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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60852 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60852)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lucifer, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Lucifer
- A Theosophical Magazine
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Various
-
-Release Date: December 5, 2019 [EBook #60852]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LUCIFER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from
-images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This text is a compilation of the six numbers of the first Volume of
-LUCIFER, spanning September 1887 through February 1888.
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. Certain
-headings were printed in a blackletter font, indicated with a ‘=’
-delimiter.
-
-Footnotes have been moved to follow the paragraphs in which they are
-referenced. They have been resequenced for uniqueness across the text.
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
-see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding
-the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
-
- LUCIFER
- =A Theosophical Magazine,=
-
- DESIGNED TO “BRING TO LIGHT THE HIDDEN THINGS OF DARKNESS.”
-
- EDITED BY
-
- H. P. BLAVATSKY AND MABEL COLLINS.
-
-THE LIGHT-BEARER IS THE MORNING STAR OR LUCIFER, AND “LUCIFER IS NO
- PROFANE OR SATANIC TITLE. IT IS THE LATIN LUCIFERUS. THE
- LIGHT-BRINGER, THE MORNING STAR, EQUIVALENT TO THE GREEK φωσφορος ...
- THE NAME OF THE PURE PALE HERALD OF DAYLIGHT.”—YONGE.
-
-
-
-
- _VOLUME I._
-
- SEPTEMBER 1887-FEBRUARY 1888.
-
- --------------
-
- =London=:
-
- GEORGE REDWAY, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
-
-
-
-
- KELLY & CO., PRINTERS
- 1 & 3, GATE STREET, LINCOLNS INN FIELDS, LONDON, W.C.
- AND MIDDLE MILL, KINGSTON-ON-THAMES.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
- Astrological Notes 158, 512
-
- Auto-Hypnotic Rhapsody, An 472
-
- Birth of Light, The 52
-
- Blood Covenanting 216
-
- Blossom and the Fruit, The. The True 23, 123, 193, 258,
- Story of a Magician 347, 443
-
- Brotherhood 212
-
- Buddhism, The Four Noble Truths of 49
-
- Christian Dogma, Esotericism of the 368
-
- Christmas Eve, A Remarkable 274
-
- Correspondence 76, 136, 228, 311,
- 412, 502
-
- Emerson and Occultism 252
-
- Evil, The Origin of 109
-
- Fear 298
-
- Freedom 185
-
- Ghost’s Revenge, A 63, 102
-
- God Speaks for Law and Order 292
-
- Gospels, The Esoteric Character of the 173, 299, 490
-
- Hand, The “Square” in the 181
-
- Hauntings, A Theory of 486
-
- Healing, The Spirit of 267
-
- Hylo-Idealism and “The Adversary” 507
-
- Infant Genius 296
-
- Interlaced Triangles, The Relation of 481
- Colour to the
-
- Invisible World, The 186
-
- Lady of Light, The 81
-
- Lama, The Last of a Good 51
-
- Law of Life, A: Karma 39, 97
-
- Let Every Man Prove His Own Work 161
-
- “Light on the Path,” Comments on 8, 90, 170, 379
-
- Literary Jottings 71, 329
-
- Love with an Object 391
-
- “LUCIFER” To the Archbishop of 340
- Canterbury Greeting, 241; To the Readers
- of
-
- Luniolatry 440
-
- Morning Star, To the 339
-
- Mystery of all Time, The 46
-
- Mystic Thought, The 192
-
- Paradox, The Great 120
-
- Planet, History of a 15
-
- Quest, The Great 288, 375
-
- Reviews 143, 232, 395, 497
-
- Science of Life, The 203
-
- Signs of the Times, The 83
-
- Soldier’s Daughter, The 432
-
- Some Words on Daily Life 344
-
- Theosophical and Mystic Publications 77, 156, 335
-
- Theosophist, A True (Count Tolstoi) 55
-
- Theosophy, Thoughts on, 134; and 282
- Socialism
-
- Three Desires, The 476
- Twilight Visions 365, 461
-
- Unpopular Philosopher, From the 80, 160, 238
- Note-Book of an
-
- What is Truth? 425
-
- What’s in a Name? Why is the Magazine 1
- called “LUCIFER”?
-
- White Monk, The 384, 466
-
- 1888 337
-
- LUCIFER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. I. LONDON, SEPTEMBER 15TH, 1887. NO. 1.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- WHAT’S IN A NAME?
- WHY THE MAGAZINE IS CALLED “LUCIFER.”
-
-
-What’s in a name? Very often there is more in it than the profane is
-prepared to understand, or the learned mystic to explain. It is an
-invisible, secret, but very potential influence that every name carries
-about with it and “leaveth wherever it goeth.” Carlyle thought that
-“there is much, nay, almost all, in names.” “Could I unfold the
-influence of names, which are the most important of all clothings, I
-were a second great Trismegistus,” he writes.
-
-The name or title of a magazine started with a definite object, is,
-therefore, all important; for it is, indeed, the invisible seedgrain,
-which will either grow “to be an all-over-shadowing tree” on the fruits
-of which must depend the nature of the results brought about by the said
-object, or the tree will wither and die. These considerations show that
-the name of the present magazine—rather equivocal to orthodox Christian
-ears—is due to no careless selection, but arose in consequence of much
-thinking over its fitness, and was adopted as the best symbol to express
-that object and the results in view.
-
-Now, the first and most important, if not the sole object of the
-magazine, is expressed in the line from the 1st Epistle to the
-Corinthians, on its title page. It is to bring light to “the hidden
-things of darkness,” (iv. 5); to show in their true aspect and their
-original real meaning things and names, men and their doings and
-customs; it is finally to fight prejudice, hypocrisy and shams in every
-nation, in every class of Society, as in every department of life. The
-task is a laborious one but it is neither impracticable nor useless, if
-even as an experiment.
-
-Thus, for an attempt of such nature, no better title could ever be found
-than the one chosen. “Lucifer,” is the pale morning-star, the precursor
-of the full blaze of the noon-day sun—the “Eosphoros” of the Greeks. It
-shines timidly at dawn to gather forces and dazzle the eye after sunset
-as its own brother ‘Hesperos’—the radiant evening star, or the planet
-Venus. No fitter symbol exists for the proposed work—that of throwing a
-ray of truth on everything hidden by the darkness of prejudice, by
-social or religious misconceptions; especially by that idiotic routine
-in life, which, once that a certain action, a thing, a name, has been
-branded by slanderous inventions, however unjust, makes _respectable_
-people, so called, turn away shiveringly, refusing to even look at it
-from any other aspect than the one sanctioned by public opinion. Such an
-endeavour then, to force the weak-hearted to look truth straight in the
-face, is helped most efficaciously by a title belonging to the category
-of branded names.
-
-Piously inclined readers may argue that “Lucifer” is accepted by all the
-churches as one of the many names of the Devil. According to Milton’s
-superb fiction, Lucifer is _Satan_, the “rebellious” angel, the enemy of
-God and man. If one analyzes his rebellion, however, it will be found of
-no worse nature than an assertion of free-will and independent thought,
-as if Lucifer had been born in the XIXth century. This epithet of
-“rebellious,” is a theological calumny, on a par with that other slander
-of God by the Predestinarians, one that makes of deity an “Almighty”
-fiend worse than the “rebellious” Spirit himself; “an omnipotent Devil
-desiring to be ‘complimented’ as all merciful when he is exerting the
-most fiendish cruelty,” as put by J. Cotter Morison. Both the
-foreordaining and predestining fiend-God, and his subordinate agent are
-of human invention; they are two of the most morally repulsive and
-horrible theological dogmas that the nightmares of light-hating monks
-have ever evolved out of their unclean fancies.
-
-They date from the Mediæval age, the period of mental obscuration,
-during which most of the present prejudices and superstitions have been
-forcibly inoculated on the human mind, so as to have become nearly
-ineradicable in some cases, one of which is the present prejudice now
-under discussion.
-
-So deeply rooted, indeed, is this preconception and aversion to the name
-of Lucifer—meaning no worse than “light-bringer” (from _lux_, _lucis_,
-“light,” and _ferre_ “to bring”)[1]—even among the educated classes,
-that by adopting it for the title of their magazine the editors have the
-prospect of a long strife with public prejudice before them. So absurd
-and ridiculous is that prejudice, indeed, that no one has seemed to ever
-ask himself the question, how came Satan to be called a _light-bringer_,
-unless the silvery rays of the morning-star can in any way be made
-suggestive of the glare of the infernal flames. It is simply, as
-Henderson showed, “one of those gross perversions of sacred writ which
-so extensively obtain, and which are to be traced to a proneness to seek
-for more in a given passage than it really contains—a disposition to be
-influenced by sound rather than sense, and an implicit faith in received
-interpretation”—which is not quite one of the weaknesses of our present
-age. Nevertheless, the prejudice is there, to the shame of our century.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- “It was Gregory the Great who was the first to apply this passage of
- Isaiah, “How art thou fallen from Heaven, Lucifer, son of the
- morning,” etc., to Satan, and ever since the bold metaphor of the
- prophet, which referred, after all, but to an Assyrian king inimical
- to the Israelites, has been applied to the Devil.”
-
------
-
-This cannot be helped. The two editors would hold themselves as
-recreants in their own sight, as traitors to the very spirit of the
-proposed work, were they to yield and cry craven before the danger. If
-one would fight prejudice, and brush off the ugly cobwebs of
-superstition and materialism alike from the noblest ideals of our
-forefathers, one has to prepare for opposition. “The crown of the
-reformer and the innovator is a crown of thorns” indeed. If one would
-rescue Truth in all her chaste nudity from the almost bottomless well,
-into which she has been hurled by cant and hypocritical propriety, one
-should not hesitate to descend into the dark, gaping pit of that well.
-No matter how badly the blind bats—the dwellers in darkness, and the
-haters of light—may treat in their gloomy abode the intruder, unless one
-is the first to show the spirit and courage he preaches to others, he
-must be justly held as a hypocrite and a seceder from his own
-principles.
-
-Hardly had the title been agreed upon, when the first premonitions of
-what was in store for us, in the matter of the opposition to be
-encountered owing to the title chosen, appeared on our horizon. One of
-the editors received and recorded some spicy objections. The scenes that
-follow are sketches from nature.
-
- I.
-
- _A Well-known Novelist._ Tell me about your new magazine. What class
- do you propose to appeal to?
-
- _Editor._ No class in particular: we intend to appeal to the public.
-
- _Novelist._ I am very glad of that. For once I shall be one of the
- public, for I don’t understand your subject in the least, and I want
- to. But you must remember that if your public is to understand you, it
- must necessarily be a very small one. People talk about occultism
- nowadays as they talk about many other things, without the least idea
- of what it means. We are so ignorant and—so prejudiced.
-
- _Editor._ Exactly. That is what calls the new magazine into existence.
- We propose to educate you, and to tear the mask from every prejudice.
-
- _Novelist._ That really is good news to me, for I want to be educated.
- What is your magazine to be called?
-
- _Editor._ Lucifer.
-
- _Novelist._ What! Are you going to educate us in vice? We know enough
- about that. Fallen angels are plentiful. You may find popularity, for
- soiled doves are in fashion just now, while the white-winged angels
- are voted a bore, because they are not so amusing. But I doubt your
- being able to teach us much.
-
- II.
-
- _A Man of the World_ (_in a careful undertone, for the scene is a
- dinner-party_). I hear you are going to start a magazine, all about
- occultism. Do you know, I’m very glad. I don’t say anything about such
- matters as a rule, but some queer things have happened in my life
- which can’t be explained in any ordinary manner. I hope you will go in
- for explanations.
-
- _Editor._ We shall try, certainly. My impression is, that when
- occultism is in any measure apprehended, its laws are accepted by
- everyone as the only intelligible explanation of life.
-
- _A M. W._ Just so, I want to know all about it, for ’pon my honour,
- life’s a mystery. There are plenty of other people as curious as
- myself. This is an age which is afflicted with the Yankee disease of
- ‘wanting to know.’ I’ll get you lots of subscribers. What’s the
- magazine called?
-
- _Editor._ Lucifer—and (_warned by former experience_) don’t
- misunderstand the name. It is typical of the divine spirit which
- sacrificed itself for humanity—it was Milton’s doing that it ever
- became associated with the devil. We are sworn enemies to popular
- prejudices, and it is quite appropriate that we should attack such a
- prejudice as this—Lucifer, you know, is the Morning Star—the
- Lightbearer,...
-
- _A M. W._ (_interrupting_). Oh, I know all that—at least I don’t know,
- but I take it for granted you’ve got some good reason for taking such
- a title. But your first object is to have readers; you want the public
- to buy your magazine, I suppose. That’s in the programme, isn’t it?
-
- _Editor._ Most decidedly.
-
- _A M. W._ Well, listen to the advice of a man who knows his way about
- town. Don’t mark your magazine with the wrong colour at starting. It’s
- quite evident, when one stays an instant to think of its derivation
- and meaning, that Lucifer is an excellent word. But the public don’t
- stay to think of derivations and meanings; and the first impression is
- the most important. Nobody will buy the magazine if you call it
- Lucifer.
-
- III.
-
- _A Fashionable Lady Interested in Occultism._ I want to hear some more
- about the new magazine, for I have interested a great many people in
- it, even with the little you have told me. But I find it difficult to
- express its actual purpose. What is it?
-
- _Editor._ To try and give a little light to those that want it.
-
- _A F. L._ Well, that’s a simple way of putting it, and will be very
- useful to me. What is the magazine to be called?
-
- _Editor._ Lucifer.
-
- _A F. L._ (_After a pause_) You can’t mean it.
-
- _Editor._ Why not?
-
- _A F. L._ The associations are so dreadful! What can be the object of
- calling it that? It sounds like some unfortunate sort of joke, made
- against it by its enemies.
-
- _Editor._ Oh, but Lucifer, you know, means Light-bearer; it is typical
- of the Divine Spirit——
-
- _A F. L._ Never mind all that—I want to do your magazine good and make
- it known, and you can’t expect me to enter into explanations of that
- sort every time I mention the title? Impossible! Life is too short and
- too busy. Besides, it would produce such a bad effect; people would
- think me priggish, and then I couldn’t talk at all, for I couldn’t
- bear them to think that. Don’t call it Lucifer—please don’t. Nobody
- knows what the word is typical of; what it means now is the devil,
- nothing more or less.
-
- _Editor._ But then that is quite a mistake, and one of the first
- prejudices we propose to do battle with. Lucifer is the pale, pure
- herald of dawn——
-
- _Lady_ (_interrupting_). I thought you were going to do something more
- interesting and more important than to whitewash mythological
- characters. We shall all have to go to school again, or read up Dr.
- Smith’s Classical Dictionary. And what is the use of it when it is
- done? I thought you were going to tell us things about our own lives
- and how to make them better. I suppose Milton wrote about Lucifer,
- didn’t he?—but nobody reads Milton now. Do let us have a modern title
- with some human meaning in it.
-
- IV.
-
- _A Journalist_ (_thoughtfully, while rolling his cigarette_). Yes, it
- is a good idea, this magazine of yours. We shall all laugh at it, as a
- matter of course: and we shall cut it up in the papers. But we shall
- all read it, because secretly everybody hungers after the mysterious.
- What are you going to call it?
-
- _Editor._ Lucifer.
-
- _Journalist_ (_striking a light_). Why not _The Fusee_? Quite as good
- a title and not so pretentious.
-
-The “Novelist,” the “Man of the World,” the “Fashionable Lady,” and the
-“Journalist,” should be the first to receive a little instruction. A
-glimpse into the real and primitive character of Lucifer can do them no
-harm and may, perchance, cure them of a bit of ridiculous prejudice.
-They ought to study their Homer and Hesiod’s Theogony if they would do
-justice to Lucifer, “_Eosphoros and Hesperos_,” the Morning and the
-Evening beautiful star. If there are more useful things to do in this
-life than “to whitewash mythological characters,” to slander and blacken
-them is, at least, as useless, and shows, moreover, a narrow-mindedness
-which can do honour to no one.
-
-To object to the title of LUCIFER, only because its “associations are so
-dreadful,” is pardonable—if it can be pardonable in any case—only in an
-ignorant American missionary of some dissenting sect, in one whose
-natural laziness and lack of education led him to prefer ploughing the
-minds of heathens, as ignorant as he is himself, to the more profitable,
-but rather more arduous, process of ploughing the fields of his own
-father’s farm. In the English clergy, however, who receive all a more or
-less classical education, and are, therefore, supposed to be acquainted
-with the _ins_ and _outs_ of theological sophistry and casuistry, this
-kind of opposition is absolutely unpardonable. It not only smacks of
-hypocrisy and deceit, but places them directly on a lower moral level
-than him they call the apostate angel. By endeavouring to show the
-theological Lucifer, fallen through the idea that
-
- “To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell;
- Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven,”
-
-they are virtually putting into practice the supposed crime they would
-fain accuse him of. They prefer reigning over the spirit of the masses
-by means of a pernicious dark LIE, productive of many an evil, than
-serve heaven by serving TRUTH. Such practices are worthy only of the
-Jesuits.
-
-But their sacred writ is the first to contradict their interpretations
-and the association of Lucifer, the Morning Star, with Satan. Chapter
-XXII. of _Revelation_, verse 16th, says: “I, Jesus ... am the root ...
-and the bright and _Morning Star_” (ὀρθρινὸς “early rising”): hence
-Eosphoros, or the Latin Lucifer. The opprobrium attached to this name is
-of such a very late date, that the Roman Church found itself forced to
-screen the theological slander behind a two-sided interpretation—as
-usual. Christ, we are told, is the “Morning Star,” the _divine_ Lucifer;
-and Satan the _usurpator_ of the _Verbum_, the “infernal Lucifer.”[2]
-“The great Archangel Michael, the conqueror of Satan, is identical in
-paganism[3] with Mercury-Mithra, to whom, after defending the Sun
-(symbolical of God) from the attacks of Venus-Lucifer, was given the
-possession of this planet, _et datus est ei locus Luciferi_. And since
-the Archangel Michael is the ‘Angel of the Face,’ and ‘the Vicar of the
-_Verbum_’ he is now considered in the Roman Church as the regent of that
-planet Venus which ‘the vanquished fiend had usurped.’” _Angelus faciei
-Dei sedem superbi humilis obtinuit_, says Cornelius à Lapide (in Vol.
-VI. p. 229).
-
------
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Mirville’s Memoirs to the Academy of France, Vol. IV., quoting
- Cardinal Ventura.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Which paganism has passed long milleniums, it would seem, in _copying
- beforehand_ Christian dogmas to come.
-
------
-
-This gives the reason why one of the early Popes was called Lucifer, as
-Yonge and ecclesiastical records prove. It thus follows that the title
-chosen for our magazine is as much associated with divine and pious
-ideas as with the supposed rebellion of the hero of Milton’s “Paradise
-Lost.” By choosing it, _we throw the first ray of light and truth_ on a
-ridiculous prejudice which ought to have no room made for it in this our
-“age of facts and discovery.” We work for true Religion and Science, in
-the interest of fact as against fiction and prejudice. It is our duty,
-as it is that of physical Science—professedly its mission—to throw light
-on facts in Nature hitherto surrounded by the darkness of ignorance. And
-since ignorance is justly regarded as the chief promoter of
-superstition, that work is, therefore, a noble and beneficent work. But
-natural Sciences are only one aspect of SCIENCE and TRUTH. Psychological
-and moral Sciences, or theosophy, the knowledge of divine truth,
-wheresoever found, are still more important in human affairs, and real
-Science should not be limited simply to the physical aspect of life and
-nature. Science is an abstract of every fact, a comprehension of every
-truth within the scope of human research and intelligence.
-“Shakespeare’s deep and accurate science in mental philosophy”
-(Coleridge), has proved more beneficent to the true philosopher in the
-study of the human heart—therefore, in the promotion of truth—than the
-more accurate, but certainly less deep, science of any Fellow of the
-Royal Institution.
-
-Those readers, however, who do not find themselves convinced that the
-Church had no right to throw a slur upon a beautiful star, and that it
-did so through a mere necessity of accounting for one of its numerous
-loans from Paganism with all its poetical conceptions of the truths in
-Nature, are asked to read our article “The History of a Planet.”
-Perhaps, after its perusal, they will see how far Dupuis was justified
-in asserting that “all the theologies have their origin in astronomy.”
-With the modern Orientalists every myth is _solar_. This is one more
-prejudice, and a preconception in favour of materialism and physical
-science. It will be one of our duties to combat it with much of the
-rest.
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
-
-
-
-Occultism is not magic, though magic is one of its tools.
-
-Occultism is not the acquirement of powers, whether psychic or
-intellectual, though both are its servants. Neither is occultism the
-pursuit of happiness, as men understand the word; for the first step is
-sacrifice, the second, renunciation.
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
-
-
-
-Life is built up by the sacrifice of the individual to the whole. Each
-cell in the living body must sacrifice itself to the perfection of the
-whole; when it is otherwise, disease and death enforce the lesson.
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
-
-
-
-Occultism is the science of life, the art of living.
-
- COMMENTS ON “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”
-
- BY THE AUTHOR.
-
- “Before the eyes can see they must be incapable of tears.”
-
-
-It should be very clearly remembered by all readers of this volume that
-it is a book which may appear to have some little philosophy in it, but
-very little sense, to those who believe it to be written in ordinary
-English. To the many, who read in this manner it will be—not caviare so
-much as olives strong of their salt. Be warned and read but a little in
-this way.
-
-There is another way of reading, which is, indeed, the only one of any
-use with many authors. It is reading, not between the lines but within
-the words. In fact, it is deciphering a profound cipher. All alchemical
-works are written in the cipher of which I speak; it has been used by
-the great philosophers and poets of all time. It is used systematically
-by the adepts in life and knowledge, who, seemingly giving out their
-deepest wisdom, hide in the very words which frame it its actual
-mystery. They cannot do more. There is a law of nature which insists
-that a man shall read these mysteries for himself. By no other method
-can he obtain them. A man who desires to live must eat his food himself:
-this is the simple law of nature—which applies also to the higher life.
-A man who would live and act in it cannot be fed like a babe with a
-spoon; he must eat for himself.
-
-I propose to put into new and sometimes plainer language parts of “Light
-on the Path”; but whether this effort of mine will really be any
-interpretation I cannot say. To a deaf and dumb man, a truth is made no
-more intelligible if, in order to make it so, some misguided linguist
-translates the words in which it is couched into every living or dead
-language, and shouts these different phrases in his ear. But for those
-who are not deaf and dumb one language is generally easier than the
-rest; and it is to such as these I address myself.
-
-The very first aphorisms of “Light on the Path,” included under Number
-I. have, I know well, remained sealed as to their inner meaning to many
-who have otherwise followed the purpose of the book.
-
-There are four proven and certain truths with regard to the entrance to
-occultism. The Gates of Gold bar that threshold; yet there are some who
-pass those gates and discover the sublime and illimitable beyond. In the
-far spaces of Time all will pass those gates. But I am one who wish that
-Time, the great deluder, were not so over-masterful. To those who know
-and love him I have no word to say; but to the others—and there are not
-so very few as some may fancy—to whom the passage of Time is as the
-stroke of a sledge-hammer, and the sense of Space like the bars of an
-iron cage, I will translate and re-translate until they understand
-fully.
-
-The four truths written on the first page of “Light on the Path,” refer
-to the trial initiation of the would-be occultist. Until he has passed
-it, he cannot even reach to the latch of the gate which admits to
-knowledge. Knowledge is man’s greatest inheritance; why, then, should he
-not attempt to reach it by every possible road? The laboratory is not
-the only ground for experiment; _science_, we must remember, is derived
-from _sciens_, present participle of _scire_, “to know,”—its origin is
-similar to that of the word “discern,” “to ken.” Science does not
-therefore deal only with matter, no, not even its subtlest and obscurest
-forms. Such an idea is born merely of the idle spirit of the age.
-Science is a word which covers all forms of knowledge. It is exceedingly
-interesting to hear what chemists discover, and to see them finding
-their way through the densities of matter to its finer forms; but there
-are other kinds of knowledge than this, and it is not every one who
-restricts his (strictly scientific) desire for knowledge to experiments
-which are capable of being tested by the physical senses.
-
-Everyone who is not a dullard, or a man stupefied by some predominant
-vice, has guessed, or even perhaps discovered with some certainty, that
-there are subtle senses lying within the physical senses. There is
-nothing at all extraordinary in this; if we took the trouble to call
-Nature into the witness box we should find that everything which is
-perceptible to the ordinary sight, has something even more important
-than itself hidden within it; the microscope has opened a world to us,
-but within those encasements which the microscope reveals, lies a
-mystery which no machinery can probe.
-
-The whole world is animated and lit, down to its most material shapes,
-by a world within it. This inner world is called Astral by some people,
-and it is as good a word as any other, though it merely means starry;
-but the stars, as Locke pointed out, are luminous bodies which give
-light of themselves. This quality is characteristic of the life which
-lies within matter; for those who see it, need no lamp to see it by. The
-word star, moreover, is derived from the Anglo-Saxon “stir-an,” to
-steer, to stir, to move, and undeniably it is the inner life which is
-master of the outer, just as a man’s brain guides the movements of his
-lips. So that although Astral is no very excellent word in itself, I am
-content to use it for my present purpose.
-
-The whole of “Light on the Path” is written in an astral cipher and can
-therefore only be deciphered by one who reads astrally. And its teaching
-is chiefly directed towards the cultivation and development of the
-astral life. Until the first step has been taken in this development,
-the swift knowledge, which is called intuition with certainty, is
-impossible to man. And this positive and certain intuition is the only
-form of knowledge which enables a man to work rapidly or reach his true
-and high estate, within the limit of his conscious effort. To obtain
-knowledge by experiment is too tedious a method for those who aspire to
-accomplish real work; he who gets it by certain intuition, lays hands on
-its various forms with supreme rapidity, by fierce effort of will; as a
-determined workman grasps his tools, indifferent to their weight or any
-other difficulty which may stand in his way. He does not stay for each
-to be tested—he uses such as he sees are fittest.
-
-All the rules contained in “Light on the Path,” are written for all
-disciples, but only for disciples—those who “take knowledge.” To none
-else but the student in this school are its laws of any use or interest.
-
-To all who are interested seriously in Occultism, I say first—take
-knowledge. To him who hath shall be given. It is useless to wait for it.
-The womb of Time will close before you, and in later days you will
-remain unborn, without power. I therefore say to those who have any
-hunger or thirst for knowledge, attend to these rules.
-
-They are none of my handicraft or invention. They are merely the
-phrasing of laws in super-nature, the putting into words truths as
-absolute in their own sphere, as those laws which govern the conduct of
-the earth and its atmosphere.
-
-The senses spoken of in these four statements are the astral, or inner
-senses.
-
-No man desires to see that light which illumines the spaceless soul
-until pain and sorrow and despair have driven him away from the life of
-ordinary humanity. First he wears out pleasure; then he wears out
-pain—till, at last, his eyes become incapable of tears.
-
-This is a truism, although I know perfectly well that it will meet with
-a vehement denial from many who are in sympathy with thoughts which
-spring from the inner life. _To see_ with the astral sense of sight is a
-form of activity which it is difficult for us to understand immediately.
-The scientist knows very well what a miracle is achieved by each child
-that is born into the world, when it first conquers its eye-sight and
-compels it to obey its brain. An equal miracle is performed with each
-sense certainly, but this ordering of sight is perhaps the most
-stupendous effort. Yet the child does it almost unconsciously, by force
-of the powerful heredity of habit. No one now is aware that he has ever
-done it at all; just as we cannot recollect the individual movements
-which enabled us to walk up a hill a year ago. This arises from the fact
-that we move and live and have our being in matter. Our knowledge of it
-has become intuitive.
-
-With our astral life it is very much otherwise. For long ages past, man
-has paid very little attention to it—so little, that he has practically
-lost the use of his senses. It is true, that in every civilization the
-star arises, and man confesses, with more or less of folly and
-confusion, that he knows himself to be. But most often he denies it, and
-in being a materialist becomes that strange thing, a being which cannot
-see its own light, a thing of life which will not live, an astral animal
-which has eyes, and ears, and speech, and power, yet will use none of
-these gifts. This is the case, and the habit of ignorance has become so
-confirmed, that now none will see with the inner vision till agony has
-made the physical eyes not only unseeing, but without tears—the moisture
-of life. To be incapable of tears is to have faced and conquered the
-simple human nature, and to have attained an equilibrium which cannot be
-shaken by personal emotions. It does not imply any hardness of heart, or
-any indifference. It does not imply the exhaustion of sorrow, when the
-suffering soul seems powerless to suffer acutely any longer; it does not
-mean the deadness of old age, when emotion is becoming dull because the
-strings which vibrate to it are wearing out. None of these conditions
-are fit for a disciple, and if any one of them exist in him, it must be
-overcome before the path can be entered upon. Hardness of heart belongs
-to the selfish man, the egotist, to whom the gate is for ever closed.
-Indifference belongs to the fool and the false philosopher; those whose
-lukewarmness makes them mere puppets, not strong enough to face the
-realities of existence. When pain or sorrow has worn out the keenness of
-suffering, the result is a lethargy not unlike that which accompanies
-old age, as it is usually experienced by men and women. Such a condition
-makes the entrance to the path impossible, because the first step is one
-of difficulty and needs a strong man, full of psychic and physical
-vigour, to attempt it.
-
-It is a truth, that, as Edgar Allan Poe said, the eyes are the windows
-for the soul, the windows of that haunted palace in which it dwells.
-This is the very nearest interpretation into ordinary language of the
-meaning of the text. If grief, dismay, disappointment or pleasure, can
-shake the soul so that it loses its fixed hold on the calm spirit which
-inspires it, and the moisture of life breaks forth, drowning knowledge
-in sensation, then all is blurred, the windows are darkened, the light
-is useless. This is as literal a fact as that if a man, at the edge of a
-precipice, loses his nerve through some sudden emotion he will certainly
-fall. The poise of the body, the balance, must be preserved, not only in
-dangerous places, but even on the level ground, and with all the
-assistance Nature gives us by the law of gravitation. So it is with the
-soul, it is the link between the outer body and the starry spirit
-beyond; the divine spark dwells in the still place where no convulsion
-of Nature can shake the air; this is so always. But the soul may lose
-its hold on that, its knowledge of it, even though these two are part of
-one whole; and it is by emotion, by sensation, that this hold is loosed.
-To suffer either pleasure or pain, causes a vivid vibration which is, to
-the consciousness of man, life. Now this sensibility does not lessen
-when the disciple enters upon his training; it increases. It is the
-first test of his strength; he must suffer, must enjoy or endure, more
-keenly than other men, while yet he has taken on him a duty which does
-not exist for other men, that of not allowing his suffering to shake him
-from his fixed purpose. He has, in fact, at the first step to take
-himself steadily in hand and put the bit into his own mouth; no one else
-can do it for him.
-
-The first four aphorisms of “Light on the Path,” refer entirely to
-astral development. This development must be accomplished to a certain
-extent—that is to say it must be fully entered upon—before the remainder
-of the book is really intelligible except to the intellect; in fact,
-before it can be read as a practical, not a metaphysical treatise.
-
-In one of the great mystic Brotherhoods, there are four ceremonies, that
-take place early in the year, which practically illustrate and elucidate
-these aphorisms. They are ceremonies in which only novices take part,
-for they are simply services of the threshold. But it will show how
-serious a thing it is to become a disciple, when it is understood that
-these are all ceremonies of sacrifice. The first one is this of which I
-have been speaking. The keenest enjoyment, the bitterest pain, the
-anguish of loss and despair, are brought to bear on the trembling soul,
-which has not yet found light in the darkness, which is helpless as a
-blind man is, and until these shocks can be endured without loss of
-equilibrium the astral senses must remain sealed. This is the merciful
-law. The “medium,” or “spiritualist,” who rushes into the psychic world
-without preparation, is a law-breaker, a breaker of the laws of
-super-nature. Those who break Nature’s laws lose their physical health;
-those who break the laws of the inner life, lose their psychic health.
-“Mediums” become mad, suicides, miserable creatures devoid of moral
-sense; and often end as unbelievers, doubters even of that which their
-own eyes have seen. The disciple is compelled to become his own master
-before he adventures on this perilous path, and attempts to face those
-beings who live and work in the astral world, and whom we call masters,
-because of their great knowledge and their ability to control not only
-themselves but the forces around them.
-
-The condition of the soul when it lives for the life of sensation as
-distinguished from that of knowledge, is vibratory or oscillating, as
-distinguished from fixed. That is the nearest literal representation of
-the fact; but it is only literal to the intellect, not to the intuition.
-For this part of man’s consciousness a different vocabulary is needed.
-The idea of “fixed” might perhaps be transposed into that of “at home.”
-In sensation no permanent home can be found, because change is the law
-of this vibratory existence. That fact is the first one which must be
-learned by the disciple. It is useless to pause and weep for a scene in
-a kaleidoscope which has passed.
-
-It is a very well-known fact, one with which Bulwer Lytton dealt with
-great power, that an intolerable sadness is the very first experience of
-the neophyte in Occultism. A sense of blankness falls upon him which
-makes the world a waste, and life a vain exertion. This follows his
-first serious contemplation of the abstract. In gazing, or even in
-attempting to gaze, on the ineffable mystery of his own higher nature,
-he himself causes the initial trial to fall on him. The oscillation
-between pleasure and pain ceases for—perhaps an instant of time; but
-that is enough to have cut him loose from his fast moorings in the world
-of sensation. He has experienced, however briefly, the greater life; and
-he goes on with ordinary existence weighted by a sense of unreality, of
-blank, of horrid negation. This was the nightmare which visited Bulwer
-Lytton’s neophyte in “Zanoni”; and even Zanoni himself, who had learned
-great truths, and been entrusted with great powers, had not actually
-passed the threshold where fear and hope, despair and joy seem at one
-moment absolute realities, at the next mere forms of fancy.
-
-This initial trial is often brought on us by life itself. For life is
-after all, the great teacher. We return to study it, after we have
-acquired power over it, just as the master in chemistry learns more in
-the laboratory than his pupil does. There are persons so near the door
-of knowledge that life itself prepares them for it, and no individual
-hand has to invoke the hideous guardian of the entrance. These must
-naturally be keen and powerful organizations, capable of the most vivid
-pleasure; then pain comes and fills its great duty. The most intense
-forms of suffering fall on such a nature, till at last it arouses from
-its stupor of consciousness, and by the force of its internal vitality
-steps over the threshold into a place of peace. Then the vibration of
-life loses its power of tyranny. The sensitive nature must suffer still;
-but the soul has freed itself and stands aloof, guiding the life towards
-its greatness. Those who are the subjects of Time, and go slowly through
-all his spaces, live on through a long-drawn series of sensations, and
-suffer a constant mingling of pleasure and of pain. They do not dare to
-take the snake of self in a steady grasp and conquer it, so becoming
-divine; but prefer to go on fretting through divers experiences,
-suffering blows from the opposing forces.
-
-When one of these subjects of Time decides to enter on the path of
-Occultism, it is this which is his first task. If life has not taught it
-to him, if he is not strong enough to teach himself, and if he has power
-enough to demand the help of a master, then this fearful trial, depicted
-in Zanoni, is put upon him. The oscillation in which he lives, is for an
-instant stilled; and he has to survive the shock of facing what seems to
-him at first sight as the abyss of nothingness. Not till he has learned
-to dwell in this abyss, and has found its peace, is it possible for his
-eyes to have become incapable of tears.
-
-The difficulty of writing intelligibly on these subjects is so great
-that I beg of those who have found any interest in this article, and are
-yet left with perplexities and doubts, to address me in the
-correspondence column of this magazine. I ask this because thoughtful
-questions are as great an assistance to the general reader as the
-answers to them.
-
- Δ
-
- (_To be continued_.)
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
-
-
-
-Harmony is the law of life, discord its shadow, whence springs
-suffering, the teacher, the awakener of consciousness.
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
-Through joy and sorrow, pain and pleasure, the soul comes to a knowledge
-of itself; then begins the task of learning the laws of life, that the
-discords may be resolved, and the harmony be restored.
-
- ------------------
-
-The eyes of wisdom are like the ocean depths; there is neither joy nor
-sorrow in them; therefore the soul of the occultist must become stronger
-than joy, and greater than sorrow.
-
- THE HISTORY OF A PLANET.
-
-
-No star, among the countless myriads that twinkle over the sidereal
-fields of the night sky, shines so dazzlingly as the planet Venus—not
-even Sirius-Sothis, the dog-star, beloved by Isis. Venus is the queen
-among our planets, the crown jewel of our solar system. She is the
-inspirer of the poet, the guardian and companion of the lonely shepherd,
-the lovely morning and the evening star. For,
-
- “Stars teach as well as shine.”
-
-although their secrets are still untold and unrevealed to the majority
-of men, including astronomers. They are “a beauty and a mystery,”
-verily. But “where there is a mystery, it is generally supposed that
-there must also be evil,” says Byron. Evil, therefore, was detected by
-evilly-disposed human fancy, even in those bright luminous eyes peeping
-at our wicked world through the veil of ether. Thus there came to exist
-slandered stars and planets as well as slandered men and women. Too
-often are the reputation and fortune of one man or party sacrificed for
-the benefit of another man or party. As on earth below, so in the
-heavens above, and Venus, the sister planet of our Earth,[4] was
-sacrificed to the ambition of our little globe to show the latter the
-“chosen” planet of the Lord. She became the scapegoat, the _Azaziel_ of
-the starry dome, for the sins of the Earth, or rather for those of a
-certain class in the human family—the clergy—who slandered the bright
-orb, in order to prove what their ambition suggested to them as the best
-means to reach power, and exercise it unswervingly over the
-superstitious and ignorant masses.
-
------
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- “Venus is a second Earth,” says Reynaud, in _Terre et Ciel_ (p. 74),
- “so much so that were there any communication possible between the two
- planets, their inhabitants might take their respective earths for the
- two hemispheres of the same world.... They seem on the sky, _like two
- sisters_. Similar in conformation, these two worlds are also similar
- in the character assigned to them in the Universe.”
-
------
-
-This took place during the middle ages. And now the sin lies black at
-the door of Christians and their scientific inspirers, though the error
-was successfully raised to the lofty position of a religious dogma, as
-many other fictions and inventions have been.
-
-Indeed, the whole sidereal world, planets and their regents—the ancient
-gods of poetical paganism—the sun, the moon, the elements, and the
-entire host of incalculable worlds—those at least which happened to be
-known to the Church Fathers—shared in the same fate. They have all been
-slandered, all bedevilled by the insatiable desire of proving one little
-system of theology—built on and constructed out of old pagan
-materials—the only right and holy one, and all those which preceded or
-followed it utterly wrong. Sun and stars, the very air itself, we are
-asked to believe, became pure and “redeemed” from original sin and the
-Satanic element of heathenism, only after the year I, A.D. Scholastics
-and scholiasts, the spirit of whom “spurned laborious investigation and
-slow induction,” had shown, to the satisfaction of infallible Church,
-the whole Kosmos in the power of Satan—a poor compliment to God—before
-the year of the Nativity; and Christians had to believe or be condemned.
-Never have subtle sophistry and casuistry shown themselves so plainly in
-their true light, however, as in the questions of the ex-Satanism and
-later redemption of various heavenly bodies. Poor beautiful Venus got
-worsted in that war of so-called divine proofs to a greater degree than
-any of her sidereal colleagues. While the history of the other six
-planets, and their gradual transformation from Greco-Aryan gods into
-Semitic devils, and finally into “divine attributes of the _seven eyes_
-of the Lord,” is known but to the educated, that of Venus-Lucifer has
-become a household story among even the most illiterate in Roman
-Catholic countries.
-
-This story shall now be told for the benefit of those who may have
-neglected their astral mythology.
-
-Venus, characterised by Pythagoras as the _sol alter_, a second Sun, on
-account of her magnificent radiance—equalled by none other—was the first
-to draw the attention of ancient Theogonists. Before it began to be
-called Venus, it was known in _pre_-Hesiodic theogony as Eosphoros (or
-Phosphoros) and Hesperos, the children of the dawn and twilight. In
-Hesiod, moreover, the planet is decomposed into two divine beings, two
-brothers—Eosphoros (the _Lucifer_ of the Latins) the morning, and
-Hesperos, the evening star. They are the children of Astrœos and Eos,
-the starry heaven and the dawn, as also of Kephalos and Eos (_Theog:_
-381, _Hyg: Poet: Astron_: 11, 42). Preller, quoted by Decharme, shows
-Phaeton identical with Phosphoros or Lucifer (_Griech: Mythol_: 1. 365).
-And on the authority of Hesiod he also makes Phaeton the son of the
-latter two divinities—Kephalos and Eos.
-
-Now Phaeton or Phosphoros, the “luminous morning orb,” is carried away
-in his early youth by Aphrodite (Venus) who makes of him the night
-guardian of her sanctuary (_Theog:_ 987-991). He is the “beautiful
-morning star” (_Vide_ St. John’s _Revelation_ XXII. 16) loved for its
-radiant light by the Goddess of the Dawn, Aurora, who, while gradually
-eclipsing the light of her beloved, thus seeming to carry off the star,
-makes it reappear on the evening horizon where it watches the gates of
-heaven. In early morning, Phosphoros “issuing from the waters of the
-Ocean, raises in heaven his sacred head to announce the approach of
-divine light.” (_Iliad_, XXIII. 226; _Odyss:_ XIII. 93; Virg: _Æneid_,
-VIII. 589; _Mythol: de la Grèce Antique_. 247). He holds a torch in his
-hand and flies through space as he precedes the car of Aurora. In the
-evening he becomes Hesperos, “the most splendid of the stars that shine
-on the celestial vault” (_Iliad_, XXII. 317). He is the father of the
-Hesperides, the guardians of the golden apples together with the Dragon;
-the beautiful genius of the flowing golden curls, sung and glorified in
-all the ancient _epithalami_ (the bridal songs of the early Christians
-as of the pagan Greeks); he, who at the fall of the night, leads the
-nuptial _cortège_ and delivers the bride into the arms of the
-bridegroom. (_Carmen Nuptiale._ See _Mythol: de la Grèce Antique_.
-Decharme.)
-
-So far, there seems to be no possible _rapprochement_, no analogy to be
-discovered between this poetical personification of a star, a purely
-astronomical myth, and the _Satanism_ of Christian theology. True, the
-close connection between the planet as Hesperos, the evening star, and
-the Greek Garden of Eden with its Dragon and the golden apples may, with
-a certain stretch of imagination, suggest some painful comparisons with
-the third chapter of Genesis. But this is insufficient to justify the
-building of a theological wall of defence against paganism made up of
-slander and misrepresentations.
-
-But of all the Greek _euhemerisations_, Lucifer-Eosphoros is, perhaps,
-the most complicated. The planet has become with the Latins, Venus, or
-Aphrodite-_Anadyomene_, the foam-born Goddess, the “Divine Mother,” and
-one with the Phœnician Astarte, or the Jewish Astaroth. They were all
-called “The Morning Star,” and the Virgins of the Sea, or _Mar_ (whence
-Mary), the great Deep, titles now given by the Roman Church to their
-Virgin Mary. They were all connected with the moon and the crescent,
-with the Dragon and the planet Venus, as the mother of Christ has been
-made connected with all these attributes. If the Phœnician mariners
-carried, fixed on the prow of their ships, the image of the goddess
-Astarte (or Aphrodite, Venus Erycina) and looked upon the evening and
-the morning star as _their_ guiding star, “the eye of their Goddess
-mother,” so do the Roman Catholic sailors the same to this day. They fix
-a Madonna on the prows of their vessels, and the blessed Virgin Mary is
-called the “Virgin of the Sea.” The accepted patroness of Christian
-sailors, their star, “_Stella Del Mar_,” etc., she stands on the
-crescent moon. Like the old pagan Goddesses, she is the “Queen of
-Heaven,” and the “Morning Star” just as they were.
-
-Whether this can explain anything, is left to the reader’s sagacity.
-Meanwhile, Lucifer-Venus has nought to do with darkness, and everything
-with light. When called _Lucifer_, it is the “light bringer,” the first
-radiant beam which destroys the lethal darkness of night. When named
-Venus, the planet-star becomes the symbol of dawn, the chaste Aurora.
-Professor Max Müller rightly conjectures that Aphrodite, born of the
-sea, is a personification of the Dawn of Day, and the most lovely of all
-the sights in Nature (“Science of Language”) for, before her
-naturalisation by the Greeks, Aphrodite was Nature personified, the life
-and light of the Pagan world, as proven in the beautiful invocation to
-Venus by Lucretius, quoted by Decharme. She is _divine_ Nature in her
-entirety, _Aditi-Prakriti_ before she becomes Lakshmi. She is that
-Nature before whose majestic and fair face, “the winds fly away, the
-quieted sky pours torrents of light, and the sea-waves smile,”
-(Lucretius). When referred to as the Syrian goddess Astarte, the
-Astaroth of Hieropolis, the radiant planet was personified as a majestic
-woman, holding in one outstretched hand a torch, in the other, a crooked
-staff in the form of a cross. (_Vide_ Lucian’s _De Dea Syriê_, and
-Cicero’s _De Nat: Deorum_, 3 c.23). Finally, the planet is represented
-astronomically, as a globe _poised above the cross_—a symbol no devil
-would like to associate with—while the planet Earth is a globe with a
-cross _over it_.
-
-But then, these crosses are not the symbols of Christianity, but the
-Egyptian _crux ansata_, the attribute of Isis (who is Venus, and
-Aphrodite, Nature, also) ♀ or ♀ the planet; the fact that the Earth has
-the _crux ansata_ reversed, ♁ having a great occult significance upon
-which there is no necessity of entering at present.
-
-Now what says the Church and how does it explain the “dreadful
-association.” The Church believes in the devil, of course, and could not
-afford to lose him. “_The Devil is the chief pillar of the Church_”
-confesses unblushingly an advocate[5] of the _Ecclesia Militans_. “All
-the Alexandrian Gnostics speak to us of the fall of the Æons and their
-Pleroma, and all attribute that fall _to the desire to know_,” writes
-another volunteer in the same army, slandering the Gnostics as usual and
-identifying _the desire to know_ or occultism, magic, with Satanism.[6]
-And then, forthwith, he quotes from Schlegel’s _Philosophie de
-l’Histoire_ to show that the seven rectors (planets) of Pymander,
-“commissioned by God to contain the phenomenal world in their seven
-circles, lost in love with their own beauty,[7] came to admire
-themselves with such intensity that owing to this proud self-adulation
-they finally _fell_.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Thus saith Des Mousseaux. “Mœurs et Pratiques des Demons.” p. X.—and
- he is corroborated in this by Cardinal de Ventura. The Devil, he says,
- “is one of the great personages _whose life is closely allied to that
- of the Church_; and without him ... the fall of man could not have
- taken place. If it were not for him (the Devil), the Saviour, the
- Redeemer, the Crucified would be but the most ridiculous of
- supernumeraries and the Cross an insult to good sense.” And if so,
- then we should feel thankful to the poor Devil.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- De Mirville. “No Devil, no Christ,” he exclaims.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- This is only another version of Narcissus, the Greek victim of his own
- fair looks.
-
------
-
-Perversity having thus found its way amongst the angels, the most
-beautiful creature of God “revolted against its Maker.” That creature is
-in theological fancy Venus-Lucifer, or rather the informing Spirit or
-Regent of that planet. This teaching is based on the following
-speculation. The three principal heroes of the great sidereal
-catastrophe mentioned in _Revelation_ are, according to the testimony of
-the Church fathers—“the Verbum, Lucifer his usurper (see editorial) and
-the grand Archangel who conquered him,” and whose “palaces” (the
-“houses” astrology calls them) are in the Sun, Venus-Lucifer and
-Mercury. This is quite evident, since the position of these orbs in the
-Solar system correspond in their hierarchical order to that of the
-“heroes” in Chapter xii of _Revelation_ “their names and destinies (?)
-being closely connected in the theological (exoteric) system with these
-three great metaphysical names.” (De Mirville’s _Memoir_ to the Academy
-of France, on the rapping Spirits and the Demons).
-
-The outcome of this was, that theological legend made of Venus-Lucifer
-the sphere and domain of the fallen Archangel, or Satan before his
-apostacy. Called upon to reconcile this statement with that other fact,
-that the metaphor of “the morning star,” is applied to both Jesus, and
-his Virgin mother, and that the planet Venus-Lucifer is included,
-moreover, among the “stars” of the seven planetary spirits worshipped by
-the Roman Catholics[8] under new names, the defenders of the Latin
-dogmas and beliefs answer as follows:—
-
-“Lucifer, the jealous neighbour of the Sun (Christ) said to himself in
-his great pride: ‘I will rise as high as he!’ He was thwarted in his
-design by Mercury, though the brightness of the latter (who is St.
-Michael) was as much lost in the blazing fires of the great Solar orb as
-his own was, and though, like Lucifer, Mercury is only the assessor, and
-the guard of honour to the Sun.”—(_Ibid._)
-
------
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- The famous temple dedicated to the Seven Angels at Rome, and built by
- Michael-Angelo in 1561, is still there, now called the “Church of St
- Mary of the Angels.” In the old Roman Missals printed in 1563—one or
- two of which may still be seen in Palazzo Barberini—one may find the
- religious service (_officio_) of the seven angels, and their _old_ and
- occult names. That the “angels” are the pagan Rectors, under different
- names—the Jewish having replaced the Greek and Latin names—of the
- seven planets is proven by what Pope Pius V. said in his Bull to the
- Spanish Clergy, permitting and encouraging the worship of the said
- seven spirits of the stars. “One cannot exalt too much these _seven
- rectors_ of the world, _figured by the seven planets_, as it is
- consoling to our century to witness by the grace of God the cult of
- these _seven ardent lights_, and of these _seven stars_ reassuming all
- its lustre in the Christian republic.” (_Les Sept Esprits et
- l’Histoire de leur Culte_; De Mirville’s 2nd memoir addressed to the
- Academy. Vol. II. p. 358.)
-
------
-
-Guards of “dishonour” now rather, if the teachings of _theological_
-Christianity were true. But here comes in the cloven foot of the Jesuit.
-The ardent defender of Roman Catholic Demonolatry and of the worship of
-the seven planetary spirits, at the same time, pretends great wonder at
-the coincidences between old Pagan and Christian _legends_, between the
-fable about Mercury and Venus, and the _historical truths_ told of St.
-Michael—the “angel of the face,”—the terrestrial double, or _ferouer_ of
-Christ. He points them out saying: “like Mercury, the archangel Michael,
-is the _friend_ of the Sun, his Mitra, perhaps, for Michael is a
-_psychopompic_ genius, one who leads the separated souls to their
-appointed abodes, and like Mitra, he is the _well-known adversary of the
-demons_.” This is demonstrated by the book of the _Nabatheans_ recently
-discovered (by Chwolson), in which the Zoroastrian Mitra is called the
-“_grand enemy of the planet Venus_.”[9] (_ibid_ p. 160.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Herodotus showing the identity of Mitra and Venus, the sentence in the
- _Nabathean Agriculture_ is evidently misunderstood.
-
------
-
-There is something in this. A candid confession, for once, of perfect
-identity of celestial personages and of _borrowing_ from every pagan
-source. It _is_ curious, if unblushing. While in the oldest Mazdean
-allegories, Mitra conquers the planet Venus, in Christian tradition
-Michael defeats Lucifer, and both receive, as war spoils, the planet of
-the vanquished deity.
-
-“Mitra,” says Dollinger, “possessed, in days of old, the star of
-Mercury, placed between the sun and the moon, but he was given the
-planet of the conquered, and ever since his victory he is identified
-with Venus.” (_“Judaisme and Paganisme,” Vol. II., p. 109. French
-transl._)
-
-“In the Christian tradition,” adds the learned Marquis, “St. Michael _is
-apportioned in Heaven the throne and the palace of the foe he has
-vanquished_. Moreover, like Mercury, during the palmy days of paganism,
-which made sacred to this _demon_-god all the promontories of the earth,
-_the Archangel is the patron of the same in our religion_.” This means,
-if it does mean anything, that _now_, at any rate, Lucifer-Venus is a
-_sacred_ planet, and no synonym of Satan, since St. Michael has become
-his legal heir?
-
-The above remarks conclude with this cool reflection:
-
-“It is evident that paganism has _utilised beforehand_, and most
-marvellously, all the features and characteristics of the _prince of the
-face of the Lord_ (Michael) in applying them to that _Mercury_, to the
-Egyptian _Hermes Anubis_, and the _Hermes Christos_ of the Gnostics.
-Each of these was represented as the first among the divine councillors,
-and the god nearest to the sun, _quis ut Deus_.”
-
-Which title, with all its attributes, became that of Michael. The good
-Fathers, the Master Masons of the temple of _Church_ Christianity, knew
-indeed how to utilize pagan material for their new dogmas.
-
-The fact is, that it is sufficient to examine certain Egyptian
-_cartouches_, pointed out by Rossellini (_Egypte_, Vol. I., p. 289), to
-find Mercury (the double of Sirius in our solar system) as Sothis,
-preceded by the words “_sole_” and “_solis custode, sostegnon dei
-dominanti, e forte grande dei vigilanti_,” “watchman of the sun,
-sustainer of dominions, and the strongest of all the vigilants.” All
-these titles and attributes are now those of the Archangel Michael, who
-has inherited them from the _demons_ of paganism.
-
-Moreover, travellers in Rome may testify to the wonderful presence in
-the statue of Mitra, at the Vatican, of the best known Christian
-symbols. Mystics boast of it. They find “in his lion’s head, and the
-eagle’s wings, those of the courageous Seraph, the master of space
-(Michael); in his caduceus, the spear, in the two serpents coiled round
-the body, the struggle of the good and bad principles, and especially in
-the two keys which the said Mitra holds, like St. Peter, the keys with
-which this Seraph-patron of the latter opens and shuts the gates of
-Heaven, _astra cludit et recludit_.” (_Mem_: p. 162.)
-
-To sum up, the aforesaid shows that the theological romance of Lucifer
-was built upon the various myths and allegories of the pagan world, and
-that it is no _revealed_ dogma, but simply one invented to uphold
-superstition. Mercury being one of the Sun’s _assessors_, or the
-_cynocephali_ of the Egyptians and _the watch-dogs of the Sun_,
-literally, the other was _Eosphoros_, the most brilliant of the planets,
-“_qui mane oriebaris_,” the early rising, or the Greek ὀρθρινὸς. It was
-identical with the _Amoon-ra_, the light-bearer of Egypt, and called by
-all nations “the _second born_ of light” (the first being Mercury), the
-beginning of his (the Sun’s) ways of wisdom, the Archangel Michael being
-also referred to as the _principium viarum Domini_.
-
-Thus a purely astronomical personification, built upon an occult meaning
-which no one has hitherto seemed to unriddle outside the Eastern wisdom,
-has now become a dogma, part and parcel of Christian revelation. A
-clumsy transference of characters is unequal to the task of making
-thinking people accept in one and the same trinitarian group, the “Word”
-or Jesus, God and Michael (with the Virgin occasionally to complete it)
-on the one hand, and Mitra, Satan and Apollo-Abbadon on the other: the
-whole at the whim and pleasure of Roman Catholic Scholiasts. If Mercury
-and Venus (Lucifer) are (astronomically in their revolution around the
-Sun) the symbols of God the Father, the Son, and of their Vicar,
-Michael, the “Dragon-Conqueror,” in Christian legend, why should they
-when called Apollo-_Abaddon_, the “King of the Abyss,” Lucifer, Satan,
-or Venus—become forthwith devils and demons? If we are told that the
-“conqueror,” or “Mercury-Sun,” or again St. Michael of the _Revelation_,
-was given the spoils of the conquered angel, namely, his planet, why
-should opprobrium be any longer attached to a constellation so purified?
-Lucifer is now the “Angel of the Face of the Lord,”[10] because “that
-face is mirrored in it.” We think rather, because the Sun is reflecting
-his beams in Mercury seven times more than it does on our Earth, and
-twice more in Lucifer-Venus: the Christian symbol proving again its
-astronomical origin. But whether from the astronomical, mystical or
-symbological aspect, Lucifer is as good as any other planet. To advance
-as a proof of its demoniacal character, and identity with Satan, the
-configuration of Venus, which gives to the crescent of this planet the
-appearance of a cut-off horn is rank nonsense. But to connect this with
-the horns of “The Mystic Dragon” in _Revelation_—“one of which was
-broken”[11]—as the two French Demonologists, the Marquis de Mirville and
-the Chevalier des Mousseaux, the champions of the Church militant, would
-have their readers believe in the second half of our present century—is
-simply an insult to the public.
-
------
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- “Both in Biblical and pagan theologies,” says de Mirville, “the Sun
- has its god, its defender, and its sacrilegious usurper, in other
- words, its Ormuzd, its planet Mercury (Mitra), and its Lucifer, Venus
- (or Ahriman), taken away from its ancient master, and now given to its
- conqueror.” (p. 164.) Therefore, Lucifer-Venus is quite _holy_ now.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- In Revelation there is no “horn broken,” but it is simply said in
- Chapter XIII., 3. that John saw “one of his heads, as it were, wounded
- to death.” John knew naught in his generation of “a horned” devil.
-
------
-
-Besides which, the Devil had no horns before the fourth century of the
-Christian era. It is a purely Patristic invention arising from their
-desire to connect the god Pan, and the pagan Fauns and Satyrs, with
-their Satanic legend. The demons of Heathendom were as hornless and as
-tailless as the Archangel Michael himself in the imaginations of his
-worshippers. The “horns” were, in pagan symbolism, an emblem of divine
-power and creation, and of fertility in nature. Hence the ram’s horns of
-Ammon, of Bacchus, and of Moses on ancient medals, and the cow’s horns
-of Isis and Diana, etc., etc., and of the Lord God of the Prophets of
-Israel himself. For Habakkuk gives the evidence that this symbolism was
-accepted by the “chosen people” as much as by the Gentiles. In Chapter
-III. that prophet speaks of the “Holy One from Mount Paran,” of the Lord
-God who “comes from Teman, and _whose brightness was as the light_,” and
-who had “_horns_ coming out of his hand.”
-
-When one reads, moreover, the Hebrew text of Isaiah, and finds that no
-Lucifer is mentioned at all in Chapter XIV., v. 12, but simply הֵילֵל,
-_Hillel_, “a _bright_ star,” one can hardly refrain from wondering that
-_educated_ people should be still ignorant enough at the close of our
-century to associate a radiant planet—or anything else in nature for the
-matter of that—with the DEVIL![12]
-
- H. P. B.
-
------
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- The literal words used, and their translation, are: “_Aïk Naphelta
- Mi-Shamayim Hillel Ben-Shachar Negdangta La-Aretz Cholesch El-Goüm_,”
- or, “How art thou fallen from the heavens, Hillel, Son of the Morning,
- how art thou cast down unto the earth, thou who didst cast down the
- nations.” Here the word, translated “Lucifer,” is הילל, Hillel, and
- its meaning is “shining brightly or gloriously.” It is very true also,
- that by a pun to which Hebrew words lend themselves so easily, the
- verb _hillel_ may be made to mean “to howl,” hence, by an easy
- derivation, hillel may be constructed into “howler,” or a devil, a
- creature, however, one hears rarely, if ever, “howling.” In his
- Lexicon, Art. הל, Parkhurst says: “The Syriac translation of this
- passage renders it אילל ‘howl’; and even Jerome observes that it
- literally means ‘to howl.’” Michaelis translates it, ‘Howl, Son of the
- Morning.’ But at this rate, Hillel, the great Jewish sage and
- reformer, might also be called a “howler,” and connected with the
- devil!
-
------
-
-
-
-
- =THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT=:
-
- _A TALE OF LOVE AND MAGIC_.
-
- ---------------------
-
- BY MABEL COLLINS,
-
- Author of “THE PRETTIEST WOMAN IN WARSAW,” &c., &c., And Scribe of “THE
- IDYLL OF THE WHITE LOTUS,” and “THROUGH THE GATES OF GOLD.”
-
- ---------------------
-
- Only—
- One facet of the stone,
- One ray of the star,
- One petal of the flower of life,
- But the one that stands outermost and faces us, who are men and women.
-
-_This strange story has come to me from a far country and was brought to
-me in a mysterious manner; I claim only to be the scribe and the editor.
-In this capacity, however, it is I who am answerable to the public and
-the critics. I therefore ask in advance, one favour only of the reader;
-that he will accept (while reading this story) the theory of the
-reincarnation of souls as a living fact._
-
- _M. C._
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
- Containing two sad lives on earth,
- And two sweet times of sleep in Heaven.
-
- A LIFETIME.
-
-Overhead the boughs of the trees intermingle, hiding the deep blue sky
-and mellowing the fierce heat of the sun. The boughs are so covered with
-white blossoms that it is like a canopy of clustered snow-flakes, tinged
-here and there with a soft pink. It is a natural orchard, a spot
-favoured by the wild apricot. And among the trees, wandering from shine
-to shade, flitting to and fro, is a solitary figure. It is that of a
-young woman, a savage, one of a wild and fierce tribe dwelling in the
-fastnesses of an inaccessible virgin forest. She is dark but beautiful.
-Her blue-black hair hangs far down over her naked body; its masses
-shield the warm, quivering, nervous brown skin from the direct rays of
-the sun. She wears neither clothing nor any ornament. Her eyes are dark,
-fierce and tender: her mouth soft and natural as the lips of an opening
-flower. She is absolutely perfect in her simple savage beauty and in the
-natural majesty of her womanhood, virgin in herself and virgin in the
-quality of her race, which is untaught, undegraded. But in her sublimely
-natural face is the dawn of a great tragedy. Her soul, her thought, is
-struggling to awake. She has done a deed that seemed to her quite
-simple, quite natural; yet now it is done a dim perplexity is rising
-within her obscure mind. Wandering to and fro beneath the rich masses of
-blossom-laden boughs, she for the first time endeavours to question
-herself. Finding no answer within she goes again to look on that which
-she has done.
-
-A form lies motionless upon the ground within the thickest shade of the
-rich fruit trees. A young man, one of her own tribe, beautiful like
-herself, and with strength and vigour written in every line of his form.
-But he is dead. He was her lover, and she found his love sweet, yet with
-one wild treacherous movement of her strong supple arm she had killed
-him. The blood flowed from his forehead where the sharp stone had made
-the death wound. The life blood ebbed away from his strong young form; a
-moment since his lips still trembled, now they were still. Why had she
-in this moment of fierce passion taken that beautiful life? She loved
-him as well as her untaught heart knew how to love; but he, exulting in
-his greater strength, tried to snatch her love before it was ripe. It
-was but a blossom, like the white flowers overhead: he would have taken
-it with strong hands as though it were a fruit ripe and ready. And then
-in a sudden flame of wondrous new emotion the woman became aware that
-the man was her enemy, that he desired to be her tyrant. Until now she
-had thought him as herself, a thing to love as she loved herself, with a
-blind unthinking trust. And she acted passionately upon the guidance of
-this thing—feeling—which until now she had never known. He, unaccustomed
-to any treachery or anger, suspected no strange act from her, and thus,
-unsuspicious, unwarned, he was at her mercy. And now he lay dead at her
-feet. And still the fierce sun shone through the green leaves and
-silvern blossoms and gleamed upon her black hair and tender brown skin.
-She was beautiful as the morning when it rose over the tree tops of that
-world-old forest. But there is a new wonder in her dark eyes; a question
-that was not there until this strange and potent hour came to her. What
-ages must pass over her dull spirit ere it can utter the question; ere
-it can listen and hear the answer?
-
-The savage woman, nameless, unknown save of her tribe, who regard her as
-indifferently as any creature of the woods, has none to help her or stay
-in its commencement the great roll of the wave of energy she has
-started. Blindly she lives out her own emotions. She is dissatisfied,
-uneasy, conscious of some error. When she leaves the orchard of wild
-fruit trees and wanders back to the clearer part of the forest beneath
-the great trees, where her tribe dwells, when she returns among them her
-lips are dumb, her voice is silent. None ever heard that he, the one she
-loved, had died by her hand, for she knew not how to frame or tell this
-story. It was a mystery to her, this thing which had happened. Yet it
-made her sad, and her great eyes wore a dumb look of longing. But she
-was very beautiful and soon another young and sturdy lover was always at
-her side. He did not please her; there was not the glow in his eyes that
-had gladdened her in those of the dead one whom she had loved. And yet
-she shrunk not from him nor did she raise her arm in anger, but held it
-fast at her side lest her passion should break loose unawares. For she
-felt that she had brought a want, a despair upon herself by her former
-deed; and now she determined that she would act differently. Blindly she
-tried to learn the lesson that had come upon her. Blindly she let
-herself be the agent of her own will. For now she became the willing
-slave and serf of one whom she did not love, and whose passion for her
-was full of tyranny. Yet she did not, she dared not, resist this
-tyranny; not because she feared him, but because she feared herself. She
-had the feeling that one might have who had come in contact with a new
-and hitherto unknown natural force. She feared lest resistance or
-independence should bring upon her a greater wonder, a greater sadness
-and loss than that which she had already brought upon herself.
-
-And so she submitted to that which in her first youth would no more have
-been endured by her than the bit by the wild horse.
-
-The apricot blossom has fallen and fruit has followed it; the leaves
-have fallen and the trees are bare. The sky is grey and wild above, the
-ground dank and soft with fallen leaves below. The aspect of the place
-is changed, but it is the same; the face and form of the woman have
-changed; but she is the same. She is alone again in the wild orchard,
-finding her way by instinct to the spot where her first lover died. She
-has found it. What is there? Some white bones that lie together; a
-skeleton. The woman’s eyes fasten and feed on the sight and grow large
-and terrible. Horror at last is struck into her soul. This is all that
-is left of her young love, who died by her hand—white bones that lie in
-ghastly order! And the long hot days and sultry nights of her life have
-been given to a tyrant who has reaped no gladness and no satisfaction
-from her submission; for he has not learned yet even the difference
-between woman and woman. All alike are mere creatures like the wild
-things; creatures to hunt and to conquer. Dumbly in her dark heart
-strange questionings arise. She turns from this graveyard of her
-unquestioning time and goes back to her slavery. Through the years of
-her life she waits and wonders, looking blankly at the life around her.
-Will no answer come to her soul?
-
- ---
-
- AFTER SLEEP, AWAKENING.
-
-Splendid was the veil that shielded her from that other soul, the soul
-she knew and of which she showed her recognition by swift and sudden
-love. But the veil separated them; a veil heavy with gold and shining
-with stars of silver. And as she gazed upon these stars, with delighted
-admiration of their brilliance, they grew larger and larger, till at
-length they blended together, and the veil became one shining sheen
-gorgeous with golden broideries. Then it became easier to see through
-the veil, or rather it seemed easier to these lovers. For before the
-veil had made the shape appear dim; now it appeared glorious and ideally
-beautiful and strong. Then the woman put out her hand, hoping to obtain
-the pressure of another hand through the shining gossamer. And at the
-same instant he too put out his hand, for in this moment their souls
-communicated, and they understood each other. Their hands touched; the
-veil was broken; the moment of joy was ended and again the struggle
-began.
-
- ---
-
- A LIFETIME.
-
-Sitting, singing, on the steps of an old palace, her feet paddling in
-the water of a broad canal, was a child who was becoming more than a
-child; a creature on the threshold of life, of awakening sensation. A
-girl, with ruddy gold hair, and innocent blue eyes, that had in their
-vivid depths the strange startled look of a wild creature. She was as
-simple and isolated in her happiness as any animal of the woods or
-hills—the sunshine, the sweet air with the faint savour of salt in it,
-her own pure clear girlish voice, and the gay songs of the people that
-she sang—these were pleasure enough and to spare for her.
-
-But the space of unconscious happiness or unhappiness which heralds the
-real events of a life was already at an end. The great wave which she
-had set in motion was increasing in volume ceaselessly; how long before
-it shall reach the shore and break upon that far off coast? None can
-know, save those whose eyesight is more than man’s. None can tell; and
-she is ignorant, unknowing. But though she knows nothing of it, she is
-within the sweep of the wave, and is powerless to arrest it until her
-soul shall awake.
-
-“My blossom, my beautiful wild flower,” said a voice close beside her. A
-young boatman had brought his small vessel so gently to the steps she
-had not noticed his approach. He leaned over his boat towards her, and
-touched her bare white feet with his hand.
-
-“Come away with me, Wild Blossom,” he said. “Leave that wretched home
-you cling to. What is there to keep you there now your mother is dead?
-Your father is like a savage, and makes you live like a savage too. Come
-away with me, and we will live among people who will love you and find
-you beautiful as I do. Will you come? How often have I asked you, Wild
-Blossom, and you have never answered. Will you answer now?”
-
-“Yes,” said the girl, looking up with grave, serious eyes, that had
-beneath their beauty a melancholy meaning, a sad question.
-
-The man saw this strange look and interpreted it as clearly as he could.
-
-“Trust me,” he said, “I am not a savage like your father. When you are
-my little wife I will care for you far more dearly than myself. You will
-be my soul, my guide, my star. And I will shield you as my soul is
-shielded within my body, follow you as my guide, look up to you as to a
-star in the blue heavens. Surely you can trust my love, Wild Blossom.”
-
-He had not answered the doubt in her heart, for he had not guessed what
-it was, nor could she have told him. For she had not yet learned to know
-what it was, nor to know of it more than that it troubled her. But she
-put it aside and silenced it now, for the moment had come to do so. Not
-till she had learned her lesson much more fully could the question ever
-be expressed even to her own soul, and before this could be, the
-question must be silenced many times.
-
-“Yes,” she said, “I will come.”
-
-She held out her hand to him as if to seal the compact. He interpreted
-the gesture by his own desire, and taking her hand in his drew her
-towards him. She yielded and stepped into the boat. And then he quickly
-pushed away from the steps, and, dipping his oars in the water, soon had
-gone far away down the canal. Blossom looking earnestly back, watched
-the old palace disappear. In some of its old rooms and on its sunny
-steps her child-life had been spent. Now she knew that was at an end.
-She understood that all was changed henceforth, though she could not
-guess into what she was going, and she waited for her future with a
-strange confidence in the companion she had accepted. This puzzled her
-dimly. Yet how should she lack confidence, having known him long ago and
-thrown away his love and his life beneath the wild apricot trees, having
-seen afterwards the steadfastness of his love when her soul stood beside
-his in soul life?
-
-A long way they went in the little boat. They left the canals and went
-out upon the open sea, and still the boatman rowed unwearyingly, his
-eyes all the while upon the beautiful wild blossom he had plucked and
-carried away with him to be his own, his dear and adored possession. Far
-away along the coast lay a small village of fishermen’s cots. It was to
-this that the young man guided his boat, for it was here he dwelled.
-
-At the door of his cot stood his old mother, a quaint old woman with
-wrinkled, rosy face, wearing a rough fishwife’s dress and coarse shawl;
-her brown hand shaded her eyes as she watched her son’s boat
-approaching. Presently a smile came on her mouth. “He’s gotten the
-blossom he’s talked of so often in his sleep. Will he be happy now, the
-good lad?”
-
-He was truly a good lad; for his mother knew him well, and the more she
-knew him the deeper grew her love. She would do anything for his
-happiness. And now she took to her arms the child, the Blossom, and
-cherished her for his sake. Before many days had passed the fishing
-village made a _fête_ day for the wedding of its strongest boatman. And
-the women’s eyes filled with tears when they looked at the sad, tender,
-questioning face of the beautiful Wild Blossom.
-
-She had given her love without hesitation, in complete confidence. She
-had given more; herself, her life, her very soul. The surrender was now
-complete.
-
-And now, when all seemed done and all accomplished, her question began
-to be answered. Dimly she knew that, spite of the husband at whose feet
-she bowed, spite of the babes she carried in her arms till their tiny
-feet were strong enough to carry them down over the shore to the marge
-of the blue waters, spite of the cottage home she garnished and cleansed
-and loved so dearly, spite of all, her heart was hungry and empty. What
-could it mean, that though she had all she had none? Blossom was grown a
-woman now, and there were some lines of care and of pain on her
-forehead. Yet, still, she was beautiful and still she bore her
-child-name of Blossom; but the beauty of her face grew sadder and more
-strange as the years went by, the years that bring ease and satisfaction
-to the stagnant soul. Wild Blossom’s soul was eager and anxious; she
-could not still the mysterious voices of her heart, and these told her
-(though perhaps she did not always understand their speech) that her
-husband was not in reality her king; that he heard no sound from that
-inner region in which she chiefly existed. For him contentment existed
-in the outward life that he lived, in sheer physical pleasure, in the
-excitement of hard work, and the dangers of the sea, in the beauty of
-his wife, the mirth of his happy children. He asked no more. But Wild
-Blossom’s eyes had the prophetic light in them. She saw that all this
-peace must pass, this pleasure end; she recognised that these things did
-not, could not, absolutely satisfy the spirit; her soul seemed to
-tremble within her as she began to feel the first dawn of the terrible
-answer to her sad questioning.
-
- ---
-
- A deeper dream of rest;
- A stronger waking.
-
-Many a long year later, a solitary woman dwelled in that fisherman’s
-cottage on the shore of the blue sea. She was old and bowed with age and
-trouble. But still her eyes were brighter than any girl’s in the
-village, and held in them the mysterious beauty of the soul; still her
-hair, once golden, now grey, waved about her forehead. The people loved
-her and were kind to her, for she was always gentle and full of generous
-thought. But they never understood her, for they were long ages behind
-her in her growth. She was ready now for the great central test of
-personal existence; the experience of life in civilization. When the old
-fishwife lay dead within her cottage, and the people came to grieve
-beside her body, they little guessed that she was going on to a great
-and glorious future; a future full of daring and of danger. When her
-eyes closed in death, her inner eyes opened on a sight that filled her
-with absolute joy. She was in a garden of fruit trees, and the blossom
-of the trees was at its full. When her eyes fell on this white maze of
-flowers and drank in its beauty, she remembered the name she had borne
-on earth and dimly understood its meaning. The blossoms hid from her the
-sky and all else until a soft pressure on her hand drew her eyes
-downwards; and then she saw beside her that one whom she had loved
-through the ages, and who, side by side with her, was experiencing the
-profound mystery, and learning the strange lesson of incarnation in the
-world where sex is the first great teacher. And with each phase of
-existence that they passed through, these two forged stronger and
-stronger links that held them together and compelled them again and
-again to meet, so that together they were destined to pass through the
-vital hour; the hour when the life is shaped for greater ends or for
-vain deeds.
-
-Here within this sheltered place, where blossoms filled the air with
-sweetness and beauty, it seemed to them, that they had attained to the
-full of pleasure. They rested in perfect satisfaction, drinking deep
-draughts of the joy of living. To them existence seemed a final and
-splendid fact in itself; existence as they then had it. The moment in
-which they lived was sufficient, they desired none other, nor any other
-place, nor any other beauty, than those they had. None knows and none
-can tell what time or age was passed in this deep contentment and
-fulfilment of pleasure. At last Wild Blossom’s soul woke from its sleep,
-satiated; the hunger returned to gnaw at her heart; the longing to know
-reasserted itself. Holding tight the hand she held in hers, she sprang
-from the soft couch on which she lay. Then, for the first time, she
-noticed that the ground was so soft and pleasant, because there, where
-she had lain, had drifted great heaps of the fallen fruit blossoms. The
-ground was all white with them, though some had begun to lose their
-delicate beauty, to curl and wrinkle and turn dark. Then she looked
-overhead and saw that the trees had, with the loss of the delicate
-petals, lost their first fairness, the splendour of the spring. Now they
-were covered with small, hard, green fruit, scarce formed, unbeautiful
-to the eye, hard to the touch, acid to the taste. With a shudder of
-regret for the sweet spring time that was gone, Wild Blossom hurried
-away from the trees, still holding fast that other hand in hers. She was
-going to face new, strange experiences, perhaps terrible dangers: her
-task was the easier for that tried companionship, for the nearness of
-that other who was climbing the same steep ladder of life.
-
- END OF INTRODUCTION.
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
-In a masked ball there is an element of adventure that appeals to the
-daring of both sexes, to the bright and witty spirits. Hilary Estanol
-was just such an one as the hero of a bright revel should be. A
-beautiful boy, with a lovely face, and eyes that had in them a deep
-sadness. In repose his face was almost womanish in its softness; but a
-chill brilliance was in his smile, a certain slight cynicism coloured
-all his speech. Yet Hilary had no reason to be a cynic, and he was not
-one who adopted anything from fashion or affectation. The spring of this
-uncalled-for coldness and indifference lay in himself.
-
-To-night he was the centre of attraction in Madame Estanol’s
-drawing-rooms. This _bal masqué_ was to celebrate his coming of age, and
-Hilary had never looked so womanish as when he stood among his friends
-receiving their congratulations and admiring their gifts. He wore the
-dress of a troubadour, and it was one which became him well, not only in
-its picturesqueness as a costume, but in the requirements of the
-character. He had the faculty of the improvisatore, his voice was rich
-and soft, his musical and poetic gifts swift and versatile. Hilary was
-adored by his friends, but disliked, indeed almost hated, by his one
-near relation, his mother. She was standing near him now, talking to a
-group who had gathered round her. She was one of the cleverest women of
-the day, and, still beautiful and full of a charming pride, held a court
-of her own. Her dislike for Hilary was founded on her estimate of his
-character. To one of her intimate friends she had said, not long before
-this night, “Hilary will disgrace his name and family before there is
-one grey thread in his dark hair. He has the qualities that bring
-despair and ensure remorse. God will surely forgive me that I say this
-of my son; but I see it before me, an abyss into which he will drag me
-with him; and I wait for it every day.”
-
-A guest, just arrived, approached Madame Estanol with a smile, and after
-greeting her affectionately, said, in a whisper, “I have brought a
-friend with me. Welcome her in her character as a fortune-teller. She is
-very witty, and will amuse us presently, if you like.”
-
-She moved aside a little, and Madame Estanol saw standing behind her a
-stooping figure, an old haggard crone, with palsied head, and hand that
-trembled as it grasped her stick.
-
-“Ah, Countess! it is impossible to recognise your friend under this
-disguise,” said Madame Estanol. “Will you not tell me who she is?”
-
-“I am pledged to say nothing but that she is a fortune-teller,” said the
-Countess Bairoun. “Her name she herself will reveal only to one person;
-and that person must be born under the star that favoured her own
-birth.”
-
-The fortune-teller turned her bent head towards Madame Estanol, and
-fixed a pair of brilliant and fascinating eyes on hers. Immediately
-Madame Estanol became aware of a strong charm that drew her towards this
-mysterious person. She advanced and held out her hand to assist the old
-woman in moving across the room.
-
-“Come with me,” she said, “I should like to introduce you to my son. He
-is the hero of this scene to-night, for the ball is held in honour of
-his coming of age.”
-
-They went together through the maskers that were now beginning to throng
-the large drawing-rooms, and everyone turned to look at the strange
-figure of the tottering old crone. Hilary Estanol was leaning against
-the high carved oak mantel frame of the inner drawing-room, surrounded
-by a laughing group of his intimate friends. He held his mask in his
-hand, and as he stood there smiling, his dark curls falling on his
-forehead, his mother thought, as she approached him, “My boy grows
-handsomer every hour of his gay young life.” When Hilary saw his
-mother’s strange companion he advanced a step, as if to welcome her, but
-Madame Estanol checked him with a smile. “I cannot introduce our visitor
-to you,” she said, “for I do not know her name. She will tell it to but
-one person, who must have been born under the same star as herself.
-Meantime, we are to greet her in her character as the fortune-teller.”
-
-This announcement was welcomed by a murmur of amusement and interest.
-
-“Then will our kind visitor perhaps exercise her craft for us?” asked
-Hilary, gazing with curiosity at the trembling head and grey locks
-before him. The old woman turned her head sideways, and gave him a look
-from those strange brilliant eyes. He, too, like his mother, felt the
-charm from them. But he felt more. Something suddenly wakened within
-him; a rush of inexplicable emotions roused him into amazement; he put
-his hand to his forehead; he was bewildered, almost faint.
-
-There was a small drawing-room which opened out of the room they were
-in. It was so tiny that it held but a table covered with flowers, a low
-couch and an easy-chair. The laughing group that surrounded Hilary went
-eagerly to convert this room into the sanctum of the prophetess. They
-lowered and softened the shaded light; drew close the blinds and shut
-the doors, locking all but one. Here was placed a guardian who was to
-admit grudgingly and one by one those who were fortunate enough to speak
-alone with the sybil, for she would only see certain of the guests whom
-she selected herself from the throng, describing their appearance and
-dress to the guardian of her improvised temple. These were all ladies of
-great position. They entered laughing and half defiant. They came out,
-some pale, some red, some trembling, some in tears. “Who can she be?”
-they whispered in terrified tones to one another, and in that terror
-showed how she had penetrated their hearts and touched on their secret
-thoughts.
-
-At last the guardian of the door said that Hilary himself was to enter.
-
-When Hilary went in, the young man, as he closed the door on the fortune
-teller and her new guest, turned with a laugh to the group behind him.
-
-“Already she has startled him,” he said, “I heard him utter almost a cry
-as he entered.”
-
-“Could you see in?” asked one, “perhaps she has taken off her disguise
-for her host!”
-
-“No, I saw nothing,” he answered. “Can none of you who have been in
-guess who she is?”
-
-“No,” answered a girl who had come out from the ordeal with white and
-trembling lips. “It is impossible to guess. She knows everything.”
-
-It was as they had supposed. She had taken off her disguise for her
-host. The staff, the large cloak, the wig and cap lay on the ground.
-With the swift use of a cosmetiqued kerchief she had removed from her
-fair skin the dark complexion of the ancient sybil. When Hilary entered
-she had completed this rapid toilette and sat leaning back in a low
-chair. She was dressed in a rich evening costume; she held a mask in her
-hand ready for use. But now her face was uncovered; her strange and
-brilliant eyes were fixed on Hilary; her beautiful mouth wore a half
-smile of amusement at his surprise. It was more than surprise that he
-experienced. Again that rush of inexplicable emotion overpowered him. He
-felt like one intoxicated. He regarded her very earnestly for a few
-moments.
-
-“Surely,” he said, “we have met before!”
-
-“We were born under the same star,” she answered in a voice that
-thrilled him. Until now he had not heard her speak. The sense of some
-strong link or association that united them, was made doubly strong by
-the sound of that voice, rich, strong and soft. Suddenly he recognised
-the meaning of his emotion. He no longer struggled against it, he no
-longer was bewildered by it.
-
-He approached her and sat down upon the couch at her side. He regarded
-her with wonder and adoration, but no longer with awe or surprise. For
-he understood that the event which he had imagined would never come was
-already here—he was in love.
-
-“You said you would disclose your name to the one who was born under the
-same star as yourself.”
-
-“Do you not know me?” she said with a slight look of surprise. She
-fancied everyone knew her at least by sight.
-
-“I do not,” he answered, “though indeed I am perplexed to think I can
-ever have lived without knowing you.”
-
-Flattery produced no effect upon her, she lived in an atmosphere of it.
-
-“I am the Princess Fleta,” she answered. Hilary started and coloured a
-little at the words, and could ill control his emotion. The Princess
-Fleta held a position in the society of the country, which can only
-belong to one who stands next to a throne that rules an important
-nation. She was a personage among crowned heads, one to whom an emperor
-might, without stooping, offer his love; and Hilary, the child of an
-officer of the Austrian army, and of a poor daughter of a decayed
-aristocratic family, Hilary had in the swift stirring of love at first
-sight, told his own heart that he loved her! It could never be unsaid,
-and he knew it. He had whispered the words within himself, the whisper
-would find a hundred echoes. He must always love her.
-
-The Princess turned her wonderful eyes on him and smiled.
-
-“I have done my work for to-night,” she said. “I have amused some of the
-people, now I should like to dance.”
-
-Hilary was sufficient of a courtier not to be deaf to this command,
-though his whole soul was in his eyes and all his thoughts fixed on her
-beauty. He rose and offered her his arm, she put on her mask and they
-left the room. When Hilary appeared among the crowd that hung round the
-door of the fortune teller’s sanctum, accompanied by a slender, graceful
-woman, whose face was hidden save for the great dark eyes, there was an
-irrepressible murmur of excitement and wonder. “Who can she be?” was
-repeated again a hundred times. But no one guessed. None dreamed this
-could be the Princess Fleta herself; for there were but few houses she
-would visit at, and no one imagined that there could be any inducement
-to bring her to Madame Estanol’s. The mystery of her presence she
-explained to Hilary while they danced together.
-
-“I am a student of magic,” she said, “and I have already learned some
-useful secrets. I can read the hearts of the courtiers who surround me,
-and I know where to look for true friends. Last night I dreamed of the
-friend I should find here. Do you care for these mystic occupations?”
-
-“I know nothing of them,” said Hilary.
-
-“Let me teach you then,” said the Princess, with a light laugh. “You
-will be a good pupil, that I know. Perhaps I may make a disciple of you!
-and there are not many with whom that is possible.”
-
-“And why?” asked Hilary. “Surely it is a fascinating study to those who
-can believe in the secrets.”
-
-“Scepticism is not the great difficulty,” answered the Princess, “but
-fear. Terror turns the crowd back from the threshold. Only a few dare
-cross it.”
-
-“And you are one of the few,” said Hilary, gazing on her with eyes of
-burning admiration.
-
-“I have never felt fear,” she answered.
-
-“And would it be impossible to make you feel it, I wonder,” said Hilary.
-
-“Do you desire to try?” she answered, with a smile at his daring speech.
-It did not sound so full of impertinence as it looks, for Hilary’s eyes
-and face were all alight with love and admiration, and his voice
-trembled with passion.
-
-“You can make the attempt if you choose,” she said, glancing at him with
-those strange eyes of hers. “Terrify me if you can.”
-
-“Not here, in my own house, it would not be hospitable.”
-
-“Come and see me, then, some day when you think it will amuse you. Try
-and frighten me. I will show you my laboratory, where I produce essences
-and incenses to please the gnomes and ghouls.”
-
-Hilary accepted this invitation with a flush of pleasure.
-
-“Take me to the Countess,” she said at last. “I am going home. But I
-want her first to introduce me to your mother.”
-
-The Countess was delighted that the Princess had made up her mind to
-this. She hardly thought Madame Estanol would be pleased to discover
-that the great lady had been masquerading in her drawing-room, and had
-not cared to throw off her disguise even for her hostess. And the
-Countess valued the friendship of Madame Estanol; so she was glad the
-wilful Princess had decided to treat her with politeness.
-
-Madame Estanol could scarcely conceal her surprise at learning what the
-dignity was which had been hidden under the disguise of the old
-fortune-teller. The Princess did not remove her mask, and, with a laugh,
-she warned Madame Estanol that some of her guests would not be pleased
-to discover who the sybil was who had read their hearts so shrewdly.
-
-When she had gone, Hilary’s heart and spirits had gone with her. It
-seemed as if he hardly cared to speak; his laughter had died away
-altogether. His thoughts, his very self, followed the fascinating
-personality that had bewitched him.
-
-Madame Estanol saw his abstraction, his flushed eager look, and the new
-softness of his eyes. But she said no word. She feared the Princess, who
-was well known to be full of caprice and wilfulness. She feared lest
-Hilary should be mad enough to yield to the charm of the girl’s beauty
-and confident manner; the charm of power, peculiar, or rather, possible
-only to one in a royal place. But she would say no word; knowing Hilary
-well, she knew that any attempt to influence him against it would only
-intensify his new passion.
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
-Two days later Hilary nerved himself to pay the visit to the Princess.
-He thought she could not consider it to be too soon, for it seemed to
-him two months since he had seen her.
-
-She lived in a garden-house some two or three miles away in the country.
-Her father’s palace in the city never pleased her; she only came there
-when festivities or ceremonials made her presence necessary. In the
-country, with her chaperone and her maids, she was free to do as she
-chose. For they were one and all afraid of her, and held her
-“laboratory” in the profoundest respect. None of them would have entered
-that room except to avoid some dreadful doom.
-
-Hilary was taken to the Princess in the garden, where she was walking to
-and fro in an avenue of trees which were covered with sweet scented
-blossoms. She welcomed Hilary with a charming manner, and the hour he
-spent with her here in the sunshine was one of the wildest intoxication.
-They began openly to play the pretty game of love. Now that no eyes were
-on them the Princess let him forget that she belonged to a different
-rank from his own. When she was tired of walking, “Come,” she said, “and
-I will shew you my laboratory. No one in this house ever enters it. If
-you should say in the city that you have been in that room you will be
-besieged with questions. Be careful to say nothing.”
-
-“I would die sooner,” exclaimed Hilary, to whom the idea of talking
-about the Princess and her secrets seemed like sacrilege.
-
-The room was without windows, perfectly dark but for a softened light
-shed by a lamp in the centre of the high ceiling. The walls were painted
-black and on them were drawn strange figures and shapes in red. These
-had evidently not been painted by any artisan hand; though bold in
-touch, they were irregular in workmanship. Beside a great vessel which
-stood upon the ground, was a chair, and in this chair a figure upon
-which Hilary’s attention immediately became fastened.
-
-He saw at once that it was not human, that it was not a lay figure, that
-it was not a statue. It resembled most a lay figure, but there was
-something strange about it which does not exist in the mere form on
-which draperies are hung. And its detail was elaborated; the skin was
-tinted, the eyes darkened correctly, the hair appeared to be human.
-Hilary remained at the doorway unable to advance because of the
-fascination this form exercised upon him.
-
-The Princess looked back from where she stood in the centre of the room
-beneath the light; she saw the direction of his gaze and laughed.
-
-“You need not fear it,” she said.
-
-“Is it a lay figure?” asked Hilary, trying to speak easily, for he
-remembered that she despised those who knew fear.
-
-“Yes,” she answered, “it is my lay figure.”
-
-There was something that puzzled Hilary in her tone.
-
-“Are you an artist?” he asked.
-
-“Yes,” she answered, “in life—in human nature. I do not work with a
-pencil or a brush; I use an agent that cannot be seen yet can be felt.”
-
-“What do you mean?” asked Hilary.
-
-She turned on him a strange look, that was at first distrustful, and
-then grew soft and tender.
-
-“I will not tell you yet,” she said.
-
-Hilary roused himself to answer her lightly.
-
-“Have I to pass through some ordeal before you tell me?” he asked.
-
-“Yes,” she answered gaily, “and already an ordeal faces you. Dare you
-advance into the room or no?”
-
-Hilary made a great effort to break the spell that was on him. He went
-hastily across the room to where she stood. Then he realised that he had
-actually passed through an ordeal. He had resisted some force, the
-nature of which he knew not, and he had come out the victor. Realising
-this brought to him another conviction.
-
-“Princess,” he said, “there is some one else in this room besides you
-and me. We are not alone.”
-
-He spoke so suddenly, and from so great a sense of startled surprise,
-that he did not pause to think whether his question were a wise one or
-not. The Princess laughed as she looked at him.
-
-“You are very sensitive,” she said. “Certainly we were born under the
-same star, for we are susceptible to the same influences. No, we are not
-alone. I have servants here whom no eyes have seen but mine. Would you
-like to see them? Do not say yes hastily. It means a long and tedious
-apprenticeship, obtaining mastery over these servants. But unless you
-conquer them you cannot often see me; for if you are much near to me
-they will hate you, and their hate is greater than your power to resist
-it.”
-
-She spoke seriously now, and Hilary felt a strange sensation as he
-looked at this beautiful girl standing beneath the lamp light. He
-experienced a sudden dread of her as of someone stronger than himself;
-and also an impassioned desire to serve her, to be her slave, to give
-his life to her utterly. Perhaps she read the love in his eyes, for she
-turned away and moved towards the figure in the chair.
-
-“I know this distresses you,” she said. “You shall see it no longer.”
-She opened a large screen which was formed of some gold coloured
-material covered with shapes outlined in black. She arranged this so
-that the figure was altogether hidden from view and also the great
-vessel which stood beside it.
-
-“Now,” she said, “you will breathe more freely. And I am going to shew
-you something. We did not come out of the sunshine for no purpose. And
-we must be quick, for my good aunt will be terrified when she finds I
-have brought you in here. I believe she will hardly expect to see you
-alive again.”
-
-She opened a gold vessel, which stood upon a cabinet, while she spoke,
-and the air immediately became full of a strong sweet perfume. Hilary
-put his hand to his forehead. Was it possible that he could be so
-immediately affected, or was it his imagination that the red shapes and
-figures which were on the black wall moved and ordered and arranged
-themselves? Yet, so it was; to his eyes the forms mingled and again
-broke up and re-mingled. A word was formed and then another. It was
-unconsciously imprinted on Hilary’s memory before it changed and
-vanished; he noticed only the mysterious occurrence which was happening
-before his eyes. Suddenly he became aware that a sentence had been
-completed; that words had been written there which he would never have
-dared to utter; that on the wall before him had appeared in letters as
-of fire the secret of his heart. He staggered back and drew his eyes
-with difficulty from the wall to fix them in amazement and fear upon the
-Princess. Her face was flushed, her eyes were bright and tender.
-
-“Did you see it?” he asked in a trembling voice.
-
-For a moment she hesitated then she answered, “Yes, I saw it.”
-
-There was a brief silence. Hilary looked again at the wall, expecting to
-see the thought in his mind written there. But the shapes were returning
-to their original appearance, and the perfume was dying out of the air.
-
-“Come,” said the Princess suddenly, “we have been here long enough. My
-aunt will be distressed. Let us go to her.”
-
-She led the way from the room, and Hilary followed her. In another
-moment they were in a large drawing-room, flooded with sunshine and
-fragrant with flowers; the Princess’ aunt was busied with silks which
-she had entangled while at her embroidery; the Princess was on her knees
-beside her, holding a skein of yellow silk upon her hands. Hilary stood
-a moment utterly bewildered. Had he been dreaming? Was that black room
-and its terrible atmosphere a phantasy?
-
-He had stayed long enough, and he now took his leave reluctantly. The
-Princess, who would have no ceremony at the Garden House, rose from her
-knees and said she would open the gate for him. Hilary flushed with
-pleasure at this mark of kindness.
-
-The gate she took him to was a narrow one that stood in a thick-set
-hedge of flowering shrubs. When he had passed through he looked back,
-and saw the Princess leaning on the gate, framed in gorgeous blossoms.
-She smiled and held out her hand to him. The richness of her presence
-intoxicated him, and he lost all sense of the apparently impassable gulf
-between them.
-
-“You read the words,” he said, “and you give me your hand in mine?”
-
-“I read the words,” she answered, in a soft voice that thrilled him,
-“and I give you my hand in yours. Good-bye!”
-
-She had touched his hand for an instant, and now she was gone. Hilary
-turned to walk through the flowering hedges to the city. But his heart,
-his thought, his soul remained behind. She had read the words, and she
-was not angry. She knew of his love for her and she was not angry. She
-had read his heart and had not taken offence. What might he not hope
-for?
-
-Then came another thought. She had read the words. Then that black room
-was no phantasy, but a fact as actual as the sunshine. What were the
-powers of this strange creature that he loved? He knew not; but he knew
-that he loved her.
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-An overpowering desire carried him daily on that road between the
-flowery hedges to the Garden House. Only sometimes had he the courage to
-enter. Most often he lingered at that narrow gate, embosomed in flowers
-and looked longingly over it. The first time that he entered after this
-visit, in which his secret was written before his eyes, he found the
-Princess standing within the gate. She held out her hand to him saying
-simply, “I knew you were coming. I have prepared something, and I have
-persuaded my aunt that no terrible thing will happen if you are in my
-laboratory for a little while. So come with me.”
-
-It was brilliantly lit, this black walled room she called her
-laboratory. The great vessel stood in the midst of the floor beneath the
-lamp, and from it rose flame and smoke. A strong and vivid perfume
-filled the air, and the upper part of the high room was clouded with
-grey blue smoke, that shone in the light like silver.
-
-In the chair beside it sat a figure: it was that of a beautiful woman. A
-strange mixture of emotions overpowered Hilary. At the first glance he
-felt that this figure was the same he had seen the other day; at the
-second he recognised his mother. He rushed forward to her and became
-aware that she was lifeless; then he turned passionately upon the
-Princess with anger and horror in his face.
-
-“What have you done? What have you done?” he cried.
-
-“Nothing,” she said, with a smile. “I have done no harm. Do you not see
-that is only an image? My lay figure, as I told you.”
-
-He gave a long look at the inanimate shape that was so perfect a
-representation of his mother, and then he turned upon the Princess a
-look of more intense horror than before.
-
-“What are you doing?” he asked, in a low voice.
-
-“No harm!” she answered lightly. “Your mother hates and fears me. I
-cannot endure that. I am making her love me. I am making her desire your
-presence here with me.”
-
-For a while they stood in silence by the side of the vessel and its
-flaming contents; then suddenly Hilary cried out: “I cannot bear it! Put
-an end to this terrible spell!”
-
-“Yes,” said the Princess, “I will, but not to its results.”
-
-She drew the screen before the seated figure, and threw something into
-the vessel that instantly quenched the flame.
-
-Then she led Hilary from the room, and they walked up and down beneath
-the trees, talking of things as lovers talk—things that interested
-themselves but none other.
-
-When Hilary returned home his mother rose from her couch and held out
-her hand to him. She drew him to sit beside her.
-
-“Hilary,” she said, “something tells me you have been with the Princess
-Fleta. It is well, and I am glad. She is a good friend for you; ask her
-if I shall come to see her.”
-
-Hilary rose without replying. The dew stood on his brow. For the first
-time he was conscious of actual fear, and the fear he felt was of the
-woman he loved.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
- A LAW OF LIFE: KARMA.
-
-There is nothing more common to those who know anything about Theosophy
-than to be asked:—What is Karma? Karma is a Sanskrit word which has to
-be used by those who discuss the idea it conveys, simply because there
-is no English word to correspond to it. That is very easy to answer.
-Then comes the question:—What is the idea which it conveys? Than this
-there is nothing more difficult to answer, and the reason why this is
-the case is not far to seek. Let it once be granted that the
-constitution of man is complex and complicated, and that the soul has
-existed for ages that seem like an eternity, and existed, moreover, in a
-garb of flesh which has been changed thousands of times in the course of
-those ages. Let this be granted, and, in addition, that no action is
-without its effect in the physical, moral, and spiritual worlds, then,
-it will be seen, that the answer to the question: “What is Karma,” is
-very difficult, if not well-nigh impossible. Still, some endeavour may
-be made to give a general idea, though the details of any individual
-case can hardly be calculated.
-
-Granting the principle of reincarnation, Karma is the _working_ of the
-great law which governs those incarnations; but, taken in its wider
-sense, Karma may be defined as a manifestation of the One, Universal,
-Divine Principle in the phenomenal world. Thus, it may be further
-defined as “the great law of Harmony” which governs the Universe.
-
-But it may be replied that Harmony is not the great law of Nature, but,
-on the contrary, lack of harmony and discord. And what proof is there
-that Harmony is the law?
-
-When such proof is required, the answer is at once made:—Too short a
-view of life and the universe has been taken. The man who denies the
-existence of harmony in the universe has transgressed the law and is
-experiencing the punishment. He does this unconsciously to himself,
-because the law of harmony forms an unconscious impulse to its
-re-adjustment when it has been broken. No better illustration can be
-given than in the definition of a fugue, which is:—“A musical
-composition in contrapuntal style, in which a subject is proposed by one
-part, and then responded to by the others according to certain rules.”
-Again, in musical chords, the composing notes, if taken by twos and
-threes, will be found in discord, but, when taken altogether, produce a
-harmony. Harmony is then the just adaptation of things to each other,
-and the universe, the personal element of man being eliminated, is
-essentially an evidence of harmony; otherwise it could not exist, for it
-would fall to pieces and no longer be a universe. To those who find only
-discord around them, the note to Rule 5, in the second part of “Light on
-the Path,” may convey a meaning. No other words can express it better.
-One reason for the apparent disharmony may be given. The desires of man
-are, as a rule, devoted to the gain of what may be called his
-personality. While such is the case in any man, to the exclusion of
-other interests, that man cannot dive deep into his own heart and
-perceive the real underlying harmony. He is incapable of understanding
-or even of perceiving it, because his attention is solely devoted to
-that which produces discord. Naturally, then, to him all things seem out
-of joint, the reign of discord is ever present, and he cries out
-perpetually against the injustice of the world he lives in. But if he
-will but turn his attention from his personality to the greater span of
-his life, and endeavour first to see evidence of harmony in those around
-him and then in himself, he will find that harmony; and his way will be
-made plain to him.
-
-Granting, then, that it is the Great Law of Harmony or Karma which
-governs the Universe, and which is the Divine principle under one aspect
-manifested in Nature, then it is easy to understand that any action in
-violation of Nature’s laws will produce a deviation from the straight
-line of harmony; consequently the law of harmony will produce an
-adjusting effect. Now, who is to produce that effect? Nature, or the man
-who committed the action? Both, or rather, the latter under the
-influence of the former. The latter most certainly, unless man is to be
-regarded simply as a blind puppet. It is possible to compare the
-situation to that of a man whose progress is contingent upon an exact
-balance being preserved on a pair of scales in front of him. If his
-actions disturb the balance of those scales and add weight to one side
-or the other, it is necessary immediately to add a counter-balancing
-weight on the opposite side and so restore the balance or harmony. (Of
-course this is a physical illustration, and can hardly be carried very
-far on the moral plane.) That is to say that the one Divine principle is
-divided by man’s actions into two opposing forces of good and evil, and
-man’s progress depends on the exertion of his will to preserve harmony
-and prevent deviation to one side or the other. Evil only exists in
-contradistinction to good, and the preservation of such harmony as we
-have and the advance towards Universal Harmony—the abstract divinity—is
-what all right-minded persons theoretically aspire to.
-
-It has been thought that, in consequence of the attention paid to the
-classics in education, the word Nemesis would replace Karma with
-advantage. So perhaps it might have done, had the earliest traditions of
-Greek mythology been preserved. But the fatal tendency towards
-anthropomorphism set in very strongly even in the palmy days of Greece,
-and in consequence Nemesis only pourtrayed the personification of a
-human passion. Originally the balancing power, independent of Zeus and
-all the Olympian gods, who carried out her decrees, Nemesis became
-simply the avenging deity; so much was this the case that in a general
-sense she might have been called the tutelary deity of those envious of
-their neighbour’s happiness. Between these points Nemesis appears as the
-personification of the moral reverence for law, of the natural fear of
-committing a wrong action, and hence the personification of conscience.
-It was after this period that Nemesis was said to direct human affairs,
-with a view to restore the balance between happiness and unhappiness.
-But, in earlier times, the idea of Nemesis was divided into those of
-_Nemesis_ and _Adrasteia_ (or what Orientalists would call good and evil
-Karma), for even then the idea of evil was beginning to be attached to
-Nemesis.
-
-But Nemesis was closely linked to both the _Moirae_ (Fates) and the
-_Eumenides_ (Furies), who were all the children of Zeus and Night. The
-_Moirae_ appear generally as divinities of fate in a strict sense, and
-act independently at the helm of necessity. They direct fate, and watch
-that the fate assigned to every being _by eternal laws_ shall take its
-course (_Aesch_: _Prometheus Vinctus_, 511-515). Zeus, as well as gods
-and men, submits to them. They assign their proper functions to the
-Erinnyes who inflict the punishment, and are sometimes called their
-sisters (_Aesch_: _Eumen_: 335, 962; _Prometheus_ 516, 696, 895). These
-latter were always considered to be more ancient than the Olympian gods,
-and were therefore not under the rule of Zeus, though they honoured and
-esteemed him. The crimes which they especially punished were (1),
-violation of the respect due to old age; (2), perjury; (3), murder; (4),
-violation of the law of hospitality; (5), improper conduct towards
-suppliants; and the punishment was inflicted not only after death but
-during life. (It is somewhat curious that these “crimes” are also those
-actions which entail the heaviest Karma.) No prayers, sacrifices, or
-tears could move them or protect the object of their persecution. When
-they feared that he would escape, they called in _Dikè_ to their
-assistance, with whom they were closely connected, as justice was said
-to be their only object.
-
-Now when the meaning of all these “minor” Greek deities is considered,
-and further, if it is considered in connection with the definition of
-Karma, it will be seen that all are so many personifications of the main
-divisions of the law of ancient Nemesis or Karma. But the one word
-cannot, in popular estimation, replace the other; for, as said above,
-Nemesis has lost its original meaning, and is almost invariably
-associated with the idea of vengeance. Karma, however, has never lost
-its essential connection with the law of Harmony, though even in this
-case there is some tendency to confine it to the law of cause and
-effects, and to consider what is called evil Karma solely in relation to
-human life. This is almost inevitable, while the human personality takes
-the foremost place in the consideration of each man, and his own
-welfare, in time and eternity, is the goal of his endeavours. As said
-above, while this is the case man cannot regard the great laws of the
-Universe, nor recognise himself as part of it, and thus his life is
-confined to the world of effects, and can never enter that of causes.
-Thus it is ignorance of the law of Harmony that leads him to struggle in
-vain, in this world, for the apparent advantage of surpassing his
-neighbour, and—worse—to instinctively carry the struggle beyond death,
-and attempt to advance in favour in the so-called heavenly kingdom.
-
-This is the result of the pernicious doctrine of reward and punishment
-after death, in heaven or in hell. Nothing could have been found more
-calculated to circumscribe the view of life as a whole, and concentrate
-man’s attention on temporary matters. It is inevitable that man should
-regard his soul as something fashioned after his struggling personality,
-and very similar to it; and this view of his personality was not
-calculated to agree with the loftiness of the ideas about the soul. From
-this point of view he either rejected the idea of soul as altogether
-worthless, or else he transferred his interest to the soul’s welfare in
-Heaven—in either case concentrating his attention on what is inevitably
-transient. It is as though a man lost sight of the fact of respiration
-in its component parts of inspiration and expiration; that is to say,
-that one respiration is taken as the whole, and the millions of other
-respirations in the course of a human life are lost sight of and
-forgotten. Thus the man who adapts his life to the ordinary views, with
-regard to life on earth and life in Heaven, fixes his thoughts and
-aspirations on what is transient, and desires to intensify that. No
-truer words were ever spoken than by Christ when he said:—“What shall it
-profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul.” It is a
-loss which man will inevitably experience if he pursues this purblind
-course of endeavour, for he will lose sight of his _real_ soul
-altogether, and he—as _he_, that is—will never regain it. He follows a
-flickering Will-o’-the-Wisp, and finds his way only into a treacherous
-marsh; the result being that the whole of that incarnation is wasted,
-and a stumbling block, perhaps, placed in the way of the next. This
-danger is, as said, due to neglect or ignorance of the idea of Karma,
-and to the purblind view consequently taken of the great scope of human
-life.
-
-In the _Theosophist_, of July, 1887, Mr. Subba Row deals with the
-doctrine of Karma as contained in the Bhagavadgita. His lecture contains
-one of the clearest elucidations of the metaphysical side of the
-question which it is possible to put in language, so far as the Kosmic
-aspect of Karma is concerned. In it, and the previous lectures, Mr.
-Subba Row dealt with three main bases or vehicles[13] (states of matter)
-through which the light of the spirit is reflected into the phenomenal
-world. These vehicles, when traced to their origin, lead to _prakriti_,
-or matter; as opposed to _purusha_, or spirit.
-
------
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Sanskrit Upadhi.
-
------
-
- “So Krishna says that all Karma is traceable to Upadhi, and hence to
- _Prakriti_. _Karma_ itself depends upon conscious existence. Conscious
- existence entirely depends upon the constitution of man’s mind....
- _Upadhi_ is the cause of individual existence. Existence itself, I
- mean living existence, is, however, traceable to this light (of the
- Logos). All conscious existence is traceable to it, and, furthermore,
- when spiritual intelligence is developed, it directly springs from
- it.... Now it is through the action of this _Karma_ that individual
- existence makes its appearance. On account of this _Karmae_ individual
- existence is maintained, and it is on account of _Karma_ that man
- suffers all the pains and sorrows of earthly existence. Birth, life,
- and death, and all the innumerable ills to which human nature is
- subject, are endured by mankind owing to this _Karma_.... Thus
- _Karma_, being the inevitable result of _Prakriti_, and _Prakriti_
- continuing to exist as long as you are a human being, it is useless to
- try to get rid of _Karma_.... When you renounce this desire (desire to
- do Karma other than from a sense of duty), _Karma_ will become weaker
- and weaker in its ability to affect you, till at last you arrive at a
- condition in which you are not affected by _Karma_ at all, and that
- condition is the condition of _Mukti_.”[14]
-
------
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Liberation or Nirvana.
-
------
-
- “Those philosophers who want to reject all _Karma_ pretend to renounce
- it altogether. But that is an impossible task. No man, so long as he
- is a human being, can ever give up _Karma_ altogether. He is at least
- bound to do that which the bare existence of his physical body
- requires, unless, indeed, he means to die of starvation, or otherwise
- put an untimely end to his life.”
-
- “Supposing you do give up _Karma_—that is abstain from it in action,
- how can you keep control over your own minds? It is useless to abstain
- from an act, and yet be constantly thinking of it. If you come to the
- resolution that you ought to give up _Karma_, you must necessarily
- conclude that you ought not even to think about these things. That
- being so, let us see in what a condition you will then place
- yourselves. As almost all our mental states have some connection with
- the phenomenal world, and are somehow or other connected with _Karma_
- in its various phases, it is difficult to understand how it is
- possible for a man to give up all _Karma_, unless he can annihilate
- his mind, or get into an eternal state of _Sushupti_ (_dreamless_
- slumber). Moreover, if you have to give up all _Karma_, you have to
- give up good _Karma_ as well as bad, for _Karma_, in its widest sense,
- is not confined to bad actions. If all the people in the world give up
- _Karma_, how is the world to exist? Is it not likely that an end will
- then be put to all good impulses, to all patriotic and philanthropic
- deeds, that all the good people, who have been and are exerting
- themselves in doing unselfish deeds for the good of their fellow men,
- will be prevented from working? If you call upon everybody to give up
- _Karma_, you will simply create a number of lazy drones, and prevent
- good people from benefiting their fellow beings.”
-
- “And furthermore, it may be argued that this is not a rule of
- universal applicability. How few are there in the world who can give
- up their whole _Karma_, and reduce themselves to a condition of
- eternal inactivity. And if you ask these people to follow this course,
- they may, instead of giving up _Karma_, simply become lazy, idle
- persons, who have not really given up anything. What is the meaning of
- the expression, to give up _Karma_? Krishna says that in abstaining
- from doing a thing there may be the effects of active _Karma_, and in
- active _Karma_ there may be no real Karmic results. If you kill a man,
- it is murder, and you are held responsible for it; but suppose you
- refuse to feed your old parents and they die in consequence of your
- neglect, do you mean to say that you are not responsible for that
- _Karma_? You may talk in the most metaphysical manner you please, you
- cannot get rid of _Karma_ altogether.”
-
- “Taking all these circumstances into consideration, and admitting the
- many mischievous consequences that will follow as the result of
- recommending every human being to give up _Karma_, Krishna adds all
- that is to be found in the teaching that makes the Logos the means of
- salvation, and recommends man—if he would seek to obtain immortality—a
- method by following which he is sure to reach it, and not one that may
- end in his having to go through another incarnation, or being absorbed
- into another spiritual being whose existence is not immortal.”
-
- “The recommendation to practice and obtain self-mastery, Krishna
- accepts. But he would add to it more effectual means of obtaining the
- desired end—means sufficient in themselves to enable you to reach that
- end. He points out that this practise of self-mastery is not only
- useful for training in one birth, but is likely to leave permanent
- impulses on a man’s soul which come to his rescue in future
- incarnations.”...
-
- “Krishna, in recommending his own method, combines all that is good in
- the five systems, and adds thereto all those necessary means of
- obtaining salvation that follow as inferences from the existence of
- the _Logos_, and its real relationship to man and to all the
- principles that operate in the cosmos. His is certainly more
- comprehensive than any of the theories from which these various
- schools of philosophy have started, and it is this theory that he is
- trying, in the second six chapters of the Bhagavadgita,to inculcate.”
-
-In the above quoted lecture Karma was considered in its Kosmic and
-universal aspect, but no attempt was made to consider it in its
-individual aspect as applied to the various great sections of Being on
-this planet. The first approach to this is seen in the animal kingdom.
-Doubtless, the mineral and vegetable kingdoms are under the law of
-Harmony with Nature; it could not possibly be otherwise for they are
-closer to what is known as nature and much less individualised. But
-there is so little individualisation in these kingdoms that it is hardly
-possible to consider them in relation to the law of harmony, or to that
-of Cause and Effect on the plane of objectivity. But to anyone who has
-thought about the question it is plain that the animal kingdom, in its
-individuals, does come at least under the law of cause and effect. This
-may practically be called the working of Karma on the physical plane and
-by some has been called the law of Compensation, this being a term
-expressive of mechanical and physical energy. The word Karma had better
-be retained to express the working of the law of harmony on that plane
-where moral responsibility begins, and where “the law of compensation
-can be modified by will and reason,” and where therefore personal merit
-and demerit exists. To quote from an article in the Theosophist on the
-Karma of animals:—
-
- “A piece of iron is attracted to a magnet without having any desire in
- the matter. If it is exposed to air and water, it may become rusty and
- cannot prevent it. A plant or a tree may be straight or crooked on
- account of circumstances over which it has no control. An animal
- usually follows the instincts of its nature without any merit or
- demerit for so doing, a child or an idiot may smilingly kick over a
- lamp which may set a whole city on fire; the cause will have its
- effect, but the child or the idiot cannot be held responsible for it,
- because they have not sufficient intelligence to fully control their
- actions or to judge about the consequences. A person can only be held
- responsible according to his ability to perceive justice and to
- distinguish between good and evil. The power to discriminate properly
- is an attribute of the human mind, and the higher that mind is
- developed the more it becomes responsible for the effects it produces.
- A cat may kill a mouse or an ox gore a man; and to hold them morally
- responsible for it would be an act of injustice, cruelty and
- stupidity. Whether or not a dog may have sufficient reason to incur
- any moral responsibility is a matter of opinion, and no emphatic
- affirmation or denial will decide the case: but it is reasonable to
- suppose that a dog, though he may have sufficient reason to know what
- is good or bad for himself or for those to whom he is attached, has no
- moral responsibility.”
-
-Thus, though animals may be under the law of compensation, and under the
-law of harmony or Karma, they _are not_ under the law of compensation,
-or the law of harmony or Karma in the same way as it applies to human
-beings. With humanity, a fresh element has been introduced—the
-intellectual, reasoning, and discriminating power. Consequently, while
-the universal law of harmony or Karma governs the whole Universe, the
-law of Harmony should be applied to the Universe as a whole, and its
-manifestations, the laws of Karma and Compensation, should be applied to
-man and animal respectively.
-
-It is more possible, perhaps, to consider the question in relation to
-the various grades of humanity so far as we can conceive of it and them.
-It would be better to commence with the highest and proceed downwards.
-
-All Theosophists, and many who are not, have heard of Mahatmas, and many
-have speculated very wrongly about them. In this magazine, and in this
-article, it may be possible to write about them without disrespect,
-_because_ only through these speculations is it possible to understand
-the law of harmony and its relation to man as Karma, and to divinity as
-harmony. The word Karma as limited above does not apply to the Mahatma.
-
- “Gazing only upon the eternal the Mahatma feels neither good nor ill,
- nor does either good or ill come to him. Personally, he cannot either
- suffer or rejoice, and is incapable of emotion, because he is
- indifferent to circumstances. But as he developes, his sympathies
- increase, until at last his sympathies enter into all beings, and with
- them he rejoices and suffers until they also pass beyond the sense of
- joy or pain.”
-
- “They do not have good or evil Karma. The glory and good fortune and
- happiness, these go to the good men who look for temporary joys. Karma
- produces pleasure or pain by the ordering of circumstances. The
- Mahatma does not feel pleasure and pain, and is not affected by
- circumstances, therefore he is Karmaless. The law of cause and effect
- is only called Karma when it concerns temporary and changing
- circumstances. The acts of the Mahatma generate spiritual energy which
- goes to create the power that shall be his when he is no longer man,
- and consequently form an eternal factor in his future; thus, the
- Mahatma, being without personal desire, is outside the operation of
- the law of Karma.”
-
-In his real condition he is in harmony with Nature, and its agent, and
-hence outside Karma. His physical body is however still within its
-limits of action. But to him this is a very small matter.
-
- ARCHIBALD KEIGHTLEY, M.B.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY OF ALL TIME.
-
-The inner light which guides men to greatness, and makes them noble,
-is a mystery through all time and must remain so while Time lasts
-for us; but there come moments, even in the midst of ordinary life,
-when Time has no hold upon us, and then all the circumstance of
-outward existence falls away, and we find ourselves face to face
-with the mystery beyond. In great trouble, in great joy, in keen
-excitement, in serious illness, these moments come. Afterwards they
-seem very wonderful, looking back upon them.
-
-What is this mystery, and why is it so veiled, are the burning
-questions for anyone who has begun to realise its existence. Trouble
-most often rouses men to the consciousness of it, and forces them to
-ask these questions when those, whom one has loved better than
-oneself, are taken away into the formless abyss of the unknown by
-death, or are changed, by the experiences of life, till they are no
-longer recognisable as the same; then comes the wild hunger for
-knowledge. Why is it so? What is it, that surrounds us with a great
-dim cloud into which all loved things plunge in time and are lost to
-us, obliterated, utterly taken from us? It is this which makes life
-so unbearable to the emotional natures, and which developes
-selfishness in narrow hearts. If there is no certainty and no
-permanence in life, then it seems to the Egotist, that there is no
-reasonable course but to attend to one’s own affairs, and be content
-with the happiness of the first person singular. There are many
-persons sufficiently generous in temperament to wish others were
-happy also, and who, if they saw any way to do it, would gladly
-redress some of the existing ills—the misery of the poor, the social
-evil, the sufferings of the diseased, the sorrow of those made
-desolate by death—these things the sentimental philanthropist
-shudders to think of. He does not act because he can do so little.
-Shall he take one miserable child and give it comfort when millions
-will be enduring the same fate when that one is dead? The inexorable
-cruelty of life continues on its giant course, and those who are
-born rich and healthy live in pleasant places, afraid to think of
-the horrors life holds within it. Loss, despair, unutterable pain,
-comes at last, and the one who has hitherto been fortunate is on a
-level with those to whom misery has been familiarised by a lifetime
-of experience. For trouble bites hardest when it springs on a new
-victim. Of course, there are profoundly selfish natures which do not
-suffer in this sense, which look only for personal comfort and are
-content with the small horizon visible to one person’s sight; for
-these, there is but little trouble in the world, there is none of
-the passionate pain which exists in sensitive and poetic natures.
-The born artist is aware of pain as soon as he is aware of pleasure;
-he recognises sadness as a part of human life before it has touched
-on his own. He has an innate consciousness of the mystery of the
-ages, that thing stirring within man’s soul and which enables him to
-outlive pain and become great, which leads him on the road to the
-divine life. This gives him enthusiasm, a superb heroism indifferent
-to calamity; if he is a poet he will write his heart out, even for a
-generation that has no eyes or ears for him; if he desires to help
-others personally, he is capable of giving his very life to save one
-wretched child from out a million of miserable ones. For it is not
-his puny personal effort in the world that he considers—not his
-little show of labour done; what he is conscious of is the
-over-mastering desire to work with the beneficent forces of
-super-nature, to become one with the divine mystery, and when he can
-forget time and circumstances, he is face to face with that mystery.
-Many have fancied they must reach it by death; but none have come
-back to tell us that this is so. We have no proof that man is not as
-blind beyond the grave as he is on this side of it. Has he entered
-the eternal thought? If not, the mystery is a mystery still.
-
-To one who is entering occultism in earnest, all the trouble of the
-world seems suddenly apparent. There is a point of experience when
-father and mother, wife and child, become indistinguishable, and
-when they seem no more familiar or friendly than a company of
-strangers. The one dearest of all may be close at hand and
-unchanged, and yet is as far as if death had come between. Then all
-distinction between pleasure and pain, love and hate, have vanished.
-A melancholy, keener than that felt by a man in his first fierce
-experience of grief, overshadows the soul. It is the pain of the
-struggle to break the shell in which man has prisoned himself. Once
-broken then there is no more pain; all ties are severed, all
-personal demands are silenced for ever. The man has forced himself
-to face the great mystery, which is now a mystery no longer, for he
-has become part of it. It is essentially the mystery of the ages,
-and these have no longer any meaning for him to whom time and space
-and all other limitations are but passing experiences. It has become
-to him a reality, profound, indeed, because it is bottomless, wide,
-indeed, because it is limitless. He has touched on the greatness of
-life, which is sublime in its impartiality and effortless
-generosity. He is friend and lover to all those living beings that
-come within his consciousness, not to the one or two chosen ones
-only—which is indeed only an enlarged selfishness. While a man
-retains his humanity, it is certain that one or two chosen ones will
-give him more pleasure by contact, than all the rest of the beings
-in the Universe and all the heavenly host; but he has to remember
-and recognise what this preference is. It is not a selfish thing
-which has to be crushed out, if the love is the love that gives;
-freedom from attachments is not a meritorious condition in itself.
-The freedom needed is not from those who cling to you, but from
-those to whom you cling. The familiar phrase of the lover “I cannot
-live without you” must be words which cannot be uttered, to the
-occultist. If he has but one anchor, the great tides will sweep him
-away into nothingness. But the natural preference which must exist
-in every man for a few persons is one form of the lessons of Life.
-By contact with these other souls he has other channels by which to
-penetrate to the great mystery. For every soul touches it, even the
-darkest. Solitude is a great teacher, but society is even greater.
-It is so hard to find and take the highest part of those we love,
-that in the very difficulty of the search there is a serious
-education. We realise when making that effort, far more clearly what
-it is that creates the mystery in which we live, and makes us so
-ignorant. It is the swaying, vibrating, never-resting desires of the
-animal soul in man. The life of this part of man’s nature is so
-vigorous and strongly developed from the ages during which he has
-dwelt in it, that it is almost impossible to still it so as to
-obtain contact with the noble spirit. This constant and confusing
-life, this ceaseless occupation with the trifles of the hour, this
-readiness in surface emotion, this quickness to be pleased, amused
-or distressed, is what baffles our sight and dulls our inner senses.
-Till we can use these the mystery remains in its Sphinx-like
-silence.
-
-
-
-
- ------------------
-
-
-
-
-When the unit thinks only of itself, the whole, which is built of
-units perishes, and the unit itself is destroyed.
-
-
- ------------------
-
-
-So it is throughout nature on every plane of life. This, therefore,
-is the first lesson to be learnt.
-
-
- ------------------
-
-
-What the _true_ occultist seeks, is not knowledge, or growth, or
-happiness, or power, for himself; but having become _conscious_ that
-the harmony of which he forms part is broken on the outer plane, he
-seeks the means to resolve that discord into a higher harmony.
-
-This harmony is Theosophy—Divine or Universal Wisdom—the root whence
-have sprung all “religions,” that is all; “bonds which unite men
-together,” which is the true meaning of the word religion.
-
-Therefore, Theosophy is not _a_ “religion,” but religion itself, the
-very “binding of men together” in one Universal Brotherhood.
-
-
-
-
- THE FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS OF BUDDHISM.
-
-
-When a man immersed in the darkness of modern civilization awakens,
-however slightly, to the hollowness of his every-day life, he
-becomes sensible of a feeling of despair, for he is mentally brought
-face to face with what appears to him to be a meaningless yet cruel
-destiny. Now to any one so circumstanced, no truer source of
-consolation and encouragement can be offered than that which is to
-be found in a proper consideration of the “Four Noble Truths” of
-Buddhism. But to give this proper consideration to the Truths, or
-indeed to promote even a preliminary enquiry into their nature is by
-no means an easy task, because the fundamental ideas which they
-embody have scarcely any vitality in the present generation; nay
-more, they involve for the most part a complete inversion of maxims
-commonly accepted as axiomatic in current thought.
-
-It is, however, in the hopes of doing something towards the
-elucidation of the matter, that the present exposition is attempted.
-
-The first Noble Truth relates to human suffering. It proclaims that
-the conscious, separated, life of individual existence necessarily
-implies pain, sorrow and misery; that so long as a man feels that he
-is possessed of an _isolated self_, or so long as he regards himself
-and his fellow men as _detached personalities_, having antagonistic
-or even independent interests, so long must he suffer and be subject
-to trouble, grief and disappointment.
-
-This first Noble Truth gives utterance to one aspect of an
-inexorable law of universal application, a law from whose operations
-no man can, or has, or ever will escape, until he has learnt and in
-the fullest sense realized the four Noble Truths.
-
-The first Truth may also be thus expressed: individual existence
-necessitates and involves change of state, whether manifested as
-birth growth, decay or death, and all changes of state are
-accompanied by pain in one form or another on some plane of being;
-while those who seem in their own eyes to have escaped from pain, or
-those who imagine that others escape from it, are alike deluded, for
-all men are overtaken by it soon or late.
-
-The second Noble Truth deals with the cause of pain, and partially
-explains its meaning. According to this Truth, it is the desire or
-thirst for the continuance of individual life, with its various
-sensations and experiences, that constitutes the true basis of all
-suffering, whatever the outward form it may assume, and to whatever
-plane of consciousness it may belong. This thirst for life, called
-in the Sanscrit language Tanha, gives rise in the mind of man to a
-delusive belief in the _permanence_ and _reality_ of that separate
-personality, which, according to Buddhism, is no more than an
-ephemeral mode of individual existence; it further leads him to
-suppose that the numerous mental states which in their aggregate
-make up the personality, are, in themselves _real_; and hence grows
-that rooted belief in the absolute reality of the manifold objects
-of sense, and that longing for their possession, that insatiable
-longing for the enhancement and for the multiplication of the
-experiences associated with these objects.
-
-The second Truth, like the first, presents an aspect of the
-universal law already referred to.
-
-This law, the Sanscrit name for which is Karma, is the governing and
-controlling power, ordering all individual existence, and by virtue
-of which Tanha operates.
-
-The third Noble Truth announces the fact that, as the individual man
-grows strong in spiritual knowledge and charity, so Tanha is
-gradually dissolved, and there is for him a consequent cessation of
-sorrow and of pain. The individuality becoming proportionately freed
-from the bondage of Karma, Tanha is indeed a quite necessary adjunct
-of man’s incipient growth, for it represents the _creative_ power
-which forces the individuality through the earlier stages of its
-development, yet, while performing this most useful function, being
-in fact indispensable to the lower nature of man, Tanha, at the same
-time, forges those Karmic fetters from which the spiritual self
-struggles desperately to get free.
-
-As the man’s spiritual nature is evolved, the unconscious creative
-energy, in form of Tanha, is gradually replaced by the newly
-developed powers of the higher self, the _will_ becomes more and
-more completely associated with the spirit, while the man himself,
-endowed with true Faith, true Hope, and true Love, becomes a
-conscious co-worker with the Universal or Macrocosmic Will, the
-“Great Builder.”
-
-The fourth Noble Truth assures us that there is a way by which all
-men may, if they only choose, rapidly accomplish this displacement
-of Tanha by true Love; this way is called the Noble Eight-fold Path
-leading to enlightenment.
-
-Thus:—1. Right fundamental Belief, _i.e._, the right basis mentally
-and spiritually upon which to establish true knowledge. 2. Right
-Intention, _i.e._, goodwill towards all that lives, singleness of
-purpose, correctness and purity of motive. 3. Right Speech, _i.e._,
-the use of becoming language, kindly temperate, fair and profitable;
-patient yet vigorous; thoughtful, courageous, honest and
-discriminating. 4. Right Behaviour _i.e._, active philanthropy. 5.
-Right means of Livelihood, _i.e._, honest and useful employment of
-one’s time, paying adequate attention to one’s own material needs
-and helping others to do the same, yet without care for the morrow.
-6. Right Endeavour, _i.e._, putting one’s heart in one’s work. 7.
-Right Loneliness, _i.e._, self-contained and harmonious within. 8.
-Right Meditation. This is the Sanskrit _Yoga_ and signifies union
-with the divine by practising the contemplation of the reality of
-being. It is the result of a sustained effort to concentrate the
-mind upon the universal, eternal and immutable law of life; the
-first stage of such concentration takes the form of an impartial
-review or survey of all one’s thoughts, actions, desires, sensations
-and experiences from a thoroughly impersonal standpoint. This
-Eightfold Path has four stages representing different degrees
-of advancement towards Buddhahood or the state of perfect
-enlightenment. The true Buddha or Tathâgata is one who has attained
-final emancipation from individual existence, whose purified spirit
-is freed from the last vestige of Tanha, one upon whom Karma has no
-more hold, for he has reached Para Nirvana, the _Eternal_, the
-Absolute Being.
-
- ST. GEORGE LANE-FOX.
-
-
- ------------------
-
- THE LAST OF A GOOD LAMA.—Whatever may be said against godless
- Buddhism, its influence, wherever it penetrates, is most
- beneficent. One finds the Spirit of “Lord Buddha ... most pitiful,
- the Teacher of Nirvâna and the Law,” ennobling even the least
- philosophical of the dissenting sects of his religion—the Lamäism
- of the nomadic Kalmucks. The Caspian Steppes witnessed, only a few
- months ago, the solemn cremation and burial of a Mongolian saint,
- whose ashes were watered by as many Christian as Lamaic tears. The
- high priest to the Russian Calmucks of the Volga died December
- 26th, 1886, near Vétlyanka, once the seat of the most terrible
- epidemics. The Ghelungs had chosen the day of ceremony in
- accordance with their sacred books; the hour was fixed
- astrologically, and at noon on January 4th, 1887, the imposing
- ceremony took place. More than 80,000 people assembling from all
- the neighbouring Cossack _stanitzas_ and Calmuck _ooloosses_,
- formed a procession surrounding the pillar of cremation. The
- corpse having been fixed in an iron arm-chair, used on such
- ceremonies, was introduced into the hollow pillar, the flames
- being fed with supplies of fresh butter. During the whole burning,
- the crowd never ceased weeping and lamenting, the Russians being
- most violent in their expressions of sorrow, and with reason. For
- long years the defunct Lama had been a kind father to all the poor
- in the country, whether Christian or Lamaist. Whole villages of
- proletarians had been fed, clothed, and their poll-taxes paid out
- of his own private income. His property in pasture lands, cattle,
- and tithes was very large, yet the Lama was ever in want of money.
- With his death, the poor wretches, who could hardly keep soul in
- their bodies, have no prospect but starvation. Thus the tears of
- the Christians were as abundant, if not quite as unselfish, as
- those of the poor Pagans. Only the year before, the good Lama
- received 4,000 roubles from a Calmuck _oolooss_ (camp) and gave
- the whole to rebuild a burned down Russian village, and thus saved
- hundreds from death by hunger. He was never known during his long
- life to refuse any man, woman, or child, in need, whether Pagan or
- Christian, depriving himself of every comfort to help his poorer
- fellow-creatures. Thus died the last of the Lamas of the priestly
- hierarchy sent to the Astrakhan Calmucks from beyond the “Snowy
- Range” some sixty years ago. A shameful story is told of how a
- travelling Christian pilgrim imposed on the good Lama. The Lama
- had entrusted him with 30,000 roubles to be placed in the
- neighbouring town; but the Christian pilgrim disappeared, and the
- money with him.
-
-
-
-
- THE BIRTH OF LIGHT.
-
- _Translated from Eliphas Levis “Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie.”_
-
-
-The “Lucifer” of the Kabalists is not a proscribed and fallen angel,
-but the spirit which illuminates and regenerates by fire; he is to
-the angels of peace what the comet is to the peaceful constellations
-of spring-time.
-
-The fixed star is beautiful, radiant and calm; she drinks in the
-aromas of Heaven, and looks lovingly on her sisters; clad in her
-dazzling garments, and her brow adorned with diamonds, she smiles as
-she sings her morning and her evening hymn; she enjoys an eternal
-repose which nothing can disturb, and solemnly she treads the path
-assigned to her among the sentinels of light.
-
-But the wandering comet, all bloodstained, and her tresses unloosed,
-rushes on from the depths of the sky; she dashes across the track of
-the peaceful spheres like a chariot of war breaking the ranks of a
-procession of vestals; she dares to breast the burning sword of the
-guardians of the sun, and, like a lost spouse who seeks the partner
-visioned in her lonely night watches, she forces her way even into
-the tabernacle of the King of Day.
-
-Then she rushes out, breathing forth the fires which consume herself
-and leaving in her train one long conflagration; the stars pale
-before her approach, the herded constellations, which browse upon
-the starry flowers in the vast meadows of the sky, seem to flee from
-her terrible breath. The grand council of the stars is called, and
-universal consternation reigns. At last the fairest of the fixed
-stars is charged to speak in the name of the heavenly concourse, and
-to propose a truce with the errant messenger.
-
-“My sister,” she says, “why troublest thou the harmony of these
-spheres? What harm have we done thee, and why, instead of wandering
-at hazard, dost thou not, like us, take up thy settled rank in the
-Court of the Sun? Why dost thou not join with us in chanting the
-evening hymn, attired, like us, in a robe of white clasped above the
-breast by one pure diamond? Why dost thou allow thy tresses,
-dripping with the sweat of fire, to float across the vapours of the
-night? If thou wouldst but take thy due place among the daughters of
-Heaven, how far more lovely thy mien! Thy face no more would be
-burnt up by the fatigue of thy unheard-of journeys; thy eyes would
-shine forth clear, and thy features smile with the tints of lily and
-of rose, like those of thy happy sisters; all the stars would
-recognise in thee a friend, and far from fearing thy transit, they
-would rejoice at thy approach. For thou wouldst be united to us by
-the indissoluble ties of universal harmony, and thy peaceable
-existence would be but one voice the more in the anthem of Infinite
-Love.”
-
-But the comet replies:
-
-“Deem not, my sister, that I could stray at chance and disturb the
-harmony of the spheres. God has traced for me my path, as thine for
-thee, and if my course appears to thee uncertain and erratic, it is
-because thy rays cannot reach so far as to embrace the outlines of
-the great ellipse which has been given me for my career. My burning
-tresses are the banner of God; I am the messenger of the Suns, and I
-bathe me in their fires that I may distribute them on my path to
-those young worlds which have not yet sufficient heat, and to the
-declining stars that shiver in their solitude. If I court fatigue in
-my long journeyings, if my beauty is less mild than thine, if my
-attire less virginal, I am no less than thee a worthy daughter of
-the sky. Leave in my hands the awful secret of my destiny, leave to
-me the horror which encompasses me, and slander me not if thou canst
-not understand me. None the less, shall I fulfil my appointed task.
-Happy the stars that take their rest and shine like young queens in
-the stately concourse of the Universe; for me, I am cast out, a
-wanderer, and claim the Infinite as my only fatherland. They accuse
-me of setting on fire the planets which I warm, and of terrifying
-the stars which I illume. I am reproached with disturbing the
-harmony of the worlds, because I do not revolve round their own
-fixed points, and because I bind them one to the other, setting my
-face alone toward the only centre of all the Suns. So rest assured,
-thou fairest star, I will not deprive thee of one ray of thy so
-peaceful light; the rather, I will squander on thee my warmth and my
-own life. Who knows, but I may vanish from the sky when I have
-consumed myself? My lot will still have been a noble one! For know
-that in the Temple of God the fires that burn are not all one. Ye
-are the light of the golden torches, but I, the flame of sacrifice.
-Let each accomplish her own destiny!”
-
-Her words scarce uttered, the comet shakes her tresses loose, covers
-herself with her burning shield, and plunges once more into infinite
-space, where she appears to vanish for evermore.
-
-It is thus that Lucifer appears and disappears in the allegories of
-the Bible.
-
-One day, so says the book of Job, the sons of God had assembled in
-the presence of their Lord, and among them came Lucifer.
-
-To him the Lord said: “Whence comest thou?”
-
-And he replied:
-
-“I have journeyed round the world and travelled throughout it.”
-
-This is how a Gnostic gospel, re-discovered in the East by a learned
-traveller, explains, in treating of the symbolical Lucifer, the
-genesis of Light.
-
-“Truth which is conscious of itself is living Thought. Truth is the
-Thought which is contained within itself; and formulated Thought is
-Speech. When the Eternal Thought sought for a _form_ it said: ‘Let
-there be Light.’ Therefore this Thought that speaks is the _Word_,
-and this Word says: ‘Let there be Light, because the word itself is
-the light of the _spirit_.’”
-
-The uncreated light, which is the divine Word, sends forth its
-rays because it wishes to be manifest, and when it says, “Let
-there be light,” it commands the eyes to open; it creates the
-_Intelligences_.
-
-And, when God said: “Let there be light,” Intelligence was made and
-light appeared.
-
-Then, the Intelligence which God had breathed forth, like a planet
-detached from the Sun, took the form of a splendid Angel and the
-heavens saluted him with the name of Lucifer.
-
-Intelligence awoke and it fathomed its own depths as it heard this
-apostrophe of the divine Word, “Let there be Light.” It felt itself
-to be free, for God had commanded it so to be, and it answered,
-raising its head and spreading its wings, “I will not be Slavery.”
-
-“Wilt thou be then Sorrow?” said the uncreated voice.
-
-“I will be Liberty,” answered the Light.
-
-“Pride will seduce thee,” replied the supreme voice, “and thou wilt
-give birth to Death.”
-
-“I must needs combat with Death to conquer Life,” said once again
-the light created.
-
-God then unloosed from his bosom the thread of splendour which held
-back the superb spirit, and as he watched him dive into the night,
-cutting in it a path of glory, he loved the child of his thought,
-and smiling with a smile ineffable, he murmured to himself: “How
-fair a thing was this Light!”
-
-And Sorrow was the condition imposed upon the free being. If the
-chief of the angels had not dared confront the depths of night, the
-travail of God had not been complete, and the created light could
-not have separated itself from the light unrevealed.
-
-Perhaps Lucifer, in plunging into the night, drew with him a shower
-of Stars and Suns _by the attraction of his glory_? * * * * * * *
-
- A TRUE THEOSOPHIST.
-
-A very large majority of people have no idea whatever about
-Theosophy, and regard Theosophists as more or less crazy members of
-a new sect. They naturally deny any superiority to one new sect
-among so many, and aver that, as a considerable number of sects have
-been “tried in the balances and found wanting,” this one is no
-better than its predecessors. Theosophists—the real ones—can only
-reply that they are unsectarian and superior to none. They believe
-that they have found a good road to the discovery of truth, and wish
-to share their discovery—if it can be so called—with others.
-
-The very assumption of superiority would be a contradiction in terms
-to the name itself. But, while giving this emphatic denial with
-reference to the name “Theosophist,” no attempt is made to assert
-that all members of the Theosophical Society are also Theosophists.
-True indeed, that when they enter that society, they subscribe to
-rules and declare their objects to be such that, were they to carry
-them out thoroughly, no other name than Theosophists would be
-applicable. Nor does the name imply that, in the studies which
-Theosophists make their own, it is necessary that the sole and best
-place should be given to studies of Oriental philosophy. That again
-would be a contradiction, for it has most emphatically been stated
-that “there are those who are ignorant of the Eastern wisdom” who
-are nearer to divine wisdom, than some who have devoted their entire
-lives to Oriental studies. It is again the old story that, “the
-letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.”
-
-Still while holding to the assertion that the study of Oriental
-wisdom is only one road out of many, it is necessary to remember the
-analogy which philology may here present to “religion.” Just as
-philology traces all languages to a common root—the Sanskrit or
-rather pre-Sanskrit—so the religions of the world can also be traced
-to a common root and birth place, identical with the cradle and
-birth place of the human race, which ethnology locates on the high
-plateaux of Central Asia. Therefore it is, that the study of
-Oriental philosophy has something to be urged in its especial
-favour, because that philosophy has its home nearer to the source of
-the wisdom religion than any other.
-
-Still more must it be borne in mind, that members of the
-Theosophical Society are not necessarily Theosophists, for a very
-considerable number are attracted merely by the name and through
-curiosity. They either do not understand what they profess, or if
-they do, they do not practise it. But this is no attempt to run
-counter to the proverb, that the tree is known by its fruit,
-although there is some amount of injustice in it. All that is
-asserted is that, if this argument is used against a Society with
-aims and aspirations such as the Theosophical Society has, it can be
-used with even more terrible effect against _all_ religions whether
-Christian, Mohammedan, Buddhist, etc. The real reason why this has
-come to pass, lies in a few words—the cultivation of the individual;
-and, as a later result of this, in anthropomorphism. It is only
-those individuals who can “grasp their whole individuality firmly,”
-and by the force of their “awakened spiritual will, reach out to the
-life beyond individuality”—it is only they, who can shake themselves
-loose from the curse which has gradually spread over the whole
-world. It is in consequence of this growth of individualism that the
-“blessings of civilization” have become the curse of mankind, and
-every religion, originally altruistic, has become inverted, and the
-reign of anti-Christ and hypocrisy has superseded that of Christ and
-truth. No sweeping accusation is made against the whole world in
-this statement. A dim and misty veil has been thrown over the face
-of Truth, and it is as though we saw everything outside the
-principal focus of a lens, and consequently, under full faith that
-we see the real image, perceive the inverted image. In the time of
-Elizabeth, for instance, men learnt to cultivate the individual
-within the circle of the race, and to attempt to unite in patriotism
-for the benefit of that race or empire. But it is a vain attempt,
-and the dissociating effects of this culture will soon be evident in
-the impossibility of the attempt. Originally the attempt was to
-cultivate the individual, but only with a view to the increase of
-that race and with that object as paramount. That is to say, that an
-English soldier would cultivate himself to the uttermost in order
-that the world should see what English soldiers were. But the time
-came when the egoistic element appeared in overwhelming force, and
-the cultivation was devoted to the sole aim of making this or that
-man stronger than any man of his own race, or any other.
-
-And now another aim has been substituted for the paramount one of
-patriotism. Mammon has superseded the latter, and the strength of
-the individual is cultivated and devoted to withstanding the
-pressure of life, and to getting a start in the great race to
-worship at the feet of the demon of cupidity. But again, while
-devoting their own lives and worse—the lives of their neighbours—to
-this worship, they yet professed to be Christians or members of
-other religions. They tried to worship two gods—Mammon on six days
-of the week and the other divinity on Sunday, or any day set apart
-for his service. But still, in most cases, it was not the divine
-instinct of search for the divine in their hearts, but a fear of
-wrath to come. It really was a pharisaical idea of “hedging,” to use
-a term of racing slang, with reference to the race of life. The end
-of it was that Mammon received the real worship of their hearts, and
-the other god only lip-service. Thus in the end hypocrisy became
-almost as paramount as Mammon. Time still passed on, and man almost
-lost sight of any idea of an offended and avenging deity, and any
-germ of spirituality was very nearly dead from want of cultivation.
-The material needs held him in complete sway, and the spread of
-physical science helped him mightily. Losing sight of all the
-subtler side of nature, he immersed himself in gross matter, and
-utilitarianism was the watchword and rallying cry. In all this
-change the age of mechanical inventions took no small part. Man can
-hardly be blamed as an individual nor as a whole. It is part of the
-great law of evolution, and the working out of the law of the
-survival of the fittest.
-
-It may be asked what this has to do with the subject of the article;
-but in justification it is averred that a picture is most clearly
-seen by its contrast.
-
-Perhaps the best definition of a Theosophist, is that given by the
-Alchemist, Thomas Vaughan:
-
-“A Theosophist is one who gives you a theory of the works of God,
-which has not a revelation, but an inspiration of his own for
-basis.”
-
-“A man once abandoning the old pathway of routine and entering on
-the solitary pathway of independent thought—Godward—he is a
-Theosophist, an original thinker, a seeker after the Eternal Truth,
-with an inspiration of his own to solve the Eternal problems.”
-
-Such a one as this is the subject of the article. Count Tolstoi, the
-Russian novelist, is a true Theosophist, and his words and actions
-in contradiction and illustration of the foregoing, are taken from
-an interview with him by Mr. George Kennan (_Century_, June 1887).
-The interview first describes the surroundings amidst which Count
-Tolstoi lives, and gives also a description of the Count’s
-appearance.
-
-Apparently the first thing which impressed Mr. Kennan was the sight
-of “a wealthy Russian noble, and the greatest of living novelists,
-shaking hands upon terms of perfect equality with a poor, ragged,
-and not over clean droshky driver,” who had been engaged in the
-streets.
-
-Then follows a description of the rooms, the furniture &c., which
-was observed during the time that Mr. Kennan’s host had retired—not,
-indeed, to change his coat, but to put one on after a morning’s
-labour in the fields. Mr. Kennan, it seems, had journeyed through
-Siberia, and had there promised several of the exiles to visit Count
-Tolstoi on his return, and to tell him of their condition. In the
-course of conversation on these matters, Mr. Kennan asked Count
-Tolstoi whether he did not think that resistance to such oppression
-as the exiles had experienced was justifiable?
-
- “That depends,” he replied, “upon what you mean by resistance; if
- you mean persuasion, argument, protest, I answer yes; if you mean
- violence—no. I do not believe that violent resistance to evil is
- ever justifiable under any circumstances.”
-
- He then set forth clearly, eloquently, and with more feeling than
- he had yet shown, the views with regard to man’s duty as a member
- of society which are contained in his book entitled “My Religion,”
- and which are further explained and illustrated in a number of his
- recently published tracts for the people. He laid particular
- stress upon the doctrine of non-resistance to evil, which, he
- said, is in accordance with both the teachings of Christ and the
- results of human experience. He declared that violence, as a means
- of redressing wrongs, is not only futile, but an aggravation of
- the original evil, since it is the nature of violence to multiply
- and reproduce itself in all directions. “The Revolutionists,” he
- said, “whom you have seen in Siberia, undertook to resist evil by
- violence, and what has been the result? Bitterness, and misery,
- and hatred, and bloodshed! The evils against which they took up
- arms still exist, and to them has been added a mass of previously
- non-existent human suffering. It is not in that way that the
- kingdom of God is to be realised on earth.”
-
- For a long time I did not suggest any difficulties or raise any
- objections.... It is one thing to ask a man in a general way
- whether he would use violence to resist evil, and quite another
- thing to ask him specifically whether he would knock down a
- burglar who was about to cut the throat of his mother. Many men
- would say _yes_ to the first question who would hesitate at the
- second. Count Tolstoi, however, was consistent. I related to him
- many cases of cruelty, brutality, and oppression which had come to
- my knowledge in Siberia, and at the end of every recital I said to
- him, “Count Tolstoi, if you had been there and had witnessed that
- transaction, would you not have interfered with violence?” He
- invariably answered “No.” I asked him the direct question whether
- he would kill a highwayman who was about to murder an innocent
- traveller, provided there were no other way to save the
- traveller’s life. He replied, “If I should see a bear about to
- kill a peasant in the forest, I would sink an axe in the bear’s
- head; but I would not kill a man who was about to do the same
- thing.” There finally came into my mind a case which, although
- really not worse than many that I had already presented to him,
- would, I thought, appeal with peculiar force to a brave,
- sensitive, chivalrous man.
-
-This was a case of most brutal treatment of a young girl who was
-exiled to Siberia. At a certain town on her journey the governor
-ordered that she was to put on the clothing of an ordinary convict.
-This she declined to do on the ground that administrative exiles had
-the right to wear their own clothing. Furthermore the clothing
-supplied to convicts is not always new, and it is quite possible
-that it is of the filthiest description and full of vermin. She
-argued that she would have been compelled to change at Moscow had it
-been necessary, and again declined. The local governor persisted and
-ordered that force should be used to effect the change. Accordingly,
-in the presence of nine or ten men, the change of clothing was
-effected—she was stripped naked, forcibly reclothed, and left
-bleeding and exhausted after ineffectual resistance.
-
- “Now,” I said, “suppose all this had occurred in your presence;
- suppose that this bleeding, defenceless, half-naked girl had
- appealed to you for protection, and had thrown herself into your
- arms; suppose that it had been your daughter, would you still have
- refused to interfere by an act of violence?”
-
- He was silent. Finally, ignoring my direct question as to what he
- personally would have done in such a case, Count Tolstoi said,
- “Even under such circumstances violence would not be justifiable.
- Let us analyse that situation carefully. I will grant, for the
- sake of argument, that the local governor who ordered the act of
- violence was an ignorant man, a cruel man, a brutal man—what you
- will; but he probably had an idea that he was doing his duty; he
- probably believed that he was enforcing a law of the Government to
- which he owed obedience and service. You suddenly appear and set
- yourself up as a judge in the case; you assume that he is not
- doing his duty—that he is committing an act of unjustifiable
- violence—and then, with strange inconsistency, you proceed to
- aggravate and complicate the evil by yourself committing another
- act of unjustifiable violence. One wrong added to another wrong
- does not make a right; it merely extends the area of wrong.
- Furthermore, your resistance, in order to be effective—in order to
- accomplish anything—must be directed against the soldiers who are
- committing the assault. But those soldiers are not free agents;
- they are subject to military discipline and are acting under
- orders which they dare not disobey. To prevent the execution of
- the orders you must kill or maim two or three of the soldiers—that
- is, kill or wound the only parties to the transaction who are
- certainly innocent, who are manifestly acting without malice and
- without evil intention. Is that just? Is it rational? But go a
- step further: suppose that you do kill or wound two or three of
- the soldiers; you may or may not thus succeed in preventing the
- completion of the act against which your violence is a protest;
- but one thing you certainly will do, and that is, extend the area
- of enmity, injustice, and misery. Every one of the soldiers whom
- you kill or maim has a family, and upon every such family you
- bring grief and suffering which would not have come to it but for
- your act. In the hearts of perhaps a score of people you rouse the
- anti-Christian and anti-social emotions of hatred and revenge, and
- thus sow broadcast the seeds of further violence and strife. At
- the time when you interposed there was only one centre of evil and
- suffering. By your violent interference you have created
- half-a-dozen such centres. It does not seem to me, Mr. Kennan,
- that that is the way to bring about the reign of peace and
- good-will on earth.”
-
-Mr. Kennan had a manuscript written by one of those prisoners who
-took part in the desperate “hunger-strike” of 1884, with which he
-had been entrusted to hand on to Count Tolstoi. He read two or three
-pages of it, and then, alluding to the Nihilists, condemned their
-methods most heartily. Mr. Kennan appeared rather to sympathise with
-their motives. Count Tolstoi appears only to do so partially, and,
-while he earnestly desires a revolution, declines to have anything
-to do with one brought about by violence. Mr. Kennan objected that
-violence might close the mouth of the peaceable revolutionist and
-prevent his teaching and thoughts from ever becoming public.
-
- “But do you not see,” replied the Count, “that if you claim and
- exercise the right to resist by an act of violence what you regard
- as evil, every other man will insist upon his right to resist in
- the same way what he regards as evil, and the world will continue
- to be filled with violence? It is your duty to show that there is
- a better way.”
-
- “But,” I objected, “you cannot show anything if somebody smites
- you on the mouth every time you open it to speak the truth.”
-
- “You can at least refrain from striking back,” replied the Count;
- “you can show by your peaceable behaviour that you are not
- governed by the barbarous law of retaliation, and your adversary
- will not continue to strike a man who neither resists nor tries to
- defend himself. It is by those who have suffered, not by those who
- have inflicted suffering, that the world has been advanced.”
-
- I said it seemed to me that the advancement of the world had been
- promoted not a little by the protests—and often the violent and
- bloody protests—of its inhabitants against wrong and outrage, and
- that all history goes to show that a people which tamely submits
- to oppression never acquires either liberty or happiness.
-
- “The whole history of the world,” replied the Count, “is a history
- of violence, and you can of course cite violence in support of
- violence; but do you not see that there is in human society an
- endless variety of opinions as to what constitutes wrong and
- oppression, and that if you once concede the right of any man to
- resort to violence to resist what he regards as wrong, he being
- the judge, you authorise every other man to enforce his opinions
- in the same way, and you have a universal reign of violence?”
-
-Count Tolstoi considers it necessary to labour for and help the poor
-by whom he is surrounded; but he is keenly alive to the danger of
-pauperising them. In doing this he runs counter to the ideas of
-organised society and the existing traits of human character. He
-declines to regard these as sacred and immutable, and is doing what
-he can to change them.
-
- “Count Tolstoi then related with great fulness of detail the
- history of his change of attitude toward the teaching of Christ,
- and the steps by which he was brought to see that that teaching,
- rightly understood, furnishes a reasonable solution of some of the
- darkest problems of human life. He based upon it not only his
- opposition to resistance as a means of overcoming evil, but his
- hostility to courts of justice, established churches, class
- distinctions, private property, and all civil and ecclesiastical
- organisation in existing forms. His frequent references to the New
- Testament, and his insistence on the precepts of Christ as
- furnishing the only rule for the right government of human
- conduct, might lead one to regard Count Tolstoi as a devout and
- orthodox Christian, but, judged by a doctrinal standard, he is
- very far from being so. He rejects the whole doctrinal framework
- of the Christian scheme of redemption, including original sin,
- atonement, the triune personality of God, and the divinity of
- Christ, and has very little faith in the immortality of the soul.
- His religion is a religion of this world, and it is based almost
- wholly upon terrestrial considerations. If he refers frequently to
- the teachings of Christ, and accepts Christ’s precepts as the
- rules which should govern human conduct, it is not because he
- believes that Christ was God, but because he regards those
- precepts as a formal embodiment of the highest and noblest
- philosophy of life, and as a revelation, in a certain sense, of
- the Divine will and character. He insists, however, that Christ’s
- precepts shall be understood—and that they were intended to be
- understood—literally and in their most obvious sense. He will not
- recognise nor tolerate any softening or modification of a hard
- commandment by subtle and plausible interpretation. If Christ
- said, ‘Resist not evil,’ he meant resist not evil. He did not mean
- resist not evil if you can help it, nor resist not evil unless it
- is unbearable; he meant resist not at all. How unflinchingly Count
- Tolstoi faces the logical results of his system of belief I have
- tried to show.”
-
-Count Tolstoi’s views as to his own action and practice have been
-recently published in an authorised interview which appeared in a
-Russian journal. He said:
-
- “People say to me, ‘Well, Lef Nikolaivitch, as far as preaching
- goes, you preach; but how about your practice?’ The question is a
- perfectly natural one; it is always put to me, and it always shuts
- my mouth. ‘You preach,’ it is said, ‘but how do you live?’ I can
- only reply that I do not preach—passionately as I desire to do so.
- I might preach through my actions, but my actions are bad. That
- which I say is not preaching; it is only an attempt to find out
- the meaning and the significance of life. People often say to me,
- ‘If you think that there is no reasonable life outside the
- teachings of Christ, and if you love a reasonable life, why do you
- not fulfill the Christian precepts?’ I am guilty and blameworthy
- and contemptible because I do not fulfill them; but at the same
- time I say—not in justification, but in explanation, of my
- inconsistency—Compare my previous life with the life I am now
- living, and you will see that I am trying to fulfill. I have not,
- it is true, fulfilled one eighty-thousandth part, and I am to
- blame for it; but it is not because I do not wish to fulfill all,
- but because I am unable. Teach me how to extricate myself from the
- meshes of temptation in which I am entangled—help me—and I will
- fulfill all. I wish and hope to do it even without help. Condemn
- me if you choose—I do that myself—but condemn me, and not the path
- which I am following, and which I point out to those who ask me
- where, in my opinion, the path is. If I know the road home, and if
- I go along it drunk, and staggering from side to side, does that
- prove that the road is not the right one? If it is not the right
- one, show me another. If I stagger and wander, come to my help,
- and support and guide me in the right path. Do not yourselves
- confuse and mislead me, and then rejoice over it and cry, ‘Look at
- him! He says he is going home, and he is floundering into the
- swamp!’ You are not evil spirits from the swamp; you are also
- human beings, and you also are going home. You know that I am
- alone—you know that I cannot wish or intend to go into the
- swamp—then help me! My heart is breaking with despair because we
- have all lost the road; and while I struggle with all my strength
- to find it and keep in it, you, instead of pitying me when I go
- astray, cry triumphantly, ‘See! He is in the swamp with us!’”
-
-In this report of Count Tolstoi, it is impossible not to recognise
-the generous, just, and sympathetic man—the true Theosophist. He may
-be mistaken, but he is endeavouring to carry out the precepts of
-Christ. Not indeed, doctrinal Christianity, but to put in practice
-the actual precepts of the Master he follows. He does this as far as
-he can; and even with this little (as he says) he is accused of
-quixotism, and is obliged to stay his hand in order to keep up the
-example he affords. Why is this. For fear of interested relatives
-and the lunatic asylum. Here we have a man endeavouring to carry out
-“under an inspiration of his own,” the precepts laid down by the
-last of the world’s great teachers. What is the result of his
-endeavours? That he is in danger of the same fate that the author of
-“Modern Christianity a civilized Heathenism,” threatened Christ
-with, were he to return in the XIXth century—the lunatic asylum.
-Nothing is so intolerable to modern minds as an example of what they
-(unconsciously to themselves) recognise as that which they ought to
-follow, but do not. Therefore it has to be put out of sight. Since
-madness has been defined as a mental state which is in contradiction
-to the average mental state, it is evident that all religious
-reformers ought to be put away in a lunatic asylum.
-
-It is quite possible to recognise what an extraordinary effect Count
-Tolstoi’s principle of non-resistance to evil would have. Still it
-is a strictly Christian one. Christ went further, and ordained that
-the other cheek should be offered to the man who smites. It might be
-argued that this would result in a tacit acquiescence in evil. But
-if it be so, the whole of the Count’s life is a contradiction to
-this, and a standing protest against the existence of those who
-create, or rather perpetuate, this evil. Every reform, this
-included, is a protest against doing at Rome what Romans do, or the
-_laisser aller_, which is the indolent curse of human progress.
-Count Tolstoi desires to see the reign of Christ on Earth, and in
-this accords well with the Theosophists who desire “Universal
-Brotherhood.” But neither of these can be effected save by the
-cultivation of the inner and spiritual man, so that it shall shine
-through and form the guide to the outer and physical man. But
-unfortunately the welfare of the latter is taken as the standard at
-present and humanity, without the spiritual man as a guide, is left
-to flounder in the ditch into which it has fallen.
-
-Those who desire to follow Count Tolstoi, or to become real working
-Theosophists, may find something to think about in comparing his
-words with his actions. He endeavours to “go about doing good,” and
-to help his fellow men on the hard path of life. When it is followed
-it will be found that to run counter to the spirit of the age, and
-instead of the indolent _laisser aller_, to work not for self, but
-for humanity at large, is the hardest task ever set to men. Mankind
-as a rule does not want an example or to be worked for; both are
-rude awakenings from the lotus-eating state they desire to be left
-in. “Let us alone,” is their cry, and they resist with violence any
-attempt to rouse them.
-
-But those who desire a greater unity than that which any race or
-nation can afford—the unity of the human race—the Universal
-Brotherhood—cannot leave them alone. There is a power which impels
-Count Tolstoi to protest against the reign of violence, and he truly
-replies, that the readiest means of continuing this reign is to meet
-violence by violence. Therefore he, by his writings, and his words
-and life, endeavours to place before men the noblest philosophy of
-life that he recognises, in answer to the appeal which is silently
-uttered from the hearts of many men and women in the world.
-
-It is a cry of despair at the ignorance which surrounds them and to
-which the Theosophical Society, _according to its avowed aims_, is
-an answer. It is best described in the words of Tennyson—
-
- An infant crying in the night,
- And with no language but a cry.
-
- A. I. R.
-
-
-
-
- A GHOST’S REVENGE
-
-
-Early in the year 187—, the singular and distressing attacks of
-mental depression from which Sir Selwyn Fox had long been a
-sufferer, increased in frequency.
-
-His son Gaston (twenty-four years of age, of medicine by calling and
-letters by choice), whose devotion to his father was intense, urged
-him to go to London and procure that skilled medical advice which
-was not to be had in the neighbourhood of the baronet’s country
-seat, in Northumberland. But Sir Selwyn was inflexible in his
-determination to see no doctor. Affectionate as his manner always
-was with Gaston, he even showed impatience when pressed on this
-point; and Gaston, forced to abandon it, fell back on his own skill
-in an endeavour to assign some tangible cause for his father’s
-malady. But in this he was hopelessly baffled.
-
-Nothing in Sir Selwyn’s present state, no circumstance of his past
-history which was known to Gaston (who had rarely been apart from
-him since boyhood), excused or explained in any degree the
-melancholy which clouded his existence. His great fortune placed him
-beyond suspicion or suggestion of pecuniary embarrassment. All the
-surroundings of his home were well calculated to administer to the
-refined pleasures of a man widely known as an amateur of books and
-art. No entanglement of the affections could be supposed seriously
-to trouble the peace of one who had passed his meridian, and who,
-moreover, cherished still the memory of the wife he had long lost.
-He had friendships which, while they attested his worth, would have
-been sufficient in themselves to endear most men to life. Yet for
-months he had worn the air of a man to whom life was fast becoming
-an unendurable burden.
-
-His own skill and experience failing to open to Gaston any method of
-coping with a disease whose hidden source and origin he could not
-divine, he was on the point of writing to a leading London physician
-of his acquaintance, when a circumstance occurred which saved him
-from the necessity of this step.
-
-Sir Selwyn was alone in his room one evening when Gaston, who was
-reading in a room immediately beneath, heard sounds overhead which
-at once sent him upstairs to learn the cause. He had fancied that
-his father was speaking in a tone of troubled remonstrance to some
-unwelcome visitor, though he felt persuaded that no one, unless a
-servant of the house, could be with him at that hour. Hastening to
-his father’s room, his footsteps were arrested on the threshold by
-the spectacle which the half-opened door revealed to him. Sir Selwyn
-sat motionless and rigid in his chair; his face was colourless, and
-all the features stiff, while the eyes, dilated and staring, seemed,
-though they were fixed on space, to hold within their vision some
-object not perceptible to Gaston. This was the more remarkable that
-Gaston stood directly in his father’s line of sight, though it was
-certain that Sir Selwyn neither looked at him nor saw him. In a
-word, it was the gaze of a man who sees, or believes that he sees,
-an apparition.
-
-Gaston took a step forward; the sound fell on the baronet’s ear and
-broke the spell which held him.
-
-His first look was one of inexpressible shame, succeeded immediately
-by one of indescribable relief. If detection were painful, as it
-clearly was, it appeared as though the pain were almost lost in the
-necessity now forced upon him of disclosing the secret of his
-misery. Gaston was at his father’s side in a moment.
-
-“What is it, father?” he cried. “What is it? You have seen
-something. Tell me what it is.”
-
-Sir Selwyn, in whose expression exhaustion and pain were mingled,
-fixed his eyes for a while on his son’s face before he replied:
-
-“If I should tell you, Gaston, you would not believe it. I do not
-believe it myself. And yet I see it, and know that it is there.”
-
-“I shall believe whatever you tell me, father,” answered Gaston.
-
-“Gaston,” began the baronet, “you are a doctor, and have read, read
-widely in all branches of science. Tell me, do you believe that we
-who are in the body may see and know a spirit from the dead?”
-
-“You believe, father, that you have seen such a spirit?”
-
-“The whole force of my reason cannot persuade me otherwise,”
-answered his father. “All the powers of my mind compel me to deny
-it, and yet the thing is there before my eyes.”
-
-The baronet had by this time regained his usual calm of manner, and
-his voice was resolute and quiet.
-
-“Is it here now, father?” asked Gaston.
-
-“Yes,” answered Sir Selwyn.
-
-“Where, father? Point to me the place where it stands.”
-
-“It stands now at my elbow, side by side with you.”
-
-Gaston started involuntarily, the baronet’s tone bespoke such
-absolute conviction. He moved a step, and placed himself immediately
-at his father’s elbow.
-
-“Do you see it now, father?” he asked.
-
-“No, for you have taken its place. Yes! I see it again. It is on
-this side now, exactly opposite to you.”
-
-There was in all this so little of the tone and manner of the mere
-spectre-ridden visionary, that Gaston could not but be impressed,
-and his alarm for his father’s state increased proportionately.
-
-He began to question him in the direct matter-of-fact style of a
-doctor with his patient, inquiring into the particular nature of the
-vision, how often and in what circumstances it presented itself,
-whether his father were able to connect it with any event of his
-life, or whether it seemed to be causeless, a mere fabric of the
-imagination.
-
-His object in this was to bring his father to exert his reason upon
-the matter, that so, if possible, he might end by convincing himself
-that he was haunted merely by some spectre of the brain. He was,
-however, only partially successful, and for this reason, that his
-father, while denying—and with perfect honesty of convincement—the
-reality of his vision, remained nevertheless persuaded that his
-bodily eye beheld it.
-
-“I cannot well remember,” went on Sir Selwyn, “how many years it is
-since this spectre first began to haunt me. In the beginning I
-thought little of it; my health was more robust then than it has
-been in late years, and leading a more active life at that time than
-I am able to do at present, I had greater strength, both of mind and
-body, to assist me in banishing it from my thoughts and presence.
-Indeed, I could then at any time rid myself of the vision by a mere
-exertion of will; but I can do so no longer. It torments me now as
-it pleases. I am powerless against it.”
-
-“Does the form resemble that of anyone whom you have ever known?”
-asked Gaston.
-
-“Yes,” replied Sir Selwyn, after a moment’s pause.
-
-“And the person whose spirit you believe this to be is now dead,
-father?”
-
-“Dead many years,” answered Sir Selwyn.
-
-“And what is there in the vision that troubles you so greatly,
-father?” asked his son.
-
-“Its presence is tormenting,” replied Sir Selwyn, “because I feel
-that there is evil in it; it is malignant, and seems continually to
-threaten me.”
-
-“Is it here still, father?”
-
-“No, since we have been speaking it has vanished. I shall see it no
-more to-night; but it will return to-morrow, and in the end it will
-kill me.”
-
-“No, father, no,” said Gaston affectionately, but gravely. “Let me
-entreat you not to give way. You see how this vision, whatever it
-may be, vanishes when you begin to reason upon it. The mere fact of
-our having discussed it together will enable you to combat it more
-resolutely. Do this, and the same power will revive by which you
-dispelled the vision when first it troubled you.”
-
-Indeed, the closing words of Sir Selwyn’s confession,
-notwithstanding the quiet assurance with which they were spoken, had
-practically convinced his son that the case was one of
-hallucination. They continued talking on the subject until, at the
-baronet’s usual hour of retiring, they separated for the night, when
-Gaston was so far satisfied that his arguments appeared at last to
-have given his father a somewhat increased measure of
-self-confidence.
-
-At breakfast the next day, Sir Selwyn assured his son that he had
-slept well, and both in speech and look he was more cheerful than
-Gaston had seen him during a considerable period. It seemed, in
-short, as though the effect of their conversation the previous night
-had already begun to bear out the son’s prediction; nor, at the end
-of a week, did this good effect appear to have been in any degree
-dissipated. “I have not seen it once,” said Sir Selwyn, in answer to
-a question from Gaston. Another week passed, and a third, and the
-baronet declared that there had been no recurrence of the visions.
-He became very reticent upon the subject, and it was evident that he
-now shrank from any allusion to it. Gaston, on his side, was only
-too willing to avoid its mention.
-
-It was at this time that Sir Selwyn received a letter from an old
-friend of his college days, now holding a high place in the Indian
-Government, reminding him of a long-promised visit, and begging him
-to fulfil his word without further delay.
-
-A better invitation, thought Gaston, could not have arrived at a
-more opportune moment. Their pleasant English home had become
-charged for the baronet with associations which were wholly painful;
-a new scene and fresher interests would assist to push to completion
-the recovery which could not but be long delayed in his present
-situation. Sir Selwyn himself was of the same mind, and decided at
-once to accept his friend’s invitation.
-
-Then arose in Gaston’s mind the question whether, in the
-circumstances, it were well or advisable that his father should make
-the journey alone. He thought it not advisable at all, and without
-plainly telling this to his father, begged that he might accompany
-him. But Sir Selwyn showed a strong reluctance to accede to this
-request, which was the more marked that father and son had never yet
-been separated on any tour of pleasure. Gaston continued to press
-his point, until he perceived, or thought that he perceived, what
-was his father’s reason for wishing to take this journey alone.
-
-The thing which Sir Selwyn had striven for years to hide from his
-son he had just been forced to reveal to him. It was the sorrowful
-secret of his life, a secret which, to the baronet, had something of
-shame in it, and the revelation had been beyond measure painful to
-him. If, in one sense, the confession which had been wrung from him
-had brought father and son more closely together, it had, in another
-sense, placed a certain something between them of which the presence
-of Gaston was a constant reminder. With Gaston at his father’s side,
-the secret too was there. When Gaston’s delicate intuition had
-realised this for him, his entreaties to accompany his father were
-at an end. It was decided that Sir Selwyn should go to India alone,
-and in a fortnight from the receipt of his friend’s invitation he
-was on his way.
-
-Gaston was desolate at home, and at the end of ten days or so he
-went to Paris, intending to stay a week there and return to England;
-but the weather was pleasant, and from Paris he began to wander, in
-leasurely fashion, southwards; and before he had quite made up his
-mind as to where he wanted to go, he found himself in Rome. Rome was
-chilly, and he had lighted on a bad hotel, so he remained but a few
-days, and went on to Naples. He would wait to see Rome, he said,
-until his father was with him.
-
-After a fortnight in Naples, he was on the point of returning home,
-when he received a cable message from his father, forwarded with
-letters from England. Sir Selwyn had reached India safely and in
-good health, and thought it probable that his stay would be of
-somewhat longer duration than his arrangements on leaving England
-had contemplated.
-
-The prospect of five or six solitary months in the castle in
-Northumberland had no relish for Gaston, so he resolved to extend
-his tour by an excursion to Sicily. Accordingly, he took steamer one
-evening from Naples to Palermo: the beautiful old city where the
-traces yet linger of Saracen and Norman; with the tideless sea in
-front, and the purple hills behind, and between the hills and the
-sea the little lovely plain of the Shell of Gold. Naples is
-beautiful, but brutal; a paradise peopled by savages: an Oriental
-languor softens the life of Palermo, as it tinges with melancholy
-the national songs; and the rural element which enters so largely
-into the character of the whole Sicilian people makes them something
-of Arcadians in a modern Arcady.
-
-Gaston felt the charm of the place in an hour; the sense of want of
-companionship which had gone with him in his listless wanderings in
-Italy, here deserted him; he plucked ripe oranges in the garden of
-the hotel, and they became his lotos fruit, for he resolved that his
-wanderings should end in Palermo. He would remain here until his
-father returned from India.
-
-But it chanced that there were few foreign visitors in Palermo that
-season, and within a week of Gaston’s arrival the hotel at which he
-stayed was emptied of all its guests, except himself and an old
-German baron, and the baron waited only for a steamer to take him to
-Malta, on his way to Egypt. An empty hotel in a foreign land is as
-cheerful an abode as a catacomb, and Gaston cast about for a change
-of quarters.
-
-Strolling one day in a slumbrous corner of the town, where cypress
-trees stood sentinels at rusty iron gates, and the air smelled of
-lemon groves and roses, he was struck by the aspect of a tenantless
-and apparently deserted villa, walled within a garden, which,
-untended as it was, retained a certain monastic trimness. A
-weather-stained board over the iron gate, which was of fine
-workmanship, announced that the villa was to let. Gaston tried the
-gate, but it was locked. A broad-hatted priest who was passing at
-the moment, observing Gaston’s interest in the villa, stopped, took
-a pinch of snuff, and said that if the signor desired to have
-particulars of the place, he might obtain them from such a person in
-a street close at hand, which he indicated. Gaston thanked the
-father for his courtesy, and went to inquire if he could see the
-villa, with a view to hiring it for a short time.
-
-At dinner that evening, the baron said that he expected to sail for
-Malta on the following day, and expressed his regret at leaving
-Gaston alone in the hotel. Gaston replied that he should be sorry to
-lose the companionship of the baron, but that he also was about to
-leave the hotel, and had taken a villa for the remainder of his stay
-in Palermo. He described the villa, and the baron, who spoke English
-well, exclaimed with a laugh:
-
-“So! Is that the place? The Villa Torcello then has found a tenant
-at last!”
-
-“Has it been long without one?”
-
-“Nearly thirty years.”
-
-“And what is the reason?”
-
-“How! Did they not tell you? The Villa Torcello is the famous
-haunted house. Yes, I assure you, a real ghost! Are you not
-delighted? You may be able to make a story about it, you know, you
-who write novels.”
-
-“And whose is the ghost?” inquired Gaston, whose associations with
-this subject were by no means pleasant.
-
-“They ought to have told you about it,” answered the baron. “Some
-people do not like ghosts. I do not like them myself, though to be
-sure I have never seen a ghost. The house, as you know, is called
-the Villa Torcello, but that was not its original name. Years ago it
-was called the Villa Verga, after its first owner, Signor Udalrico
-Verga, a young Sicilian of good family, who was well known and very
-popular in Palermo. He lived there all alone, and was much visited
-by a priest, a very handsome young man, a little older than himself,
-with whom he was on terms of great affection. One morning, thirty
-years ago—I believe it was in this very month—the gardener of the
-Signor Verga found his master lying dead in the garden, with a
-bullet-hole in the temple. There seemed no reason in the world why
-he should have killed himself, and as no weapon was found near the
-body, or in any part of the garden, it was concluded that he had
-been murdered. Suspicion fell on the priest, though for no cause
-except that he had been more intimate with the Signor Verga than
-anybody else. They were never known to have had a quarrel, and as
-for evidence, not a scrap could be produced against the priest, who,
-they say, showed the deepest grief for his friend. Indeed he died,
-in great distress of mind, six months afterwards. Some people, who
-would always regard him as the murderer, said that remorse for his
-crime killed him; but though I have heard this story many times
-since I first visited Palermo, I could never see that there was any
-reason whatever to suspect the priest.”
-
-“And the murder was never brought home to anyone?”
-
-“It has remained a mystery from that day to this,” replied the
-baron. “A year or two after the death of Verga, his brother went to
-live in the Villa, changing its name to that of a property of his
-own in Calabria, the name which it still bears. But he could not
-stay in it, for he said that he saw the spirit of his brother
-walking in the garden in the evenings, on the path where the body
-was found. Since he left it, the house has never been occupied. As
-to the ghost, many stories are told, but the favourite one is that
-it haunts the place seeking someone to avenge the murder. That is a
-strange notion, don’t you think, Herr Fox?”
-
-The baron added no more to the story, and as he was busy with his
-letters during the rest of the evening, Gaston only saw him again to
-bid him good-bye on the following morning.
-
-A day or two afterwards, Gaston settled himself in the Villa
-Torcello. His coming there created a momentary flutter of excitement
-in the quarter where the villa was situated; but this was not known
-to Gaston, who had neither friends nor acquaintances in the town.
-
-He wrote to tell his father of his new residence, and to ask him
-whether he had visited Palermo in the tour he had made in Italy a
-few years before Gaston’s birth. One morning, the post from England
-brought him some flattering notices of a book he had published
-shortly before leaving, which made him think that it was time to set
-to work upon a new story. But the idea he was seeking did not come
-to him, and the indolent charm of his surroundings favoured no
-severe exertion of the intellect.
-
-He walked in the town until it grew familiar to him; its avenues,
-and terraces by the sea, its deep shadowy gardens, its groves of
-orange trees and lemon; its narrow streets and the multiplied
-variety of the houses, with their odd and glaring contrasts of
-colour; its churches, where the religion of the west seems out of
-harmony with the architectural and decorative fashions of the east.
-
-Sometimes he hired a carriage and drove out into the country, and
-these excursions were usually prolonged throughout the day. On one
-such occasion, he was returning late in the afternoon, and the
-vetturino was guiding his horses in lazy fashion in and out amongst
-a straggling file of mule-carts laden with wine, in a narrow lane on
-the outskirts of the town.
-
-“What place is this?” called out Gaston presently, pointing to an
-old, discoloured building of considerable extent, which lay on the
-left of the road.
-
-“_Il Convento de’ Cappuccini, signor_,” replied the driver, and
-(never rejecting a chance to rest) pulled up his horses, adding:
-“The signor no see Il Convento? _Ma, è molto curioso, signor_ (but
-it’s a queer place).”
-
-Gaston got down from the carriage, and at that moment a sandalled
-and brown-robed monk appeared at the entrance to the monastery.
-
-“_Ecco il padre, signor!_” (There’s the father), said the driver,
-pointing to the Capucin, who bowed to Gaston with a courteous
-indication of readiness to receive him.
-
-Gaston went across, and was presently following the monk through an
-outer chamber of the monastery, empty and cold, with bare walls and
-a dark stone floor.
-
-The monk stopped at a heavy wooden door, and taking a key from his
-girdle, turned to Gaston and said, in a mixture of Italian and
-broken English, which is here translated:
-
-“The signor probably wishes to see our subterranean chambers. Many
-foreigners come here to see them. It is a very curious sight; we
-keep here the bodies of the wealthy Palermitans, whose relatives and
-friends assemble every year, on the Feast of All Souls, to visit
-them.”
-
-While he was speaking he unlocked the door, which led into a vaulted
-passage with a flight of stairs beyond. A faint, sickly smell
-pervaded the corridor, which became stronger and more offensive as
-they began to descend the steps.
-
-They went down to a dusky place, around which Gaston’s eyes wandered
-for a few moments with no certain gaze, until they grew accustomed
-to the dimness. The daylight, such feeble daylight as filtered into
-that dismal magazine of mummies, was fading fast.
-
-The monk took a bit of candle from a ledge and lighted it; at once a
-strange and weird effect was produced.
-
-Thousands of corpses, and skeletons, and horrible hooded figures
-which were of neither state, seemed in some manner to be awakened,
-seemed to rouse themselves, and take cognisance of Gaston and his
-guide.
-
- TIGHE HOPKINS.
-
- (_To be concluded in our next._)
-
- ------------------
-
-NOTE.—The Editors regret that they are unable to publish, as
-announced, the translation of the “Death of Ivan Ilyitch,” by Count
-Tolstoi, a complete translation having just been issued by Messrs.
-Vizetelly.
-
-
-
-
- =LITERARY JOTTINGS=
-
-
-“BUDDHISM IN CHRISTENDOM, OR JESUS THE ESSENE,” by Arthur Lillie,
-etc.—A queer and rather thickish volume, of a presumably scientific
-character, by an amateur Orientalist. Contents:—Familiar theories,
-built on two sacred and time-honoured names, which the author
-enshrines between garlands of modern gossip and libels on his
-critics, past and present. A true literary sarcophagus inhuming the
-decayed bodies of very old, if occasionally correct, theories
-jumbled up together with exploded speculations.
-
-The volume—title and symbology—is pregnant with the atmosphere of
-the sacred poetry attached to the names of Gautama the Buddha, and
-“Jesus the Essene.” To find it sprinkled with the heavy drops of
-personal spite, is like gazing at an unclean fly fallen into the
-communion-wine of a chalice. One can but wonder and ask oneself,
-what shall be the next move in literature? Is it a new “Sacred Book
-of the East,” in which one will find the evidence by Policeman
-Endacott against Miss Cass welcomed and accepted as an historical
-fact? Or shall it be the Pentecostal tongues of fire examined in the
-light of the latest improved kerosene lamp?
-
-But a well-informed chronicler at our elbow reports that the author
-of _Buddhism in Christendom, or Jesus the Essene_, is a strong
-medium who sits daily for spiritual development? This would account
-for the wonderfully mixed character of the contents of the volume
-referred to. It must be so, since it reads just as such a joint
-production would. It is a curious mixture of “spirit” inspiration,
-passages bodily taken from the reports of the Society “for
-_Spookical_ Research,” as that misguided body was dubbed—for once
-wittily—by the _Saturday Review_, and various other little
-defamatory trifles besides. The “spirit guides” are proverbially
-revengeful and not always wise in their generation. A former work by
-the same medium having been three or four years ago somewhat
-painfully mangled by a real Sanskrit and Buddhist scholar in India,
-the “Spirit Angel” falls foul now of his critics. The wandering
-Spook tries to run amuck among them, without even perceiving the
-poor, good soul, that he only blots and disfigures with the
-corrosive venom of his spite the two noble and sacred characters
-whom his medium-author undertakes to interpret before ever he has
-learned to understand them....
-
-This places “Lucifer” under the disagreeable necessity of reviewing
-the pretentious work at length in one of its future numbers. As the
-same mistakes and blunders occur in “Buddhism in Christendom” as in
-“Buddha and Early Buddhism,” the magazine must make it its duty, if
-not altogether its pleasure, to check the volume of 1883 by that of
-1887.
-
- ---
-
-It is rumoured that “A CATECHISM ON EVERY-DAY LIFE,” by a
-Theosophical writer, is ready for press. Let us hope it will contain
-no special theology or dogmas, but only wise advice for practical
-life, in its application to the ordinary events in the existence of
-every theosophist. The time has come when the veil of illusion is to
-be pulled aside entirely, not merely playfully, as hitherto done.
-For if mere members of the theosophical body have nothing to risk,
-except, perhaps, an occasional friendly stare and laugh at those
-who, without any special necessity, as believed, pollute the
-immaculate whiteness of their respectable society skirts by joining
-an unpopular movement, real theosophists ought to look truth and
-fact right in the face. To become a true theosophist—_i.e._ one
-thoroughly imbued with altruistic feelings, with a willingness to
-forget self, and readiness to help his neighbour to carry the burden
-of life—is to become instantaneously transformed into a public
-target. It is to make oneself a ready thing for heavy “Mrs. Grundy”
-to sit upon: to become the object of ridicule, slander, and
-vilification, which will not stop even before an occasional criminal
-charge. For some theosophists, every move in the _true theosophical
-direction_, is a forlorn-hope enterprise. All this notwithstanding,
-the ranks of the “unpopular” society are steadily, if slowly
-increasing.
-
-For what does slander and ridicule really matter? When have fools
-ever been slandered, or rich and influential men and women
-ostracised, however black and soiled in their hearts, or in their
-secret lives? Who ever heard of a Reformer’s or an orator’s course
-of life running smooth? Who of them escaped from being pelted with
-dirt by his enemies?
-
-Gautama Buddha, the great Hindu Reformer, was charged by the
-Brahmins with being a demon, whose form was taken by Vishnu, to
-encourage men to despise the Vedas, deny the gods, and thus effect
-their own destruction.
-
- “Say we not well thou art a Samaritan, and hast a devil?” said the
- Pharisees to Jesus. “He deceiveth the people.... Stone him to
- death!”
-
- “He who surpasses or subdues mankind,
- Must look down on the hate of those below,”
-
-says the great English poet. The latter is echoed in prose by the
-king of French poets. Writes Victor Hugo:
-
- “You have your enemies; but who has not? Guizot has enemies,
- Thiers has enemies, Lamartine has enemies. Have I not been myself
- fighting for twenty years? Have I not been for twenty years past
- reviled, betrayed, sold, rended, hooted, taunted, insulted,
- calumniated? Have not my books been parodied, and my deeds
- travestied? I also am beset and spied upon, I also have traps laid
- for me, and I have even been made to fall into them. But what is
- all that to me? I disdain it. It is one of the most difficult yet
- necessary things in life to learn to disdain. Disdain protects and
- crushes. It is a breast plate and a club. You have enemies? Why,
- it is the story of every man who has done a great deed, created a
- new idea. It is the cloud which thunders around everything which
- shines. Do not trouble yourself about it. Do not give your enemies
- the satisfaction of thinking that they cause you any feeling, be
- disdainful.” (_Choses Vues._)
-
- -------
-
- “THE LATEST ROMANCE OF SCIENCE,” Summarized by a Frenchman.
-
-If the Atomo-mechanical Theory of the Universe has caused
-considerable embarrassment to our materialists, and brought some of
-their much beloved scientific speculations to grief (see “Concepts
-of Modern Physics,” by Stallo), the layman must not be ungrateful to
-the great men for other boons received at their hands. Through the
-indefatigable labours of the most famous biologists and
-anthropologists of the day, the mystery which has hitherto
-enshrouded the origin of man is no more. It has vanished into thin
-air; thanks to the activity of the _officina_ (workshop, in Queen’s
-English), in Haeckel’s brain, or, as a Hylo-Idealist would say, in
-the _vesiculo neurine of his hemispherical ganglia_[15]—the origin
-of mankind has to be sought in _that_ scientific region, and nowhere
-else.
-
------
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Dr. Lewins, the Hylo-Idealist, in his appendices to “What is
- Religion?” by C. N.—“On the Brain Theory of Mind and Matter, the
- Creed of Physics, Physic and Philosophy.” W. Stewart & Co.
-
------
-
-Religiously read by the “Animalists” in its English translation in
-Protestant and Monarchical England, the “Pedigree of Man” is now
-welcomed with shouts of joy in Roman Catholic Republican France. A
-summary has just been compiled of it by a French _savant_, who
-rejoices in the name of Topinard. The summary on that “question of
-questions” (as Mr. Huxley calls it), is more interesting in reality
-than the “Pedigree of Man” itself. It is so deliciously fantastic
-and original, that one comes almost to regret that our numerous and
-frolicsome ancestors in the Zoological Gardens of Europe and America
-seem to show no intention of getting up a subscription list among
-themselves, for the raising of a lasting monument to the great
-Haeckel. Thus, ingratitude in man must surely be a phenomenon of
-_atavism_; another suggestive point being thus gained toward further
-proof of man’s descent from the ingrate and heartless, as well as
-tailless, pithecoid baboon.
-
-Saith the learned Topinard:—
-
- “At the commencement of what geologists call the _Laurentian
- period_ of the Earth, and the fortuitous union of certain elements
- of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen, under conditions which
- _probably_ only took place at that epoch, the first albuminoid
- clots were formed. From them, and by spontaneous generation,[16]
- the first cellules or cleavage masses took their origin. These
- cellules were then sub-divided and multiplied, arranging
- themselves in the form of organs, and after a series of
- transformations, fixed by Mr. Haeckel at nine in number,
- originated certain vertebrata of the genus _Amphioxus
- lanceolatus_. The division into sexes was marked out, the spinal
- marrow and _chorda dorsalis_ became visible. At the tenth stage
- the brain and skull made their appearance, as in the lamprey; at
- the eleventh, the limbs and jaws were developed ... the earth was
- then only in the _Silurian_ period. At the sixteenth, the
- adaptation to terrestrial life ceased. At the seventeenth, which
- corresponds to the _Jurassic_ phase of the history of the globe,
- the genealogy of man is raised to the kangaroo among the
- marsupials. At the eighteenth, he becomes a lemurian; the
- _Tertiary period_ commences. At the nineteenth, he becomes
- Catarrhinian, that is to say, an ape with a tail, a Pithecian. At
- the twentieth he becomes an anthropoid, continuing so throughout
- the whole of the _Miocene period_. At the twenty-first he becomes
- a man-ape, he does not possess language, nor in consequence the
- corresponding brain. Lastly, at the twenty-second, man comes forth
- ... in his inferior types.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Mark well: when a theosophist or an occultist speaks of
- “spontaneous generation,” because for him there exists no
- inorganic matter in Kosmos—he is forthwith set down as an
- _ignoramus_. To prove the descent of man from the animal, however,
- even spontaneous generation from dead or inorganic matter, becomes
- an axiomatic and scientific fact.
-
------
-
-Happy, privileged man! Hapless evolution-forsaken baboon! We are not
-told by science the secret why, while man has had plenty of time to
-become, say a Plato, a Newton, a Napoleon, or _even_ a Haeckel, his
-poor ancestor should have been arrested in his growth and
-development. For, as far as is known, the rump of the cynocephalus
-seems as blue and as callous to-day, as it was during the reign of
-Psammetichus or Cheops; the macacus must have made as ugly faces at
-Pliny 18 centuries back, as he does now at a Darwinian. We may be
-told that in the enormous period of time that must have elapsed
-since the beginning of evolution, 2,000, or even 10,000, years mean
-very little. But then, one does not find even the Moneron any better
-off for the millions of years that have rolled away. Yet, between
-the gelatinous and thoughtful hermit of the briny deep and man,
-there must have elapsed quite sufficient time for some trifling
-transformation. That primordial protoplasmic creature, however,
-seems to fare no better at the hands of evolution, which has
-well-nigh forgotten it.
-
-By this time, one would suppose that this ancestor of ours of stage
-_one_, ought to have reached, to say the least, a higher
-development: to have become, for instance, the amphibian “sozura” of
-the “fourteenth stage,” so minutely and scientifically described by
-Mr. Haeckel, and of which De Quatrefages so wickedly says in “The
-Human Species” (p. 108), that “it (the sozura) is _equally unknown
-to science_.” But we see quite the reverse. This tender-bodied
-little one, has remained but a moneron to this very hour: so much
-so, that Mr. Huxley, fishing him out from the abysmal ocean depths,
-took pity upon him, and gave him a father. He baptized our archaic
-ancestor, and named him _Bathybius Haeckelii_....
-
-But all these are mysteries that will, no doubt, be easily explained
-to the full satisfaction—of science, by any biologist of Haeckel’s
-brain power. As all know, no acrobatic feats, from the top of one
-tree to another top, by the swiftest of chimpanzees, can ever
-approach, let alone equal, the rapid evolutions of fancy in his
-cerebral “officina,” whenever Haeckel is called upon to explain the
-inexplicable....
-
-There is one trifle, however, which seems to have the best of even
-his capacity for getting out of a scientific dilemma, and this is
-_the eighteenth stage_ of his genealogy, in the “Pedigree of Man.”
-Man’s evolution from the Monera, _alias_ Bathybius _Haeckelii_, up
-to tailed and then tailless man, passes through the marsupials, the
-kangaroo, sarrigue, etc. Thus he writes:—
-
-“_Eighteenth stage._ Prosimiæ allied to the Loris (Stenops) and
-Makis (Lemur), without marsupial bones, but _with placenta_.”
-(“_Pedig. of Man._” p. 77.)
-
-Now it may be perhaps interesting to the profane and the innocent to
-learn that no such “prosimiæ,” with placenta, exists in nature. That
-it is, in short, another creation of the famous German Evolutionist,
-and a child of his own brain. For De Quatrefages has pointed out
-several years ago, that:
-
- “The anatomical investigations of MM. Alphonse Milne, Edwards and
- Grandidier ... place it beyond all doubt that the prosimiæ of
- Haeckel have _no decidua and a diffuse placenta_. They are
- _indeciduata_. Far from _any possibility of their being the
- ancestors of the apes_, according to the principles laid down by
- Haeckel himself, they cannot even be regarded as the ancestors of
- the zonoplacential mammals ... and ought to be connected with the
- pachydermata, the edentata and the cetacea.” (p. 110.)
-
-But, as that great French _savant_ shows, “Haeckel, without the
-least hesitation, adds his _prosimiæ_,” to the other groups in the
-“Pedigree of Man,” and “attributes to them ... a discoidal
-placenta.” Must the world of the too credulous innocents again
-accept on faith these two creatures unknown to Science or man, only
-because “the proof of their existence arises _from the necessity of
-an intermediate type_?” This necessity, however being one only for
-the greater success of their inventor, Haeckel, that Simian Homer
-must not bear us ill will, if we do not hesitate to call his
-“genealogy” of man a romance of Science of the wildest type.
-
-One thing is very suggestive in this speculation. The discovery of
-the absence of the needed placenta in the so-called _prosimiæ_ now
-dates several years back. Haeckel knows of it, of course. So does
-Mr. Ed. B. Aveling, D.Sc., his translator. Why is the error allowed
-to remain uncorrected, and even unnoticed, in the English
-translation of the “Pedigree of Man,” of 1887? Do the “members of
-the International Library of Science and Free-thought,” fear to lose
-some of Haeckel’s admirers were these to learn the truth?
-
-Nevertheless Haeckel’s scientific “Pedigree of Man,” ought to awake
-and stir up to action the spirit of private enterprise. What a
-charming _Féerie_ could be made of it on the stage of a theatre! A
-_corps de ballet_, composed of antediluvian reptiles and giant
-lizards, gradually, and stage by stage, metamorphosing themselves
-into kangaroos, lemurs, tailless apes and anthropoid baboons, and
-finally into a chorus of German biologists!
-
-Such a _Féerie_ would leave “Black Crook,” and “Alice in
-Wonder-Land,” nowhere. An intelligent manager, alive to his
-interests, would make his fortune were he but to follow the happy
-thought.
-
-_Nota bene_:—The suggestion is copyright.
-
- ---
-
-THE BOOK OF LIFE, by Sidhartha (also) Vonisa; his discoveries from
- “6215 to 6240, Anno Mundi.”
-
-A cross between an _octavo_ and _duodecimo_.
-
-This volume, we see, is highly appreciated by the clergy, by whom,
-at this gloomy day of infidelity, even small favours seem to be
-thankfully received. The author (profane name unknown) hints, when
-he does not state plainly, that he is a reincarnation of Gautama
-Buddha, or Siddartha, as also of a few other no meaner historical
-personages. The work is a clever steering between the sandbanks of
-science and theology. Enough is given in careful agreement with the
-former to make it ignore the more abundant concessions to the gods
-of the latter—_e.g._, Biblical chronology. The age of the world is
-allowed 6240 years from Adam, “seven hundred years after the brown
-and black races had been created” (p. 53 “Chronology”); the date of
-the earth’s incrustation and globe being left to the imagination of
-the reader. A chronological table of the principal historical events
-of the world is published on pages 53-56. Among them the birth of
-Moses is placed 1572 B.C. The Vedas are shown compiled in India, and
-the poems of Homer in Greece, “about 1200 B.C.” Siddartha or Gautama
-established Buddhism in India “from 808 to 726,” B.C. we are told.
-Last, but not least, of the world epochs and _divine_ signs of the
-time, comes the for ever memorable event of March 31st, 1885—namely,
-the “Book of Life, Vonisa, was completely written,” and it closes
-the list. The reader is notified, moreover, at the line beginning
-with A.D. 6240, that the year 1884 C.E. (Christian Era) is the
-“beginning of Messianic age and close of Christian age,” which might
-account for the appearance and publication in the year following of
-the original volume now under review.
-
-The new Messiah declares that “although much of the work consists of
-discoveries which are original with the author, yet the reader will
-find in the Analytic Index a few hundred out of the many references
-which might be given to eminent authorities which were consulted in
-its preparation.” Among these, it seems, one has to include some
-theosophic writings, as it is stated in the “Book of Life” that—
-
- (_a._) “Seven great forces were concerned in these vast movements
- of early creation.”
-
- (_b._) “Seven Ages of the Earth.”
-
- (_c._) “Vayomer Elohim” translated “according to the laws of the
- Hebrew language,” means that “seven forces were used as three-fold
- factors,” and
-
- (_d._) “That the first human beings were incarnated spirits” (pp.
- 26-27).
-
-The above four declarations have the approval of theosophy. Whether
-the sentence that follows, namely, that “the work of incarnation (of
-the _spirits_) took place according to law,” and is “the clearest
-hypothesis _which science has to offer concerning the origin of
-man_,” will meet with the same approval from Messrs. Huxley,
-Haeckel, and Fiske, of the “Atomo-mechanical Theory,” is very
-doubtful.
-
-Nor is it so sure that the Ethnological department in the
-Anglo-Indian Bureau of Statistics is quite prepared to alter its
-census returns in accordance with Siddartha’s declaration, on page
-29,that—
-
-“One branch of the brown race was the Dravidian, _which still holds
-its place in Northern India_.” (?!)
-
- ---
-
-A new book, bearing the title of SPIRIT REVEALED, is nearly ready
-for press. It is described as an extraordinary work. Its author is
-Wm. C. Eldon Serjeant, F.T.S., a writer of articles on the “Coming
-Reformation,” “Sparks from the World of Fire,” &c., &c. The work
-claims to “explain the Nature of the Deity, and to discuss His
-manifestations on every plane of existence, and to show forth the
-form of Christ, whose second coming is expected by Christians, and
-to proclaim the advent of the Messiah according to the belief of the
-Jews.” “Many subjects, involving questions of considerable obscurity
-in reference to the Deity, to the Scriptures, to men, to animals,
-and to things generally, are comprehensively treated and explained
-in accordance with the Word of the Spirit declared at various times
-through the sons of men.”
-
- ---
-
-PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH:
-
-These reports coming out _ad libitum_, without any definite date,
-cannot be regarded as periodical. Depending for their circulation
-chiefly on the consummation of what the learned editors offer as
-_bonâ fide_ psychic and spiritualistic _exposés_—which the public
-accepts as most kind advertisements of the people so attacked—this
-publication occupies a position entirely _sui generis_. The
-“Proceedings” offer to the public a very useful _manual_, something
-between a text and a guidebook, with practical instructions in
-diplomatic policy in the domain of the Psychic, in the form of
-scientific letters and private detective information. Sensitives
-discern in the “Proceedings” (by _telepathic impact_) the
-Machiavelian spirit of aristocratic Bismarck, seasoned with an aura
-strongly impregnated with the plebeian perfumes of honest
-_mouchards_ on duty, but then they are, perhaps, prejudiced. On the
-other hand, some Russian spiritualistically inclined members of the
-S.P.R. have been heard to say, that the “Proceedings” reminded them
-of those of the happily defunct Third Section of the St. Petersburg
-Police. Thus, the tutelary “guides” of the learned association of
-the British Psychists, may one day turn out to be the departed
-spirits of Russian _gendarmes_ after all?
-
-Occasionally when the hunting grounds of this erudite body have
-afforded a specially successful chase—after mares’ nests—a
-_Supplement_ is added to the “Proceedings,” the magnitude of the
-added volume being in inverse ratio to the illumination of its
-contents, which are generally offered as a premium to materialism.
-
-Hence, the “Proceedings” may be better described as the fluctuating
-and occasional records of a society bent upon giving the lie to its
-own name. For “Psychical” research is surely a misnomer, besides
-being a delusion and a snare for the unwary. LUCIFER would suggest
-as a truer title, “Society for Hylo-_Pseumatical_ Research.” This
-would give the S.P.R. the benefit of an open connection with Dr.
-Lewins’ unparalleled “Hylo-Idealism”[17]—while it would enable it to
-sail under its _true_ colours.
-
-Whether LUCIFER’S advice be accepted or not, the profound philosophy
-of the phenomenon baptized “telepathy” and telepathic impact can
-only be studied scientifically, in our spasmodic contemporary. This
-new Greek stranger is the crowning work of the Psychic Fathers of
-our century. It is their “first” and “only” offspring, and is a
-_genuine_ discovery as far as its Hellenic name goes. For, bereft of
-its Greek appellation, it becomes like America. The genius who
-_discovered_ the phenomenon, is like Columbus on whom the Northmen,
-and even the Chinamen, had stolen a march centuries before. This
-phenomenon can only seem _new_ when thus disguised under a name
-solemn and scientific—because incomprehensible to the average
-profane. Its plain description in English—as transference of thought
-or sensation from a distance—could never hope to have the same ring
-of classical learning in it.
-
-Nevertheless, the “Proceedings” with the two additional gigantic
-volumes of the psychic “Leviathan,” called “Phantasms of the
-Living,” are strongly recommended to invalids. They are priceless in
-cases of obstinate _insomnia_, as the best soporific known.
-_Directions_: The reader must be careful not to light a match in too
-close proximity to the said works.
-
- “THE ADVERSARY.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- ύλη “_matter_ as opposed to mind”; therefore _Material-Idealism_—a
- contradiction in terms exactly parallel to the name “Psychic” and
- the very “anti-psychic” work of the Society referred to. _Pseuma_
- should replace _Psyche_, as it seeks for _frauds_ and not
- _soul-action_.
-
------
-
- ------------------
-
-The following books have been received and will be noticed in early
-numbers of LUCIFER:—
-
-THE HISTORY OF THE ROSICRUCIANS, by Arthur E. Waite, and THE
-QUABALAH UNVEILED, by S.L. Mac-Gregor Mathers, from Mr. Redway;
-EARTH’S EARLIEST AGES, by G. H. Pember, from Messrs. Hodder and
-Stoughton: THE MYSTERY OF THE AGES, by the Countess of Caithness,
-from Mr. C. L. H. Wallace; AN ADVENTURE AMONG THE ROSICRUCIANS, by
-Dr. F. Hartmann, from the Occult Publishing Company, Boston; and
-NINETEENTH CENTURY COMMON SENSE, from the T. B. Lippincott Company,
-Boston, U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- =CORRESPONDENCE=
-
- INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.
- ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 1.
-
- _To the Editor of_ LUCIFER.
-
-We are told that, before judging a horary figure, we must ascertain
-if it is radical, and to decide this point several rules have been
-given. The first is with regard to the number of degrees on the cusp
-of the ascendant. Lilly says a figure is rarely radical if the first
-two or last three degrees of a sign ascend. Morrison fixes the limit
-at the first or second and last two degrees. Pearse gives the limit
-as the first and last five degrees, and Raphael as the first and
-last three.
-
-All the laws of nature are harmonious and rational; but in the rule
-of the first two authorities, this harmony seems absent. Why should
-the limit be 1 or 2 degrees at the beginning of the sign and 2 or 3
-at the end?
-
-Again, as an exception to the above rule, Lilly says that a figure
-may be radical even when 27° or more ascend, if the number
-corresponds to his age; and when 1° or 2° ascend, if the querent be
-very young, and his appearance agrees with the quality of the signs
-ascending. And here again there is the same want of harmony. Why
-should the age of the querent have to correspond accurately in one
-case and only approximately in the other? Furthermore, no
-astrologers seem to have given a logical explanation of these rules.
-
-On reflecting on this problem I reasoned thus. In ♍ 29° 59´ 59´´ ♃
-is absolutely without dignity; in ♐ 0° 0´ 1´´ he is in his house
-triplicity, and terms, a threefold dignity. Is it conceivable that
-this great change of power should be so sudden, as to be
-accomplished in less than 2 seconds of space? Analogy shows that it
-is probably otherwise, and that as the planets and cusps of houses
-have orbs of influence, _so also have the signs_.
-
-If this be true, it supplies the key to the above problem. If only
-the first or last few degrees of a sign ascend, then the cusp of the
-ascendant is within the orbs of the adjacent signs, and the house is
-not ruled solely by the planet which is its proper lord, but also
-partly by the planet ruling the adjacent sign; and this must hold
-good under all circumstances, even when the number of the degrees
-ascending agree with the age of the querent, or the ascending sign
-and planets therein describe him.
-
-Furthermore, if this be admitted, it also follows, as a logical
-conclusion, that if the first and last few degrees of a sign are on
-the cusp of any house, no conclusion can be drawn with certainty
-from the aspects of the lord of that house.
-
-The exact limits of the orbs of the signs must be decided by
-experience; I am induced to fix the limits at 2° 30´ and 27° 30´.
-
- NEMO.
-
- --------------
-
- _To the Editor of_ LUCIFER.
-
-The belief in the power and efficacy of talismans and amulets was,
-at one period of the world’s history, universal. Even during the
-XVth century, the latest among the innumerable revivals of
-civilisation, the majority of learned and cultured men had a
-profound conviction of their reality. But such ideas are now scouted
-by popular opinion, because the philosophy underlying them is not
-understood. LUCIFER, therefore, would certainly confer a boon on
-many by throwing light on the following points:—
-
-(1). Wherein does the power of a talisman lie? (2). How far does its
-efficacy depend on the signs traced upon it, and how far on the
-power and knowledge of the maker? (3). Granting that will-power and
-knowledge are the main factors in imparting to the talisman its
-power, how does that power remain attached to it after the death of
-the man who made it.
-
- β
-
- =THEOSOPHICAL
- AND MYSTIC PUBLICATIONS=
-
-
-The Theosophist, a magazine of Oriental Philosophy, Art, Literature,
-and Occultism. Conducted by H. P. Blavatsky, and H. S. Olcott,
-Permanent President of the T. S. Vol. VIII., Nos. 94 and 95, July
-and August, 1887. Madras, India. In London, George Redway, 15, York
-Street, Covent Garden.
-
-This journal is the oldest of the periodicals of the Theosophical
-Society, and has a distinct feature of its own: a number of Hindoo,
-Buddhist, and Parsi contributors among the most learned of British
-India. No journal is thus more reliable in the occasional
-information given in it upon the sacred tenets and scriptures of the
-East, since it is derived first hand, and comes from native
-scholars, well versed in their respective cults. From time to time
-_The Theosophist_ has respectfully corrected mistakes—sins of
-omission and commission—by Western Orientalists, and will continue
-to perform its proposed task by issuing admirable articles.
-
-As a marked instance of this, the four “Lectures on the Bhagavid
-Gita,” by a native scholar, Mr. T. Subba Rao, may be cited. Begun in
-the February number, they are now concluded in the July issue. No
-better, abler, or more complete exposition on that most
-philosophical, as the least understood, of the sacred books of the
-East, has ever been given in any work, past or present. In the June
-and July numbers, the “Ha-Khoshe-Cah, a Vision of the Infinite,” by
-Dr. Henry Pratt, a erudite Kabalist in England, is published.
-
-Some very interesting articles on the “Norse Mythology,” by the
-learned Swedish scholar, Mr. C. H. A. Bjerregard (the Astor Library,
-New York), may also be found in the last numbers.
-
-_The Theosophist_ is the journal of the Theosophical Society _par
-excellence_; the Minutes and records of the Society’s work, being
-given monthly in its “Supplements.”
-
-No evil wisher of the said Society, rushing into publicity with
-denunciations, and occasionally libellous attacks upon that body,
-ought—if he is a fair-minded and _honest_ opponent, of course—to
-publish anything without first making himself well acquainted with
-the contents of _The Theosophist_, and especially with the
-_Supplements_ attached to that journal.
-
-This advice is given in all kindness to our traducers—the learned as
-the ignorant—for their direct benefit, though at an evident
-disadvantage to theosophy. For, as so many of our critics have been
-lately making fools of themselves, in their alleged _exposés_ of our
-doctrines, it is to the advantage of our Society to let them go on
-undisturbed, and thus turn the laugh on the enemy. Two graphic
-instances may be cited. In “Buddhism in Christendom; or, Jesus the
-Essene,” by an impolite dabbler in Orientalism, the septenary
-doctrine of the Occultists is disfigured out of recognition, and is
-met by the unanimous hearty laugh of those who know something of the
-subject. Its unlucky author has evidently never opened a serious
-theosophical work, unless, indeed, the doctrine is too much above
-his head. As a refreshing contrast one finds, in “Earth and Its
-Earliest Ages,” by G. H. Pember, an author, who has most
-conscientiously studied and understood the fundamental doctrines of
-Theosophy.
-
-Thus, notwithstanding his attempt to connect it with the coming
-Antichrist, and show its numerous writers pledged to the work of
-Satan, “the Prince of the Powers of the Air,”[18] the volume
-published by that learned and fair-minded gentleman is a true pearl
-in the _anti_-Theosophical literature. The correct enunciation of
-knowledge of the tenets he disapproves, as a sincere orthodox
-Christian, is remarkable; and his language, dignified, polite, and
-entirely free from any personality can but call forth as courteous a
-reply from those he arraigns. He has evidently read, and, what is
-more, _understood_, what he found in the _Theosophist_, and other
-mystic volumes. It shall, therefore, be the pleasure and duty of
-LUCIFER, who bears no malice for the personal attack, to review this
-interesting volume in its October issue, hoping to see as kind a
-notice of “Earth and Its Earliest Ages” in the _Theosophist_ of
-Madras.
-
------
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Spiritualists, mystics, and metaphysical Orientalists need not
- feel jealous, as they are made to share the same fate, and are
- raised to the same dignity with the Theosophists. The writers of
- “The Perfect Way,” Mrs. Dr. Kingsford and Mr. E. Maitland, stand
- arm-in-arm with the humble writer of “Isis Unveiled” before the
- throne of Satan. Mr. Ed. Arnold, of “The Light of Asia,” and the
- late Mr. Kenealy, of the “Book of God.” are seen radiating in the
- same lethal light of brimstone and sulphur. Mr. C. C. Massey is
- shown stuck deep in Antichristian Metaphysics; our kind Lady
- Caithness is pointed out in the coils of the “Great Beast” of
- Romanism, and charged with “Goddess worship:” and even—ye Powers
- of mystical Perception!—Mr. Arthur Lillie’s Buddhist Monotheism is
- taken _au grand serieux_!
-
------
-
- ---
-
-The Path; “a magazine devoted to the Brotherhood of Humanity,
-Theosophy in America, and the study of Occult Science, Philosophy,
-and Aryan Literature.” Edited by William Q. Judge. Price ten
-shillings per annum. New York, U. S. A. P. O. Box, 2659, etc. George
-Redway, 15 York Street, Covent Garden, London.
-
-A most excellent and theosophical monthly, full of philosophical
-literature by several well-known mystics and writers. The best
-publication of its kind in the United States, and one that ever
-fulfils what it promises, giving more food for thought than many of
-the larger periodicals. Its August number is very interesting and
-fully up to its usual mark.
-
-Jasper Niemann continues his excellent reflections in “Letters on
-the True.” Mr. E. D. Walker, in an article upon “The Poetry of
-Reincarnation in Western Literature,” cites the verses of
-Wordsworth, Tennyson, Dean Alford, Addison, H. Vaughan, Browning,
-etc., in proof of the fact that these poets were tinctured, if not
-imbued, with the philosophy of reincarnation. B. N. Acle continues
-_Notes on the Astral Light_, from Eliphas Levi. He cites the
-startling and lurid enunciation of that epigrammatical occultist,
-who says that “He who dies without forgiving his enemy, hurls
-himself into Eternity armed with a dagger, and devotes himself to
-the horror of eternal murder.” “_The Symbolism of the Equilateral
-Triangle_,” by Miss Lydia Bell, shows how much wisdom can be
-extracted from a little symbol when you know how to look for it
-there.
-
-S. B. makes some very pertinent remarks upon _Theosophical Fiction_,
-the growth of which is one sign of the times. “A true picture of
-life, either real or potential, which is found in a work of fiction,
-makes such reading one of the best sources of learning.” Thanks to
-the education which it is receiving from the more solid literature
-of theosophy, the public is becoming more critical, and has already
-formed a “standard of probability” for marvellous phenomena, which
-acts as a healthy check upon outside writers of fiction, who are
-therefore no longer able to trust entirely “to their imagination for
-their acts, and to their memory for their fancies.” Novel readers
-now like their supernatural not to be _unnaturally_ supernatural,
-even if they do have to take it in minute doses, disguised in their
-favourite draught of love, murder and small talk. _The Higher
-Carelessness_ (No. 7 of _Thoughts in Solitude_), by “Pilgrim,” is
-full of deep and beautiful reflections. This writer, like “American
-Mystic” whose article on the puzzling question, “_Am I my Brothers
-Keeper_,” comes next, has advanced some way upon the path of
-knowledge, and the thoughts of both of them have a special interest
-for contemplative and self-examining readers. “American Mystic,”
-by-the-bye, gives a new and striking turn to a phrase too often
-misunderstood. “Resist not evil” he quotes and explains that
-resistance, fierce and personal, to evil befalling oneself, is what
-is meant. _Christianity—Theosophy_, by Mr. Wm. H. Kembal, seeks to
-show that the fundamental aim of both, namely the Brotherhood of
-Humanity, is the same, and that they can and ought to unite their
-forces.
-
-_Julius_, in _Tea Table Talk_, is as crisp, weird, and
-slyly-sentimental as ever.
-
- ---
-
-Le Lotus: “Revue des Hautes Etudes Théosophiques. Tendant à
-favorises le rapprochement entre l’Orient et l’Occident.” Sous
-l’inspiration de H. P. Blavatsky (nominally; but edited, in reality,
-by our able brother, F. K. Gaboriau, F.T.S.). Georges Carré, 112
-Boulevard St. Germain, Paris. Subscription 15 fr. per annum.
-
-An excellent monthly, presenting yet another aspect of theosophy;
-inspired by the desire to benefit the struggling masses of humanity,
-and to diffuse the true spirit of solidarity among men. The August
-number, besides translations of selected articles from the
-_Theosophist_, of special interest to its French readers, contains a
-capital article on “Freemasons and Theosophists,” the continuation
-of a series of studies on “Initiation,” and a discussion of the
-much-vexed question whether the “Will to Live” spoken of in the
-“Elixir of Life” is selfish or not. In the last few pages, the
-serious character of the journal is relieved by those brilliant
-sparkles of French wit to which that language lends itself so
-admirably.
-
-Brief notes on books, articles in the press, pamphlets, &c., give
-ample scope for caustic raillery, as well as appreciative comment,
-and the editor ought to be specially congratulated on this
-department of his review.
-
- ---
-
-L’Aurore: Revue mensuelle sous la direction de Lady Caithness,
-Duchesse de Pomar. George Carré, 112 Boulevard St. Germain, Paris.
-Subscription, 15fr. per annum.
-
-The Mystic and Catholic Journal of Aristocratic France, somewhat
-tinged with humanitarianism, and showing the influence of the higher
-phases of modern spiritualism. The subject of reincarnation is its
-principal feature, and a mystical romance, _Amour Immortel_, gives
-its various phases. _L’Aurore_ is admirably conducted. Its articles
-are always in good taste, and perfectly adapted to the special
-public it appeals to.
-
- ---
-
-The Occult Word: A monthly journal in the interest of Theosophy.
-Mrs. J. W. Cables, 40, Ambrose Street, Rochester, N. Y., U.S.A.
-Subscription, 1 dollar per annum.
-
-Brought out more in the style of a newspaper, this journal is
-another proof of the vitality of the Theosophic movement. It is more
-Christian in its tone and phraseology, and shows less traces of the
-influence of Eastern thought, than the publications already
-mentioned. Some thoughts in it are remarkably good, and its tendency
-most excellent. A most worthy little periodical.
-
- ---
-
-The Occultist: A monthly journal of Psychological and Mystical
-Research. Edited by Mr. J. Thomas, F.T.S. London agent, E. W. Allen,
-4 Ave Maria Lane, E.C. Subscription, 1 shilling per annum.
-
-As its price indicates, a tiny and unambitious publication of four
-pages, but one that contains, from time to time, thoughtful and
-suggestive articles. Its existence testifies to the devotion of its
-proprietor and editor to the cause of truth.
-
- ---
-
-The Sphinx: “A monthly journal, devoted to the historical and
-experimental proof of the supersensuous conception of the world on a
-monistic basis.” Edited by Hübbe Schleiden, Dr. J. U. Th. Griebens
-Verlag, Leipzig; and George Redway, London. Subscription, 12s. 6d.
-per annum.
-
-As its title page implies, a learned and philosophical journal,
-doing its work with true German thoroughness and permeated with a
-real spirit of earnest investigation. It appeals, mainly, to
-thinkers and students—a numerous class in Germany, but somewhat
-sparsely represented in England. Dr. Carl Du Prel, the leader of the
-new school of transcendental philosophy in that country, is its
-leading contributor. But it contains from time to time articles of
-great interest to students of occultism.
-
- ---
-
-TRANSACTIONS OF THE “LONDON LODGE” OF THE T. S., NOS. 12 AND 13.—Two
-able and interesting papers by Mr. A. P. Sinnett; the first on
-“Buddha’s Teaching,” the second on “The Relations of the Lower and
-Higher Self.” Dealing with Buddhism, Mr. Sinnett exposes several of
-the current misconceptions regarding Buddhist doctrines. Notably
-among these stand the utterly false ideas, current in the West, that
-Buddha recognised no conscious existence for the individual after
-death, and that Nervana is synonymous with annihilation. Mr. Sinnett
-draws a happy comparison between these misconceptions and the
-strange blindness shown by European scholars in accepting the
-allegorical legend that Buddha’s death was occasioned by eating
-roast _boar_, as a literal fact.
-
-In his second paper, Mr. Sinnett follows up a line of thought
-originated by him in an earlier number of the “Transactions.” He
-explains his views with clearness, and adds considerably to the
-details of the outline sketched in his previous paper. But, as
-LUCIFER hopes shortly to deal with this subject at length, it is
-unnecessary to enter into a detailed examination of Mr. Sinnett’s
-views at present.
-
- ---
-
-The Esoteric: “A Magazine of Advance and Practical Esoteric
-Thought.” Boston, U.S.A. Subscription 6s. per annum.
-
-Principal feature—the identification of each issue with one of the
-signs of the Zodiac, which are held to be “important and real
-divisions of time or states of man’s life.” Contents—eighteen short
-articles, occupying 62 pages, the substance of which has been mainly
-gleaned from various mystic authors, and harmonizes well with some
-Theosophical teachings.
-
-
-
-
- =FROM THE NOTE BOOK OF AN UNPOPULAR PHILOSOPHER=
-
- THE ESOTERIC VALUE OF CERTAIN WORDS AND DEEDS IN SOCIAL LIFE.
-
-
-A definition of _Public Opinion_. The gathering of a few fogies
-positively electrified by fanaticism and force of habit, who act on
-the many noodles negatively electrified by indifference. The
-acceptation of uncharitable views on “suggestion” by “telepathic
-impact” (what ever that may mean). The work of unconscious
-psychology.
-
-_Sympathetic grief._—The expression thereof in Society, for one’s
-sorrow, is like a solemn funeral procession, in which the row of
-mourning coaches is long, indeed, but the carriages of which are all
-empty.
-
-_Mutual exchange of compliments._—Expressions of delight and other
-acting in cultured society are the fig-leaves of the civilised Adams
-and Eves. These “aprons” to conceal truth are fabricated incessantly
-in social Edens, and their name is—_politeness_.
-
-_Keeping the Sabbath._—Throwing public contumely on, and parading
-one’s superiority over Christ, “one greater than the temple” and
-Sabbath, who stood for his disciples’ rights to “break” the Sabbath,
-for the Sabbath was made for man, and not man for Sabbath (Matt.
-xii. and Mark ii., etc.).
-
-_Attending Divine Service._—Breaking the express commandment of
-Jesus. Becoming “as the hypocrites are,” who love to pray in
-Synagogue and Temples, “that they may be seen of men.” (Matt.vi.)
-
-_Taking the Oath, on the Bible._—A Christian law, devised and
-adopted to perpetuate and carry out the unequivocal commandment of
-the Founder of Christianity, “Swear not at all, neither by heaven
-nor by the earth” (Matt. v.). As the heaven and the earth are
-supposed to have been created _only_ by God, a book written by _men_
-thus received the prerogative over the former.
-
-_Unpopularity._—We hate but those whom we envy or fear. Hatred is a
-concealed and forced homage rendered to the person hated; a tacit
-admission of the superiority of the unpopular character.
-
-The true value of _back-biting and slander_. A proof of the fast
-coming triumph of the victim chosen. The bite of the fly when the
-creature feels its end approaching.
-
- _A Few Illustrations to the Point from Schopenhauer._
-
-Socrates was repeatedly vilified and thrashed by the opponents of
-his philosophy, and was as repeatedly urged by his friends to have
-his honour avenged in the tribunals of Athens. Kicked by a rude
-citizen, in the presence of his followers, one of these expressed
-surprise for his not resenting the insult, to which the Sage
-replied:
-
-“Shall I then feel offended, and ask the magistrate to avenge me, if
-I also happen to be kicked by an ass?”
-
-To another remark whether a certain man had abused and called him
-names, he quietly answered:
-
-“No; for none of the epithets he used can possibly apply to me.”
-(From Plato’s “Georgics”)
-
-The famous cynic, Cratus, having received from the musician
-Nicodromus a blow which caused his face to swell, coolly fixed a
-tablet upon his brow, inscribed with the two words, “_Nicodromus
-facit_.” The flute player hardly escaped with his life from the
-hands of the populace, which viewed Cratus as a household god.
-
-Seneca, in his work “_De Constanta Sapientis_,” treats most
-elaborately of insults in words and deeds, or _contumelia_, and then
-declares that no Sage ever pays the smallest attention to such
-things.—“Well, yes!” the reader will exclaim, “but these men were
-all of them _Sages_!”—“And you, are you then only _fools_? Agreed!”
-
- LUCIFER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. I. LONDON, OCTOBER 15TH, 1887. NO. 2.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- THE LADY OF LIGHT.
-
- (_Written for_ LUCIFER.)
-
- Star of the Day and the Night!
- Star of the Dark that is dying;
- Star of the Dawn that is nighing,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light![19]
-
- * *
-
- Still with the purest in white,
- Still art thou Queen of the Seven;
- Thou hast not fallen from Heaven
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- How large in thy lustre, how bright
- The beauty of promise thou wearest!
- The message of Morning thou bearest,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- Aid us in putting to flight
- The Shadows that darken about us,
- Illumine within, as without, us,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- Shine through the thick of our fight;
- Open the eyes of the sleeping;
- Dry up the tears of the weeping,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- Purge with thy pureness our sight,
- Thou light of the lost ones who love us,
- Thou lamp of the Leader above us,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- Shine with transfiguring might,
- Till earth shall reflect back as human
- Thy Likeness, Celestial Woman,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- With the flame of thy radiance smite
- The clouds that are veiling the vision
- Of Woman’s millennial mission,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- * *
-
- Shine in the Depth and the Height,
- And show us the treasuries olden
- Of wisdom, the hidden, the golden,
- Lucifer, Lady of Light!
-
- GERALD MASSEY.
-
------
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- The reader well versed in symbology and theogony is, of course,
- aware that every god and goddess of the ancient pantheons is
- androgynous in his or her genealogy. Thus our Lucifer, the
- “Morning Star,” being identical with Venus, is, therefore, the
- same as the Chaldean Istar, or the Jewish Astoreth, to whom the
- Hebrews offered cakes and buns, addressing her as the Lady of
- Light and the Queen of Heaven. She is the “great star,”
- _Wormwood_, whom the misanthropical St. John sees falling down to
- the earth in _Revelation_ (Chapter viii.), as her great rival is
- _Aima_, the fruitful mother, or the third Sephiroth Binah (IHVH
- ALHIM, or the female Jah-hovah), the “woman with child,” in
- Chapter xii. of the same.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
-
-
-It is intensely interesting to follow season after season the rapid
-evolution and change of public thought in the direction of the
-mystical. The educated mind is most undeniably attempting to free
-itself from the heavy fetters of materialism. The ugly caterpillar
-is writhing in the agonies of death, under the powerful efforts of
-the psychic butterfly to escape from its science-built prison, and
-every day brings some new glad tidings of one or more such mental
-births to light.
-
-As the New York “Path” truly remarks in its September issue, when
-“Theosophical and kindred topics ... are made the texts for novels,”
-and, we may add, scientific essays and _brochures_, “the implication
-is that interest in them has become diffused through all social
-ranks.” That kind of literature is “paradoxically proof that
-Occultism has passed beyond the region of careless amusement and
-entered that of serious enquiry.” The reader has but to throw a
-retrospective glance at the publications of the last few years to
-find that such topics as Mysticism, Magic, Sorcery, Spiritualism,
-Theosophy, Mesmerism, or, as it is now called, Hypnotism, all the
-various branches in short of the _Occult_ side of nature, are
-becoming predominant in every kind of literature. They visibly
-increase in proportion to the efforts made to discredit the
-movements in the cause of truth, and strangle enquiry—whether on the
-field of theosophy or spiritualism—by trying to besmear their most
-prominent heralds, pioneers and defenders, with tar and feathers.
-
-The key-note for mystic and theosophic literature was Marion
-Crawford’s “Mr. Isaacs.” It was followed by his “Zoroaster.” Then
-followed “The Romance of Two Worlds,” by Marie Corelli; R. Louis
-Stephenson’s “Mr. Hyde and Dr. Jekyll;” “The Fallen Idol,” by
-Anstey; “King Solomon’s Mines” and the thrice famous “She,” by Rider
-Haggard; “Affinities” and “The Brother of the Shadow,” by Mrs.
-Campbell Praed; Edmund Downey’s “House of Tears,” and many others
-less noticeable. And now there comes a fresh outburst in Florence
-Marryat’s “Daughter of the Tropics,” and F. C. Philips’ “Strange
-Adventures of Lucy Smith.” It is unnecessary to mention in detail
-the literature produced by avowed theosophists and occultists, some
-of whose works are very remarkable, while others are positively
-scientific, such as S. L. Macgregor Mathers’ “Kabbalah Unveiled,”
-and Dr. F. Hartmann’s “Paracelsus,” “Magic, White and Black,” &c. We
-have also to note the fact that theosophy has now crossed the
-Channel, and is making its way into French literature. “La France”
-publishes a strange romance by Ch. Chincholle, pregnant with
-theosophy, occultism and mesmerism, and called “_La Grande
-Pretresse_,” while _La Revue politique et litteraire_ (19 Feb. 1887,
-_et seq._) contained over the signature of Th. Bentzon, a novel
-called _Emancipée_, wherein esoteric doctrines and adepts are
-mentioned in conjunction with the names of well-known theosophists.
-A sign of the times!
-
-Literature—especially in countries free from government
-censorship—is the public heart and pulse. Besides the glaring fact
-that were there no demand there would be no supply, current
-literature is produced only to please, and is therefore evidently
-the mirror which faithfully reflects the state of the public mind.
-True, Conservative editors, and their submissive correspondents and
-reporters, still go on slashing occasionally in print the fair faces
-of mystic spiritualism and theosophy, and some of them are still
-found, from time to time, indulging in a _brutal_ personal attack.
-But they do no harm on the whole, except perhaps to their own
-editorial reputations, as such editors can never be suspected of an
-exuberance of culture and good taste after certain ungentlemanly
-personal attacks. They do good on the contrary. For, while the
-theosophists and spiritualists so attacked, may view the
-Billingsgate poured upon them in a true Socratean spirit, and
-console themselves with the knowledge that none of the epithets used
-can possibly apply to them, on the other hand, _too much_ abuse and
-vilification generally ends by awakening the public sympathy for the
-victim, in the right-minded and the impartial, at any rate.
-
-In England people seem to like fair play on the whole. It is not
-_bashi-boozook_-like actions, the doughty deeds of those who
-delight in mutilating the slain and the wounded, that can find
-sympathy for any great length of time with the public. If—as
-maintained by our lay enemies and repeated by some _naïf_ and too
-sanguine missionary organs—Spiritualism and Theosophy are “dead as
-a door-nail” (_sic_, _vide_ American Christian periodicals),—aye,
-“dead and buried,” why, in such case, good Christian fathers, not
-leave the dead at rest till “Judgment Day”? And if they are not,
-then editors—the profane as well as the clerical—why should you
-still fear? Do not show yourselves such cowards if you have the
-truth on your side. _Magna est veritas et prevalebit_, and “murder
-will out,” as it always has, sooner or later. Open your columns to
-_free_ and fearless discussion, and do as the theosophical
-periodicals have ever done, and as LUCIFER is now preparing to do.
-The “bright Son of the morning” fears no light. He courts it, and
-is prepared to publish any inimical contributions (couched, of
-course, in decent language), however much at variance with his
-theosophical views. He is determined to give a fair hearing in any
-and every case, to both contending parties and allow things and
-thoughts to be judged on their respective merits. For why, or what
-should one dread when fact and truth are one’s only aim? _Du choc
-des opinions jaillit la verité_ was said by a French philosopher.
-If Theosophy and Spiritualism are no better than “gigantic frauds
-and will-o’-the-wisps of the age” why such _expensive_ crusades
-against both? And if they are not, why should Agnostics and
-searchers after truth in general, help bigoted and narrow-minded
-materialists, sectarians and dogmatists to hide our light under a
-bushel by mere brutal force and usurped authority? It is easy to
-surprise the good faith of the fair-minded. Still easier to
-discredit that, which by its intrinsic strangeness, is already
-unpopular and could hardly be credited in its palmiest days. “We
-welcome no supposition so eagerly as one which accords with and
-intensifies our own prejudices” says, in “Don Jesualdo,” a popular
-author. Therefore, _facts_ become often cunningly concocted
-“frauds;” and self-evident, glaring lies are accepted as gospel
-truths at the first breeze of Don Basilio’s _Calumnia_, by those
-to whose hard-crusted pre-conceptions such slander is like
-heavenly dew.
-
-But, beloved enemies, “the light of Lucifer” may, after all, dispel
-some of the surrounding darkness. The mighty roaring voice of
-denunciation, so welcome to those whose little spites and hates and
-mental stagnation in the grasp of the social respectability it
-panders to, may yet be silenced by the voice of truth—“the still
-small voice”—whose destiny it ever was to first preach in the
-desert. That cold and artificial light which still seems to shine so
-dazzlingly over the alleged iniquities of professional mediums and
-the supposed sins of commission and omission of _non-professional_
-experimentalists, of free and independent theosophists, may yet be
-extinguished at the height of all its glory. For it is not quite the
-perpetual lamp of the alchemist philosopher. Still less is it that
-“light which never shone on sea or land,” that ray of divine
-intuition, the spark which glimmers latent in the spiritual,
-never-erring perceptions of man and woman, and which is now
-awakening—for its time is at hand. A few years more, and the
-Aladdin’s lamp, which called forth the ministering genius thereof,
-who, making three salutes to the public, proceeded forthwith to
-devour mediums and theosophists, like a juggler who swallows swords
-at a village fair, will get out of order. Its light, over which the
-anti-theosophists are crowing victory to this day, shall get dim.
-And then, perhaps, it will be discovered that what was claimed as a
-direct ray from the source of eternal truth was no better than a
-penny rush-light, in whose deceitful smoke and soot people got
-hypnotized, and saw everything upside down. It will be found that
-the hideous monsters of fraud and imposture had no existence outside
-the murky and dizzied brains of the Aladdins on their journey of
-discovery. And that, finally, the good people who listened to them,
-had been all the time seeing sights and hearing things under
-unconscious and mutual _suggestion_.
-
-This is a scientific explanation, and requires no black magicians or
-_dugpas_ at work; for “suggestion” as now practised by the sorcerers
-of science is—_dugpaship_ itself, _pur sang_. No Eastern “adept of
-the _left_ hand” can do more mischief by his infernal art than a
-grave hypnotiser of the Faculty of Medicine, a disciple of Charcot,
-or of any other scientific _light_ of the first magnitude. In Paris,
-as in St. Petersburg, crimes have been committed under “suggestion.”
-Divorces have occurred, and husbands have nearly killed their wives
-and their supposed co-respondents, owing to tricks played on
-innocent and respectable women, who have thus had their fair name
-and all their future life blasted for ever. A son, under such
-influence, broke open the desk of an avaricious father, who caught
-him in the act, and nearly shot him in a fit of rage. One of the
-keys of Occultism is in the hands of science—cold, heartless,
-materialistic, and crassly ignorant of the other truly psychic side
-of the phenomenon: hence, powerless to draw a line of demarcation
-between the physiological and the purely spiritual effects of the
-disease inoculated, and unable to prevent future results and
-consequences of which it has no knowledge, and over which it has,
-therefore, no control.
-
-We find in the “Lotus” of September, 1887, the following:—
-
- A French paper, the _Paris_, for August 12th, contains a long and
- excellent article by G. Montorgueil, entitled, _The Accursed
- Sciences_, from which we extract the following passage, since we
- are, unfortunately, unable to quote the whole:—
-
- “Some months ago, already, in I forget what case, the question of
- ‘suggestion’ was raised and taken account of by the judges. We
- shall certainly see people in the dock accused of occult
- malpractices. But how will the prosecution go to work? What
- arguments will it bring to bear? The crime by ‘suggestion’ is the
- ideal of a crime without proof. In such a case the gravest charges
- will never be more than presumptions, and fugitive presumptions.
- On what fragile scaffolding of suspicions will the charge rest? No
- examination, but a moral one, will be possible. We shall have to
- resign ourselves to hearing the Solicitor-general say to the
- accused: ‘Accused, it appears from a perquisition made into your
- brain, etc.’
-
- Ah, the poor jurymen! it is they who are to be pitied. Taking
- their task to heart, they already have the greatest difficulty in
- separating the true from the false, even in rough and ready cases,
- the facts of which are obvious, all the details of which are
- tangible and the responsibilities clear. And we are going to ask
- them on their soul and conscience to decide questions of black
- magic! Verily their reason will not hold out through the
- fortnight; it will give way before that and sink into thaumaturgy.
-
- We move fast. The strange trials for sorcery will blossom anew;
- somnabules who were merely grotesque will appear in a tragic
- light; the coffee grounds, which so far only risked the police
- court, will hear their sentence at the assizes. The evil eye will
- figure among criminal offences. These last years of the XIXth
- century will have seen us step from progress to progress, till we
- reach at last this judicial enormity: a second Laubardemont
- prosecuting another Urbain Grandier.”
-
-Serious, scientific, and political papers are full of earnest
-discussions on the subject. A St. Petersburg “Daily” has a long
-_feuilleton_ on the “Bearing of _Hypnotic Suggestions_ upon Criminal
-Law.” “Cases of Hypnotism with criminal motives have of late begun
-to increase in an ever progressing ratio,” it tells its readers. And
-it is not the only newspaper, nor is Russia the only country where
-the same tale is told. Careful investigations and researches have
-been made by distinguished lawyers and medical authorities. Data
-have been assiduously collected and have revealed that the curious
-phenomenon,—which sceptics have hitherto derided, and young people
-have included among their evening _petits jeux innocents_,—is a new
-and terrible danger to state and society.
-
-Two facts have now become patent to law and science:—
-
- (I.) _That, in the perceptions of the hypnotised subject, the
- visionary representations called forth by “suggestion,” become
- real existing actualities, the subject being, for the moment,
- the automatic executor of the will of the hypnotiser; and_—
-
- (II.) _That the great majority of persons experimented upon, is
- subject to hypnotic suggestion._
-
-Thus Liébeault found only _sixty_ subjects intractable out of the
-_seven hundred_ he experimented upon; and Bernheim, out of 1,014
-subjects, failed with only _twenty-six_. The field for the
-natural-born _jadoo-wala_ (sorcery-mongers), is vast indeed! Evil
-has acquired a play-ground on which it may now exercise its sway
-upon many a generation of unconscious victims. For crimes undreamt
-of in the waking state, and felonies of the blackest dye, are now
-invited and encouraged by the new “accursed science.” The real
-perpetrators of these deeds of darkness may now remain for ever
-hidden from the vengeance of human justice. The hand which executes
-the criminal suggestion is only that of an irresponsible automaton,
-whose memory preserves no trace of it, and who, moreover, is a
-witness who can easily be disposed of by compulsory suicide—again
-under “suggestion.” What better means than these could be offered to
-the fiends of lust and revenge, to those dark Powers—called human
-passions—ever on the look out to break the universal commandment:
-“Thou shalt not steal, nor murder, nor lust after thy neighbour’s
-wife?” Liébeault _suggested_ to a young girl that she should poison
-herself with prussic acid, and she swallowed the supposed drug
-without one moment’s hesitation; Dr. Liégois _suggested_ to a young
-woman that she owed him 5,000 francs, and the subject forthwith
-signed a cheque for the amount Bernheim _suggested_ to another
-hysterical girl a long and complicated vision with regard to a
-criminal case. Two days after, although the hypnotiser had not
-exercised any new pressure upon her in the interim, she repeated
-distinctly the whole suggested story to a lawyer sent to her for the
-purpose. Had her evidence been seriously accepted, it would have
-brought the accused to the guillotine.
-
-These cases present two dark and terrible aspects. From the moral
-stand point, such processes and _suggestions_ leave an indelible
-stain upon the purity of the subject’s nature. Even the innocent
-mind of a ten year old child can thus be innoculated with vice, the
-poison-germ of which will develop in his subsequent life.
-
-On the judicial aspect it is needless to enter in great detail.
-Suffice to say that it is this characteristic feature of the
-hypnotic state—the absolute surrender of will and self-consciousness
-to the hypnotiser—which possesses such importance, from its bearing
-upon crime, in the eyes of legal authorities. For if the hypnotiser
-has the subject entirely at his beck and call, so that he can cause
-him to commit any crime, acting, so to say, invisibly within him,
-then what are not the terrible “judicial mistakes” to be expected?
-What wonder then, that the jurisprudence of one country after the
-other has taken alarm, and is devising, one after the other,
-measures for repressing the exercise of hypnotism! In Denmark it has
-just been forbidden. Scientists have experimented upon sensitives
-with so much success that a hypnotised victim has been jeered and
-hooted through the streets on his way to commit a crime, which he
-would have completed unconsciously, had not the victim been warned
-beforehand by the hypnotiser.
-
-In Brussels a recent and sad case is well-known to all. A young girl
-of good family was seduced while in a hypnotised state by a man who
-had first subjected her to his influence at a social gathering. She
-only realised her condition a few months later, when her relatives,
-who divined the criminal, forced her seducer to make the only
-possible reparation—that of marrying his victim.
-
-The French Academy has just been debating the question:—how far a
-hypnotised subject, from a mere victim, can become a regular tool of
-crime. Of course, no jurist or legislator can remain indifferent to
-this question; and it was averred that the crimes committed under
-_suggestion_ are so unprecedented that some of them can hardly be
-brought within the scope of the law. Hence the prudent legal
-prohibition, just adopted in France, which enacts that no person,
-save those legally qualified to exercise the medical profession,
-shall hypnotise any other person. Even the physician who enjoys such
-legal right is permitted to hypnotise a person only in the presence
-of another qualified medical man, and with the written permission of
-the subject. Public _séances_ of hypnotism are forbidden, and they
-are strictly confined to medical _cliniques_ and laboratories. Those
-who break this law are liable to a heavy fine and imprisonment.
-
-But the keynote has been struck, and many are the ways in which this
-_black art_ may be used—laws notwithstanding. That it will be so
-used, the vile passions inherent in human nature are sufficient
-guarantee.
-
-Many and strange will be the romances yet enacted; for truth is
-often stranger than fiction, and what is thought fiction is still
-more often truth.
-
-No wonder then that occult literature is growing with every day.
-Occultism and sorcery are in the air, with no true philosophical
-knowledge to guide the experimenters and thus check evil results.
-“Works of _fiction_,” the various novels and romances are called.
-“Fiction” in the arrangement of their characters and the adventures
-of their heroes and heroines—admitted. Not so, as to the _facts_
-presented. These are _no fictions_, but true _presentiments_ of what
-lies in the bosom of the future, and much of which is already
-born—nay corroborated by _scientific_ experiments. Sign of the
-times! Close of a psychic cycle! The time for phenomena with, or
-through mediums, whether professional or otherwise, is gone by. It
-was the early season of the blossoming, of the era mentioned even in
-the Bible;[20] the tree of Occultism is now preparing for
-“fruiting,” and the Spirit of the Occult is awakening in the blood
-of the new generations. If the old men only “dream dreams,” the
-young ones see already visions,[21] and—record them in novels and
-works of fiction. Woe to the ignorant and the unprepared, and those
-who listen to the syrens of materialistic science! For indeed,
-indeed, many will be the unconscious crimes committed, and many will
-be the victims who will innocently suffer death by hanging and
-decapitation at the hands of the righteous judges and the _too
-innocent_ jurymen, both alike ignorant of the fiendish power of
-“SUGGESTION.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- “It shall come to pass that I will pour out my Spirit upon all
- flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men
- shall dream dreams; your young men shall see visions” (Joel ii.
- 28).
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- It is curious to note that Mr. Louis Stevenson, one of the most
- powerful of our imaginative writers, stated recently to a reporter
- that he is in the habit of constructing the plots of his tales in
- _dreams_, and among others that of Dr. Jekyll. “I dreamed,” he
- continued, “the story of ‘Olalla’ ... and I have at the present
- moment two unwritten stories which I have likewise dreamed....
- Even when fast asleep I know that it is I who am inventing.”...
- But who knows whether the idea of “invention” is not also “a
- dream”!
-
------
-
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-
-
-
-
- SELF-KNOWLEDGE.
-
-The first necessity for obtaining self-knowledge is to become
-profoundly conscious of ignorance; to feel with every fibre of the
-heart that one is _ceaselessly_ self-deceived.
-
-The second requisite is the still deeper conviction that such
-knowledge—such intuitive and certain knowledge—can be obtained by
-effort.
-
-The third and most important is an indomitable determination to
-obtain and face that knowledge.
-
-Self-knowledge of this kind is unattainable by what men usually call
-“self-analysis.” It is not reached by reasoning or any brain
-process; for it is the awakening to consciousness of the Divine
-nature of man.
-
-To obtain this knowledge is a greater achievement than to command
-the elements or to know the future.
-
- COMMENTS ON “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”
-
- BY THE AUTHOR; (_continued_).
-
- “Before the ear can hear, it must have lost its sensitiveness.”
-
-
-The first four rules of Light on the Path are, undoubtedly, curious
-though the statement may seem, the most important in the whole book,
-save one only. Why they are so important is that they contain the
-vital law, the very creative essence of the astral man. And it is
-only in the astral (or self-illuminated) consciousness that the
-rules which follow them have any living meaning. Once attain to the
-use of the astral senses and it becomes a matter of course that one
-commences to use them; and the later rules are but guidance in their
-use. When I speak like this I mean, naturally, that the first four
-rules are the ones which are of importance and interest to those who
-read them in print upon a page. When they are engraved on the man’s
-heart and on his life, unmistakably then the other rules become not
-merely interesting, or extraordinary, metaphysical statements, but
-actual facts in life which have to be grasped and experienced.
-
-The four rules stand written in the great chamber of every actual
-lodge of a living Brotherhood. Whether the man is about to sell his
-soul to the devil, like Faust; whether he is to be worsted in the
-battle, like Hamlet; or whether he is to pass on within the
-precincts; in any case these words are for him. The man can choose
-between virtue and vice, but not until he is a man; a babe or a wild
-animal cannot so choose. Thus with the disciple, he must first
-become a disciple before he can even see the paths to choose
-between. This effort of creating himself as a disciple, the
-re-birth, he must do for himself without any teacher. Until the four
-rules are learned no teacher can be of any use to him; and that is
-why “the Masters” are referred to in the way they are. No real
-masters, whether adepts in power, in love, or in blackness, can
-affect a man till these four rules are passed.
-
-Tears, as I have said, may be called the moisture of life. The soul
-must have laid aside the emotions of humanity, must have secured a
-balance which cannot be shaken by misfortune, before its eyes can
-open upon the super-human world.
-
-The voice of the Masters is always in the world; but only those hear
-it whose ears are no longer receptive of the sounds which affect the
-personal life. Laughter no longer lightens the heart, anger may no
-longer enrage it, tender words bring it no balm. For that within, to
-which the ears are as an outer gateway, is an unshaken place of
-peace in itself which no person can disturb.
-
-As the eyes are the windows of the soul, so are the ears its
-gateways or doors. Through them comes knowledge of the confusion of
-the world. The great ones who have conquered life, who have become
-more than disciples, stand at peace and undisturbed amid the
-vibration and kaleidoscopic movement of humanity. They hold within
-themselves a certain knowledge, as well as a perfect peace; and thus
-they are not roused or excited by the partial and erroneous
-fragments of information which are brought to their ears by the
-changing voices of those around them. When I speak of knowledge, I
-mean intuitive knowledge. This certain information can never be
-obtained by hard work, or by experiment; for these methods are only
-applicable to matter, and matter is in itself a perfectly uncertain
-substance, continually affected by change. The most absolute and
-universal laws of natural and physical life, as understood by the
-scientist, will pass away when the life of this universe has passed
-away, and only its soul is left in the silence. What then will be
-the value of the knowledge of its laws acquired by industry and
-observation? I pray that no reader or critic will imagine that by
-what I have said I intend to depreciate or disparage acquired
-knowledge, or the work of scientists. On the contrary, I hold that
-scientific men are the pioneers of modern thought. The days of
-literature and of art, when poets and sculptors saw the divine
-light, and put it into their own great language—these days lie
-buried in the long past with the ante-Phidian sculptors and the
-pre-Homeric poets. The mysteries no longer rule the world of thought
-and beauty; human life is the governing power, not that which lies
-beyond it. But the scientific workers are progressing, not so much
-by their own will as by sheer force of circumstances, towards the
-far line which divides things interpretable from things
-uninterpretable. Every fresh discovery drives them a step onward.
-Therefore do I very highly esteem the knowledge obtained by work and
-experiment.
-
-But intuitive knowledge is an entirely different thing. It is not
-acquired in any way, but is, so to speak, a faculty of the soul; not
-the animal soul, that which becomes a ghost after death, when lust
-or liking or the memory of ill-deeds holds it to the neighbourhood
-of human beings, but the divine soul which animates all the external
-forms of the individualised being.
-
-This is, of course, a faculty which indwells in that soul, which is
-inherent. The would-be disciple has to arouse himself to the
-consciousness of it by a fierce and resolute and indomitable effort
-of will. I use the word indomitable for a special reason. Only he
-who is untameable, who cannot be dominated, who knows he has to play
-the lord over men, over facts, over all things save his own
-divinity, can arouse this faculty. “With faith all things are
-possible.” The sceptical laugh at faith and pride themselves on its
-absence from their own minds. The truth is that faith is a great
-engine, an enormous power, which in fact can accomplish all things.
-For it is the covenant or engagement between man’s divine part and
-his lesser self.
-
-The use of this engine is quite necessary in order to obtain
-intuitive knowledge; for unless a man believes such knowledge exists
-within himself how can he claim and use it?
-
-Without it he is more helpless than any drift-wood or wreckage on
-the great tides of the ocean. They are cast hither and thither
-indeed; so may a man be by the chances of fortune. But such
-adventures are purely external and of very small account. A slave
-may be dragged through the streets in chains, and yet retain the
-quiet soul of a philosopher, as was well seen in the person of
-Epictetus. A man may have every worldly prize in his possession, and
-stand absolute master of his personal fate, to all appearance, and
-yet he knows no peace, no certainty, because he is shaken within
-himself by every tide of thought that he touches on. And these
-changing tides do not merely sweep the man bodily hither and thither
-like driftwood on the water; that would be nothing. They enter into
-the gateways of his soul, and wash over that soul and make it blind
-and blank and void of all permanent intelligence, so that passing
-impressions affect it.
-
-To make my meaning plainer I will use an illustration. Take an
-author at his writing, a painter at his canvas, a composer listening
-to the melodies that dawn upon his glad imagination; let any one of
-these workers pass his daily hours by a wide window looking on a
-busy street. The power of the animating life blinds sight and
-hearing alike, and the great traffic of the city goes by like
-nothing but a passing pageant. But a man whose mind is empty, whose
-day is objectless, sitting at that same window, notes the passers-by
-and remembers the faces that chance to please or interest him. So it
-is with the mind in its relation to eternal truth. If it no longer
-transmits its fluctuations, its partial knowledge, its unreliable
-information to the soul, then in the inner place of peace already
-found when the first rule has been learned—in that inner place there
-leaps into flame the light of actual knowledge. Then the ears begin
-to hear. Very dimly, very faintly at first. And, indeed, so faint
-and tender are these first indications of the commencement of true
-actual life, that they are sometimes pushed aside as mere fancies,
-mere imaginings.
-
-But before these are capable of becoming more than mere imaginings,
-the abyss of nothingness has to be faced in another form. The utter
-silence which can only come by closing the ears to all transitory
-sounds comes as a more appalling horror than even the formless
-emptiness of space. Our only mental conception of blank space is, I
-think, when reduced to its barest element of thought, that of black
-darkness. This is a great physical terror to most persons, and when
-regarded as an eternal and unchangeable fact, must mean to the mind
-the idea of annihilation rather than anything else. But it is the
-obliteration of one sense only; and the sound of a voice may come
-and bring comfort even in the profoundest darkness. The disciple,
-having found his way into this blackness, which is the fearful
-abyss, must then so shut the gates of his soul that no comforter can
-enter there nor any enemy. And it is in making this second effort
-that the fact of pain and pleasure being but one sensation becomes
-recognisable by those who have before been unable to perceive it.
-For when the solitude of silence is reached the soul hungers so
-fiercely and passionately for some sensation on which to rest, that
-a painful one would be as keenly welcomed as a pleasant one. When
-this consciousness is reached the courageous man by seizing and
-retaining it, may destroy the “sensitiveness” at once. When the ear
-no longer discriminates between that which is pleasant or that which
-is painful, it will no longer be affected by the voices of others.
-And then it is safe and possible to open the doors of the soul.
-
-“Sight” is the first effort, and the easiest, because it is
-accomplished partly by an intellectual effort. The intellect can
-conquer the heart, as is well known in ordinary life. Therefore,
-this preliminary step still lies within the dominion of matter. But
-the second step allows of no such assistance, nor of any material
-aid whatever. Of course, I mean by material aid the action of the
-brain, or emotions, or human soul. In compelling the ears to listen
-only to the eternal silence, the being we call man becomes something
-which is no longer man. A very superficial survey of the thousand
-and one influences which are brought to bear on us by others will
-show that this must be so. A disciple will fulfil all the duties of
-his manhood; but he will fulfil them according to his own sense of
-right, and not according to that of any person or body of persons.
-This is a very evident result of following the creed of knowledge
-instead of any of the blind creeds.
-
-To obtain the pure silence necessary for the disciple, the heart and
-emotions, the brain and its intellectualisms, have to be put aside.
-Both are but mechanisms, which will perish with the span of man’s
-life. It is the essence beyond, that which is the motive power, and
-makes man live, that is now compelled to rouse itself and act. Now
-is the greatest hour of danger. In the first trial men go mad with
-fear; of this first trial Bulwer Lytton wrote. No novelist has
-followed to the second trial, though some of the poets have. Its
-subtlety and great danger lies in the fact that in the measure of a
-man’s strength is the measure of his chance of passing beyond it or
-coping with it at all. If he has power enough to awaken that
-unaccustomed part of himself, the supreme essence, then has he power
-to lift the gates of gold, then is he the true alchemist, in
-possession of the elixir of life.
-
-It is at this point of experience that the occultist becomes
-separated from all other men and enters on to a life which is his
-own; on to the path of individual accomplishment instead of mere
-obedience to the genii which rule our earth. This raising of himself
-into an individual power does in reality identify him with the
-nobler forces of life and make him one with them. For they stand
-beyond the powers of this earth and the laws of this universe. Here
-lies man’s only hope of success in the great effort; to leap right
-away from his present standpoint to his next and at once become an
-intrinsic part of the divine power as he has been an intrinsic part
-of the intellectual power, of the great nature to which he belongs.
-He stands always in advance of himself, if such a contradiction can
-be understood. It is the men who adhere to this position, who
-believe in their innate power of progress, and that of the whole
-race, who are the elders brothers, the pioneers. Each man has to
-accomplish the great leap for himself and without aid; yet it is
-something of a staff to lean on to know that others have gone on
-that road. It is possible that they have been lost in the abyss; no
-matter, they have had the courage to enter it. Why I say that it is
-possible they have been lost in the abyss is because of this fact,
-that one who has passed through is unrecognizable until the other
-and altogether new condition is attained by both. It is unnecessary
-to enter upon the subject of what that condition is at present. I
-only say this, that in the early state in which man is entering upon
-the silence he loses knowledge of his friends, of his lovers, of all
-who have been near and dear to him; and also loses sight of his
-teachers and of those who have preceded him on his way. I explain
-this because scarce one passes through without bitter complaint.
-Could but the mind grasp beforehand that the silence must be
-complete, surely this complaint need not arise as a hindrance on the
-path. Your teacher, or your predecessor may hold your hand in his,
-and give you the utmost sympathy the human heart is capable of. But
-when the silence and the darkness comes, you lose all knowledge of
-him; you are alone and he cannot help you, not because his power is
-gone, but because you have invoked your great enemy.
-
-By your great enemy, I mean yourself. If you have the power to face
-your own soul in the darkness and silence, you will have conquered
-the physical or animal self which dwells in sensation only.
-
-This statement, I feel, will appear involved; but in reality it is
-quite simple. Man, when he has reached his fruition, and
-civilization is at its height, stands between two fires. Could he
-but claim his great inheritance, the encumbrance of the mere animal
-life would fall away from him without difficulty. But he does not do
-this, and so the races of men flower and then droop and die and
-decay off the face of the earth, however splendid the bloom may have
-been. And it is left to the individual to make this great effort; to
-refuse to be terrified by his greater nature, to refuse to be drawn
-back by his lesser or more material self. Every individual who
-accomplishes this is a redeemer of the race. He may not blazon forth
-his deeds, he may dwell in secret and silence; but it is a fact that
-he forms a link between man and his divine part; between the known
-and the unknown; between the stir of the market-place and the
-stillness of the snow-capped Himalayas. He has not to go about among
-men in order to form this link; in the astral he _is_ that link, and
-this fact makes him a being of another order from the rest of
-mankind. Even so early on the road towards knowledge, when he has
-but taken the second step, he finds his footing more certain, and
-becomes conscious that he is a recognised part of a whole.
-
-This is one of the contradictions in life which occur so
-constantly that they afford fuel to the fiction writer. The
-occultist finds them become much more marked as he endeavours to
-live the life he has chosen. As he retreats within himself and
-becomes self-dependent, he finds himself more definitely becoming
-part of a great tide of definite thought and feeling. When he has
-learned the first lesson, conquered the hunger of the heart, and
-refused to live on the love of others, he finds himself more
-capable of inspiring love. As he flings life away it comes to him
-in a new form and with a new meaning. The world has always been a
-place with many contradictions in it, to the man; when he becomes
-a disciple he finds life is describable as a series of paradoxes.
-This is a fact in nature, and the reason for it is intelligible
-enough. Man’s soul “dwells like a star apart,” even that of the
-vilest among us; while his consciousness is under the law of
-vibratory and sensuous life. This alone is enough to cause those
-complications of character which are the material for the
-novelist; every man is a mystery, to friend and enemy alike, and
-to himself. His motives are often undiscoverable, and he cannot
-probe to them or know why he does this or that. The disciple’s
-effort is that of awaking consciousness in this starry part of
-himself, where his power and divinity lie sleeping. As this
-consciousness becomes awakened, the contradictions in the man
-himself become more marked than ever; and so do the paradoxes
-which he lives through. For, of course man creates his own life;
-and “adventures are to the adventurous” is one of those wise
-proverbs which are drawn from actual fact, and cover the whole
-area of human experience.
-
-Pressure on the divine part of man re-acts upon the animal part. As
-the silent soul awakes it makes the ordinary life of the man more
-purposeful, more vital, more real, and responsible. To keep to the
-two instances already mentioned, the occultist who has withdrawn
-into his own citadel has found his strength; immediately he becomes
-aware of the demands of duty upon him. He does not obtain his
-strength by his own right, but because he is a part of the whole;
-and as soon as he is safe from the vibration of life and can stand
-unshaken, the outer world cries out to him to come and labour in it.
-So with the heart. When it no longer wishes to take, it is called
-upon to give abundantly.
-
-“Light on the Path” has been called a book of paradoxes, and very
-justly; what else could it be, when it deals with the actual
-personal experience of the disciple?
-
-To have acquired the astral senses of sight and hearing; or in other
-words to have attained perception and opened the doors of the soul,
-are gigantic tasks and may take the sacrifice of many successive
-incarnations. And yet, when the will has reached its strength, the
-whole miracle may be worked in a second of time. Then is the
-disciple the servant of Time no longer.
-
-These two first steps are negative; that is to say they imply
-retreat from a present condition of things rather than advance
-towards another. The two next are active, implying the advance into
-another state of being.[22]
-
- Δ
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
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-
-Footnote 22:
-
- The correspondence with reference to these “Comments” will be
- found in the Correspondence columns.
-
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-
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-
- WILL AND DESIRE.
-
-WILL is the exclusive possession of man on this our plane of
-consciousness. It divides him from the brute in whom instinctive
-desire only is active.
-
-DESIRE, in its widest application, is the one creative force in the
-Universe. In this sense it is indistinguishable from Will; but we
-men never know desire under this form while we remain only men.
-Therefore Will and Desire are here considered as opposed.
-
-Thus Will is the offspring of the Divine, the God in man; Desire the
-motive power of the animal life.
-
-Most men live in and by desire, mistaking it for will. But he who
-would achieve must separate will from desire, and make his will the
-ruler; for desire is unstable and ever changing, while will is
-steady and constant.
-
-Both will and desire are absolute _creators_, forming the man
-himself and his surroundings. But will creates intelligently—desire
-blindly and unconsciously. The man, therefore, makes himself in the
-image of his desires, unless he creates himself in the likeness of
-the Divine, through his will, the child of the light.
-
-His task is twofold: to awaken the will, to strengthen it by use and
-conquest, to make it absolute ruler within his body; and, parallel
-with this, to purify desire.
-
-Knowledge and will are the tools for the accomplishment of this
-purification.
-
- A LAW OF LIFE: KARMA.
-
- (_Continued._)
-
-In illustration of the Mahatmic condition, it may be well to quote
-some extracts from “Five Years of Theosophy,” on pp. 215, _et seq._
-
-“The principal object of the Yogi is to realise the oneness of
-existence, and the practice of morality is the most powerful means
-to that end. The principal obstacle to this realization is the
-inborn habit of man of always placing himself at the centre of the
-Universe. Whatever a man might act, think, or feel, the
-irrepressible personality is sure to be the central figure. This, as
-will appear on reflection, is that which prevents every individual
-from filling his proper sphere in existence, where he only is in
-place, and no other individual is. The realization of this harmony
-is the practical objective aspect of the ‘Grand Problem.’.... It
-availeth nothing to intellectually grasp the notion of your being
-everything ... if it is not realized in daily life. To confuse ‘meum
-and tuum’ in the vulgar sense is but to destroy the harmony of
-existence by a false assertion of ‘I,’ and is as foolish as the
-attempt to nourish the legs at the expense of the arms. You cannot
-be one with Nature, unless all your acts, thoughts, and feelings,
-synchronize with the onward march of Nature. What is meant by a
-Brahmajnani being beyond the reach of Karma, can be realised only by
-a man who has found out his exact position in harmony with the one
-Life in Nature; that man can see how a Brahmajnani can act only in
-unison with Nature, and never in discord with it.”
-
-“To use the phraseology of old occult writers, the Brahmajnani is a
-real co-worker with Nature.... Many have fallen into the error of
-supposing that a human being can escape the operation of the law of
-Karma by adopting a condition of masterly inactivity, entirely
-losing sight of the fact that even a rigid abstinence from physical
-acts does not produce inactivity on the higher astral and spiritual
-planes.... Such a supposition is nothing short of a delusion....
-There is a tendency in every department of Nature for an act to
-repeat itself. The Karma acquired in the last preceding birth is
-always trying to forge fresh links in the chain, and thereby lead to
-continued material existence. This tendency can only be counteracted
-by unselfishly performing all the duties pertaining to the sphere in
-which a person is born. Such a course can alone produce purification
-of the mind, without which the capacity of perceiving spiritual
-truths can never be acquired.”
-
-Such a moral standard as this may be considered as the main working
-factor in the existence of a Mahatma. He exists by, through, and in
-harmony, and, as Mahatma, is harmony itself. It is impossible to
-carry these speculations further, for beyond the fact that these
-considerations are in analogy with the great law of nature, ordinary
-human intelligence can gain nothing from them. The Mahatma is a
-Mahatma, and only those who have reached that supreme condition can
-describe it, and even then it is doubtful whether words would
-express it. The word Mahatma has been used with some hesitation, as
-it might possibly require an article of great length to give the
-least idea of what it means. But some idea of the true position of
-these exalted beings (known in India and Tibet by this name) may be
-gathered from the foregoing pages if any conception of the
-connection of humanity with the law of Karma, and also of liberated
-humanity with the law of harmony, can be obtained.
-
-In the preceding pages especial reference has been made to the fact
-that the Mahatma, as such, has no Karma, but it is by no means
-intended to convey the idea that all who enter Occultism, and even
-those who have progressed a very long way on the Path of Life, are
-Mahatmas. Nay, more! There are many of them who are very holy, and
-even exalted, beings, but who are still subject to the law of Karma,
-as applied to ordinary humanity. But they have acquired self-mastery
-to an extraordinary degree, and their whole attention is “fixed on
-the eternal.” Thus, so far as they are concerned, they generate no
-new Karma in the restricted sense, but only progress towards
-Universal Harmony.
-
-To put it shortly, they exhaust their old Karma of past lives, and
-devote themselves to the production of Harmony.
-
-It is important to bear this in mind when the attention is turned to
-the Karmic condition of ordinary humanity. For we are at once
-brought face to face with the old and much disputed question between
-free-will and predestination.
-
-At this point, therefore, it will be necessary to enter, at some
-length, on this question, because it has been supposed that the idea
-of Karma is identical, or nearly so, with that of predestination.
-Consequently, it will be necessary to attempt a definition of what
-Free-will and Will are. Will, to the ordinary man, is known
-according to his experience as the power to do or not to do an
-action. So far, he is perfectly right, but, as usual, man limits the
-action of his will to the physical plane, and takes no account of
-even the mental plane. Even if he does not commit an action, he
-cannot help thinking about it, because he has desired to do it—even
-if he has repressed that desire. Nothing is more common than to hear
-anyone say, “I can’t help my likes and dislikes,” or, in other
-words, their attractions and repulsions, desires and the reverse.
-Consequently, until a man can control his desires, those desires
-control his will, and, consequently, predestination appears to rule
-the day. Thus we find that it is desire which impels man onward on
-his course, and governs that course to a very large extent, and this
-is the principle which is at its highest development in mankind as a
-rule. Now if it be granted that the human personality—a transient
-thing—has been constituted by man’s vanity as the centre of the
-Universe, it is plain that the combination of this principle of
-desire with the pronounced personality, will only serve to intensify
-this personality and bind man fast to it. Man thus constituted is a
-prisoner, and, more often than not, is so attached to his prison
-that he prefers to flutter his wings against the bars of his cage,
-instead of endeavouring to escape. But are there any means of
-escape:—it may be asked? Desire binds man fast to his personality,
-and intensifies one personality against another. Hence it is
-productive of strife and discord, and militates strongly against the
-law of universal harmony, or Karma, in this aspect. Thus desire and
-Karma would seem to be in complete opposition, and desire cannot be
-said to be a consequence of Karma. But really this is a confusion of
-terms, for all this only exists in the world of effects and not in
-that of causes. Desire is an effect of the accentuated personality,
-and in its turn produces that personality. This constitutes the
-prison, and the only means of escape from this prison of discord is
-the endeavour to produce harmony in its place. Thus, therefore, we
-have a definition of will as being not only that which represses a
-desire, but also an emanation of the one divine principle, and
-proceeding from the divine in man. In one sense, this will, this
-harmonizer of the discord, is identical with Karma. As a
-consequence, we can see that Karma produces punishment. That
-punishment arises from the fact that the assertion of both desire
-and will in any man makes him the battle-field of two opposing
-forces—the desire to do anything, and thus gratify the desire, and
-the will to repress it. Thus man must be a co-worker with nature and
-the law of harmony. He has to repress the Typhonic principle of
-desire and dissipate its energy. If he does not, it will bind him
-more firmly to his “personal centre,” accentuate his punishment, and
-hang like a millstone round his neck in the shape of Karmic effects,
-which generate fresh tendencies and desires.
-
-The real function of will is to promote harmony between man and the
-great law by repressing desire. Liberation from the _effects_ of
-Karma will come to the man who grasps his whole individuality firmly
-(not merely his personality), and, by the force of his awakened
-_spiritual_ will, recognises this individuality as not himself, but
-as a thing to use in passing beyond the life of the individuality.
-
-Thus the direction of will should be towards realizing one’s
-aspirations, and so give man “a glimpse into the eternal;” the lower
-consciousness will mirror these aspirations, even unconsciously to
-itself, and then itself aspires and is elevated if all is in accord.
-
-But this is not free-will in the ordinary sense of the term; and it
-does not seem possible that such should exist in view of the ideas
-of Karmic effects and of reincarnation. It is in these two that lie
-all the objections to free-will, because too short a view has been
-taken of human life. In the dim vistas of time, and the countless
-incarnations which have taken place in them, it will at once be seen
-that the individual being has generated innumerable causes, the
-effects of which are still to be experienced. Thus it is free-will
-that man has, but not in the ordinary sense; it is free-will limited
-by countless other free-wills around him—limited too and
-circumscribed by his own acts. Man makes himself a prisoner, and
-believes himself free. He is right in his belief in a measure, for
-in virtue of the will he is free—to aspire and soar into the sublime
-heights of his own higher nature. He is a prisoner and predestined
-when he confines himself to his personality. Karma is at once his
-gaoler and his liberator, and the decision lies in the intensity of
-his aspirations, and is therefore in his own hands. Thus from the
-personal view predestination is true, but not from that of the
-spirit, which is free. From the latter view, and to a reasoning
-mind, the Calvinistic doctrine sounds little short of blasphemy. It
-is most certainly a contradiction in terms to speak of God as an
-all-wise, all-powerful and entirely just God, and then to speak of
-predestination as one of his laws, a law which, in face of the above
-qualities, and with that of mercy in addition, dooms countless
-millions to an eternity of pain and suffering as punishment, and
-that too before they are even born. When the apparent injustice of
-the lives of men is viewed and argued, it is because men forget what
-they have done in previous lives, in which they have violated the
-law in a very material direction, which leads them into these
-positions and from which they have to escape.
-
-Thus the aspirations of man constitute that which sets man free, and
-which therefore represent his free-will. It is then well to
-endeavour to trace these aspirations in man with regard to Karma.
-The second section of the third part of “Light on the Path,” speaks
-on this point with no uncertain voice. The Occultist must pluck and
-eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge, and step on either the good
-or the evil path. And to do this knowingly produces great Karmic
-results. The mass of men walk waveringly, uncertain as to their
-goal, their standard of life is indefinite; the Occultist cannot be
-half-hearted, nor can he return when he has passed the threshold.
-“The individuality has approached the state of responsibility by
-reason of growth; it cannot recede from it.” The one means of escape
-from Karma is for the Occultist to live in the Eternal. But below
-this—the threshold—many men aspire. On this point, we may quote,
-“Five Years of Theosophy,” p. 226.
-
-“The unintelligent aspiration towards goodness propagates itself and
-leads to good lives in the future; the intelligent aspiration
-propagates itself in the same way, plus the propagation of
-intelligence; and this distinction shows the gulf of difference
-which may exist between the growth of a human soul, which merely
-drifts along the stream of time, and that of one which is
-consciously steered by an intelligent purpose throughout. The human
-Ego, which acquires the habit of seeking for knowledge, becomes
-invested, life after life, with the qualifications which ensure the
-success of such a search, until the final success, achieved at some
-critical period of its existence, carries it right up into the
-company of those perfected Egos, which are the fully developed
-flowers only expected from a few of the thousand seeds.”
-
-“Now it is clear that a slight impulse in a given direction, even on
-the physical plane, does not produce the same effect as a stronger
-one; so exactly in this matter of engendering habits which are
-required to persist in their operation through a succession of lives
-it is quite obvious that the strong impulse of a very ardent
-aspiration towards knowledge will be more likely than a weaker one
-to triumph over the so-called accidents of nature.”
-
-These considerations bring us to the question of those habits of
-life which are more immediately associated with the pursuit of
-occult science. It will be quite plain that the generation within
-his own nature of affinities in the direction of spiritual progress
-is a matter which has very little to do with the outer circumstances
-of a man’s daily life. It cannot be dissociated from what may be
-called the outer circumstances of his moral life, for an occult
-student, whose moral nature is consciously ignoble, and who combines
-the pursuit of knowledge with the practice of wrong, becomes by that
-condition of things a student of sorcery rather than of true
-Occultism.
-
-Thus so far traced Karma in one of its aspects is, “the ethical law
-of causation.” This law descends in its action below the moral
-plane, and is observed as the law of compensation on the physical
-plane. Thus the physical, intellectual and emotional planes, are all
-affected by Karma. The key to the situation is the mind; and, as we
-have seen, the liberation of the mind must be the most difficult
-task. If the powers of the mind are concentrated on the attainment
-of the highest ideal, Karma has no basis in which to inhere and
-consequently the tendency to commit actions from lower motives is
-annihilated. Even repentance, from this point of view, is a mistake,
-as it necessarily draws the mind back to the actions and motives
-repented of. Consequently by the exertion of free will, in the
-aspiration to realize the ideal, man becomes his own Saviour; and
-the true way to do this is to look neither for reward nor
-punishment; to detach the mind from all considerations below that of
-the spiritual life, and to live only in the Eternal.
-
- ARCHIBALD KEIGHTLEY, M.B.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- “The great watch-word of the True is this:—in last analysis all
- things are divine.”—(_Jasper Niemand in the “Path”_).
-
- A GHOST’S REVENGE.
-
- (_Conclusion._)
-
-Gaston paused at the entrance to the chamber, and even detected
-himself in taking an involuntary step backwards, for the singular
-illusion was heightened by the circumstance that many of the figures
-which were suspended perpendicularly from the walls, and had fallen
-a little forward, looked as though they were trying to let
-themselves down. But the monk, nothing concerned, went stolidly on
-down the long narrow chamber, which had other chambers, or
-corridors, leading out of it in several directions. To speak more
-correctly, there was a series of vaults, branching several ways,
-some of which were shut off from the rest by open-work screens or
-gates of wool.
-
-The walls on either side were piled high with coffins, the greater
-number of which had one of their sides of glass, exposing to view
-the hideous shrouded tenants. By whatever art it had been sought to
-preserve these bodies from decay, Nature had declared in every
-instance that it should not be, and no ghastlier assemblage of
-mummified and mouldering corpses could have mocked the grief of the
-relatives who should have given their dead to the grave. On the
-blackened and distorted faces of some, it was not difficult to read
-a look of supplication which the parted and fleshless lips seemed
-striving to translate in this way: “Take us away from this dreadful
-place and hide us in the decent earth.”
-
-They lay there, all of them, in their coffins, in wrappings of
-linen, silk, and velvet; men, and women, and children, and little
-infants; priests, nobles, merchants—a world of dead ones; hundreds
-and thousands of them.
-
-Upon the faces of some, decay seemed working with a kind of
-fantastic cruelty: punching a hole in the cheek or forehead; pushing
-one eye from its socket, and leaving the other; stripping the skin
-from one side of the face, and leaving it like a bit of wrinkled
-parchment on the other.
-
-Some were made to laugh from ear to ear; some had the corners of the
-mouth drawn down and the features twisted, as though pain haunted
-them in death; others looked defiant, derisive, amazed, indignant.
-The majesty of death had fled from all of them, mockery and shame
-had come to take its place. The worms were being avenged on these
-who should have gone to feed them. Silent and rotting, they had no
-part in either world; and shrinking continually within their
-coffins, they cried mutely on decay to hasten his work, and give
-them the boon of nothingness.
-
-Above the line of coffins, on both sides of the chamber, hundreds of
-clothed and hooded creatures—skeletons in all except the face, which
-for the most part retained its covering of dried and tarnished
-skin—were suspended from the walls. Each had a ticket pinned to its
-dress, bearing the name and the date of death.
-
-It was these figures on the walls which gave the chamber its most
-dreadful aspect. Some were suspended by the neck, like suicides left
-there for an example. Others in various gruesome fashions parodied
-the attitudes of life. There was a grotesque group composed of three
-figures which had tumbled together in such a manner that the two on
-either side appeared to whisper into the ears of the third. Some had
-the neck awry, the head on one side, in a listening or questioning
-attitude; of others the head had sunk forward on the narrow breast.
-The jaw of some had dropped, and protruded a row of teeth, with a
-savage or jeering air.
-
-Every variety of grimace and grin was shown on those appalling
-faces; and as Gaston passed down the chamber fingers poked at him
-from gaping sleeves; he was laughed at, mocked at, scowled at; and
-when he looked behind him, all these skeletons were laughing,
-mocking, and scowling at one another. Many of the faces were little
-else but grinning mouths, and to those whose mouths stood wide open
-his imagination gave voices, so that the vaults seemed filled with
-the cries and laughter of the dead.
-
-The monk went steadily on in front of him, waving his candle to and
-fro; and as the smell was nauseate and oppressed the nostrils, he
-spat occasionally upon the floor.
-
-His bit of candle burnt itself out before he had taken Gaston
-completely round, and he returned to fetch another, leaving Gaston
-in a corner of the vault where the light was a mere glimmer. Right
-opposite to him in this place was a massive coffin with rich
-chasings, whose grisly inmate was wrapped from head to foot in a
-mantle of black velvet. Every particle of flesh had melted from the
-face, the hair had fallen from the head, the eyeless sockets stared
-from the depths of the velvet hood. The skeleton was richly dight
-and finely housed; it was Death himself lying in state.
-
-The monk came up with a fresh candle, and Gaston stooped down and
-peered into the coffin. Above the figure’s head was affixed a
-miniature on ivory, which represented a young man in the first prime
-of life, of a refined and beautiful countenance. In the folds of the
-mantle a card had tumbled, and stooping lower, Gaston read on it the
-name of Udalrico Verga. There was a small round hole in the skull,
-just over the left temple.
-
-“_Ucciso_, signor!” (Murdered!) said the monk, behind him.
-
-The Italian word sounded softly in the lips of the monk; but there
-was the tell-tale hole in the forehead.
-
-This then was the hero and the victim of that old tragedy; this was
-the end of him! But for his punctured skull, he might have changed
-places with any of the least repulsive of his skeleton companions.
-But his little bullet-hole marked him out from all of them.
-Curiously, the hood had slipped off from the left side of the skull,
-and as this was the side next to the spectator, the bullet-hole
-compelled attention to itself at once.
-
-The story of the murder which the baron had told to Gaston, and with
-which his thoughts had many times been occupied in the Villa
-Torcello, came before him again; and looking at the stark remains of
-the victim of that forgotten crime, he felt a sudden and
-irresistible longing to know its secret. If he could win it from the
-coffin there! But the grim rest within would be disturbed no more.
-And the young man pictured there beside the skeleton? Murder had no
-meaning for him; he had not come to know it when he was pictured
-thus. The face impressed Gaston strangely. He looked at it long,
-till he began to fancy that behind its delicate beauty he saw the
-tokens of a latent sensuality. But it was a face of singular
-sweetness, and if any evil were there, it existed only in the
-colourless form of a suggestion.
-
-And the priest, who had died a suspect? Was _he_ here, and did death
-whisper anything against him? No, the monk said; the priest was a
-native of Syracuse, and after his death his body had been carried
-there.
-
-Gaston had seen enough; the chamber and its horrid tenants had given
-him a sense of physical sickness; and, above all, some curious
-malign influence seemed to issue from the coffin of Udalrico Verga,
-which was working its way into his brain.
-
-The words of the Baron came into his mind: “They say the spirit
-haunts the place, seeking some one to avenge the murder.”
-
-Placing a five-franc note in the hand of the monk, he left the
-chamber and the monastery at once; and entering the carriage, he was
-driven home.
-
-By morning he had shaken off the morbid effects of his visit to the
-Capucins’; but his imagination had become the seat of a vague and
-indefinable oppression. This, at length, when analysed, resolved
-itself into a certain feeling of injury on account of Udalrico
-Verga. The wonderful amiableness, joined to an almost womanly
-beauty, of the face he had seen imaged in the coffin, had touched
-his sympathies; and now the memory of it began to lay hold on his
-affections. For what cause, and by whose hand, had the young
-Udalrico died so brutally?
-
-The tale of the murder stuck in his mind; it possessed him; it would
-not be dislodged. And the tale, though begun a whole generation
-since, was still unfinished. It told that Verga had been murdered;
-but who had murdered him?
-
-This question uttered itself again and again; it grew importunate.
-One evening in particular it became a kind of clamour in his ears;
-when, walking by moonlight in the garden of the villa, he was
-suddenly conscious that a presence other than his own was with him.
-Turning about, he beheld vividly, at a distance from him of twelve
-or fifteen paces, the figure of a young and elegant man. The view of
-this figure which his eyes took in, and the impression which it made
-upon his mind, were so distinct, that, but for a single
-circumstance, he would have suspected nothing abnormal in the
-appearance. The features were those of Udalrico Verga.
-
-His reason still urging him to reject the testimony of his sight,
-Gaston advanced nearer to the figure. It remained motionless,
-outlined distinctly in the moonlight, on the path bordered by a row
-of pepper trees where the body of Verga had been found. Again Gaston
-went forward; he could now by stretching out his hand almost have
-touched the figure; his eyes looked straight into the eyes of the
-man whom he knew to have lain for thirty years in his coffin. While
-gazing fixedly and with fascination upon this creature from the
-grave, which, though he knew it to be bodiless, seemed full real to
-him, Gaston felt his senses being subdued; and, before he could
-exert will enough to repel an influence which flowed in upon him as
-it were waves of blinding light, he was rapt out of himself, and
-held for the space of a minute or so in what is best described as a
-magnetic sleep or trance. He remained upright and rigid; his brain a
-whirl of excitement, with an accompanying painful consciousness; the
-body of the emotion being a confused and very indefinite feeling of
-fear—whether for himself or for some other person, he did not know.
-This feeling becoming slightly more definite, he knew that the fear
-he felt was not for himself, but for another; yet who that other
-was, he could not tell. It was the same when a voice said plainly in
-his ear, that what had been begun must be finished; the voice was
-piercing in its clearness, and he knew that it was the voice of one
-dear to him; but whose, he could not divine.
-
-This curious sleep lasted, as I have said, for about a minute; and
-when Gaston awoke he was standing precisely as he had been when
-seized in the trance. He looked for the apparition; it was not
-there. He moved to the path, placed himself on the very spot where,
-but a minute before, the form in the likeness of Udalrico Verga had
-stood. There was nothing. He looked round him; from this path he
-could see over the whole garden; it slept motionless in the
-moonlight, and his was the only figure in it. Gaston returned to the
-house in a condition of extreme nervous excitement.
-
-In this condition, and almost before he had reached the room in
-which he usually sat, the story of the murder was flashed in upon
-his mind; he read it as plainly as if it were traced in English
-characters on the wall before him. Fancying himself still under some
-abnormous influence, which when it passed away would carry the story
-with it, he at once sat down and committed an abstract of it to
-paper.
-
-All that night, the story swam in his brain, and rising early next
-morning, he resolved—or rather was impelled—to commence writing it
-immediately. He did so, and in the full light of day the wraith of
-Udalrico Verga stood beside him, and he plainly saw it, during the
-whole time his pen was at work. But the vision had no longer any
-weakening or retarding effect upon his brain; rather its effects
-were quickening and coercive; and these effects increased, till it
-became a certainty to him that from the visible presence of the
-spirit of Verga he drew the main strength of his inspiration. The
-story grew under his pen to an elaborate romance, upon which,
-sustained throughout by an elation of mind that allowed little
-repose to the body, he was at work during many weeks.
-
-In all this time, he never passed beyond the grounds of the villa,
-and when, by-and-bye, his face began to show marks of the mental and
-bodily stress to which his task subjected him, the peasant people of
-the town, who saw him walking in the garden sometimes of an evening,
-used to say:
-
-“There is the English signor who went to live in the Villa Torcello
-eleven weeks ago; he used to go out every day, but it is nine weeks
-since he passed the gate. He cannot get out any more. He has seen
-the ghost of the Signor Verga, and it keeps him there. He grows like
-a ghost himself.”
-
-But the story was finished at length, and Gaston sent the manuscript
-to his publishers in London. The ghost of Verga, which had remained
-visibly before him during the whole period of composition, vanished
-on the day the work was ended, and was never seen by him again. He
-went out every day as he had done formerly, and exercise brought
-back the colour to his face, and restored the tone of his mind. At
-this time he thought no more about the story than that it was a
-strange one, which had come to him in a strange manner, and that it
-ought to bring him the fame in fiction which he coveted.
-
-A letter from Sir Selwyn, in which he said that he was on the point
-of starting for home, determined Gaston to return thither at once,
-that he might have everything in readiness for his father’s coming.
-
-On the evening before his departure, while sorting a bundle of
-papers, he came upon a portion of manuscript of his story which he
-remembered having set aside as needing to be re-cast. He took it up
-and began to read it.
-
-The tragedy which formed the climax of the romance, had this
-feature, that the man who was murdered had (unconsciously, and by a
-singular operation of fate) planned his own death in planning that
-of the friend whom he falsely believed to have betrayed him in love.
-The chapter upon which Gaston had lighted, was devoted to a minute
-analysis of the character of the man whom blind force of
-circumstance had driven to an act of murder which his affection for
-its victim had rendered abhorrent in the highest degree.
-
-So remote from the ordinary had been the conditions under which the
-story was composed, and so small (it had seemed to Gaston) was the
-share of its inspiration which his own brain could claim, that now,
-within a few weeks of its composition, he read it almost as the work
-of another.
-
-This exotic notion, that his own was not his own, deepened as he
-read further into the chapter, for something was there which
-disquieted him. Some shadowy unembodied likeness, and yet no
-likeness, but a faint whispering of resemblance; some voiceless hint
-that was but the failure of an echo. He turned back, and read again.
-It was not there, he had deceived himself. He shut the page, his
-mind at ease.
-
-In a week from this time, he was home again, awaiting the coming of
-his father. Sir Selwyn landed in England a month later, and Gaston,
-who received him at the vessel’s side, was shocked at his
-appearance. Sir Selwyn’s handsome face seemed not so much to have
-aged as to have withered; the body, too, was shrunken, and
-desiccated, as though the vital fluids were exhausted. The nervous
-irritation of manner which had characterised an earlier stage of the
-disease, had given way to a species of torpor, in which even speech
-seemed an effort. It was the mental and bodily paralysis of
-melancholia in its acutest form.
-
-The journey home was a sad one. What little Sir Selwyn said, told
-the story of the renewal of his sufferings, which dated from the day
-that he had written to Gaston of his intention to return to England.
-“But I am persuaded,” he said in conclusion, “that it draws near the
-end.”
-
-Strangely enough, however, as Gaston thought, and quite contrary to
-his expectations, the sight of his beautiful home revived Sir
-Selwyn’s spirits. They dined together, and the baronet showed a
-brighter face over his wine. He sent for his bailiff, and spent an
-hour or more discussing the affairs of his estate. Afterwards, he
-walked with Gaston through the gardens and park, and began, for the
-first time, to talk of his travels. Then he questioned Gaston about
-his Italian tour, and said:
-
-“What did you do with yourself all those weeks in Palermo? You
-mentioned no writing; but I am sure your pen was not idle so long.”
-
-“No,” said Gaston. “I wrote a famous story there. I did not mean to
-tell you of it until it was published. It was to be a surprise, for
-this is the book that is to make me famous.”
-
-“Come, that sounds well!” said Sir Selwyn. “But you are beginning to
-be famous already. What could have been better than the reviews of
-your last book which you sent me?”
-
-“Oh, but this one will do twice as much for me!” laughed Gaston.
-
-“I am glad you feel that. No one could be more delighted than I am
-to hear it. Have you dedicated it to me, Gaston?”
-
-“Otherwise, my dear father, it would be no book of mine.”
-
-“Thank you, Gaston. You know how dear your fame is to me.”
-
-In another month, during which Sir Selwyn’s health, with some
-fluctuations, had shown, on the whole, a disposition towards
-improvement, Gaston’s romance was published.
-
-On the day on which some copies were forwarded to him from the
-publishers, he had gone on business to the neighbouring town, and
-did not return until late in the evening.
-
-Sir Selwyn’s valet, an old and devoted servant who had been with his
-master for many years, met him at the door, pale, and terrified.
-
-“Sir Selwyn has been taken strangely ill, sir,” he said. “We can
-none of us tell what is the matter with him. He rang his bell an
-hour ago, and when I went upstairs he was looking like a ghost,
-sitting up quite stiff in his arm-chair, with one of your new books
-in his hand. It seemed like a dead man speaking when he asked how
-soon you could return, and said that no doctor was to be sent for.
-He would not let me stay with him either, and, indeed, though I’ve
-known Sir Selwyn these forty years, I believe I should have been
-almost afraid to do so sir, he looked so terrible. I remained close
-outside; but there’s not been a sound in his room ever since, sir.”
-
-Fears which, even in thought, he dared not shape, came like a wave
-upon Gaston, as he hurried to his father’s room.
-
-Death, or his image, sat there, in Sir Selwyn’s chair; or rather,
-the baronet’s aspect, as Gaston beheld him, grey and rigid, was like
-the phantom Life-in-Death; as though a corpse had been galvanised
-for a moment into a ghastly appearance of life. The jaw had begun to
-fall and the eyes were large and glassy; but the regular rising and
-falling of the breast showed that mechanical life was not yet
-extinct. Open on the ground beside Sir Selwyn lay Gaston’s new
-romance.
-
-The spirit had all but taken its departure; but when Gaston bent
-over his father and pleaded for recognition, there was a faint
-twitching of the brow, and a half-convulsive movement of the whole
-body, as though the spirit were trying to force an entrance again;
-and Sir Selwyn, by an effort, fixed his eyes on his son’s face. His
-voice struggled in his throat, and he said, with a pause between
-every word:
-
-“When I knelt beside him—for I still loved him—he said: ‘You have
-killed me, but I will never leave you, and one day I will come back
-from the grave and kill _you_’ He has kept his word. This is not
-your book, Gaston, _it-is-Udalrico’s_. This is my——”
-
-The voice stopped. Sir Selwyn was dead. The Ghost of Udalrico Verga
-was avenged.
-
- TIGHE HOPKINS.
-
- THE ORIGIN OF EVIL.
-
-The problem of the origin of evil can be philosophically approached
-only if the archaic Indian formula is taken as the basis of the
-argument. Ancient wisdom alone solves the presence of the universal
-fiend in a satisfactory way. It attributes the birth of Kosmos and
-the evolution of life to the breaking asunder of primordial,
-manifested UNITY, into plurality, or the great illusion of form.
-HOMOGENEITY having transformed itself into Heterogeneity, contrasts
-have naturally been created: hence sprang what we call EVIL, which
-thenceforward reigned supreme in this “Vale of Tears.”
-
-Materialistic Western philosophy (so mis-named) has not failed to
-profit by this grand metaphysical tenet. Even physical Science, with
-Chemistry at its head, has turned its attention of late to the first
-proposition, and directs its efforts toward proving on irrefutable
-data the homogeneity of primordial matter. But now steps in
-materialistic Pessimism, a teaching which is neither philosophy nor
-science, but only a deluge of meaningless words. Pessimism, in its
-latest development, having ceased to be pantheistic, and having
-wedded itself to materialism, prepares to make capital out of the
-old Indian formula. But the atheistic pessimist soars no higher than
-the terrestrial homogeneous plasm of the Darwinists. For him the
-_ultima thule_ is earth and matter, and he sees, beyond the _prima
-materia_, only an ugly void, an empty nothingness. Some of the
-pessimists attempt to poetize their idea after the manner of the
-whitened sepulchres, or the Mexican corpses, whose ghastly cheeks
-and lips are thickly covered with rouge. The decay of matter pierces
-through the mask of seeming life, all efforts to the contrary
-notwithstanding.
-
-Materialism patronises Indian metaphora and imagery now. In a new
-work upon the subject by Dr. Mainländer, “Pessimism and Progress,”
-one learns that Indian Pantheism and German Pessimism are
-_identical_; and that it is the breaking up of homogeneous matter
-into heterogeneous material, the transition from uniformity to
-multiformity, which resulted in so unhappy a universe. Saith
-Pessimism:—
-
- “This (transition) is precisely the original mistake, the
- _primordial sin_, which the whole creation has now to expiate by
- heavy suffering; it is just that _sin_, which, having launched
- into existence all that lives, plunged it thereby into the abysmal
- depths of evil and misery, to escape from which there is but one
- means possible, _i.e._, by putting _an end to being itself_.”
-
-This interpretation of the Eastern formula, attributing to it the
-first idea of escaping the misery of life by “putting an end to
-being”—whether that being is viewed as applicable to the whole
-Kosmos, or only to individual life—is a gross misconception. The
-Eastern pantheist, whose philosophy teaches him to discriminate
-between Being or ESSE and conditioned existence, would hardly
-indulge in so absurd an idea as the postulation of such an
-alternative. He knows he can put an end to _form_ alone, not to
-_being_—and that only on this plane of terrestrial illusion. True,
-he knows that by killing out in himself _Tanha_ (the unsatisfied
-desire for existence, or the “_will_ to live”)—he will thus
-gradually escape the curse of re-birth and _conditioned_ existence.
-But he knows also that he cannot kill or “put an end,” even to his
-own little life except as a personality, which after all is but a
-change of dress. And believing but in One Reality, which is eternal
-_Be-ness_, the “_causeless_ CAUSE” from which he has exiled himself
-unto a world of forms, he regards the temporary and progressing
-manifestations of it in the state of _Maya_ (change or illusion), as
-the greatest evil, truly; but at the same time as a process in
-nature, as unavoidable as are the pangs of birth. It is the only
-means by which he can pass from limited and conditioned lives of
-sorrow into eternal life, or into that absolute “Be-ness,” which is
-so graphically expressed in the Sanskrit word _sat_.
-
-The “Pessimism” of the Hindu or Buddhist Pantheist is metaphysical,
-abstruse, and philosophical. The idea that matter and its Protean
-manifestations are the source and origin of universal evil and
-sorrow is a very old one, though Gautama Buddha was the first to
-give to it its definite expression. But the great Indian Reformer
-assuredly never meant to make of it a handle for the modern
-pessimist to get hold of, or a peg for the materialist to hang his
-distorted and pernicious tenets upon! The Sage and Philosopher, who
-sacrificed himself for Humanity by _living for it, in order to save
-it_, by teaching men to see in the sensuous existence of matter
-misery alone, had never in his deep philosophical mind any idea of
-offering a premium for suicide; his efforts were to release mankind
-from too strong an attachment to life, which is the chief cause of
-Selfishness—hence the creator of mutual pain and suffering. In his
-personal case, Buddha left us an example of fortitude to follow: in
-living, not in running away from life. His doctrine shows evil
-immanent, _not in matter_ which is eternal, but in the illusions
-created by it: through the changes and transformations of matter
-generating life—because these changes are conditioned and such life
-is ephemeral. At the same time those evils are shown to be not only
-unavoidable, but necessary. For if we would discern good from evil,
-light from darkness, and appreciate the former, we can do so only
-through the contrasts between the two. While Buddha’s philosophy
-points, in its dead-letter meaning, only to the dark side of things
-on this illusive plane; its esotericism, the hidden soul of it,
-draws the veil aside and reveals to the Arhat all the glories of
-LIFE ETERNAL in _all the Homogeneousness of Consciousness and
-Being_. Another absurdity, no doubt, in the eyes of materialistic
-science and even modern Idealism, yet a _fact_ to the Sage and
-esoteric Pantheist.
-
-Nevertheless, the root idea that evil is born and generated by the
-ever increasing complications of the homogeneous material, which
-enters into form and differentiates more and more as that form
-becomes physically more perfect, has an esoteric side to it which
-seems to have never occurred to the modern pessimist. Its
-dead-letter aspect, however, became the subject of speculation with
-every ancient thinking nation. Even in India the primitive thought,
-underlying the formula already cited, has been disfigured by
-Sectarianism, and has led to the ritualistic, purely dogmatic
-observances of the _Hatha Yogis_, in contradistinction to the
-philosophical Vedantic _Raja Yoga_. Pagan and Christian exoteric
-speculation, and even mediæval monastic asceticism, have extracted
-all they could from the originally noble idea, and made it
-subservient to their narrow-minded sectarian views. Their false
-conceptions of matter have led the Christians from the earliest day
-to identify woman with Evil and matter—notwithstanding the worship
-paid by the Roman Catholic Church to the Virgin.
-
-But the latest application of the misunderstood Indian formula by
-the Pessimists in Germany is quite original, and rather unexpected,
-as we shall see. To draw any analogy between a highly metaphysical
-teaching, and Darwin’s theory of physical evolution would, in
-itself, seem rather a hopeless task. The more so as the theory of
-natural selection does not preach any conceivable extermination of
-_being_, but, on the contrary, a continuous and ever increasing
-development of _life_. Nevertheless, German ingenuity has contrived,
-by means of scientific paradoxes and much sophistry, to give it a
-semblance of philosophical truth. The old Indian tenet itself has
-not escaped litigation at the hands of modern pessimism. The happy
-discoverer of the theory, that the origin of evil dates from the
-protoplasmic _Amœba_, which divided itself for procreation, and thus
-lost its immaculate homogeneity, has laid claim to the Aryan archaic
-formula in his new volume. While extolling its philosophy and the
-depth of ancient conceptions, he declares that it ought to be viewed
-“as the most profound truth _precogitated_ and _robbed_ by the
-ancient sages from modern thought”!!
-
-It thus follows that the deeply religious Pantheism of the Hindu and
-Buddhist philosopher, and the occasional vagaries of the pessimistic
-materialist, are placed on the same level and identified by “modern
-thought.” The impassable chasm between the two is ignored. It
-matters little, it seems, that the Pantheist, recognising no reality
-in the manifested Kosmos, and regarding it as a simple illusion of
-his senses, has to view his own existence also as only a bundle of
-illusions. When, therefore, he speaks of the means of escaping from
-the sufferings of objective life, his view of those sufferings, and
-his motive for putting an end to existence are entirely different
-from those of the pessimistic materialist. For him, pain as well as
-sorrow are illusions, due to attachment to this life, and ignorance.
-Therefore he strives after eternal, changeless life, and absolute
-consciousness in the state of Nirvana; whereas the European
-pessimist, taking the “evils” of life as _realities_, aspires when
-he has the time to aspire after anything except those said mundane
-_realities_, to annihilation of “being,” as he expresses it. For the
-philosopher there is but one real life, _Nirvanic bliss_, which is a
-state differing in kind, not in degree only, from that of any of the
-planes of consciousness in the manifested universe. The Pessimist
-calls “Nirvana” superstition, and explains it as “cessation of
-life,” life for him beginning and ending on earth. The former
-ignores in his spiritual aspirations even the integral homogeneous
-unit, of which the German Pessimist now makes such capital. He knows
-of, and believes in only the direct cause of that unit, eternal and
-_ever living, because the ONE uncreated_, or rather not evoluted.
-Hence all his efforts are directed toward the speediest reunion
-possible with, and return to his _pre_-primordial condition, after
-his pilgrimage through this illusive series of visionary lives, with
-their unreal phantasmagoria of sensuous perceptions.
-
-Such pantheism can be qualified as “pessimistic” only by a believer
-in a personal Providence; by one who contrasts its negation of the
-reality of anything “created”—_i.e._ conditioned and limited—with
-his own blind and unphilosophical faith. The Oriental mind does not
-busy itself with extracting evil from every radical law and
-manifestation of life, and multiplying every phenomenal quantity by
-the units of very often imaginary evils: the Eastern Pantheist
-simply submits to the inevitable, and tries to blot out from his
-path in life as many “descents into rebirth” as he can, by avoiding
-the creation of new _Karmic_ causes. The Buddhist philosopher knows
-that the duration of the series of lives of every human being—unless
-he reaches Nirvana “artificially” (“takes the kingdom of God by
-violence,” in Kabalistic parlance), is given, allegorically, in the
-_forty-nine days_ passed by Gautama the Buddha under the Bo-tree.
-And the Hindu sage is aware, in his turn, that he has to light the
-_first_, and extinguish the _forty-ninth fire_[23] before he reaches
-his final deliverance. Knowing this, both sage and philosopher wait
-patiently for the natural hour of deliverance; whereas their unlucky
-copyist, the European Pessimist, is ever ready to commit, as to
-preach, suicide. Ignorant of the numberless heads of the hydra of
-existences he is incapable of feeling the same philosophical scorn
-for life as he does for death, and of, thereby, following the wise
-example given him by his Oriental brother.
-
------
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- This is an esoteric tenet, and the general reader will not make
- much out of it. But the Theosophist who has read “Esoteric
- Buddhism” may compute the 7 by 7 of the _forty-nine_ “days,” and
- the _forty-nine_ “fires,” and understand that the allegory refers
- esoterically to the seven human consecutive root-races with their
- seven subdivisions. Every monad is born in the first and obtains
- deliverance in the last seventh race. Only a “Buddha” is shown
- reaching it during the course of one life.
-
------
-
-Thus, philosophical pantheism is very different from modern
-pessimism. The first is based upon the correct understanding of the
-mysteries of being; the latter is in reality only one more system of
-evil added by unhealthy fancy to the already large sum of real
-social evils. In sober truth it is no philosophy, but simply a
-systematic slander of life and being; the bilious utterances of a
-dyspeptic or an incurable hypochondriac. No parallel can ever be
-attempted between the two systems of thought.
-
-The seeds of evil and sorrow were indeed the earliest result and
-consequence of the heterogeneity of the manifested universe. Still
-they are but an illusion produced by the law of contrasts, which, as
-described, is a fundamental law in nature. Neither good nor evil
-would exist were it not for the light they mutually throw on each
-other. _Being_, under whatever form, having been observed from the
-World’s creation to offer these contrasts, and evil predominating in
-the universe owing to _Ego_-ship or selfishness, the rich Oriental
-metaphor has pointed to existence as expiating the mistake of
-nature; and the human soul (psüche), was henceforth regarded as the
-scapegoat and victim of _unconscious_ OVER-SOUL. But it is not to
-Pessimism, but to Wisdom that it gave birth. Ignorance alone is the
-willing martyr, but knowledge is the master of natural Pessimism.
-Gradually, and by the process of heredity or _atavism_, the latter
-became innate in man. It is always present in us, howsoever latent
-and silent its voice in the beginning. Amid the early joys of
-existence, when we are still full of the vital energies of youth, we
-are yet apt, each of us, at the first pang of sorrow, after a
-failure, or at the sudden appearance of a black cloud, to accuse
-_life_ of it; to feel _life_ a burden, and often to curse our being.
-This shows pessimism in our blood, but at the same time the presence
-of the fruits of ignorance. As mankind multiplies, and with it
-suffering—which is the natural result of an increasing number of
-units that generate it—sorrow and pain are intensified. We live in
-an atmosphere of gloom and despair, but this is because our eyes are
-downcast and rivetted to the earth, with all its physical and
-grossly material manifestations. If, instead of that, man proceeding
-on his life-journey looked—not heavenward, which is but a figure of
-speech—but _within himself_ and centred his point of observation on
-the _inner_ man, he would soon escape from the coils of the great
-serpent of illusion. From the cradle to the grave, his life would
-then become supportable and worth living, even in its worst phases.
-
-Pessimism—that chronic suspicion of lurking evil everywhere—is thus
-of a two-fold nature, and brings fruits of two kinds. It is a
-natural characteristic in physical man, and becomes a curse only to
-the ignorant. It is a boon to the spiritual; inasmuch as it makes
-the latter turn into the right path, and brings him to the discovery
-of another as fundamental a truth; namely, that all in this world is
-only _preparatory_ because transitory. It is like a chink in the
-dark prison walls of earth-life, through which breaks in a ray of
-light from the eternal home, which, illuminating the _inner_ senses,
-whispers to the prisoner in his shell of clay of the origin and the
-dual mystery of our being. At the same time, it is a tacit proof of
-the presence in man of that _which knows, without being told_,
-viz:—that there is another and a better life, once that the curse of
-earth-lives is lived through.
-
-This explanation of the problem and origin of evil being, as already
-said, of an entirely metaphysical character, has nothing to do with
-physical laws. Belonging as it does altogether to the spiritual part
-of man, to dabble with it superficially is, therefore, far more
-dangerous than to remain ignorant of it. For, as it lies at the very
-root of Gautama Buddha’s ethics, and since it has now fallen into
-the hands of the modern Philistines of materialism, to confuse the
-two systems of “pessimistic” thought can lead but to mental suicide,
-if it does not lead to worse.
-
-Eastern wisdom teaches that spirit has to pass through the ordeal of
-incarnation and life, and be baptised with matter before it can
-reach experience and knowledge. After which only it receives the
-baptism of soul, or self-consciousness, and may return to its
-original condition of a god, _plus_ experience, ending with
-omniscience. In other words, it can return to the original state of
-the homogeneity of primordial essence only through the addition of
-the fruitage of Karma, which alone is able to create an absolute
-_conscious_ deity, removed but one degree from the absolute ALL.
-
-Even according to the letter of the Bible, evil must have existed
-before Adam and Eve, who, therefore, are innocent of the slander of
-the original sin. For, had there been no evil or sin before them,
-there could exist neither tempting Serpent nor a Tree of Knowledge
-of _good and evil_ in Eden. The characteristics of that apple-tree
-are shown in the verse when the couple had tasted of its fruit: “The
-eyes of them both were opened, and _they knew_” many things besides
-knowing they were naked. Too much knowledge about things of matter
-is thus rightly shown an evil.
-
-But so it is, and it is our duty to examine and combat the new
-pernicious theory. Hitherto, pessimism was kept in the regions of
-philosophy and metaphysics, and showed no pretensions to intrude
-into the domain of purely physical science, such as Darwinism. The
-theory of evolution has become almost universal now, and there is no
-school (save the Sunday and missionary schools) where it is not
-taught, with more or less modifications from the original programme.
-On the other hand, there is no other teaching more abused and taken
-advantage of than evolution, especially by the application of its
-fundamental laws to the solution of the most compound and abstract
-problems of man’s many sided existence. There, where psychology and
-even philosophy “fear to tread,” materialistic biology applies its
-sledge-hammer of superficial analogies, and prejudged conclusions.
-Worse than all, claiming man to be only a higher animal, it
-maintains this right as undeniably pertaining to the domain of the
-science of evolution. Paradoxes in those “domains” do not rain now,
-they pour. As “man is the measure of all things,” therefore is man
-measured and analyzed by the animal. One German materialist claims
-spiritual and psychic evolution as the lawful property of physiology
-and biology; the mysteries of embryology and zoology alone, it is
-said, being capable of solving those of consciousness in man and the
-origin of his soul.[24] Another finds justification for suicide in
-the example of animals, who, when tired of living, put an end to
-existence by starvation.[25]
-
------
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- Haeckel.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- Leo Bach.
-
------
-
-Hitherto pessimism, notwithstanding the abundance and brilliancy of
-its paradoxes, had a weak point—namely, the absence of any real and
-evident basis for it to rest upon. Its followers had no living,
-guiding thought to serve them as a beacon and help them to steer
-clear of the sandbanks of life—real and imaginary—so profusely sown
-by themselves in the shape of denunciations against life and being.
-All they could do was to rely upon their representatives, who
-occupied their time very ingeniously if not profitably, in tacking
-the many and various evils of life to the metaphysical propositions
-of great German thinkers, like Schopenhauer and Hartmann, as small
-boys tack on coloured tails to the kites of their elders and rejoice
-at seeing them launched in the air. But now the programme will be
-changed. The Pessimists have found something more solid and
-authoritative, if less philosophical, to tack their jeremiads and
-dirges to, than the metaphysical _kites_ of Schopenhauer. The day
-when they agreed with the views of this philosopher, which pointed
-at the Universal WILL as the perpetrator of all the World-evil, is
-gone to return no more. Nor will they be any better satisfied with
-the hazy “Unconscious” of von Hartmann. They have been seeking
-diligently for a more congenial and less metaphysical soil to build
-their pessimistic _philosophy_ upon, and they have been rewarded
-with success, now that the cause of Universal Suffering has been
-discovered by them in the fundamental laws of physical development.
-Evil will no longer be allied with the misty and uncertain Phantom
-called “WILL,” but with an actual and obvious fact: the Pessimists
-will henceforth be towed by the Evolutionists.
-
-The basic argument of their representative has been given in the
-opening sentence of this article. The Universe and all on it
-appeared in consequence of the “breaking asunder of UNITY into
-_Plurality_.” This rather dim rendering of the Indian formula is not
-made to refer, as I have shown, in the mind of the Pessimist, to the
-one Unity, to the Vedantin abstraction—Parabrahm: otherwise, I
-should not certainly have used the words “breaking up.” Nor does it
-concern itself much with Mulaprakriti, or the “Veil” of Parabrahm;
-nor even with the first manifested primordial matter, except
-inferentially, as follows from Dr. Mainländer’s exposition, but
-chiefly with terrestrial _protoplasm_. Spirit or deity is entirely
-ignored in this case; evidently because of the necessity for showing
-the whole as “the lawful domain of physical Science.”
-
-In short, the time-honoured formula is claimed to have its basis and
-to find its justification in the theory that from “a few, perhaps
-one, single form of the very simplest nature” (Darwin), “all the
-different animals and plants living to-day, and all the organisms
-that have ever lived on the earth,” have gradually developed. It is
-this axiom of Science, we are told, which justifies and demonstrates
-the Hindu philosophical tenet. What is this axiom? Why, it is this:
-Science teaches that the series of transformations through which the
-seed is made to pass—the seed that grows into a tree, or becomes an
-_ovum_, or that which develops into an animal—consists in every case
-in nothing but the passage of the fabric of that seed, from the
-homogeneous into the heterogeneous or compound form. This is then
-the scientific verity which checks the Indian formula by that of the
-Evolutionists, identifies both, and thus exalts ancient wisdom by
-recognizing it worthy of modern materialistic thought.
-
-This philosophical formula is not simply corroborated by the
-individual growth and development of isolated species, explains our
-Pessimist; but it is demonstrated in general as in detail. It is
-shown justified in the evolution and growth of the Universe as well
-as in that of our planet. In short, the birth, growth and
-development of the whole organic world in its integral totality, are
-there to demonstrate ancient wisdom. From the universals down to the
-particulars, the organic world is discovered to be subject to the
-same law of ever increasing elaboration, of the transition from
-unity to plurality as “the fundamental formula of the evolution of
-life.” Even the growth of nations, of social life, public
-institutions, the development of the languages, arts and sciences,
-all this follows inevitably and fatally the all-embracing law of
-“the breaking asunder of unity into plurality, and the passage of
-the homogeneous into multiformity.”
-
-But while following Indian wisdom, our author exaggerates this
-fundamental law in his own way, and distorts it. He brings this
-law to bear even on the historical destinies of mankind. He makes
-these destinies subservient to, and a proof of, the correctness of
-the Indian conception. He maintains that humanity as an integral
-whole, in proportion as it develops and progresses in its
-evolution, and separates in its parts—each becoming a distinct and
-independent branch of the unit—drifts more and more away from its
-original healthy, harmonious unity. The complications of social
-establishment, social relations, as those of individuality, all
-lead to the weakening of the vital power, the relaxation of the
-energy of feeling, and to the destruction of that integral unity,
-without which no inner harmony is possible. The absence of that
-harmony generates an inner discord which becomes the cause of the
-greatest mental misery. Evil has its roots in the very nature of
-the evolution of life and its complications. Every one of its
-steps forward is at the same time a step taken toward the
-dissolution of its energy, and leads to passive apathy. Such is
-the inevitable result, he says, of every progressive complication
-of life; because evolution or development is a transition from the
-homogeneous to the heterogeneous, a scattering of the whole into
-the many, etc. etc. This terrible law is universal and applies to
-all creation, from the infinitesimally small up to man for, as he
-says, it is a fundamental law of nature.
-
-Now, it is just in this one-sided view of physical nature, which the
-German author accepts without one single thought as to its spiritual
-and psychic aspect, that his school is doomed to certain failure. It
-is not a question whether the said law of differentiation and its
-fatal consequences may or may not apply, in certain cases, to the
-growth and development of the animal species, and even of man; but
-simply, since it is the basis and main support of the whole new
-theory of the Pessimistic school, whether it is really a _universal_
-and fundamental law? We want to know whether this basic formula of
-evolution embraces the whole process of development and growth in
-its entirety; and whether, indeed, it is within the domain of
-physical science or not. If it is “nothing else than the transition
-from the homogeneous state to the heterogeneous,” as says
-Mainländer, then it remains to be proved that the given process
-“produces that complicated combination of tissues and organs which
-forms and completes the perfect animal and plant.”
-
-As remarked already by some critics on “Pessimism and Progress,” the
-German Pessimist does not doubt it for one moment. His supposed
-discovery and teaching “rest wholly on his certitude that
-development and the fundamental law of the complicated process of
-organization represent but one thing: the transformation of unity
-into plurality.” Hence the identification of the process with
-dissolution and decay, and the weakening of all the forces and
-energies. Mainländer would be right in his analogies were this law
-of the differentiation of the homogeneous into the heterogeneous to
-really represent the fundamental law of the evolution of life. But
-the idea is quite erroneous—metaphysically as well as physically.
-Evolution does not proceed in a straight line; _no more_ than any
-other process in nature, but journeys on _cyclically_, as does all
-the rest. The cyclic serpents swallow their tails like the Serpent
-of Eternity. And it is in this that the Indian formula, which is a
-Secret Doctrine teaching, is indeed corroborated by the natural
-Sciences, and especially by biology.
-
-This is what we read in the “Scientific Letters” by an anonymous
-Russian author and critic.
-
- “In the evolution of isolated individuals, in the evolution of the
- organic world, in that of the Universe, as in the growth and
- development of our planet—in short wherever any of the processes
- of progressive complexity take place, there we find, apart from
- the transition from unity to plurality, and homogeneity to
- heterogeneity a _converse transformation—the transition from
- plurality to unity, from the heterogeneous to the homogeneous_....
- Minute observation of the given process of progressive complexity
- has shown, that what takes place in it is not alone the separation
- of parts, but also their mutual absorption.... While one portion
- of the cells merge into each other and unite into one uniform
- whole, forming muscular fibres, muscular tissue, others are
- absorbed in the bone and nerve tissues, etc. etc. The same takes
- place in the formation of plants....”
-
-In this case material nature repeats the law that acts in the
-evolution of the psychic and the spiritual: both descend but to
-re-ascend and merge at the starting-point. _The homogeneous
-formative mass or element differentiated in its parts, is gradually
-transformed into the heterogeneous; then, merging those parts into a
-harmonious whole, it recommences a converse process, or
-reinvolution, and returns as gradually into its primitive or
-primordial state._
-
-Nor does Pessimism find any better support in pure Materialism, as
-hitherto the latter has been tinged with a decidedly optimistic
-bias. Its leading advocates have, indeed, never hesitated to sneer
-at the theological adoration of the “glory of God and all his
-works.” Büchner flings a taunt at the pantheist who sees in so “mad
-and bad” a world the manifestation of the Absolute. But, on the
-whole, the materialists admit a balance of good over evil, perhaps
-as a buffer against any “superstitious” tendency to look out and
-hope for a better one. Narrow as is their outlook, and limited as is
-their spiritual horizon, they yet see no cause to despair of the
-drift of things in general. The _pantheistic_ pessimists, however,
-have never ceased to urge that a despair of conscious being is the
-only legitimate outcome of atheistic negation. This opinion is, of
-course, axiomatic, or ought to be so. If “in this life only is there
-hope,” the tragedy of life is absolutely without any _raison d’être_
-and a perpetuation of the drama is as foolish as it is futile.
-
-The fact that the conclusions of pessimism have been at last
-assimilated by a certain class of atheistic writers, is a striking
-feature of the day, and another sign of the times. It illustrates
-the truism that the void created by modern scientific negation
-cannot and can never be filled by the cold prospects offered as a
-_solatium_ to optimists. The Comtean “enthusiasm of Humanity” is a
-poor thing enough with annihilation of the Race to ensue “as the
-solar fires die slowly out”—if, indeed, _they do die_ at all—to
-please physical science at the computed time. If all present sorrow
-and suffering, the fierce struggle for existence and all its
-attendant horrors, go for nothing in the long run, if MAN is a mere
-ephemeron, the sport of blind forces, why assist in the perpetuation
-of the farce. The “ceaseless grind of matter, force and law,” will
-but hurry the swarming human millions into eternal oblivion, and
-ultimately leave no trace or memory of the past, when things return
-to the nebulosity of the fire-mist, whence they emerged. Terrestrial
-life is no object in itself. It is overcast with gloom and misery.
-It does not seem strange, then, that the Soul-blind negationist
-should prefer the pessimism of Schopenhauer to the baseless optimism
-of Strauss and his followers, which, in the face of their teachings,
-reminds one of the animal spirits of a young donkey, after a good
-meal of thistles.
-
-One thing is, however, clear: the absolute necessity for some
-solution, which embraces the facts of existence on an optimistic
-basis. Modern Society is permeated with an increasing cynicism and
-honeycombed with disgust of life. This is the result of an
-utter ignorance of the operations of Karma and the nature of
-Soul-evolution. It is from a mistaken allegiance to the dogmas of a
-mechanical and largely spurious theory of Evolution, that Pessimism
-has risen to such undue importance. Once the basis of the Great Law
-is grasped—and what philosophy can furnish better means for such a
-grasp and final solution, than the esoteric doctrine of the great
-Indian Sages—there remains no possible _locus standi_ for the recent
-amendments to the Schopenhauerian system of thought or the
-metaphysical subtleties, woven by the “philosopher of the
-Unconscious.” The reasonableness of _Conscious_ Existence can be
-proved only by the study of the primeval—now esoteric—philosophy.
-And it says “there is neither death nor life, for both are
-illusions; being (or _be-ness_) is the only reality.” This paradox
-was repeated thousands of ages later by one of the greatest
-physiologists that ever lived. “Life is Death” said Claude Bernard.
-The organism lives because its parts are ever dying. The survival of
-the fittest is surely based on this truism. The life of the superior
-whole requires the death of the inferior, the death of the parts
-depending on and being subservient to it And, as life is death, so
-death is life, and the whole great cycle of lives form but ONE
-EXISTENCE—_the worst day of which is on our planet_.
-
-He who KNOWS will make the best of it For there is a dawn for every
-being, when once freed from illusion and ignorance by Knowledge; and
-he will at last proclaim in truth _and all Consciousness_ to
-Mahamaya:—
-
- “BROKEN THY HOUSE IS, AND THE RIDGE-POLE SPLIT!
- DELUSION FASHIONED IT!
- SAFE PASS I THENCE—DELIVERANCE TO OBTAIN.”...
-
- H. P. B.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- “Man will regain his lost Eden on that day when he can look at
- every desire in the broad, quiet light of this question:—How can I
- give desire such vent as shall conduce to the benefit of other
- men?”—(_Jasper Niemand in the “Path”_).
-
- THE GREAT PARADOX.
-
-Paradox would seem to be the natural language of occultism. Nay
-more, it would seem to penetrate deep into the heart of things, and
-thus to be inseparable from any attempt to put into words the truth,
-the reality which underlies the outward shows of life.
-
-And the paradox is one not in words only, but in action, in the very
-conduct of life. The paradoxes of occultism must be lived, not
-uttered only. Herein lies a great danger, for it is only too easy to
-become lost in the intellectual contemplation of the path, and so to
-forget that the road can only be known by treading it.
-
-One startling paradox meets the student at the very outset, and
-confronts him in ever new and strange shapes at each turn of the
-road. Such an one, perchance, has sought the path desiring a guide,
-a rule of right for the conduct of his life. He learns that the
-alpha and the omega, the beginning and the end of _life_ is
-selflessness; and he feels the truth of the saying that only in the
-profound unconsciousness of self-forgetfulness can the truth and
-reality of being reveal itself to his eager heart.
-
-The student learns that this is the one law of occultism, at once
-the science and the art of living, the guide to the goal he desires
-to attain. He is fired with enthusiasm and enters bravely on the
-mountain track. He then finds that his teachers do not encourage his
-ardent flights of sentiment; his all-forgetting yearning for the
-Infinite—on the outer plane of his actual life and consciousness. At
-least, if they do not actually damp his enthusiasm, they set him, as
-the first and indispensable task, _to conquer and control his body_.
-The student finds that far from being encouraged to live in the
-soaring thoughts of his brain, and to fancy he has reached that
-ether where is true freedom—to the forgetting of his body, and his
-external actions and personality—he is set down to tasks much nearer
-earth. All his attention and watchfulness are required on the outer
-plane; he must never forget himself, never lose hold over his body,
-his mind, his brain. He must even learn to control the expression of
-every feature, to check the action of each muscle, to be master of
-every slightest involuntary movement. The daily life around and
-within him is pointed out as the object of his study and
-observation. Instead of forgetting what are usually called the petty
-trifles, the little forgetfulnesses, the accidental slips of tongue
-or memory, he is forced to become each day more conscious of these
-lapses, till at last they seem to poison the air he breathes and
-stifle him, till he seems to lose sight and touch of the great world
-of freedom towards which he is struggling, till every hour of every
-day seems full of the bitter taste of self, and his heart grows sick
-with pain and the struggle of despair. And the darkness is rendered
-yet deeper by the voice within him, crying ceaselessly, “forget
-thyself. Beware, lest thou becomest self-concentrated—and the giant
-weed of spiritual selfishness take firm root in thy heart; beware,
-beware, beware!”
-
-The voice stirs his heart to its depths, for he feels that the words
-are true. His daily and hourly battle is teaching him that
-self-centredness is the root of misery, the cause of pain, and his
-soul is full of longing to be free.
-
-Thus the disciple is torn by doubt. He trusts his teachers, for he
-knows that through them speaks the same voice he hears in the
-silence of his own heart. But now they utter contradictory words;
-the one, the inner voice, bidding him forget himself utterly in the
-service of humanity; the other, the spoken word of those from whom
-he seeks guidance in his service, bidding him _first_ to conquer his
-body, his outer self. And he knows better with every hour how badly
-he acquits himself in that battle with the Hydra, and he sees seven
-heads grow afresh in place of each one that he has lopped off.
-
-At first he oscillates between the two, now obeying the one, now the
-other. But soon he learns that this is fruitless. For the sense of
-freedom and lightness, which comes at first when he leaves his outer
-self unwatched, that he may seek the inner air, soon loses its
-keenness, and some sudden shock reveals to him that he has slipped
-and fallen on the uphill path. Then, in desperation, he flings
-himself upon the treacherous snake of self, and strives to choke it
-into death; but its ever-moving coils elude his grasp, the insidious
-temptations of its glittering scales blind his vision, and again he
-becomes involved in the turmoil of the battle, which gains on him
-from day to day, and which at last seems to fill the whole world,
-and blot out all else beside from his consciousness. He is face to
-face with a crushing paradox, the solution of which must be lived
-before it can be really understood.
-
-In his hours of silent meditation the student will find that there
-is one space of silence within him where he can find refuge from
-thoughts and desires, from the turmoil of the senses and the
-delusions of the mind. By sinking his consciousness deep into his
-heart he can reach this place—at first only when he is alone in
-silence and darkness. But when the need for the silence has grown
-great enough, he will turn to seek it even in the midst of the
-struggle with self, and he will find it. Only he must not let go of
-his outer self, or his body; he must learn to retire into this
-citadel when the battle grows fierce, but to do so without losing
-sight of the battle; without allowing himself to fancy that by so
-doing he has won the victory. That victory is won only when all is
-silence without as within the inner citadel. Fighting thus, from
-within that silence, the student will find that he has solved the
-first great paradox.
-
-But paradox still follows him. When first he thus succeeds in thus
-retreating into himself, he seeks there only for refuge from the
-storm in his heart. And as he struggles to control the gusts of
-passion and desire, he realises more fully what mighty powers he has
-vowed himself to conquer. He still feels himself, apart from the
-silence, nearer akin to the forces of the storm. How can his puny
-strength cope with these tyrants of animal nature?
-
-This question is hard to answer in direct words; if, indeed, such an
-answer can be given. But analogy may point the way where the
-solution may be sought.
-
-In breathing we take a certain quantity of air into the lungs, and
-with this we can imitate in miniature the mighty wind of heaven. We
-can produce a feeble semblance of nature: a tempest in a tea-cup, a
-gale to blow and even swamp a paper boat. And we can say: “I do
-this; it is my breath.” But we cannot blow our breath against a
-hurricane, still less hold the trade winds in our lungs. Yet the
-powers of heaven are within us; the nature of the intelligences
-which guide the world-forces is blended with our own, and could we
-realise this and forget our outer selves, the very winds would be
-our instruments.
-
-So it is in life. While a man clings to his outer self—aye, and even
-to any one of the forms he assumes when this “mortal coil” is cast
-aside—so long is he trying to blow aside a hurricane with the breath
-of his lungs. It is useless and idle such an endeavour; for the
-great winds of life must, sooner or later, sweep him away. But if he
-changes his attitude _in himself_, if he acts on the faith that his
-body, his desires, his passions, his brain, are not himself, though
-he has charge of them, and is responsible for them; if he tries to
-deal with them as parts of nature, then he may hope to become one
-with the great tides of being, and reach the peaceful place of safe
-self-forgetfulness at last.
-
- “FAUST.”
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- “Fear is the slave of pain and Rebellion her captive; Endurance
- her free companion and Patience her master. And the husband of
- Pain is Rapture. But the souls are few in whom that marriage is
- consummated.” (L. S. C.).
-
-
- =THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT=:
-
- _THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN_.[26]
-
- (_Continued._)
-
- ---------------------
-
- BY MABEL COLLINS,
-
- Author of “THE PRETTIEST WOMAN IN WARSAW,” &c., &c.,
- And Scribe of “THE IDYLL OF THE WHITE LOTUS,” and “THROUGH THE GATES
- OF GOLD.”
-
- ---------------------
-
------
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- The sub-title, “a tale of love and magic,” having been
- simultaneously used by myself, Mr. Joseph Hutton, and another
- author, I think it best to change mine for one certainly less
- pretty, but equally descriptive. Is not this simultaneous use also
- a “sign of the times”?
-
------
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
-In a chapel of the great Cathedral in the city there was at certain
-hours always a priest who held there his confessional.
-
-To him went Hilary some days later. In the interim he had not seen
-the Princess. His soul had been torn hither and thither, to and fro.
-His passion for the beautiful girl held him fast, while his horror
-of the magician repelled him from her. He went to the Cathedral in
-the afternoon determined that he would reveal all his distress to
-the priest. Father Amyot was in his confessional, but some one was
-with him, for the curtain was drawn. Hilary knelt down at the small
-altar of the chapel there to wait. Presently there was a slight
-sound; he turned his head to see if the confessional was now free.
-The Princess Fleta stood beside him, her eyes fixed on him; it was
-she who at this instant only had risen from her knees in the
-confessional. Hilary, amazed and dumb with wonder, could only gaze
-upon her. She kept her strange and fascinating eyes fixed on his for
-a moment and then turned and with swift, soft steps left the chapel.
-Hilary remained kneeling motionless before the altar, his mind
-absorbed in what was hardly so much thought as amazement. Fleta was
-not then what he thought her. If she were sensitive to religious
-impressions she could not be the cold magician which she had
-appeared to him to be when he recollected the last scene in the
-laboratory. Perhaps after all she used her power generously and for
-good. He began to see her in another light. He began to worship her
-for her goodness as well as for her strong attractions. His heart
-leaped with joy at the thought that her soul was as beautiful as her
-body. He rose from his knees and turned instinctively and without
-thought to follow her. As he did so he passed Father Amyot, who
-seeing that no one else came immediately to the confessional, had
-left it and flung himself at full length upon the ground before the
-altar. He wore a long robe of coarse white cloth, tied at the waist
-with a black cord; a hood of the same cloth covered his shaven head.
-He was like a skeleton, perfectly fleshless and emaciated. His face
-lay sideways on the stone; he seemed unconscious, so profound was
-his abstraction. The eyes were open but had no sight in them. They
-were large grey blue eyes, full of a profound melancholy which gave
-them an appearance as if tears stood in them. This melancholy
-affected Hilary strangely; it touched his heart, made thrill and
-vibrate some deeply sensitive cord in his nature. He stood gazing a
-moment at the prostrate figure, and then with a profound obeisance
-left the chapel.
-
-The Princess Fleta had her horse waiting for her. She was a constant
-and daring rider, and seldom entered the city except on horseback,
-to the amazement of the court ladies, who in the city rode in
-carriages that they might dress beautifully. But Fleta had no vanity
-of this kind. Probably no other girl of her age would have willingly
-adopted the hideous dress of the witch and worn it before so many
-curious eyes. Her own beauty and her own appearance was a subject of
-but the slightest thought to her. She would walk down the
-fashionable promenade in her riding habit among the magnificent
-toilettes of the Court ladies. This she was doing now while a
-servant led her horse up and down. Hilary watched her from a
-distance, unable to summon courage to approach her in the midst of
-such a throng of personages. But presently Fleta saw him and came
-with her swift light step towards him. “Will you walk with me?” she
-asked. “There is no one here to be my companion but you.”
-
-“And why is that?” asked Hilary, as with flushed face and eager
-steps he accompanied her.
-
-“Because there are none that sympathise with me. You alone have
-entered my laboratory.”
-
-“But would not any of these be glad to come if you would admit
-them?”
-
-“Not one would have the courage, except perhaps some few wild
-spirits who would dare anything for mere excitement. And they would
-not please me.”
-
-Hilary was silent. Her words showed him very plainly that he pleased
-her. But there was a chill in his nature which now asserted itself.
-Here in the midst of so many people her hold on him was lessened,
-and he doubted her more than ever. Was she merely playing with him
-for her own amusement? Her high position gave her this power and he
-could not resent it, for even to be her favourite for a day would be
-accounted by any man an honour and a thing to boast of. And Hilary
-was being signalled out for public honour. He felt the envious
-glances of the men whom he met, and immediately a cold veil fell on
-his heart. He desired no such envy. To his mind love was a thing
-sacred. His scorn of life and doubt of human nature awakened at this
-moment of triumph. He did not speak, but the Princess answered his
-thought.
-
-“We will go away from here,” she said. “In the country you are a
-creature of passion. Here you become a cynic.”
-
-“How do you know my heart?” he asked.
-
-“We were born under the same star,” she answered quietly.
-
-“That is no sufficient answer,” he replied. “It conveys no meaning
-to me, for I know nothing of the mysterious sciences you study.”
-
-“Come then with me,” she answered, “and I will teach you.”
-
-She signed to her servant, who brought her horse; she mounted and
-rode away with merely a smile to Hilary. She knew that in spite of
-the chill that was on him he would hunger for her in her absence and
-soon follow. And so he did. The pavements appeared empty though
-crowds moved over them; the city seemed lifeless and dull, though it
-was one of the gayest in the world. He turned from the streets, and
-walking into the country, found himself very soon at the narrow
-wicket gate of the Princess Fleta’s Garden House.
-
-She was wandering up and down the avenue between the trees. Her
-dress was white now, and very long and soft, falling in great folds
-from her shoulders. As she moved slowly to and fro, the dancing
-sunlight playing on her splendid form, it seemed to Hilary that he
-saw before him not a mere woman, but a priestess. Her late visit to
-the Cathedral recurred to him; if the religious soul was in her,
-might she not, indeed, spite of her strange acts, be no magician,
-but a priestess? He returned to his former humour and was ready to
-worship at her feet. She greeted him with a smile that thrilled him;
-her eyes read his very soul, and her smile brought to it an
-unutterable joy. She turned and led the way to the house and Hilary
-followed her.
-
-She opened her laboratory door, and immediately Hilary became aware
-of the strong odour of some powerful incense. The dim smoke was
-still in the room but the flame had all died away in the vessel. By
-the side of the vessel lay a prostrate figure. Hilary uttered a cry
-of amazement and of horror as he recognised Father Amyot. He turned
-such a look of dismay upon the Princess that she answered his
-thought in a haughty tone which she had never before used in
-addressing him.
-
-“It is not time yet to ask me the meaning of what you may see here.
-Some day, perhaps, when you know more, you may have the right to
-question me: but not now. See, I can change this appearance that
-distresses you, in a moment.”
-
-She raised the prostrate figure, and flung off from it the white
-robe that resembled Father Amyot’s. Beneath, it was clothed in a
-dull red garment such as Hilary had first seen it in. With a few
-swift touches of her hand the Princess changed the expression of the
-face. Father Amyot was gone, and Hilary saw sitting in the chair
-before him that unindividualised form and face which at his visit to
-the laboratory had affected him with so much horror. The Princess
-saw the repugnance still in his face, and with a laugh opened the
-screen with which she had hidden the figure before.
-
-“Now,” she said, “come and sit beside me on this couch.”
-
-But before she left the great vessel she threw in more incense and
-lit it. Already Hilary was aware that the fumes of that which had
-been already burned had affected his brain. The red figures moved
-upon the black wall, and he watched them with fascinated eyes.
-
-They shaped themselves together not, this time, into words, but into
-forms. And the wall instead of black became bright and luminous. It
-was as though Hilary and Fleta sat alone before an immense stage.
-They heard the spoken words and saw the gestures and the movements
-of these phantasmal actors as clearly and with as much reality as
-though they were creatures of flesh and blood before them. It was a
-drama of the passions; the chief actors were Hilary and Fleta
-themselves. Hilary almost forgot that the real Fleta was at his
-side, so absorbed was he in the action of the phantasmal Fleta.
-
-He was bewildered, and he could not understand the meaning of what
-he saw, clearly though the drama was enacted in front of him. He saw
-the orchard full of blossoming trees; he saw the splendid savage
-woman. He knew that he himself and this Fleta at his side, were in
-some strange way playing a part under this savage guise; but how or
-what it was he could not tell. Fleta laughed as she watched his
-face. “You do not know who you are,” she cried. “That is a great
-loss and makes life much more difficult. But you will know by and
-bye if you are willing to learn. Come, let us look at another and a
-very different page of life.”
-
-The stage grew dark and moving shadows passed to and fro upon it,
-great shadows that filled Hilary’s soul with dread. At last they
-drew back and left a luminous space where Fleta herself was visible.
-Fleta, in this same human shape that she wore now, yet strangely
-changed. She was much older and yet more beautiful; there was a
-wonderful fire in her brilliant eyes. On her head was a crown, and
-Hilary saw that she had great powers to use or abuse—it was written
-on her face. Then something drew his eyes down and he saw a figure
-lying helpless at her feet—why was it so still?—it was alive!—yes,
-but it was bound and fettered, bound hand and foot.
-
-“Are you afraid?” broke out Fleta’s voice with a ring of mocking
-laughter in it. “Surely you are not afraid—why should I not reign?
-why should you not suffer? You are a cynic; is there anything good
-to be expected?”
-
-“Perhaps not,” said Hilary. “It may be that you are heartless and
-false. And yet, as I stand here now, I feel that though you may
-betray me by and bye, and take my life and liberty from me, yet I
-love your very treachery.”
-
-Fleta laughed aloud, and Hilary stood silent, confused by the words
-he had spoken hastily without pausing to think whether they were fit
-to speak or not. Well, it was done now. He had spoken of his love.
-She could refuse ever to see him again and he would go into the
-outer darkness.
-
-“No,” she said, “I shall not send you away. Do you not know, Hilary
-Estanol, that you are my chosen companion? Otherwise would you be
-here with me now? The word love does not alarm me; I have heard it
-too often. Only I think it very meaningless. Let us put it aside for
-the present. If you let yourself love me you must suffer; and I do
-not want you to suffer yet. When pain comes to you the youth will go
-from your face; you do not know how to preserve it, and I like your
-youth.”
-
-Hilary made no answer. It was not easy to answer such a speech, and
-Hilary was not in the humour for accomplishing any thing difficult.
-His brain was confused by the fumes of the incense and by the
-strange scenes so mysteriously enacted before his eyes. He scarcely
-knew what Fleta this was that stood beside him. And yet he knew he
-loved her though he distrusted her! With each moment that he passed
-by her side he worshipped her more completely, and the disbelief
-interfered less and less with his proud joy in being admitted to her
-intimacy.
-
-“Now,” said Fleta, “I want you to do a new thing. I want you to
-exercise your will and compel my servants who have been pleasing us
-with phantasies, to show us a phantasy of your own creation. You can
-do this very well, if you will. It only needs that you shall not
-doubt you can do it. Ah! how quickly does the act follow the
-thought!” She uttered the last words with a little cry of amused
-pleasure. For the dim shadows had rapidly masked the stage and then
-again withdrawn, leaving the figure of Fleta very clearly visible,
-beautiful and passionate, her face alight with love, held clasped in
-Hilary’s arms, her lips pressed close to his.
-
-The real Fleta who sat beside him rose now with a shake of her head,
-and a laugh which was not all gay. The shadows closed instantly over
-the stage, and a moment later the illusion was all destroyed and the
-solid wall was there before Hilary’s eyes. He had become so
-accustomed to witness the marvellous inside this room that he did
-not pause to wonder; he followed Fleta as she crossed to the door,
-and tried to attract her attention.
-
-“Forgive me, my Princess,” he murmured over and over again.
-
-“Oh, you are forgiven,” she said at last lightly. “You have not
-offended, so it is easy for me to forgive. I do not think a man can
-help what is in his heart; at all events, no ordinary man can. And
-you, Hilary, have consented to be like the rest. Are you content?”
-
-“No!” he answered, instantly. And as he spoke he understood for the
-first time the fever that had stirred him all through his short
-bright life. “Content! How should I be? Moreover, is not our star
-the star of restlessness and action?”
-
-For the first time, Fleta turned on him a glance of real tenderness
-and emotion. When he said the words “our star,” it seemed as if he
-had touched her heart.
-
-“Ah!” she said, “How sorely I long for a companion!”
-
-Then she turned from him very abruptly, and almost before he knew
-she had moved she had opened the door, and was standing outside
-waiting for him. “Come!” she said impatiently. He followed her
-immediately, for he had no choice but to do so; yet he was
-disappointed. He was more deeply disappointed when he found that she
-led the way with swift steps into the room where her aunt sat.
-Arrived there, Fleta threw herself into a chair, took up a great
-golden fan and began to fan herself, while she talked about the
-gossip of the Court. The change was so sudden that for some moments
-Hilary could not follow her. He stood bewildered, till the aunt
-pushed a low chair towards him; and he felt then that the old lady
-was not surprised at his manner, but only sorry for him. And then
-suddenly the cynic re-asserted itself in his heart. A thought that
-bit like flame suddenly started into life. Had the bewildered
-emotion that had been, as he knew, visible on his face, been seen on
-others before; was Fleta not only playing with him, but playing with
-him as she had played with many another lover? The thought was more
-hateful than any he had ever suffered from; it wounded his vanity,
-which was more tender and delicate than his heart.
-
-Fleta gave him no opportunity of anything but talk such as seemed in
-her stately presence too trivial to be endured, and so at last he
-rose and went his way. Fleta did not accompany him to the gate this
-time. She left him to go alone, and he felt as if she had withdrawn
-her favour in some degree; and yet perhaps that was foolish, he told
-himself, for after all, both he and she had said too much to-day.
-
-Fleta was betrothed. She had been betrothed at her christening.
-Before long her marriage would take place; and then that crown seen
-in the vision would be placed on her head. Had it needed the vision
-to bring that fact to his mind, asked Hilary of himself? If so,
-’twas time, he bitterly added, for Fleta was not a woman who was
-likely to give up a crown for the sake of love! His heart rose
-fiercely within him as he thought of all this. Why had she tempted
-him to speak of love? For surely he never would have dared to so
-address her had she not tempted him; so he thought.
-
-If he could have seen Fleta now! As soon as he left the room she had
-risen and slowly moved back to her laboratory. Entered there, she
-drew away a curtain which concealed a large mirror let deep into the
-wall. She did this resolutely, yet as if reluctantly. Immediately
-her gaze became fixed on the glass. She saw Hilary’s figure within
-it moving on his way towards the city. She read his thoughts and his
-heart. At last she dropped the curtain with a heavy sigh, and let
-her arms fall at her side with a gesture that seemed to mean
-despair; certainly it meant deep dejection. And presently some great
-tears dropped upon the floor at her feet
-
-None, since Fleta was born, had seen her shed tears.
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
-Father Amyot on the next morning sent a message to Hilary praying
-him to come and see him. This Hilary did at once, and in much
-perplexity as to what the reason of such a summons could be. He went
-straight to the Cathedral, for there he knew the ascetic priest
-passed all his time. He found him, as he expected, prostrate before
-the altar, and almost in the same attitude he had seen him in
-yesterday. Horribly too it reminded him of the attitude of that
-figure lying on the floor of Fleta’s laboratory when he had entered
-it. He had to touch Father Amyot to attract his attention; then at
-once the priest rose and led the way out of the Cathedral into the
-cloisters, which joined it to the monastery close at hand. He went
-on, without speaking, his head drooped. Hilary could but follow. At
-last they reached a bare cell in which was no furniture but a
-crucifix and a perpetual lamp burning before it, and against the
-wall a bench.
-
-Here Father Amyot sat down, and he motioned with his hand to Hilary
-to sit beside him.
-
-Then he fell into a profound reverie; and Hilary watching him,
-wondered much what was in his mind. Was Fleta even now working her
-spells upon him and moulding his thoughts according to her will?
-
-It almost seemed like it, for her name was the first word he uttered
-“The Princess Fleta,” he commenced, “is about to go upon a long and
-dangerous journey.”
-
-Hilary started and turned his face away, for he knew that he had
-turned pale. Was she really going to leave the city! How unexpected!
-how terrible!
-
-“In a very short time,” went on Father Amyot, “the Princess will be
-married and she has a mission which she desires to accomplish before
-her wedding, and she says that you can assist her in this. It is for
-the fulfilment of this mission that she is undertaking the journey I
-speak of; supposing you should agree to help her you would have to
-accompany her.”
-
-Hilary made no answer. He had no answer ready. His breath was taken
-away and he could not recover it all in an instant. The whole thing
-seemed incredible; he felt it to be impossible; and yet a conviction
-was already falling on him that it would take place.
-
-“Of course,” resumed Father Amyot, seeing that Hilary was not
-disposed to speak, “you will want to know your errand, you will want
-to know why you are going on this journey. This it will be
-impossible for you to know. The Princess does not choose to inform
-any one of what her errand is.”
-
-“Not even the person whom she says can help her?” exclaimed Hilary
-in amazement
-
-“Not even you.”
-
-“Well,” said Hilary rising with a gesture of indignation, “let her
-find some one else to go blindly in her wake. I am not the man.”
-
-So saying he walked across the cell to the doorway, forgetting even
-to say good-bye to Father Amyot.
-
-But the priest’s voice arrested him.
-
-“You would travel alone, save for one attendant.”
-
-Hilary turned and faced the priest in amazement.
-
-“Oh, impossible!” he exclaimed, “——yet it is true.”
-
-To Hilary the cynic, the thing suddenly assumed an intelligible
-form. Fleta wanted to take a journey in which she would prefer a
-companion because of its danger; yet she could not give her
-confidence to any one. She proposed to herself to use his love for
-her; she offered him her society as a bribe to take care of her, to
-ask no questions and tell no tales. The idea did not please him.
-
-“I have heard of princesses risking anything, relying on the power
-of their position; I have heard that the royal caprice is not to be
-measured by the reason of other men and women. Perhaps it is so. But
-Fleta! I thought her different even from her own family.”
-
-These were the first thoughts that came into his mind. His ready
-conclusion was that Fleta was willing that he should be her lover if
-he would be her servant also. But immediately afterwards came the
-fair vision of Fleta herself in her white robes, and with the face
-of a priestess. Her purpose was inscrutable, like herself. He
-confessed this as he stood there, surging doubts in his mind. And
-then suddenly a fragrance came across his sense—a strong perfume,
-that he associated with Fleta’s dress—and next a breath of incense.
-His brain grew dizzy; he staggered back and leaned against the wall.
-He no longer appeared to himself to be in Father Amyot’s cell—he was
-in Fleta’s laboratory, and her hand touched his face, her breath was
-on his brow. Ah, what madness of joy to be with her! To travel with
-her, to be her associate and companion to pass all the hours of the
-day by her side. Suddenly he roused himself, and, starting forward,
-approached Father Amyot.
-
-“I will go,” he said.
-
-“It will cost you dear,” said the priest. “Think again before you
-decide.”
-
-“It is useless to think,” cried Hilary. “Why should I think? I
-feel—and to feel is to live.”
-
-Father Amyot seemed not to hear his words. He was apparently already
-buried in prayer. Evidently he had said all that he intended to say;
-and Hilary, after a glance at him, turned and left the cell. He knew
-the priest’s moods too well to speak again, when once that deep
-cloud of profound abstraction had descended on his face.
-
-He went away, passing back as he had come, through the Cathedral. At
-the high altar he paused an instant, and then knelt and murmured a
-prayer. It was one he had learned, and he scarce attached any
-meaning to the familiar words. But it comforted him to feel that he
-had prayed, be it never so meaningless a prayer. For Hilary had been
-reared in all the habits of the devout Catholic.
-
-Then he went out and took his way towards the Garden House, walking
-with long strides. He was determined to know the truth, and that at
-once. Amid all the brilliant men who crowded her father’s Court was
-he indeed the only one who could touch her heart? An hour ago he
-would have laughed at any one who had told him he had touched it;
-yet now he believed he had. And what intoxication that belief was!
-For the first time he began to feel the absolute infatuation of
-love. And looking back it seemed to him that an hour ago he had not
-loved Fleta—that he had never loved her till this minute.
-
-He found her standing at the gate, among the flowers. She was
-dressed in white, and some crimson roses were fastened at her neck.
-Her face was like a child’s, full of gaiety and gladness. Hilary’s
-heart bounded with the delight it gave him to see her like this. She
-opened the gate for him, and together they walked towards the house.
-
-“I have been to see Father Amyot,” said Hilary. “He sent for me this
-morning.”
-
-“Yes,” answered Fleta, quietly. “He had a message to you from me.
-Are you willing to undertake a tiresome task for one you know so
-little?”
-
-“My Princess,” murmured Hilary, bending his head as he spoke.
-
-“But not your Queen,” said Fleta, with a laugh full of the glorious
-insolence only possible to one who had the royal blood in her veins,
-and knew that a crown was waiting for her.
-
-“Yes, my Queen,” said Hilary.
-
-“If you call me that,” said Fleta, quickly, and in a different tone,
-“you recognise a royalty not recognised by courtiers.”
-
-“Yes,” replied Hilary simply.
-
-“The royalty of power,” added Fleta, significantly, and with a
-penetrating look into his eyes.
-
-“Call it what you will,” answered Hilary, “you are my Queen. From
-this hour I give allegiance.”
-
-“Be it so,” said Fleta, with a light girlish laugh, “Be ready then,
-tomorrow at noon. I will tell you where to meet me. I will send a
-message in the morning.”
-
-Suddenly a recollection crossed Hilary’s mind which had hitherto
-been blotted out from it. “My mother,” he said.
-
-“Oh,” said Fleta, “I have been to see Madame Estanol. My father goes
-into the country to-day and she believes you go with him. She is
-glad you should join the Court.”
-
-“Strange,” said Hilary, unthinkingly, “for she has always set her
-face against it.” Then the smile on Fleta’s face made him think his
-words foolish.
-
-“It is as my Queen orders. Seemingly, men and women obey her even in
-their inmost hearts.”
-
-“No,” said Fleta, with a sigh, “that is just what they do not! It is
-that power which I have yet to obtain. They obey me, yes, but
-against the dictates of their inmost hearts. If you really loved me,
-we could obtain that power; but you are like the others. You do not
-love me with your inmost heart!”
-
-“I do not!” exclaimed Hilary, in amazement, stunned by her words.
-
-“No,” she answered, mournfully, “you do not. If you really loved me
-you would not calculate chances and risks, you would not consider
-whether I am profligate or virtuous, whether I am my father’s
-daughter or a child of the stars! I tell you, Hilary Estanol, if you
-were capable of loving me truly, you might find your way to the gods
-with me and even sit among them. But it is not so with you. You
-vacillate even in your love. You cannot give yourself utterly. That
-means grief to you, for you cannot find perfect pleasure in a thing
-which you take doubtingly and give but by halves. Still you shall
-travel with me; and you shall be my companion and friend. There is
-none other to whom I would give this chance. How do you think you
-will reward me? Oh, I know too well. Go now, but be ready when I
-send for you.”
-
-So saying she turned and went into the house, leaving him in the
-garden. For a few moments he stood there embarrassed, not knowing
-which way to turn or what to do. But he was not annoyed or
-disturbed, as his vanity might have led him to be at another time,
-by such cavalier treatment. He was aghast, horrified. Was this the
-girl he loved! this tyrant, this proud spirit, this strange woman,
-who before he had wooed her reproached him with not loving her
-enough! Within him lurked a conventional spirit, strong under all
-circumstances, even those of the most profound emotion, and Fleta’s
-whole conduct shocked and distressed that spirit so that it groaned,
-and more, upbraided him with his mad love. But the fierce growth of
-that love could not be checked. He might suffer because it lived,
-but he was not strong enough to kill it.
-
-He turned and walked away from the house and slowly returned to the
-city. He was ashamed and disheartened. His love seemed to disgrace
-him. He had entertained lofty ideas which now were discarded for
-ever. For he knew that to-morrow he would start upon a long journey,
-the end of which was to him unknown, by the side of a girl whom he
-could never marry, yet of whom he was the avowed lover. Well, be it
-so. Hilary began to look at these things from a fatalistic point of
-view; his weakness led him to shrug his shoulders and say that his
-fate was stronger than himself. So he went home gloomily yet with a
-burning and feverish heart. He immediately set to work making ready
-for his departure for an indefinite period. His mother he found was
-prepared for this, as Fleta had told him; and more—seemed to regard
-Fleta as a kind of gentle goddess who had brought good fortune into
-his path.
-
-“I have always resisted the idea of your hanging about the Court,”
-she said, “but it is different if indeed the King wishes to have you
-with him. That must lead to your obtaining some honourable post.
-What I dreaded was your becoming a mere useless idler. And I am glad
-you are going into the country, dear, for you are looking very pale
-and quite ill.”
-
-Hilary assented tacitly and without comment to the deceit with which
-Fleta had paved the way for him.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- “Spirituality is not what we understand by the words ‘virtue’ or
- ‘goodness.’ It is the power of perceiving formless, spiritual
- essences.”—(_Jasper Niemand in the “Path.”_)
-
- “The discovery and right use of the true essence of Being—this is
- the whole secret of life.”—(_Jasper Niemand in the “Path.”_)
-
- ------------------
-
- DESIRE MADE PURE.
-
-When desire is for the purely abstract—when it has lost all trace or
-tinge of “self”—then it has become pure.
-
-The first step towards this purity is to kill out the desire for the
-things of matter, since these _can_ only be enjoyed by the separated
-personality.
-
-The second is to cease from desiring for oneself even such
-abstractions as power, knowledge, love, happiness, or fame; for they
-are but selfishness after all.
-
-Life itself teaches these lessons; for all such objects of desire
-are found Dead Sea fruit in the moment of attainment. This much we
-learn from experience. Intuitive perception seizes on the _positive_
-truth that satisfaction is attainable only in the infinite; the will
-makes that conviction an actual fact of consciousness, till at last
-all desire is centred on the Eternal.
-
- THOUGHTS ON THEOSOPHY.
-
-“The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life,” this is the
-keynote of all true reform. Theosophy is the vehicle of the spirit
-that gives life, consequently nothing _dogmatic_ can be truly
-_theosophical_.
-
-It is incorrect, therefore, to describe a _mere_ unearthing of dead
-letter dogmas as “Theosophic work.”
-
-When a word, phrase, or symbol, having been once used for the
-purpose of suggesting an idea _new_ to the mind or minds being
-operated on, is insisted upon irrespective of the said idea, it
-becomes a dead letter dogma and loses its vitalising power, and
-serves rather as an obstruction to, than as vehicle of the spirit;
-but, alas, this insistance upon the letter is too often carried on
-under the honoured name of “Theosophy.”
-
-A man cannot acquire an idea _new to him_ unless it _grows_ in his
-mind.
-
-The mere familiarity with the _sound_ of a word, or a phrase, or the
-mere familiarity with the _appearance_ of a symbol, does not, of
-_necessity_, involve the possession of the idea properly associated
-with the said word, phrase or symbol. To insist, therefore, on the
-contrary cannot be theosophical; but would be better described as
-_un_theosophical.
-
-It would certainly be theosophical work to point out kindly and
-temperately how certain words, phrases and symbols appear to have
-been misunderstood or misapplied, how various claims and professions
-may be excessive or confused as a consequence of ignorance or
-vanity, or both. But it is quite another thing to condemn a man or a
-body of men _outright_, for certain errors in judgment or action;
-even though they were the result of vanity, greed or hypocrisy;
-indeed such wholesale condemnation would, on the contrary, be
-untheosophical.
-
-The one eternal, immutable law of life alone can judge and condemn a
-man absolutely. “Vengeance is _mine_, saith the Lord.”
-
-Were I asked how I would dare attempt “to dethrone the gods,
-overthrow the temple, destroy the law which feeds the priests and
-props the realm; I should answer as the Buddha is made to answer in
-the _Light of Asia_: ‘What thou bidst me keep is form which passes
-while the free truth stands; get thee to thy darkness.’”
-
-“What good gift hath my brother but it comes from search and strife
-(inward) and loving sacrifice.”
-
- *
- * *
-
- =Correspondence=
-
- ---
-
- ARE THE TEACHINGS ASCRIBED TO JESUS CONTRADICTORY?
-
-There are none so blind as those who won’t see, excepting those who
-can’t!
-
-In _Light_, for September 10th, there is a letter from Dr. Wyld, who
-writes as follows: “In the last number of _Light_ there is a
-quotation from the _Spiritual Reformer_ in which the writer shows
-the absurdity of the idea that Jesus was not an historic being. But
-while thanking the writer for this contribution, I would take the
-strongest objection to his assertion that many of Christ’s teachings
-are contradictory and mistaken. This is an assertion occasionally
-made by Spiritualists, and whenever I have met with it I have asked
-for evidence of the assertion, but hitherto I have received none.”
-
-But that might surely have been easily supplied. Here, for example,
-are a few very direct contradictions in the speaker’s own words.
-Every one knows how secret were the teachings in their nature; how
-secretly they were conveyed in private places apart; how secretly
-his secrets were to be kept; and yet in presence of the High Priest
-Jesus makes the astounding declaration: “_I have spoken openly to
-the world; I always taught in synagogues; and in secret spake I
-nothing._”—John xviii. 20.
-
-Jesus, in keeping with the mythical character, is made to claim
-equality and identity with the Father. He says (John x. 30), “_I and
-my Father are one_;” but in the same book (John xiv. 28), he says,
-“_The Father is greater than I_”—(Cf. Matthew xxiv. 36.) Again, he
-claims superiority over his Father. “_The Father judgeth no man, but
-hath committed all judgment to the Son. As I hear I judge_” (John v.
-22, 30). And then in the same gospel he says, “_I judge no man_,”
-(John viii. 15.) “_If any man hear my words and believe not, I judge
-him not; for I came not to judge the world_,” (John xii. 47). Again,
-“_I am one that bear witness of myself. Though I bear witness of
-myself, yet my record is true_,” (John viii. 14, 18); which is
-contradicted by (John v. 31) “_If I bear witness of myself, my
-witness is not true_.” He says (John v. 33, 34) that “_John bare
-witness unto the truth, but I receive not testimony from man_,” and
-then tells the disciples, who are supposed to have been men, that
-“_they also shall bear witness_” to or of him (John xv. 27). Again
-he says, “_Let your light so shine before men that they may see your
-good works_,” (Matthew v. 16). But “_Take heed that ye do not your
-alms before men to be seen of them_.” (Matthew vi. 1).
-
-“_Resist not evil, but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right
-cheek, turn to him the other also_,” (Matthew v. 39); for “_all that
-take the sword, shall perish with the sword_,” (Matthew xxvi. 52).
-Nevertheless, “_He that hath no sword let him sell his garment and
-buy one_,” (Luke xxii. 36). “_I came not to send Peace but a
-Sword_,” (Matthew x. 34). “_Be not afraid of them that kill the
-body_,” (Luke xii. 4). Nevertheless “_Jesus would not walk in Jewry
-because the Jews sought to kill him_,” (John vii. 1).
-
-I merely ask, for the sake of information, are these statements
-contradictory or are they not?
-
-I will but offer one or two specimens of the more serious and
-fundamental contradictions in the _olla podrida_ of teaching
-assigned to Jesus. The teaching of the alleged founder of
-Christianity in the Gospel according to Matthew (ch. xix. 12), is
-that of the Saboi, the self-mutilators, who are still extant as the
-Russian Skoptsi[27] and who emasculate themselves to save their
-spermatic souls, as Origen is reputed to have done. Jesus is made to
-say, “_There are Eunuchs which made themselves Eunuchs for the
-Kingdom of Heaven’s sake_. He that is able to receive it, let him
-receive it.” And then in the opening verses of the very next
-chapter, the same teacher says, “_Suffer little children and forbid
-them not, to come unto me; for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven_.”
-But those who became Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven’s sake could
-not be suffering the little children to come unto him or to them.
-They would be forbidding them to come at all. If the Kingdom of
-Heaven be _such_ as the children of Eunuchs it must be non-extant.
-As Hood’s deaf shopman said of the crackers going off, there were so
-many reports he did not know _which_ to believe.
-
------
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- Of whom there are large colonies along the Black Sea and the coast
- of Imeretia and Poti.
-
------
-
-And where is the sense of talking so much nonsense about the “Golden
-Rule” or the Divine humanity on behalf of one who carried on the
-blindest warfare against human nature itself? Who declared that “_If
-any man come to me and hate not his father and mother, and wife and
-children, and brothers and sisters, and his own life also, he cannot
-be my disciple_” (Luke xiv. 26). And who promised that every
-follower of his who “_left house, or parents, or brethren, or wife,
-or children, for the Kingdom of God’s sake should receive manifold
-more in the present and in the world to come life everlasting_.”
-Well may the grateful Musselman cry in his adorations, “_Thank God_
-OUR _Father has no Son!_”
-
-But, I do not charge these contradictory sayings and teachings to
-any personal character. The collectors are but making use of the
-_Kurios_, the Lord of the pre-Christian Mythos, the mystical Christ
-of the Gnostics, as a puppet to represent them and their divers
-doctrines. They make the human image of a God of Love to be the
-preacher of everlasting punishment, and the bearer of a fan with
-which he fans the fires of hell; a false foreteller of that which
-never came to pass, and the forerunner of a fulfilment which did not
-follow. In short, they make this Marionette Messiah dance to any
-particular tune they play.
-
-Jesus is posed as the original revealer of a father in Heaven,
-whereas the doctrine of the Divine Fatherhood was taught in three
-different Egyptian Cults during some four thousand years previously.
-
-Dr. Wyld implies that I deny the existence of a personal Jesus. That
-is the misrepresentation of ignorance. But the sole historical Jesus
-acknowledged by me is the only one who was ever known to the Jews,
-to Celsus, to Epiphanius, as the descendant of JOSEPH Pandira, he,
-who according to Irenæus, lived to be over fifty years of age.
-
-This, I admit, was not the kind of Jesus whom the Christians find in
-the Gospels and honour as a God.
-
-The Gospel histories do not contain the biography of Ben-Pandira,
-the son of Joseph. Nor was it intended that they should. Their Jesus
-is the mythical Christ, the Horus of 12 years, and the adult Horus
-of 30 years; the Lord of the age, Æon or Cycle, who came and went,
-and was to come again for those who possessed the Gnosis.
-
-Another writer in _Light_, a week earlier, could not understand how
-any one can deny the personal existence of the “Historical Christ!”
-
-The _Historical Christ_! You might as well demand our belief in the
-historical Chronos—Time, in person—or the historical Ghost, in man
-or out of him. If the writer knew anything of the pre-Christian
-Spiritualism—anything of the true nature or even the meaning of the
-name—he would perceive the Historic Impossibility of the personal
-Christ. An “Historical Christ” is as much a nonentity as the
-historical Mrs. Harris. But, _cui bono?_ I have no hope in these
-matters of any orthodox Christian Spiritualists. They have to learn
-the primary lesson, at last, that Historic Christianity was not
-founded on our facts _until it had buried them_! That it was the
-negation of Gnosticism, the antithesis of phenomenal Spiritualism.
-That it substituted faith for facts; a physical resurrection for a
-spiritual continuity, and a corporeal Christ for the trans-corporeal
-man.
-
-The Christian Revelation leaves no room for modern Spiritualism, and
-they are logically, truly Christians who reject it! It recognises no
-other rising again except at the last day, and then only for the few
-who believed in Jesus (John vi. 40). The Christians have no other
-world but one at the end of this; no other spirits extant excepting
-their physical Christ and the devil.
-
-People who will see nothing contradictory in direct opposites, no
-difference betwixt black and white, but rather the necessary duality
-of antiphonal truth, who can accept a misinterpretation of mythology
-for the Word of God, are of little account as witnesses for
-Spiritualism. They who tell a story about the whale swallowing Jonah
-are not likely to be credited when they come with another that looks
-very like Jonah swallowing the whale. Professed believers in the
-literal truth of the Gospel fables are of necessity “_Suspects_” as
-witnesses for abnormal and extraordinary facts.
-
-Pointing to his antagonist on the platform, O’Connel once enquired
-of his audience, “Can ye believe a single word that a gentleman says
-who wears a waistcoat of _that_ colour?” It was yellow, and they
-couldn’t.
-
-What is the use of taking your “Bible oath” that this thing is true,
-if the Book you are sworn upon is a magazine of falsehoods already
-exploded or just going off?
-
-Moreover, the Christian Priesthood has been preaching through all
-these centuries that the dead do _not_ return; and the living have
-believed them.
-
-Dr. Sprenger has calculated that nine million persons have been put
-to death as Witches, Wizards, or Mediums, since 1484, when Pope
-Innocent VIII. issued his Bull against Spiritualism and all its
-practices, which were considered to be the works of the devil.
-
-Besides, if the Christian scheme of damnation be true, as assigned
-to the teaching of Jesus, no humane person should want to know that
-there is any hereafter.
-
-Spiritualism can make no headway where it has to draw after it this
-dead weight of a tail.
-
-Christian Spiritualism also ostentatiously proclaims that it has
-nothing in the world to do with “Woman’s Rights,” “Vaccination,” or
-any such merely human interests. It would seek to create an interest
-in another life, whilst ignoring the vital interests of this. But
-that is to sign its own death-warrant and to seal its own speedy
-doom. This is to repeat the mistake and follow the failure of the
-Christian system of saving souls for another life whilst allowing
-them to be damned in this. At the same time, it would drag
-Spiritualism into the bankrupt business of Historic Christianity and
-bind up a third testament to save the other two, as a sort of
-Trinity in Unity. But as a system of thought, of religion, or morals
-and a mode of interpreting nature, Historic Christianity is moribund
-and cannot be saved, or resuscitated by transfusion of new blood
-into it; not if you bled Spiritualism to death in trying to give it
-a little new life. They try in vain to make our phenomena guarantee
-the miracles of mythology as spiritual realities. They try in vain
-to tether the other world in this and make it draw for the
-fraudulent old faith. They keep on jumping up and down to persuade
-themselves and others that they are free. But it is only a question
-of length of chain, for those who are still fettered fast at foot
-upon the ancient standing-ground.
-
-I have not answered the writer in the paper quoted by _Light_, and
-approved by Dr. Wyld, for the reason that his acquaintance with my
-data was too limited to make discussion profitable or useful. Those
-data are already presented in accessible books and pamphlets, and
-there is no need for me to repeat them in reply to him. Those who
-undertake to write on so perplexing a subject ought to be able to
-illuminate it and enlighten their opponents. The problems are not to
-be solved by any amount of personal simplicity. I am always ready to
-meet any competent and well-informed defender of the faith upon the
-platform or in the press. I should prefer it to be a bishop, who is
-also an Egyptologist. But beggars are not allowed to be choosers. I
-am prepared at any time to demonstrate the entirely mythical and
-mystical origin of the Christ, and the non-spiritual, non-historical
-beginnings of the vast complex called Christianity.
-
- GERALD MASSEY.
-
- [Any “Bishop Egyptologist,” or even Assyriologist, of whom we have
- heard there are not a few in England, is cordially invited to
- defend his position in the pages of LUCIFER. The “Son of the
- Morning” is the _Light-Bearer_, and welcomes light from every
- quarter of the globe.—ED.]
-
- ------------------
-
- [NOTE.—As _Lucifer_ cannot concur in the exclusively _exoteric_
- view, taken by Mr. Massey, of this allegorical, though none the
- less philosophical, scripture, the next number will contain an
- article dealing with the _esoteric_ meaning of the New
- Testament.—ED.]
-
- TO THE AUTHOR OF “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”
-
-There is a sentence in your “Comments” which has haunted me with a
-sense of irritation: “To obtain knowledge by experiment is too
-tedious a method for those who aspire to do real work,” &c. Have we
-any knowledge, of whatever sort, that has been of use in the world,
-which has been obtained otherwise than experimentally? By patient
-and persistent toil of sifting and testing, we have obtained the
-little knowledge that is of service to us. Is there such a thing as
-“certain intuition”? Has intuitive knowledge, if such there be, been
-accepted as positive knowledge until it has been submitted to the
-test of experiment? Would it be right that it should be? Your
-illustration of the “determined workman” brings the question down
-(as I think the question should be brought) to the plane of
-practice. Is there any workman who can know his tools until he has
-tried them? Is not the history of knowledge the history of
-intuitions put to the test of practice? Intuitions, or what we call
-such, seem to me quite as apt and likely to deceive us as anything
-in the world; we only know them for good when we have tried them.
-
- INTERROGATOR.
-
- ---
-
-It seems to me there is some confusion in this letter between
-obtaining knowledge by experiment, and testing it by experiment.
-Edison knew that his discoveries were only things to look for, and
-he tested his knowledge by experiment. The actual work of great
-inventors is the bringing of intuitive knowledge on to the plane of
-practice by applying the test of experiment. But all inventors are
-seers; and some of them having died without being able to put into
-practice the powers which they knew existed in Nature were
-considered madmen. Later on, other men are more fortunate, and
-re-discover the laughed-at knowledge. This is an old and familiar
-story, but we need constantly to be reminded of it. How often have
-great musicians or great artists been regarded as “infant prodigies”
-in their childhood? They have intuitive knowledge of that power of
-which they are chosen interpreters, and experiment is only necessary
-in order to find out how to give that which they know to others.
-
-Intuitive knowledge in reference to the subjects with which I have
-been dealing must indeed be tested by experiment; and it is the
-whole purpose of “Light on the Path” itself, and the “Comments” to
-urge men to test their knowledge in this way. But the vital
-difference between this and material forms of knowledge is that for
-all occult purposes a man must obtain his own knowledge before he
-can use it. There are many subjects of time content to linger on
-through æons of slow development, and pass the threshold of eternity
-at last by sheer force of the great wheel of life with which they
-move; possibly during their interminable noviciate, they may obtain
-knowledge by experiment and with well-tested tools. Not so the
-pioneer, the one who claims his divine inheritance now. He must work
-as the great artists, the great inventors have done; obtain
-knowledge by intuition, and have such sublime faith in his own
-knowledge that his life is readily devoted to testing it.
-
-But for this purpose the testing has to be actually done in the
-astral life. In a new world, where the use of the senses is a pain,
-how can the workman stay to test his tools? The old proverb about
-the good workman who never quarrels with them, however bad they are,
-though of course had he the choice he would use the best, applies
-here.
-
-As to whether intuitive knowledge exists or no, I can only ask how
-came philosophies, metaphysics, mathematics into existence? All
-these represent a portion of abstract truth.
-
-Before I received this letter the “Comments” for this month were
-written, in which, as it happens, I have spoken a great deal about
-intuitive knowledge. Therefore, I will now only quote the definition
-of a philosopher from Plato, which is given near the end of Book
-V.,—
-
-“I mean by philosopher, the man who is devoted to the acquisition of
-knowledge, real knowledge, and not merely inquisitive. The more our
-citizens approach this temperament, the better the state will be.
-True knowledge in its perfection and its entirety, man cannot
-attain. But he can attain to a kind of knowledge of realities, if he
-has any knowledge at all, because he cannot know nonentities. Hence
-his knowledge is half-way between real knowledge and ignorance, and
-we must call it opinion.”
-
- NOTE.—Several questions which have been received are held over to
- be answered next month.
-
- ------------------
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-In the interesting and lucid article on “Karma” in your number of
-September 15th, everything seems to hinge on the theory of
-re-incarnation. “Very well,” says the author of that paper, “let
-us take the principle of re-incarnation for granted.” But is not
-this a rather unphilosophical way of handling a subject of such
-gravity? Take this or that principle for granted, and you may go
-about to prove anything under the sun. It is the old weakness of
-begging the question. Is it not this taking for granted what
-cannot be proved, and is not attempted to be proved, that has led
-astray speculators—both scientific and religious—everywhere and in
-every age, and is it not upon similar assumptions that the whole
-monstrous fabric of theology rests? Of course, in every kind of
-speculation one is compelled to set out with an assumption of some
-sort; but then the first thing the reader demands is, that the
-grounds shall be shown upon which the assumption rests; the
-assumption, whatever it be, must be made good before one can be
-asked to accept that which is to be raised upon it. And here comes
-in my question: What is the warrant or sanction for the principle
-of re-incarnation? What is the principle grounded upon? Do we
-undergo re-incarnation, and how do you know it?
-
-Having set out with the assumption, the author does not return to it
-again, and at the end of the article I am as uninstructed as at the
-outset respecting the pivotal principle upon which all that follows
-seems to turn.
-
- INTERROGATOR.
-
- ------------------
-
-The author of “Karma” will go into this question fully in a paper
-devoted entirely to the subject of re-incarnation. The two subjects
-are inextricably interwoven, but it was decided that to treat the
-two at the same time would produce too great a confusion, and offer
-too wide an area of speculation for the mind to grapple with.
-Therefore this course was adopted of taking the principle of
-re-incarnation for granted. It is possible that the second paper
-should have come first, but the two theories stand side by side, not
-one before the other, so that the question of precedence was a
-difficult one. But it is necessary, in view of this blending of the
-ideas, that the reader shall have the complete presentation of both
-before him, and then draw his conclusions. Therefore indulgence is
-asked until the papers dealing with each subject are completed. As
-many readers may have felt the same difficulty as our correspondent,
-we are glad to insert this letter and reply.—ED.
-
- Reviews.
-
-=THE KABBALAH UNVEILED.=
-
- TRANSLATED BY S. L. MACGREGOR MATHERS.[28]
-
------
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- George Redway, 15, York Street, Covent Garden.
-
------
-
-The author of this welcome volume has supplied the present
-generation of students of theosophy and occultism with a text-book
-which has been long wanted and waited for. The “Zohar” is the great
-storehouse of the ancient Hebrew theosophy, supplemented by the
-philosophical doctrines of the mediæval Jewish Rabbis. It consists
-of several distinct yet allied tracts, each discussing some special
-branch of the subject; each tract again consists of several
-portions, a kernel of most ancient dogma, to which are added
-comments and explanations, in some cases by several hands and at
-very different epochs. There is sufficient proof that these kernels
-of dogma are remnants of one of the oldest systems of philosophy
-that have come down to us, and they show also intrinsic evidence
-that they are associated at least with the return from the
-Babylonish captivity. On the other hand, it is pretty certain that
-the Zohar, in its present form, was put together and first printed
-about 1558, at Mantua, and a little later in other editions at
-Cremona and Lublin. This Mantuan edition was a revision of the
-collection of tracts collected and edited in MS. form by Moses de
-Leon, of Guadalaxara, in Spain, about 1300; even the most hostile
-views of the antiquity of the Zohar grant this much, and although
-direct historical evidence is not forthcoming of the several steps
-in the course of transmission of these doctrines from ante-Roman
-times, yet, as aforesaid, the internal evidence is ample to show the
-essential origination of the specially Hebrew ideas found in the
-Zohar from Rabbis, more or less tinged with a Babylonish cast, who
-must have flourished antecedent to the building of the second
-Temple. The tradition of the mediæval Rabbis definitely assigned the
-authorship to Rabbi Schimeon ben Jochai, who lived in the reign of
-the Roman Emperor Titus, A.D. 70-80; and it is the claim of
-authorship made on his behalf that the modern critic is so fond of
-contesting.
-
-The “Zohar,” or “Splendour,” or “Book of Illumination,” and the
-“Sepher Yetzirah” are almost the only extant books of the Kabbalah,
-Qbalah or Cabbala. The “Kabbalah Denudata” of Knorr von Rosenroth,
-is a Latin version of the former, with commentaries by himself and
-by certain learned Rabbis. No French and no German translation of
-the Zohar has ever been published, nor until the present time has
-any English version been printed. Eliphaz Levi has, however,
-paraphrased a few chapters of the “Book of Concealed Mystery,” and
-these have been printed in the _Theosophist_.
-
-Some parts of the Zohar are written in pure Hebrew, but a large
-portion is in Aramaic Chaldee, and there are passages in other
-dialects; this variation of language adds immensely to the
-difficulties of an accurate translation.
-
-Knorr von Rosenroth was a most able and compendious Hebrew savant,
-and his translation of much of the Zohar into Latin is a work of
-established reputation, and has been, indeed, almost the only means
-by which the students of our era have been able to consult Hebraic
-philosophy. The present revival of theosophical studies by the
-English speaking races has created a demand for the Kabbalah in an
-English dress, and hence the appearance of the present work is well
-timed, and will form an epoch in the history of occultism; and much
-good fruit will no doubt be borne by a more intimate acquaintance
-with Jewish lore, which will tinge the present tendency to supremacy
-of the Sanscrit and Hermetic forms of mysticism. There is much
-reason to suppose that an attentive study of each of these forms of
-knowledge may lead one to the Hidden Wisdom; but a skilful analogy,
-and an investigation into the three forms of dogma on parallel lines
-will give a breadth of grasp and a cosmopolitan view of the matter
-which should lead to a happy solution of the great problems of life
-in a speedy and satisfactory manner. The Kabbalah may, in concise
-terms, be said to teach the ancient Rabbinical doctrines of the
-nature and attributes of the Divinity, the cosmogony of our
-universe, the creation of angels and the human soul, the destiny of
-angels and men, the dogma of equilibrium, and the transcendental
-symbolism of the Hebrew letters and numerals.
-
-Mr. Mathers, who is a most patient and persevering student, if not
-professor, of mystic lore, is at the same time a first-rate
-classical scholar, and a skilful interpreter of the Hebrew tongue,
-and his translation from the Latin, varied and improved by his own
-study of the original Chaldee, has produced an English version of
-the Kabbalah Denudata which is eloquent in its construction, true to
-its text, and lucid in its abstruseness. For the matter is abstruse,
-much of it, and some is practically incomprehensible to the
-beginner, to the world in general for certain, and perhaps to every
-one at the first glance. But it will be certainly perceived that
-those very portions which seem most extravagant at a first reading
-are just the passages from which later a light will arise and lead
-one on to a firm grasp of the subject. To take up this volume and
-read at odd moments is a useless and hopeless task; no progress will
-be made, at any rate at first, except by thoroughly abstracting
-one’s individuality from the things of common life; disappointment
-can only accompany superficial reading.
-
-Great credit is due to the enterprise of Mr. Redway in publishing
-this volume, for which no very extensive sale could have been
-anticipated; that he has already distributed a considerable number
-is matter for congratulation to himself and to the public. It is
-hoped that his success will induce him to publish other volumes of
-antique lore, of which many yet remain more or less completely
-ignored by the present generation.
-
-The “Siphra Dtzenioutha,” the “Idra Rabba,” and the “Idra Zuta,”
-included in this volume are doubtless three of the most valuable of
-the tracts of the Zohar, yet there are others of equal interest. The
-“Book of the Revolutions of Souls” is a most curious and mysterious
-work, and the “Asch Metzareph” is a treatise on the relations
-between Theosophy and the oldest alchemical ideas which are known to
-exist; it is a work on the Asiatic plane, on the lowest of the four
-kabbalistic worlds of Emanation.
-
-Beyond the limits of the Zohar proper, the “Sepher Yetzirah,” is a
-treatise which for interest and instruction cannot be surpassed.
-
-Mr. Mathers supplies us with an introduction to the Qabalah, which
-stamps him as a master of the science, and although he refers us on
-some pages to Ginsburg (a recognised authority), yet his remarks and
-explanation are more deep and thorough than those published in
-Ginsburg’s little English pamphlet, and are more discursive and
-complete. My remarks on the difficulty of our subject hardly render
-it necessary for me to insist on the absolute necessity of a
-painstaking study of this introduction, which will supply in a great
-measure the want of a _de novo_ education in Hebrew, and Hebrew
-modes of thought and expression.
-
-Mr. Mathers justly insists on the literal rendering of the Hebrew
-title by the spelling Qabalah, which is no doubt correct, but lays
-him open to a charge of pedantry, which perhaps does not much affect
-him, since it would only come from superficial and possibly scoffing
-critics. The use of the letter Q without its usual English companion
-the u is sanctioned and advised, in this connection, by the learned
-Max Müller and other Orientalists of repute. To avoid the printing
-of Hebrew letters, the publisher has adopted a scheme of printing
-Hebrew words in English capital letters (in addition to the mode of
-pronunciation), after a method given by the author in tabular form.
-To the Hebrew scholar this gives an idea of barbarism, which is
-painful to the eye and sadly mars the volume, whilst it only saves
-the student the task of learning an alphabet of 22 letters. I differ
-from the author in representing the Hebrew Teth by T, while
-depicting the Tau by TH., the reverse would have been a closer
-imitation of the sounds. The Introduction includes a learned
-excursus upon the idea of “Negative Existence,” in which
-considerable light is thrown on that difficult subject; skilful
-definitions are added concerning the AIN, the AIN SOPH, and AIN SOPH
-AUR, answering in English to Negativity, The Limitless, and
-Limitless Light, the first essences of Deity. Several pages are
-devoted to a clear description of the Ten Sephiroth, the Numerical
-Conceptions of Godhead, and their explanatory titles; the Four
-Worlds of Emanation, and the component elements of a Human Soul; the
-Mysteries of the Hexagram as a type of Macroprosopus, the Most Holy
-Ancient One, or God the Father—and the succeeding mystery of
-Microprosopus, the Lesser Countenance, typified in the Pentagram and
-corresponding to the Christian Personality of the “Son of God,” are
-all explained at length. The series of references to the IHVH the
-Tetragrammaton, the Concealed Name of unknown pronunciation, form a
-valuable dissertation. The book is supplied with nine well executed
-diagrams, explanatory of the Sephiroth, the sacred names, essences
-of the soul, and a very perfect and complete scheme of the Sephiroth
-in the four worlds of emanation associated with the Vision of
-Ezekiel. Mr. Mathers desires to call special attention to the
-differentiation of the Deity in the Emanations, into the female type
-in addition to masculine characteristics: note the idealism of the
-Superior HE, Binah, the Mother, and the Inferior HE, Malkuth, the
-Bride of Microprosopus, the Kingdom of God (the Son of God and his
-Bride the Church), note that Genesis i. 26, says “let _Us_ make man
-in our image,” “male and female created he them;” the “_us_” is
-“Elohim,” a noun in the plural.
-
-The “Siphra Dtzenioutha,” or “Book of Concealed Mystery,” is the
-most difficult of comprehension. Mr. Mathers adds a running
-commentary of his own, which proves to be very valuable. It consists
-of five chapters; in the first are found references to the Mystical
-Equilibrium, the worlds of unbalanced force characterised as the
-Edomite kings, the Vast Countenance, Theli the Dragon, the powers of
-IHVH, and the essence of the female power—the Mother. The second
-chapter mentions the Beard of Truth, and passes on to define
-Microprosopus. The third chapter treats of the Beard of
-Microprosopus in an allegorical manner, and of the formation of the
-Supernal Man. An annotation follows concerning Prayer, and a curious
-note on the word AMEN! as composed of IHVH, and ADNI Adonai or Lord.
-Chapter IV. treats of the male and female essences, and has a
-curious note on the Hebrew letter Hé, speaking of it as female, and
-composed of D, Daleth, and I, Jod—a great mystery worthy of study.
-Chapter V. speaks of the Supernal Eden, the Heavens, the Earth, the
-Waters, the Giants-Nephilim in the earth, wars of the kings, the
-tree of knowledge of good and evil, the serpent, and the houses of
-judgment; so that this treatise is no less discursive than abstruse.
-
-The “Idra Rabba,” or “Greater Holy Assembly,” consisted of ten
-Rabbis, of whom Rabbi Schimeon was chief, and the book contains
-their several speeches and comments upon the doctrines laid down by
-Rabbi Schimeon, on a similar plan to the conversations narrated in
-the Book of Job. Twenty-five chapters are occupied with an allegory
-of the several parts of Macroprosopus, the type of God the Father;
-the twenty-sixth concerns the Edomite kings, the vanished creations;
-Chapters XXVII. to XLII. are an allegorical description of
-Microprosopus, the Son Deity, the V or Vau of the Tetragrammaton;
-Chapter XLIII. concerns the Judgments; XLIV., the Supernal Man; and
-XLV. is a Conclusion, in narrative form, of the passing away of
-three of the ten Rabbis, and the acknowledgment of R. Schimeon as
-chief of them all.
-
-Very much of this descriptive volume referring to Deity is not only
-abstruse, but is, to the modern European, verbiage run wild; yet in
-this characteristic it is truly Oriental and Hebrew; some passages
-remind me very much of the “Song of Solomon,” there are the same
-exuberant and flowery outbursts of poetic imagery.
-
-The “Idra Zuta,” or “Lesser Holy Assembly,” is a similar treatise,
-explanatory of the Holy powers of the Deity, ascribing honour and
-power to Macroprosopus, Microprosopus, AIMA the God Mother, and the
-Bride of God; with instructive allusions to the Prior Worlds of the
-so-called Edomite Kings, and the sexual aspects of Godhead. The work
-concludes with a narrative of the death of R. Schimeon and his
-burial, the whole “Idra” being his last dying declaration of
-doctrine.
-
-It is noteworthy that the words of the “Smaragdime Tablet of
-Hermes”—“that which is below is like that which is above” occur in
-paragraph 388 of the Idra Rabba, and are thus introduced, “We have
-learned through Barietha, the tradition given forth _without_ the
-Holy City.” I note also that the Mischna is mentioned in the Idra
-Zuta. Want of space compels me to omit all extracts from this
-volume, which is a matter of regret, as many passages are very
-eloquently written.
-
-A flaw in this book is the construction of the Index, which should
-have contained sub-headings, as well as main headings. Of what value
-is the entry “Microprosopus,” followed by eleven lines each of
-fourteen page-numbers? A score of references, sub-divided between
-his characteristics, his relationships, and his titles would have
-been of more practical use. With this exception, and when the
-abomination of Hebrew in English letters has been tolerated, we must
-acknowledge the production of a most valuable theosophical and
-philosophical storehouse of ancient Hebrew doctrine, on which Mr.
-MacGregor Mathers may be heartily congratulated.
-
- W. WYNN WESTCOTT, M.B.
-
- ------------------
-
-
-
-“AN ADVENTURE AMONG THE ROSICRUCIANS.”
-
- BY A STUDENT OF OCCULTISM.[29]
-
------
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- Copyrighted by Franz Hartmann, Boston Occult Publishing Co., 1887.
-
------
-
-A strange and original little story, charmingly fantastic, but full
-of poetic feeling and, what is more, of deep philosophical and
-occult truths, for those who can perceive the ground-work it is
-built upon. A fresh Eclogue of Virgil in its first part, descriptive
-of Alpine scenery in the Tyrol, where the author “dreamt” his
-adventure, with “shining glaciers glistening like vast mirrors in
-the light of the rising sun,” deep ravines with rushing streams
-dancing between the cliffs, blue lakes slumbering among the meadows,
-and daisy-sprinkled valleys resting in the shadow of old pine
-forests.
-
-Gradually as the hero of the “Adventure” ascended higher and higher,
-he began losing the sense of the world of the real, to pass
-unconsciously into the land of waking dreams.
-
- “In these solitudes there is nothing to remind one of the
- existence of man, except occasionally the sawed-off trunk of a
- tree, showing the destructive influence of human activity. In some
- old, rotten, and hollow trunks rain-water has collected, sparkling
- in the sun like little mirrors, such as may be used by
- water-nymphs, and around their edges mushrooms are growing, which
- our imagination transforms into chairs, tables, and baldachinos
- for elves and fairies.... No sound could now be heard, except
- occasionally the note of a titmouse and the cry of a hawk who rose
- in long-drawn spiral motion high up into the air....”
-
-Throwing himself upon the moss, he begins watching the play of the
-water until it becomes “alive with forms of the most singular
-shape,” with super-mundane beings dancing in the spray, “shaking
-their heads in the sunshine and throwing off showers of liquid
-silver from their waving locks.”...
-
- “Their laughter sounded like that of the Falls of _Minnehaha_, and
- from the crevices of the rocks peeped the ugly faces of gnomes and
- kobolds, watching slyly the fairies.”
-
-Then the dreamer asks himself a variety of questions of the most
-perplexing nature, except, perhaps, to the materialist, who cuts
-every psychological problem as Alexander cleft the Gordian knot....
-
-“What is the reason that we imagine such things?” he inquires.
-
- “Why do we endow ‘dead’ things with human consciousness and with
- sensation?... Is our consciousness merely a product of the organic
- activity of our physical body, or is it a function of the
- universal life ... within the body? Is our personal consciousness
- dependent for its existence on the existence of the physical body,
- and does it die with it; or is there a spiritual consciousness,
- belonging to a higher, immortal, and invisible self of man,
- temporarily connected with the organism, but which may exist
- independently of the latter? If such is the case, if our physical
- organism is merely an instrument through which our consciousness
- acts, then this instrument is _not_ our real self. If this is
- true, then our real self is there where our consciousness exists,
- and may exist independently of the latter.... Can there be any
- _dead_ matter in the Universe? Is not even a stone held together
- by the ‘cohesion’ of its particles, and attracted to the earth by
- ‘gravitation’? But what else is this ‘cohesion’ and ‘gravitation’
- but _energy_, and what is ‘energy’ but the _soul_, an interior
- principle called _force_, which produces an outward manifestation
- called _matter_?... All things possess life, all things possess
- soul, and there may be soul-beings ... invisible to our physical
- senses, but which may be perceived by our soul.” (p. 19.)
-
-The arch-druid of modern Hylo-Idealism, Dr. Lewins, failing to
-appear to rudely shake our philosopher out of his unscientific
-thoughts, a dwarf appears in his stead. The creature, however, does
-not warn the dreamer, as that _too_-learned _Idealist_ would. He
-does not tell him that he transcends “the limits of the anatomy of
-his conscious Ego,” since “_psychosis_ is now diagnosed by
-_medico-psychological symptomatology as vesiculo-neurosis in
-activity_,”[30] and—as quoth the raven—“merely this, and nothing
-more.” But being a _cretin_, he laughingly invites him to his
-“Master.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- “What is Religion: A Vindication of Free Thought.” By C. N.,
- annotated by Robert Lewins, M. D. See his Appendices, p. 35, _et
- seq._
-
------
-
-The hero follows, and finds he is brought to a “theosophical
-monastery,” in a hidden valley of the most gorgeous description.
-Therein he meets, to his surprise, with adepts of both sexes; for,
-as he learns later:—
-
- “What has intelligence to do with the sex of the body? Where the
- sexual instincts end, there ends the influence of the sex.”
-
-Meanwhile, he is brought into the presence of a male adept of
-majestic appearance, who welcomes and informs him that he is among
-“The Brothers of the Golden and Rosy Cross.” He is invited to remain
-with them for some time, and see how they live. His permanent
-residence with them is, however, objected to. The reasons given for
-it are as follow:—
-
- “There are still too many of the lower and animal elements
- adhering to your constitution.... They could not resist long the
- destructive influence of the pure and spiritual air of this place;
- and, as you have not yet a sufficient amount of truly spiritual
- elements in your organism to render it firm and strong, you would,
- by remaining here, soon become weak and waste away, like a person
- in consumption; you would become miserable instead of being happy,
- and you would die.”
-
-Then follows a philosophical conversation on WILL, in which the
-latter, in individual man, is said to become the stronger if it only
-uses the universal Will-Power in Nature, _itself remaining passive
-in the_ LAW. This sentence has to be well understood, lest it should
-lead the reader into the error of accepting pure _mediumistic
-passivity_ as the best thing for spiritual and occult development. A
-phenomenon is produced on a passing cloud, into which apparent life
-is infused by the Master’s hand, stretched towards it; this is again
-explained by showing that LIFE is universal and identical with WILL.
-Other phenomena still more wonderful follow; and they are all
-explained as being produced through natural laws, in which science
-will not believe. The thoughts of the student are read and answered
-as though his mind were an opened book. A lovely garden, full of
-exotic plants and luxurious palm-trees, into which he is taken,
-striking him as something unnatural in the Tyrolean Alps; so much
-luxury, moreover, seeming to him to disagree with the ascetic views
-just expressed by the adept, he is told forthwith, in answer to his
-unexpressed thoughts, that the garden had been erected to make his
-visit an agreeable one; and that it was an _illusion_. “All these
-trees and plants ... require no gardeners, ... they cost us nothing
-but an effort of our imagination”—he learns.
-
-“Surely,” he said, “this rose cannot be an illusion ... or an effect
-of my imagination?”
-
-“No,” answered the adept ... “but it is a product of the imagination
-of Nature, whose processes can be guided by the will of the adept.
-The whole world ... is nothing else but a world of the imagination
-of the _Universal Mind_, which is the _Creator_ of forms....”
-
-To exemplify the teaching, a Magnolia Tree in full blossom sixty
-feet high, standing at a distance, is made to look less and less
-dense. The green foliage fades into gray, becomes “more and more
-shadowy and transparent,” until “it seemed to be merely the ghost of
-a tree, and finally disappeared entirely from view.”
-
- “Thus” continued the adept, “you see that tree stood in the sphere
- of my mind as it stood in yours. We are all living within the
- sphere of each other’s mind.... The Adept creates his own images;
- the ordinary mortal lives in the products of the imagination of
- others, or the imagination of nature. We live in the paradise of
- our own soul ... but the spheres of our souls are not narrow. They
- have expanded far beyond the limits of the visible bodies, and
- will continue to expand until they become one with the universal
- Soul....”
-
- “The power of the imagination is yet too little known to mankind,
- else they would better beware of what they think. If a man thinks
- a good or an evil thought, that thought calls into existence a
- corresponding form or power ... which may assume density and
- become living ... and live long after the physical body of the man
- who created it has died. It will accompany his soul after death,
- because _the creations are attracted to their creator_.” (p. 83.)
-
-Scattered hither and thither, through this little volume are pearls
-of wisdom. For that which is rendered in the shape of dialogue and
-monologue is the fruit gathered by the author during a long research
-in old forgotten and mouldy, MSS. of the Rosicrucians, or mediæval
-alchemists, and in the worm-eaten _infoglios_ of unrecognized, yet
-great adepts of every age.
-
-Thus when the author approaches the subject of theosophical retreats
-or communities—a dream cherished by many a theosophist—he is
-answered by the “Adept” that “the _true ascetic is he who lives in
-the world, surrounded by its temptations_; he in whose soul the
-animal elements are still active, craving for, the gratification of
-their desires and possessing the means for such gratification, but
-_who by the superior power of his will conquers his animal self_.
-Having attained that state he may retire from the world.... He
-expects no future reward in heaven; for what could heaven offer him
-except happiness which he already possesses? He desires no other
-good, but to create good for the world.”... Saith the Adept.
-
- “If you could establish theosophical monasteries, where
- intellectual and spiritual development would go hand-in-hand,
- where a new science could be taught, based upon a true knowledge
- of the fundamental laws of the universe, and when, at the same
- time man would be taught how to obtain a mastery over himself, you
- would confer the greatest possible benefit upon the world. Such a
- convent would afford immense advantage for the advancement of
- intellectual research.... These convents would become centres of
- intelligence....”
-
-Then, reading the student’s thoughts:
-
- “You mistake,” he added; “it is not the want of money which
- prevents us to execute the idea. It is the impossibility to find
- the proper kind of people to inhabit the convent after it is
- established. Indeed, we would be poor Alchemists if we could not
- produce gold in any desirable quantity ... but gold is a curse to
- mankind, and we do not wish to increase the curse.... Distribute
- gold among men, and you will only create craving for more; give
- them gold, and you will transform them into devils. No, it is not
- gold that we need; it is men who thirst after wisdom. _There are
- thousands who desire knowledge, but few who desire wisdom...._
- Even many of your would-be Occultists ... have taken up their
- investigations merely for the purpose of gratifying idle
- curiosity, while others desire to pry into the secrets of nature,
- to obtain knowledge which they desire to employ for the attainment
- of selfish ends. Give us men or women who desire nothing else but
- the truth, and we will take care of their needs....”
-
-And then having given a startlingly true picture of modern
-civilisation, and explained the occult side of certain things
-pertaining to knowledge, the Adept led on the student to his
-laboratory, where he left him for a few minutes alone. Then another
-adept, looking like a monk, joined him, and drew his attention to
-some powders, by the fumigations of which the Elementals, or
-“Spirits of Nature” could be made to appear. This provoked the
-student’s curiosity. Sure of his invulnerability in the matter of
-tests and temptations, he begged to be allowed to see these
-creatures....
-
-Suddenly the room looked dim, and the walls of the laboratory
-disappeared. He felt he was in the water, light as a feather,
-dancing on the waves, with the full moon pouring torrents of light
-upon the ocean, and the beautiful Isle of Ceylon appearing in the
-distance. The melodious sound of female voices made him espy near to
-where he was three beautiful female beings. The Queen of the
-Undines, the most lovely of the three—for these were the longed-for
-Elementals—entices the unwary student to her submarine palace. He
-follows her, and, forgetting theosophical convents, Adepts and
-Occultism, succumbs to the temptation....
-
- * * * * * * * * * *
-
-Was it but a dream? It would so appear. For he awakes on the mossy
-plot where he had lain to rest in the morning, and from whence he
-had followed the dwarf. But how comes it that he finds in his
-button-hole the exotic lily given to him by the adept lady, and in
-his pocket the piece of gold transmuted in his presence by the
-“Master”? He rushes home, and finds on the table of his hotel-room a
-promised work on “The Secret Symbols of the Rosicrucians,” and on
-its fly-leaf a few words in pencil. They ran thus:—
-
-“_Friend, I regret ... I cannot invite you to visit us again for the
-present. He who desires to remain in the peaceful valley must know
-how to resist all sensual attractions, even those of the Water
-Queen. Study ... bring the circle into the square, mortify the
-metals.... When you have succeeded we shall meet again.... I shall
-be with you when you need me._”
-
-The work ends with the quotation from Paul’s Second Epistle to the
-Corinthians, where the man caught up into Paradise (whether in the
-body or out of the body ... God knoweth) “_heard unspeakable words,
-which it is not lawful for a man to utter_....”
-
-The “adventure” is more than worth perusal.
-
- ------------------
-
- TABULA BEMBINA SIVE MENSA ISIACA. THE ISIAC TABLET OF CARDINAL
- BEMBO. ITS HISTORY AND OCCULT SIGNIFICANCE.
-
- BY W. WYNN WESTCOTT, M.B. BATH. R. H. FRYAR, 1887.
-
-This work is a monograph of 20 foolscap folio pages, on the
-celebrated Isiac Tablet. It is well and clearly printed in
-good-sized type on good paper, and has for frontispiece a
-well-executed photogravure of the Tablet itself, from a drawing made
-by the author some years previously. It is written in the clear
-style which distinguishes Dr. Westcott’s writings, and in all
-quotations chapter and verse are scrupulously given. Three centuries
-ago this Tablet greatly exercised the minds of the learned, and
-continued to do so till the researches of modern Egyptologists began
-to throw some doubt upon its authenticity as a reliable specimen of
-ancient Egyptian art; since which time the interest in it has
-gradually declined. Undoubtedly occult, as its meaning and symbolism
-alike are, we feel that this monograph will be of service to all
-lovers and students of the mystical ideas of ancient Egypt. The
-first thing which strikes the eye of even the most careless observer
-is the careful and systematic arrangement of the figures and emblems
-in triads, or groups of three, which system of classification
-prevailed in the religious symbolism of the Egyptians. The Tablet,
-again, is divided by transverse horizontal lines into three
-principal portions, Upper, Lower, and Middle, the latter being
-sub-divided by vertical lines into three parts, the centre of which
-is occupied by a throned female figure, flanked on each side by a
-triad, of which the central figure in each instance is seated. Thus
-the Upper and Lower portions of the Tablet give each a Dodecad
-sub-divided into Triads, while the central portion forms a Heptad.
-This at once corresponds to the symbolism of the ספר יצירה, _Sepher
-Yetzirah_, Chapter VI., § 3. “The Triad, the Unity which standeth
-one and alone, the Heptad divided into Three as opposed to Three and
-the Centre Mediating between them, the Twelve which stand in war ...
-the Unity above the Triad, the Triad above the Heptad, the Heptad
-above the Dodecad and they are all bound together each with each.”
-
-Commencing with a description of the Tablet, Dr. Westcott gives as
-much as is known of its history, quoting from Kircher, Keysler,
-Murray, and others. It appears that it was first discovered in Rome,
-at a spot where a Temple of Isis had once stood. After the sack of
-Rome by the Constable De Bourbon, it fell into the hands of a smith,
-who sold it to Cardinal Bembo for a large sum. At his death it came
-into the possession of the Dukes of Mantua, at the taking of which
-city in 1630, it passed into the hands of Cardinal Pava. It is now
-in the Museum of Egyptian Antiquities at Turin. The dimensions are 4
-ft. 2 in., by 2 ft. 5½ in. Thus its experiences during the last few
-centuries have been rather stormy.
-
-After mentioning Æneas De Vico and Pignorius, Dr. Westcott gives us
-an extensive digest of the views of Athanasius Kircher, from whose
-plate in the “Œdipus Ægyptiacus” the photogravure at the
-commencement is taken. Kircher undoubtedly more nearly grasped the
-esoteric design of the tablet than any one except Eliphas Levi, and
-his attempted explanation marks him alike as a profound scholar and
-an advanced mystic, notwithstanding the great disadvantages with
-which he had to contend in the utter ignorance of Egyptology as it
-is now understood, which prevailed at the date at which he wrote.
-
-Quotations and notes from Montfauçon, Shuckford, Warburton,
-Jablonski, Caylus, Banier, Mackenzie, Kenealy, and Winckelman follow
-the excerpts from Kircher, and we then come to the views of modern
-Egyptologists on the subject, notably those of Professor Le Page
-Renouf as expressed to Dr Westcott in person. The reasons they
-assign for doubting the authenticity of the Tablet are briefly
-these:—that they consider the execution of the work stamps it as a
-Roman production; that the hieroglyphics will not read so as to make
-sense; that the running pattern with the masks would never have been
-employed by an Egyptian; and that some of the best known Egyptian
-deities are conspicuous by their absence. In answer to these attacks
-Dr. Westcott wisely remarks that “it is a gross absurdity to suppose
-that any man capable of designing such a tablet, over which immense
-energy, research, and knowledge must have been expended, to say
-nothing of the skill displayed in its execution, should have wasted
-his abilities in perpetrating a gigantic hoax; for that is, I
-suppose, what some modern writers mean who call it a ‘forgery’; but
-a _forgery_ is a _deceitful imitation_. How it can be called an
-imitation considering that its special character is that of being
-different to any other Stelé or Tablet known is not clear; and how
-it can be a deceit is also incomprehensible, since it bears no name
-or date purporting to refer it to a definite author or period.”
-
-On page 16 Dr. Westcott observes that the Four Genii of the Dead are
-conspicuous by their absence, but he seems to overlook their
-representation in figure 41 of the Limbus, where the sepulchral
-vases beneath the couch have, as usual, the heads of the Genii of
-the Dead.
-
-A quotation, together with a plate from Levi’s “Histoire de la
-Magie,” follows this, together with a disquisition on the Taro,
-which has so much exercised occult students of late. Altogether the
-book is an extremely interesting production, and Dr. Westcott puts
-forward his own views on the subject with much clearness.
-
- ------------------
-
- EARTH’S EARLIEST AGES
- AND THEIR CONNECTION WITH MODERN SPIRITUALISM AND THEOSOPHY.
-
- BY G. H. PEMBER, M.A. (Hodder & Stoughton).
-
-To meet with a book like this in the last quarter of the nineteenth
-century is like meeting a Pterodactyl strolling along the Row in the
-height of the season. But more careful perusal, while augmenting the
-reader’s wonder, mingles with it a certain respect for the writer’s
-courage and unflinching logic.
-
-Granting his fundamental premiss—the verbal inspiration of the
-Bible—and accepting his first principle of interpretation, his
-argument is at least consistent, and is weakened by no half-hearted
-pandering to the facts of experience or the discoveries of science.
-
-To quote Mr. Pember’s primary canon, he assumes—
-
- I. “That the first chapter of Genesis, equally with those which
- follow it, is, in its primary meaning, neither vision nor
- allegory, but plain history, and must, therefore, be accepted as a
- literal statement of facts.”
-
-On this basis he gives an interpretation of Genesis, the main idea
-of which is the interposition of “The Interval” between the creation
-and the “Six Days” described in the text. During this period the
-earth was wholly given over to Satan and his host, and the “Six
-Days” creation was, according to Mr. Pember, the restoration and
-reformation of the world from this chaos of confusion.
-
-But space forbids to follow the author into details, since one-half
-of his volume is devoted to the subject indicated in its sub-title,
-and this portion is of greater interest to readers of LUCIFER.
-
-As an accurate and thorough student of the work of those he
-condemns, Mr. Pember stands unrivalled. He has both read and
-understood a very large part of the literature of Theosophy and
-Spiritualism. His quotations are fair and well chosen, his comments
-strictly moderate in tone and entirely free from any personal
-animus. And these traits are the more surprising since the author
-has certainly got the “Powers of the Air” very much on the brain. It
-is hardly even a rhetorical expression to say that it is his firm
-and unshakeable conviction, that all persons who do not hold the
-same views of Biblical criticism and Scriptural exegesis as Mr.
-Pember, are, to the extent of their difference from him, serving the
-Powers of Evil, the Personal Devil, the Antichrist, whose coming he
-expects in the very near future.
-
-On this point only Mr. Pember does not seem to have the courage of
-his opinions; perhaps he does not see, or seeing does not realise,
-the inevitable conclusion to which his arguments point. But then he
-may, after all, take refuge in the famous _credo quia absurdum_.
-
-The author, moreover, is sure to meet with scant sympathy even from
-the materialists to whom he is most nearly allied in thought. For he
-accepts, _en bloc_, the phenomena and wonders of spiritualism as of
-occultism, and never attempts even to question their reality.
-Meanwhile, he believes in the resurrection of the _physical body_
-after death, in a physical kingdom of Christ upon earth, and so on.
-Indeed, his views are the most remarkable compound of pure
-materialism and wholesale acceptance of the psychic and so-called
-supernatural that have ever appeared in print.
-
-To sum up, a few passages may be quoted to give an idea of the
-spirit of Mr. Pember’s treatment of this part of the subject, which
-at the same time will be the most telling criticism of his book to
-the minds of those who have grasped the ideas of which he speaks.
-
- “... the existence, in all times of the world’s history, of
- persons with abnormal faculties, initiates of the great mysteries
- and depositors of the secrets of antiquity, has been affirmed by a
- testimony far too universal and persistent to admit of denial....
- He who would be an adept must conform to the teaching of those
- demons, predicted leaders of the last apostasy, who forbid to
- marry, and command to abstain from meat.”
-
- “We have never met with a single reported instance of a spirit
- entering the lower spheres with the glad tidings, “Believe on the
- Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved.” On the contrary, among
- Spiritualists, as with Theosophists and Buddhists, sin can be
- expiated only by personal suffering.... “Sin,” shrieks the
- familiar of “M. A. Oxon,” “is remediable by repentance and
- atonement and reparation personally wrought out in pain and shame,
- not by coward cries for mercy, and by feigned assent to statements
- which ought to create a shudder.”
-
-Mr. Pember, therefore, believes in vicarious atonement in its
-crudest form? He teaches that “repentance and faith” save man _from
-the consequences_ of his actions!
-
-After describing the “Perfect Way” as “an ecclesiastical compound of
-Heathenism” (_with a capital H_), the author proceeds to expound the
-doctrine of reincarnation as therein set forth. Nothing can be
-fairer or more correct than this exposition, at the conclusion of
-which we read:
-
- “Jews, Christians, Buddhists and Mahommedans ... will become able
- to unite in a universal belief that sin is expiated by
- transmigrations and in the worship of ‘the Great Goddess’. The
- conception of a second league of Babel has been formed in the
- minds of Theosophists.”
-
-And even then, would not such a league be better than the sectarian
-wars, the religious persecutions, the tests and disabilities which
-still disfigure _Christendom_ in the name of religion?
-
-Further on the author refers to the occult axiom that “whereas God
-is I AM, or positive being, the Devil is NOT, and remarks:
-
- “There is little doubt that the culminations of the Mysteries was
- the worship of Satan himself... It would appear, then, that from
- remote ages, probably from the time when the Nephilim [the fallen
- angels of Satan’s Host] were upon earth, there has existed a
- league with the Prince of Darkness, a Society of men consciously
- on the side of Satan, and against the Most High.
-
- “The spells by which spirits may be summoned from the unseen are
- now known to all; and those unearthly forms which in past times
- were projected from the void only in the labyrinths, caverns, and
- subterranean chambers of the initiated, are now manifesting
- themselves in many a private drawing-room and parlour. Men have
- become enamoured of demons, and ere long will receive the Prince
- of the Demons as their God.”
-
-Theosophy, says Mr. Pember, will become the creed of the
-intellectual and the educated, while Spiritualism influences the
-masses of mankind. And he traces the influences of Theosophy and
-Buddhism in “Broad-Churchism, Universalism, Comtism, Secularism, and
-Quietism.” Nay, even under the Temperance movement he spies the
-lurking serpent of esoteric teaching and guidance, and he cites
-letters from Christian friends complaining that these and other
-philanthropic movements are being swamped, and their periodicals
-occupied by Theosophists, who work on Buddhist principles.
-
-In his concluding chapter, the author sums up a truly formidable
-array of evidences to prove that “the advocates of modern thought
-array themselves against every principle of the early revelations of
-the Divine Will,” apparently since they deny and repudiate the
-following “cosmic or universal laws”:—
-
-I. The law of the Sabbath.
-
-II. The headship of the man over the woman.
-
-III. The institution of marriage [_i.e._, they practise _celibacy_].
-
-IV. The law of substitution, that life must atone for life, and that
- without shedding of blood there is no remission, as taught in
- type by animal sacrifices. Latter-day philosophers affect the
- utmost horror of such a salvation, and will have none of Christ.
-
-V. The command to use the flesh of animals as food.
-
-VI. The decree that “whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man shall his
- blood be shed.”
-
-VII. The direction to multiply and replenish the earth.
-
-The charge of disobedience to such laws as these every mystic will
-joyfully admit, with the cry, “Happy will it be for all things
-living when such laws shall no longer be obeyed by any living
-creature.”
-
-These laws, the disobedience to which Mr. Pember so much regrets in
-the later schools, date from the dark past when man had to form his
-physical existence and root it upon the earth. If they are some of
-the early revelations of the “Divine Will,” that is no reason why
-they should rule mankind when its condition is changed and it is
-emerging from the darkness of Materialism, and losing, from its
-natural growth towards that Divine will, the desire for physical
-existence. The Mosaic laws were made by the Jehovah, the God of
-anger and cruelty. In spite of the strange inconsistency by which
-the followers of Jesus Christ, the teacher of a gentle and sublime
-faith, read in their churches these Mosaic laws, yet they are empty
-words from a past of bloodshed to the humane or religious man. The
-occultist professes even more than religion—he dares to avow himself
-a follower of the light, an aspirant towards knowledge, and one who
-is determined to live the noblest life knowledge can indicate. What
-to him are the laws of murder, of the shedding of blood, of marriage
-and giving in marriage? It is not his aim to help people the earth,
-for he desires to lift himself and others above the craving for
-earth-life. He commits no murder, for all men are his brethren, and
-he no longer recognises the brutal law of the criminal, by which,
-when blood is shed, blood must be again shed to wash it away. He can
-have no interest either in the straightforward laws of the past, or
-the complicated modern law of the present—which permits of many
-things the Jews would have been ashamed of. The only law he
-recognises is that of charity and justice.
-
-There is a charming page in the _Introduction_, a ring of genuine
-sorrow for the failure of certain missionaries in their cowardly
-attack upon the theosophical leaders, as refreshing as it is
-ludicrous. The Jeremiad runs in this wise:—
-
- “It would seem that the attack of the Madras Christian College
- upon Madame Blavatsky has by no means checked the movement in
- which she has been so conspicuous an actor, and, apparently, the
- failure is nowhere more manifest than in Madras itself. It was
- confidently predicted that the High Priestess of Theosophy and
- Buddhism would not dare to show her face again in that city.
- Nevertheless she did so, and ... received a warm welcome, not
- merely from the members of the Theosophical societies, but also
- from the members of the various colleges and from many other
- persons. She was conducted in procession from the shore to the
- Pancheappa Hall, and was there presented by the students with an
- address of sympathy and admiration, to which, among other
- signatures, were appended those of more than three hundred members
- of the very Christian College whose professors had assailed her.”
-
-And he adds, “Satan is now setting in motion intellectual forces
-which will be more than a match for the missionaries, if they
-persist in carrying on the warfare in the old way.”
-
-Too much praise cannot be rendered to Mr. Pember for his fairness
-and impersonality. He writes as becomes a scholar and a gentleman,
-and though one may smile at his intellectual blindness and stand
-amazed at the mental capacity which can digest the views which he
-maintains, one cannot but respect his earnestness, his thoroughness,
-and his mastery of the subject.
-
- B. K.
-
- ------------------
-
- ISAURE AND OTHER POEMS.
-
- BY W. STEWART ROSS.
-
-The poem which gives its name to this volume of ringing verse is, as
-may easily be conjectured, the lament of a poet over his love torn
-from him by inexorable death.
-
-A true instinct has taught the author that it is such hours of agony
-as this, such piercing of the heart, such fierce and burning
-torture, which reveal to the noble soul capable of intense suffering
-the inner truths and realities of life.
-
-To quote:
-
- “I stand on the cis-mortal,
- And I gaze with ’wildered eye,
- To the mists of the trans-mortal,
- And the signs called Live and Die.
- . . . . . . .
- Let me dream in this cis-mortal,
- And the noblest dream I can.
- . . . . . . .
- Let me dream far from the formulæ,
- And I may dream more nigh
- To the sable shore of mystery,
- And the signs of Live and Die.”
-
-Some passages in this opening poem are instinct with the breath of
-mysticism, and rouse a keen desire that Mr. Stewart Ross had become
-acquainted, in that period of his life when this book was written,
-with the wider and grander view of life as a whole, of its purpose
-and meaning, of its laws and its realities, which occultism affords
-to a mind capable of grasping them.
-
-Surely the man who could write:
-
- “For death and life are really one.”
-
-And again:
-
- “For the mystic Part is gathered
- Unto the mystic Whole.
- And the vague lines of non-Being
- Are scribbled o’er thy soul.”
-
-must have the power to sense the keener air of the subtle life and
-grasp its glorious promise.
-
-What pilgrim of the path has not felt:
-
- “Hard-paced the iron years have gone
- Over my head since then;
- I’ve haunted in a waking dream
- The paths of living men;
- But of this world my kingdom’s not,
- Like him of Galilee,
- For I grasp hands they cannot feel,
- See forms they cannot see.”
-
-In “Leonore: A Lay of Dipsomania,” one of the most terrible sides of
-human life is depicted with a vividness which tortures the reader,
-and flings a gloom on the inexorable sweep of life, fitly in keeping
-with the vision pictured in “A Nightmare.” A mystic, struggling with
-the negations of modern science, battling to assert the intuitive
-knowledge of his true self against its captious intellectualisms,
-speaks through this picture of desolation and decay, protesting
-against the disappearance of all that is great and valuable in life
-under the waves of oblivion.
-
-But no man in whom the spark of true poetic inspiration burns can
-ever in the depths of his own heart accept the lifeless, empty,
-unreal phantom which materialism offers as the aim, the purpose, the
-fulfilment of life. We hope, therefore, that Mr. Stewart Ross will
-some day give us a volume of poetry in which his true power and
-insight will find expression, and which will enroll his name on the
-list of those who have given new life to men.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-
-
-
-One cannot fill a vacuum from within itself.—L.S.C.
-
-Many a man will follow a misleader.—L.S.C.
-
-It is not necessary for truth to put on boxing-gloves.—L.S.C.
-
-You cannot build a temple of truth by hammering dead stones. Its
-foundations must precipitate themselves like crystals from the
-solution of life.—L.S.C.
-
-When a certain point is reached pain becomes its own anodyne.—L.S.C.
-
-Some pluck the fruits of the tree (of knowledge) to crown themselves
-therewith, instead of plucking them to eat.—L.S.C.
-
-
-
-
- =THEOSOPHICAL=
- =AND MYSTIC PUBLICATIONS=
-
-
-THE THEOSOPHIST; a magazine of Oriental Philosophy, Art, Literature,
-and Occultism, conducted by H. P. Blavatsky, and H. S. Olcott,
-Permanent President of the T. S. Vol. VIII., 1887. Madras, India. In
-London, George Redway, 15, York Street, Covent Garden.
-
-The September number contains several articles of great interest.
-For lovers of the wonderful, as for the more scientifically inclined
-students of the laws of psycho-physics, the account given by
-Sreenath Chatterjee, of a self-levitating lama who stayed for some
-days in his house, is both interesting and instructive. It is
-endorsed by Colonel Olcott and another independent witness, and
-bears evident marks of genuine and careful observation. Curious and
-wonderful as such feats are, however, they have little to do with
-Theosophy.
-
-To many readers such articles as Mr. Khandalwala’s “The
-Bhagavat-Gita and the Microcosmic Principles” will be far more
-attractive. The questions propounded in this paper have a very
-important bearing upon a question which has recently been a good
-deal under discussion, and it is to be hoped that it will elicit
-from Mr. Subba Row the further explanation of his views which is so
-much needed.
-
-Visconde Figanière continues his “Esoteric Studies” with some
-abstruse but very interesting calculations as to the composition of
-the alchemical elements during various cycles. A page of moral
-maxims from the Mahabharata and a thoughtful paper on the “Kabbalah
-and the Microcosm” contribute to make this number full of valuable
-matter.
-
- ---
-
-THE PATH; “a magazine devoted to the Brotherhood of Humanity,
-Theosophy in America, and the Study of Occult Science, Philosophy,
-and Aryan Literature.” Edited by W. Q. Judge, New York, P. O. Box
-2,659, and in London from George Redway.
-
-In the September issue, the opening paper is the fourth of “Jasper
-Niemand’s” admirable “Letters on the True.” Its subject is the
-“Mind” (_Manas_) or Heart in its relation to the Soul. Both analysis
-and synthesis are employed by the writer, with the intuition of a
-true mystic, and many suggestive gleams of light are thrown on an
-exceedingly difficult subject in the course of a few pages.
-
-The idea of re-incarnation is traced by Mr. Walker in the writings
-of various poets: Mr. Johnston contributes an interesting paper on
-“Gospels and Upanishads,” and “Rameses” gives us a charming allegory
-under the archaic title of “Papyrus,” and the number concludes with
-“Tea-Table Talk,” which is, as usual, quaint, yet instructive.
-Finally, thanks are due to Mr. Judge for the kind and cordial
-welcome he has extended to LUCIFER; the first number of which has,
-it is to be hoped, fulfilled the flattering expectations he
-expresses.
-
- ---
-
-LE LOTUS: “Revue des Hautes Etudes Théosophiques. Tendant à
-favoriser le rapprochement entre l’Orient et l’Occident.” Sous
-l’inspiration de H. P. Blavatsky (nominally, but edited in reality,
-by our able brother, F. K. Gaborian, F. T. S.). Georges Carré, 112
-Boulevard St. Germain, Paris.
-
-This journal—the French Theosophist—contains in its September number
-an article by Madame Blavatsky on “Misconceptions,” in which various
-doctrines and ideas erroneously connected with Theosophy are dealt
-with. M. Barlet continues his series of articles on “Initiation,”
-and the reprint of the Abbé de Villars’ clever and humorous “Comte
-de Gabalis,” is continued. Some verses by Amaravella, and several
-pages of sparkling “Notes,” conclude the table of contents.
-
-LUCIFER owes thanks also to the _Lotus_ for inserting an admirably
-translated extract from its prospectus.
-
- ---
-
-L’AURORE: Revue mensuelle sous la direction de Lady Caithness,
-Duchesse de Pomar, Georges Carré, 112 Boulevard St. Germain, Paris.
-
-The articles in the September number are neither so numerous nor so
-varied as those of the other Theosophical periodicals already
-referred to. Lady Caithness advocates, in the current issue, the
-theory that the English nation is descended from the lost ten tribes
-of Israel. As the very existence of these ten tribes is more than
-questionable, students must judge for themselves of the weight of
-the arguments advanced; the subject being too extensive even for
-comment here.
-
- ---
-
-THE SPHINX: “A monthly journal devoted to proving historically and
-experimentally the supersensuous conception of the world on a
-monistic basis.” Edited by Hübbe Schleiden. Dr. J. U. Th. Griebens
-Verlag, Leipzig.
-
-The October number is a full and highly instructive one. Dr. Carl
-du Prel’s handling of the “Demon of Socrates” contrasts
-brilliantly with the lame and obscure treatment which the same
-subject received a while ago at the hands of a body, which
-professes to investigate matters pertaining to the soul and its
-activity. Herr Niemann’s proof of the existence of an esoteric or
-secret teaching in the Platonic dialogues is able and convincing;
-Mr. Finch contributes a most interesting article on his
-observations among the “Faith-Healers” in America, and Herr Carl
-zu Leiningen pursues his able exposition of the Kabbalistic
-doctrine of Souls.
-
- ---
-
-Three new works on mystic subjects are shortly to appear from the
-pen of Dr. Franz Hartmann, whose valuable book on Paracelsus is
-certainly in the hands of many of our readers.
-
-Of these the first, and probably the most important, is entitled:
-“THE SECRET SYMBOLS OF THE ROSICRUCIANS,” and is to be published in
-Boston, U.S.A., by the Occult Publishing Company. It will contain
-numerous plates coloured by hand, giving accurate transcriptions of
-symbols and figures which have hitherto lain buried in rare, and in
-some cases, unattainable manuscripts. The value of the work as a
-text-book for students will be much enhanced by the copious
-vocabulary which Dr. Hartmann promises shall accompany it.
-
-The other two will probably be issued by Mr. Redway; the one being
-called: “IN THE PRONAOS OF THE TEMPLE OF THE R.C.,” and the other:
-“THE LIFE OF JEHOSHUA, THE ADEPT OF NAZARETH: AN OCCULT STUDY.”
-
-This is an attempt to dispel the mists which for many centuries have
-been gathering around the person of the supposed founder of
-Christianity, and which have prevented mankind from obtaining a
-clear view of the “Redeemer.” It claims to give an approximately
-correct account of his life, his initiation into the Egyptian
-mysteries and of his ignominious death caused by an infuriated mob,
-excited by the Pharisees of the temple, who were bound to destroy
-his mortal form, because he had taught the religion of universal
-fraternal love and freedom of thought in opposition to priestcraft
-and superstition.
-
-While the book deals to a certain extent with the external life of
-Jehoshua, as far as its details have become known by historical
-researches into sources not generally known, it especially deals
-with his inner life—_i.e._ his method of thought.
-
-The author says: “If we wish to give a correct picture of the
-character of a person, we must try to describe his thoughts as well
-as his acts, for the thought-life of a man constitutes his real
-life, while his outward life is merely a pictorial representation, a
-shadow of the actions that are taking place upon the interior stage
-of his mind.”
-
-“To describe this inner life, a dramatical representation of the
-processes going on in the soul of man will be better adapted to
-bring it to our understanding, than a merely verbal description of
-character. This maxim seems to have influenced those who wrote the
-accounts contained in the bible, and who describe interior processes
-in allegorical pictures of events, which may or may not have taken
-place on the outward plane. I have adhered to this plan in
-describing the thought-life of Jehoshua Ben-Pandira, but I have
-attempted to shape the allegories contained in this book in such a
-manner that the intelligent reader may easily perceive their true
-meaning, for I have made the forms sufficiently transparent, so that
-the truths which they are intended to represent may be easily seen
-through the external shell.”
-
-“Nevertheless, these descriptions are not mere fancies, but they are
-based upon historical facts, and upon information received from
-sources whose nature will be plain to every occultist. The events
-described have all actually taken place; but whether they have
-wholly or in part taken place on the external or internal plane,
-each intelligent reader is left to decide for himself.”
-
- =CORRESPONDENCE=
-
- INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.
-
- ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 2.
-
- _To the Editor of_ LUCIFER.
-
-The ancients assigned to the planets certain signs and degrees, in
-which they were essentially dignified, being there more powerful for
-good, and less powerful for evil; these were called their House,
-Exaltation, Triplicity, Term, and Face. Opposite to the first two
-were the places where they were essentially debilitated, being there
-less powerful for good and more powerful for evil; these were called
-their Detriment and Fall. Whether the latter three dignities have
-three corresponding debilities has not been stated.
-
-To the seven known planets, the ancients apportioned the twelve
-zodiacal signs as their respective houses or chief dignity, thus: ☉
-ruled ♌, and ☽ ruled ♋, both by day and night; while the remaining
-ten signs were divided between the remaining five planets, each
-planet ruling two signs, one by day and the other by night. But when
-♅ and ♆ were discovered, the question arose where to place them.
-
-A. J. Pearce, the present editor of _Zadkiel’s Almanac_, has
-suggested that, as they were more remote from ☉ than was ♄, they
-should have the same houses and exaltations as ♄. Raphael dethrones
-♄ from ♒, and proclaims that ♅ reigns in his stead. Both these
-suggestions involve serious difficulties, nor do they settle the
-question once and for all with regard to any planets which may yet
-be discovered. It seems unlikely that planets of such diverse
-natures as ♄, ♅, and ♆ (not to mention any still more distant
-planets) should all bear equal rule in the same two signs, and to
-depose ♄ from his throne, pre-supposes a grave error on the part of
-the ancients, whose teaching on this point has been handed down with
-complete unanimity from the dim past: necessitating, also, a further
-process of dethronement, and a further ignoring of the teachings of
-antiquity, as further planetary discoveries are made.
-
-The first Raphael (the late R. C. Smith) rejected the ancient
-nocturnal and diurnal division of the Houses and Triplicities, in
-which he is followed by his successor. It appears to me that it is
-here that the error, with its consequent difficulties, first arose;
-and that by observing this distinction, ♅ and ♆ easily find their
-homes, with room to spare for their yet undiscovered brethren.
-
-It is obvious that Astrology can never become an even approximately
-perfect science, unless we are able in our calculations to take
-fully into account the influence of ♅ and ♆. With this end in view,
-I have been endeavouring, in my leisure moments, to solve the
-problem. To a certain extent I have been successful; and though I
-have not yet been able to substantiate all my conclusions as fully
-as I could wish, yet I deem it is the best interests of the Science
-to make them now public, that their truth or falsity may be as
-speedily as possible established by the investigations of
-astrologers generally.
-
-My conclusions are the following: that the ancient Diurnal and
-Nocturnal divisions are quite correct, so that if a figure is drawn
-for any time between sunrise and sunset, the planets which rule by
-day the signs on the cusps of the houses of the significators must
-be chiefly, and sometimes exclusively, considered; and _vice versâ_.
-
-The Houses of the new planets are, I believe, these:
-
-♒, which is the day-house of ♄, is the night-house of ♅.
-
-♊, which is the day-house of ☿, is the night-house of ♆.
-
-♍, which is the night-house of ☿, is the day-house of ♅.
-
-♓, which is the night-house of ♃, is the day-house of ♆.
-
-The first two I have verified by horary figures drawn for the time
-of an event; the latter two I consider as highly probable, but have
-not yet been able to thoroughly substantiate them.
-
-There is an old tradition (_Esoteric Science in Human History_, p.
-180) that there are 12 principal planets in our solar system; this
-leaves 4 more to be discovered. It will be seen at a glance that
-these 4 will fill up the vacant signs, two planets ruling each sign,
-one by night and the other by day. The only alteration which will
-then have to be made will be to consider ☉ to rule ♌ by day only,
-and ☽ to rule ♋ by night only; this, however, will be only in
-accordance with nature: moreover, the fact that the ancients
-assigned only one house each to ☉ and ☽, and two to each of the
-other planets, denotes some essential astrological difference
-between them.
-
-With regard to the other essential dignities, Raphael considers ♏ to
-be the exaltation of ♅; I am inclined to believe ♒ to be the
-exaltation of ♆. In the Triplicities there is a curious want of
-harmony; each, according to the ancients, being ruled by two
-planets, one by day and the other by night, except the watery
-triplicity, which is ruled by ♂ only. There seems to be no reason
-for this discrepancy, except the all-powerful one that there was no
-other known planet to share his dominion. I have ascertained that ♆
-has strong dignity in ♏, and conclude that he rules the watery
-triplicity, probably by night. Furthermore, I believe ♅ rules the
-airy triplicity. As for the Terms and Faces of the planets, they
-also, like the Planetary Hours, require re-arrangement so as to
-bring in ♅ and ♆ but in what way this is to be done, I have not yet
-been able to discover.
-
-I will take this opportunity of saying, in reply to inquiries, that
-the best books for beginners are Raphael’s _Horary Astrology_ for
-that branch of the Science; A. J. Pearce’s _Science of the Stars_
-for Mundane and Atmospheric Astrology; A. J. Pearce’s _Text Book of
-Astrology_ for Nativities, to be worked out by Primary Directions;
-and Raphael’s _Guide to Astrology_ for the same, worked out by
-Secondary Directions excited by Transits. Raphael’s works are
-published by Foulsham and Co., 4, Pilgrim Street, E.C.; and Pearce’s
-works may be procured from the author, 54, East Hill, Wandsworth,
-S.W.
-
- NEMO.
-
-
-
-
- ------------------
-
-
-
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-For the purpose of correcting any prejudicial suspicion or erroneous
-misrepresentation of myself, arising from the insertion of the note
-at the end of the “Bath Occult Reprint Edition” of the “Divine
-Pymander” or as associated with the Society of the “H. B. of L.,”
-known to me only through the names of Peter Davidson and T. H.
-Burgoyne, alias D’Alton, Dalton, &c., and whose secretary is
-announced to be “A convicted felon, and the supposed adept to be a
-Hindu of questionable antecedents,” I wish it to be understood I
-have now no confidence, sympathy, or connection therewith, direct or
-indirect, since or even prior to the date hereof, viz., May, 1886.
-
- Yours truly,
- ROBT. H. FRYAR.
-
-8, Northumberland Place, Bath.
-
- =FROM THE NOTE BOOK OF AN UNPOPULAR PHILOSOPHER=
-
-THE ESOTERIC VALUE OF CERTAIN WORDS AND DEEDS IN SOCIAL LIFE.
-
-_To Show Anger._—No “_cultured_” man or woman will ever show anger
-in Society. To check and restrain every sign of annoyance shows good
-manners, certainly, but also considerable achievement in hypocrisy
-and dissimulation. There is an occult side to this rule of good
-breeding expressed in an Eastern proverb: “Trust not the face which
-never shows signs of anger, nor the dog that never barks.”
-Cold-blooded animals are the most venomous.
-
-_Non-resistance to Evil._—To brag of it is to invite all evil-doers
-to sit upon you. To practice it openly is to lead people into the
-temptation of regarding you as a coward. Not to resist the evil you
-have never created nor merited, to eschew it yourself, and help
-others quietly to get out of its way, is the only wise course open
-to the lover of wisdom.
-
-“_Love Thy Neighbour._”—When a parson has preached upon this
-subject, his pious congregation accepts it as tacit permission to
-slander and vilify their friends and acquaintances in neighbouring
-pews.
-
-_International Brotherhood._—When a Mussulman and a Christian swear
-mutual friendship, and pledge themselves to be brothers, their two
-formulas differ somewhat. The Moslem says: “Thy mother shall be my
-mother, my father thy father, my sister thy hand maid, and thou
-shalt be my brother.” To which the Christian answers: “Thy mother
-and sister shall be my hand-maidens, thy wife shall be my wife, and
-my wife shall be thy dear sister.”—_Amen._
-
-_Brave as a Lion._—The highest compliment—in appearance—paid to
-one’s courage; a comparison with a bad-smelling wild-beast—in
-reality. The recognition, also, of the superiority of animal over
-human bravery, considered as a virtue.
-
-_A Sheep._—A weak, silly fellow, figuratively, an insulting,
-contemptuous epithet among laymen; but one quite flattering among
-churchmen, who apply it to “the people of God” and the members of
-their congregations, comparing them to _sheep_ under the guidance of
-the lamb.
-
-_The Code of Honour._—In France—to seduce a wife and kill her
-husband. There, offended honour can feel satisfied only with blood;
-here, a wound inflicted upon the offender’s pocket suffices.
-
-_The Duel as a Point of Honour._—The duel being an institution of
-Christendom and civilization, neither the old Spartans, nor yet the
-Greeks or Romans knew of it, as they were only uncivilized
-heathens.—(_See Schopenhauer._)
-
-_Forgive and Forget._—“We should freely forgive, but forget rarely,”
-says Colton. “I will not be revenged, and this I owe to my enemy;
-but I will _remember_, and this I owe to myself.” This is real
-practical wisdom. It stands between the ferocious “Eye for eye, and
-tooth for tooth” of the Mosaic Law, and the command to turn the left
-cheek to the enemy when he has smitten you on the right. Is not the
-latter a direct encouraging of sin?
-
-_Practical Wisdom._—On the tree of silence hangs the fruit of peace.
-The secret thou wouldst not tell to thine enemy, tell it not to thy
-friend.—(_Arabic._)
-
-_Civilised Life._—Crowded, noisy and full of vital power, is modern
-Society to the eye of matter; but there is no more still and silent,
-empty and dreary desert than that same Society to the spiritual eye
-of the Seer. Its right hand freely and lavishly bestows ephemeral
-but costly pleasures, while the left grasps greedily the leavings
-and often grudges the necessities of show. All our social life is
-the result and consequence of that unseen, yet ever present autocrat
-and despot, called _Selfishness_ and _Egotism_. The strongest will
-becomes impotent before the voice and authority of _Self_.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- LUCIFER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. 1. LONDON, NOVEMBER 15TH, 1887. NO. 3.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- “LET EVERY MAN PROVE HIS OWN WORK.”
-
-Such is the title of a letter received by the Editors of LUCIFER. It
-is of so serious a nature that it seems well to make it the subject
-of this month’s editorial. Considering the truths uttered in its few
-lines, its importance and the bearing it has upon the much obscured
-subject of Theosophy, and its visible agent or vehicle—the Society
-of that name—the letter is certainly worthy of the most considerate
-answer.
-
- “_Fiat justitia, ruat cœlum!_”
-
-Justice will be done to both sides in the dispute; namely,
-Theosophists and the members of the Theosophical Society[31] on the
-one hand, and the followers of the _Divine Word_ (or Christos), and
-the so-called Christians, on the other.
-
------
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Not all the members of the Theosophical Society are Theosophists;
- nor are the members of the so-called Christian Churches all
- Christians, by any means. True Theosophists, as true Christians,
- are very, _very_ few; and there are practical Theosophists in the
- fold of Christianity, as there are practical Christians in the
- Theosophical Society, outside all ritualistic Christianity. “Not
- every one that saith unto me ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the Kingdom
- of Heaven, but he that doeth the will of my Father.” (Matthew,
- vii. 21.) “Believe not in Me, but in the truths I utter.”
- (Buddha’s _Aphorisms_.)
-
------
-
-We reproduce the letter:
-
- “_To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
- “What a grand chance is now open in this country, to the exponents
- of a noble and advanced religion (if such this Theosophy be[32])
- for proving its strength, righteousness and verity to the Western
- world, by throwing a penetrating and illuminating ray of its
- declared light upon the terribly harrowing and perplexing
- practical problems of our age.
-
- “Surely one of the purest and least self-incrusted duties of man,
- is to alleviate the sufferings of his fellow man?
-
- “From what I read, and from what I daily come into immediate
- contact with, I can hardly think it would be possible to over-rate
- in contemplation, the intense privation and agonizing suffering
- that is—aye, say it—_at this moment_ being endured by a vast
- proportion of our brothers and sisters, arising in a large measure
- from their not absolutely having the means for procuring the _bare
- necessaries of existence_?
-
- “Surely a high and Heaven-born religion—a religion professing to
- receive its advanced knowledge and Light from ‘those more learned
- in the Science of Life,’ should be able to tell us something of
- how to deal with such life, in its primitive condition of helpless
- submission to the surrounding circumstances of—civilization!
-
- “If one of our main duties is that of exercising disinterested
- love towards the Brotherhood, surely ‘those more learned’ ones,
- whether in the flesh, or out of it, can and will, if appealed to
- by their votaries, aid them in discovering ways and means for such
- an end, and in organising some great fraternal scheme for dealing
- _rightly_ with questions which are so appalling in their
- complexity, and which must and do press with such irresistible
- force upon all those who are earnest in their endeavours to carry
- out the will of Christ in a Christian Land?
-
- “L. F. FF.
-
- “October 25, 1887.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- “This” Theosophy is not a religion, but rather _the_ RELIGION—if
- one. So far, we prefer to call it a philosophy; one, moreover,
- which contains every religion, as it is the essence and the
- foundation of all. Rule III. of the Theos. Body says: “The Society
- represents no particular religious creed, is entirely
- _unsectarian_, and includes professors of all faiths.”
-
------
-
-This honest-spoken and sincere letter contains two statements; an
-implied accusation against “Theosophy” (_i.e._ the Society of that
-name), and a virtual admission that Christianity—or, again, rather
-its ritualistic and dogmatic religions—deserve the same and even a
-sterner rebuke. For if “Theosophy,” represented by its professors,
-merits on external appearance the reproach that so far it has failed
-to transfer divine wisdom from the region of the metaphysical into
-that of practical work, “Christianity,” that is, merely professing
-Christians, churchmen and laymen lie under a like accusation,
-evidently. “Theosophy” has, certainly, failed to discover
-_infallible_ ways and means of bringing all its votaries to exercise
-“disinterested love” in their Brotherhood; it has not yet been able
-to relieve suffering in mankind at large; but neither has
-Christianity. And not even the writer of the above letter, nor any
-one else, can show sufficient excuse for the Christians in this
-respect. Thus the admission that “those who are earnest in their
-endeavour to carry out the will of Christ in a Christian land” _need
-the help of_ “‘those more learned,’ whether (pagan adepts) in flesh,
-or (spirits?) out of it” is very suggestive, for it contains the
-defence and the _raison d’être_ of the Theosophical Society. Tacit
-though it is, once that it comes from the pen of a sincere
-Christian, one who longs to learn some practical means to relieve
-the sufferings of the starving multitudes—this admission becomes the
-greatest and most complete justification for the existence of the
-Theosophical Brotherhood; a full confession of the absolute
-necessity for such a body independent of, and untrammelled by, any
-enchaining dogmas, and it points out at the same time the signal
-failure of Christianity to accomplish the desired results.
-
-Truly said Coleridge that “good works may exist _without_ saving (?)
-principles, therefore cannot contain in themselves the principles of
-salvation; but saving principles never did, never can exist without
-good works.” Theosophists admit the definition, and disagree with
-the Christians only as to the nature of these “saving principles.”
-The Church (or churches) maintain that the only saving principle is
-belief in Jesus, or the carnalized Christ of the soul-killing dogma;
-theosophy, undogmatic and unsectarian, answers, it is not so. The
-only _saving_ principle dwells in man himself, and has never dwelt
-outside of his immortal divine self; _i.e._ it is the true Christos,
-as it is the true Buddha, the divine inward light which proceeds
-from the eternal unmanifesting unknown ALL. And this light _can only
-be made known by its works_—_faith_ in it having to remain ever
-blind in all, save in the man himself who feels that light within
-his soul.
-
-Therefore, the tacit admission of the author of the above letter
-covers another point of great importance. The writer seems to have
-felt that which many, among those who strive to help the suffering,
-have felt and expressed. The creeds of the churches fail to supply
-the _intellectual_ light, and the true wisdom which are needed to
-make the practical philanthropy carried out, by the true and earnest
-followers of Christ, a _reality_. The “practical” people either go
-on “doing good” unintelligently, and thus often do harm instead; or,
-appalled by the awful problem before them, and failing to find in
-their “churches” any clue, or a hope of solution, they retire from
-the battlefield and let themselves be drifted blindly by the current
-in which they happen to be born.
-
-Of late it has become the fashion for friends, as well as for foes,
-to reproach the Theosophical Society with doing no practical work,
-but losing itself in the clouds of metaphysics. Metaphysicians, we
-are told, by those who like to repeat stale arguments, have been
-learning their lesson for the last few thousand years; and it is now
-high time that they should begin to do some practical work. Agreed;
-but considering that the Christian churches count nearly nineteen
-centuries of existence, and that the Theosophical Society and
-Brotherhood is a body hardly twelve years old; considering again
-that the Christian churches roll in fabulous wealth, and number
-their adherents by hundreds of millions, whereas the Theosophical
-Brotherhood is but a few thousand strong, and that it has no fund,
-or funds, at its disposal, but that 98 per cent. of its members are
-as poor and as uninfluential as the aristocracy of the Christian
-church is rich and powerful; taking all this into consideration,
-there would be much to say if the theosophists would only choose to
-press the matter upon the public notice. Meanwhile, as the bitterest
-critics of the “leaders” of the Theosophical Society are by no means
-only outsiders, but as there are members of that society who always
-find a pretext to be dissatisfied, we ask: Can works of charity that
-will be known among men be accomplished without money? Certainly
-not. And yet, notwithstanding all this, none of its (European)
-members, except a few devoted officers in charge of societies, will
-do _practical_ work; but some of them, those especially who have
-never lifted a finger to relieve suffering, and help their outside,
-poorer brothers, are those who talk the most loudly, and are the
-bitterest in their denunciations of the _unspirituality_ and the
-unfitness of the “leaders of theosophy.” By this they remove
-themselves into the outer ring of critics, like those spectators at
-the play who laugh at an actor passably representing Hamlet, while
-they themselves could not walk on to the stage with a letter on a
-salver. While in India, comparatively poor theosophists have opened
-gratuitous dispensaries for the sick, hospitals, schools, and
-everything they could think of, asking no returns from the poor, as
-the missionaries do, no abandonment of one’s forefathers’ religion,
-as a heavy price for favours received, have the English
-theosophists, as a rule, done a single thing for those suffering
-multitudes, whose pitiful cry rings throughout the whole Heavens as
-a protest against the actual state of things in Christendom?
-
-We take this opportunity of saying, in reply to others as much as to
-our correspondent, that, up till now, the energies of the Society
-have been chiefly occupied in organising, extending, and solidifying
-the Society itself, which work has taxed its time, energies, and
-resources to such an extent as to leave it far less powerful for
-practical charity than we would have wished. But, even so, compared
-with the influence and the funds at the disposal of the Society, its
-work in practical charity, if less widely known, will certainly bear
-favourable comparison with that of professing Christians, with their
-enormous resources in money, workers, and opportunities of all
-kinds. It must not be forgotten that practical charity is not one of
-the _declared_ objects of the Society. It goes without saying, and
-needs no “declaration,” that every member of the Society must be
-practically philanthropic if he be a theosophist at all; and our
-declared work is, in reality, more important and more efficacious
-than work in the every-day plane which bears more evident and
-immediate fruit, for the direct effect of an appreciation of
-theosophy is to make those charitable who were not so before.
-Theosophy creates the charity which afterwards, and of its own
-accord, makes itself manifest in works.
-
-Theosophy is correctly—though in this particular case, it is rather
-ironically—termed “a High, Heaven-born Religion.” It is argued that
-since it professes to receive its advanced knowledge and light from
-“those more learned in the Science of Life,” the latter ought and
-_must_, if appealed to by their votaries (the theosophists), aid
-them in discovering ways and means, in organising some great
-fraternal scheme,” etc.
-
-The scheme was planned, and the rules and laws to guide such a
-practical brotherhood, have been given by those “more learned in the
-Science of (practical, daily, _altruistic_) life;” aye, verily “more
-learned” in it than any other men since the days of Gautama Buddha
-and the Gnostic Essenes. The “scheme” dates back to the year when
-the Theosophical Society was founded. Let anyone read its wise and
-noble laws embodied to this day in the Statutes of the Fraternity,
-and judge for himself whether, if carried out rigorously and applied
-to practical life, the “scheme” would not have proved the most
-beneficent to mankind in general, and especially to our poorer
-brethren, of “the starving multitudes.” Theosophy teaches the spirit
-of “non-separateness,” the evanescence and illusion of human creeds
-and dogma, hence, inculcates _universal love and charity for all
-mankind “without distinction of race, colour, caste or creed;”_ is
-it not therefore the fittest to alleviate the sufferings of mankind?
-No true theosophist would refuse admission into a hospital, or any
-charitable establishment, to any man, woman or child, under the
-pretext that he is _not_ a theosophist, as a Roman Catholic would
-when dealing with a Protestant, and _vice versa_. No true
-theosophist of the original rules would fail to put into practice
-the parable of the “Good Samaritan,” or proffer help only to entice
-the unwary who, he hopes, will become a pervert from his god and the
-gods of his forefathers. None would slander his brother, none let a
-needy man go unhelped, none offer fine talk instead of practical
-love and charity.
-
-Is it then the fault of Theosophy, any more than it is the fault of
-the Christ-teachings, if the majority of the members of the
-Theosophical Society, often changing their philosophical and
-religious views upon entering our Body, have yet remained
-practically the same as they were when professing _lip_
-Christianity? Our laws and rules are the same as given to us from
-the beginning; it is the general members of the Society who have
-allowed them to become virtually _obsolete_. Those few who are ever
-ready to sacrifice their time and labour to work for the poor, and
-who do, unrecognised and unthanked for it, good work wherever they
-can, are often too poor themselves to put their larger schemes of
-charity into objective practical form, however willing they may be.
-
-“The fault I find with the Theosophical Society,” said one of the
-most eminent surgeons in London to one of the editors, quite
-recently, “is that I cannot discover that any of its members really
-lead the Christ-life.” This seemed a very serious accusation from a
-man who is not only in the front rank of his profession, and valued
-for his kindly nature, by his patients, and by society, and
-well-known as a quiet doer of many good deeds. The only possible
-answer to be made was that the Christ-life is undeniably the ideal
-of every one worthy in any sense of the name of a Theosophist, and
-that if it is not lived it is because there are none strong enough
-to carry it out. Only a few days later the same complaint was put in
-a more graphic form by a celebrated lady-artist.
-
-“You Theosophists don’t do enough good for me,” she said pithily.
-And in her case also there is the right to speak, given by the fact
-that she leads two lives—one, a butterfly existence in society, and
-the other a serious one, which makes little noise, but has much
-purpose. Those who regard life as a great vocation, like the two
-critics of the Theosophical movement whom we have just quoted, have
-a right to demand of such a movement more than mere words. They
-themselves endeavour very quietly to lead the “Christ-life,” and
-they cannot understand a number of people uniting in the effort
-towards this life without practical results being apparent. Another
-critic of the same character who has the best possible right to
-criticise, being a thoroughly practical philanthropist and
-charitable to the last degree, has said of the Theosophists that
-their much talking and writing seems to resolve itself into mere
-intellectual luxury, productive of no direct good to the world.
-
-The point of difference between the Theosophists (when we use this
-term we mean, not members of the Society, but people who are really
-using the organization as a method of learning more of the true
-wisdom-religion which exists as a vital and eternal fact behind all
-such efforts) and the practical philanthropists, religious or
-secular, is a very serious one, and the answer, that probably none
-of them are strong enough yet to lead the “Christ-life,” is only a
-portion of the truth. The situation can be put very plainly, in so
-many words. The religious philanthropist holds a position of his
-own, which cannot in any way concern or affect the Theosophist. He
-does not do good merely for the sake of doing good, but also as a
-means towards his own salvation. This is the outcome of the selfish
-and personal side of man’s nature, which has so coloured and
-affected a grand religion that its devotees are little better than
-the idol-worshippers who ask their deity of clay to bring them luck
-in business, and the payment of debts. The religious philanthropist
-who hopes to gain salvation by good works has simply, to quote a
-well-worn yet ever fresh witticism, exchanged worldliness for
-other-worldliness.
-
-The secular philanthropist is really at heart a socialist, and
-nothing else; he hopes to make men happy and good by bettering their
-physical position. No serious student of human nature can believe in
-this theory for a moment. There is no doubt that it is a very
-agreeable one, because if it is accepted there is immediate,
-straightforward work to undertake. “The poor ye have always with
-you.” The causation which produced human nature itself produced
-poverty, misery, pain, degradation, at the same time that it
-produced wealth, and comfort, and joy and glory. Lifelong
-philanthropists, who have started on their work with a joyous
-youthful conviction that it is possible to “do good,” have, though
-never relaxing the habit of charity, confessed to the present writer
-that, as a matter of fact, misery cannot be relieved. It is a vital
-element in human nature, and is as necessary to some lives as
-pleasure is to others.
-
-It is a strange thing to observe how practical philanthropists will
-eventually, after long and bitter experience, arrive at a conclusion
-which, to an occultist, is from the first a working hypothesis. This
-is, that misery is not only endurable, but agreeable to many who
-endure it. A noble woman, whose life has been given to the rescue of
-the lowest class of wretched girls, those who seem to be driven to
-vice by want, said, only a few days since, that with many of these
-outcasts it is not possible to raise them to any apparently happier
-lot. And this she distinctly stated (and she can speak with
-authority, having spent her life literally among them, and studied
-them thoroughly), is not so much from any love of vice, but from
-love of that very state which the wealthy classes call misery. They
-prefer the savage life of a bare-foot, half-clad creature, with no
-roof at night and no food by day, to any comforts which can be
-offered them. By comforts, we do not mean the workhouse or the
-reformatory, but the comforts of a quiet home; and we can give
-chapter and verse, so to speak, to show that this is the case, not
-merely with the children of outcasts, who might be supposed to have
-a savage heredity, but with the children of gentle, cultivated, and
-Christian people.
-
-Our great towns hide in their slums thousands of beings whose
-history would form an inexplicable enigma, a perfectly baffling
-moral picture, could they be written out clearly, so as to be
-intelligible. But they are only known to the devoted workers among
-the outcast classes, to whom they become a sad and terrible puzzle,
-not to be solved, and therefore, better not discussed. Those who
-have no clue to the science of life are compelled to dismiss such
-difficulties in this manner, otherwise they would fall, crushed
-beneath the thought of them. The social question as it is called,
-the great deep waters of misery, the deadly apathy of those who have
-power and possessions—these things are hardly to be faced by a
-generous soul who has not reached to the great idea of evolution,
-and who has not guessed at the marvellous mystery of human
-development.
-
-The Theosophist is placed in a different position from any of these
-persons, because he has heard of the vast scope of life with which
-all mystic and occult writers and teachers deal, and he has been
-brought very near to the great mystery. Indeed, none, though they
-may have enrolled themselves as Fellows of the Society, can be
-called in any serious sense Theosophists, until they have begun to
-consciously taste in their own persons, this same mystery; which is,
-indeed, a law inexorable, by which man lifts himself by degrees from
-the state of a beast to the glory of a God. The rapidity with which
-this is done is different with every living soul; and the wretches
-who hug the primitive task-master, _misery_, choose to go slowly
-through a tread-mill course which may give them innumerable lives of
-physical sensation—whether pleasant or painful, well-beloved because
-tangible to the very lowest senses. The Theosophist who desires to
-enter upon occultism takes some of Nature’s privileges into his own
-hands by that very wish, and soon discovers that experiences come to
-him with double-quick rapidity. His business is then to recognise
-that he is under a—to him—new and swifter law of development, and to
-snatch at the lessons that come to him.
-
-But, in recognising this, he also makes another discovery. He sees
-that it takes a very wise man to do good works without danger of
-doing incalculable harm. A highly developed adept in life may grasp
-the nettle, and by his great intuitive powers, know whom to relieve
-from pain and whom to leave in the mire that is their best teacher.
-The poor and wretched themselves will tell anyone who is able to win
-their confidence what disastrous mistakes are made by those who come
-from a different class and endeavour to help them. Kindness and
-gentle treatment will sometimes bring out the worst qualities of a
-man or woman who has led a fairly presentable life when kept down by
-pain and despair. May the Master of Mercy forgive us for saying such
-words of any human creatures, all of whom are a part of ourselves,
-according to the law of human brotherhood which no disowning of it
-can destroy. But the words are true. None of us know the darkness
-which lurks in the depths of our own natures until some strange and
-unfamiliar experience rouses the whole being into action. So with
-these others who seem more miserable than ourselves.
-
-As soon as he begins to understand what a friend and teacher pain
-can be, the Theosophist stands appalled before the mysterious
-problem of human life, and though he may long to do good works,
-equally dreads to do them wrongly until he has himself acquired
-greater power and knowledge. The ignorant doing of good works may be
-vitally injurious, as all but those who are blind in their love of
-benevolence are compelled to acknowledge. In this sense the answer
-made as to lack of Christ-like lives among Theosophists, that there
-are probably none strong enough to live such, is perfectly correct
-and covers the whole question. For it is not the spirit of
-self-sacrifice, or of devotion, or of desire to help that is
-lacking, but the strength to acquire knowledge and power and
-intuition, so that the deeds done shall really be worthy of the
-“Buddha-Christ” spirit. Therefore it is that Theosophists cannot
-pose as a body of philanthropists, though secretly they may
-adventure on the path of good works. They profess to be a body of
-learners merely, pledged to help each other and all the rest of
-humanity, so far as in them lies, to a better understanding of the
-mystery of life, and to a better knowledge of the peace which lies
-beyond it.
-
-But as it is an inexorable law, that the ground must be tilled if
-the harvest is to be reaped, so Theosophists are obliged to work in
-the world unceasingly, and very often in doing this to make serious
-mistakes, as do all workers who are not embodied Redeemers. Their
-efforts may not come under the title of good works, and they may be
-condemned as a school of idle talkers, yet they are an outcome and
-fruition of this particular moment of time, when the ideas which
-they hold are greeted by the crowd with interest; and therefore
-their work is good, as the lotus-flower is good when it opens in the
-mid-day sun.
-
-None know more keenly and definitely than they that good works are
-necessary; only these cannot be rightly accomplished without
-knowledge. Schemes for Universal Brotherhood, and the redemption of
-mankind, might be given out plentifully by the great adepts of life,
-and would be mere dead-letter utterances while individuals remain
-ignorant, and unable to grasp the great meaning of their teachers.
-To Theosophists we say, let us carry out the rules given us for our
-society before we ask for any further schemes or laws. To the public
-and our critics we say, try to understand the value of good works
-before you demand them of others, or enter upon them rashly
-yourselves. Yet it is an absolute fact that without good works the
-spirit of brotherhood would die in the world; and this can never be.
-Therefore is the double activity of learning and doing most
-necessary; we have to do good, and we have to do it _rightly_, with
-knowledge.
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-It is well known that the first rule of the society is to carry out
-the object of forming the nucleus of a universal brotherhood. The
-practical working of this rule was explained by those who laid it
-down, to the following effect:—
-
-“HE WHO DOES NOT PRACTISE ALTRUISM; HE WHO IS NOT PREPARED TO SHARE
-HIS LAST MORSEL WITH A WEAKER OR POORER THAN HIMSELF; HE WHO
-NEGLECTS TO HELP HIS BROTHER MAN, OF WHATEVER RACE, NATION, OR
-CREED, WHENEVER AND WHEREVER HE MEETS SUFFERING, AND WHO TURNS A
-DEAF EAR TO THE CRY OF HUMAN MISERY; HE WHO HEARS AN INNOCENT PERSON
-SLANDERED, WHETHER A BROTHER THEOSOPHIST OR NOT, AND DOES NOT
-UNDERTAKE HIS DEFENCE AS HE WOULD UNDERTAKE HIS OWN—IS NO
-THEOSOPHIST.”
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-
-
-
- THE DEMAND OF THE NEOPHYTE.
-
- [Continuation of COMMENTS ON LIGHT ON THE PATH: By the Author.]
-
-“Before the voice can speak in the presence of the Masters.”
-
-Speech is the power of communication; the moment of entrance into
-active life is marked by its attainment.
-
-And now, before I go any further, let me explain a little the way in
-which the rules written down in “Light on the Path” are arranged.
-The first seven of those which are numbered are sub-divisions of the
-two first unnumbered rules, those with which I have dealt in the two
-preceding papers. The numbered rules were simply an effort of mine
-to make the unnumbered ones more intelligible. “Eight” to “fifteen”
-of these numbered rules belong to this unnumbered rule which is now
-my text.
-
-As I have said, these rules are written for all disciples, but for
-none else; they are not of interest to any other persons. Therefore
-I trust no one else will trouble to read these papers any further.
-The first two rules, which include the whole of that part of the
-effort which necessitates the use of the surgeon’s knife, I will
-enlarge upon further if I am asked to do so. But the disciple is
-expected to deal with the snake, his lower self, unaided; to
-suppress his human passions and emotions by the force of his own
-will. He can only demand assistance of a master when this is
-accomplished, or at all events, partially so. Otherwise the gates
-and windows of his soul are blurred, and blinded, and darkened, and
-no knowledge can come to him. I am not, in these papers, purposing
-to tell a man how to deal with his own soul; I am simply giving, to
-the disciple, knowledge. That I am not writing, even now, so that
-all who run may read, is owing to the fact that super-nature
-prevents this by its own immutable laws.
-
-The four rules which I have written down for those in the West who
-wish to study them, are as I have said, written in the ante-chamber
-of every living Brotherhood; I may add more, in the ante-chamber of
-every living or dead Brotherhood, or Order yet to be formed. When I
-speak of a Brotherhood or an Order, I do not mean an arbitrary
-constitution made by scholiasts and intellectualists; I mean an
-actual fact in supernature, a stage of development towards the
-absolute God or Good. During this development the disciple
-encounters harmony, pure knowledge, pure truth, in different
-degrees, and, as he enters these degrees, he finds himself becoming
-part of what might be roughly described as a layer of human
-consciousness. He encounters his equals, men of his own self-less
-character, and with them his association becomes permanent and
-indissoluble, because founded on a vital likeness of nature. To them
-he becomes pledged by such vows as need no utterance or framework in
-ordinary words. This is one aspect of what I mean by a Brotherhood.
-
-If the first rules are conquered the disciple finds himself standing
-at the threshold. Then if his will is sufficiently resolute his
-power of speech comes; a two-fold power. For, as he advances now, he
-finds himself entering into a state of blossoming, where every bud
-that opens throws out its several rays or petals. If he is to
-exercise his new gift, he must use it in its two-fold character. He
-finds in himself the power to speak in the presence of the masters;
-in other words, he has the right to demand contact with the divinest
-element of that state of consciousness into which he has entered.
-But he finds himself compelled, by the nature of his position, to
-act in two ways at the same time. He cannot send his voice up to the
-heights where sit the gods till he has penetrated to the deep places
-where their light shines not at all. He has come within the grip of
-an iron law. If he demands to become a neophyte, he at once becomes
-a servant. Yet his service is sublime, if only from the character of
-those who share it. For the masters are also servants; they serve
-and claim their reward afterwards. Part of their service is to let
-their knowledge touch him; his first act of service is to give some
-of that knowledge to those who are not yet fit to stand where he
-stands. This is no arbitrary decision, made by any master or teacher
-or any such person, however divine. It is a law of that life which
-the disciple has entered upon.
-
-Therefore was it written in the inner doorway of the lodges of the
-old Egyptian Brotherhood, “The labourer is worthy of his hire.”
-
-“Ask and ye shall have,” sounds like something too easy and simple
-to be credible. But the disciple cannot “ask” in the mystic sense in
-which the word is used in this scripture until he has attained the
-power of helping others.
-
-Why is this? Has the statement too dogmatic a sound?
-
-Is it too dogmatic to say that a man must have foothold before he
-can spring? The position is the same. If help is given, if work is
-done, then there is an actual claim—not what we call a personal
-claim of payment, but the claim of co-nature. The divine give, they
-demand that you also shall give before you can be of their kin.
-
-This law is discovered as soon as the disciple endeavours to speak.
-For speech is a gift which comes only to the disciple of power and
-knowledge. The spiritualist enters the psychic-astral world, but he
-does not find there any certain speech, unless he at once claims it
-and continues to do so. If he is interested in “phenomena,” or the
-mere circumstance and accident of astral life, then he enters no
-direct ray of thought or purpose, he merely exists and amuses
-himself in the astral life as he has existed and amused himself in
-the physical life. Certainly there are one or two simple lessons
-which the psychic-astral can teach him, just as there are simple
-lessons which material and intellectual life teach him. And these
-lessons have to be learned; the man who proposes to enter upon the
-life of the disciple without having learned the early and simple
-lessons must always suffer from his ignorance. They are vital, and
-have to be studied in a vital manner; experienced through and
-through, over and over again, so that each part of the nature has
-been penetrated by them.
-
-To return. In claiming the power of speech, as it is called, the
-Neophyte cries out to the Great One who stands foremost in the ray
-of knowledge on which he has entered, to give him guidance. When he
-does this, his voice is hurled back by the power he has approached,
-and echoes down to the deep recesses of human ignorance. In some
-confused and blurred manner the news that there is knowledge and a
-beneficent power which teaches is carried to as many men as will
-listen to it. No disciple can cross the threshold without
-communicating this news, and placing it on record in some fashion or
-other.
-
-He stands horror-struck at the imperfect and unprepared manner in
-which he has done this; and then comes the desire to do it well, and
-with the desire thus to help others comes the power. For it is a
-pure desire, this which comes upon him; he can gain no credit, no
-glory, no personal reward by fulfilling it. And therefore he obtains
-the power to fulfil it.
-
-The history of the whole past, so far as we can trace it, shows very
-plainly that there is neither credit, glory, or reward to be gained
-by this first task which is given to the Neophyte. Mystics have
-always been sneered at, and seers disbelieved; those who have had
-the added power of intellect have left for posterity their written
-record, which to most men appears unmeaning and visionary, even when
-the authors have the advantage of speaking from a far-off past. The
-disciple who undertakes the task, secretly hoping for fame or
-success, to appear as a teacher and apostle before the world, fails
-even before his task is attempted, and his hidden hypocrisy poisons
-his own soul, and the souls of those he touches. He is secretly
-worshipping himself, and this idolatrous practice must bring its own
-reward.
-
-The disciple who has the power of entrance, and is strong enough to
-pass each barrier, will, when the divine message comes to his
-spirit, forget himself utterly in the new consciousness which falls
-on him. If this lofty contact can really rouse him, he becomes as
-one of the divine in his desire to give rather than to take, in his
-wish to help rather than be helped, in his resolution to feed the
-hungry rather than take manna from Heaven himself. His nature is
-transformed, and the selfishness which prompts men’s actions in
-ordinary life suddenly deserts him.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
- THE ESOTERIC CHARACTER OF THE GOSPELS.
-
- “.... Tell us, when shall these things be? And what shall be the
- sign _of thy presence_, and _of the consummation of the age_?”[33]
- asked the Disciples of the MASTER, on the Mount of Olives.
-
------
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- St. Matthew xxiv., 3, _et seq._ The sentences italicised are those
- which stand corrected in the New Testament after the recent
- revision in 1881 of the version of _1611_; which version is full
- of errors, voluntary and involuntary. The word “presence,” for
- “coming,” and “the consummation of the age,” now standing for “the
- end of the world,” have altered, of late, the whole meaning, even
- for the most sincere Christians, if we exempt the Adventists.
-
------
-
-The reply given by the “Man of Sorrow,” the _Chréstos_, on his
-trial, but also on his way to triumph, as _Christos_, or Christ,[34]
-is prophetic, and very suggestive. It is a warning indeed. The
-answer must be quoted in full. Jesus ... said unto them:—
-
- “Take heed that _no man_ lead you astray. For many shall come in
- my name saying, I am the Christ; and shall lead many astray. And
- ye shall hear of wars ... but the end is not yet. _For nation
- shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; and there
- shall be famines and earthquakes in divers places._ But all these
- things are the beginning of travail.... Many false prophets shall
- arise, and shall lead many, astray ... then shall the end come ...
- when ye see the abomination of desolation which was spoken through
- Daniel.... Then if any man shall say unto you, _Lo, here is the
- Christ_, or There; believe him not.... If they shall say unto you,
- Behold, he is in the wilderness, go not forth; behold, he is in
- the inner chambers, believe them not. For as the lightning cometh
- forth from the East, and is seen even in the West, so shall be the
- _presence_ of the Son of Man,” etc., etc.
-
------
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- He who will not ponder over and master the great difference
- between the meaning of the two Greek words—χρηστος and χριστος
- must remain blind for ever to the true esoteric meaning of the
- Gospels; that is to say, to the living Spirit entombed in the
- sterile dead-letter of the texts, the very Dead Sea fruit of
- _lip_-Christianity.
-
------
-
-Two things become evident _to all_ in the above passages, now that
-their false rendering is corrected in the revision text: (_a_) “the
-coming of Christ,” means _the presence of_ CHRISTOS in a regenerated
-world, and not at all the actual coming in body of “Christ” Jesus;
-(_b_) this Christ is to be sought neither in the wilderness nor “in
-the inner chambers,” nor in the sanctuary of any temple or church
-built by man; for Christ—the true esoteric SAVIOUR—_is no man_, but
-the DIVINE PRINCIPLE in every human being. He who strives to
-resurrect the Spirit _crucified in him by his own terrestrial
-passions_, and buried deep in the “sepulchre” of his sinful flesh;
-he who has the strength to roll back _the stone of matter_ from the
-door of his own _inner_ sanctuary, he _has the risen Christ in
-him_.[35] The “Son of Man” is no child of the bond-woman—_flesh_,
-but verily of the free-woman—_Spirit_,[36] the child of man’s own
-deeds, and the fruit of his own spiritual labour.
-
------
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- For ye are the temple (“sanctuary” in the _revised_ N. T.) of the
- living God. (II. Cor. vi., 16.)
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Spirit, or the Holy Ghost, was feminine with the Jews, as with
- most ancient peoples, and it was so with the early Christians.
- _Sophia_ of the Gnostics, and the third Sephiroth _Binah_
- (the _female_ Jehovah of the Kabalists), are feminine
- principles—“Divine Spirit,” or _Ruach_. “_Achath Ruach Elohim
- Chiim._” “One is _She_, the Spirit of the Elohim of Life,” is said
- in “Sepher Yezirah.”
-
------
-
-On the other hand, at no time since the Christian era, have the
-precursor signs described in _Matthew_ applied so graphically and
-forcibly to any epoch as they do to our own times. When has nation
-arisen against nation more than at this time? When have
-“famines”—another name for destitute pauperism, and the famished
-multitudes of the proletariat—been more cruel, earthquakes more
-frequent, or covered such an area simultaneously, as for the last
-few years? Millenarians and Adventists of robust faith, may go on
-saying that “the coming of (the carnalised) Christ” is near at hand,
-and prepare themselves for “the end of the world.” Theosophists—at
-any rate, some of them—who understand the hidden meaning of the
-universally-expected Avatars, Messiahs, Sosioshes and Christs—know
-that it is no “end of the world,” but “the consummation of the age,”
-_i.e._, the close of a cycle, which is now fast approaching.[37] If
-our readers have forgotten the concluding passages of the article,
-“The Signs of the Times,” in LUCIFER for October last, let them read
-them over, and they will plainly see the meaning of this particular
-cycle.
-
------
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- There are several remarkable cycles that come to a close at the
- end of this century. First, the 5,000 years of the Kaliyug cycle;
- again the Messianic cycle of the Samaritan (also Kabalistic) Jews
- of the man connected with _Pisces_ (Ichthys or “Fish-man” _Dag_).
- It is a cycle, historic and not very long, but very occult,
- lasting about 2,155 solar years, but having a true significance
- only when computed by lunar months. It occurred 2410 and 255 B.C.,
- or when the equinox entered into the sign of the _Ram_, and again
- into that of _Pisces_. When it enters, in a few years, the sign of
- _Aquarius_, psychologists will have some extra work to do, and the
- psychic idiosyncrasies of humanity will enter on a great change.
-
------
-
-Many and many a time the warning about the “false Christs” and
-prophets who shall lead people astray has been interpreted by
-charitable Christians, the worshippers of the dead-letter of their
-scripture, as applying to mystics generally, and Theosophists most
-especially. The recent work by Mr. Pember, “Earth’s Earliest
-Ages,” is a proof of it. Nevertheless, it seems very evident that
-the words in Matthew’s Gospel and others can hardly apply to
-Theosophists. For these were never found saying that Christ is
-“Here” or “There,” in wilderness or city, and least of all in the
-“inner chamber” behind the altar of any modern church. Whether
-Heathen or Christian by birth, they refuse to materialise and thus
-degrade that which is the purest and grandest ideal—the symbol of
-symbols—namely, the immortal Divine Spirit in man, whether it be
-called Horus, Krishna, Buddha, or Christ. None of them has ever
-yet said: “I am the Christ”; for those born in the West feel
-themselves, so far, only _Chréstians_,[38] however much they may
-strive to become _Christians_ in Spirit. It is to those, who in
-their great conceit and pride refuse to win the right of such
-appellation by first leading the life of _Chrestos_;[39] to those
-who haughtily proclaim themselves _Christians_ (the glorified, the
-anointed) by sole virtue of baptism when but a few days old—that
-the above-quoted words of Jesus apply most forcibly. Can the
-prophetic insight of him who uttered this remarkable warning be
-doubted by any one who sees the numerous “false prophets” and
-pseudo-apostles (_of Christ_), now roaming over the world? These
-have split the one divine Truth into fragments, and broken, in the
-camp of the Protestants alone, the rock of the Eternal Verity into
-three hundred and fifty odd pieces, which now represent the bulk
-of their Dissenting sects. Accepting the number in round figures
-as 350, and admitting, for argument’s sake, that, at least, one of
-these may have the approximate truth, still 349 _must be
-necessarily false_.[40] Each of these claims to have Christ
-exclusively in its “inner chamber,” and denies him to all others,
-while, in truth, the great majority of their respective followers
-daily put Christ to death on the cruciform tree of matter—the
-“tree of infamy” of the old Romans—indeed!
-
------
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- The earliest Christian author, Justin Martyr, calls, in his first
- Apology, his co-religionists _Chrestians_, χρηστιανοι—not
- Christians.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- “Clemens Alexandrinus, in the second century, founds a serious
- argument on this paranomasia (lib. iii., cap. xvii., p. 53 _et
- circa_), that all who believed in _Chrest_ (_i.e._, “a good man”)
- both are, and are called Chrestians, that is, good men,”
- (Strommata, lib. ii. “Higgins’ _Anacalypsis_.”) And Lactantius
- (lib. iv., cap. vii.) says that it is only through _ignorance_
- that people call themselves Christians, instead of Chrestians:
- “_qui proper ignorantium errorem cum immutata litera Chrestum
- solent dicere_.”
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- In England alone, there are over 239 various sects. (See
- Whitaker’s Almanac.) In 1883, there were 186 denominations only,
- and now they steadily increase with every year, an additional 53
- sects having sprung up in only four years!
-
------
-
-The worship of the dead-letter in the Bible is but one more form of
-_idolatry_, nothing better. A fundamental dogma of faith cannot
-exist under a double-faced Janus form. “Justification” _by Christ_
-cannot be achieved at one’s choice and fancy, _either_ by “faith” or
-by “works” and James, therefore (ii., 25), contradicting Paul (Heb.
-xi., 31), and _vice versa_,[41] one of them must be wrong. Hence,
-the Bible is _not_ the “Word of God” but contains at best the words
-of fallible men and _imperfect_ teachers. Yet read _esoterically_,
-it does contain, if not the _whole_ truth, still, “_nothing but the
-truth_,” under whatever allegorical garb. Only: _Quot homines tot
-sententiæ_.
-
------
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- It is but fair to St. Paul to remark that this contradiction is
- surely due to later tampering with his Epistles. Paul was a
- Gnostic himself, _i.e._, A “Son of Wisdom,” and an Initiate into
- the true _mysteries of Christos_, though he may have thundered (or
- was made to appear to do so) against some Gnostic sects, of which,
- in his day, there were many. But his Christos was not Jesus of
- Nazareth, nor any living man, as shown so ably in Mr. Gerald
- Massey’s lecture, “Paul, the Gnostic Opponent of Peter.” He was an
- Initiate, a true “Master-Builder” or adept, as described in “Isis
- Unveiled,” Vol II., pp. 90-91.
-
------
-
-The “Christ principle,” the awakened and glorified Spirit of Truth,
-being universal and eternal, the true _Christos_ cannot be
-monopolized by any one person, even though that person has chosen to
-arrogate to himself the title of the “Vicar of Christ,” or of the
-“Head” of that or another State-religion. The spirits of “Chrest”
-and “Christ” cannot be confined to any creed or sect, only because
-that sect chooses to exalt itself above the heads of all other
-religions or sects. The name has been used in a manner so intolerant
-and dogmatic, especially in our day, that Christianity is now the
-religion of arrogance _par excellence_, a stepping-stone for
-ambition, a sinecure for wealth, sham and power; a convenient screen
-for hypocrisy. The noble epithet of old, the one that made Justin
-Martyr say that “_from the mere name_, which is imputed to us as a
-crime, _we are the most excellent_,”[42] is now degraded. The
-missionary prides himself with the so-called _conversion_ of a
-heathen, who makes of Christianity ever a _profession_, but rarely a
-religion, a source of income from the missionary fund, and a
-pretext, since the blood of Jesus has washed them all by
-anticipation, for every petty crime, from drunkenness and lying up
-to theft. That same missionary, however, would not hesitate to
-publicly condemn the greatest saint to eternal perdition and hell
-fires if that holy man has only neglected to pass through the
-fruitless and meaningless form of baptism by water with
-accompaniment of _lip_ prayers and vain ritualism.
-
------
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- ὁσοντε ὲκ τοῦ κατηγορουμένου ἡμῶν ὀνομάτος χρησότατοι ὑπάρχομεν
- (_First Apology_).
-
------
-
-We say “lip prayer” and “vain ritualism” knowingly. Few Christians
-among the laymen are aware even of the true meaning of the word
-_Christ_; and those of the clergy who happen to know it (for they
-are brought up in the idea that to study such subjects is _sinful_)
-keep the information secret from their parishioners. They demand
-blind, implicit faith, and _forbid inquiry as the one unpardonable
-sin_, though nothing of that which leads to the knowledge of the
-truth can be aught else than holy. For what is “Divine Wisdom,” or
-_Gnosis_, but the essential reality behind the evanescent
-appearances of objects in nature—the very soul of the manifested
-LOGOS? Why should men who strive to accomplish union with the one
-eternal and absolute Deity shudder at the idea of prying into its
-mysteries—however awful? Why, above all, should they use names and
-words the very meaning of which is a sealed mystery to them—a mere
-sound? Is it because an unscrupulous, power-seeking Establishment
-called a Church has cried “wolf” at every such attempt, and,
-denouncing it as “blasphemous,” has ever tried to kill the spirit of
-inquiry? But Theosophy, the “divine Wisdom,” has never heeded that
-cry, and has the courage of its opinions. The world of sceptics and
-fanatics may call it, one—an empty “_ism_”—the other “Satanism”:
-they can never crush it. Theosophists have been called Atheists,
-haters of Christianity, the enemies of God and the gods. They are
-none of these. Therefore, they have agreed this day to publish a
-clear statement of their ideas, and a profession of their faith—with
-regard to monotheism and Christianity, at any rate—and to place it
-before the impartial reader to judge them and their detractors on
-the merits of their respective faiths. No truth-loving mind would
-object to such honest and sincere dealing, nor will it be dazzled by
-any amount of new light thrown upon the subject, howsoever much
-startled otherwise. On the contrary, such minds will thank LUCIFER,
-perhaps, while those of whom it was said “_qui vult decipi
-decipiatur_”—let them be deceived by all means!
-
-The editors of this magazine propose to give a series of essays upon
-the hidden meaning or esotericism of the “New Testament.” No more
-than any other scripture of the great world-religions can the Bible
-be excluded from that class of allegorical and symbolical writings
-which have been, from the pre-historic ages, the receptacle of the
-secret teachings of the Mysteries of Initiation, under a more or
-less veiled form. The primitive writers of the _Logia_ (now the
-Gospels) knew certainly _the_ truth, and the _whole_ truth; but
-their successors had, as certainly, only dogma and form, which lead
-to hierarchical power at heart, rather than the spirit of the
-so-called Christ’s teachings. Hence the gradual perversion. As
-Higgins truly said, in the Christologia of St. Paul and Justin
-Martyr, we have the esoteric religion of the Vatican, a refined
-Gnosticism for the cardinals, a more gross one for the people. It is
-the latter, only still more materialized and disfigured, which has
-reached us in our age.
-
-The idea of writing this series was suggested to us by a certain
-letter published in our October issue, under the heading of “Are the
-Teachings ascribed to Jesus contradictory?” Nevertheless, this is no
-attempt to contradict or weaken, in any one instance, that which is
-said by Mr. Gerald Massey in his criticism. The contradictions
-pointed out by the learned lecturer and author are too patent to be
-explained away by any “Preacher” or Bible champion; for what he has
-said—only in more terse and vigorous language—is what was said of
-the descendant of Joseph Pandira (or Panthera) in “Isis Unveiled”
-(vol. ii., p. 201), from the Talmudic _Sepher Toldos Jeshu_. His
-belief with regard to the spurious character of Bible and New
-Testament, _as now edited_, is therefore, also the belief of the
-present writer. In view of the recent revision of the Bible, and its
-many thousands of mistakes, mistranslations, and interpolations
-(some confessed to, and others withheld), it would ill become an
-opponent to take any one to task for refusing to believe in the
-authorised texts.
-
-But the editors would object to one short sentence in the criticism
-under notice. Mr. Gerald Massey writes:—
-
-“What is the use of taking your ‘Bible oath’ that the thing is true,
-if the book you are sworn upon is a magazine of falsehoods already
-exploded, or just going off?”
-
-Surely it is not a symbologist of Mr. G. Massey’s powers and
-learning who would call the “Book of the Dead,” or the Vedas, or any
-other ancient Scripture, “a magazine of falsehoods.”[43] Why not
-regard in the same light as all the others, the Old, and, _in a
-still greater measure_, the _New_ Testament?
-
------
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- The extraordinary amount of information collated by that able
- Egyptologist shows that he has thoroughly mastered the secret of
- the production of the _New Testament_. Mr. Massey knows the
- difference between the spiritual, divine and purely metaphysical
- Christos, and the made-up “lay figure” of the carnalized Jesus. He
- knows also that the Christian canon, especially the _Gospels_,
- _Acts_ and _Epistles_, are made up of fragments of gnostic wisdom,
- the ground-work of which is _pre-Christian_ and built on the
- MYSTERIES of Initiation. It is the mode of theological
- presentation and the interpolated passages—such as in Mark xvi.
- from verse 9 to the end—which make of the Gospels a “magazine of
- (_wicked_) falsehoods,” and throw a slur on CHRISTOS. But the
- Occultist who discerns between the two currents (the true gnostic
- and the _pseudo_ Christian) knows that the passages free from
- theological tampering belong to archaic wisdom, and so does Mr.
- Gerald Massey, though his views differ from ours.
-
------
-
-All of these are “magazines of falsehoods,” if accepted in the
-exoteric dead-letter interpretations of their ancient, and
-especially their modern, theological glossarists. Each of these
-records has served in its turn as a means for securing power and of
-supporting the ambitious policy of an unscrupulous priesthood. All
-have promoted superstition, all made of their gods bloodthirsty and
-ever-damning Molochs and fiends, as all have made nations to serve
-the latter more than the God of Truth. But while cunningly-devised
-dogmas and intentional misinterpretations by scholiasts are beyond
-any doubt, “falsehoods already exploded,” the texts themselves are
-mines of universal truths. But for the world of the profane and
-sinners, at any rate—they were and still are like the mysterious
-characters traced by “the fingers of a man’s hand” on the wall of
-the Palace of Belshazzar: _they need a Daniel to read and understand
-them_.
-
-Nevertheless, TRUTH has not allowed herself to remain without
-witnesses. There are, besides great Initiates into scriptural
-symbology, a number of quiet students of the mysteries of archaic
-esotericism, of scholars proficient in Hebrew and other dead
-tongues, who have devoted their lives to unriddle the speeches of
-the Sphinx of the world-religions. And these students, though none
-of them has yet mastered all the “seven keys” that open the great
-problem, have discovered enough to be able to say: There _was_ a
-universal mystery-language, in which all the World Scriptures were
-written, from _Vedas_ to “Revelation,” from the “Book of the Dead”
-to the _Acts_. One of the keys, at any rate—the numerical and
-geometrical key[44] to the Mystery Speech is now rescued; an ancient
-language, truly, which up to this time remained hidden, but the
-evidences of which abundantly exist, as may be proven by undeniable
-mathematical demonstrations. If, indeed, the Bible is forced on the
-acceptance of the world in its dead-letter meaning, in the face of
-the modern discoveries by Orientalists and the efforts of
-independent students and kabalists, it is easy to prophesy that even
-the present new generations of Europe and America will repudiate it,
-as all the materialists and logicians have done. For, the more one
-studies ancient religious texts, the more one finds that the
-ground-work of the New Testament is the same as the ground-work of
-the Vedas, of the Egyptian theogony, and the Mazdean allegories. The
-atonements by blood—blood-covenants and blood-transferences from
-gods to men, and by men, as sacrifices to the gods—are the first
-key-note struck in every cosmogony and theogony; soul, life and
-blood were synonymous words in every language, pre-eminently with
-the Jews; and that blood-giving was life-giving. “Many a legend
-among (geographically) alien nations ascribes soul and consciousness
-in newly-created mankind to the blood of the god-creators. Berosus
-records a Chaldean legend ascribing the creation of a new race of
-mankind to the admixture of dust with the blood that flowed from the
-severed head of the god Belus. “On this account it is that men are
-rational and partake of divine knowledge,” explains Berosus.[45] And
-Lenormant has shown (_Beginnings of History_, p. 52, note) that “the
-Orphics ... said that the _immaterial part of man, his soul_ (his
-life) sprang from the blood of Dionysius Zagreus, whom ... Titans
-tore to pieces.” Blood “revivifies the dead”—_i.e._, interpreted
-metaphysically, it gives _conscious_ life and a soul to the man of
-matter or clay—such as the modern materialist is now. The mystic
-meaning of the injunction, “Verily I say unto you, except _ye eat
-the flesh_ of the Son of man and _drink his blood_, ye have not life
-in yourselves,” &c., can never be understood or appreciated at its
-true _occult_ value, except by those who hold some of the _seven
-keys_, and yet care little for St Peter.[46] These words, whether
-said by Jesus of Nazareth, or Jeshua Ben-Panthera, are the words of
-an INITIATE. They have to be interpreted with the help of _three_
-keys—one opening the _psychic_ door, the second that of physiology,
-and the third that which unlocks the mystery of terrestrial being,
-by unveiling the inseparable blending of theogony with anthropology.
-It is for revealing a few of these truths, with the _sole view of
-saving intellectual mankind from the insanities of materialism and
-pessimism_, that mystics have often been denounced as the servants
-of Antichrist, even by those Christians who are most worthy,
-sincerely pious and respectable men.
-
------
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- “The key to the recovery of the language, so far as the writer’s
- efforts have been concerned, was found in the use, strange to say,
- of the discovered integral ratio in numbers of diameter to
- circumference of a circle,” by a geometrician. “This ratio is
- 6,561 for diameter and 20,612 for circumference.” (Cabalistic
- MSS.) In one of the future numbers of “LUCIFER” more details will
- be given, with the permission of the discoverer.—Ed.
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- Cory’s _Anc. Frag._, p. 59, f. So do Sanchoniaton and Hesiod, who
- both ascribe the _vivifying_ of mankind to the spilt blood of the
- gods. But blood and _soul_ are one (_nephesh_), and the blood of
- the gods means here the informing soul.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- The existence of these _seven_ keys is virtually admitted,
- owing to deep research in the Egyptological lore, by Mr. G.
- Massey again. While opposing the teachings of “Esoteric
- Buddhism”—unfortunately misunderstood by him in almost every
- respect—in his Lecture on “The Seven Souls of Man,” he writes
- (p. 21):—
-
- “This system of thought, this mode of representation, this
- septenary of powers, in various aspects, had been established in
- Egypt, at least, seven thousand years ago, as we learn from
- certain allusions to Atum (the god ‘in whom the fatherhood was
- individualised as the _begetter of an eternal soul_,’ the
- _seventh_ principle of the Theosophists,) found in the
- inscriptions lately discovered at Sakkarah. I say in various
- aspects, _because the gnosis of the Mysteries was, at least,
- sevenfold in its nature_—it was Elemental, Biological, Elementary
- (human), Stellar, Lunar, Solar and Spiritual—and _nothing short of
- a grasp of the whole system can possibly enable us to discriminate
- the various parts, distinguish one from the other, and determinate
- the which and the what, as we try to follow the symbolical Seven
- through their several phases of character_.”
-
------
-
-The first key that one has to use to unravel the dark secrets
-involved in the mystic name of Christ, is the key which unlocked the
-door to the ancient mysteries of the primitive Aryans, Sabeans and
-Egyptians. The Gnosis supplanted by the Christian scheme was
-universal. It was the echo of the primordial wisdom-religion which
-had once been the heirloom of the whole of mankind; and, therefore,
-one may truly say that, in its purely metaphysical aspect, the
-Spirit of Christ (the divine _logos_) was present in humanity from
-the beginning of it. The author of the Clementine Homilies is right;
-the mystery of Christos—now supposed to have been taught by Jesus of
-Nazareth—“was identical” with that which _from the first_ had been
-communicated “_to those who were worthy_,” as quoted in another
-lecture.[47] We may learn from the Gospel _according_ to Luke, that
-the “worthy” were those who had been initiated into the mysteries of
-the Gnosis, and who were “accounted worthy” to attain that
-“resurrection from the dead” _in this life_ ... “those who knew that
-they could die no more, being equal to the angels as sons of God and
-sons of the Resurrection.” In other words, they were the great
-adepts _of whatever religion_; and the words apply to all those who,
-without being Initiates, strive and succeed, through personal
-efforts to _live the life_ and to attain the naturally ensuing
-spiritual illumination in blending their personality—the (“Son”)
-with (the “Father,”) their individual divine Spirit, _the God
-within_ them. This “resurrection” can never be monopolized by the
-Christians, but is the spiritual birth-right of every human being
-endowed with soul and spirit, whatever his religion may be. Such
-individual is a _Christ-man_. On the other hand, those who choose to
-ignore the Christ (principle) within themselves, must die
-_unregenerate heathens_—baptism, sacraments, lip-prayers, and belief
-in dogmas notwithstanding.
-
-In order to follow this explanation, the reader must bear in mind
-the real archaic meaning of the paronomasia involved in the two
-terms _Chréstos_ and _Christos_. The former means certainly more
-than merely “a good,” an “excellent man,” while the latter was never
-applied to any one living man, but to every Initiate at the moment
-of _his second birth and resurrection_.[48] He who finds Christos
-within himself and recognises the latter as his only “way,” becomes
-a follower and an _Apostle of Christ_, though he may have never been
-baptised, nor even have met a “Christian,” still less call himself
-one.
-
- H. P. B.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
------
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- “Gnostic and Historic Christianity.”
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- “Verily, verily, I say unto thee, except a man _be born again_ he
- cannot see the Kingdom of God.” (John iii. 4.) Here the birth
- _from above_, the spiritual birth, is meant, achieved at the
- supreme and last initiation.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- THE “SQUARE” IN THE HAND.
-
-
-I am unable to say where or when the events related in the following
-pages took place. Neither can I give any details concerning the
-personal circumstances of the narrator. All I know is that she was a
-young woman of French nationality, and that the “uncle” of whom she
-speaks—her senior by some thirty years—was more distinguished as a
-philosopher than as an enthusiast. Whether the conspiracy against
-the reigning authorities in which our heroine and her friends were
-implicated, happened to be of any historical importance or not, is
-also more than I can say. As my object in reproducing the narrative
-is merely to illustrate the curious operation through natural
-channels of laws, which are usually regarded as “occult,” and the
-activity of which on the material plane has given rise to the common
-notion of “miracle,” I do not propose to trouble the reader or
-myself with any preamble of merely local interest. So, without more
-introduction, I leave the diary of the writer to recount the
-adventure set down therein by her own hand.
-
- . . . . . . . .
-
-“I was concerned in a very prominent way in a political struggle for
-liberty and the people’s rights. My part in this struggle was,
-indeed, the leading one, but my uncle had been drawn into it at my
-instance, and was implicated in a secondary manner only. The
-government sought our arrest, and, for a time, we evaded all
-attempts to take us, but at last we were surprised and driven under
-escort in a private carriage to a military station, where we were to
-be detained for examination. With us was arrested a man popularly
-known as ‘Fou,’ a poor weakling whom I much pitied. When we arrived
-at the station which was our destination, ‘Fou’ gave some trouble to
-the officials. I think he fainted, but at all events his conveyance
-from the carriage to the _caserne_ needed the conjoined efforts of
-our escort, and some commotion was caused by his appearance among
-the crowd assembled to see us. Clearly the crowd was sympathetic
-with us and hostile to the military. I particularly noticed one
-woman who pressed forward as ‘Fou’ was being carried into the
-station, and who loudly called on all present to note his feeble
-condition and the barbarity of arresting a witless creature such as
-he. At that moment my uncle laid his hand on my arm and whispered:
-‘Now is our time; the guards are all occupied with ‘Fou;’ we are
-left alone for a minute; let us jump out of the carriage and run!’
-As he said this he opened the carriage door on the side opposite to
-the _caserne_ and alighted in the street. I instantly followed, and
-the people favouring us, we pressed through them and fled at the top
-of our speed down the road. As we ran I espied a pathway winding up
-a hill-side away from the town, and cried: ‘Let us go up there; let
-us get away from the streets!’ My uncle answered: ‘No, no; they
-would see us there immediately at that height, the path is too
-conspicuous. Our best safety is to lose ourselves in the town. We
-may throw them off our track by winding in and out of the streets.’
-Just then a little child, playing in the road, got in our way, and
-nearly threw us down as we ran. We had to pause a moment to recover
-ourselves. ‘That child may have cost us our lives,’ whispered my
-uncle breathlessly. A second afterwards we reached the bottom of the
-street which branched off right and left. I hesitated a moment; then
-we both turned to the right. As we did so—in the twinkling of an
-eye—we found ourselves in the midst of a group of soldiers coming
-round the corner. I ran straight into the arms of one of them, who
-the same instant knew me and seized me by throat and waist with a
-grip of iron. This was a horrible moment! The iron grasp was sudden
-and solid as the grip of a vice; the man’s arm held my waist like a
-bar of steel. ‘I arrest you!’ he cried, and the soldiers immediately
-closed round us. At once I realised the hopelessness of the
-situation; the utter futility of resistance. ‘_Vous n’avez pas
-besoin de me tenir ainsi_,’ I said to the officer; ‘_j’irai
-tranquillement_.’ He loosened his hold and we were then marched off
-to another military station, in a different part of the town from
-that whence we had escaped. The man who had arrested me was a
-sergeant or some officer in petty command. He took me alone with him
-into the guard-room, and placed before me on a wooden table some
-papers which he told me to fill in and sign. Then he sat down
-opposite to me and I looked through the papers. They were forms,
-with blanks left for descriptions specifying the name, occupation,
-age, address and so forth of arrested persons. I signed these, and
-pushing them across the table to the man, asked him what was to be
-done with us. ‘You will be shot,’ he replied, quickly and
-decisively. ‘Both of us?’ I asked. ‘Both,’ he replied. ‘But,’ said
-I, ‘my companion has done nothing to deserve death. He was drawn
-into this struggle entirely by me. Consider, too, his advanced age.
-His hair is white; he stoops, and, had it not been for the
-difficulty with which he moves his limbs, both of us would probably
-be at this moment in a place of safety. What can you gain by
-shooting an old man such as he?’ The officer was silent. He neither
-favoured nor discouraged me by his manner. While I sat awaiting his
-reply, I glanced at the hand with which I had just signed the
-papers, and a sudden idea flashed into my mind. ‘At least,’ I said,
-‘grant me one request. If my uncle _must_ die, _let me die first_.’
-Now I made this request for the following reason. In my right hand,
-the line of life broke abruptly halfway in its length; indicating a
-sudden and violent death. But the point at which it broke was
-terminated by a perfectly marked _square_, extraordinarily clear-cut
-and distinct. Such a square, occurring at the end of a broken line
-means _rescue_, _salvation_. I had long been aware of this strange
-figuration in my hand, and had often wondered what it presaged. But
-now, as once more I looked at it, it came upon me with sudden
-conviction that in some way I was destined to be delivered from
-death at the last moment, and I thought that if this be so it would
-be horrible should my uncle have been killed first. If _I_ were to
-be saved I should certainly save him also, for my pardon would
-involve the pardon of both, or my rescue the rescue of both.
-Therefore it was important to provide for his safety until after my
-fate was decided. The officer seemed to take this last request into
-more serious consideration than the first. He said shortly: ‘I may
-be able to manage that for you,’ and then at once rose and took up
-the papers I had signed. ‘When are we to be shot?’ I asked him.
-‘To-morrow morning,’ he replied, as promptly as before. Then he went
-out, turning the key of the guard-room upon me.
-
- . . . . . . . .
-
-“The dawn of the next day broke darkly. It was a terribly stormy
-day; great black lurid thunderclouds lay piled along the horizon,
-and came up slowly and awfully against the wind. I looked upon them
-with terror; they seemed so near the earth, and so like living,
-watching things. They hung out of the sky, extending long ghostly
-arms downwards, and their gloom and density seemed supernatural. The
-soldiers took us out, our hands bound behind us, into a quadrangle
-at the back of their barracks. The scene is sharply impressed on my
-mind. A palisade of two sides of a square, made of wooden planks,
-ran round the quadrangle. Behind this palisade, and pressed up close
-against it was a mob of men and women—the people of the town—come to
-see the execution. But their faces were sympathetic; an unmistakable
-look of mingled grief and rage, not unmixed with desperation—for
-they were a down-trodden folk—shone in the hundreds of eyes turned
-towards us. I was the only woman among the condemned. My uncle was
-there, and poor ‘Fou,’ looking bewildered, and one or two other
-prisoners. On the third and fourth sides of the quadrangle was a
-high wall, and in a certain place was a niche partly enclosing the
-trunk of a tree, cut off at the top. An iron ring was driven into
-the trunk midway, evidently for the purpose of securing condemned
-persons for execution. I guessed it would be used for that now. In
-the centre of the square piece of ground stood a file of soldiers,
-armed with carbines, and an officer with a drawn sabre. The palisade
-was guarded by a row of soldiers somewhat sparsely distributed,
-certainly not more than a dozen in all. A Catholic priest in black
-cassock walked beside me, and as we were conducted into the
-enclosure, he turned to me and offered religious consolation. I
-declined his ministrations, but asked him anxiously if he knew which
-of us was to die first. ‘_You_,’ he replied; ‘the officer in charge
-of you said you wished it, and he has been able to accede to your
-request.’ Even then I felt a singular joy at hearing this, though I
-had no longer any expectation of release. Death was, I thought, far
-too near at hand for that. Just then a soldier approached us, and
-led me, bare-headed, to the tree trunk, where he placed me with my
-back against it, and made fast my hands behind me with a rope to the
-iron ring. No bandage was put over my eyes. I stood thus, facing the
-file of soldiers in the middle of the quadrangle, and noticed that
-the officer with the drawn sabre placed himself at the extremity of
-the line, composed of six men. In that supreme moment I also noticed
-that their uniform was bright with steel accoutrements. Their
-helmets were of steel and their carbines, as they raised them and
-pointed them at me, ready cocked, glittered in a fitful gleam of
-sunlight with the same burnished metal. There was an instant’s
-stillness and hush while the men took aim; then I saw the officer
-raise his bared sabre as the signal to fire. It flashed in the air;
-then, with a suddenness impossible to convey, the whole quadrangle
-blazed with an awful light—a light so vivid, so intense, so
-blinding, so indescribable that everything was blotted out and
-devoured by it. It crossed my brain with instantaneous conviction
-that this amazing glare was the physical effect of being shot, and
-that the bullets had pierced my brain or heart, and caused this
-frightful sense of all-pervading flame. Vaguely I remembered having
-read or having been told that such was the result produced on the
-nervous system of a victim to death from fire-arms. ‘It is over,’ I
-said, ‘that was the bullets.’ But presently there forced itself on
-my dazed senses a sound—a confusion of sounds—darkness succeeding
-the white flash—then steadying itself into gloomy daylight; a
-tumult; a heap of stricken, tumbled men lying stone-still before me;
-a fearful horror upon every living face; and then ... it all burst
-on me with distinct conviction. The storm which had been gathering
-all the morning had culminated in its blackest and most electric
-point immediately over-head. The file of soldiers appointed to shoot
-me stood exactly under it. Sparkling with bright steel on head and
-breast and carbines, they stood shoulder to shoulder, a complete
-lightning conductor, and at the end of the chain they formed, their
-officer, at the critical moment, raised his shining, naked blade
-towards the sky. Instantaneously heaven opened, and the lightning
-fell, attracted by the burnished steel. From blade to carbine, from
-helmet to breastplate it ran, smiting every man dead as he stood.
-They fell like a row of nine-pins, blackened in face and hand in an
-instant—in the twinkling of an eye. _Dead._ The electric flame
-licked the life out of seven men in that second; not one moved a
-muscle or a finger again. Then followed a wild scene. The crowd,
-stupefied for a minute by the thunderbolt and the horror of the
-devastation it had wrought, recovered sense, and with a mighty shout
-hurled itself against the palisade, burst it, leapt over it and
-swarmed into the quadrangle, easily overpowering the unnerved
-guards. I was surrounded, eager hands unbound mine, arms were thrown
-about me; the people roared, and wept, and triumphed, and fell about
-me on their knees praising Heaven. I think rain fell, my face was
-wet with drops, and my hair—but I knew no more, for I swooned and
-lay unconscious in the arms of the crowd. My rescue had indeed come,
-and from the very Heavens!”
-
- ANNA KINGSFORD, M.D.
-
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-
- FREEDOM.
-
- Know, striving soul, on truth intent,
- That not with words by mortal sent—
- Faint shimmerings of earthly light—
- Shall ever-living truth be taught,
- Or light to gild the path be bought,
- That leads us upward from the night.
-
- But govern mind with ordered will,
- Subduing this with knowledge still,
- Fanning the spark within that glows,
- The essence of that power divine,
- The pledge to man from mystic time,
- The light from thrones above that flows.
-
- Then may the spirit, bathed in light,
- Soar upward from the realms of night,
- No more a fettered earth-bound thing,
- But freed from clay, and doubt, and slime,
- Triumphant over death and time!
- To the eternal ever cling!
-
- P. H. D.
-
- THE INVISIBLE WORLD.
-
-In many of the tasks of life the first step costs the great effort,
-and the investigation of truth in the higher regions of Nature
-justifies the familiar maxim. The first step for the modern inquirer
-is that which carries his consciousness across the threshold of
-matter into the invisible world. Never mind for the moment whether
-occult progress be attempted by a direct onslaught on the defences
-of the invisible world, or by purely internal combats with the
-desires of the lower self. The unseen must first become a reality
-for anyone who seriously desires to enter into relations with it,
-whether he sets his will to work to vanquish his own frailties, or
-the forces of Nature on the astral plane. An internal struggle with
-material desire undertaken for a spiritual purpose, just as much as
-the other kind of contest, is a recognition of the superior realm;
-and it is not a struggle of the kind we are contemplating at all, if
-it is merely undertaken for a worldly purpose, as thrifty habits may
-be cultivated, for instance, at the bidding of the grossest material
-selfishness. But though a recognition of the invisible world must in
-this way have been forced, at an early stage of his inquiry, on the
-mind of everyone who becomes an earnest explorer of Nature’s higher
-laws, its invisibility is a terrible barrier in the way of the
-progress that would otherwise be made by the throngs of intelligent
-materialists who people civilised countries at this epoch of our
-history. From the point of view of conventional thinkers—of those
-alike who sacrifice their Sunday mornings to provide for the
-contingency that there may be something in religion after all, and
-of those who are frankly incredulous of any Nature lying beyond the
-reach of instrumental research—a tremendous revolution in all their
-views of life is accomplished if they are somehow brought face to
-face with the reality of super-material phenomena, if they ever
-discover the invisible world and come to know it, or any part of it,
-as an unequivocal fact.
-
-Long experienced explorers of the unseen often forget how profoundly
-clouded the whole region seems from the shore of materialistic
-thought. Indeed, from the shore of other systems where habits of
-metaphysical speculation would lead men to repudiate the charge of
-materialism, the unseen appears to be equally impenetrable to all
-human faculties. It is as though we lived beside an ocean always
-shrouded from view by a belt of mist. A few persons are in the
-constant habit of pushing out beyond in boats, but these, when they
-come back, are told, “Nonsense! there is no ocean; you have been
-dreaming!” For the vast majority, the mist is an infinite void. Only
-by a minority have the few who have passed through it, been even
-encountered. Will anyone who knows his generation pretend to say
-that even among ordinary religious people the next world is a
-certain fact in Nature, like the next street? How many are there who
-do more than rest on the hypothesis that there may be somewhere a
-heaven to “go to” when the dreadful moment comes at which mortal man
-must perforce bid adieu to the warm precincts of the cheerful day.
-“God forbid!” a bishop is said to have piously remarked when warned,
-during danger at sea, that he would be in Heaven that night. The
-next world of commonplace orthodoxy is but too often regarded as a
-desperate resource for ruined men, whose fortune of life has been
-wrung from them to the last drop. For those who are bankrupt of
-breath, “let us trust” (as a frequent phrase expresses the idea)
-that some compensation may be provided by Providence hereafter,
-though it does all remain so hopelessly obscure.
-
-“Ah, if you could only show me that there really is a life beyond
-this—a perpetuation of this real individual Me after I am what my
-friends will call dead—you would be giving me a blessing that no
-words could over-estimate.” That is a passionate cry from many
-hearts to those who talk of other lives for the soul—of spiritual
-rewards, or the fruit of Karma in future states of existence.
-
-It is a cry which few people indeed, even among those who have been
-in contact with the invisible world, are in a position to satisfy.
-Most of us are obliged to reply: “This satisfaction can only be
-acquired by a resolute effort; it is impossible for us to bring you
-proof of what we know, to save you trouble. If you would know
-whether Africa exists, we cannot bring you Africa to prove it; we
-can only give you directions how to get there if you are willing to
-undertake the journey.” “But why,” we might ask, “cannot you believe
-the testimony of those who have had proof of the sort you require.”
-The answer always is in effect: “_C’est le premier pas qui coute_.
-It would be worth worlds to know, but to believe without personal
-knowledge—that would be an act of faith. I might as easily believe
-at once in the Roman Catholic Church.”
-
-There is a great difference, really, between the surrender of that
-reason claimed by ecclesiastical tyranny and the faith required to
-enable a seeker after truth to gain personal cognisance of the
-invisible world. The priest and the occultist both claim faith from
-the neophyte; but the first bids him develop this by strangling his
-reason, the second by satisfying it. Sensible faith is that which
-recognises the logic of facts appealing to human intelligence. It is
-stupid to believe that which you have no reason for believing; it is
-no less stupid to disbelieve that which there is reason to believe.
-The majority of modern men and women, indeed—fed exclusively on the
-husks of knowledge—are too profoundly ignorant of the records
-accumulated by those who have penetrated the unseen to be called
-stupid for undervaluing them. But on one or the other horn of the
-dilemma they must take their place. They are unconscious of the
-existence of the records left, or of the work done by students of
-occultism in its various phases; or they must be held responsible
-for defects of understanding. Does anyone say: “What are the records
-you refer to?” The answer would be analogous to one that might be
-given to a person brought up in American backwoods, on modern
-practicalities exclusively, and who in mature life should hear
-someone refer to classical literature as important. “What book do
-you want me to read?” he might ask. What would an accomplished
-University devotee of Greek poetry _think_ in reply, even if he
-tried to disguise his answer in polite terms?
-
-Any fairly considerable acquaintance with the literature of occult
-research—including in that broad designation records of any
-supermaterial phenomena—will put any man in a position in which he
-must either believe in the existence of the invisible world, or
-discover that he is an irrational being, whose “convictions” are
-merely acts of submission to the decrees of the multitude. And
-then, for most of those who perceive that they must believe, or
-who find that they cannot continue to disbelieve, some personal
-contact with some phases of the invisible world will probably
-follow in the sequence of events; because, once _believing_—once
-saturated with a complete conviction that there are other planes
-of Nature—these will present themselves to the mind as so
-interesting, that it becomes worth while to take trouble in order
-to get the gratification of beholding their phenomena in some way
-or other; and then success will sooner or later be attained. While
-people merely think “there _may be_ an invisible world, let us try
-if we can find it out,” they are easily baffled by failure. They
-draw one or two covers “blank” and retire from the effort
-declaring “there is nothing to be discovered; it is all a
-delusion.” The man who has read and assimilated what he has read
-is, as we have said above, saturated with a conviction on the
-subject. His state of mind remains unaffected by personal failure;
-and still impelled by the fascination of the idea, he will try
-again and again till he succeeds. When anyone says, “I _wish_ I
-could see something out of the common way, but I never have any
-luck in such things,” the answer is: “Then you certainly do not
-wish _much_.” Probably such people do not wish enough to take the
-trouble merely to study. What they wish is that conclusive
-phenomena demonstrating the existence of the invisible world
-should always be on view at some London theatre, where inquirers
-might go without liability to disappointment, when other
-engagements permitted.
-
-And yet, though it is so easy to blame and ridicule that attitude of
-mind, no one who has the influence of the higher occultism in his
-heart, and at the same time a capacity for sympathising with the
-best attributes of modern culture, can be otherwise than
-indefatigably anxious to waken up the present generation more fully
-to an appreciation of the sublime knowledge accessible to those who
-get across the outer barriers and come to realise the existence of
-the world beyond, once for all. Occultists will often fail to
-understand the situation aright. There are some who would do nothing
-but draw from their own knowledge of the invisible world a store of
-moral maxims, and serve these out to their brethren, fearing to
-suggest further inquiries lest danger should be incurred, for, of
-course, people are put in danger the higher they climb, falls being
-then more disastrous. But maxims to have any value must be in
-circuit with knowledge. “Be good!” is a sound maxim. “Be good
-children!” is often an efficient exhortation, but it will not
-survive the period when the persons addressed say “Why?” And all the
-educated world is saying “Why?” now in regard to injunctions which
-rest upon incredible assertions. Why is Society so tolerant of some
-misdoing which the Church has always specially condemned, though it
-lies outside the catalogue of offences like robbery and murder,
-proscribed by common convenience? Because maxims which merely rest
-upon religion have no longer any binding force; in other words,
-because religion is the science, or the sum total of the sciences of
-the invisible world, and men now claim to have cut and dried maxims
-overhauled on principles to which this age of science has accustomed
-them. It is quite possible to get this done. The fact that this _is_
-a scientific age is a declaration, in other words, that a time has
-come for putting a scientific complexion on religious thought; in
-other words again, for beginning to lead the public, in flocks,
-where hitherto rare pioneers only have penetrated in secret—across
-the threshold unto the limitless realms of the invisible world. By
-flocks we need not be supposed to mean crude masses of humanity
-selected on no system, but large numbers compared to the rare
-explorers of former times, considerable groups of the most
-intelligent and advanced minds of the age. A man of the present day,
-who has obtained the beautiful culture of modern civilisation, who
-may be an accomplished classic, a finely-trained man of science, a
-poet, an artist, and yet a person so ignorant or stupid (as to
-certain facets of his mind) as not to know anything about the
-invisible world, is a creature who provokes in the more enlightened
-observer a feeling analogous to that with which one might look at a
-lady of fashion, beautiful in the face, but whose winning draperies
-you know to hide ugly deformities or repulsive disease. Or treating
-the subject more abstractedly, this lovely culture of modern
-civilisation is like the soulless statue—the Galatea without life.
-Surely it is time that the gods informed the marble with the breath
-of the spirit; and have they not shown themselves ready to do this
-if the sculptor does but appeal to them?
-
-The man who penetrates, or gets into relations of some sort or other
-with the invisible world, will not necessarily be illuminated at
-once with a flood of exhilarating knowledge. The new realm may open
-out before the explorer in many different ways; and there is much
-going astray amidst its innumerable mazes for new comers, as a rule.
-But to discuss these perils in detail would be to attempt an essay
-on all branches of occultism. For the present we are arguing merely
-that to make no journeys there at all is to give up progress, to
-move no longer with the onward stream of evolution, to fall out of
-the line of march.
-
-It is deplorable that men of intelligence, in the present day,
-should neglect to pick up the threads which might guide them to
-some knowledge of the invisible world, for two reasons, or rather,
-the reasons why this is deplorable may be divided into two great
-classes, those which have reference to knowledge, as such, and
-those which have reference to the spiritual interests of mankind.
-To people who appreciate spiritual interests, nothing else is
-relatively worth a thought; but for men of modern civilisation at
-large knowledge is worth everything for its own sake; it is the
-end they are pursuing, and this being so, it is astounding that
-they neglect the most subtle, fascinating and intricate phenomena
-of all nature, those which have to do with supermaterial planes of
-existence and natural force. And from that point of view, any
-passage across the threshold of the invisible world will do as
-well as any other. The tables that move without hands, the pencils
-that write without fingers, are surely linked with mysteries of
-Nature not yet understood, and, therefore, worth examination.
-Investigations concerning them bring one face to face with the
-forces of the invisible world.
-
-Are we told that science cannot grasp these phenomena to investigate
-them? The statement is not true. They cannot be grasped at any time
-by anybody, but no more can the depths of stellar space be fathomed
-by whoever chooses whenever it suits his leisure. Great telescopes
-are scarce; nights perfectly fitted for observation must be waited
-for with patience. But when they come, the men who have got the
-telescopes take observations and make reports, and their records are
-studied by other astronomers, and used as the foundation of
-theories, as the raw material of current knowledge. If similar
-methods were adopted with even the crudest spiritualistic, not to
-speak of scientific, research in occult mystery, the world at large
-would not be blundering about as it is, with absurd denials of facts
-known to thousands. Clairvoyance again, by flights of perception
-through the invisible world, bridges gulfs that are materially
-impassable. But what does modern culture know of it? As a scientific
-fact, it is enormously more certain than the existence, for example,
-of the satellites of Mars; but who disputes the latter fact? They
-have been seen, those satellites, if they are not seen easily or
-often, and therefore their existence has been established. But five
-newspapers out of six in the present day—barometers of prevailing
-belief—would profess to disbelieve in clairvoyance if the subject
-had to be mentioned; to _disbelieve_ in that which is an elementary
-truth having to do with the most easily accessible region of
-supermaterial knowledge!
-
-To gain touch with this is _not_ to be put at once in possession of
-that certainty concerning the survival after death of the real “Me”
-in each case, which is the great point to be established for most
-European doubters, but it is the first step. Students of the laws
-which govern existence in the higher realms of Nature can gain no
-hearing from those to whom that great point remains unsatisfied.
-Once the higher realm is felt to be a reality, the possibility of
-gaining a knowledge of the laws which prevail there presents itself
-to the mind with an altogether new significance. And finally, closer
-attention shows that this knowledge certainly has been gained; that
-the path leading to spiritual wisdom is defined; that with some of
-the powers which reign in the invisible world we may enter into more
-or less definite relations beforehand here; that of all practical
-pursuits which men of clear heads and resolute purpose can set
-themselves to, during the space of incarnate earthly life,
-immeasurably the most practical, in so far as it has to do with
-objects which dwarf all others in their importance, are those which
-have to do with the culture and development of that Higher Self
-within them which has its natural home in the invisible world, and
-is but a passing guest in the midst of material occupations. To use
-and apply the knowledge of supermaterial laws which occult studies
-disclose is a life’s task, but of that for the moment we need not
-speak. It is with the heedless and frivolous generation at large
-that we are concerned in this appeal—with those who waste great
-gifts of intelligence and splendid energies and courage and
-indomitable industry on transitory pursuits, on money-making (in
-excess), on discovery and research that merely subserve passing
-material wants, on the struggle for flattering distinctions which
-cast a meteoric gleam on the brief journey to personal oblivion, on
-the “solid realities” of the visible world, which, like the ice
-drops of a hailstorm, are as hard as bullets one minute and
-dissolved in new forms the next. It is all for want of taking the
-first step that they are squandering their lives. Their immediate
-predecessors _knew_ no more than they perhaps of the hidden
-mysteries, but they were less critical of the distorted shape in
-which pious tradition told them of the future and of the powers
-above. The heirs of modern thought have grown in knowledge of
-molecules and of the transmutation of energy but as they look back
-upon the beliefs which contented their forefathers, they perceive
-that their fuller science of the physical plane has entirely shut
-out the wide, vague prospect that used to gleam on the earlier
-horizon.
-
-Rational human creatures cannot afford to leave that prospect in a
-permanent eclipse. The neglect of all facts concerned with the
-durabilities of existence; the concentration of effort and interest
-on the hastily dissolving view of its physically manifested phases,
-is the crying folly of the period. To spring at once into complete
-conscious spiritual relationship with the higher planes of Nature is
-not an easy achievement. The great Realities lie within a domain
-which makes no direct appeal to the five senses of the earthly body,
-and the only way of approaching their comprehension is to press on
-through the darkness, beyond which other men before us declare that
-they have reached illuminated altitudes.
-
-But meanwhile, the torpor of the educated world at large in regard
-to the promptings which ought now to stir its activity in this
-direction is little less than idiotic. Idiotic relatively, that is
-to say, to spiritual culture. There are men of illustrious fame in
-the various provinces of intellectual culture, who are behaving
-relatively to their own higher potentialities, as the luckless
-victim of a shallow skull may behave towards the teachings of
-science and art. But there is always one thing to be remembered
-about them; they are curable. Their cure can be undertaken with sure
-certainty of success at any moment, but for each sufferer from that
-inner cataract which shuts out from his consciousness the prospect
-of the invisible world, there is only one surgeon who can
-successfully perform the necessary operation—the man himself. What
-we can do who have accomplished the feat for ourselves, is to
-encourage others—not to _go_, but to come and do likewise.
-
- A. P. SINNETT.
-
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-
-
- THE MYSTIC THOUGHT.
-
- When will come rest? Is it alone the silent grave
- That can bring true peace to the restless soul
- That striving, yearns to reach some distant goal,
- Toss’d like a boat on the crest of a mighty wave?
- Is there oblivion in the cold, dark tomb
- To dull the heart and kill the abject fear
- Which loads the sense, when unknown dangers loom
- From regions that our sense perceives not here?
- When from the soul goes forth the mystic thought
- That we have higher purpose than we know,
- And each must reap the fruit he cares to sow,
- Or learn the duties he himself has taught:
- Can this be killed?—no, surely!—but that lamp can save
- That burns within us here—and burns beyond the grave.
-
- P. H. DALBIAC.
-
-
- =THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT=:
-
- _THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN_.
-
- (_Continued._)
-
- ---------------------
-
- BY MABEL COLLINS,
-
- Author of “THE PRETTIEST WOMAN IN WARSAW,” &c., &c.,
- And Scribe of “THE IDYLL OF THE WHITE LOTUS,” and “THROUGH THE GATES
- OF GOLD.”
-
- ---------------------
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-Adventure is said to be sweet to the young; if it was so to Hilary,
-he must soon have found abundant pleasure in the possession of
-enough sweets. For the next few days scarcely an hour passed without
-an event large enough in his eyes to be an adventure.
-
-He was ready at the hour Fleta had named; and had provided against
-all probable contingencies by taking with him the smallest possible
-amount of luggage. For aught he knew they might have to climb
-mountains in the course of this journey. And moreover he knew
-Fleta’s unprincess-like distaste for superfluities; he would not
-have been surprised to see her start in her riding habit and take no
-luggage at all. The difficulty he dreaded was his mother’s surprise
-at this scant provision of his. But good luck—or was it something
-else?—took her away. She was summoned to visit a sick friend at a
-little distance out of the city, and said good-bye to Hilary before
-her departure. So Hilary made his preparations without being
-troubled by criticism.
-
-At noon a lad presented himself at the door of the Estanol’s house,
-with a note which he said he was to give into Hilary’s own hand.
-Hilary immediately went to him and took it, as he guessed it was
-from Fleta. A single line!—and no signature!—
-
-“I am waiting for you outside the north gate.”
-
-Hilary took his valise in his hand, afraid to hire a carriage lest
-it should not please her that he brought any eyes to note their
-meeting. He walked out of the city by the quietest side streets he
-could select, hoping not to meet any of his friends. He met no one
-he knew, and with a sigh of relief passed out through the gate and
-walked on to the broad country road beyond it. Drawn up under some
-trees was a handsome travelling carriage, with four horses and
-postilions. Hilary was surprised. He had not expected so much
-luxury. When he reached the carriage he was even more surprised.
-Fleta was hardly dressed as for a journey; she wore a much richer
-robe than usual, and her head and shoulders were covered with
-beautiful black lace. She leaned back in a corner of the roomy
-carriage, with a voluptuous dreamy expression on her face which was
-new to Hilary. Opposite her sat Father Amyot. Hilary could not but
-regard the priest with amazement. Was the town to lose its favourite
-confessor? How then could all the gossips in it be prevented from
-hearing of the Princess Fleta’s journey? But Hilary resolved not to
-harass himself with conjecture. He entered the carriage and Fleta
-motioned to him to seat himself at her side.
-
-At her side! Yes, that was his place. And Father Amyot, the father
-confessor, beloved and almost worshipped by the people, in whose
-breast reposed the secrets and the sorrows of the city; Father
-Amyot, who was the model of piety to all who knew him, sat opposite
-in the carriage. Did he watch the lovers? Seemingly not. His eyes
-were lowered and his gaze was apparently fixed on his clasped hands.
-He sat there like a statue. Once or twice when Hilary glanced at his
-face, he fancied he must be there unwillingly. Was it so? Was he
-Fleta’s tool and servant held by her domineering temper to do her
-bidding? Surely not. Father Amyot was too well known as a man of
-power for the idea to be credible. Hilary checked himself for the
-hundredth time in these hopeless speculations and determined to
-enjoy the moment he was in possession of and not trouble about the
-next one till it came; nor yet endeavour to read others’ hearts. And
-so this young philosopher went open eyed, as he believed, to his
-destruction.
-
-The carriage rolled away at a great speed; it was drawn by four
-beautiful Russian horses, and the postilions were Fleta’s own, and
-accustomed to her likings. She was a most daring and intrepid rider
-and nothing pleased her in the way of motion except great speed. She
-was a lover of animals and her horses were the finest kept in the
-city. It was strange to Hilary to try and realise her singular
-independence of position, as to-day he felt impelled to. For himself
-he was still to a great extent in leading strings; he had made no
-position for himself, nor even planned any career; he was dependent
-on his mother’s fortune, and consequently, to a certain extent,
-could act only according to her approval. He was still so young that
-all this seemed natural enough. But Fleta was younger than himself,
-though it was difficult always to remember it, so dominant was her
-temper. A glance at her fresh face still so soft in its outlines as
-to have something childish about it when her expression permitted;
-at her figure, so slender in spite of its stateliness, recalled the
-fact that the Princess was indeed only a girl. Did the man who was
-about to marry her suppose that his young Queen was a creature
-unformed, fresh from the schoolroom, altogether malleable to his
-hand?
-
-During the whole of the afternoon they drove on with scarcely a
-pause, and with very little conversation to pass the time. Yet for
-Hilary it flew with swift wings. The mere sensation of his novel
-position was enough for him as yet. To be beside Fleta and to watch
-her mysterious face for so long together satisfied for the moment
-his longing soul. Fleta herself seemed buried in profound thought.
-She sat silent, her eyes on the country they passed through, but her
-mind, as far as Hilary could judge, wandering in some remote region.
-As for Father Amyot, his regard remained fixed upon a small crucifix
-which he held hidden within his clasped hands, and now and then his
-lips moved in prayer, while, on that austere face, no expression
-seemed to have room but that of adoration or contemplation of the
-divine.
-
-At sundown they stopped at a very small way-side inn. Hilary could
-not believe they were going to stay here, for it looked little more
-than a place where men drink and horses are fed. Yet so it was. The
-carriage was driven round to the side of the small house, the horses
-taken out of it, and Fleta led the way in at a side door, followed
-by her two companions.
-
-Within they found a motherly, plain and kindly woman, who evidently
-knew Fleta well; Hilary learned afterwards that this landlady had
-been a kitchen maid in the royal household. And now he saw strange
-things indeed. For this inn was in reality nothing but a drinking
-shop for the drivers who passed along the road. It had no parlour,
-nor any accommodation for travellers of a better sort. And Fleta
-knew this, as was evident at once. She drew a hard chair forward,
-close to the great fire which flamed up the wide open chimney, and
-sat down seemingly quite at her ease.
-
-“We must have some supper,” she said to the landlady. “Get us what
-you can. Can you find room for these gentlemen to-night?”
-
-The landlady came near to Fleta and spoke in a low voice; the
-Princess laughed.
-
-“There are no bedrooms in this house, it seems,” she said, aloud,
-“in fact, it is not an hotel. Shall we drive on or shall we sit here
-through the night?”
-
-“The horses are tired,” said Father Amyot, speaking for the first
-time since they had left the city.
-
-“True,” said Fleta, absently—for already she appeared to be thinking
-of something else. “I suppose, then, we must stay here.”
-
-Hilary had never passed, nor ever contemplated passing, a night in
-such rough fashion. He was fond of comfort, or rather of luxury. But
-what could he do when his Princess, the greatest lady in the land,
-set him the example. Any protest would have appeared effeminate, and
-his pride held him silent. Still, when after a very indifferent
-supper, they all returned to the hard wooden chairs beside the fire,
-Hilary for the moment very sincerely wished himself at home in his
-own comfortable rooms. As he wished this, suddenly he became aware
-that Fleta’s dark eyes had turned upon him, and he would not look
-up, for he believed she had read his thought. He wished he could
-have hidden it from her, for he had no mind to be held as more
-effeminate than herself.
-
-There was a sort of second kitchen even rougher and more cheerless
-than the one in which they sat; and there the postilions and other
-men, the ordinary customers of the house, were crowded together,
-drinking and talking and singing. Their presence was horrid to
-Hilary, who was conscious of refined susceptibilities, but Fleta
-seemed quite indifferent to the noise they made and the odour of
-their coarse tobacco; or rather it might be that she was unaware of
-anything outside her own thoughts. She sat, her chin on her hand,
-looking into the fire; and so graceful and perfect was her attitude
-that she had the air of being a masterpiece of art placed amid the
-commonest surroundings. She looked more lovely than ever from the
-contrast, but yet the incongruity was painful to Hilary.
-
-The silence in the room in which they sat became the more marked
-from contrast with the increasing noise in the crowded room without.
-At last, however, the hour came for the house to be closed and the
-landlady politely showed her customers the door; all except those
-who were travellers on the road. These, including the postilions,
-gathered into the chimney corner and became quiet, at last falling
-sound asleep. To Hilary it seemed now that he was living through a
-painful dream, and he longed for the awakening—willing to awake,
-even if that meant that he would be at home and away from Fleta.
-
-At last sleep came to him, and his head drooped forward; he sat
-there, upright in the wooden chair, fast asleep. When he awoke it
-was with a sense of pain in every limb, from the posture which he
-had maintained; and he could scarcely refrain from crying out when
-he attempted to move. But he instantly remembered that if the others
-were sleeping he must not wake them. Then he quickly looked round.
-Father Amyot sat near, looking just as he had looked since they
-entered the house; he might have been a statue. Fleta’s chair was
-empty.
-
-Hilary roused himself, sat up and stared at her empty place; then
-looked all round the kitchen. An idea occurred to him; possibly the
-landlady had found some resting place for the young Princess. A
-sense of oppression came over him; the kitchen seemed stifling. He
-rose with difficulty and stretched himself, then found his way out
-into the air. It was a glorious morning; the sun had just risen, the
-world seemed like a beautiful woman seen in her sleep. How sharp the
-sweet fresh air was! Hilary drew a deep breath of it. The country in
-which this lonely little inn stood was exceedingly lovely, and at
-this moment it wore its most fascinating appearance. A sense of
-great delight came upon Hilary; the uneasiness of the past night was
-at an end, and he was glad now and full of youth and strength. He
-turned and walked away from the house, soon leaving the road and
-plunging into the dewy grass. There was a stream in the valley, and
-here he determined to bathe. He soon reached it, and in another
-moment had hastily undressed, and was plunged in the ice-cold water.
-An intoxicating sense of vigour came over him as he experienced the
-keen contact. Never had he felt so full of life as now! It was not
-possible to remain long in the water, it was so intensely cold; he
-sprang out again and stood for a moment on the bank in the brilliant
-morning sunshine, looking like a magnificent figure carved by the
-god of the day, his flesh gleaming in the light. Slowly he began at
-last to put on his dress, feeling as if in some way this meant a
-partial return and submission to civilization. Something of the
-savage which lay deep hidden in him had been roused and touched. A
-fire burned that hitherto he had never felt, and which made him long
-for pure freedom and uncriticised life. And this was Hilary Estanol!
-It seemed incredible that a draught of fresh morning air, a plunge
-into ice-cold water beneath the open sky, should have been enough to
-unloose the savage in him, which was held fast beneath his
-conventional and languid self, as it is in all of us, and all those
-whom we meet in ordinary life. He moved hastily, striding on as
-though he were hurrying to some end, but it was merely a new
-pleasure in motion. There was a grove of old yew trees near the
-stream; a grove which with the superstitious was held to be sacred.
-That it should be revered was no wonder, so stately were the ancient
-trees, so deep the shadow they cast. Hilary went towards this grove,
-attracted by its splendid appearance; as he approached its margin a
-dim sense of familiarity came over him. Never had he left the city
-by this road, yet it seemed to him that he had entered the grove of
-yews by the early morning light already many a time. We are all
-accustomed to meet with this curious sensation; Hilary laughed at it
-and put it away. What if he had visited this spot in a dream? Now it
-was broad daylight, and he felt himself young and a giant. He
-plunged into the deep shadow, pleased by the contrast it made to the
-brilliant light without.
-
-Suddenly his heart leaped within him and his brain reeled. For there
-before him, stood Fleta; and the brilliant Princess looked like a
-spirit of the night, so pale and grave and proud was her face and so
-much a part did she seem of the deep shadow of the wood.
-
-“Is it you?” she said with a smile, a smile of mystery and deep
-unfathomable knowledge.
-
-“Yes it is!” he answered, and felt, as he spoke, that he said
-something in those words which he did not himself understand. They
-stood side by side for a moment in silence; and then Hilary
-remembered himself to be alone with this woman, alone with her in
-the midst of the world. They were separated by the hour from other
-men and women, for the world still lay asleep; they were separated
-by the deep shadow of the wood from all moving life that answered to
-the sun. They were alone—and overwhelmed by this sudden sense of
-solitude Hilary spoke out his soul.
-
-“Princess,” he said, “I am ready to be your blind servant, your dumb
-slave, speaking and seeing only when you tell me. You know well why
-I am willing to be the tool in your hands. It is because I love you.
-But you must pay a price for your tool if you would have it! I
-cannot only worship at your feet. Fleta, you must give yourself to
-me, absolutely, utterly. Marry that man to whom you are betrothed if
-you desire to be a queen, but to me you must give your love,
-yourself. Ah! Fleta, you cannot refuse me!”
-
-Fleta stood still a long moment, her eyes upon his face.
-
-“No,” she said, “I cannot refuse you.”
-
-And to Hilary, for an instant of horror, it seemed to him that in
-her eyes was a glance of ineffable scorn. Yet there was love in the
-smile on her lips and in the touch of her hand as she laid it in
-his.
-
-“The bond is made,” she said, “all that you can take of me is yours.
-And I will pay you for your love with my love. Only do not forget
-that you and I are different—that we are after all, two persons—that
-we cannot love in exactly the same way. Do not forget this!”
-
-Hilary knew not what to answer. As she spoke the last words he
-recognised his princess, he saw the queen before him. What did she
-mean? Well, he was so unhappy that his love had gone from him to a
-lady of royal birth. It could not be undone, this folly. He must be
-content to take that part which a subject may take in the life of a
-queen, even though he be her lover. The thought brought a pang, a
-swift stab to his heart and a sigh burst from his lips. Fleta put
-her hand on his arm.
-
-“Do not be sad so soon,” she said, “let us wait for trouble. Come,
-let us go out into the sunshine.”
-
-They went out, hand in hand; they wandered down beside the stream
-and looked into the gleaming waters.
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
-That day the journey began early, and was very protracted. Twice
-during it they halted at little inns to rest the horses and to
-obtain what food they could. By the evening they had entered upon
-the most deserted region of the great forest which was one of the
-prides of the country. The King’s hunting seat, where he now was,
-stood in a part of this forest, but in quite another region, a long
-distance from this wild place where Hilary and his companions now
-were. Hilary had never been within the forest, as few from the city
-ever penetrated it except as part of the King’s retinue, and then
-they only saw such tracts of it as were preserved and in order. Of
-this wilder region practically little was known, and the spirit of
-adventure within Hilary made him rejoice to find that their journey
-led them through this unpopulated district. His curiosity as to
-their destination was not now very acute, for the experiences of the
-passing moments were all sufficient. It is true that he was
-conscious of the great gulf fixed between himself and Fleta. He knew
-her to be his superior in every respect. He knew not only that he
-must always be separated from her by their difference in station but
-that he was more vitally separated from her by their difference in
-thought—and that even now. But he was made happy by a look of love
-that plunged deep from her eyes into his own now and again, and he
-was thrilled to the heart when her hand touched his with a light and
-delicate pressure that he alone could understand. Ah! that secret
-understanding which separates lovers from all the rest of the world.
-How sweet it is! How strange it is, too, for they are overpowered by
-a mutual sense of sympathy which appears to be a supreme
-intelligence, giving each the power to look into the other’s heart.
-Dear moments are they when this is realised, when all life outside
-the sacred circle in which the two dwell is obscure and dim, while
-that within is rich, and strong, and sweet. Hilary lived supremely
-content only in the consciousness of being near this woman whom he
-loved; for now that he had actually asked her love, and been granted
-it, nothing else existed for him save that sweet fact. He was
-indifferent to the hardships, and, indeed, probable dangers, of the
-journey they were upon, which might have made a more intrepid spirit
-uneasy; for now he was content to suffer, or even to die, if all
-conditions were shared with Fleta. All her life could not be shared
-with him, but all his could be shared with her. When a man reaches
-this point, and is content to face such a state of things between
-himself and the woman he loves, he may be reckoned as being in love
-indeed.
-
-Quite late at night it was when this day’s journey ended, and the
-splendid horses were really tired out. But a certain point evidently
-had to be reached, and the postilions pushed on. Fleta at last
-seemed to grow a little anxious, and several times rose in the
-carriage to look on ahead; once or twice she inquired of the
-postilions if they were certain of their way. They answered yes;
-though how that could be was to Hilary a mystery, for they had been
-for a long while travelling over mere grass tracts, of which there
-were many, to his eyes undistinguishable one from the other. But the
-postilions either had landmarks which he could not detect, or else
-knew their way very well. At last they stopped; and in the dim light
-Hilary saw that there was a gate at the side of the track, a gate
-wide enough to drive through, but of the very simplest construction.
-It might have defended merely a spot where young trees were planted,
-or some kind of preserving done; and it was set in a fence of the
-same character, almost entirely hidden by thick growth of wild
-shrubs. The Princess Fleta produced from her dress a whistle on
-which she sounded a clear ringing note, and then everybody sat still
-and waited. It seemed to Hilary that it was quite a long while that
-they waited; perhaps it was not really long, but the night was so
-still, the silence so profound, the feeling of expectancy so strong.
-He was, for the first time since they started, really very curious
-as to what would happen next. What did happen at last was this.
-There was a sound of laughter and footsteps, and presently two
-figures appeared at the gate; one that of a tall man, the other that
-of a young, slight girl. The gate was unlocked and thrown wide open,
-and a moment later the young girl was in the carriage, embracing
-Fleta with the greatest enthusiasm and delight. Hilary hardly knew
-how everything happened, but presently the whole party was standing
-together inside the gate, the carriage had driven in and was out of
-sight. Then the tall man shut and locked the gate, after which he
-turned back, and walked on ahead with the young girl at his side,
-while Hilary followed with Fleta. The moon had risen now, and Hilary
-could see her beautiful face plainly, wearing on it an unusually gay
-and happy expression; her lips seemed to smile at her own thoughts.
-The sweet gladness in her face made Hilary’s heart spring with joy.
-It could not be rejoining her friends that made her so glad, for
-they had gone on and left her alone with him.
-
-“Fleta—my princess—no, my Fleta,” he said, “are you happy to be with
-me? I think you are!”
-
-“Yes, I am happy to be with you—but I am not Fleta.”
-
-“Not Fleta!” echoed Hilary, in utter incredulity.
-
-He stopped, and catching his companion’s hand, looked into her face.
-She glanced up, and her eyes were full of shy coquetry and ready
-gaiety.
-
-“I might be her twin sister, might I not, if I am not Fleta herself?
-Ah! no, Fleta’s fate is to live in a court—mine to live in a forest
-Live!—no, it is not life!”
-
-What was it in that voice that made his heart grow hot with passion?
-Fiercely he exclaimed to himself that it _was_, it _must_, be
-Fleta’s voice. No other woman could speak in such tones—no other
-woman’s words give him such a sense of maddening joy.
-
-“Oh! yes,” he said, “it is life—when one loves, one lives anywhere.”
-
-“Yes, perhaps, when one loves!” was the answer.
-
-“You told me this morning that you loved me, Fleta!” cried Hilary in
-despair.
-
-“Ah! but I am not Fleta,” was the mocking answer. It sounded like
-mockery indeed as she spoke. And yet the voice was Fleta’s. There
-was no doubt of that. He looked, he listened, he watched. The voice,
-the face, the glorious eyes, were Fleta’s. It was Fleta who was
-beside him, say she what she might.
-
-They had been following the others all this while, and had now
-reached a clearing in the wood, where was a garden full of sweet
-flowers, as Hilary could tell at once by the rich scents that came
-to him on the night air.
-
-“I am glad we have reached the house,” said his companion, “for I am
-very tired and hungry. Are not you? I wonder what we shall have for
-supper. You know this is an enchanted place which we call the palace
-of surprises. We never know what will happen next. That is why one
-can enjoy a holiday here as one can enjoy it no where else. At home
-there is a frightful monotony about the eating and drinking
-Everything is perfect, of course, but it is always the same. Now
-here one is fed like a Russian one day, and a Hungarian the next.
-There is a perpetual novelty about the menus, and yet they are
-always good. Is not that extraordinary. And oh! the wines, great
-heavens! what a cellar our sainted father keeps. I can only bless,
-with all my heart, the long dead founders of his order, who
-instituted such a system.”
-
-Hilary had regarded his companion with increasing amazement during
-this speech. Certainly it was unlike Fleta. Was she acting for his
-benefit? But at the words “sainted father” another idea thrust that
-one out of his head. What had become of Father Amyot? He had not
-seen him leave the carriage, or approach the house.
-
-“Oh, your holy companion has gone to his brethren,” said the girl,
-with a laugh. “They have a place of their own where they torture
-themselves and mortify the flesh. But they entertain us well, and
-that is what I care for. We will have a dance to-night. Oh! Hilary,
-the music here! It is better than that of any band in the world!”
-
-“If you are not, Fleta, how do you know my name?”
-
-“Simple creature! What a question! Why, Fleta has told me all about
-you. Did you never hear that the princess had a foster-sister, and
-that none could ever tell which was which, so like were we—and are
-we! Did you never hear that Fleta’s mother was blonde, and dull, and
-plain, and that Fleta is like none of her own family? Oh, Hilary,
-you, fresh from the city, you know nothing!”
-
-A sudden remembrance crossed Hilary’s mind.
-
-“I _have_ heard,” he said, “that no one could tell where Fleta had
-drawn her beauty from. But I believe you draw it from your own
-beautiful soul!”
-
-“Ah, you still think me Fleta? I have had some happy hours in the
-city before now when Fleta has let me play at being a princess. Ah,
-but the men all thought the princess in a strange, charming,
-delightful humour on these days. And when next they saw her, that
-humour was gone, and they were afraid to speak to her. Come in. I am
-starving!”
-
-They had entered a wide, low doorway, and stood now within the great
-hall. What a strange hall it was! The floor was covered with the
-skins of animals, many of them very handsome skins; and great jars
-held flowering plants, the scent from which made the air rich and
-heavy. A wood fire burned on the wide hearth, and before it, still
-in the dress she had travelled in, stood—Fleta.
-
-Yes, Fleta.
-
-The girl who stood at Hilary’s side laughed and clapped her hands as
-he uttered a cry of amazement, even of horror.
-
-“This is some of your magic, Fleta!” he exclaimed involuntarily.
-
-The Princess turned at his words. She was looking singularly grave
-and stern; her glance gave Hilary a sense of almost fear.
-
-“No,” she answered in a low, quiet voice that had a tone, as Hilary
-fancied, of pain, “it is not magic. It is all very natural. This is
-Adine, my little sister; so like me that I do not know her from
-myself.”
-
-She drew Adine to her with a gesture which had a protecting
-tenderness in it. This was the Princess who spoke, queen-like in her
-kindness. Hilary stood, unable to speak, unable to think, unable to
-understand. Before him stood two girls—each Fleta. Only by the
-difference of expression could he detect any difference between
-them. One threw him back the most coquettish and charming glance, as
-she went towards her grave sister. He could feel keenly how vitally
-different the two were. Yet they stood side by side, and though
-Fleta said “my little sister” there was no outward difference
-between them. Adine was as tall, as beautiful—and the same in
-everything!
-
-“Do not be startled,” said Fleta quietly, “you will soon grow used
-to the likeness.”
-
-“Though I doubt,” added Adine, with a wicked glance from her
-brilliant eyes, “whether you will ever tell us apart except when we
-are not together.”
-
-“Come,” said Fleta, “let us go and wash the travel stains off. It is
-just supper time.”
-
-Fleta talked of travel stains, but as Hilary looked at her queenly
-beauty, he thought she seemed as fresh as though she had but from
-this moment come from the hands of her maid. However, the two went
-away arm in arm, Adine turning at the door to have one last glance
-of amusement at Hilary’s utterly perplexed face. He was left alone,
-and he remained standing where he was, without power of thought or
-motion.
-
-Presently some one came and touched him on the shoulder; this was
-necessary in order to attract his attention. It was the tall man who
-had come to the gate to meet them. He was very handsome, and with
-the most cheerful and good-natured expression; his blue eyes were
-full of laughter.
-
-“Come,” he said, “come and see your room. I am master of the
-ceremonies here; apply to me for anything you want—even information!
-I may, or may not give it, according to the decision of the powers
-that be. Call me Mark. I have a much longer name, in fact,
-half-a-dozen much longer ones, and a few titles to boot; but they
-would not interest you, and in the midst of a forest where nobody
-has any dignity, a name of one syllable is by far the best.” While
-he talked on like this, apparently indifferent as to whether Hilary
-listened or no, he led the way out of the hall and down a wide,
-carpeted corridor. He opened the last door in this, and ushered
-Hilary in.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
- THE SCIENCE OF LIFE.
-
-What is Life? Hundreds of the most philosophical minds, scores of
-learned well-skilled physicians, have asked themselves the question,
-but to little purpose. The veil thrown over primordial Kosmos and
-the mysterious beginnings of life upon it, has never been withdrawn
-to the satisfaction of earnest, honest science. The more the men of
-official learning try to penetrate through its dark folds, the more
-intense becomes that darkness, and the less they see, for they are
-like the treasure-hunter, who went across the wide seas to look for
-that which lay buried in his own garden.
-
-What is then this Science? Is it biology, or the study of life in
-its general aspect? No. Is it physiology, or the science of organic
-function? Neither; for the former leaves the problem as much the
-riddle of the Sphinx as ever; and the latter is the science of death
-far more than that of life. Physiology is based upon the study of
-the different organic functions and the organs necessary to the
-manifestations of life, but that which science calls living matter,
-is, in sober truth, _dead matter_. Every molecule of the living
-organs contains the germ of death in itself, and begins dying as
-soon as born, in order that its successor-molecule should live only
-to die in its turn. An organ, a natural part of every living being,
-is but the medium for some special function in life, and is a
-combination of such molecules. The vital organ, the _whole_, puts
-the mask of life on, and thus conceals the constant decay and death
-of its parts. Thus, neither biology nor physiology are the science,
-nor even branches of the _Science of Life_, but only that of the
-_appearances_ of life. While true philosophy stands Œdipus-like
-before the Sphinx of life, hardly daring to utter the paradox
-contained in the answer to the riddle propounded, materialistic
-science, as arrogant as ever, never doubting its own wisdom for one
-moment, biologises itself and many others into the belief that it
-has solved the awful problem of existence. In truth, however, has it
-even so much as approached its threshold? It is not, surely, by
-attempting to deceive itself and the unwary in saying that life is
-but the result of molecular complexity, that it can ever hope to
-promote the truth. Is vital force, indeed, only a “phantom,” as
-Du-Bois Reymond calls it? For his taunt that “life,” as something
-independent, is but the _asylum ignorantiæ_ of those who seek refuge
-in abstractions, when direct explanation is impossible, applies with
-far more force and justice to those materialists who would blind
-people to the reality of facts, by substituting bombast and
-jaw-breaking words in their place. Have any of the five divisions of
-the functions of life, so pretentiously named—Archebiosis,
-Biocrosis, Biodiæresis, Biocænosis and Bioparodosis[49], ever helped
-a Huxley or a Hæckel to probe more fully the mystery of the
-generations of the humblest ant—let alone of man? Most certainly
-not. For life, and everything pertaining to it, belongs to the
-lawful domain of the _metaphysician_ and psychologist, and physical
-science has no claim upon it. “That which hath been, is that which
-shall be; and that which hath been is named already—and it is known
-that it is MAN”—is the answer to the riddle of the Sphinx. But “man”
-here, does not refer to _physical_ man—not in its esoteric meaning,
-at any rate. Scalpels and microscopes may solve the mystery of the
-material parts of _the shell of man_: they can never cut a window
-into his soul to open the smallest vista on any of the wider
-horizons of being.
-
------
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- Or Life-origination, Life-fusion, Life-division, Life-renewal and
- Life-transmission.
-
------
-
-It is those thinkers alone, who, following the Delphic injunction,
-have cognized life in their _inner_ selves, those who have studied
-it thoroughly in themselves, before attempting to trace and analyze
-its reflection in their outer shells, who are the only ones rewarded
-with some measure of success. Like the fire-philosophers of the
-Middle Ages, they have skipped over the _appearances_ of light and
-fire in the world of effects, and centred their whole attention upon
-the producing arcane agencies. Thence, tracing these to the one
-abstract cause, they have attempted to fathom the MYSTERY, each as
-far as his intellectual capacities permitted him. Thus they have
-ascertained that (1) the _seemingly_ living mechanism called
-physical man, is but the fuel, the material, upon which life feeds,
-in order to manifest itself; and (2) that thereby the inner man
-receives as his wage and reward the possibility of accumulating
-additional experiences of the terrestrial illusions called lives.
-
-One of such philosophers is now undeniably the great Russian
-novelist and reformer, Count Lef N. Tolstoi. How near his views are
-to the esoteric and philosophical teachings of higher Theosophy,
-will be found on the perusal of a few fragments from a lecture
-delivered by him at Moscow before the local Psychological Society.
-
-Discussing the problem of life, the Count asks his audience to
-admit, for the sake of argument, _an impossibility_. Says the
-lecturer:—
-
-Let us grant for a moment that all that which modern science longs
-to learn of life, it has learnt, and now knows; that the problem has
-become as clear as day; that it is clear how organic matter has, by
-simple adaptation, come to be originated from inorganic material;
-that it is as clear how natural forces may be transformed into
-feelings, will, thought, and that finally, all this is known, not
-only to the city student, but to every village schoolboy, as well.
-
-I am aware, then, that such and such thoughts and feelings originate
-from such and such motions. Well, and what then? Can I, or cannot I,
-produce and guide such motions, in order to excite within my brain
-corresponding thoughts? The question—what are the thoughts and
-feelings I ought to generate in myself and others, remains still,
-not only unsolved, but even untouched.
-
-Yet it is precisely this question which is the _one_ fundamental
-question of the central idea of life.
-
-Science has chosen as its object a few manifestations that accompany
-life; and _mistaking_[50] the part for the whole, called these
-manifestations the integral total of life....”
-
------
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- “Mistaking” is an erroneous term to use. The men of science know
- but too well that what they teach concerning life is a
- materialistic fiction contradicted at every step by logic and
- fact. In this particular question science is abused, and made to
- serve personal hobbies and a determined policy of crushing in
- humanity every spiritual aspiration and thought. “_Pretending_ to
- mistake” would be more correct.—H. P. B.
-
------
-
-The question inseparable from the idea of life is not _whence_ life,
-but _how one should live_ that life: and it is only by first
-starting with this question that one can hope to approach some
-solution in the problem of existence.
-
-The answer to the query “How are we to live?” appears so simple to
-man that he esteems it hardly worth his while to touch upon it.
-
-... One must live the best way one can—that’s all. This seems at
-first sight very simple and well known to all, but it is by far
-neither as simple nor as well known as one may imagine....
-
-The idea of life appears to man in the beginning as a most simple
-and self-evident business. First of all, it seems to him that life
-is in himself, in his own body. No sooner, however, does one
-commence his search after that life, in any one given spot of the
-said body, than one meets with difficulties. Life is not in the
-hair, nor in the nails; neither is it in the foot nor the arm, which
-may both be amputated; it is not in the blood, it is not in the
-heart, and it is not in the brain. It is everywhere and it is
-nowhere. It comes to this: life cannot be found in any of its
-dwelling-places. Then man begins to look for life in Time; and that,
-too, appears at first a very easy matter.... Yet again, no sooner
-has he started on his chase than he perceives that here also the
-business is more complicated than he had thought. Now, I have
-_lived_ fifty-eight years, so says my baptismal church record. But I
-know that out of these fifty-eight years I slept over twenty. How
-then? have I lived all these years, or have I not? Deduct the months
-of my gestation, and those I passed in the arms of my nurse, and
-shall we call this life, also? Again, out of the remaining
-thirty-eight years, I know that a good half of that time I slept
-while moving about; and thus, I could no more say in this case,
-whether I lived during that time or not. I may have lived a little,
-and vegetated a little. Here again, one finds that in time, as in
-the body, life is everywhere, yet nowhere. And now the question
-naturally arises, whence, then, that life which I can trace to
-nowhere? Now—will I learn.... But it so happens that in this
-direction also, what seemed to me so easy at first, now seems
-impossible. I must have been searching for something else, not for
-my life, assuredly. Therefore, once we have to go in search of the
-whereabouts of life—if search we have to—then it should be neither
-in space nor in time, neither as cause nor effect, but as a
-something which I cognize within myself as quite independent from
-Space, time and causality.
-
-That which remains to do now is to study _self_. But how do I
-cognize life in myself?
-
-This is how I cognize it. I know, to begin with, that I live; and
-that I live wishing for myself everything that is good, wishing this
-since I can remember myself, to this day, and from morn till night.
-All that lives outside of myself is important in my eyes, but only
-in so far as it co-operates with the creation of that which is
-productive of _my_ welfare. The Universe is important in my sight
-only because it can give _me_, pleasure.
-
-Meanwhile, something else is bound up with this knowledge in me of
-my existence. Inseparable from the life I feel, is another cognition
-allied to it; namely, that besides myself, I am surrounded with a
-whole world of living creatures, possessed, as I am myself, of the
-same instinctive realization of their exclusive lives; that all
-these creatures live for their own objects, which objects are
-foreign to me; that those creatures do not know, nor do they care to
-know, anything of my pretensions to an exclusive life, and that all
-these creatures, in order to achieve success in their objects, are
-ready to annihilate me at any moment. But this is not all. While
-watching the destruction of creatures similar in all to myself, I
-also know that for me too, for that precious ME in whom alone life
-is represented, a very speedy and inevitable destruction is lying in
-wait.
-
-It is as if there were two “I’s” in man; it is as if they could
-never live in peace together; it is as if they were eternally
-struggling, and ever trying to expel each other.
-
-One “I” says, “I alone am living as one should live, all the rest
-only seems to live. Therefore, the whole _raison d’être_ for the
-universe is in that _I_ may be made comfortable.”
-
-The other “I” replies, “The universe is not for thee at all, but for
-its own aims and purposes, and it cares little to know whether thou
-art happy or unhappy.”
-
-Life becomes a dreadful thing after this!
-
-One “I” says, “I only want the gratification of all my wants and
-desires, and that is why I need the universe.”
-
-The other “I” replies, “All animal life lives only for the
-gratification of its wants and desires. It is the wants and desires
-of animals alone that are gratified at the expense and detriment of
-other animals; hence the ceaseless struggle between the animal
-species. Thou art an animal, and therefore thou hast to struggle.
-Yet, however successful in thy struggle, the rest of the struggling
-creatures must sooner or later crush thee.”
-
-Still worse! life becomes still more dreadful....
-
-But the most terrible of all, that which includes in itself the
-whole of the foregoing, is that:—
-
-One “I” says, “I want to live, to live for ever.”
-
-And that the other “I” replies, “Thou shalt surely, perhaps in a few
-minutes, die; as also shall die all those thou lovest, for thou and
-they are destroying with every motion your lives, and thus
-approaching ever nearer suffering, death, all that which thou so
-hatest, and which thou fearest above anything else.”
-
-This is the worst of all....
-
-To change this condition is impossible.... One can avoid moving,
-sleeping, eating, even breathing, but one cannot escape from
-thinking. One thinks, and that thought, _my_ thought, is poisoning
-every step in my life, as a personality.
-
-No sooner has man commenced a conscious life than that consciousness
-repeats to him incessantly without respite, over and over the same
-thing again. “To live such life as you feel and see in your past,
-the life lived by animals and many men too, lived in _that_ way,
-which made you become what you are now—is no longer possible. Were
-you to attempt doing so, you could never escape thereby the struggle
-with all the world of creatures which live as you do—for their
-personal objects; and then those creatures will inevitably destroy
-you.”...
-
-To change this situation is impossible. There remains but one thing
-to do, and that is always done by him who, beginning to live,
-transfers his objects in life outside of himself, and aims to reach
-them.... But, however far he places them outside his personality, as
-his mind gets clearer, none of these objects will satisfy him.
-
-Bismarck, having united Germany, and now ruling Europe—if his reason
-has only thrown any light upon the results of his activity—must
-perceive, as much as his own cook does who prepares a dinner that
-will be devoured in an hour’s time, the same unsolved contradiction
-between the vanity and foolishness of all he has done, and the
-eternity and reasonableness of that which exists for ever. If they
-only think of it, each will see as clearly as the other; _firstly_,
-that the preservation of the integrity of Prince Bismarck’s dinner,
-as well as that of powerful Germany, is solely due: the preservation
-of the former—to the police, and the preservation of the latter—to
-the army; and that, so long only as both keep a good watch. Because
-there are famished people who would willingly eat the dinner, and
-nations which would fain be as powerful as Germany. Secondly, that
-neither Prince Bismarck’s dinner, nor the might of the German
-Empire, coincide with the aims and purposes of universal life, but
-that they are in flagrant contradiction with them. And thirdly, that
-as he who cooked the dinner, so also the might of Germany, will both
-very soon die, and that so shall perish, and as soon, both the
-dinner and Germany. That which shall survive alone is the Universe,
-which will never give one thought to either dinner or Germany, least
-of all to those who have cooked them.
-
-As the intellectual condition of man increases, he comes to the idea
-that no happiness connected with his personality is an achievement,
-but only a necessity. Personality is only that incipient state from
-which begins life, and the ultimate limit of life....
-
-Where, then, does life begin, and where does it end, I may be asked?
-Where ends the night, and where does day commence? Where, on the
-shore, ends the domain of the sea, and where does the domain of land
-begin?
-
-There is day and there is night; there is land and there is sea;
-there is life and there is _no_ life.
-
-Our life, ever since we became conscious of it, is a pendulum-like
-motion between two limits.
-
-One limit is, an absolute unconcern for the life of the infinite
-Universe an energy directed only toward the gratification of one’s
-own personality.
-
-The other limit is a complete renunciation of that personality, the
-greatest concern with the life of the infinite Universe, in full
-accord with it, the transfer of all our desires and good will from
-one’s self, to that infinite Universe and all the creatures outside
-of us.[51]
-
-The nearer to the first limit, the less life and bliss, the closer
-to the second, the more life and bliss. Therefore, man is ever
-moving from one end to the other; _i.e._ he lives. THIS MOTION IS
-LIFE ITSELF.
-
-And when I speak of life, know that the idea of it is indissolubly
-connected in my conceptions with that of _conscious_ life. No other
-life is known to me except conscious life, nor can it be known to
-anyone else.
-
-We call life, the life of animals, organic life. But this is no life
-at all, only a certain state or condition of life manifesting to us.
-
-But what is this consciousness or mind, the exigencies of which
-exclude personality and transfer the energy of man outside of him
-and into that state which is conceived by us as the blissful state
-of love?
-
-What is conscious mind? Whatsoever we may be defining, we have to
-define it with our conscious mind. Therefore, with what shall we
-define mind?...
-
-If we have to define all with our mind, it follows that conscious
-mind cannot be defined. Yet all of us, we not only know it, but it
-is the only thing which is given to us to know undeniably....
-
-It is the same law as the law of life, of everything organic, animal
-or vegetable, with that one difference that we _see_ the
-consummation of an intelligent law in the life of a plant. But the
-law of conscious mind, to which we are subjected as the tree, is
-subjected to its law, we _see_ it not, but fulfil it....
-
------
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- This is what the Theosophists call “living _the_ life”—in a
- nut-shell.—H. P. B.
-
------
-
-We have settled that life is that which is not our life. It is
-herein that lies hidden the root of error. Instead of studying that
-life of which we are conscious within ourselves, absolutely and
-exclusively—since we can know of nothing else—in order to study it,
-we observe that which is devoid of the most important factor and
-faculty of our life, namely, intelligent consciousness. By so doing,
-we act as a man who attempts to study an object by its shadow or
-reflection does.
-
-If we know that substantial particles are subjected during their
-transformations to the activity of the organism; we know it not
-because we have observed or studied it, but simply because we
-possess a certain familiar organism united to us, namely the
-organism of our animal, which is but too well known to us as the
-material of our life; _i.e._ that upon which we are called to work
-and to rule by subjecting it to the law of reason.... No sooner has
-man lost faith in life, no sooner has he transferred that life into
-that which is no life, than he becomes wretched, and sees death....
-A man who conceives life such as he finds it in his consciousness,
-knows neither misery, nor death: for all the good in life for him is
-in the subjection of his animal to the law of reason, to do which is
-not only in his power, but takes place unavoidably in him. The death
-of particles in the animal being, we know. The death of animals and
-of man, as an animal, we know; but we know nought about the death of
-conscious mind, nor can we know anything of it, _just because that
-conscious mind is the very life itself_. And _Life can never be
-Death_....
-
-The animal lives an existence of bliss, neither seeing nor knowing
-death, and dies without cognizing it. Why then should man have
-received the gift of seeing and knowing it, and why should death be
-so terrible to him that it actually tortures his soul, often forcing
-him to kill himself out of sheer fear of death? Why should it be so?
-Because the man who sees death is a sick man, one who has broken the
-law of his life, and lives no longer a conscious existence. He has
-become an animal himself, an animal which also has broken the law of
-life.
-
-The life of man is an aspiration to bliss, and that which he aspires
-to is given to him. The light lit in the soul of man is bliss and
-life, and that light can never be darkness, as there exists—verily
-there exists for man—only this solitary light which burns within his
-soul.
-
- ------------------
-
-We have translated this rather lengthy fragment from the Report of
-Count Tolstoi’s superb lecture, because it reads like the echo of
-the finest teachings of the universal ethics of true theosophy. His
-definition of life in its abstract sense, and of the life every
-earnest theosophist ought to follow, each according to, and in the
-measure of, his _natural_ capacities—is the summary and the Alpha
-and the Omega of practical psychic, if not spiritual life. There are
-sentences in the lecture which, to the average theosophist will seem
-too hazy, and perhaps incomplete. Not one will he find, however,
-which could be objected to by the most exacting, practical
-occultist. It may be called a treatise on the Alchemy of Soul. For
-that “solitary” light in man, which burns for ever, and can never be
-darkness in its intrinsic nature, though the “animal” outside us may
-remains blind to it—is that “Light” upon which the Neo Platonists of
-the Alexandrian school, and after them the Rosecroix and especially
-the Alchemists, have written volumes, though to the present day
-their true meaning is a dark mystery to most men.
-
-True, Count Tolstoi is neither an Alexandrian nor a modern
-theosophist; still less is he a Rosecroix or an Alchemist. But that
-which the latter have concealed under the peculiar phraseology of
-the Fire-philosophers, purposely confusing cosmic transmutations
-with Spiritual Alchemy, all that is transferred by the great Russian
-thinker from the realm of the metaphysical unto the field of
-practical life. That which Schelling would define as a realisation
-of the identity of subject and object in the man’s inner Ego, that
-which unites and blends the latter with the universal Soul—which is
-but the identity of subject and object on a higher plane, or the
-unknown Deity—all that Count Tolstoi has blended together without
-quitting the terrestrial plane. He is one of those few _elect_ who
-begin with intuition and end with _quasi_-omniscience. It is the
-transmutations of the baser metals—the _animal mass_—into gold and
-silver, or the philosopher’s stone, the development and
-manifestation of man’s higher, SELF which the Count has achieved.
-The _alcahest_ of the inferior Alchemist is the _All-geist_, the
-all-pervading Divine Spirit of the higher Initiate; for Alchemy was,
-and is, as very few know to this day, as much a spiritual philosophy
-as it is a physical science. He who knows nought of one, will never
-know much of the other. Aristotle told it in so many words to his
-pupil, Alexander: “It is not a stone,” he said, of the philosopher’s
-stone. “_It is in every man and in every place_, and at all seasons,
-and is called the _end_ of all philosophers,” as the _Vedanta_ is
-_the end_ of all philosophies.
-
-To wind up this essay _on the Science of Life_, a few words may be
-said of the eternal riddle propounded to mortals by the Sphinx. To
-fail to solve the problem contained in it, was to be doomed to sure
-death, as the Sphinx of life devoured the unintuitional, who would
-live only in their “animal.” He who lives for Self, and only for
-_Self_, will surely die, as the higher “I” tells the lower “animal”
-in the Lecture. The riddle has seven keys to it, and the Count opens
-the mystery with one of the highest. For, as the author on “Hermetic
-Philosophy” beautifully expressed it: “The real mystery most
-familiar and, at the same time, most unfamiliar to every man, _into
-which he must be initiated or perish as an atheist, is himself_. For
-him is the elixir of life, to quaff which, before the discovery of
-the philosopher’s stone, is to drink the beverage of death, while it
-confers on the adept and the _epopt_, the true immortality. He may
-know truth as it really is—_Aletheia_, the breath of God, or Life,
-the conscious mind in man.”
-
-This is “the Alcahest which dissolves all things,” and Count Tolstoi
-has well understood the riddle.
-
- H. P. B.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- SIN AGAINST LIFE.
-
-A newspaper paragraph lately declared that a certain American lady
-of great wealth, residing in London, had conceived the strange
-desire to possess a cloak made of the soft warm down on the breasts
-of birds of Paradise. Five hundred breasts, it was said, were
-required for this purpose, and two skilful marksmen, the story went
-on to aver, had been sent to New Guinea to shoot the poor little
-victims whose wholesale slaughter must be accomplished to gratify
-this savage whim. We rejoice to observe that the whole statement has
-been flatly contradicted by the _World_, apparently on the best
-possible authority; but, however little the lady concerned may
-deserve the reproach which the authors of the calumny endeavoured to
-evoke against her, the feeling it may have excited is worth analysis
-in a world where, if bird of Paradise cloaks are rare, most women
-who dress luxuriously adorn themselves in one way or another at the
-expense of the feathered kingdom. The principle involved in a bonnet
-which is decorated with the plumage of a single bird, slaughtered
-for its sake, is the same as that which would be more grotesquely
-manifest in a garment that would require the slaughter of five
-hundred. Too many rich people in this greedy age forget that the
-grandest privilege of those who possess the means is that they have
-the power of alleviating suffering. Too many, again, forget that the
-sympathies of those who rule the animate world should extend beyond
-the limits of their own kind; and thus we have the painful spectacle
-of human “sport” associated in civilised countries still, with
-pursuits which should no longer afford pleasure to men who have
-emerged from the primitive life of hunters and fishers. But how is
-it possible, let us consider, to stoop lowest from the proud estate
-of humanity in search of ignoble gratification? It is bad to kill
-any sentient creature for the sake of the savage pleasures of the
-chase. It is bad, perhaps worse, to cause their destruction for the
-sake of coldly profiting by their slaughter, and it is bad to
-squander money in this hard world of want and wide-spread privation
-on costly personal indulgence. But the acme of all that is
-reprehensible in these various departments of ill-doing is surely
-reached when women—who should, by virtue of their sex, be helping to
-soften the ferocities of life—contrive to collect the cream of evil
-from each of these varieties, and to sin against a whole catalogue
-of human duties by cruel acquiescence in an unworthy fashion.
-
- BROTHERHOOD.
-
-The Theosophical Society has always placed in the forefront of its
-programme, as its first and most important object, the formation of
-the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood, without distinction of race,
-creed, caste or sex. It would doubtless be incorrect to say that
-this object of the Society has been entirely overlooked in the West,
-but it is to be feared that not a few members of the Society have
-accepted it as an amiable formula, to which no objection could be
-raised, and have turned their attention almost exclusively to the
-two remaining objects. And yet, without some attempt to understand
-the true meaning of this Universal Brotherhood, it is idle to expect
-that any great services can be rendered to the cause of Theosophy.
-It may be useful to see whether any explanation can be given of the
-reason for the neglect of this first object, and whether such light
-may be thrown on its meaning, as may render the idea a living
-reality to many who now but faintly grasp its significance.
-
-In the first place it may be said, that in many enlightened Western
-minds, there was already a familiarity with the idea thus
-enunciated. Christianity has always taught the “theoretical”
-equality in the sight of God, of all true believers, and politically
-the dogma of “equal rights” is practically beyond the reach of
-attack. The abolition of slavery, the extension of representative
-government, the spread of education, and perhaps also, in some
-degree, the influence of the scientific as opposed to the religious
-theories of the origin and destiny of man, have all combined to
-render this idea by no means difficult of apprehension, at least
-intellectually. Further its acceptance in this sense has not
-necessarily entailed any different view of the duties and
-responsibilities of life. In the East it cannot be said that this is
-the case. In India, the stringency of caste regulations causes class
-distinctions to assume a very definite form, while religious
-hatreds, if not more bitter than with us, enter more directly into
-the life of the people, and interpose stronger barriers between man
-and man than in Europe or America. Hence an Indian theosophist must,
-before he can accept the first object, even in its outward form,
-modify to some extent his intellectual conception of the relations
-in which he stands to the rest of mankind, and he will in his life
-give practical proof of the change. In his case the acceptance of
-the outward form can only follow on the appreciation of the inner
-meaning; that which results is that his theosophy is firmly founded
-on the principle of the Universal Brotherhood.
-
-On the other hand, in the West, a familiarity with the external side
-seems, in many cases, to have prevented any attempt to go below the
-surface, and to have caused men to be satisfied with vague
-philanthropic sentimentality, effecting nothing, and leading
-nowhere.
-
-What then is this Universal Brotherhood, which is the main spring of
-Theosophy? and what are its results?
-
-_Socialism_ as preached in this 19th century it certainly is not.
-Indeed, there would be little difficulty in shewing that modern
-materialistic Socialism is directly at variance with all the
-teachings of theosophy. Socialism advocates a direct interference
-with the results of the law of _Karma_, and would attempt to alter
-the dénouement of the parable of the talents, by giving to the man
-who hid his talent in a napkin, a portion of the ten talents
-acquired by the labour of his more industrious fellow.
-
-Neither is it true that in practical benevolence is the whole idea
-of universal brotherhood exemplified, though doubtless that
-unselfish and unceasing work for the good of mankind, which is true
-philanthropy must of necessity be one result of it. The
-philanthropist may be, and no doubt often is, a true theosophist in
-all but name, though there is still much of what may be called
-unintelligent benevolence, the result of a mere emotional impulse;
-and again there is much that is the result of very decided and very
-narrow sectarian views, to which it would be absolutely impossible
-to apply the epithet universal. The devotion and self-sacrifice
-shown in many individual instances by Christian missionaries of
-various denominations, may be taken as fairly exemplifying
-philanthropy both of the unintelligent and the narrow type. They are
-prepared to make any sacrifice for what they believe to be the
-ultimate good of humanity, and in that sense are practising what
-some others only preach, namely true unselfishness, but they are
-often hampered by an intellectual inability to view both sides of
-the question, and fail thereby to acquire that understanding of, and
-sympathy with the difficulties and the wants of those whom they are
-endeavouring to aid, which are necessary preliminaries to any work
-of lasting usefulness. In a word, they too often fail to realise
-that unity in mankind which truly underlies all individualism. But
-having said so much, it must be added that an understanding of the
-real meaning of “Brotherhood” must entail active benevolence, that
-is to say work for others in some form or other, upon every one who
-does not wilfully thrust aside the obligation.
-
-Where then are we to look for the explanation, and how are we to
-understand the spirit which must animate all true theosophists, if
-they are to realise and follow out the first rule of the Society?
-Not surely on the physical plane. Not by an attempt to force on the
-intellect as a fact to be accepted, or more truly a pill to be
-swallowed, a belief in similarities, equalities or identities, which
-have no existence. Only a realisation of what truly constitutes man
-can help us to form a conception of what brotherhood means.
-
-Man is a complex organism as he exists on our earth to-day. He is
-partly transitory, partly eternal; in one sense the creature of
-circumstances, in another the creator of his own environment. But
-the true man, the underlying individuality is a reflection of the
-Divine. We are able to discern physical beauty, even when clad in
-rags. Is it impossible that we should also recognise the beauty of
-the soul, though it be for a time veiled beneath a gross material
-body? The physical body is indeed nothing but the garment of the
-ego, the true man; that momentarily suited to his needs and his
-deserts, the livery of his servitude, which must be worn, in ever
-changing forms, till the moment of his final emancipation. It is
-then beyond the physical, beyond the intellectual man, that we must
-look for that fraternity, arising out of unity and equality, which
-cannot be found on the purely material plane of existence. The
-divine soul of man, in which is posited his true individuality, is
-the real man, the immortal ego, which, through the accumulated
-experience of many earth lives is marching onward through the ages
-to its goal, reunion with the Infinite. What matters then the
-outward semblance, which our senses know as man? Our æsthetic
-perception may shrink from the rags, the dirt, the ugliness which
-belong to the physical environment. Our moral nature may revolt at
-association with vice, with low selfish courses of life, but within
-and behind all this we must endeavour to realise the continual
-presence of the immortal ego, one with us, as with all humanity, as
-sharing the divine nature, and ever struggling, as we are
-struggling, on the upward path that leads to the realisation of the
-Absolute. As Carlyle says in Sartor Resartus. “Mystical, more than
-magical, is that communing of Soul with Soul, both looking
-heavenward; here properly Soul first speaks with Soul; for only in
-looking heavenward, take it in what sense you may, not in looking
-earthward does what we can call Union, Mutual Love, Society, begin
-to be possible.”
-
-It may be objected that in some cases it is impossible to recognise
-even the glimmerings of those higher aspirations, which are the
-tokens of the presence of the soul, the immortal ego. Such cases,
-however, must be comparatively rare. Still there are beings—it is
-almost impossible to call them human—who have so persistently
-concentrated all their efforts on the gratification of their lower
-consciousness, as to sever the frail link which binds them to their
-higher selves. Then the true man is no longer present in the human
-form, and brotherhood becomes an impossibility. But we may in truth
-almost ignore the existence of this type of mankind, for even when
-an intellectual materialism seems to be the sole ruling principle,
-we dare not deny the presence of that capacity for higher things
-which must exist in all who can still truly be called men.
-
-Surely then it is in this view of our relations to our fellow men,
-that we shall find that guiding influence which may enable us to
-rise above the sordid considerations of our ordinary earthly
-existence. It is no sectarian belief that is here advanced; it is
-the essence of the teaching of Jesus, as it was of Gautama; nor is
-it a mere formula, to be accepted as an article of faith, and then
-laid on the shelf. Once understood, it must influence all who have
-sufficient strength of purpose to fight their own lower selfish
-personalities, and must lead them to the practical realisation of
-their aspirations towards true unselfishness and active benevolence.
-
-But there lurks a danger even in the use of the word unselfishness.
-It has been the text of sermons from every pulpit in Christendom for
-centuries, and with what small results? No doubt the duty nearest at
-hand must not be neglected, and it is the duty of every one to do
-what he can to render those about him happier. But many stop there
-and consider that all their work consists in the practice of
-self-abnegation in their own small circle. Does not the broader view
-of human life here set forth suggest a new sphere of usefulness, and
-therefore of duty? It is for every man to determine what he can do
-for the good of humanity; all are not equally gifted, but all can do
-something. Some theosophists appear to be satisfied with
-intellectual study, or the development of their own spiritual
-nature, and neither of these two courses is to be neglected; but
-something more must be done. “It is more blessed to give than to
-receive,” and the acquirement of knowledge brings with it the
-obligation of spreading it. This is work from which none need
-shrink, and all who truly desire to work for Theosophy, which is in
-the highest sense “the religion of humanity,” will find the work
-ready to their hand, and be able to assist in bringing the Light “to
-them that sit in darkness.”
-
- T. B. H.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- PYTHAGORIC SENTENCES OF DEMOPHILUS.
-
-Esteem that to be eminently good, which, when communicated to
-another, will be increased to yourself.
-
-Be persuaded that those things are not your riches which you do not
-possess in the penetralia of the reasoning power.
-
-As many passions of the soul, so many fierce and savage despots.
-
-No one is free who has not obtained the empire of himself.
-
- BLOOD-COVENANTING.[52]
-
------
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- “The Blood-Covenant, a Primitive Rite, and its bearings on
- Scripture.” By H. Clay Trumbull, D.D. London: Redway.
-
------
-
-
-Particular attention has been recently directed to this subject of
-_Blood-Covenant_ by the experiences of explorers in Africa, who
-appear to have discovered in that Dark Land some of the primitive
-facts the gory ghost of which has long haunted our European mind in
-the Eschatological phase.
-
-Stanley, an especial sufferer from the practice, denounces the
-blood-brotherhood as a _beastly cannibalistic ceremony_. “For the
-fiftieth time my poor arm was scarified and my blood shed for the
-cause of civilization.” As the writer of this book observes: “The
-blood of a fair proportion of all the first families of equatorial
-Africa now courses in Stanley’s veins; and if ever there was an
-American citizen who could pre-eminently appropriate to himself the
-national motto ‘_E pluribus unum_,’ Stanley is the man.”
-
-In his book, Dr. Trumbull has collected a mass of data from a wide
-range of sources to illustrate what he terms the “_Primitive rite of
-covenanting by the inter-transfusion of blood_.”
-
-Dr. Trumbull is anxious to make the efficacy of the rite depend upon
-the recognition of a vivifying virtue in the blood itself, as the
-essence of life. But such recognition appears to have been remote
-enough from the Primitive thought. The Aborigines were not Jews or
-Christians. They gave of their life without always thinking of the
-exact equivalent or superior value received. They gave it as the
-witness to the troth they plighted and the covenant which they
-intended to keep. His theory of interpretation is that there was a
-dominating and universal conviction that the “blood is the life;
-that blood-transfer is soul-transfer, and that blood-sharing, human
-or _divine_-human, secures an inter-union of natures; and that a
-union of the human nature with the divine is the highest ultimate
-attainment reached out after by the most primitive, as well as the
-most enlightened, mind of humanity.”
-
-His collection of facts may serve a most useful purpose as
-eye-openers to other people (and for other facts to follow), just as
-they appear to have been to himself. The book is interesting, if not
-profound; and nothing that follows in this article is intended to
-decry it, or to prevent the readers of LUCIFER from looking into it
-if they do not feel too great a “scunner” at sight of the
-gilded-gory illustration on the cover. But the work is written by
-one who talks to us out of a window of Noah’s Ark, and who still
-seems to think the Hebrew Bible is the rim of the universe. We value
-and recommend the book solely for its facts, not for its theories,
-nor for its bibliolatry.
-
-In all studies of this kind which make use of the word “Primitive,”
-it is the fundamental facts that we first need; and next a
-first-hand acquaintanceship with all the facts, so that we may do
-our own thinking for ourselves and strike our light within by which
-we can read the facts without, as the primary and essential
-procedure in the endeavour to attain the truth.
-
-Also the facts may be genuine and honestly presented, yet the
-interpretation may be according to an inadequate or a “bogus”
-theory. The truth is that no bibliolator can be trusted to interpret
-the past of our race now being unveiled by evolution. He is born and
-begotten with the blinkers on. His mode of interpretation is to get
-behind us, to lay the hands upon our eyes in front, and ask us to
-listen whilst he gives us his views of the past! But the
-non-evolutionist cannot interpret the past from lack of a true
-standpoint with regard to the beginnings or rather the processes of
-becoming. He can begin anywhere and at any time short of the
-starting-point. There is nothing for it but to break away, and turn
-round to see for ourselves whether the traditionary vision of the
-Blinkerists be true or false. The facts alone are the final
-determinatives of the Truth. But we must have the whole of them and
-not a few, whether judiciously or Jesuitically selected to support a
-Christian theory. Whereas, the object and aim of this work, the bias
-of the writer, and the trend of his arguments, are all on the line
-of showing or suggesting that the blood-covenant was the result of
-some innate instinct or divine revelation which prefigured and
-foreshadowed, and may be taken to indicate and authorize, the
-Christian scheme of atonement, and the remission of sin by the
-shedding of innocent blood. The writer asserts that this primitive
-symbolism was “_made a reality in Jesus Christ_” in whom “_God was
-to give of his blood in the blood of his Son for the revivifying of
-the sons of Abraham in the Blood of the Eternal Covenant_.” But it
-can be demonstrated that the covenant by blood did not commence
-where Dr. Trumbull begins—with a religious yearning God-ward for the
-establishing of a brotherhood between the human nature and the
-Divine. The root-idea was not that of an “inter-union of the
-spiritual natures by the inter-commingling of blood for the sake of
-an inter-communion with deity.” That, at least, was by no means the
-“_primitive_ rite,” which the blood-covenant is here called. The
-many forms of the blood-covenant can only be unified at the root,
-_i.e._, in the beginning, not at the end. They are not to be
-understood apart from the primitive language of signs, as in Tattoo,
-the very primitive biology of the early observers, and the most
-primitive sociology of the Totemic times.
-
-Time was, and may be still, when the blood-covenant would often
-serve as the one protection against being killed and eaten. Even the
-cannibals will not partake of their own Totemic brothers. Also the
-covenant was extended to certain animals which were made of kin and
-held to be sacred as brothers of the blood.
-
-The Blood-covenant takes many forms besides that of the
-blood-brotherhood, which are not to be explained by this writer’s
-theory of exchange.
-
-When the blood of an African woman accidentally spurted into the eye
-of Dr. Livingstone, she claimed him for her blood relation, without
-there being any exchange of blood for blood.
-
-Dr. Trumbull claims the Egyptians as witnesses to the truth of his
-interpretation. But so far from their highest conception of “a union
-with the Divine nature” being an inter-flowing and interfusion of
-blood, the soul of blood was the very lowest, that is the first, in
-a series of seven souls!
-
-Their highest type of the soul was the sun that vivified for ever
-called Atmu, the Father Soul.[53] The bases of natural fact which
-lie at the foundation of the Blood-covenant, preceded any and all
-such ideas as those postulated by the writer as being extant from
-the first, such as “a longing for oneness of life with God;” an
-“out-reaching after inter-union and inter-communion with God.” There
-was no conception of a one God extant in the category of human
-consciousness when the rites of a blood-covenant were first founded.
-There could be no atonement where there was no sense of sin or a
-breaking of the law. All through, the writer is apt to confuse the
-past with the present, and eager to read the present into the
-past.[54]
-
------
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- The Theosophists are reminded that the “seven souls” are what we
- call the “seven principles” in man. “Blood” is the _principle_ of
- the Body, the lowest in our septenary, as the highest is “Atma,”
- which may well be symbolized by the Sun; Atma being the light and
- life in man, as the physical sun is the light and life of our
- solar system.—ED.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- The arcane doctrine teaches that the “blood” rites are as old as
- the Third-Root race, being established in their final form by the
- Fourth Parent race in commemoration of the separation of
- androgynous mankind, their forefathers, into males and females.
- Mr. G. Massey is a strict scholar, who holds only to that which is
- made evident to him, and ignores the Occultistic division of
- mankind into Races, and the fact that we are in our Fifth-Root
- race, and would, of course, refuse to carry mankind back into
- _pre_-Tertiary times. Yet his researches and the fruit of his
- life-labour, corroborate, by their numberless new facts revealed
- by him, most wonderfully, the teachings of the “Secret Doctrines.”
- (ED.)
-
------
-
-The real roots of matters like these are to be found only in certain
-facts of nature which were self-revealing, and not in the sphere of
-concepts and causation! And it is only when we can reach the natural
-genesis of primitive customs and fetishtic beliefs, and trace their
-lines of descent, that we can understand and interpret their meaning
-in the latest symbolical and superstitious phase of religious rites.
-Nothing can be more fatally false than to interpret the physics of
-the past by means of modern metaphysic, with the view of proving
-that certain extant doctrines of delusion are the lineal descendants
-of an original Divine revelation, which has been bound up in two
-Testaments for the favoured few.
-
-The blood-covenant is undoubtedly a primitive rite; but the author
-of this work does not penetrate to its most primitive or significant
-phases. These are not to be read by the light of Hebrew revelation,
-but by the light of nature if at all. Many primitive customs and
-rites survived amongst the Semites, but they themselves were not
-amongst the aboriginal races of the world. We have to get far beyond
-their stage to understand the meaning of the myths, legends, rites,
-and customs, that were preserved by them as sacred survivals from
-the remoter past. The symbolical and superstitious phases of custom
-cannot be directly explained on the spot where we may first meet
-with them in going back. In becoming symbolical they had already
-passed out of their primary phase, and only indirectly represent the
-natural genesis of the truly primitive rite. I have spent the best
-part of my life in tracking these rites and customs to their natural
-origin, and in expounding the typology and symbols by which the
-earliest meaning was expressed.
-
-What then was the root-origin of a blood-covenant? The primary
-perceptions of primitive or archaic men included the observation
-that they came from the mother, and first found themselves at her
-breast.
-
-Next they saw that the child was fleshed by the mother, and formed
-from her blood, the flow of which was arrested to be solidified, and
-take form in their own persons. Thus the red amulet which was worn
-by the Egyptian dead, was representative of the blood of Isis, who
-came from herself, and made her own child without the fatherhood,
-when men could only derive their blood and descent from the mother.
-This amulet was put on by her, says Plutarch, when she found herself
-_enceinte_ with Horus, her child, who was derived from the mother
-alone, or was traced solely to the blood of Isis. Primitive men
-could perceive that the children of one mother were of the same
-blood. This, the first form of a blood-brotherhood, was the first to
-be recognised as the natural fact. Uterine brothers were
-blood-brothers. The next stage of the brotherhood was Totemic; and
-the mode of extending the brotherhood to the children of several
-mothers implies, as it necessitated, some form of symbolic rite
-which represented them as brothers, or as typically becoming of the
-one blood. Here we can track the very first step in sociology which
-was made when the typical blood-brotherhood of the Totem was formed
-in imitation of the natural brotherhood of the mother-blood. The
-modes and forms of the Covenant can be identified by the Totemic
-mysteries, some of which yet survive in the crudest condition. The
-brotherhood was entered at the time of puberty; that is, at the time
-of re-birth, when the boy was re-born as a man, and the child of the
-mother attained the soul of the fatherhood, and was permitted to
-join the ranks of the begetters. The mystery is one with that of
-Horus, child of the mother alone, who comes to receive the soul of
-the father in _Tattu_, the region of establishing the son as the
-father, which is still extant in the mysteries, and the symbolism of
-_Tattoo_.
-
-This re-birth was enacted in various ways by typically re-entering
-the womb. One of these was by burial in the earth, the tomb or place
-of re-birth being the image of the maternal birth-place all the
-world over. Thus when the Norsemen or other races prepared a hole
-under the turf, and buried their cut and bleeding arms to let the
-blood flow, and commingle in one as the token of a covenant, they
-were returning typically to the condition of uterine twins, and the
-act of burial for the purpose of a re-birth was a symbolical mode of
-establishing the social brotherhood upon the original grounds of the
-natural brotherhood of blood. Thus the blood-covenant did not
-originate in the set transfusion or inter-fusion of blood. In the
-Totemic mysteries the pubescent lad was admitted by the shedding of
-his blood, with or without any interchange. The blood itself was the
-symbol of brotherhood, and the shedding of it was the seal of a
-covenant.
-
-Nor was this merely because flesh was formed of blood, or the first
-men were made of the mystical red soil, as with the _aarea_ of the
-Tahitians, or the red earth of the Adamic man. Most of these
-primitive rites, the Blood-Covenant included, had their
-starting-point from the period of puberty. It was at this time the
-lads who were not brothers uterine were made brothers of the Totem
-at what was termed the festival of young-man-making. The proper
-period for circumcision, or cutting and sealing, as still practised
-by the oldest aborigines, is the time of puberty, the natural coming
-of age. It is then they enter the Totemic Brotherhood. Now in
-Egyptian, the word _khet_ or _khut_ = cut, means to cut and to seal.
-_Khetem_ is to enclose, bind, seal, and is applied to sealing. The
-same root passes into Assyrian and Hebrew as _Khatan_, _Katam_ or
-_Chatan_, with the same meaning. In Arabic, _Khatana_ is to
-circumcise. Cutting and sealing are identical as the mode of
-entering into a Blood-Covenant. Circumcision was _one_ form of the
-sealing, but there were various kinds of cuts employed, and
-different parts of the body were scarified and tattooed. In the
-primary phase, then, the blood-brotherhood was established by the
-shedding of blood; the register was written in blood, and instead of
-the covenant being witnessed by the seal of red wax, it was stamped
-in blood.
-
-The reason for phallic localization is to be sought in the fact that
-the young men not only entered the Brotherhood by the baptism of
-blood, they were also received into the higher ranks of the fathers,
-and sworn in to live an orderly, legal and cleanly life, henceforth,
-as the pro-creators and loyal preservers of the race.
-
-But this was not the only clue directly derived from nature. There
-is another reason why blood should have become the sacred sign of a
-covenant. Amongst many primitive races blood, or the colour red, is
-the symbol of _Tapu_, the sign of sanctity. The bones of the dead
-were covered with red ochre as a means of protection by the most
-widely scattered races in the world. The stamp of a red hand on the
-building, or a crimson daub upon the gravestone will render them
-sacred. The Kaffirs will wash their bodies with blood as a
-protection against being wounded in battle. The colour of
-robin-redbreast still renders him _tapu_ or sacred to English
-children.
-
-Blood having become a sign of that which is true and sacred, on
-account of the Covenant, it is then made the symbol of all that is
-sacred. It can be used for the purpose of anointing the living or
-the dead, can be the seal of the marriage or other ceremonies and
-rites of covenanting. It is the primæval token of _tapu_.
-
-As I have elsewhere shown, blood was sworn by as the type of that
-which was true, the primary one of the typical Two Truths of Egypt.
-It was so in all the mysteries, and is so to-day, including the
-mysteries of Masonry. I have suggested the derivation of the masonic
-name from the Egyptian _Sen_ = son, for blood and brotherhood. The
-working Mason in Egyptian is the _makh_ (_makht_) by name. _Makh_
-means to work, inlay by rule and measure. We see that _makh_
-modifies into _mâ_ for measure, and for that which is just and true.
-
-_Mâ-sen_ = Mason, would denote the true brotherhood; and as _sen_ is
-also blood, the true brotherhood as the blood-brotherhood would be
-the masons in the mystical or occult sense. Red is the colour of
-_Mâ_ or Truth personified, and _sen_ is blood. Blood is sworn by
-because it is the colour of truth, or the true colour. Now in old
-English the word _seng_ means both “blood” and “true.” Here, then,
-we find the origin of the oath, which constitutes the supreme
-expression in the vocabulary of our English roughs, when they use
-the oath of the blood-covenant, and swear by the word “bloody!” When
-they wax emphatic, everything they say becomes “bloody true.” This
-is the exact equivalent of “seng it is” for “it is true.” According
-to the primitive mysteries, this mode of swearing, or establishing
-the covenant, was sacred whilst kept piously secret, and it becomes
-impious when made public or profane. Such mysteries were very simply
-natural at first, and it was this primitive simplicity and nearness
-to nature which demanded the veil to protect them from the gaze of
-the later consciousness. Time was when the English felon would carry
-a red handkerchief with him to the scaffold, and hold it in his hand
-as a signal that he had betrayed no secrets, but died “bloody true,”
-or true blood.
-
-These customs were symbolical, but there is a hint of the
-blood-covenant beyond them—a hint received direct from Nature
-herself—call it revelation if you please. In the first rude ethics
-we find that the time for the sexes to come together was recognised
-by the intimation of nature, made in her own sign-language at the
-period of feminine pubescence. Nature gave the hint, and a covenant
-was established. Henceforth, the child that could not enter that
-covenant would be protected from brutal assault, and was allowed, or
-rather compelled, to run about unclothed in token of her exemption.
-It is here in the swearing-in and covenanting of the sexes at the
-time of pubescence that we discover another real and most secret,
-_i.e._, sacred root of the rite.
-
-The self-revelation made by nature to primitive man was very
-primitive in its kind. She not only demonstrated that the blood was
-the life, or that the life passed away with the letting out of the
-blood, but in another domain, which our author has not entered, she
-showed that blood was, and how it was, the future life. Blood was
-the primary witness to the future life which the child received from
-the mother. It was the token of the time when the female could
-become the bearer of that future life which took flesh and form in
-her blood.
-
-The blood-covenanting of the primitive races is still a part of the
-most elaborate system of making presents, which are the express
-witnesses of proffered troth and intended fealty. The most precious
-or sacred things are parted from in proof. The best is given on
-either side. And in the offering of blood, they were giving their
-very life, that in which the best attains supremacy. But these
-primitive rites can never be truly read except by those who are
-deeply grounded in the fact, and well acquainted with the evidence,
-that sign-language was primordial, that gestures preceded verbal
-speech, and acting was an earlier mode of representing than talking.
-Primitive men could only _do_ that which we can _say_. In Egyptian
-that which is _said_ is _done_. And in these primitive customs and
-religious rites we see the early races of men performing in
-pantomime the early drama of dumb or inarticulate humanity. And it
-seems as if this primitive language could produce an impression and
-reach a reality that are unapproachable by means of words. The
-significance of the teaching went all the deeper when it was incised
-in the flesh and branded into the blood. For example, what a
-terrific glimpse of reality is revealed by the fact that the
-Malagasy make their sign of a blood-covenant by an incision in the
-skin that covers the bosom, and this opening with its utterance of
-blood is called _ambavfo_, the “mouth of the heart.” Thus the
-covenant is made in the blood, which is the very life, uttering
-itself with the mouth of the heart. In Egyptian the covenant, the
-oath, and the life, have the same name of _Ankhu_; and the greatest
-oath was to swear by the life or the blood of the Pharaoh. The
-primitive mode was to slash the flesh and let the hot blood spout
-and speak for itself with the “mouth of the heart,” the utterance of
-the living letter and red seal of the wound, as true witness.
-
-No verbal covenant or written record of the modern races has ever
-had the full force and effect of these modes of covenanting amongst
-the primitive people of the past. The moderns do not keep their word
-with anything like the inviolable sanctity of the aborigines; when
-once they are sworn to fealty, the covenant is almost never broken.
-Few things in poetry are more pathetic than the story related of
-Tolo, a chief of the Shastika Indians on the Pacific Coast. In the
-year 1852 he entered into a tribal treaty with Colonel McKee and was
-desirous of making a covenant for life in some way that could not
-possibly be violated. Instead of exchanging blood he proposed a
-transfer of their own two personal names. Henceforth he was to be
-known as McKee, and the Colonel as Tolo. But the treaty was
-discarded, the covenant was not kept by the American Government. In
-reply, the Indian cast off the title of McKee and refused to resume
-his own tarnished and degraded name of Tolo! He considered that his
-very identity was lost by this mode of losing his good name! I doubt
-whether 1,800 years of Christianity have evolved in the later races
-of men a consciousness of truth, probity, and loyalty, so quick and
-profound as that!
-
-The writer of this book remains stone-blind to its own teachings
-with regard to the doctrine of survivals, and of the past persisting
-as a pattern for the present.
-
-To quote his own words, he rejoices in the “_blessed benefits of the
-covenant of blood_,” and is still a fervent supporter of the great
-delusion inculcated by the gospel of ruddy gore.
-
-The doctrine is fundamentally the same whether the Greek murderer
-was cleansed from his guilt by the filthy purification of pig’s
-blood or the modern sinner is supposed to be washed white in the
-Blood of the Lamb.
-
-As I had already written in my “Natural Genesis,” “the religious
-ritual of the moderns is crowded like a kitchen-midden with the
-refuse relics of customs that were natural once, and are now clung
-to as if they were supernatural in their efficacy because their
-origin has been unknown. Indeed, the current masquerade in these
-appurtenances of the past is as sorry a sight to the archaic student
-as are the straw crowns and faded finery of the kings and queens
-whose domain is limited to the lunatic asylum.” Dr. Trumbull
-endorses the doctrine that “_Mortals gave the blood of their
-first-born sons in sacrifice to the Supreme Being, then the Supreme
-Being gave the blood of his first-born male in sacrifice_” for men;
-and there you have the covenant of blood in its final form!
-
-It is true that first-born children were offered in sacrifice just
-as the first take of fish was returned to the waters with a lively
-sense of future favours from the Typhonian power thus propitiated,
-but where is the sense of talking about the thought of an
-intercommunion with the divine nature through a blood-union with God
-as a concept in the mind of primitive man? It is true the recognized
-nature-powers, or devils of physical force, were invoked with blood,
-but what was the status of these powers when the beasts of blood
-were their representatives on earth, and the blood, which is the
-life, was given to the Serpent, for instance, as the likeness of
-life itself because it sloughed its own skin and manifested the
-enviable power of self-renewal? The profounder and more fundamental
-our researches, the more clearly does it become apparent that we
-have been victimised by the unsuspected survival of the past in the
-present, and that the veriest leavings of primitive man have been
-palmed off upon us by the ignorant as sacred mysteries and
-revelations guaranteed to be original and divine. Continually we
-find that our errors of belief are based upon very simple truths
-that have been misunderstood through a misinterpretation of
-primitive matters and modes of representation by means of modern
-ignorance. The blood-covenant of the aboriginal races has
-undoubtedly survived and culminated as Christian in the frightful
-formula, “Without blood there is no remission of sin.” Not merely
-the blood of beasts or human creatures this time, but the ruddy life
-and ichor of a supposed Divine Being, who was made flesh on purpose
-to pour out the blood for Almighty vengeance to lap in the person of
-a gory ghost of God. One of the seven primal powers in Egypt was
-represented by the hawk, because it drank blood. One of the Seven in
-Akkad was the vampire. And this type of blood-drinking has been
-divinised at last as the Christian God.
-
-Pindar says: “It is impossible for me to call one of the blessed
-gods a cannibal.” But the Christian scheme makes the Only God a
-cannibal, who offers the flesh and blood of his own Son and Very
-Self as sacrificial food made sacred for his followers. Such a god
-is, in two senses, _chimerical_. How natural an accompaniment is the
-picture of the Crucified Christ to the Zuni saying, “My Father, this
-day shalt thou refresh thyself with blood!” Such a doctrine is but
-an awful shadow of the primitive past—the shadow, so to say, of our
-old earth in the very far-off past—that remains to eclipse the light
-of Heaven to-day, and darken the souls of men in the present through
-the survival of savage spiritualism in its final Christian phase,
-where the extant doctrines are little more than an ignorant
-perversion of the most primitive knowledge.
-
-It is in this final and not in the primitive phase that we shall
-identify the irrationality, the impiety, the disgusting grossness of
-Mythology under the surface of theological varnish and veneer. The
-only senselessness is in the survival of Myths without their sense.
-
-Lastly, it is observable that in the genuine rite the
-covenant-makers always bled _directly_ and suffered each for
-themselves. Later on we find that other victims were substituted by
-purchase, by fraud, or by force; hence the blood-covenant by proxy.
-Now the Christian scheme is that which culminated in the
-blood-covenant and atonement by proxy. “_His offspring for his life
-he gave_,” is said of an Akkadian ruler who sacrificed his own son
-as an expiatory offering to save himself from the consequences of
-his own sin. And this doctrine of the despicable, this type of the
-fatherhood, is elevated to the status of divinity by Dr. Trumbull.
-To quote his own words, the inspired author of the narrative found
-in the Hebrew Genesis shows “Abel lovingly and trustfully reaching
-out toward God with _substitute_ blood!”
-
-And there began for the Historic Christians that vast perversion of
-a primitive custom which culminated at last in the Christian
-doctrine of vicarious sacrifice, based upon the mythology of the Old
-Testament being literalized in the New. Now we have the ludicrous
-spectacle of salvation by means of a rite which has lost all the
-manhood, all the morality, all the meaning, that was put into it by
-the despised races of uncivilized men.
-
-The eucharistic rite is incredibly primitive when really understood.
-The bread and wine of the Christian sacrament still represent the
-male spirit and the female source of life. The “Blood of Jesus,”
-which was to be “drink indeed,” is identical with the “Blood of
-Bacchus,” which preceded historic Christianity, and has been
-substituted for the human or animal blood of the earlier mysteries.
-Imbibing the blood of the Christ did not originate in any historic
-or personal transaction. Also the blood of Christ, or Mithras, or
-Horus, employed in drinking the covenant, was preceded by the blood
-of Charis. In some of the Gnostic mysteries we have the proof that
-the first form of the saving blood was feminine, not masculine at
-all. Irenæus presents us with a picture of profound interest from
-the anthropological point of view.
-
-He tells us how Marcus performed the eucharistic rite with the blood
-of Charis, instead of the blood of Christ. He handed cups to the
-women and bade them consecrate these in his presence. Then, by the
-use of magical incantation, “Charis was thought to drop her own
-blood into the cup” thus consecrated. (B. I. 13, 2.)
-
-There is but one known fact in natural phenomena which will fitly
-account as _Vera Causa_ for a monthly Sacrament, celebrated every
-twenty-eight days, or thirteen times to the year; which fact was
-commemorated by the Blood-Covenant of Charis ( _Vide_ “Nat. Gen.” V.
-ii. section 12, for proofs). This kind of blood-covenant can be
-paralleled in the Yain or Yonian mysteries of India.
-
-When rightly understood, the eucharist is a survival of the “beastly
-cannibalistic ceremony,” whether considered as the blood of Charis
-or the blood of Christ, or partaken of as the red Tent wine or the
-“bloody wafer” of Rome.
-
-We welcome Dr. Trumbull’s contribution on the subject, although he
-has but “breathed a vein” of it, because these rites and customs
-have to be unveiled, and when they are at last exposed in all the
-simplicity of naked nature the erroneous ideas read into them, the
-delusive inferences drawn from them, the false illusions painted
-upon the veil that concealed the truth about them, will be doomed to
-pass away. To explain the true is the only effectual mode of
-exploding the false.
-
- GERALD MASSEY.
-
- =Correspondence.=
-
- CORRESPONDENCE ADDRESSED TO THE AUTHOR OF “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”
-
- I.
-
-“What are the senses called astral, in reality? Are they not really
-spiritual, seizing on the inner essence of things and interpreting
-it. The ordinary psychic or clairvoyant surely does not use the
-astral senses? Yet he sees things which we do not see. It would be
-well to explain this.”
-
- B. K.
-
-_A._ The senses called astral in the comments on “Light on the Path”
-are the senses which perceive the inner essence, certainly; which
-are cognisant of the life underlying every form of matter. The
-ordinary psychic or clairvoyant only perceives other forms of matter
-than those we ordinarily see, and perceives them as a child
-perceives the forms in this world at first, without understanding
-their meaning. The astral senses carry beyond matter, and enlighten
-man with regard to any form of life which especially interests him.
-They show the poet painter, and composer the things they express to
-other men, who regard these great ones as beings of another
-order—beings with the gift of genius. So they are, and the vigour of
-that genius carries them on into the inner life where meaning, and
-harmony, and the indefinable all-desired are to be perceived.
-Wordsworth saw it in nature, he recognised the “spirit in the
-woods”—not the wood-nymphs but the divine spirit of peace which
-teaches a lesson in life. Richard Jeffries saw it in nature, too, as
-perhaps no other man ever has seen it; through the finite visible
-world he perceived the infinite invisible one, and before he died he
-had begun to know that the visible world does not exist. Turner,
-perhaps, is the only parallel. By the invisible world I must repeat
-again that I do not mean what the spiritualists call by that name—a
-new world of other forms. I mean the formless world. It is the
-farthest limit man’s _consciousness_ can reach to; and only the pure
-and star-like soul can become even aware of its existence. It is not
-man’s divine nature, but the man who enters it with any reverence
-for the great miracle of life can only do so by the aid of his
-divine nature, whether as a poet, a painter, or an occultist. The
-soul which enters it without reverence is unable to endure its
-extreme rarity of atmosphere and turns to the psychic-astral in
-which to live; such men become madmen and suicides, more or less
-pronounced, as men do who refuse to dwell in any form of physical
-life but the grossest and simplest. There is some law of life which
-impels men onward—call it evolution or developement or what you
-will; and a man can no more go downwards without suffering than a
-tree can be placed with its branches in the ground, instead of its
-roots, without discomfort, and in the end, death.
-
-I propose to use two phrases which have been suggested to me; the
-psychic-astral and the divine-astral. This seems the only way to
-make my meaning clear, for the word astral has two meanings, its own
-proper derivative one, from the Sanskrit _stri_ to strew light, and
-that given it by the use of all occultists. Paracelsus appropriated
-the word for all things sidereal, subject to the moon and stars,
-part and parcel of this material universe, even though formed as
-Dryden says of “purest atoms of the air.” In this sense the
-spiritualists and psychics have the right of custom to use it as
-they do, to describe their world of finer forms. In this meaning an
-astral shape is the form of the human soul, still in possession of
-the passions which make it human; and the astral senses perceive not
-the subtle and supreme glory which Shelley seized on in Prometheus,
-but a region full of shapes and forms differing but little from
-those we now wear, and still distinctly material.
-
-The “astral man” in the “Comments on Light on the Path” should have
-been written the divine-astral man, according to this evident
-difference of meaning between the present writer and all other
-writers on occultism.
-
- II.
-
-“Are not the _astral_ senses used by every great poet or inventor
-though he does not see clairvoyantly at all? _i.e._ does not see
-elementals, astral pictures, forms, &c.”
-
- FAUST.
-
-The answer to the former question seems to contain the answer to
-this, which is clearly prompted by a conception of the word “astral”
-in its divine sense.
-
- III.
-
-1. “There is a law of nature which insists that a man shall read
-these mysteries for himself. Will all men seeking the occult path
-read these mysteries alike, or will each man find the interpretation
-peculiarly adapted to his own phrase of development. No two men read
-the mysteries contained in the Bhagavat Gita quite alike, each gains
-the glimpses of light which he is able to assimilate and no more.”
-
-_A._ This seems to be rather a statement of a truth than a question
-which can be answered in any way other than putting it into
-different words, perhaps not so good.
-
-2. “Is the outer world the reflection of the world within? like a
-shadowed reproduction in clumsy form, the inner being reality?”
-
-_A._ This is what should be. But materialists have brought their
-sense of reality into the shadowed life.
-
-3. “How is the intuition to be developed which enables one to grasp
-swift knowledge?”
-
-_A._ To me no way is known but that of living the life of a
-disciple.
-
-4. “Can the laws in super-nature only act on their own plane, or can
-their reflection be brought down intact in their own purity to
-govern physical life.”
-
-_A._ Surely this must be so; yet rarely, for when it is accomplished
-the man would be divine, a Buddha!
-
-5. “To be incapable of tears”—does not that mean that the physical
-emotions, being merged into the inner physical, that tears are
-impossible as being an outward phase of the physical nature—whereas
-the psychical emotions, to use a physical term are vibratory.
-
-_A._ “The whole of ‘Light on the Path,’ is written in an astral
-cipher” is stated at the outset of the “comments;” the word “tears”
-does not refer to physical tears in any way.
-
-It is the only word which will convey any idea whatever of the
-moisture of life, that which bursts from the human soul in its
-experience of sensation and emotion, and in the passion of its
-hunger for them.
-
-6. “How is one to take the snake of self in a steady grasp and
-conquer it?”
-
- W.
-
-_A._ This is the great mystery which each man must solve for
-himself.
-
- IV.
-
- WALLASEY, Oct. 1st
-
-Referring to the comments on “Light on the Path,” in the first
-number of LUCIFER, may I ask whether the full paradox “Before the
-eyes can see they must be incapable of tears, and yet no eyes
-incapable of tears can see,” _i.e._, see good or God, is not truer
-and stronger than its part?
-
-“Therefore the soul of the occultist must become stronger than joy
-and greater than sorrow” I presume means that he must not _seek_ joy
-or _fear_ sorrow, not that he may not enjoy nor sorrow?
-
-The phrase by itself may read “Before the eyes can see they must be
-incapable of tears,” tearless, dry, in fact dead! which is obviously
-not the author’s intention in “Light on the Path.”
-
- Yours truly,
- A. E. I.
-
-_A._ Once more I must refer to the preliminary statement in the
-comments that “Light on the Path,” is written in an astral cipher,
-and that tears do not mean the tears of the physical body, but the
-rain drops that come from the passion-life of the human soul. These
-being stayed for ever, the astral sight is no longer blinded or
-blurred. Divine love and charity then find room, when personal
-desire is gone. Joy and sorrow, _for oneself_, then drop naturally
-into another place than that which they filled before.
-
- V.
-
-(1.) I desire very strongly to obtain conquest over “self;” would my
-using the occult means for so doing, which apparently to me lie
-without the _ordinary_ experience of Christians, necessitate my
-sacrificing any iota of my belief in the _power of Christ_?
-
-(2.) If I submit myself to the occult conditions under which the
-four first rules in “Light on the Path” may be “engraved on my heart
-and life;” will these conditions permit me to _pray throughout_ for
-the Divine help and strength of the Eternal Christ, who has passed
-the portal, opened the “way,” and whom I believe to be the “Master
-of Masters,” the “Lord of Angels”?
-
-(3.) Do the words—“the disciple” ... “must then so shut the gates of
-his soul that _no comforter_ can enter there nor any enemy”—mean,
-that we are wilfully to exclude ourselves from any desire for the
-sympathy, strength, and support of the spirit of One who said “No
-man cometh unto the Father but by Me,” and who drank the cup of
-agony to the very dregs for love of the Brotherhood?
-
- L. H. FF.
-
-_A._ (1.) Not any iota of your belief in the power of the
-Christ-spirit would or should be sacrificed; it would rather
-increase, for that spirit is the same Divine overshadowing which has
-inspired every Redeemer.
-
-(2.) It matters very little by what name you call the Master of
-Masters, so that you do appeal to “_Its_” power throughout.
-
-(3.) Man can find no comforter save in the Divine Spirit within
-himself. Does not the tale of the life of Jesus illustrate this,
-looking at it from one point of view? In what dread isolation he
-lived and died; His disciples, even those who were most beloved by
-Him, could not reach His spirit in its sublime moments, or in the
-hours of its keenest suffering. So with every one who raises himself
-by effort above the common life of man, in however small a degree.
-Solitude becomes a familiar state, for nothing personal, not even a
-personal God, can comfort or cheer any longer.
-
- VI.
-
-“Is there any chance of self-deception? May one enter the path so
-gradually as to be conscious of no radical change, representing a
-change of life or stage of progression? How is it with one who has
-never experienced a great and lasting sorrow, or an all-absorbing
-joy, but who in the midst of both joy and sorrow strives to remember
-others, and to feel that he hardly deserves the joy, and that his
-sorrow is meagre in the presence of the great all-pain? How is such
-a one to enter through the gates? By what sign shall he know them?”
-
- Y. H.
-
-_A._ It is difficult for such a one to know anything of what lies
-beneath the surface of his nature until it has been probed by the
-fiercer experiences of life. But, of course, the theory of
-re-incarnation makes it possible that such experiences are left
-behind in the past. The entrance to the gates is marked by one
-immutable sign; the sense that personal joy or sorrow no longer
-exist. The disciple lives for humanity, not for himself; works for
-all creatures that suffer instead of knowing that he himself has
-pain.
-
- ------------------
-
- “ESOTERIC BUDDHISM.”
-
-“As the Editors of LUCIFER kindly invite questions concerning
-Theosophy and kindred subjects, an honest enquirer into these
-matters would welcome an answer to the following difficulty:
-
-“In his book on ‘Esoteric Buddhism,’ Mr. Sinnett states that souls
-or spirits pass the long interval between the one incarnation and
-another in a sort of quiescent, and at least half-unconscious,
-state, losing enough of their identity to preclude their carrying
-any recollection of one incarnation on to the next. In his novel,
-“Karma,” Mr. Sinnett represents one character, Mrs. Lakesby, gifted
-with more than usual powers, as being very fond, when she has the
-chance, of allowing her spirit to escape from the trammels of the
-body and meeting the spirits of departed—that is, dead friends—“and
-others” on the Astral plane where she holds agreeable converse with
-them.
-
-“How are these two statements reconcilable?
-
-“October 22nd, 1887.
-
- N. D.”
-
-Mr. Sinnett would probably reply that the answer could only be given
-fully by reprinting all that he has written in various published
-works, on the conditions of existence in Kama-Loca, and Devachan,
-and on the higher and lower aspects of _Self_. The normal course of
-events will conduct a human being who quits the material body
-through Kama-Loca to the Devachanic state, in which Mrs. Lakesby
-would not be able to interview him. But while in Kama-Loca she might
-at least imagine she did this, and, perhaps not too wisely, indulge
-in the practice of so doing. If we remember rightly the Baron, in
-“Karma,” who is represented as knowing a good deal more than Mrs.
-Lakesby, gifted as she is, throws some discredit upon her view
-concerning the Astral plane and its inhabitants. At the best when a
-clairvoyant can gain touch with a soul in Kama-Loca, it is the lower
-self remaining there, though it has left the body, that she deals
-with. And though that lower self may be very recognisable for people
-who have known it in the earthly manifestation, it will be _lower_
-than the lower self of earth and not higher because ethereal. That
-is to say on earth the living man is more or less under the guidance
-of his higher self. But the higher has no longer any business to
-transact with the lower self of Kama-Loca, and does not manifest
-there at all.
-
-Finally it must always be remembered that a romance, even though
-written by an Occultist, is a romance still, designed to suggest
-broad conceptions rather than to expound scientific and doctrinal
-details.
-
- ------------------
-
-“Being courteously invited to address any questions bearing on the
-matter contained in LUCIFER to the Editors, Madame la Marechale
-Canrobert would gladly know:—First, What is the distinction made
-(page 11) between _the soul_ and the starry spirit? Is it that soul
-which is again alluded to (page 91) as the animal soul, in
-opposition to the Divine soul? Second, What are the external forms
-of the individualised being spoken of also on page 91?”
-
-_A._ The human soul, that which is subject to human passions, but
-which can also yearn towards the nobility of the Divine soul, is
-that which is spoken of on page 11. The starry spirit is the
-Divine-astral. The animal soul is that which animates the mere
-physical life, the unintelligent existence of the body. The
-“external forms” referred to on page 91 are the successive human
-shapes which the starry spirit inspires during its long pilgrimage.
-
- M. C.
-
- =Reviews.=
-
- ---
-
- THE REAL HISTORY OF THE ROSICRUCIANS.[55]
-
------
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- A. E. Waite. Published by G. Redway.
-
------
-
-Mr. Waite’s new book will be welcomed by that large class of readers
-who regard occultism, alchemy, and all like studies with antagonism
-and suspicion. Secret societies supposed to deal with such subjects
-are, from their point of view, better exposed and ridiculed than
-treated with respect or taken seriously. The author of the present
-volume does not, however, cast disrespect on occult science, nor
-does he discuss the Rosicrucians in a spirit of levity or disdain.
-He recognises that there may be, and probably is, a grand spiritual
-and moral philosophy in the higher aspects of true alchemy, but in
-these pages he treats the subject of the society from the
-historical, and not at all from the mystical side, and confines
-himself to tracing its recorded history, its rise, fall, and _raison
-d’etre_. The conscientious study of these records relating to the
-Brotherhood has brought Mr. Waite to the conclusion that they do not
-support the traditions which up to the present have surrounded the
-society with a veil of unknown antiquity and have endowed its
-members with a halo of marvellous wisdom. It is these conclusions
-that will charm the incredulous, and may probably blind them to the
-indications of an undercurrent of belief in the reality of occult
-science, _per se_, which the author has evidently not desired to
-suppress. To investigate and disentangle the network of facts,
-theories, and traditions which must necessarily envelope a society
-that up to the commencement of the seventeenth century had not been
-heard of by the general public is no easy task, and Mr. Waite may be
-congratulated upon the calm and judicial spirit with which he has
-treated his subject, as well as upon the moderation with which he
-advances his own views. To be able to gather from these open records
-how far the members of such a society may have held in their keeping
-some of the inner secrets of Nature is of course impossible to
-ordinary humanity. The real character and aims of such an
-association can be known only to passed Initiates. In his preface
-Mr. Waite says: “I claim to have performed my task in a sympathetic
-but impartial manner, purged from the bias of any theory, and above
-all uncontaminated by the pretension to superior knowledge, which
-claimants have never been able to substantiate.” This statement is
-fully justified in the pages of the book under review. Its value
-does not lie so much in any new presentation of the facts or
-theories pertaining to the Rosicrucians, and which are so frequently
-distorted by ignorant commentators, as in the compact and systematic
-arrangement of some of the principal writings available. He has
-brought together not only the leading works of the various writers
-known, or supposed to be Rosicrucians, but he has also collected the
-criticisms and conjectures on these current at the time of their
-appearance in Germany, together with others of a much more recent
-date. Consequently the reader has before him almost all the
-information of this description he could require, and which he could
-not obtain for himself except by the expenditure of time and trouble
-that very few are either able or willing to give.
-
-It is not surprising that Mr. Waite should have satisfied himself
-that the Rosicrucians have no sort of claim to the reverence and
-admiration in which scholars and mystics have held them up to the
-present time. But these conclusions will form only one more of other
-proofs to students of esotericism, that the task of writing a true
-and real history of a secret occult society from its records, where
-such exist, is an impossibility. For even when such societies left
-reliable information of their pursuits, aspirations, and beliefs,
-the language employed has always been of such a character as to
-baffle entirely the ordinary exoteric reader, whether he were
-historian, literateur, or scientist. Such literature can be
-interesting only to the student on the track of esoteric knowledge,
-or to one who has in a great measure acquired the meaning conveyed,
-for himself in other ways. This method of giving to the world, as it
-were, the proceeds, of life-long research in the realms of unseen
-Nature, has been adopted by alchemists, magicians, priests, and
-hierophants from all ages. None but those who were sufficiently
-steadfast in the cause of truth could read and understand what was
-thus written. The numerous and minute directions for the working of
-spells and cures, etc., left by Paracelsus, and which are apparently
-as straight forward and practicable as the receipts in a modern
-cookery book, would turn out probably much less successful in the
-hands of an amateur, no matter how highly educated on the physical
-plane, than the more delicate dishes taken from such receipts
-manipulated by an entirely inexperienced servant. For these
-elaborate instructions are given in terms that appeal simply to the
-material senses of those who are in search of power rather than of
-wisdom, whereas the real effort to produce the result has to take
-place on the Astral plane of nature. The spiritual or soul side of
-man, must be awakened and utilised, before the Philosopher’s stone,
-or the elixir of life, can be discovered.
-
-The comprehension of the potentialities of the human body, their
-nurture and eventual utilisation for purely unselfish ends and
-spiritual, _i.e._, real wisdom, is, or ought to be, the work of all
-secret occult societies. But to return to Mr. Waite’s book. The
-popular notion that this Brotherhood is of great, almost incredible
-antiquity, is utterly condemned by him. He fails to find any
-documentary evidence to show that it existed before the early part
-of the seventeenth century, and argues that the well-known antiquity
-of the Rose and Cross in symbolism is no proof of the antiquity of a
-society using them “at a period subsequent to the Renaissance.”
-Granting that the device of the Rose and Cross, as emblems of a
-particular order or brotherhood, does not guarantee its equal
-antiquity with them, still it must be admitted that these symbols
-bearing as they do a profoundly esoteric interpretation, and being
-adopted by a society of a distinctly occult character, is an
-argument in support of the theory that the founder or originator of
-this order had some reason other than fancy for thus labelling his
-fraternity. Elsewhere he says, “I have shown indisputably that there
-was no novelty in the Rosicrucian pretensions, and no originality in
-their views. They appear before us as Lutheran disciples of
-Paracelsus.”
-
-The author here seems to be not entirely logical in his deductions.
-When he states that he has not met in his search with either
-letters, records, or papers that mention or suggest the existence of
-such a society before the seventeenth century, he is of course, as a
-historian, safely ensconced from attack. In this capacity as an
-impartial seeker after facts, it is outside the area of his work in
-the absence of data to theorise on probabilities. When, however, in
-dealing with the manifestoes of the seventeenth century, he finds
-therein evidence that shows him the Brotherhood had no back history
-or ancestry, his conclusions are open to criticism. The very fact of
-the want of originality and novelty in the views, aims and
-aspirations set forth in the “Fama,” and “Confessio” surely gives
-strength to the theory that holds to the antiquity of the society,
-rather than to its being the outcome of a spontaneous effort. All
-true students of mysticism have good reason to believe, even when
-they do not absolutely know, that the various schools of occultism
-considered from their highest or most spiritual and abstract
-teaching, lead to the same goal. They may be called by different
-names, and their methods in minor details may not be the same, but
-the wisdom _au fond_ is identical. Therefore when Mr. Waite casts
-discredit upon the Rosicrucians for not advertising novelties in
-their manifesto, in the mystical line of thought, he reminds us of a
-man who in making up his mind on the value of a violin, decides that
-it cannot be of great age, because it emits only the same set of
-sounds that such musical instruments have been accustomed to give
-forth from time immemorial.
-
-As far as can be ascertained by studying the state of thought and
-society at the period when the Rosicrucians were first heard of in
-Europe, this particular order manifested itself as an antidote to
-the general tendency towards the material side of alchemy, which
-honey-combed the educated classes of Germany. Wonder-seekers then,
-as now, did not apprehend that ethics, both social and spiritual,
-are the fundamental basis of real wisdom, consequently the great cry
-was for power, no matter of what description, for the accumulation
-of wealth. The craving for arcane knowledge, so widely diffused, and
-which alchemists were truly known to possess, had gradually
-degenerated into a purely selfish desire for the secret of
-transmuting metals. To supply this eager demand charlatans of every
-description rushed to the front professing to teach all who joined
-their standards, _i.e._, who could pay the necessary fee, how to
-turn common metal into pure gold. The craze for this power was so
-universal, the motive of it so unspiritual, that in order to stem
-the tide of the folly, and to checkmate the impostors who were
-bringing discredit on the _Sacred Art_, the “Fama” was issued by a
-body of people who took as their symbols the Rose and Cross. From
-this point of view the Rosicrucians historically come before the
-world in the light of a group of Reformers.
-
-Different people interpret in different ways the two manifestoes—the
-“Fama” and “Confessio.” Mr. Waite appears to place great importance
-on the adherence to Christian dogmas observable in the wording of
-these papers. But in taking the documents literally, he seems to
-overlook the necessity that all writers were under, in those
-troubled times, of pandering to the narrow and prejudiced minds of
-the leaders of the so called Christian Church, by apparently
-adhering to the Ritual. Naturally, the author of the “Fama” worded
-it in such a manner as to avoid persecution or suspicion of heresy.
-Those to whom it was really addressed would not be misled by its
-tone of orthodoxy, and the general public and the church would pass
-it by as harmless. Moreover, as Mr. Waite remarks further on, “the
-philosophical and scientific opinions and pretentions of the
-Rosicrucian Society have more claim on our notice” than their
-theology. Speaking again of the school of thought current at the
-time this organization was floated, and which he tells us the
-Rosicrucians followed, he says.... “Mystics in an age of scientific
-and religious materialism, they were connected by an unbroken chain
-with the theurgists of the first Christian centuries, they were
-alchemists in the spiritual sense, and the professors of a Divine
-Magic. Their disciples, the Rosicrucians, followed closely in their
-footsteps, and the claims of the “Fama” and “Confessio” must be
-reviewed in the light of the great elder claims of alchemy and
-magic.” In spite of this, Mr. Waite judges the Society, it would
-appear, by what he admits to be the minor and less important side of
-its object, for he speaks of it eventually, as a body of
-“pre-eminently learned men and a Christian Sect.” We will not stop
-to consider the probability or possibility of a body of
-“pre-eminently learned men,” being at the same time a “Christian
-Sect.”
-
-Having thus deprived the Rosicrucians of the dignity, reverence and
-romance, that cling round great antiquity; having saddled them with
-the tenets and dogmas of conventional mediæval christianity, Mr.
-Waite next proceeds to demolish their emblems, or at all events, to
-deny that they attached any esoteric interpretation to them. He says
-... “The whole question of the Crucified Rose, in its connection
-with the Society is one of pure conjecture, that no Rosicrucian
-manifestoes, and no acknowledged Brother have ever given any
-explanation concerning it, and that no presumption is afforded by
-the fact of its adoption, for the antiquity of the Society, or for
-its connection with Universal Symbolism.” Allowing for the necessity
-in writing a history of a mystical society of taking the documents
-as they stand, Mr. Waite rather ignores the fact that the evidence
-for the statement above is of a negative character. That in their
-manifestoes and records there appears no explanation of their
-emblems, hardly justifies the conclusion that they were incapable of
-giving any. It would indeed have been a new departure in the annals
-of Secret Societies if the founders of this particular order had
-left behind the explanation of their signs and symbols. The study
-and interpretation of symbology forms a most important element in
-the education of occult disciples, and therefore to assume that the
-projectors of this organisation should be unaware of the mystic
-reading of the Rose and Cross, is a hypothesis that no student of
-mysticism could accept.
-
-It is, on the whole, generally assumed by those who have taken any
-pains to investigate the evidence, that Johann Valentin Andreas was
-the author of the “Fama,” the _Confessio Fraternitatis_, and also of
-the “Chymical Marriage” of Christian Rosencreutz, and to that extent
-he must be looked upon exoterically as the founder of the
-Rosicrucian Society, as first known to history. He was deeply versed
-in mystic studies and alchemy, and had besides a widespread
-reputation as a scholar and learned man. His “Chymical Marriage,” to
-anyone with even a slight acquaintance with alchemical literature,
-reveals him as one who had penetrated deeply into some of the
-mysteries of nature. Consequently, he must have been well aware that
-the Rose and Cross bore a profoundly occult signification.
-Considering the man himself, the character of his studies, and his
-well known devotion to alchemy and mysticism, it is certainly more
-reasonable to suppose that he took those emblems (presuming he had
-any choice in the matter) for his society, not as some suggest,
-because they happened to form a part of his own armorial bearings,
-or that the Rose and Cross on a Heart was used by Martin Luther, but
-because he recognised their full value and importance as symbols of
-cosmic evolution.
-
-Mr. Waite seems, on the whole, to agree with the idea that Andreas
-was the author of the “Fama” and “Confessio,” and regards the
-“Chymical Marriage” as undoubtedly his production. He also allows
-that the latter pamphlet can only have been the work of a man deeply
-embued with alchemical speculations, a mystic and follower of
-Paracelsus. How then can he ask us to believe that the Society
-formed under such auspices was _au fond_, nothing but a Christian
-sect based on the teachings of Martin Luther! To the public at large
-these theories may perhaps appear sufficiently plausible in face of
-the wording of those parts of the manifestoes that touch on
-theology. To students of esotericism, however, such conclusions will
-be absolutely unacceptable, and we can not allow to pass without
-comment Mr. Waite’s hypothesis that the Rosicrucian Society, as it
-first came before the world, was simply a society for the
-propagation of the deteriorated Christianity of the middle ages. No
-mystic, whether calling himself Rosicrucian, Cabbalist, Theosophist,
-Christian, or Buddhist, would either, intellectually or spiritually,
-accept the narrow dogmas and intolerant views of the Christian
-church, even when to some extent cleansed of many of its grosser
-abuses by the energy of Martin Luther’s Reform.
-
-The two lines of thought are essentially different. In the case of
-the Christian, no matter of what denomination, his thoughts are
-bound down and paralysed within the rigid circle drawn by the
-materialistic reading of Christ’s birth, life, and death. The true
-occultist takes those episodes spiritually or allegorically, finding
-their correspondences within himself as well as in the universe. To
-say that a human being can at one and the same time be an occultist,
-and a sectarian Christian, is as impossible as to speak of a
-Christian Jew. A true Christian, _i.e._, one who understood and
-followed absolutely the teachings of Jesus, would be also a true
-Rosicrucian. Membership of particular churches or societies does not
-unfortunately endow the individual immediately with the virtue,
-knowledge or power, that is the theoretical goal of his initial
-action. Such membership is, or may be a step in the direction of
-Divine Wisdom, but one step does not carry him to the summit of the
-path. Men do not become either Rosicrucians, Christians, or
-Theosophists merely by joining the Societies working under those
-particular names. But certain tendencies in their temperaments urge
-them into the special Society where the mode of thought seems best
-fitted to help them, to realise the magnitude and glory of the
-possibilities inherent in their own souls.
-
-Between the humanity of to-day, and the development of a sixth
-sense, which will enable it to perceive what now is imperceptible,
-there is but a thin veil of obstructing matter, metaphorically
-speaking. This veil is even now being continually pierced by
-psychics, first in one direction then in another, letting in through
-these tiny openings glimpses of the invisible world around. In a
-little while the veil will be worn away entirely, and the humanity
-of that future time will doubtless wonder how the humanity of this
-age, which we find so enlightened, could have been so unintuitive
-and blind to the most important side of their natures. Until the
-race however has by soul evolution attained to this sixth sense,
-real histories of Mystical Societies can hardly be hoped for.
-Members of such Societies, who by study and training have attained
-some degree of knowledge _may_ not disclose the secrets, non-members
-cannot get at them. The reading-classes of to-day may, after reading
-Mr. Waite’s book, think they have learnt something of the body of
-people called Rosicrucians, and until now supposed to have some
-claim to arcane knowledge. The students of occultism will know that
-the vital part of the subject is and must remain ever impregnable,
-excepting from its esoteric side.
-
- ------------------
-
- “NINETEENTH CENTURY SENSE.”
-
-Sense! What is ”sense”? A word meaning either little or much; simple
-and clear to the understanding, or various and carrying with it many
-connotations. It is one or other according as we measure the depth,
-the thoroughness, or the _reality_ of the knowledge acquired. From a
-purely physical “sensation” we may trace the word through endless
-shades of signification; through “good” sense, “sound” sense,
-through the artistic and finer sensibilities, the “moral” sense,
-till it loses itself in the vague hint of a dim, unformed
-consciousness, pointing the way to the new world of the “inner
-senses.”
-
-All these meanings and more are connoted by the phrase “Nineteenth
-Century Sense;” [56] for, by a daring metaphor, the tools which
-modern science places at our disposal are considered as “senses,”
-and even the faculty and power of analysis is sometimes included
-under the word.
-
------
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- NINETEENTH CENTURY SENSE: The Paradox of Spiritualism. By John
- Darby. J. B. Lippincott, Philadelphia, and 10, Henrietta Street,
- Covent Garden, London.
-
------
-
-Beginning with the simplest, the reader is led on to the most
-astounding phenomena of modern spiritualism in the first
-thirty-seven pages of this strange work. The author depicts in vivid
-language his own experiences, and the triumphs of phenomena produced
-by one of his personal friends, in a style which is often quaint and
-striking, though at times the writer’s disregard of many of the
-accepted rules of composition becomes—to say the least—irritating.
-But the matter of his book earns forgiveness for the manner in which
-it is formulated.
-
-After carrying his reader to a pitch of interest and expectation as
-to the phenomena he describes, Mr. Darby suddenly plunges him into
-the frozen sea of scepticism by stating that all the phenomena
-produced under what seemed the strictest test conditions, were
-produced by conjuring and legerdemain, and by explaining the
-physical causes of some of the visions he has so graphically
-described. It will suffice to cite a single instance in
-illustration. “The President of the American Branch of the Indian
-Society of Theosophists (Professor Coues) ... spent an evening with
-me some time back in conversation on the subject of psychical
-phenomena. We parted at midnight. At seven o’clock the next morning
-I suddenly awoke, beholding the astral of the professor standing at
-my bed-side.”
-
-This vision Mr. Darby explains by reference to the fact of the
-persistence of retinal images and the super-excitability of the
-nerves and brain. “Astral projections,” he concludes, “are of
-precisely similar significance.” We would feel obliged to the
-eminent American professor of physiology referred to if he would
-give his written opinion on the question thus raised. For
-Theosophists have heard of persons whose brains were in complete
-repose and fully occupied otherwise who have also seen the astral
-form of Professor Coues. How’s this?
-
-He concludes, nevertheless, that materialistic agnosticism is the
-only “creed”? Far from it. This portion of the book is purely
-introductory; it forms the five door-steps leading to the Spiritus
-Sanctus—the laboratory of the Divine Spirit.
-
-From this black depth of doubt and confusion, the reader is lifted
-suddenly into the clear ether, and his feet are placed on the
-“Rosicrucian Way.”
-
-Whether called “Rosicrucian,” or by whatever other name, the “Way”
-is the “Way of Life,” the path which leads to freedom, to wisdom, to
-true living. Whole pages might well be quoted; a few aphorisms must
-suffice.
-
- “A thing is to the sense that uses it what to the sense
- It seems to be; it is never anything else.”
-
-Many passages recall “Light on the Path,” though Mr. Darby probably
-never saw that book; but life is one, and _true_ occultism is one.
-
-Speaking of mankind as divided into two classes, _men_ in whom is
-the Holy Ghost, the Divine Spirit or the _Logos_, he says:
-
- “With people self-wise or over-sufficient, with the proud and the
- uncharitable, with all who are _without understanding as to the
- common good being the only good_, with him who fails to see that
- gifts _are in men as almoners only_—with all these the Holy Ghost
- is absent, otherwise so lacking in measure as to be incapable of
- making itself felt.”
-
-The italicised passages give the key-note of the true science and
-art of living. To quote again:
-
- “Settled into tranquillity by entirely satisfactory recognition of
- noumenon through phenomenon an end is reached where instrument is
- prepared and ready for use. Analysis has shown the Rosicrucian
- what he is; more than this—what he can become as to his Ego. If
- out of his understanding, he puts office [_the service of
- others_.—ED.] before self, he learns directly of the God, as the
- God comes to live in and to make use of him.”
-
- “Proving to one’s self that one’s self is God”; and again, “God
- ... the One is in all; the All is in one.”
-
-The next chapter contrasts strangely with the one just quoted
-from—strangely, that is, to the outer sense. The one full of deep
-philosophy, of questionings of God, the Self, the World, clothed in
-the profound and significant paradoxes in which wisdom finds
-expression; the other an idyll, a sketch of nature, deeply coloured
-by the influence of Walt Whitman, whose _style_, perhaps, has had
-too great an influence on Mr. Darby, who has caught its jerky and
-unpleasant strings of detached sentences.
-
-This is Chapter V.; Chapter VI. deals with Matter in its relation to
-the Ego, the spirit of the treatment being indicated by the
-following conclusion:
-
- “That there shows itself, out of a process of exclusion, conducted
- even only so far as the analysis of matter, a something which is
- not matter. The analysis demonstrates the something to be of
- individual signification; further, that it is to it what a flute
- or other instrument is to harmony.”
-
-The final words express a purely occult doctrine, which is worked
-out at length in the succeeding chapter on the Ego.
-
-This is the fundamental thought of the book, the last fifty pages of
-which describe the author’s individual experiences in nascent
-psychic development.
-
-They are not of a very striking character, but exhibit with
-sufficient clearness the early forms of this new growth.
-Unfortunately, the author seems to have lacked the desire to pursue
-the road thus opened to him, and the final pages of his work are but
-a lame and halting conclusion to a remarkable production.
-
-The book is well adapted for those who stand halting on the verge of
-mysticism, while for the student who has advanced further, its pages
-may serve as a means for helping others.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-The Editors of LUCIFER beg to acknowledge the following books, which
-will be noticed in future numbers:—
-
- From Messrs. Ward and Downey: “A Modern Magician,” by Fitzgerald
- Molloy. “Twin Souls.”
-
- From Messrs. David Nutt & Co.: “The Gnostics and their Remains,”
- by C. H. King.
-
- From the Authors: “Natural Genesis,” by Gerald Massey. “Sepher
- Yezirah,” by Dr. Wynn Westcott. “Palingenesia,” by “Theosopho and
- Ellora.” “Mohammed Benani,” by Ion Perdicaris. “Lays of Romance,”
- by W. Stewart Ross.
-
- From George Redway: “Posthumous Humanity,” translated by Col. H.
- S. Olcott.
-
- ------------------
-
-⁂ The Editors regret that the pressure on their space prevents their
-noticing in detail the various Theosophical Magazines:—THE
-THEOSOPHIST, THE PATH, LE LOTUS, and L’AURORE. A full summary of
-their contents for November and December will appear next month. The
-same remark applies to a letter on “Karma,” received from Mr.
-Beatty, which will be published and fully answered next month.
-
- =FROM THE NOTE BOOK OF AN UNPOPULAR PHILOSOPHER=
-
-
-I am Sternly Rebuked for some remarks made in the last number. My
-reflections with regard to the respective value of Mussulman and
-Christian pledges exchanged, as also on the doubtful propriety of
-zoological symbolism in the Churches—are pronounced wantonly wicked
-and calculated to hurt the tender feelings of Christian readers—if
-any. Protestant England—it is solemnly urged—is full of truly good
-men and women, of sincere church-goers, who “walk in the ways of the
-Lord.” No doubt there are such, and no doubt they do, or try to,
-which is a step in advance of those who do not. But then none of the
-“righteous” need recognize their faces in the mirror presented by
-the “Unpopular Philosopher” only to the _unrighteous_. And again—-
-
-“THE WAYS OF THE LORD....” The ways of _which_ Lord? Is the jealous
-Lord of Moses meant, the God who thundered amidst the lightnings of
-Sinai, or the meek “Lord” of the Mount of Olives and Calvary? Is it
-the stern God that saith “_vengeance is mine_,” and who must be
-“_worshipped in fear_,” or the “man-God” who commanded _to love
-one’s neighbours as oneself_, _to forgive one’s enemies_ and _bless
-those who revile us_? For the ways of the two Lords are wide apart,
-and can never meet.
-
-No one who has studied the Bible can deny for one single moment that
-a large proportion (if _happily_ not all) of modern Christians walk
-indeed “in the _ways_ of the Lord”—Number I. This one is the “Lord”
-who _had respect unto Abel_, because the meat of his sacrifice smelt
-sweet in his nostrils; the “Lord” who commanded the Israelites to
-_spoil_ the Egyptians of their jewels of silver and gold;[57] also
-to “_kill every male among the little ones_,” as “_every woman ...
-but all the women children_ (virgins) _to keep alive for
-themselves_” (Numb. XXXI., 17, _et seq._); and to commit other
-actions too coarse to be repeated in any respectable publication.
-
------
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- And no doubt also the Anglo-Indians to _spoil_ the King of Burmah
- of his?
-
------
-
-Hence the modern warriors who achieve such feats (with the modern
-improvement occasionally, of shooting their enemies out of the
-mouths of big guns) walk, most undeniably, “in the ways” of the Lord
-of the Jews, but _never in the ways_ of Christ. So does the modern
-trader who keeps the Sabbath most rigorously, attending Divine
-Service thrice on that day, after treating during the whole week his
-hired clerks as the brood of Ham “who shall be their (Shem and
-Japhet’s) servants.”
-
-So does, likewise, he who helps himself, David-like, to a
-Bath-Sheba, the wife of Uriah, without the least concern whether he
-simply robs or kills the Hittite husband. For he has every right to
-take for his sampler “a friend of God”—the _God_ of the old
-covenant.
-
-But will either of these pretend they walk in the ways of their Lord
-of the _new_ Dispensation? Yet, he who raises his voice in a protest
-against the “ways” of the Mosaic God, therefore, in favour of those
-preached by the very _antithesis_ of Jehovah—the meek and gentle
-“Man of Sorrow”—he is forthwith set up on the pillory and denounced
-to public opprobrium as an _anti-Christian_ and an Atheist! This, in
-the face of the words: “_Not every one that saith unto me Lord,
-Lord, shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven; but he that doeth the
-will of my Father which is in Heaven.... And every one that heareth
-these words of mine, and doeth them not, shall be likened unto a
-foolish man, which built his house upon the sand.... and great was
-the fall thereof!_”
-
-THE “WILL OF MY FATHER?” Is this “Father” identical with the God of
-Mount Sinai and of the Commandments? Then what is the meaning of the
-whole Chapter V. of Matthew, of the Sermon on the Mount, in which
-every one of these Commandments is virtually criticised and
-destroyed by the new amendments?
-
-“_Ye have heard that it hath been said ‘An eye for an eye, and a
-tooth for a tooth’; but I say unto you that you resist not evil_,”
-etc.
-
-Glance at the big centres of our Christian civilisations. Look at
-the jails, the court and the prison-houses, the tribunals, and the
-police; see the distress, with starvation and prostitution as its
-results. Look at the host of the men of law and of judges; and then
-see how far the words of Christ, “Love your enemies, bless them that
-curse you, Judge not that ye be not judged,” apply to the whole
-structure of our modern civilised life, and how far we may be called
-_Christians_.
-
-How well the commandment—“_He that is without sin among you, let him
-first cast a stone_”—is now obeyed, may be seen by following day
-after day, the law reports for slander, calumny and defamation.
-Obedience to the injunction, and warning against the sin of
-offending children, “_these little ones_,” of whom is the Kingdom of
-Heaven, is found in the brutal treatment of fatherless children on
-the streets by the Christian police, of other children by their
-parents, and finally, in the merciless flogging of wee bits of
-culprits driven to crime by their own parents and starvation. And is
-it those who denounce such an anti-Christian spirit in legislation,
-the Pharisaical church and society, who shall be branded for
-speaking the truth? The magistrate, who has sworn on the
-Bible—contrary to Christ’s express injunction—to administer justice;
-the pious defaulter, who swears falsely on it, but cannot be
-convicted; the sanctimonious millionaire who fattens on the blood
-and sweat of the poor; and the aristocratic “Jezebel” who casts mud
-from her carriage wheels on her “fallen” sister, on the street, a
-_victim perchance, of one of the men of her own high caste_—all
-these call themselves Christians. The _anti-Christians_ are those
-who dare to look behind that veil of respectability.
-
-The best answer to such paradoxical denunciation may be found in one
-of “Saladin’s” admirable editorials. The reader must turn to _The
-Secular Review_ for October 22nd, 1887, and read some pertinent
-reflections on “The Bitter Cry of Outcast London,” and the
-“Child-thieves” flogging. Well may a “heathen Chinee” or a “mild
-Hindu” shudder in horror at the picture in it of that “drawing of
-blood” out of the baby-bodies of infant thieves. The process is
-executed by a Christian policeman acting under the orders and in the
-presence of a righteous Christian magistrate. Has either of the two
-ever given a thought during the “child-torture” to the words of
-their Christ: “_Whosoever shall offend one of these little ones, it
-is better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck and he
-were cast into the sea_”?
-
-Yes, they _are_ walking “in the ways of the God of Israel”! For, as
-“_it repented the Lord that he had made man_” so wicked and so
-imperfect, that “Lord” drowned and destroyed him “from the face of
-the Earth,” without more ado. Verily so, “_both man and beast, and
-the creeping thing and the fowls_,” though the latter had neither
-sinned, nor were they “wicked.” And why shouldn’t the righteous men
-on Earth do likewise? It repents the Christian citizens of pious
-LUGDUNUM perchance also, that they create the starving little
-wretches, the foundlings abandoned to vice from the day of their
-birth? And the truly good Christian men, who would believe
-themselves damned to hell-fire were they to miss their Sabbath
-Service, forbidden by law to drown _their_ creatures, resort to the
-next best thing they can; they “draw blood” from those little ones
-whom their “Saviour” and Master took under his special protection.
-
-May the shadow of “Saladin” never grow less, for the fearless honest
-words of truth he writes:—
-
- “And whose blood was in the veins of these two boys? Whose blood
- reddened the twigs of the birch? Peradventure that of the
- magistrate himself, or of the chaplain of the prison. For mystical
- are the grinding of the wheels of the mill of misery. And God
- looks on and tolerates. And I am accounted a heretic, and my
- anti-Christian writings are produced against me in a Court of
- Justice to prevent my getting justice, because I fail to see in
- all this how Christianity “elevates” woman and casts a “halo of
- sacred innocence round the tender years of the child.” So be it. I
- have flung down my gage of battle, and the force of bigotry may
- break me to death; but it shall never bend me to submission.
- Unsalaried and ill-supported, I fight as stubbornly as if the
- world flung at my feet its gold and laurels and huzzas; for the
- weak need a champion and the wronged an avenger. It is necessary
- that Sham find an opponent and Hypocrisy a foe: these they will
- find in me, be the consequences what they may.
-
- “SALADIN.”
-
-This is the epitomized history of the “Unpopular Philosopher”; aye,
-the story of all those who, in the words of “Lara,” know that
-“Christianity will never save humanity, but humanity may save
-Christianity,” _i.e._, the ideal spirit of the Christos-Buddha—of
-THEOSOPHY.
-
- LUCIFER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. I. LONDON, DECEMBER 15TH, 1887. NO. 4.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- “LUCIFER” TO THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY,
- GREETING!
-
-MY LORD PRIMATE OF ALL ENGLAND,—
-
-We make use of an open letter to your Grace as a vehicle to convey
-to you, and through you, to the clergy, to their flocks, and to
-Christians generally—who regard us as the enemies of Christ—a brief
-statement of the position which Theosophy occupies in regard to
-Christianity, as we believe that the time for making that statement
-has arrived.
-
-Your Grace is no doubt aware that Theosophy is not a religion, but a
-philosophy at once religious and scientific; and that the chief
-work, so far, of the Theosophical Society has been to revive in each
-religion its own animating spirit, by encouraging and helping
-enquiry into the true significance of its doctrines and observances.
-Theosophists know that the deeper one penetrates into the meaning of
-the dogmas and ceremonies of all religions, the greater becomes
-their apparent underlying similarity, until finally a perception of
-their fundamental unity is reached. This common ground is no other
-than Theosophy—the Secret Doctrine of the ages; which, diluted and
-disguised to suit the capacity of the multitude, and the
-requirements of the time, has formed the living kernel of all
-religions. The Theosophical Society has branches respectively
-composed of Buddhists, Hindoos, Mahomedans, Parsees, Christians, and
-Freethinkers, who work together as brethren on the common ground of
-Theosophy; and it is precisely because Theosophy is not a religion,
-nor can for the multitude supply the place of a religion, that the
-success of the Society has been so great, not merely as regards its
-growing membership and extending influence, but also in respect to
-the performance of the work it has undertaken—the revival of
-spirituality in religion, and the cultivation of the sentiment of
-BROTHERHOOD among men.
-
-We Theosophists believe that a religion is a natural incident in the
-life of man in his present stage of development; and that although,
-in rare cases, individuals may be born without the religious
-sentiment, a community must have a religion, that is to say, _a
-uniting bond_—under penalty of social decay and material
-annihilation. We believe that no religious doctrine can be more than
-an attempt to picture to our present limited understandings, in the
-terms of our terrestrial experiences, great cosmical and spiritual
-truths, which in our normal state of consciousness we vaguely
-_sense_, rather than actually perceive and comprehend; and a
-revelation, if it is to reveal anything, must necessarily conform to
-the same earth-bound requirements of the human intellect. In our
-estimation, therefore, no religion can be absolutely true, and none
-can be absolutely false. A religion is true in proportion as it
-supplies the spiritual, moral and intellectual needs of the time,
-and helps the development of mankind in these respects. It is false
-in proportion as it hinders that development, and offends the
-spiritual, moral and intellectual portion of man’s nature. And the
-transcendentally spiritual ideas of the ruling powers of the
-Universe entertained by an Oriental sage would be as false a
-religion for the African savage as the grovelling fetishism of the
-latter would be for the sage, although both views must necessarily
-be true in degree, for both represent the highest ideas attainable
-by the respective individuals of the same cosmico-spiritual facts,
-which can never be known in their reality by man while he remains
-but man.
-
-Theosophists, therefore, are respecters of all the religions, and
-for the religious ethics of Jesus they have profound admiration. It
-could not be otherwise, for these teachings which have come down to
-us are the same as those of Theosophy. So far, therefore, as modern
-Christianity makes good its claim to be the _practical_ religion
-taught by Jesus, Theosophists are with it heart and hand. So far as
-it goes contrary to those ethics, pure and simple, Theosophists are
-its opponents. Any Christian can, if he will, compare the Sermon on
-the Mount with the dogmas of his church, and the spirit that
-breathes in it, with the principles that animate this Christian
-civilisation and govern his own life; and then he will be able to
-judge for himself how far the religion of Jesus enters into his
-Christianity, and how far, therefore, he and Theosophists are
-agreed. But professing Christians, especially the clergy, shrink
-from making this comparison. Like merchants who fear to find
-themselves bankrupt, they seem to dread the discovery of a
-discrepancy in their accounts which could not be made good by
-placing material assets as a set-off to spiritual liabilities. The
-comparison between the teachings of Jesus and the doctrines of the
-churches has, however, frequently been made—and often with great
-learning and critical acumen—both by those who would abolish
-Christianity and those who would reform it; and the aggregate result
-of these comparisons, as your Grace must be well aware, goes to
-prove that in almost every point the doctrines of the churches and
-the practices of Christians are _in direct opposition to the
-teachings of Jesus_.
-
-We are accustomed to say to the Buddhist, the Mahomedan, the Hindoo,
-or the Parsee: “The road to Theosophy lies, for you, through your
-own religion.” We say this because those creeds possess a deeply
-philosophical and esoteric meaning, explanatory of the allegories
-under which they are presented to the people; but we cannot say the
-same thing to Christians. The successors of the Apostles never
-recorded the _secret doctrine_ of Jesus—the “mysteries of the
-kingdom of Heaven”—which it was given to them (his apostles) alone
-to know.[58] These have been suppressed, made away with, destroyed.
-What have come down upon the stream of time are the maxims, the
-parables, the allegories and the fables which Jesus expressly
-intended for the spiritually deaf and blind to be revealed later to
-the world, and which modern Christianity either takes all literally,
-or interprets according to the fancies of the Fathers of the secular
-church. In both cases they are like cut flowers: they are severed
-from the plant on which they grew, and from the root whence that
-plant drew its life. Were we, therefore, to encourage Christians, as
-we do the votaries of other creeds, to study their own religion for
-themselves, the consequence would be, not a knowledge of the meaning
-of its mysteries, but either the revival of mediæval superstition
-and intolerance, accompanied by a formidable outbreak of mere
-lip-prayer and preaching—such as resulted in the formation of the
-239 Protestant sects of England alone—or else a great increase of
-scepticism, for Christianity has no esoteric foundation known to
-those who profess it. For even you, my Lord Primate of England, must
-be painfully aware that you know absolutely no more of those
-“mysteries of the kingdom of Heaven” which Jesus taught his
-disciples, than does the humblest and most illiterate member of your
-church.
-
------
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- S. Mark, iv. 11; Matthew, xiii. 11; Luke, viii. 10.
-
------
-
-It is easily understood, therefore, that Theosophists have nothing
-to say against the policy of the Roman Catholic Church in
-forbidding, or of the Protestant churches in discouraging, any such
-private enquiry into the meaning of the “Christian” dogmas as would
-correspond to the esoteric study of other religions. With their
-present ideas and knowledge, professing Christians are not prepared
-to undertake a critical examination of their faith, with a promise
-of good results. Its inevitable effect would be to paralyze rather
-than stimulate their dormant religious sentiments; for biblical
-criticism and comparative mythology have proved conclusively—to
-those, at least, who have no vested interests, spiritual or
-temporal, in the maintenance of orthodoxy—that the Christian
-religion, as it now exists, is composed of the husks of Judaism, the
-shreds of paganism, and the ill-digested remains of gnosticism and
-neo-platonism. This curious conglomerate which gradually formed
-itself round the recorded sayings (λογια) of Jesus, has, after the
-lapse of ages, now begun to disintegrate, and to crumble away from
-the pure and precious gems of Theosophic truth which it has so long
-overlain and hidden, but could neither disfigure nor destroy.
-Theosophy not only rescues these precious gems from the fate that
-threatens the rubbish in which they have been so long embedded, but
-saves that rubbish itself from utter condemnation; for it shows that
-the result of biblical criticism is far from being the ultimate
-analysis of Christianity, as each of the pieces which compose the
-curious mosaics of the Churches once belonged to a religion which
-had an esoteric meaning. It is only when these pieces are restored
-to the places they originally occupied that their hidden
-significance can be perceived, and the real meaning of the dogmas of
-Christianity understood. To do all this, however, requires a
-knowledge of the Secret Doctrine as it exists in the esoteric
-foundation of other religions; and this knowledge is not in the
-hands of the Clergy, for the Church has hidden, and since lost, the
-keys.
-
-Your Grace will now understand why it is that the Theosophical
-Society has taken for one of its three “objects” the study of those
-Eastern religions and philosophies, which shed such a flood of light
-upon the inner meaning of Christianity; and you will, we hope, also
-perceive that in so doing, we are acting not as the enemies, but as
-the friends of the religion taught by Jesus—of true Christianity, in
-fact. For it is only through the study of those religions and
-philosophies that Christians can ever arrive at an understanding of
-their own beliefs, or see the hidden meaning of the parables and
-allegories which the Nazarene told to the spiritual cripples of
-Judea, and by taking which, either as matters of fact or as matters
-of fancy, the Churches have brought the teachings themselves into
-ridicule and contempt, and Christianity into serious danger of
-complete collapse, undermined as it is by historical criticism and
-mythological research, besides being broken by the sledge-hammer of
-modern science.
-
-Ought Theosophists themselves, then, to be regarded by Christians
-as their enemies, because they believe that orthodox Christianity
-is, on the whole, opposed to the religion of Jesus; and because
-they have the courage to tell the Churches that they are traitors
-to the MASTER they profess to revere and serve? Far from it,
-indeed. Theosophists know that the same spirit that animated the
-words of Jesus lies latent in the hearts of Christians, as it does
-naturally in all men’s hearts. Their fundamental tenet is the
-Brotherhood of Man, the ultimate realisation of which is alone
-made possible by that which was known long before the days of
-Jesus as “the Christ spirit.” This spirit is even now potentially
-present in all men, and it will be developed into activity when
-human beings are no longer prevented from understanding,
-appreciating and sympathising with one another by the barriers of
-strife and hatred erected by priests and princes. We know that
-Christians in their lives frequently rise above the level of their
-Christianity. All Churches contain many noble, self-sacrificing,
-and virtuous men and women, eager to do good in their generation
-according to their lights and opportunities, and full of
-aspirations to higher things than those of earth—followers of
-Jesus in spite of their Christianity. For such as these,
-Theosophists feel the deepest sympathy; for only a Theosophist, or
-else a person of your Grace’s delicate sensibility and great
-theological learning, can justly appreciate the tremendous
-difficulties with which the tender plant of natural piety has to
-contend, as it forces its root into the uncongenial soil of our
-Christian civilization, and tries to blossom in the cold and arid
-atmosphere of theology. How hard, for instance, must it not be to
-“love” such a God as that depicted in a well-known passage by
-Herbert Spencer:
-
- “The cruelty of a Fijian God, who, represented as devouring the
- souls of the dead, may be supposed to inflict torture during the
- process, is small, compared to the cruelty of a God who condemns
- men to tortures which are eternal.... The visiting on Adam’s
- descendants through hundreds of generations, of dreadful penalties
- for a small transgression which they did not commit, the damning
- of all men who do not avail themselves of an alleged mode of
- obtaining forgiveness, which most men have never heard of, and the
- effecting of reconciliation by sacrificing a son who was perfectly
- innocent, to satisfy the assumed necessity for a propitiatory
- victim, are modes of action which, ascribed to a human ruler,
- would call forth expressions of abhorrence.”
-
- (“_Religion: a Retrospect and a Prospect._”)
-
-Your Grace will say, no doubt, that Jesus never taught the worship
-of such a god as that. Even so say we Theosophists. Yet that is the
-very god whose worship is officially conducted in Canterbury
-Cathedral, by you, my Lord Primate of England; and your Grace will
-surely agree with us that there must indeed be a divine spark of
-religious intuition in the hearts of men, that enables them to
-resist so well as they do, the deadly action of such poisonous
-theology.
-
-If your Grace, from your high pinnacle, will cast your eyes around,
-you will behold a Christian civilisation in which a frantic and
-merciless battle of man against man is not only the distinguishing
-feature, but the acknowledged principle. It is an accepted
-scientific and economic axiom to-day, that all progress is achieved
-through the struggle for existence and the survival of the fittest;
-and the fittest to survive in this Christian civilization are not
-those who are possessed of the qualities that are recognised by the
-morality of every age to be the best—not the generous, the pious,
-the noble-hearted, the forgiving, the humble, the truthful, the
-honest, and the kind—but those who are strongest in selfishness, in
-craft, in hypocrisy, in brute force, in false pretence, in
-unscrupulousness, in cruelty, and in avarice. The spiritual and the
-altruistic are “the weak,” whom the “laws” that govern the universe
-give as food to the egoistic and material—“the strong.” That “might
-is right” is the only legitimate conclusion, the last word of the
-19th century ethics, for, as the world has become one huge
-battlefield, on which “the fittest” descend like vultures to tear
-out the eyes and the hearts of those who have fallen in the fight.
-Does religion put a stop to the battle? Do the churches drive away
-the vultures, or comfort the wounded and the dying? Religion does
-not weigh a feather in the _world_ at large to-day, when worldly
-advantage and selfish pleasures are put in the other scale; and the
-churches are powerless to revivify the religious sentiment among
-men, because their ideas, their knowledge, their methods, and their
-arguments are those of the Dark Ages. My Lord Primate, your
-Christianity is five hundred years behind the times.
-
-So long as men disputed whether this god or that god was the true
-one, or whether the soul went to this place or that one after death,
-you, the clergy, understood the question, and had arguments at hand
-to influence opinion—by syllogism or torture, as the case might
-require; but now it is the existence of any such being as God, at
-all, or of any kind of immortal spirit, that is questioned or
-denied. Science invents new theories of the Universe which
-contemptuously ignore the existence of any god; moralists establish
-theories of ethics and social life in which the non-existence of a
-future life is taken for granted; in physics, in psychology, in law,
-in medicine, the one thing needful in order to entitle any teacher
-to a hearing is that no reference whatever should be contained in
-his ideas either to a Providence, or to a soul. The world is being
-rapidly brought to the conviction that god is a mythical conception,
-which has no foundation in fact, or place in Nature; and that the
-immortal part of man is the silly dream of ignorant savages,
-perpetuated by the lies and tricks of priests, who reap a harvest by
-cultivating the fears of men that their mythical God will torture
-their imaginary souls to all eternity, in a fabulous Hell. In the
-face of all these things the clergy stand in this age dumb and
-powerless. The only answer which the Church knew how to make to such
-“objections” as these, were _the rack and the faggot_; and she
-cannot use that system of logic _now_.
-
-It is plain that if the God and the soul taught by the churches be
-imaginary entities, then the Christian salvation and damnation are
-mere delusions of the mind, produced by the hypnotic process of
-assertion and suggestion on a magnificent scale, acting cumulatively
-on generations of mild “hysteriacs.” What answer have you to such a
-theory of the Christian religion, except a repetition of assertions
-and suggestions? What ways have you of bringing men back to their
-old beliefs but by reviving their old habits? “Build more churches,
-say more prayers, establish more missions, and your faith in
-damnation and salvation will be revived, and a renewed belief in God
-and the soul will be the necessary result.” That is the policy of
-the churches, and their only answer to agnosticism and materialism.
-But your Grace must know that to meet the attacks of modern science
-and criticism with such weapons as assertion and habit, is like
-going forth against magazine guns, armed with boomerangs and leather
-shields. While, however, the progress of ideas and the increase of
-knowledge are undermining the popular theology, every discovery of
-science, every new conception of European advanced thought, brings
-the 19th century mind nearer to the ideas of the Divine and the
-Spiritual, known to all esoteric religions and to Theosophy.
-
-The Church claims that Christianity is the only true religion, and
-this claim involves two distinct propositions, namely, that
-Christianity is true religion, and that there is no true religion
-except Christianity. It never seems to strike Christians that God
-and Spirit could possibly exist in any other form than that under
-which they are presented in the doctrines of their church. The
-savage calls the missionary an Atheist, because he does not carry an
-idol in his trunk; and the missionary, in his turn, calls everyone
-an Atheist who does not carry about a fetish in his mind; and
-neither savage nor Christian ever seem to suspect that there may be
-a higher idea than their own of the great hidden power that governs
-the Universe, to which the name of “God” is much more applicable. It
-is doubtful whether the churches take more pains to prove
-Christianity “true,” or to prove that any other kind of religion is
-necessarily “false;” and the evil consequences of this, their
-teaching, are terrible. When people discard dogma they fancy that
-they have discarded the religious sentiment also, and they conclude
-that religion is a superfluity in human life—a rendering to the
-clouds of things that belong to earth, a waste of energy which could
-be more profitably expended in the struggle for existence. The
-materialism of this age is, therefore, the direct consequence of the
-Christian doctrine that there is no ruling power in the Universe,
-and no immortal Spirit in man except those made known in Christian
-dogmas. The Atheist, my Lord Primate, is the bastard son of the
-Church.
-
-But this is not all. The churches have never taught men any other or
-higher reason why they should be just and kind and true than the
-hope of reward and the fear of punishment, and when they let go
-their belief in Divine caprice and Divine injustice the foundations
-of their morality are sapped. They have not even natural morality to
-consciously fall back upon, for Christianity has taught them to
-regard it as worthless on account of the natural depravity of man.
-Therefore self-interest becomes the only motive for conduct, and the
-fear of being found out, the only deterrent from vice. And so, with
-regard to morality as well as to God and the soul, Christianity
-pushes men off the path that leads to knowledge, and precipitates
-them into the abyss of incredulity, pessimism and vice. The last
-place where men would now look for help from the evils and miseries
-of life is the Church, because they know that the building of
-churches and the repeating of litanies influence neither the powers
-of Nature nor the councils of nations; because they instinctively
-feel that when the churches accepted the principle of expediency
-they lost their power to move the hearts of men, and can now only
-act on the external plane, as the supporters of the policeman and
-the politician.
-
-The function of religion is to comfort and encourage humanity in its
-life-long struggle with sin and sorrow. This it can do only by
-presenting mankind with noble ideals of a happier existence after
-death, and of a worthier life on earth, to be won in both cases by
-conscious effort. What the world now wants is a Church that will
-tell it of Deity, or the immortal principle in man, which will be at
-least on a level with the ideas and knowledge of the times. Dogmatic
-Christianity is not suited for a world that reasons and thinks, and
-only those who can throw themselves into a mediæval state of mind,
-can appreciate a Church whose religious (as distinguished from its
-social and political) function is to keep God in good humour while
-the laity are doing what they believe he does not approve; to pray
-for changes of weather; and occasionally, to thank the Almighty for
-helping to slaughter the enemy. It is not “medicine men,” but
-spiritual guides that the world looks for to-day—a “clergy” that
-will give it ideals as suited to the intellect of this century, as
-the Christian Heaven and Hell, God and the Devil, were to the ages
-of dark ignorance and superstition. Do, or can, the Christian clergy
-fulfil this requirement? The misery, the crime, the vice, the
-selfishness, the brutality, the lack of self-respect and
-self-control, that mark our modern civilization, unite their voices
-in one tremendous cry, and answer—NO!
-
-What is the meaning of the reaction against materialism, the signs
-of which fill the air to-day? It means that the world has become
-mortally sick of the dogmatism, the arrogance, the self-sufficiency,
-and the spiritual blindness of modern science—of that same Modern
-Science which men but yesterday hailed as their deliverer from
-religious bigotry and Christian superstition, but which, like the
-Devil of the monkish legends, requires, as the price of its
-services, the sacrifice of man’s immortal soul. And meanwhile, what
-are the Churches doing? The Churches are sleeping the sweet sleep of
-endowments, of social and political influence, while the world, the
-flesh, and the devil, are appropriating their watchwords,
-their miracles, their arguments, and their blind faith. The
-Spiritualists—oh! Churches of Christ—have stolen the fire from your
-altars to illumine their séance rooms; the Salvationists have taken
-your sacramental wine, and make themselves spiritually drunk in the
-streets; the Infidel has stolen the weapons with which you
-vanquished him once, and triumphantly tells you that “What you
-advance, has been frequently said before.” Had ever clergy so
-splendid an opportunity? The grapes in the vineyard are ripe,
-needing only the right labourers to gather them. Were you to give to
-the world some proof, on the level of the present intellectual
-standard of probability, that Deity—the immortal Spirit in man—have
-a real existence as facts in Nature, would not men hail you as their
-saviour from pessimism and despair, from the maddening and
-brutalizing thought that there is no other destiny for man but an
-eternal blank, after a few short years of bitter toil and
-sorrow?—aye; as their saviours from the panic-stricken fight for
-material enjoyment and worldly advancement, which is the direct
-consequence of believing this mortal life to be the be-all and
-end-all of existence?
-
-But the Churches have neither the knowledge nor the faith needed to
-save the world, and perhaps your Church, my Lord Primate, least of
-all, with the mill-stone of £8,000,000 a year hung round its neck.
-In vain you try to lighten the ship by casting overboard the ballast
-of doctrines which your forefathers deemed vital to Christianity.
-What more can your Church do now, than run before the gale with bare
-poles, while the clergy feebly endeavour to putty up the gaping
-leaks with the “revised version,” and by their social and political
-deadweight try to prevent the ship from capsizing, and its cargo of
-dogmas and endowments from going to the bottom?
-
-Who built Canterbury Cathedral, my Lord Primate? Who invented and
-gave life to the great ecclesiastical organisation which makes an
-Archbishop of Canterbury possible? Who laid the foundation of the
-vast system of religious taxation which gives you £15,000 a year and
-a palace? Who instituted the forms and ceremonies, the prayers and
-litanies, which, slightly altered and stripped of art and ornament,
-make the liturgy of the Church of England? Who wrested from the
-people the proud titles of “reverend divine” and “Man of God” which
-the clergy of your Church so confidently assume? Who, indeed, but
-the Church of Rome! We speak in no spirit of enmity. Theosophy has
-seen the rise and fall of many faiths, and will be present at the
-birth and death of many more. We know that the lives of religions
-are subject to law. Whether you inherited legitimately from the
-Church of Rome, or obtained by violence, we leave you to settle with
-your enemies and with your conscience; for our mental attitude
-towards your Church is determined by its intrinsic worthiness. We
-know that if it be unable to fulfil the true spiritual function of a
-religion, it will surely be swept away, even though the fault lie
-rather in its hereditary tendencies, or in its environments, than in
-itself.
-
-The Church of England, to use a homely simile, is like a train
-running by the momentum it acquired before steam was shut off. When
-it left the main track, it got upon a siding that leads nowhere. The
-train has nearly come to a standstill, and many of the passengers
-have left it for other conveyances. Those that remain are for the
-most part aware that they have been depending all along upon what
-little steam was left in the boiler when the fires of Rome were
-withdrawn from under it. They suspect that they may be only playing
-at train now; but the engineer keeps blowing his whistle and the
-guard goes round to examine the tickets, and the breaksmen rattle
-their breaks, and it is not such bad fun after all. For the
-carriages are warm and comfortable and the day is cold, and so long
-as they are tipped all the company’s servants are very obliging. But
-those who know where they want to go, are not so contented.
-
-For several centuries the Church of England has performed the
-difficult feat of blowing hot and cold in two directions at
-once—saying to the Roman Catholics “Reason!” and to the Sceptics
-“Believe!” It was by adjusting the force of its two-faced blowing,
-that it has managed to keep itself so long from falling off the
-fence. But now the fence itself is giving way. Disendowment and
-disestablishment are in the air. And what does your Church urge in
-its own behalf? Its usefulness. It is _useful_ to have a number of
-educated, moral, unworldly men, scattered all over the country, who
-prevent the world from utterly forgetting the name of religion, and
-who act as centres of benevolent work. But the question now is no
-longer one of repeating prayers, and giving alms to the poor, as it
-was five hundred years ago. The people have come of age, and have
-taken their thinking and the direction of their social, private and
-even spiritual affairs into their own hands, for they have found out
-that their clergy know no more about “things of Heaven” than they do
-themselves.
-
-But the Church of England, it is said, has become so liberal that
-all ought to support it. Truly, one can go to an excellent imitation
-of the mass, or sit under a virtual Unitarian, and still be within
-its fold. This beautiful tolerance, however, only means that the
-Church has found it necessary to make itself an open common, where
-every one can put up his own booth, and give his special performance
-if he will only join in the defence of the endowments. Tolerance and
-liberality are contrary to the laws of the existence of any church
-that believes in divine damnation, and their appearance in the
-Church of England is not a sign of renewed life, but of approaching
-disintegration. No less deceptive is the energy evinced by the
-Church in the building of churches. If this were a measure of
-religion what a pious age this would be! Never was dogma so well
-housed before, though human beings may have to sleep by thousands in
-the streets, and to literally starve in the shadow of our majestic
-cathedrals, built in the name of Him who had not where to lay His
-head. But did Jesus tell you, your Grace, that religion lay not in
-the hearts of men, but in temples made with hands? You cannot
-convert your piety into stone and use it in your lives; and history
-shows that petrifaction of the religious sentiment is as deadly a
-disease as ossification of the heart. Were churches, however,
-multiplied a hundred fold, and were every clergyman to become a
-centre of philanthropy, it would only be substituting the work that
-the poor require from their fellow men but not from their spiritual
-teachers, for that which they ask and cannot obtain. It would but
-bring into greater relief the spiritual barrenness of the doctrines
-of the Church.
-
-The time is approaching when the clergy will be called upon to
-render an account of their stewardship. Are you prepared, my Lord
-Primate, to explain to YOUR MASTER why you have given His children
-stones, when they cried to you for bread? You smile in your fancied
-security. The servants have kept high carnival so long in the inner
-chambers of the Lord’s house, that they think He will surely never
-return. But He told you He would come as a thief in the night; and
-lo! He is coming already in the hearts of men. He is coming to take
-possession of His Father’s kingdom there, where alone His kingdom
-is. But you know Him not! Were the Churches themselves not carried
-away in the flood of negation and materialism which has engulfed
-Society, they would recognise the quickly growing germ of the
-Christ-spirit in the hearts of thousands, whom they now brand as
-infidels and madmen. They would recognise there the same spirit of
-love, of self-sacrifice, of immense pity for the ignorance, the
-folly, and the sufferings of the world, which appeared in its purity
-in the heart of Jesus, as it had appeared in the hearts of other
-Holy Reformers in other ages; and which is the light of all true
-religion, and the lamp by which the Theosophists of all times have
-endeavoured to guide their steps along the narrow path that leads to
-salvation—the path which is trodden by every incarnation of CHRISTOS
-or the SPIRIT OF TRUTH.
-
-And now, my Lord Primate, we have very respectfully laid before you
-the principal points of difference and disagreement between
-Theosophy and the Christian Churches, and told you of the oneness of
-Theosophy and the teachings of Jesus. You have heard our profession
-of faith, and learned the grievances and plaints which we lay at the
-door of dogmatic Christianity. We, a handful of humble individuals,
-possessed of neither riches nor worldly influence, but strong in our
-knowledge, have united in the hope of doing the work which you say
-that your MASTER has allotted to you, but which is so sadly
-neglected by that wealthy and domineering colossus—the Christian
-Church. Will you call this presumption, we wonder? Will you, in this
-land of free opinion, free speech, and free effort, venture to
-accord us no other recognition than the usual _anathema_, which the
-Church keeps in store for the reformer? Or may we hope that the
-bitter lessons of experience, which that policy has afforded the
-Churches in the past, will have altered the hearts and cleared the
-understandings of her rulers; and that the coming year, 1888, will
-witness the stretching out to us of the hand of Christians in
-fellowship and goodwill? This would only be a just recognition that
-the comparatively small body called the Theosophical Society is no
-pioneer of the Anti-Christ, no brood of the Evil one, but the
-practical helper, perchance the saviour, of Christianity, and that
-it is only endeavouring to do the work that Jesus, like Buddha, and
-the other “sons of God” who preceded him, has commanded all his
-followers to undertake, but which the Churches, having become
-dogmatic, are entirely unable to accomplish.
-
-And now, if your Grace can prove that we do injustice to the Church
-of which you are the Head, or to popular Theology, we promise to
-acknowledge our error publicly. But—“SILENCE GIVES CONSENT.”
-
- “EMERSON AND OCCULTISM.”
-
- “’Tis thus at the roaring Loom of Time I ply,
- And weave for God the garment thou seest Him by.”
-
- —_Erd. Geist_, FAUST.
-
-The sunset, to the boor a mere mass of evening vapours, presaging
-rain for his fields or heat for his harvest, expands for the poet,
-standing beside him and beholding the self-same firmament, into a
-splendid picture, rich in crimson and purple, in golden light and
-gleaming colour, mingled in harmonious purity.
-
-Whence so great a difference?
-
-The poet has finer eyes; and within the mere material forms
-perceives a subtle essence, which flows everywhere through nature,
-adding to all it touches a new wealth of joy and power. The poet’s
-eyes have opened to a new reality; he no longer values things for
-themselves; but in proportion as they contain this quality, they
-become dear to him.
-
-But beyond the poet, there is yet a third rank. The poet, it is
-true, rejoices in nature, and perceives its beauty and symbolic
-character. But he rests in the beauty of the symbol, and does not
-pass to the reality symbolised. Rapt in adoration of the beauty of
-the garment, he does not pierce through to Him who wears the
-garment. This remains for the philosopher—the sage. Yet the boor has
-his place in Nature. He has tilled and subdued the soil, has brought
-its latent powers into action; in command of nature, he is far in
-advance of the mere nomad savage, for whom nature is a maze of
-uncertain and unconquered forces.
-
-The savage, the boor, the poet; these types have their parallels in
-mental life.
-
-When the crude conceptions of nature, which mark dawning
-civilisation, give place to those fair and truer, because more
-harmonious, views which bear the name of Science; when the principle
-of Continuity, the reign of Universal Law, have displaced the first
-notions of Chance and Discord, the work of the physical scientist is
-done; he must stand aside, and make way for the philosopher, the
-transcendentalist. Modern Science has replaced the crudities of
-mediæval theology by the idea of an orderly universe permeated by
-Law, binding alike the galaxy and the atom, as the tillage of the
-farmer has replaced the nomadism of the savage.
-
-But within the world of the boor nestles the poet’s world, and
-within the world of the physical scientist lies an ethereal,
-spiritual universe, with its own powers, its own prophets. The great
-trilogy of friends at the beginning of this century, who rose like
-three mountain peaks above their contemporaries, Goethe, Carlyle,
-and Emerson, were chosen by Destiny as prophets of this nature
-within nature.
-
-Their gleanings have been rich enough to tempt many to enter the
-same field, though they have no more exhausted its wealth than Homer
-and Shakespeare have exhausted poetry.
-
-The new world they have explored, is the land of hope of the future,
-for which we must leave the impoverished soil of theology, and the
-arid deserts of materialism.
-
-What these three masters taught, Occultism teaches; and we propose
-to show them as great natural masters in the mystic knowledge.
-
-To do this with any completeness in the space at our disposal is
-necessarily impossible; for the present, we must content ourselves
-with shewing from the writings of one of the masters, Emerson, that
-he recognised some of the chief laws announced by Occultism.
-
-The first truth to be insisted on, concerning this nature within
-nature, the spiritual universe, is that it exists for its own ends,
-and not as an adjunct to the material world; in other words, the end
-of morals is to make archangels rather than good citizens.
-
-Spirit is the reality; matter, the secondary; or, as Goethe says,
-the _Garment_ of God.
-
-No occultist could insist on the subordinate character of matter
-more vehemently than Emerson—he writes:
-
- “Nature is a mutable cloud, which is always and never the same.
- Through the bruteness and toughness of matter, a subtle spirit
- bends all things to its own will. The world proceeds from the same
- spirit as the body of man. It is a _remoter and inferior
- incarnation of God_, a projection of God into the unconscious.”
-
-The Occultist sees in this world of spirit the home of that true joy
-of which all earthly happiness is the shadow, and whispered
-intimation. There all ideals find their realization, all highest
-hopes their fulfilment; there flow abundant fountains of celestial
-bliss, whose least presence makes earthly things radiant.
-
-Of spirit, Emerson writes:
-
- “But when following the invisible steps of thought, we come to
- enquire, Whence is matter? and where to? Many truths arise to us
- out of the recesses of consciousness. We learn that the highest is
- present to the soul of man, that the dread universal essence which
- is not wisdom, or love, or beauty, or power; but all in one, and
- each entirely, is that for which all things exist, and that by
- which they are; that spirit creates; that behind nature,
- throughout nature spirit is present. As a plant upon the earth, so
- a man rests upon the bosom of God; he is nourished by unfailing
- fountains, and draws, at his need, inexhaustible power.”
-
-But to obtain a footing in this world of essential being, is to be
-emancipated from the domination of Time and Space, to enter a
-universe where they do not exist; for Space and Time are no
-realities, but, as Carlyle says, the “deepest of all _illusory
-appearances_.” Emancipation from Space and Time; how much more this
-implies than is at first sight apparent. The first fruit of this
-freedom is a feeling of eternalness, the real basis of the doctrine
-of immortality. It is an attainable reality, this sense of
-eternalness; let the sceptic and materialist say what they will.
-
-Of this truth, also, we may bring Emerson as witness. He writes:
-
- “To truth, justice, love, the attributes of the soul, the idea of
- _immutableness_ is essentially associated. In the flowing of love,
- in the adoration of humility, there is no question of
- continuance.”
-
-Once recognise the truth that we can gain a footing in a world free
-from the tyranny of time, that the soul exists in such a world, and
-a new philosophy is at once required. Freedom from Time implies the
-eternity of the soul, and the facts of life and death take a new
-position and significance. If the soul be eternal, death must be an
-illusion, a garment in which Nature wraps some hidden law.
-
-In the following words of Emerson, on this subject:
-
- “It is the secret of the world that _all things subsist and do not
- die_, but only retire a little from sight, and afterwards return
- again. Whatever does not concern us, is concealed from us. As soon
- as a person is no longer related to our present well-being, he is
- concealed or _dies_, as we say. When the man has exhausted for the
- time the nourishment to be drawn from any one person or thing,
- that object is withdrawn from his observation, and though still in
- his immediate neighbourhood, he does not suspect its presence.
- Nothing is dead; men feign themselves dead, and endure mock
- funerals and mournful obituaries, and there they stand looking out
- of the window, sound and well, in some new disguise. Jesus is not
- dead; he is very well alive; nor John, nor Paul, nor Mahomet, nor
- Aristotle.”
-
-we have an accurate exposition of the occult doctrine of
-Reincarnation—the progressive discipline of the soul through
-many lives—which has been parodied in the popular fable of
-metemphsychosis.
-
-The true occult doctrine does not picture a series of bodies in each
-of which the soul makes a temporary sojourn. In this, as in all
-else, it begins with spirit and then descends to matter. It depicts
-that vital energy which we call a soul, alternately exuding from
-itself and re-absorbing into its own nature an environment or
-physical encasement, whose character varies with the increasing
-stature of the soul. According to the teaching of occultism, the
-successive formations of this objective shell—whose purpose is to
-provide for the development of the animal nature—alternate with
-periods of subjective life, which give expansion to the powers of
-the soul.
-
-As corollary to this doctrine, occultism postulates a second—that
-the incidents of each objective environment or physical life—are not
-fortuitous and isolated, but that they are bound to all that precede
-and follow them, and moreover that “the future is not arbitrarily
-formed by any separate acts of the present, but that the whole
-future is in unbroken continuity with the present, as the present is
-with the past.”
-
-To the various developments of this law, eastern philosophy has
-given the name of Karma; the west has as yet no name for it. But
-though unnamed, its leading ideas have not been unperceived by those
-western minds which have penetrated into the world of supernature.
-
-Thus we find Emerson writing:
-
- “Every secret is told, every crime is punished, every virtue
- rewarded, every wrong redressed, in silence and certainty. Crime
- and punishment grow on one stem; punishment is a fruit that
- unsuspected ripens within the flower of pleasure which concealed
- it. You cannot do wrong without suffering wrong. The thief steals
- from himself; the swindler swindles himself. Everything in nature,
- even motes and feathers, goes by law and not by luck. _What a man
- sows, he reaps._”
-
-The picture of an orderly universe, where matter is the garment of
-spirit—spirit visualised—where souls march onward in orderly
-procession to boundless perfection; where the life of each permeates
-and flows through the life of all; where the wrong of each is turned
-to the benefit of all by the firm hand of an invisible and ever
-active law, incessantly disciplining and correcting, till the last
-dross of self and sin is purged away, and instead of man there
-remains God only, working through the powers that were man’s; such
-is the conception Occultism holds.
-
-“I know not,” says Emerson—
-
- “I know not whether there be, as is alleged, in the upper region
- of our atmosphere a permanent westerly current, which carries with
- it all atoms which rise to that height, but I see that when souls
- reach a certain clearness of perfection, they accept a knowledge
- and motive above selfishness. A breath of Will blows eternally
- through the universe of souls in the direction of the Right and
- Necessary. It is the air which all intellects inhale and exhale,
- and it is the wind which blows the world into order and orbit.
-
- “Let us build altars to the Beautiful Necessity which rudely or
- softly educates men to the perception that there are no
- contingencies, that Law rules through existence, a Law which is
- not intelligent but intelligence, not personal nor impersonal—it
- disdains words, and passes understanding; it dissolves persons; it
- vivifies nature, yet solicits the pure in heart to draw on its
- all, its omnipotence.”
-
-Discipline always and everywhere throughout the universe; to
-discipline, development, all other facts are subordinate; for their
-sake, all laws are enunciated, all spiritual facts are insisted on;
-all truths which tend not to the melioration of human life—if any
-such there be—are worthless. Discipline, development. What
-development does Occultism predict for man? Man’s future destiny, in
-the view of Occultism, is so stupendous, that we prefer merely to
-erect a finger-post pointing out the direction of the path, using
-the words of Emerson:
-
- “The youth puts off the illusions of the child, the man puts off
- the ignorance and tumultuous passions of the youth; proceeding
- thence, puts off the egotism of manhood, and becomes at last a
- public and universal soul. He is rising to greater height, but
- also to realities; the outer relations and circumstances dying
- out, he is entering deeper into God, God into him, until the last
- garment of egotism falls, and he is with God, shares the will and
- the immensity of the First Cause.”
-
-From first to last, Occultism has preached no doctrine more
-emphatically than the necessity of dependence on the intuitions, and
-the reality of interior illumination. “Seek out the way by making
-the profound obeisance of the soul to the dim star that burns
-within; within you is the light of the world,” writes the Occultist.
-
-And this doctrine is repeated again and again in the writings of the
-philosopher we have been quoting from. He writes:
-
- “A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light which
- flashes across his mind from within, more than the lustre of the
- firmament of bards and sages. From within or from behind, a light
- shines through us upon things, and makes us aware that we are
- nothing, but that the light is all. The consciousness in each man
- is a sliding scale, which identifies him now with the First Cause,
- and now with the flesh of his body; life above life, in infinite
- degrees. There is for each a Best Counsel, which enjoins the fit
- word and the fit act for every moment. There is no bar or wall in
- the soul where man, the effect, ceases, and God, the cause,
- begins. The walls are taken away, we lie open on one side to the
- deeps of spiritual nature, to the attributes of God. The simplest
- person who, in his integrity, worships God, becomes God; yet for
- ever and ever the influx of this better and universal self is new
- and unsearchable.”
-
-The life of one is the life of all. The good of one re-acts on all.
-The walls by which selfishness conceives itself enclosed and
-isolated, are unreal, have no existence. Spirit is fluid and
-all-pervading; its beneficent power flows unchecked from soul to
-soul, energising, harmonising, purifying. To resist all discordant
-tendencies which check this salutary flow, this all-permeating love,
-is to come under the reign of Universal Brotherhood; and to the
-honour of Occultism be it said, that Universal Brotherhood is
-blazoned highest on its standard.
-
-“Thus,” writes Emerson—
-
- —“Are we put in training for a love which knows not sex nor
- person, nor partiality, but which seeks virtue and wisdom
- everywhere. One day all men will be lovers, and every calamity
- will be dissolved in universal sunshine. An acceptance of the
- sentiment of love throughout Christendom for a season would bring
- the felon and the outcast to our side in tears, with the devotion
- of his faculties to our service.”
-
-But to the axiom “Kill out the sense of separateness” Occultism adds
-another, “Yet stand alone.” Before the lesson of life can be learnt,
-the soul must in some sort detach itself from its environment, and
-view all things impersonally, in solitude and stillness. There is an
-oracle in the lonely recess of the soul to which all things must be
-brought for trial. Here all laws are tested, all appearances
-weighed.
-
-About this truth always hangs a certain solemnity, and Emerson has
-given it a fitting expression in the following words:
-
- “The soul gives itself alone, original, and pure, to the Lonely,
- Original, and Pure, who, on that condition, gladly inhabits,
- leads, and speaks through it. Then it is glad, young, and nimble.
- Behold, it saith, I am born into the great, the universal mind. I,
- the imperfect, adore my own Perfect. I am somehow receptive of the
- great soul, and thereby I do overlook the sun and the stars, and
- feel them to be the fair accidents and effects which change and
- pass. More and more the surges of everlasting nature enter into
- me, and I become public and human in my regards and actions. So I
- come to live in thoughts, and act with energies, which are
- immortal.”
-
-The last words of this sentence lead us to the occult idea of
-_Mahatma-hood_, which conceives a perfected soul as “living in
-thoughts, and acting with energies which are immortal.”
-
-The _Mahatma_ is a soul of higher rank in the realms of life,
-conceived to drink in the wealth of spiritual power closer to the
-fountain-head, and to distil its essence into the interior of
-receptive souls.
-
-In harmony with this idea, Emerson writes:
-
- “Truth is the summit of being; justice is the application of it to
- affairs. All individual natures stand in a scale, according to the
- purity of this element in them. The will of the pure runs down
- from them into other natures, as water runs down from a higher
- into a lower vessel; this natural force is no more to be withstood
- than any other natural force. A healthy soul stands united with
- the Just and the True, as the magnet arranges itself with the
- pole, so that he stands to all beholders like a transparent object
- betwixt them and the sun, and whoso journeys towards the sun,
- journeys towards that person.”
-
-Occultism conceives the outer world and all its accidents to be so
-many veils, shrouding the splendour of essential nature, and
-tempering the fiery purity of spirit to the imperfect powers of the
-understanding soul. This illusory power Occultism considers to be
-the “active will of God,” a means to the ends of eternal spirit.
-
-In the view of Occultism, life is a drama of thinly veiled souls; as
-Shakespeare writes:
-
- “We are such stuff
- As dreams are made of, and our little life
- Is rounded with a sleep!”
-
-We shall conclude with two passages from Emerson’s essays, on the
-subject of illusions:
-
- “Do you see that kitten chasing so prettily her own tail? If you
- could look with her eyes, you might see her surrounded with
- hundreds of figures performing complex dramas, with tragic and
- comic issues, long conversations, many characters, many ups and
- downs of fate; and meantime it is only puss and her tail. How long
- before our masquerade will end its noise of tambourines, laughter,
- and shouting, and we shall find it was a solitary performance?”
-
-We must supplement this rather playful passage with one in a higher
-strain:
-
- “There is no chance, and no anarchy, in the universe. All is
- system and gradation. Every god is there sitting in his sphere.
- The young mortal enters the hall of the firmament; there is he
- alone with them alone, they pouring on him benedictions and gifts,
- and beckoning him up to their thrones. On an instant, and
- incessantly, fall snowstorms and illusions. He fancies himself in
- a vast crowd which sways this way and that, and whose movement and
- doings he must obey: he fancies himself poor, orphaned,
- insignificant. The mad crowd drives hither and thither, now
- furiously commanding this thing to be done, now that. What is he
- that he should resist their will, and think or act for himself?
- Every moment new changes and new showers of deceptions to baffle
- and distract him. And when, by-and-bye, for an instant, the air
- clears, and the cloud lifts a little, there are the gods still
- sitting around him on their thrones—they alone with him alone.”
-
- CHARLES JOHNSTON, F.T.S.
-
- =THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT=:
-
- _THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN_.
-
- (_Continued._)
-
- ---------------------
-
- BY MABEL COLLINS,
-
- Scribe of “THE IDYLL OF THE WHITE LOTUS,” and “THROUGH THE GATES OF
- GOLD.”
-
- [_Some of the readers of_ LUCIFER _have taken great exception to
- the love passages between Fleta and Hilary, saying that they are
- not up to the standard of Theosophic thought, and are out of place
- in the magazine. The author can only beg that time may be given
- for the story to develope. None of us that is born dies without
- experiencing human passion; it is the base on which an edifice
- must rise at last, after many incarnations have purified it; “it
- is the blossom which has in it the fruit.” Hilary is still only a
- man, he has not yet learned to the full the lesson of human life
- and human passion. Fleta promises him all that he can take and
- that plainly is only what she can give—the deep love of the
- disciple. But she cannot instantly free his eyes from the
- illusions caused by his own passionate heart; till he has suffered
- and conquered, he cannot recognise her for what she is, the
- pledged servant of a great master, of necessity more white-souled
- than any nun need be._
-
- _Another strange criticism is made, condemning portions of the
- story as though expressive of the author’s feelings and
- sentiments; whereas they are simply descriptive of the states
- through which Hilary is passing. They no more express the author’s
- feelings than do those later parts which refer to the ordeals of
- Fleta, the accepted disciple, express the author’s feelings. The
- two characters of the struggling aspirant and the advanced
- disciple, are studies from life. The stumbling-block of human
- passion which stands in Hilary’s way, is the same which lost
- Zanoni his high estate; in the coming chapters of “The Blossom and
- the Fruit,” we shall see Fleta flung back from the high estate she
- aims at, by this same stumbling-block, in an idealised and subtle
- form. She has not yet learned the bitter truth that the Occultist
- must stand absolutely alone, without even companionship of
- thought, or sympathy of feeling, at the times of the Initiations
- and the trials which precede them._—M. C.]
-
- ---------------------
-
- CHAPTER VI.—(_Continued._)
-
-Hilary found himself in a room which no longer permitted him to
-regret his own rooms at home, for it was more luxurious. A great
-bath stood ready filled with perfumed water, and he hastened to
-bathe himself therein, with a sort of idea that he was perhaps
-suffering from hallucinations, some of which he might wash away. His
-scanty luggage had been brought into the room, and when the bath was
-over Hilary got out a velvet suit which he thought would do well for
-evening-dress in this palace of surprises. He was but just ready
-when a knock came at his door, and without further ceremony, Mark
-opened it and looked in.
-
-“Come,” he said, “we don’t wait for anybody here. The cook won’t
-stand it. He is a very holy father indeed, and nobody dare say him
-nay, unless it were the Princess herself. She always does as she
-likes. Are you ready?”
-
-“Quite,” replied Hilary.
-
-Opening out of the entrance was a great oak door, double, and very
-richly carved. This had been shut when Hilary passed through before;
-now it stood open, and Mark led the way through it. They entered an
-immense room, of which the floor was polished so that it shone like
-a mirror. Two figures were standing in the midst of this room,
-dressed alike in clouds of white lace; they were the two Fletas, as
-to Hilary’s eyes they still seemed.
-
-His heart was torn as he gazed on them, waiting for a glance of
-love, a gleam of love-light, to tell him which was his own, his
-Fleta, his princess, the Fleta whom he served. There was none; they
-had been talking together very earnestly and both looked sad and a
-little weary.
-
-As Hilary’s eyes wandered from one face to the other his mind grew
-confused. And then suddenly a flash of bewitchingly beautiful
-laughter came on one of the faces; and immediately he decided that
-must be Adine. And yet, had he not seen just such laughter flash
-across Fleta’s face? But all this passed in a moment, and no more
-time was given him for thought. A table stood at one end of the
-hall, set as a king’s table might be; covered with the finest linen,
-edged with deep lace, and with gold dishes of fruit upon it; it was
-decorated with lovely flowers. Hilary opened his eyes a little even
-in the midst of his other much greater perplexities, to see this
-luxury here in the midst of the forest. And was it prepared in
-honour of Fleta, who ate a crust of dry bread in an ale-house with
-perfect cheerfulness, or rather, indifference? Fleta took her place
-at the end of the table; at least, one sister did so, and the other
-took her place beside Hilary—he could not yet determine which was
-which, and his whole soul was absorbed in the attempted solution of
-that problem. Mark sat at the other end of the table, evidently
-prepared to do such labours of carving as might be necessary. Two
-places were set at the other side of the table, but no one came to
-fill them. A very elaborate dinner was served, and a very good one;
-and Hilary thought he was satisfied now that it was Adine who sat
-next him, for she showed herself an unmistakable little gourmand. He
-had just come to this conclusion when his attention was distracted
-by the great doors being thrown open again for two persons to enter.
-Everyone rose, even Fleta, who advanced with a smile to meet these
-new comers. Hilary rose also and turned from the table. Two men
-stood there; one a man but little older than himself, and of
-extremely fine appearance. Little more than a boy, yet he had a
-dignity which made him something much more, and Hilary felt
-immediately a kind of jealousy, undefined, vague, but still
-jealousy. For Fleta had put both her hands into those of this
-handsome young man and greeted him with great warmth. At his side
-stood a small shrivelled old man, in the same dress that Father
-Amyot always wore. This circumstance again made Hilary wonder what
-had become of Father Amyot; but he concluded Adine’s account had
-been the correct one.
-
-There was something familiar in the face of the young man, so Hilary
-thought; while he was thinking this, Fleta turned and introduced
-them to each other.
-
-He was the young king to whom Fleta was betrothed.
-
-This is a history of those things which lie behind the scenes, not a
-history of that which is known to all the world. We will give this
-young King the name of Alan. Let those who like fix upon his kingdom
-and assign to him his true name.
-
-He sat down opposite Hilary; and the old priest took his place
-beside him. Hilary returned to his chair, feeling that all strength,
-and hope, and power, and life had gone from him. By a fierce and
-terrible revulsion of his whole nature and all his recent feelings,
-he returned to his cynical estimate of mankind and most of all of
-Fleta. She had brought him to this place simply to taunt and harass
-him and show him his madness and folly in aspiring to her love in
-the face of such a rival. It cut Hilary’s heart like a knife to find
-the young King so magnificent a creature. And Fleta, why had she
-come here to meet him? Why had she brought her unhappy lover with
-her? Hilary tore himself with doubts, and fears, and questions; and
-sat silent, not even noticing the plates that were placed before him
-and taken away untouched. The others talked and laughed gaily, Alan
-being apparently possessed of a hundred things to say. Hilary did
-not hear what they were, but it annoyed him to find his rival
-speaking so much in that rich, musical voice of his, while he
-himself sat dumb, silenced by a bitter pain that tore his heart.
-
-“You are sad,” said a soft voice at his side, “it is hard, if you
-love Fleta, to see her monopolised by some one else. How often have
-I had to suffer it? Well, it must be so, I suppose. Why am I sorry
-for you. I wonder? For if Alan were not here you would monopolise
-Fleta, and have no eyes for anyone else. Ah me!”
-
-The sigh was very tender, the voice very low and soft; and that
-voice was Fleta’s voice, those lovely eyes uplifted to his were
-Fleta’s eyes. Yes, it was so! He thought as he looked back. Did he
-not know Fleta well enough by now?
-
-“Ah, you are playing with me,” he exclaimed eagerly, “it is Fleta
-now, not Adine! Is it not so? Oh, my love, my love, be honest and
-tell me!”
-
-He spoke like this under cover of the others’ voices, but Fleta
-looked round alarmed.
-
-“Hush!” she said, “take care. Your life would be lost if you
-revealed our secret here. After dinner is over, come with me.”
-
-This appointment made Hilary happy again; his heart leaped up, his
-pulses throbbed; all the world changed. He found some fruit was
-before him, he began to eat it, and to drink the wine in his glass.
-Fleta was watching him.
-
-“You have just begun to dine!” said Fleta with a soft laugh. “Well,
-never mind; you are young and strong. Do you think you could live
-through a great many hardships?”
-
-Hilary made the lover’s answer, which is so evident that it need not
-be recorded. He did not know how he said it, but he desired to tell
-her that for her he would endure anything. She laughed again.
-
-“It may be so!” she said thoughtfully; and then he caught her eyes
-fixed upon him with a searching glance that for an instant seemed to
-turn the blood cold in his veins. His terrible thoughts and doubts
-of her returned again the more fiercely for their momentary
-repulsion. He emptied his glass, but eat nothing more, and was very
-glad when they all rose from the table together, a few moments
-later. He followed the figure of the girl who had sat next him since
-Alan’s entrance, believing that Fleta had then changed her place.
-She went across the great room and led the way into a greenhouse
-which opened out of it. A very wonderful greenhouse it was, full of
-the strangest plants. They were extremely beautiful, and yet in some
-way they inspired in him a great repugnance. They were of many
-colours, and the blossoms were variously shaped, but evidently they
-were all of one species.
-
-“These are very precious,” said Fleta, looking at the flowers near
-her tenderly. “I obtain a rare and valuable substance from them. You
-have seen me use it,” she added, after a moment’s pause. Hilary
-longed to leave the greenhouse and sit elsewhere; but that was so
-evidently not Fleta’s wish that he could not suggest it. There were
-seats here and there among the flowers, and she placed herself upon
-one of them, motioning Hilary to sit beside her.
-
-“Now,” she said, “I am going to tell you a great many things which
-you have earned the right to know. To begin with, you are now in a
-monastery, belonging to the most rigid of the religious orders.”
-
-“Are you a Catholic?” asked Hilary suddenly. And then laughed at
-himself for such a question. How could Fleta be catalogued like
-this? He knew her to be a creature whose thought could not be
-limited.
-
-“No,” she answered simply. “I am not a Catholic. But I belong to
-this order. I fear such an answer will be so unintelligible as to be
-like an impertinence. Forgive me, Hilary.”
-
-Ah, what a tone she spoke in, gentle, sweet—the voice of the woman
-he loved. Hilary lost all control over himself. He sprang to his
-feet and stood before her.
-
-“I do not want to know your religion,” he exclaimed passionately, “I
-do not want to know where we are, or why we are here. I ask you only
-this—Are you indeed my love given to me, as you said this
-morning?—or is your love given to the king, and are you only
-laughing at me. It is enough to make me think so, to bring me here
-to meet him! Oh, it is a cruel insult, a cruel mockery! For, Fleta,
-you have made me love you with all my heart and soul. My whole life
-is yours. Be honest and tell me the truth.”
-
-“You have a powerful rival,” said Fleta deliberately. “Is he not
-handsome, courtly, all that a king should be? And I am pledged to
-him. Yes, Hilary, I am pledged to him. Would you have the woman you
-love live a lie for your sake, and hourly betray the man she
-marries?”
-
-“I would have her give me her love,” said Hilary despairingly, “at
-all costs, at all hazards. Oh, Fleta, do not keep me in agony. You
-said this morning that you loved me, that you would give yourself to
-me. Are you going to take those words back?”
-
-“No,” said Fleta, “I am not. For I do love you, Hilary. Did I not
-see you first in my sleep? Did I not dream of you? Did I not come to
-your house in search of you? Unwomanly, was it not? No one but Fleta
-would have done it. And Fleta would only have done it for love. You
-do not know what she risked—what she risks now—for you! Oh, Hilary,
-if you could guess what I have at stake. Never mind. None can know
-my own danger but myself.”
-
-“Escape from it!” said Hilary in a sort of madness. A passionate
-desire to help her came over him and swept all reasonable thoughts
-away. “You are so powerful, so free, there is no need for you to
-encounter danger. Does it lie in these people, in this strange
-place? Come back then to the city, to your home. What is there to
-induce you to run risks, you that have all that the world can offer?
-Is there anything you need that you cannot have?”
-
-“Yes,” said Fleta, “there is. I need something which no power of
-royalty can give me. I need something which I may have to sacrifice
-my life to obtain. Yet I am ready to sacrifice it—oh, how ready!
-What is my life to me! What is my life to me! Nothing!”
-
-She had risen and was impatiently walking to and fro, moving her
-hands with a strange eager gesture as she did so; and her eyes were
-all aflame. This was the woman he loved. This, who said her life was
-nothing to her. Hilary forgot all else that was strange in her words
-and manner in the thought of this. Could she then return his
-love—no, it was impossible, if she meant these strange and terrible
-words that she uttered!
-
-“Ah, this it is that keeps me back,” she said, before he had time to
-speak. Her voice had altered, and her face had grown pale, so pale
-that he forgot everything else in watching her.
-
-“This it is that keeps me from my strength, this longing for it!”
-And with a heavy sigh she moved back to her seat and fell into it
-with a weariness he had never seen in her before. Her head drooped
-on her breast, she fell into profound thought. Presently she spoke
-again, disjointedly, and in such words as seemed unintelligible.
-
-“I have always been too impatient, too eager,” she said sadly, “I
-have always tried to take what I longed for without waiting to earn
-it. So it was long ago, Hilary, when you and I stood beneath those
-blossoming trees, long ages ago. I broke the peace that kept us
-strong and simple. I caused the torment of pain and peril to arise
-in our lives. We have to live it out—alas, Hilary, we have to live
-it out!—and live beyond it. How long will it take us—how long will
-it take!”
-
-There was a despair, an agony in her voice and manner, that were so
-new, he was bewildered, he hardly recognised her. Her moods changed
-so strangely that he could not follow them, for he had not the key;
-he could not read her thought. He sat dumb, looking in her sad drawn
-face.
-
-“My love, my love,” he murmured at last, hardly knowing that he
-spoke, hardly knowing what his thought was that he spoke, only full
-of longing. “Would that I could help you! Would that I understood
-you!”
-
-“Do you indeed wish to?” asked Fleta, her voice melting into a sort
-of tender eagerness.
-
-“Do you not know it?” exclaimed Hilary. “My soul is burning to meet
-yours and to recognise it, to stand with you and help you. Why are
-you so far off, so like a star, so removed and unintelligible to me,
-who love you so! Oh, help me to change this, to come nearer to you!”
-
-Fleta rose slowly, her eyes fixed upon his face.
-
-“Come,” she said. And she held out her hand to him. He put his into
-it, and together, hand in hand, they left the conservatory. They did
-not enter the great dining hall, where now there was music and
-dancing as Hilary could see and hear. They left the house of the
-strange flowers by a different doorway, which admitted them to a
-long dim corridor. Fleta opened the door by a key that was attached
-to a chain hanging from her waist; and she closed it behind her.
-Hilary asked no questions, for she seemed buried in thought so
-profound that he did not care to rouse her.
-
-At the end of the corridor was a small and very low doorway. Fleta
-stooped and knocked, and without waiting for any answer pushed the
-door open.
-
-“May I come in, Master?” she said.
-
-“Come, child,” was the answer, in a very gentle voice.
-
-“I am bringing some one with me.”
-
-“Come,” was repeated.
-
-They entered. The room was small, and was dimly lit by a shaded
-lamp. Beside the table, on which this stood, sat a man, reading. He
-put a large book which he had been holding, on to the table, and
-turned towards his visitors. Hilary saw before him the handsomest
-man he had ever seen in his life. He was still young, though Hilary
-felt himself to be a boy beside him; he rose from his chair and
-stood before them very tall and very slight, and yet there was that
-in his build which suggested great strength. He looked attentively
-at Hilary for a moment, and then turned to Fleta.
-
-“Leave him here.” Fleta bowed and immediately went out of the room
-without another word. Hilary gazed upon her in amazement. Was this
-the proud, imperious princess who yielded such instant and ready
-obedience? It seemed incredible. But he forgot the extraordinary
-sight immediately afterwards in the interest excited by his new
-companion, who at once addressed him:
-
-“The Princess has often spoken to me of you,” he said, “and I know
-she has much wished that this moment should arrive. She will be
-satisfied if she thinks you appreciate with your inner senses the
-step you are about to take if you accord with her wishes. But I
-think it right you should know it in every aspect as far as that is
-possible. If you really desire to know Fleta, to approach her, to
-understand her, you must give up all that men ordinarily value in
-the world.”
-
-“I have it not to surrender,” said Hilary rather bitterly, “my life
-is nothing splendid.”
-
-“No, but you are only at the beginning of it. To you the future is
-full of promise. If you desire to be the Princess Fleta’s companion,
-your life is no longer your own.”
-
-“No—it is hers—and it is hers now!”
-
-“Not so. It is not hers now, nor will it be hers then. Not even your
-love does she claim for her own. She has nothing.”
-
-“I don’t understand,” said Hilary simply. “She is the Princess of
-this country; she will soon be the Queen of another. She has all
-that the world has to give a woman.”
-
-“Do you not know the woman you love better than to suppose that she
-cares for her position in the world?” demanded this man whom Fleta
-called her master. “At a word from me, at any hour, at any time she
-will leave her throne and never return to it. That she will do this
-certainly some day I know very well; and her sister will take her
-place, the world being no wiser than it now is. Fleta looks forward
-to this change eagerly.”
-
-“Well, perhaps,” admitted Hilary.
-
-“Neither has she your love nor your life as her own. In loving her
-you love the Great Order to which she belongs, and she will gladly
-give your love to its right owner. She has done this already in
-bringing you to me.”
-
-Hilary started to his feet, stung beyond endurance.
-
-“This is mere nonsense, mere insult,” he said angrily, “Fleta has
-accepted my love with her own lips.”
-
-“That is so,” was the answer, “and she is betrothed to King Alan.”
-
-“I know that,” said Hilary in a low voice.
-
-“And what did you hold Fleta to be then? A mere pleasure seeker,
-playing with life like the rest, devoid of honour and principle? Was
-this your estimate of the woman you loved? What else indeed could it
-be, when you said, let her give her hand to King Alan while you know
-her love is yours! And you could love such a woman! Hilary Estanol,
-you have been reared in a different school than this. Does not your
-own conscience shame you?”
-
-Hilary stood silent. Every word struck home. He knew not what to
-say. He had been wilfully blinding himself; the bandages were rudely
-drawn aside. After a long pause he spoke, hesitatingly:
-
-“The Princess cannot be judged as other women would be; she is
-unlike all others.”
-
-“Not so, if she is what you seem to think her; then she is just like
-the rest, one of the common herd.”
-
-“How can you speak of her in that way?”
-
-“How can you think of her as you do, dishonouring her by your
-thoughts?”
-
-The two stood opposite each other now, and their eyes met. A strange
-light seemed to struggle into Hilary’s soul as these bitter words
-rang sharply on his ear. Dishonouring her? Was it possible? He
-staggered back and leaned against the wall, still gazing on the
-magnificent face before him.
-
-“Who are you?” he said at last.
-
-“I am Father Ivan, the superior of the order to which the Princess
-Fleta belongs,” was the reply. But another voice spoke when his
-ceased, and Hilary saw that Fleta had entered, and was standing
-behind him.
-
-“And he is the master of knowledge, the master in life, the master
-in thought, of whom the Princess Fleta is but a poor and impatient
-disciple. Master, forgive me! I cannot endure to hear you speak as
-if you were a monk, the mere tool of a religion, the mere professor
-of a miserable creed.”
-
-She sank on her knees before Father Ivan, in an attitude strangely
-full of humility. The priest bent down and lifted her to her feet.
-They stood a moment in silence, side by side, Fleta’s eyes upon his
-face devouring his expression with a passionate and adoring
-eagerness. How splendid they looked! Suddenly Hilary saw it, and a
-wild, fierce, all-devouring flame of jealousy awoke in his heart—a
-jealousy such as King Alan, no, nor a hundred King Alans, could not
-have roused in him.
-
-For he saw that this Ivan, who wore a priest’s dress, yet was
-evidently no priest, who spoke as if this world had no longer any
-meaning for him, yet who was magnificent in his personal presence
-and power—he saw that this man was Fleta’s equal. And more, he saw
-that Fleta’s whole face melted and softened, and grew strangely
-sweet, as she looked on him. Never had Hilary seen it like that.
-Never had Hilary dreamed it could look like that. Stumbling like a
-blind man he felt for the door, which he knew was near, and escaped
-from the room—how he knew not. Hurriedly he went on, through places
-he did not see, and at last found himself in the open air. He went
-with great strides away through the tall ferns and undergrowth until
-he found himself in so quiet a spot that it appeared as if he were
-alone in the great forest. Then he flung himself upon the ground and
-yielded to an agony of despair which blotted out sky and trees and
-everything from his gaze, like a great cloud covering the earth.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- TWILIGHT.
-
- I sit alone in the twilight,
- Dreaming—but not as of old;
- Blind to the flickering fire-light,
- Mystic visions my spirit enfold.
-
- What means this struggle within me,
- This new hope of a far-off goal?
- This fighting against superstition,
- That would fetter my awakening soul?
-
- Why cannot I pray as I once did,
- For self before all the world?
- Whence came the flash of lightning
- That self from its pedestal hurled?
-
- But what if I’m struggling blindly,
- What if this new hope is vain,
- Can I go back to my old faith?
- A voice whispers—“Never again.”
-
- So I will press forward—believing
- Hands unseen will guide to the goal,
- And tho’ dim yet the light on my pathway,
- Nirväna breathes peace to my soul.
-
- _K. D. K._
-
- THE SPIRIT OF HEALING.
-
-It is somewhat difficult to say what real or theosophical work is
-when exactly defined, and, in consequence, it becomes very easy to
-speak of an effort as untheosophical—that is not sufficiently
-unselfish in motive. The fact is that the word Theosophy has such a
-very wide meaning, embracing, as it does, the true spirit of all
-creeds and religions, and confining itself to none in particular,
-that no work done in the spirit of truth and wisdom is really
-untheosophical. Hence, unless the speaker is possessed of more
-knowledge than ordinary men concerning the causes which underlie our
-actions, the application of the word untheosophical is incorrect. In
-fact, if it is once granted that it is possible to work from an
-impersonal standpoint in favour of a particular creed or religion,
-that work becomes theosophical in character. Thus it is only work
-(in the widest sense of the word and on all planes) from the
-personal standpoint, and which, therefore, militates against
-Universal Brotherhood, which can really be described as
-untheosophical. But this by no means presupposes that work which has
-outwardly the appearance of theosophical genuineness is not really
-selfish. It is, of course, the old story of the wolf in sheep’s
-clothing. We do but need one example—the truly-called _profession_
-of Medicine. We constantly hear of the wonderful self-sacrifice of
-medical men; of men who die at their posts rather than desert a
-possible case in times of epidemic and cholera; of men who suck
-tracheotomy tubes with almost certain death by diphtheria staring
-them in the face; finally we hear, though but seldom, of the honest,
-earnest devotion of a lifetime in places and districts where the
-fees are so small that it is barely possible for the doctor to live
-on his earnings. These are the heroes of the profession. Their work,
-for the most part, consists of an unselfish devotion to the
-alleviation of suffering, culminating in a final sacrifice of their
-personal selves—for death is nothing less than this. But we must
-turn to the less favourable side of the picture—the struggle not for
-a living, but for wealth, and work, fired by ambition and the search
-for fame. Of course, apart from the personal, selfish element in it,
-the ambitious struggle in other professions than those of the Church
-or Medicine is of no great or unnatural harm; but in these two cases
-it is more than harmful, it is a degrading betrayal of trust. It is
-Simonism with a vengeance; yes, kind friends, it approaches very
-nearly to the case of Judas, who held the bag, and betrayed his
-Master with a kiss. It may be asked why this sweeping denunciation
-is made of the two noblest professions; of those two which,
-considered from the ethical standpoint, consist of devotion to the
-service of man? The reason is not very far to seek. The power which
-true healers possess—healers alike of body and soul, is not one
-which can be sold for money or bartered for wealth and fame. At
-least, if the possibility does exist, it bears a suspicious
-resemblance to the old idea of selling one’s soul to the devil in
-exchange for power and prosperity. It may be replied to this that
-there is no harm in bartering knowledge of drugs, of pathology,
-diagnosis of disease, surgical skill, etc.—in short, all the
-knowledge acquired by education—for money. I answer No! for it is
-material given for material, and nothing more. But these are not the
-sole properties of the true healer, and those who do not possess
-these other properties I speak of are not healers, and while they
-may _profess_ medicine[59] and may be _in_ it, are yet not _of_ it.
-
------
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- So medicine is, in the Shakespearian use of the word, and also
- from its Greek derivation, not to give drugs, but to cure or heal.
-
------
-
-As regards the Church and its professors of religion, the case is
-even worse; they have no material products of education to barter,
-and for the most part are contented with telling their flock to “do
-as I bid you, and not as I do.” But among them there are noble
-examples of unswerving unselfishness and devotion, although for the
-most part those who enter the Church are too young to understand
-fully the nature of their high calling. Unfortunately the call in
-too many cases is not a call to minister and heal souls, but to make
-a living and heal the souls in the process. But again, it may be
-asked, what are these wonderful powers which constitute the true
-healer, and which are not to be bought or sold? The first one which
-occurs naturally to the mind is the power of sympathy. The old joke
-in _Punch_ about “the good bedside manner” has a considerable
-substratum of truth when divested of its unpleasing folly. The
-substratum of that manner is that which is given by sympathy; and
-this is one of the first elements which constitute the power of
-healing. It gives the power of suffering with the patient and
-therefore of understanding what the sufferer is enduring. It is
-beyond diagnosis, although it assists it by being much surer—at
-least, as to the reality of the suffering. But this power of
-sympathy only expresses a part of the meaning of the power to heal.
-Sympathy tends to annihilate the personal distinctions between the
-healer and the sufferer; it tends to exalt the consciousness of the
-healer not only to know the remedy for the disease, but to be
-himself the power of cure, and also it is a vast occult power in
-virtue of which all the “elder brethren” of the Universal
-Brotherhood live their lives; in virtue of which the world’s great
-enlighteners have not only lived their lives but _lived their
-death_, in order that they might benefit the sufferers who despised
-and rejected them. But this power of sympathy and the kindred powers
-which constitute the true healer, are really secret powers and
-secret remedies. Therefore they are openly tabooed by the medical
-profession, although the said professors cannot avoid using them.
-But secret remedies are to some degree justly avoided. For it is but
-natural to regard secret remedies with suspicion. At best their use
-seems like working in the dark and blindly, and, consequently, any
-results obtained must be empirical. Again, the medical profession
-seems to plume and feather itself upon possessing a slight leaven of
-its ideal condition, and, by constituting itself into a kind of
-trades’ union, declines as a body to have anything to do with any
-remedy of which the composition is not made fully known. This, at
-least, is the more charitable view, for, on the other hand, the
-doctors know only too well how eagerly the public rushes after any
-new “quack” medicine, and seeks to cure itself without calling in
-their aid. The doctors reply to this that they will have nothing to
-do with a medicine whose composition is a secret, and which is
-therefore devoted, to a great extent, to replenishing the purse of
-its discoverer, and not to the cure of diseases from a love of man
-and a hatred of suffering. This is a very high-sounding idea, and a
-noble one, when it is not what the Americans would call only
-“high-falutin.” But even when a remedy is made public property, it
-is not necessarily _pro bono publico_; in fact, as a rule, it serves
-only the good of the dispensing chemist. He sees the prescription
-and notes it, the public does not; and, as a rule, the chemist
-obtains the drugs cheaply, and compounds them at the same rate as
-this medicine was originally sold under the patent of its
-discoverer. Still, with all the dislike of the profession for secret
-remedies, there is no doubt at all that in the case of the heads of
-the profession some of the best results are obtained by the use of
-prescriptions, which practically constitute a secret formula. The
-especial combination which the particular man has discovered to be
-of use is his property, and his only until he writes a book, for the
-various chemists who make it up, and the various patients who drink
-it, are not to the full aware of its value and use. The difference
-between this and quack medicine lies merely in the peculiar names
-and large advertisements, but very often these are balanced by the
-fame of the particular surgeon or physician. But, in all honour to
-physicians and surgeons, who do in many cases have and show a
-large-hearted sympathy for suffering, it must be remembered that
-many of the greatest and busiest of them give hours of their
-valuable time to those who are too poor to pay in any other form
-than that of grateful thanks. There are, again, others who disregard
-all the rules which govern trades’ union society, and boldly take
-their stand upon Christ’s dictum, that “the Sabbath was made for man
-and not man for the Sabbath.” In other words, they say that any
-medicine which they personally find valuable in the alleviation of
-pain and disease must be used even at the risk of themselves being
-called “unprofessional.” Again, others will use these so-called
-secret remedies, and say nothing about it, preferring to pin their
-faith to the wittily termed eleventh commandment, “Thou shalt not be
-found out.” At this point it is possible to draw a parallel between
-the use of the terms “untheosophical” and “unprofessional.” It would
-seem that both are used in very much the same trades’ union sense.
-In the case of the word “unprofessional,” it is to be regretted that
-it is due very largely to a lack of charity and of the spirit of
-enquiry. In the case of the word “untheosophical” it is often used
-in consequence of a lack of charity, and further in the spirit of
-scandal and gossip. Unless a man or woman is a theosophist pure and
-simple, who carries out in their _entirety_, the objects of the
-Theosophical Society, the use of the word untheosophical betrays
-_them_ to be untheosophical and to fail in carrying out those
-objects which they have promised to further to the best of their
-power.
-
-In the light of the foregoing it is now possible to examine the
-manner in which Count Mattei’s remedies have been received. The
-Count himself is a member of a noble family of Bologna, he has
-travelled much, but returned there in 1847, and took part in the
-movement which led to the liberation of Italy. In early life he much
-wished to study medicine, but was prevented from doing so by his
-father’s wish. Still his desire for knowledge was not quenched, and
-he attempted to follow the bent of his own mind. He rightly
-concluded that the instincts of the lower animals would lead them to
-search for herbs and plants which would cure their ailments, and
-that careful observation of these instincts might disclose medicines
-of the greatest value to human sufferers. Thus he adopted the habit
-of taking walks in the company of a number of dogs which were
-suffering from various diseases, and carefully watched their
-proceedings. Gradually the new pharmacopœia assumed shape, and the
-instinct of the dogs showed that particular diseases were met by
-particular remedies. These observations were made more than sixty
-years ago, and were not forgotten amid the occupations of a busy
-life. Indeed, when those occupations became less, Count Mattei
-returned with ardour to his earlier studies. He became a deputy in
-the Roman Parliament, but retired into private life after finding
-that his political views were not those of the men by whom he was
-surrounded. After this retirement the Count devoted himself to the
-study of medicine, in order that he might fit himself to apply
-certain principles which he believed he had discovered to be
-valuable for sick and suffering humanity. By his own account and the
-testimony of his patients he was not deceived, and the present
-remedies which bear his name are the result of twenty-five years’
-unceasing labour and experiment. He rapidly acquired an enormous
-practice, and during the early years of it his advice and his
-medicines were entirely gratis. But an unfortunate combination of
-circumstances, as well as the expense entailed by the preparation of
-the remedies, rendered it necessary for the Count to demand some
-small remuneration for his services. Then he learned that his bounty
-was abused, and that certain doctors, who had asked and obtained the
-remedies from him, departed from Bologna and retailed the remedies
-at extravagantly exorbitant prices. To such an extent was this
-carried that there exist authentic cases where a thaler was demanded
-for a single globule, and for the globules (20-30) necessary to give
-a bath, 1,000 francs were asked in New York. Some idea of the
-extortion may be given when Count Mattei refers to the thaler price
-as being 1,350 times the price at Bologna. This would be enough to
-justify any amount of secrecy on Count Mattei’s part, more
-especially as that secrecy entirely prevents the adulteration of the
-medicines which would inevitably follow, were they to become
-commercial property.
-
-We have only too familiar an example in the ranks of the medical
-profession. Many of his confrères have been appealed to for the
-support of a physician, named Warburg. At this date it seems hardly
-possible to believe that this gentleman was the happy discoverer of
-Warburg’s Fever Tincture. Perhaps in this country the value of the
-compound was not so highly appreciated as in India. But it is
-impossible to open any treatise on either surgery or medicine which
-is about twenty years old and not find the use of Warburg’s tincture
-specially urged in all cases of high fever, and especially in cases
-of malarial fever and pyæmia. The compound had an enormous sale, and
-yielded a very substantial income to its discoverer, but as soon as
-he yielded to the pressure of professional opinion, and consented to
-publish his formula so that it might obtain an extended use, he
-obtained the reward of such philanthropy. Every chemist now prepares
-the prescription and sells it at very nearly the original price, and
-what is more, never refunds a fraction of a farthing in the shape of
-a royalty to the discoverer. Consequently, we have before us the
-edifying spectacle of the learned discoverer compelled to exist on
-the charity of his professional confrères. Count Mattei has, at all
-events, protected himself against this, for although he states that
-in the event of his death he has provided against the loss of his
-secret to the world, and intends to leave it carefully as a legacy
-to suffering humanity, there is not the slightest doubt that he
-alone is the possessor of his own secret. That it is possible to
-obtain wealth from using this system is very evident. Certain among
-the chief of his followers are in the habit of visiting London at
-intervals, and the number of those who consult them is really
-wonderful. I am assured by an eye-witness that the crowd is far
-beyond that which besieges the door of the most fashionable
-physician of the day. When one reads the literature of the subject,
-one becomes more and more astonished at its simplicity. All diseases
-resolve themselves into three main forms, and constitutions vary
-accordingly. There are sanguine and lymphatic constitutions, and the
-various combinations of these two; there are also febrile
-disturbances and diseases of the liver and spleen. Consequently
-there are three chief medicines, which are used in an extraordinary
-state of dilution. It is no use, here at least, to discuss the value
-of these infinitesimal doses, so that may be left for future
-discussion. To a professional mind the most extraordinary claim on
-Count Mattei’s part will be that of curing cancer by internal and
-external medicines, and wholly without the use of the knife. He
-claims positively to cure every case in which the cancer has not
-ulcerated, and to cure a large proportion even of those which have
-already done so. Even of those which have been neglected, and have
-remained long in the ulcerated state, he claims to restore a certain
-proportion (though not a large one) to health. Of course, to any man
-who has seen the difficulty which attends the early diagnosis of
-cancer, these claims are very high-sounding indeed—almost to
-absurdity. The difficulties which attend diagnosis, even almost to
-the time when the knife _has been_ used, and the tissue submitted to
-the microscope, are very great. But in Count Mattei’s second
-division there is no such difficulty. It is then possible by certain
-indications, as well as by the use of the microscope, to be sure of
-the nature of the disease. Here Mattei steps in and claims that, by
-the use of one of his medicines, which exerts an _electric_
-influence on cancer, and by one of what he terms his vegetable
-electricities, he can restore the sufferer to health. Surely
-_conservative_ surgery, if it be worthy of the name, will
-investigate such a claim. Of the vegetable electricities there is no
-doubt whatever. Cases of neuralgia and sciatica and articular
-rheumatic pain have been seen to yield to them as to magic;
-consequently, even in the last stages of cancer, when there is no
-refuge save the grave left to the sufferer, I have reason to believe
-Count Mattei, to some extent, when he claims to enable the said
-sufferer to sink gently away in full consciousness, and without the
-use of morphia.
-
-To those who know anything of the occult uses and powers of plants,
-the fact that Count Mattei gathers his herbs at particular phases of
-the moon, will convey a good deal of meaning. Further, they will
-feel an additional assurance as to their value, and will no longer
-wonder, on one side at least, that Count Mattei chooses to keep his
-secret. It would seem probable to some extent that Count Mattei is
-one of the “elder brethren” of the race, although how far he is
-consciously so may be a matter for speculation, which could only be
-set at rest by Mattei himself and his compeers and superiors. What
-is definitely certain is that his system of medicine in its
-theories, if not in its practice, is a distinct step in advance in
-the healing art. Mattei is one of those pioneers of advance who
-spend the greater part of their lives in introducing for public use
-a secret of which they have become possessed. Mr. Keeley, of
-Philadelphia,[60] appears to be another of those pioneers who are in
-advance of their times. But Mr. Keeley, in his work, resembles Friar
-Bacon, who blessed (?) the world with gunpowder. No doubt
-civilization has been enormously extended by its aid; but however
-much use it may have been to man in adapting the face of nature to
-his service, it has at any rate subserved the gratification of his
-passions. Count Mattei appears to have none of these “defects of his
-qualities,” and to have endeavoured to bless the world without
-giving to it attendant curses. Still it is always possible that when
-his secret shall become known it will draw attention to plants which
-have just as destructive and poisonous an influence as the plants
-and herbs he uses have of healing power. At all events, at present
-his secret is of use to the world, and so far as may be seen he
-makes a just and “brotherly” use of it. Has enough been said above
-to show that the fact that his medicines are “secret” compounds
-should be no barrier to their use? What is still more important is
-that true theosophists should recognise that Count Mattei has done
-what they endeavour to do, and devoted his life to Real Work.
-
- A. I. R.
-
------
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- The discoverer of the new power now known as the Keeley-motor and
- inter-etheric force.
-
------
-
- ------------------------------------
-
- THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY’S CONVENTION OF 1887.
-
- -------
-
-Safely returned from my long tour of ten months, my first duty upon
-reaching home is to remind the Branches that the time approaches for
-the Annual Meeting of the Convention of the General Council—27th to
-30th of December. It appears that the attendance this year will be
-much larger than ever before; some thinking that we shall register
-between 200 and 300 Delegates: besides the old, there will be some
-twenty new Branches entitled to representation and votes. The yearly
-extension of our Society is thus steadily augmenting the strength of
-the General Council, and the importance of its Annual Convention. As
-the Society settles gradually upon its constitutional basis, the
-volume of committee and parliamentary work lessens and more time
-becomes available for theosophical lectures, the formation of
-friendships, and the cultivation of a good mutual understanding as
-to the work before us.
-
-The Adyar Library, to which considerable gifts of old MSS. and books
-have been made since last December, is already being put to use. The
-Dwaita Catechism was issued at the last Convention, and at this
-year’s the Vishistadvaita and Advaita Catechisms will be ready; as
-will also a compilation of Buddhistic Morals from the sacred
-literature of Ceylon. It is hoped that members of our many Branches
-will kindly bring forward as many ancient works upon every
-Department of Aryan knowledge as they can procure for this best of
-national monuments, the Adyar Library.
-
-Every effort will be made to promote the comfort of Delegates, as
-heretofore. Lectures are being arranged for, but learned Mofussil
-members who are willing to read discourses upon special topics
-interesting to Delegates, are requested to at once correspond with
-the Secretary, and if the MSS. are ready, to send them in for
-approval.
-
- * * * * * * * * *
-
-In conclusion let me assure our colleagues of all races, creeds and
-colors, that a hearty and brotherly welcome awaits them at their
-Theosophical home at Adyar.
-
- Adyar, 17th October, 1887. H. S. OLCOTT, P.T.S.
-
-
-
-
- A REMARKABLE CHRISTMAS EVE.
-
-
-It was a dark and solitary path, a narrow, hardly perceptible,
-footway in a dense forest, hemmed in by two walls of impenetrable
-thorns and wild creepers, covering, as with a net-work, the trunks
-of the tall, bare, moss-covered trees. The path led through the
-woods down to a deep valley in which a few country-houses were
-nestled. Night was fast approaching, and the hurricane, that blew
-across the country, boded evil to many a traveller, by land and sea.
-The wind, which had hitherto been only moaning through the trees, in
-low sad tones reminding one of a funereal dirge, was now beginning
-to roar with fury, filling the forest as with the howling of a
-hundred hungry wolves. Very soon a drizzling, ice-cold rain veiled
-the whole forest in a damp shroud of fog.
-
-One solitary traveller was wearily wending his way along this
-deserted path. The hour was late, and the darkening shadows were
-creeping on steadily, making the gloom in the thicket still more
-depressing. The young man looked worn and tired, as he again and
-again brushed aside the entangled briars which impeded his progress
-forward. He was well-dressed, and wore a marine officer’s cap. But
-his coat was now in rags, torn by the hard, frozen, cruel thorns,
-and his hands were bleeding in the struggle he had had with the
-briars for a whole long night and a day since he had lost his way in
-the huge forest. Panting, he stopped at last; and, as he heaved a
-deep sigh, he fell down half-insensible at the foot of an old shaggy
-oak. Then, half-opening his weary eyes, he murmured in despair, as
-he placed his hand on his heart:—“I wonder how long _this_ will yet
-beat.... I feel as if it were gradually stopping.”
-
-He closed his eyes once more, and very soon the feeble palpitations
-he was watching within himself, turned his half-paralysed thought
-into a new groove of ideas. Now the hardly audible beatings of his
-heart seemed to transform themselves into the ticking of an old
-clock quite near to him. He imagined the old Nüremberg timepiece in
-his mother’s room. He was dripping wet, chilled to the marrow of his
-bones, and was fast losing consciousness. But, forgetting for one
-moment his situation, and where he was, he caught himself
-soliloquising as was his custom, when alone.
-
-“This clock,” he thought, “has to be wound up ... else it will stop.
-So shall this heart. A man has to eat and drink to renew the fuel
-which feeds life, the clock too ... no; the clock is different to
-man. Let it rest for a week, for two, three months, even for a
-year.... Still, if wound up again, it will tick on as merrily as
-ever. But once the supply of the body is stopped—well, what then?
-Shall the working power cease for ever, or the ticking of the heart
-be resumed as that of the clock? No, no!... You may feed the dead
-body of man as much as you please! it shall awaken to life no
-more.... A queer problem to solve,—What becomes of that something
-which made the body move? The food is not the cause, is it?... No;
-the food is only the fuel.... There must be some inward fire ever
-burning, as long as it is supplied.... But when the supply of the
-fuel ceases? Ah!... that is it ... where does it go?... Does
-anything really die?... What form shall _my_ inner fire take?...
-Shall it return to _its_ primordial light ... and be no more?... Oh,
-how I suffer!... No, no; I must not allow this, _my_ fire, to go
-out. No, not before I see once more my loved ones ... my mother and
-Alice....”
-
-Arising with great effort he pursued his way with tottering steps,
-feeling his way in the darkness. But instantly a wild gust of wind,
-tearing along the narrow pathway, caused the great trees to sway and
-rock as if in very agony. Catching in its icy clasp the weakened
-form of the young man, the hurricane nearly upset him. Being already
-wet through and through with rain and cold, he shivered and groaned
-aloud, as he felt a sharp pain penetrating his limbs from the brain
-downwards. One more short struggle and he heavily fell on the cold
-hard ground. Clasping his hands over his brow, he could only whisper
-again: “Mother, I can do no more.... Farewell, mother, for ever!
-Alice—fare thee well!”...
-
-His strength was gone. For over thirty hours he had tasted no food.
-He had travelled night and day in the hope of being with his family
-on Christmas Eve, that blessed day of joy and peace. Never yet had
-he spent a Christmas Eve away from home; but that year had been an
-unusually unfortunate one for him. His vessel had been wrecked and
-he had lost all. It was only by the greatest of chances that he had
-been enabled to find his way back to his country, in time to take
-the train that brought him from a large seaport to the small town
-some twenty miles’ distance from his home. Once there, he had to
-travel that distance by coach. But just as he was preparing to start
-on his last journey, he met a poor sailor, a companion of his
-shipwreck. With tears in his eyes the man told him that having lost
-all, he had no more money left to take him to his wife and children,
-who were yet two days’ journey by rail from where he was; and that
-thus, he could not be with them to make merry Christmas together. So
-the good-hearted young officer, thinking he could easily walk the
-short distance that separated him from home, had emptied his purse
-into the sailor’s hands and started on his way on foot, hoping to
-arrive on that same evening.
-
-He set out early in the morning and bethought himself of a short cut
-through the vast forests of his native place. But on that afternoon
-he hurt his foot badly, and being able to move only at a very slow
-pace, the night had overtaken him in the forest in which he had
-finally lost his way during that terrible night. He had wandered
-since the morning during the whole long day, until pain, exhaustion,
-and the hurricane had overpowered him. And now, he was lying
-helpless on the bare frozen ground, and would surely die before the
-dawn.
-
-How long he lay there he never remembered; but, when he came back to
-himself, he thought he could move, and resolved to make a last
-supreme effort after the short rest. The wind had suddenly fallen.
-He felt warmer and calmer now, as he sat leaning against a tree. Old
-habit brought him back to his previous train of thought.
-
-“Never, mother dear, never,” he addressed her in thought, “never
-have I spent a Christmas away from your dear selves.... Never, since
-my boyhood, when father died twelve years ago! I made a vow then
-that, come what would, I should spend each Christmas Eve at home;
-and now, though life seems slowly ebbing out of my body, I want to
-keep my promise. They must be waiting for me even now, they, and
-Alice, my sweet fair cousin, who tells me she never loved but me!
-Reginald and Lionel, my brothers, who are earnestly waiting for me;
-my shy pretty May, and little Fanny.... They are all longing to see
-me, my dear ones, all expecting their old brother Hugo to return and
-decorate their Christmas-tree.... Oh, mother, mother, see you I
-must! I will be with you on this Christmas Eve, come what may!”
-
-This passionate longing appeal seemed to give him a ten-fold
-strength. He made a desperate effort to rise from his place, and
-found he could do so quite easily. Then, overcome with joy, he flew
-rather than walked through the dense black forest. He must have
-surely mistaken the distance, as a minute later he found himself in
-the brushwood, and saw the well-known valley so familiar to him, and
-even discerned in the bright moonlight the home that contained all
-his dear ones. He ran still faster, more and more rapidly, and even
-forgot in his excitement to wonder whence he had found the power of
-using his lame foot so easily.... At last he reached the lawn, and
-approached the cosy old house, all wrapped in its snowy winter
-garments, and sparkling in moonlight like a palace of King Frost.
-From a large bay-window poured out torrents of light, and as he drew
-still nearer, trying to see through it, he caught a glimpse of the
-loved faces, which he stopped to look at, before knocking at the
-door....
-
-“Oh, my mother! I see her there,” he exclaimed. “There she is,
-seated in her arm-chair, with her knitting by her side, her
-beautiful silvery hair as soft and glossy as ever under her
-snow-white cap. I see her kind eyes and placid features still
-unmarked by the furrows of age.... She looks troubled.... She
-listens to the fierce gusts of wind which cause the windows to shake
-and rattle. How that wind _does_ try to get into the house, and,
-finding itself no welcome guest, hark, how it rolls away.... How
-strange!... I _hear_, but I do _not feel_ the wind.... Oh!...
-Kneeling at my mother’s feet, there’s Alice. Her arms are clasped
-around mother’s knees; her golden curls fall on her back....
-But—but, why are her large violet eyes filled with tears as she
-looks with up-turned face into mother’s sad eyes?... Hush! What is
-she saying?... I hear it, even through that wall....
-
-“‘Don’t be uneasy, mother, dear, Hugo will come back. You know he
-told us so in his last letter. He said that after their shipwreck he
-was kindly cared for by those who saved the crew. He wrote also that
-he had borrowed money for the journey, and that he would be with us
-at the latest on Christmas Eve!... Bad roads and the stormy night
-will have detained him.... The coach, you say? Well, and though the
-coach has long since passed by, he may have taken a carriage. He
-will soon be here, mother.’
-
-“Ah, dear Alice, I see—she looks at her finger, with its little ruby
-ring I placed on it. She puts it to her lips, and I hear her
-murmuring my name....
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-(From Hugo’s diary, where he recorded that night’s experience.)
-
-... I rushed into the house at that appeal, and, as I now remember,
-without knocking at the door, as if I had passed through the stone
-walls. I tried to speak, but no sound appeared to reach their ears.
-Nor did anyone seem to see or greet me.... I drew Alice by the arm,
-but she never turned round, only continued to murmur sweet words of
-consolation into my mother’s ear. Good God, what agony! Why do they
-not hear, or even see me.... Am I really here? I look round the
-room. The old home is just as I had left it nine months since. There
-is my father’s picture hanging over the mantel-piece, looking at me
-with his kind smile; the old piano open, with my favourite song on
-it.... The cat sleeping as usual, on the hearthrug, and purring, as
-she stretches out her lazy paws. Albums on the table, my photograph,
-with its bright and happy look! How different to my present self!
-Here am I, standing in an agony of doubt, before my loved ones,
-seeing them, feeling them, touching them ... and yet unseen by them,
-unnoticed, as one who is not there.... Not even my shadow on the
-wall over their own. But who then, am I?... Why have they grown so
-blind to my presence? Why do their hearts and senses remain so
-dense? I try again and again. I call them piteously by their names,
-but they heed me not. My heart, my love, all is here, but my
-physical body seems far away. Yes, it is far, far away, and now I
-see it, as it lies cold and lifeless in that forest, where I must
-have left it. It is surely for _me_, not for that body, that they
-care! And is it because I am no longer clothed with flesh that I
-must be as only a breath, an empty naught, to them?...
-
-Full of despair, I turned away, and passing through the folding
-doors, arrived in the adjoining room, where my young brothers and
-sisters were busily occupied decorating the Christmas tree. There it
-stands, the old friend of my youth. I see it, and even discern its
-resinous perfume.... Towering up towards the ceiling, its lower
-branches are bending to the ground, laden with golden fruits, with
-toys and wax tapers. My brothers and sisters are gathered around it.
-But Reginald looks grave. I see him turning to May, and hear him
-saying:
-
-“Are you not anxious about Hugo? I wonder what can have become of
-him!”
-
-“I did not like to tell mother,” May replies with a little shiver,
-“but I had a dreadful dream last night. I saw Hugo white and cold.
-He looked sorrowfully at me, but when he tried to speak he could
-not. His look haunts me still!” she softly sobbed, with tears
-rolling down her cheeks.
-
-But now little Fanny gives a scream of delight. The child has
-discovered among the Christmas presents a real pipe, a pipe with
-silver bells.
-
-“Oh, _this_ shall be for Hugo, and then he will have music whenever
-he smokes!” exclaims the little one, merrily laughing, and holding
-out the toy in the direction where I am standing.
-
-For a moment I hope she sees me. I try to take the pipe, but my hand
-cannot clasp it, and the toy seems to slip away from me as if it
-were a shadow.... I try to speak again, but it is of no use ... they
-see me not, neither do they hear me!...
-
-Grieved beyond words, I left them, and returning into the next room,
-went up straight to Alice, who was still at mother’s side, murmuring
-to her loving words. I spoke again, I entreated, I besought them to
-look at me, and my suffering was so great that I felt that death
-would be preferable to this!
-
-Then came a last and supreme effort. Concentrating all my will, I
-bent over Alice, and gasped out with my whole soul:
-
-“If ever you loved me, Alice, know and hear me now!” I exclaimed, as
-I pressed my lips to hers.
-
-She gave a shudder, a start, and then, opening her eyes wider and
-wider, she shrieked in terror:
-
-“Hugo! Hugo! Mother, do you see? Hugo is here!”
-
-She tried to clasp me in her arms, but her hands met together, and
-only joined as if in prayer.
-
-“Hugo, Hugo, stay, why can I not touch you? Mother, look! look! Here
-is Hugo!”
-
-She was growing wilder and more excited with every moment.
-
-My mother looked faint and frightened, as she said:
-
-“Alice, what is the matter, child? What do you see? Hugo is not
-here!”
-
-The children, hearing Alice’s cry, flew into the room, all eager
-with expectation.
-
-“Where is Hugo? Where is he?” they prattled.
-
-I felt that I was invisible to all but Alice. She was the only one
-to see me. Therefore, realizing that the body had to be saved from
-its danger in the woods without loss of time, I drew her after
-myself with all my will. I slowly moved towards the door, never
-taking my look off her eyes. She followed me, as one in a state of
-somnambulism.
-
-My mother looked stunned and bewildered.
-
-Rising with difficulty from her place, she would have made for the
-door also, but sank back into her arm-chair powerless and covered
-her face with her hands.
-
-“Boys, follow Alice,” said May. “Wait ... the carriage is there
-ready to go after the doctor’s children. Take it. Call the gardener
-and John to go with you. I will stay with mother.” And whispering to
-Reginald, she added, “Tell John to take rugs and blankets ... but I
-am afraid poor Hugo is dead!”
-
-She then turned to mother, who had fainted. I would see no more, but
-_willing_ Alice to follow me, I left the house.
-
-She came slowly after me, her face all white, her large eyes full of
-a look of terror, but also of resolution in them. On she would have
-gone on foot, in the drizzling rain, her golden hair all flying
-about her head, had she been allowed to do so by my brothers and
-servants. The strange cortege was ushered into the open carriage,
-the coachman being ordered to follow her directions. On it went, as
-speedily as the horse could go. I found myself floating now before
-them, and, to my own amazement, sliding backwards, with my face
-turned towards Alice, strongly willing that she should not lose
-sight of me. Two hours afterwards, the carriage entered the
-brushwood, and they were obliged to alight.
-
-The night was now very dark and stormy, and notwithstanding the
-lanterns, the group made way with great difficulty into the thicket.
-The wind had begun to blow and howl with the same fury as when I had
-left the wood, and seemed to have caught them all in its chilly
-embrace. The boys and servants panted and shivered, but Alice heeded
-nothing. What cared _she_ for that! The only thought of my beloved
-was I, Hugo.... On, on we went, her tender feet wounded with the
-brambles, and the wet sprays of branches brushing against her white
-face. On, on she ran, till, with a sudden and loud cry of joy and
-terror mixed, she fell down....
-
-At the same instant _I_ collapsed, and _fell also on the ground, as
-it seemed to me_; and then all became a blank.... As I learned
-later, at that moment the boys drew near, and lowering their
-lanterns found Alice with her arms clasped around a form, and when
-the lanterns were placed close to it they saw before them the body
-of their brother Hugo, a corpse!
-
-“Sure enough he is dead, the poor young master!” cried John, our old
-servant, who was close behind.
-
-“No, no!” Alice answered. “No, he is not dead.... His body is cold,
-but his heart still beats. Let us carry him home.... Quick, quick!”
-
-Lifting up the body gently and placing it in the carriage they
-covered it with rugs and shawls, and drove at a furious speed back
-to our home. It was near midnight when the carriage stopped at the
-gate.
-
-“Reginald, run on quickly and give the good news to mother!” cried
-Alice. “Tell May to have hot bottles and blankets ready, on the sofa
-in the drawing-room. It is warm there near the fire.... Tell them
-all that Hugo lives, for I _know_ he does,” she went on repeating.
-
-More lights were brought out, and the servants carried carefully
-their burden into the house, where they placed it on the sofa, hot
-flannels and restoratives being immediately applied. Noiselessly and
-breathlessly went on the work of love around the apparently dead
-body, and was at last rewarded. A sigh was heard, a deeper _breath_
-was drawn, and then the eyes slowly opened and _I_ looked round in
-vague surprise at all those loved and anxious faces crowding eagerly
-around me.
-
-“Don’t speak yet, Hugo,” whispered Alice anxiously. “Don’t, till you
-feel stronger.”
-
-But I could not control my impatience.
-
-“How am I here?” I asked. “Ah, I remember. I lost my way in the old
-forest.... Ah, yes; I recollect now all.... The cold biting wind, my
-lame foot, after I stumbled and fell, knocking my head against a
-stone, and all became a blank to me!”
-
-“Hush, Hugo, hush my boy,” said my mother wiping tears of joy from
-her still pale and suffering face. “You will tell us all that
-presently.... Now rest.”
-
-But I could not refrain from speaking, as thoughts crowded into my
-head, and recollections came vividly back. “No, no, I am better,” I
-went on. “I am strong again, and I must let you know all that I
-dreamed. I was here, and I saw you all.... Oh, the torture I
-suffered when you knew me not!... Mother, darling, did you not see
-me, your son? But she, my Alice, saw and followed me, and it is she
-who saved me from death! Ah, yes! I remember now, you found my body,
-and then all was darkness again. Kiss me, mother! Kiss me all, let
-me feel that I am really with you in body, and am no longer an
-invisible shadow.... Mother I kept my promise; I am here on
-Christmas Eve! Light the tree, my little Fan, and give me the pipe
-with the bells I saw you holding, and heard you say it was for old
-brother Hugo.”
-
-The child ran into the other room and returned with the pipe I had
-seen her playing with a few hours before. This was the greatest and
-final proof for me, as for my family. The event was no vision then,
-no hallucination, but true to its merest details! As my mother often
-said afterwards, referring to that wonderful night, it was a weird
-and strange experience, but one which had happened to others before,
-and will go on happening from time to time. Of late years, when I
-had been happily married to my Alice (who will not let me travel far
-away without her, any longer) I have dived a good deal into such
-psychic mysteries, and I think I can explain my experience. I think
-that by privation, cold, and mental agony, I had been thrown into
-such abnormal conditions, that my astral body, as it is now
-generally called, my “conscious self,” was able to escape from the
-physical tenement and take itself to the home I so passionately
-desired to reach. All my thoughts, and longings being intensely
-directed towards it, I found myself there where I wished to be, in
-spirit. Then the agony of mind from the consciousness that I was
-invisible to all, added to the fear of death unless I could impress
-them with my presence, became finally productive of the supreme
-effort of will, the success of which alone could save me. This
-joined to Alice’s sensitiveness and her love for me, enabled her to
-sense my presence, and even to see my form, whereas others saw
-nothing. Man is a wonderful and marvellous enigma; but it is one
-which has to, and _will_, be completely unriddled some day, the
-scepticism of the age notwithstanding.
-
-Such is the simple story told to the writer by an old naval officer,
-about the most “memorable Christmas Eve” that came within his own
-experience.
-
- CONSTANCE WACHTMEISTER.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-
- A HALF CONVERT.
-
- Buddha! my earthly memory is so dimmed
- By this poor passing life which travels a hem
- Across my soul, and thought I cannot stem
- Pours like a flood to wash all traces limned
- Of former selves, that I shall ne’er recall
- The steps I came, nor know the fleshly tents
- In which I sojourned;—yet the fraying rents
- Of time-worn garments I have seen, and all
- The dust upon my feet, and I the sin
- Of tiger and of cobra passions striven
- To crush. These were strait gates, and through them driven
- My chariot wheels, so prithee set me free
- From other births, lest I seek Peter’s key,
- O! Sakya Muni, let me trembling in.
-
- MARY N. GALE.
-
-
-
-
- THEOSOPHY AND MODERN SOCIALISM.
-
- BY A SOCIALIST STUDENT OF THEOSOPHY.
-
-
-The writer of the article on “Brotherhood” in your last issue has
-given an erroneous impression of Socialism, which, as a student of
-Theosophy (I do not know if I can yet call myself a disciple), who
-has been, in a large measure, drawn to this great study _through
-Socialism_, I may, perhaps, be allowed to correct. Indeed, I should
-feel that I was shirking a task clearly indicated to me at the
-present moment, were I to leave such errors, so far as all readers
-of LUCIFER are concerned, uncorrected.
-
-“T.B.H.,” the writer of the article in question—an interesting and,
-I believe, useful article in many respects—has, I venture to
-conjecture, confused the general system or class of systems known as
-Socialism, with certain methods of propagating its principles. Let
-me commence by quoting the paragraph in his article to which I take
-exception. He says (LUCIFER No. 3, p. 213):—
-
- (1). “Socialism, as preached in this nineteenth century, it
- [the Universal Brotherhood, which is the mainspring of
- Theosophy.—J.B.B.] certainly is not. (2). Indeed, there would
- be little difficulty in showing that modern materialistic
- Socialism is directly at variance with all the teachings of
- Theosophy. (3). Socialism advocates a direct interference with
- the results of the law of _Karma_, and would attempt to alter
- the dénouement of the parable of the talents by giving to the
- man, who hid his talent in a napkin, a portion of the ten
- talents acquired by the labour of his more industrious
- fellow.”
-
-I will first take the three statements contained in this paragraph
-separately, and, for convenience’s sake, in inverted order. The
-allegation against Socialism contained in the third is the most
-specific, and that which, in the eyes of Theosophists, must appear
-the most serious. This statement, namely, that “Socialism advocates
-a direct interference with the results of the law of Karma, and
-would attempt &c.,” constitutes, in fact, the only definite premise
-in his argument. Of course, if Socialists do advocate, consciously
-or unconsciously, anything of the sort, they advocate a physical and
-psychical impossibility, and their movement is fore-doomed to
-failure. More than this, if they do so _consciously_, they are
-sinning against the light, and are impious as well as childish in
-their efforts. Of such, clearly, the Universal Brotherhood is not.
-
-But neither Socialists nor Socialism, “as preached in this
-nineteenth century,” do anything of the kind. By “Materialistic”
-Socialism, I presume “T.B.H.” implies (if he has really _studied_
-Socialism at all, which I venture to doubt) so much of it as can be
-urged upon purely worldly grounds, such as the better feeding,
-housing, &c., of those who do the active work of society, technical
-instruction, such general education as fits a man for the domestic
-and secular duties of life, and the reorganisation of society with
-these objects upon a “co-operative” basis,[61] in which public
-salaried officers, elected by their fellows, will take the place of
-capitalists and landlords, and in which the production and
-distribution of wealth will be more systematically regulated. This
-system, of course, takes no account of the law of Karma.
-
------
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- Co-operative, that is to say, in the sense that the various
- sections and individual members of society shall _willingly_
- co-operate, being fully conscious of their interdependance.
-
- ST. GEORGE LANE FOX.
-
------
-
-In a rough sort of way, however, all Socialists recognise the law,
-so far as its effects are visible in this world on the physical,
-intellectual, and moral planes. The fact that “the evil that men
-do,” and classes and nations of men also, “lives after them,” none
-are more ready to own and act upon. The action and reaction of
-individual _will_ and individual and social _circumstance_, both
-upon each other and upon individual and social _conditions_, forms
-part of the foundations of Socialism. _Quâ_ Socialists we do not, of
-course, take any more account of the law of Karma than do
-non-Socialist Christians and Agnostics, but I maintain there is
-nothing whatever in Socialism repugnant to a belief in this law. If
-anything, it is the other way. All Socialists, whether they call
-themselves Collectionists or Anarchists, Christian Socialists,[62]
-Communists, or purely economic Socialists, are anxious to give freer
-play to human abilities and social impulses, by creating leisure and
-educational opportunities for all. We may thus, if it is permitted
-to me to speculate while criticising, become the instruments of a
-greater equalisation, distribution, and acceleration of Karmic
-growth, “good” or “evil,” upon and among individual souls, during
-their incarnation on this planet. This would come to pass by the
-transferring of a great deal of the responsibility for Karmic
-results which now lies with each individual in his personal
-capacity, upon the collective entities composed of individuals
-acting in public capacities; _e.g._, as nations, provinces,
-communes, or trade corporations.
-
------
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- Socialists who consider their Christianity to supply them with
- sufficient motives for their Socialism. They do not strictly form
- a sect either of Socialists or of Christians.
-
------
-
-It is surely true, even now, to speak of a collective, _e.g._, a
-national or municipal Karma, as we do of a national conscience. We
-speak of reward or retribution to nations and cities as if they had
-distinct personalities—are these mere “figures of speech”? But what
-is more important is that Socialists may prepare the way for a
-revelation of the noble truths of Theosophy to the multitude; they
-may help to raise the intellectual and instinctive moral standard of
-the whole community to such an extent that all will, in the next
-generation following after the Social Revolution,[63] be amenable to
-those truths. In this way Socialism would not, indeed, interfere
-with the results of the law of Karma, but would, as the precursor of
-Theosophy, be the indirect means of enabling multitudes to rise and
-free themselves from its bonds.
-
------
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- This word, of course, is employed in the general sense, without
- any reference to the physical character which the revolution may
- assume. It may be attended with violence, or it may be as peaceful
- as, for instance, the religious revolution accomplished by
- Constantine in the fourth century. All I am postulating is a more
- or less sudden transformation of the existing social order,
- effected by one of those impulses with which evolution seems to
- complete its periods, and of which Theosophy may some day afford
- the explanation.
-
------
-
-As to the parable of the talents, well, Socialists would be only too
-glad to see its moral better enforced in this and other “civilised”
-countries. To them it seems impossible that it could be _less_
-enforced or taken to heart than it is now. They see that under the
-present system of Society—that vast engine of usury by which whole
-classes are held in economic servitude to other classes—many are
-encouraged to live in sloth and hide their talents, even if they put
-them to no worse uses than that. This could hardly happen under a
-_régime_ of economic Socialism (such a _régime_, for instance, as
-Laurence Grönlund contemplates in his “Co-operative Commonwealth”);
-for these able-bodied or talented citizens who declined to work
-would simply be left to starve or sponge upon their relatives. Under
-a purely communist _régime_,[64] no doubt there would be a few who
-would shirk their proper share in the social work, but at least none
-would be brought up from infancy, as now, to “eat the bread of
-idleness.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- The only kind to which T. B. H.’s remarks are in any way
- applicable.
-
------
-
-Finally on this point, if to advocate such changes as Socialists
-advocate, the substitution of social co-operation for competition;
-of production with a view to use, for production with view to
-profit; of peace between nations, classes, and individuals, for war;
-of harmonious organisation to the advantage of all, for _laissez
-faire_, and chaos for the advantage (or supposed advantage) of a
-few. If I say, to advocate such changes be to advocate interference
-with the results of the law of Karma, so is every proposal for the
-amelioration of the physical or intellectual welfare of our fellows.
-And if participation in this and other movements, which may with
-equal justice be called “materialistic,” be prohibited to
-Theosophists, they may as well, for all good their Universal
-Brotherhood will do to the mass of those at present outside it, stay
-at home and content themselves with communing with the select few
-who alone will ever be in a position to appreciate them. If, for one
-reason or other, they do not care to co-operate with Socialists, let
-them, at least, recognise that the latter are preparing their way
-for them, doing the dirty (?) and laborious work, without which
-Theosophy can never descend from the serene heights in which it now
-dwells, to replenish, spiritually, this sadly benighted world. For,
-apart from a healthier physical and psychical atmosphere than
-“civilised” life engenders in either rich or poor (collective Karmic
-effects), a fair amount of leisure and freedom from sordid care are
-indispensable in most human beings for the higher development of the
-perceptive or gnostic faculties. At present this minimum of
-leisure and economic independence is probably unattainable by
-nineteen-twentieths of the population. Yet this self-same society,
-with its scientific learning and experience, its machinery, and its
-business organisation, contains within it all the germs of such a
-reconstruction of the physical environment as shall very shortly
-place the means of spiritual and psychical regeneration within the
-reach of all.
-
-“T. B. H.’s” second statement is that “Indeed there would be very
-little difficulty in showing that modern materialistic Socialism is
-directly at variance with all the teachings of Theosophy.” Such an
-expression as “materialistic Socialism” is, as I have already
-hinted, erroneous. _All_ Socialism is materialistic in the sense
-that it concerns itself primarily with the material or physical
-conditions of mankind. So do chemistry and mechanics, pure or
-applied; so, in ordinary politics, do Liberalism and Conservatism.
-_No_ Socialism is materialistic in the sense that it is based upon
-any materialistic, as distinct from spiritualistic or pantheistic
-conceptions of the universe. It has hardly any more to do with such
-questions than have cotton-spinning or boot-making. I do not,
-however, pretend to mistake “T. B. H’s” meaning. Taking Socialism in
-its essentially economic aspect (which I admit is the foremost for
-the present, and must remain so until it has been disposed of), he
-asserts that “there would be very little difficulty in proving &c.”
-This is a mere general charge against it, although, I think, a less
-plausible, and therefore—from the point of view of harmony between
-Socialists and Theosophists—a less serious one, than the particular
-charge which follows it, and with which I have already endeavoured
-to deal. For my own enlightenment, I should be glad to have some
-samples, taken at random, of his skill in showing this variance; but
-I doubt if such a demonstration could effect any good. Meanwhile it
-is impossible to _answer_ the charge on account of its vague, albeit
-sweeping and all-comprehensive character. “All the teachings of
-Theosophy” are quite too much for a student like myself to attempt
-to compare with Economic Socialism, as a system; nor do I think one
-with ten times the learning and discernment that I can claim, would
-readily attempt it. I merely record, therefore, my sincere
-conviction that on this general point “T. B. H.” is also mistaken,
-and that it is not Socialism, economic, or otherwise, which he has
-really been scrutinising and balancing, but the sayings or doings of
-some particular “Socialist,” whom he has seen or read of.
-
-Individual Socialists have, of course, many faults which cannot
-fairly be charged to the social and economic tenets they profess.
-Thus one besetting fault of militant advocates of the cause is the
-use of violent language against individual capitalists, police
-officials and landlords. It, is so easy, even for men of a calibre
-superior to the average, to be drawn on from righteous indignation
-at a corrupt system, to abuse of the creatures and instruments
-thereof—or even, on occasion, to personal violence against them.
-Every good cause has its Peters, no less than its Judases. Socialism
-unfortunately has a rich crop of the former. Another still worse
-fault on the part of certain agitators, but one which might easily
-be predicted from the character of the struggle and the condition of
-the classes who must form the backbone of the Socialist Party, is
-the frequent appeal to lower motives, such as revenge and love of
-luxury.
-
-But such faults, although by all human prevision necessary
-incidents in the movement, are by no means inherent in Socialism.
-Even the purely “materialistic” socialism of Karl Marx, to which
-“T. B. H.” seems (although I think not with any clear picture of
-it in his mind) to refer, aims simply at securing the decencies
-and ordinary comforts of life to all, as a recompense for more
-evenly distributed social labour. The very conditions of life
-under a co-operative commonwealth such as Hyndman, Grönlund, and
-other followers of the late Karl Marx’s economic ideal, have in
-view—above all the obligation (virtual, at any rate) under which
-every able-bodied member of the community would find himself or
-herself, to do a few hours of useful work of one kind or another
-every day, and the elimination of the commercial and speculative
-element, with the wretched insecurity and dangerous temptations
-which it involves,—would preclude inordinate luxury. A healthy
-simplicity of life would become, first, “fashionable,” then
-usual.[65] Communism, of course, goes further than economic
-socialism, as it implies not only the claim of the individual upon
-the community for the means of _labour_ and the enjoyment of its
-fruits or their equivalent, but his claim for _subsistence_,
-irrespective of the amount and social value of the labour which he
-is able to perform. It would abolish, therefore, not only
-individual property in the means of production, but in the
-products themselves. The practicability of Communism, the motto of
-which is, “From each according to his abilities, to each according
-to his needs,” obviously depends upon the prevalence of more
-generous motives, of a higher sense of duty both to work and to
-give—a more perfect development, in fact, of the sense of human
-solidarity. It is for this very reason more commendable than mere
-economic socialism, as an ideal, to the attention of Theosophists;
-although its application, on the national or universal scale,
-cannot yet be said to have entered “the sphere of practical
-politics.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- I do not, of course, mean to predict that “sin” (or its
- Theosophical equivalent) would die out. It is, after all, a
- relative matter to the capacities and potentialities of the
- individual and his surroundings. Under Socialism, sensuality,
- social or plutocratic pride, and other sins fostered by the
- present order, would simply give way to ambition (to obtain
- popular distinction, _e.g._, as an artist or inventor) and perhaps
- to magic and other at present unfashionable vices.
-
------
-
-Communism, which may be either Collectivist or Anarchist, leads me
-to add a few words about Anarchism. I refer, of course, to the
-social ideal philosophically denoted by this name, and not to the
-means advocated by some of its supporters for putting an end to the
-present society. Anarchism involves Communism, as well as extreme
-decentralisation; more than this, it involves the abolition of all
-permanent machinery of law and order, such as “the State” is
-supposed to provide, and the abolition of physical force as a method
-of suasion, even for criminals and lunatics. As a protest against
-political domination of all kinds, and an antidote to the excessive
-centralisation advocated by some state-Socialists, Anarchism may be
-of some use, but it is obviously further even than Communism (of the
-Collectivist variety) from becoming a school of “practical”
-politics. It could only become so after society at large, all the
-world over, had grown sufficiently homogeneous and _solidaire_ for
-its members to co-operate spontaneously and automatically for all
-necessary purposes, grouping themselves into large or small
-organizations (limbs and organs) as required, and forming a complete
-_body-social_, or Mesocosm, if I may be allowed to coin a word for
-the purpose.
-
-The erroneous conceptions of Socialism which I believe “T. B. H.” to
-have formed, do not necessarily invalidate the first statement in
-the paragraph of his article upon which I have been commenting, to
-wit, that the Universal Brotherhood which he has in view (and which,
-I understand from him, forms the first part of the programme of the
-Theosophical Society) is not “Socialism as preached in this 19th
-century,”—or at any other time, past or future, for that matter.
-Still, I am inclined to hope that a more intimate study of Socialism
-will lead him to see that, whether identical or not, they are at any
-rate not antagonistic. My own belief is that Theosophy and
-“materialistic” Socialism will be found to be working along
-different planes in the same direction.
-
-Any Universal Brotherhood of Theosophists must be based upon
-Socialist principles, _inter alia_: its foundations may extend
-further and deeper than those of Socialism, but cannot be less
-extensive. Greed and War (political or industrial) Social Caste and
-Privilege, Political Domination of Man over Man, are as out of place
-in a true Brotherhood as wolves in a flock of sheep. Yet the
-exclusion of these anti-social demons and the enthronement in their
-place of Universal Love and Peace, if effected by such a
-Brotherhood, would simply leave Socialists nothing to do but to
-organize the material framework of their co-operative commonwealths.
-To preach economic or “materialistic” Socialism to a world already
-converted to the highest and completest form of Socialism, would be
-to advocate the plating of gold with tin or copper.
-
-Modern Socialism, if the noble aspirations of some of its apostles
-may be taken as an earnest of its future, is already developing
-(incidentally, of course, to its main economic and ethical
-doctrines) strong æsthetic and spiritual tendencies. No reader of
-William Morris or Edward Carpenter, to speak of English Socialists
-only, will fail to notice this. At present the mass of Socialists
-content themselves with basing their social and economic faith upon
-the ethical principles of Justice, Freedom and Brotherhood. But the
-highest, because most mystical of these principles, that of
-Brotherhood, or better, Human Solidarity—the ancient conception of
-“Charity”—forms the unconscious link between modern Socialism on the
-one hand, and Esoteric Buddhism, Esoteric Christianity, and
-Theosophy generally, on the other. I say _unconscious_ link, but I
-mean to imply that it may soon be rendered conscious and visible. As
-the various “orthodox” varieties, first of Christianity, then of
-Mohammedanism, perish with the destruction or collapse of the Social
-systems that have grown up along with them, this simple religion of
-Human Solidarity will take possession of the deserted shrines of
-Christ and Allah, and will begin to seek out its own fount of
-inspiration. Then will be the time for the Universal Brotherhood of
-Theosophists to step into the breach.
-
- J. BRAILSFORD BRIGHT (_M.A. Oxon._).
-
-
- THE GREAT QUEST.
-
- “In many mortal forms I rashly sought
- The shadow of that idol of my thought.”
- —_Shelley._
-
- “Après l’amour éteint si je vécus encore
- C’est pour la vérité, soif aussi qui dévore!”
- —_Lamartine._
-
-The loss of youth and love is the perpetual wail of the poets. A
-never-changing spring-time of life, where the sweet dreams of youth
-would be realised in the fruition of reciprocal love, such would be
-a heaven to them, and such _is_ a heaven while it lasts. If we add
-to this the refined æsthetic taste that can delicately balance and
-appreciate to a nicety every joy of the senses, and the
-highly-developed intellect which can roam at will over the
-accumulated store of past ages of culture, what would there be left
-for poets to dream of? With heart, senses and mind worthily
-employed, and with the well-balanced nature that knows moderation
-alone can give continued bliss, could not man rest satisfied at
-last? What more could he desire?
-
-It is useless to deny that life has very sweet gifts to give, though
-the number is limited of those who are capable of receiving them in
-their fulness. But even while these gifts are being enjoyed, it is
-felt that the horizon is bounded. With what questioning
-uncertainty—albeit with fascination—does youth open its eyes upon
-the glamour of the dazzling world! The love of the Springtide, even
-in fruition, is continually building fairy bowers in the future—it
-never for long rests content in the present, while to the intellect
-the bounded scope of utmost learning is a still more definite goad
-towards a knowledge that shall transcend all past experience.
-
-And even were man content to continue to drink of the one cup of
-bliss, he is never allowed to do so. The lessons of life, the great
-teacher, are continually being altered, and the tempest of the heart
-takes the place of the calm that was never expected to end.
-
-If, then, we must look in vain to find permanent bliss in any of
-these things—if, beyond the highest intellectual culture of an
-intellectual age there gleams the vision of a higher knowledge—if
-behind the artistic refinement of this, as of all past flowers of
-civilization, the fount of all sweetness lies hid—if even the
-heart-binding communion of earthly love is but a faint reflex of the
-deep peace realized by him who has torn aside the veil that hides
-the Eternal, surely all man’s energies should be devoted to the
-quest which will yield him such results.
-
-The whole philosophy of life may be summed up in the Four great
-Truths that Buddha taught, and no more convincing description of
-them can be read than that given in the lovely lines of the eighth
-book of the “Light of Asia.”
-
-He who has once been deeply imbued with these great truths—who has
-realised the transitory nature of all earthly bliss, and the pains
-and sorrows that more than counterbalance the joys of life—will
-never in his truest moments desire to be again blessed, either in
-the present or in any future incarnation, with an uniformly happy
-life, for there is no such soporific for the soul as the feeling of
-satisfaction, as there is no such powerful goad as the feeling of
-dissatisfaction. He is bound to pass through periods of joy, but
-they will be looked forward to with fear and doubting, for then it
-is that the sense-world again fastens its fangs on the soul, to be
-followed by the pain of another struggle for freedom.
-
-When first setting out on the great quest, it seems as if many
-lifetimes would fail to appease the dominant passion of the soul,
-but nature works quickly in the hottest climates, and from the very
-intensity of the desire may spring the strength and will to conquer
-it. Though it is probably the same key-note that is struck
-throughout, the dominant desire will appear to take a different tone
-through the ascending scale of life. It is a speculation, but one
-which would seem to receive endorsement from the analogies of
-nature; for as the human embryo in its antenatal development,
-exhibits in rapid succession, but with longer pauses as it
-approaches the period of birth, the characteristics of the lower
-races of animal life from which man has evolved, so does the human
-soul realise in its passage through life the dominant desires and
-attractions which have affected it through countless past
-incarnations. The lower desires which in past lives may have been
-more or less completely conquered, will be experienced in rapid
-succession and left behind without much difficulty, till the great
-struggle of the life is reached, from which man must come out more
-or less victorious if he is to continue the progress at all.
-
-If right intention were the only thing needed, if it were a
-guarantee against being led astray, or if straying did not
-necessitate retardation on the road, there would be no such supreme
-necessity that belief should be in accordance with facts; but even
-in worldly affairs we see every day that purity of intention is no
-guard against the failures that come from lack of knowledge. In the
-great spiritual science therefore, which deals with the problem of
-life as a whole—not the mere fragment which this earthly existence
-represents—it will be seen how vitally necessary it is that facts
-should be conceived correctly.
-
-To us whose eyes are blinded to the heights above, by the mists of
-our own desires, the only rays of light which can illumine the
-darkness of our journey on the great quest, are the words (whether
-or not in the form of recognised revelation) left by the masters who
-have preceded us on the road, and the counsel of our comrades who
-are bound for the same goal. But words are capable of many
-interpretations, and the opinions of our comrades are coloured by
-their own personality—the ultimate touch-stone of truth must
-therefore be looked for in the disciple’s own breast.
-
-Having stated the necessity for correct belief, let us now consider
-the question of the great achievement—the annihilation of Karma—the
-attainment of Nirvana. It must be acknowledged as a logical
-proposition that Karma can never annihilate Karma, _i.e._, that no
-thoughts words, or acts of the man in his present state of
-consciousness, can, ever free him from the circle of re-births. This
-view would seem to necessitate some power external to the man to
-free him—a power which has touch of him, and which would have to be
-allied to him.
-
-Now the teachings which have been put before the world in “Light on
-the Path” state the other side of the question. “Each man is to
-himself absolutely the _way_, the _truth_, and the _life_.” And
-again, “For within you is the light of the world, the only light
-that can be shed on the Path. If you are unable to perceive it
-within you, it is useless to look for it elsewhere.” It would seem
-that the solution of this great paradox must be sought for in the
-constitution of man, as described in theosophic writings. Indeed, it
-is the scientific statement of deep spiritual truths which gives to
-the Theosophic teachings their remarkable value, and which seems
-likely to carry conviction of their truth to the Western peoples,
-who have for too long been accustomed to the mere emotional
-sentimentality of the orthodox religions, and to the pessimistic
-negation of science.
-
-The higher principles, as they have been called, in the constitution
-of man, particularly the divine Atma, through which he is allied to
-the all-pervading Deity, must ever remain deep mysteries. But at
-least they are cognisable by the intellect, as providing logical
-stepping-stones for spanning the great gulf between Humanity and
-Divinity,—the Power—the correct cognition of which provides the very
-link between both systems of thought—which is at the same time
-external to man, and has touch of him by its own divine light which
-enlightens him, and which is also the very man himself—his highest
-and truest Self.
-
-For most of us it is the “God hidden in the Sanctuary,” of whose
-very existence we are unaware, is known under the name of Iswara or
-the Logos—the primal ray from the Great Unknown. It is the Chrestos
-of the Christians, but, save, perhaps, to a few mystics in the Roman
-or Greek churches, it has been degraded past recognition by their
-materialistic anthropomorphism. A help to its better understanding
-may be obtained by a reference to Sanscrit philosophy, which
-describes man’s nature as consisting of the three _gunas_ or
-qualities—Satwa, goodness, Rajas, passion and Tamas, darkness, or
-delusion—and the nature of most men is made up almost entirely of
-the two last named—while the Logos is pure Satwa.
-
-The vexed question, therefore, as to whether man is freed by his own
-dominant will, or by the power of the Logos, will be seen to be very
-much a distinction without a difference. For the attainment of final
-liberation the God within and the God without must co-operate.
-
-Desire being, as Buddha taught, the great obstacle in the way, its
-conquest by the dominant will is the thing that has to be done, but
-the Divine will cannot arise in its power, till the conviction of
-the Supreme desirability of attaining the eternal condition is
-rendered permanent; and it is this that necessitates the goad which
-the Logos is continually applying by its light on the soul.
-
-We are now face to face with a very difficult problem—it is, in fact
-the gulf which separates the Occultist from the Religionist, and it
-is here that it is so necessary to get hold of the correct idea.
-
- “Strong limbs may dare the rugged road which storms,
- Soaring and perilous, the mountain’s breast;
- The weak must wind from slower ledge to ledge,
- With many a place of rest.”
-
-The short cut to perfection referred to in the first two lines has
-been called in Theosophic writings “the perilous ladder which leads
-to the path of life.” To have faced the fearful abyss of darkness of
-the first trial, without starting back in terror at the apparent
-annihilation which the casting aside of the sense-life implies, and
-out of the still more awful silence of the second trial; to have had
-the strength to evoke the greater Self—the God that has hitherto
-been hidden in the sanctuary—such is the language used with
-reference to the very first—nay, the preliminary—steps on this path,
-while the further steps are represented by the ascending scale of
-the occult Hierarchy, where the neophyte or chela, through a series
-of trials and initiations, may attain the highest Adeptship, and the
-man may gradually leave behind him his human desires and
-limitations, and realise instead the attributes of Deity.
-
- PILGRIM.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- “_GOD SPEAKS FOR LAW AND ORDER._”
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-The readers of the curious article which follows are requested to
-remember that the writers of signed papers in LUCIFER, and not the
-editors, are responsible for their contents. Captain Serjeant’s
-views excite much interest among a large number of earnest people,
-who use Biblical forms and phraseology to picture to themselves the
-hidden things of nature and of spirit—things which we, the editors,
-and also the large majority of Theosophists, believe to be more
-clearly conveyed under the symbolism of the ancient Wisdom-Religion
-of the East, and better expressed in its terminology. The article is
-an attempt to explain the significance of a very curious cloud
-formation observed by many persons in Scotland, on the 16th of
-September last, a sketch of which appeared in the _St. Stephens
-Review_ on the 24th of the same month. In the centre of the sketch
-appears a side view of the British Lion rampant, with his paw on the
-head of a bearded man, who bears a considerable likeness to Mr.
-Parnell; to the right of the Lion is an excellent likeness of Her
-Majesty, crowned, as in the Jubilee coinage, and smiling very
-naturally; and to the left of the picture is an Irish harp. The
-appearance, by the testimony of many witnesses, must have been
-remarkably perfect and striking. Cloud-forms of a similar kind have
-been recorded many times in history, and they are usually connected
-in the public mind with some important political event. The Cross of
-Constantine will, no doubt, recur to the readers’ mind, but the
-sword and reversed crescent, which everyone saw in the sky when the
-Turks were driven out of Vienna, may be less generally known; as
-also the reversed thistles, with the outline of a Scotchman, armed
-with claymore and targe, and falling backward, which was observed in
-the clouds by the King and Court at Windsor on the night before the
-battle of Culloden.
-
-The question of what interpretation is to be put upon remarkable
-cloud appearances, is of little interest to anyone who believes that
-such phenomena are merely accidental arrangements of the watery
-vapours of the atmosphere driven by currents of air. Apart, however,
-from the obvious consideration that this way of regarding the
-phenomenon only raises the further question of what causes the
-currents of air to run in these particular ways, it may be safely
-said that the chances are millions of millions of millions to one,
-against the appearance in the clouds of any such perfect and
-complete picture of well-known persons and emblems, as were seen in
-Scotland on the 16th of September. Of course it may be argued, on
-the other hand, that the clouds are for ever forming and re-forming
-in millions of millions of millions different ways, and that the
-mathematical chances are that one of these ways will occasionally
-represent an earth scene. But even if the infinite number of
-continual permutations and transformations of cloud substance be
-held to account for the occasional appearance of some graphic
-picture of human things, it does not in any way explain why these
-rare pictures, when they do occur, should be perfect and appropriate
-symbols; neither does it account for their appearance at the
-particular moment when the extraordinary events, to which they are
-appropriate, are occurring, or about to occur.
-
-The phenomenon of vapours and fumes taking the shape of persons and
-things, is one of the oldest and best accredited facts in magic, and
-these cloud appearances, if they be viewed as having any
-significance, are merely instances of a similar action on a large
-scale produced by some conscious or unconscious force in nature.
-
-If it be allowed, however, that the occasional assumption by vapours
-of the shapes and likenesses of terrestrial things is not a
-“fortuitous concourse of atoms,” but occurs in accordance with some
-obscure law of Nature that in itself is the result of the mutual
-interaction and interdependence of everything in the Universe, the
-important question still remains—whether these appearances, when
-they do occur, are “intended” as warnings or omens? Should the lion,
-the harp, her Majesty, and Mr. Parnell, of the Scottish
-cloud-picture, be taken as having any more significance in the
-affairs of the nation, or of the world at large, than chemical
-phenomena can be supposed to presage disturbances or rejoicings in
-the world of nature? To answer this question would involve
-considerations which only an advanced Occultist would be able to
-comprehend; so we shall merely say, that although there are natural
-symbols which carry in them a definite meaning for those who can
-read that secret language, still symbols are generally significant
-in proportion as people themselves put a significance into them.
-
-A triangle or a cube is nothing but a triangle or a cube to a yokel,
-but to an Occultist they contain the philosophy of the Universe.
-Even so, Captain Serjeant, “the New Dispensationist,” and
-Theosophist, can put the meaning he likes into this or any other
-symbolical representation. We do not quite agree with either his
-methods or his results in the case before us, but the conclusions he
-draws are the same that are now being reached by many minds pursuing
-very different paths; and these conclusions may be summed up by
-saying that great changes are approaching, both in the temporal and
-in the spiritual life of humanity, and that these changes will
-eventuate in better things and nobler ideas.
-
- ---
-
- AN INTERPRETATION OF THE VISION, BY SERJEANT.
-
- (The New Dispensationist.)
-
-Thus may be interpreted the symbolical appearance represented and
-described in the _St. Stephen’s Review_ of 24th September 1887. The
-lion[66] of the house of Judah[67] arises with Victoria[68] the
-female principle of the victor[69] of this world of ignorance,
-error, sin, crime and misery. The lion represents that wisdom which
-is the only true and lasting power on earth. He shall crush out the
-anarchy and confusion now so manifest in _the world_ which is the
-state of ignorance existing on this earth. Without a miracle shall
-all this be accomplished?
-
------
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- It is somewhat difficult to follow the argument of this passage,
- unless the meaning of the words is explained. The Lion of the
- House of Judah is equivalent to “the Lord” and to “the Victor”
- mentioned below. In the writer’s phraseology “Victor is the symbol
- of the Trinity of Wisdom, Love, Truth.” Now the Lion is symbolical
- of Wisdom; but, as it is impossible to sever one element of the
- Trinity from another, it is necessary to remember that whenever
- the word wisdom is used it carries with it the other two as well.
- The above sentence would then seem to mean the conjunction of the
- male and female principles to effect the purpose of the
- manifestation of the Trinity above mentioned; by which
- manifestation all ignorance is dispelled. [ED.]
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- Judah means _praised_; the true idea being _the Lord be praised_.
- Too much attention cannot be paid to the meanings of the words
- used in the sacred writings of all nations and peoples.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- _i.e._ the Queen, on whose lands _the Sun never sets_; it must be
- remembered that—“neither is the woman without the man, nor the man
- without the woman in the Lord.”—(1 Corinthians xi, 11.)
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- “And no man can say _Jesus is Lord_ (_i.e._ Victor), but in the
- Holy Spirit.”—(1 Corinthians xii., 3, Revised Version.) It is
- especially necessary to remember that whenever allusion is made to
- Victoria, it is not Her Most Gracious Majesty who is meant but the
- unseen Victoria whose outward manifestation the Queen is alleged
- to be. It is as though the Queen is the mouth-piece of the
- intelligence behind, as the Foreign Secretary may be the
- mouth-piece of the Foreign policy of the Government. The language
- used is purely symbolical and by using words as symbols an
- esoteric meaning is attached to the most commonplace events in
- life. It is a truly occult argument, but one which matter-of-fact
- people will regard as nonsensical. [ED.]
-
------
-
-As insidious doubt has crept into the hearts of the children of men,
-so shall insidious truth creep in to dispel all doubt; ignorance
-developed into wisdom shall be the destruction of the world.[70]
-Ignorance is the former or lower expression of knowledge, and
-knowledge is the former or lower expression of wisdom—ignorance[71]
-is the cross—wisdom is the crown. Ignorance regarded in a true light
-is really an incentive to knowledge, for no man would try to attain
-to knowledge were he not ignorant. And no man would strive to attain
-to wisdom, did he not possess the knowledge which ever silently
-proclaims to him its crowning happiness. Wisdom is not only the
-celestial crown which every embodied soul is ultimately destined to
-possess, but it is also that particular state of Heaven called the
-“New Jerusalem” which shall descend from the Spirit (_i.e._ God, see
-John iv., 24.) to earth in these latter days (see Revelation xxi.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- According to the explanations of the writer (_v. supra_), _The
- World_ signifies a state of ignorance and darkness. Taken in this
- sense the above sentence becomes a truism. [ED.]
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Ignorance is the equivalent of the Body, which is the Cross. By
- this light the Wisdom means the life of the Spirit. [ED.]
-
------
-
-Man was created[72] an ignorant being for a great purpose, which he
-will ultimately realise and know. Were there no ignorance, there
-could be no error, without error there could be no sin. Were there
-no ignorance, no sin, there could be no crime, no unhappiness, no
-misery existing on the earth. When, therefore, general ignorance
-shall succumb to the disintegrating power of universal intelligence
-so rapidly developing in these latter days[73] (see Daniel xii., 4),
-and which is the quickening of the Spirit of God in man; then the
-very conditions responsible for evolving error, sin, crime,
-unhappiness, and misery will be entirely done away with, and thus
-the consummation of the age—or, as the old translation of the Bible
-has it, the end of the world—will be brought about as a necessary
-consequence of purification by the Fire of the Spirit, _Truth_,
-which is the Divine Son of the Supreme Spirit, or God. “When He, the
-Spirit of Truth, is come, He shall guide you into all the Truth”;
-then shall the princes of the House of David[74] arise from amongst
-the people to rule the nations in equity and justice, in prosperity
-and peace, and the reign of the One Almighty Spirit of Wisdom, Love,
-and Truth shall begin on earth—for the Lion (or wisdom) shall lie
-down with the Lamb (or innocence), and a little child (or truth, see
-Rev. xii., the coming man-child) shall lead them.
-
------
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- To say that Man was created ignorant for a great purpose would
- argue the idea of a creator, according to orthodox ideas. But the
- writer is known to repudiate this idea entirely. It is difficult,
- therefore, to see what he means, unless it is that the man of
- flesh was ushered into existence by an evolution which he has not
- yet completed—ignorant, to acquire knowledge gradually. [ED.]
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- This is a _very_ optimistic view of the case, and we can only hope
- to see it realised. The article “Signs of the Times” agrees with
- the views of the writer of this article. There is a development
- going on, but the forces against which it has to contend are too
- dense for an early realisation of this dreamlike Golden Age. It is
- too good to be true; but that it is possible to help it is also
- true. The Kingdom of Heaven may be taken by violence, and an
- entrance effected in an instant, but the process of attaining the
- position whence the attack may be delivered, is one extending over
- years. No student of occultism needs to be told this. [ED.]
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- David means _beloved_; he was the first King of Israel, chosen of
- the Spirit. Israel means _one who strives with God_—_i.e._ one who
- strives against ignorance in order that he may be blessed together
- with his posterity. It was a name given to Jacob when he wrestled
- with the Angel (Genesis xxxii., 28), and applies _to all_ who
- contend on the side of the Deity.
-
------
-
-The soul-stirring and elevating harp of the sweet and trusting
-daughters of Judah[75] is hushed—no crown surmounts it; and angels
-weep and mourn over the discord now prevailing in the world. Where
-are the harmonious chords which, through their inherent, soft,
-loving and sympathetic notes once rendered powerless that enemy of
-man—the serpent? Lost, through the ignorance and sin of the puny
-earth-worms of this world! Yet Ireland, in common with the whole
-earth, shall be freed ere long from the yoke of ignorance which is
-so sorely oppressing all God’s creatures, for the crowned female
-head symbolically represents the “Sign in Heaven” _which has
-appeared_, of the Victoria or the woman[76] clothed with the Sun,
-the Divine Mother from whom will proceed the Child of Wisdom, Love
-and Truth, who shall rule all nations with a rod of iron,[77] and
-who shall be caught up unto God and unto His Throne.[78]
-
------
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- In the writer’s phraseology, Judah is the equivalent of Erin in
- this case. It becomes exceedingly difficult to follow his meaning,
- for as everything is the equivalent of everything else, we are
- landed in a hopeless maze of paradox. On the principle that there
- is no truth without a paradox, there must be a great truth in this
- article (as there is), but its disentanglement is a matter of much
- labour and thought. The line of argument is the Judah meaning “be
- praised”—certain people who praised or followed the Lord (or
- Wisdom) were “oppressed and laid aside _their harps_.” There are
- people unjustly oppressed in Ireland, not by the outer troubles,
- but by the causes of the undoubted misery which prevails there.
- Consequently, the daughters of Judah and Erin are equivalent terms
- and interchangeable as symbols. The fact is that the author uses a
- peculiar cryptogram, as he himself states. [ED.]
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- See “The Mother, the woman clothed with the Sun,” Vols. I. and
- II.; and also the celebrated picture of “The Woman clothed with
- the Sun,” by Carl Müller.
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- _i.e._, The Sceptre that endureth.
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- _Revelation_, xii.
-
------
-
-The following quotation from one of the replies to two leading
-articles, which appeared in the _Manchester Courier_ of May 4th and
-13th, may also tend to throw some light on the vision of the crowned
-female head: “The present year heralds the jubilee of Her Majesty
-Queen Victoria, on whose glorious Empire the sun never sets. It
-shall also proclaim the jubilee of another Queen Victoria, well
-known to the ancients as the Bride of God who awaits the arrival of
-the Bridegroom. This Queen is She of Sheba[79]—the female principle
-of the one who is the Victor[80] of this world of ignorance and
-darkness, sin and crime; and He is the Solomon,[81] or Man of Light,
-Truth and Life Eternal. On her glorious empire the golden rays of
-Love and Peace shall shine forth from the Living Sun which nevermore
-shall set. She is the woman clothed with the Sun, and from her will
-proceed the promised man-child who shall rule all nations with a rod
-of iron, and shall be caught up unto God and unto His Throne. Were
-the English nation but to realise the mighty import of the grand and
-everlasting truths which I now proclaim, it would, to a man, support
-us in that work in which we, the New Dispensationists, daily and
-hourly labour in the interests of a suffering humanity now being
-slowly ground to powder in the stern mill of social ignorance and
-degradation. The time has come for the promise to be made known of
-the fulfilment of the “Saving health of all nations”; the prophecies
-of the ancients relating to the ultimatum of the written Word of
-Truth clearly point to the present age; and the Eternal Fiat has
-gone forth from the Universal King: “Write, for these words are
-faithful and true”—“Behold, I make all things new.” (Revelation xxi,
-5.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- The Queen of the South or Zenith (_i.e._ the most supreme point of
- the Heavens) who shall rise in judgment with this generation (see
- Matthew xii, 42), She’ba represents two Hebrew words (_Shebhā_ and
- _Shebhȧ_). The first of these is an obscure term, compared by
- Gesenius with the Ethiopic for “man”; the second signifies an oath
- or covenant.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- _i.e._, The Christ, the Messiah.
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- _i.e._, The man of “Sol” or the Sun. Hence, Christians worship on
- Sunday instead of on the Sabbath or on Saturday, as the Jews
- worship.
-
------
-
-It is fashionable in the world to covertly sneer at the things of
-the Spirit, and to regard the Living God in Heaven as a Being either
-unable or unwilling to manifest His Almighty Power and Presence to
-the world in this orthodox nineteenth century. To all who may be
-inclined to ignorantly hold what I have here written to be the
-outcome of a disordered imagination I would say, in the words of
-Paul, an apostle: “not of men, neither by men.”—“We speak wisdom
-among the full-grown, yet a wisdom, not of this world, nor of the
-rulers of this world, _which are coming to nought_: but we speak
-God’s wisdom in a mystery, even the wisdom that hath been hidden,
-which God foreordained before the worlds unto our glory, _which none
-of the Rulers of this world knoweth_.”[82] “Now the natural man
-receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are
-foolishness unto him; and he cannot know them because they are
-spiritually examined. But he that is spiritual examineth all things
-and is himself examined of no man.” (See 1 Corinthians, ii.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- _i.e._, Theosophy, or the hidden outcome of the hidden wisdom of
- the ages.
-
------
-
-The year 1887 heralds the spiritual activity which will eventually
-culminate in the glorious consummation of the age.
-
- W. ELDON SERJEANT.
-
- AN INFANT GENIUS.
-
-The idea of re-incarnation, that is to say of a succession of
-earth-lives passed through by each individual monad, seems so new
-and so daring to the Western World, that we are always being asked,
-“Where are your proofs? Are we to take such a startling hypothesis
-as this simply on your _ipse dixit_, or on the authority of some
-ancient Oriental book or ‘problematical’ Mahatma?”
-
-To such a question the reply cannot be given in two or three words;
-for, while maintaining that there is at least as much reliance to be
-placed upon the Sacred Books of the East as on those of any other
-religion, and while holding firm to the belief that there _are_
-beings of a higher order of intelligence living upon this earth, and
-mixing even in its great life-currents, we cannot expect that merely
-because we say “Man does not leave this earth for good and all at
-Death,” we therefore shall gain credence. Before the world of
-Science our position would have to be that of a Young with his
-undulatory hypothesis of light, or a Dalton with his atomic theory.
-We cannot bring proof positive to those who desire an Euclidic
-demonstration; we can only offer to them a hypothesis, and bid them
-treat it calmly and dispassionately, not flying straightway into a
-fury of abuse at our great impudence in daring to suggest a heresy,
-but weighing it with care, and trying whether or no it will explain
-some of the dark riddles of existence.
-
-To ourselves, merely as a working hypothesis, the doctrine of
-reincarnation seems to throw so much long-sought-for light upon the
-bewildering enigmas of life, and the strange vagaries of a fickle
-fortune, that we could not, even if we would, lay aside so fluent an
-interpreter of the utterances of the Sphinx—Existence. The seeming
-injustices in the lot of man fall into line as units of the great
-battalion of cause and effect; “What a man sows that must he also
-reap.” How else account for all the misery that cries aloud on every
-hand, the starving multitudes, the good man persecuted, the
-charlatan triumphant? In the small purview of a life summed up in
-three-score years and ten, where is the indication of a Divine
-intelligence that metes to each his due?
-
-But if this brief existence be not the only one that man incarnate
-must pass through, if it be, as we are assured, but one short link
-in a chain that spans a fathomless expanse of myriad years, then
-does the eternity of justice proclaim itself, handed on from birth
-to birth in the dark fuel of the torch of life.
-
-Our purpose now, however, is not to strive to catalogue the
-countless instances where destiny appears to cry aloud, into the
-deaf ears of man, that life is fraught with dire responsibility for
-future life, but to point to a case where she, in kindlier mood, has
-shown the gracious aspect of her face.
-
-For the last few months London has been taken by storm by the
-marvellous musical talent of a child whose life, in this incarnation
-at least, is barely ten years old. We allude, of course, to Josef
-Hofmann. None of our readers who have heard this boy but must have
-wondered whence this phenomenal skill could have been derived. Other
-children have come before the public, and roused its listlessness a
-little with exhibitions of infantile precocity. But this young Josef
-has taken at once front rank among the stars of the musical world,
-and won a place only to be compared to that of the fairy-child
-Mozart.
-
-Whence comes this breadth of feeling, this grasp of musical
-expression? It is certain that it comes not from his teacher; for
-his father alone has filled that capacity, and it does not show
-itself in _his_ performance; and again, the only unsatisfactory part
-of the boy’s playing is clearly the result of mannerisms such as the
-second-rate conductor of a provincial orchestra would, without fail,
-extol and inculcate. No; it is clear that the swing of rhythm, the
-determination of attack, the delicacy of sentiment, must come from a
-man’s heart beating within that boyish frame, and a man’s mind
-shining through that childish head. Could one forget the name of the
-performer for one instant, and shut from one’s eyes his physical
-presence, it were a _man_ that was revealing to us the secrets of
-the notes. The rife experience of years must needs precede such
-rendering of musical thought; an experience earned in many a fight
-with varying fortune, in sympathy with many a tale of woe, in
-rejoicing over many a glimpse of Love and Brotherhood.
-
-Yet ten short years are all his tale! What magician could crowd into
-that tiny space the parti-coloured pictures of a fevered life of
-energy? No, it must be that the child has lived upon this earth
-before, has borne his lance in the thickest of the fray, has
-achieved distinction in some great branch of art and garnered up a
-store of thought and feeling, into the inheritance of which his
-heir, himself, has entered. He may squander it again; alas, so many
-have before; but there it is, for him to use aright or wrongly, and
-serious is the charge imposed upon his guardians that they shall lay
-the lesson to heart that to whom much is given, from him shall much
-be expected. But with that aspect of the case it is not for us here
-to deal. We have only adduced this boy’s genius as one of the
-indications that life is in its succession a far more complex
-problem than the materialists or the orthodox religionists would
-lead us to believe. There are countless other suggestive little
-facts of early talent that must have come within the circle of the
-daily life of each of us; but without the thread of Karma whereon to
-string them, we pass them by; and it is only when some remarkable
-phenomenon, such as that of Josef Hofmann, bursts upon the world,
-that men fall to wondering. Yet it is by the accumulation of small
-details that a philosopher like Darwin worked out his scheme of
-natural evolution; and it is by the testing of such a theory as that
-of re-incarnation by many a little hitherto unexplained incident
-that we shall find its worth. Nor is it merely as a curious prying
-into mysteries that we should regard such research; for, once let a
-man convince himself that though “Art is long,” yet Life, in its
-recurrence, is longer, he will find in the thought that he is really
-laying up treasure in heaven (the _lives_ to come), encouragement,
-despite all temporary failure, to do whatsoever his hand findeth to
-do with all his might.
-
- W. ASHTON ELLIS.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- FEAR.
-
- Why fearest thou the darksome shades
- That creep across the path of life?
- Why tremble at the thought of strife
- That oftentimes the soul invades?
-
- Why sicken at the thought of ills?
- The horrors that invade thy dreams,
- The shadowland of forms, that seems
- Dark terror to the soul it fills?
-
- Why weary of the onward way,
- Or dread the roughness of the road?
- Why fear to struggle ’gainst the load,
- The heavy burthen of life’s clay?
-
- Hast thou not seen?—when gone the night
- And stilled the dropping of the shower,
- The weary drooping wayside flower
- Drink in new life from sunbeams bright.
-
- Hast thou not loved, at dawn, to feast,
- The longing of thy mortal eyes
- With vivid colours of the skies,
- Burst free from floodgates of the East?
-
- And hast thou never tried, in thought,
- To gain a clearer, truer view?
- A mystic glimpse, a vision new,
- That shows the darkness as it ought?
-
- A phantom of material fear
- Unworthy of a moment’s dread;
- For darkness would itself be dead,
- Unless its mother light were near!
-
- Then learn to grasp the purer light,
- And learn to know the holier creed—
- The brighter glow—the greater need,
- The nearer day—the murkier night.
-
- P. H. D.
-
-
-
-
- THE ESOTERIC CHARACTER OF THE GOSPELS.
-
- (_Continued._)
-
- II.
-
-The word Chréstos existed ages before Christianity was heard of. It
-is found used, from the fifth century B.C., by Herodotus, by
-Æschylus and other classical Greek writers, the meaning of it being
-applied to both things and persons.
-
-Thus in Æschylus (Cho. 901) we read of Μαντεύματα πυθόχρηστα
-(_pythochrésta_) the “oracles delivered by a Pythian God”
-(_Greek-Eng. Lex._) through a pythoness; and _Pythochréstos_ is the
-nominative singular of an adjective derived from _chrao_ χράω
-(Eurip. _Ion_, 1, 218). The later meanings coined freely from this
-primitive application, are numerous and varied. Pagan classics
-expressed more than one idea by the verb χράομαι “consulting an
-oracle”; for it also means “fated,” _doomed_ by an oracle, in the
-sense of a _sacrificial victim to its decree_, or—“to the WORD”; as
-_chrésterion_ is not only “the seat of an oracle” but also “an
-offering to, or for, the oracle.”[83] _Chrestés_ χρήστης is one who
-expounds or explains oracles, “a _prophet_, a _soothsayer_;”[84] and
-_chrésterios_ χρηστὴριος is one who belongs to, or is in the service
-of, an oracle, a god, or a “Master”;[85] this Canon Farrar’s efforts
-notwithstanding.[86]
-
------
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- The word χρεών is explained by Herodotus (7. 11. 7.) as that which
- an oracle declares, and τὸ χρεών is given by Plutarch (Nic. 14.)
- as “fate,” “necessity.” _Vide_ Herod, 7. 215; 5. 108; and
- Sophocles, Phil. 437.
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- See Liddell and Scott’s Greek-Engl. Lex.
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- Hence of a _Guru_, “a teacher,” and _chela_, a “disciple,” in
- their mutual relations.
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- In his recent work—“The Early Days of Christianity,” Canon Farrar
- remarks:—“Some have supposed a pleasant play of words founded on
- it, as ... between _Chréstos_ (‘sweet’ Ps. xxx., iv., 8) and
- Christos (Christ)” (I. p. 158, _foot-note_). But there is nothing
- to suppose, since it began by a “play of words,” indeed. The name
- _Christus_ was _not_ “distorted into Chrestus,” as the learned
- author would make his readers believe (p. 19), but it was the
- adjective and noun _Chréstos_ which became distorted into
- _Christus_, and applied to Jesus. In a foot-note on the word
- “Chrestian,” occurring in the First Epistle of Peter (chap. iv.,
- 16), in which in the _revised_ later MSS. the word was changed
- into _Christian_, Canon Farrar remarks again, “Perhaps we should
- read the ignorant heathen distortion, _Chréstian_.” Most decidedly
- we should; for the eloquent writer should remember his Master’s
- command to render unto Cæsar that which is Cæsar’s. His dislike
- notwithstanding, Mr. Farrar is obliged to admit that the name
- _Christian_ was first INVENTED, by the sneering, mocking
- Antiochians, as early as A.D. 44, but had not come into general
- use before the persecution by Nero. “Tacitus,” he says, “uses the
- word Christians with something of apology. It is well known that
- in the N. T. it only occurs three times, and always involves a
- hostile sense (_Acts_ xi. 26, xxvi. 28, as it does in iv. 16).” It
- was not Claudius alone who looked with alarm and suspicion on the
- Christians, so nicknamed in derision for their carnalizing a
- subjective principle or attribute, but all the pagan nations. For
- Tacitus, speaking of those whom the masses called “Christians,”
- describes them as a set of men _detested for their enormities_ and
- crimes. No wonder, for history repeats itself. There are, no
- doubt, thousands of noble, sincere, and virtuous _Christian-born_
- men and women now. But we have only to look at the viciousness of
- Christian “heathen” converts; at the _morality_ of those
- proselytes in India, whom the missionaries themselves decline to
- take into their service, to draw a parallel between the converts
- of 1,800 years ago, and the modern heathens “touched _by grace_.”
-
------
-
-All this is evidence that the terms Christ and Christians, spelt
-originally _Chrést_ and _Chréstians_ χρηστιανοὶ[87] were
-directly borrowed from the Temple terminology of the Pagans, and
-meant the same thing. The God of the Jews was now substituted
-for the Oracle and the other gods; the generic designation
-“Chréstos” became a noun applied to one special personage; and
-new terms such as _Chréstianoï_ and _Chréstodoulos_ “a follower
-or servant of Chrestos”—were coined out of the old material.
-This is shown by Philo Judæus, a monotheist, assuredly, using
-already the same term for monotheistic purposes. For he speaks
-of θεόχρηστος (_théochréstos_) “God-declared,” or one who is
-declared by god, and of λόγια θεόχρηστα (_logia théochrésta_)
-“sayings delivered by God”—which proves that he wrote at a time
-(between the first century B.C., and the first A.D.) when
-neither Christians nor Chrestians were yet known under these
-names, but still called themselves the Nazarenes. The notable
-difference between the two words χράω—“consulting or obtaining
-response from a god or oracle” (χρεω being the Ionic earlier
-form of it), and χριω (_chrio_) “to rub, to anoint” (from which
-the name Christos), have not prevented the ecclesiastical
-adoption and coinage from Philo’s expression θεόχρηστος of that
-other term θεόχριστος “anointed by God.” Thus the quiet
-substitution of the letter ι for η for dogmatic purposes, was
-achieved in the easiest way, as we now see.
-
------
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Lactantius, Clemens Alexandrinus, and
- others spelt it in this way.
-
------
-
-The secular meaning of _Chréstos_ runs throughout the classical
-Greek literature _pari passu_ with that given to it in the
-mysteries. Demosthenes’ saying ω χρηστέ (330, 27), means by it
-simply “you nice fellow”; Plato (in Phaed. 264 B) has χρηστός ει ὅτι
-ἣγεῖ—“you are an excellent fellow to think....” But in the esoteric
-phraseology of the temples “chrestos,”[88] a word which, like the
-participle _chréstheis_, is formed under the same rule, and conveys
-the same sense—from the verb χράομαι(“to consult a god”)—answers to
-what we would call an adept, also a high _chela_, a disciple. It is
-in this sense that it is used by Euripides (Ion. 1320) and by
-Æschylus (1 C). This qualification was applied to those whom the
-god, oracle, or any superior had proclaimed this, that, or anything
-else. An instance may be given in this case.
-
------
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- _Vide_ Liddell and Scott’s Greek and English Lexicon. _Chréstos_
- is really one who is continually warned, advised, guided, whether
- by oracle or prophet. Mr. G. Massey is not correct in saying that
- “... The Gnostic form of the name Chrest, or Chrestos, denotes the
- _Good God_, not a human original,” for it denoted the latter,
- _i.e._, a good, holy man; but he is quite right when he adds that
- “_Chrestianus_ signifies ... ‘Sweetness and Light.’” “The
- _Chrestoi_, as the _Good People_, were pre-extant. Numerous Greek
- inscriptions show that the departed, the hero, the saintly
- one—that is, the ‘Good’—was styled _Chrestos_, or the Christ; and
- from this meaning of the ‘Good’ does Justin, the primal apologist,
- derive the Christian name. This identifies it with the Gnostic
- source, and with the ‘Good God’ who revealed himself according to
- Marcion—that is, the Un-Nefer or Good-opener of the Egyptian
- theology.”—(_Agnostic Annual._)
-
------
-
-The words χρῆσεν οικιστῆρα used by Pindar (p. 4-10) mean “the oracle
-_proclaimed_ him the coloniser.” In this case the genius of the
-Greek language permits that the man so proclaimed should be called
-χρήστος (_Chréstos_). Hence this term was applied to every Disciple
-recognised by a Master, as also to every good man. Now, the Greek
-language affords strange etymologies. Christian theology has chosen
-and decreed that the name Christos should be taken as derived from
-χρίΩ, χρίσω (Chriso), “anointed with scented unguents or oil.” But
-this word has several significances. It is used by Homer, certainly,
-as applied to the rubbing with oil of the body after bathing (_Il._
-23, 186; also in _Od._ 4, 252) as other ancient writers do. Yet the
-word χρίστης (_Christes_) means rather a _white-washer_, while the
-word Chrestes (χρήστης) means priest and prophet, a term far more
-applicable to Jesus, than that of the “Anointed,” since, as Nork
-shows on the authority of the Gospels, he never was anointed, either
-as king or priest. In short, there is a deep mystery underlying all
-this scheme, which, as I maintain, only a thorough knowledge of the
-Pagan mysteries is capable of unveiling.[89] It is not what the
-early Fathers, who had an object to achieve, may affirm or deny,
-that is the important point, but rather what is now the evidence for
-the real significance given to the two terms _Chréstos_ and
-_Christos_ by the ancients in the pre-Christian ages. For the latter
-had no object to achieve, therefore nothing to conceal or disfigure,
-and their evidence is naturally the more reliable of the two. This
-evidence can be obtained by first studying the meaning given to
-these words by the classics, and then their correct significance
-searched for in mystic symbology.
-
------
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- Again I must bring forward what Mr. G. Massey says (whom I quote
- repeatedly because he has studied this subject so thoroughly and
- so conscientiously).
-
- “My contention, or rather explanation,” he says, “is that the
- author of the Christian name is the Mummy-Christ of Egypt, called
- the _Karest_, which was a type of the immortal spirit in man, the
- Christ within (as Paul has it), the divine offspring incarnated,
- the Logos, the Word of Truth, the _Makheru_ of Egypt. It did not
- originate as a mere type! The preserved mummy was the _dead body
- of any one_ that was _Karest_, or mummified, to be kept by the
- living; and, through constant repetition, this became a type of
- the resurrection from (not of!) the dead.” See the explanation of
- this further on.
-
------
-
-Now _Chrestos_, as already said, is a term applied in various
-senses. It qualifies both Deity and Man. It is used in the former
-sense in the Gospels, and in Luke (vi., 35), where it means “kind,”
-and “merciful.” “χρηστός ἑστιν επι τους,” in 1 Peter (ii, 3), where
-it is said, “Kind is the Lord,” χρηστός ὁ κύριος. On the other hand,
-it is explained by Clemens Alexandrinus as simply meaning a good
-man; _i.e._ “All who believe in _Chrést_ (a good man) both _are_,
-and _are called Chréstians_, that is good men.” (Strom. lib. ii.)
-The reticence of Clemens, whose Christianity, as King truly remarks
-in his “_Gnostics_,” was no more than a graft upon the congenial
-stock of his original Platonism, is quite natural. He was an
-Initiate, a new Platonist, before he became a Christian, which fact,
-however much he may have fallen off from his earlier views, could
-not exonerate him from his pledge of secrecy. And as a Theosophist
-and a _Gnostic_, one who _knew_, Clemens must have known that
-_Christos_ was “the WAY,” while _Chréstos_ was the lonely traveller
-journeying on to reach the ultimate goal through that “Path,” which
-goal was _Christos_, the glorified Spirit of “TRUTH,” the reunion
-with which makes the soul (the Son) ONE with the (Father) Spirit.
-That Paul knew it, is certain, for his own expressions prove it. For
-what do the words πάλιν ὠδίνω, ἅχρις οὕ μορφωθῆ χριστὸς ἐνὺμῖν, or,
-as given in the authorised translations, “I am again in travail
-until _Christ be formed in you_” mean, but what we give in its
-esoteric rendering, _i.e._ “until you find _the_ Christos within
-yourselves as your only ‘way.’” (_vide_ Galatians iv., 19 and 20.)
-
-Thus Jesus, whether of Nazareth or Lüd,[90] was a Chréstos, as
-undeniably as that he never was entitled to the appellation of
-_Christos_, during his life-time and before his last trial. It may
-have been as Higgins thinks, who surmises that the first name of
-Jesus was, perhaps, χρεισος the second χρησος, and the third χρισος.
-“The word χρεισος was in use before the H (cap. _eta_) was in the
-language.” But Taylor (in his answer to Pye Smith, p. 113) is quoted
-saying “The complimentary epithet Chrest ... signified nothing more
-than a good man.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- Or Lydda. Reference is made here to the Rabbinical tradition in
- the Babylonian Gemara, called _Sepher Toledoth Jeshu_, about Jesus
- being the son of one named Pandira, and having lived a century
- earlier than the era called Christian, namely, during the reign of
- the Jewish king Alexander Jannæus and his wife Salome, who reigned
- from the year 106 to 79 B.C. Accused by the Jews of having learned
- the magic art in Egypt, and of having stolen from the Holy of
- Holies the Incommunicable Name, Jehoshua (Jesus) was put to death
- by the Sanhedrin at Lud. He was stoned and then crucified on a
- tree, on the eve of Passover. The narrative is ascribed to the
- Talmudistic authors of “Sota” and “Sanhedrin,” p. 19, Book of
- Zechiel. See “Isis Unveiled,” II. 201; Arnobius; Elephas Levi’s
- “_Science des Esprits_,” and “The Historical Jesus and Mythical
- Christ,” a lecture by G. Massey.
-
------
-
-Here again a number of ancient writers may be brought forward to
-testify that _Christos_ (or _Chreistos_, rather) was, along with
-χρησος = Hrésos, an adjective applied to Gentiles before the
-Christian era. In _Philopatris_ it is said ει τυχοι χρηστος και εν
-εθνεσιν, _i.e._ “if chrestos chance to be even among the Gentiles,”
-etc.
-
-Tertullian denounces in the 3rd chapter of his _Apologia_ the word
-“_Christianus_” as derived by “crafty interpretation;”[91] Dr.
-Jones, on the other hand, letting out the information, corroborated
-by good sources, that _Hrésos_ χρησός was the name given to Christ
-by the Gnostics, and even by unbelievers,” assures us that the real
-name ought to be χρισος or Chrisos—thus repeating and supporting the
-original “pious fraud” of the early Fathers, a fraud which led to
-the carnalizing of the whole Christian system.[92] But I propose to
-show as much of the real meaning of all these terms as lies within
-my humble powers and knowledge. Christos, or the “Christ-condition,”
-was ever the synonym of the “Mahatmic-condition,” _i.e._, the union
-of the man with the divine principle in him. As Paul says (Ephes.
-iii. 17) “κατοικησαι τον χριστον δια της πιστεως εν ταις καρδιαις
-ὑμωι.” “That you may find Christos in your _inner_ man through
-_knowledge_” not faith, as translated; for _Pistis_ is “knowledge,”
-as will be shown further on.
-
------
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- “Christianus quantum interpretatione de unctione deducitas. Sed ut
- cum perferam Chrestianus pronunciatus a vobis (nam nec nominis
- certa est notitia penes vos) de suavitate vel benignitate
- compositum est.” Canon Farrar makes a great effort to show such
- _lapsus calami_ by various Fathers as the results of disgust and
- fear. “There can be little doubt,” he says (in _The Early Days of
- Christianity_) “that the ... name Christian ... was a nick-name
- due to the wit of the Antiochians.... It is clear that the sacred
- writers avoided the name (Christians) because it was employed by
- their enemies (Tac. Ann. xv. 44). It only became familiar when the
- virtues of Christians had shed lustre upon it....” This is a very
- lame excuse, and a poor explanation to give for so eminent a
- thinker as Canon Farrar. As to the “virtues of Christians” ever
- shedding _lustre_ upon the name, let us hope that the writer had
- in his mind’s eye neither Bishop Cyril, of Alexandria, nor
- Eusebius, nor the Emperor Constantine, of murderous fame, nor yet
- the Popes Borgia and the Holy Inquisition.
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- Quoted by G. Higgins. (See Vol. I., pp. 569-573.)
-
------
-
-There is still another and far more weighty proof that the name
-_Christos_ is pre-Christian. The evidence for it is found in the
-prophecy of the Erythrean Sybil. We read in it ἹΗΣΟΥΣ ΧΡΕΙΣΤΟΣΘΕΟΝ
-ὙΙΟΣ ΣΩΤΗΡ ΣΤΑΥΡΟΣ. Read esoterically, this string of meaningless
-detached nouns, which has no sense to the profane, contains a real
-prophecy—only not referring to Jesus—and a verse from the mystic
-catechism of the Initiate. The prophecy relates to the coming down
-upon the Earth of the Spirit of Truth (Christos), after which
-advent—that has once more nought to do with Jesus—will begin the
-Golden Age; the verse refers to the necessity before reaching that
-blessed condition of inner (or subjective) theophany and
-theopneusty, to pass through the crucifixion of flesh or matter.
-Read exoterically, the words “_Iesous Chreistos theou yios soter
-stauros_,” meaning literally “Iesus, Christos, God, Son, Saviour,
-Cross,” are most excellent handles to hang a Christian prophecy on,
-but they are _pagan_, not Christian.
-
-If called upon to explain the names IESOUS CHREISTOS, the answer is:
-study mythology, the so-called “fictions” of the ancients, and they
-will give you the key. Ponder over Apollo, the solar god, and the
-“Healer,” and the allegory about his son Janus (or Ion), his priest
-at Delphos, through whom alone could prayers reach the immortal
-gods, and his other son Asclepios, called the _Soter_, or Saviour.
-Here is a leaflet from esoteric history written in symbolical
-phraseology by the old Grecian poets.
-
-The city of Chrisa[93] (now spelt Crisa), was built in memory of
-Kreusa (or Creusa), daughter of King Erechtheus and mother of Janus
-(or Ion) by Apollo, in memory of the danger which Janus escaped.[94]
-We learn that Janus, abandoned by his mother in a grotto “to hide
-the shame of the virgin who bore a son,” was found by Hermes, who
-brought the infant to Delphi, nurtured him by his father’s sanctuary
-and oracle, where, under the name of Chresis (χρησις) Janus became
-first a _Chrestis_ (a priest, soothsayer, or Initiate), and then
-very nearly a _Chresterion_, “a sacrificial victim,”[95] ready to be
-poisoned by his own mother, who knew him not, and who, in her
-jealousy, mistook him, on the hazy intimation of the oracle, for a
-son of her husband. He pursued her to the very altar with the
-intention of killing her—when she was saved through the pythoness,
-who divulged to both the secret of their relationship. In memory of
-this narrow escape, Creusa, the mother, built the city of Chrisa, or
-Krisa. Such is the allegory, and it symbolizes simply the trials of
-Initiation.[96]
-
------
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- In the days of Homer, we find this city, once celebrated for its
- mysteries, the chief seat of Initiation, and the name of
- _Chrestos_ used as a title during the mysteries. It is mentioned
- in the _Iliad_, ii., 520 as “Chrisa” (χρῖσα). Dr. Clarke suspected
- its ruins under the present site of _Krestona_, a small town, or
- village rather, in Phocis, near the Crissæan Bay. (See E. D.
- Clarke, 4th ed. Vol. viii. p. 239, “Delphi.”)
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- The root of χρητός (_Chretos_) and χρηστος (_Chrestos_) is one and
- the same; χράω which means “consulting the oracle,” in one sense,
- but in another one “consecrated,” _set apart_, belonging to some
- temple, or oracle, or devoted to oracular services. On the other
- hand, the word χρε (χρεω) means “obligation,” a “bond, duty,” or
- one who is under the obligation of pledges, or vows taken.
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- The adjective χρηστὸς was also used as an adjective before proper
- names as a compliment, as in Plat. Theact. p. 166A, “Ὁυτος ὁ
- Σωκράτης ὁ χρηστός;” (here Socrates is the _Chréstos_), and also
- as a surname, as shown by Plutarch (V. Phocion), who wonders how
- such a rough and dull fellow as Phocion could be surnamed
- _Chréstos_.
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- There are strange features, quite suggestive, for an Occultist, in
- the myth (if one) of Janus. Some make of him the personification
- of _Kosmos_, others, of _Cælus_ (heaven), hence he is “two-faced”
- because of his two characters of spirit and matter; and he is not
- only “Janus _Bifrons_” (two-faced), but also _Quadrifrons_—the
- perfect square, the emblem of the Kabbalistic Deity. His temples
- were built with _four_ equal sides, with a door and _three_
- windows on each side. Mythologists explain it as an emblem of the
- _four_ seasons of the year, and _three_ months in each season, and
- in all of the twelve months of the year. During the mysteries of
- Initiation, however, he became the Day-Sun and the Night-Sun.
- Hence he is often represented with the number 300 in one hand, and
- in the other 65, or the number of days of the Solar year. Now
- _Chanoch_ (Kanoch and _Enosh_ in the Bible) is, as may be shown on
- Kabalistic authority, whether son of Cain, son of Seth, or the son
- of Methuselah, one and the same personage. As _Chanoch_ (according
- to Fuerst), he is the _Initiator_, _Instructor_—of the
- astronomical circle and solar year,” as son of Methuselah, who is
- said to have lived 365 years and been taken to heaven alive, as
- the representative of the Sun (or god). (See Book of Enoch.) This
- patriarch has many features in common with Janus, who,
- exoterically, is Ion but IAO cabalistically, or Jehovah, the “Lord
- God of Generations,” the mysterious Yodh, or ONE (a phallic
- number). For Janus or Ion is also _Consivius, a conserendo_,
- because he presided over generations. He is shown giving
- hospitality to Saturn (_Chronos_ “time”), and is the _Initiator_
- of the year, or time divided into 365.
-
------
-
-Finding then that Janus, the solar God, and son of Apollo, the Sun,
-means the “Initiator” and the “Opener of the Gate of Light,” or
-secret wisdom of the mysteries; that he is born from Krisa
-(esoterically _Chris_), and that he was a _Chrestos_ through whom
-spoke the God; that he was finally Ion, the father of the Ionians,
-and, some say, an _aspect_ of Asclepios, another son of Apollo, it
-is easy to get hold of the thread of Ariadne in this labyrinth of
-allegories. It is not the place here to prove side issues in
-mythology, however. It suffices to show the connection between the
-mythical characters of hoary antiquity and the later fables that
-marked the beginning of our era of civilization. Asclepios
-(Esculapius) was the divine physician, the “Healer,” the “Saviour,”
-Σωτηρ as he was called, a title also given to Janus of Delphi; and
-IASO, the daughter of Asclepios was the goddess of healing, under
-whose patronage were all the candidates for initiation in her
-father’s temple, the novices or _chrestoi_, called “the sons of
-Iaso.” (_Vide_ for name, “Plutus,” by Aristoph. 701).
-
-Now, if we remember, firstly, that the names of IESUS in their
-different forms, such as Iasius, Iasion, Jason and Iasus, were very
-common in ancient Greece, especially among the descendants of Jasius
-(the Jasides), as also the number of the “sons of Iaso,” the
-_Mystoï_ and future Epoptai (Initiates), why should not the
-enigmatical words in the Sibylline Book be read in their legitimate
-light, one that had nought to do with a Christian prophecy? The
-secret doctrine teaches that the first two words ΙΗΣΟΥΣ ΧΡΕΙΣΤΟΣ
-mean simply “son of Iaso, a Chrestos,” or servant of the oracular
-God. Indeed IASO (Ιασω) _is in the Ionic dialect IESO_ (Ἱησὼ), and
-the expression Ιησους (_Iesous_)—in its archaic form, ΙΗΣΟΥΣ—simply
-means “the son of Iaso or _Ieso_, the healer,” _i.e._ ο Ιησοῦς
-(υῖος). No objection, assuredly, can be taken to such rendering, or
-to the name being written _Ieso_ instead of _Iaso_, since the first
-form is _attic_, therefore incorrect, for the name is _Ionic_.
-“Ieso” from which “O’ Iesous” (son of Ieso)—_i.e._ a genitive, not a
-nominative—_is Ionic and cannot_ be anything else, if the age of the
-Sibylline book is taken into consideration. Nor could the Sibyl of
-Erythrea have spelt it originally otherwise, as Erythrea, her very
-residence, was a town in Ionia (from Ion or Janus) opposite Chios;
-and that the _Ionic_ preceded the _attic_ form.
-
-Leaving aside in this case the mystical signification of the now
-famous Sibylline sentence, and giving its literal interpretation
-only, on the authority of all that has been said, the hitherto
-mysterious words would stand; “Son of IASO, CHRESTOS (the priest or
-servant) (of the) SON of (the) GOD (Apollo) the SAVIOUR from the
-CROSS”—(of flesh or matter).[97] Truly, Christianity can never hope
-to be understood until every trace of dogmatism is swept away from
-it, and the dead letter sacrificed to the eternal Spirit of Truth,
-which is Horus, which is Crishna, which is Buddha, as much as it is
-the Gnostic Christos and the true Christ of Paul.
-
-In the _Travels_ of Dr. Clarke, the author describes a heathen
-monument found by him.
-
------
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- _Stauros_ became the cross, the instrument of crucifixion, far
- later, when it began to be represented as a Christian symbol and
- with the Greek letter T, the Tau. (Luc. Jud. Voc.) Its primitive
- meaning was phallic, a symbol for the male and female elements;
- the great serpent of temptation, the body which had to be killed
- or subdued by the dragon of wisdom, the seven-vowelled solar
- chnouphis or Spirit of Christos of the Gnostics, or, again, Apollo
- killing Python.
-
------
-
- “Within the sanctuary, behind the altar, we saw the fragments of a
- _marble cathedra_, upon the back of which we found the following
- inscription, exactly as it is here written, no part of it having
- been injured or obliterated, affording perhaps the only instance
- known of a sepulchral inscription upon a monument of this
- remarkable form.”
-
-The inscription ran thus: ΧΡΗΣΤΟΣ ΠΡΩΤΟΥ ΘΕΣΣΑΛΟΣ ΛΑΡΙΣΣΑΙΟΣ
-ΠΕΛΑΣΓΙΟΤΗΣ ΕΤΩΝ ΙΗ or, “Chrestos, the first, a Thessalonian from
-Larissa, Pelasgiot 18 years old Hero,” Chrestos the _first_
-(_protoo_), why? Read literally the inscription has little sense;
-interpreted esoterically, it is pregnant with meaning. As Dr. Clarke
-shows, the word Chrestos is found on the epitaphs of almost all the
-ancient Larissians; but it is preceded always by a proper name. Had
-the adjective Chrestos stood after a name, it would only mean “a
-good man,” a posthumous compliment paid to the defunct, the same
-being often found on our own modern tumular epitaphs. But the word
-Chrestos, standing alone and the other word, “protoo,” following it,
-gives it quite another meaning, especially when the deceased is
-specified as a “hero.” To the mind of an Occultist, the defunct was
-a neophyte, who had died in his 18th year _of neophytism_,[98] and
-stood in the first or highest class of discipleship, having passed
-his preliminary trials as a “hero;” but had died before the last
-mystery, which would have made of him a “Christos,” an _anointed_,
-one with the spirit of Christos or Truth in him. He had not reached
-the end of the “Way,” though he had heroically conquered the horrors
-of the preliminary theurgic trials.
-
------
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- Even to this day in India, the candidate loses his name and, as
- also in Masonry, his age (monks and nuns also changing their
- Christian names at their taking the order or veil), and begins
- counting his years from the day he is accepted a chela and enters
- upon the cycle of initiations. Thus Saul was “a child of one
- year,” when he began to reign, though a grown-up adult. See 1
- Samuel ch. xiii. 1, and Hebrew scrolls, about his initiation by
- Samuel.
-
------
-
-We are quite warranted in reading it in this manner, after learning
-the place where Dr. Clarke discovered the tablet, which was, as
-Godfrey Higgins remarks, there, where “I should expect to find it,
-at Delphi, in the temple of the God IE.,” who, with the Christians
-became Jah, or Jehovah, one with Christ Jesus. It was at the foot of
-Parnassus, in a gymnasium, “adjoining the Castalian fountain, which
-flowed by the ruins of Crisa, probably the town called Crestona,”
-etc. And again. “In the first part of its course from the
-(Castalian) fountain, it (the river) separates the remains of the
-gymnasium ... from the valley of Castro,” as it probably did from
-the old city of Delphi—the seat of the great oracle of Apollo, of
-the town of Krisa (or Kreusa) the great centre of initiations and of
-the _Chrestoi_ of the decrees of the oracles, where the candidates
-for the last _labour_ were anointed with sacred oils[99] before
-being plunged into their last trance of forty-nine hours’ duration
-(as to this day, in the East), from which they arose as glorified
-adepts or _Christoi_.”
-
- “In the Clementine Recognitions it is announced that the father
- anointed his son with ‘oil that was taken from the wood of the
- Tree of Life, and from this anointing he is called the Christ:’
- whence the Christian name. This again is Egyptian. Horus was the
- anointed son of the father. The mode of anointing him from the
- Tree of Life, portrayed on the monuments, is very primitive
- indeed; and the Horus of Egypt was continued in the Gnostic
- Christ, who is reproduced upon the Gnostic stones as the
- intermediate link betwixt the _Karest_ and the Christ, also as
- the Horus of both sexes.” (“_The name and nature of the
- Christ._”—GERALD MASSEY.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- Demosthenes, “De Corona,” 313, declares that the candidates for
- initiation into the Greek mysteries were anointed with oil. So
- they are now in India, even in the initiation into the _Yogi_
- mysteries—various ointments or unguents being used.
-
------
-
-Mr. G. Massey connects the Greek Christos or Christ with the
-Egyptian _Karest_, the “mummy type of immortality,” and proves it
-very thoroughly. He begins by saying that in Egyptian the “Word of
-Truth” is _Ma-Kheru_, and that it is the title of Horus. Thus, as he
-shows, Horus preceded Christ as the Messenger of the Word of Truth,
-the Logos or the manifestor of the divine nature in humanity. In the
-same paper he writes as follows:
-
- The Gnosis had three phases—astronomical, spiritual, and
- doctrinal, and all three can be identified with the Christ of
- Egypt. In the astronomical phase the constellation Orion is called
- the _Sahu_ or _mummy_. The soul of Horus was represented as rising
- from the dead and ascending to heaven in the stars of Orion. The
- mummy-image was the preserved one, the saved, therefore a portrait
- of the Saviour, as a type of immortality. This was the figure of a
- dead man, which, as Plutarch and Herodotus tell us, was carried
- round at an Egyptian banquet, when the guests were invited to look
- on it and eat and drink and be happy, because, when they died,
- they would become what the image symbolised—that is, they also
- would be immortal! This type of immortality was called the
- _Karest_, or _Karust_, and it _was_ the Egyptian Christ. To
- _Kares_ means to embalm, anoint, to make the Mummy as a type of
- the eternal; and, when made, it was called the _Karest_; so that
- this is not merely a matter of name for name, the _Karest_ for the
- _Christ_.
-
- This image of the _Karest_ was bound up in a woof without a seam,
- the proper vesture of the Christ! No matter what the length of the
- bandage might be, and some of the mummy-swathes have been unwound
- that were 1,000 yards in length, the woof was from beginning to
- end without a seam.... Now, this seamless robe of the Egyptian
- _Karest_ is a very tell-tale type of the mystical Christ, who
- becomes historic in the Gospels as the wearer of a coat or chiton,
- made without a seam, which neither the Greek nor the Hebrew fully
- explains, but which is explained by the Egyptian _Ketu_ for the
- woof, and by the seamless robe or swathing without seam that was
- made for eternal wear, and worn by the Mummy-Christ, the image of
- immortality in the tombs of Egypt.
-
- Further, Jesus is put to death in accordance with the instructions
- given for making the _Karest_. Not a bone must be broken. The true
- _Karest_ must be perfect in every member. “This is he who comes
- out sound; whom men know not is his name.”
-
- In the Gospels Jesus rises again with every member sound, like the
- perfectly-preserved _Karest_, to demonstrate the physical
- resurrection of the mummy. But, in the Egyptian original, the
- mummy transforms. The deceased says: “I am spiritualised. I am
- become a soul. I rise as a God.” This transformation into the
- spiritual image, the _Ka_, has been omitted in the Gospel.
-
- This spelling of the name as Chrest or Chrést in Latin is
- supremely important, because it enables me to prove the identity
- with the Egyptian _Karest_ or _Karust_, the name of the Christ as
- the embalmed mummy, which was the image of the resurrection in
- Egyptian tombs, the type of immortality, the likeness of the
- Horus, who rose again and made the pathway out of the sepulchre
- for those who were his disciples or followers. _Moreover, this
- type of the Karest or Mummy-Christ is reproduced in the Catacombs
- of Rome._ No representation of the supposed historic resurrection
- of Jesus has been found on any of the early Christian monuments.
- But, instead of the missing fact, we find the scene of Lazarus
- being raised from the dead. This is depicted over and over again
- as the typical resurrection where there is no real one! The scene
- is not exactly in accordance with the rising from the grave in the
- Gospel. It is purely Egyptian, and Lazarus is an Egyptian mummy!
- Thus Lazarus, in each representation, _is_ the mummy-type of the
- resurrection; Lazarus _is_ the Karest, who was the Egyptian
- Christ, and who is reproduced by Gnostic art in the Catacombs of
- Rome as a form of the Gnostic Christ, who _was not and could not
- become an historical character_.
-
- Further, as the thing is Egyptian, it is probable that the name is
- derived from Egyptian. If so, Laz (equal to Ras) means to be
- raised up, while _aru is_ the mummy by name. With the Greek
- terminal _s_ this becomes Lazarus. In the course of humanising the
- mythos the typical representation of the resurrection found in the
- tombs of Rome and Egypt would become the story of Lazarus being
- raised from the dead. This Karast type of the Christ in the
- Catacombs is not limited to Lazarus.
-
- By means of the _Karest_ type the Christ and the Christians can
- both be traced in the ancient tombs of Egypt. The mummy was made
- in this likeness of the Christ. It was the Christ by name,
- identical with the _Chrestoi_ of the Greek Inscriptions. Thus the
- honoured dead, who rose again as the followers of Horus-Makheru,
- the Word of Truth, are found to be the Christians οι χρηστοι, on
- the Egyptian monuments. _Ma-Kheru_ is the term that is always
- applied to the faithful ones who win the crown of life and wear it
- at the festival which is designated ‘Come thou to me’—an
- invitation by Horus the Justifier to those who are the ‘Blessed
- ones of his father, Osiris’—they who, having made the Word of
- Truth the law of their lives, were the Justified—οι χρηστοι, the
- Christians, on earth.
-
- In a fifth century representation of the Madonna and child from
- the cemetery of St. Valentinus, the new-born babe lying in a box
- or crib _is_ also the _Karest_, or mummy-type, further identified
- as the divine babe of the solar mythos by the disk of the sun and
- the cross of the equinox at the back of the infant’s head. Thus
- the child-Christ of the historic faith is born, and visibly begins
- in the _Karest_ image of the dead Christ, which was the mummy-type
- of the resurrection in Egypt for thousands of years before the
- Christian era. This doubles the proof that the Christ of the
- Christian Catacombs was a survival of the _Karest_ of Egypt.
-
- Moreover, as Didron shows, there was a portrait of the Christ who
- had his body _painted red_![100] It was a popular tradition that
- the Christ _was_ of a red complexion. This, too, may be explained
- as a survival of the Mummy-Christ. It was an aboriginal mode of
- rendering things _tapu_ by colouring them red. The dead corpse was
- coated with red ochre—a very primitive mode of making the mummy,
- or the anointed one. Thus the God Ptah tells Rameses II. that he
- has “_re-fashioned his flesh in vermilion_.” This anointing with
- red ochre is called _Kura_ by the Maori, who likewise made the
- Karest or Christ.
-
- We see the mummy-image continued on another line of descent when
- we learn that among other pernicious heresies and deadly sins with
- which the Knights Templars were charged, was the impious custom of
- adoring a Mummy that had red eyes. Their Idol, called Baphomet, is
- also thought to have been a mummy.... The Mummy was the earliest
- human image of the Christ.
-
- I do not doubt that the ancient Roman festivals called the
- _Charistia_ were connected in their origin with the _Karest_ and
- the _Eucharist_ as a celebration in honour of the manes of their
- departed kith and kin, for whose sakes they became reconciled at
- the friendly gathering once a year.... It is here, then, we have
- to seek the essential connection between the Egyptian Christ, the
- Christians, and the Roman Catacombs. These Christian Mysteries,
- ignorantly explained to be inexplicable, can be explained by
- Gnosticism and Mythology, but in no other way. It is not that they
- are insoluble by human reason, as their incompetent, howsoever
- highly paid, expounders now-a-days pretend. That is but the
- puerile apology of the unqualified for their own helpless
- ignorance—they who have never been in possession of the gnosis or
- science of the Mysteries by which alone these things can be
- explained in accordance with their natural genesis. In Egypt only
- can we read the matter to the root, or identify the origin of the
- Christ by nature and by name, to find at last that the Christ was
- the Mummy-type, and that our Christology is mummified
- mythology.—(_Agnostic Annual._)
-
------
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- _Because he is cabalistically the new Adam, the “celestial man,”
- and Adam was made of red earth._
-
------
-
-The above is an explanation on purely scientific evidence, but,
-perhaps, a little too _materialistic_, just because of that
-science, notwithstanding that the author is a well-known
-Spiritualist. Occultism pure and simple finds the same mystic
-elements in the Christian as in other faiths, though it rejects as
-emphatically its dogmatic and _historic_ character. It is a fact
-that in the terms Ιησοῦς ὁ χριστος (See _Acts_ v. 42, ix. 14; 1
-Corinth. iii. 17, etc.), the article ὁ designating “Christos,”
-proves it simply a surname, like that of Phocion, who is referred
-to as Φωκίων ὁ χρηστός (Plut. v.). Still, the personage (Jesus) so
-addressed—whenever he lived—was a great Initiate and a “Son of
-God.”
-
-For, we say it again, the surname Christos is based on, and the
-story of the Crucifixion derived from, events that preceded it.
-Everywhere, in India as in Egypt, in Chaldea as in Greece, all these
-legends were built upon one and the same primitive type; the
-voluntary sacrifice of the _logoï_—the _rays_ of the one LOGOS, the
-direct manifested emanation from the One ever-concealed Infinite and
-Unknown—whose _rays_ incarnated in mankind. They consented to _fall
-into matter_, and are, therefore, called the “Fallen Ones.” This is
-one of those great mysteries which can hardly be touched upon in a
-magazine article, but shall be noticed in a separate work of mine,
-_The Secret Doctrine_, very fully.
-
-Having said so much, a few more facts may be added to the etymology
-of the two terms. Χριστος being the verbal adjective in Greek of
-χρίω “to be rubbed on,” _as ointment_ or salve, and the word being
-finally brought to mean “the Anointed One,” in Christian theology;
-and _Kri_, in Sanskrit, the first syllable in the name of Krishna,
-meaning “to pour out, or rub over, to cover with,”[101] among many
-other things, this may lead one as easily to make of Krishna, “the
-anointed one.” Christian philologists try to limit the meaning of
-Krishna’s name to its derivation from _Krish_, “black”; but if the
-analogy and comparison of the Sanskrit with the Greek roots
-contained in the names of Chrestos, Christos, and _Ch_rishna, are
-analyzed more carefully, it will be found that they are all of the
-same origin.[102]
-
------
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- Hence the memorialising of the doctrine during the MYSTERIES. The
- pure monad, the “god” incarnating and becoming _Chrestos_, or man,
- on his trial of life, a series of those trials led him to the
- _crucifixion of flesh_, and finally into the Christos condition.
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- On the best authority the derivation of the Greek _Christos_
- is shown from the Sanskrit root _ghársh_ = “rub”; thus:
- _ghársh-ā-mi-to_, “to rub,” and ghársh-tá-s “flayed, sore.”
- Moreover, Krish, which means in one sense to plough and make
- furrows, means also to cause pain, “to torture to torment,”
- and ghrsh-tā-s “rubbing”—all these terms relating to Chrestos
- and Christos conditions. One has _to die in Chrestos_, _i.e._,
- kill one’s personality and its passions, to blot out every
- idea of separateness from one’s “Father,” the Divine Spirit in
- man; to become one with the eternal and absolute _Life_ and
- _Light_ (SAT) before one can reach the glorious state of
- _Christos_, the regenerated man, the man in spiritual freedom.
-
------
-
-“In Bockh’s ‘Christian Inscriptions,’ numbering 1,287, there is no
-single instance of an earlier date than the third century, wherein
-the name is not written _Chrest_ or _Chreist_.” (_The Name and
-Nature of the Christ_, by G. Massey, “The Agnostic Annual.”)
-
-Yet none of these names can be unriddled, as some Orientalists
-imagine, merely with the help of astronomy and the knowledge of
-zodiacal signs in conjunction with phallic symbols. Because, while
-the sidereal symbols of the mystic characters or personifications in
-Puranâs or Bible, fulfil astronomical functions, their spiritual
-anti-types rule invisibly, but very effectively, the world. They
-exist as abstractions on the higher plane, as manifested ideas on
-the astral, and become males, females and androgyne powers on this
-lower plane of ours. _Scorpio_, as _Chrestos-Meshiac_, and Leo, as
-_Christos-Messiah_ antedated by far the Christian era in the trials
-and triumphs of Initiation during the Mysteries, Scorpio standing as
-symbol for the latter, Leo for the glorified triumph of the “sun” of
-truth. The mystic philosophy of the allegory is well understood by
-the author of the “Source of Measures”; who writes: “One (Chrestos)
-causing himself to go down into the pit (of Scorpio, or incarnation
-in the womb) for the salvation of the world; this was the Sun, shorn
-of his _golden rays_, and _crowned with blackened_[103] _ones_
-(symbolizing this loss) as the thorns; _the other_ was the
-triumphant _Messiah_, mounted up to the _summit of the arch of
-heaven_, personated as the _Lion of the tribe of Judah_. In both
-instances he had the Cross; once in humiliation (as the son of
-copulation), and once holding it in his control, as the law of
-creation, he being Jehovah”—in the scheme of the authors of dogmatic
-Christianity. For, as the same author shows further, John, Jesus and
-even Apollonius of Tyana were but epitomizers of the history of the
-Sun “under differences of aspect or condition.”[104] The
-explanation, he says, “is simple enough, when it is considered that
-the names _Jesus_, Hebrew יש and Apollonius, or Apollo, are alike
-names of the _Sun in the heavens_, and, necessarily, the history of
-the one, as to his travels through _the signs_, with the
-personifications of his sufferings, triumphs and miracles, could be
-but the _history of the other_, where there was a wide-spread,
-common method of describing those travels by personification.” The
-fact that the Secular Church was founded by Constantine, and that it
-was a part of his decree “that the venerable day of the _Sun_ should
-be the day set apart for the worship of Jesus Christ as _Sun_-day,”
-shows that they knew well in that “Secular Church” “that the
-allegory rested upon an astronomical basis,” as the author affirms.
-Yet, again, the circumstance that both Purânas and Bible are full of
-solar and astronomical allegories, does not militate against that
-other fact that all such scriptures in addition to these two are
-_closed_ books to the scholars “having authority.”(!) Nor does it
-affect that other truth, that all those systems are _not the work of
-mortal man_, nor are they his invention in their origin and basis.
-
------
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- The Orientalists and Theologians are invited to read over and
- study the allegory of Viswakarman, the “Omnificent,” the Vedic
- God, the architect of the world, who sacrificed himself _to
- himself_ or the world, after having offered up all worlds, _which
- are himself_, in a “Sarva Madha” (general sacrifice)—and ponder
- over it. In the Purânic allegory, his daughter _Yoga-siddha_
- “Spiritual consciousness,” the wife of _Surya_, the Sun, complains
- to him of the too great effulgence of her husband; and Viswakarmâ,
- in his character of _Takshaka_, “wood cutter and carpenter,”
- placing the Sun upon his lathe cuts away a part of his brightness.
- Surya looks, after this, crowned with dark thorns instead of rays,
- and becomes Vikarttana (“shorn of his rays”). All these names are
- terms which were used by the candidates when going through the
- trials of Initiation. The Hierophant-Initiator personated
- Viswakarman; the father, and the general _artificer_ of the gods
- (the adepts on earth), and the candidate-Surya, the Sun, who had
- to kill all his fiery passions and wear the crown of thorns _while
- crucifying his body_ before he could rise and be re-born into a
- new life as the glorified “Light of the World”—Christos. No
- Orientalist seems to have ever perceived the suggestive analogy,
- let alone to apply it!
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- The author of the “Source of Measures” thinks that this “serves to
- explain why it has been that the _Life of Apollonius of Tyana, by
- Philostratus_ has been so carefully kept back from translation and
- popular reading.” Those who have studied it in the original have
- been forced to the comment that either the “_Life of Apollonius_
- has been taken from the New Testament, or that New Testament
- narratives have been taken from the _Life of Apollonius_, because
- of the manifest sameness of the _means of construction_ of the
- narrative.” (p. 260).
-
------
-
-Thus “Christos,” under whatever name, means more than _Karest_, a
-mummy, or even the “anointed” and the _elect_ of theology. Both of
-the latter apply to _Chréstos_, the man of sorrow and tribulation,
-in his physical, mental, and psychic conditions, and both relate to
-the Hebrew _Mashiac_ (from whence Messiah) condition, as the word is
-etymologised[105] by Fuerst, and the author of “The Source of
-Measures,” p. 255. Christos is the crown of glory of the suffering
-Chréstos of the mysteries, as of the candidate to the final UNION,
-of whatever race and creed. To the true follower of the SPIRIT OF
-TRUTH, it matters little, therefore, whether Jesus, as man and
-Chrestos, lived during the era called Christian, or before, or never
-lived at all. The Adepts, who lived and died for humanity, have
-existed in many and all the ages, and many were the good and holy
-men in antiquity who bore the surname or title of Chrestos before
-Jesus of Nazareth, otherwise Jesus (or Jehoshua) Ben Pandira was
-born.[106] Therefore, one may be permitted to conclude, with good
-reason, that Jesus, or Jehoshua, was like Socrates, like Phocian,
-like Theodorus, and so many others surnamed _Chréstos_, _i.e._, the
-“good, the excellent,” the gentle, and the holy Initiate, who showed
-the “way” to the Christos condition, and thus became himself “the
-Way” in the hearts of his enthusiastic admirers. The Christians, as
-all the “Hero-worshippers” have tried to throw into the background
-all the other Chréstoï, who have appeared to them as rivals of
-_their_ Man-God. But if the voice of the MYSTERIES has become silent
-for many ages in the West, if Eleusis, Memphis, Antium, Delphi, and
-Crèsa have long ago been made the tombs of a Science once as
-colossal in the West as it is yet in the East, there are successors
-now being prepared for them. We are in 1887 and the nineteenth
-century is close to its death. The twentieth century has strange
-developments in store for humanity, and may even be the last of its
-name.
-
- H. P. B.
-
------
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- The word שיה _shiac_, is in Hebrew the same word as a verbal,
- signifying _to go down into the pit_. As a noun, _place of thorns,
- pit_. The _hifil_ participle of this word is [Hebrew] or Messiach,
- or the Greek _Messias_, _Christ_, and means “he who causes to go
- down into the pit” (or hell, in dogmatism). In esoteric
- philosophy, this going down _into the pit_ has the most mysterious
- significance. The Spirit “Christos” or rather the “Logos” (_read_
- Logoï), is said to “go down into the pit,” when it incarnates in
- flesh, _is born as a man_. After having robbed the _Elohim_ (or
- gods) of their secret, the _pro-creating_ “fire of life,” the
- Angels of Light are shown cast down into the pit or abyss of
- matter, called _Hell_, or the bottomless pit, by the kind
- theologians. This, in Cosmogony and Anthropology. During the
- Mysteries, however, it is the _Chréstos_, _neophyte_, (as man),
- etc., who had to descend into the crypts of Initiation and trials;
- and finally, during the “Sleep of Siloam” or the final _trance_
- condition, during the hours of which the new Initiate has the last
- and final mysteries of being divulged to him. Hades, Schéol, or
- Patala, are all one. The same takes place in the East now, as took
- place 2,000 years ago in the West, during the MYSTERIES.
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- Several classics bear testimony to this fact. Lucian, c. 16, says
- Φωκίων ὁ χρηστὸς, and Φωκίων ὁ ἐπὶκλην (“λεγόμενος,” surnamed
- “χρηστος.”) In Phædr. p. 226 E, it is written, “you mean Theodorus
- the Chrestos.” “Τὸν χρηστὸν λεγεις Θεὸδωρον”. Plutarch shows the
- same; and Χρηστος—Chrestus, is the proper name (see the word in
- _Thesaur._ Steph.) of an orator and disciple of Herodes Atticus.
-
------
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-
-
-
- SIMILITUDES OF DEMOPHILUS.
-
-It is the business of a musician to harmonize every instrument, but
-of a well educated man to adapt himself harmoniously to every
-fortune.
-
-It is necessary that a well educated man should depart from life
-elegantly, as from a banquet.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
- GOLDEN SENTENCES OF DEMOCRITUS.
-
-It is beautiful to impede an unjust man; but if this be not
-possible, it is beautiful not to act in conjunction with him.
-
-Sin should be abstained from, not through fear, but, for the sake of
-the becoming.
-
-Many who have not learnt to argue rationally, still live according
-to reason.
-
-Vehement desires about any one thing render the soul blind with
-respect to other things.
-
-The equal is beautiful in everything, but excess and defect to me do
-not appear to be so.
-
-It is the property of a divine intellect to be always intently
-thinking about the beautiful.
-
-
- =Correspondence.=
-
- A LAW OF LIFE: KARMA.
-
-[The following letter has been received by the editors, in criticism
-on Mr. Keightley’s article on “Karma”; and as it raises many rather
-important points, an attempt has been made to answer them. Mr.
-Beatty’s letter is somewhat difficult to deal with, for though it
-asks many questions, they are so inextricably mingled with its
-author’s thoughts that it would be unfair to disentangle them from
-the context. It is a pity that Mr. Beatty, in his haste to
-criticize, did not wait for the conclusion of the article, as he
-might have saved himself some trouble. If his real desire is to
-learn, it would be well that he should approach the endeavour in a
-less flippant spirit and evolve the critic out of the criticaster.
-In many of his arguments he has, so to say, “given himself away,”
-but, in the interests of space and of the readers of LUCIFER, only
-those questions and arguments which bear directly on the points at
-issue have been selected for answer. The point which Mr. Beatty does
-“not care to discuss,” and which refers to the mystery of Godliness,
-has been omitted. Perhaps, if Mr. Beatty continues to read, mark,
-learn, _and inwardly digest_, he may in some _future incarnation_
-solve the mystery.]
-
-In an article in LUCIFER, under the above heading, Mr. Keightley
-declares it to be “very difficult, if not well-nigh impossible,” to
-understand Karma, and I grant him that his essay is a practical
-demonstration of his allegation. The difficulty (1.) does not,
-however, hinder him from attempting to define the refractory term.
-“Karma,” he says, “is the working of the great law which governs
-reincarnation,” or “a manifestation of the One, Universal, Divine
-Principle in the phenomenal world,” or again, “the great law of
-harmony which governs the universe.” Now, waiving altogether the
-question of reincarnations, I shall proceed to examine whether Mr.
-Keightley makes good his contention that “harmony,” in his sense of
-the word, “governs the Universe.” He says, “the man who denies the
-existence of harmony in the universe has transgressed the law and is
-experiencing punishment. He does this unconsciously to himself,
-because the law of harmony forms an unconscious impulse to its
-readjustment when it has been broken.” Here there are several things
-to be considered. In the first place, it may be asked: (2.) Does a
-man, by merely denying the existence of a law of Nature or the
-universe, transgress that law? I think not.[107] Secondly. Can a law
-of the universe be “broken”? Here again I must reply in the
-negative; for who is going to contend that the law of gravitation
-has ever been “broken,”[108] has ever ceased to act, has ever
-required “re-adjustment”? A man can break no law of Nature in the
-sense of bringing that law into abeyance. If then, a law of harmony
-governs the universe there can be no such thing as discord. (3.) Yet
-Mr. Keightley admits that there _is_ discord, that the law of
-harmony has been “broken” and needs “readjustment” This is a
-surrendering of his position and a patent admission that harmony is
-not constant or universal. He then proceeds to draw an illustration
-from music. “In musical chords, the composing notes, if taken by
-twos and threes, will be found in discord, but, when taken together,
-produce a harmony.” This is a particularly unfortunate subject of
-illustration. For does it not show that discord is an element in the
-universe as well as harmony? Why are discords introduced into music?
-Simply to make the harmony more effective. The reason for this,
-however, does not lie in any so-called universal law of harmony, but
-rather in the constitution of animate existences. Fundamentally,
-sensation is the consciousness of difference. Where the difference
-is great the feeling is great. If we wish to have the keenest
-sensation of sweetness we must first taste something bitter. Thus it
-is that occasional discords heighten harmony. But are the discords
-any less real on that account? Certainly not; for there can no more
-be harmony without discord, than there can be an up without a down.
-This, moreover, is only another illustration of the fact that human
-knowledge is merely relative. Must we, however, admit that the
-universal law may be harmony while our experience tells us that
-there are discords without number? Unless ignorance be considered as
-superior to positive knowledge, I see no room for the admission. If
-a man’s house tumbles about his ears, does it become any less a fact
-by trying to persuade himself and his neighbours that it is still
-standing? This seems to be the method of Mr. Keightley. He has,
-however, yet another argument “The universe ... is essentially an
-evidence of harmony; otherwise it could not exist, for it would fall
-to pieces.” This is a palpable begging of the question, and,
-besides, very absurd. The universe is a harmony, because a universe
-must be a harmony! “Otherwise it could not exist.” Now how does our
-harmonist know whether it could exist or not? Of what other universe
-has he experience or knowledge? “It would fall to pieces.” Where, I
-wonder, would it fall to? Perhaps it is even now fast falling to
-pieces, and who can tell us differently? As far as ordinary people
-can judge, it seems, as regards the parts we are acquainted with, to
-be falling into more or less concrete masses, but not many sane
-people believe it can fall into nothingness. After all this vain
-contention for universal harmony we find Mr. Keightley settling down
-like ordinary mortals to the conviction that the world is far from
-harmonious or perfect. One unfortunate individual who cannot be
-persuaded that all is harmony, is told that “he is incapable of
-understanding it because his attention is solely devoted to that
-which produces discord.” How comes it that the universe does not
-fall to pieces as a result of this discord? Surely we are in a
-precarious condition, if every obstinate fool who persists in crying
-out when he has been hurt, endangers the stability of the universe.
-Did ever anyone meet with a universe where there is less evidence of
-harmony? One brute force ever in conflict with another. Infernal
-forces piling up mountain on the top of mountain; supernal forces
-blasting, rending, excoriating and tumbling these mountains down
-again into the valleys; the oak struggling against the inwarping
-ivy, the fawn attempting vainly to escape from the claws of the
-tiger, the child agonising while parasites eat slowly and
-mercilessly into its lungs, liver, or brain; the strong everywhere
-victorious over the weak; each sect and each party exerting itself
-ferociously to scoop out the viscera of its rival. Such is the
-world, such all records declare it to have been, and such it gives
-ample promise of continuing. But if the world is not really so, and
-on the contrary is one immensity of joyous harmony, who can tell us
-why the evidence is so deceptive? Here again, Mr. Keightley
-introduces to us a most remarkable statement. “The one Divine
-principle is divided by man’s actions into two opposing forces of
-good and evil, and man’s progress depends on the exertion of his
-will to preserve harmony and prevent deviation to one side or the
-other.” Give us by all means in preference to this for common sense,
-for rationality and for every other quality that makes it
-digestible, the childish story of Eve, the apple and the fall.
-
------
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- Mr. Keightley’s meaning (and it is difficult for the words to bear
- any other interpretation) was that the denial of harmony is
- evidence that, at some previous time, the man who denies has set
- himself in opposition to the law, in virtue of those very desires
- and instincts of his animal personality to which Mr. Beatty
- alludes later on. In this sense, Mr. Beatty is right in saying
- that a law of the universe cannot be broken; but its limits may be
- transgressed, and consequently an attempt made by man to make
- himself into a small, but rival universe. It is the old story of
- the china pot and the iron kettle, and the fact that china gets
- the worst of it is conclusive that the china is struggling
- _against_ Nature.
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- Will Mr. Beatty explain the phenomenon of a comet flirting its
- tail round the sun in defiance of the “_law_ of gravitation”?
-
------
-
-Beyond doubt, Mr. Keightley has a profound faith in man as a power
-in the universe and an instrument for evil. By a most singular
-process of metaphysical alchemy man decomposes the “Divine
-principle” into “two opposing forces of good and evil.” It seems
-from this revised version of an old story that man introduced evil
-into the universe. Why is man so important that a universe should be
-polluted for his sake? Surely man did not make himself, and whatever
-powers were in him for evil or for good must have been potential in
-that from which he sprang. Man can create nothing, neither evil nor
-good, neither a tendency to do right nor an inclination to do wrong.
-“Man’s will” is always a tremendous force for good or evil in the
-hands of theologians and metaphysicians. Did man make his own
-“will?” If not, how can he be responsible for what he does?
-Everybody knows that man can act according to his likes or dislikes.
-But does anybody imagine that he can make his own likes or dislikes?
-(4.) He can do as he wishes, but he wishes according to his nature,
-and this he cannot transcend, consequently he is not responsible to
-the Author of his nature for what his nature inclines him to do. But
-what are we to understand by the rest of the sentence? Man’s will is
-“to preserve harmony and prevent deviation to one side or the
-other.” First the will brings about evil in the “Divine principle,”
-destroying harmony, then it is to reproduce harmony and at the same
-time to maintain a balance between good and evil, and “prevent
-deviation to the one side or the other.” This to Mahatmas and
-possessors of the “sixth sense” may seem plain logic, but it far
-surpasses my comprehension.[109] I am, perhaps, as averse to “the
-pernicious doctrine of reward and punishment after death, in heaven
-or in hell” as Mr. Keightley can be, but I can by no means deduce
-from it the results which to him appear so inevitable. “Nothing,” he
-says, “could have been found more calculated to circumscribe the
-view of life as a whole, and concentrate man’s attention on
-temporary matters.... He either rejected the idea of soul as
-altogether worthless, or else he transferred his interest to the
-soul’s welfare in heaven—in either case concentrating his attention
-on what is inevitably transient.” How the idea of never-ending
-existence in heaven or in hell can have the effect of circumscribing
-“the view of life as a whole,” and of concentrating “man’s attention
-on temporary matters,” is to me an insolvable puzzle. That it should
-have quite the opposite effect, does not seem to require proof. Why,
-in the name of mystery, should he “reject the idea of soul as
-worthless,” and how can transferring “his interest to the soul’s
-welfare in heaven” be called a concentrating of “his attention on
-what is inevitably transient?” Truly this Karma is a bewildering
-subject![110]
-
------
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- Very little doubt that it does. Mankind is only very gradually
- developing its fifth sense on the intellectual plane. Intuition
- might have carried our critic over the difficulty, but in some
- parts of his criticism he seems hardly to have begun to evolute
- the intellectual sense.
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- “This Karma,” as Mr. Beatty expresses it, would not be quite so
- bewildering a subject if critics would bear in mind the context
- and not fall foul of a detached expression—not even a sentence.
- The “interest of the soul’s welfare in heaven” is concentrated by
- John Smith on John Smith as John Smith in heaven, and in order
- that the said John Smith may go on enjoying the things he loved on
- earth. As his earth life has ended, John Smith has changed and is
- “transient.” If he were not transient a very natural inference
- would follow, that progress, evolution, &c., on whatever plane of
- being does not prevail.
-
------
-
-Do plants and animals come under the law of Karma? is the next
-question discussed by Mr. Keightley. An extract from the
-_Theosophist_ seems to discountenance such a thing. But are its
-arguments really conclusive against it? I do not think so. It says,
-“A piece of iron is attracted to a magnet without having any desire
-in the matter.” Now, in the first place, this is pure assumption,
-and has its origin in vainglorious human egotism.[111] It is evident
-that from objective data alone we cannot decide what is the
-subjective state of the molecules of the attracted iron. In the
-second place, we are only acquainted with the iron as a cause
-producing changes in us. No matter how we interpret these changes,
-they cannot even tell us the real nature of iron, merely considered
-objectively. Again the extract proceeds: “An animal usually follows
-the instincts of its nature without any merit or demerit for so
-doing; a child or an idiot may smilingly kick over a lamp, which may
-set a whole city on fire.... A person can only be held responsible
-according to his ability to perceive justice, and to distinguish
-between good and evil.” According to this doctrine, man is not an
-“animal,” and does not follow his instincts. To those who are
-acquainted, even slightly, with the method and regularity of Nature,
-this contention will appear, on the face of it, untenable. For why
-should there be an exception in the case of man?[112] Has man
-instincts, desires, and inclinations, or has he not? If he has, why
-should he have them if he is not to follow them? And if in any case
-he does not follow them, is it not with him as with the “animals”?
-Is it not because he is deterred by influences from without, or
-hereditary influences from within? And of all these instincts,
-desires and influences, how is he to know which to obey, to know
-which is of Divine sanction? He has conscience, of course, but
-conscience is a very variable quantity, and indeed, it might not be
-too much to say that there is hardly a crime in the world that has
-not, at one time or another, been commended by conscience.
-Conscience is only one phase of the man’s mental activity, and was
-no more created by him than was his power of vision. We talk of
-“children and idiots,” and their being irresponsible, but are not
-untamed savages also irresponsible? And if we admit that there may
-be beings as much higher than we, as we are higher than children,
-idiots, and savages, will they not, with reason and justice, regard
-us as irresponsible? The truth is, there never was a greater chimera
-conjured up by unreasoning fancy than that one of man’s
-responsibility to a Supreme Power. Man is responsible only to man,
-and man’s conduct is without merit except from a human view-point.
-We are good or bad by reason of all the forces that act on and
-through us.
-
-My object in writing what I have written is to show to Theosophists
-the dense darkness in which I wander. Will some God-illumined mind
-not take pity upon, and draw me up from the labyrinthian gloom,
-where illusions mislead me at every step? My “sixth sense” seems
-wholly dormant, and Nirvana, that haven of rest, seems distant, by
-many a weary league of rocky path and burning desert. Pity me.
-
- Adyar, 17th October, 1887. H. S. OLCOTT, P.T.S.
-
------
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- Mr. Beatty hardly maintains his position of consistent materialism
- here; and it is at least as vainglorious to deny as to assert.
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- Man has the “animal” in him of course, but he has also the power
- of judgment or discrimination. Mr. Beatty’s wish to be
- critically pessimistic seems here to run away with his power of
- discrimination.
-
------
-
-(1.) The difficulty experienced in fathoming the mysteries of Karmic
-Law arises from the conditions of our present intellectual
-environment and general evolutionary status. It has been, also,
-frequently stated that a _complete_ comprehension of its workings is
-reserved for the Initiate who has transcended the domain of
-terrestrial activity—viz., the necessity for soul-evolution through
-successive births. But, passing over this consideration, it is
-evident that, in the process of bringing down fragments of the
-Divine Truth on to the plane of mere intellectual interpretation, an
-inevitable distortion must ensue. The rays of spiritual light will
-be split up and refracted as they pass through the prism of the
-brain. Mr. Beatty will recognise this fact more clearly owing to his
-belief “that _human_ knowledge is _merely relative_.” Surely, when
-that most familiar fact of our experience, the “perception of
-matter,” is, metaphysically speaking, an illusion, the relativity of
-_mental_ conceptions of spiritual truths would appear to be a
-necessity. According to Huxley, Spencer, Du Bois Reymond, and all
-leading thinkers, we know nothing of things as they are even on this
-plane, which to the materialist is “All in all.” The essence of the
-thing “perceived” escapes us; all we really grasp is its
-presentation in consciousness. It is, therefore, clear that in
-interpreting realities on the superphysical plane, we cannot advance
-beyond word-symbols and adumbrations. The intuition of the
-individual must effect the rest.
-
-Such considerations, however, in no way militate against the
-successful defence of Esoteric philosophy on purely intellectual
-lines. Translated into terms of human thought, its metaphysics must
-be shown to blend intimately with the _facts_ of science and
-psychology, and its ability to solve the enigmas of life
-demonstrated. “Philosophy is chaos,” remarks the author of “Absolute
-Relativism,” referring to modern thought. If we are to avoid the
-spectacle of a future “moral chaos,” also, as the fruit of the
-materialistic Upas tree, some fresh impulse must be infused into the
-dry bones of Western metaphysics—some _raison d’être_ assigned to
-life, and an ideal worthy of man’s noblest efforts presented to the
-multitude of _laissez-faire_ pessimists. Such is an aspect of the
-work now before us.
-
-(2.) A man may certainly injure himself[113] by shutting his eyes to
-a spiritual interpretation of the Universe and its workings. The
-only acquisition he can carry with him after physical death is the
-_aroma_ of the vast aggregate of mental states generated in one
-incarnation. The _personality_ or brain-consciousness of the
-physical man is, after all, a mere feeler projected into this
-objective plane to harvest experience for its individual Self. It
-does not at all follow that any experience may be acquired which the
-Monad is enabled to assimilate. Abstract thinking, religious
-aspirations, scientific lore; poetry, the nobler emotions, and all
-such efflorescences of human consciousness, furnish the “material”
-which go to build up the _transcendental individuality_ of the Ego
-progressing towards the Nirvana. The materialist presents a frequent
-instance of soul-death—so far as the fruitage of the personality is
-concerned. His knowledge may be enormous, but being unspiritualised,
-a mere creature of the physical brain, it cannot blossom into
-luxuriance in the Devachanic interim between successive births.
-Consequently, as the True Self—the “transcendental subject” of the
-neo-Kantian German school—only assimilates experience suitable to
-its own exalted nature, it becomes evident that, ideals apart, the
-philosophy of a man is of very great importance. At the same time,
-it need not be said that sectarian “religion” is almost more
-pernicious than materialism, inasmuch as it combines the two factors
-of crass ignorance and spiritual torpor.
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- No law of Nature can be set aside, but a man _transgresses_ a law
- of his [mental] being when he deliberately places himself under
- the sway of certain “evil” forces. The gist of Mr. Beatty’s
- criticism is not quite evident here.
-
------
-
-(3.) Harmony _is_ essentially the law of the Universe. The
-contrasted aspects of Nature come into being subsequently to the
-differentiation of matter from its several _protyles_ in the
-commencement of a cycle of becoming, or Manwantara, and can have no
-reality except in the experience of conscious Egos.[114] For beneath
-the surface of the great ocean of cosmic illusion—beneath the clash
-of apparently clashing forces—lies the Eternal Harmony. The
-semblance of discord is but a ripple on the stream of Maya, or
-illusion. One aspect of esoteric solution of apparent evils is dealt
-with in the last issue of LUCIFER (_vide_ art., “Origin of Evil”).
-But Mr. Beatty will not find himself in a position to accept its
-validity so long as he continues to “waive the question of
-reincarnation,” the acceptance of that doctrine lying at the root of
-the real explanation.
-
------
-
-Footnote 114:
-
- The _phenomenal_ contrast is not denied, but it is representative
- of no fundamental want of harmony. In the same way the contrast of
- Subject and Object is essential to our present finite
- consciousness, although it has no basis of reality beyond the
- limits of conditional being. Moreover, even in this phenomenal
- Universe, equilibrium (harmony) is most certainly maintained by
- the very conflict of the contrasted forces alluded to.
-
------
-
-The Universe must, at bottom, be a Harmony. Why?[115] The
-equilibrating action of the forces around us is a sufficient proof
-of the fact; the apparent discord existing, as argued by Spinoza,
-solely in the sensations of conscious beings. The matter in reality
-involves the re-opening of the much debated question as to whether
-an optimistic or pessimistic pantheism is the creed of the true
-philosopher. Can we with von Hartmann postulate the strange
-contradiction of an absolutely wise (though from our standpoint
-unconscious) cause behind phenomena confronted with a “worthless
-universe?” Obviously not. Moreover, as pantheists necessarily regard
-the individual mind as only a rushlight compared with the blazing
-sun of the Universal Mind, its source, how is a final conclusion as
-to the “unfathomable folly” of manifested being possible? On the
-other hand, a non-recognition of the Maya of appearances is a tacit
-impeachment of the wisdom of the Absolute. The pantheist—and
-pantheism alone accounts for consciousness itself—is, at least,
-logically driven into the admission that the “nature of things” is
-sound and that, probably, apparent flaws in the mechanicism of the
-Universe would, if viewed from a wider standpoint than the human,
-altogether vanish.
-
------
-
-Footnote 115:
-
- Mr. Beatty asks how the Universe would come to a stand-still, if
- the law of Harmony was suspended. Now suppose, for instance, the
- law of “gravity” was not _counterbalanced_ by the action of other
- “forces,” what would happen? Science assures us that everything
- would have long before gravitated to a common centre, and a
- universal dead-lock have ensued! _Vice versa_, if “gravity” were
- to lapse. _Verb. Sap._
-
------
-
-If, however, the Spinozistic axiom that evil _exists only in us_, is
-true—and it is not for a relativist of our critic’s type to deny the
-fact—pessimism is rooted in the recognition of the equilibrating
-action of the law of Karma. The examples cited by Mr. Beatty of
-brute forces “one in conflict with another;” of the sufferings of
-animals in the struggle for existence; and more especially of human
-suffering in no way controvert the views of the “Harmonists.” The
-first group is representative of those forces which balance one
-another by oscillating about a common centre of equilibrium,
-producing harmony by conflict, just as in the case of the so-called
-centripetal and centrifugal forces, which regulate the earth’s
-orbital journey. The second group is, undoubtedly, characterised by
-the infliction of much incidental pain. But in all instances where
-Nature immolates the individual organism on the altar of natural
-selection, she does it for the benefit of the species or the
-“survival of the fittest”—the individuals borne down by violence in
-the struggle, reaping, one and all, the results of a compensatory
-Karma. In the domain of _human_ suffering, moral debasement, etc.,
-an entirely new factor supervenes—the equilibrating influence of a
-_positive_ Karma, which in biblical language demands “an eye for an
-eye and a tooth for a tooth.”
-
-(4). “Why,” asks our critic, “is man so important that the Universe
-was polluted for his sake?” In the first place, Humanity is, by no
-means, unimportant; the panorama of evolution only existing in order
-to evolve the Ego from the animal stage up to that of a conscious
-God. The designation of nature as divided into “good” and “evil”
-principles, has been taken by Mr. Beatty in its absolute, as opposed
-to its relative, aspect. Man pollutes only himself and his fellows
-by “sin”; nature remaining constant _per se_. “How can he be
-responsible for what he does?” he continues. He is only so within
-certain wide limits defined by his previous Karma—the tendencies
-moral, mental and spiritual, generated in previous lives,
-continually driving him on to certain lines of action. The “Free
-Will absolute” of the theologians is as unpsychological and
-worthless a concept as it is possible to formulate. Not so the
-doctrine that the Ego is able to _mould_ its tendencies of thought
-and emotion within “constitutional limits.” It was the recognition
-of this fact which led John Stuart Mill to take up a midway position
-between the equally absurd extremes of Free Will and Necessarianism.
-The same conviction led the prophet of Materialism, Dr. Louis
-Büchner, to contradict his whole system by admitting human liberty
-within a certain area mapped out by “Heredity” and Environment, and
-Professor Clifford to invest the “conscious, automaton” Man with the
-power to control his own ideas!! Responsibility varies enormously,
-and is, perhaps, almost wanting in the savage (who, however, is in
-all cases the degraded relic of primæval civilisation). In all
-cases, the human Ego must be held to be the evolver of the group of
-tendencies which make up the personality of each re-birth. The
-sensualist is the victim of a “Frankenstein’s monster,” into which
-he has infused strength through many lives. We really cannot follow
-Mr. Beatty when he writes: “Has man instincts, desires, and
-inclinations, or has he not? If he has, _why should he have them if
-he is not to follow them_?” He has them because they are the
-heritage handed down to him from past lives, and also because his
-Karma as an individual is bound up with that of the race to which he
-belongs. It rests with him as to how far he chooses to _modify_ them
-“for weal or woe,” for every moment the exhaustion of past Karma
-runs parallel with the creation of new. It is certainly a strange
-doctrine here enunciated by Mr. Beatty, that the possession of
-certain “instincts, etc,” justifies their gratification. Crime,
-debauchery and cruelty would be difficult to deal with on this
-hypothesis! It is certainly true—to some extent—that “we are good or
-bad by reason of all the forces that act on or through us.” These
-latter are the stimuli to action (_subject to the control of the
-will_), but are in their turn the resultant of previous Karma.
-Judging from the general tone of his criticism, it would appear that
-his first acquaintance with the esoteric philosophy does not date
-back to a very remote antiquity.
-
- A. K.
-
- ------------------
-
- “THE LATEST ATTACK ON CHRISTIANITY.”
-
-In the July number of the _Quarterly Review_ there is an article
-reviewing the recent book of J. C. Morrison upon “The Service of Man
-or the Future Religion.” And although Mr. Morrison, in his book,
-writes to urge that the chief and primary principle of religion is
-“to promote the spirit of self-sacrifice, and to direct men’s
-energies to the service of their fellow creatures,” yet the
-_Quarterly Review_ pours every kind of insult and obloquy on Mr.
-Morrison.
-
-But herein is the gross contradiction, that the _Quarterly Review_
-admits that the primary principle of Christianity has the very same
-objects in view, as Mr. Morrison urges the future religion should
-have. And yet the _Quarterly Review_ ridicules Mr. Morrison, and
-describes his book as an attack upon Christianity.
-
-Then, surely, when two persons thus fall out with one another,
-whilst both advocate the same lofty and noble principles, there must
-be some gross misunderstanding between them!
-
-The error thus which they both labour under, is one and the same;
-for the _Quarterly Review_ errs, in assuming that the teaching or
-doctrine of the Church is indisputably, and infallibly, the teaching
-or doctrine of Christ. And Mr. Morrison errs in assuming that the
-teaching or doctrine of Christ is the same as the doctrine of the
-Church.
-
-So that if the teaching of the Church is not the teaching of Christ,
-then Mr. Morrison in attacking the supposed Christianity of the
-Church is not really attacking Christianity, but only attacking the
-spurious doctrine of the Church, which has passed current as
-Christianity; _ex gr._, Isaiah, Jeremiah and Elijah, in denouncing
-the religion of the priests, did not attack true religion (as the
-priests would assert), but only their adulterated and spurious
-religion.
-
-And Christ tells us that the Priests and Pharisees made the word of
-God of none effect by their traditions. And St Paul tells us that,
-with the authority of the Chief Priest, he had, before conversion,
-imprisoned and put men to death, and made them blaspheme (Acts
-xxvi., 11) against God and the Church.
-
-Therefore, before we accept the Church and Christianity to be
-synonymous terms, and not only signifying but being actually the
-Church of Christ, and so, verily, Christianity, we must have a clear
-and definite understanding as to what we mean, and wish others to
-understand what we mean, by “the Church.”
-
-For the world, outside of Christianity, and often inside, is at its
-wits’ end to know which of the numerous churches and sects, which
-all claim to be the Church of Christ, is really and truly the Church
-of Christ; because the World witnesses that they all reject one
-another.
-
-Then surely, whilst the world witnesses rival and hostile churches
-all claiming to be “the Church” and Christianity, Mr. Morrison is
-not at all necessarily attacking the Church of Christ, or true
-Christianity, when he attacks the doctrine, or the Christianity of
-the churches.
-
-And this proposition of course, opens and raises the question as to
-what is Christianity, which the _Quarterly Review_ either avoids or
-assumes to be established, as being “_a sound belief in the merits
-of the Saviour_,” which of course means belief in the Atonement as
-commonly taught. But how can the truth of Christianity be possibly
-established, whilst to this day the doctrine of Atonement taught by
-the Church as Christianity, cannot be reconciled as either good or
-true; and is moreover a mystery to the leaders of it, a stumbling
-block to the Jews, and foolishness to the world, making the
-preaching of the Church as Canon Liddon admits, utterly powerless?
-The _Quarterly Review_ assumes that the doctrine of the Church has
-been taught as Christianity for 1,800 years; and that 1,800 years’
-teaching of it has proved it to be Christianity, because the
-_Quarterly Review_ assumes that there has been liberty for 1,800
-years to disprove the doctrine of the Church, and that the doctrine
-of the Church, not having been disproved, is a proof that it cannot
-be disproved. But the fact that to this very day there is no liberty
-allowed in the pulpits of the National Churches to discuss the
-doctrine of the Church (it being a law with the rulers of the Church
-that “the doctrine of the Church may not be touched”), utterly
-refutes all the assumptions of the _Quarterly Review_.
-
-For whilst there is no liberty, even for fair and candid criticism
-in the pulpit, on the doctrine of the Church, even in this age of
-liberty and education, there could have been none when the Church,
-for centuries, had power to imprison, slay, and excommunicate or
-boycott; and used it against those who even questioned the doctrine
-of the Church.
-
-But we are told, by the great Bishop Butler, in his “Analogy of
-Religion” (and whom the _Quarterly Review_ admits to be an authority
-of the very highest class), that the doctrine of Atonement is
-positively immoral, excepting for the supposed divine authority; and
-the Bishop himself looked forward to the day, when the progress of
-liberty and education should throw greater light upon this doctrine
-of the Church, and indisputably determine whether or no it has the
-divine authority, it was then supposed or asserted to have.
-
-So great has been our progress in education and liberty that _The
-Guardian_ of the 3rd August, in its review of this book of Mr.
-Morrison’s, says, if Christianity is Calvinism with its doctrine of
-substitution and justification, then it is _madness_ any longer to
-attempt defending the morality of Christianity.
-
-It is true that it is one thing to make this admission in the review
-of a book, and another thing to publish it from the pulpit; and it
-is true that the admission would be withdrawn or crucified by
-silence; but the _Quarterly Review_ itself, in its argument by
-analogy of the human and divine mind, admits that this doctrine of
-Atonement is immoral, because it admits that no authority could be
-divine which called immorality morality, as it asserts that
-_whatever is moral humanly speaking, is also moral divinely
-speaking, only in an infinitely greater degree_, and the converse.
-So that an attack on an immoral doctrine of the Church is not an
-attack on Christianity, if the doctrine of the Church is not the
-teaching of Christ, as it can be shown that it is not, as soon as
-liberty is allowed in the pulpits of the National Churches, for
-explaining the truth of a _Crucified Christ_, and removing the
-mystery that has been created, which causes it to be a stumbling
-block to the Jews, and foolishness to the world.
-
-We are told that the late Archbishop Whately said, that if the
-Christian Religion did not come from God, miraculously (in the sense
-commonly taught), yet the religion, nevertheless, exists, and
-therefore the phenomenon has to be explained how it could have
-arisen and been propagated without miracles.
-
-But the _Quarterly Review_ asserts that for 1,800 years all the
-attempts to explain it, without the aid of miracles, have utterly
-failed, and therefore it must be assumed to be miraculous.
-
-But before there can be any justification for such a bold
-assumption, as that what is taught as Christianity is infallibly,
-and indisputably, the teaching of Jesus Christ, what is meant by the
-term Christianity, or Christian religion must be clearly defined:
-for the Roman Catholic Church denounces the Protestant, and the
-Protestant denounces the Roman Church, as having naught to do with
-Christianity; so that even if there is anything held in common
-between these Churches (as “the faith of the Primitive Church,” or
-“the faith once delivered to the Saints,” or any other faith), yet
-whatever it is, or is called, it would seem to be of not the
-slightest value whatever, in saving them from rejecting one another
-absolutely.
-
-Canon Liddon, however, asserts that all the doctrine and teaching of
-the Church derives its authority from a miraculous resurrection of
-Jesus, with a material and physical body of flesh, blood, and bones,
-in direct defiance of the teaching of Jesus, that the flesh
-profiteth nothing, and that it was the words which He spoke, “_They
-were_ spirit, _they_ were life.” (John vi., 63.)
-
-And if we believe that the Holy Spirit of God could speak without
-the aid of a material body, composed of flesh, blood, and bones, in
-a still small voice to the conscience or soul of Moses and Elijah (1
-Kings xix., 12); and if we believe that the same Holy Spirit is
-_present_ even now (where two or three are gathered together—Matt,
-xvii., 23), why should not the presence of the still small voice of
-the Holy Spirit, speaking to the conscience or soul of the Apostles,
-be of itself deemed sufficient, without needing the aid of a
-material body?
-
-Again, if the _presence_ of the still small voice of the Holy
-Spirit, speaking to the soul of man, has been deemed sufficient by
-the world both before the crucifixion of Christ, and since the
-crucifixion of Christ, why should it be deemed necessary to raise up
-the crucified One, with a body of flesh, blood and bones, only to
-teach what the still small voice of the Holy Spirit was able,
-willing, and _present_ to teach, and to doubt which would be
-Atheism? And, moreover, whilst such teaching was sufficient, it
-would be a contradiction to vouchsafe more.
-
-Therefore, if the still small voice of the Holy Spirit is sufficient
-and _present_ to guide us into all truth, it must have been
-sufficient for the Apostles also (John xvi., 13); and, therefore,
-Christ’s religion is not dependent upon a material resurrection of
-the body, with flesh, blood and bones.
-
-Here, once more, we see the necessity of liberty being allowed in
-the pulpit, for fair and candid criticism on the doctrine of the
-Church, for the purpose of eliminating error and eliciting truth; so
-that it may be clearly seen and known what is Christ’s religion, as
-it might indeed be possible that a material resurrection would seem
-necessary to support the doctrine of the Church, though wholly
-unnecessary for the support of Christ’s religion, or gospel.
-
-Although the _Quarterly Review_ asserts that men have failed for
-1,800 years to account for the existence of Christianity, unless it
-had a miraculous resurrection to support it, yet it by no means
-follows that, because a miracle is supposed to be needed to support
-a doctrine of the Church, therefore a miracle is needed for
-supporting the doctrine, gospel, or religion of Christ; which
-exists, and will continue to exist, without needing the aid of
-belief in a miraculous resurrection of the material body, to support
-it. And it only needs that there should be liberty allowed in the
-pulpits of the National Churches to show the deficiency of faith in
-Christ’s spiritual resurrection, to see there is no need for belief
-in that carnal, gross, and material resurrection of the body, with
-flesh, blood and bones.
-
-Then, let there be liberty allowed in the pulpits of the National
-Churches; because it is not true that there has ever been liberty
-for 1,800 years to explain the Mystery of a Crucified Christ; for,
-it is refused to the present day. If any man, on behalf of the
-Church, contradicts this, and asserts there is liberty to explain,
-in the Church, the truth of a crucified Christ, let him mention one
-Church, or one clergyman that will allow it, and I will test its
-truth by asking for the same permission that the rulers of the
-Synagogue accorded to St Paul at Antioch, Acts xiii., 15.
-
-The _Quarterly Review_ says the clergy have no objection to free
-discussion—that it is the very air they breathe, and that it has
-been the life of Christian Truth. These are bold and brave words,
-but where is there even one clergyman that will endorse them, and
-act upon them? Where?
-
-Isaiah says, “Open ye the gates that the truth may enter in” (xxvi.,
-2). But instead of reverencing the just and righteous “Son of Man,”
-the chief priests and rulers of the Ancient Church condemned “the
-Just One,” to be slain as a blasphemer, whose blood ought to be shed
-for an Atonement. And the chief priests of our Church have combined
-that this doctrine should not be touched, so that by their practice
-they make their statement of the _Quarterly Review_ utterly untrue.
-For if there is one clergyman, A.D. 1887, who will support the
-_Quarterly Review’s_ statement, and open his pulpit for explaining
-the truth of “Christ crucified” and proclaiming Christian truth, as
-taught by Christ—Where is he? and who is he?
-
-And if there is not one, then need the Church be surprised that men
-attack, not the Christianity of Jesus Christ, but only an erroneous
-doctrine of the Church, miscalled Christianity?
-
- (REV.) T. G. HEADLEY.
-
-_Manor House, Petersham, S. W._
-
-P.S.—Although the _Quarterly Review_ admits that Mr. Morrison has
-established a high position in literature, and that he seeks to
-promote the same lofty and noble principles as true Christianity
-inculcates; yet it speaks of Mr. Morrison’s book as bad and
-incomplete; feeble and illogical; full of perversities,
-monstrosities, misrepresentations, and misquotations; adding, that
-it is bitter, unscrupulous, ignorant, inconsistent, offensive,
-bullying, brow-beating, overbearing, absurd, and ridiculous, as well
-as indecent and false; insulting and flagrant; inconsecutive and
-unjust; full of jugglery and a disgrace.
-
-Is this an exhibition of how theologians, or the clergy, as the
-reviewer is most probably a clergyman, love free discussion, and
-crucify those from whom they differ by damning them in this gross
-manner?
-
- ------------------
-
- ISLAM AND CHRISTIANITY.
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-In the numerous letters that have repeatedly appeared recently in
-the _Times_ opposing the statements of the Rev. Canon Isaac Taylor,
-in his speech at the late Church Congress, on the very great
-progress of Islam, and the comparative failure of Christianity (as
-taught), in India and Africa, it is frequently asserted that _“Islam
-is the only religion that has laid an immutable barrier on human
-progress;”_ and that _“no system could have been devised with more
-consummate skill (than the Koran of Islam) for shutting out the
-light of truth, from the Nations over which Islam has sway.”_
-
-But surely this is equally as true of our Church, whilst it also
-makes it an immutable law, as it has done to this day, that “_the
-doctrine of the Church may not be touched_”? For how could any
-system have been devised with more consummate skill for shutting out
-the light of truth, than to delude the people to crucify “the Just
-One,” as a blasphemer whose blood ought to be shed for an atonement,
-and afterwards to quote Scripture in support of this doctrine (as
-necessary to be believed in order to escape being cursed here and
-damned hereafter), and stamp out and boycott all who doubted it?
-
-And yet this is the present state of things.
-
-And therefore, whilst the clergy have power to say that “_the
-doctrine of the Church may not be touched_,” how is the mystery of a
-Crucified Christ to be explained and translated, so that it may be
-seen to be “_a light to lighten the Gentiles, and also the glory of
-Israel_,” instead of being, as it is now, a stumbling block to the
-Jews, foolishness to the world, and a mystery to the teachers of it,
-making those who accept it, in India and Africa, worse than they
-were before?
-
-Then is there not a cause for demanding that liberty should be
-allowed in the Church, for explaining, in the pulpit, the mystery of
-a Crucified Christ, so that it may no longer remain a mystery for
-want only of this liberty?
-
- (REV.) T. G. HEADLEY.
-
- ------------------
-
- HYLO-IDEALISM.—AN APOLOGY.
-
-My attention has been directed to a somewhat slighting notice of the
-above theory of human nature, on pages 72 and 75 of your issue for
-September, the contents of which are, doubtless, most suggestive of
-the _nouvelles couches mentales_ at the basis of all _nouvelles
-couches sociales_, and which Physical Science, in its vulgar
-realism, has altogether missed.
-
-My main position, to which all else is but subsidiary, is that the
-worlds both of thought and thing, which thus become identified and
-unified, _must_ be a product of _our own_ personality or Egoity,
-which thus constitutes each Ego Protagonist and Demiurge, from
-whose tribunal there can be no possible appeal. This being
-granted, and even Max Müller, in his “Science of Thought,”
-considers the position _impregnable_, it matters not one jot, at
-least in the first line and as far as my main object is concerned,
-whether the Ego be a Body or a “Spirit.” Our own individuality, as
-sum and substance of all “things,” is the only essential point of
-the question. So that it may be argued either on the somatic
-(hylozoic) or “Spiritual” hypothesis of life and mind. I have
-always contended that Hylo-Idealism, or Auto-centricism, is the
-only thorough and legitimate outcome of the phenomenal world
-theory—this representative _Weltanschanung_ having been, for some
-generations past, the accredited creed both of physical science
-and philosophy. It is well summed up in Kant’s negation of “_Das
-Ding an sich_.$1“$2”$3 Vulgar Physical Science, as interpreted by
-its greatest hierophants, from Newton to Huxley and Darwin, from
-its incarnate dualism, is fatally handicapped in its search after
-the _final_ “good, beautiful, and true.” Even Cardinal Newman is
-in a similar case, when he predicates _two_ luminous spectra, God
-and Self, as the sole entities. The former Spectrum, on the
-Hylo-ideal, or visional, or phenomenal hypothesis, _must_ be only
-the functional _imago_ of the latter; Self being thus proved to be
-“Alpha and Omega, beginning and ending, first and last.” Beyond
-Self, it is manifest, mortal mind can never range. Whether Self be
-body or “spirit” is, I repeat, for my chief contention, quite
-immaterial—I sit on both sides of the stile, facing both ways.
-
- ROBERT LEWINS, M.D.
-
- ------------------
-
- HYLO-IDEAISM.
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-As a hostile notice of the above philosophy has appeared in your
-columns, will you kindly permit me to say a few words in its
-defence? Not, of course, that I can hope in these few lines to
-really make clear to the casual reader the greatest change in human
-thought ever witnessed on earth (a change not merely as regards the
-form or matter of existence, but as regards its very nature)—yet I
-may hope that a few seasonable words may be the means of inducing at
-least a few to enquire further into a theory, the self-evident
-simplicity of which is so great, that, I am convinced, it needs but
-to be understood to command universal acceptance.
-
-The term Hylo-Ideaism is no self-contradiction, but undeniable
-verity, based on the first two facts of all existence; viz., the
-assumption of the material on the one hand, and the actuality of the
-ideal on the other. The primary, undeniable and necessary assumption
-of the “reality” of existence supplies us with the first half of our
-designation, and the recognition of the correlative truism that this
-existence—based on our own assumption—is, therefore, only our own
-idea, completes our title, and amply vindicates the self-sufficiency
-of Hylo-Ideaistic philosophy. For here is not a mere unended
-argument, leaving us at both ends stranded on mere metaphysical
-speculation, but a self-sustaining circle[116] where both ends meet,
-and materiality and ideality are blended as one, and indissoluble.
-
------
-
-Footnote 116:
-
- Yet, unless _metaphysical_ speculation comes to the rescue of the
- new philosophy, and, completing, explains it on the old Vedantic
- lines, the “circle,” instead of being a “self-sustaining” one, is
- more than likely to become a—“vicious circle.”—ED.
-
------
-
-It matters not on what basis we proceed, whether we speak of
-existence as material or ideal, or “spiritual” or anything else—a
-moment’s reflection is sufficient to establish us in a position of
-consistent monism. For all thought or knowledge is but sensation,
-and sensation is and must be purely subjective, existing in, and by,
-the ego itself. As now we cannot outstrip our own sensations (only a
-madman could controvert this proposition—which includes
-_everything_)—therefore are we absolutely, and for ever, limited to
-self-existence, and the same holds good of all possible or imaginary
-existence whatsoever. For the first essential of any conscious
-existence—that which indeed constitutes it—is a sentient subject,
-and inasmuch as all connected with this subject—thought, knowledge,
-feeling, fancy, sentiment—are all _purely subjective_, _i.e._, in
-the subject itself, so must the subject be to itself the sum of all
-things, and objective existence only its own fancy by which it
-realises itself. This then utterly disposes of all fancied objective
-dualism by reducing all existence within the ring-fence of the ego
-itself, and this not as mere speculative theory but as positive
-fact, which, whether we recognise it or not, remains fact still—we
-_are_ limited to Self, whether we know it or not.
-
-Then finally, _in self_, we harmonise the antithesis between the
-material and the ideal by recognising the two as absolutely
-inter-dependent, each upon the other, and therefore one consistent
-and indivisible whole. The ideal (thought, fancy, sentiment) is, and
-must be, but the property and outcome of the material (the nominal
-reality), which, on the other hand, is itself (and can be) but the
-assumption of the ideal. Destroy reality and thought is dead, blind
-thought and reality is a blank; and thus are the ideal and the
-material but the two sides of one and the self-same shield, and the
-line of our argument joins itself in one consistent circle, which
-constitutes the existence of the Ego—He who creates light and
-darkness, heaven and earth, pleasure and pain, God and devil—who is,
-in Himself, the sum of all things, (viz. “thinks”) beyond which is
-naught, naught, naught, for the fancy of His own which imagines a
-“beyond” is, itself, but fancy—self-contained in Self.
-
- Thou Unity of force sublime,
- Th’ eternal mystery of thy time
- Runs on unstay’d for ever;
- Yet, self-containing God of all,
- As raptur’d at thy feet I fall
- In thee myself I worship.
- HERBERT L. COURTNEY.
-
-Cambridge, November, 1887.
-
- [EDITOR’S NOTE.—In reference to the supposed “slighting
- remark” of which Dr. Lewins speaks, and the no less supposed
- “hostile notice,” as Mr. Herbert L. Courtney puts it—contained
- in our September number—we demur to the accusation. Both
- gentlemen will find it, however, fully answered in the
- “Literary Jottings” of this number; where, also, their
- respective pamphlets “AUTO-CENTRICISM,” “HUMANISM _versus_
- THEISM,” and “The New Gospel of Hylo-Idealism”—are amply
- noticed by the “Adversary.”]
-
- ----------------------------
-
- ANSWERS TO QUERIES.
-
-A CORRESPONDENT from New York writes:
-
- .... “The Editors of LUCIFER would confer a great benefit on those
- who are attracted to the movement which they advocate, if they
- would state:
-
- “(1.) Whether a would-be-theosophist-occultist is required to
- abandon his worldly ties and duties such as family affection, love
- of parents, wife, children, friends, etc.?
-
- “I ask this question because it is rumoured here that some
- theosophical publications have so stated, and would wish to know
- whether such a _sine quâ non_ condition really exists in your
- Rules? The same, however, is found in the New Testament. ‘He that
- loveth father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of Me; and he
- that loveth son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me,
- etc., etc.,’ is said in Matthew (x. 37). Do the MASTERS of
- Theosophy demand as much?
-
- “Yours in the Search of Light,
- “L. M. C.”
-
-This is an old, old question, and a still older charge against
-theosophy, started first by its enemies. We emphatically answer, NO;
-adding that no _theosophical_ publication could have rendered itself
-guilty of such a FALSEHOOD and calumny. No follower of theosophy,
-least of all a disciple of the “Masters of Theosophy” (the _chela_
-of a _guru_), would ever be accepted on such conditions. Many were
-the candidates, but “few the chosen.” Dozens were refused, simply
-because married and having a sacred duty to perform to wife and
-children.[117] None have ever been asked to forsake father or
-mother; for he who, being necessary to his parent for his support,
-leaves him or her to gratify his own selfish consideration or thirst
-for knowledge, however great and sincere, _is “unworthy”_ of the
-Science of Sciences, “or ever to approach a holy MASTER.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 117:
-
- We know but two cases of _married_ “chelas” being accepted; but
- both these were Brahmins and had _child-wives_, according to Hindu
- custom, and they were _Reformers_ more than _chelas_, trying to
- abrogate child-marriage and slavery. Others had to obtain the
- consent of their wives before entering the “Path,” as is usual in
- India since long ages.
-
------
-
-Our correspondent must surely have confused in his mind Theosophy
-with Roman Catholicism, and Occultism with the dead-letter teachings
-of the Bible. For it is only in the Latin Church that it has become
-a meritorious action, which is called serving God and Christ, to
-“abandon father and mother, wife and children,” and every duty of an
-honest man and citizen, in order to become a monk. And it is in St.
-Luke’s Gospel that one reads the terrible words, put in the mouth of
-Jesus: “If any _man_ come to me, and _hate not his father, and
-mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters_, yea,
-_his own life_ also, HE CANNOT BE MY DISCIPLE.” (xiv. 26.)
-
-_Saint_ (?) Jerome teaches, in one of his writings, “If thy father
-lies down across thy threshold, if thy mother uncovers to thine eyes
-the bosom which suckled thee, _trample on thy father’s lifeless
-body_, TRAMPLE ON THY MOTHER’S BOSOM, and _with eyes unmoistened and
-dry, fly to the Lord, who calleth thee_!”
-
-Surely then, it is not from any _theosophical_ publication that our
-correspondent could have learnt such an infamous charge against
-theosophy and its MASTERS—but rather in some _anti-Christian_, or
-_too_ dogmatically “Christian” paper.
-
-Our society has never been “more Catholic than the Pope.” It has
-done its best to follow out the path prescribed by the Masters; and
-if it has failed in more than one respect to fulfil its arduous
-task, the blame is certainly not to be thrown on either Theosophy,
-nor its Masters, but on the limitations of human nature. The
-_Rules_, however, of _chelaship_, or discipleship, are there, in
-many a Sanskrit and Tibetan volume. In Book IV. of _Kiu-ti_, in the
-chapter on “_the Laws of Upasans_” (disciples), the qualifications
-expected in a “regular _chela_” are: (1.) Perfect physical
-health.[118] (2.) Absolute mental and physical purity. (3.)
-Unselfishness of purpose; universal charity; pity for all animate
-beings. (4.) Truthfulness and unswerving faith in the laws of Karma.
-(5.) A courage undaunted in the support of truth, even in face of
-peril to life. (6.) An intuitive perception of one’s being the
-vehicle of the manifested divine _Atman_ (spirit). (7.) Calm
-indifference for, but a just appreciation of, everything that
-constitutes the objective and transitory world. (8.) Blessing of
-both parents[119] and _their permission to become an Upasan_
-(chela); and (9.) Celibacy, and freedom from any obligatory duty.
-
------
-
-Footnote 118:
-
- This rule 1. applies only to the “temple chelas,” who must be
- _perfect_.
-
-Footnote 119:
-
- Or one, if the other is dead.
-
------
-
-The two last rules are most strictly enforced. No man _convicted of
-disrespect to his father or mother_, or _unjust abandonment of his
-wife_, can ever be accepted even as a _lay chela_.
-
-This is sufficient, it is hoped. We have heard of chelas who, having
-_failed_, perhaps in consequence of the neglect of some such duty,
-for one or another reason, have invariably thrown the blame and
-responsibility for it on the teaching of the Masters. This is but
-natural in poor and weak human beings who have not even the courage
-to recognise their own mistakes, or the rare nobility of publicly
-confessing them, but are always trying to find a scapegoat. Such we
-pity, and leave to the Law of Retribution, or Karma. It is not these
-weak creatures, who can ever be expected to have the best of the
-enemy described by the wise Kirátárjuniya of Bharavi:—
-
- “The enemies which rise within the body.
- Hard to be overcome—the evil passions—
- Should manfully be fought, _who conquers these
- Is equal to the conqueror of worlds_.” (xi. 32.)
-
- [ED.]
-
- ---
-
-We have received several communications for publication, bearing on
-the subjects discussed in the editorial of our last issue, “Let
-every man prove his own work.” A few brief remarks may be made, not
-in reply to any of the letters—_which, being anonymous, and
-containing no card from the writers, cannot be published_ (nor are
-such noticed, as a general rule)—but to the ideas and accusations
-contained in one of them, a letter signed “M.” Its author takes up
-the cudgels on behalf of the Church. He objects to the statement
-that this institution lacks the enlightenment necessary to carry out
-a true system of philanthropy. He appears, also, to demur to the
-view that “the practical people either go on doing good
-unintentionally and often do harm,” and points to the workers amid
-our slums as a vindication of Christianity—which, by-the-bye, was in
-no sense attacked in the editorial so criticized.
-
-To this, repeating what was said, we maintain that more mischief has
-been done by emotional charity than sentimentalists care to face.
-Any student of political economy is familiar with this fact, which
-passes for a truism with all those who have devoted attention to the
-problem. No nobler sentiment than that which animates the unselfish
-philanthropist is conceivable; but the question at issue is not
-summed up in the recognition of this truth. The practical results of
-his labours have to be examined. We have to see whether he does not
-sow the seeds of a greater—while relieving a lesser—evil.
-
-The fact that “thousands are making great efforts in all the cities
-throughout our land” to meet want, reflects immense credit on the
-character of such workers. It does not affect their creed, for such
-natures would remain the same, whatever the prevailing dogmas
-chanced to be. It is certainly a very poor illustration of the
-fruits of centuries of dogmatic Christianity that England should be
-so honeycombed with misery and poverty as she is—especially on the
-biblical ground that a tree must be judged by its fruits! It might,
-also, be argued, that the past history of the Churches, stained as
-it is with persecutions, the suppression of knowledge, crime and
-brutality, necessitates the turning over of a new leaf. The
-difficulties in the way are insuperable. “Churchianity” has, indeed,
-done its best to keep up with the age by assimilating the teachings
-of, and making veiled truces with, science, but it is incapable of
-affording a true spiritual ideal to the world.
-
-The same Church-Christianity assails with fruitlesss pertinacity,
-the ever-growing host of Agnostics and Materialists, but is _as
-absolutely ignorant, as the latter, of the mysteries beyond the
-tomb_. The great necessity for the Church, according to Professor
-Flint, is to keep the leaders of European thought within its fold.
-By such men it is, however, regarded as an anachronism. The Church
-is eaten up with scepticism within its own walls; free-thinking
-clergymen being now very common. This constant drain of vitality has
-reduced the true religion to a very low ebb, and it is to infuse a
-new current of ideas and aspirations into modern thought, in short,
-to supply a logical basis for an elevated morality, a science and
-philosophy which is suited to the knowledge of the day, that
-Theosophy comes before the world. Mere physical philanthropy, apart
-from the infusion of new influences and ennobling conceptions of
-life into the minds of the masses, is worthless. The gradual
-assimilation by mankind of great spiritual truths will alone
-revolutionize the face of civilization, and ultimately result in a
-far more effective panacea for evil, than the mere tinkering of
-superficial misery. Prevention is better than cure. Society creates
-its own outcasts, criminals, and profligates, and then condemns and
-punishes its own Frankensteins, sentencing its own progeny, the
-“bone of its bone, and the flesh of its flesh,” to a life of
-damnation on earth. Yet that society recognises and enforces most
-hypocritically Christianity—_i.e._ “Churchianity.” Shall we then, or
-shall we not, infer that the latter is unequal to the requirements
-of mankind? Evidently the former, and most painfully and obviously
-so, in its present dogmatic form, which makes of the beautiful
-ethics preached on the Mount, a Dead Sea fruit, a whitened
-sepulchre, and no better.
-
-Furthermore, the same “M.,” alluding to Jesus as one with regard to
-whom there could be only two alternatives, writes that he “was
-either the Son of God or the vilest impostor who ever trod this
-earth.” We answer, not at all. Whether the Jesus of the New
-Testament ever lived or not, whether he existed as an historical
-personage, or was simply a lay figure around which the Bible
-allegories clustered—the Jesus of Nazareth of Matthew and John, is
-the ideal for every would-be sage and Western candidate Theosophist
-to follow. That such an one as he, was _a_ “Son of God,” is as
-undeniable as that he was neither the _only_ “Son of God,” nor the
-first one, nor even the last who closed the series of the “Sons of
-God,” or the children of Divine Wisdom, on this earth. Nor is that
-other statement that in “His life he (Jesus) has ever spoken of
-himself as co-existent with Jehovah, the Supreme, the Centre of the
-Universe,” correct, whether in in its dead letter, or hidden mystic
-sense. In no place does Jesus ever allude to “_Jehovah_”; but, on
-the contrary, attacking the Mosaic laws and the alleged Commandments
-given on Mount Sinai, he disconnects himself and his “Father” most
-distinctly and emphatically from the Sinaitic tribal God. The whole
-of Chapter V., in the Gospel of Matthew, is a passionate protest of
-the “man of peace, love and charity,” against the cruel, stern, and
-selfish commandments of “the man of war,” the “Lord” of Moses (Exod.
-xv., 3). “Ye have heard that it was said by them of old times,”—so
-and so—“But I say unto you,” quite the reverse. Christians who still
-hold to the Old Testament and the Jehovah of the Israelites, are at
-best _schismatic Jews_. Let them be that, by all means, if they will
-so have it; but they have no right to call themselves even
-_Chréstians_, let alone _Christians_.[120]
-
-It is a gross injustice and untruth to assert, as our anonymous
-correspondent does, that “the freethinkers are notoriously unholy
-in their lives.” Some of the noblest characters, as well as
-deepest thinkers of the day, adorn the ranks of Agnosticism,
-Positivism and Materialism. The latter are the worst enemies of
-Theosophy and Mysticism; but this is no reason why strict justice
-should not be done unto them. Colonel Ingersoll, a rank
-materialist, and the leader of freethought in America, is
-recognised, even by his enemies, as an ideal husband, father,
-friend and citizen, one of the noblest characters that grace the
-United States. Count Tolstoi is a freethinker who has long parted
-with the orthodox Church, yet his whole life is an exemplar of
-Christ-like altruism and self-sacrifice. Would to goodness every
-“Christian” should take those two “_infidels_” as his models in
-private and public life. The munificence of many freethinking
-philanthropists stands out in startling contrast with the apathy
-of the monied dignitaries of the Church. The above fling at the
-“enemies of the Church,” is as absurd as it is contemptible.
-
-“What can you offer to the dying woman who fears to tread alone the
-DARK UNKNOWN?” we are asked. Our Christian critic here frankly
-confesses (_a._) that Christian dogmas have only developed _fear_ of
-death, and (_b._) the _agnosticism_ of the _orthodox believer_ in
-Christian theology as to the future _post-mortem_ state. It is,
-indeed, difficult to appreciate the peculiar type of bliss which
-orthodoxy offers its believers in—_damnation_.
-
-The dying man—the average Christian—with a _dark_ retrospect in life
-can scarcely appreciate this boon; while the Calvinist or the
-Predestinarian, who is brought up in the idea that God may have
-pre-assigned him from eternity to everlasting misery, through no
-fault of that man, but simply because he is God, is more than
-justified in regarding the latter as ten times worse than any devil
-or fiend that unclean human fancy could evolve.
-
-Theosophy, on the contrary, teaches that _perfect, absolute justice_
-reigns in nature, though short-sighted man fails to see it in its
-details on the material and even psychic plane, and that every man
-determines his own future. The true Hell is life on Earth, as an
-effect of Karmic punishment following the preceding life during
-which the evil causes were produced. The Theosophist fears _no
-hell_, but confidently expects rest and bliss during the _interim_
-between two incarnations, as a reward for all the unmerited
-suffering he has endured in an existence into which he was ushered
-by Karma, and during which he is, in most cases, as helpless as a
-torn-off leaf whirled about by the conflicting winds of social and
-private life. Enough has been given out at various times regarding
-the conditions of post-mortem existence, to furnish a solid block of
-information on this point. Christian theology has nothing to say on
-this burning question, except where it veils its ignorance by
-mystery and dogma; but Occultism, unveiling the symbology of the
-Bible, explains it thoroughly.—[ED.]
-
------
-
-Footnote 120:
-
- See “The Esoteric Character of the Gospels,” in this number.
-
------
-
-
- =LITERARY JOTTINGS=
-
- HYLO-IDEALISM _versus_ “LUCIFER,” and the “ADVERSARY.”
-
-Under the head of CORRESPONDENCE in the present number, two
-remarkable letters are published. (See Text.) Both come from fervent
-Hylo-Idealists—a Master and Disciple, if we mistake not—and both
-charge the “Adversary,” one, of a “slighting,” the other, of a
-“hostile notice” of Hylo-Idealism, in the September number of
-“_Lucifer_.”
-
- * *
-
-Such an accusation is better met and answered in all sincerity; and,
-therefore, the reply is, a flat denial of the charge. No
-_slight_—nor _hostility_ either, could be shown to “Hylo-Idealism,”
-as the “little stranger” in the happy family of philosophies was
-hitherto as good as unknown to “Lucifer’s” household gods. It was
-_chaff_, if anything, but surely no hostility; and even that was
-concerned with only some dreadful words and sentences, with
-reference to the new teaching, and had nothing whatever to do with
-Hylo-Idealism proper—a _terra incognita_ for the writer at the time.
-But now that three pamphlets from the pens of our two correspondents
-have been received in our office, for review, and carefully read,
-Hylo-Idealism begins to assume a more tangible form before the
-reviewer’s eye. It becomes easier to separate the grain from the
-chaff, the theory from the (no doubt) scientific, nevertheless, most
-irritating, words in which it is presented to the reader.
-
- * *
-
-This is meant in all truth and sincerity. The remarks which our two
-correspondents have mistaken for expressions of hostility, were as
-justified _then_, as they are _now_. What ordinary mortal, we ask,
-before he had time (to use Dr. Lewins’ happiest expressions) to
-“_asself_ or _cognose_”—let alone _intercranialise_[121] (!!)—the
-hylo-idealistic theories, however profound and philosophical these
-may be, who, having so far come into direct contact with only the
-_images_ thereof “subjected by his own _egoity_” (_i.e._ as words
-and sentences), who could avoid feeling his hair standing on end,
-over “_his organs of mentation_,” while spelling out such
-terrible words as “_vesiculo-neurosis_ in conjunction with
-_medico-psychological symptomatology_,” “_auto-centricism_,” and the
-like? Such interminable, outlandish, multisyllabled and
-multicipital, newly-coined compound terms and whole sentences,
-maybe, and no doubt are, highly learned and scientific. They may be
-most expressive of true, real meaning, to a specialist of Dr.
-Lewins’ powers of thought; nevertheless, I make bold to say, that
-they are far more calculated to obscure than to enlighten the
-ordinary reader. In our modern day, when new philosophies spring out
-from the spawn of human overworked intellect like mushrooms from
-their mycelium after a rainy morning, the human brain and
-its capacities ought to be taken into a certain thoughtful
-consideration, and spared useless labour. Notwithstanding Dr.
-Lewins’ praiseworthy efforts to prove that brain (as far as we
-understand his aspirations and teachings) is the only reality in the
-whole kosmos, its limitations are painfully evident, on the whole.
-As philanthropists and theosophists, we entreat the founder of
-Hylo-Idealism and his disciples to be merciful to their new god, the
-“Ego-Brain,” and not tax too heavily its powers, if they would see
-it happily reign. For otherwise, it is sure to collapse before the
-new theory—or, let us call it philosophy—is even half appreciated by
-that “Ego-Brain.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 121:
-
- “AUTO-CENTRICISM, or, _The Brain Theory of Life and Mind_,” p. 41.
-
------
-
- * *
-
-By speaking as we do, we are only pursuing a life-long policy. We
-have criticized and opposed the coinage of hard Greek and Latin
-words by the New York Pantarchists; laughed at Hæckel’s pompous
-tendency to invent thirty-three syllabled terms, and speak of the
-_perigenesis_ of _plastidules_, instead of honest whirling atoms—or
-whatever he means; and derided the modern psychists for calling
-simple thought transference “telepathic impact.” And now, we
-tearfully beg Dr. Lewins, in the interests of humanity, to have pity
-on his poor readers: for, unless he hearkens to our advice, we shall
-be compelled, in dire self-defence, to declare an open war to his
-newly-coined words. We shall fight the usurper “Solipsism” in favour
-of the legitimate king of the Universe—EGOISM—to our last breath.
-
- * *
-
-At the same time, as we have hitherto been ignorant of the latest
-philosophy, described by Mr. H. L. Courtney as “the greatest change
-in human thought,” may we be permitted to enquire whether it is
-spelt as its Founder spells it, namely, “Hylo-Idealism,” or as his
-disciple, Mr. Courtney does, who writes Hylo-Ideaism? Is the latter
-a _schism_, an improvement on the original name, a _lapsus calami_,
-or what? And now, having disburdened our heart of a heavy weight, we
-may proceed to give an opinion (so far very superficial), on the
-three Hylo-Idealistic (or _Ideaistic_) pamphlets.
-
- ---
-
-_Under the extraordinary title of_ “AUTO-CENTRICISM” and “HUMANISM
-_versus_ THEISM,” or “Solipsism (Egoism)=Atheism” (W. Stewart & Co.,
-41, Farringdon Street, E.C.; and Freethought Publishing Co., 63,
-Fleet Street, E.C.)—Dr. Lewins publishes a series of letters on the
-subject of the philosophy of which he is the founder. It is
-impossible not to feel admiration for the manner in which these
-letters are written. They show a great deal of sincere conviction
-and deep thought, and give evidence of a most wide and varied
-reading. However his readers may dissent from the writer’s
-conclusions, the research with which he has strengthened his theory,
-cannot fail to attract their attention, and smooth their way through
-the somewhat tortuous labyrinth of arguments before them. But—
-
-Dr. Lewins is among those who regard consciousness as a function of
-the nerve-tissue; and in this aspect, he is an uncompromising
-materialist. Yet, on the other hand, he holds that the Universe,
-God, and thought, have no reality whatever, apart from the
-individual Ego. The Ego is again resolvable into brain-process. We
-thus arrive at the doctrine that Brain is the workshop in which all
-our ideas of external things are originated. Apart from brain there
-is no Ego, no external world. What, then, is the Brain itself—this
-solitary object in a void universe? Hylo-Idealism does not say.
-Thus, the author cannot escape the confusion of thought which his
-unique working-union of materialism and idealism involves. The
-_oscillation_ between these two poles is strikingly apparent in the
-subjoined quotations. At one point Matter is discussed as if it were
-an objective reality; at another, it is regarded as a mere “phantasm
-of the Ego.” The Brain alone survives throughout in solitary state.
-We quote from the two pamphlets—
-
- MATTER ASSERTED.
-
- “_Matter_, organic and inorganic, is now fully known ... to
- perform all _material_ operations.”
-
- —_Auto-Centricism_, p. 40.
-
- “Man is _all body and matter_.”
-
- —_Do_, p. 40.
-
- “Abstract thought [is] _neuropathy_ ... disease of the _nervous
- centres_.”
-
- —_Humanism versus Theism_, p. 25.
-
- “What we call mind ... is a function of certain _nerve structures
- in the organism_.”
-
- —_Humanism v. Theism_, p. 24.
-
- MATTER DENIED.
-
- “_All discovery_ is ... a _subjective phenomenon_.”
-
- —_Humanism v. Theism_, p. 17.
-
- “_All things_ are for us but _modes of perception_.”—[Mental
- figments].
-
- The “celestial vault and garniture of Earth,” are “a _mere
- projection of our own inner consciousness_.”
-
- —_Humanism v. Theism_, p. 17.
-
- “We _get rid of Matter altogether_.”
-
- —_Humanism v. Theism_, p. 17.
-
- “The whole objective world ... is _phenomenal or ideal_.”
-
- —_Auto-Centricism_, p. 9.
-
- “_Everything_ is spectral” (_i.e._, unreal).
-
- —_Ibid_, p. 13.
-
-Matter is at one time credited with a real being, and again resolved
-into a mere mental figment as _circumstances demand_. If Matter is,
-as the author frequently states, unreal, it is, at least clear that
-the brain, one of its many phases, goes with it!!
-
-As to the learned doctor’s assertion that perception is relative, a
-theory which runs through his whole work, we have but one answer.
-This conception is, in no sense whatever, a monopoly of
-Hylo-Idealists, as Dr. Lewins appears to think. The illusory nature
-of the phenomenal world—of the things of sense—is not only a belief
-common to the old Brahminical metaphysics, and to the majority of
-modern psychologists, but it is also a vital tenet of Theosophy. The
-latter distinctly realises matter as a “bundle of attributes,”
-ultimately resolvable into the subjective sensations of a
-“percipient.” The connection of this simple truth with the
-hylo-idealistic denial of soul is not apparent. Its acceptance has,
-also, no bearing on the problem as to whether there may not exist a
-duality—_within the limits of manifested being_—or contrast between
-Mind and the Substance of matter. This Cosmic Duality is symbolised
-by the Vedantins in the relations between the Logos and
-Mulaprakriti—_i.e._, the Universal Spirit and the “material” basis
-(or root) of the objective planes of nature. The _Monism_, then, of
-Dr. Lewins and other negative thinkers of the day, is evidently at
-fault, when applied to unify the contrast of mental and material
-facts in the conditioned universe. Beyond the latter, it is indeed
-valid, but that is scarcely a question for practical philosophy.
-
-To close with a reference this once to Dr. Lewins’ letter (see
-“Correspondence” in the text), in which he makes his subsequent
-assertion to the effect that God is the “functional (_sic_) image,”
-of the Ego, we should prefer to suggest that all individual “selves”
-are but dim reflections of the universal soul of the Kosmos. The
-orthodox concept of God is not, as he contends, a myth or phantasm
-of the brain; it is rather an expression of a vague consciousness of
-the universal, all-pervading Logos. It is because SELF pinions man
-within a narrow sphere “beyond which mortal mind can never range,”
-that the destruction of the personal sense of separateness is
-indispensable to the Occultist.
-
- ---
-
-“THE NEW GOSPEL OF HYLO-IDEALISM, _or Positive Agnosticism_,”
-(Freethought Publishing Co., 73, Fleet Street, E. C. Price 3d.), is
-another pamphlet on the same subject, in which Mr. Herbert L.
-Courtney contributes his quota to the discussion of the “Brain
-Theory of mind and matter.” He is, if we mistake not, an avowed
-disciple of Dr. Lewins, and, perhaps, identical with the “C. N.,”
-who watched over the cradle of the “new philosophy.” The whole gist
-of the latter may be summed up as an attempt to frame a
-working-union of Materialism and Idealism. This result is effected
-on two lines (1) in the acceptance of the idealistic theorem, that
-the so-called external world only exists in our consciousness; and
-(2) in the designation of that consciousness, in its turn, as a mere
-function of Brain. The first of these contentions is unquestionably
-valid, in so far as it concerns the world of appearances, or _Maya_;
-it is, however, as “old as the hills,” and incorporated into the
-Hylo-Ideal argument from anterior sources. The second is untenable,
-for the simple reason that on the premises of the new creed itself,
-the brain, as an object of perception, can possess no reality
-outside of the Ego. Hegelians might reply that Brain is but an
-_i.e._ of the Ego, and cannot hence determine the existence of the
-latter—its creator.
-
- ---
-
-Metaphysicism will, however, find much to interest them in Mr.
-Courtney’s brochure, representative, as it is, of the new and more
-subtle phase into which modern scepticism is entering. Some
-expressions we may demur to—_e.g._, “That which we see is not
-Sirius, but the light-wave.” So far from the light-wave being
-“seen,” it is a mere working hypothesis of Science. All we
-experience is the retinal sensation, the objective counterpart to
-which is a matter of pure inference. So far as we can learn,
-Hylo-Idealism is chiefly based upon gigantic paradoxes, and even
-contradictions in terms. For, with regard to the speculations anent
-the Noumenon (p. 8.) what justification can be found for terming it
-“MATTER,” especially as it is said to be “unknowable”? Obviously it
-may be of the nature of mind, or—_something_ HIGHER. How is the
-Hylo-Idealist to know?
-
- ---
-
-“LAYS OF ROMANCE AND CHIVALRY,” by Mr. W. Stewart Ross. (Stewart and
-Co., Farringdon Street.) In this neat little volume the author
-presents to the reader a collection of vigorous verse, mostly of
-chivalrous character. Some of these pieces, such as the “Raid of
-Vikings” and “Glencoe,” are of merit, despite an occasional echo of
-Walter Scott, whose style seems to have had a considerable modifying
-influence on the author’s diction. It is in the “Bride of Steel”
-that this feature is most noticeable—
-
- “I love thee with a warrior’s love,
- My Sword, my Life, my Bride!
- Dear, dear as ever knighthood bore,
- Though yet no gout of battle-gore
- Thy virgin blade hath dyed!”
-
-Apart from this unconscious influence of the great Scottish bard,
-the ring of originality and feeling which characterises Mr. Stewart
-Ross’s poetry is most refreshing. The little volume sparkles with
-the vein of romance, and after perusing it, in spite of occasional
-anachronisms and other literary errors, we are not surprised to hear
-of the favourable reception hitherto accorded to it.
-
- ---
-
-In the _Secular Review_ for November 26th, Mr. Beatty makes an
-attack upon a former article in LUCIFER, entitled “The Origin of
-Evil.” We find, however, Mr. Beatty exhibiting crass ignorance of
-the ideas he criticises, as when, for instance, he speaks of the
-“_Buddhistic_” Parabram (_sic_). To begin with, every tyro in
-Oriental philosophy knows that “Parabrahm” is a Hindu Vedantic idea,
-and has no connection whatever with Buddhist thought. If Mr. Beatty
-wishes to become a serious critic, he must first learn the _a_, _b_,
-_c_, of the subject with which he professes to deal. His article is
-unfinished, but it seems only fair at the present stage to call his
-attention to so glaring an error.
-
- ---
-
-THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR REMAINS, ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL. By C. W. King,
-M.A. Second Edition. David Nutt, 270 Strand, London, 1887. pp. 466,
-8vo.
-
-It would be unfair to the erudite and painstaking author of “_The
-Gnostics and Their Remains_” for a reviewer to take the title of his
-book as altogether appropriate, for it suggests too high a standard
-of criticism. Mr. King says in the introduction that his book is
-intended to be subsidiary to the valuable treatise of M. Matter,
-adding: “I refer the reader to him for the more complete elucidation
-of the _philosophy_ of Gnosticism, and give my full attention to its
-_Archæological_ side.” The italics are the author’s, and they disarm
-criticism as far as the philosophical side of Gnosticism is
-concerned; for thus italicised, this passage is, at the outset, as
-plain a confession as could, in conscience, be expected of an author
-of a fact which the reader would probably have found out for
-himself, before he closed the volume: namely, that the work is
-chiefly valuable as an Archæological compendium of “Gnostic
-Remains.” Unfortunately, the most interesting point about the
-Gnostics is their philosophy, of which their Archæological remains
-are, properly speaking, little more than illustrations. But the fact
-is, that the hard-shelled Archæologist is the last man in the world
-to appreciate the real esoteric signification of symbolism. All true
-symbols have many meanings, and for the purposes of descriptive
-Archæology the more superficial of these meanings are sufficient.
-Ignorance of the deeper meaning may indeed be bliss for the
-Archæologist, for it necessitates an amount of ingenuity in the
-fitting together of “remains,” that commands the admiration of the
-public, and is productive in the Archæological bosom of that
-agreeable sensation known as “fancying oneself.” As a laborious
-collector and compiler, and an ingenious worker-up of materials into
-interesting reading, too much can hardly be said in Mr. King’s
-praise, and had he a greater intuitional power, and a knowledge of
-esoteric religion, his great industry and erudition would make his
-writings valuable even to students of Occultism.
-
-Since the publication of the former edition of his work,
-twenty-three years ago, Mr. King has come across and read the
-_Pistis Sophia_. The discovery of this, the only remaining Gnostic
-Gospel, or rather, Gospel fragment, is attributed to Schwartze, and
-the Latin translation to Petermann (in 1853). But Mr. King does not
-seem to be aware that as far back as 1843, another and ampler copy
-than that in the British Museum was in the hands of a Russian
-Raskolnik (dissident), a Cossack, who lived and married in
-Abyssinia; and another is in the possession of an Englishman, an
-Occultist, now in the United States, who brought it from Syria. It
-seems a pity that in the interim Mr. King did not also read _Isis
-Unveiled_, by H. P. Blavatsky, published by Bouton in New York in
-1876, as its perusal would have saved him a somewhat absurd and
-ludicrous blunder. In his _Preface_, Mr. King says:—“There seems to
-be reason for suspecting that the Sibyl of Esoteric Buddhism drew
-the first notions of her new religion from the analysis of the
-_inner man_, as set forth in my first edition.”[122] The only person
-to whom this passage could apply is one of the Editors, the author
-of _Isis Unveiled_. And this, her first publication, contains the
-same and only doctrine she has always, or ever, promulgated. _Isis
-Unveiled_ has passed through eight editions, and has been read by
-many thousands of persons; and not only they, but everyone who is
-not strangely ignorant of the very literature with which it was Mr.
-King’s business to make himself conversant, are perfectly aware that
-the two large volumes which compose that work are entirely devoted
-to a defence of the philosophy, science, and religion of the
-ancients, especially of the old Aryans, whose religion can hardly be
-called a “new” one, still less—“Esoteric Buddhism.” If properly
-spelt, however, the latter word, or Buddhism, ought to be written
-with one “d,” as in this case it means Wisdom. But “Budhism,” or the
-wisdom-religion of the Aryans, was still less a religion, in the
-exoteric sense, than is Buddhism, but rather a philosophy. In that
-part of _Isis Unveiled_ which treats of the Gnostics, Mr. King will
-find a few quotations from his writings side by side with quotations
-from other writers on the same subject; but he will find no “new
-religion” there, or anywhere else, in the works of H. P. Blavatsky.
-And, if anyone drew the “first notions” of their religion from his
-“analysis of the inner man,” it must have been the early Aryans,
-who, unfortunately, have neglected to acknowledge the obligation.
-What makes Mr. King’s self-complacency the more ridiculous, is that
-in his preface he himself accuses someone else of “the grave error
-of representing their (the Gnostics’) doctrines as _novel_, and the
-pure _inventions_ of the persons who preached them.” And in another
-place he confesses that he owes to Matter the first idea which has
-now become a settled conviction with him, that “the seeds of the
-_gnosis_ were originally of Indian growth.” If Matter “faintly
-discerned” this truth, on the other hand Bailly, Dupuis, and others
-had seen it quite clearly, and had declared it most emphatically. So
-that Mr. King’s “discovery” is neither very new nor very original.
-
------
-
-Footnote 122:
-
- This modest assumption is followed by the generous promise to
- furnish “investigators of the same order” as the supposed “Sibyl,”
- with “a still more profound theosophy.” This is extremely
- considerate and kind. But if it is _Pistis-Sophia_ which the
- author had in his mind, then he had better apply to Theosophists
- for the explanation of the most recondite points in that gnostic
- fragment, while translating it, as he proposes doing from Latin.
- For though the world of the Orientalists “of the same order” as
- _himself_, may labour under the mistaken impression that no one
- except themselves knew or know anything about _Pistis-Sophia_ till
- 1853—Theosophists know better. Does Mr. King really imagine that
- no one besides himself knows anything about the Gnostics “and
- their remains,” or what _he_ knows is the only correct thing to
- know? Strange delusion, if so; yet quite a harmless one, we
- confess.
-
------
-
-Mr. King must be aware that of late years immense additions have
-been made to western knowledge of eastern philosophies and
-religions—a new region in ancient literature having, in fact, been
-opened up by the labours of Orientalists, both European and Eastern.
-A study of these Oriental systems throws a strong though often a
-false light upon the inner meaning of Gnostic symbolism and ideas
-generally, which Mr. King acknowledges to have come from Indian
-sources; and certainly the reader has a right to expect a little
-more knowledge in that direction from a writer of Mr. King’s
-pretensions, than is displayed. For example, in the section about
-Buddhism in the work before us: one is tempted sometimes to ask
-whether it is flippancy or superficiality that is the matter with
-the author—when he calls the ancient Indian gymnosophists “fakirs,”
-and confounds them with Buddhists. Surely he need hardly be told
-that fakirs are Mahomedans, and that the Gymnosophists he mentions
-were Brahmin Yogis.
-
-The work, however, is a valuable one in its way; but the reader
-should not forget that “there seems reason for suspecting” that the
-author does not always know exactly what he is talking about,
-whenever he strays too far from Archæology, on which he is no doubt
-an authority.
-
- ---
-
-THE JEWISH WORLD enters bravely enough (in its issue of the 11th
-November 1887) on its new character of professor of symbology and
-History. It accuses in no measured terms one of the editors of
-LUCIFER of ignorance; and criticises certain expressions used in our
-October number, in a foot-note inserted to explain why the “Son of
-the Morning” LUCIFER is called in Mr. G. Massey’s little poem, “Lady
-of Light.” The writer objects, we see, to Lucifer-Venus being called
-in one of its aspects “the Jewish Astoreth;” or to her having ever
-been offered cakes by the Jews. As explained in a somewhat confused
-sentence: “There _was no Jewish Astoreth_, though the Syrian
-goddess, Ashtoreth, or Astarte, often appears in Biblical
-literature, the moon goddess, the complement of Baal, the Sun God.”
-
-This, no doubt, is extremely learned and conveys quite _new_
-information. Yet such an astounding statement as that the whole of
-the foot-note in LUCIFER is “pure imagination and bad history” is
-very risky indeed. For it requires no more than a stroke or two of
-our pen to make the whole edifice of this denial tumble on the
-_Jewish World_ and mangle it very badly. Our contemporary has
-evidently forgotten the wise proverb that bids one to let “sleeping
-dogs lie,” and therefore, it is with the lofty airs of superiority
-that he informs his readers that though the Jews in Palestine lived
-surrounded with (? _sic_) this pagan form of worship, and _may, at
-times_, (?!) have wandered towards it, they HAD NOTHING IN THEIR
-WORSHIP IN COMMON WITH CHALDEAN OR SYRIAN BELIEFS IN MULTIPLICITY OF
-DEITIES? (!!)
-
-This is what any impartial reader might really term “bad history,”
-and every Bible worshipper describe as a _direct lie_ given to the
-Lord God of Israel. It is more than _suppressio veri suggestio
-falsi_, for it is simply a cool denial of facts in the face of both
-Bible and History. We advise our critic of the _Jewish World_ to
-turn to _his_ own prophets, to Jeremiah, foremost of all. We open
-“Scripture” and find in it: “the Lord God” while accusing _his_
-“backsliding Israel and treacherous Judah” of following in “the ways
-of Egypt and of Assyria,” of drinking the waters of Sihor, and
-“serving strange Gods” enumerating his grievances in this wise:
-
- “According _to the number of thy cities_ are thy gods, O Judah,
- (Jer. ii. 28.).
-
- “Ye have turned back to the iniquities of your forefathers who
- went after other gods to serve them (xi.) ... _according to the
- number of the streets of Jerusalem_ have ye set up altars to that
- shameful thing, even altars unto Baal” (_Ib._).
-
-So much for Jewish _monotheism_. And is it any more “pure
-imagination” to say that the Jews offered cakes to their Astoreth
-and called her “Queen of Heaven”? Then the “Lord God” must, indeed,
-be guilty of more than “a delicate expansion of facts” when
-thundering to, and through, Jeremiah:—
-
- “Seest thou not what they do in the cities of Judah, and in the
- streets of Jerusalem? The children gather wood, and the fathers
- kindle the fire, and the women knead their dough TO MAKE CAKES _to
- the Queen of Heaven_, and to pour out drink offerings _unto the
- gods_.” (Jer. vii. 17-18).
-
-“The Jews _may_ AT TIMES” only (?) have wandered towards pagan forms
-of worship but “had _nothing in common_ in it with Syrian beliefs in
-multiplicity of deities.” Had they not? Then the ancestors of the
-editors of the _Jewish World_ must have been the victims of
-“suggestion,” when, snubbing Jeremiah (and not entirely without good
-reason),they declared to him:
-
- “As for the word that thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the
- Lord, we will not hearken unto thee. But we will certainly do
- whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth, to burn incense
- unto the Queen of Heaven[123] ... _as we have done, we_, AND OUR
- FATHERS, _our kings, and our princes, in the cities of Judah, and
- in the streets of Jerusalem_, for _then_ had we plenty of
- victuals, and were well, and saw no evil. But _since we left off
- to burn incense to the Queen of Heaven_, and to _pour out drink
- offerings unto her_ ... and (_to_) _make her cakes to worship her
- ... we have wanted all things_, and have been consumed by the
- sword and by the famine....” (Jer. xliv. 16, 17, 18, 19).
-
------
-
-Footnote 123:
-
- Astoreth-Diana, Isis, Melita, Venus, etc., etc.
-
------
-
-Thus, according to their own confession, it is not “at times” that
-the Jews made cakes for, and worshipped Astoreth and the strange
-gods, but constantly: doing, moreover, _as their forefathers_, kings
-and princes _did_.
-
-“_Bad_ history”? And what was the “golden calf” but the sacred
-heifer, the symbol of the “Great Mother,” first the planet Venus,
-and then the moon? For the esoteric doctrine holds (as the Mexicans
-held) that Venus, the morning star, was _created before the sun and
-moon; metaphorically_, of course, not astronomically,[124] the
-assumption being based upon, and meaning that which the _Nazars_ and
-the Initiate alone understood among the Jews, but that the writers
-of the _Jewish World_ are not supposed to know. For the same reason
-the Chaldeans maintained that the moon was produced before the sun
-(_see Babylon—Account of Creation, by George Smith_). The morning
-star, Lucifer-Venus was dedicated to that Great Mother symbolized by
-the heifer or the “Golden Calf.” For, as says Mr. G. Massey in his
-lecture on “The Hebrews and their Creations,” “This (the Golden
-Calf) being of either sex, it supplied a twin-type for Venus, as
-Hathor or Ishtar (Astoreth), the double star, that was male at
-rising, and female at sunset” She is the “Celestial Aphrodite,”
-_Venus Victrix_ νιχηφόρος associated with _Ares_ (see Pausanias i,
-8, 4, 11, 25, 1).
-
------
-
-Footnote 124:
-
- Because the stars and planets are the symbols and houses of Angels
- and Elohim, who were, of course, “created,” or evoluted before the
- physical or cosmic sun or moon. “The sun god was called the child
- of the moon god Sin, in Assyria, and the lunar god Taht, is called
- the father of Osiris, the sun god ‘in Egypt.’” (G. Massey.)
-
------
-
-We are told that “happily for them (the Jews) there was no Jewish
-Astoreth.” The _Jewish World_ has yet to learn, we see, that there
-would have been no Greek Venus Aphrodite; no _Ourania_, her earlier
-appellation; nor would she have been confounded with the Assyrian
-Mylitta (Herod, 1, 199; Pausan., 1, 14, 7; Hesiod, Μυληταν την
-Ουρανιαν Ασσυριοι) had it not been for the Phœnicians and other
-Semites. We say the “Jewish Astoreth,” and we maintain what we say,
-on the authority of the Iliad, the Odyssey, of Renan, and many
-others. Venus Aphrodite is one with the Astarte, Astoreth, etc. of
-the Phœnicians, and she is one (as a planet) with “Lucifer” the
-“Morning Star.” So far back as the days of Homer, she was confounded
-with _Kypris_, an Oriental goddess brought by the Phœnician Semites
-from their Asiatic travels (_Iliad_, V, 330, 422, 260). Her worship
-appears first at Cythere, a Phœnician settlement depôt or
-trade-establishment (_Odys._, VIII. 362.; Walcker, _griech.
-götterl._ I, 666.) Herodotus shows that the sanctuary of Ascalon, in
-Syria, was the most ancient of the fanes of Aphrodite Ourania (I,
-105): and Decharme tells us in his _Mythologie de la Grèce Antique_,
-that whenever the Greeks alluded to the origin of Aphrodite they
-designated her as _Ourania_, an epithet translated from a _semitic
-word_, as Jupiter _Epouranios_ of the Phœnician inscriptions, was
-the _Samemroum_ of Philo of Byblos, according to Renan (_Mission de
-Phenicie_). Astoreth was a goddess of generation, presiding at human
-birth (as Jehovah was _god of generation_, foremost of all). She was
-the moon-goddess, and a planet at the same time, whose worship
-originated with the Phœnicians and Semites. It flourished most in
-the Phœnician settlements and colonies in Sicily, at Eryax. There
-hosts of _Hetairae_ were attached to her temples, as hosts of
-_Kadeshim_, called by a more sincere name in the Bible, were, to the
-house of the Lord, “where the women wove hangings for the grove”
-(II. Kings, xxiii, 7). All this shows well the Semitic provenance of
-Astoreth-Venus in her capacity of “great Mother.” Let us pause. We
-advise sincerely the _Jewish World_ to abstain from throwing stones
-at other peoples’ beliefs, so long as its own faith is but a house
-of glass. And though Jeremy Taylor may think that “to be proud of
-one’s learning is the greatest ignorance,” yet, in this case it is
-but simple justice to say that it is really desirable for our
-friends the Jews that the writer in LUCIFER of the criticised note
-about Astoreth _should know less_ of history and the Bible, and her
-unlucky critic in the _Jewish World_ learn a little more about it.
-
- “ADVERSARY.”
-
-
-
-
- =THEOSOPHICAL= <br> =AND MYSTIC PUBLICATIONS=
-
-
-THE THEOSOPHIST for October opens with the first of a series of
-articles on the “Elohistic Cosmogony.” The views put forward by the
-writer are certainly both striking and original, and, although Dr.
-Pratt diverges very considerably from the recognised standard of
-kabalistic orthodoxy, his interpretation of the Jewish version of
-cosmic evolution will assuredly excite considerable interest.
-
-Following on Dr. Pratt’s learned article, come a few—unfortunately,
-too few—pages of extremely interesting notes on the Folk-lore of the
-Himalayan tribes, contributed by Captain Banon. The _Theosophist_
-has often been indebted to Captain Banon for similar notes
-respecting such little known tribes and people; and it is much to be
-regretted that the many members of the Theosophical Society who
-reside in or visit such out-of-the-way places, do not make it a rule
-to collect these traditions and send them for publication in the
-_Theosophist_ or one of the other Theosophical magazines.
-
-Dr. Hartmann continues his series of “Rosicrucian Letters,” with a
-number of extracts from the papers of Karl von Eckartshausen, who
-died in 1792. Dr. Hartmann deserves the gratitude of all students
-for rendering accessible these records and notes of past generations
-of “seekers after the Truth.”
-
-Dr. Buck contributes a pithy and thoughtful article on “The Soul
-Problem,” and Mr. Lazarus continues his exposition of the kabalistic
-doctrine of the Microcosm. Besides these there are further
-instalments of two valuable translations from Hindu works of great
-antiquity and authority; the “Crest Jewel of Wisdom,” by
-Sankaracharya and the “Kaivalyanita.” It is much to be desired that
-one of our Hindu brothers, who adds to a knowledge of his own mystic
-literature, an acquaintance with Western modes of thought and
-expression, would devote a series of articles to the exposition of
-the fundamental standpoint and ideas of such works as these. Such an
-article would add enormously to the value of these translations to
-the Western world.
-
-In the _November_ number, Dr. Pratt takes up the _Jehovistic_
-cosmogony, which he contrasts and compares with the _Elohistic_
-version already referred to. In his view, the Jehovistic teaching
-embodies the conception of the world as “created” and “ruled” by an
-_extra-natural_ and _personal_ deity, as opposed to the more
-philosophical and pantheistic conception of the earlier Elohistic
-writers.
-
-Under the title of _An Ancient Weapon_, this issue contains an
-instructive account of the evocation of certain astral forces
-according to the ancient Vedic rites. As here described, the _evil
-intention_, with which the rite is performed, transforms it into a
-ceremony of _Black Magic_, but this does not render the account any
-less valuable.
-
-This is followed by the first of a series of articles on _The
-Allegory of the Zoroastrian Cosmogony_, which promises to furnish
-much food for thought and study.
-
-_Rosicrucian Letters_ contains this time an extract from an old MS.,
-headed _The Temple of Solomon_, which is well worthy of careful
-attention.
-
-Besides these we have a sketch of the life and writings of
-Madvachary, the great teacher of Southern India, and some further
-testimonies to the fact of “self-levitation” from eye-witnesses.
-Rama Prasad gives some most valuable details of the “Science of
-Breathing,” one of the most curious branches of occult physics,
-while the remainder of the number is occupied by an article on
-“Tetragrammaton,” which may be interesting to students of the
-Kabbala, and continuations of the “Kabbala and the Microcosm,” and
-of the translations from Indian books mentioned in connection with
-the October number.
-
-These two numbers contain much valuable matter and well maintain the
-reputation which the _Theosophist_ originally gained for itself.
-
- ---
-
-In THE PATH for October we notice especially the following articles:
-
-_Nature’s Scholar_, a most poetically-conceived and well-worked-out
-Idyll, by J. C. Ver Plank, in which the underlying occult truth is
-presented to the reader in a most attractive form.
-
-Following this is a much needed warning against the dangers of
-_Astral Intoxication_. Admirably expressed, it points out the true,
-and indicates the false, path with great clearness; and we desire to
-call the earnest attention of such of our readers as are engaged in
-_psychic_ development to its importance.
-
-“Pilgrim” contributes some further _Thoughts in Solitude_, the
-leading idea of which may be indicated by its concluding lines,
-which are quoted from Sir Philip Sydney of heroic fame:
-
- “Then farewell, World! thy uttermost I see,
- Eternal Love, maintain thy life in me!”
-
-_Tea-Table Talk_ is even more interesting and suggestive than usual,
-and, besides those above mentioned, this well-filled number contains
-Part IV. of the series of articles on _The Poetry of Re-incarnation
-in Western Literature_, which deals with the _Platonic Poets_.
-
-The _November_ number opens with an able continuation of Mr.
-Brehon’s article on _The Bhagavat-Gita_, commenced so long ago as
-last April, of which we hope to peruse a further instalment.
-Following this is a short article indicating the term “Medium” from
-the loathsome connotations which phenomenal spiritualism has
-attached to it. We then come to a paper on Goethe’s _Faust_, read
-before one of the branches of the Theosophical Society in America.
-It is of great interest to students of literature and will furnish a
-clue to the real meaning of much of the poet’s writing.
-
-Mr. Johnston makes some most suggestive remarks on _Cain and Abel_;
-Harij speaks in no uncertain tones of _Personalities_ and Truth,
-while Hadji Erinn points out the _Path of Action_, and warns the
-members of the T. S. that they must not expect their road to become
-easier and plainer before them, while yet the society is undergoing
-the trials of its education.
-
-Zadok gives some able answers to questions on various points of
-practical occultism and Julius, in _Tea-Table Talk_, points out how
-many people are really entering on the path of Theosophy—even though
-unconsciously.
-
- ---
-
-LE LOTUS, for October and November, is even more interesting than
-usual. In the October number are contained two very valuable
-articles. The first of these is a paper on Paracelsus from the pen
-of Dr. Hartmann, who is especially qualified to handle the subject
-by his profound study of the work, and especially the manuscripts,
-of that great occultist. M. “Papus” contributes a most lucid and
-able exposition of some Kabbalistic doctrines, the _practical_ value
-of which has been hitherto but little realised even by professed
-students of mysticism.
-
-The opening article in the November issue is headed, _The
-Constitution of the Microcosm_. It is written in a clear and
-attractive style, and contains a most thorough and complete
-explanation of the various classifications of the principles which
-enter into the constitution of man.
-
-“Amaravella” has evidently studied the whole subject very deeply,
-and he shows the relation of these various classifications to one
-another in a way which will clear up many of the misconceptions
-which have arisen.
-
-M. “Papus” writes on Alchemy in a manner which shows how conversant
-he is with this little-understood topic. We therefore look forward
-with great anticipations to the perusal of his book “_Traité
-élémentaire de science occulte_,” the fourth chapter of which
-contains the article referred to.
-
-It is very evident that Theosophy is making great and rapid progress
-in France, and this is in great measure due to the untiring and
-unselfish devotion of the editor of _Le Lotus_, M. Gaboriau, whom we
-congratulate most warmly on the success which has attended his
-efforts.
-
- ---
-
-_L’Aurore_ for October contains an article on the so-called “Star of
-Bethlehem,” which repeats the assurance that the world is entering
-on a new and happier life-phase.
-
-Unfortunately, it seems more than probable that before this
-amelioration takes place, the world must pass through the valley of
-the shadow of Death, and endure calamities far worse than any it has
-yet seen. Lady Caithness continues her erudite and interesting
-article on the lost ten tribes of Israel. Her thesis is put forward
-in admirable language, and supported by a great wealth of biblical
-quotations. Unfortunately, the task undertaken is an impossible one.
-There never were twelve tribes of Israel—two only—Judah and the
-Levites, having had a real existence in the flesh. The remainder are
-but euhemerizations of the signs of the Zodiac, and were introduced
-because they were necessary to the Kabalistic scheme on which the
-“History” of the Jews was written.
-
-Lady Barrogill relates the well-known story of an English bishop and
-the ghost of a Catholic priest, who haunted his former residence in
-order to secure the destruction of some notes he had taken (contrary
-to the rule of the Church) of an important confession which he had
-heard.
-
-Besides these articles we find the continuation of the serial
-romance, “L’amour Immortel,” and LUCIFER has to thank the editor for
-the appreciative notice contained in this number.
-
-
-
-
- LUCIFER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. I. LONDON, JANUARY 15TH, 1888. NO. 5.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- =1888.=
-
-
-People usually wish that their friends shall have a happy new
-year, and sometimes “prosperous” is added to “happy.” It is not
-likely that much happiness or prosperity can come to those who are
-living for the truth under such a dark number as 1888; but still
-the year is heralded by the glorious star Venus-Lucifer, shining
-so resplendently that it has been mistaken for that still rarer
-visitor, the star of Bethlehem. This too, is at hand; and surely
-something of the Christos spirit must be born upon earth under
-such conditions. Even if happiness and prosperity are absent, it
-is possible to find something greater than either in this coming
-year. Venus-Lucifer is the sponsor of our magazine, and as we
-chose to come to light under its auspices, so do we desire to
-touch on its nobility. This is possible for us all personally, and
-instead of wishing our readers a happy or prosperous New Year, we
-feel more in the vein to pray them to make it one worthy of its
-brilliant herald. This can be effected by those who are courageous
-and resolute. Thoreau pointed out that there are artists in life,
-persons who can change the colour of a day and make it beautiful
-to those with whom they come in contact. We claim that there are
-adepts, masters in life who make it divine, as in all other arts.
-Is it not the greatest art of all, this which affects the very
-atmosphere in which we live? That it is the most important is seen
-at once, when we remember that every person who draws the breath
-of life affects the mental and moral atmosphere of the world, and
-helps to colour the day for those about him. Those who do not help
-to elevate the thoughts and lives of others must of necessity
-either paralyse them by indifference, or actively drag them down.
-When this point is reached, then the art of life is converted into
-the science of death; we see the black magician at work. And no
-one can be quite inactive. Although many bad books and pictures
-are produced, still not everyone who is incapable of writing or
-painting well insists on doing so badly. Imagine the result if
-they were to! Yet so it is in life. Everyone lives, and thinks,
-and speaks. If all our readers who have any sympathy with LUCIFER
-endeavoured to learn the art of making life not only beautiful but
-divine, and vowed no longer to be hampered by disbelief in the
-possibility of this miracle, but to commence the Herculean task at
-once, then 1888, however unlucky a year, would have been fitly
-ushered in by the gleaming star. Neither happiness nor prosperity
-are always the best of bedfellows for such undeveloped mortals as
-most of us are; they seldom bring with them peace, which is the
-only permanent joy. The idea of peace is usually connected with
-the close of life and a religious state of mind. That kind of
-peace will however generally be found to contain the element of
-expectation. The pleasures of this world have been surrendered,
-and the soul waits contentedly in expectation of the pleasures of
-the next. The peace of the philosophic mind is very different from
-this and can be attained to early in life when pleasure has
-scarcely been tasted, as well as when it has been fully drunk of.
-The American Transcendentalists discovered that life could be made
-a sublime thing without any assistance from circumstances or
-outside sources of pleasure and prosperity. Of course this had
-been discovered many times before, and Emerson only took up again
-the cry raised by Epictetus. But every man has to discover this
-fact freshly for himself, and when once he has realised it he
-knows that he would be a wretch if he did not endeavour to make
-the possibility a reality in his own life. The stoic became
-sublime because he recognised his own absolute responsibility and
-did not try to evade it; the Transcendentalist was even more,
-because he had faith in the unknown and untried possibilities
-which lay within himself. The occultist fully recognises the
-responsibility and claims his title by having both tried and
-acquired knowledge of his own possibilities. The Theosophist who
-is at all in earnest, sees his responsibility and endeavours to
-find knowledge, living, in the meantime, up to the highest
-standard of which he is aware. To all such LUCIFER gives greeting!
-Man’s life is in his own hands, his fate is ordered by himself.
-Why then should not 1888 be a year of greater spiritual
-development than any we have lived through? It depends on
-ourselves to make it so. This is an actual fact, not a religious
-sentiment. In a garden of sunflowers every flower turns towards
-the light. Why not so with us?
-
-And let no one imagine that it is a mere fancy, the attaching of
-importance to the birth of the year. The earth passes through its
-definite phases and man with it; and as a day can be coloured so can
-a year. The astral life of the earth is young and strong between
-Christmas and Easter. Those who form their wishes now will have
-added strength to fulfil them consistently.
-
-
- TO THE MORNING STAR.
-
- Lucifer, Lucifer Son of the Morning,
- Trembling and fair on the opening skies,
- Heralding, truly, a day that is dawning,
- Telling the “Light of the World” shall arise.
-
- Lucifer, Lucifer, all through the Ages
- Weary hearts struggled and watched for the light,
- Now it is coming, and thou the forerunner,
- Mystical prophet, the herald of Right.
-
- There in the desert of Night where thou dwellest,
- Round thee in myriads the feebler lights stand;
- Lucifer, Lucifer, ever thou tellest
- The glorious Kingdom of Right is at hand.
-
- Rising and setting, O, Star of the Morning!
- Strangely prophetic, thou atom of light;
- Revealing in silence the law of creation.
- Out from the unseen abyss of the night,
-
- Into a world where the stars, sympathetic,
- Seem to be fraught with a pulsating breath;
- Brilliant, yet shining like tear-drops pathetic,
- But sinking at last in oblivion of death!
-
- Sinking, but wrapped in the shroud of the Morning,
- Folded in splendour as light shall arise;
- Lucifer, herald of Truth that is dawning,
- Ride through thy glorious pathway, the skies!
-
- Soon in the east, with a splendour triumphant,
- Morning shall break like a great altar-fire,
- Ignorance, darkness, and gross superstition,
- Shall melt in its beams, and in silence expire!
-
- HELEN FAGG.
-
- -----------------------
-
- .... “THE faith that you call sacred—‘sacred as the most delicate
- or manly or womanly sentiment of love and honour’—is the faith
- that nearly all of your fellow men are to be lost. Ought an honest
- man to be restrained from denouncing that faith because those who
- entertain it say that their feelings are hurt? You say to me:
- ‘There is a hell. A man advocating the opinions you advocate will
- go there when he dies.’ I answer: ‘There is no hell, the Bible
- that teaches it is not true.’ And you say: ‘How can you hurt my
- feelings?’”—R. G. INGERSOLL.—_Secular Review._
-
-
- “TO THE READERS OF ‘LUCIFER.’”
-
-
-Our magazine is only four numbers old, and already its young life is
-full of cares and trouble. This is all as it should be; _i.e._, like
-every other publication, it must fail to satisfy _all_ its readers,
-and this is only in the nature of things and the destiny of every
-printed organ. But what seems a little strange in a country of
-culture and freethought is that LUCIFER should receive such a number
-of _anonymous_, spiteful, and often abusive letters. This, of
-course, is but a casual remark, the waste-basket in the office being
-the only addressee and sufferer in this case; yet it suggests
-strange truths with regard to human nature.[125]
-
------
-
-Footnote 125:
-
- “VERBUM SAP.” It is not our intention to notice anonymous
- communications, even though they should emanate in a round-about
- way from Lambeth Palace. The matter “_Verbum Sap_” refers to is
- not one of taste; the facts must be held responsible for the
- offence; and, as the Scripture hath it, “Woe to them by whom the
- offence cometh!”
-
------
-
-Sincerity is true wisdom, it appears, only to the mind of the moral
-philosopher. It is rudeness and insult to him who regards
-dissimulation and deceit as culture and politeness, and holds that
-the shortest, easiest, and safest way to success is to let sleeping
-dogs and old customs alone. But, if the dogs are obstructing the
-highway to progress and truth, and Society will, as a rule, reject
-the wise words of (St.) Augustine, who recommends that “no man
-should prefer custom before reason and truth,” is it a sufficient
-cause for the philanthropist to walk out of, or even deviate from,
-the track of truth, because the selfish egoist chooses to do so?
-Very true, as remarked somewhere by Sir Thomas Browne that not every
-man is a proper champion for the truth, nor fit to take up the
-gauntlet in its cause. Too many of such defenders are apt, from
-inconsideration and too much zeal, to charge the troops of error so
-rashly that they “remain themselves as trophies to the enemies of
-truth.” Nor ought all of us (members of the Theosophical Society) to
-do so personally, but rather leave it only to those among our
-numbers who have voluntarily and beforehand sacrificed their
-personalities for the cause of Truth. Thus teaches us one of the
-Masters of Wisdom in some fragments of advice which are published
-further on for the benefit of the Theosophists (see the article that
-follows this). While enforcing upon such public characters in our
-ranks as editors, and lecturers, etc., the duty of telling
-fearlessly “the Truth to the face of LIE,” he yet condemns the habit
-of private judgment and criticism in every individual Theosophist.
-
-Unfortunately, these are not the ways of the public and readers.
-Since our journal is entirely unsectarian, since it is neither
-theistic nor atheistic, Pagan nor Christian, orthodox nor heterodox,
-therefore, its editors discover eternal verities in the most
-opposite religious systems and modes of thought. Thus LUCIFER fails
-to give full satisfaction to either infidel or Christian. In the
-sight of the former—whether he be an Agnostic, a Secularist, or an
-Idealist—to find divine or occult lore underlying “the rubbish” in
-the Jewish Bible and Christian Gospels is sickening; in the opinion
-of the latter, to recognise the same truth as in the Judeo-Christian
-Scriptures in the Hindu, Parsi, Buddhist, or Egyptian religious
-literature, is vexation of spirit and blasphemy. Hence, fierce
-criticism from both sides, sneers and abuse. Each party would have
-us on its own sectarian side, recognising as truth, only that which
-its particular _ism_ does.
-
-But this cannot nor shall it be. Our motto was from the first, and
-ever shall be: “THERE IS NO RELIGION HIGHER THAN—TRUTH.” Truth we
-search for, and, once found, we bring it forward before the world,
-whencesoever it comes. A large majority of our readers is fully
-satisfied with this our policy, and that is plainly sufficient for
-our purposes.
-
-It is evident that when toleration is not the outcome of
-indifference it must arise from wide-spreading charity and
-large-minded sympathy. Intolerance is preeminently the consequence
-of ignorance and jealousy. He who fondly believes that he has got
-the great ocean in his family water-jug is naturally intolerant of
-his neighbour, who also is pleased to imagine that he has poured the
-broad expanses of the sea of truth into his own particular pitcher.
-But anyone who, like the Theosophists knows how infinite is that
-ocean of eternal wisdom, to be fathomed by no one man, class, or
-party, and realizes how little the largest vessel made by man
-contains in comparison to what lies dormant and still unperceived in
-its dark, bottomless depths, cannot help but be tolerant. For he
-sees that others have filled their little water-jugs at the same
-great reservoir in which he has dipped his own, and if the water in
-the various pitchers seems different to the eye, it can only be
-because it is discoloured by impurities that were in the vessel
-before the pure crystalline element—a portion of the one eternal and
-immutable truth—entered into it.
-
-There is, and can be, but one absolute truth in Kosmos. And little
-as we, with our present limitations, can understand it in its
-essence, we still know that if it is absolute it must also be
-omnipresent and universal; and that in such case, it must be
-underlying every world-religion—the product of the thought and
-knowledge of numberless generations of thinking men. Therefore, that
-a portion of truth, great or small, is found in every religious and
-philosophical system, and that if we would find it, we have to
-search for it at the origin and source of every such system, at its
-roots and first growth, not in its later overgrowth of sects and
-dogmatism. Our object is not to destroy any religion but rather to
-help to filter each, thus ridding them of their respective
-impurities. In this we are opposed by all those who maintain,
-against evidence, that their particular pitcher alone contains the
-whole ocean. How is our great work to be done if we are to be
-impeded and harassed on every side by partisans and zealots? It
-would be already half accomplished were the intelligent men, at
-least, of every sect and system, to feel and to confess that the
-little wee bit of truth they themselves own must necessarily be
-mingled with error, and that their neighbours' mistakes are, like
-their own, mixed with truth.
-
-Free discussion, temperate, candid, undefiled by personalities and
-animosity, is, we think, the most efficacious means of getting rid
-of error and bringing out the underlying truth; and this applies to
-publications as well as to persons. It is open to a magazine to be
-tolerant or intolerant; it is open to it to err in almost every way
-in which an individual can err; and since every publication of the
-kind has a responsibility such as falls to the lot of few
-individuals, it behoves it to be ever on its guard, so that it may
-advance without fear and without reproach. All this is true in a
-special degree in the case of a theosophical publication, and
-LUCIFER feels that it would be unworthy of that designation were it
-not true to the profession of the broadest tolerance and
-catholicity, even while pointing out to its brothers and neighbours
-the errors which they indulge in and follow. While thus keeping
-strictly, in its editorials, and in articles by its individual
-editors, to the spirit and teachings of pure theosophy, it
-nevertheless frequently gives room to articles and letters which
-diverge widely from the esoteric teachings accepted by the editors,
-as also by the majority of theosophists. Readers, therefore, who are
-accustomed to find in magazines and party publications only such
-opinions and arguments as the editor believes to be unmistakably
-orthodox—from his peculiar standpoint—must not condemn any article
-in LUCIFER with which they are not entirely in accord, or in which
-expressions are used that may be offensive from a sectarian or a
-_prudish_ point of view, on the ground that such are unfitted for a
-theosophical magazine. They should remember that precisely because
-LUCIFER is a theosophical magazine, it opens its columns to writers
-whose views of life and things may not only slightly differ from its
-own, but even be diametrically opposed to the opinion of the
-editors. The object of the latter is to elicit truth, not to advance
-the interest of any particular _ism_, or to pander to any hobbies,
-likes or dislikes, of any class of readers. It is only snobs and
-prigs who, disregarding the truth or error of the idea, cavil and
-strain merely over the expressions and words it is couched in.
-Theosophy, if meaning anything, means truth; and truth has to deal
-indiscriminately and in the same spirit of impartiality with vessels
-of honour and of dishonour alike. No theosophical publication would
-ever dream of adopting the coarse—or shall we say terribly
-sincere—language of a Hosea or a Jeremiah; yet so long as those holy
-prophets are found in the Christian Bible, and the Bible is in every
-respectable, pious family, whether aristocratic or plebeian; and so
-long as the Bible is read with bowed head and in all reverence by
-young, innocent maidens and school-boys, why should our Christian
-critics fall foul of any phrase which may have to be used—if truth
-be spoken at all—in an occasional article upon a scientific subject?
-It is to be feared that the same sentences now found objectionable,
-because referring to Biblical subjects, would be loudly praised and
-applauded had they been directed against any gentile system of faith
-(_Vide certain missionary organs_). A little charity, gentle
-readers—charity, and above all—_fairness_ and JUSTICE.
-
-Justice demands that when the reader comes across an article in this
-magazine which does not immediately approve itself to his mind by
-chiming in with his own peculiar ideas, he should regard it as a
-problem to solve rather than as a mere subject of criticism. Let him
-endeavour to learn the lesson which only opinions differing from his
-own can teach him. _Let him be tolerant, if not actually
-charitable_, and postpone his judgment till he extracts from the
-article the truth it must contain, adding this new acquisition to
-his store. One ever learns more from one’s enemies than from one’s
-friends; and it is only when the reader has credited this hidden
-truth to LUCIFER, that he can fairly presume to put what he believes
-to be the errors of the article, he does not like, to the debit
-account.
-
-[Illustration: decorative]
-
- ADAPTATIONS.
-
-We have been asked to give permission for Mr. Gerald Massey’s lines
-on LUCIFER, Lady of Light, to be “adapted” and sung to the “Lord
-Jesus Christ” in a chapel. This is flattering for both parties
-concerned. The editors have no objection, but Mr. Massey is obdurate
-enough to refuse his permission and sufficiently unfeeling to have
-called the pretty “adaptation” a PARODY. The “Lady of Light” was to
-have run in this wise:—
-
- “Star of the Day and the Night,
- Star of the Dark that is dying,
- Star of the Dawn that is nighing,
- Jesu, our Saviour, our Light!” etc.
-
-But how truly appropriate it would be if Mr. Massey’s lines on
-Shakspeare were also “adapted” and applied to the Lord Buddha.
-
- “FOR HIM NO MARTYR-FIRES HAVE BLAZED,
- NO RACK BEEN USED, NOR SCAFFOLDS RAISED;
- FOR HIM NO LIFE WAS EVER SHED
- TO MAKE THE CONQUEROR’S PATHWAY RED.
- OUR PRINCE OF PEACE IN GLORY HATH GONE,
- WITHOUT A SINGLE SWORD BEING DRAWN;
- WITHOUT ONE BATTLE-FLAG UNFURLED,
- TO MAKE HIS CONQUEST OF OUR WORLD.
- AND FOR ALL TIME HE WEARS HIS CROWN
- OF LASTING, LIMITLESS, RENOWN;
- HE REIGNS WHATEVER MONARCHS FALL,
- HIS THRONE IS AT THE HEART OF ALL.”
-
- SOME WORDS ON DAILY LIFE.
-
- (_Written by a Master of Wisdom._)
-
-“It is divine philosophy alone, the spiritual and psychic blending
-of man with nature, which, by revealing the fundamental truths that
-lie hidden under the objects of sense and perception, can promote a
-spirit of unity and harmony in spite of the great diversities of
-conflicting creeds. Theosophy, therefore, expects and demands from
-the Fellows of the Society a great mutual toleration and charity for
-each other’s shortcomings, ungrudging mutual help in the search for
-truths in every department of nature—moral and physical. And this
-ethical standard must be unflinchingly applied to daily life.
-
-“Theosophy should not represent merely a collection of moral
-verities, a bundle of metaphysical ethics, epitomized in theoretical
-dissertations. Theosophy _must be made practical_; and it has,
-therefore, to be disencumbered of useless digressions, in the sense
-of desultory orations and fine talk. Let every Theosophist only do
-his duty, that which he can and ought to do, and very soon the sum
-of human misery, within and around the areas of every Branch of your
-Society, will be found visibly diminished. Forget SELF in working
-for others—and the task will become an easy and a light one for
-you....
-
-“Do not set your pride in the appreciation and acknowledgment of
-that work by others. Why should any member of the Theosophical
-Society, striving to become a Theosophist, put any value upon his
-neighbours’ good or bad opinion of himself and his work, so long as
-he himself knows it to be useful and beneficent to other people?
-Human praise and enthusiasm are short-lived at best; the laugh of
-the scoffer and the condemnation of the indifferent looker-on are
-sure to follow, and generally to out-weigh the admiring praise of
-the friendly. Do not despise the opinion of the world, nor provoke
-it uselessly to unjust criticism. Remain rather as indifferent to
-the abuse as to the praise of those who can never know you as you
-really are, and who ought, therefore, to find you unmoved by either,
-and ever placing the approval or condemnation of your own _Inner
-Self_ higher than that of the multitudes.
-
-“Those of you who would know yourselves in the spirit of truth,
-learn to live alone even amidst the great crowds which may sometimes
-surround you. Seek communion and intercourse only with the God
-within your own soul; heed only the praise or blame of that deity
-which can never be separated from your _true_ self, _as it is verily
-that God itself_: called the HIGHER CONSCIOUSNESS. Put without delay
-your good intentions into practice, never leaving a single one to
-remain only an intention—expecting, meanwhile, neither reward nor
-even acknowledgment for the good you may have done. Reward and
-acknowledgment are in yourself and inseparable from you, as it is
-your Inner Self alone which can appreciate them at their true degree
-and value. For each one of you contains within the precincts of his
-inner tabernacle the Supreme Court—prosecutor, defence, jury and
-judge—whose sentence is the only one without appeal; since none can
-know you better than you do yourself, when once you have learned to
-judge that Self by the never wavering light of the inner
-divinity—your higher CONSCIOUSNESS. Let, therefore, the masses,
-which can never know your true selves, condemn your outer selves
-according to their own false lights....
-
-“The majority of the public Areopagus is generally composed of
-self-appointed judges, who have never made a permanent deity of any
-idol save their own personalities—their lower selves; for those who
-try in their walk in life, to follow their _inner light_ will never
-be found judging, far less condemning, those weaker than themselves.
-What does it matter then, whether the former condemn or praise,
-whether they humble you or exalt you on a pinnacle? They will never
-comprehend you one way or the other. They may make an idol of you,
-so long as they imagine you a faithful mirror of themselves on the
-pedestal or altar which they have reared for you, and while you
-amuse or benefit them. You cannot expect to be anything for them but
-a temporary _fetish_, succeeding another fetish just overthrown, and
-followed in your turn by another idol. Let, therefore, those who
-have created that idol destroy it whenever they like, casting it
-down with as little cause as they had for setting it up. Your
-Western Society can no more live without its Khalif of an hour than
-it can worship one for any longer period; and whenever it breaks an
-idol and then besmears it with mud, it is not the model, but the
-disfigured image created by its own foul fancy and which it has
-endowed with its own vices, that Society dethrones and breaks.
-
-“Theosophy can only find objective expression in an all-embracing
-code of life, thoroughly impregnated with the spirit of mutual
-tolerance, charity, and brotherly love. Its Society, as a body, has
-a task before it which, unless performed with the utmost discretion,
-will cause the world of the indifferent and the selfish to rise up
-in arms against it. Theosophy has to fight intolerance, prejudice,
-ignorance, and selfishness, hidden under the mantle of hypocrisy. It
-has to throw all the light it can from the torch of Truth, with
-which its servants are entrusted. It must do this without fear or
-hesitation, dreading neither reproof nor condemnation. Theosophy,
-through its mouthpiece, the Society, has to tell the TRUTH to the
-very face of LIE; to beard the tiger in its den, without thought or
-fear of evil consequences, and to set at defiance calumny and
-threats. _As an Association_, it has not only the right, but the
-duty to uncloak vice and do its best to redress wrongs, whether
-through the voice of its chosen lecturers or the printed word of its
-journals and publications—making its accusations, however, as
-impersonal as possible. But its Fellows, or Members, have
-_individually_ no such right. Its followers have, first of all, to
-set the example of a firmly outlined and as firmly applied morality,
-before they obtain the right to point out, even in a spirit of
-kindness, the absence of a like ethic unity and singleness of
-purpose in other associations or individuals. No Theosophist should
-blame a brother, whether within or outside of the association;
-neither may he throw a slur upon another’s actions or denounce him,
-lest he himself lose the right to be considered a Theosophist. For,
-as such, he has to turn away his gaze from the imperfections of his
-neighbour, and centre rather his attention upon his own
-shortcomings, in order to correct them and become wiser. Let him not
-show the disparity between claim and action in another, but, whether
-in the case of a brother, a neighbour, or simply a fellow man, let
-him rather ever help one weaker than himself on the arduous walk of
-life.
-
-“The problem of true Theosophy and its great mission are, first, the
-working out of clear unequivocal conceptions of ethic ideas and
-duties, such as shall best and most fully satisfy the right and
-altruistic feelings in men; and second, the modelling of these
-conceptions for their adaptation into such forms of daily life, as
-shall offer a field where they may be applied with most
-equitableness.
-
-“Such is the common work placed before all who are willing to act on
-these principles. It is a laborious task, and will require strenuous
-and persevering exertion; but it must lead you insensibly to
-progress, and leave you no room for any selfish aspirations outside
-the limits traced.... Do not indulge personally in unbrotherly
-comparison between the task accomplished by yourself and the work
-left undone by your neighbours or brothers. In the fields of
-Theosophy _none is held to weed out a larger plot of ground than his
-strength and capacity will permit him_. Do not be too severe on the
-merits or demerits of one who seeks admission among your ranks, as
-the truth about the actual state of the inner man can only be known
-to Karma, and can be dealt with justly by that all-seeing LAW alone.
-Even the simple presence amidst you of a well-intentioned and
-sympathising individual may help you magnetically.... You are the
-free volunteer workers on the fields of Truth, and as such must
-leave no obstruction on the paths leading to that field.
-
- . . . . . . . . .
-
-“_The degree of success or failure are the landmarks the masters
-have to follow, as they will constitute the barriers placed with
-your own hands between yourselves and those whom you have asked
-to be your teachers. The nearer your approach to the goal
-contemplated—the shorter the distance between the student and
-the Master._”
-
-
- =THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT=:
-
- _THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN_.
-
- (_Continued._)
-
- ---------------------
-
- BY MABEL COLLINS.
-
- ---------------------
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
-The cloud lifted to reveal Fleta’s face. She was bending over him;
-she was at his side; she was almost leaning her face on his.
-
-“My dear, my dear,” she said in a soft whispering voice, “has the
-blow been too great? Tell me, Hilary, speak to me? Have you still
-your senses?”
-
-“And you love that man?” was Hilary’s sole answer, fixing his eyes
-in a cold strange gaze on her.
-
-“Oh! Hilary, you talk of what is unknown to you! I love him, yes,
-and with a love so profound it is unimaginable to you.”
-
-“And you tell me this! You tell this to the man who loves you, and
-who has already devoted his whole life to you! Do you want a madman
-for your service?”
-
-“A life!” exclaimed Fleta, with a strange tone that had a ring as of
-scorn in it. “What is a life? I count it nothing. Our great aims lie
-beyond such considerations.”
-
-Hilary raised himself and looked into her face.
-
-“Then you are mad,” he said, “and if so, a madman in your service is
-but fit. Nevertheless, my Princess, do not forget with what forces
-you have to contend. I am but a man; you have accepted my love. Only
-just now you have made me a murderer at heart—in desire. How soon
-shall I be one in reality? That depends on you, Fleta. The next time
-I see your gaze fixed on that man’s face as I saw it but now I will
-kill him.”
-
-Fleta rose to her full height and lifted her face to the sky; as she
-stood there a sort of shiver passed through her, a shiver as of
-pain. Instantly Hilary’s humour changed. “You are ill,” he
-exclaimed. She turned her eyes on him.
-
-“When that murderous mood is on you, it will not be Father Ivan that
-you kill, but me, whom you profess to love. Do you understand that?”
-
-“Ah!” cried Hilary, uttering a sound as if his heart was bursting
-under the torture, “that is because you love him so! Well, I can
-only long and serve. I have no power to protest. Yet I ask you, oh!
-Princess, is it fit to use a man’s heart to play at your queenly
-coquetries with? A king, your betrothed—a mysterious priest, the man
-you love—are not these enough but that you must take a boy, obscure
-and untaught in such misfortunes, and trample on his love? It is
-unlike the nobility I have seen in you. Good-bye, for this,
-Princess! I am never your lover again as I was before. I can never
-believe in your pure sweet heart—only this morning it seemed to me
-as a pearl, as a drop of limpid water. Good-bye, my idol! Yet I am
-your servant to obey always, for I gave you my life to do with as
-you would. Call me, and I come, like your dog; but I will not stay
-by you, for no longer is it anything but pain to do so.”
-
-With these wild, fierce reproaches, which seemed to stir the quiet
-air of the woodland, and make it seethe and burn with passion and
-despair, he turned and went from her. Fleta stood motionless, and
-her eyes drooped heavily; only she murmured, “We were born under the
-same star!”
-
-Her voice was very low, yet it reached Hilary’s ear. The words
-seemed to lash his heart.
-
-“Under the same star!” he repeated, in a voice of agony, standing
-suddenly still. “No, Fleta. You are the queen, I the subject. Not
-only so, but you know it, and use your power to the full. Did you
-not promise yourself utterly to me to be mine?”
-
-“I promised to give you my love for yours; I promised to give you
-all that you can take of me. My love is greater than you can even
-imagine, else I would not have listened to one word of your
-reproaches. They have humbled me, but I have borne it.”
-
-“Ah, Fleta! you talk enigmas,” exclaimed Hilary, moving rapidly back
-to her side; “you are enough to madden a man; yet I cannot but love
-you. Why is this? Every act of yours proves you heartless,
-faithless, and yet I love you! Why is this? Oh, that I could read
-the riddle of your existence! Who are you?—What is this mysterious
-place?—Who is that priest whose rule you acknowledge? I _will_
-know!”
-
-Fleta turned on him a sudden sweet smile, that seemed to light up
-his inner being as the flame of a lamp illumines a dusky room.
-
-“Yes,” she said, “find out. I cannot tell you, yet I desire you—oh!
-indeed, I desire you to know. Compel the secret—force it. Yes, yes,
-Hilary!”
-
-She spoke eagerly, with a bright ring in her voice that thrilled his
-soul. He forgot the Princess, the conspirator, the religieuse—he
-only remembered the girl he loved—young, fresh, flower-like, with
-the fair sweet face close to his own. With an unutterable cry of
-love he held out his arms to her.
-
-“Oh, my dear, my love, come!” he said, in trembling tones that
-vibrated with his passion. But Fleta turned away without a word and
-walked through the tall ferns, her robe trailing on the ground. No
-backward glance, no turn of the head, not even a movement of those
-white statuesque hands which hung at her sides. In one was a long
-grass which she had plucked before she came to him. Even that,
-though it fluttered in the wind, had a strangely stiff air, as if it
-had become a part of that statue which but a moment since was a
-woman. Hilary stood gazing after this retreating figure, powerless
-to move, powerless to rouse in his mind any thought but one; and
-that was not a thought. It was knowledge—consciousness. He knew, he
-felt, that he dared not follow Fleta and address her as men address
-the women they love; he dared not woo her with the fever on his lips
-that burned there. And why? Not because of her royal birth, or her
-beauty, or her power. He knew not why—he could not understand
-himself. It was as though a spell were cast on him that held him
-silent and motionless.
-
-When at last she was out of sight a sudden reaction took place. The
-whole burning force of the strong young man’s nature broke loose and
-raged wildly through his whole system; he no longer was capable of
-thought, he only felt the blood that rushed to his head and made his
-brain reel as though he had drunk strong wine. He suddenly became
-aware that he had aged, grown, become a new creature in these last
-moments of experience. He had called himself a man five minutes ago;
-but now he knew that when he had uttered those words, he was only a
-boy. Across a great gulf of feeling he looked back at the love that
-was in him when he had so spoken. Now his passion burned like a fire
-on the altar of life; every instant the flames grew stronger and
-mounted more fiercely to his inflamed brain.
-
-The savage had burst forth. The savage untamed man, which smoulders
-within, and hides behind the cultivated faces of a gentle age. One
-strong touch on the chord of passion, and Hilary Estanol, a
-chivalric and courteous product of a refined time, knew himself to
-be a man, and knew that man to be a savage. A savage, full of
-desire, of personal longing, thinking of nothing but his own needs.
-And to Hilary this sudden starting forth of the nature within him
-seemed like a splendid unfolding. He remained standing, erect,
-strong, resolute. His seething mind hastily went over his whole
-position and Fleta’s. Everything suddenly bore a new, vivid,
-stirring aspect.
-
-“This is a nest of conspirators!” he exclaimed to himself. “That
-man, Ivan, is a conspirator or worse, else he would not hide here.
-What crowned head is it that he threatens? He is a criminal. I will
-discover his secret; I will rescue Fleta from him; by the strength
-of my love I will win her love from him; I will make her my own.
-Come, I must calm myself—I must be sober, for I have to find out the
-meaning of this mysterious place.”
-
-He walked slowly through the wood, trying to still the throbbing in
-his brain, to check the fierce pulsations of his heart and blood. He
-knew that now he needed all his instincts, all his natural
-intelligence, all his power of defence; for, in his present humour,
-he walked as an enemy to all men; by his new tide of feeling he had
-made every man his enemy. The young King Otto had a prior right to
-the Fleta whom he desired to make his own; King Otto was indeed his
-enemy. Ivan had her love; how bitterly did Hilary hate that priest!
-And Adine, the false Fleta—what was she but a mere tool of the
-priest’s, a creature used to baffle and blind him? She was the one
-most likely to trip his steps, for she defied even the knowledge
-which his love gave him of Fleta’s face!
-
-He was full of energy and activity, and his blood desired to be
-stilled by action. He had quickly decided that he must immediately
-do two things: inspect the whole exterior of the house, so as to get
-some notion of what rooms were in it, and what their uses; and
-explore the outer circle of the grounds, to see if there was any
-difficulty about leaving them. As the latter task involved most
-exercise, he chose to undertake it first, and swiftly, with long
-strides, made his way through the woodlands in the direction where
-the boundaries must lie. It did not take him long to traverse a
-considerable distance; for he felt stronger than ever in his life
-before. He had been a delicate lad, now he knew himself to be a
-strong man, as if new blood ran in his veins. The moon was high in
-the heavens, it was nearly full, and its light was strong. By it he
-soon discovered that the strange place in which he was had a more
-cunning and effective defence than any high wall or iron barrier. It
-was surrounded by tangled virgin woodland growth, where, as it
-seemed, no man’s foot could have ever trodden.
-
-Hilary found it hard to believe that such wild land existed within a
-drive of the city. But it was there, and there was no passing
-through it, unless he worked his way with a wood-axe, inch by inch,
-as men do when they make a clearing. Such a task was hopeless, even
-if he had the tools, for it was impossible to tell in what direction
-to move.
-
-He returned at last, after many fruitless efforts; there seemed to
-be no vestige of a path. He had discovered the gate by which their
-entrance had been made; and discovered also that it was guarded. A
-figure moved slowly to and fro in the shadow of the trees; not with
-the air of one strolling for pleasure, but with the regular
-movements of a sentry. It was an unfamiliar figure, but dressed in
-the garb of the order.
-
-Hilary went quietly along by the side of the path that led to the
-house. It was useless to waste more time on this investigation;
-quite clearly he was a prisoner. And it seemed to him equally clear
-that unless he could escape, no information would be of any use to
-him. He must be able to carry it to the city, where he would be free
-to take it to Fleta’s father, or even to other crowned heads in
-other countries, according to its nature. As he walked quietly on,
-revolving his position, he saw that the task he had set himself was
-no light one, even for a strong man possessed by love. These monks
-belonged to an extraordinarily powerful order, and were men of great
-ability.
-
-Here he was, in the very heart of one of their secret centres, which
-was, presumably, political. Fleta and King Otto were under their
-influence. And they were magicians; very certain he felt that they
-knew some of Nature’s secrets, and had trained Fleta in her
-mysterious powers. And from this hidden and carefully guarded place
-he was determined to escape, taking with him its secret—and Fleta!
-Fleta, his love, his own, yet whom he had to win by his strength.
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
-In the long corridor through which Fleta had led Hilary to Father
-Ivan’s room there was another door, which was fastened in a very
-different manner. It was held in its place by iron clamps which
-would puzzle the beholder, for they fastened on the outside as
-though they secured the door of a prison instead of being any
-protection for the inhabitant of the room beyond. It was inside this
-door that Fleta was now lying down to rest for the night. Had Hilary
-known this what agony would have torn him! He would have felt that
-he must break those bars and release the prisoner within them,
-however supernatural the strength might be which would be needed. He
-was spared the sharp pain of knowing this, however, and he was not
-likely to learn it, for a strange sentinel patrolled the long
-corridor with even step—Father Ivan himself. Without any pause he
-went steadily to and fro.
-
-It was about midnight that Father Ivan went into his room and
-glanced at a clock on the chimney-piece; not quite midnight, but
-very nearly. Hilary was lying awake in his room, tossing to and fro
-on a very luxurious and tempting bed, which gave him, however, no
-hope of rest. He had wandered round and round the house a dozen
-times, only to find himself bewildered by its strange shape, and the
-shrubberies which grew up close to the walls, and disheartened by
-the solid barricading of those windows which it was easy to
-approach. And yet at last he found a window wide open, and a room
-brightly lit; a lamp stood on the table and showed the pleasant
-room, well-furnished, and with a bed in it, dressed in fine linen
-and soft laces such as perhaps only members of an ascetic order know
-how to offer to their guests. Hilary stood a moment on the
-threshold, and then suddenly recognised it as his own room. It gave
-him an odd feeling, this, as if he had been watched and arranged
-for; treated like a prisoner. Well, it was useless to evade that
-dark fact—a prisoner he was. Recognising defeat for the moment,
-Hilary determined to accept it as gracefully as might be. He
-entered, closed his window and the strong shutters which folded over
-it, and then quickly laid himself down with intent to sleep. But
-sleep would not come, and he found all his thoughts and all his
-interest centred on Father Ivan. He tried to prevent this but could
-not; he chased Fleta’s image in vain—he could scarcely remember her
-beautiful face! What was its shape and colour? He tortured himself
-in trying to recall the face he loved so dearly. But always Father
-Ivan’s figure was before his eyes; and suddenly it struck him that
-this vision was almost real, for he saw Ivan raise his hand in a
-commanding gesture which seemed to be directed towards himself. A
-moment later and he fell fast asleep, like a tired child. At this
-moment Ivan was standing in his own room, looking for an instant at
-the clock. He stood, perhaps, a little longer than was needed in
-order to see the time; and a frown came on his fine clear forehead
-which drew the arched eyebrows together. Then he turned quickly,
-left his room, and closed its door behind him. He went to the door
-which was so strongly barred, and noiselessly loosened its
-fastenings, which swung heavily yet quite softly away from it. He
-opened the door and went in.
-
-In a sort of curtained recess was a low divan, which quite filled
-it, rising hardly a foot from the ground. This was covered with
-great rugs made of bear and wolf skin. Fleta lay stretched upon
-them, wrapped in a long cloak of some thick white material, which
-was bordered all round with white fur, and, indeed, lined with it,
-too. And yet when Ivan stooped and touched her hand it was cold as
-ice.
-
-“Come,” he said; and turning, went slowly away from her. Fleta rose
-and followed him. Her eyes were half-closed, and had something of
-the appearance of a sleep-walker’s, and yet not altogether, for
-though they appeared dim and unseeing yet there was purpose, and
-consciousness, and resolution in them. No one who had not seen Fleta
-before in this state could have recognised those eyes, so set and
-strange were they. Ivan approached a large curtained archway, and
-drawing the curtain aside he motioned to Fleta to pass through. As
-she did so he touched one of her hands, as it hung at her side.
-Immediately she raised it, and throwing the cloak aside showed that
-she held a white silk mask. Her dress beneath the cloak was of white
-silk. Slowly she raised the mask to her face and was about to put it
-on when a change of state came so suddenly upon her that it was like
-a tropical tornado. She opened her starry eyes wide and vivid light
-flashed from them; she flung the mask away upon the floor and
-clasped her hands violently together, while her whole frame shook
-with emotion.
-
-“Why must I mask myself?” she exclaimed. “You have not told me why.”
-
-“I have,” said Ivan, very quietly. “No woman has ever entered there
-till now.”
-
-“What then?” cried Fleta, fiercely. “There is no shame in being a
-woman! Have I not assailed that door in vain in a different
-character? Now, a woman, I demand entrance. Master, I will not
-disguise myself.”
-
-“Be it so,” said Ivan, “yet take the mask with you lest your mood
-should change again. You were willing, you remember, but a while
-since.”
-
-Fleta stood motionless regarding the mask as it lay on the floor.
-Then she lifted her head suddenly and looked Ivan straight in the
-eyes.
-
-“I will cast my sex from me, and mask my womanhood without any such
-help as that.”
-
-Immediately that she had spoken Ivan walked on. They were in a long
-corridor, lit, and with the walls faintly coloured in pale pink on
-which shone some silver stars. Yet, bright though it was, this
-corridor seemed strangely solemn. Why was it so? Fleta looked from
-side to side, and could not discover. There was something new to her
-which she did not understand. Though she had been instructed in so
-many of the mysteries, and so much of the knowledge of the order,
-she had never entered this corridor, nor indeed had she before known
-of its existence. They slowly neared the end of it where was a high
-door made of oak, and seemingly very solidly fastened; but Father
-Ivan opened it easily enough.
-
-“My God!” cried Fleta instantly, in a low voice of deep amazement.
-“Where am I? What country am I in? Father, was that corridor a magic
-place? This is no longer my own country! How far have you carried me
-in this short time?”
-
-“A long way my daughter; come, do not delay.”
-
-A vast plain, prairie-like, stretched before them, encircled on the
-right by the narrowing end of a huge arm of mountains which
-disappeared upon the far horizon. Upon the plain was one spot, was
-one place, where a livid flame-like light burned, and could be seen,
-though the whole scene was bathed in strong moonlight. Ivan
-commenced to rapidly take his way down a steep path which lay before
-them. And then Fleta became aware that they were themselves upon a
-height and had to descend into the plain. She did not look back; all
-her thoughts were centred on that vivid light which she now saw came
-from the windows of a great building. Then she suddenly saw that a
-number of persons were in the plain; although it was so large yet
-there were enough people to look like a crowd, which was gathering
-together from different directions. All were approaching the
-building.
-
-“Father,” she said to Ivan, who was leading the way rapidly. “Will
-they go in?”
-
-“Into the Temple? Those on the plain? Indeed no. They are outside
-worshippers; that crowd is in the world and of it, and yet has
-courage to come here often when there is no light, and the icy winds
-blow keen across the plain.”
-
-“And they never enter. Why, my master, they can have no strength.”
-
-Ivan glanced back for an instant, a curious look in his eyes.
-
-“It is not always strength that is needed,” he said in a low voice.
-Fleta did not seem to hear him; her eyes were fixed on the temple
-windows. Suddenly she stopped and cried out:
-
-“Is this a dream?”
-
-“You are not asleep,” said Ivan with a smile.
-
-“Asleep! no,” she answered, and went on her way with increased
-rapidity.
-
-Very soon they stood on the plain and advanced with great speed
-towards the temple. Fleta was naturally hardy; but now it seemed to
-her that the very idea of fatigue was absurd. She could scale
-mountains in order to reach that light. And yet what was it in it
-that drew her so? None but herself could have told. But Fleta’s
-heart beat passionately with longing at the sight of it. Ivan turned
-on her a glance of compassion.
-
-“Keep quiet,” he said.
-
-He was answered with a look and tone of fervour.
-
-“Yes: if it is in human power,” she replied.
-
-The great crowds were slowly gathering towards the temple and formed
-themselves into masses of silent and scarcely moving figures. Fleta
-was now among them and though so absorbed by the idea of the goal
-before her, she was attracted by the strange appearance of these
-people. They were of all ages and nationalities, but more than
-two-thirds of them were men; they one and all had the appearance of
-sleep-walkers, seeming perfectly unconscious of the scene in which
-they moved and of their object in reaching it. Their whole nature
-was turned inwards; so it appeared to Fleta. Why then had they come
-to this strange place, so difficult of access, if when come they
-could neither see nor hear? Fleta considered these things rapidly in
-her mind and would again have asked an explanation of Father Ivan
-but that while her steps slackened a little, his had hastened. He
-had already reached the door of the temple—when Fleta reached it he
-was not there. Of course he had entered, and Fleta, without fear or
-hesitation, put her hand on the great bar which held the door and
-lifted it. It was not difficult to lift; it seemed to yield to her
-touch, and swung back smoothly. With a slight push the great door
-opened a little before her—not wide; only as far as she had pushed
-it. Ah! there was the light! There, in her eyes! It was like life
-and joy to Fleta. She turned her eyes up to gaze on it, and stood an
-instant with her hands clasped, in ecstacy.
-
-Someone brushed lightly by, and, passing her, went straight in. That
-reminded her that she, too, desired to go straight in. She nerved
-herself for the supreme effort. For she was learned enough to know
-that only the initiate in her faith could enter that door; and she
-had not, in any outward form, passed the initiation. But she
-believed she had passed it in her soul; she had tested her emotions
-on every side and found the world was nothing to her; she had flung
-her mask away believing her woman’s shape and face to be the merest
-outward appearance, which would be unseen at the great moment. And
-now it hardly seemed as if she were a woman—she stood transfigured
-by the nobility of her aspirations—and some who stood on the step
-outside remained there awestruck by her majestic beauty. By a
-supreme effort she resolved to face all—and to conquer all. She
-boldly entered the door and went up the white marble steps within
-it. A great hall was before her, flooded with the clear, soft light
-she loved; an innumerable number of objects presented themselves to
-her amazed eyes, but she did not pause to look at them—she guessed
-that the walls were jewelled from their sparkling—she guessed that
-the floor was covered with flowers, which lay on a polished silver
-surface, from the gleaming and the colour—and who were these, the
-figures in silver dresses with a jewel like an eye that saw, clasped
-at the neck? A number came towards her. She would not allow herself
-to feel too exultant—she tried to steady herself—and yet joy came
-wildly into her heart, for she felt that she was already one of this
-august company. But their faces, as they gathered nearer, were all
-strange and unfamiliar. She looked from one to another.
-
-“Where is Ivan?” she murmured.
-
-Suddenly all was changed. The white figures grew in numbers till
-there seemed thousands—with outstretched hands they pushed Fleta
-down the steps—down, down, down, resist how she might. She did more!
-She fought, she battled, she cried aloud, first for justice, then
-for pity. But there was no relenting, no softening in these
-superhuman faces. Fleta fled at last from their overpowering numbers
-and inexorable cruelty, and then there came a great cry of voices,
-all uttering the same words;
-
-“You love him! Go!”
-
-Fleta fell, stunned and broken, at the foot of the outer step, and
-the great door closed behind her. But she was not unconscious for
-more than a few minutes. She opened her eyes and looked at the
-starry sky. Then she felt suddenly that she could not endure even
-that light and that the stars were reading her soul. She rose and
-hurried away, blindly following in any path that her feet found. It
-did not take her to any familiar place. She found herself in a dark
-wood. The moss was soft and fragrant and violets scented it. She lay
-down upon it, drawing her white cloak round her and hiding her eyes
-from the light.
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
-It seemed to her that for long ages she was alone. Her mind achieved
-great strides of thought which at another time would have appeared
-impossible to her. She saw before her clearly her own folly, her own
-mistake. Yesterday she would not have credited it—yesterday it would
-have been unmeaning to her. But now she understood it, and
-understood too how heavy and terrible was her punishment; for it was
-already upon her. She lay helpless, her eyes shut, her whole body
-nerveless. Her punishment was here. She had lost all hope, all
-faith.
-
-A gentle touch on her hand roused her consciousness, but she was too
-indifferent to open her eyes. It mattered little to her what or who
-was near her. The battle of her soul was now the only real thing in
-life to her.
-
-A voice that seemed strangely familiar fell on her ears; yet last
-time she had heard it it was loud, fierce, arrogant; now it was
-tender and soft, and full of an overwhelming wonder and pity.
-
-“You, Princess Fleta, here? My God! what can have happened? Surely
-she is not dead? No! What is it, then?”
-
-Fleta slowly opened her eyes. It was Hilary who knelt beside her;
-she was lying on the dewy grass, and Hilary knelt there, the morning
-sun shining on his head and lighting up his beautiful boy’s face.
-And Fleta as she lay and looked dully at him felt herself to be
-immeasurably older than he was; to be possessed of knowledge and
-experience which seemed immense by his ignorance. And yet she lay
-here, nerveless, hopeless.
-
-“What is it?” again asked Hilary, growing momently more distressed.
-
-“Do you want to know?” she said gently, and yet with an accent of
-pity that was almost contempt in her tone. “You would not
-understand.”
-
-“Oh, tell me!” said Hilary. “I love you—let me serve you!”
-
-She hardly seemed to hear his words, but his voice of entreaty made
-her go on speaking in answer:
-
-“I have tried,” she said, “and failed.”
-
-“Tried what?” exclaimed Hilary, “and how failed? Oh, my Princess, I
-believe these devils of priests have given you some fever—you do not
-know what you are saying!”
-
-“I know very well,” replied Fleta; “I am in no fever. I am all but
-dead—that is no strange thing, for I am stricken.” Hilary looked at
-her as she lay, and saw that her words were true. How strange a
-figure she looked, lying there so immovably, as if crushed or dead,
-upon the dewy grass; wrapped in her white robes. And her face was
-white with a terrible whiteness; the great eyes looked out from the
-white face with a sad, smileless gaze; and would those pale drawn
-lips never smile again? Was the radiant, brilliant Fleta changed for
-ever into this paralysed white creature? Hilary knew that even if it
-was so he loved her more passionately and devotedly than before. His
-soul yearned towards her.
-
-“Tell me, explain to me, what has done this?” he cried out, growing
-almost incoherent in his passionate distress. “I demand to know by
-my love for you. What have you tried to do in this awful past
-night?”
-
-Fleta opened her eyes, the lids of which had drooped heavily, and
-looked straight into his as she answered:
-
-“I have tried for the Mark of the White Brotherhood. I have tried to
-pass the first initiation of the Great Order. I did not dream I
-could fail, for I have passed through many initiations which men
-regard with fear. But I have failed.”
-
-“I cannot believe,” said Hilary, “that you could fail in anything.
-You are—dreaming—you are feverish. Let me lift you, let me carry you
-into the house.”
-
-“Yes, I have failed,” answered Fleta dully; “failed, because I had
-not measured the strength of my humanity. It is in me—in me still! I
-am the same as any other woman in this land. I, who thought myself
-supreme—I, who thought myself capable of great deeds! Ah, Hilary,
-the first simple lesson is yet unlearned. I have failed because I
-loved—because I love like any other fond and foolish woman! And yet
-no spark of any part of love but devotion is in my soul. That is too
-gross. Is it possible to purge even that away? Yes, those of the
-White Brotherhood have done it. I will do it even if it take me a
-thousand years, a dozen lifetimes!”
-
-She had raised herself from the ground as she spoke, for a new
-fierce passion had taken the place of the dull despair in her
-manner; she had raised herself to her feet, and then unable to stand
-had fallen on to her knees. Hilary listened yet hardly heard; only
-some of her words hurried into his mind. He bent down till his face
-touched her white cloak where it lay on the grass, and kissed it a
-dozen times.
-
-“You have failed because of love? Oh, my Princess, then it is not
-failure! Men live for love, men die for love! It is the golden power
-of life. Oh, my Princess, let me take you from this terrible
-place—come back with me to the world where men and women know love
-to be the one great joy for which all else is well lost. Fleta,
-while I doubted that you loved me I was as wax; but now that I know
-you do, and with a love so great that it has power to check the
-career of your soul, now I am strong, I am able to do all that a
-strong man can do. Come, let me raise you and take you away from
-here to a place of peace and delight!”
-
-He had risen to his feet and stood before her, looking magnificent
-in the morning sunshine. He was slight of build, yet that slightness
-was really indicative of strength; when Hilary Estanol had been
-effeminate it was because he had not cared to be anything else. He
-stood grandly now, his hands stretched towards her; a man, lofty,
-transformed by the power of love. Fleta looking at him saw in his
-brilliant eyes the gleam of the conquering savage. She rose suddenly
-and confronted him.
-
-“You are mistaken,” she said abruptly. “It is not you that I love.”
-
-Then, as suddenly as Fleta had moved and spoken, the man before her
-vanished, with his nobility, and left the savage only, unvarnished,
-unhumanised.
-
-“My God,” gasped Hilary, almost breathless from the sudden blow,
-“then it is that accursed priest?”
-
-“Yes,” answered Fleta, her eyes on his, her voice dull, her whole
-form like that of a statue, so emotionless did she seem, “it is that
-accursed priest.”
-
-She moved away from him and looked about her. The spot was familiar.
-She was in the woodland about the monastery. She could find her way
-home now without difficulty. And yet how weak she was, and how hard
-it was to take each footstep! After moving a few paces she stood
-still and tried to rouse herself, tried to use her powerful will.
-
-“Where are my servants?” she said in a low voice. “Where are those
-who do my bidding?”
-
-She closed her eyes, and standing there in the sunlight, used all
-her power to call the forces into action which she had learned to
-control. For she was a sufficiently learned magician to be the
-mistress of some of the secrets of Nature. But now it seemed she was
-helpless—her old powers were gone. A low, bitter cry of anguish
-escaped from her lips as she realised this awful fact. Hilary,
-terrified by the strange sound of her voice, hastily approached her
-and looked into her face. Those dark eyes, once so full of power,
-were now full of an agony such as one sees in the eyes of a hunted
-and dying creature. Yet Fleta did not faint or fail, or cling to the
-strong man who stood by her side. After a moment she spoke, with a
-faint yet steady voice.
-
-“Do you know the way to the gate?” she asked.
-
-“Yes,” replied Hilary; who indeed had but recently explored the
-whole demesne.
-
-“Take my hand,” she said, “and lead me there.”
-
-She used her natural power of royal command now; feeble though she
-was, she was the princess. Hilary did not dream of disobeying her.
-He took the cold and lifeless hand she extended to him, and led her
-as quickly as was possible over the grass, through the trees and
-flowering shrubs, to the gateway. As they neared it she spoke:
-
-“You are to go back to the city,” she said. “Do not ask why—you must
-go; yet I will tell you this—it is for your own safety. I have lost
-my power—I can no longer protect you, and there are both angels and
-devils in this place. I have lost all! all! And I have no right to
-risk your sanity as well as my own. You must go.”
-
-“And leave you here?” said Hilary, bewildered.
-
-“I am safe,” she answered proudly. “No power in heaven or earth can
-hurt me now, for I have cast my all on one stake. Know this, Hilary,
-before we part; I shall never yield or surrender. I shall cast out
-that love that kills me from my heart—I shall enter the White
-Brotherhood. And, Hilary, you too will enter it. But, oh! not yet!
-Bitter lessons have you yet to learn! Good-bye, my brother.”
-
-The sentinel who guarded the gate now approached them in his walk;
-Fleta moved quickly towards him. After a few words had passed
-between them he blew a shrill, fine whistle. Then he approached
-Hilary.
-
-“Come,” he said, “I will show you the way for some distance and will
-then obtain you a horse and a guide to the city.”
-
-Hilary did not hesitate in obeying Fleta’s commands; he knew he must
-go. But he turned to look once more into her mysterious face. She
-was no longer there. He bowed his head, and silently followed the
-monk through the gate into the outer freedom of the forest.
-
-Fleta meantime crept back to the house through the shelter of the
-trees. Her figure looked like that of an aged woman, for she was
-bowed almost double and her limbs trembled as she moved. She did not
-go to the centre door of the house, but approached a window which
-opened to the ground and now stood wide. It was the window of
-Fleta’s own room; she hurried towards it with feeble, uncertain
-steps. “Rest! Rest! I must rest!” she kept murmuring to herself. But
-on the very threshold she stumbled and fell. Someone came
-immediately to her and tried to raise her. It was Father Ivan. Fleta
-disengaged herself, tremblingly yet resolutely. She rose with
-difficulty to her feet and gazed very earnestly into his face.
-
-“And you knew why I should fail?” she said.
-
-“Yes,” he answered, “I knew. You are not strong enough to stand
-alone amid the spirit of humanity. I knew you clung to me. Well have
-you suffered from it. I know that very soon you will stand alone.”
-
-“Of what use would that mask have been?” demanded Fleta, pursuing
-her own thoughts.
-
-“None. If you had obeyed me and worn it you would have been of so
-craven a spirit you could never have reached the temple, never have
-seen the White Brotherhood. You have done these things, which are
-more than any other woman has accomplished.”
-
-“I will do yet more,” said Fleta. “I will be one of them.”
-
-“Be it so,” answered Ivan. “To do so you must suffer as no woman has
-yet had strength to suffer. The humanity in you must be crushed out
-as we crush a viper beneath our feet.”
-
-“It shall be. I may die, but I will not pause. Good-bye, my master.
-As I am a queen in the world of men and women, so you are king in
-the world of soul, and to you I have done homage; that homage they
-call love. It is so, perhaps. I am blind yet, and know not. But no
-more may you be my king. I am alone, and all knowledge I gain I must
-now gain myself.”
-
-Ivan bowed his head as if in obedience to an unanswerable decree,
-and in a moment had walked away among the trees. Fleta watched him
-stonily till he was out of sight, then dragged herself within the
-window to fall helplessly upon the ground, shaken by sobs and strong
-shudders of despair.
-
- ---
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
-It was late in the day before Fleta again came out of her room. She
-seemed to have recovered her natural manner and appearance; and yet
-there was a change in her which anyone who knew her well must see.
-She had not been into the general rooms, or greeted the other
-guests; nor did she do so now. Her face was full of resolution, but
-she was calm, at all events externally. Without going near the guest
-rooms or the great entrance hall, she made her way round the house
-to where a very small door stood almost hidden in an angle of the
-wall. It was such a door as might lead to the cellars of a house,
-and when Hilary had explored the night before he had scarcely
-noticed it. But it was exceedingly solid and well fastened. Fleta
-gave a peculiar knock upon it with a fan which she carried in her
-hand. It was immediately opened, and Father Amyot appeared.
-
-“Do you want me?” he asked.
-
-“Yes; I want you to go on an errand for me.”
-
-“Where am I to go?”
-
-“I do not know; probably you will know. I must speak to one of the
-White Brotherhood.”
-
-Amyot’s face clouded and he looked doubtfully at her.
-
-“What is there you can ask that Ivan cannot answer?”
-
-“Does it matter to you?” said Fleta imperiously. “You are my
-messenger, that is all.”
-
-“You cannot command me as before,” said Father Amyot.
-
-“What! do you know that I have failed? Does all the world know it?”
-
-“The world?” echoed Amyot, contemptuously. “No; but all the
-Brotherhood does, and all its servants do. No one has told me, but I
-know it.”
-
-“Of course,” said Fleta to herself. “I am foolish.” She turned away
-and walked up and down on the grass, apparently buried in deep
-thought. Presently she raised her head suddenly, and quickly moved
-towards Amyot, who still stood motionless in the dim shadow of the
-little doorway. She fixed her eyes on him; they were blazing with an
-intense fire. Her whole attitude was one of command.
-
-“Go,” she said.
-
-Father Amyot stood but for a moment; and then he came out slowly
-from the doorway, shutting it behind him.
-
-“You have picked up a lost treasure,” he said. “You have found your
-will again. I obey. Have you told me all your command?”
-
-“Yes. I must speak to one of the White Brothers. What more can I
-say? I do not know one from another. Only be quick!”
-
-Instantly Amyot strode away over the grass and disappeared. Fleta
-moved slowly away, thinking so deeply that she did not know any one
-was near her till a hand was put gently on her arm. She looked up,
-and saw before her the young king, Otto.
-
-“Have you been ill,” he asked, looking closely into her face.
-
-“No,” she answered. “I have only been living fast—a century of
-experience in a single night! Shall I talk to you about it, my
-friend?”
-
-“I think not,” answered Otto, who now was walking quietly by her
-side. “I may not readily understand you. I am anxious above all to
-advance slowly and grasp each truth as it comes to me. I have been
-talking a long time to-day to Father Ivan; and I feel that I cannot
-yet understand the doctrines of the order except as interpreted
-through religion.”
-
-“Through religion?” said Fleta. “But that is a mere externality.”
-
-“True, and intellectually I see that. But I am not strong enough to
-stand without any external form to cling to. The precepts of
-religion, the duty of each towards humanity, the principle of
-sacrifice one for another, these things I can understand. Beyond
-that I cannot yet go. Are you disappointed with me?”
-
-“No, indeed,” answered Fleta. “Why should I be.”
-
-Otto gave a slight sigh as of relief. “I feared you might be,” he
-answered; “but I preferred to be honest. I am ready, Fleta, to be a
-member of the order, a devout member of the external Brotherhood.
-How far does that place me from you who claim a place among the wise
-ones of the inner Brotherhood.”
-
-Fleta looked at him very seriously and gravely.
-
-“I claim it,” she said; “but is it mine? Yet I will win it, Otto;
-even at the uttermost price, I will make it mine.”
-
-“And at what cost?” said Otto. “What is that uttermost price?”
-
-“I think,” she said slowly, “I already feel what it is. I must learn
-to live in the plain as contentedly as on the mountain tops. I have
-hungered to leave my place in the world, to go to those haunts where
-only a few great ones of the earth dwell, and from them learn the
-secret of how to finally escape from the life of earth altogether.
-That has been my dream, Otto, put into simple words; the old dream
-of the Rosicrucian and those hungerers after the occult who have
-always haunted the world like ghosts, unsatisfied, homeless. Because
-I am a strong-willed creature, because I have learned how to use my
-will, because I have been taught a few tricks of magic I fancied
-myself fitted to be one of the White Brotherhood. Well, it is not
-so. I have failed. I shall be your queen, Otto.”
-
-The young king turned on her a sudden look full of mingled emotions.
-“Is that to be, Fleta? Then may I be worthy of your companionship.”
-
-Fleta had spoken bitterly, though not ungently. Otto’s reply had
-been in a strange tone, that had exultation, reverence, gladness, in
-it; but not any of the passion which is called love. A coquette
-would have been provoked by a manner so entirely that of friendship.
-
-“Otto,” said Fleta, after a moment’s pause, during which they had
-walked on side by side. “I am going to test your generosity. Will
-you leave me now?”
-
-“My generosity?” exclaimed Otto. “How is it possible for you to
-address me in that way?” Without any further word of explanation he
-turned on his heel and walked quickly away. Fleta understood his
-meaning very well; she smiled softly as she looked for a moment
-after him. Then, as he vanished, her whole face changed, her whole
-expression of attitude, too. For a little while she stood quite
-still, seemingly wrapt in thought. Then steadily and swiftly she
-began to move across the grass and afterwards to thread her way
-through the trees. Having once commenced to move, she seemed to have
-no hesitation as to the direction in which she was going. And,
-indeed, if you had been able to ask her how she knew what path to
-take, she would have answered that it was very easy to know. For she
-was guided by a direct call from Amyot, as plainly heard as any
-human voice, though audible only to her inner hearing. To Fleta, the
-consciousness of the double life—the spiritual and the natural—was a
-matter of constant experience, and, therefore, there was no need for
-the darkness of midnight to enable her to hear a voice from what
-ordinary men and women call the unseen world. To Fleta it was no
-more unseen than unheard. She saw at once, conquering time and
-space, the spot where she would find Father Amyot at the end of her
-rapid walk; and more, the state she would find him in. The sun
-streamed in its full power and splendour straight on the strange
-figure of the monk, lying rigidly upon the grass. Fleta stood beside
-him and looked down on his face, upturned to the sky. For a little
-while she did nothing, but stood there with a frown upon her
-forehead and her dark eyes full of fierce and changing feeling.
-Amyot was in one of his profound trances, when, though not dead, yet
-he was as one dead.
-
-“Already my difficulties crowd around me,” exclaimed Fleta aloud.
-“What folly shall I unknowingly commit next? My poor servant—dare I
-even try to restore you—or will Nature be a safer friend?”
-
-Full of doubt and hesitation, she turned slowly away and began to
-pace up and down the grass beside the figure of the priest.
-Presently she became aware that she was not alone—some one was near
-her. She started and turned quickly. Ivan stood but a pace from her,
-and his eyes were fixed very earnestly upon her.
-
-He was not dressed as a priest, but wore a simple hunting dress,
-such as an ordinary sportsman or the king incognito might wear.
-Simple it was, and made of coarse materials; but its easy make
-showed a magnificent figure which the monkish robes had disguised.
-His face had on it a deep and almost pathetic seriousness; and yet
-it was so handsome, so nobly cut, and made so brilliant by the deep
-blue eyes, which were bluer than their wont now, even in the full
-blaze of the sun—that in fact as a man merely, here stood one who
-might make any woman’s heart, queen or no queen, beat fiercely with
-admiration. Fleta had never seen him like this before; to her he had
-always been the master, the adept in mysterious knowledge, the
-recluse who hid his love of solitude under a monkish veil. This was
-Ivan! Young, superb, a man who must be loved. Fleta stood still and
-silent, answering the gaze of those questioning, serious blue eyes,
-with the purposeful, rebellious look which was just now burning in
-her own. The two stood facing each other for some moments, without
-speaking—without, as it seemed, desiring to speak. But in these
-moments of silence a measuring of strength was made. Fleta spoke
-first.
-
-“Why have you come?” she demanded. “I did not desire your presence.”
-
-“You have questions to ask which I alone can answer.”
-
-“You are the one person who cannot answer them, for I cannot ask
-them of you.”
-
-“It is of me that you must ask them,” was all Ivan’s reply. Then he
-added: “It is of me you have to learn these answers. Learn them by
-experience if you like, and blindly. If you care to speak, you shall
-be answered in words. This will spare you some pain, and save you
-years of wasted time. Are you too proud?”
-
-There was a pause. Then Fleta replied deliberately:
-
-“Yes, I am too proud.”
-
-Ivan bowed his head and turned away. He stooped over Father Amyot,
-and taking a flask from his pocket, rubbed some liquid on the monk’s
-white and rigid lips.
-
-“I forbid you,” said Ivan, “to use your power over Amyot again.”
-
-“You forbid me?” repeated Fleta in a tone of profound amazement.
-Evidently this tone was entirely new to her.
-
-“Yes, and you dare not disobey me. If you do, you will suffer
-instantly.”
-
-Fleta looked the amazement which was evidently beyond her power to
-express in words. Ivan’s manner was cold, almost harsh. Never had he
-addressed her without gentleness before. Hastily she recovered
-herself, and without pausing to address to him any other word she
-turned away and went quickly through the trees and back to the
-house. Otto was standing at one of the windows; she went straight to
-him.
-
-“I wish to go back to the city at once,” she said, “will you order
-my horses?”
-
-“May I come with you?”
-
-“No, but you may follow me to-morrow if you like.”
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-
- SPECULATION.
-
- Man’s reasoning faith can outlive and can ride
- O’er countless speculations. Navies float
- On changeful waves, and for this ark-like boat
- Winds from all quarters, every swelling tide
- Will serve. By all the virgin spheres that glide
- Like timid guests across sky-floor we note
- Where lies the pole-star. Those who only quote
- Their compass, fail, and antique charts must slide
- To error, in this shifting sand of thought
- And _new-found science_, where sweet isles of palm
- And olive sink, that were as land-marks sought,
- While others rise from Ocean’s fertile bed.
- No storm, nor heat, nor cold I fear; my dread
- Is lest the ship should meet a death-like calm.
-
- REVOLUTION.
-
- Ah! wondrous happy rounding universe
- Where suns and moons alike as tears e’er mould
- Themselves to beauteous circles! He that rolled
- The planets, curved their paths; though seas immerse
- Both shattered ship and shell, naught _shall escape_
- Th’ inevitable wheel that must restore
- The seeming lost. The potent buried lore
- Of saint and sage revives to melt and shape
- Our thoughts to comeliness, and souls that leave
- Earth’s shores float back as craft that cruising sails;
- Each blessed gift that hourly from us flies,
- God will rain down albeit in other guise;—
- And e’en the very dew-drop _noon exhales_
- May find again the self-same rose at eve.
-
- MARY W. GALE.
-
-
- TWILIGHT VISIONS.
-
- “At evening time there shall be light.”
- —ZECH. xiv., 7.
-
- The day’s work done, I cast my pen aside
- And rose, with aching eye and troubled brain,
- Thinking how oft my fellow workers here
- Have suffered in the flesh for labours wrought
- In love to all mankind; and how the world
- Cares nought for words which teach not of itself;
- For to the world, itself is all in all,
- And nought outside it can the world conceive
- As real and true. And yet this earth must cease
- To be for ever to each mortal, when
- The Spirit casts off earth, and, in new life
- Will feel and know the world to be the vale
- Of deathly shadows compass’d round about
- With ignorance and error, sin and crime,
- With yearnings, longings, miseries, and griefs,
- And all that makes the “Breath of Lives” to seem
- As Angels wrestling with the powers of hell.
-
- * * * *
-
- A gentle Spirit with the twilight came
- And rested on my soul; then hope with peace,
- Long since to me as strangers, touched my heart,
- And, sitting at the organ, soft and sweet
- There streamed a flow of harmony, tho’ I
- Scarce seemed to touch the keys, yet simple hymns
- Called forth a train of Spirits bright and young,
- Amongst them saw I all that I had known
- And loved in days when life seem’d sweet to me.
- I was a child again, and saw myself
- As such—no aching eye—no troubled brain
- Had that young being who in faith and hope
- Sang songs of holiness, of peace and truth—
- There, resting on his Mother’s breast, with arms
- Clasped round her neck, with loving eyes that watched
- The loving face, whereon a parent’s smile
- Was ever present in the days now past,
- Now buried in the dust with former things.
-
- * * * *
-
- In saddened notes swelled forth “Thy will be done!”
- And then appeared a radiant spirit form
- Of one who, as a babe, was called away,
- From out this world of wretchedness and sin.
- An infant—which scarce breathed upon the earth
- Ere God, in His great mercy, took her home
- To dwell with Him, and she, an Angel bless’d,
- Now looks in pity on her parents here,
- A weeping witness of the vacant lives
- Which in the world their souls are forced to pass
- As, hung’ring for the love of One in heaven
- They stagger on from day to day in doubt—
- In misery, which none but they can know.
-
- * * * *
-
- Some cursed bonds can ne’er be snapped in twain,
- Save death or sin alone be brought to bear
- To shatter human customs hard and vile,
- And false and horrible as hell itself.
- For man exists in darkness, bound by laws
- Which curse and damn his very soul on earth;
- Mankind will not accept the Master’s words
- Or listen to His cry within the soul.
- And so the world in falsehood wanders on
- And dooms the inner Man of Light again
- To suffer crucifixion in the flesh;
- The Trinity—of Wisdom, Love and Truth—
- The Christ, is absent from this “Christian” World
- And ignorance with hatred lies and sin
- Reign rampant in their infidel abode.
-
- * * * *
-
- “Abide with me, fast falls the eventide.”
- O Lord! we suff’ring mortals here on earth
- Have nought but Thee, Thou Guide of all mankind
- To lead us in our wand’rings, and to turn
- Our falt’ring footsteps from the way of death;
- Thy Angels true are sent to fainting souls,
- And lovingly their voices soft are heard
- Peace! troubled hearts, hereafter all shall be
- Made up in heaven. Know that sufferings
- Are sent in love that we may minister,
- To all your needs, and bear you safely home
- To that good land ordained for all mankind—
- The kingdom bright—of happiness and love,
- Whereon your lives shall ever be a rest
- In one long summer day of light and joy.
- No mortal e’er can comprehend the peace
- Of God, which shall be yours, when, from the world
- Your glorious inner beings stand apart
- For ever! Soon shall you know all that we
- Would tell you now—yet hope and struggle on.
- “At evening time there shall be Light! and then—
- The Living Light shall lead you home to God,
- Home to the place which He hath made,—’tis yours
- For ever! We are sent to tell you this
- And by the Mighty One we do not lie!
-
- * * * *
-
- “O Glorious Angels of our Loving God!
- Pray tell us if this land, we fain would know,
- Contains the dear ones we have loved on earth?
- For what were heaven e’en to us, if we
- Could nevermore be all in all to those
- Who when on earth were all in all to us!”
- A voice replied—’twas one I oft have heard
- And learned to love with more than mortal love,
- “Look up, my own! and see me with thee now
- For ever on this earth. If then ’tis so,
- How canst thou think that I shall ever be
- Apart from thee in heav’n—the land of love
- Wherein alone life’s consummation finds
- A fullness in its own eternal self?
- For God is all—thus He is life and love
- And love eternal is the power that welds
- Each atom in the universal chain
- Of infinite expanse throughout the skies—
- Which ever shows to godly men on earth
- The Power of powers that reigneth over all!”
-
- * * * *
-
- Then in the gloom a glorious form appeared,
- And, standing by my side, it pressed its lips
- Upon the troubled brow which none could calm
- On earth, save she who was beside me then.
- And so an Angel from our loving God
- Came down to comfort, in the eventide—
- To show, by light of love, God’s holy truth,
- Which from the world—in darkness—hath been hid
- Because the world in darkness will exist,
- And, living thus, man sins against himself
- And so against his loving God of Life.
- The promised Light appeared at evening time,
- And by its living rays did I perceive—
- Mankind to wander on in sin and shame;
- Thus HELL prevails to-day where heaven should be....
-
- WM. C. ELDON SERJEANT.
-
-London, _6th December, 1887_.
-
-
- ESOTERICISM OF THE CHRISTIAN DOGMA.
-
- CREATION AS TAUGHT BY MOSES AND THE MAHATMAS.
-
- BY THE ABBÉ ROCA (_Honorary Canon_).
-
- [Extracts translated from the “LOTUS” _Revue des Hautes Etudes
- Theosophiques_. Journal of “Isis,” the French Branch of The
- Theosophical Society. December, 1887. Paris, George Carrés, 58,
- Rue St André des Arts.—VERBAL TRANSLATION.]
-
- I.
-
-Thanks to the light which is now reaching us from the far East
-through the Theosophical organs published in the West, it is easy to
-foresee that the Catholic teaching is about to undergo a
-transformation as profound as it will be glorious. All our dogmas
-will pass from “the letter which killeth” to “the spirit which
-giveth life,” from the mystic and sacramental to the scientific and
-rational form, perhaps even to the stage of experimental methods.
-
-The reign of faith, of mystery and of miracle, is nearing its close;
-this is plain and was, moreover, predicted by Christ himself. Faith
-vanishes from the brains of men of science, to make way for the
-clear perception of the essential truths which had to be veiled at
-the origin of Christianity, under symbols and figures, so as to
-adapt them, as far as possible, to the needs and weaknesses of the
-infancy of our faith.
-
-Strange! It is at the very hour when Europe is attaining the age of
-reason, and when she is visibly entering upon the full possession of
-her powers, that India prepares to hand on to us those loftier ideas
-which exactly meet our new wants, as much from the intellectual, as
-from the moral, religious, social and other standpoints.
-
-One might believe that the “BROTHERS” kept an eye from afar on the
-movements of Christendom, and that from the summits of their
-Himalayan watch towers, they had waited expectantly for the hour
-when they would be able to make us hear them with some chance of
-being understood....
-
-It is certain that the situation in the West is becoming more and
-more serious. Everyone knows whence comes the imminence of the
-catastrophe which threatens us; hitherto men have only evoked the
-animal needs, they have only awakened and unchained the brute forces
-of nature, the passional instincts, the savage energies of the lower
-Kosmos. Christianity does indeed conceal under the profound
-esotericism of its Parables, those truths, scientific, religious,
-and social, which this deplorable situation imperiously demands, but
-sad to say, sad indeed for a priest, hard, hard indeed for Christian
-ears to hear, all our priesthoods, that of the Roman Catholic Church
-equally with those of the Orthodox Russian, the Anglican, the
-Protestant, and the Anglo-American churches, seem struck with
-blindness and impotence in face of the glorious task which they
-would have to fulfil in these terrible circumstances. They see
-nothing; their eyes are plastered and their ears walled up. They do
-not discover; one is tempted to say, they do not even suspect what
-ineffable truths are hidden under the dead letter of their
-teachings.
-
-Say, is it not into that darkness that we are all stumbling, in
-State and in Church, in politics as in religion! A double calamity
-forming but one for the peoples, which suffer horribly under it, and
-for our civilisation which may be shipwrecked on it at any moment.
-May God deliver us from a war at this moment! It would be a
-cataclysm in which Europe would break to pieces in blood and fire,
-as Montesquieu foresaw: “Europe will perish through the soldiers, if
-not saved in time.” We must escape from this empiricism and this
-fearful confusion. But who will save us? The Christ, the true
-Christ, the Christ of esoteric science.[126] And how? Thus: the same
-key which, under the eyes of the scientific bodies, shall open the
-secrets of Nature, will open their own intellects to the secrets of
-true Sociology; the same key which, under the eyes of the
-priesthoods, shall open the Arcana of the mysteries and the gospel
-parables, will open their intellects to these same secrets of
-Sociology. Priests and savants will then develope in the radiance of
-one and the same light.
-
------
-
-Footnote 126:
-
- “The Christ of esoteric science” is the _Christos_ of Spirit—an
- impersonal principle entirely distinct from any carnalised Christ
- or Jesus. Is it this Christos that the learned Canon Roca
- means?—[ED.]
-
------
-
-And this key—I can assert it, for I have proved it in application to
-all our dogmas—THIS KEY IS THE SAME WHICH THE MAHATMAS OFFER AND
-DELIVER TO US AT THIS MOMENT.[127]
-
------
-
-Footnote 127:
-
- The capitals are our own; for these “Mahatmas” are the real
- Founders and “Masters” of the Theosophical Society.—[ED.]
-
------
-
-There is here an interposition of Providence, before which we should
-all of us offer up our own thanksgivings. For my part, I am deeply
-touched by it; I feel I know not what sacred thrill! My gratitude is
-the more keen since, if I confront the Hindu tradition with the
-occult theosophic traditions of Judeo-Christianity, from its origin
-to our own day, through the Holy Kabbala, I can recognise clearly
-the agreement of the teaching of the “Brothers” with the esoteric
-teaching of Moses, Jesus, and Saint Paul.
-
-People are sure to say: “You abase the West before the East, Europe
-before Asia, France before India, Christianity before Buddhism. You
-are betraying at once your Country and your Church, your quality as
-a Frenchman, and your character as a Priest.” Pardon me, gentlemen!
-I abase nothing whatever; I betray nothing at all! A member of
-Humanity, I work for the happiness of Humanity; a son of France, I
-work for the glory of France; a Priest of Jesus Christ, I work for
-the triumph of Jesus Christ. You shall be forced to confess it;
-suspend, therefore, your anathemas, and listen, if you please!
-
-We are traversing a frightful crisis. For the last hundred years we
-have been trying to round the _Cape of Social Tempests_, which I
-spoke of before; we have been enduring, without intermission, the
-fires, the lightnings the thunders, and the earthquakes of an
-unparalleled hurricane, and we feel, clearly enough, that everything
-is giving way around us; under our feet and over our heads! Neither
-pontiffs, nor savants, nor politicians, nor statesmen, show
-themselves capable of snatching us from the abysses towards which we
-are being, one is tempted to say, driven by a fatality! If, then, I
-discover, in the distant East, through the darkness of this tempest,
-the blessed star which alone can guide us, amidst so many shoals,
-safe and sound to the longed-for haven of safety, am I wanting in
-patriotism and religion because I announce to my brethren the rising
-of this beneficent star?...
-
-I know as well as you that it was said to Peter: “I _will_ give thee
-the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, that thou mayest open its gates
-upon earth”; yes, doubtless, but note the tense of this verb: I
-_will give_ thee: in the future. Has the Christian Pontiff already
-received them—those magic Keys? Before replying look and see what
-Rome has made of Christendom; see the lamentable state of Europe;
-not only engaged in open war with foreign nationalities, but also
-exhausting herself in fratricidal wars and preparations to
-consummate her own destruction; behold everywhere Christian against
-Christian, church against church, priesthood against priesthood,
-class against class, school against school, and, often in the same
-family, brother against brother, sons against their father, the
-father against his sons! What a spectacle! And a Pope presides over
-it! And while, all around, men prepare for a general slaughter, he,
-the Pope, thinks only of one thing—of his temporal domain, of his
-material possessions! Think you that this state of things forms the
-Kingdom of Heaven, and say you still that the Pontiff of Rome has
-already received the Keys thereof?
-
-It is written, perchance, in the decrees of Providence, that these
-mysterious Keys shall be brought to the brethren of the West by the
-“Brothers” of the East.... Such is, indeed, the expectation of all
-the nations; the prophetic East sighs for the tenth incarnation of
-Vishnu, which shall be the crown of all the Avatars which have
-preceded it, and the Apocalypse, on its side, announces the
-appearance of the _White Horse_ which is the symbol of the Christ
-risen, glorious and triumphant before the eyes of all the peoples of
-the earth.
-
-This is how I, priest of Jesus Christ, betray Jesus Christ, when I
-acclaim the wisdom of the Mahatmas and their mission in the West!
-
-I have spoken of the opportuneness of the hour chosen by them for
-coming to our help. I must insist upon this point.
-
-[_The Abbé then enforces his argument by references to the position
-of Modern Science, and concludes_:—TR.]
-
-“The phenomena of motion,” by means of which men of science claim to
-explain everything, explain nothing at all, because the very cause
-of that motion is unknown to our physicists as they themselves
-admit. “Consider, say to us the Mahatmas by the mouth of their
-Adepts, that behind each physical energy is hidden another energy,
-which itself serves as envelope to a spiritual force which is the
-living soul of every manifested force.”
-
-And thus Nature offers us an infinite series of forces one within
-another, serving mutually as sheaths, which, as d’Alembert
-suspected, produce all sensible phenomena and reach all points of
-the circumference starting from a central point, which is God....
-
- II.
-
-I can now, after these preliminaries, give an example of the
-transformation which, thanks to the Mahatmas, will soon take place
-in the teaching of the Christian Church. I will take particularly
-the dogma of the _Creation_, informing my readers that they will
-find in a book I am preparing, _The New Heavens and the New Earth_,
-an analogous work on all the dogmas of the Catholic faith.
-
-Matter exists in states of infinite variety, and, sometimes, even of
-opposite appearance. The world is constituted in two poles, the
-North or Spiritual, and the South or Material pole: these two poles
-correspond perfectly and differ only in form, that is, in
-appearance.
-
-Regarded from above, as the Easterns regard it, the universal
-substance presents the aspect of a spiritual or divine _emanation_;
-looked at from below, as the Westerns are in the habit of viewing
-it, it offers, on the contrary, the aspect of a material creation.
-
-One sees at once the difference which must exist between the two
-intellectualities and, consequently, between the two civilisations
-of the East and the West. Yet there is no more error in the Genesis
-of Moses, which is that of the Christian teaching, than there is in
-the Genesis of the Mahatmas, which is that of the Buddhist doctrine.
-The one and the other of these Geneses are absolutely founded on one
-and the same reality. Whether one descends or ascends the scale of
-being, one only traverses, in the East from above downwards, in the
-West from below upwards, the same ladder of essences, more or less
-spiritualised, more or less materialised, according as one
-approaches to, or recedes from, _Pure Spirit_, which is God.
-
-It was, therefore, not worth while to fulminate so much on one side
-or the other, here, against the theory of _emanation_, there,
-against the theory of _Creation_. One always comes back to the
-principle of Hermes Trismegistus: the universe is dual, though
-formed of a single substance. The Kabbalists knew it well, and it
-was taught long ago in the Egyptian sanctuaries, as the occultists
-have never ceased to repeat it in the temples of India.
-
-It will soon be demonstrated, I hope, by scientific experiments such
-as those of Mr. William Crookes, the Academician, that everywhere,
-throughout all nature, _spirit_ and _matter_ are not _two_ but
-_one_, and that they nowhere offer a real division in life. Under
-every physical force there is a spiritual or a psychic force: in the
-heart of the minutest atom is hidden a vital soul, the presence of
-which has been perfectly determined by Claude Bernard in germs
-imperceptible to the naked eye. “This soul, human, animal, vegetal
-or mineral, is but a ray lent by the universal soul to every object
-manifested in the Kosmos.”
-
-“Corporeal man and the sensible universe, says the theosophical
-doctrine, are but the appearance imparted to them by the cohesion of
-the interatomic or inter-astral forces which constitute both
-exteriorly. The visible side of a being is an ever-changing Maya.”
-The language of St. Paul is in no way different: “The aspect of the
-world,” he says, “is a passing vision, an image which passes and
-renews itself continually—_transit figura hujus mundi_.”
-
-“The real man, or the _microcosm_—and one can say as much of the
-_macrocosm_—is an astral force which reveals itself through this
-physical appearance, and which, having existed before the birth of
-this form, does not share its fate at the hour of death: surviving
-its destruction. The material form cannot subsist without the
-spiritual force which sustains it; but the latter is independent of
-the former, for form is created by spirit, and not spirit by form.”
-
-This theory is word for word that of the “Brothers” and the Adepts,
-at the same time it is that of the Kabbalists and the Christians of
-the School of Origen, and the Johannine Church.
-
-There could not be a more perfect agreement. Transfer this teaching
-to the genesis of the Kosmos and you have the secret of the
-formation of the World; at the same time you discover the profound
-meaning of the saying of St. Paul: “The invisible things of God are
-made visible to the eye of man through the visible things of the
-creation,” a saying so well translated by Joseph de Maistre by the
-following: “The world is a vast system of invisible things, visibly
-organised.”
-
-The whole of the Kosmos is like a two-faced medal of which both
-faces are alike. The materialists know only the lower side, while
-the occultists see it from both sides at once; from the front and
-from the back. It is always nature, and the same nature, but _natura
-naturata_ from below, _natura naturans_ from above; here,
-intelligent cause; there, brute effect; spiritual above, corporeal
-below, etherealised at the North, concreted at the South Pole.
-
-The distinction accepted everywhere in the West down to our own day,
-as essential and radical, between spirit on the one hand and matter
-on the other, is no longer sustainable. The progress of science,
-spurred on as it will be by Hindu ideas, will soon force the last
-followers of this infantile belief to abandon it as ridiculous....
-
-Yes, all, absolutely all in the world is life, but life differently
-organised and variously manifested through phenomena which vary
-infinitely from the most spiritualised beings, such as the Angels,
-as well known to Buddhists as to Christians, though called by other
-names, down to the most solidified of beings, such as stones and
-metals. In the bosom of the latter, sleep, in a cataleptic
-condition, milliards of vital elementary spirits. These latter only
-await, to thrill into activity, the stroke of the pick or hammer to
-which they will owe their deliverance and their escape from the
-_limbus_, of which the Hindu doctrine speaks as well as the
-Catholic. Here lies, for these souls of life, the starting point of
-the _Resurrection_ and of the _Ascension_, taught equally by both
-the Eastern and the Western traditions, but not understood among us.
-
-[_The Abbé sketches in eloquent words the development of these
-“spirits of the elements,” and then continues_:—TR.]
-
-But as they ascend, so the spirits can also descend, for they are
-always free to transfigure themselves in the divine light, or to
-bury themselves in the satanic shadow of error and evil. Hence,
-while time is time, “these ceaseless tears and gnashings of teeth”
-of which the gospel Parables speak metaphorically, and which will
-last as long as shall last the elaboration of the social atoms
-destined for the collective composition of the beatific Nirvana.
-
-Nature is ever placing under our eyes examples of organic
-transformations, analagous to those I am speaking of, as if to aid
-us in comprehending our own destiny. But it seems that many men
-“have eyes in order not to see,” as Jesus said. See how in order to
-remove these cataracts, science, even in the West, constantly
-approaching more and more that of the East, is at work producing in
-its turn phenomena, which corroborate at once the Parables of the
-Gospels and the teachings of nature. I will not speak of the
-Salpêtrière and the marvels of hypnotism in the hands of M. Charcot
-and his numerous disciples throughout the whole world. There are
-things which strike me even more.
-
-M. Pictet, at Geneva, is creating diamonds with air and light. This
-should not astonish those who know that our coal mines are nothing
-but “stored-up sunlight.” With an even more marvellous industry, do
-not the flowers extract from the atmosphere the luminous substance
-of which they weave their fine and joyous garments? And “all that is
-sown in the earth under a material form, does it not rise under a
-spiritual form,” as St. Paul says?
-
-The glorious entities, which we call celestial spirits, have
-themselves an organic form. It is defined in the canons of our
-dogma, whatever the ignorance-mongers of ultramontanism may pretend.
-God alone has no body, God alone is _pure Spirit_—and even to speak
-thus we must consider the Deity apart from the person of Jesus
-Christ, for in the “_Word made flesh_” God dwells _corporeally_,
-according to the true and beautiful saying of St. Paul.
-
-And it is because God has no body that he is present everywhere in
-the infinite, under the veils of cosmic light and ether, which serve
-as his garment and under the electric, magnetic, interatomic,
-interplanetary, interstellar and sound fluids, which serve him as
-vehicles....
-
-And it is also because God has no created form that the Kabbala
-could, without error, call him _Non-Being_. Hegel probably felt this
-esoteric truth when he spoke, in his heavy and cumbrous language, of
-the equivalence of Being and Non-Being.
-
-All visible forms are thus the product, at the same time as they are
-the garment and the manifestation, of spiritual forces. All sensible
-order is, in reality, an _organic concretion_, a sort of living
-_crystallisation_ of intelligent powers fallen from the state of
-_spirituality_ into the state of materiality; in other words, fallen
-from the North to the South pole of nature, in consequence of a
-catastrophe called by Holy Scripture the _Fall from Eden_. This
-cataclysm was the punishment of a frightful crime, of an audacious
-revolt spoken of in the traditions of all Temples and called in our
-dogma _original sin_. The primary priesthood of the Christian church
-has hitherto lacked the light needed to explain this biological
-phenomenon, which is an ascertained fact of physiology and
-sociology, as I hope to prove. Questioned on this point, the priests
-have always replied: It is a mystery. Now there are no mysteries
-save for ignorance, and the Christ announced that “every hidden
-thing should be brought to light, and proclaimed on the house-tops.”
-
-This is why so many new lights, coming from the East and elsewhere,
-enter scientifically, in our day, into the Christian mind. Glory to
-the Theosophists, glory to the Adepts, glory to the Kabbalists,
-glory above all to the Hermetists everywhere, glory to those new
-missionaries whose coming M. de Maistre foresaw, and whom M. de
-Saint-Ives d’Alveydre lately hailed as the elect of God, charged by
-him to establish a communion of knowledge and of love between all
-the religious centres of the earth!
-
-Priests of the Roman Catholic Church, we shall enter in our turn
-this wise communion of saints, on the day when we shall consent to
-read anew our sacred texts, no longer in “the dead letter” of their
-exotericism, but in the “living spirit” of their esotericism, and in
-the threefold sense which Christian tradition has always canonically
-recognised in them.
-
- L’ABBE ROCA (_Chanoine_).
-
-Chateau de Pallestres, France.
-
- [This is a very optimistic way of putting it, and if realized
- would be like pouring the elixir of life into the decrepit body of
- the Latin Church. But what will his Holiness the Pope say to
- it?—ED.]
-
-
- THE GREAT QUEST.
-
- CONTINUED from the December (1887) number.
-
-The Religionist, of course, denies that man can become a god or ever
-realise in himself the attributes of Deity. He may recognise the
-necessity of re-incarnation for ordinary worldly men, and even for
-those who are not constant in their detachment and devotion, but he
-denies the necessity for that series of trials and initiations which
-must cover, at all events, more than one life-time—probably many. It
-would appear as if the theory of evolution might be called in, to
-aid this latter view. If it is acknowledged that we, as individuals,
-have been for ever whirling on the wheel of conditioned existence;
-if at the beginning of each manwantara the divine monad which
-through the beginningless past has inhabited in succession the
-vegetable, animal, and human forms, takes to itself a house of flesh
-in exact accordance with previous Karma, it will be seen that (while
-inhabiting a human body) during no moment in the past eternity have
-we been nearer the attainment of Nirvana than at any other. If then
-there is no thinkable connection between evolution and Nirvana, to
-imagine that evolution, through stages of Adeptship, conducts to
-Nirvana, is a delusion. “It is purely a question of divine
-grace”—says the Religionist. If in answer to this view, it is
-contended that the light of the Logos is bound, eventually, to reach
-and enlighten every individual, and that the steady progress to
-perfection through Chelaship and Adeptship would, therefore, be a
-logical conclusion, it is objected that to assert that the light of
-the Logos must eventually reach and enlighten all, would involve the
-ultimate extinction of the objective Universe, which is admitted to
-be without beginning or end, although it passes through alternate
-periods of manifestation and non-manifestation. If to escape from
-this untenable position we postulate fresh emanations of Deity into
-the lowest organisms at the beginning of each manwantara, to take
-the place of those who pass away into Nirvana, we are met by other
-difficulties. Firstly, putting out of consideration the fact that
-such a supposition is expressly denied by what is acknowledged as
-revelation, the projection into the evolutionary process of a monad
-free from all Karma, makes the law of Karma inoperative, for the
-monad’s first association with Karma remains unexplained; and also
-it becomes impossible to say what the monad was, and what was the
-mode of its being prior to the projection into evolution. It must be
-noted that although the law of Karma does not explain _why_ we are,
-yet it satisfactorily shows _how_ we are what we are; and this is
-the _raison d’être_ of the law. But the above theory takes away its
-occupation. It makes Karma and the monad independent realities,
-joined together by the creative energy of the Deity, while Karma
-ought to be regarded as a mode of existence of the monad—which mode
-ceases to be when another mode, called liberation, takes its place.
-Secondly, if the monad in attaining liberation only attains to what
-it was before its association with Karma, _à quoi bon_ the whole
-process; while, if it is stated that the monad was altogether
-non-existent before its projection, the Deity becomes responsible
-for all our sufferings and sins, and we fall into either the
-Calvinist doctrine of predestination as popularly conceived, or into
-the still more blasphemous doctrine of the worshippers of Ahriman,
-besides incurring many logical difficulties. The teaching of our
-eastern philosophers is that the real interior nature of the monad
-is the same as the real interior essence of the Godhead, but from
-beginningless past time it has a transitory nature, considered
-illusive, and the mode in which this illusion works is known by the
-name of Karma.
-
-But were we not led astray in the first instance? Ought we not to
-have acquiesced in the first above given definition of the theory of
-evolution? The premiss was satisfactory enough—the mistake was in
-allowing the religionist’s deduction as a logical necessity. When
-the religionist states that there is no thinkable connection between
-evolution and Nirvana, he merely postulates for the word evolution a
-more limited scope than that which the Occultist attaches to it,
-viz., the development of soul as well as that of mere form. He is
-indeed right in stating that the natural man, while he remains such,
-will never attain the ultimate goal of Being. True it is, for the
-Occultist as for the religionist, that, to free himself from the
-fatal circle of rebirths, he must “burst the shell which holds him
-in darkness—tear the veil that hides him from the eternal.” The
-religionist may call this the act of divine grace; but it may be
-quite as correctly described as the “awakening of the slumbering God
-within.” But the error of the religionist is surely in mistaking the
-first glimmer of the divine consciousness for a guarantee of final
-emancipation, at, say, the next death of the body, instead of merely
-the first step of a probationary stage in the long vista of work for
-Humanity on the higher planes of Being!
-
-To provide ourselves with an analogy from the very theory of
-Evolution which we have been discussing, is it not more logical to
-imagine that, in the same way in which we see stretched at our feet
-the infinite gradations of existence, through the lower animal,
-vegetable, and mineral kingdoms—between which indeed, thanks to the
-recent investigations of scientific men—there is no longer
-recognised to be any distinct line of demarcation—so the heights
-(necessarily hidden from our view) which still remain to be scaled
-by us in our upward progress to Divinity, should be similarly filled
-with the gradations of the unseen hierarchy of Being? And that, as
-we have evolved during millions of centuries of earth-life through
-these lower forms up to the position we now occupy, so may we, if we
-choose, start on a new and better road of progress, apart from the
-ordinary evolution of Humanity, but in which there must also be
-innumerable grades?
-
-That there will be progress for Humanity as a whole, in the
-direction of greater spirituality, there is no doubt, but that
-progress will be partaken of by continually decreasing numbers.
-Whether the weeding out takes place at the middle of the “great
-fifth round,” or whether it be continually taking place during the
-evolutionary process, a ray of light is here thrown on the statement
-met with in all the Bibles of Humanity as to the great difficulty of
-the attainment. “For straight is the gate, and narrow is the way
-that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it; but wide is
-the gate, and broad is the way that leadeth unto destruction, and
-many there be that go in thereat.” This and parallel passages
-doubtless refer to the weeding out of those who are unfit to
-continue the progress, on which the more spiritualized Humanity will
-then have entered. The most vivid picture of the comparative handful
-of elect souls, who are fit to achieve the great quest, will be
-obtained by contemplating the fact already stated, that the
-objective universe, with its myriads of inhabitants, will never, in
-the vast abysses of the future, cease to be; and that the great
-majority of humanity—the millions of millions—will thus for ever
-whirl on the wheel of birth and death.
-
-But though Nature may give us an almost infinite number of chances
-to attempt the great quest, it were madness to put by the chance
-offered now, and allow the old sense-attractions to regain their
-dominance, for it must be remembered that the barbarism and anarchy
-which every civilisation must eventually lapse into, are periods of
-spiritual deadness, and that it is when “the flower of civilisation
-has blown to its full, and when its petals are but slackly held
-together,” that the goad within men causes them to lift their eyes
-to the sunlit mountains, and “to recognise in the bewildering
-glitter the outlines of the Gates of Gold.”
-
-There are no doubt realms in the Devaloka where the bliss of heaven
-may be realised by those who aspire to the selfish rewards of
-personal satisfaction, but these cease to exist with the end of the
-manwantara, and with the beginning of the next the devotee will
-again have to endure incarceration in flesh. The eighth chapter of
-the Bhagavad Gita does indeed state that there is a path to Nirvana
-through the Devaloka, and amongst the countless possibilities of the
-Infinite who shall assert that this is not so? but the context
-surely implies such a detachment and devotion through life as is
-difficult for us even to contemplate, much less to realize.
-
-However distant, therefore, may appear to us the achievement of the
-great quest, when we consider how much more closely we are allied to
-the animal than to the God, it must necessarily seem an infinitely
-far-off goal, but though we may have to pass through many life-times
-before we reach it, our most earnest prayer should be, that we may
-never lose sight of that celestial goal, for surely it is the one
-thing worthy of achievement!
-
-To many the foregoing may appear as mere speculations, and the
-firmest faith indeed can scarcely call itself knowledge, but,
-however necessary the complete knowledge may be, we may at least
-hope that its partial possession is adequate to the requirements of
-the occasion. To us whose feet tread, often wearily, towards the
-path of the great quest, and whose eyes strain blindly through the
-mists that wrap us round, steady perseverance and omnipotent hope
-must be the watch-words—perseverance to struggle on, though the
-fiends of the lower self may make every step a battle, and hope that
-at any moment the entrance to the path may be found.
-
-As an example of these two qualities, and also because all words
-that strike a high key are bound to awaken responsive echoes in
-noble hearts, let us conclude with the following extract from the
-Ramayana:—
-
-“Thus spoke Rama. Virtue is a service man owes himself, and though
-there were no heaven nor any God to rule the world, it were not less
-the binding law of life. It is man’s privilege to know the right and
-follow it. Betray and persecute me brother men! Pour out your rage
-on me O malignant devils! Smile, or watch my agony in cold disdain
-ye blissful Gods! Earth, hell, heaven combine your might to crush
-me—I will still hold fast by this inheritance! My strength is
-nothing—time can shake and cripple it; my youth is transient—already
-grief has withered up my days; my heart—alas! it is well-nigh broken
-now. Anguish may crush it utterly, and life may fail; but even so my
-soul that has not tripped shall triumph, and dying, give the lie to
-soulless destiny that dares to boast itself man’s master.”
-
- “PILGRIM.”
-
-[Illustration: decorative description]
-
- WHISPER OF A ROSE.
-
- Behold me! an offspring of Darkness and Light.
- With soft, tender petals of radiant white,
- With golden heart mystery, full of perfume
- That is Soul of my Breath—the Secret of Bloom.
-
- Infinity’s centre is heart of the rose,
- And th’ breath of Creation its perfume that flows
- Through ages and eons and time yet untold—
- But the _Soul_ of the _Breath_ I may not unfold.
-
- MORA.
-
- THE SECLUSION OF THE ADEPT.
-
- [CONTINUATION OF “COMMENTS ON LIGHT ON THE PATH,” BY THE AUTHOR.]
-
- “Before the voice can speak in the presence of the Masters, it
- must have lost the power to wound.”
-
-Those who give a merely passing and superficial attention to the
-subject of occultism—and their name is Legion—constantly inquire
-why, if adepts in life exist, they do not appear in the world and
-show their power. That the chief body of these wise ones should be
-understood to dwell beyond the fastnesses of the Himalayas, appears
-to be a sufficient proof that they are only figures of straw.
-Otherwise, why place them so far off?
-
-Unfortunately, Nature has done this and not personal choice or
-arrangement. There are certain spots on the earth where the advance
-of “civilisation” is unfelt, and the nineteenth century fever is
-kept at bay. In these favoured places there is always time, always
-opportunity, for the realities of life; they are not crowded out by
-the doings of an inchoate, money-loving, pleasure seeking society.
-While there are adepts upon the earth, the earth must preserve to
-them places of seclusion. This is a fact in nature which is only an
-external expression of a profound fact in super-nature.
-
-The demand of the neophyte remains unheard until the voice in which
-it is uttered has lost the power to wound. This is because the
-divine-astral life[128] is a place in which order reigns, just as it
-does in natural life. There is, of course, always the centre and the
-circumference as there is in nature. Close to the central heart of
-life, on any plane, there is knowledge, there order reigns
-completely; and chaos makes dim and confused the outer margin of the
-circle. In fact, life in every form bears a more or less strong
-resemblance to a philosophic school. There are always the devotees
-of knowledge who forget their own lives in their pursuit of it;
-there are always the flippant crowd who come and go——Of such,
-Epictetus said that it was as easy to teach them philosophy as to
-eat custard with a fork. The same state exists in the super-astral
-life; and the adept has an even deeper and more profound seclusion
-there in which to dwell. This place of retreat is so safe, so
-sheltered, that no sound which has discord in it can reach his ears.
-Why should this be, will be asked at once, if he is a being of such
-great powers as those say who believe in his existence? The answer
-seems very apparent. He serves humanity and identifies himself with
-the whole world; he is ready to make vicarious sacrifice for it at
-any moment—_by living not by dying for it_. Why should he not die
-for it? Because he is part of the great whole, and one of the most
-valuable parts of it. Because he lives under laws of order which he
-does not desire to break. His life is not his own, but that of the
-forces which work behind him. He is the flower of humanity, the
-bloom which contains the divine seed. He is, in his own person, a
-treasure of the universal nature, which is guarded and made safe in
-order that the fruition shall be perfected. It is only at definite
-periods of the world’s history that he is allowed to go among the
-herd of men as their redeemer. But for those who have the power to
-separate themselves from this herd he is always at hand. And for
-those who are strong enough to conquer the vices of the personal
-human nature, as set forth in these four rules, he is consciously at
-hand, easily recognised, ready to answer.
-
------
-
-Footnote 128:
-
- Of course every occultist knows by reading Eliphas Levi and other
- authors that the “astral” plane is a plane of unequalised forces,
- and that a state of confusion necessarily prevails. But this does
- not apply to the “divine astral” plane, which is a plane where
- wisdom, and therefore order, prevails.
-
------
-
-But this conquering of self implies a destruction of qualities which
-most men regard as not only indestructible but desirable. The “power
-to wound” includes much that men value, not only in themselves, but
-in others. The instinct of self-defence and of self-preservation is
-part of it; the idea that one has any right or rights, either as
-citizen, or man, or individual, the pleasant consciousness of
-self-respect and of virtue. These are hard sayings to many; yet they
-are true. For these words that I am writing now, and those which I
-have written on this subject, are not in any sense my own. They are
-drawn from the traditions of the lodge of the Great Brotherhood,
-which was once the secret splendour of Egypt. The rules written in
-its ante-chamber were the same as those now written in the
-ante-chamber of existing schools. Through all time the wise men have
-lived apart from the mass. And even when some temporary purpose or
-object induces one of them to come into the midst of human life, his
-seclusion and safety is preserved as completely as ever. It is part
-of his inheritance, part of his position, he has an actual title to
-it, and can no more put it aside than the Duke of Westminster can
-say he does not choose to be the Duke of Westminster. In the various
-great cities of the world an adept lives for a while from time to
-time, or perhaps only passes through; but all are occasionally aided
-by the actual power and presence of one of these men. Here in
-London, as in Paris and St. Petersburgh, there are men high in
-development. But they are only known as mystics by those who have
-the power to recognise; the power given by the conquering of self.
-Otherwise how could they exist, even for an hour, in such a mental
-and psychic atmosphere as is created by the confusion and disorder
-of a city? Unless protected and made safe their own growth would be
-interfered with, their work injured. And the neophyte may meet an
-adept in the flesh, may live in the same house with him, and yet be
-unable to recognise him, and unable to make his own voice heard by
-him. For no nearness in space, no closeness of relations, no daily
-intimacy, can do away with the inexorable laws which give the adept
-his seclusion. No voice penetrates to his inner hearing till it has
-become a divine voice, a voice which gives no utterance to the cries
-of self. Any lesser appeal would be as useless, as much a waste of
-energy and power, as for mere children who are learning their
-alphabet to be taught it by a professor of philology. Until a man
-has become, in heart and spirit, a disciple, he has no existence for
-those who are teachers of disciples. And he becomes this by one
-method only—the surrender of his personal humanity.
-
-For the voice to have lost the power to wound, a man must have
-reached that point where he sees himself only as one of the vast
-multitudes that live; one of the sands washed hither and thither by
-the sea of vibratory existence. It is said that every grain of sand
-in the ocean bed does, in its turn, get washed up on to the shore
-and lie for a moment in the sunshine. So with human beings, they are
-driven hither and thither by a great force, and each, in his turn,
-finds the sunrays on him. When a man is able to regard his own life
-as part of a whole like this he will no longer struggle in order to
-obtain anything for himself. This is the surrender of personal
-rights. The ordinary man expects, not to take equal fortunes with
-the rest of the world, but in some points, about which he cares, to
-fare better than the others. The disciple does not expect this.
-Therefore, though he be, like Epictetus, a chained slave, he has no
-word to say about it. He knows that the wheel of life turns
-ceaselessly. Burne Jones has shown it in his marvellous picture—the
-wheel turns, and on it are bound the rich and the poor, the great
-and the small—each has his moment of good fortune when the wheel
-brings him uppermost—the King rises and falls, the poet is _fêted_
-and forgotten, the slave is happy and afterwards discarded. Each in
-his turn is crushed as the wheel turns on. The disciple knows that
-this is so, and though it is his duty to make the utmost of the life
-that is his, he neither complains of it nor is elated by it, nor
-does he complain against the better fortune of others. All alike, as
-he well knows, are but learning a lesson; and he smiles at the
-socialist and the reformer who endeavour by sheer force to
-re-arrange circumstances which arise out of the forces of human
-nature itself. This is but kicking against the pricks; a waste of
-life and energy.
-
-In realising this a man surrenders his imagined individual rights,
-of whatever sort. That takes away one keen sting which is common to
-all ordinary men.
-
-When the disciple has fully recognised that the very thought of
-individual rights is only the outcome of the venomous quality in
-himself, that it is the hiss of the snake of self which poisons with
-its sting his own life and the lives of those about him, then he is
-ready to take part in a yearly ceremony which is open to all
-neophytes who are prepared for it. All weapons of defence and
-offence are given up; all weapons of mind and heart, and brain, and
-spirit. Never again can another man be regarded as a person who can
-be criticised or condemned; never again can the neophyte raise his
-voice in self-defence or excuse. From that ceremony he returns into
-the world as helpless, as unprotected, as a newborn child. That,
-indeed, is what he is. He has begun to be born again on to the
-higher plane of life, that breezy and well-lit plateau from whence
-the eyes see intelligently and regard the world with a new insight.
-
-I have said, a little way back, that after parting with the sense of
-individual rights, the disciple must part also with the sense of
-self-respect and of virtue. This may sound a terrible doctrine, yet
-all occultists know well that it is not a doctrine, but a fact. He
-who thinks himself holier than another, he who has any pride in his
-own exemption from vice or folly, he who believes himself wise, or
-in any way superior to his fellow men, is incapable of discipleship.
-A man must become as a little child before he can enter into the
-kingdom of heaven.
-
-Virtue and wisdom are sublime things; but if they create pride and a
-consciousness of separateness from the rest of humanity in the mind
-of a man, then they are only the snakes of self re-appearing in a
-finer form. At any moment he may put on his grosser shape and sting
-as fiercely as when he inspired the actions of a murderer who kills
-for gain or hatred, or a politician who sacrifices the mass for his
-own or his party’s interests.
-
-In fact, to have lost the power to wound, implies that the snake is
-not only scotched, but killed. When it is merely stupefied or lulled
-to sleep it awakes again and the disciple uses his knowledge and his
-power for his own ends, and is a pupil of the many masters of the
-black art, for the road to destruction is very broad and easy, and
-the way can be found blindfold. That it is the way to destruction is
-evident, for when a man begins to live for self he narrows his
-horizon steadily till at last the fierce driving inwards leaves him
-but the space of a pin’s-head to dwell in. We have all seen this
-phenomenon occur in ordinary life. A man who becomes selfish
-isolates himself, grows less interesting and less agreeable to
-others. The sight is an awful one, and people shrink from a very
-selfish person at last, as from a beast of prey. How much more awful
-is it when it occurs on the more advanced plane of life, with the
-added powers of knowledge, and through the greater sweep of
-successive incarnations!
-
-Therefore I say, pause and think well upon the threshold. For if the
-demand of the neophyte is made without the complete purification, it
-will not penetrate the seclusion of the divine adept, but will evoke
-the terrible forces which attend upon the black side of our human
-nature.
-
- . . . . . .
-
- “Before the soul can stand in the presence of the Masters its feet
- must be washed in the blood of the heart.”
-
-The word soul, as used here, means the divine soul, or “starry
-spirit.”
-
-“To be able to stand is to have confidence;” and to have confidence
-means that the disciple is sure of himself, that he has surrendered
-his emotions, his very self, even his humanity; that he is incapable
-of fear and unconscious of pain; that his whole consciousness is
-centred in the divine life, which is expressed symbolically by the
-term “the Masters;” that he has neither eyes, nor ears, nor speech,
-nor power, save in and for the divine ray on which his highest sense
-has touched. Then is he fearless, free from suffering, free from
-anxiety or dismay; his soul stands without shrinking or desire of
-postponement, in the full blaze of the divine light which penetrates
-through and through his being. Then he has come into his inheritance
-and can claim his kinship with the teachers of men; he is upright,
-he has raised his head, he breathes the same air that they do.
-
-But before it is in any way possible for him to do this, the feet of
-the soul must be washed in the blood of the heart.
-
-The sacrifice, or surrender of the heart of man, and its emotions,
-is the first of the rules; it involves the “attaining of an
-equilibrium which cannot be shaken by personal emotion.” This is
-done by the stoic philosopher; he, too, stands aside and looks
-equably upon his own sufferings, as well as on those of others.
-
-In the same way that “tears” in the language of occultists expresses
-the soul of emotion, not its material appearance, so blood
-expresses, not that blood which is an essential of physical life,
-but the vital creative principle in man’s nature, which drives him
-into human life in order to experience pain and pleasure, joy and
-sorrow. When he has let the blood flow from the heart he stands
-before the Masters as a pure spirit which no longer wishes to
-incarnate for the sake of emotion and experience. Through great
-cycles of time successive incarnations in gross matter may yet be
-his lot; but he no longer desires them, the crude wish to live has
-departed from him. When he takes upon him man’s form in the flesh he
-does it in the pursuit of a divine object, to accomplish the work of
-“the Masters,” and for no other end. He looks neither for pleasure
-nor pain, asks for no heaven, and fears no hell; yet he has entered
-upon a great inheritance which is not so much a compensation for
-these things surrendered, as a state which simply blots out the
-memory of them. He lives now not in the world, but with it; his
-horizon has extended itself to the width of the whole universe.
-
- Δ
-
-
- THE WHITE MONK.
-
- By the Author of the “Professor of Alchemy.”
-
- PART I.—RALPH’S STORY.
-
-“It was after this manner, as they say,” began Ralph, swinging
-himself on to a bench and pouring out for himself a tankard of our
-good home-brewed, as I crouched in the hay opposite to him. “Two
-centuries agone and thirty years or so, there dwelt in this very
-house which I serve—and which one day, young master, you shall
-rule!—Sir Gilbert de Troyes, your ancestor, and his lady, and four
-fair sons, and a lovely daughter. Of these sons, twain were at the
-wars, one was in his nurse’s lap, and another was gone to Italy, to
-finish his studies at Parma. Thus did the old nobles use to ruin
-their sons!
-
-“This young foregoer of yours (a goodly youth!) fell in with the
-usual temptations of Satan. He held, with the poets, that the world
-is the best book for men to read; and he studied it, I ween, with
-diligence. Now there was a certain damsel, winsome enough, I doubt
-not, in the Italian style, with black hair and the devil—save the
-mark!—in her wandering eyes. So it came to pass that Master Gilbert,
-younger, wooed her for his bride, like an honest gentleman, as the
-old tales say he was; and so great is the power of one upright soul
-amongst others, that the young witch—she was but young, poor soul!
-and teachable—was charmed herself from her Italian ways, and vowed
-to love and follow only him; and the day before their marriage, she
-was walking with him in the streets of Parma, by night—for Master
-Gilbert had a governor along with him in Italy, who must be
-hoodwinked—when there chanced to espy them one Pietro Rinucci, a
-clerkly fellow (with a curse upon him!) who was even studying also
-at Parma, and who loved the Italian witch himself.
-
-“This Rinucci had been favoured of the girl, and only when she saw
-the Englishman, with his blue eyes and his honest ways, had she
-scorned her countryman and left him. Rinucci, after the manner of
-his race-fellows, then dogged her steps, tracked her to her early
-meetings with young Gilbert de Troyes, who was his unsuspecting
-friend, and listened to their innocent ravings of love conjoined to
-virtue.
-
-“Afterward, had he gone to the damsel’s poor lodging and there, with
-Heaven knows what direful threats! conjured her to renounce her
-honest lover and return to himself. The signorina was not like an
-English girl—she neither stormed nor yielded—she cajoled and blinded
-him. ‘If he would go, she would consider; perchance she did not love
-the Briton truly; perchance it was a whim; she knew not. Might she
-but think? it was a whirl, and her heart, alas! was o’er
-susceptible; ’twould pass; he must leave her now, at least, and she
-would see. Meantime Pietruccino should wear this pretty crimson
-ribbon of hers till they met again.’ After even such words, and for
-a kiss, he left her. But the cunning villain was more than her
-match, and waited all the next day round the corners, whence he
-could see her goings out and comings in. He saw her glide to her
-trysting-place; he followed cautiously; he heard her give a
-signalling whispered call; he heard it answered by a short, low
-whistle; young Gilbert de Troyes swung merrily round the corner and
-fell into his Italian sweetheart’s arms.
-
-“He met his death, poor, noble young fellow! ’Tis an old tale
-repeated. I need scarce have wasted all these words upon it—but that
-one’s heart must needs ache at these things. In the course of nature
-that Italian snake, Rinucci, was bound to finish his rival there and
-then. So he got behind the unwary schoolboy—for the lad was, indeed,
-little more—and stabbed him, all too deep, in the back of the neck.
-
-“Folk say Rinucci triumphed as he set his foot on his dying
-college-mate, and wiped his dagger, with a laugh, before the
-horror-stricken girl. Myself can scarcely believe it; he was too
-young in murder then for that.
-
-“Be this as it may, certain it is that he dragged away the mourning
-damsel from the corpse of the man who would have saved her soul, and
-took her back to himself.
-
-“A sickening story, boy. Wilt thou have more, young master? Yea?
-Why, there is worse to come. For Mistress Italiana—no tradition
-tells her name—was spirited as any gipsy woman, and full of crafty
-lore, such as her race delight in. She broke her heart over her
-English lover’s corpse; but she had still the Southern amusement
-left her of revenge. She concocted an evil greenish powder, and
-coloured Signor Pietro’s sweetmeats with it.
-
-“The fellow ate largely, praising the daintiness of the confection.
-It was deadly enough, I daresay, in all conscience, but it killed
-him not. These reptiles live on poison; morally, ’tis certain,
-belike, and also physically it agreed with him. Perchance he may
-have felt a qualm or two, though tradition says nought of it.
-Anyway, the next fytte of this story shows us the mysterious
-disappearance of the Italian girl, of whom no word hath ever since
-been told.
-
-“She left behind her, whether willingly or no, a quantity of the
-false seasoning, which Master Pietro had caused to be analysed, and
-which he seems to have carefully preserved.
-
-“Some time after these events, we find Signor Pietro Rinucci entered
-into the Monastery of Dominicans at Brescia, a repentant neophyte.
-He had turned remorseful, no doubt, and in good time! The fellow had
-ever strong imaginations. He was received in due time as a brother;
-wore the garb of the Order, and cast his eyes down. Tradition saith
-he was in great turmoil of soul at this time—judge for yourself,
-young master, by what followed.
-
-“One fine morning Brother Petrus was missing from his small, damp
-cell, and none could tell what had become of him. None, that is,
-save the poverty-stricken ropemaker who had supplied him with cords
-to scale the monastery walls; and his discretion had been paid for.
-The fact being, I doubt not, that discipline being ever repugnant to
-our young bravo’s manners, he had fled it.
-
-“In the meantime, the news of Gilbert de Troyes’ death had been
-brought to these very doors, and certainly the grooms who then
-tended the good horses of your ancestors must, even in this
-saddle-room, have spent their sorrow in each other’s company. But
-Ambrose de Troyes, newly back from the wars, and second-born of the
-family, rose in his wrath, and swore to avenge his brother. For all
-might know that the death blow had been dealt by one Pietro Rinucci,
-fellow-scholar of Gilbert’s, whose absence afterward from the
-University had puzzled the doctors and caused inquisition into the
-matter.
-
-“So away went Ambrose, the soldier, to Parma. And mind ye, Ambrose
-was no careless school-boy, no mean foe to a man, but a great,
-staunch fellow who had seen service, and who was, moreover, by
-Nature something stern and hard of purpose.
-
-“But at Parma they told him Rinucci was escaped into a monastery
-which they named, and showed a painted portrait of him, and did so
-minutely, point by point, describe the man, that Ambrose swore he
-should know him, should he meet him in Heaven. And that was a strong
-assertion, note ye.
-
-“Well, Ambrose journeyed on towards the secluded spot where the
-Monastery of Dominicans lay, and was enforced to rest one night at
-the village of Santa Rosa on his road. Having stabled his steed,
-refreshed it and himself, and practised his arm some moments with
-the good sharp sword, he slung the weapon round him and went forth
-for a stroll to pass the time.
-
-“He came to the equivalent of what would be to us in England an
-ale-house, but some way out of the village, meet for travellers to
-pause and rest a moment on their way. Ambrose went in to look about
-him and ordered drink for himself. He lacked a companion to pledge,
-but looking round the little room saw no one but a moody man who
-seemed lost in thought, though enjoying some passing sour wine.
-Ambrose himself could stomach neither the fare nor the company, so
-he quickly got him on his way a little further; when, meeting with a
-simple shrine to the Virgin, the God-fearing soldier took his rosary
-from under his baldrick, and knelt him down to pray. For something
-had sore perplexed him; he had seemed to see in the features of that
-morose comrade at the inn the most exact resemblance of Rinucci. But
-Rinucci was safe at the Monastery, waiting till his time should
-come, and the avenger should denounce him. But even as he rose from
-prayer did Ambrose see a mounted messenger speeding to him, who told
-him breathlessly the news had just reached Santa Rosa that the Monk
-Petrus was escaped and roaming at large somewhere in the country.
-
-“Then Ambrose de Troyes knew he had his man; and natheless, like the
-large-hearted fellow he was, he would but meet him quite alone. So
-he rewarded the newsbringer and sent him away. Once more he fell on
-his knees before our Lady’s image, and besought that his cause might
-find Heaven’s favour, and his action in it be in every point just
-and serviceable. (For he looked upon himself as sent to do such
-things as might cause his brother’s soul to rest in peace.) Then he
-went rapidly retracing his steps towards the inn again, and, led by
-Destiny, out came Pietro Rinucci, unarmed, to meet him. Ambrose de
-Troyes looked into the assassin’s eyes and knew him. Stranger still,
-the piercing eyes of the cunning Italian saw, in the traits of this
-bronzed warrior, relationship to the Gilbert who had been his friend
-and victim.
-
-“‘I arrest thee, Pietro Rinucci, for the murder of my brother,
-Gilbert de Troyes, and, though I may not draw upon a tonsured monk
-(yea, I know thee through all thy false disguises!), yet, before I
-hale thee to the ecclesiastical courts, I will show thee, snake,
-what I think of thee, and of all such!’
-
-“And Ambrose de Troyes smote the villain a shameful blow upon the
-face.
-
-“Even at that instant, the monk whips me Ambrose’s sword from its
-scabbard, and, with the fatal dexterity of his race, ran in upon the
-stately Englishman and laid him, bleeding quick to death, upon the
-hot white road.
-
-“‘Oh Margaret, my sister Margaret!’ the dying man raved, as if he
-thirsted for help from the hand that had been kind to him.
-
-“‘A right pestilent breed of Britons! but easy to kill—easy to
-kill,’ quoth the Monk, as he laid down the red sword by the dying
-man’s side and left him alone in his agony.
-
-“This scene was witnessed by a terrified young country-girl, who
-crouched behind a heap of stones, meanwhile, until the murderer’s
-flight, and then ran to assist De Troyes, who thought she was his
-sister Margaret, and said marvellous tender words, of home and of
-her kindness, and of the little brother he had left in the nursery.
-
-“After this, there comes a period of Rinucci’s life of which we know
-but little. He seems to have raced about the country, in hiding
-always, but doing little harm for him. Italy, however, is debateable
-ground for one of her own recreant monks, so we find Messer Pietro
-fleeing Justice and coming over here to England. Whether he had had
-some of his heart-searchings that he knew so often, I know not, but
-deem it very likely. Here is the flaw, to my mind, in the
-foreigners’ constitutions. They recognize their sins as such, not so
-we English! We say our evil deeds are fate, congenital infirmity,
-ignorance, negligence, or even virtues; they say their sins are
-sins, and yet they do them. Had I but half the talent of sinning
-that Messer Pietro seems to have owned, my faith, I would have
-gloried in it! So did not he, however; he went to a father
-confessor, fell on the earth, and implored absolution—for life was
-still sweet to him, he said, and he would not die yet awhile.
-
-“The father sent him for penance to travel as a pilgrim, in a white
-penitential garb to England, there to walk to the shrine of St.
-Thomas à Becket, foully slain on earth by violence.
-
-“The father did well for his mother-country, but evilly for us.
-
-“The monk Petrus performed at all points the penalty enjoined him,
-and afterward, having no especial call to Italy again, he followed
-his roving instincts and wandered about England, even till chance
-brought him to this, our, town. In this country he knew no men well
-enough to desire to kill them; besides, at this period, one of his
-fits of penitence seems to have been on him. Certes, he wore the
-monkish habit, only different in its white colour from that of other
-fraternities, and the folk grew acquainted with his white figure as
-he roamed the land in deepest meditation, with his eyes bent upon
-the ground.
-
-“Now, one day, say the chronicles (which are made up of village
-tales), the White Monk, as our townsfolk called him, was sitting in
-a thicket by a brook in which he was bathing his travelled feet,
-when there came by the sister of his victims, even Mistress Margaret
-de Troyes herself, and walked the pleasant fringes of the forest,
-very near to where the wanderer sat, on the further side the elders.
-She was accompanied by her mother and by another lady, both of whom
-were pressing the claims of some noble suitor upon her.
-
-“The other ladies were in deepest mourning for Gilbert and for
-Ambrose, and Mistress Margaret herself, though she wore no such
-signs of grief, was most plainly clad in a pale, pure garb of
-lavender. She listened quietly to all they urged, then spoke and
-said:
-
-“‘My mother, he is a light, false man. I care not for him.’
-
-“It was protested to her, her high birth, the respect in which he
-would hold her for herself; above all, her fair beauty, would all
-ensure his faithfulness. But Margaret said:
-
-“‘I beseech ye, press me no further. Heaven knows I wish the
-gentleman much good, and that he may aspire to higher things. I will
-pray for him, weep for him if need be; but, ladies, though I be but
-a simple English maiden, I hold myself all too good for such as he
-to marry and draw down, perchance, to like thoughts with himself. I
-hate all evil—not the doers, mother; but the evil. We are all weak
-and changeable, and I dare not come in contact of my free will with
-evil influence. God might punish me by weakness of resolve against
-infection.’
-
-“They urged her yet once more; she might triumph and convert a soul.
-
-“‘In truth,’ confessed fair Margaret de Troyes, ‘ye wound me sorely,
-dearest ladies mine! At such a time, when good Ambrose de Troyes is
-scarce cold in his grave, to bid his sister make her choice amongst
-his townsfolk; and celebrate the marriage feast with a breaking
-heart! My Ambrose—to think that thou, who, if I but spake of a
-moment’s weariness, would quickly place a cushion for my head, and
-sit by the hour on our window-seat chafing my feet, that thou
-should’st be bleeding in the death-struggles, on the hard, parched
-road, in a foreign land, and I be far away, not able so much as to
-raise thy dear head upon my knee! Oh, I loved him so tenderly,
-strong brother of mine! I gloried in my brown-maned soldier. We
-prayed together the night before he left on his sacred errand, and,
-at his entreaty, I laid my hand upon his head and blessed him in Our
-Lady’s name. He was a grave, good man; and you would have me turn my
-thoughts from him to that other! What though I know Ambrose to be
-now one of God’s angels; yet he hath left me behind him on the
-earth—the first unkindness he hath ever done me! And his mother and
-mine would have me think of wedlock!’
-
-“The fair, pale Englishwoman bent her head, and Pietro heard her
-weeping.
-
-“Well, it is but guesswork thenceforth. Folk say, in their coarse
-way of speaking, that the White Monk ‘loved’ the lady Margaret.
-Forfend! The love of such a man were an insult all too gross to
-offer to the memory of any Damoiselle de Troyes. Say, rather, he
-kindled to the worship of goodness in that form first of all.
-
-“We know that from that hour when he first saw and heard her,
-Rinucci, the stained wretch, wandered ever where there was a chance
-to see her, even from afar. Once, indeed he even spoke with her.
-Under the favour of his sacred garment he dared to near her, and
-asked:
-
-“‘Maiden, how say you? Is there mercy in Heaven for the worst
-sinners, or no?’
-
-“‘Nay, holy father,” answered the damsel, smiling, ‘thou must be
-better seen in these high mysteries than I who dwell in the world,
-where we all need mercy. We can but hope that our God is more
-pitiful than are our fellow creatures to our faults.’
-
-“‘Maiden,’ besought the White Monk further, ‘can such as thou look
-pityingly upon a vice-stained fellow man?’
-
-“But Margaret wept, and answered him:
-
-“‘Oh, father, search me not over this problem. I have lost the
-dearest to me in the world, two brothers, by an assassin’s hand. If
-that man stood before me, tell me, _could_ I look at him
-forgivingly? Oh, never, father! Human nature is too weak.’
-
-“The rencounter was over, for Pietro dared speak no more. But,
-according to the custom of that day, Mistress Margaret bent her fair
-head to receive the blessing of the holy father.
-
-“The monk started back in horror; even he was not too base to feel
-that. But as the maiden still stood humbly waiting, he was forced to
-stretch his hands forth from the distance, and murmur: ‘Benedicite!’
-
-“The days went by and the townsfolk noted how the White Monk wasted,
-and how strange he was. He would mutter to himself like a madman. He
-never said a word of holy import to the cottagers with whom he
-lodged at small cost. He ate almost nothing and appeared to spend
-his days in solitary musing. His conduct smacked so oddly of mania
-that Giles Hughson, his landlord, took to watching whither he went
-and what he did. He saw him always following Margaret, but seeking
-to avoid her if she turned where she might see him. He seemed to
-dread her greatly, yet, to worship her, or, at least to follow her
-like a lost soul looking after the light from some vanishing angel’s
-wing.
-
-“Once Margaret turned and saw him, but recognised him not as the man
-she had spoken withal. She, taking him for a _frère quetant_,
-silently, without looking upon him, pressed into his hand money,
-which he took, and which was found on him when he died, as you shall
-hear.”
-
- PERCY ROSS.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-The following remarkable passage was published some five years ago
-in the _Theosophist_, of Madras (1883); and it is needless to call
-attention in more detail to the fidelity with which it is being
-since then verified.
-
-Protesting against the arbitrary chronology of the Sanskritists in
-the question of Indian antiquity who make it dependent on the Greeks
-and Chandragupta—whose date is represented as “the sheet-anchor of
-Indian chronology” that “nothing will ever shake” (Prof. Max Müller
-and Weber), the author of the prophecy remarks that “it is to be
-feared that as regards India, the chronological ship of the
-Sanskritists has already broken from her moorings and gone adrift
-with all her precious freight of conjectures and hypotheses.” And
-then adds:—
-
-“We are at the end of a cycle—geological and other—and at the
-beginning of another. Cataclysm is to follow cataclysm. The pent-up
-forces are bursting out in many quarters; and not only will men be
-swallowed up or slain by thousands, “new” land appear and “old”
-subside, volcanic eruptions and tidal waves appal; but secrets of an
-unsuspected past will be uncovered to the dismay of Western
-theorists and the humiliation of an imperious science. This drifting
-ship, if watched, may be seen to ground upon the upheaved vestiges
-of ancient civilisations, and fall to pieces. We are not emulous of
-the prophet’s honours: but still, let this stand as a prophecy.”
-(See also “_Five Years of Theosophy_,” p. 388.)
-
-
- LOVE WITH AN OBJECT.
-
-Some distinguished contributors to theosophical literature have of
-late been describing what qualities are necessary to constitute a
-perfect man, _i.e._, an Adept. They said that among other things it
-was absolutely and indispensably necessary, that such a being should
-possess Love—and not merely Love in the abstract—but love regarding
-some object or objects. What can they possibly mean by speaking of
-“love with an object,” and could there possibly be love without any
-object at all? Can that feeling be called love, which is directed
-solely to the Eternal and Infinite, and takes no cognizance of
-earthly illusions? Can that be love which has no object or—in other
-words—is the love of forms or objects the true love at all? If a man
-loved all things in the universe alike, without giving any
-preference to any of them, would not such a love be practically
-without any object; would it not be equal to loving nothing at all;
-because in such a case the individuality of any single object would
-be lost to sight?
-
-A love which is directed towards all things alike, an universal
-love, is beyond the conception of the mortal mind, and yet this kind
-of love, which bestows no favours upon any one thing, seems to be
-that eternal love, which is recommended by all the sacred books of
-the East and the West; because as soon as we begin to love one thing
-or one being more than another, we not only detract from the rest an
-amount of love which the rest may rightfully claim; but we also
-become attached to the object of our love, a fate against which we
-are seriously warned in various pages of these books.
-
-The _Bhagavad Gita_ teaches that we should not love or hate any
-object of sense whatsoever, nor be attached to any object or thing,
-but renounce all projects and fix our thoughts solely on It, the
-Eternal, which is no-thing and no object of cognition for us, but
-whose presence can be only subjectively experienced by, and within
-ourselves. It says: “He is esteemed, who is equal-minded to
-companions, friends, enemies, strangers, neutrals, to aliens and
-kindred, yea to good and evil men” (Cap. vi., 14); and further on it
-says: “He whose soul is united by devotion, seeing the same in all
-around, sees the soul in everything and everything in the soul. He
-who sees Me (Brahmâ) everywhere and everything in Me, him I
-forsake not and he forsakes not me.... He who sees the same in
-everything—Arjuna!—whether it be pleasant or grievous, from the
-self-resemblance, is deemed to be a most excellent Yogin” (Cap. vi.,
-29, 32).
-
-On almost every page of the _Bhagavad Gita_ we are instructed only
-to direct our love to that which is eternal in every form, and let
-the form itself be a matter of secondary consideration. “He must be
-regarded as a steadfast renouncer, who neither hates nor
-desires.”... “In a learned and modest Brahman, in a cow, in an
-elephant, in a dog, and a Swapāka; they who have knowledge see the
-same thing.”... “Let no man rejoice in attaining what is pleasant,
-nor grieve in attaining what is unpleasant; being fixed in mind,
-untroubled, knowing Brahma and abiding in Brahma.”... “He who is
-happy in himself, pleased with himself, who finds also light in
-himself, this Yogin, one with Brahmâ, finds _Nirvana_ in Him.”
-
-The great _Hermes Trismegistus_ teaches the same identical doctrine;
-for he says: “Rise and embrace me with thy whole being, and I will
-teach thee whatsoever thou desirest to know.” The _Bible_ also tells
-us that “God is Love” (1. John iv., 8), and that we should love Him
-with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind (Math.
-xxii., 37), and while it teaches that we should love nothing else
-but God (Math. xx., 37), who is All in All (Ephes. i., 23), yet it
-affirms, that this God is omnipresent, eternal and incomprehensible
-to the finite understanding of mortals (1. Timoth. vi., 16). It
-teaches this love to be the most important of all possessions,
-without which all other possessions are useless (1. Corinth, xiii.,
-2), and yet this God, whom we are to love, is not an “object” (John
-i., 5), but everywhere. He is in us and we in Him (Rom. xii., 5). We
-are to leave all objects of sense and follow Him alone (Luc. v., 2),
-although we have no means of intellectually knowing or perceiving
-Him, the great Unknown, for whose sake we are to give up house and
-brethren, sisters, father, mother, wife, children and lands (Mark
-x., 29).
-
-What can all this mean, but that love itself is the legitimate
-object of love? It is a divine, eternal, and infinite power, a
-light, which reflects itself in every object while it seeks not the
-object, but merely its own reflection therein. It is an
-indestructible fire and the brighter it burns, the stronger will be
-the light and the clearer will its own image appear. Love falls in
-love with nothing but its own self, it is free from all other
-attractions. A love which becomes attached to objects of sense,
-ceases to be free, ceases to be love, and becomes mere desire. Pure
-and eternal love asks for nothing, but gives freely to all who are
-willing to take. Earthly love is attracted to persons and things,
-but Divine spiritual love seeks only that which is divine in
-everything, and this can be nothing else but love, for love is the
-supreme power of all. It holds together the worlds in space, it
-clothes the earth in bright and beautiful colours, it guides the
-instincts of animals and links together the hearts of human beings.
-Acting upon the lower planes of existence it causes terrestrial
-things to cling to each other with fond embrace; but love on the
-spiritual plane is free. Spiritual love is a goddess, who
-continually sacrifices herself for herself and who accepts no other
-sacrifice but her own self, giving for whatever she may receive,
-herself in return. Therefore the _Bhagavad Gita_ says: “Nourish ye
-the gods by this and let the gods nourish you. Thus nourishing each
-other ye shall obtain the highest good” (Cap. iii., ii.,); and the
-Bible says: “To him who has still more shall be given, and from him
-who has not, even what he has shall be taken away” (Luke xix., 26).
-
-Love is an universal power and therefore immortal, it can never die.
-We cannot believe that even the smallest particle of love ever died,
-only the instruments through which it becomes manifest change their
-form; nor will it ever be born, for it exists from eternity, only
-the bodies into which it shines are born and die and are born again.
-A Love which is not manifest is non-existent for us, to come into
-existence means to become manifest. How then could we possibly
-imagine a human being possessed of a love which never becomes
-manifest; how can we possibly conceive of a light which never shines
-and of a fire which does not give any heat?
-
-But “as the sun shines upon the lands of the just and the unjust,
-and as the rain descends upon the acres of the evil-minded as well
-as upon those of the good”; likewise divine love manifesting itself
-in a perfect man is distributed alike to every one without favour or
-partiality. Wherever a good and perfect human being exists, there is
-divine love manifest; and the degree of man’s perfection will depend
-on the degree of his capacity to serve as an instrument for the
-manifestation of divine love. The more perfect he is, the more will
-his love descend upon and penetrate all who come within his divine
-influence. To ask favours of God is to conceive of Him as an
-imperfect being, whose love is not free, but subject to the guidance
-of, and preference to, mortals. To expect favours of a Mahatma is to
-conceive him as an _imperfect_ man.
-
-True, “prayer,” _i.e._ the elevation and aspiration of the soul “in
-spirit and in truth” (John xiv., 14), is useful, not because it will
-persuade the light to come nearer to us, but because it will assist
-us to open our eyes for the purpose of seeing the light that was
-already there. Let those who desire to come into contact with the
-Adepts enter their sphere by following their doctrines; seeking for
-love, but not for an object of love, and when they have found the
-former, they will find a superabundance of the latter throughout the
-whole extent of the unlimited universe; they will find it in
-everything that exists, for love is the foundation of all existence
-and without love nothing can possibly continue to exist.
-
-Love—divine love—is the source of life, of light, and happiness. It
-is the creative principle in the Macrocosm and in the Microcosm of
-man. It is _Venus_, the mother of all the gods, because from her
-alone originates Will and Imagination and all the other powers by
-which the universe was evolved. It is the germ of divinity which
-exists in the heart of man, and which may develop into a life-giving
-sun, illuminating the mind and sending its rays to the centre of the
-universe; for it originates from that centre and to that centre it
-will ultimately return. It is a divine messenger, who carries Light
-from Heaven down to the Earth and returns again to Heaven loaded
-with sacrificial gifts.
-
-It is worshipped by all, some adore it in one form and some in
-another, but many perceive only the form and do not perceive the
-divine spirit. Nevertheless the spirit alone is real, the form is an
-illusion. Love can exist without form, but no form can exist without
-love. It is pure Spirit, but if its light is reflected in matter, it
-creates desire and desire is the producer of forms. Thus the visible
-world of perishable things is created. “But above this visible
-nature there exists another, unseen and eternal, which, when all
-created things perish, does not perish” (Bh. G. viii. 20), and “from
-which they who attain to it never return.” This is the supreme abode
-of Love without any object, unmanifested and imperishable, for there
-no object exists. There love is united to love, enjoying supreme and
-eternal happiness within her own self and that peace, of which the
-mortal mind, captivated by the illusion of form, cannot conceive.
-Non-existent for us, and yet existing in that Supreme _Be-ness_, in
-which all things dwell, by which the universe has been spread out,
-and which may be attained to by an exclusive devotion.
-
- EMANUEL.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- SELF MASTERY.
-
- (A SONNET.)
-
- O! for the power to lay this burden low!
- This weight of self; to kill all vain desire
- To clasp to our outer selves the scorching fire,
- So that the God within shall live and grow!
- O! for the strength to face the hidden foe,
- To raise our being higher still and higher,
- To breathe the breath that Holy ones inspire,
- To break the bonds that bind to Earth below!
-
- Great, Infinite Soul! that broodeth o’er us ever,
- Say, can the human will _unaided_ win
- The Victor’s crown (and earthly bondage sever),
- —A Heavenly flight, triumphant over sin?
- O Human and Divine, forsake us never,
- Thine is the power by which we enter in!
-
- DUM SPIRO, SPERO.
-
- =Reviews.=
-
- A MODERN MAGICIAN. A ROMANCE, by J. Fitzgerald Molloy, in Three
- Volumes. Ward & Downey, 12, York Street, Covent Garden.
-
-Opinions may be greatly divided as to the merits of this book; and
-to those who look for unexceptionable literary style as a primary
-element in fiction, it may not be satisfactory. But to all those who
-regard ideas as the first requisite, this work will probably prove
-of great interest. It has been somewhat curious to note the
-reception with which Mr. Molloy has met. The _Pall Mall Gazette_,
-for instance, devotes considerable length to him, and somewhat
-smartly calls him “a novelist born, but not made”; after which it
-proceeds, with more apparent animus than judiciousness, to criticise
-the pedantic style of conversation and narrative which the author
-occasionally makes use of. Curiously enough, the critic selects for
-his worst blows the phrases used by the chief inspector of the
-detectives. Now, if there is one thing more common than another, it
-is to find the half educated, but uncultured, men of the class from
-which police inspectors are drawn, using the longest words and
-phrases, not so much as a proof of their culture, as with the object
-of impressing their hearers. The reviewer was perhaps right to
-assail Mr. Molloy for sending his hero to Scotland Yard to hunt up
-news of his erring wife, who, as he was perfectly aware, had fled
-with another man. But this, and other trifling mistakes of similar
-character, are venial errors, and could only be so strongly
-animadverted upon in a paper which devotes itself to hunting
-plagiarisms in impossible places, through envy of successful
-authors; or by a reviewer who is a personal enemy of the author. As
-Macintosh well said: “The critic who is discerning in nothing but
-faults, may care little to be told that this is the mark of
-unenviable disposition, but he might not feel equally easy, were he
-convinced that he thus gives absolute proofs of ignorance and want
-of taste.” To make matters worse, and more interesting to LUCIFER,
-the reviewer is plainly a partisan of the Society for Psychical
-Research, to which Mr. Molloy somewhat unfeelingly alludes as the
-“Society of Scientific Cackle.” The review in the _Pall Mall
-Gazette_ starts with smartness and intelligence, but allows itself
-to run off into partisanship and prejudice. But all that is in
-strict keeping with the tone of a “Gazette” which generally starts
-useful work well, continues it badly, and ends by throwing mud out
-of the gutter at anybody or anything which happens to run counter to
-it. For instance, here is a specimen of the reviewer:
-
- “As a story teller he (the author) is the Bobadil of fashionable
- mysticism: as a literary workman he is a pretentious bungler: his
- syntax is inconceivable, his dialogue impossible, his style a
- desperately careful expression of desperately slovenly thinking,
- his notions of practical affairs absurd, and his conception of
- science and philosophy a superstitious guess; yet he has an
- indescribable flourish, a dash of half-ridiculous poetry, a
- pathetic irresponsibility, a captivating gleam of Irish
- imagination, and, above all, an unsuspicious good nature, that
- compel a humane public to read his books rather than mortify him
- by a neglect which he has done nothing malicious to deserve.”
-
-Such criticism can only be met from the point of view of the
-reviewer, by “Set a thief to catch a thief,” and from that of Mr.
-Molloy, by “Heaven save me from the penny-a-liners, actuated by
-personal animus!”
-
-The reviewer may be allowed to have pointed out a few glaring errors
-in Mr. Molloy’s style and syntax, but we add that, in pointing these
-out, he has only exposed himself.
-
-As regards the central figure of Benoni, the adept in the book,
-LUCIFER may, perhaps, say a few words. Slightly as the character is
-drawn, and startling as are the deeds of this personage, there is a
-majesty about him which commands respect, and we may congratulate
-Mr. Molloy on his effort. We do not entirely accord with the author
-in the deeds which he sets Benoni to do, but with regard to the
-words and precepts which he puts into the adept’s mouth, we do
-absolutely agree, and recommend our readers, and especially all the
-Theosophists, to read Mr. Molloy’s book. Here the _Pall Mall_
-reviewer—being, as said, an admiring follower of the Society for
-Psychical Research—again falls foul of Mr. Molloy; but we may safely
-quote the impressive and truthful words of Benoni, and leave the
-rest to others.
-
-Amerton, the hero of the book, reproaches the adept with having seen
-trouble approaching him, and with having neglected to warn him.
-Benoni replies:
-
- “That is true. It was not permitted that I should serve you then;
- to test your strength it was necessary that you should bear the
- trial unaided. When, some years ago. you came to me in Africa, and
- asked me to solve experiences which perplexed you, and later
- besought Amuni, the faithful One, to show you the pathway leading
- towards light, you but obeyed a dictate of your nature impossible
- to resist. That within you urged you forward to seek the sacred
- mysteries of life and death. But these cannot be obtained by those
- who are not prepared to endure with patience, and grow strong in
- spirit. You have suffered, and thus taken the first step towards
- the attainment of your desires.”
-
- “But, surely,” said Philip, “you might have warned me.”
-
- “I should have but inflicted additional pain on you.”
-
- “Was there no escape?”
-
- “None, indeed,” replied the mystic.
-
- “Then I was destined to meet humiliation and pain.”
-
- Benoni looked at him with mingled pity and affection in his gaze.
-
- “A child,” he said, in his low, sonorous voice, “is grieved for a
- broken toy, or is humiliated by correction.”
-
- “But you don’t compare my wrongs to a child’s grievances?”
-
- “His sorrows are as real and bitter to him as your afflictions are
- to you. It is only when time has passed, he reviews his distress
- with wonder, seeing the pettiness of its cause. So will it be with
- you. Ten years hence, you will regard this grief, desolating your
- life, with equanimity; forty years later, you will remember it
- with indifference, as an item in your fate. Then shall you look
- back upon the brightness and darkness of your existence as one
- regards the lights and shadows chequering his pathway through
- woods in spring. How futile seem woe and joy, weighed with the
- consideration that all men are as shadows that fade, and as
- vapours which flee away.... Think, my friend,” continued the
- mystic earnestly, “of your existence but as a journey towards a
- goal, on which hardships must be suffered by the way. You are now
- but working out the fulfillment of your fate. Remember, those who
- would ascend must suffer; affliction is the flame which purifies;
- pain teaches compassion.” (pp. 89, 90. Vol. III.)
-
-When asked of himself, Benoni replies:
-
- “Misfortune cannot compass, distress overwhelm, nor
- disappointments assail me, because the things of the world are as
- naught to my senses, and man’s life seems but a dream. Before this
- stage affliction must have crucified the senses; self must be
- conquered, slain, and entombed.” (p. 91, Vol. III.)
-
-There are other passages equally true from the occult standpoint,
-and we trust their readers will benefit by them and appreciate them.
-
-As regards Amerton’s character, we see the natural, born, mystic
-turning aside and voluntarily taking upon himself, though warned,
-the bonds of married life. These become intolerable to him, and the
-unhappiness of two persons results. Occultism is a jealous mistress,
-and, once launched on that path, it is necessary to resolutely
-refuse to recognise any attempt to draw one back from it. Amerton
-wanted to crush out his natural tendencies to occultism, and failed.
-It is as hard to draw back from them, and turn attention solely to
-the things of the world, as it is, when studying occultism, to turn
-our attention solely to the invisible regions, and neglect
-absolutely the physical world.
-
-The other characters in the novel make it light, graceful and
-pleasant reading. The interest is ever preserved from the first to
-the last scene, and certainly no one could find, in all the three
-volumes, one dull page in them. Moreover, Mr. Fitzgerald Molloy
-seems an acute observer. Some of his secondary heroes, such as the
-wealthy widow, Mrs. Henry Netley, a plebeian enamoured of rank and
-title, and Lord Pompey Rokeway, “a gay, though ancient, personage,”
-who uses rouge, wig, and corsets, and imagines every woman in love
-with him—are portraits from nature, to one who knows anything of
-modern society. In short, “The Modern Magician,” as a work of
-fiction, can fearlessly bear comparison with any of the modern
-productions written lately upon occult subjects, with the solitary
-exception of Rider Haggard’s “She,” and surpasses some in unabated
-interest. We might be more exacting and severe, perhaps, were it a
-purely theosophical work. As it stands, however, we must
-congratulate Mr. Molloy in having clothed the subject of mysticism
-in such graceful robes; had he been as good a literary workman as he
-is an excellent constructor of plots, the book should have met with
-unqualified approval. Meanwhile, we wish it the greatest success.
-
- ------------------
-
-“THE TWIN SOUL: A PSYCHOLOGICAL AND REALISTIC ROMANCE,” in two
- volumes, by an Anonymous Author. Ward & Downey, 12, York Street,
- Covent Garden.
-
-This is quite another kind of literary production than the “Modern
-Magician,” just reviewed. It aspires to more serious and
-philosophical mysticism, but fails rather ungloriously. There are
-passages in it which, taken out of the work, especially at the
-beginning of Volume I., might be made the subjects of short and
-rather useful little treatises upon mystic theories; but, as a
-whole, the book is one of the most disappointing novels published
-for some time. It begins well, goes on from bad to worse, promises
-much, holds nothing, and ends nowhere, seeming to be written not as
-a work of fiction, but simply to ventilate the author’s ideas.
-These—the work being anonymous—have to be judged by the novel alone.
-It is rumoured that the “Twin Soul” is the occasional work of twelve
-years’ labour, and the disconnected character of its events bears
-out the rumour. Its style is pedantic, though good in writing, while
-the matter and plot are heavy, and delivered in a long-winded and
-didactic manner.
-
-The story is that of one Mr. Rameses, an exceedingly virtuous,
-learned, and solemn Oriental millionaire, whose real nationality
-remains to the end a mystery, and whose story is narrated by a
-somewhat cynical English philosopher, called De Vere. The latter
-tells the story in the style which suits him best, and is perfectly
-natural. He is humorous and amusing, even if slightly ponderous. But
-alas for the reader! Mr. De Vere suddenly stops short at an early
-stage, and the story is taken up, without any apparent cause or
-reason, by a man unknown, who “had less sympathy with Mr. Rameses,”
-and who has all the defects of Mr. De Vere’s qualities, and a good
-many of his own besides, for he is even more ponderous and more
-cynical, without his humour. Mr. Rameses is a peculiar character,
-but, as sketched, he is quite in keeping with his Oriental origin.
-He believes in many theories: re-incarnation, socialism, certain
-occult doctrines, the possibility of recovering the memory of past
-incarnations, and, as a matter of course, the modern craze of the
-day, the theory of “twin souls.” He is perpetually in search of his
-“twin,” and hunts her with the pertinacity of a sleuth-hound under
-all forms, and in all places. Mr. De Vere is the possessor of an
-Assyrian collection, Egyptian papyri, and also of two female
-mummies—Amenophra and Lurulâ, the first the daughter of a Pharaoh,
-the second a priestess of Isis—of which the sarcophagi are covered
-with hieroglyphics, which Mr. Rameses reads with most surprising
-ease. The hero, claiming his memory as a palimpsest, which by
-certain processes clearly discovers the obliterated record of his
-past incarnations, cannot, in spite of this, make up his mind which
-of the two mummies was formerly the body of his twin-soul. Finally,
-he solves the doubt by declaring them both to have been the mortal
-casket of his beloved—with Lurulâ for choice. The reader here has
-great hopes held out to him that there will be a grand ceremony, at
-which the mummies are to be unrolled, and at which the soul of the
-deceased mummy will be summoned back to shuffle on a mortal coil
-again. Alas! such hopes are fallacious; for the ceremony never takes
-place, owing to Mr. Rameses falling in love with the sister of a
-Hindu lady married to an English baronet. After much hesitation the
-lady so honoured by his choice is also declared to be the vehicle of
-his twin-soul, _i.e._, to save appearances—to be a re-incarnation of
-the ego which formerly dwelt in the mummy or mummies. Finally, after
-a long-winded oration over the mystic properties of a magnificent
-present of jewels, Mr. Rameses wins “the fair Niona,” as she is
-called—who, although a Hindu, is a Zoroastrian Sun-worshipper. They
-are married, notwithstanding their “paganism,” according to Roman
-Catholic rites, and the pair start to spend the honeymoon in Egypt,
-where, in the Temple of Isis at Thebes, they are to be again united
-according to the—to them—more sacred ritual of Sun-worship. After a
-very interesting dream about the Deluge, which broke through an
-isthmus uniting Gibraltar to North Africa, and destroyed a vast
-civilization which occupied the floor of the present Mediterranean
-Sea, they arrive safely in Egypt. Here the fair Hindu of Zoroastrian
-persuasion and Italian name, has another interesting psychic vision,
-an interview with the Sphinx, which makes her incontinently faint,
-and lose consciousness. Then they proceed to Thebes, and, after due
-care, make selection of the site of the Temple of Isis. They build
-their bonfire and ignite it, but at the supreme moment Niona gives a
-gasp, faints, and this time dies outright, with as little reason for
-it as every other incident in the novel has. The return to Cairo is
-immediately commenced, and here Niona, in strict keeping with Mr.
-Rameses’s habits, is at once converted into a mummy. It must be
-rather interesting to possess the body of three defunct twin souls,
-and reflect upon their virtues.
-
-The rest of the book is occupied by various disquisitions of the
-author, disguised flimsily under conversations of his characters on
-the social and political customs of the Nineteenth century. Read
-carefully, the conversations contain ideas, but are likely to offend
-on account of their length and ponderousness. As regards the
-construction of the book and the characters, Mr. Rameses is
-interesting, in spite of his solemnity and his love of mummies, and
-Mr. De Vere is amusing. The other _dramatis personæ_ seem to have
-been created merely as pegs upon which to hang the author’s
-opinions. What, for instance, is the object of entering into detail
-upon the passionate episodes in the career of Mr. Rameses’s
-secretary, or the mercenary marriage of Lady Gwendoline Pierrepoint
-with “Old Methusaleh”? Their only excuse can be that they may serve
-to increase the contrast between such marriages and that with a twin
-soul. Taken as a whole, the ideas are interesting, and the mystic
-utterances in the first volume almost correct from the orthodox
-occult point. But the manner in which they are displayed is
-irritating, and this chiefly because the reader is perpetually being
-brought up to a point of interest, and as perpetually left
-disappointed.
-
- -----------------------
-
-
- POSTHUMOUS HUMANITY.[129]
-
------
-
-Footnote 129:
-
- _Posthumous Humanity_, a study of Phantoms, by Adolphe d’Assier,
- Member of the Bordeaux Academy of Sciences. Translated and
- annotated by Henry S. Olcott, President of the Theosophical
- Society. George Redway, London, 1887. 8vo. pp. 360.
-
------
-
-This is a translation from the French by Colonel H. S. Olcott,
-President of the Theosophical Society, of the remarkable work of
-that name, by a well-known _savant_, Adolphe d’Assier. The original
-work appeared a few years ago, and produced a stir both in the
-sceptical public and unbelieving science, and an outcry among the
-spiritists of France, whose pet theories about the “spirits” of the
-dead it upset. “Posthumous Humanity” was not only a singularly
-interesting work, but it was one of the first, and perhaps the
-loudest, of the bugle notes that heralded the last act of the fierce
-battle between materialistic science and spiritualism; for it ended
-in the virtual defeat of the former, at any rate, upon one line: it
-forced the hand of the majority of sceptics in the recognition of
-what is called in mysticism the “astral body” of man and animal, and
-by more pretentious than wise investigators “the _phantasms_ of the
-living,” forgetting those of the dead.
-
-That a learned member of an academy of science should, of all men,
-write a serious book on the phenomena of “the Borderland,” accepting
-as facts in nature such things as ghostly appearances, and the
-projection of the double, is almost a phenomenon in itself. And what
-makes the case the more remarkable as an indication of a new current
-in public opinion, is the fact that these things, which it has
-hitherto been the fashion to consign with a laugh or a shudder to
-the limbo of exploded superstitions, are treated by the author in a
-perfectly scientific spirit. He accounts for them, not by the usual
-supposition of hallucination or stupidity on the part of observers,
-but by an exceedingly ingenious and plausible postulation of forces
-at work in us, and around us, which are as little “supernatural” as
-any of the recognised forces of nature, or portions of man’s
-constitution. Not only has M. d’Assier the courage to face the
-probable ridicule of the wiseacres, but he has the audacity to turn
-the tables upon “men of science,” by actually making fun of their
-unmeasured pretensions, and twitting them mercilessly about their
-past mistakes. Not the least remarkable feature in the case is the
-fact that the author, who started into these researches an ardent
-positivist, has come out of them an ardent positivist still. He
-believes that what he has accomplished is to extend the reign of
-matter into a region previously believed to belong to spirit, thus
-planting the standard of positivism in a wider and more fruitful
-region, which he has happily reclaimed from the winds and tides of
-superstition. But the fact is, that although our author has gone a
-good deal further than most of those who start out “on their own
-hook” to explore the realms of the Occult, he cannot be said to have
-penetrated very far into the mysteries of being. He has peeped in at
-the door of the psychic antechamber to the spiritual world
-proper—the ante-chamber in which the members of Psychical Research
-Societies amuse themselves and others by playing blindman’s buff
-with hypothesis—and his interesting volume tells us of the wonderful
-things that go on there. The result of his researches, as he says in
-his _Preface_, is the conclusion that “posthumous humanity is, in
-fact, but a special example of posthumous animality, and that the
-latter presents itself as the immediate consequence of the living
-world.” Every tyro in theosophy knows that this conclusion is a fair
-approximation to the truth, and were man nothing but an animal of
-high degree, it might possibly be the whole truth. But man is an
-animal, plus _something_, and this something _more_, is precisely
-what M. d’Assier leaves entirely out of sight, as indeed he could
-hardly help doing if he attached any importance to remaining a
-Positivist. It is this _something more_, of whose very existence our
-author seems profoundly unconscious, that has the chief interest for
-us, for that is the spiritual and eternal part of man, in
-contradistinction to the psychic portion which fades away and
-disappears after a time, as M. d’Assier very justly declares.
-
-It seems a pity that a learned and ingenious man, like our author,
-should not have begun investigations of this kind by making himself
-familiar with at least the bare outline of the metaphysical and
-psychological system that underlies the schools of philosophy of
-India. This system is the result of very profound research into such
-phenomena as our author deals with, and also into other far deeper
-and more important manifestations that he has not considered at all;
-and these researches have for thousands of years occupied, to a
-greater or lesser degree, almost every thinking man among races
-which are acknowledged to be possessed of a very high degree of
-intellectual acuteness and spiritual insight. Were our Western
-adventurers into the borderland between spirit and matter—the astral
-world—to take this obvious precaution, they would know that the
-ground over which they now laboriously make their way, has not only
-been traversed before, but pretty fully surveyed and mapped out, and
-that their supposed discoveries amount virtually to no more than a
-verification of results long ago obtained by others. This very
-needed exception in the work under review has been obviated by the
-translator’s notes and supplement, without diminishing the practical
-value of M. d’Assier’s treatise as a useful contribution to occult
-literature. For, as his labours do actually confirm much of the
-teachings of Theosophy, with regard to that part of the constitution
-of man, which is common to him and the animals, the work, as it now
-stands, is really a valuable occult treatise as to facts. The
-important question with the world, in these times, being not so much
-_what is said_, as _who it is that says it_, the fact that an
-incorrigible positivist, has published his belief in the actuality
-of a psychic plane of existence, and of the temporary survival in it
-after death of a certain part or principle of the animal (including
-man), is of the greatest help and importance to theosophy. It will
-probably affect public opinion far more profoundly than if a
-thousand Eastern sages proclaimed the same elementary fact of
-Occultism in chorus. No better illustration of, and testimony to,
-the reality of plain, broad facts in connection with wraiths,
-“doubles,” and other such apparitions, can be found than in
-d’Assier’s “Posthumous Humanity” in its new English garb, by Colonel
-Olcott, and with the translator’s _Preface_ and annotations to the
-text. These add greatly to the value of the book for the student of
-Occultism. In fact, these additions serve the same purpose which a
-notice of the work in LUCIFER might have been expected to have in
-view; for they correct the author in some particulars, add
-additional information in others, and generally forestall the critic
-who writes from the Theosophical standpoint. Besides this, the
-translator has added a highly interesting and unique _appendix_,
-giving the opinions of numerous Hindus of various castes and sects
-upon psychic phenomena of that kind, collected from various parts of
-India, which, by itself, has considerable value to the student of
-mystical sciences. In conclusion, we may record almost a general
-opinion—save, of course, that of rank materialists—that no work yet
-published on the subject dealt with by our author is better
-calculated to reach the scientifically-minded enquirer. It is
-written with calmness and logical clearness that takes the scoffer’s
-laugh out of his mouth. It goes as far as anyone new to the subject
-could be reasonably expected to follow; and the direction it takes
-is the right one. It is preeminently _the_ book for the too
-sceptical and ignorant enquirer to begin with.
-
- -----------------------
-
-ספר יצירה, _Sepher Yetzirah, The Book of Formation, and the
-Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom_; _translated from the Hebrew, and
-collated with Latin Versions. By Dr. W. Wynn Westcott, Bath: Robert
-H. Fryar_, 1887.
-
-This is a treatise of about 30 quarto pages on that well-known
-Hebrew occult work, the Sepher Yetzirah. It consists of an
-introduction, giving the historic aspects of the matter, an English
-translation of the Sepher Yetzirah and the Thirty-two Paths, and
-several pages of notes, giving remarks on and variant readings of
-difficult and disputed passages.
-
-The introductory pages bear the stamp of considerable literary
-research, and the translation of the Book of Formation itself is
-intelligible and concise. But we can hardly say as much for the
-Thirty-two Paths, which, abstruse and difficult of comprehension in
-the original, are, we are afraid, no more intelligible in the
-translation. Owing to the unpopularity of the subject, there are
-readers who will be readily drawing the conclusion that Dr. Westcott
-himself does not altogether understand their mystical bearing and
-symbolism. Yet the notes on the actual text of the “Sepher Yetzirah”
-are valuable, and show considerable occult knowledge. But a still
-greater error is made by the translator. We notice that Dr. Westcott
-has invariably rendered the word Elohim by “God,” notwithstanding
-that it is a plural noun, as shown by the plural word “Chiim” joined
-thereto in the ninth section of the first chapter. This will, no
-doubt, prove grateful to the staff and readers of the _Jewish
-World_, whose editors pride themselves, against all fact and truth,
-on the _Monotheism_ of their early ancestors. It cannot fail to
-strike the Kabalists as an unfortunate deviation from the original
-meaning in favour of one laboriously fabricated by both Jewish and
-Christian falsificators.
-
-The “Book of Formation” is a treatise consisting of 6 chapters and
-33 sections, and thus its compilation is pentacular. The 6 chapters
-refer to the Yetziratic World, the 6 periods of Genesis; while the
-33 sections have a close analogy with the Thirty-two Paths which are
-added at the end of the work. It is a philosophical disquisition on
-the occult meanings of the ten numbers of the decimal scale, and the
-22 letters of the Hebrew sacred alphabet. The first chapter deals
-with the numbers, which it divides into a Tetrad (symbolising
-Spirit, Air, Water, and Fire), and a Hexad (symbolising Height,
-Depth, East, West, South and North). The second chapter treats
-generally of the 22 letters, produced from the Air or the number 2,
-and divided into 3 Mother-letters, 7 double-letters, and 12 simple
-letters. The third chapter shows the symbolic reference of the 3
-Mother-letters to Air, Water, and Fire; the fourth chapter that of
-the 7 double-letters to the Planets &c.; the fifth chapter that of
-the 12 simple letters to the signs of the Zodiac, &c.; and the sixth
-chapter forms the synthesis.
-
-The 32 paths are no other than symbolical developments of the 10
-Sephiroth or numbers, and the 22 letters which form the connecting
-links between them.
-
-Altogether the work is interesting and worthy of careful study.
-
- ------------------
-
- TREBLE CHORDS.
-
- POEMS BY CATHERINE GRANT FURLEY.
-
- Edinburgh: R. and R. Clark.
-
-This is an inviting little book of verse, with an ill-chosen title.
-Why “Treble Chords,” when the author cannot compose anything more
-than a single part? The octave is spanned by treble or threefold
-chords, but Miss Furley has not yet reached the octave of
-attainment! No, the book must be re-christened at its second birth;
-and the protest of the _Girton Girl_, and the more sustained poem of
-the _Other Isolt_, are assuredly good enough to interest and delight
-a sufficient number of women to send it into a second edition. The
-writer has a distinct faculty of seeing, as well as the tendency to
-take the “other side,” as she does in _Isolt of Brittany_ and in
-_Galatea to Pygmalion_. The moral of the latter poem is thus
-presented:
-
- “O, frequent miracle! so often seen
- We scarcely pause to think what it may mean—
- Man’s power to raise within a woman’s heart
- A love he does not know, nor could impart;
- To wake a soul within the marble breast,
- Then long to soothe it back to stony rest;
- For, though the woman’s sweeter to caress,
- The statue’s more convenient to possess.”
-
-Here is a specimen of the sonnets, not the best, perhaps, but to the
-purpose:
-
- CIRCE.
-
- Men call me Circe, but my name is Love;
- And my cup holds the draught of sweet and sour,
- Of gain, joy, loss, renouncement, all the dower
- That woman’s love brings man. I hold above
- Your outstretched hand the chalice; ere you prove
- Its potency, bethink you; it has power
- To test your soul. If in a sinful hour
- You touch it, you shall sink as those who strove
- Of old to win my heart. Lo! there they be,
- Not men but beasts; for with impure desire
- They sought me, and Love holds _that_ blasphemy;
- And for their sin doth bid them dwell in mire
- Nor know their shame. Had they been pure in thought,
- My cup had strengthened them and injured not.
-
-It is but a tiny handful, this, of first flowers; not even a
-gathering of first-fruits. But they have the fragrance of promise,
-and a freshness of real rarity. Whether the fruit will set and
-mature must depend upon the sunshine and the rain and other
-surroundings of the struggling life, and on the depth of soil and
-strength of rootage. Of these we cannot judge; but the first-flowers
-are sweet and pretty and worth a word of welcome.
-
- G. M.
-
- ------------------
-
- THE CREATOR, AND WHAT WE MAY KNOW OF THE METHOD OF CREATION.[130]
-
------
-
-Footnote 130:
-
- The Fernley Lecture, 1887, by Dr. Dallinger. T. Woolmer, 2, Castle
- Street, City Road, London E.C. (1s. 6d., paper covers.)
-
------
-
-The above is the title of a lecture, forming the seventeenth of what
-are known as the “Fernley Lectures,” delivered annually, by the
-leading minds in the Ministry of the Wesleyan Methodist Society.
-This specific lecture is the latest of the series, and was delivered
-in Manchester, August 1st in present year, by the Rev. W. H.
-Dallinger, LL.D., F.R.S., Pres. R.M.S., etc., Governor of Wesley
-College, Sheffield.
-
-The lecture occupies an unique position amongst its fellows, and
-will bear a most favourable comparison with any that have been
-delivered by the various Presidents of the Royal Society on the
-sciences of the day. For clearness of argument and lucidity of
-thought—_as far as it goes_—it is unsurpassed, and, as a specimen of
-the power of English language, it is a treat to all who can estimate
-its value. It is all this, and more, and here its significance and
-suggestiveness comes in, and I can do no less than characterise its
-delivery under the circumstances, to an auditory that represents (in
-the eyes of the sect itself, at all events) the purest form of
-Evangelical religion, as a startling phenomenon, and as such I
-consider a notice of it in no way out of place in a theosophical
-journal. That such a lecture should be allowed to be delivered and
-favourably received, not only by the audience, but by the Wesleyan
-body at large, is a “sign of the times” that the intelligent
-observer cannot fail to discern. It is, undoubtedly, an index finger
-that marks a large advance in the progress of human emancipation
-from the increasingly intolerable yoke of Churchianic or
-Ecclesiastical tyranny; and all “friends of progress” will
-cheerfully render to the worthy and eloquent lecturer the thanks
-that are due for his manly and outspoken views upon the profoundest
-question of the age. The strangest part is the spectacle of a
-“Minister of the Gospel,” himself a scientist of no mean order,
-proclaiming from a Methodist platform his adherence to, and
-acceptance of, the doctrines of Charles Darwin, as true exponents of
-the “Method of Creation,” which means that “Natural Selection,” and
-survival of the “Fittest,” accounts for the origin of species and
-the indefinite variety of extinct and extant animal forms of life.
-Why not include vegetable forms as well? Methinks the fabulous
-“missing link” between the vegetable and animal kingdoms may,
-without much difficulty, be actually spotted. Nature, as delineated
-by the great “Naturalist,” must have been very peevish and unkind to
-her worshippers, when she mocks them by destroying every vestige,
-even to the veriest fragmentary fossil, of this anxiously looked for
-and expectant missing link, between the animal (brute) and man! To
-my view, the continuous chain of sequential life forms, as presented
-in the Darwinian theory, evinces a vast number of “missing links,”
-and, unless these can be supplied, it will not bear the strain when
-tested by the unclouded intellect of man. The philosopher of
-Materialism may accept the Darwinian theories (for as yet they are
-nothing less or more) as gospel, but the spiritual philosopher will
-not, nor can he accept them as truth, simply because he recognises a
-factor, which is an abomination in the eyes of the materialistic
-“wise ones.” It is this factor that the eloquent and learned
-lecturer pleads for, without suspecting what it really is. I have
-reason to know that our reverend scientist regards this “Spiritual”
-factor with the utmost contempt. But I leave this, and pass on to
-notice some of the really valuable thoughts and facts that ennoble
-the lecture, which is addressed to “thoughtful and earnest minds,
-not concerned specially with questions of philosophy, metaphysics,
-and science, but alive to the advanced knowledge and thought of our
-times, and anxious to know how the great foundation of religious
-belief, the existence of Deity, is affected by the splendid advance
-of our knowledge of nature.”
-
-This expression “existence of Deity” is conveniently elastic enough
-to cover the ground of argument by a scientific theologian, inasmuch
-as it may be taken to mean a personal God, according to sound
-Evangelical belief, and thus assume a plausible defence of Theism
-versus Atheism; or, it may admit of a much wider application to an
-“Unknown God”; for when the lecturer does venture to delineate the
-characteristic of Deity as the Creator, it is such terms as
-“Inscrutable Power or Creator,” “Eternal Mind,” “Infinite
-Intelligence,” &c., which is tantamount to saying that the Primal
-Cause of all that is, is unknowable; and if this is what Dr.
-Dallinger really means, he is at one with the Spiritual Philosopher;
-but this will be a curious weapon in the hands of an ecclesiastical
-theologian—as dangerous as it is curious. By the use of these terms
-the reverend author shields himself from the charge of materialistic
-heresy, albeit to the clear-sighted one there are several, if not
-many, weak and vulnerable points in the defensive armour; but if the
-adherents and votaries of the “faith once delivered to the saints”
-might be a little chary in their acceptance of him as a “sound”
-exponent of religious truth, yet all progressive minds will hail him
-as a fearless champion for the truth as delivered by the Book of
-Nature and interpreted by the splendid achievements of modern
-science.
-
- “The study of phenomena, their succession and their
- classification, is the essential work of science. It has no
- function, and is possessed of no instrument with which to look
- behind or below the sequence, in quest of some higher relation.
- The eye and mind of the experimentalist know only of antecedent
- and consequent. These fill the whole circle of his research; let
- him find these, and he has found all.”
-
-Here the domain of “science” is defined by a master mind, which
-tells us that “the researches of science are physical.” The
-observable, finite contents of space and time are the subjects of
-its analysis. Existence, not the cause of existence, succession, not
-the reason of succession, method, not the origin of method, are the
-subjects of physical research. A primordial cause cannot be the
-subject of experiment nor the object of demonstration. It must for
-ever transcend the most delicate physical re-action, the profoundest
-analysis, and the last link in the keenest logic. Science refuses
-absolutely to recognise mind as the primal cause of the sequences of
-matter. This is just—within the strict region of its research—for
-phenomena, their sequences and classification, are its sole domain.
-But observe; science universally puts _force_ where the reason asks
-for cause. The forces affecting matter are tacitly assumed to be
-competent to account for every activity, every sequence, every
-phenomenon, and all the harmonies of universal being, a nexus for
-the infinite diversities and harmonies, a basis for all the
-equilibrium of nature, is found by modern science in force. But
-force is as absolutely inscrutable as mind. Force can never be known
-in itself; it is known by its manifestations. It is not a
-phenomenon, it produces phenomena. We cannot know it; but we know
-nothing without it. The ultimate analysis of physical science is the
-relations of matter and force. In irreducible terms, therefore, the
-final analysis of science is _matter as affected by motion_.
-
-We now see, from the above excerpta, the goal to which the “splendid
-discoveries” of modern science lead its votaries, as portrayed by an
-authority that claims to speak not as other men; and if it is not a
-veritable dismal swamp, leading to nothing or negation; a miasma
-suffocating the aspirations of those who are trusting to the
-leadership of _savants_ to guide them in the path that conveys them
-to the habitat of true wisdom and knowledge of themselves; then I
-can only say of such, “miserable comforters are ye all.”
-
-But the question intervenes here: is this a true definition of the
-end and aim of science? It may be to the majority of the Royal
-Society; but I may tell those who claim to be the conservators of
-science, and who arrogate to themselves the right to define the
-boundaries of even physical science, that they do not possess the
-_all_ of human intelligence, and that there are, outside their
-societies, men who refuse to bow the knee to the modern scientific
-Baal, who refuse to be cajoled by the use of terms that mystify but
-certainly do not enlighten. For instance, who is one wit the wiser
-when, having reached the end of its tether, science discovers that
-“matter and motion” govern and regulate all things observable by the
-human eye, or within the range of the human mind? To the credit of
-the author of the last Fernley Lecture, he sees and acknowledges the
-dilemma into which “materialistic” science is driven; but whether
-“theological” science, so ably represented by himself, can
-altogether evade it, is a question that I do not here stay to
-propound. This much, however, I may say, scientific dicta
-notwithstanding, there is another department of scientific research
-which _does_ form the _nexus_—the _veritable_ missing link—between
-the known and their unknown, and this is the science of psychology,
-which commences just where the professors of science (physical)
-confess themselves baffled, and are unable, or rather unwilling, to
-advance further in this to them _terra incognita_. The wilful
-ignoring of this by Materialistic leaders of thought ends by putting
-them out of court in the discussion of the profound problems arising
-out of the discoveries of the psychological scientist. In
-presence of facts, the evidence for which are world wide and as
-demonstrable—_on their own plane or ground_—as geological, or
-astronomical facts which the psychologist adduces, of what
-conceivable use are the “relations of matter and force” of the
-physicist, as explanatory of the laws, &c., pertaining to the new
-world discovered by psychological _Savants_?
-
-It will be new to many of your readers to find the Rev. Dr.
-“hob-nobbing” with Professor Huxley, who is quoted as—_not_ a
-Materialist! The learned professor appears to be indignant with
-those who are zealous for “the fundamental article of the faith
-materialistic,” who “parade force and matter as the Alpha and Omega
-of existence,” and says, “If I were forced to choose between
-Materialism and Idealism, I would elect for the latter”; and the
-lecturer adds, “Truly, if our choice must be between them, this is
-the normal alternative.” It were better had the Professor given some
-inkling as to what _he_ meant by this high-sounding term
-“Idealism.”[131]
-
------
-
-Footnote 131:
-
- Both the Idealism of Mr. Herbert Spencer, and the Hylo-Idealism of
- Dr. Lewins are more materialistic and atheistic than any of the
- honestly declared materialistic views—Buchner’s and Molaschott’s
- included.—[ED.]
-
------
-
-The author again says—“I adopt gladly the language of Professor
-Huxley: Belief, in the scientific sense of the word, is a serious
-matter, and needs, strong foundations. If it were given me to look
-beyond the abyss of geologically recorded time to the still more
-remote period when the earth was passing through physical and
-chemical conditions, I should expect to be a witness of the
-evolution of living protoplasm from not-living matter.”
-
-“So should I,” adds the Rev. Dr., who brings in Mr. Crooks (?), of
-whom the lecturer says, “I do not forget the recent and splendid
-service done by Mr. Crooks to the philosophical side of chemistry.
-It is a most subtle and exquisite means of endeavouring to deduce
-the _method_, the ‘_law_’ according to which what we know as the
-‘chemical elements’ were built up. He obtains indications of a
-primitive element—a something out of which the elements were
-evolved. He calls it _protyle_ or first stuff, and from its presence
-concludes that the elements, as we know them, have been evolved from
-simpler matter—or perhaps, indeed, from one sole kind of matter.” In
-the following sentences he tries hard to depreciate this “splendid
-discovery” by Mr. Crooks, the reason for which is anything but
-difficult to discover. Dr. Dallinger _knows_ that Mr. Crooks
-published a work entitled “Researches in the Phenomena of
-Spiritualism,” containing his _Experimental_ Investigations in
-Psychic Force, which he, in conjunction with his friend Huxley,
-thinks it beneath him to notice.
-
-But _I_ claim the “splendid discovery” of Mr. Crooks to be of far
-more transcendent importance than the learned scientist will admit.
-It comes marvellously near to the scientific demonstration of the
-ethic propounded by the “philosophy of spirit,” “There is but one
-life, and one substance, by which life is manifested in an
-infinitude of forms in all universes, from the simplest to the most
-complex organic.”
-
-On this subject the Lecture contains the following eloquent, and, I
-may add, brilliant peroration.
-
- “Life, it is well known, has its phenomena inherent in, and
- strictly confined to, a highly complex compound, with fixed
- chemical constituents. This compound, in its living state, is
- known as protoplasm. It is clear, colourless, and to our finest
- optical resources, devoid of discoverable structure. There is
- not a living thing on earth but possesses its life in
- protoplasm, from a microscopic fungus, to Man. To depict the
- properties of Life in irreducible simplicity, take one of the
- lowliest instances within the range of science. Let it be one of
- the exquisitely minute, almost infinitely prolific, and
- universally diffused living forms that set up, and carry on,
- putrefaction. The lesser of them may, when considered as solid
- specks, vary from the fifty-thousand-millionth of a cubic inch
- to the twenty-billionth of a cubic inch (evidently far beneath
- the unaided optic power of the human eye to see). I select one
- that is oval in shape. Its mission as an organism, is to break
- up and set free the chemical elements that had been locked up in
- dead organic compounds. (Query—Was this tiny creature
- self-generated, or was it the product of the _dead_ organism?)
- Its own substance wears out by this and other means; and it has
- the power to renovate the waste from the dead decomposition in
- which it lives, constructing, in the lavatory of its protoplasm,
- new living matter. But more; this vital and inconceivably minute
- speck multiplies with astounding rapidity in two ways; by the
- first and common process, in the course of a minute and a half,
- the entire body is divided into two precisely similar bodies,
- each one perfect; almost immediately these again divide, and so
- on in geometric ratio through all the populated fluid; the
- rapidity of this intense and wonderful vital action transcending
- all thought. By this process alone, a single form may, in three
- hours, give rise to a population of organisms as great as the
- human population of the globe. This is life—whether vegetable or
- animal none can determine—in the simplest form in which it can
- be known, and which distinguish it for ever and everywhere from
- what is not life.”
-
-Several equally interesting examples of recent scientific
-discoveries are given, but space forbids me to more than mention
-them. Science, as represented by the _Savants_, evidently believes
-in an unbridged chasm between the forms of life and not-life. The
-Scientist and Philosopher of Spirit join issue on this, for they
-declare that “Life is present everywhere, and _in_ all forms,
-organic or non-organic, and without the presence of Life no
-forms—not even mineral—could be phenomenal or _ex_istent.”
-
-Your space does not permit me to deal with more than one other, and,
-to many, the more important subject of Biblical records coming
-within the domain of science. Here is a specimen of how the learned
-scientist and theologian deals with the biblical account of
-Creation.
-
- “And God said, ‘Let the earth bring forth the living creature
- after his kind.’ That is the utterance of the human conception,
- which can alone represent to us the divine resolve to fill the
- earth with life—and the joy of living things. ‘And it was so.’ But
- what epochs of countless ages filled the incalculable
- interval?”[132]
-
------
-
-Footnote 132:
-
- A few years—and, who knows? perhaps only few months more, and
- Protestant England will have reverend scientists explaining to
- their congregations from the pulpits that Adam and Eve were but
- the “missing link”—_two tailless baboons_.—[ED.]
-
------
-
-The boldness of this utterance from one in the position of the
-Reverend Lecturer can be well imagined. It contains the elements of
-combustion which need but the spark of investigation to deal a death
-blow to the established Churchianic dogma of Biblical infallibility
-in its literal sense. I conclude by repeating that such a
-deliverance by a ministerial representative of the Wesleyan
-denomination is a phenomenon that strikingly indicates the “Signs of
-the times,” and which shows that the emancipation of the human mind
-from the bonds of theological presumption is not far distant.
-
- WILLIAM OXLEY.
-
-Higher Broughton, Manchester, _December_ 11th, 1887.
-
- ------------------
-
-ABSOLUTE MONISM; OR, MIND IS MATTER AND MATTER IS MIND. By SUNDARAM
-IYER, F.T.S. Madras, 1887.
-
-Under the above title the author issues an address delivered at the
-last convention of the delegates of the Theosophical Society at
-Adyar. Metaphysicians, who note with interest all criticisms of
-Western psychology from the Oriental standpoint, will welcome the
-appearance of this extremely able and instructive _brochure_, which
-constitutes the first instalment of Absolute Monism. The object of
-the writer is to discuss the point whether an examination of all
-theories, as to relations of mind and body, “does not lead us to the
-Unistic theory that Mind is Matter, and Matter is Mind.” He
-endeavours to merge the apparent dualism of subject and object into
-a fundamental unity:—
-
- “Is mind a product of organized matter? No ... for organized
- matter is only a combination of material particles, as is
- unorganized matter. How is it, then, that there is the
- manifestation of Mind in the one case, and not in the other?...
- Can subjective facts ever emerge out of a group of molecules?
- Never; as many times never as there are molecules in the group.
- And why? Because Mind cannot issue from No Mind.” (p. 13.)
-
-The line of argument adopted _versus_ Materialism—the doctrine that
-mental facts are the _resultant_ of chemical changes in the brain;
-force and matter being the only Ultimates of Existence—is
-unquestionably forcible. Mind can never be resolved into a
-“bye-product” of brain activity, for several valid reasons. In the
-first place, in its aspect of thought, it exhibits _concentration on
-an end_, _intelligence_ and _interest_ in the subject under
-consideration, all of which characteristics, according to
-Tyndall and Du Bois Reymond, are necessarily absent from those
-remarshallings of atoms and molecules which are declared to
-“cerebrate out” mental phenomena! In the second place, the gulf
-between consciousness and molecular change has never been bridged;
-an admission to which the leading physicists and physiologists of
-the day lend all the weight of their authority. The terms
-“consciousness” and “matter” are expressive of things so utterly
-contrasted, that all attempts to deduce the former from the latter
-have met with signal discredit. Nevertheless, materialists assume
-the contrary, whenever the necessities of their philosophy demand
-it. Hence, we find men, like Büchner, admitting in one place that
-“in the relation of soul and brain, phenomena occur which _cannot be
-explained by ... matter and force_,” and elsewhere resolving
-mind into the “_activity of the tissues of the brain_,” “a
-mode of motion”—contradictions, the flagrancy of which is
-enhanced by the fact that the same author invests the physical
-automaton Man with a power to control his actions! Lastly, the
-degradation of consciousness into “brain-function” by constituting
-philosophers, theologians, scientists, and all alike “conscious
-automata”—(machines whose thoughts are determined _for_, not _by_
-their conscious Egos)—knocks away the basis of argument. The only
-resource becomes universal scepticism; a denial of the possibility
-of attaining truth. Can impartiality, correct thinking and
-agreement, be expected on the part of controversialists who form
-part of a comedy of Automata?
-
-If mind is not inherent in matter, it cannot be evolved by mere
-nervous complexity. The combination of two chemical elements cannot
-result in a compound in which something more than the constituent
-factors are present. It is sometimes urged that, since the
-properties of substances are often altogether changed in the course
-of chemical combinations—new ones arising with the temporary lapse
-of the old—consciousness may be explained as a “peculiar property”
-of matter under some of its conditions. Mr. Sundaram Iyer meets this
-objection ably. “Aquosity,” it is said, is a property of oxygen and
-hydrogen in combination, though not in isolation. To this he
-answers, “chemical properties are either purely subjective facts or
-objectivo-subjective ones” (p. 57). They exist only in the
-consciousness of the percipient, and represent no external and
-independent reality. Psychologists of the type of Huxley would do
-well to recall this fact, apart from the considerations springing
-from other data.
-
-Our author is loud in his praises of _Panpsychism_, that phase of
-pantheism which regards all matter as saturated with a potential
-psyche. He speaks of the “catholicity, sublimity and beauty ... not
-to say the philosophy, and logic, and truthfulness of this creed of
-thought.” It is, however, clear that some of the authorities he
-cites in support of this view, more especially Clifford, Tyndall,
-and Ueberweg, represent a phase of thought which is too
-materialistic to do justice to an elevated pantheistic concept.
-Clifford’s _conscious_ mind-_stuff_ is sublimated materialism, and
-Ueberweg speaks of those “sensations” present in “inanimate” objects
-which are “concentrated” in the human brain, as if they represented
-so many substances to be weighed in scales. Instructive and
-thoughtful as is the discussion of this subject (pp. 32-63), its
-value would have been increased by a survey of the pantheistic
-schools of German speculation, so many of whose conclusions are
-absolutely at one with esoteric views as to the Logos and the
-metaphysics of consciousness.
-
-After discussing the primary and secondary (so-called) qualities of
-matter, as tabulated by Mill, Hamilton and others, Mr. Sundaram Iyer
-passes on the question: “What is force?”
-
- “Force _is_ matter ... it may be related to matter in ... four
- ways:—firstly, it may be an extraneous power to matter, acting
- upon it from without; secondly, it may be an inherent power in
- matter, influencing it from within, but yet distinct from the
- substance of matter; thirdly, it may be an innate power in matter,
- influencing it from within, and not distinct from the substance of
- matter; or fourthly, it may be a function of the substance of
- matter.” (p. 76-7.)
-
-After an interesting criticism of current theories, he concludes
-that:—
-
- “Function is simply the phenomenal effect of the latent cause,
- namely force, but never force itself. This potential existence,
- which is in matter, _is a physical existence_. If not it cannot,
- as shown before, produce any impression whatsoever upon or in the
- substance of matter.”
-
-Matter is force and force is matter. It is not quite evident,
-however, whether this position is strictly reconcilable with the
-remark that “the primary qualities of matter are all simplifiable
-into ... extension and (its) motion (actual or possible).”
-
-If force is a _physical existence_, and the real _substance_ of
-matter at the same time, we get back no further into the mystery of
-what things-in-themselves really are. Physical existence remains the
-reality behind physical existence and the realization of matter and
-force, as aspects only of one basis, in no way simplifies the crux.
-
-It is not clear, moreover, what is the exact meaning the author
-intends by the use of the word “force.” Is it motion—molar or
-molecular—or the unknown cause of motion? According to Professor
-Huxley, “force” is merely an expression used to denote the _cause_
-of motion, whatever that may be. We only _know_ this cause in its
-_aspect_ of motion, and cannot penetrate behind the veil in order to
-grasp the Noumenon of which motion is the phenomenal effect. The
-necessity, therefore, of recognising the fact that _motion_ is all
-that falls within the cognizance of sense, forbids the (profane)
-scientist to use the term “force” as representative of anything but
-an abstraction. The question is complicated by the consideration
-that the _substantiality_ of various so-called “forces” appears most
-probable, and that this substantiality becomes objectively real to
-sense, only on a plane beyond this—the domain of matter in its order
-of physical differentiations.
-
-The materialistic doctrine that force merely = a motion of matter is
-contradicted by the fact that, as shown by Mill, _motion can be
-temporarily neutralized_. Lift a heavy weight on to a shelf and the
-mechanical energy expended in the act is latent in the potentiality
-of the weight to fall to the ground again. There is _no immediate
-equivalent_, as the attraction of the earth for the object remains
-the same (the now greater distance tending to diminish the amount
-though in a very minute degree.)
-
-It may be further noted that, granting Mr. Sundaram Iyer’s
-definition of matter as “_extension pure and simple_,” to be correct
-(p. 112), it is difficult to understand how he predicates this
-barren content as endowed with _motion_ (p. 83.) What moves?
-
-The rest of the _brochure_ is taken up with some excellent criticism
-of current conceptions of atoms, space and heterogenealism (a creed
-now so sorely wounded by Mr. Crooke’s “Protyle.”) Dealing with one
-of the late Mr. G. H. Lewe’s utterances, the author remarks
-with great truth: “By some mysterious law of occurrence the
-self-contradictions of the bulk of the erudite and enlightened are
-in point of gravity, palpableness, and number in direct proportion
-to their erudition and enlightenment.” With how many contrasted
-dicta from the pages of our Büchners, Spencers, Bains etc., etc.,
-could this conclusion be supported.
-
-One word before we close. Is the title of the work well chosen? It
-appears to us the least satisfactory sentence which has been traced
-by the writer’s pen. The definition of “mind as matter and matter as
-mind” not only offers no solution of the great psychological problem
-discussed, but does injustice to the contents of the work itself.
-
-In the process of definition we “assemble representative examples of
-the phenomena,” under investigation and “our work lies in
-generalizing these, in detecting community in the midst of
-difference.” Now, there is _no community whatever_ between mental
-and material facts. For as Professor Bain writes:
-
-“Extension is but the first of a long series of properties all
-present in matter, _all absent in mind_ ... our mental experience,
-our feelings and thoughts, have no _extension_, no _place_, no
-_form_[133] or _outline_, or _mechanical division_ of parts; and we
-are incapable of attending to anything mental until we shut off the
-view of all that.”—“_Mind and Body._” pp. 125 and 135.
-
------
-
-Footnote 133:
-
- Nevertheless _objectively_ viewed thoughts are actual entities to
- the occultist.
-
------
-
-The phenomenal contrast of mind and matter is not only at the root
-of our present constitution but an essential of our terrestrial
-consciousness. Duality is illusion in the ultimate analysis; but
-within the limits of a Universe-cycle or Great Manwantaræ it holds
-true. The _two_ bases of manifested Being—the Logos (spirit) and
-Mulaprakriti, (Matter, or rather its Noumenon) are unified in the
-absolute reality, but in the Manvantaric Maya, under space and time
-conditions, they _are contrasted though mutually interdependent
-aspects of the_ ONE CAUSE.
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- EDITORS’ NOTES.
-
-We have a good deal of correspondence now in type, but must stand
-over till next month owing to lack of space.
-
-In particular we wish to acknowledge a letter on Hylo-Idealism,
-signed C. N., forwarded to us by Dr. Lewins from a correspondent of
-his now in the East. This letter places Hylo-Idealism in a new and
-very different light, and its straightforward style and language are
-in strong contrast to the turgid effusions of such writers as G. M.
-McC. An extract from one of the latter’s letters to the “_Secular
-Review_” (January 7, 1888), for instance, says that “Specialism _is_
-Superficialism, and _vice versa_, both being _fractionalism_;
-and that the true desideratum is generalisationism (_i.e._
-_all-roundism_ and _all-throughism_), whereby and wherein the
-Kantian and Hegelian metaphysic may be precipitated and modern
-Materialism sublimed? There is only one alembic for both, and that
-is Solipsism—that true ‘wisdom of the ages,’ in which the
-profoundest thinker is at one with the little child.—G. M.
-McC.”!!![134]
-
- ------------------
-
-The following books have been received and will be noticed in due
-course:—
-
-“Absolute Relativism; or, the Absolute in Relation,” by W. B.
-McTaggart. (W. Stewart & Co.)
-
-“Spirit Revealed,” by Captain William C. Eldon Serjeant. (George
-Redway.)
-
-“A Modern Apostle,” and other Poems, by Constance C. W. Naden.
-(Kegan Paul, Trench & Co.)
-
-“Manuel of Etheropathy,” by Dr. Count Manzetti.
-
------
-
-Footnote 134:
-
- See also his letter under Correspondence.
-
------
-
- =Correspondence.=
-
- -------
-
- THE CHURCH AND THE DOCTRINE OF ATONEMENT.
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-As it is often supposed that the clergy are required to be united as
-one man in teaching a doctrine called Atonement, and that this
-doctrine requires the clergy either to teach that “God required the
-blood of Jesus to be shed and offered as a sacrifice for an
-Atonement,” or to leave the Church if they reject it; therefore,
-since I reject this doctrine, it is sometimes wondered how I can
-either have been admitted to ordination, or, being admitted, how I
-can remain in, or expect to have a hearing in, the pulpits of the
-National Churches.
-
-_The explanation_ of my position is as follows:
-
-I offered myself as a candidate for ordination much later than is
-usual; and _one_ of the three beneficed clergy, whose testimonials,
-as to the candidate’s religious views being orthodox, each candidate
-is required to provide before being accepted as a candidate for
-examination and ordination, _informed_ the Bishop of London
-(Jackson) that I did not hold Church of England views on the
-Atonement. The Bishop, therefore, before accepting me as a
-candidate, required a personal interview; when I told the Bishop, in
-reply to his question, whether I had any difficulty in accepting the
-doctrine of Atonement as taught in the second of the XXXIX.
-Articles, that I was entering the Church in order to teach, that it
-was the work of Jesus Christ to devote His life a living sacrifice
-to persuade us to believe that in His love, His mind, His spirit
-towards us, we saw (so far as it could be manifested in the human
-form) the love, mind, and spirit of God towards us; and that the
-sacrifice of Jesus consisted in His leaving nothing undone that love
-could do or suffer, even to drinking to its very dregs the cup of
-our hatred, whilst blind and ignorant, in order that we might accept
-and believe His testimony.
-
-And, in addition, I told the Bishop that if the XXXIX. Articles did
-not allow of this teaching, and demanded of the clergy to believe
-and teach that “God required the blood of Jesus to be shed and
-offered as a sacrifice for an Atonement, either to appease God’s
-wrath, satisfy His justice, or propitiate His favour,” then such a
-doctrine was immoral, anti-Christian, contrary to the Scriptures,
-and made God to be no better than Shylock, a wolf, or a devil. And I
-dared the Bishop to refuse accepting me as a candidate.
-
-The Bishop made no reply, neither assenting nor dissenting, and I
-returned to Petersham to await the result of this interview. After a
-day or two the Bishop’s chaplain wrote that I might consider my
-proposal to come to the Bishop’s examination for Orders accepted;
-and I was ordained without one word of comment upon the conversation
-at this private interview. But my first vicar only allowed me to
-preach three times, and then for the rest of the year he boycotted
-me from either preaching, reading, or even speaking in the parish,
-excepting only in a particular part of it. My second vicar, after
-allowing me to preach three times, also boycotted me entirely. I
-appealed to the Bishop, but he declined to interfere. So after
-striving in vain to find a clergyman who would allow me to preach
-what I was ordained to teach, I published pamphlets, and delivered
-them by the hundred and thousand at the church doors after the
-service, wherever there was a large congregation; but after a time
-the Bishop was appealed to to stop me; when he not only denied me,
-as Peter denied Jesus, but he threatened to instruct the police to
-prevent me; and the ruling powers at St Paul’s Cathedral did
-instruct the chief of the police to prevent me.
-
-As a last resort, I write letters in the Press wherever I can find a
-newspaper willing to open its columns, to explain my views and
-appeal to the people to obtain liberty in the Church for teaching
-the truth of “Christ Crucified.” But so great is the opposition to
-this, that the chief organ of the Church and the Press (the _Times_)
-refuses even to allow me to advertise for a pulpit, on the ground
-that it is _inadmissible_; notwithstanding all the minutest details
-of divorce trials are freely _admissible_, thus proving that
-everything is admissible excepting one thing, viz.: the truth of
-Christ Crucified.
-
-And yet the Archbishop of Canterbury has recently told the world
-that “the Church wishes the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
-the truth, to be told,” and the Bishops of Carlisle, Durham,
-Peterborough, Manchester, Liverpool and Bedford, have also used
-words to the same effect. But although I have spent the best part of
-my life (17 years) in striving to find one clergyman (from the
-highest to the lowest), I have not found one who would allow this
-liberty to speak the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
-truth, concerning Christ Crucified. And I appeal to the rulers of
-the Church to allow this liberty—and to the people to demand and
-obtain this liberty, if the rulers of the Church refuse it. For I
-have a letter from Canon Liddon, in which he says to me, “I can
-believe with all my heart, although I only know you from the two
-letters which you have written to me (upon my sermons), that if you
-were to preach, people would go to hear you as they go to hear me.”
-Is there not a cause then, why I should complain of being thus
-cruelly and unjustly boycotted for 17 years without any reason?
-
-The chief organ of the Church and the Press (the _Times_) in the
-supposed chief Christian city in the world, refused to publish, even
-as an advertisement, any one of the three following appeals, on the
-ground that they were _inadmissible_. Yes, _inadmissible_, whilst
-all the minutest details of the Barrett trial, the Dilke trial, the
-Colin Campbell trial, the Seabright trial, and a host of others of a
-like nature, were all _freely admissible_.
-
- I.
-
-“A pulpit wanted, in the National Church, in which liberty will be
-allowed to teach the truth of Christ Crucified, openly and
-fearlessly, in order that it may no longer remain either a
-stumbling-block to the Jews, foolishness to the world, or a mystery
-to the teachers of it (as it is to this day, for want only of this
-liberty), but may verily be seen to be, as it is, and as St. Paul
-asserted it to be, the power of God, and wisdom of God for the
-salvation of all men.”
-
- II.
-
-“The Rev. T. G. Headley, of Petersham, S.W., appeals to the Clergy
-and people of the Church of England for a pulpit in which he may be
-allowed to preach seven sermons: I. on Unbelief; II. the Trial of
-Abraham; III. the Day of Judgment; IV. Mary Magdalene; V. Conversion
-of St. Paul; VI. Jesus, only; VII. Inspiration.”
-
- III.
-
-“The Rev. T. G. Headley, of Petersham, S.W., appeals to the Clergy
-for a pulpit in which he may be allowed to explain the mystery of
-Christ Crucified, that it may no longer remain a mystery.”
-
- Rev. T. G. HEADLEY.
-
-Manor House, Petersham, S.W.
-
- ---
-
-[This persistent refusal is the more remarkable as other preachers
-are allowed to teach worse, _from an orthodox standpoint, of
-course_. Is it _inadmissible_ “to explain the mystery of Christ
-Crucified,” as the Rev. Mr. Headley is likely to, lest it should
-interfere with the explanation and description of Jehovah—“_one with
-Christ Jesus_” in the orthodox dogma—by the Rev. H. R. Haweis, M.
-A.? Says this truthful and cultured if not very pious orator: “At
-first the chief attributes of Satan were given to Jehovah. It was
-God who destroyed the world, hardened Pharaoh, tempted David,
-provoked to sin, and punished the sinner. This way of thinking
-lingered even as late as 700 B.C.: ‘I the Lord make peace and create
-evil’ (Isa. xlv. 7). We have an odd survival of this identification
-of God with the Devil in the word ‘_Deuce_,’ which is none other
-than ‘_Deus_,’ but which to us always means the Devil. As the Jew
-grew more spiritual he gradually transferred the devilish functions
-to a ‘Satan,’ or accusing spirit. The transition point appears in
-comparing the early passage (2 Sam. xxiv.), when _God_ is said to
-‘move’ David to number the people, with the later (1 Chron. xxi.),
-where _Satan_ is said to be the instigator who ‘provoked’ the
-numbering. But Satan is not yet the King Devil. We can take up our
-Bible and trace the gradual transformation of Satan from an accusing
-angel into the King Devil of popular theology.”—(_The Key_, etc p.
-22.) This, we believe, is an even more damaging teaching for the
-Orthodox Church than any theory about “Christ Crucified.” Mr.
-Headley seeks to prove Christ, the Rev. Haweis ridiculing and making
-away with the Devil, _destroys and makes away for ever with Jesus_,
-as Christ, also. For, as logically argued by Cardinal Ventura de
-Raulica, “_to demonstrate the existence of Satan, is to
-re-establish_ ONE OF THE FUNDAMENTAL DOGMAS OF THE CHURCH, _which
-serves as a basis for Christianity, and without which_, Satan (and
-Jesus) would be but names”; or to put it in the still stronger terms
-of the pious Chevalier des Mousseaux, “_The Devil is the chief
-pillar of Faith_ ... if it was not for him, the Saviour, the
-Crucified, the Redeemer, would be but the most ridiculous of
-supernumeraries, and the Cross an insult to good sense.” (See _Isis
-Unveil._ vol. i., 103; vol. ii., 14.) Truly so. Were there no Devil,
-a Christ to save the World from him would be hardly wanted! Yet, the
-Rev. Haweis says: (p. 24) “I cannot now discuss the teaching of the
-N. T. on the King Devil, or I might show that Jesus did not endorse
-the popular view of one King Devil, and ... notice the way in which
-our translators have played fast and loose with the words _Diabolus
-and Satan_;” adding that the Tree and Serpent worship was an
-Oriental cult, “of which the narrative of Adam and Eve is a Semitic
-form.” Is this _admissible_ orthodoxy?—ED.]
-
- SOCIALISM AND THEOSOPHY.
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-MESDAMES,—In the December number of LUCIFER Mr. J. B. Bright takes
-exception to some remarks on Socialism in an article on
-“Brotherhood,” which appeared in your pages a month previously.
-
-As the writer of that article, I think it right to accept Mr.
-Bright’s challenge, and endeavour to replace my somewhat hasty
-generalisations by a more precise statement of the teachings of
-Theosophy, as they appear to me to bear on the question at issue.
-
-Mr. Bright objects to my use of the phrase “_materialistic_
-Socialism.” My intention was to draw a distinction between that
-which “concerns itself primarily with the material or physical
-condition of mankind,” and that other form of purely voluntary
-association, springing, as regards each of its members, from a
-recognition of their unity of purpose, and the realisation of the
-idea of brotherhood, for an example of which we may turn to the
-communistic system of the early Christian Church. I would point out
-that this is not a fanciful distinction, as in the first case what
-is described as “a juster distribution of wealth” is the very
-essence of the Socialistic idea, while in the second it is only an
-incident, arising from the conviction that worldly possessions have
-in themselves no value in comparison with “the things of the
-spirit.” I maintain then that the teachings of Theosophy are opposed
-to “modern materialistic Socialism,” and I will endeavour to point
-out, as briefly as possible, in what this opposition consists.
-
-There is at the outset a fundamental difference between Theosophy
-and Socialism in the value they attach to the “material and
-physical” well-being of mankind. Theosophy regards any given earth
-life as an infinitesimal link in the chain of lives which leads from
-the first glimmerings of a separate consciousness up to the very
-threshold of Divinity and All-knowledge. And taking the doctrines of
-Re-incarnation and Karma, as interacting laws, it sees in the
-apparent injustices of physical life, and in the inequalities of
-intellectual and moral development among mankind, the results of
-good or bad use made of opportunities in previous incarnations. The
-Universe is governed by the great law of Harmony, whose agent is
-Karma, and infractions of this law, or rebellion against it, are
-punished by the action of Karma, whether in the individual or the
-race. Thus the position of every individual in respect to his fellow
-men, and the position of every nation (the compound, as it were, of
-individual Karmas) in respect to other nations, is the direct result
-of previously acquired characteristics and affinities. The
-re-incarnation of an individual will be governed by his personal
-affinities; firstly, to the general Karma of his nation: secondly,
-to the particular circumstances of his parentage and condition in
-life. Theosophy therefore teaches that so far as regards his
-individual Karma, a man’s place in Society is what he has made it,
-and he has no right to cry out against the injustice of the law
-which he has broken, and which inexorably exacts the penalty of his
-default. This does not however quite hold good as regards the
-national or the cyclic Karma. It is quite possible that by the
-action of cyclic Karma injustice may be done to individuals, to be
-atoned for no doubt in future existences, but at the same time
-calculated to impede their due and regular development. The
-combating of this cyclic Karma, in so far as it deals unjustly with
-individuals, is the work of the great and wise ones of this earth,
-and every true Theosophist will to the best of his ability take part
-in the struggle. But the Socialist movement is itself a part of the
-cyclic Karma, and in its endeavour to rectify what seem, from its
-limited point of view, injustices, it cannot fail to be unjust to
-those the justice of whose position in life it declines to
-recognise. Thus it cannot be otherwise than that it should meet with
-opposition from those whose object is the improvement of humanity as
-a whole.
-
-I must in the second place point out that the teaching of Theosophy
-is entirely opposed to the idea that any very great progress can be
-made by humanity as a whole, within the space of a few generations.
-Speaking of the destruction of evil in the human heart, the author
-of “Light on the Path” says, “Only the strong can kill it out. The
-weak must wait for its growth, its fruition, its death. And it is a
-plant which lives and increases throughout the ages. It flowers when
-man has accumulated unto himself innumerable existences.” This is
-undoubtedly Theosophical teaching, but I do not think it tallies
-with Mr. Bright’s view that “this self same society——contains within
-it all the germs of such a reconstruction of the physical
-environment as shall shortly place the means of spiritual and
-psychical regeneration within the reach of all.” It is impossible
-that Socialism or any other external organisation can “raise the
-intellectual and instinctive moral standard of the whole community
-to such an extent that all will, in the next generation after the
-Social Revolution, be amenable to the truths” of Theosophy. This
-would be equivalent to saying that every member of the community was
-prepared definitely to undertake the task of self-conquest, and it
-happens unfortunately that almost all the external work of Socialism
-is in the opposite direction. Further, it must be distinctly pointed
-out that this task of self-conquest must be undertaken and carried
-through by each man for himself, and only those who have reached a
-certain point in human evolution are ready for the struggle. There
-is one other point on which I feel some stress must be laid. It
-seems to me impossible that Theosophy, recognising as it does the
-immense gulf which exists between ordinary humanity (in which term I
-of course include all its followers), and those who are on the
-threshold of Divinity, can fail to recognise at the same time the
-principle of hierarchy in its best and noblest sense. I mean of
-course a spiritual hierarchy, but even this is incompatible with
-that innate hatred of domination which is so obvious in Socialism.
-There is no doubt some inconsistency in this hatred of domination,
-as in practice Socialists are prepared to substitute for the
-existing domination of intelligence that of mere numbers, but this,
-if anything, only makes the contrast between the two ideas somewhat
-stronger. It is only right to point out that an accepted disciple
-(not a mere student) practically surrenders his personal liberty,
-and pledges himself to obedience to those great ones who are the
-initiators of the Theosophical movement.
-
-I have endeavoured thus far to particularise my general statement
-that the teachings of Theosophy were opposed to Socialism. I think
-Mr. Bright’s objections to my other statements are in effect
-answered in what I have already said, but I may perhaps be permitted
-to deal with them separately. If Mr. Bright has understood the
-meaning of the article on Brotherhood, he will, I think, see that
-whereas the Theosophical idea of brotherhood is based on the
-identity of the Divine spirit inherent in humanity, and thence
-working downwards, the brotherhood of Socialism is based on the
-assumption of equality on the material, or intellectual plane, and
-has, _per se_, no existence at all on the higher plane. The
-brotherhood of Theosophy, once rightly understood, will no doubt be
-manifested on the lower planes, but that does not make it the same
-thing as an idea of Brotherhood which begins and ends in physical
-existence.
-
-As to my remark that Socialism is an attempt to interfere with the
-action of the Laws of Karma, I should perhaps have added the word
-“individual,” which, in conjunction with my reference to the parable
-of the talents, should make the meaning clear. Socialism aims at the
-levelling of classes, which is nothing else than a redistribution of
-the responsibilities of life. I understand the parable of the
-talents to indicate the true meaning of the differences in
-opportunities accorded to individuals during their life on earth.
-Every opportunity is also a responsibility, and from those to whom
-much is given much will be demanded. Further, responsibility is
-thrust upon those who can bear it, and to relieve them from it, and
-transfer it to the shoulders of the weaker brethren, is an
-interference with the laws of Karma, and can only lead to a
-retardation of the general evolution of humanity. I will only say in
-conclusion that I have endeavoured to confine my remarks to the view
-of Socialism advanced by Mr. Bright. It is indeed hardly necessary
-to point out that Theosophy can never be a party to the incitements
-to violence, and the appeals to the baser passions which Mr. Bright
-rightly deprecates, but which are unfortunately too often the
-stock-in-trade of the Socialist orator.
-
-I feel that there are many points in Mr. Bright’s letter to which I
-should be glad to reply more in detail, but I fear that in so doing
-I might be considered as trenching too much on those purely
-political aspects of the question which are outside the scope of
-Theosophical work.
-
- I am, Mesdames,
- Your obedient servant,
- THOS. B. HARBOTTLE.
-
- -----------------------
-
- WHAT IS THEOSOPHY?
-
-_The question is answered by Schopenhauer as follows_:
-
-“... Starting from the plane of _mental conception_ (_Vorstellung_),
-and proceeding on our way towards the attainment of _objective
-knowledge_, we shall never be able to arrive at a higher point than
-our own conception (imagination), _i.e._ of the external appearance
-of the object of our observation; but we shall never be able to
-penetrate into the interior of the things and to find out what they
-really are (not what they merely appear to be). So far I agree with
-_Kant_. But as a counterpoise to this truth I have called attention
-to another one; namely, that we are not merely the _cognising
-subject_, but we are also ourselves a part of object of our
-cognition, we are ourselves the _Thing itself_. There is
-consequently an interior way open to us from that self-existing and
-interior essence of things, which we cannot approach from the
-outside; a kind of subterranean passage, a secret connection, by
-which we by treason, as it were, may at once penetrate into a
-fortress which was impregnable from the outside. The _Thing itself_
-can as such enter our consciousness only in a direct manner, _i.e._
-_by becoming conscious of its own self_. To attempt to know it
-objectively is to ask for a self-contradiction.” (_The World as Will
-and Conception._ Vol. ii., Cap. 18).
-
-What Schopenhauer expresses in modern philosophical language might
-perhaps be stated in a few words by saying, that man cannot become
-conscious of the truth unless the truth is in him, and in that case
-it is not the man who recognises the truth, but the truth which
-recognises itself in man. He who wants to know it objectively must
-separate himself from it, because no one can see his own face
-without the help of a mirror; but if he separates himself from it,
-the truth exists in him no longer. It is therefore the truth itself
-which may become self-conscious in man, provided there exists any
-truth in him.
-
- F. H.
-
- -----------------------
-
- A NOTE OF EXPLANATION.
-
-I would much rather suffer an unintentional misrepresentation of my
-meaning than take the trouble to reply, and have no desire to
-magnify small matters of difference. But a very critical friend
-calls my attention to certain statements and apparent discrepancies
-in the “Esoteric Character of the Gospels,” on which I will beg
-leave to say a word.
-
-I find it affirmed on p. 300, in a foot-note, that “Mr. G. Massey
-is not correct in saying that ‘_The Gnostic form of the name
-Chrest or Chrestos denotes the Good God, not a human original,’
-for it denoted the latter, that is, a good, holy man._” But either
-the statement has no meaning as an answer to me, or it is based on
-a misunderstanding of mine.[135] I was showing that the _original_
-Christ of the Gnosis was not one particular form of human
-personality, like the supposed historic Christ, and that the name
-denoted a divine, and not a human _original_. I was perfectly well
-aware, as your quotations show, that the name was _afterwards_
-conferred on the “good” as the Chrestoi or Chrestiani. Nor do I
-say, or anywhere imply, that the “_Karest_,” or mummy-type of
-immortality _was_ the _only form of the Christ_, as your
-quotations again will prove. I have written enough about that
-Gnostic Christ who was the Immortal Self in man, the reflection
-of, or emanation from, the divine nature in humanity, and in both
-sexes, not merely in one.[136] This is the Christ that never could
-become a one person or be limited to one sex. This you accept and
-preach; yet you can add “_Still the personage (Jesus) so addressed
-by Paul—wherever he lived—was a great initiate, and a ‘Son of
-God.’_”[137] But the Christos of Paul, being the Gnostic Christ,
-as you admit (301), it cannot be a personage named Jesus, or a
-great Initiate, who was addressed by him. It appears to me that in
-passages like these, you are giving away all that is worth
-contending for, and vouching for that which never has been, and
-never can be, proved. I have searched for Jesus many years in the
-Gospels and elsewhere without being able to catch hold of the hem
-of the garment of any human personality. Ben-Pandira we know a
-little of, but cannot make him out in the Christ of the Gospels.
-The Christ of the Gnosis can be identified, but not with any
-historic Jesus.
-
------
-
-Footnote 135:
-
- The remark made has never been meant as “an answer,” but simply as
- an observation that the word “Chrestos” applied to a “good man,” a
- “human original,” and not to a “good God only.” If such was not
- the intention of Mr. Massey, and he amplifies his idea elsewhere,
- it was not so amplified in his article in the “Agnostic Annual.”
- It is, therefore, simply a bare statement of facts referring to
- that particular article and no more. I do not for one moment
- oppose Mr. Massey’s conclusions, nor doubt his undeniable learning
- in the direction of those particular researches, _i.e._, about the
- words “Christos” and “Chrestos.” What I say is, that he limits
- them to the negation of an historical Christ, and, for reasons no
- doubt very weighty, does not touch upon their principal esoteric
- meaning in the temple-phraseology of the Mysteries.—H.P.B.
-
-Footnote 136:
-
- This is absolutely and preeminently a Theosophical doctrine taught
- ever since 1875, when the Theosophical Society was founded.—[ED.]
-
-Footnote 137:
-
- This, I am afraid, is a misunderstanding (due, no doubt, to my own
- fault) on the part of our learned correspondent, of the meaning
- that was intended to be conveyed in the articles now criticized.
- If he goes to the trouble of reading over again the paragraph that
- misled him (see p. 307, 5th paragraph), he will, perhaps, see that
- it is so. That which was really meant was that, though the terms
- _Christos_ and _Chréstos_ are generic surnames, still, the
- personage so addressed (not by Paul, necessarily, but by any one),
- was a great Initiate and a “Son of God.” It is the name “Jesus,”
- placed in the sentence in parentheses that made it both clumsy and
- misleading. Whether Paul knew of Jehoshua Ben Pandira (and he must
- have heard of him), or not, he could never have applied the
- surname used by him to Jesus or any other _historic_ Christ.
- Otherwise his _Epistles_ would not have been withheld and exiled
- as they were. The sentence which precedes the two incriminated
- statements, shows that no such thing, as understood by Mr. Massey,
- could have been really meant, as it is said “Occultism pure and
- simple finds the same mystic elements in the Christian as in other
- faiths, _though it rejects emphatically its dogmatic and historic
- character_.” The two statements, viz., that Jesus or Jehoshua Ben
- Pandira _whenever he lived_, was a great Initiate and the “Son of
- God”—just as Apollonius of Tyana was—and that Paul never meant
- either him or any other living Initiate, but a metaphysical
- Christos present in, and _personal_ to, every mystic Gnostic as to
- every initiated Pagan—are not at all irreconcileable. A man may
- know of several great Initiates, and yet place his own ideal on a
- far higher pedestal than any of these.—[H.P.B.]
-
------
-
-We do not go to the Christian Gospels to learn the true nature of
-the Christ, or the incarnation according to the Gnostic religion
-(I use this term in preference to yours of the “Wisdom-Religion,”
-as being more definite and explanatory; not as a religion,
-supposed by the _Idiotai_ to have followed in the wake of Historic
-Christianity!). These were known in Egypt, more than six thousand
-years ago. When the monuments began the Cult of the Supreme God
-Atum was extant. We know not how many æons earlier, but six
-thousand years will do. Atum = Adam was the divine father of an
-eternal soul which was personated as his son, named Iu-em-hept
-(the Greek Imothos or Æsculapius), an image of whom used to be
-seen (on shelf 3,578, b. 1874), in the British Museum. He was the
-second Atum = Adam, and is called the “Eternal Word” in the
-Ritual. In external phenomena this type represented the Solar God,
-re-born monthly or annually in the lunar orb; in human phenomena
-the Christ or Son of God as the essential and eternal soul in man.
-But he was neither a man nor an Initiate. He was just what the
-Logos, the Word of Truth or Ma-Kheru, the Buddha or Christ is in
-other Cults.[138]
-
------
-
-Footnote 138:
-
- Nor shall I dispute this statement in general. But this does not
- invalidate in one iota _my_ claim. The temple priests assumed
- the names of the gods they served, and this is as well known a
- fact, as that the defunct Egyptian became an “Osiris”—was
- “osirified”—after his death. Yet Osiris was assuredly neither
- “man nor an Initiate,” but a being hardly recognised as such by
- the Royal Society of materialistic science. Why, then, could not
- an “Initiate,” who had succeeded in merging his spiritual being
- into the _Christos state_, be regarded as a Christos after his
- last and supreme initiation, just as he was called _Chrestos_
- before that? Neither Plotinus, Porphyry nor Apollonius were
- Christians, yet, according to esoteric teaching, Plotinus
- realized this sublime state (of becoming or uniting himself with
- his _Christos_) six times, Apollonius of Tyana four times, while
- Porphyry reached the exalted state only once, when over sixty
- years of age. The Gnostics called the “_Word_” “Abraxas” and
- “Christos” indiscriminately, and by whatever name we may call
- it, whether Ma-Kheru, or Christos or Abraxas, it is all one.
- That mystic state which gives to our inner being the impulse
- that attracts “the soul toward its origin and centre, the
- Eternal good,” as Plotinus teaches, and makes of man a god, the
- Christos or the unknown made manifest, is a preeminently
- theosophical condition. It belonged to the temple mysteries, and
- the teachings of the Neo-Platonists.—[H.P.B.]
-
------
-
-I cordially agree with “M,” a correspondent whom you quote, and wish
-that all our orthodox friends would as frankly face the facts. If
-any historic Jesus ever did claim to be the Gnostic Christ made
-flesh[139] once for all, he would be the supremest impostor in
-history.
-
-Let us define to ourselves very strictly what it is we do mean, or
-we shall introduce the direst confusion into the conflict, and we
-shall be unable to distinguish the face of friend from foe in the
-cloud of battle-dust which we may raise. What I find is, that
-Historic Christianity was based either upon the suppression or the
-perversion of all that _was_ esoteric in Gnostic Christianity. And
-to bring any aid from the one to the support of the other is to try
-and re-establish with the left hand all that you are knocking down
-with the right.
-
-I am also taken to task on page 307 for alluding to the Bible as a
-“Magazine of falsehoods already exploded, or just going off,” by the
-writer who adds force to my words later on in characterizing these
-same writings as a “Magazine of (_wicked_) falsehoods”[140] (p.
-178), which was going farther than I went, who do set down as much
-to ignorance as to knavery. What I meant was, that the “Fall of Man”
-in the Old Testament, is a falsification of fable, now exploded, and
-that the redemption from that fall, which is promised in the New,
-whether by an “Initiate” or “Son of God” is a fraud based on the
-fable, and a falsehood that is going to be exploded. There is no
-call to mix up the Book of the Dead, the Vedas, or any other sacred
-writings, in this matter. Each tub must stand on its own bottom, and
-the one that won’t, can’t hold water.[141]
-
- GERALD MASSEY.
-
-P.S. By the by, I see the Adventists, and other misleading
-Delusionists are all agog just now about the wonderful fulfilment of
-prophecy, and corroboration of historic fact, that we are now
-witnessing. The “Star of Bethlehem” has reappeared, so they say, to
-prove the truth of the Christian story. But, sad to say, it is not
-the star of Christ that is now visible in the south-east before
-sunrise every morning. It is Venus in her heliacal rising. It is
-Venus as the Maleess, or Lucifer as “Sun of the Morning.” This
-particular Star of Bethlehem—there are various others less brilliant
-and less noticeable—generally does return once every nineteen months
-or so, when the planet Venus is the Morning Star. Only the gaping
-camel-swallowers, who know all about the “Star of Bethlehem,” and
-the fulfilment of prophecy, are not up in Astronomy, and they will
-no doubt squirm and strain at this small gnat of real fact offered
-to them by way of an explanation.
-
- G. M.
-
------
-
-Footnote 139:
-
- “Christ made flesh,” would be a claim worse than imposture, as it
- would be _absurdity_, but a man of flesh assuming the
- _Christ-condition_ temporarily, is indeed an occult, yet living,
- fact.—[ED.]
-
-Footnote 140:
-
- Just so, if it has been originally written to be accepted in its
- dead letter sense. But, as I entirely agree with Mr. Massey, that
- historic Christianity was based upon the suppression, and
- especially the _perversion_ of that which was esoteric in
- gnosticism, it is difficult to see in what it is that we disagree?
- The perversion of esoteric facts in the gospels is not so cleverly
- done as to prevent the true occultist from reading the Gospel
- narratives between the lines.—[H.P.B.]
-
-Footnote 141:
-
- If Mr. G. Massey kindly waits till the conclusion of “the Esoteric
- character of the gospels” to criticise the statements, he may
- perhaps arrive at the conviction that we are not so far apart in
- our ideas upon this particular question as he seems to think. Of
- course my critic being an Egyptologist, opposed to the Aryan
- theory, and arriving at his conclusions only by what he finds in
- strictly authenticated and accepted documents—and I, as a
- Theosophist and an Occultist of a certain school, accepting my
- proofs on data which he rejects—_i.e._ esoteric teachings—we can
- hardly agree upon every point. But the question is not whether
- there was or never was an _historical_ Christ, or Jesus, between
- the years 1 and 33 A.D.—but simply were the Gospels of the
- gnostics (of Marcion and others, for instance) perverted later by
- Christians—esoteric allegories founded on _facts_, or simply
- meaningless fictions? I believe the former, and esoteric teachings
- explain many of the allegories.—[H.P.B.]
-
------
-
- -----------------------
-
- [_We give room to this remarkable letter with the object of
- comparison. The Secularists are loud in proclaiming the modes of
- expression of the Theosophists as “stultic profundity,” and the
- Esoteric Doctrine as “a hopeless chaos,” a “rudely methodised
- madness.” At the same time the Hylo-Idealists are_ PERSONÆ
- GRATISSIMÆ _in the “Secular Review,” and no such remarks are
- passed about their theories and style_. Readers please to compare.
- “Fiat Justitia, ruat Saladinus!”—ED.]
-
- HYLO-IDEALISM—THE SECRET OF JESUS.
-
- “Behold, the Kingdom of Heaven is within you.”
-
-The primacy of Self is indisputable, if by reason of one fact
-only—that this, self-same, Self is the initial postulate of all sane
-philosophy. And, when Philosophy soars to Metaphysic, Scientific
-Analysis “takes up the wondrous tale,” and its burden is Self-hood
-also. All roads lead to Rome. All analysis runs into the Egoistic
-Synthesis. “The One [Ego] remains, the Many change and pass.” Yet
-the passing is only the flux and ebb of the One. In Hegel’s words,
-“that which passes away passes away into its own self: only the
-passing away passes away.” Which things are an allegory, and yet
-“_solvitur ambulando_.” A recent traveller in the United States
-tells us, that, in the Emerson country, he chanced upon cross-roads,
-and found there an apparently contradictory direction-post. One arm
-of it bore the inscription, “This is the way to Concord,” the other,
-pointing in the opposite direction, was similarly worded, “This is
-the way to Concord.” The Hylo-Ideal Thesis is this Ideal Concord, to
-be reached whether you travel by way of Eastern Idealism, or by the
-route of plainer Western Materialism. For, and here all
-contradictions are reconciled, in the one Subject-object which is
-Self, there is no diversity, neither Jew nor Greek, neither Idealism
-only, nor Materialism only, or exclusively, but all is one.[142] And
-in Unity there is no class distinction, no nomenclature, no
-“otherness,” no Ebal _and_ Gerizim, but only the Mount of God. What
-the Ego is, _all_ is.[143] It is the _x_ of every problem and
-answers to any value save the spurious and indifferent one of the
-Dualist.
-
------
-
-Footnote 142:
-
- Hence the Spirit of _Non-Separateness_ in esoteric philosophy must
- be the ONE _truth_.—ED.
-
-Footnote 143:
-
- Only this “Ego” is _universal_, not _individual_: _Absolute_
- Consciousness, not the _human_ Brain.—ED.
-
------
-
-I find Hylo-Idealism (Auto-centricism)—this “pearl of great
-price”—canvassed and examined by many modern thinkers, only to be
-contemptuously cast away, though it would have made each one of them
-in turn “richer than all his tribe.” But it was ever thus. In this
-rejection there is no despair in the view of the _illuminati_. All
-is ours, and paltering with the central truth of SOLIPSISM, as men
-have ever paltered, does not change or diminish the truth itself, or
-lessen the assurance of its ultimate victory, since to go from, or
-flee from, the Egoistic presence is an impossibility. We wander here
-and there, but to seek to transcend ourselves is vain. There must,
-sooner or later, be the _resipiscentia_, the coming home at last to
-Self, and Self only, as to the better home at last.
-
-In this view there is no _Logos_—save that indisputable one, which
-maketh all things to every one of us—no “true Light” save that
-effulgent one which “lighteth every man that cometh into the world,”
-namely, his own creative and illuminating Egoity—_sans_ which there
-is but nothingness. Such a Gospel as this should be termed the
-Evangel of common-sense were it not that that phrase shows only one
-side of the question—“_Virginibus, puerisque est_” but it is also
-the very acme of the exalted intelligence, “the last and sharpest
-height” of human thought where the atmosphere is all too rare for
-mortal breath.
-
-The highest and the lowliest[144] are ever thus akin—“Aryan worship
-secreted in the Holy of Holies the utensils of the dairy.” Grasp but
-the centre truth of truths—that the Ego and its products are _one_,
-that every one of us spins, from his own consciousness, the web of
-thing and circumstance, which envelopes him—and you see at once and
-as it were instinctively, that in this Universe-circle of Egoity
-there is no “otherness” even thinkable, no lower and no higher, no
-difference, nothing essentially common or unclean, everything being,
-not so much cleansed of God, as very THEOBROMA,[145] God’s food and
-nutrient element, seeing that in it, and by it, and through it, we
-and all things CONSUBSTANTIALLY EXIST.
-
------
-
-Footnote 144:
-
- Then why not term the philosophy “_High-Low_-Idealism” _vice_
- “Hylo-Idealism”?—ED.
-
-Footnote 145:
-
- “Theobroma”—the same as _cacao-butter_. We take exception _to the
- phraseology_, not to Dr. Lewins’ ideas.—ED.
-
------
-
-Thus _veræ causæ_ and other figments are not so much unsearchable,
-or past finding out, as out of court or indifferent. Whether all be
-of God, or all be from a “clam-shell,” does not matter—does not, by
-one jot, affect our Thesis. Indifferently we are by origin,
-patricians or “gutter-snipes.” The Ego is free of the Cosmos—equal
-to either fortune, high or low, makes _its own_ universe, calls it
-by its own name, and it “lives and moves and has its being.”
-
- G. M. McC.
-
- -----------------------
-
- GERALD MASSEY ON SHAKSPEARE.
-
- Mr. Massey has sent us a circular, the contents of which should be
- of interest to the lovers of Shakspeare and the buyers of rare
- books. The writer says:
-
-“My work on the Secret Drama of Shakspeare’s Sonnets, with Sketches
-of his Private Friends, and of his own Life and Character, first
-published in the year 1866, the Second Edition of which was issued,
-with a Supplement, for Subscribers in 1872, has now been out of
-print many years. It is frequently enquired for, and very rarely to
-be found in the catalogues of second-hand booksellers. Therefore I
-am about to reproduce the work. It will have to be re-cast and
-re-written where necessary, as the writing can now be more
-definitely done. Errors must be confessed and corrected. The new
-volume will be on lines similar to those of the earlier work,
-accentuated in many of the details, but modified in others. There
-will be something new and more decisive to say concerning both sets
-of the Sonnets, which I call the Southampton and Herbert series; and
-not without reason or warrant will the Comparative method be pushed
-much farther than before. The work will be written up to date in the
-light of the latest knowledge. The most recent data, the latest
-results of Shakspearian Siftings, will be utilised; and something
-will have to be said concerning the current Baconian Craze, which
-was no doubt foreseen by the Great Humourist when he wrote, ‘_A most
-fine figure! To prove you a Cypher!_’ is my aim to fight one last
-battle on this field for what I maintain to be the cause of truth
-and right; to entrust a final answer on the Sonnet question to the
-types of John Guttenberg, and leave in his safe keeping a plea that
-shall be heard hereafter, as a permanent memorial to the writer’s
-love and admiration for Shakspeare the Poet and Man. After twenty
-years the ground is felt to be firmer underfoot. The building will
-have a more concrete base. I am enabled to give a closer clinch to
-my conclusions, and, as I think, complete my case. Necessarily the
-book must be large, 700 or 800 pp. The price will be One Guinea.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
-
-
-
- =CORRESPONDENCE=
-
- INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.
-
- ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 3.
-
- _To the Editor of_ LUCIFER.
-
-Question, at London, 11.45 a.m., Feb. 26th, 1887.
-
-Will the quesited die from his present illness?
-
-Hearing by letter that my uncle, an octogenarian, was seriously ill
-from pneumonia, I drew a figure for the moment of the impression to
-do so, which occurred while reading the communication. His illness
-had commenced about February 7th, and he was now confined to his
-bed.
-
-The following are the elements of the figure:—
-
- Cusp of 10th house 0° ♓.
-
- — 11th house 3° ♈.
-
- — 12th house 20° ♉.
-
- — 1st house 4°
- 38’♋.
-
- — 2nd house 20° ♋.
-
- — 3rd house 8° ♌.
-
-Planets’ places: ♆ 25° 10’ ♉; ♅ 11° 46 R ♎; ♄ 15° 54’ R ♉. ♃ 5° 48’
-R ♏; ♂ 20° 31’ 31” ♓; ☉ 7° 35’ 50” ♓; ♀ 27° 53’ 14” ♓; ☿ 23° 18’ 58”
-♓; ☽ 16° 22’ 36” ♈. Caput Draconis 27° 35’ ☊; ⨁ 13 24’ ♌.
-
-As the quesited was the 4th of my mother’s brothers and sisters, my
-mother being the 8th and last, I took the 10th house of the figure
-for herself, the 12th (or 3rd from the 10th) for her eldest brother
-or sister, the 2nd for the 2nd, the 4th for the 3rd, the 6th for the
-4th—the quesited—and the 1st (the 8th from the 6th) for his 8th, or
-house of death. ♂ was lord of his first house, and ☽ of his 8th. The
-aspect was ☽ 25° 51’ 5” ♂, separating from the quindecile, and
-applying to the semisextile. As the significators were in good
-aspects, separating from one and applying to the other, and within
-orbs of both, it signified sure recovery; more especially as ♂
-received ☽ by house, and was dignified by triplicity. Nevertheless,
-the severity of the illness was shown by _Cauda Draconis_ in
-quesited’s 4th house; by ♄, lord of quesited’s 4th, posited in
-quesited’s 8th, retrograde, in his detriment, and in close □ to ☽,
-lady of quesited’s 8th and posited in his 6th. Furthermore, as ☽,
-the applying planet of the two significators, was in a cardinal sign
-and in a succeedent house of the figure, each degree signified a
-week; therefore as ☽ wanted 4° 8’ 55” of the perfect semisextile
-aspect, I judged that he would be convalescent in 4 weeks and 1 day,
-or March 27th. _On March 29th he walked out in his garden for the
-first time_, and fully recovered from his attack.
-
- NEMO.
-
- ------------------
-
- ERRATUM.—Page 76, 2nd column, line 2, _for_ ♍ _read_ ♏.
-
- LUCIFER
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. I. LONDON, FEBRUARY 15TH, 1888. NO. 6.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- “WHAT IS TRUTH?”
-
- “_Truth_ is the Voice of Nature and of Time—
- _Truth_ is the startling monitor _within us_—
- Nought is without it, it comes from the stars,
- The golden sun, and every breeze that blows....”
-
- —W. THOMPSON BACON.
-
- “... Fair Truth’s immortal sun
- Is sometimes hid in clouds; not that her light
- Is in itself defective, but obscured
- By my weak prejudice, imperfect faith
- And all the thousand causes which obstruct
- The growth of goodness....”
-
- —HANNAH MORE.
-
-“What is Truth?” asked Pilate of one who, if the claims of the
-Christian Church are even approximately correct, must have known it.
-But He kept silent. And the truth which He did not divulge, remained
-unrevealed, for his later followers as much as for the Roman
-Governor. The silence of Jesus, however, on this and other
-occasions, does not prevent his present followers from acting as
-though they had received the ultimate and absolute Truth itself; and
-from ignoring the fact that only such Words of Wisdom had been given
-to them as contained a share of the truth, itself concealed in
-parables and dark, though beautiful, sayings.[146]
-
------
-
-Footnote 146:
-
- Jesus says to the “Twelve”—“Unto you is given the mystery of the
- Kingdom of God; but _unto them that are without, all things are
- done in parables_,“ etc. (Mark iv. II.)
-
------
-
-This policy led gradually to dogmatism and assertion. Dogmatism in
-churches, dogmatism in science, dogmatism everywhere. The possible
-truths, hazily perceived in the world of abstraction, like those
-inferred from observation and experiment in the world of matter, are
-forced upon the profane multitudes, too busy to think for
-themselves, under the form of _Divine revelation_ and _Scientific
-authority_. But the same question stands open from the days of
-Socrates and Pilate down to our own age of wholesale negation: is
-there such a thing as _absolute truth_ in the hands of any one party
-or man? Reason answers, “there cannot be.” There is no room for
-absolute truth upon any subject whatsoever, in a world as finite and
-conditioned as man is himself. But there are relative truths, and we
-have to make the best we can of them.
-
-In every age there have been Sages who had mastered the absolute and
-yet could teach but relative truths. For none yet, born of mortal
-woman in _our_ race, has, or could have given out, the whole and the
-final truth to another man, for every one of us has to find that (to
-him) final knowledge _in_ himself. As no two minds can be absolutely
-alike, each has to receive the supreme illumination _through_
-itself, according to its capacity, and from no _human_ light. The
-greatest adept living can reveal of the Universal Truth only so much
-as the mind he is impressing it upon can assimilate, and no more.
-_Tot homines, quot sententiæ_—is an immortal truism. The sun is one,
-but its beams are numberless; and the effects produced are
-beneficent or maleficent, according to the nature and constitution
-of the objects they shine upon. Polarity is universal, but the
-polariser lies in our own consciousness. In proportion as our
-consciousness is elevated towards absolute truth, so do we men
-assimilate it more or less absolutely. But man’s consciousness
-again, is only the sunflower of the earth. Longing for the warm ray,
-the plant can only turn to the sun, and move round and round in
-following the course of the unreachable luminary: its roots keep it
-fast to the soil, and half its life is passed in the shadow....
-
-Still each of us can relatively reach the Sun of Truth even on this
-earth, and assimilate its warmest and most direct rays, however
-differentiated they may become after their long journey through the
-physical particles in space. To achieve this, there are two methods.
-On the physical plane we may use our mental polariscope; and,
-analyzing the properties of each ray, choose the purest. On the
-plane of spirituality, to reach the Sun of Truth we must work in
-dead earnest for the development of our higher nature. We know that
-by paralyzing gradually within ourselves the appetites of the lower
-personality, and thereby deadening the voice of the purely
-physiological mind—that mind which depends upon, and is inseparable
-from, its medium or _vehicle_, the organic brain—the animal man in
-us may make room for the spiritual; and once aroused from its latent
-state, the highest spiritual senses and perceptions grow in us in
-proportion, and develop _pari passu_ with the “divine man.” This is
-what the great adepts, the Yogis in the East and the Mystics in the
-West, have always done and are still doing.
-
-But we also know, that with a few exceptions, no man of the world,
-no materialist, will ever believe in the existence of such adepts,
-or even in the possibility of such a spiritual or psychic
-development. “The (ancient) fool hath said in his heart, There is no
-God”; the modern says, “There are no adepts on earth, they are
-figments of your diseased fancy.” Knowing this we hasten to reassure
-our readers of the Thomas Didymus type. We beg them to turn in this
-magazine to reading more congenial to them; say to the miscellaneous
-papers on Hylo-Idealism, by various writers.[147]
-
------
-
-Footnote 147:
-
- _e.g._, to the little article “Autocentricism”—on the same
- “philosophy,” or again, to the apex of the Hylo-Idealist pyramid
- in this Number. It is a letter of protest by the learned Founder
- of the School in question, against a _mistake_ of ours. He
- complains of our “coupling” his name with those of Mr. Herbert
- Spencer, Darwin, Huxley, and others, on the question of atheism
- and materialism, as the said lights in the psychological and
- physical sciences are considered by Dr. Lewins too flickering, too
- “compromising” and weak, to deserve the honourable appellation of
- Atheists or even Agnostics. See “Correspondence” in Double Column,
- and the reply by “The Adversary.”
-
------
-
-For LUCIFER tries to satisfy its readers of whatever “school of
-thought,” and shows itself equally impartial to Theist and Atheist,
-Mystic and Agnostic, Christian and Gentile. Such articles as our
-editorials, the Comments on “Light on the Path,” etc, etc.—are not
-intended for Materialists. They are addressed to Theosophists, or
-readers who know in their hearts that Masters of Wisdom _do_ exist:
-and, though _absolute_ truth is not on earth and has to be searched
-for in higher regions, that there still are, even on this silly,
-ever-whirling little globe of ours, some things that are not even
-dreamt of in Western philosophy.
-
-To return to our subject. It thus follows that, though “general
-_abstract_ truth is the most precious of all blessings” for many of
-us, as it was for Rousseau, we have, meanwhile, to be satisfied with
-relative truths. In sober fact, we are a poor set of mortals at
-best, ever in dread before the face of even a relative truth, lest
-it should devour ourselves and our petty little preconceptions along
-with us. As for an absolute truth, most of us are as incapable of
-seeing it as of reaching the moon on a bicycle. Firstly, because
-absolute truth is as immovable as the mountain of Mahomet, which
-refused to disturb itself for the prophet, so that he had to go to
-it himself. And we have to follow his example if we would approach
-it even at a distance. Secondly, because the kingdom of absolute
-truth is not of this world, while we are too much of it. And
-thirdly, because notwithstanding that in the poet’s fancy man is
-
- “... the abstract
- Of all perfection, which the workmanship
- Of heaven hath modelled....”
-
-in reality he is a sorry bundle of anomalies and paradoxes, an empty
-wind bag inflated with his own importance, with contradictory and
-easily influenced opinions. He is at once an arrogant and a weak
-creature, which, though in constant dread of some authority,
-terrestrial or celestial, will yet—
-
- “... like an angry ape,
- Play such fantastic tricks before high Heaven
- As make the angels weep.”
-
-Now, since truth is a multifaced jewel, the facets of which it is
-impossible to perceive all at once; and since, again, no two men,
-however anxious to discern truth, can see even one of those facets
-alike, what can be done to help them to perceive it? As physical
-man, limited and trammelled from every side by illusions, cannot
-reach truth by the light of his terrestrial perceptions, we
-say—develop in you the _inner_ knowledge. From the time when the
-Delphic oracle said to the enquirer “Man, know thyself,” no greater
-or more important truth was ever taught. Without such perception,
-man will remain ever blind to even many a relative, let alone
-absolute, truth. Man has to _know himself_, _i.e._, acquire the
-_inner_ perceptions which never deceive, before he can master any
-absolute truth. Absolute truth is _the symbol of Eternity_, and no
-_finite_ mind can ever grasp the eternal, hence, no truth in its
-fulness can ever dawn upon it. To reach the state during which man
-sees and senses it, we have to paralyze the senses of the external
-man of clay. This is a difficult task, we may be told, and most
-people will, at this rate, prefer to remain satisfied with relative
-truths, no doubt. But to approach even terrestrial truths requires,
-first of all, _love of truth for its own sake_, for otherwise no
-recognition of it will follow. And who loves truth in this age for
-its own sake? How many of us are prepared to search for, accept, and
-carry it out, in the midst of a society in which anything that would
-achieve success _has to be built on appearances, not on reality, on
-self-assertion, not on intrinsic value_? We are fully aware of the
-difficulties in the way of receiving truth. The fair heavenly maiden
-descends only on a (to her) congenial soil—the soil of an impartial,
-unprejudiced mind, illuminated by pure Spiritual Consciousness; and
-both are truly rare dwellers in civilized lands. In our century of
-steam and electricity, when man lives at a maddening speed that
-leaves him barely time for reflection, he allows himself usually to
-be drifted down from cradle to grave, nailed to the Procrustean bed
-of custom and conventionality. Now conventionality—pure and
-simple—is a congenital LIE, as it is in every case a “_simulation_
-of feelings according to a received standard” (F. W. Robertson’s
-definition); and where there is any simulation _there cannot be any
-truth_. How profound the remark made by Byron, that “truth is a gem
-that is found at a great depth; whilst on the surface of this world
-all things are weighed _by the false scales of custom_,” is best
-known to those who are forced to live in the stifling atmosphere of
-such social conventionalism, and who, even when willing and anxious
-to learn, dare not accept the truths they long for, for fear of the
-ferocious Moloch called Society.
-
-Look around you, reader; study the accounts given by world-known
-travellers, recall the joint observations of literary thinkers, the
-data of science and of statistics. Draw the picture of modern
-society, of modern politics, of modern religion and modern life in
-general before your mind’s eye. Remember the ways and customs of
-every cultured race and nation under the sun. Observe the doings and
-the moral attitude of people in the civilized centres of Europe,
-America, and even of the far East and the colonies, everywhere where
-the white man has carried the “benefits” of so-called civilization.
-And now, having passed in review all this, pause and reflect, and
-then name, _if you can_, that blessed _Eldorado_, that exceptional
-spot on the globe, _where_ TRUTH _is the honoured guest, and_ LIE
-_and_ SHAM _the ostracised outcasts_? YOU CANNOT. Nor can any one
-else, unless he is prepared and determined to add his mite to the
-mass of falsehood that reigns supreme in every department of
-national and social life. “Truth!” cried Carlyle, “truth, though the
-heavens crush me for following her, no falsehood, though a whole
-celestial Lubberland were the prize of Apostasy.” Noble words,
-these. But how many think, and how many will _dare_ to speak as
-Carlyle did, in our nineteenth century day? Does not the gigantic
-appalling majority prefer to a man the “paradise of Do-nothings,”
-the _pays de Cocagne_ of heartless selfishness? It is this majority
-that recoils terror-stricken before the most shadowy outline of
-every new and unpopular truth, out of mere cowardly fear, lest Mrs.
-Harris should denounce, and Mrs. Grundy condemn, its converts to the
-torture of being rent piecemeal by her murderous tongue.
-
-SELFISHNESS, the first-born of Ignorance, and the fruit of the
-teaching which asserts that for every newly-born infant a new soul,
-_separate and distinct_ from the Universal Soul, is “created”—this
-Selfishness is the impassable wall between the _personal_ Self and
-Truth. It is the prolific mother of all human vices. _Lie_ being
-born out of the necessity for dissembling, and _Hypocrisy_ out of
-the desire to mask _Lie_. It is the fungus growing and strengthening
-with age in every human heart in which it has devoured all better
-feelings. Selfishness kills every noble impulse in our natures, and
-is the one deity, fearing no faithlessness or desertion from its
-votaries. Hence, we see it reign supreme in the world and in
-so-called fashionable society. As a result, we live, and move, and
-have our being in this god of darkness under his trinitarian aspect
-of Sham, Humbug, and Falsehood, called RESPECTABILITY.
-
-Is this Truth and Fact, or is it slander? Turn whichever way you
-will, and you find, from the top of the social ladder to the bottom,
-deceit and hypocrisy at work for dear Self’s sake, in every nation
-as in every individual. But nations, by tacit Agreement, have
-decided that selfish motives in politics shall be called “noble
-national aspiration, patriotism,” etc.; and the citizen views it in
-his family circle as “domestic virtue.” Nevertheless, Selfishness,
-whether it breeds desire for aggrandizement of territory, or
-competition in commerce at the expense of one’s neighbour, can never
-be regarded as a virtue. We see smooth-tongued DECEIT and BRUTE
-FORCE—the _Jachin_ and _Boaz_ of every International Temple of
-Solomon—called Diplomacy, and we call it by its right name. Because
-the diplomat bows low before these two pillars of national glory and
-politics, and puts their masonic symbolism “in (cunning) strength
-shall this my house be established” into daily practice; _i.e._,
-gets by deceit what he cannot obtain by force—shall we applaud him?
-A diplomat’s qualification—“dexterity or skill in securing
-advantages“—for one’s own country at the expense of other countries,
-can hardly be achieved by speaking _truth_, but verily by a wily and
-deceitful tongue; and, therefore, LUCIFER calls such action—a
-_living_, and an evident LIE.
-
-But it is not in politics alone that custom and selfishness have
-agreed to call deceit and lie virtue, and to reward him who lies
-best with public statues. Every class of Society lives on LIE, and
-would fall to pieces without it. Cultured, God-and-law-fearing
-aristocracy being as fond of the forbidden fruit as any plebeian, is
-forced to lie from morn to noon in order to cover what it is pleased
-to term its “little peccadillos,” but which TRUTH regards as gross
-immorality. Society of the middle classes is honeycombed with false
-smiles, false talk, and mutual treachery. For the majority religion
-has become a thin tinsel veil thrown over the corpse of spiritual
-faith. The master goes to church to deceive his servants; the
-starving curate—preaching what he has ceased to believe
-in—hood-winks his bishop; the bishop—his God. _Dailies_, political
-and social, might adopt with advantage for their motto Georges
-Dandin’s immortal query—“Lequel de nous deux trompe-t-on ici?”—Even
-Science, once the anchor of the salvation of Truth, has ceased to be
-the temple of _naked_ Fact. Almost to a man the Scientists strive
-now only to force upon their colleagues and the public the
-acceptance of some personal hobby, of some new-fangled theory, which
-will shed lustre on their name and fame. A Scientist is as ready to
-suppress damaging evidence against a current scientific hypothesis
-in our times, as a missionary in heathen-land, or a preacher at
-home, to persuade his congregation that modern geology is a lie, and
-evolution but vanity and vexation of spirit.
-
-Such is the actual state of things in 1888 A.D., and yet we are
-taken to task by certain papers for seeing this year in more than
-gloomy colours!
-
-Lie has spread to such extent—supported as it is by custom and
-conventionalities—that even chronology forces people to lie. The
-suffixes A.D. and B.C. used after the dates of the year by Jew and
-Heathen, in European and even Asiatic lands, by the Materialist and
-the Agnostic as much as by the Christian, at home, are—a _lie_ used
-to sanction another LIE.
-
-Where then is even relative truth to be found? If, so far back as
-the century of Democritus, she appeared to him under the form of a
-goddess lying at the very bottom of a well, so deep that it gave but
-little hope for her release; under the present circumstances we have
-a certain right to believe her hidden, at least, as far off as the
-ever invisible _dark_ side of the moon. This is why, perhaps, all
-the votaries of hidden truths are forthwith set down as lunatics.
-However it may be, in no case and under no threat shall LUCIFER be
-ever forced into pandering to any universally and tacitly
-recognised, and as universally practised lie, but will hold to fact,
-pure and simple, trying to proclaim truth whensoever found, and
-under no cowardly mask. Bigotry and intolerance may be regarded as
-orthodox and sound policy, and the encouraging of social prejudices
-and personal hobbies at the cost of truth, as a wise course to
-pursue in order to secure success for a publication. Let it be so.
-The Editors of LUCIFER are Theosophists, and their motto is chosen:
-_Vera pro gratiis_.
-
-They are quite aware that LUCIFER’S libations and sacrifices to
-the goddess Truth do not send a sweet savoury smoke into the noses
-of the lords of the press, nor does the bright “Son of the
-Morning” smell sweet in their nostrils. He is ignored when not
-abused as—_veritas odium paret_. Even his friends are beginning to
-find fault with him. They cannot see _why it should not be a
-purely Theosophical magazine_, in other words, why it refuses to
-be dogmatic and bigoted. Instead of devoting every inch of space
-to theosophical and occult teachings, it opens its pages “to the
-publication of the most grotesquely heterogeneous elements and
-conflicting doctrines.” This is the chief accusation, to which we
-answer—why not? Theosophy is divine knowledge, and knowledge is
-truth; every _true_ fact, every sincere word are thus part and
-parcel of Theosophy. One who is skilled in divine alchemy, or even
-approximately blessed with the gift of the perception of truth,
-will find and extract it from an erroneous as much as from a
-correct statement. However small the particle of gold lost in a
-ton of rubbish, it is the noble metal still, and worthy of being
-dug out even at the price of some extra trouble. As has been said,
-it is often as useful to know what a thing _is not_, as to learn
-what it _is_. The average reader can hardly hope to find any fact
-in a sectarian publication under all its aspects, _pro_ and _con_,
-for either one way or the other its presentation is sure to be
-biassed, and the scales helped to incline to that side to which
-its editor’s special policy is directed. A Theosophical magazine
-is thus, perhaps, the only publication where one may hope to find,
-at any rate, the unbiassed, if still only approximate truth and
-fact. Naked truth is reflected in LUCIFER under its many aspects,
-for no philosophical or religious views are excluded from its
-pages. And, as every philosophy and religion, however incomplete,
-unsatisfactory, and even foolish some may be occasionally, must be
-based on a truth and fact of some kind, the reader has thus the
-opportunity of comparing, analysing, and choosing from the several
-philosophies discussed therein. LUCIFER offers as many facets of
-the One universal jewel as its limited space will permit, and says
-to its readers: “Choose you this day whom ye will serve: whether
-the gods that were on the other side of the flood which submerged
-man’s reasoning powers and divine knowledge, or the gods of the
-Amorites of _custom_ and _social falsehood_, or again, the Lord of
-(the highest) Self—the bright destroyer of the dark power of
-illusion?” Surely it is that philosophy that tends to diminish,
-instead of adding to, the sum of human misery, which is the best.
-
-At all events, the choice is there, and for this purpose only have
-we opened our pages to every kind of contributors. Therefore do you
-find in them the views of a Christian clergyman who believes in his
-God and Christ, but rejects the wicked interpretations and the
-enforced dogmas of his ambitious proud Church, along with the
-doctrines of the Hylo-Idealist, who denies God, soul, and
-immortality, and believes in nought save himself. The rankest
-Materialists will find hospitality in our journal; aye, even those
-who have not scrupled to fill pages of it with sneers and personal
-remarks upon ourselves, and abuse of the doctrines of Theosophy, so
-dear to us. When a journal of _free thought_, conducted by an
-Atheist, inserts an article by a Mystic or Theosophist in praise of
-his occult views and the mystery of Parabrahmam, and passes on it
-only a few casual remarks, then shall we say LUCIFER has found a
-rival. When a Christian periodical or missionary organ accepts an
-article from the pen of a free-thinker deriding belief in Adam and
-his rib, and passes criticism on Christianity—its editor’s faith—in
-meek silence, then it will have become worthy of LUCIFER, and may be
-said truly to have reached that degree of tolerance when it may be
-placed on a level with any Theosophical publication.
-
-But so long as none of these organs do something of the kind, they
-are all sectarian, bigoted, intolerant, and can never have an idea
-of truth and justice. They may throw innuendoes against LUCIFER and
-its editors, they cannot affect either. In fact, the editors of that
-magazine feel proud of such criticism and accusations, as they are
-witnesses to the absolute absence of bigotry, or arrogance of any
-kind in theosophy, the result of the divine beauty of the doctrines
-it preaches. For, as said, Theosophy allows a hearing and a fair
-chance to all. It deems no views—if sincere—entirely destitute of
-truth. It respects thinking men, to whatever class of thought they
-may belong. Ever ready to oppose ideas and views which can only
-create confusion without benefiting philosophy, it leaves their
-expounders personally to believe in whatever they please, and does
-justice to their ideas when they are good. Indeed, the conclusions
-or deductions of a philosophic writer may be entirely opposed to our
-views and the teachings we expound; yet, his premises and statements
-of facts may be quite correct, and other people may profit by the
-adverse philosophy, even if we ourselves reject it, believing we
-have something higher and still nearer to the truth. In any case,
-our profession of faith is now made plain, and all that is said in
-the foregoing pages both justifies and explains our editorial
-policy.
-
-To sum up the idea, with regard to absolute and relative truth, we
-can only repeat what we said before. _Outside a certain highly
-spiritual and elevated state of mind, during which Man is at one
-with the_ UNIVERSAL MIND—_he can get nought on earth but relative
-truth,_ _or truths, from whatsoever philosophy or religion_. Were
-even the goddess who dwells at the bottom of the well to issue from
-her place of confinement, she could give man no more than he can
-assimilate. Meanwhile, every one can sit near that well—the name of
-which is KNOWLEDGE—and gaze into its depths in the hope of seeing
-Truth’s fair image reflected, at least, on the dark waters. This,
-however, as remarked by Richter, presents a certain danger. Some
-truth, to be sure, may be occasionally reflected as in a mirror on
-the spot we gaze upon, and thus reward the patient student. But,
-adds the German thinker, “I have heard that some philosophers in
-seeking for Truth, to pay homage to her, have seen their own image
-in the water and adored it instead.”...
-
-It is to avoid such a calamity—one that has befallen every founder
-of a religious or philosophical school—that the editors are
-studiously careful not to offer the reader only those truths which
-they find reflected in their own personal brains. They offer the
-public a wide choice, and refuse to show bigotry and intolerance,
-which are the chief landmarks on the path of Sectarianism. But,
-while leaving the widest margin possible for comparison, our
-opponents cannot hope to find _their faces_ reflected on the clear
-waters of our LUCIFER, without remarks or just criticism upon the
-most prominent features thereof, if in contrast with theosophical
-views.
-
-This, however, only within the cover of the public magazine, and so
-far as regards the merely intellectual aspect of philosophical
-truths. Concerning the deeper spiritual, and one may almost say
-religious, beliefs, no true Theosophist ought to degrade these by
-subjecting them to public discussion, but ought rather to treasure
-and hide them deep within the sanctuary of his innermost soul. Such
-beliefs and doctrines should never be rashly given out, as they risk
-unavoidable profanation by the rough handling of the indifferent and
-the critical. Nor ought they to be embodied in any publication
-except as hypotheses offered to the consideration of the thinking
-portion of the public. Theosophical truths, when they transcend a
-certain limit of speculation, had better remain concealed from
-public view, for the “evidence of things not seen” is no evidence
-save to him who sees, hears, and senses it. It is not to be dragged
-outside the “Holy of Holies,” the temple of the impersonal divine
-_Ego_, or the indwelling SELF. For, while every fact outside _its_
-perception can, as we have shown, be, at best, only a relative
-truth, a ray from the absolute truth can reflect itself only in the
-pure mirror of its own flame—our highest SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS.
-And how can the darkness (of illusion) comprehend the LIGHT that
-shineth in it?
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- THE SOLDIER’S DAUGHTER.
-
- (Judges xi., 6-xi., 39.)
-
-In the early days of Israel’s history, whilst Israel was struggling
-to be a nation and a kingdom, there was a people called the
-Ammonites, who were making war upon the Israelites.
-
-And we are told that the Israelites, in great distress and fear,
-went out of their country, into the land of Tob, to find a man named
-Jephthah, who was a man of mighty valour, in order to persuade him
-to return with them, and be the captain and leader of their army, to
-fight against, and save them from the Ammonites.
-
-Now this man Jephthah was himself an Israelite by birth, but because
-his mother had not been legally married to his father, Gilead, the
-sons of Gilead’s lawful wife conspired together to drive him from
-his hearth, home, and country, as a disgrace to the family and to
-Israel; but the true reason was that they were envious and jealous
-of him, in like manner as the brethren of Joseph who had previously
-conspired against him.
-
-For Jephthah himself was wholly innocent of having done anything to
-disgrace either the family or the nation. And therefore, in common
-justice, he ought not to have been made to suffer merely for the
-form and manner of his birth; over which neither Jephthah nor any of
-us have any control, either as to the time, when, or the manner, in
-which we should be born. But although Jephthah was despised and cast
-out as a dog, in the days of Israel’s prosperity, yet in the day of
-Israel’s adversity and weakness, Israel no longer allowed any mean
-and petty distinctions to prevent her from recognising the noble
-character of Jephthah, and she entreated him to forget past
-ill-usage, and return to be her captain and leader to save her from
-the Ammonites.
-
-And as this proposal of Israel afforded Jephthah the long wished-for
-opportunity of returning to his country, and of establishing an
-honourable reputation, _therefore_ he was not only ready to forget
-and forgive the insults and injuries which he had received in the
-past from his brethren, but he was also ready to return with them,
-and share their troubles and dangers, even to sacrificing his life,
-if need be, in order to save their lives and property.
-
-Jephthah was the more willing to return and make this sacrifice
-because he had a daughter, an only daughter and child; and she was
-all the world to him, as he was to her; “for beside her he had
-neither son nor daughter,” and she had patiently and willingly
-suffered with him, and borne all his sorrows as her own.
-
-But imagine the horror of Jephthah, after having saved the lives and
-property of his brethren and countrymen by risking his own life, at
-being then required, by these very brethren and countrymen, to shed
-the blood of his only child! Immediately after the war was over,
-Jephthah was required to sacrifice his daughter as a burnt offering
-to the Lord of Battles, for having assisted Israel to overcome the
-Ammonites; and so great was the love of this heroine for her father,
-and for everything that concerned his honour and glory, that she
-willingly consented to be sacrificed as a burnt offering.
-
-Can anything be conceived more heartrending and terrible than that
-Jephthah should thus be required by these very brethren and
-countrymen whom he had saved, to shed the blood of his only child as
-a sacrifice, in acknowledgment that he owed his victory to
-miraculous assistance and favour, and not to his own skill and
-valour?
-
-What to him was the deliverance either of Israel or of his brethren
-(who had cared naught for him), if they now required him to
-sacrifice the only being in the world that he loved, and that loved
-him, and who was therefore all the world to him?
-
-It is true that Jephthah had made a foolish and rash vow, in the mad
-excitement of the moment before going into battle, that if he came
-out of the battle victorious, he would sacrifice, as a burnt
-offering to the Lord, the first thing that came to meet him from his
-house as he returned from the battle; but when the first person that
-met Jephthah was his only daughter, _what could that Deity be, which
-accepted as a sacrifice the blood of this child?_ What could the
-religion of Jephthah’s brethren and countrymen be, that allowed and
-required him to commit such an evil deed?
-
-For if Jephthah had saved his brethren and countrymen from their
-enemies, could they not now save Jephthah from shedding the blood of
-his daughter as a sacrifice, in the name of religion, _when_ the
-very deed itself proclaimed the religion, and their conception both
-of religion and of the Deity, to be evil? And if his brethren and
-countrymen would not save his daughter, but even required him to
-fulfil his vow, could not Jephthah save himself and his child by
-refusing to commit this evil deed? But if, in order to save his own
-blood from being shed as a blasphemer for an atonement, Jephthah had
-to flee from the country as an outcast and a criminal, whither could
-he flee to, that would make life worth keeping? For surely the world
-would be no desirable place for an honest man to live in, if he had
-to live at enmity with men both at home and abroad, because he had
-made a rash and foolish vow, which no Deity worthy of being
-worshipped could or would require him to perform?
-
-Because under such a sanguinary conception of religion, and of the
-Deity, there was no remission, or redemption either, with, or
-without, the shedding of blood. If Jephthah refused to shed the
-blood of his daughter, then both his own and his daughter’s would be
-shed by his brethren and countrymen, whilst if Jephthah shed the
-blood of his daughter, as a sacrifice to save his own, what
-remission or redemption was there in this? None!
-
-And he cried for a deliverer to save him and his daughter, from this
-great trouble. For he had staked his life and his all upon obtaining
-a position and reputation for himself and his daughter at home in
-Israel; and now, to give up hope of this for ever, and to shed the
-blood of his daughter, or again flee as an outcast—what was it but a
-living death to Jephthah, either way, whether he remained and
-sacrificed his daughter, or fled to save her?
-
-But who, in this agonising moment of Jephthah’s trouble, could raise
-his voice to demand, in the name of religion, this diabolical
-sacrifice of his innocent child?
-
-Yes; diabolical. For what spirit, or voice, but that of a devil or
-fiend could _counsel_ men to shed the blood of this pure and noble
-girl? And where could the devil or fiend be found who would _commit_
-the deed itself?
-
-Jephthah is mockingly told that he is the fiend who must sacrifice
-his child, as Abraham is said to have offered Isaac. And Jephthah is
-told that he has no one to blame but himself, for having made the
-vow. But who heard the vow? or who accepted the vow? Who could he,
-or they be, who would require the fulfilling of it?[148]
-
------
-
-Footnote 148:
-
- Jehovah, of course, in his own national character of Baal, Moloch,
- Typhon, etc. The final and conclusive identification of the “Lord
- God” of Israel with Moloch, we find in the last chapter of
- _Leviticus_, concerning _things devoted not to be redeemed_.... “A
- man shall devote unto the Lord of all that he hath, _both of man_
- and beast.... None devoted, which shall be devoted of men, shall
- be redeemed, _but shall surely be put to death_ ... for it is
- _most holy unto the Lord_.” (See Leviticus xxvii., 28, 29, 30.)
-
- “Notwithstanding the numerous proofs that the Israelites
- worshipped a variety of gods, and even offered human sacrifices
- until a far later period than their Pagan neighbours, they have
- contrived to blind posterity in regard to truth. They sacrificed
- human life as late as 169 B.C. (_Vide_ “_Joseph. contra Apion_,”
- 11, 8—what Antiochus Epiphanius found in the Temple), and the
- _Bible_ contains a number of such records. At a time when the
- Pagans had long abandoned the abominable practice, and had
- replaced the sacrificial man by the animal, and the ox of
- Dionysius was sacrificed at the Bacchic Mysteries (“Anthon,” p.
- 365), Jephthah is represented sacrificing his own daughter to the
- ‘Lord’ for a burnt-offering.” _Isis Unveiled_, vol ii., pp. 524,
- 525.
-
------
-
-Are they worthy of the name of brethren and countrymen who would
-persuade Jephthah _to assassinate_ his daughter, in the name of
-religion, or even look on at such an assassination? Would it not be
-blasphemy to say that a good Deity required Jephthah to kill his
-innocent child? And would not a good Deity release Jephthah from his
-vow, and forbid him to sacrifice his daughter, in like manner as the
-Scriptures teach us Abraham was forbidden to sacrifice his son
-Isaac? And if it is said, it would have been faithless and sinful of
-Jephthah after returning from the battle victorious, to have refused
-the offering of his daughter as a sacrifice; yet surely to bind
-Jephthah to break the Sixth Commandment, and to shed innocent blood
-in the name of religion, would be making the Deity that required
-such a sacrifice to be evil, and His worshippers to be the doers of
-evil; and thus Jephthah would be required to sell himself to the
-devil.
-
-And how could men be other than the doers of evil, and the priests
-of evil, who would counsel Jephthah to commit this evil deed, and be
-ready to commit it themselves if he hesitated? How? Whether Jephthah
-received any miraculous assistance or not, in the war, yet he was in
-no wise bound to surrender his personality and to become an abject
-slave to the supposed power that helped him. For Jephthah’s personal
-services were needed as an instrument to deliver and save the
-Israelites, or his services would not have been asked for. It was
-also possible that he might have given certain services, which even
-a miraculous power was unable to give—as we read in the Book of
-Judges that “Judah could not drive out the inhabitants of the
-valley, because they had chariots of iron.” (Judges i. 19.)[149]
-
------
-
-Footnote 149:
-
- It is said in the “Holy Book,” that it was “the Lord (who) was
- with Judah,” who “could not drive out the inhabitants of the
- valley, because they had chariots of iron,” (Judges i. 19), and
- not “Judah” at all. This is but natural, according to popular
- belief and superstition that “the Devil is afraid of _iron_.” The
- strong connection and even identity between Jehovah and the Devil
- is ably insisted upon by the Rev. Haweis. See his “Key” (p.
- 22).—ED.
-
------
-
-And again, if all the glory of Jephthah’s victory had to be ascribed
-to a miraculous power, then likewise all the shame would have to be
-ascribed to that power also, for having ordained that Jephthah’s
-daughter should be the first person to meet him after the war, to
-pay _the price of victory_ to Jephthah, with _death to his
-child_—for whom, alone, he coveted victory.
-
-Victory on such terms was defeat and shame, not glory; for surely
-such views of religious worship must be the _d’evil_ worship which
-the Psalmist speaks of (Psalm cvi., 37), and not the service or
-worship of a good God who would have mercy and _not_ sacrifice, as
-Abraham learnt when he went out of the Philistine city into the
-wilderness, and communed with God alone on Mount Moriah.
-
-But it was one thing for a single individual like Abraham, at the
-close of a long life, to acquire the knowledge “that God would have
-mercy and not sacrifice”; and quite another thing for a Town, a
-City, a Nation, or the World, to have acquired this knowledge in its
-infancy; as even Abraham only acquired this knowledge by going out
-of the city into the wilderness, and communing alone with God.
-
-We can well understand how impossible it would have been for Abraham
-even to have attempted, on his return from the mountain, to teach
-the Philistines the faith or gospel (that God would have mercy and
-not sacrifice), from the very fact that when Jesus Christ came _into
-the world_ to teach the faith or gospel, which Abraham had gone _out
-of the world_ to learn, Jesus was condemned by Caiaphas to be
-crucified with malefactors, as a blasphemer. And to this very day
-this doctrine of the power of Caiaphas, the adversary of Jesus,
-continues to be taught as the doctrine of the Church, which it is
-necessary to believe in order to obtain the blessing of the Church
-here and of God hereafter.
-
-Therefore it is manifestly evident that after Abraham had acquired
-the knowledge that God would have mercy and not sacrifice, yet he
-could not publish it, but could only lay it up in his heart as a
-secret treasure, to be disclosed in the distant future, which in the
-vision of his mind he saw. Meanwhile he prayed that the Lord would
-raise up messengers and stewards to prepare the world to receive
-this faith or gospel, because of its being too Herculean a task for
-any one person to alter suddenly the religion of a people.
-
-For whilst priests continued to teach, and the people to believe
-that sacrifices of human beings were acceptable to God, how was the
-man who dared (suddenly and without the cloak of a parable) to
-reveal and publish the contrary, to escape being himself slain as a
-blasphemer, whose blood it would be doing God service to shed for an
-atonement? And until the world was sufficiently educated to declare
-the generation of him who should be unjustly slain (Isaiah liii.),
-it could only be like throwing pearls to swine for such an one to
-attempt the task.
-
-Then from whence, and from whom could Jephthah, who had saved
-others, now look for the salvation of his daughter, or of himself,
-if he refused to sacrifice that daughter?
-
-And, in the anguish of his soul, Jephthah rent his clothes, and
-bemoaned his trouble, whilst his daughter fled to the mountains to
-pour out the sorrow of her soul, during the few short days she had
-yet to live.
-
-It is true that, in order to save her father from the cruel pain of
-assassinating his devoted child, the noble girl may have voluntarily
-leapt into the sulphurous flames on the burning altar; just as the
-noble Roman soldier Curtius on his horse leapt down into the dark
-and awful volcanic gulf as a sacrifice to save his countrymen.
-
-But the more heroic and divine these persons were, the more
-demoniacal and diabolical must be the religion of those persons who
-required them thus to suffer.[150]
-
------
-
-Footnote 150:
-
- And yet it is this “demoniacal and diabolical religion” that
- passed part and parcel into Protestantism.—ED.
-
------
-
-It is true that the priests of such a religion may have believed in
-it themselves, and may have been ready to sacrifice their own sons
-and daughters in like manner; but that in no wise lessens the crime,
-but on the contrary it intensifies it a hundred fold. How were the
-people to be saved from a religion, of which the priests themselves
-needed to be saved, whilst the priests had the sole education of the
-people from infancy upwards, as well as the Chief power in the State
-to make and unmake its laws, even to making and unmaking its kings?
-
-Whilst the priests and rulers of the church taught such a cruel
-religion,[151] would not the people and priests need a Mediator to
-deliver and save them from practising it?
-
------
-
-Footnote 151:
-
- So “the people and priests” do now. And as the late Rev. Henry
- Ward Beecher once said in a sermon, “could Jesus come back and
- behave in the streets of Christian cities as he did in those of
- Jerusalem, he would be declared an impostor and then confined in
- prison.”—ED.
-
------
-
-If He who mediated to deliver and save us was Himself condemned to
-be slain, and crucified with thieves as a blasphemer whose blood
-ought to be shed for an Atonement, what hope of salvation can there
-be for the world from such a Religion, until the people not only
-uplift the Crucified Jesus as having been no blasphemer, but also
-expose the doctrine to be evil and false which is quoted as an
-authority for requiring the blood of “the Just one” to be shed for
-an Atonement? And if it is said that we have no longer women brought
-like Jephthah’s daughter to be assassinated and burnt as a
-sacrifice, or noble men condemned to be burnt as heretics, yet we
-have to the present day noble men and women condemned by the Church
-as evil (to be accursed here and damned hereafter), simply and
-solely because they refuse to believe this evil doctrine of
-Atonement, which is oftentimes such a burden to their soul (either
-to accept or reject) that they are driven to the very verge of
-madness.
-
-It is no uncommon thing to hear priests revile even our Queen as
-being no true Christian, simply because they suppose she does not
-believe in this evil doctrine of atonement, which is the doctrine of
-Caiaphas, the enemy of Christ, and not Christ’s doctrine, teaching,
-or gospel.
-
-Should not such scriptural stories as these of the assassination of
-Jephthah’s noble daughter, of the crucifixion of Jesus, and the
-spilling of the blood of a whole host of martyrs, awaken men who
-have slumbered to rise, to hear, to see, to speak, and run to save
-the world from having to believe in this sanguinary doctrine, which
-is a stumbling-block to the Jews, foolishness to the world, and a
-mystery even to the teachers of it. This doctrine of Atonement can
-not be reconciled as either good or true; and therefore it is the
-cause of all progress being prevented so far as the world is
-dependent on the Church for progress.
-
-Yet the man who doubts or denies the goodness of this doctrine is
-branded by the Church, to the present day, as a Sceptic and Atheist,
-whom all sound Churchmen should avoid. And for sixteen centuries the
-Church used its sovereign power to condemn those who rejected its
-doctrine of Atonement as criminals, whom it would be doing God
-service to burn as heretics; and the Church is only prevented from
-doing so now _because_ (to its great regret) it has no longer the
-power which it formerly had in the days of “the Inquisition.” The
-doctrine remains the same still, and therefore the people owe it, as
-a duty to the long roll of martyrs, to expose it. For it has been
-the cause of much evil, and even to this day it assassinates the
-souls of noble men and women, who incarcerate themselves in
-monasteries and nunneries in the vain attempt to attain a sound
-belief in it.
-
-But when the Church is willing to allow (what it has refused to the
-present day) liberty in the pulpit for explaining the mystery and
-translating the truth of a “Crucified Christ,” then it will be seen
-that the truth is not only a light to the Gentiles, but also the
-glory of Israel; and the truth shall make us free.[152] (John viii.,
-32.)
-
- Adyar, 17th October, 1887. H. S. OLCOTT, P.T.S.
-
------
-
-Footnote 152:
-
- Only, as such _truth_ and _freedom_ amounts to the Church
- committing suicide and burying herself with her own hands, she
- will never allow such a thing. She will die her natural death the
- day when there will not exist a man, woman or child to believe any
- longer in her dogmas. And this beneficent result might be achieved
- within her own hierarchy, were there many such sincere, brave and
- honest clergymen who, like the writer of this article, fear not to
- speak the truth—whatever may come—[ED.]
-
------
-
-
-
-
- LUNIOLATRY.
-
-A friend has just informed me of the fact that when President
-Cleveland was making his recent tour through the States an old negro
-presented him with _the left hind foot of a grave-yard rabbit, which
-had been killed in the dark of the moon_. In making his present the
-negro said he had sent it because he desired the reelection of
-President Cleveland. “_Tell him to preserve it carefully, and that
-as long as he keeps it he will always get there._”
-
-The friend whom I speak of had just been reading a lecture of mine
-on “Luniolatry,” in which the imagery and significance of the hare
-and rabbit in the moon were spoken of all too briefly, and he wishes
-to know if I can interpret the meaning of the negro’s gift. I guess
-so. As previously explained the hare and the rabbit are both
-zootypes or living images of lunar phenomena. A rabbit pounding rice
-in a mortar is a Chinese sign of the moon. Swabian children are
-still forbidden to make the likeness of a rabbit or hare in shadow
-on the wall, as it would be a sin against the moon. The hare in the
-moon is a well-known Hindu type of Buddha. It is mythically
-represented that Buddha once took the form of a hare on purpose to
-offer himself as food for a poor famishing creature, and so the
-Buddha was translated in that shape to be eternized as the hare in
-the moon. That is one illustration of the way in which the book of
-external nature was filled full of mystic meanings, the essence of
-which escapes altogether in trying to read such things as
-historical, no matter whether they are related of Buddha, Horus, or
-Jesus. This hare or rabbit in the moon is a symbol or superstition
-with various races, Black, Brown, Red, Yellow, and White. When the
-meaning was understood it was a symbol; when the clue is lost it
-becomes a superstition of the ignorant; thus the ancient symbolism
-survives in a state of dotage with the negroes as well as with the
-“noble Caucasian.”
-
-The frog in the moon was another lunar type. In a Chinese myth—that
-is, a symbolic representation—the lunar frog has three legs, like
-the Persian ass in the Bundahish. In both cases the three legs stand
-for three phases of the moon reckoned at ten days each in a
-luni-solar month of thirty days. Now it happens that the rabbit’s
-period of gestation is thirty days; and the early races included
-very curious observers amongst their naturalists, who had to think
-in things and express their thought in gesture-signs and _zootypes_
-before there were such things as printer’s types. Hence the frog
-that dropped its tail, the serpent that sloughed its skin, the
-rabbit with its period of thirty days, were all symbols of the moon.
-Enough that the rabbit _was_ a zootype of the moon, and the rabbit
-is equal to the hare. Hor-Apollo tells us that when the Egyptians
-would denote “an opening,” they delineate a hare, because this
-animal always has its eyes open (B. I. 26). This can be corroborated
-in several ways. The name of the hare in Egyptian is “Un,” which
-means open, to open, the opener. It was applied to Osiris,
-“Un-Nefer,” in his lunar character as the good opener, otherwise the
-splendid or glorious hare, because “Nefer” means the handsome,
-beautiful, perfect, or glorious. Also the city of Unnut was that of
-the hare, “Un,” and this was the metropolis of the 15th Nome of
-Upper Egypt, which is another mode of identifying the open-eyed hare
-with the moon at the full, called the “Eye of Horus,” and with the
-woman of the moon who brings her orb to the full on the 15th day of
-the month (Egyptian Ritual, ch. lxxx). The hare was also a symbol of
-the opening period at puberty, a sign therefore of being open,
-unprohibited, or “it is lawful” (Sharpe). Hence the Namaqua
-Hottentots would only permit the hare to be eaten by those who had
-attained the age of the adult male. The proverb, “_Somnus
-leporinus_,” relates to the hare that sleeps with its eyes open; and
-in our old English pharmacopœia of the folk-lore or leech-craft, the
-brains and eyes of the hare are prescribed as a cure for somnolency,
-and a sovereign medicine for making or keeping people wide-awake.
-The rabbit equates with the hare, and has the same symbolical value.
-Now it is sometimes said that the hare-rabbit is of both sexes. So
-the moon was both male and female in accordance with the dual
-lunation. The new moon with the horns of the bull or the long ears
-of the ass, the rabbit, or hare was considered to be male. The dark
-lunation or hinder part was female. In the ancient symbolism the
-front or fore-part is masculine, the hinder-part or the tail is
-feminine. The two were head and tail in the earliest coinage as well
-as on the latest coins. In Egypt the South was front and is male;
-the North was the hinder-part and is female. Hence the old Typhon of
-the Northern part was denoted by the tail-piece, and it follows that
-Satan with the long tail is of feminine origin, and so the devil was
-female from the first. The same symbolism was applied to the moon.
-In the light half it was the male moon, in the dark half female. The
-new moon was the Lord of Light, the Increaser, the sign of new life,
-of saving and healing. The new moon was the messenger of immortality
-to men in the form of the hare or the rabbit. The waning moon
-represented the devil of darkness, the Typhonian power that said to
-men “even as I die and do not rise again so will it be with you.”
-Offerings were made to the new moon. When the moon was at the full
-the Egyptians sacrificed a black pig to Osiris. This represented
-Typhon, his conquered enemy. But in the dark half of the lunation
-Typhon had the upper hand when he tore Osiris into fourteen parts
-during the fourteen nights of his supremacy. The lunar zootype then
-is male in front, and female in the hinder-part of the animal. In
-the hieroglyphics the khepsh-leg or hind-quarter is the ideographic
-type of Typhon, the evil power personified. Further, the left side
-is female and Typhonian; the right is male. Ergo, _the left hind leg
-of the grave-yard animal that was killed in the dark of the moon_,
-stood for the hind (or last) quarter of the moon; literally the end
-of it. And if the negro laid hold of that rabbit’s foot the right
-way, we can read the symbol that he probably did not understand,
-although he knew the rabbit’s hind foot was a good fetish. It shows
-the survival of _intended_ symbolism, which represents some sort of
-victory over the power of darkness analogous to taking the brush of
-the fox (another Typhonian animal) after it has been hunted to
-death. This was the last leg that the devil of darkness had to stand
-on, and so it was a trophy snatched from the Typhonian power to be
-worn in triumph as a token of good luck, of repetition or renewal,
-thence a second term.
-
-It would be a sort of equivalent for taking the scalp of Satan, who
-could only be typified by the tail or hinder leg. The gift was
-tantamount to wishing “_A Happy New Moon to You!_” expressed in the
-language of symbolism, which was acted instead of being spoken. The
-negroes consider this particular talisman bequeathed by “_Brer
-Rabbit_” represents all the virtues and powers of renewal that are
-popularly attributed to the New Moon. But do not let me be
-misunderstood by those who know that in the Negro Märchen the rabbit
-is the good one of the typical two, and that the fox plays the
-Typhonian part. The rabbit or hare of the moon may be pourtrayed in
-two characters or in one of two. In both he is the hero, the Lord of
-Light and conqueror of the Power of Darkness, the rabbit, so to say,
-that rises again from the graveyard in or as the New Moon. The
-figure of the hind quarter and latter end of the dying moon is thus
-a type of the conquered Typhon, but the magical influence depends
-upon its being also a type of the conqueror, the rabbit of the
-resurrection or the New Moon. It is a curious coincidence that the
-luckiest of all Lucky Horse-Shoes in England is one that has been
-cast off the _left hind foot_ of a Mare.
-
-Lastly, this hind leg of the lunar rabbit is a fellow-type with the
-leg of pig that is still eaten in England on Easter Monday, which is
-a survival of the ancient sacrifice of the pig Typhon, in the solar
-or annual reckoning, as pourtrayed in the planisphere of Denderah,
-where we see the god Khunsu offering the pig by the leg in the disc
-of the full moon. It must have been a potent fetish long ages ago in
-Africa, and a medicine of great power according to the primitive
-mysteries of the dark land. It may be surmised that much of this
-fetishtic typology is still extant amongst the negroes in the United
-States, and it is to be hoped that the Bureau of Ethnology at
-Washington, which has done, and is doing, such good work under the
-direction of Major J. W. Powell in collecting and preserving the
-relics of the Red Men, will extend the range of its researches to
-the black race in America, and not leave those matters to
-irresponsible story-tellers.
-
- GERALD MASSEY.
-
-
-
-
- =THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT=:
-
- _THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN_.
-
- (_Continued._)
-
- ---------------------
-
- BY MABEL COLLINS.
-
- ---------------------
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
-It was the day of the Princess Fleta’s wedding and the whole city
-was _en fête_.
-
-Hilary Estanol paced the streets wildly, like a creature distracted.
-He had never seen her face since the day he returned from the secret
-monastery. He could not trust himself to go near her. He felt that
-the savage in him must kill, must destroy, if too much provocation
-were given him.
-
-He held this savage in check as well as he could. He would not trust
-himself under the same roof with the woman he loved as he loved
-nothing else in life, and who had given him her love while she gave
-herself to another man. Herself! How much that meant Hilary seemed
-only now to know, now that he heard her marriage bells ringing, now
-that she was absolutely given. Yes, she had given herself away to
-another man. Was it possible? Hilary stood still now and again in
-the midst of the crowded street trying to remember the words she had
-said to him in that wood in the early morn when she had accepted his
-love. What had she taken from him then? He had never been the same
-since. His heart lay cold, and chill, and dull within him save when
-her smile or its memory woke him to life and joy. Were these gone
-for ever? Impossible. He was still young—a mere boy. She could not
-have stolen so much from him! No—he had the first right—he would be
-her lover still and always, to whoever else she gave herself in
-name. This was the point of thought to which Hilary perpetually
-returned. Undoubtedly she was his, and he would claim her. But
-obscured and excited as his mind was he had sufficient intelligence
-to know that his must be a secret claim even though it stood before
-all others. He could not go and claim her at the altar, for she had
-not given him any right to. What she had said was, “Take from me
-what you can.” Well, he could not make her his wife. He could not
-marry a royal Princess. She was not of his class. This being so,
-what could he hope for? Nothing—and yet he had her love—yes, the
-last kind touch of her hand, the last sweet smile on her lips, were
-still with him, and drove his blood rioting through his veins.
-
-At last the procession is coming—the soldiers have already cleared
-the way and with their horses keep back the crowd. Hilary stands
-now, still as a carven figure, watching only for one face. He sees
-it suddenly—ah! so beautiful, so supremely beautiful, so
-mysterious—and everything in Heaven and earth becomes invisible,
-non-existent, save that one dear face. A voice rang out on the air,
-clear, shrill, above all other voices.
-
-“Fleta! Fleta! My love! my love!”
-
-What a cry! It penetrated to Fleta’s ears; it reached the ears of
-her bridegroom.
-
-In the church, amid the pomp and ceremony, and the crowd of great
-people, Otto did a thing which made those near him stare. He went to
-meet his bride and touched her hand.
-
-“Fleta,” he said, “that voice was the voice of one who loves you.
-What answer do you make to it?”
-
-Fleta put her hand in his.
-
-“That is my answer,” she said.
-
-And so they stepped up the broad low steps to the altar. None heard
-what had been said except the king.
-
-Fleta’s father was strangely unlike herself. He was a rugged,
-morose, sombre man, ill-disposed towards all humanity, as it would
-seem, save those few who held the key to his nature. Of these, his
-daughter was one; some said she was the only one. Others said her
-power lay in the fact that she was not his daughter, but a child of
-other parents altogether than those reputed to be hers; and that a
-State secret was involved in the mystery of her birth.
-
-At all events, it was seldom indeed that the king interfered with
-Fleta. But he did so now, at this moment, with all the eyes of the
-Court upon them.
-
-He spoke low into her ear, he stood beside her.
-
-“Fleta,” he said, “is this marriage right?”
-
-Fleta turned on him a face so full of torture, of deathly pain, that
-he uttered an ejaculation of horror.
-
-“Say no word, my father,” she said, “it is right.”
-
-And then she turned her head again, and fixed her glorious eyes on
-Otto.
-
-What a strangely beautiful bride she was! She was dressed with
-extraordinary simplicity; her robe had been arranged by her own
-hands in long, soft lines that fell from her neck to her feet, and a
-long train lay on the ground behind her, but it was undecked by any
-lace or flowers. No flowers were in her hair, no jewels on her neck.
-Never had a princess been dressed so simply, a princess who was to
-be a queen. The Court ladies stared in amazement. But they knew well
-that there was a grace so supreme, a dignity so lofty, in this royal
-girl, that however simple her dress she outshone them all, and would
-outshine any woman who stood beside her.
-
-No one heard any of what passed between the three chief actors in
-this scene; yet everyone was aware that there was something unusual
-in it. There was an atmosphere of mystery, of excitement, of
-strangeness. And yet what else would be possible where the Princess
-Fleta was concerned? In her father’s Court she was looked upon as a
-wild, capricious, imperious creature whose will none could resist.
-None would have wondered had they believed her carriage to have
-passed over the body of an accepted lover, now thrown aside and
-discarded. So did these people interpret the character of Fleta.
-Otto knew this, felt it, understood it; knew that those creatures of
-intrigue and pleasure would have thought her far less worthy had
-they judged her character more nearly as he did. To him she was
-pure, stainless, unattainable; virgin in soul and thought. This he
-said to her when, on leaving the cathedral, they entered a carriage
-together and alone. They had together passed through crowds of
-congratulators, nobles, great ladies, diplomats from different parts
-of Europe. They had bowed and smiled, and answered courteously the
-words addressed to them. And yet how far away were their thoughts
-all the while! They neither of them knew who they had met, who they
-had spoken to. All was lost in one absorbing thought. But it was not
-the same thought. No, indeed, their minds were separated widely as
-the poles.
-
-Fleta was filled with the sense of a great purpose. This marriage
-was but the first step in a giant programme. Her thoughts had flown
-now from this first step and were dwelling on the end, the
-fulfilment; as an artist when he draws his first sketch sees in his
-own mind the completed picture.
-
-Otto had but one overwhelming thought; a very simple one, expressed
-instantly, in the first words he uttered when they were alone:
-
-“Fleta, you did not fancy that I doubted you? I never meant that!
-And yet it seemed as if there was reproach in your eyes! No, Fleta,
-never that. But the cry was so terrible—it cut my heart. You did not
-fancy I meant any doubt?—assure me, Fleta!”
-
-“No, I did not,” replied Fleta quietly. “You know whose voice it
-was.”
-
-“No—it was unrecognisable—it was nothing but a cry of torture.”
-
-“Ah! but I knew it,” said Fleta. “It was Hilary Estanol who cried
-out my name.”
-
-“He said ‘Fleta, my love, my love,’” added Otto. “Is he that?”
-
-“Yes,” said Fleta unmoved, indeed strangely calm. “He is. More,
-Otto; he has loved me long centuries ago, when this world wore a
-different face. When the very surface of the earth was savage and
-untaught so were we. And then we enacted this same scene. Yes Alan,
-we three enacted it before, without this pomp, but with the natural
-splendour of savage beauty and undimmed skies. Otto, I sinned then I
-expiated my sin. Again and again have I expiated it. Again and again
-has Nature punished me for my offence against her. Now at last I
-know more, I see more, I understand more. The sin remains. I desired
-to take, to have for myself, to be a conqueror. I conquered—I have
-conquered since! how often! That has been my expiation: satiety. But
-now I will no longer enjoy. I will stand on that error, that folly,
-and win from it strength which shall lift me from this wretched
-little theatre where we play the same dramas for ever through the
-fond weariness of recurring lives.”
-
-Otto had drawn back from her, and gazed intently upon her as she
-spoke, passion and vehemence gradually entering her low voice. As
-she ceased he passed his hand over his forehead.
-
-“Fleta,” he said, “is this some spell of yours upon me? While you
-spoke I saw your face change, and become the face of one familiar to
-me, but far, far back! I smelled the intense rich scent of
-innumerable fruit blossoms——Fleta, tell me, are you dreaming or
-speaking fables, or is this thing true? Have I lived for you before,
-loved you, served you, ages back, when the world was young?”
-
-“Yes,” said Fleta.
-
-“Ah!” cried Otto suddenly, “I feel it—there is blood on you—blood on
-your hand!”
-
-Fleta raised her beautiful hand, and looked at it with an infinite
-sadness on her face.
-
-“It is so,” she answered. “There is blood on it, and there will be,
-until I have got beyond the reign of blood and of death. You held me
-down then, Otto; you triumphed by brute force, not knowing that in
-me lay a power undreamed of by you—a vital, stirring will. I could
-have crushed you. But already I had used my will once, and found the
-bitter, unintelligible suffering it produced. I determined to try
-and understand Nature before I again used my power. So I submitted
-to your tyranny; you learned to love it, and through many lives have
-learned to love it more. It has brought you a crown at last, and a
-little army of soldiers to defend it for you, and half-a-dozen
-crafty old diplomats who want you to keep it, and who think they can
-make you do just as their respective monarchs wish. Move your
-puppets, Otto. No such kingdom satisfies me. I mean to win my own
-crown. I will be a queen of souls, not of bodies; a queen in
-reality, not in name.”
-
-She seemed to wrap herself in an impenetrable veil of scorn as she
-ceased speaking and leaned back in the carriage.
-
-Some great emotion was stirring Otto through and through. At last he
-spoke; and the man seemed changed—a different being. From under the
-gentle manner, the docile, ready air, came struggling up the fierce
-spirit of opposition.
-
-“You despise the crown you married me for? Is that so? Well, I will
-teach you to respect it.”
-
-A smile dawned on Fleta’s clouded face and then was gone again in a
-moment. This was all the answer she vouchsafed to the kingly threat.
-Otto turned and looked at her steadily.
-
-“A magnificent creature,” he said, “beautiful, and with a brain of
-steel, and perhaps for all I know, a heart like it. You won a great
-deal from me, Fleta, a little while since. Did I not submit to the
-masquerading of your mysterious Order? Did I not trust my life to
-those treacherous monks of yours, submit to be blindfolded and led
-into their haunt by secret ways. For what end? Ivan told me of
-aspirations, of ideas, of thoughts, which only sickened my soul and
-filled me with shame and despair. For I am a believer in order, in
-moral rule, in the government of the world in accordance with the
-principles of religion. I told you I was willing to become a member
-of the order; yes, because my nature is in sympathy with its avowed
-tenets. But its secret doctrines as I have heard them from you, as I
-have heard them from the man you call your master, are to me
-detestable. And it is for the carrying out of this unholy theory or
-doctrine that you propose to surrender your life? No, Fleta; you are
-now my queen.”
-
-“Yes,” said Fleta. “I am now your queen. I know that I have chosen
-the lot willingly. You need not again tell me that I have the crown
-I purposed to obtain.”
-
-At this moment they arrived at the palace. There was yet a weary
-mass of ceremony and speaking of polite nothings to be passed
-through before there was any chance of their being alone again. Otto
-relapsed into the pleasant and kindly manner which was habitual with
-him. Fleta fell into one of her abstracted moods, and the court
-adopted its usual policy under such circumstances—let her be
-undisturbed. Few of the men cared to risk the satirical answers that
-came readiest to her lips when she was roused out of such a mood as
-this.
-
-And yet at last someone did venture to rouse her; and a smile,
-delicious as a burst of sunshine, came swiftly and suddenly on her
-mouth.
-
-It was Hilary Estanol. Pale, worn, the mere ghost of himself, his
-dark eyes looking strangely large in the white face they were set
-in. They were fixed on her as though there were nothing else in the
-world to look at.
-
-Fleta held out her hand to him; his companion—a military officer who
-had brought him under protest, and in some doubt, for Hilary had no
-friends at Court—drew back in amazement. He understood now Hilary’s
-importunity.
-
-Hilary bent over Fleta’s hand and held his lips near it for an
-instant, but did not touch it. A sort of groan came to her ear from
-his lips.
-
-“You have resigned me?” she asked in a low vibrating whisper.
-
-“You have cast me off,” he answered.
-
-“Be it so,” she replied, “but you have lived through it, and you now
-claim nothing. Is it not so? I read it in the dumb pain in your
-eyes.”
-
-“Yes,” said Hilary, straightening himself and standing upright close
-beside her, and looking down upon her beautiful dark head. “It is
-so. I will not cry for the moon, nor will I weary any woman with my
-regret or entreaty, even you, Fleta, though it is no dishonour to
-humble oneself at the feet of such as you. No; I will bear my pain
-like a man. I came here to say good-bye. You are still something
-like the Fleta that I loved. To-morrow you will not be.”
-
-“How can you tell?” she said with her inscrutable smile. “Still, I
-think you are right. And now that we are no longer lovers will you
-enter with me another bond? Will you be my comrade in undertaking
-the great task? I know you are fearless.”
-
-“The great task?” said Hilary vaguely, and he put his hand to his
-forehead.
-
-“The one great task of this narrow life—To learn its lesson and go
-beyond it.”
-
-“Yes, I will be your comrade,” said Hilary in an even voice and
-without enthusiasm.
-
-“Then meet me at two this very morning at the gate of the
-garden-house where you used to enter.”
-
-It was now just midnight. Hilary noticed this as he turned away, for
-a little clock stood on a bracket close by. He looked at it, and
-looked back at Fleta. Could she mean what she said? But already the
-Fleta he knew had vanished; a cold, haughty, impassive young queen
-was accepting the uninteresting homage of a foreign minister. The
-guests were beginning to take their departure. Fleta and Otto did
-not propose to take any journey in honour of their wedding as is the
-custom in some places; the king opened for their use the finest set
-of guests’ chambers in the palace, and these they occupied,
-remaining among the visitors until all had departed. On the next day
-Otto was to take his queen home; but he had had to give way to the
-wishes of Fleta and her father as to the postponing of the journey.
-
-From the great drawing-rooms Fleta went quietly away when the last
-guest had departed; she moved like a swift shadow noiselessly along
-the corridors. She entered her own room, and there began, without
-summoning any attendant, to hastily take off her bridal robes. On a
-couch was lying the white robe and cloak which she had worn when she
-had endeavoured to enter the hall of the mystics. These she put on,
-and wrapping the cloak round her turned to leave the room. As she
-did so she came face to face with Otto, who had entered noiselessly,
-and was standing in silence beside her. She seemed scarcely to
-notice him, but changed her direction and proceeded towards another
-door. Otto quickly placed himself again in her way.
-
-“No,” he said; “you do not leave this room to-night.”
-
-“And why?” asked Fleta, looking gravely at his set face.
-
-“Because you are now my wife. I forbid it. Stay here, and with me.
-Come, let me take off that cloak, without any trouble; the white
-gown under it suits you even better than your wedding-dress.”
-
-He unfastened the clasps which held the cloak together. Fleta made
-no opposition, but kept her eyes on his face; he would not meet her
-gaze, though his face was white and rigid with the intensity of his
-passion and purpose.
-
-“Do you remember,” said Fleta, “the last thing that you did when you
-were with Father Ivan? Do you remember kneeling before him and
-uttering these words—‘I swear to serve the master of truth and the
-teacher of life——’”
-
-“That master—that teacher!” interrupted Otto hotly. “I reserved my
-reason even in that incense-scented room. That master—that
-teacher—is my own intelligence—so I phrased it in my own mind—I
-recognise no other master.”
-
-“Your own intelligence!” repeated Fleta. “You have not yet learned
-to use it. You did not so phrase the vow then; you only rephrased it
-so afterwards, when you were away, and alone, and began again to
-struggle for your selfish freedom. No, Otto, you have not begun to
-use your intelligence. You are still the slave of your desires,
-eaten up with the longing for power and the lust of the tyrannical
-soul. You do not love me—you only desire to possess me. You fancy
-your power is all you wish it to be. Well, put it to the test. Take
-this cloak from my shoulders.”
-
-Otto came close, and took the cloak in his hands; and then a
-sudden passion filled him—he seized her in his arms and pressed
-his lips to hers—yet he did not do so, either, for the attempt was
-instantaneously surrendered. He staggered back, white and
-trembling.
-
-Fleta stood erect and proud before him.
-
-“That vow you took,” she said quietly, “you knew very well in the
-inner recesses of your soul, in your true unblinded self, to make
-you a slave of the Great Order. That vow may yet save you from
-yourself, if you do not resent it too fiercely. But remember this; I
-am a neophyte of that order, and you being its slave, are under my
-command. I am your queen, Otto, but not your wife.”
-
-She passed him as she said this, and he made no effort to detain
-her; indeed, the trembling had not yet left him, and his whole
-strength was taken by the attempt to control it. As she reached the
-door he succeeded in speaking:
-
-“Why did you marry me?”
-
-“Did I not tell you?” she said, pausing a moment and turning to look
-at him. “I think I did. Because I have to learn to live on the plain
-as contentedly as on the mountain tops. There is but one way for me
-to do this, and that is to devote my life as your queen to the same
-great purpose it would serve were I the silver-robed initiate I
-desire to be. I go now to commence my work, with the aid of a lover
-who has learned to surrender his love.”
-
-She moved magnificently from the room, looking much taller even than
-her natural height. And Otto let her go without any word or sign.
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
-It was a fragrant night—a night rich with sweet flower-scents, not
-only from the flower beds near, but coming from afar on the breeze.
-Hilary stood at the gate, leaning on it and looking away at the sky,
-where a faint streak of different light told of the sun’s coming. It
-was quite clear, though there had been no moonlight; one of those
-warm, still nights when it is easy to find one’s way, though hard to
-see into the face of one near by, a night when one walks in a dream
-amid changing shadows, and when the outer mysteriousness and the
-dimness of one’s soul are as one. So with Hilary; so had he walked
-to the gate. He waited for the woman he loved, the only woman any
-man could ever love, having once known her. And yet no fever burned
-now in his veins, no intoxication mounted from his heart to his
-brain. Standing there, and regarding himself and his own feelings
-very quietly in the stillness, it seemed to him as if he had died
-yesterday when that wild cry had been unknowingly uttered; as if his
-soul or his heart, or, indeed, his very self had gone forth in it.
-
-A light touch was laid on his shoulder, and then the gate was
-opened. He passed through and walked by Fleta up the flower-bordered
-pathway. She moved on without speaking, her white cloak hanging
-loose from her neck, and her bare arms gleaming as it fell back from
-them.
-
-“You who know so much tell me something,” said Hilary. “Why are you
-so wise?”
-
-“Because I burned my soul out centuries ago,” said Fleta. “When you
-have burned out your heart you will be strong as I am.”
-
-“Another question,” said Hilary. “Why did you fail in that
-initiation?”
-
-Fleta stopped suddenly, and fixed fierce questioning eyes upon him.
-She was terrible in this quick rush of anger. But Hilary looked on
-her unmoved. It seemed to him that nothing would ever be able to
-move him again. Was he dead indeed that he could thus endure the
-scorching light of those brilliant eyes?
-
-“What makes you ask me that?” cried Fleta in a voice of pain. “Do
-you demand to know?”
-
-“Yes; I do wish to know.”
-
-For a moment Fleta covered her face with her hands, and her whole
-form shrank and quivered. But only for a moment; then she dropped
-her hands at each side and stood erect, her queenly head poised
-royally.
-
-“It is my punishment,” she said in a murmuring voice, “to discover
-so soon how absolute are the bonds of the Great Order; how the pupil
-can command the master as well as the master the pupil.”
-
-Then she turned abruptly upon Hilary, approaching him more nearly,
-while she spoke in a quick, fierce voice.
-
-“Because, though I have burned out my soul, I have not burned out my
-heart! Because, though I cannot love as men do, and have almost
-forgotten what passion means, yet I can still worship a greater
-nature than my own so deeply that it may be called love. I have not
-learned to stand utterly alone and to know myself as great as any
-other with the same possibilities, the same divinity in myself. I
-still lean on another, look to another, hunger for the smile of
-another. O, folly, when I know so well that I cannot find any rest
-while that is in me. O, Ivan, my teacher, my friend, what torture it
-is to wrest the image of you from its shrine within me. Powers and
-forces of indifferent Nature, I demand your help!”
-
-She raised her arms as she uttered this invocation, and it struck
-Hilary at the moment how little like a human being she looked. She
-might have been the spirit of the dawn. Her voice had become
-unutterably weird and mournful, like the deep cry of a broken soul.
-
-Without pausing for any answer she dropped her arms, drew her cloak
-around her, and walked away over the dewy grass. Hilary, as silent,
-as mournful, but seemingly without emotion, dropped his head and
-quietly followed her track. Of old—only yesterday—what an age
-ago!—he would have kept his eyes fixed on her shining dark hair or
-the movements of her delicate figure. Suddenly Fleta stopped, turned
-and confronted him. He raised his eyes in surprise and looked at
-her.
-
-“You are no longer devoured by jealousy,” she said. “You can hear me
-speak as I did just now without its turning you into a savage. What
-has happened?”
-
-Her eyes seemed to penetrate his impassive and languid expression,
-looking for the soul beneath. She was longing that his answer should
-be the one she needed.
-
-“I am hopeless,” answered Hilary.
-
-“Of what?”
-
-“Of your love. I understand at last that you have a great purpose in
-your life, and that I am a mere straw on a stream. I thought I had
-some claim on you; I see I cannot have. I surrender myself to your
-will. That is all I have left to do.”
-
-Fleta stood meditatively for a moment Then she looked up very sadly
-in his face.
-
-“It is not enough,” she said. “Your gift must be a positive one.”
-
-Then she again turned and went on her way to the house. Here
-everything was silent and even dark, for the shutters were all
-closed, and evidently the place was deserted. Fleta opened a side
-door with a key which was attached to her girdle; they entered and
-she locked it behind them. She led the way through the quiet dim
-house to the door of the laboratory; they entered the room in
-silence. It wore a quite new aspect to Hilary’s eyes, and he looked
-round in wonder. All was pale; there was no incense burning, no
-lamps were lit; the colour had gone from the walls; a faint grey
-light through a skylight, which had always hitherto been curtained,
-dimly broke on the darkness of the room which still lurked deeply in
-the lower part. But Hilary found enough light to see that the thing
-he so hated was not present; that lay figure which was to him always
-such a horror was gone.
-
-“Where is it?” he said after a moment, wondering at the sense of
-relief with which its absence filled him.
-
-“What?—oh! the figure. Again you ask a question which I am compelled
-to answer. Well, I cannot use that power at present; I have again to
-win the right.”
-
-“How did you win the right before?” asked Hilary, fixing his eyes on
-her; a fierce desire to know this possessed him.
-
-Fleta started, turned towards him, and for a moment the proud
-imperiousness which ordinarily characterised her came over her form
-and her features. But in another moment it was gone. She stood
-before him, pale, gentle and sublime.
-
-“I will tell you,” she said in a clear yet very low voice. “By
-taking your life.”
-
-Hilary looked at her in complete perplexity and bewilderment.
-
-“Do you not remember,” she said, “that forest, that new earth and
-sky, all so sweet and strong, that wealth of apricot blossom that
-came between us and the sky? Ah, Hilary, how fresh and vivid life
-was then, while we lived and loved and understood not that we did
-either! Was it not sweet? I loved you. Yes, I loved you—loved you.”
-
-Her voice broke and trembled. Hilary’s numbed heart suddenly sprang
-again to life. Never had her voice contained such tones of
-tenderness and passion before.
-
-“Oh, my dear, my Fleta, you love me still—now!”
-
-He sprang towards her, but she seemed to sweep him aside with one
-majestic action of her bare arm.
-
-“With that passion,” she said, with a pale solemnity, “I can never
-love now. I have not forgotten entirely what such love is—no,
-Hilary, I have not forgotten—else how should I have found you again
-among the multitudes of the earth?” She held out her hand to him,
-and, as he clasped it, he felt it was soft and tender, that the warm
-life blood of a young creature responded to his touch. “I knew you
-by your dear eyes which once were so full of pure love for me that
-they were like stars in my life.”
-
-“What came between us?” asked Hilary.
-
-She looked strangely at him, drew her hand away, folded her cloak
-round her and then answered in one word:
-
-“Passion!”
-
-“I remember it now!” cried Hilary in sudden excitement “My God! I
-see your beautiful wild face before me, I see your lips as lovely as
-the soft blossom above us. Fleta, I loved you as men love—I hungered
-for you—what harm lay in that?”
-
-“None,” she answered, standing now motionless and statue-like,
-wrapped in her long, white cloak, seeming like a lovely ghost rather
-then a living woman. “None—for men who care only to be men, to
-reproduce men, to be and to do nothing more than that! But I had
-another power within me, that seemed stronger than myself—a stirring
-of the dumb soul within. When that moment came, Hilary, then came
-the great decision, the fierce struggle between two souls hurled
-together out of the dimness of life, and finding light in the fever
-of love—yes, light!—the fire that is love makes it possible for men
-to live. It gives them hope, it animates them, it makes them believe
-in a future, it enables them to create men to fill that future.
-
-“In those old days beneath those apricot blossoms, you and I,
-Hilary, were but children on this earth, new to its meaning, knowing
-nothing of its purpose. How could we guide ourselves? We were
-ignorant of the great power of sex, we were only at the beginning of
-its lesson. So it must be with all. They must go through with the
-lesson, they cannot guess it from the first! Nor could we. I did not
-know what I did, Hilary, my lover, when I took your life. Had I
-known I should only have been like a beast of prey. But I did not
-know. You asserted your power—you claimed me. I asserted mine—I
-conquered. I wanted power; and killing you as I did with that one
-emotion only stirring within me, I got what I longed for. Not at
-once—not till I had suffered patiently, not till I had struggled
-hard to understand myself and the force that was at work within me.
-And this for life after life, incarnation after incarnation. You not
-only loved me but you were mine—I conquered you and used your life
-and love for my own ends—to add to my power, to actually create the
-life and strength I needed. By your life, by your strength, I became
-a magician, read by my insight the mysteries of alchemy and the
-buried secrets of power. Yes, Hilary, it is so. To you I owe myself.
-I have become free from the common burdens of humanity, its
-passions, its personal desires, its weary repetitions of experiences
-till their edge grows blunted by long usage. I have seen the
-Egyptian and the Roman, men of the old superb civilisations, trying
-to reproduce their past pleasures, their past magnificence to-day,
-in this modern life. It is useless, life after life full of
-selfishness and pleasure, ends in the weariness of living that kills
-men’s souls and darkens their thought. But you and I, Hilary, have
-escaped from this dismal fate. I would not be content to live again
-as I had lived before, to use the life principle which lies in love,
-only for pleasure or the bringing of eidolons on to the earth. I
-determined to rise, to raise myself, to raise you, and out of our
-love perpetually to create something nobler than we ourselves. I
-have succeeded, Hilary, I have succeeded. We stand now before the
-gate of the first initiation. I tried to enter it and failed for
-want of strength—for want of strength, Hilary! I could not pluck my
-master’s image utterly out of my soul—I looked for him to lean on—at
-least to find comfort in seeing that face I knew. Give me strength,
-Hilary! Be my comrade! Help me to enter and your strength shall come
-back to you a hundredfold. For your reward shall be that you too
-shall enter with me.”
-
-She had changed from moment to moment as she spoke. She looked like
-an inspired priestess—like a Divine being. Now she stood like a
-flame with a strange appearance, as if her whole soul and self,
-spirit and body, rose upwards in adoration. The dawn had come; the
-first rays of the sun shot through the skylight and fell on her
-transfigured face and gleaming hair.
-
-Hilary looked at her as a worshipper might look at his idol.
-
-“I am yours,” he said, “but I know not how to prove it.”
-
-She held out her hand to him, and lowered her eyes from the light to
-which they had been raised until they met his.
-
-“We must discover the great secret together, Hilary. No longer may
-you give yourself to me without knowledge. Hitherto our lives have
-been but the lives of the blossom; now we must be wise and enter the
-state when the fruit comes. We have to find out what that power is
-which the sun represents to us; to discover the pure creative power.
-But we have not strength yet, Hilary; alas! I dread and fear
-sometimes. More strength means more sacrifice.”
-
-She drew her cloak closer round her, the light faded from her eyes
-and face, and turning away she went and sat down on a couch which
-was back in the shadow. Hilary felt a profound sense of sadness, of
-sympathy, of sorrow, sweep over his being. He followed her and sat
-down beside her. One pale hand lay on the couch, outside her cloak.
-He laid his upon it, and fell deep into thought. Thus they sat,
-silent, breathing softly, for long hours, till the sun was high. But
-still, even then, the room was very dim and cool, and full of
-shadows.
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
-On the next day, the same day rather, for they sat together in the
-laboratory till long after the sun was high, Hilary, to his own
-amazement, found that he had an official post in the household of
-the young Queen which would keep him continually about her. Indeed,
-he had to pack up instantly on being informed of the fact, in order
-to follow Fleta to her own dominions. How this had been effected
-none could tell—Hilary, least of all, for he saw immediately on
-presenting himself in King Otto’s presence that he was regarded by
-him with dislike and distrust. Before, Otto had scarcely noticed
-him. The present state of things was decidedly a change for the
-worse. However, Hilary had already perceived very clearly that to
-serve under Fleta was to serve under a hard master. And he had no
-longer any kind of choice. Life was inconceivable without
-her—without the pain caused by her difficult service. He had rather
-suffer that than enjoy any other kind of pleasure. And, indeed,
-pleasure, apart from Fleta, did not appear to him to exist.
-
-And yet he was still capable of doubting her.
-
-Fleta had chosen a companion of royal birth to travel with her; a
-young duchess who bore the same family name as Fleta herself. This
-girl had been reared in a nunnery, and then taken to court, where
-she took part in all the pageants and immediately found herself
-surrounded by suitors. She was not very pretty, and certainly not at
-all clever. To go with Fleta seemed to her delightful, as it would
-introduce her to a new court and a fresh series of suitors. It
-struck Hilary as quite extraordinary that Fleta should choose this
-child as her companion—not that the Duchess was any younger than
-Fleta—indeed, they were almost of an age; but Fleta appeared to
-carry within her beautiful head the wisdom of centuries, while the
-Duchess was a mere school-girl trained in court etiquette.
-
-These three were to travel together in Fleta’s own favourite
-travelling carriage. She simply refused to travel with her husband.
-When he addressed her on the subject, she merely replied:
-
-“You would weary me; and, moreover, I have work to do.”
-
-And so they started; and as Hilary took his place, he thought of
-that strange drive when he and Fleta, and Father Amyot, had been the
-three. Recollecting this made him wonder what had become of Father
-Amyot; for the priest had not returned to his duties in the city. He
-asked Fleta, while the thought was in his mind, why Amyot was not
-with her now.
-
-“He is of no use to me,” she answered coldly.
-
-The journey was a very long and a very weary one to Hilary; for the
-Duchess, finding no one else to flirt with, insisted upon flirting
-with him; while Fleta lay back in her corner of the carriage hour
-after hour, with her eyes closed. What was the work she had to do?
-Hilary, who had overheard her answer to the King, wondered very
-much. And yet, as he watched her intently he saw that her face
-changed. It grew darker, more inscrutable, more set in purpose.
-
-Late one evening, and when they were indeed travelling later than
-usual, hoping to reach their destination that same night, a curious
-thing happened. All day long Fleta had been silent, seemingly buried
-in thought; but sometimes when Hilary was watching her he noticed
-her lips move as if in speech. He sat opposite her whenever he
-could; this was not always possible, as the young Duchess would talk
-to him, and the carriage being very large and roomy, he had to
-change his position, and go nearer to her in order to carry on a
-conversation with any comfort. But as it grew dark the Duchess grew
-tired, and leaned back half asleep, for indeed they had had a long
-day’s journey.
-
-Hilary withdrew himself to the corner opposite Fleta. It grew so
-dark he could no longer see her; they had a swinging-lamp in the
-roof of the carriage, but he did not want to light it unless Fleta
-wished it so; and, indeed, he longed for the quiet and the darkness
-very much. It made him feel more alone with her, he could try to
-follow and seize her thoughts then without the perpetual disturbance
-of the little Duchess’s quick eyes on him and her light voice in his
-ears.
-
-He sat still and thought of Fleta—Fleta herself in her glorious
-beauty—sitting there opposite him shrouded by the darkness. He could
-endure it no longer—the man rose up in him and asserted itself—he
-leaned forward and put his hand upon her. He had scarcely done so
-when the Duchess uttered a shrill cry.
-
-“My God!” she exclaimed, in a voice of horror, “who is in the
-carriage with us?”
-
-She flung herself across and knelt upon the floor between Hilary and
-Fleta; her terror was so great she did not know what she was doing.
-
-Hilary leaned across her and instantly discovered that she was
-right—that there was another man in the carriage besides himself.
-
-“Oh, kill him! kill him!” cried the little Duchess, in an agony of
-fear; “he is a thief, a murderer, a robber!”
-
-Hilary rose up and precipitated himself upon this person whom he
-could not see. A sense of self-defence, of defence of the women with
-him, seized him as we see it seize the animals. He discovered that
-this man had risen also. Blindly and furiously he attacked him, and
-with extraordinary strength. Hilary was young and full of vigour,
-but slight and not built like an athlete. Now, however, he seemed to
-be one. He found his adversary to be much larger and stronger than
-himself.
-
-A fearful struggle followed. The carriage drove on through unseen
-scenery as fast as possible; Fleta could have stopped it had she
-thrown the window down and cried out to the postilions. But Fleta
-remained motionless—she might have fainted, she was so still. The
-little Duchess simply cowered on the ground beside her, clinging to
-her motionless figure. This terrified girl had not the presence of
-mind to think of stopping the carriage, and so obtaining help. She
-was too horror-struck to do anything. And, indeed, it was horrible,
-for the swaying struggling forms sometimes were right upon the two
-women, sometimes at the other side of the carriage; it was a deadly,
-horrible, ghastly struggle, all the more horrid for the silence.
-There were no cries, no exclamations, for indeed, so far as Hilary
-was concerned, he had no breath to spare for them. There were only
-gasps, and heavy breathings, and the terrible sound that comes from
-a man’s throat when he is fighting for his life. How long this
-hideous battle lasted none could tell—Hilary had no idea of the
-passage of time. The savage in him had now come so entirely
-uppermost and drowned all other consciousness, that his one thought
-was he must kill—kill—kill—and at last it was done. There was a
-moment when his adversary was below him, when he could use his whole
-force upon him—and then came a gasp and an unearthly cry—and
-silence.
-
-Absolute silence for a little while. No one moved, no one stirred.
-The Duchess was petrified with horror. Hilary had sunk exhausted on
-the seat of the carriage—not only exhausted, but bewildered, for a
-host of other emotions besides savage fury began to rise within him.
-What—who—-was this being he had destroyed? At that moment they were
-urged into a gallop, for they were entering the city gates. Hilary
-threw down the window next him with a crash. “Lights, lights!” he
-cried out, “bring lights.” The carriage stopped, and there was a
-crowd immediately at the windows, and the glare of torches fell into
-the carriage, making it bright as day. The little Duchess was
-crouched in the corner on the ground in a dead faint. Fleta sat up,
-strangely white, but calm. Nothing else was to be seen, alive or
-dead, save Hilary himself; and so horror-struck was he at this
-discovery that he turned and buried his face in the cushions of the
-carriage, and he never knew what happened—whether he wept, or
-laughed, or cursed—but some strange sound of his own voice he heard
-with his ears.
-
-There was a carriage full of servants behind Fleta’s carriage; when
-hers stopped so suddenly they all got out and came quickly to the
-doors.
-
-“The Duchess has fainted,” said Fleta, rising so as to hide Hilary;
-“the journey has been too long. Is there a house near where she can
-lie still a little while, and come on later to the palace?”
-
-Immediately offers of help were made, and the servants and those who
-were glad to help them carried the poor little Duchess away.
-
-“On to the palace!” cried Fleta, and shut the door and drew down the
-blinds. The postilion started the horses with all speed.
-
-Suddenly the blood in Hilary’s body began to surge and burn. Was it
-Fleta’s arms that clung round him? Fleta’s lips that printed warm,
-living kisses on his neck, his face, his hair? He turned and faced
-her.
-
-“Tell me the truth,” he said. “Are you a devil?”
-
-“No,” she answered, “I am not. I want to find my way to the pure
-good that governs life. But there are devils about me, and you have
-killed one of them to-night. Hush, calm yourself; remember what we
-are in the eyes of the world. For we are at the palace door, and
-Otto is standing there to receive us.”
-
-She stepped out, the young queen.
-
-Hilary followed her, stumbling, broken. He said he was ill, to those
-who spoke to him; and stood staring in wonder at the brilliant sight
-before him.
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
-The great hall of the palace was illuminated gloriously by huge
-dragons made of gold, placed high up on the walls; within these
-strange creatures were powerful lamps, which shed their light not
-only through the eyes and opened mouths, but from the gleaming
-claws. The whole place was filled with a blaze of light from them;
-and the dresses of the household assembled below seemed to Hilary
-another blaze of light, so gay were they. Yet this was only a
-domestic reception. It was late, and Otto had refused to allow any
-more general demonstration to take place that night. Yet Fleta, when
-she threw off her travelling cloak and hood, might have been the
-centre of any pageant. She showed no trace of the weariness of
-travel, or even of the strange excitement she had passed through.
-She was pale, but her face was calm and wore its most haughty and
-unapproachable expression. Her dress of black lace hung about her
-slender form like clouds. Otto was filled with pride as he noted her
-superb dignity and beauty; with hatred, as he observed that her eyes
-never met his own, that she treated him with just the same civility
-as the steward, or any servant of the establishment. No one could
-notice this but himself and perhaps Hilary, supposing the latter to
-be capable of regarding anyone but Fleta herself; for she was too
-much a woman of the world, this mystic, this wild girl, to admit
-anyone even to the most evident of the secrets of her life.
-
-After a few moments passed among the little crowd assembled in the
-great hall, Fleta proposed to go to her own rooms for the night, and
-a stately little procession formed itself at once to conduct her
-there. But before going she beckoned to Hilary.
-
-“The Duchess must come to me to-night,” she said. “I wish her to be
-in my own room. Send a carriage and servants to fetch her.”
-
-How her eyes glittered! Had he ever seen them shine so vividly
-before?
-
-“Tell me one thing,” he said hoarsely. “I believe you have taken to
-yourself that creature’s life and very body that I killed for you.
-Is it not true?”
-
-“You are shrewd,” she said with a laugh. “Yes, it is true. My whole
-being is stronger for his death; I absorbed his vital power the
-instant you wrenched it from him.”
-
-“And he?” said Hilary, with wild eyes.
-
-“Was one of those half-human, half-animal creatures that haunt men
-to their ill, and which fools call ghosts or demons. I have done him
-a service in taking his life into my own.”
-
-Hilary shuddered violently.
-
-“You doubt me,” said Fleta very quietly. “You still doubt if it is
-not I who am the devil. Be it so. I am indifferent to your opinion
-of me, Hilary; you cannot help loving and serving me. We were born
-under the same star. Now go and give orders about the Duchess.”
-
-Under the same star! Those words had not come to his mind for a long
-while; yet how horribly true they were. For he, Hilary, it was who
-had actually done this dreadful deed and killed this unseen,
-unknown, unimaginable creature. Horror made him clutch his hands
-together as he thought that he had touched this thing, more, had
-killed it hideously. Might it not have been some good thing striving
-to baffle Fleta? Ah, yes! he still doubted her. And yet to doubt her
-so completely made the very earth to sink away from under his feet.
-He himself, his life, his all, were given to her, be she good or
-evil! Staggering and overpowered by the terrible thoughts that
-crushed his wearied brain, Hilary found his way to a supper-table;
-and too exhausted to think of anything else but recruiting his
-strength, sat down to drink wine—and to try to eat. This latter
-seemed impossible, but the wine revived him; and presently he
-remembered that it was his business to look after the Duchess.
-
-By-and-bye she was carried into the palace; she could not yet stand,
-for she had only come out of one fainting fit to fall into another.
-
-And now came a strange and dreadful scene—one which only a few
-witnessed, Hilary as it happened being among those few, for he
-saw the Duchess taken to the suite of rooms Fleta occupied. In
-the corridor Fleta came out to them; she was still in her
-travelling-dress, and looked very quiet and even subdued. But at
-the sight of her the young Duchess screamed as if she saw some
-awful thing; she would not let Fleta touch her, she absolutely
-refused to enter her room.
-
-“But you must be with me,” said Fleta in a low voice.
-
-“I will not,” answered the Duchess with a firm resolution which
-amazed everyone who knew her. She rose up and walked unassisted
-along the corridor and down the great staircase; she met the young
-king coming up it; he had heard her shrill cries and came to see
-what was happening.
-
-“What is the matter, little cousin?” seeing her tear-stained and
-agitated face.
-
-“Fleta wants me to be in her room all night! I would not do it for
-all the world! She is a devil—she would kill me or make her lover
-kill me, and then no one would ever hear of me or even find my body.
-No! No!”
-
-And so she ran on, down the wide stairs, leaving Otto thunderstruck.
-He noticed that a number of persons were gathering on the landing
-and stairs, and so, with a stern and quiet face, he passed through
-the little throng, making no observation. He went down the corridor
-and straight into Fleta’s room. Here he found her standing silent,
-dark, like a sombre statue. One other person was in the room—Hilary
-Estanol. He was in the most extraordinary state of agitation,
-pouring out words and accusations; some horror appeared to possess
-and blind him, for he took no notice of the king’s entrance. Fleta
-did, however; she looked up at him and smiled—such a strange, sweet,
-subtle smile. Seldom, indeed, had Fleta given him a look like this.
-Otto’s heart leaped within him, and he knew himself her slave. For
-he loved her increasingly with every passing moment; and she had but
-to turn her face on him softly to make the loving soul in him burn
-with ardour. But that burning was fiery indeed. He turned upon
-Hilary and stayed his words by a sudden sharp order:
-
-“Leave the room,” he said. “And you had better go and see Doctor
-Brandener before you go to bed, for you are either in a fever or
-mad. Go at once.”
-
-Hilary was in a condition in which an order given in such a tone
-took the place of the action of his own brain, and he mechanically
-obeyed it. This was the best possible thing that could have happened
-to him; for he was in fact in a high fever, and if he had not,
-without thinking about it, done as he was told and gone to the
-resident doctor of the palace, he would probably have wandered
-raving about all night. As it was he was obliged to drink a strong
-sleeping draught, and was placed in his bed, where he fell at once
-into a sleep so profound it seemed like death.
-
-Hilary gone, Fleta closed the door behind him.
-
-“Do not let there be any struggle of wills between us to-night,”
-said Fleta very softly. “I warn you, I am much stronger than I was;
-I am very much stronger than you are, now. And you found before that
-you could not even come near enough to touch me. Let me rest, and
-that quietly; I wish to retain my beauty, both for your sake and my
-own.”
-
-Otto paused a few moments before he made any answer to this
-extraordinary speech. Then he spoke with difficulty; and as he did
-so raised his hand to brush away some great drops of sweat which had
-gathered on his forehead.
-
-“I know I am powerless against you to-night, Fleta,” he said. “I
-cannot even move nearer to you. But be warned; I intend to probe the
-mystery of your being. I intend to conquer you at last. I will do it
-if I have to visit hell itself for the magic which shall be stronger
-than yours.”
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
- ——*———
-
-
-
-
- TWILIGHT VISIONS.
-
- PART II.—THE CRESCENT.
-
- “_The_ LORD _appeared of old unto me, saying, ‘Yea, I have loved
- thee with an everlasting love: therefore with loving-kindness have
- I drawn thee.’_”—JER. xxxi., 3.
-
- “In life, in death, O Lord! abide with me!”
- Thou, Ruler o’er the Living Rosy Cross—
- Great Master Mason of the mortal frame,
- Which is the temple of the Holy Ghost—
- Grand Power of all who through the secret sun
- Dost hold the soul in tenement of clay
- To guide it safely through the gloom of night
- Into the golden morn, when all things then
- In Light of Love—thine own Eternal Self—
- Shall truly stand revealed to those that strive
- In truth to know the Power which all mankind
- Shall worship in the Universal King.
-
- * * * * *
-
- My children! saith the living God of Love,
- Now “if with all your hearts ye truly seek,”[153]
- Ye surely shall find me your King in Heaven,
- And finding me shall know yourselves to be
- Anointed Princes—Rulers of the Earth—
- The Powers of Light sent by me in the flesh,
- And named Michael! You are here to fight,
- To hurl down Satan to his black abyss,
- Where ignorance and error, sin and crime,
- And hellish spirits dark for ever dwell
- With all who in the bonds of slavery
- Lead deathly lives as creatures of the world—
- The wretched earth-worms of that bounden sphere,
- Which is the only Hell mankind can know!
-
- * * * * *
-
- The night is now far spent, and in the sky
- From out a dark blue setting there hath shone
- In ages past, as now, full many a star
- Proclaiming to mankind the Light of Heaven,
- Each with its own peculiar brilliancy
- Illumining the minds of men with rays
- Which point to other realms beyond this world,
- And ever tell of one star differing
- In glory from its fellow star on high.
-
- What great and hidden meaning lieth here!
- Why are the stars above held forth to man
- As entities which tell of other states?
- The Stars of Heaven are never seen by man;
- As man, he cannot know that glorious light
- Sent forth—from States of Wisdom not in skies—
- Through brilliant rays which meet not mortal gaze,
- And are invisible save to the one
- Who—seeing through perception—contacts light,
- That Light of ancient days, since passed away
- Into the sombre gloom of deepest night;
- Because in ignorance and selfishness
- Man willed to dwell in darkness on this earth.
- And now behold the fallen Lucifer!—
- Thou Morning Star of Truth—again arise—
- To touch with thy bright rays the mind of man
- And open to his gaze the Light of Love,
- Reflected in the silv’ry Crescent now
- About to crown the Living Cross of Truth.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Shine forth, fair Luna! Man hath waited long
- For thee—O bringer of the Golden Light.
- Surmount the Cross—thou Goddess of the Gods—
- Which suff’ring mortals here in agony
- Have borne along, desiring of their King—
- Of whom thou art—those better things on earth,
- Which He hath promised them in days of old,
- Shall take the place of former things to pass—
- With mourning, weeping, bitterness, and death—
- Away for ever, as the first-born states
- Of Heaven and earth and sea no more to be.[154]
-
- * * * * *
-
- Fair Keeper of the rays shed by the Sun!
- Whilst feeble mortals now deny thy power,
- We of the morn declare thee as thou art;
- The mediate force to govern all mankind,
- The force of love which mortals cannot know.
- For that man holds as love is passion foul:
- It hath transformed the earth into a hell,
- And none save thou can mediately stand
- To rid the earth—by Truth who comes from thee—
- From that curs’d tyrant in the world or hell,
- The devil—Satan—he that doth deceive,
- Accuser of our brethren, soon to be
- Bound hand and foot in heaven, then cast to earth,
- When angels dark and all who fight for him
- Shall fall with him through Michael’s power and might.[155]
-
- * * * * *
-
- The grandest vision seen in heaven from earth
- Has burst upon the wond’ring mind of man,
- For woman has appear’d with Sun array’d—
- She stands on Luna, o’er her holy brow
- A coronet of twelve bright golden stars:
- She crieth out and travaileth in pain
- To be delivered of the Child of Truth,
- Which is, in love, to rule mankind as one,
- The one great body in the Spirit CHRIST[156]
- Who cometh now a second time to man
- Through her who clothes him with a mortal form,
- Our Holy Mother in the Living God.
- And yet about the woman, as of old,
- Damned Satan’s lurks, with seven diadems—
- The dragon stands as knowledge of the World,
- Which would devour the holy child of God.
- But so-called knowledge is not ever true,
- Frail mortals know not that the states of Heaven
- Permit below themselves the states of Hell
- To be—that mortals there may feel the Truth—
- The everlasting fire, consuming Self—
- Destroying all the former things in man
- Through fiery sufferings induced by self,
- Through freedom granted by a Loving God.
- The Universal King in love ordains
- That man shall ever reap the crop he sows,
- And so the Woman clothed with the Sun,
- Who sows the seed of love amongst mankind,
- Shall reap the fruits of love in Heaven—her home—
- Where happiness and peace eternal reign,
- Wherein the dragon hath no place—no power.
- All hail! thou glorious Bride, in Light array’d,
- O, woman, clothed with the Bridegroom’s Power,[157]
- Arise and shine! The time is now at hand
- To change this earth into a heaven bright,
- This hell into a paradise of Saints;
- Through thee alone can mortals rise from earth
- To soar into Eternity—God’s Peace;
- Through thee alone can man perceive the light—
- The Sun of Wisdom,[158] which shall soon appear
- Acknowledged King supreme of all that is,
- Which He hath made in love for all mankind.
- Woman! behold a groaning world awaits
- The crushing of the Serpent’s power through thee;
- Look on the fairest cities of this globe,
- In misery the love-starved of the earth
- Now walk the streets; whilst degradation vile
- Confronts them in their daily—hourly lives,
- Because mankind will sell itself for gold
- To one, who is the prince of hell; he rules
- The States of falsehood in this mortal world
- Wherein the moaning of tormented souls
- Appeals to God[159] in mortal agony
- To ease the burdens of their earthly lives
- By teaching them of thee, O Queen of Heaven!
-
- * * * * *
-
- Woman, behold the sighing, wretchedness,
- Depravity, disease and death on earth!
- Pure life has left these mortals who transgress
- The laws of God by being of the world;
- They know not happiness and peace and thee.
- Thou art of nations all, the Saving Health.
- Stretch forth thine hands and save, O Queen of Heaven!
-
- * * * * *
-
- Woman! behold the man of war exists
- Whose work it is to shed the blood of him
- Who truly is a portion of thyself;
- Nay more, thine ALL, within this weary state;
- The Father of thy loved ones in the flesh!
- How long wilt thou permit ungodly strife
- To keep thee from thy lawful throne on earth,
- The one great Empire that shall bow to thee,
- That thou alone can’st rule, Queen of the South?[160]
- O, Bride of Heaven, thou knowest well that He—
- The Son of Man—thy bridegroom—came to save,
- Not to destroy, the lives of men on earth![161]
-
- * * * * *
-
- Great Spirit Love! Bright Queen of Highest Heaven,
- Send forth thy potent force, and let it fire
- The hearts of all within this little sphere;
- Show worldly rulers in their sinful states
- That thou alone art Queen of all Mankind;
- And in these petty princes of the earth
- Destroy, we pray thee, all the mortal lusts
- Of self, of gold, and praise, and feeble power,
- Implanted in their natures by the one
- Who rules them with their subjects in this hell
- Created by themselves through ignorance
- Of thee, O, Spirit Love, Blest Queen of Heaven!
-
- WM. C. ELDON SERJEANT.
-
-London, 28th January, 1888.
-
------
-
-Footnote 153:
-
- See Deut. iv.
-
-Footnote 154:
-
- See Rev. xxi.
-
-Footnote 155:
-
- See Rev. xii.
-
-Footnote 156:
-
- _i.e._, The invisible, universal, and eternal principle which
- mortals can only conceive of as the sum total of the combined
- spirits of Truth, Love, and Wisdom, when manifested in that “Son
- of Man,” or HUMANITY, which is also the “Son of God,” collectively
- and individually.
-
-Footnote 157:
-
- In the Kabala, the Bride of the “Heavenly Man,” _Tetragrammaton_,
- is Malkuth—the foundation or kingdom. It is our earth, which, when
- _regenerated_ and purified (as matter), will be united to her
- bridegroom (Spirit). But in Esotericism there are two aspects of
- the LOGOS, or the “Father-Son,” which latter becomes his own
- father; one is the UNMANIFESTED Eternal, the other the manifested
- and periodical LOGOS. The “Bride” of the former is the universe as
- nature in the abstract. She is also his “MOTHER”; who, “clothed
- with the bridegroom’s power,” gives birth to the manifested
- universe (the second _logos_) through her own inherent, mystic
- power, and is, therefore, the Immaculate Mother; “the woman
- clothed with the sun, and travailing” in child birth, in
- Revelation, ch. xii.—ED.
-
-Footnote 158:
-
- See Psalm lxxxiv., 11.
-
-Footnote 159:
-
- _i.e._ The Universal Spirit in whom all things exist and have
- being. That Eternal Principle which fills all Space and Time, and
- is SPACE and Time (in its abstract sense, as otherwise it would be
- an _extra-Cosmic_ God), and is perfect in perfection.
-
-Footnote 160:
-
- See Matt. xii., 42.
-
-Footnote 161:
-
- Luke ix., 56.
-
------
-
- ------------------
-
- EDITORS’ NOTE.
-
- This second part of the three which form the bulk of the poem
- called “Twilight Visions” by their author—from a purely Kabalistic
- standpoint of universal symbolical Esotericism, is most
- suggestive. Its literary value is apparent. But literary form in
- occultism counts for nothing in such mystic writing if its spirit
- is sectarian—if the symbolism fails in universal application or
- lacks correctness. In this, Part II., however (of the third to
- come we can yet say nothing), the Christian-Judæan names may be
- altered and replaced by their Sanskrit or Egyptian equivalents,
- and the ideas will remain the same. It seems written in the
- universal “mystery-language,” and may be readily understood by an
- occultist, of whatever school or nationality. Nor will any true
- mystic, versed in that international tongue, whose origin is lost
- in the dark night of pre-historic ages, fail to recognise a true
- Brother, who has adopted the phraseology of the Initiates of the
- ancient Judæan Tanaim—Daniel and St. John of the Apocalypse—and
- partially that of the Christian Gnostics, only to be the more
- readily understood by the profane of Christian lands. Yet the
- author means precisely the same thing that would be in the mind of
- any Brahminical or Buddhist Initiate, who, while deploring the
- present degenerated state of things, would place all his hope in
- the transient character of even the _Kali Yuga_, and trust in the
- speedy coming of the Kalki Avatar. We say again, the divine
- Science and Wisdom—_Theosophia_—is universal and common property,
- and the same under every sky. It is the physical type and the
- outward appearance in the dress, that make of one individual a
- Chinaman and of another a European, and of a third a red-skinned
- American. The inner man is one, and all are “Sons of God” by
- birth-right.
-
- The editors regret that, by an over-sight, the sub-title, “The
- Cross,” that headed Part I. of “Twilight Visions,” published in
- our January number, should have been omitted.
-
- THE WHITE MONK.
-
- By the Author of “A Professor of Alchemy.”
-
- (_Continued._)
-
-“Margaret had been in grief so sad and potent since her brother’s
-death, that it at last brought her into a fever, from which, with
-difficulty, she recovered, and which kept her long to her chamber.
-
-“During this time the monk roamed like a restless spirit, seeming to
-seek her, and despairing because he found her not. Giles Hughson
-even went so far as to suspect he was no true priest at all, until
-he had seen his tonsure. Even then he was drawn into most
-sacrilegious surmises by what he beheld some few nights after.
-
-“Having some work to do in Castle Troyes garden, he noted the White
-Monk, his lodger, glide noiselessly through the grounds, hidden
-behind the thick black walls of yew, and pause under the casement of
-Mistress Margaret and stand there listening intently for a certain
-space. At last, with a gesture of despair, he slung himself with
-infinite agile stillness up some feet of the ivy that covered the
-wall, from which insecure footing he did long and earnestly search
-if he might see her shadow cross the room. Giles, the gardener,
-swore afterwards that the sight of that priest, with his cowl fallen
-back from his dark face, and that look of straining, terrified
-attention had in it something so partaking of the unearthly, that
-for the life of him he dared not accost the daring intruder. ‘Time
-enough if there were need,’ he excused himself afterwards, ‘but
-Castle Troyes is ever well enow defended, and at that time there
-must have been enough of inmates watching over Margaret, the
-beautiful, to win her back to life.’
-
-“The horrible recklessness of an act such as this, with the carbines
-of a round thirty men within a few yards of him, made the monk seem
-to Giles a creature of charmed life, who may not be addressed as
-ordinary mortals.
-
-“But the White Monk saw his discoverer when he descended and glided
-away again, scared by some noise made by Margaret’s attendants. And
-thus there occurred a tragedy, which you shall learn as far as it
-was ever known.
-
-“Now Giles Hughson had a young son afflicted with total dumbness,
-but whom Mistress Margaret de Troyes had taught to write; and it is
-through this scholarship of his that we come to know as much as we
-do of what really happened. The White Monk appeared fond of this
-boy, possibly because he had seen Margaret kiss him. Thus the lad
-had greater access to the monk’s small attic than any other; and
-this is the tale he tells of the night after Giles had espied his
-lodger clinging to the wall of Castle Troyes.
-
-“The boy had noiselessly, so as not to disturb the often musings of
-the solitary one, stepped up the attic stairs to fetch some trifle
-he wanted of the monk. Pausing timidly at the door, he beheld the
-familiar white-clad figure, with an air of terrible malignity,
-mixing some powder of a greenish colour, which, at the sight of the
-intruder, he hastily laid aside, thinking it had not been seen.
-
-“But the lad was unnerved by the expression he had caught on the
-monk’s face, and he forgot not so lightly.
-
-“At the frugal supper, that very night, he observed the monk ate
-even less than was his wont, and of one dish only, the which he also
-pressed upon the young lad by his side, seeming to wish to keep the
-others from him. The others of the family, Giles Hughson and his
-dame, did eat as usual, and were both found dead on the morrow.
-
-“The monk strove to comfort the poor boy by every means in his
-power, but it was all of no avail. The lad seized a moment, fled
-into the wood, and there wrote down all that he had seen and
-suspected, with which account he presently did seek the justices.
-These caused proper inquiry into the manner of the deaths of the
-workman and his wife to be made, and, finding they had died of
-potent poison, instituted careful search for the person of the White
-Monk, who had vanished from the cottage.
-
-“At length they found him, in a strange state for one of his way of
-living. Into the wood had he gone, but not so far as that he could
-hide him. He had stopped beside a little brook, where he had sat
-when first he saw fair Margaret, the sister of his victims. There,
-even there, was he found, in so deep contemplation that he never
-heard his pursuers’ footsteps. He had made a cross of two elder
-branches (folk about us say that the elder-wood formed the Cross
-whereon Christ died), and having set it on the summit of a bank, was
-deep in prayer, as it seemed, before it.
-
-“One of his Italian repentances, I doubt not.
-
-“He seemed in sore distress of mind, and lost to all thought of his
-surroundings.
-
-“So they took him; the foreign wild beast, tracked at last. But not
-without trouble for he fought like the panther he was. Escaping
-lissomely from their hands at the moment when they would have bound
-him, the ex-bravo snatched a genuine stiletto from the folds of his
-monastic frock and stabbed one man to death, laughing coarsely at
-the stupid astonishment of the harquebusiers to see this weapon in
-so unseemly a hand.
-
-“He had no chance, being taken thus unawares, and exhaustion came
-upon him; so, with tremours, the officers of justice held him fast.
-Before the first cord was fastened round his struggling wrists, he
-fell back, rigid, in their arms; sighed once or twice, smiled
-bitterly to himself at their consternation, and flung his head back,
-dead.
-
-“A small quantity of a green powder was found on him (a large dose,
-I ween, had killed so hardy a villain!), and by comparing the signs
-of death with those of Giles Hughson and his wife, they saw he had
-poisoned himself some time within the last five hours. Whether he
-had seen Margaret again, and by seeing her upon the earth, had come
-to know himself too bad for it; or whether the weariness attendant
-upon sins so heavy had worn him out at last, remains a mystery. The
-leeches said a man so wasted and wan as this could scarce, in the
-way of Nature, have lived many years longer; but I question this,
-and so did the men who had so great trouble to hold him!
-
-“News travelled slowly in those days from Italy to England, and it
-was not until very shortly after the White Monk’s death that our
-town learnt it had harboured Pietro Rinucci, the slayer of the two
-good brothers, Ambrose and Gilbert de Troyes. No one ever told
-Mistress Margaret that she had spoken with such a man. And now the
-beautiful maiden rose from her bed, and asked for her mostly costly
-gowns, of amber, blue and rosy colours; and went amongst her friends
-brightly, wreathed with pearls and radiant in smiles. She was
-thought to have recovered, though she looked ethereal as a daisy or
-white cloud; but she said and averred that she was dying, and that
-her brother Ambrose had appeared to her in a vision, bidding her
-make all speed to do what remained to her upon the earth and be soon
-ready, when he should come behind the angels to fetch her hence. Her
-kinsfolk thought she wandered in her mind. She asked for the man who
-had wooed her, and held long speech with him, very merrily, and yet
-with tears; beseeching him to pause e’er he rashly threw away his
-life on this earth, since we know not in the beginning, whither our
-pleasant sins may carry us, and when we have no enjoyment of them,
-save by memory, what are they to us? The instruments of our present
-ruin.
-
-“‘All this,’ said the lovely Margaret with a smile, ‘hath right off,
-my Lord, been heard, by you and others; but from a lady’s lips (and
-that lady who is even now bent to consider the past failings of her
-own life, soon to be taken from her) it hath been made evident to
-me, these poor oft-repeated words shall have some power. God bless
-you, my Lord—farewell.’
-
-“The gentleman came out from her boudoir exceeding sobered, and
-essaying as he might to conceal his tears.
-
-“The words of this dying angel—for so indeed she seemed—he vowed
-should be as a challenge to him from God to purify his ways. And
-indeed from that day the gentleman made such progress in godliness
-as can be made by one of his complexion.
-
-“And now a strange and terrible portent was observed.
-
-“Those who watched by the Lady Margaret, began to see a vision, and
-of that most dreaded being, the White Monk!
-
-“Night or day, it mattered not; with a chill like to that of Death
-itself, the horrified watchers knew the presence of the phantom. In
-the dark corners of the room would shape themselves dimly the
-features of the murderer, Rinucci, and his monastic gown, so glaring
-white in its dimness through the dark that the eye could not search
-it, and gone, ever gone, if some bold spirit neared the spot where
-he had thought he saw it.
-
-“No one said aught of this to the Lady Margaret, in fear to fright
-her; and she alone, of all who watched, did never see nor feel the
-constant presence. It seemed sometimes as though the phantom yearned
-to make itself visible to her kind, half-divine eyes, but her
-thoughts were too high-set for it to be given her to see a sight so
-horrible.
-
-“She was much upheld by visions then—her contemplative soul shaped
-to itself many fair sights and sounds that others knew not. Sitting
-by the open casement in her sun-coloured gown, with white arms,
-pearl encircled, leaning out, and her smile ever brighter as she
-murmured to herself, she would stretch far over the lattice and
-grasp at rosy clouds, which she said floated past her in the peopled
-air. She would reply, still leaning out and smiling, to what she
-vowed was said to her by wandering happy spirits. And all this
-while, behind her, there would stand the White Mystery, with slight
-hand lifting the cowl from a face whose eyes were as deep as death
-and more despairing.
-
-“Small marvel that the murderer’s ghost should cling to our saint
-while she yet lived on earth! He may have known that, once dead,
-restored to Heaven, she would thenceforth move in worlds where such
-as he should never have the force to breathe.
-
-“And in her due hour she died; and after that for a space no one saw
-aught of the dread ghost. His spirit, drawn by some power to enter
-our house, wherein was held all he knew of goodness, had now no
-further business there, for a while. His loathed name, fraught with
-horror to your ancestors’ home, was now never spoken. It was
-thought, doubtless, that since Margaret de Troyes—the innocent
-avenger—had unwittingly caused the murderer’s death, the house he
-had so deeply injured was for ever free from his godless presence.
-And, indeed, for a while, the chronicles are silent respecting him.
-The next two generations were happy, and no great misfortune blasted
-the house. But in the third generation there were harsh feuds in the
-city, and much bloodshed, and several of your name came to violent
-and sometimes mysterious ends. Then it was that there arose a
-searching into past traditions to discover the secret of a certain
-white spectre said to appear about the castle previous to each
-calamity. Not all saw it; but still it grew known, and it bore a
-marked resemblance to an ancient portrait—hung up for curiosity’s
-sake—of Pietro Rinucci.
-
-“Well, young master, I myself served your grandfather, and I myself
-can bear witness to the presence of the White Monk’s ghost on one of
-the shrewd moments of the family destinies. Wilt hear it? So your
-father was then a stalwart young man, away at the wars in Spain.
-Your uncles, two blithe young gallants, were at home at the time I
-speak of, and there was some merry-making toward in the castle.
-Myself was seeing to the torches in the garden, when I chanced to
-see your uncle, Geoffrey de Troyes, come hastily into the yew-walk
-with his rapier drawn, followed by another youth whom I knew well,
-his rival, and in some sort, his enemy.
-
-“As the guests danced within, these nobles fought without. A man
-dared not have interposed; it was matter of life and death to them,
-and they were there to prove it.
-
-“I was glad, as I stood on the further side the hedge, to mark the
-vigour and the skill of our Geoffrey. Methought the vantage was with
-him, and with my whole heart I hated his opponent, the cold, selfish
-Ernle Deane, and wished him to succumb.
-
-“And so, by mine honour, he should have done, for my boy was the
-pride of us all for swordsmanship; but it was not to be.
-
-“Geoffrey de Troyes never suffered more from his mortal wound than I
-did in my heart and my pride, as I led him, bleeding piteously to
-this very stable-room, where he sank on the hay and said he must
-die.
-
-“‘Look to it,’ groaned the poor young noble, as he lay dying, ‘that
-Mistress Beatrice Savile has this token from me—my gold chain—warn
-her from me when I am dead, that she wed not Ernle Deane—he is bad
-to the core, and she is too good to mend him. Oh! but for that
-hateful vision!’
-
-“‘What vision, a God’s name?’ I cried.
-
-“And he told me trembling—he who had never trembled of his whole
-life!—that even at the moment when he had thought to subdue his
-enemy—even as he raised his sword to strike home to a worthless
-heart—even then had his arm fallen paralysed and a frightful shiver
-quite unmanned him at the sight of a poor monk in white, who stood
-some yards away, and raised his cowl with a thin white hand, and
-fixed unearthly eyes upon him with a steadfast look that drew the
-soul away from the deadliest earthly peril.
-
-“‘And so I fell!’ cried the shamed noble, crimsoning though the
-pallor of exhaustion. ‘_I_—a practised hand, a not unworthy
-courage—a De Troyes! I fell—for this!—and so would any man have
-fallen,’ he defiantly ended, ‘for ’twas a devil—’twas Pietro Rinucci
-himself, who came from hell to lure me from my hopes of earthly
-happiness. O, life! O, Beatrice!’
-
-“And I nursed him and wept over him like any woman, whilst one
-young, bright life more departed,
-
-“In truth, young master,” ended honest Ralph, “the noble Geoffrey
-may have been deceived, and fancied this; but, you shall pardon me,
-I would rather think that armies of devils nightly march these
-grounds than that one De Troyes was ever seen to quail, save under
-magic! Thus it is that I, and that many of us yet believe in the
-spectre of Pietro Rinucci, ‘the White Monk.’”
-
-Oh these faithful servitors, they would die for us children of the
-house, I believe, and yet they have ever this curious bent to
-terrify the childish minds. I know not when it was precisely that I
-thus first heard the White Monk’s story, but this I know, I was
-young enough to sit with my clenched fistlets supporting my chin,
-and my eyes and mouth very wide open.
-
-“And was he always in _white_, that fearful man?” I asked, somewhere
-toward the middle of the story. “_Always in white?_” I know not why,
-but this detail struck my child’s phantasy more powerfully than all
-the rest; _this_ was awful, this was the pith of the whole matter,
-and from that moment I sat trembling, and drinking in the history
-with reluctant suspense, until it became the bane of my life for a
-term of years.
-
-For hours I lay shuddering ofttimes in my bed, dreading with my body
-and my soul lest the Monk should appear to me! And never had I
-courage to speak of this to anyone of the many loving house mates
-who would so promptly have put an end to my fears by leaving me no
-more alone at night. There is a keen, hard honour for children to
-maintain, and to them the confession of nocturnal terror is as
-flight to the soldier. So, as the banquet sped its course below, I
-shuddered lonely in my bed in the oaken room, often weeping angrily
-amidst my fears because I alone, the only son of the house, was the
-only soul in it left desolate.
-
-A little later I was comforted in some sort by my baby sister
-Margaret, who was put to sleep in an adjacent cot, and being too
-tiny for Fear to reach, would sleep secure, all gold and white in
-the dusky gleam of our rushlight—the one oasis of hope throughout
-the terrible oaken room. Yet she in her turn, became a source of
-fear to me. Should the Monk appear, and should the dire extremity
-cause me to shriek, what would become of Marguerite? She would die
-of sudden terror. Worse—if he should stand by her bedside, raising
-his cowl off the awful face, and her blue eyes should open at that
-instant? How should I protect her?
-
-But before I wander further, I must begin straight and tell how we
-lived, and where, and to what end.
-
- PERCY ROSS.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
- AN AUTO-HYPNOTIC RHAPSODY.
-
- “_When all desires_ that dwell in the heart _cease, then the mortal
- becomes immortal, and obtains Brahman_.
- _When all the fetters of the heart_ here on earth _are broken_;
- _When all that bind us to_ this life _is undone, then the mortal
- becomes immortal—here my teaching ends_.”
-
- —KATHA UPANISHAD.
-
-I (Âtman) have crossed the sea—I have reached the other shore—I have
-triumphed over gravitation, my soul is in the sun-currents, moving
-sunwards with the sun.
-
-Where the currents are bearing me to I scarcely know, but yet
-something has been revealed.
-
-I died the mystical death, I was received by the Dawn-Maidens—the
-bright ones of the eternal twilights, the two bright Ushas, Ahana
-and Antigone, Isis, and Nephtys of Aanru.[162]
-
------
-
-Footnote 162:
-
- _Aanru_ is the celestial field where the defunct’s soul received
- wheat and corn, growing therein _seven cubits high_. (See “Book of
- the Dead,” 124 _et seq._)—ED.
-
------
-
-The Ahana-Aurora of Eternity laid me asleep on her bosom, giving me
-_amrita_[163] to drink, as Hebe gave to Herakles, and then I at once
-knew that I (_Atman_) was immortal; the Mask of Personality had
-fallen to earth, the Âtma was revealed—my true SELF—I knew my name,
-and found myself soaring sunwards. Then the Voice of that DAWN said,
-“I give you the ‘Amrita’ of the cessation of deaths,” and her lips
-burning with sun-ardours, kissed my forehead, and said, “I bring you
-to the sun; when blind—on earth, that Sanskara of sorrow—you fancied
-your sun was nothing but a great centre of physical force—light and
-heat, and their equivalents; but it was Maya, the Earth-Queen of
-illusions, who thus deceived your earth eyes. Look now, and you can
-see nothing but a vast group of mighty spirit-wills clustered round
-a yet mightier Spirit centre, drawing from thence inspiration, and
-ever-radiating sun effluxes, for the good and advancement of those
-unhappy lower wills yet sunk in the earth. What you called light was
-intelligence, and heat was—love. Did not Koré suggest this to you, O
-my weak child, for she, too, was one of the Ushas, a Maiden of the
-Dawn, kindling your soul to love?”
-
------
-
-Footnote 163:
-
- _Amrita_ (immortal) applied to the Soma juice, and called the
- “Water of Life.”—ED.
-
------
-
-I was silent to this question, for a dread sorrow clung to me.
-
-“Though” (began again the Voice) “the sun-souls attract the
-earth-souls, the lost ones, for a while, to bring them up to
-themselves by the path that leads to Nirvana[164] ‘where there is no
-sorrow’; yet the sun-groups of Spirits are themselves attracted by a
-grander centre of force, and the Sun, with his planet-children, are
-speeding in a mighty orbit round a far mightier Soul-centre—the lost
-Pleiad—lost on earth to be found in Heaven. Dost thou not hear the
-solemn music of that tempest flight?” And then she touched my ears,
-and I heard the myriad voiced song of the blessed ones as they
-passed on rejoicing, and the Voice continued: “That lost Pleiad, the
-dove-woman, the ‘Woman Clothed with the Sun,’ who, as Jeremiah
-prophesied, should ‘compass man,’ is that eternal womanhood which
-attracts all men.” And the chorus of the psalm I heard them sing, as
-they passed on Pleiad-ward, was “Freedom and Love—Love in Bi-unity.
-The Two in One foretold has come even to earth.” And the souls in
-that Pleiad-world are infinite in number as the sands of the seas of
-countless worlds, elective affinities attract like to like, forming
-celestial choirs, each member of which breathes the akasian air
-synchronously with the other, and what you call in your
-earth-symbol-language their “hearts,” beat and throb in unison
-together as one heart, and thus become coalesced in, and by, love.
-
------
-
-Footnote 164:
-
- This is a doctrine of the Visishtadwaita sect of the Vedantins.
- The _Jiva_ (spiritual life principle, the living _Monad_) of one
- who attained Moksha or Nirvana, “breaks through the Brahmarandra
- and goes to _Suryamandala_ (the region of the sun) through the
- Solar rays. Then it goes, through a dark spot in the Sun, to
- Paramapeda to which it is directed by the Supreme Wisdom acquired
- by _Yoga_, and helped thereinto by the _Devas_ (gods) called
- Archis, the “Flames,” or Fiery Angels, answering to the Christian
- archangels.—ED.
-
------
-
-“Listen, O my child, to the music of their breathing,” and I said,
-“Is Koré there?” Then I heard voices in Heaven, and I began to
-breathe the interior akasa breath synchronously with her—our breaths
-became one, I was mingled with, and melted in her; and lo! a great
-mystery! that Dawn-maiden changed to Koré, and Koré gave me the
-amrita of the Pleiad, and I knew that our biune love was immortal.
-
-I have passed over the deep waters, I am free, I have infinite peace
-and infinite joy, at rest for ever.
-
-Have I not, like Herakles, slept on the bosom of Athéné, breathing
-the wisdom of her breaths? I, too, breathe internally akasian
-love-breaths, I live in the love-choirs of the Pleiad Sun, I am in
-the true Nirvana, where there is no sorrow and no desire, for desire
-is lost in an ever-abiding and eternal fruition. The Lotus has
-bloomed in the Sun-fire,[165] and my soul is newborn in the pure
-white calyx, and floats down the golden waters that wash the eternal
-shores. I have found the “Path,” “suffering, and the cause of
-suffering” (separation from the loved one) have been seen, and have
-passed away, whilst we ever rise and pass onwards by the star-paths.
-I am no more blind, but, like Orion of old, gazing eastwards on that
-rising sun, the red flush of whose dawn is ever blushing in our
-central souls. I have received my sight.—OM....
-
- A. J. C.
- Lucerne.
-
------
-
-Footnote 165:
-
- _Vide_ Legend of Jyotishka, mentioned in “Life of Buddha from the
- Bkah-Hgyur.”
-
------
-
- ---
-
-Since writing the foregoing, A. J. C. has met with the following
-note contained in Mr. Edwin Arnold’s interesting essay, “Death and
-Afterwards,” which throws light on the views in said Rhapsody: “That
-which safely bears our ‘solid world’ in the gulfs of space is no
-base or basis, no moveless central rock, but _throbbing energies_ in
-complex and manifold action, _in swing and wave and thrill_;
-whirling us onward in mighty sweeps of three-fold rythm _to which
-our hearts are set_. So therefore not solidity of base in fixity of
-status is our supreme and vital need, but moving _power beyond our
-ken or senses_; known to us in _energising action_, and working
-through blue ‘void’; impelling us in rings of spiral orbit round a
-moving sun in which we are dependent.”
-
-The same book contains Walt Whitman’s beautiful and striking poem on
-Death, in which the poet says:
-
- “Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome?”
-
-Yes, one other, the writer of the foregoing Rhapsody, has attempted
-a song in praise of Death the deliverer, and the Italian poet,
-Leopardi, stated in beautiful verse years ago that the world had two
-good things in it—Love and Death.
-
- “Due belle cose ho il mondo
- L’amor e la Morte”...
-
- ----------
-
- OUR OTHER HALF.
-
-When our ancient brethren, the Kabalists, Jewish as well as
-Oriental, taught that the divine monad, starting on its long journey
-from the bosom of the Infinite One was divided into halves, they had
-a double meaning, one exoteric, the other esoteric. The exoteric
-one, being that the two halves, swept through cycles upon cycles of
-time, in search of each other; and, that, when they finally met, in
-a perfect union, or marriage, the two halves became one on earth,
-and after death, united again. The true explanation, however, the
-esoteric one, is, that each and every one of us, contains within
-himself, both the halves: the feminine predominating through some
-incarnations, the masculine through others. It adds that, when we
-evolute into the perfect being, the Adept, the Mahatma, both
-principles are in perfect harmony. Or, as the Kabalists have
-recorded it, harmony is in equilibrium, and equilibrium exists by
-the analogy of contraries. How often we discern in the most
-masculine of men, distinct feminine traits of character, and _vice
-versa_, in the gentlest of the fair sex, discover masculine traits.
-
-The Jewish Kabbalists represented these two principles in the
-letters forming their Ineffable Name. Its first three characters
-mean Eve, or Eva, or Hâyah היה or woman, or by another reading it
-means mother, and is, in fact, the proper name as given in Genesis
-for Eve, “the mother of all living.” Adding the character י Yodh or
-Yah, the male, the number one, the masculine, we have Jehovah, or
-Jah-eve, or being as male-female, the perfect number—10, symbolised
-by the Sephirothal Adam Kadmon.
-
-A few evenings ago, while pondering on this subject, in a room
-devoted to occult research, where an Eastern incense burning with a
-ruddy glow on the triangular-shaped altar, sent its refreshing
-fragrance through the apartment, my outer senses were lulled, and
-the inner ones came into play, and I became conscious of my other
-“half.” I saw standing before me, a being, whom I had hitherto
-considered as my guardian angel stretching out her hands to me, and
-saying—“my beloved one, know thy-_self_.”
-
-The fire on the altar burnt low. The north-east wind, which had been
-blowing in furious gusts outside, lashing the bosom of the lake into
-white foam, died away, sounding like some far distant choral chant.
-An unearthly silence ensued, and seemed to pervade the infinitudes
-of space. A thousand voices spoke to me, saying, “Man, know
-thyself.” Shadowy, ghostly forms filled the apartment. One, more
-distinct than the rest, tall in form, clad in a long flowing garment
-of pure white, the long black hair falling in curly locks over his
-shoulders, the silky beard reaching to his waist, the light of
-centuries of centuries gleaming forth from his dark eyes—extended
-his right hand toward me. A thrill of unutterable delight passed
-through my being. Slowly I emerged from my earthly casket, looked
-for an instant at its sleeping form, then felt irresistibly drawn to
-the fair being, who still stood with outstretched hands, and seemed
-to lose myself in her. The twain had become one. The mystic union
-had taken place. For a few brief moments I realized the
-possibilities of _jnânayoga_, the wisdom-power of the adepts. Space
-was annihilated. I could see systems upon systems of worlds,
-galaxies of stars, suns and systems of suns, whirling through space.
-I thought of some distant place, and I was there. Complex problems
-solved themselves quite naturally: I had become all THOUGHT....
-
-The extended hand of the tall form flashed before my eyes, and I
-became unconscious. When I awoke, I found lying on the altar a
-full-blown white rose. The north-east wind was again roaring in
-fierce gusts, the fire on the altar had died out. The mirrors had
-draped themselves with their curtains of black. The two interlaced
-triangles had merged into a circle, of pure gold in colour. Once
-more I took upon myself my objective life. But I had solved the
-problem which has taken me seven years to solve. I was content....
-
- “BERTRAND STONEX,” F.T.S.
-
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-
- THE THREE DESIRES.
-
-The first three of the numbered rules of “Light on the Path” must
-appear somewhat of an unequal character to bracket together. The
-sense in which they follow each other is purely spiritual. Ambition
-is the highest point of personal activity reached by the mind, and
-there is something noble in it, even to an Occultist. Having
-conquered the desire to stand above his fellows, the restless
-aspirant, in seeking what his personal desires are, finds the thirst
-for life stand next in his way. For all that are ordinarily classed
-as desires have long since been subjugated, passed by, or forgotten,
-before this pitched battle of the soul is begun. The desire for life
-is entirely a desire of the spirit, not mental at all; and in facing
-it a man begins to face his own soul. But very few have even
-attempted to face it; still fewer can guess at all at its meaning.
-
-The connection between ambition and the desire of life is of this
-kind. Men are seldom really ambitious in whom the animal passions
-are strong. What is taken for ambition in men of powerful physique
-is more often merely the exercise of great energy in order to obtain
-full gratification of all physical desires. Ambition pure and simple
-is the struggle of the mind upwards, the exercise of a native
-intellectual force which lifts a man altogether above his peers. To
-rise—to be preeminent in some special manner, in some department of
-art, science, or thought, is the keenest longing of delicate and
-highly-tuned minds. It is quite a different thing from the thirst
-for knowledge which makes of a man a student always—a learner to the
-end, however great he may become. Ambition is born of no love for
-anything for its own sake, but purely for the sake of oneself. “It
-is I that will know, I that will rise, and by my own power.”
-
- “Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition;
- By that sin fell the angels.”
-
-The place-seeking for which the word was originally used, differs in
-degree, not in kind, from that more abstract meaning now generally
-attached to it. A poet is considered ambitious when he writes for
-fame. It is true; so he is. He may not be seeking a place at court,
-but he is certainly seeking the highest place he knows of. Is it
-conceivable that any great author could really be anonymous, and
-remain so? The human mind revolts against the theory of the Baconian
-authorship of Shakespeare’s works, not only because it deprives the
-world of a splendid figure, but also because it makes of Bacon a
-monster, unlike all other human beings. To the ordinary intelligence
-it is inconceivable that a man should hide his light in this
-purposeless manner. Yet it is conceivable to an occultist that a
-great poet might be inspired by one greater than himself, who would
-stand back entirely from the world and all contact with it. This
-inspirer would not only have conquered ambition but also the
-abstract desire for life, before he could work vicariously to so
-great an extent. For he would part with his work for ever when once
-it had gone to the world; it would never be his. A person who can
-imagine making no claim on the world, neither desiring to take
-pleasure from it nor to give pleasure to it, can dimly apprehend the
-condition which the occultist has reached when he no longer desires
-to live. Do not suppose this to mean that he neither takes nor gives
-pleasure; he does both, as also he lives. A great man, full of work
-and thought, eats his food with pleasure; he does not dwell on the
-prospect of it, and linger over the memory, like the gluttonous
-child, or the gourmand pure and simple. This is a very material
-image, yet sometimes these simple illustrations serve to help the
-mind more than any others. It is easy to see, from this analogy,
-that an advanced occultist who has work in the world may be
-perfectly free from the desires which would make him a part of it,
-and yet may take its pleasures and give them back with interest. He
-is enabled to give more pleasure than he takes, because he is
-incapable of fear or disappointment. He has no dread of death, nor
-of that which is called annihilation. He rests on the waters of
-life, submerged and sleeping, or above them and conscious,
-indifferently. He cannot feel disappointment, because although
-pleasure is to him intensely vivid and keen, it is the same to him
-whether he enjoys it himself or whether another enjoys it. It is
-pleasure, pure and simple, untarnished by personal craving or
-desire. So with regard to what occultists call “progress”—the
-advance from stage to stage of knowledge. In a school of any sort in
-the external world emulation is the great spur to progress. The
-occultist, on the contrary, is incapable of taking a single step
-until he has acquired the faculty of realizing progress as an
-abstract fact. Someone must draw nearer to the Divine in every
-moment of life; there must always be progress. But the disciple who
-desires that he shall be the one to advance in the next moment, may
-lay aside all hope of it. Neither should he be conscious of
-preferring progress for another or of any kind of vicarious
-sacrifice. Such ideas are in a certain sense unselfish, but they are
-essentially characteristic of the world in which separateness
-exists, and form is regarded as having a value of its own. The shape
-of a man is as much an _eidolon_ as though no spark of divinity
-inhabited it; at any moment that spark may desert the particular
-shape, and we are left with a substantial shadow of the man we knew.
-It is in vain, after the first step in occultism has been taken,
-that the mind clings to the old beliefs and certainties. Time and
-space are known to be non-existent, and are only regarded as
-existing in practical life for the sake of convenience. So with the
-separation of the divine-human spirit into the multitudes of men on
-the earth. Roses have their own colours, and lilies theirs; none can
-tell why this is when the same sun, the same light, gives the colour
-to each. Nature is indivisible. She clothes the earth, and when that
-clothing is torn away, she bides her time and re-clothes it again
-when there is no more interference with her. Encircling the earth
-like an atmosphere, she keeps it always glowing and green, moistened
-and sun-lit. The spirit of man encompasses the earth like a fiery
-spirit, living on Nature, devouring her, sometimes being devoured by
-her, but always in the mass remaining more ethereal and sublime than
-she is. In the individual, man is conscious of the vast superiority
-of Nature; but when once he becomes conscious that he is part of an
-indivisible and indestructible whole, he knows also that the whole
-of which he is part stands above nature. The starry sky is a
-terrible sight to a man who is just self-less enough to be aware of
-his own littleness and unimportance as an individual; it almost
-crushes him. But let him once touch on the power which comes from
-knowing himself as part of the human spirit, and nothing can crush
-him by its greatness. For if the wheels of the chariot of the enemy
-pass over his body, he forgets that it is his body, and rises again
-to fight among the crowd of his own army. But this state can never
-be reached, nor even approached, until the last of the three desires
-is conquered, as well as the first. They must be apprehended and
-encountered together.
-
-Comfort, in the language used by occultists, is a very comprehensive
-word. It is perfectly useless for a neophyte to practise discomfort
-or asceticism as do religious fanatics. He may come to prefer
-deprivation in the end, and then it has become his comfort.
-Homelessness is a condition to which the religious Brahmin pledges
-himself; and in the external religion he is considered to fulfil
-this pledge if he leaves wife and child, and becomes a begging
-wanderer, with no shelter of his own to return to. But all external
-forms of religion are forms of comfort, and men take vows of
-abstinence in the same spirit that they take pledges of boon
-companionship. The difference between these two sides of life is
-only apparent. But the homelessness which is demanded of the
-neophyte is a much more vital thing than this. It demands the
-surrender from him of choice or desire. Dwelling with wife and
-child, under the shelter of a familiar roof-tree, and fulfilling the
-duties of citizenship, the neophyte may be far more homeless, in the
-esoteric sense, than when he is a wanderer or an outcast. The first
-lesson in practical occultism usually given to a pledged disciple is
-that of fulfilling the duties immediately to hand with the same
-subtle mixture of enthusiasm and indifference as the neophyte would
-imagine himself able to feel when he had grown to the size of a
-ruler of worlds and a designer of destinies. This rule is to be
-found in the Gospels and in the Bhagavad Gita. The immediate work,
-whatever it may be, has the abstract claim of duty, and its relative
-importance or non-importance is not to be considered at all. This
-law can never be obeyed until all desire of comfort is for ever
-destroyed. The ceaseless assertions and re-assertions of the
-personal self must be left behind for ever. They belong as
-completely to the character of this world as does the desire to have
-a certain balance at the bank, or to retain the affections of a
-loved person. They are equally subject to the change which is
-characteristic of this world; indeed, they are even more so, for
-what the neophyte does by becoming a neophyte is simply to enter a
-forcing-house. Change, disillusionment, disheartenment, despair will
-crowd upon him by invitation; for his wish is to learn his lessons
-quickly. And as he turns these evils out they will probably be
-replaced by others worse than themselves—a passionate longing for
-separate life, for sensation, for the consciousness of growth in his
-own self, will rush in upon him and sweep over the frail barriers
-which he has raised. And no such barriers as asceticism, as
-renunciation, nothing indeed which is negative, will stand for a
-single moment against this powerful tide of feeling. The only
-barrier is built up of new desires. For it is perfectly useless for
-the neophyte to imagine he can get beyond the region of desires. He
-cannot; he is still a man, Nature must bring forth flowers while she
-is still Nature, and the human spirit would loose its hold on this
-form of existence altogether did it not continue to desire. The
-individual man cannot wrench himself instantly out of that life of
-which he is an essential part. He can only change his position in
-it. The man whose intellectual life dominates his animal life,
-changes his position; but he is still in the dominion of desire. The
-disciple who believes it possible to become selfless in a single
-effort, will find himself flung into a bottomless pit as the
-consequence of his rash endeavour. Seize upon a new order of
-desires, purer, wider, nobler; and so plant your foot upon the
-ladder firmly. It is only on the last and topmost rung of the
-ladder, at the very entrance upon Divine or Mahatmic life, that it
-is possible to hold fast to that which has neither substance or
-existence.
-
-The first part of “Light on the Path” is like a chord in
-music; the notes have to be struck together though they must
-be touched separately. Study and seize hold of the new desires
-before you have thrust out the old ones; otherwise in the
-storm you will be lost. Man while he is man has substance and
-needs some step to stand on, some idea to cling to. But let it
-be the least possible. Learn as the acrobat learns, slowly and
-with care, to become more independent. Before you attempt to
-cast out the devil of ambition—the desire of something,
-however fine and elevated, outside of yourself,—seize on the
-desire to find the light of the world within yourself. Before
-you attempt to cast out the desire of conscious life, learn to
-look to the unattainable or in other language to that which
-you know you can only reach in unconsciousness. In knowing
-that your aim is of this lofty character, that it will never
-bring conscious success, never bring comfort to you, that it
-will never carry you _in your own temporary personal self_ to
-any haven of rest or place of agreeable activity, you cut away
-all the force and power of the desires of the lower astral
-nature. For what avail is it, when these facts have been once
-realised, to desire separateness, sensation or growth?
-
-The armour of the warrior who rises to fight for you in the battle
-depicted in the second part of “Light on the Path,” is like the
-shirt of the happy man in the old story. The king was to be cured of
-all his ills by sleeping in this shirt; but when the one happy man
-in his kingdom was found, he was a beggar, without care, without
-anxiety—and shirtless. So with the divine warrior. None can take his
-armour and use it, for he has none. The king could never find
-happiness like that of the careless beggar. The man of the world,
-however fine and cultivated he may be, is hampered by a thousand
-thoughts and feelings which have to be cast aside before he can even
-stand on the threshold of occultism. And, be it observed, he is
-chiefly handicapped by the armour he wears, which isolates him. He
-has personal pride, personal respect. These things must die out as
-the personality recedes. The process described in the first part of
-“Light on the Path,” is one which takes off that shell, or armour,
-and casts it aside for ever. Then the warrior arises, armourless,
-defenceless, offenceless, identified with the afflicters and the
-afflicted, the angered and the one that angers; fighting not on any
-side, but for the Divine, the highest in all.
-
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-
- GOLDEN SENTENCES OF DEMOCRITUS.
-
-It is beautiful to impede an unjust man; but if this be not
-possible, it is beautiful not to act in conjunction with him.
-
-Sin should be abstained from, not through fear, but, for the sake of
-the becoming.
-
-Many who have not learnt to argue rationally, still live according
-to reason.
-
-Vehement desires about any one thing render the soul blind with
-respect to other things.
-
-The equal is beautiful in everything, but excess and defect to me do
-not appear to be so.
-
-It is the property of a divine intellect to be always intently
-thinking about the beautiful.
-
-
-
-
- THE RELATION OF COLOUR TO THE INTERLACED
- TRIANGLES, OR THE PENTACLE.[166]
-
------
-
-Footnote 166:
-
- A paper read before the Chicago Branch of the Theosophical
- Society, by its Secretary, M. L. Brainard.
-
------
-
-Colour registers grades of vibration. Vibration registers grades of
-life. Life, esoterically considered, is ascent towards its
-source—the great First Cause, the celestial sun which lights
-universal creation.
-
-If a ray of white light is passed through a triangular piece of
-glass, called a prism, it becomes separated into the seven colours
-known as the “solar spectrum.” Careful scientific analysis has
-proven that these colours are produced by different rates of
-vibration.
-
-It has shown that the slowest vibrations are red, the quickest
-violet. The red ray of the spectrum gives 477 millions of millions
-(or billions) of vibrations in a second, the orange 506, the yellow
-535, the green 577, the blue 622, Indigo 658, and violet 699.
-
-Thus there is a regular ascent in the colour-scale from red to
-violet, and the trans-violet rays go on octaves higher, becoming
-invisible to the physical eye as their rates of vibration increase.
-
-It has also been discovered that these seven prismatic rays of the
-solar spectrum correspond to the seven notes on the musical scale,
-the ray of slowest vibration, red, being a correlate of the base
-note of the musical gamut, and the violet ray answering to the
-highest musical note.
-
-When the vibrations exceed a certain limit, the tympanum of the ear
-has not time to recoil before a succeeding impulse arrives, and it
-remains motionless. Darkness and silence are, therefore, equivalents
-for the cessation of vibrations on the retina of the eye and
-tympanum of the ear respectively. Incidentally it may be stated that
-cold is also considered to be the cessation of vibrations through
-the nerves of feeling.
-
-Colour, therefore, is to light what pitch is to sound—both depend on
-length of vibrations.
-
-The thought will immediately suggest itself in this connection that
-if colour and music are thus correlated, the perfect clairvoyant
-might _see_ a concert as well as hear it. This is true, and there
-are instances on record of such transcendent views. In one case of
-this kind, it was not alone a poetical play of colour springing into
-life under the touch of a German professor’s hands, but a host of
-airy sprites clothed in the various rays which called them forth.
-
-_Isis_ declares that “sounds and colours are all spiritual numerals;
-and as the seven prismatic rays proceed from one spot in Heaven, so
-the seven powers of Nature, each of them a number, are the seven
-radiations of the unity, the central spiritual sun.”[167]
-
------
-
-Footnote 167:
-
- “ISIS UNVEILED,” Vol 1., p. 514.
-
------
-
-It is easy to follow along the lines of these suggestions, and trace
-the origin of chanting the seven vowels to one of their gods, among
-the Egyptians, as a hymn of praise at sunrise. In the so-called
-mythical Golden Age this must have been the mode of putting
-themselves _en rapport_ or _in tune_ with the Cosmic powers, and
-ensuring harmony while the vibrations were synchronous.
-
-The third necessary correlation to be considered in this analysis is
-that of form. Scientific research has proven that not only are music
-and colour due to rates of vibration, but form also marshals itself
-into objective being in obedience to the same mysterious law. This
-is demonstrated by the familiar experiment of placing some dry sand
-on a square of glass, and drawing a violin bow across the edge.
-Under the influence of this intonation, the sand assumes star shapes
-of perfect proportion; if other material is placed on the square of
-glass at the same time, other shapes are assumed, varying in
-proportion to the power resident in the atoms to _respond_ to the
-vibrations communicated.
-
-It is noticeable, however, that the vibration makes the spaces, and
-the sand falls into the _rest_ places.
-
-We have now discovered a triangular key—light, music, form—which
-will disclose to us the exact relations which colour sustains to the
-interlaced triangles, the six-rayed star, universal symbol of
-creative force acting upon matter.[168] This triangular key is
-simply three modes of one being, three differential expressions of
-one force—vibration.
-
------
-
-Footnote 168:
-
- Hence in Kabalistic symbolism the _pentacle_, or the six-pointed
- star, is the sign of the _manifested_ “Logos,” or the “Heavenly
- man,” the Tetragrammaton. “The four-lettered Adni (_Adonai_, “the
- Lord”), is the _Eheieh_ (the symbol of _life_ or existence), is
- the Lord of the six limbs (6 Sephiroth) and his Bride (_Malkuth_,
- or physical nature, also Earth) is his seventh limb.” (Ch. _Book
- of Numbers_ viii. 3-4.)—ED.
-
------
-
-That which causes the vibration we can only represent by the
-Ineffable Name, behind which burns the quenchless glory of En Soph,
-the Boundless.
-
-Thus, in our symbology we start from the centre of a circle, which
-should be represented by white light.
-
-The seven rays issuing therefrom, must first pass through the
-interior and invisible triangle of Akasa, the prism A.U.M., before
-they can flow outward, and by their action upon chaos, wheel the
-myriad forms of physical life into consonance with their rates of
-vibration. In this manner is the visible formulated from the
-invisible. By such subtle music is born the gorgeous flora of our
-tropics, drinking its wealth of colour from the yellow and warm rays
-of the sunlight; and in accord with the same harmony is produced the
-subdued vegetation of colder climes. The blue and violet beams carry
-the quick pulses of the parent flame deep within the earth, and
-by-and-bye she gives back that which she has received, transformed
-into a thousand brilliant hues woven in the magic loom of Love,
-presided over by the solar spectrum. Or, as Egyptian myth phrases
-it, Osiris (the sun) weds Isis (the earth), and the child,
-Horus-Apollo, glorifies all things as the product of this divine
-union.
-
-The culmination of light resides in the yellow ray, and hence to
-that colour is given the East point in our symbolised centre of
-radiation.[169] The others follow in the order of the solar
-spectrum.
-
------
-
-Footnote 169:
-
- It is the secret of the great reverence shown in the East for this
- colour. It is the colour of the _Yogi_ dress in India, and of the
- _Gelupka_ sect (“Yellow caps”) in Thibet. It symbolizes _pure
- blood_ and sunlight, and is called “the stream of life.” Red, as
- its opposite, is the colour of the _Dugpas_, and black
- magicians.—ED.
-
------
-
-But it is noticeable in this connection, that _in_ that order, the
-coarsest and warmest of the visible rays—red—is placed next to the
-coldest and most refined ray, the violet. Here we have the analogy
-of contraries. The ray of lowest refrangibility and the ray of
-highest refrangibility become next-door neighbours in the divergent
-circle of necessity. What is the result? It is not hard to discover,
-when we know that the cooling colours are essential to the balanced
-action of the thermal rays. “A small amount of blue when combined
-with other rays will even increase the heat, because it kindles into
-activity its opposite warm principle, red, through chemical
-affinity.”
-
-Having determined the law which should govern the symbology of
-colours at the centre of our circle, we come next to the interlaced
-triangles.
-
-The truly Theosophical Pentacle should be made by the interlacing of
-a white triangle with a black triangle—the white representing pure
-spirit, the black, gross matter. This is the true symbology, for the
-reason that white reflects all colours, and black absorbs all
-colours. It is the face of the White Ancient looking into the face
-of the Black Ancient.
-
-Absolute blackness appears to give back nothing; nor does it ever,
-save through processes of slow evolution, wrought by continued
-vibration upon its molecules from the Divine Centre of Light.
-
-Continuous vibration polarizes these particles, so that at last
-rising from the lowest grade of refrangibility to the highest, into
-the invisible octaves of being, our planetary chain in its
-culmination will reach a point where every atom will give an
-answering thrill of resonance to the throbbing of the heart of the
-Universe—the Central Spiritual Sun.
-
-As every substance in Nature has its colour, so the human family
-publish their grades of advancement to the clairvoyant eye by their
-astral colours; and seekers after the true Light may know what “ray”
-they are in, by a comparison of their own auras with the colours of
-the overshadowing soul.
-
-The middle rays of the solar spectrum—blue, green, and yellow—give a
-very powerful triangle, a wonderful _working_ triangle of forces;
-for green is Hermetic silver, yellow is Hermetic gold, and blue is a
-despatch-messenger from the “Lord of the Worlds,” Jupiter.
-
-The blue and the yellow of this group, on account of their
-position—the third and the fifth reckoned both ways—have been chosen
-as the colours of our incense-holders, alternating on the points of
-the Pentacle. As odours are also correlated with colours, and as
-sandal-wood is the perfume which belongs to the sun, we use that
-incense to intensify the vibrations from the radiating points, in
-order to increase the volume of accord which will reach other
-centres at a distance; for the akasa is more sensitive than an
-Eolian harp—it registers the very aroma of our thoughts. It was,
-therefore, no exaggeration of the poet when he said:
-
- “Guard well thy thought:
- Our thoughts are _heard_ in Heaven.”
-
-But if colours and sounds are spiritual numerals, then the seven
-symbolical points of the Pentacle represent numbers of the greatest
-importance in world-building, and in soul-building also. For we must
-all build our own souls. And the symbology of the interlacing of the
-triangle of spirit with the triangle of matter, finds its
-correspondence in man, the little world, who, though a spiritual
-ego, yet dwells in a physical house, and whose business it is to
-merge himself completely into the region of the white triangle.
-
-When Man has raised his vibrations into perfect harmony with the
-universal sun, he has then unbound himself from the wheel of
-re-birth—the Zodiac—and is ready to enter Nirvana.
-
-The word “heaven” in Hebrew signifies the abode of the sun. When,
-therefore, the Nazarene said “The Kingdom of Heaven is within you,”
-he virtually declared that all the seven cosmic powers are resident
-within us.
-
-Esoteric science recognises man as a septenary, working in
-conjunction with other orders of numerals which register divine
-vibrations.
-
-All nature listens to that universal song, and the music of the
-spheres is no fable. The swarming zöospores in the protoplasm of
-plants hear it, and thrilled by that enchantment, fall into
-invisible rhythm, bringing up by quick marches into the region
-of Day the tiny dwellers in stem and leaf. How do we know that
-the mystery of the six-sided cell of the honey-bee may not find
-its solution here? Perhaps the bee is susceptible only to
-vibrations which fall into these lines, and faithfully obeys the
-master-musician in the construction of its hexagonal house. The
-great law of cosmic and microcosmic correspondence was revealed
-ages ago to the Sages who _listened_, and listening, _heard_ the
-wondrous revelations breathed forth from the harp of Akasa.
-Sighing winds from other worlds passed over the delicate
-strings, and as they passed, uttered in soundless tones the
-profound mystery of near and remote planets. These Sages dwelt
-in that White Palace—the Lotus of the Heart—the sun-palace
-indeed. From centre to circumference their vast circle of vision
-was permeated by the reflected _All_, and from the White Palace
-they ascended the sacred mountain Meru, where dwelleth wisdom
-and love.
-
-The key which opens the White Palace is held by the seven mystic
-children of the Royal Arch of the Rainbow, guarding the seven gates
-of the Sun, every gate of which answers to a musical note, and every
-note of which enfolds three tones.
-
-Hence, if we understand the analogies of colour, we may open the six
-doors of Nature, and also the seventh, to Nirvana.
-
- M. L. BRAINARD.
-
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-
- QUESTIONS.
-
- What can we do in temptation’s hour?
- How shall we conquer its fiery power?
- How can we master it—standing _alone_,
- Just on the threshold of things unknown?
-
- Strong is its power as Death and Hell,
- Led by its lure, even angels fell!
- Dazed by the glare of a rising light
- How shall poor mortals see aright?
-
- Tempted we were in the morning of life,
- With earth’s simple joys that are ever rife,
- To idly bask in the sun’s warm beam
- And to care no jot for a holier dream.
-
- Tempted again in the heyday sun,
- To choose fair paths and in gardens run,
- _Claiming_ as ours, all joy—all love,
- Flowerets of bliss from the Heavens above.
-
- Temptings come now, in life’s later prime,
- Deeper and stronger than in past time,
- To feed with fuel the inward fire,
- The passionate dream of the _soul’s desire_!
-
- -----------------------
-
- Two feet are creeping on paths unknown,
- Weary and mournful, sad and lone;
- Two eyes are looking and longing for light,
- Two hands are locked in a desperate fight.
-
- A heart is breaking with pain and grief,
- A soul in strong agony cries for relief;
- Echoes no kindred chord above?
- Stretcheth no Hand in responsive love?
-
- Is our Great God, but a God of stone?
- Are we—His people—dazed and alone?
- Is there no Ear that can hear us cry?
- No Christ,—to succour us e’er we die?
-
- L. F. Ff.
-
-
-
-
- A THEORY OF HAUNTINGS.
-
-
-Very few persons realise the powerful and long-lasting effects of
-human “auras”—those mysterious psychical emanations which are
-mentally cognised, and which silently impress one as to the
-character of a locality, the idiosyncrasies of a nation, a family,
-or an individual. Personal auras are strictly speaking the effects
-of the innate, and presumably hidden natures, of individuals, and
-are entirely the effluence of soul and mind. A house, or a
-neighbourhood, becomes imbued with the individual or collective
-auras of its inhabitants, which convey to the psychic senses, and
-thence to the mind, a powerful impression of character. At the same
-time within the aura of individuals, or families, are indelibly
-imprinted their thought-pictures, which may, or may not, have been
-embodied in acts; the faces and forms of relatives, friends,
-visitors, of the very animals they pet, the image of their pursuits,
-in short the whole life. These are imprinted in the _astral_ element
-which surrounds each individual soul, as the atmosphere surrounds
-our bodies; and as the air we breathe becomes changed in
-respiration, so this ethereal atmosphere becomes transformed by
-personal impress.
-
-Education, morality, religion, health, disease, happiness or misery,
-are largely the effects of the widely diffused auras of individuals
-continually given forth into the ambient atmosphere. As a man, or
-body of men, think, act, and live, such is the quality of the aura,
-or odylic sphere they emanate. This has an effect for good or evil
-upon all who approach within its radius; a formative, educating
-effect upon the ignorant, if it is of a high, intellectual, or
-spiritual quality; or a depressing, stultifying, deforming effect
-upon the minds and souls of innocent, or negative sensitives, when
-it is of an impure, debased, or brutal character.
-
-Thought governs the world. It is by thought, and its embodiment in
-acts, that progress is made. Every thought has its aura, and nothing
-can prevent its diffusion in the atmospheres, both the astral and
-the natural or physical. Hence being continually surrounded by the
-effects of thoughts universally diffused, we are insensibly governed
-by their aura of good or evil, and we grow in beauty, or are warped
-in deformity, mental and bodily, from infancy, under the moulding
-consequences of the local thought-auras of the family, neighbourhood
-and nation in which we happen to be born.
-
-Psychometry proves that even stones retain the impression of the
-scenes which have been enacted in their neighbourhood. That is, the
-stone having been bathed in the psychic emanations of creatures,
-human and animal, during, perhaps, centuries, retains such auras
-indestructibly in its atmosphere; and a psychometric clairvoyant
-will gradually perceive the most trivial details of the more active
-life which has daily passed in the vicinity of the stone. A fragment
-from the Temple of Diana of Ephesus, for instance, were it
-procurable, would enable a good psychometrist to describe every
-minute particular of the ancient temple worship and ceremonies. A
-stone from the Colosseum held in the hand, or to the forehead of a
-psychometrist, would produce a vision of the scenes in the arena
-which were wont to attract the Roman population. A fossil of some
-antediluvian animal would bring before the mind’s eye surroundings
-corresponding to the period in which the animal had lived. In truth,
-upon the plane of more ethereal matter adjacent to this, are to be
-found the images of all things, subject neither to time nor the
-changes of time; and there our image-producing faculties,
-temporarily divested of the blinding veil of flesh, may call them up
-at will.
-
-The aura of a great crime becomes diffused in the neighbourhood of
-its commission, and concealment would be impossible if the psychic
-vision of men were open instead of being closed. A picture of the
-deed committed becomes impressed upon the astral atmosphere, with
-the faces and forms of those engaged in its commission. This effect
-is never destroyed, but may be recalled at will by a good
-clairvoyante. At the same time the aura of good deeds is equally
-powerful and indestructible. The one is like a transitory
-convulsion, disturbing the beauty of order and harmony with Nature;
-the other is the fixed and equable moral atmosphere arising from
-thoughts and actions consonant with wisdom. In short, the aura of
-good thoughts and deeds is the _pabulum_ of souls; the invigorating
-and supporting air they inspire and respire, producing health,
-happiness, mental activity, and inciting to progress. If it were not
-for the good on the earth, we might doubtless often cry in
-vain—“Heaven help us!”—for we should be so smothered under evil
-auras that spiritual breathing, and rapport with purer realms of
-life, would be a radical impossibility.
-
-A crime is the insane product of an unbalanced, disordered mind. It
-causes a species of astral electric disturbance, which is as
-sensibly felt by sensitives as any explosion or convulsion on the
-natural plane. Astral, or ethereal molecules become violently
-displaced, and forced into new conditions of juxtaposition. A
-mysterious terror pervades the air, which affects all neighbouring
-minds, even to the very animals. It is as if the living soul of
-Nature had been violently wrenched from its normal condition of
-peace and happiness, and stood electrified with horror, whilst upon
-its veil of ethereal matter is fixed an indestructible image of the
-painful tragedy which has been suddenly enacted.
-
-We are, in fact, surrounded, upon the soul plane of life, by an
-atmosphere which receives, so to speak, a photographic impression of
-even our very thoughts, which is a mirror to reflect our whole life,
-an image-world, retaining sounds as well as forms. It may be made
-subject to our will, which can call up before the mind, and make
-visible to the eye of the soul whatsoever, without exception, we
-will to see, to hear, or to know. The phantoms or apparitions of
-which we so frequently hear, are matters of fact to all psychic
-seers; are things as absolutely existent as any objects on the more
-familiar plane of dense matter. Once to realise this great fact, and
-to understand some of the laws which would enable us consciously to
-control, and illustrate to our satisfaction, certain of the hidden
-mysteries of the inner world of ethereal matter, from which our own
-proceeds as an effect from a cause, would set us upon a mountain
-height of knowledge whence all clouds of superstition, doubt, and
-uncertainty, would roll away.
-
-There are many stories extant of certain haunting apparitions which
-have been seen at various times during the lapse of centuries,
-reappearing again and again in the same families as warnings, or
-otherwise; or it may be a mysterious sound, such as the cry of the
-“banshee” in Ireland. The popular fallacy regarding such apparitions
-is that a _human_ soul, or “spirit”—it may be wrongly called—is
-compelled, as a retribution for the commission of some crime, to
-remain on the earth haunting the scene of its former sins. Or, if
-the visitant be a benevolent ghost, it is supposed that it is some
-ancestor or ancestress, ever present in loving watchfulness over the
-destinies of the family, giving warning of death or danger. The idea
-of a human soul being chained in this melancholy fashion to the
-earth is exceedingly repugnant to most minds, and naturally excites
-the utmost compassion for the poor ghost which has to wear out so
-dreary a doom. Such a hypothesis contradicts all those religious
-teachings which assign to souls either a state of absolute
-unconscious sleep, until the day of judgment, or an abode,
-presumably in a conscious state, in heaven or hell. It contradicts
-all those more modern teachings of “progress” after death, of the
-gradual ascension of the soul to its place of rest. If we accept the
-ideas of Eastern teachers concerning those occult mysteries—that the
-higher self, the spiritualised entity, gradually separates from its
-more animal, or lower principles of organism, which adhere together
-for a longer or shorter period as a shell-like or shadowy
-personality—even then, these principles or ethereal molecules which
-go to form an astral body, disintegrate after a time. They would not
-be likely, at all events, to endure over a century. Apparitions of
-persons deceased _within_ a century might be considered as
-essentially ghosts, or shades—the shadowy, sidereal shapes of
-personalities passed away from the physical plane, and in a
-condition of gradual separation from all that can attach them to the
-earth. And it is presumable that a phantom which is seen repeatedly
-during the lapse of centuries, is merely a reflection in the astral
-light, called up by the will of a seer; or projected upon the plane
-of soul-vision either by some psychological disturbance, or by some
-change of condition on the part of those who see the phantom. The
-immediate action may be due to “_elementals_,” those mysterious
-entities called by Liebnitz “Monads,” which are in close attendance
-upon mankind, and have so much to do with his very existence that he
-would fare but indifferently without them. Not only are they as
-intimately consociated with him as his own thoughts, but certain
-grades of them depend upon him also for their existence. These
-beings often become tutelary, or “house-spirits,” and the _rôle_ of
-re-appearing again and again, as a sort of hereditary ghost, to give
-warning of death or danger, is not incompatible with their condition
-of existence. Time does not exist for them, and one century would be
-like any other. They live in the personal or family aura, and become
-intimately blended with the daily lives of its members. When, as in
-the case of royal or noble houses, the family aura remains
-undisturbed in its ancient palaces or castles during centuries, a
-haunting elemental would find it an easy matter to make itself
-visible, frequently by a semi-materialisation, or a condensation of
-the ethereal atoms of its body. In such a case it would be seen
-objectively by anyone who happened to be present. In other cases,
-when an apparition is only a reflection in the astral light, a
-sensitive in moments of abnormal or psychic lucidity would perceive
-it. Others sympathetically inclined would perceive the same. At
-length, after repeated similar visions, the locality would get the
-name of being haunted. The image so repeatedly beheld becomes fixed
-in the atmosphere of that particular spot. Upon entering a locality
-with such a reputation a species of psychological inebriation would
-assail every individual so constituted as to fall under the effects
-of the aura already established, and they would then always behold
-the spectre thus ideally produced. These mental or astral spectres
-need not necessarily be merely immovable pictures. They will move,
-or walk, threaten, or act a pantomime exactly as they may have the
-reputation of doing; or as the person who beholds them expects or
-imagines them to be doing.
-
-In some respects these apparitions or warning cries may be mental
-legacies left indelibly impressed in the astral light by the
-powerful will of a departed ancestor, friendly or inimical, as a
-blessing or a curse; or even by a member of some alien family, as a
-pursuing Nemesis which falls as a retribution upon the perpetrator
-of evil, but can possess no power over the innocent and good.
-
- FRANK FAIRHOLME.
-
- (_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- THE ESOTERIC CHARACTER OF THE GOSPELS.
-
- III.
-
-
-No one can be regarded as a Christian unless he professes, or is
-supposed to profess, belief in Jesus, by baptism, and in salvation,
-“through the blood of Christ.” To be considered a good Christian,
-one has, as a _conditio sine quâ non_, to show faith in the dogmas
-expounded by the Church and to profess them; after which a man is at
-liberty to lead a private and public life on principles
-diametrically opposite to those expressed in the Sermon on the
-Mount. The chief point and that which is demanded of him is, that he
-should have—or _pretend to have_—a blind faith in, and veneration
-for, the ecclesiastical teachings of his special Church.
-
- “Faith is the key of Christendom,”
-
-saith Chaucer, and the penalty for lacking it is as clearly stated
-as words can make it, in St. Mark’s Gospel, Chapter xvi., verse
-16th: “He that believeth and is baptised shall be saved; but he that
-believeth not shall be damned.”
-
-It troubles the Church very little that the most careful search for
-these words in the oldest texts during the last centuries, remained
-fruitless; or, that the recent revision of the Bible led to a
-unanimous conviction in the truth-seeking and truth-loving scholars
-employed in that task, that no such _un-Christ_-like sentence was to
-be found, except in some of the latest, fraudulent texts. The good
-Christian people had assimilated the consoling words, and they had
-become the very pith and marrow of their charitable souls. To take
-away the hope of eternal damnation, for all others except
-themselves, from these chosen vessels of the God of Israel, was like
-taking their very life. The truth-loving and God-fearing revisers
-got scared; they left the forged passage (an interpolation of eleven
-verses, from the 9th to the 20th), and satisfied their consciences
-with a foot-note remark of a very equivocal character, one that
-would grace the work and do honour to the diplomatic faculties of
-the craftiest Jesuits. It tells the “believer” that:—
-
- “The two oldest Greek MSS. and some other authorities OMIT from
- verse 9 to the end. Some authorities _have a different ending_ to
- the Gospel.”[170]—
-
-—and explains no further.
-
------
-
-Footnote 170:
-
- Vide “Gospel according to St. Mark,” in the _revised_ edition
- printed for the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, 1881.
-
------
-
-But the two “oldest Greek MSS.” _omit_ the verses _nolens volens_,
-as these _have never existed_. And the learned and truth-loving
-revisers know this better than any of us do; yet the wicked
-falsehood is printed at the very seat of Protestant Divinity, and it
-is allowed to go on, glaring into the faces of coming generations of
-students of theology and, hence, into those of their future
-parishioners. Neither can be, nor are they deceived by it, yet both
-_pretend_ belief in the authenticity of the cruel words worthy of a
-_theological Satan_. And this Satan-Moloch is their own _God of
-infinite mercy and justice_ in Heaven, and the incarnate symbol of
-love and charity on Earth—blended in one!
-
-Truly mysterious are your paradoxical ways, oh—Churches of Christ!
-
-I have no intention of repeating here stale arguments and logical
-_exposés_ of the whole theological scheme; for all this has been
-done, over and over again, and in a most excellent way, by the
-ablest “Infidels” of England and America. But I may briefly repeat
-a prophecy which is a self-evident result of the present state of
-men’s minds in Christendom. Belief in the Bible _literally_, and
-in a _carnalised_ Christ, will not last a quarter of a century
-longer. The Churches will have to part with their cherished
-dogmas, or the 20th century will witness the downfall and ruin of
-all Christendom, and with it, belief even in a Christos, as pure
-Spirit. The very name has now become obnoxious, and theological
-Christianity must die out, _never to resurrect again_ in its
-present form. This, in itself, would be the happiest solution of
-all, were there no danger from the natural reaction which is sure
-to follow: crass materialism will be the consequence and the
-result of centuries of blind faith, unless the loss of old ideals
-is replaced by other ideals, unassailable, because _universal_,
-and built on the rock of eternal truths instead of the shifting
-sands of human fancy. Pure immateriality must replace, in the end,
-the terrible anthropomorphism of those ideals in the conceptions
-of our modern dogmatists. Otherwise, why should Christian
-dogmas—the perfect counterpart of those belonging to other
-exoteric and pagan religions—claim any superiority? The bodies of
-all these were built upon the same astronomical and physiological
-(or phallic) symbols. Astrologically, every religious dogma the
-world over, may be traced to, and located in, the Zodiacal signs
-and the Sun. And so long as the science of comparative symbology
-or any theology has only two keys to open the mysteries of
-religious dogmas—and these two only very partially mastered, how
-can a line of demarcation be drawn, or any difference made between
-the religions of say, Chrishna and Christ, between salvation
-through the blood of the “first-born primeval male” of one faith,
-and that of the “only _begotten_ Son” of the other, far younger,
-religion?
-
-Study the Vedas; read even the superficial, often disfigured
-writings of our great Orientalists, and think over what you will
-have learnt. Behold Brahmans, Egyptian Hierophants, and Chaldean
-Magi, teaching several thousand years before our era that the gods
-themselves had been only mortals (in previous births) until they won
-their immortality by _offering their blood to their Supreme God_ or
-chief. The “Book of the Dead,” teaches that mortal man “became one
-with the gods through an interflow of a common life in the common
-blood of the two.” Mortals gave the blood of their first-born sons
-in sacrifice to the Gods. In his _Hinduism_, p. 35, Professor Monier
-Williams, translating from the _Taitiriya Brâhmana_, writes:—“By
-means of the sacrifice the gods obtained heaven.” And in the _Tandya
-Brâhmana_:—“The lord of creatures offered himself a sacrifice for
-the gods.”... And again in the _Satapatha Brâhmana_:—“He who,
-knowing this, sacrifices with the _Purusha-madha_ or the sacrifice
-of the primeval male, becomes everything.”
-
-Whenever I hear the Vedic rites discussed and called “disgusting
-human sacrifices,” and cannibalism (_sic._), I feel always inclined
-to ask, where’s the difference? Yet there is one, in fact; for while
-Christians are compelled to accept the allegorical (though, when
-understood, highly philosophical) drama of the New Testament
-Crucifixion, as that of Abraham and Isaac literally,[171]
-Brahmanism—its philosophical schools at any rate—teaches its
-adherents, that this (_pagan_) sacrifice of the “primeval male” is a
-purely allegorical and philosophical symbol. Read in their
-dead-letter meaning, the four gospels are simply slightly altered
-versions of what the Church proclaims as Satanic plagiarisms (by
-anticipation) of Christian dogmas in Pagan religions. Materialism
-has a perfect right to find in all of them the same sensual worship
-and “solar” myths as anywhere else. Analysed and criticised
-superficially and on its dead-letter face, Professor Joly (“Man
-before Metals,” pp. 189-190) finding in the _Swastika_, the _crux
-ansata_, and the cross pure and simple, mere sexual symbols—is
-justified in speaking as he does. Seeing that “the father of the
-sacred fire (in India) bore the name of _Twashtri_, that is the
-divine carpenter who made the _Swastika_ and the _Pramantha_, whose
-friction produced the divine child _Agni_, in Latin _Ignis_; that
-his mother was named _Maya_; he himself, styled _Akta_ (_anointed_,
-or _Christos_) after the priests had poured upon his head the
-spirituous _soma_ and on his body butter purified by sacrifice”;
-seeing all this he has a full right to remark that:—
-
- “The close resemblance which exists between certain ceremonies of
- the worship of _Agni_ and certain rites of the Catholic religion
- may be explained by their common origin. _Agni_ in the condition
- of _Akta_, or anointed, is suggestive of Christ; _Maya_, Mary, his
- mother; _Twashtri_, St. Joseph, the carpenter of the Bible.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 171:
-
- _Vide_ “The Soldier’s Daughter,” in this number, by the Rev. T. G.
- Headley, and notice the desperate protest of this _true_
- Christian, against the _literal_ acceptance of the “blood
- sacrifices,” “Atonement by blood,” etc., in the Church of England.
- The reaction begins: another _sign of the times_.
-
------
-
-Has the professor of the Science Faculty of Toulouse explained
-anything by drawing attention to that which anyone can see? Of
-course not. But if, in his ignorance of the esoteric meaning of the
-allegory he has added nothing to human knowledge, he has on the
-other hand destroyed faith in many of his pupils in both the
-“_divine_ origin” of Christianity and its Church and helped to
-increase the number of Materialists. For surely, no man, once he
-devotes himself to such comparative studies, can regard the religion
-of the West in any light but that of a pale and enfeebled copy of
-older and nobler philosophies.
-
-The origin of all religions—Judaeo-Christianity included—is to be
-found in a few primeval truths, not one of which can be explained
-apart from all the others, as each is a complement of the rest in
-some one detail. And they are all, more or less, broken rays of the
-same Sun of truth, and their beginnings have to be sought in the
-archaic records of the Wisdom-religion. Without the light of the
-latter, the greatest scholars can see but the skeletons thereof
-covered with masks of fancy, and based mostly on personified
-Zodiacal signs.
-
-A thick film of allegory and _blinds_, the “dark sayings” of
-fiction and parable, thus covers the original esoteric texts from
-which the New Testament—_as now known_—was compiled. Whence, then,
-the Gospels, the life of Jesus of Nazareth? Has it not been
-repeatedly stated that no human, _mortal_ brain could have
-invented the life of the Jewish Reformer, followed by the awful
-drama on Calvary? We say, on the authority of the esoteric Eastern
-School, that all this came from the Gnostics, as far as the name
-Christos and the astronomico-mystical allegories are concerned,
-and from the writings of the ancient _Tanaïm_ as regards the
-Kabalistic connection of Jesus or Joshua, with the Biblical
-personifications. One of these is the mystic esoteric name of
-Jehovah—not the present fanciful God of the profane Jews ignorant
-of their own mysteries, the God accepted by the still more
-ignorant Christians—but the compound Jehovah of the pagan
-Initiation. This is proven very plainly by the glyphs or mystic
-combinations of various signs which have survived to this day in
-the Roman Catholic hieroglyphics.
-
-The Gnostic Records contained the epitome of the chief scenes
-enacted during the mysteries of Initiation, since the memory of man;
-though even that was given out invariably under the garb of
-semi-allegory, whenever entrusted to parchment or paper. But the
-ancient Tanaïm, the Initiates from whom the wisdom of the Kabala
-(_oral tradition_) was obtained by the later Talmudists, had in
-their possession the secrets of the mystery language, and it is _in
-this language that the Gospels_ were written.[172] He alone who has
-mastered the esoteric cypher of antiquity—the secret meaning of the
-numerals, a common property at one time of all nations—has the full
-proof of the genius which was displayed in the blending of the
-purely Egypto-Jewish, Old Testament allegories and names, and those
-of the pagan-Greek Gnostics, the most refined of all the mystics of
-that day. Bishop Newton proves it himself quite innocently, by
-showing that “St. Barnabas, the companion of St. Paul, in his
-epistle (ch. ix.) discovers ... the name of Jesus crucified in the
-number 318,” namely, Barnabas finds it in the mystic Greek I H T—the
-_tau_ being the glyph of the cross. On this, a Kabalist, the author
-of an unpublished MS. on the Key of Formation of the Mystery
-Language, observes:—“But this is but a play upon the Hebrew letters
-_Jodh_, _Chith_, and _Shin_, from whence the I H S as the monogram
-of Christ coming down to our day, and this reads as יהש or 381, the
-sum of the letters being 318 or the number of Abraham and his Satan,
-and of Joshua and his Amalek ... also the number of Jacob and his
-antagonist ... (Godfrey Higgins gives the authority for the number
-608).... It is the number of Melchizedek’s name, for the value of
-the last is 304 and Melchizedek was the priest of the most high God,
-without beginning nor ending of days.” The solution and secret of
-Melchizedek are found in the fact that “in the ancient Pantheons the
-two planets which had existed from eternity (_æonic_ eternity) and
-were eternal, were the Sun and the Moon, or Osiris and Isis, hence
-the terms of _without beginning nor ending of days_. 304 multiplied
-by two is 608. So also the numbers in the word Seth, who was a type
-of the year. There are a number of authorities for the number 888 as
-applying to the name of Jesus Christ, and as said this is in
-antagonism to the 666 of the Anti-Christ.... The staple value in the
-name of Joshua was the number 365, the indication of the Solar year,
-while Jehovah delighted in being the indication of the Lunar
-year—and Jesus Christ was both Joshua and Jehovah in the Christian
-Pantheon....”
-
------
-
-Footnote 172:
-
- Thus while the three Synoptics display a combination of the pagan
- Greek and Jewish symbologies the _Revelation_ is written in the
- mystery language of the Tanaïm—the relic of Egyptian and Chaldean
- wisdom—and St John’s Gospel is purely Gnostic.
-
------
-
-This is but an illustration to our point to prove that the Christian
-application of the compound name Jesus-Christ is all based on
-Gnostic and Eastern mysticism. It was only right and natural that
-Chroniclers like the initiated Gnostics, pledged to secresy, should
-veil or _cloak_ the final meaning of their oldest and most sacred
-teachings. The right of the Church fathers to cover the whole with
-an epitheme of euhemerized fancy is rather more dubious.[173] The
-Gnostic Scribe and Chronicler deceived no one. Every Initiate into
-the Archaic gnosis—whether of the pre-Christian or post-Christian
-period—knew well the value of every word of the “mystery-language.”
-For these Gnostics—the inspirers of primitive Christianity—were “the
-most cultured, the most learned and most wealthy of the Christian
-name,” as Gibbon has it. Neither they, nor their humbler followers,
-were in danger of accepting the dead letter of their own texts. But
-it was different with the victims of the fabricators of what is now
-called _orthodox_ and _historic_ Christianity. Their successors have
-all been made to fall into the mistakes of the “foolish Galatians”
-reproved by Paul, who, as he tells them (Galat. iii. 1-5), having
-begun (by believing) in the Spirit (of Christos), “ended by
-believing in _the flesh_,”—_i.e._, a _corporeal_ Christ. For such is
-the true meaning of the Greek sentence,[174] “ἐναρξάμενοι Πνεύματι
-νῦν σαρκι ἐπιτελεῖσθε.” That Paul was a gnostic, a founder of a new
-sect of _gnosis_ which recognized, as all other gnostic sects did, a
-“Christ-Spirit,” though it went against its opponents, the rival
-sects, is sufficiently clear to all but dogmatists and theologians.
-Nor is it less clear that the primitive teachings of Jesus, whenever
-he may have lived, could be discovered only in Gnostic teachings;
-against which discovery, the falsifiers who dragged down Spirit into
-matter, thus degrading the noble philosophy of primeval
-Wisdom-Religion, have taken ample precautions from the first. The
-works of Basilides alone—“The philosopher devoted to the
-contemplation of Divine things,” as Clement describes him—the 24
-volumes of his _interpretations upon the Gospels_—were all burned by
-order of the Church, Eusebius tells us (H. E., iv. 7).
-
------
-
-Footnote 173:
-
- “The claim of Christianity to possess Divine authority rests on
- the ignorant belief that the mystical Christ could and did become
- a Person, whereas the gnosis proves the corporeal Christ to be
- only a counterfeit Presentment of the trans-corporeal man;
- consequently, historical portraiture is, and ever must be, a fatal
- mode of falsifying and discrediting the Spiritual Reality.” (G.
- Massey, “Gnostic and Historic Christianity.”)
-
-Footnote 174:
-
- This sentence analyzed means “Shall you, who in the beginning
- looked to the _Christ-Spirit_, now _end_ by believing in a Christ
- of flesh,” or it means nothing. The verb ἐπιτελοῦμαι has not the
- meaning of “becoming perfect,” but of “ending by,” becoming so.
- Paul’s lifelong struggle with Peter and others, and what he
- himself tells of his vision of a Spiritual Christ and not of Jesus
- of Nazareth, as in the _Acts_—are so many proofs of this.
-
------
-
-As these _Interpretations_ were written at a time when the Gospels
-we have now, were not yet in existence,[175] here is a good proof
-that the Evangel, the doctrines of which were delivered to Basilides
-by the Apostle Matthew, and Glaucus, the disciple of Peter (_Clemens
-Al._ “_Strom._” vii. 7, § 106), must have differed widely from the
-present New Testament Nor can these doctrines be judged by the
-distorted accounts of them left to posterity by Tertullian. Yet even
-the little this partisan fanatic gives, shows the chief gnostic
-doctrines to be identical, under their own peculiar terminology and
-personations, with those of the _Secret Doctrine_ of the East. For,
-discussing Basilides, the “pious, god-like, theosophic philosopher,”
-as Clement of Alexandria thought him, Tertullian exclaims:
-
- “After this, Basilides, the _heretic_, broke loose.[176] He
- asserted that there is a Supreme God, by name Abraxas, by whom
- Mind (_Mahat_) was created, which the Greeks call _Nous_. From
- this emanated the Word; from the Word, Providence; from
- Providence, Virtue and Wisdom; from these two again, Virtues,
- _Principalities_,[177] _and Powers_ were made; thence infinite
- productions and emissions of angels. Among the lowest angels,
- indeed, and those that made this world, he sets _last of all_ the
- god of the Jews, whom he denies to be God himself, affirming that
- he is but one of the angels.”[178] (Isis Unv. vol. ii.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 175:
-
- See “Supern. Relig.,” vol. ii., chap. “Basilides.”
-
-Footnote 176:
-
- It was asked in “Isis Unveiled,” were not the views of the
- Phrygian Bishop Montanus, also deemed a HERESY by the Church of
- Rome? It is quite extraordinary to see how easily that Church
- encourages the abuse of one _heretic_, Tertullian, against another
- _heretic_, Basilides, when the abuse happens to further her own
- object.
-
-Footnote 177:
-
- Does not Paul himself speak of “_Principalities_ and _Powers_ in
- heavenly places” (Ephesians iii. 10; i. 21), and confess that
- there be _gods_ many and _Lords_ many (Kurioi)? And angels, powers
- (Dunameis), and _Principalities_? (See 1 Corinthians, viii. 5; and
- Epistle to Romans, viii. 38.)
-
-Footnote 178:
-
- Tertullian: “Præscript.” It is undeniably owing only to a
- remarkably casuistical, sleight-of-hand-like argument that
- Jehovah, who in the _Kabala_ is simply a Sephiroth, the third,
- left-hand power among the Emanations (Binah), has been elevated to
- the dignity of the _One_ absolute God. Even in the Bible he is but
- one of the _Elohim_ (See Genesis, chapter iii. v. 22. “The Lord
- God” making no difference between himself and others.)
-
------
-
-Another proof of the claim that the Gospel of Matthew in the usual
-Greek texts is not the original gospel written in Hebrew, is given
-by no less an authority than S. Jerome (or Hieronymus). The
-suspicion of a conscious and gradual _euhemerization_ of the Christ
-principle ever since the beginning, grows into a conviction, once
-that one becomes acquainted with a certain confession contained in
-book ii. of the “Comment. to Matthew” by Hieronymus. For we find in
-it the proofs of a deliberate substitution of the whole gospel, the
-one now in the Canon having been evidently re-written by this too
-zealous Church Father.[179] He says that he was sent toward the
-close of the fourth century by “their Felicities,” the Bishops
-Chromatius and Heliodorus to Cæsarea, with the mission to compare
-the Greek text (the only one they ever had) with the Hebrew original
-version preserved by the Nazarenes in their library, and to
-translate it. He translated it, but under protest; for, as he says,
-the _Evangel_ “exhibited matter _not for edification, but for
-destruction.”_[180] The “destruction” of what? Of the dogma that
-Jesus of Nazareth and the _Christos_ are one—evidently; hence for
-the “destruction” of the newly planned religion.[181] In this same
-letter the Saint (who advised his converts to kill their fathers,
-trample on the bosom that fed them, by walking over the bodies of
-their mothers, if the parents stood as an obstacle between their
-sons and Christ)—admits that Matthew did not wish his gospel to be
-_openly written_, hence that the MS. _was a secret_ one. But while
-admitting also that this gospel “was written in Hebrew characters
-and _by the hand of himself_” (_Matthew_), yet in another place he
-contradicts himself and assures posterity that _as it was tampered
-with, and re-written by a disciple of Manicheus, named Seleucus_ ...
-“the ears of the Church properly refused to listen to it.”
-(_Hieron._, “Comment. to Matthew,” book ii. chapter xii., 13.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 179:
-
- This is _history_. How far that _re-writing_ of, and tampering
- with, the primitive gnostic fragments which are now become the New
- Testament, went, may be inferred by reading “Supernatural
- Religion,” which went through over twenty-three editions, if I
- mistake not. The host of authorities for it given by the author,
- is simply appalling. The list of the English and German Bible
- critics alone seems endless.
-
-Footnote 180:
-
- The chief details are given in “Isis Unveiled,” vol. ii pp.
- 180-183, _et seq._ Truly faith in the infallibility of the Church
- must be _stone-blind_—or it could not have failed being killed
- and—dying.
-
-Footnote 181:
-
- See Hieronymus: “De Viros,” illust. cap. 3; Olshausen: “Neuen
- Test.,” p. 32. The Greek text of Matthew’s Gospel is the only one
- used or ever possessed by the Church.
-
------
-
-No wonder that the very meaning of the terms _Chrestos_ and
-_Christos_, and the bearing of both on “Jesus of Nazareth,” a name
-coined out of Joshua the _Nazar_, has now become a dead letter for
-all with the exception of non-Christian Occultists. For even the
-Kabalists have no original data now to rely upon. The _Zohar_ and
-the Kabala have been remodelled by Christian hands out of
-recognition; and were it not for a copy of the Chaldean _Book of
-Numbers_ there would remain no better than garbled accounts. Let not
-our Brothers, the so-called Christian Kabalists of England and
-France, many of whom are Theosophists, protest too vehemently; for
-_this is history_ (See Munk). It is as foolish to maintain, as some
-German Orientalists and modern critics still do, that the Kabala has
-never existed before the day of the Spanish Jew, Moses de Leon,
-accused of having forged this pseudograph in the 13th century, as to
-claim that any of the Kabalistical works now in our possession are
-as original as they were when Rabbi Simeon Ben Jochaï delivered the
-“traditions” to his son and followers. Not a single of these books
-is immaculate, none has escaped mutilation by Christian hands. Munk,
-one of the most learned and able critics of his day on this subject,
-proves it, while protesting as we do, against the assumption that it
-is a post-Christian forgery, for he says:
-
-“It appears evident to us that the author made use of ancient
-documents, and among these of certain _Midraschim_ or collections of
-traditions and Biblical expositions, which we do not now possess.”
-
-After which, quoting from Tholuck (l. c. pp. 24 and 31), he adds:
-
-“Haya Gaon, who died in 1038, is to our knowledge the first author
-who developed the theory of the Sephiroth and he gave to them the
-names which we find again to be among the Kabalists (Tellenik, Moses
-ben Schem Tob di Leon, p. 13, note 5); this doctor, _who had
-intimate intercourse with the Syrian and Chaldean Christian savans_,
-was enabled by these last to acquire a knowledge of some of the
-Gnostic writings.”
-
-Which “Gnostic writings” and esoteric tenets passed part and parcel
-into the Kabalistic works, with many more modern interpolations that
-we now find in the _Zohar_, as Munk well proves. The Kabala is
-Christian now, not Jewish.
-
-Thus, what with several generations of most active Church Fathers
-ever working at the destruction of old documents and the
-preparation of new passages to be interpolated in those which
-happened to survive, there remains of the _Gnostics_—the
-legitimate offspring of the Archaic Wisdom-religion—but a few
-unrecognisable shreds. But a particle of genuine gold will glitter
-for ever; and, however garbled the accounts left by Tertullian and
-Epiphanius of the Doctrines of the “Heretics,” an occultist can
-yet find even in them traces of those primeval truths which were
-once universally imparted during the mysteries of Initiation.
-Among other works with most suggestive allegories in them, we have
-still the so-called _Apocryphal Gospels_, and the last discovered
-as the most precious relic of Gnostic literature, a fragment
-called _Pistis-Sophia_, “Knowledge-Wisdom.”
-
-In my next article upon the Esoteric character of the Gospels, I
-hope to be able to demonstrate that those who translate _Pistis_ by
-“Faith,” are utterly wrong. The word “faith” as _grace_ or something
-to be believed in through unreasoned or blind faith, is a word that
-dates only since Christianity. Nor has Paul ever used this term in
-this sense in his Epistles; and Paul was undeniably—an INITIATE.
-
- H. P. B.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
- =Reviews.=
-
- ---
-
- “SPIRIT REVEALED.”[182]
-
------
-
-Footnote 182:
-
- By Captain Wm. C. Eldon Serjeant. Published by Geo. Redway, York
- Street, Covent Garden. Price 7s. 6d.
-
------
-
-The new work by Captain Serjeant (New Dispensationist and Fellow of
-the Theosophical Society) is certainly what he describes it as
-being, the “book for the age,” if, at least, it be admitted that the
-age requires arousing. I have no hesitation in saying that no such
-book has before been presented to the public. It sounds forth like a
-trumpet to arouse the sleepers from their crass forgetfulness of
-every law of Brotherly Love and Spiritual Truth. One might almost
-imagine, in reading it, the sensation produced upon his
-contemporaries by Ezekiel, when first he gave forth his prophecies
-to a wondering world; or by Bunyan, when he startled the English of
-his time with the magnificent allegory of the “Pilgrim’s Progress.”
-It is true that here and there whole passages are bodily
-transplanted from St John’s “Revelation,” but they are so
-marvellously dovetailed into the context that, without constant
-reference to the Apocalypse, it is almost impossible to say where
-the quotations begin and where they end. From a literary point of
-view this may be a fault; but if we recognise the one Spirit
-speaking through many voices we cannot deny that the same truth may
-call for repetition and expansion, and the same Spirit may emit
-again, with fuller details, what it has emitted before.
-
-Were this an _orthodox_ journal, I am aware that I dare not advance
-such tenets for fear the luckless editors should be deemed
-blasphemous by their subscribers. But LUCIFER at least must allow
-that the Universal Spirit has not in the sacred books of olden times
-breathed its last words. Then, again, Captain Serjeant disclaims all
-_personal_ responsibility for these utterances when he states that
-the very passages which the reader will find the most glowing in the
-fierceness of their heat, are not words conceived by his own
-personality, but given to him by processes well-known to
-Spiritualists as “direct” and “automatic” writing.
-
-The root idea of the volume is that _one Spirit_ permeates all men
-and all things, and that this Spirit is that of Wisdom, Love and
-Truth; yet that this Spirit is denied or hidden out of sight by its
-own children; and that not till it is again made manifest in the
-public affairs of the world, can mankind hope for that happiness
-which it is now vainly pursuing in every other direction save the
-right one, namely, _within_. The dedication of the book sounds the
-key-note of its contents; for it is inscribed to “Love, the Queen of
-Heaven; and to Faith, the Star of the Soul.” The inscription closes
-with the words “Follow after Love—Love never faileth,” and the
-reader is intentionally left to supply the third term, “God is
-Love.” It is in this conception of the Supreme that we shall find
-the whole meaning of the work. The words “God” and the “Father,” as
-also the “Mother” and “Christ,” are employed pretty freely; yet with
-this clue, we shall see that the writer believes in no _personal_
-Deity, but in one Universal Spirit, of whom each intelligence is a
-manifestation in the flesh, little though such being may show or
-know it.
-
-It is impossible in a short review to touch upon all the striking
-features of “Spirit Revealed,” and I must, therefore, content myself
-with noticing but a very few, referring the readers of LUCIFER to
-the book itself; for they will find in it a “Guide, Philosopher and
-Friend.”
-
-The preface reminds one of a passage in Ezekiel too often forgotten.
-“And they were _scattered_, because there is no shepherd: and they
-became meat to all the beasts of the field, _when they were
-scattered_.” Captain Serjeant points out the necessity of a bond of
-_union_ in these words:—
-
-“The contentions amongst many religious sects have been to a
-considerable extent responsible for the rise, growth, and
-development of numerous societies of professed religious, as well as
-of an anti-religious character. Each and every one of these
-Societies possesses its own peculiar views on the Deity, as well as
-on life and death, and though the majority of the more enlightened
-of them have evidently the same fundamental principles underlying
-the teachings which they endeavour to inculcate in the minds of men
-generally, yet the manifest confusion generated by what are
-seemingly conflicting opinions, tends, unhappily, to increase the
-bewilderment and distrust experienced in connection with the truths
-of the Spirit throughout all classes of Society in the nineteenth
-century.”
-
-He then proceeds to claim for his work that it “places in the hands
-of Christian Ministers” (Note, that he employs the word “Christ”
-continually in the sense of the divine Spirit within mankind) “many
-powerful weapons wherewith to establish and uphold the universal
-Church of the Living God.” The preface, which is conceived
-throughout in the most elevated style of address, concludes with an
-appeal to “all who, in their hearts, are ready and willing to labour
-loyally in the interests of their less enlightened fellow creatures
-existing in this ignorant, selfish, and love-starved world.”
-
-After a brief Introduction, couched in a prophetic form, the writer
-deals with the nature of God, man, matter, the power of Spirit
-manifest in and through matter, the omnipresence of Spirit, the
-Intelligent Principle, and the Seven Rays of Truth. In these seven
-chapters is comprised what I may call the theoretical part of the
-book. The following quotations must suffice to show in what vein
-these world-riddles are worked out. “We are endued with two natures,
-one of which is human or mortal, and subject to chemical change,
-commonly termed dissolution or death; the other, immortal or
-spiritual, capable of adding to itself by an inherent power to
-comprehend the nature, qualities and capabilities of all created
-visible things, which comprehension signifies the reconversion of
-all material existences into true ideas.” “It is an absolute fact
-that _everything is literal_. To the spiritual man symbols are
-literal; they are indeed more literal than the natural man considers
-what he terms facts or realities.“ ”_The ultimate atom is Spirit._
-Finite wills are points on which the Infinite Will acts, for no
-creature can will without being a manifestation of the Supreme
-Intelligence who first wills that it shall will.“
-
-The subsequent portion of the book deals partly with an expansion of
-the general tenets laid down in these seven chapters, and their
-application to the present _practical_ needs of the world; partly
-with prophetic utterances as to the near approach of an awakening of
-the peoples to their real position as members of one great Spiritual
-community. Under the first heading a very important document is
-presented to the world, being a form for enrolment in the “Universal
-Rights Support Association,” which if generally adopted in the true
-spirit would indeed herald the millennium. Under the second heading
-in Chapter XIII. a remarkable reading of part of the Apocalypse is
-given, commencing with the words from Daniel, “and at that time
-shall Michael stand up, the great Prince which standeth for the
-children of the people: and there shall be a time of trouble, such
-as never was since there was a Nation even to that same time: At
-that time the people shall be delivered, every one that shall be
-found written in the book.” Such words as these are not to be
-understood on the first reading, and indeed will probably meet with
-nothing but derision from many. Yet LUCIFER will see in them another
-and a most powerful battery opened against the powers of darkness to
-wage war with which is his own chief mission.
-
-In conclusion I can only add that, in my humble opinion, few men
-have shown such courage in facing the ridicule of society as Captain
-Serjeant, and that he has chosen to risk the forfeiture of a place
-in social circles to which his right is undeniable, rather than give
-way to the temptation to prophesy smooth things. He is one of the
-foremost in the New Dispensation movement, and a man whose working
-power must be enormous, if it be measured by the labours which he
-daily and voluntarily undertakes. His peculiar style of writing lays
-him open to the accusation of calling himself the coming Messiah. If
-his accusers would only meet him face to face, they would find that
-no man is humbler than he, and none is more fully conscious nor more
-loudly proclaims that “individuality is but an emanation from the
-one Great Spirit,” in which alone he recognises the true Christ, the
-Saviour of the world. He would tell them that in _themselves_ is
-incarnate the Spirit of Wisdom, and that it only awaits its union
-with the Spirit of Love, to manifest itself as the Spirit of Truth.
-How little he values his own personality and his own well-being or
-fame, those who know him best can testify. If Theosophy is to be a
-living thing, and not a mere intellectual amusement, it is by such
-men as this that it must be followed. Were there many such the world
-would soon be freed from its misery, by the force of their united
-volition. Verily their reward is at hand.
-
- WILLIAM ASHTON ELLIS.
-
- -----------------------
-
- TRAITÉ ÉLÉMENTAIRE DE SCIENCE OCCULTE, par PAPUS.
-
- Published by Georges Carré, 58, Rue St Audré des Arts.
-
-This, the latest of the admirable publications now being issued by
-M. Georges Carré, under the auspices of “L’Isis,” the French branch
-of the Theosophical Society, deserves a hearty welcome at the hands
-of all students of Occultism, as it fulfils the promise of its
-title, which is high praise indeed.
-
-The book is written and constructed on correct Occult principles; it
-contains seven chapters, three devoted to theory and four to the
-application and practical illustration of that theory.
-
-After an eloquent introductory chapter, M. Papus proceeds to lead
-his readers by easy transitions into the mysterious science of
-numbers. This—the first key to _practical_ Occultism—is at once the
-simplest and the most subtle of sciences. Hitherto there has existed
-no really elementary exposition of its primary, fundamental
-principles. And, as this science of numbers lies at the base of
-every one of those applications of occult science which are still to
-any extent studied, a knowledge of it is almost indispensable.
-
-Astrology, Chiromancy, Cartomancy, in short, all the arts of
-divination, rest ultimately on numbers and their occult powers, as a
-foundation.
-
-And yet, though the students of each of these several arts must,
-perforce, acquire a certain knowledge of numerical science, yet very
-few of them possess that knowledge in a systematic and co-ordinated
-form.
-
-Of course M. Papus does not, and cannot, give anything like a
-complete textbook on the subject, but he does give, in clear
-language, the fundamental guiding principles of this science.
-Moreover, he illustrates the methods of numerical working, by
-numerous and well-chosen examples—an aid which is simply invaluable
-to the student who is making his first entrance into this field of
-study. In the third chapter these abstract formulæ are given as they
-relate to man, as an individual, and as a member of that larger
-whole, called humanity. This completes the purely theoretical
-portion of the book, and in the fourth chapter we are shown how
-these general principles work in their application.
-
-Signs and symbols are proved to be the _natural_ expressions of
-ideas in accordance with fixed laws, and the method is applied by
-way of illustration to the interpretation of the Emerald Tablet of
-Hermes Trismegistus. The relation between number and form is shown
-as exhibited in geometrical figures, and M. Papus gives a clue to a
-subject which has puzzled many—the actual _influence_ in life of
-_names_. This chapter is most enthralling, but lack of space forbids
-any detailed comments, for so much would have to be said.
-
-Chapters five and six are almost equally interesting; full of
-lucid illustration and valuable hints to the practical student,
-they form almost a manual in themselves. But on one point M. Papus
-is certainly in error, though, since it is on a matter of history,
-its importance is relatively small. He attaches _far_ too much
-weight to the Jews and to their national system of occultism—the
-Kabbala. True, that system is the most familiar in Europe; but it
-has been so much overlaid by a semi-esoteric veil, and additions
-and interpolations by Christian Occultists, that its inner
-grossness is lost sight of; so that students are apt to be led
-away from the truth, and to form erroneous conceptions as to the
-value and meaning of many symbols, the importance of which in
-practical work is very great. What esoteric knowledge the Jews
-possessed, they derived either from the Egyptians or the
-Babylonians during the captivity. Hence M. Saint-Ives d’Alvidre,
-his gigantic erudition notwithstanding, is altogether mistaken in
-the stress he lays on their knowledge, their place in history and
-their mission as a nation. This, however, is but a matter of small
-moment in a book, the practical value of which it would be
-difficult to over-estimate.
-
- -----------------------
-
- THE NEW WAGNER JOURNAL.
-
-We have received from Mr. Geo. Redway, Publisher, 15, York Street,
-W.C., the prospectus of a new Journal, “THE MEISTER,” which is about
-to be edited for the _Richard Wagner Society_ by Mr. Wm. Ashton
-Ellis, author of “Theosophy in the Works of Richard Wagner”
-(Theosophical Society’s Transactions), and of “Richard Wagner as
-Poet, Musician and Mystic,” read before the Society of Fine Arts. As
-Mr. Ellis is a member of the Committee of the Wagner Society, and a
-member of Council of the London Lodge of the Theosophical Society,
-we hope that prominence will be given to the esoteric side of
-Richard Wagner’s works; and for this hope we have justification not
-only in the pamphlets above alluded to but also in the words of the
-prospectus of the MEISTER. “Religion, Art, and Social Questions are
-in these works (Wagner’s) presented to his readers under novel
-aspects, and such as are of the greatest interest to a generation
-which is eagerly scanning the horizon for some cloud which may be
-the harbinger of refreshing rain long looked for to quench the
-thirst of the arid sands of Materialistic Science.”
-
-The prospectus presents us with a specimen of the cover of the
-journal, designed by Mr. Percy Anderson, an artist who has already
-made a name for himself in other walks of the decorative art, and
-whose first attempt in this direction shows great power of broad
-effects of light and shade, and considerable expertness in
-symbolism. We hope in our next issue to review the first number of
-the MEISTER which, we understand, will appear on the 13th inst. It
-will be published for the present _quarterly_, at the subscription
-rate of 4s. per annum, but we trust that it may shortly become a
-full-fledged “monthly.”
-
-[Illustration: decorative separator]
-
- NEW YEAR’S EVE.
-
- All sound was hushed, except the sad sad bells,
- Chanting their requiem o’er the dying year;
- Alone I knelt beneath the watchful stars,
- And held communion with my restless soul.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Old Year died, the sad bells all were stilled,
- And o’er a silent city, shone the pure cold moon.
- Then unrestrained my soul poured forth its cry,
- “O God Eternal, Changless, Sacred, O. M.
- Let my past die with the Old Year to-night.
- And when the joy-bells hail the New Year’s birth,
- Let each sweet note waft up a pæan of praise,
- Straight from a new-born Soul unto its Maker.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- The New Year dawned, madly the bells clashed forth
- Beneath the stars, I still knelt on—in peace.
-
- KATIE DUNCAN KING.
-
- =Correspondence.=
-
- ---
-
- AUTOCENTRICISM.[183]
-
------
-
-Footnote 183:
-
- “Autocentricism; or, the Brain Theory of Life and Mind,” being the
- substance of letters written to the Secular Review (1883-4). By
- Robert Lewins, M.D. “The New Gospel of Hylo-Idealism, or Positive
- Agnosticism.” By Herbert L. Courtney.
-
------
-
-Man has made God in his own image. Taking his thoughts and passions,
-fears, hope and aspirations, with part thereof he endows his
-fellow-men, whose natures he knows only as figured and interpreted
-by his own, and thus he becomes a social being; with part thereof he
-inspires the inanimate world—“the sun, the moon, the stars, the sea,
-the hills, and the plains,” and thus he becomes a poet; “with the
-residue” he forms his God, and “falleth down unto it, and
-worshippeth it, and prayeth unto it, and saith, Deliver me, for thou
-art my God.”
-
-The first of these processes is legitimate, indeed necessary, for
-there is a foundation of unity in human nature, however diverse and
-complex are its varied developments; and the humanity which dwells
-in all can recognize itself under strange disguises.
-
-The second process is innocent and elevating, so long as it is kept
-within just limits, and claims to reach results subjectively, not
-objectively, true.
-
-The third process is inevitable at a certain stage of racial
-evolution, but beyond that stage becomes absolutely noxious and
-degrading, because it extols as truth that which conscience and
-reason have begun to condemn as untruth.
-
-Dead are the Gods of Egypt, those supreme plutocrats, under whom
-costly mummification and burial in a sculptured tomb were the
-conditions of posthumous life, so that a poor man could by no means
-enter into the kingdom of Osiris. Dead are Jupiter, Apollo, Pallas,
-Aphrodite, the products and reflexes of Greek majesty, beauty and
-intellect; or, if not dead, they are immortalised only by the art of
-their human creators. Dead, or dying, as a power to be loved and
-feared, is that Jehovah who reproduces the cruelty, selfishness and
-stubbornness of the typical Jew, with his substratum of conscience,
-showing itself from time to time in a more or less wrong-headed zeal
-for righteousness.
-
-In its infancy, every race unconsciously forms an ideal, and makes
-this ideal its God. As the race grows in civilisation the ideal is
-modified, and for some time the god continues to undergo
-corresponding changes, and is, so to speak, kept up to date. But
-increasing experience and knowledge bring increasing secularism of
-thought and feeling, and incapacitate the mind for reconstructing
-its Divinity. Religion loses its life-blood. In this stage, the
-Deity is either an anachronism, incompatible with the highest
-instincts of his worshippers, and therefore holding them back
-morally and intellectually, or else he becomes a nonentity, an
-abstraction, which can have no influence on life and conduct. It is
-this effete conception which Dr. Lewins combats in the tract
-entitled “Autocentricism, or the Brain Theory of Life and Mind.”
-
-Man, in brief, is his own God. Saints and mystics, and all the most
-beautiful souls of all religions, have seen this truth as in a glass
-darkly. Christ expressed it in mystic form when he said, “The
-Kingdom of Heaven is within you,” and, “I and my Father are one.”
-But in Christ’s time Animism was so ingrained in human nature that
-it was impossible he could escape it.[184] He had not the scientific
-data on which to found a true cosmology; and even had he possessed
-the data, he would have lacked the power to use them. Scientific
-habits of thought were necessarily alien to the mind of the Galilean
-peasant.[185] He could _feel_ rather than _comprehend_ the unity of
-God, Man, and the World; but he could not know that this unity is
-centred in the thought-cells of the cerebral hemispheres, and that
-the Divine glory is the offspring of a material organism.[186]
-Scientific synthesis can now give a solid basis to Christian and
-Buddhist mysticism, to Berkleyan and Kantian Idealism, by declaring
-that the brain is the one phenomenon which certifies its own nomenal
-existence. It thinks, therefore it is; it creates, therefore it
-exists. Yet Dualism is condemned, whatever stand-point we adopt.
-“For my main argument ... it matters not a jot or tittle whether you
-proceed on the nöetic or hyloic basis. A European ought to take the
-latter, which admits of scientific research and discovery. An
-Asiatic or African, who has not the genius for original realistic
-research, may safely be left to the former.”[187] Beyond himself, no
-man can think. We are apt to be deluded by the exigencies of
-language, and to look upon “our” ideas, “our” imaginations, as in
-some way separable from ourselves; as possessions rather than
-components of the Ego. Yet nothing is clearer than that the sum of
-these sentient states actually _constitutes_ the Ego, so far as it
-knows itself; and that a “dominant” idea, engrossing the attention
-to the exclusion of all others, is for the time absolutely identical
-with and equivalent to the mind which it is said to “rule.” For
-moments which are eternities, because the sense of time is
-abolished, the musician may be “absorbed in” or identified with his
-sonata, the poet with his verse, the mystic with his vision of the
-Divine Essence. “I am as great as God, and He as small as I,” sings
-Angelus Silesius; but we may rather say that in such states of
-rapture the relations of “great” and “small,” of “internal” and
-“external,” of “space” and “infinitude,” of “time” and “eternity,”
-are annihilated, and the whole universe fused into one point of
-light.
-
------
-
-Footnote 184:
-
- “Autocentricism,” &c., p. 10.
-
-Footnote 185:
-
- _Christ_—A Galilean peasant! [ED.]
-
-Footnote 186:
-
- Nor does Dr. Lewins _know_: assumption is no proof. [ED.]
-
-Footnote 187:
-
- “Autocentricism,” &c., p. 33.
-
------
-
-This feeling, rationalised and stripped of mystery, though not of
-wonder and solemnity, is the truth and life of Hylo-Idealism.
-Worship is done away with, not by iconoclasm, but by apotheosis. “By
-it we are, indeed, for ever and entirely relieved from the
-humiliating and overwhelming sense of human insignificance, thus
-making ourselves quite at home in the more than terrestrial
-grandeurs of the universe, in which our planet is but a
-sand-grain.”[188]
-
------
-
-Footnote 188:
-
- Ibid, p. 19.
-
------
-
-In conclusion, I should like to recommend Dr. Lewins’s tractate,
-with its Introduction by Mr. Courtney, and its succinct and luminous
-Appendix by G. M. Mc., and also Mr. Courtney’s articles reprinted
-from “Our Corner” to the attention of all sincere souls.
-Hylo-Idealism, or “Autocentricism,” has the merit of not being
-negative merely, but also positive and constructive, substituting
-for the “renunciation” preached by Christ and Buddha, a perfect
-fulfilment of self, and conquering selfishness by self-expansion. It
-is thus especially potent in the fields of theoretical and practical
-ethics, indeed the central idea of Spinoza’s admirable and still
-unsurpassed analysis of the Passions is distinctly deducible from
-our thesis, though generally regarded as an excrescence rather than
-a natural growth from his own. Upon all this I cannot, at present,
-dwell, but must content myself with the bare indication of fields of
-thought and action which are “white already to the harvest.”
-
-On the Nile, _Dec._ 1887.
-
- C. N.
-
- --------------
-
- WHAT OF PHENOMENA?
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER:
-
- “I avail myself of your invitation to correspondents, in order to
- ask a question.
-
- “How is it that we hear nothing now of the signs and wonders with
- which Neo-theosophy was ushered in? Is the ‘age of miracles’ past
- in the Society?
-
- “Yours respectfully,
- “*”
-
-“Occult phenomena,” is what our correspondent apparently refers to.
-They failed to produce the desired effect, but they were, in no
-sense of the word, “miracles.” It was supposed that intelligent
-people, especially men of science, would, at least, have recognised
-the existence of a new and deeply interesting field of enquiry and
-research when they witnessed physical effects produced at will, for
-which they were not able to account. It was supposed that
-theologians would have welcomed the proof, of which they stand so
-sadly in need in these agnostic days, that the soul and the spirit
-are not mere creations of their fancy, due to ignorance of the
-physical constitution of man, but entities quite as real as the
-body, and much more important. These expectations were not realized.
-The phenomena were misunderstood and misrepresented, both as regards
-their nature and their purpose.
-
-In the light which experience has now thrown upon the matter the
-explanation of this unfortunate circumstance is not far to seek.
-Neither science nor religion acknowledges the existence of the
-Occult, as the term is understood and employed in theosophy; in the
-sense, that is to say, of a super-material, but not super-natural,
-region, governed by law; nor do they recognise the existence of
-latent powers and possibilities in man. Any interference with the
-every-day routine of the material world is attributed, by religion,
-to the arbitrary will of a good or an evil autocrat, inhabiting a
-supernatural region inaccessible to man, and subject to no law,
-either in his actions or constitution, and for a knowledge of whose
-ideas and wishes mortals are entirely dependent upon inspired
-communications delivered through an accredited messenger. The power
-of working so-called miracles has always been deemed the proper and
-sufficient credentials of a messenger from heaven, and the mental
-habit of regarding any occult power in that light is still so strong
-that any exercise of that power is supposed to be “miraculous,” or
-to claim to be so. It is needless to say that this way of regarding
-extraordinary occurrences is in direct opposition to the scientific
-spirit of the age, nor is it the position practically occupied by
-the more intelligent portion of mankind at present. When people see
-wonders, nowadays, the sentiment excited in their minds is no longer
-veneration and awe, but curiosity.
-
-It was in the hope of arousing and utilizing this spirit of
-curiosity that occult phenomena were shown. It was believed that
-this manipulation of forces of nature which lie below the
-surface—that surface of things which modern science scratches and
-pecks at so industriously and so proudly—would have led to enquiry
-into the nature and the laws of those forces, unknown to science,
-but perfectly known to occultism. That the phenomena did excite
-curiosity in the minds of those who witnessed them, is certainly
-true, but it was, unfortunately, for the most part of an idle kind.
-The greater number of the witnesses developed an insatiable appetite
-for phenomena for their own sake, without any thought of studying
-the philosophy or the science of whose truth and power the phenomena
-were merely trivial and, so to say, accidental illustrations. In but
-a few cases the curiosity which was awakened gave birth to the
-serious desire to study the philosophy and the science themselves
-and for their own sake.
-
-Experience has taught the leaders of the movement that the vast
-majority of professing Christians are absolutely precluded by their
-mental condition and attitude—the result of centuries of
-superstitious teaching—from calmly examining the phenomena in their
-aspect of natural occurrences governed by law. The Roman Catholic
-Church, true to its traditions, excuses itself from the examination
-of any occult phenomena on the plea that they are necessarily the
-work of the Devil, whenever they occur outside of its own pale,
-since it has a lawful monopoly of the legitimate miracle business.
-The Protestant Church denies the personal intervention of the Evil
-One on the material plane; but, never having gone into the miracle
-business itself, it is apparently a little doubtful whether it would
-know a _bona-fide_ miracle if it saw one, but, being just as unable
-as its elder sister to conceive the extension of the reign of law
-beyond the limits of matter and force, as known to us in our present
-state of consciousness, it excuses itself from the study of occult
-phenomena on the plea that they lie within the province of science
-rather than of religion.
-
-Now science has its miracles as well as the Church of Rome. But, as
-it is altogether dependent upon its instrument maker for the
-production of these miracles, and, as it claims to be in possession
-of the last known word in regard to the laws of nature, it was
-hardly to be expected that it would take very kindly to “miracles,”
-in whose production apparatus has no part, and which claim to be
-instances of the operation of forces and laws of which it has no
-knowledge. Modern science, moreover, labours under disabilities with
-respect to the investigation of the Occult quite as embarrassing as
-those of Religion; for, while Religion cannot grasp the idea of
-natural law as applied to the supersensuous Universe, Science does
-not allow the existence of any supersensuous universe at all to
-which the reign of law could be extended; nor can it conceive the
-possibility of any other state of consciousness than our present
-terrestrial one. It was, therefore, hardly to be expected that
-science would undertake the task it was called upon to perform with
-much earnestness and enthusiasm; and, indeed, it seems to have felt
-that it was not expected to treat the phenomena of occultism less
-cavalierly than it had treated divine miracles. So it calmly
-proceeded at once to pooh-pooh the phenomena; and, when obliged to
-express some kind of opinion, it did not hesitate, without
-examination, and on hearsay reports, to attribute them to fraudulent
-contrivances—wires, trap-doors and so forth.
-
-It was bad enough for the leaders of the movement, when they
-endeavoured to call the attention of the world to the great and
-unknown field for scientific and religious enquiry which lies on the
-borderland between matter and spirit, to find themselves set down as
-agents of his Satanic Majesty, or as superior adepts in the
-charlatan line; but the unkindest cut of all, perhaps, came from a
-class of people whose own experiences, rightly understood, ought
-certainly to have taught them better: the occult phenomena were
-claimed by the Spiritualists as the work of their dear departed
-ones, but the leaders in Theosophy were declared to be somewhat less
-even than mediums in disguise.
-
-Never were the phenomena presented in any other character than that
-of instances of a power _over perfectly natural though unrecognised
-forces_, and incidentally over matter, possessed by certain
-individuals who have attained to a larger and higher knowledge of
-the Universe than has been reached by scientists and theologians, or
-can ever be reached by them, by the roads they are now respectively
-pursuing. Yet this power is latent in all men, and could, in time,
-be wielded by anyone who would cultivate the knowledge and conform
-to the conditions necessary for its development. Nevertheless,
-except in a few isolated and honourable instances, never was it
-received in any other character than as would-be miracles, or as
-works of the Devil, or as vulgar tricks, or as amusing gape-seed, or
-as the performances of those dangerous “spooks” that masquerade in
-séance rooms, and feed on the vital energies of mediums and sitters.
-And, from all sides, theosophy and theosophists were attacked with a
-rancour and bitterness, with an absolute disregard alike of fact and
-logic, and with malice, hatred and uncharitableness that would be
-utterly inconceivable, did not religious history teach us what mean
-and unreasoning animals ignorant men become when their cherished
-prejudices are touched; and did not the history of scientific
-research teach us, in its turn, how very like an ignorant man a
-learned man can behave, when the truth of his theories is called in
-question.
-
-An occultist can produce phenomena, but he cannot supply the world
-with brains, nor with the intelligence and good faith necessary to
-understand and appreciate them. Therefore, it is hardly to be
-wondered at, that _word_ came to abandon phenomena and let the ideas
-of Theosophy stand on their own intrinsic merits.
-
- --------------
-
- MR. MOHINI M. CHATTERJI.
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-Will you kindly afford publicity in the pages of Lucifer to the
-enclosed letter I have just received from Mr. Mohini M. Chatterji
-who has been staying for a few months at Rome, with English friends,
-on his way back to India.—Yours very truly,
-
- A. P. SINNETT.
-
- TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE LONDON LODGE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
-
-SIR,—I understand that among the members of your Society there is a
-rumour to the effect that I have joined the Roman Catholic Church,
-which has caused much annoyance to my friends and also to myself. I
-beg therefore that you will do me the justice to make it known that
-the rumour is entirely false and that I have no desire to join any
-Christian Church.—I am, Sir, your obedient servant,
-
- MOHINI M. CHATTERJI.
-
-ROME (Italy), _January 30th, 1888_.
-
- ------------------
-
- _To the Editors of_ LUCIFER.
-
-On behalf of the members of the London Lodge, I beg to state that
-the rumour referred to in Mr. Mohini’s letter emanated from two
-acquaintances of his belonging to the Romish Church, who themselves
-derived their information from the R. C. priesthood. As for the
-members of the L. L. they never believed in this report.
-
- BERTRAM KEIGHTLEY, Hon. Sec.
-
-
-
-
- =CORRESPONDENCE=
-
-
- [The editors have received the two following letters—one from the
- learned Founder of Hylo-Idealism, the other from a gentleman, a
- casual correspondent, of whom they know _absolutely nothing_
- except his most extraordinary way of expressing his thoughts in
- words and terms hitherto unheard by ordinary mortals. Both take
- the editors to task for using their undeniable right of criticism
- and editorial judgment. As LUCIFER, however, is a magazine _sui
- generis_, and as its policy is the greatest possible tolerance and
- fairness to all parties concerned, it will abstain from its legal
- prerogative of leaving the letters without reply or notice.
- LUCIFER hands them over, therefore, to the “ADVERSARY,” to be
- dealt with according to their respective merits. The editors have
- never pretended to an “understanding of Hylo-Idealism” nor do they
- entertain any such rash hope for the future. They belong to that
- humble class of mortals who labour to their dying day under the
- belief that 2 × 2 = 4, and can by no means, even hylo-idealistic,
- make 5. “C. N.”’s letter placed the new “philosophy” in an
- entirely different light; firstly, because it is written in good
- English, and because the style of the writer is extremely
- attractive; and secondly, because at least one point has now been
- made clear to the editors: “Hylo-Idealism” is, like modern
- spiritualism, the _essence of transcendental materialism_. If in
- Mr. Huxley’s opinion Comte’s Positivism is, in practice,
- “Catholicism _minus_ Christianity,” in the views of the editors of
- LUCIFER Hylo-Idealism is “Metaphysics _minus_ psychology
- and—_physics_.” Let its apostles explain away its flagrant
- contradictions, and then LUCIFER will be the first to render
- justice to it as a philosophy. Meanwhile, it can only acknowledge
- a number of remarkably profound thoughts that are to be found
- scattered in independent solitude throughout the letters of Dr.
- Lewins (Humanism _v._ Theism) and others, and—no more.]
-
- _re_ HYLO-IDEALISM.
-
- To the Editors of LUCIFER.
-
-Perhaps space may be found in the February or other early issue of
-your interesting and suggestive serial for the present curt
-communication. In a footnote of your January number I am coupled
-with Mr. H. Spencer as being more Atheist than Moleschott and
-Büchner—to say nothing of such compromising and irresolute
-scientists as Darwin, Huxley, and Co. Now, that atheistic or
-non-animist standpoint is the pivot on which my whole synthesis
-revolves; and is, I contend, the burning problem at this
-epoch—ethical and intellectual—of the human mind—_thoroughly_ to
-establish on certain concrete, rational and scientific _data_, that
-is to say—not on the Utopias of Speculation and Metaphysics. My
-principle is exactly that of Kant (inter alios) when he formulates
-the “Thing in Itself.” But we have only to study the short and handy
-“Critique of Kant,” referred to in your columns—by Kuno Fischer,
-translated by Dr. Hough, to see how fast and loose that
-“all-shattering” metaphysician played with his all-destructive
-theme. Not only does he entirely reverse it and its corollaries in
-his critique of the “Practical Reason,” and of “Judgment,” but also
-in the second edition of the “Critique of Pure Reason” itself, in
-which originally, as its corollary, or rather concomitant, he, like
-myself, only on less sure premises, disposes of God, the Soul (Anima
-or Vital Principle), and Immortality—that is of another “personal”
-life after death. I hold with Lucretius, Epicurus, and others in
-ancient and modern times, of whom Shelley is a typical case, that no
-greater benefit can be bestowed on humanity than the elimination
-from sane thought of this ghastly and maddening Triune Spectre. God
-alone is quite “l’infame” Voltaire dubs the Catholic Church. Looking
-through Nature “red in tooth and claws” to its _pseudo_ Author, we
-must expect to find a _Pandemon_. For any omnipotent Being who,
-unconditioned and unfettered in all respects, “_willed_” such a
-world of pain and anguish for sentient creatures, must be a Demon
-_worse_ than mythology has fabled of Satan, Moloch, Mammon, or other
-fiends. It must be noted that in the classic Pantheon, the Fates, or
-Fatal Sisters, are “above” all the Immortals of Olympus, including
-Jove himself—a saving provision quite inadmissible in modern
-Monotheism, which endows its Divinity[189] with absolute omnipotence
-and fore-knowledge.
-
- ROBERT LEWINS, M.D.
-
------
-
-Footnote 189:
-
- Deuce, _i.e._, Devil, is the synonym of _Deus_.
-
------
-
- ---
-
- HYLO-IDEALISM.
-
- To the Editors of LUCIFER.
-
-I have to thank you for your kind insertion of my note on above in
-January issue of the Magazine.
-
-I have not the slightest desire to quarrel with your prefaced
-comments on my style of writing. It seems to you to be “turgid,” and
-you take advantage of some unkind epithets lately dealt out to
-Theosophy in the _Secular Review_ to return the compliment to me
-with interest added. Be it so. It would seem but fair to, let me
-say, compliment those, and those only, who have directly
-complimented you; but I have no wish, as I have just said, to find
-fault with _any_ comment on Hylo-Idealism or on the methods of its
-advocacy. _All_ criticism is, I know, received by the excogitator of
-the system with thanks, and, save that both he and I think your note
-_re “Theobroma”_ not a little at fault (for explanation I refer you
-to the well-known Messrs. Epps), I can say the same for myself.
-
-I can see, however, in spite of the raillery with which you honour
-us, that a right understanding of Hylo-Idealism—I beg pardon,
-_High-low_ Idealism—is still very far from being yours. Why, in a
-recent issue of LUCIFER the old difficulty of, as I call it, the
-“Coincident assumption of Materiality” is started as if it had never
-before been thought of. It is, in point of fact, fully dealt with in
-my “Appendix” to the “Auto-Centricism” pamphlet, which has already
-passed under your review! It is not worth while to enter once more
-upon this point; suffice it then to say, in addition, that I
-explained it also, at full length, to a Theosophical writer—Mr. E.
-D. Fawcett—in the _Secular Review_, some months ago. He had started
-the same venerable objection, but after my reply, he so far honoured
-me as not to return to the charge. Let him do so now, and then a
-Theosophical attack and a Hylo-Ideal defence will be before you.
-But, really, it is no argument against my position to extract some
-half-dozen lines of my writing from a contemporary and to follow
-this _soupçon_ with three printer’s “shrieks.”
-
-I shall wait with interest the promised letter from “C. N.,” placing
-Hylo-Idealism in a “new and very different light,” as you say. This
-is something quite new. Dr. Lewins, C. N., and I have, none of us,
-been able, hitherto, to find any material difference between our
-several presentations of the system.
-
- I have the honour to be, Mesdames,
- Your most obedient servant,
- G. M. McC.
-
- TO DR. LEWINS, AND THE HYLO-IDEALISTS AT LARGE.
-
-The several learned gentlemen of the above persuasion, who have
-honoured LUCIFER with their letters and articles, will please to
-accept the present as a collective Reply. Life is too short to
-indulge very often in such lengthy explanations. But “une fois n’est
-pas coutume.”
-
-In “coupling” Dr. Lewins’ name with those he mentions—especially
-with Mr. Herbert Spencer’s—the Editors had assuredly no intention of
-saying anything derogatory to the dignity of the founder of
-Hylo-Idealism. They have called the latter system—its qualification
-of _Idealistic_ notwithstanding——“atheistical,” and to this Dr.
-Lewins himself does not demur. Quite the contrary. If his protest
-(against a casual remark made in a footnote of two lines!) means
-anything at all, it means that he feels hurt to find his name
-associated with the names of such “compromising and (in _atheism_)
-irresolute scientists as Darwin, Huxley, and Co.” What is it that
-our erudite correspondent demurs to, then? Just that, and nothing
-more. His prefixed adjectives refer to the half-heartedness of these
-gentlemen in the matter of atheism and materialism, not surely, to
-their scientific achievements. Indeed, these illustrious naturalists
-are timid enough to leave half-opened doors in their speculations
-for something to enter in which is not quite matter, and yet what it
-is they do not, or _do not wish_ to know.
-
-Indeed, they derive man, his origin and consciousness, _only_ from
-the lower forms of animal creation and the brutes, instead of
-attributing life, mind and intellect—as the followers of the new
-System do—simply to the pranks played by _Prakriti_ (the great
-Ignorance and Illusion) on our “diseased nervous centres”—_abstract
-thought_ being synonymous with _Neuropathy_ in the teachings of the
-Hylo-Idealists (see _Auto-Centricism_, p. 40). But all this has been
-already said and _better said_ by Kapila, in his _Sankhya_, and is
-very old philosophy indeed; so that Messrs. Darwin and Co. have
-been, perhaps, wise in their generation to adopt another theory. Our
-great Darwinists are practical men, and avoid running after the hare
-and the eagle at the same time, as the hare in such case would be
-sure to run away, and the eagle to be lost in the clouds. They
-prefer to ignore the ideas and conceptions of the Universe, as held
-by such “loose,” and—as philosophically expressed by our
-_uncompromising_ opponent—“all-shattering metaphysicians as Kant
-was.” Therefore letting all such “metaphysical crack-brained
-theories” severely alone, they made man and his thinking _Ego_ the
-lineal descendant of the revered ancestor of the now tailless
-baboon, our beloved and esteemed first cousin. This is only logical
-_from the Darwinian standpoint_. What is, then, Dr. Lewins’ quarrel
-with these great men, or with us? They have their theory, the
-inventor of Hylo-Idealism has his theory, we, Metaphysicians, have
-our ideas and theories; and, the _Moon_ shining with impartial and
-equal light on the respective occiputs of Hylo-Idealists,
-Animalists, and Metaphysicians, she pours material enough for every
-one concerned to allow each of them to “live and let live.” No man
-can be at once a Materialist and an Idealist, and remain consistent.
-Eastern philosophy and occultism are based on the _absolute unity_
-of the Root Substance, and they recognise only one infinite and
-universal CAUSE. The Occultists are UNITARIANS _par excellence_. But
-there is such a thing as conventional, time-honoured terms with one
-and the same meaning attached to them all—at any rate on this plane
-of illusion. And if we want to understand each other, we are forced
-to use such terms in their generally-accepted sense, and avoid
-calling mind matter, and vice versâ. The definition of a
-_materialised “Spirit”_ as frozen whiskey is in its place in a
-humouristic pun: it becomes an absurdity in philosophy. It is Dr.
-Lewins’ argument that “the very first principle of logic is, that
-two ‘causes’ are not to be thought of when one is sufficient;” and
-though the first and the ultimate, the Alpha and the Omega in the
-existence of the Universe, is one absolute cause, yet, on the plane
-of manifestations and differentiations, matter, as phenomenon, and
-Spirit as noumenon, cannot be so loosely confused as to merge the
-latter into the former, under the pretext that one self-evident
-natural cause (however secondary in the sight of logic and reason)
-is “sufficient for our purpose,” and we need not “transcend the
-proper conditions of thought” and fall back upon the lower level of
-“lawless and uncertain fancy”—i.e., metaphysics. (_Vide_ “Humanism
-_v._ Theism,” pp. 14, 15.)
-
-We have nothing whatever, I say it again, against “Hylo-Idealism”
-with the exception of its compound and self-contradictory name. Nor
-do we oppose Dr. Lewins’ earlier thoughts, as embodied in “C. N’s”
-“HUMANISM _versus_ THEISM.” That which we permit ourselves to object
-to and oppose is the later system grown into a _Bifrontian_,
-Janus-like monster, a hybrid _duality_ notwithstanding its forced
-mask of Unity. Surely it is not because Dr. Lewins calls “Spirit—a
-_fiction_” and attributes Mind, Thought, Genius, Intellect, and all
-the highest attributes of thinking man to simple effects or
-functions of Hylo-zoism, that the greatest problem of psychology,
-_the relation of mind to matter_, is solved? No one can accuse “The
-Adversary” of too much tenderness or even regard for the conclusions
-of such rank materialists as the Darwinians generally are. But
-surely no impartial man would attribute their constant failure to
-explain the relations of mind to matter, and the confessions of
-their ignorance of the ultimate constitution of that matter itself,
-to timidity and irresoluteness, but rather to the right cause:
-_i.e._, the _absolute impossibility of explaining spiritual effects
-by physical causes_, in the first case; and the presence of that in
-matter which baffles and mocks the efforts of the physical senses to
-perceive or feel, and therefore to explain it, in the second case.
-It is not, evidently, a desire to _compromise_ that forced Mr.
-Huxley to confess that “in strictness we (the Scientists) know
-nothing about the composition of matter,” but the _honesty_ of a man
-of science in not speculating upon what he did not believe in, and
-knew nothing about. Does J. Le Conte insult the majesty of physical
-science by declaring that the creation or destruction, increase or
-diminution of matter, “_lies beyond the domain of science?_”[190]
-And to whose prejudices does Mr. Tyndall pander, he, who once upon a
-time shocked the whole world of believers in spiritual existence, by
-declaring in his Belfast address that in matter alone was “the
-promise and potency of every form and quality of life” (just what
-Dr. Lewins does) when he maintains that “the passage _from the
-physics of the brain to the corresponding facts of_ CONSCIOUSNESS
-_is unthinkable_,” and adds:
-
- “Granted that a definite thought and a molecular action in the
- brain occur simultaneously; we do not possess the intellectual
- organ nor apparently any rudiments of the organ, which would
- enable us to pass by a process of reasoning from one to the other.
- They appear together, but _we do not know why_. Were our minds and
- senses so expanded, strengthened and illuminated, as to enable us
- to see and feel the very molecules of the brain; were we capable
- of following all their motions, all their groupings, all their
- electric discharges, if such there be; and were we intimately
- acquainted with the corresponding states of thought and feeling,
- we should be as far as ever from the solution of the problem. ‘How
- are these physical processes connected with the facts of
- consciousness?’ The chasm between the two classes of phenomena
- would still remain intellectually impassable.”[191]
-
------
-
-Footnote 190:
-
- “_Correl._ of _Vital with Chem. and Physical Forces_.” Appendix.
-
-Footnote 191:
-
- “Fragments of Science.”
-
------
-
-To our surprise, however, we find that our learned
-correspondent—Tyndall, Huxley & Co., notwithstanding—has passed the
-_intellectually impassable_ chasm by modes of perception,
-“anti-intellectual,” so to speak. I say this in no impertinent mood;
-but merely following Dr. Lewins on his own lines of thought. As his
-expressions seem absolutely antiphrastic in meaning to those
-generally accepted by the common herd, “anti-intellectual” would
-mean with the Hylo-Idealists “anti-spiritual” (spirit being a
-_fiction_ with them). Thus their Founder must have crossed the
-impassable chasm—say, by a hylo-zoistic process of perception,
-“starting from the region of rational cogitation” and not from “that
-lower level of lawless and uncertain fancy,” as Theosophists,
-Mystics, and other _hoi polloi_ of thought, do. He has done it to
-his own “mental satisfaction,” and this is all a Hylo-Idealist will
-ever aspire to, as Dr. Lewins himself tells us. He “cannot deny that
-there may be _behind_ (?) nature a ‘cause of causes,’[192] but if
-so, it is a god who hides himself, or itself, from mortal thought.
-Nature is at all events vice-regent plenipotentiary, and with _her_
-thought has alone to deal.” Just so, and we say it too, for reasons
-given in the footnote. “There is a natural solution for everything,”
-he adds. “Of course, if there be no ‘cause,’ this solution is the
-arrangement and co-ordination of invariable sequences in our own
-minds ... rather than an ‘explanation’ or ‘accounting for’
-phenomena. Properly speaking we can ‘account for’ nothing. _Mental
-satisfaction_—unity between microcosm and macrocosm, not the search
-after ‘First Causes.’ ... is the true chief end of man.” (Hum. _v._
-Theism, p. 15.)
-
------
-
-Footnote 192:
-
- We Theosophists, who do not _limit_ nature, do not see the “cause
- of causes” or the _unknowable_ deity _behind_ that which is
- limitless, but identify that abstract Nature with the deity
- itself, and explain its visible laws as secondary effects on the
- plane of Universal Illusion.
-
------
-
-This seems the backbone of Hylo-Idealistic philosophy, which
-thus appears as a cross breed between Epicurianism and the
-“Illusionism” of the Buddhist Yogachâras. This stands proven
-by the contradictions in his system. Dr. Lewins seems to have
-achieved that, to do which every mortal scientist has hitherto
-failed, firstly, by declaring (in Hum. _v._ Theism, p. 17) the
-whole objective world—“_phenomenal_ or _ideal_”,[193] and
-“everything in it _spectral_” (Auto-Centricism, p. 9), and yet
-_admitting the reality of matter_. More than this. In the
-teeth of all the scientific luminaries, from Faraday to
-Huxley, who all confess to knowing NOTHING of matter, he
-declares that—“Matter organic and inorganic _is now fully
-known_” (Auto-Centricism, p. 40)!!
-
------
-
-Footnote 193:
-
- We call the _noumenal_—the “ideal.”
-
------
-
-I humbly beg Dr. Lewins’ pardon for the rude question; but does he
-really mean to say what he does say? Does he want his readers to
-believe that up to his appearance in this world of matter, thinking
-men did not know what they were talking about, and that among all
-the “Ego Brains” of this globe his brain is the one omniscient
-_reality_, while all others are empty phantasms,or _spectral_
-balloons? Besides which, matter cannot surely be _real_ and _unreal_
-at the same time. If _unreal_—and he maintains it—then all Science
-can know about it is that it knows _nothing_, and this is precisely
-what Science confesses. And if _real_—and Dr. Lewins, as shown,
-declares it likewise—then his _Idealism_ goes upside down, and
-_Hylo_ alone remains to mock him and his philosophy. These may be
-trifling considerations in the consciousness of an _Ego_ of Dr.
-Lewins’ power, but they are very serious contradictions, and also
-impediments in the way of such humble thinkers as Vedantins,
-Logicians, and Theosophists, toward recognising, let alone
-appreciating, “Hylo-Idealism.” Our learned correspondent pooh-poohs
-Metaphysics, and at the same time not only travels on purely
-metaphysical grounds, but adopts and sets forth the most
-metaphysical tenets, the very gist of the PARA-metaphysical Vedanta
-philosophy, tenets held also by the Buddhist “Illusionists”—the
-_Yogachâras_ and _Madhyamikas_. Both schools maintain that all is
-void (_sarva sûnya_), or that which Dr. Lewins calls spectral and
-phantasmal. Except internal sensation or intelligence (_vijnâna_)
-the Yogachâras regard everything else as illusion. Nothing that is
-material can have any but a _spectral_ existence with them. So far,
-our “Bauddhas” are at one with _the_ Hylo-Idealists, but they part
-at the crucial moment. The New School teaches that the Brain (the
-originator of consciousness) is the only factor and Creator of the
-visible Universe; that in _it_ alone all our ideas of external
-things are born, and that, apart from it, nothing has real
-existence, everything being illusion. Now what has that Brain, or
-rather the material its particles and cells are composed of,
-distinct in it from other matter that it should be rendered such
-honours? _Physically_, it differs very little indeed from the brain
-stuff and cranium of any anthropoid ape. Unless we divorce
-consciousness, or the EGO, from matter, one materialistic philosophy
-is as good as the other, and none is worth living for. What his
-Brain-Ego _is_, Dr. Lewins does not show anywhere. He urges that his
-“atheistic or _non-animist_ (soulless) standpoint is the _pivot_” on
-which his “whole synthesis revolves.” But as that “pivot” is no
-higher than the physical brain with its hallucinations, then it must
-be a broken reed indeed. A philosophy that goes no further than
-superficial Agnosticism, and says that “what Tennyson says of Deity
-_may_ be true, but it is not in the region of natural cogitation;
-for it transcends the logical _Encheiresis naturæ_“ (Hum. _v._
-Theism)—is no philosophy, but simply _unqualified negation_. And one
-who teaches that ”_savants_, or specialists, are the last to reach
-the _summa scientiæ_, for the constant _search_ after knowledge must
-ever prevent its _fruition_” (ibid), cuts the ground himself under
-his feet, and thus loses the right, not only to be considered a man
-of science, but likewise his claim to the title of philosopher, for
-he rejects all knowledge. Dr. Lewins, quoting Schiller, “to the
-effect that truth can never be reached while the mind is in its
-analytic throes,” shows the poet-philosopher saying that:—“To
-capture the fleeting phantom he (the analyst) must fetter it by
-rules, must anatomatise its fair body into concepts, and imprison
-_its living spirit_ into a bare skeleton of words”—and thus brings
-this as a prop and proof of his own arguments that we need not
-trouble ourselves with the “cause of causes.” But Schiller believed
-in spirit and immortality, while the Hylo-Idealists deny them _in
-toto_. What he says above is accepted by every Occultist and
-Theosophist, simply because _he refers to the purely intellectual_
-(not Spiritual) _analysis_ on the physical plane, and according to
-the present scientific methods. Such analysis, of course, will never
-help man to reach the real _inner_ soul-knowledge, but must ever
-leave him stranded in the bogs of fruitless speculation.
-
-The truth is, that Hylo-Idealism is at best QUIETISM—only on the
-purely material plane. “Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we
-die,” seems its motto. Dr. Lewins tells us that he holds his views
-with Epicurus. I beg leave to contradict again. Epicurus insisted
-upon the necessity of making away with an unphilosophical,
-anthropomorphic deity— a bundle of contradictions—and so do we,
-the Theosophists. But Epicurus believed in gods, finite and
-conditioned in space and time, still _divine_ when compared to
-objective ephemeral man: again, just as we, Theosophists, believe
-in them.
-
-We feel sorry to have to say unpleasant truths. The Founder of
-Hylo-Idealism is evidently a marvellously well-read man, his
-learning is great and undeniable; and, we have always had an
-instinctive respect for, and sympathy with, thinkers of his calibre.
-But, we have been sent pamphlets and books on Hylo-Idealism for
-review, and one would be truant to his duty to conceal one’s
-honest and sincere views on anything. Therefore, we say that,
-contradictions and inconsistencies in the Hylo-Idealistic system
-apart, we find in it a mass of ideas and _arguments_ which come
-forcibly home to us, because they are part and parcel of the Eastern
-Idealism. Our premises and propositions seem to be almost identical
-in some respects, but the conclusions we come to disagree in every
-point, the most important of which is the true nature of matter.
-This, which “has been _fabled_ as ‘Spirit,’” writes Dr. Lewins in
-1878, “is really merely the ‘_vis insita_’ of matter or ‘nature’—the
-latter a misnomer if creation or birth is a delusion, as it must be
-on the hypothesis of the eternity of matter.”
-
-Here the Doctor speaks evidently of “Spirit” from the Christian
-stand-point, and criticises it from this aspect. And from this
-stand-point and aspect he is perfectly right; but as wrong from
-those of Eastern philosophy. Did he but view Spirit, _as one with
-eternal matter_, which, though eternal _in esse_ is but finite and
-conditioned during its periodical manifestations, he would not so
-materialise its _vis insita_—which is _vis vitæ_ but when applied to
-individual manifestations, the living subjects of illusion, or
-animated bodies. But this would lead us too far, and we must close
-the subject with one more protest. There is a casual remark in
-“Humanism _v._ Theisms” to the effect (on the authority of Ueberweg)
-that “the early Greek thinkers and Sages were Hylo-Zoists.” Aye,
-learned Doctor; but the early Greek thinkers understood Hylo-Zoism
-(from “_Hyle_” _primordial_ matter, or what the greatest chemist in
-England, Mr. Crookes, has called “protyle” _undifferentiated
-matter_, and “_Zoe_,” life) in a way very different from yours. So
-are we, Theosophists and Eastern Occultists, “Hylo-Zoists”; but it
-is because with us “life” is the synonym both of Spirit and Matter,
-or the ONE eternal and infinite LIFE whether manifested or
-otherwise. That LIFE is both the eternal IDEA and its periodical
-LOGOS. He who has grasped and mastered this doctrine completely has
-thereby solved the mystery of BEING.
-
- “THE ADVERSARY.”
-
-P.S.—We have in type a very excellent article by Mr. L. Courtney,
-which could not find room in this present number, but will appear in
-March. In it, the writer says all that he _can_ possibly say in
-favour of Hylo-Idealism, and that is all one can do. Thus, LUCIFER
-will give one fair chance more to the new System; after which it
-will have gained a certain right to neither answer at such length,
-nor accept any article on Hylo-Idealism that will go beyond a page
-or so.—“A.”
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.
-
- ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 4.
-
- _To the Editor of_ LUCIFER.
-
-QUESTION, at London, 1887, March 2nd, 6.8 p.m. What will be the
-duration of quesited’s life?
-
-Though the preceding figure showed that my relative would recover
-from his illness,[194] yet it was obvious that the end could not be
-far distant; and I drew the present figure for the minute of the
-impression, to interrogate the stars.
-
------
-
-Footnote 194:
-
- NOTE.—This was shown by the preceding figure; a weak aspect in
- horary astrology can only symbolize a weak result. Hence, though
- the weakly good semisextile was sufficient to indicate
- convalescence from a self-limited disease like pneumonia, yet it
- did not denote complete restoration to health. Had the
- significators been applying to a Trine, I should have judged not
- only convalescence from the acute attack, but a continuance of a
- vigorous old age.
-
------
-
-The following are the elements of the figure:—
-
- Cusp of 10th house 14 ♊.
- — 11th house 21 ♋.
- — 12th house 22 ♌.
- — 1st house 17° 45’ ♍.
- — 2nd house 10 ♎.
- — 3rd house 9 ♏.
-
- Planets’ places are:
- ♆ 25. 13. 15 ♉.
- ♅ 11. 37. 30 R. ♎.
- ♄ 15. 46. 30 R ♋.
- ♃ 5. 41. 30 R ♏.
- ♂ 23. 50. 45 ♓.
- ☉ 11. 52. 19 ♓.
- ♀ 3. 10. 30 ♈.
- ☿ 29. 36. 15 ♓.
- ☽ 8. 28. 15 ♊.
- Caput Draconis 27. 21. 38 ♌.
- ⨁ 14. 20. 56 I.
-
-As in the previous figure the 6th house is the quesited’s 1st, and
-the 1st house is his 8th. As the time of the question was after
-sunset, ☿ ruling ♏ by night was lord of his 8th, and ♅ ruling ♒ by
-night was lord of his 1st. The aspect of the significators is ☿ 167°
-58’ 45” ♅, separating from the Quincunx and applying to the
-Opposition. The Quincunx is, like the Conjunction and Parallel,
-convertible in nature, being good with benefics and evil with
-malefics, and when a benefic and malefic are thus joined, the
-stronger rules. It was therefore in this case doubly evil, as the
-significators were separating from one evil aspect and applying to
-another though not within orbs of either. As ☿, the applying planet,
-was in a common sign, and is an angle of the figure, each degree
-signified a week; and as 12° 1′ 15´´ were wanted to complete the
-opposition, the critical period was shown to be a fraction over 12
-weeks, or May 25th.
-
-Danger to life was also shown by _Cauda Draconis_ in quesited’s 1st
-house; by ☉ in quesited’s 1st afflicted by a very close Quincunx of
-♅ lord of his 1st, ♅ moreover receiving ☉ in his Detriment, and ☉
-receiving ♅ in his Fall; and by ☽, lady of quesited’s 6th, posited
-in his 4th, and afflicted by a rather close Quartile of ☉ posited in
-his 1st, ☉ moreover receiving ☽ in his Anti-triplicity (_sit venia
-verbo_). Nevertheless, as the significators were not actually in any
-evil aspect, ☿ moreover receiving ♅ in his Triplicity, and being
-almost out of ♓ his Fall and Detriment, and the Detriment of ♅; ☽,
-lady of his 6th, and posited in his 4th, applying to a Trine of ♅
-lord of his 1st; and ☿ lord of his 8th applying to Conjunction with
-♀ lady of his 4th, ♀ moreover receiving ☿ in her exaltation;—all
-this denoted that May 25th would be the time, not indeed of certain
-death, but of imminent danger, the beginning of the end.
-
-⨁ being in the 4th house of the figure, almost on the cusp, denoted
-a legacy to my father.
-
-The actual result was as follows: After having been for some time in
-fair health, considering his age and recent illness, _he was
-suddenly taken ill and in great danger on the night of May 27th, and
-on the morning of May 31st was in articulo mortis, and given up by
-his two physicians_. From this, however, he rallied; relapsed on the
-night of July 6th; rallied again; but _died on July 19th_ at 8.30
-a.m., after a sudden seizure of only 15 minutes’ duration, _and my
-father received a legacy under his will_.
-
-The quesited suffered much in his last illness from cough and
-dyspnœa. The certificate of death was—“_Primary_: emphysema, morbus
-cordis. _Secondary_: thrombus, syncope.” With this may be compared ♄
-in ♋, having dignity in quesited’s 8th house, and afflicting ♅ lord
-of quesited’s 1st. ♄ in ♋ denotes “phthisis, ulceration in lungs,
-obstructions and bruises in breast, ague, scurvy, cancer, and
-cough.”
-
- NEMO.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-Some longer stories and articles are continued from number to number
-of the publication. Where the continued text appears in this volume,
-the ‘to be continued’ note a the bottom of each section is linked to
-the next. On occasion, the promised continuation is not to be found
-in thi text, and no link is provided.
-
-On p. 236, the footnote now numbered 56 was referenced both in the
-title of the review and on the repetition of that phrase in the body
-of the review. The first of these has been removed as redundant. On
-occasion, diacritical marks in foreign words were not printed, and
-have not been added here.
-
-The copious quotations give rise to the occasional puzzle with
-quotation marks, which make it difficult to say what the authors
-intended. Where there is no simple resolution, the text is given
-here as printed. The problematic paragraphs appear on p. 151, p.
-164, p. 179, p. 205, p. 277, p. 295, p. 305.
-
-Other errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been
-corrected as noted below.
-
-The references are to the page and line in the original. Where the
-page is printed in columns, ‘L’ and ‘R’ refer to the left and right
-columns. Those referenced with three numbers indicate the page,
-footnote and line within the note. Since footnotes have sometimes
-been moved to follow a paragraph, all references are to their
-position in the printed text.
-
- 3.1.2 How art thou [f]allen from Heaven Restored.
-
- 20.1 in which the Zoroast[r]ian Mitra Inserted
-
- 22.1.1 tha[t] John saw Restored.
-
- 22.2.9 it literally means ‘to howl.’[”] Added.
-
- 38.4 I have p[re/er]suaded my aunt Transposed.
-
- 44.16 chapters of the Bha[ga]vadgita Inserted.
-
- 51.1 self-contained and harmonious within[.] Added.
-
- 55.31 the high plateaux of Central Asia[.] Added.
-
- 55.40 some amount of injustice in it[.] Added.
-
- 60.6 Count Tolstoi considers it nec[e]ssary Inserted.
-
- 67.2 in [leasurely] fashion _sic_
-
- 69.13 in the Villa Torcello[.] Added.
-
- 72L.33 my books been par[a/o]died Replaced.
-
- 75L.55 by [C/G]. H. Pember Replaced.
-
- 79R.43 But as LU[FIC/CIF]ER hopes shortly to deal Transposed.
-
- 74R.15 [“]That the first human beings Added.
-
- 80R.33 [“]The famous cynic, Cratus, Removed.
-
- 84.41 his theosop[h]ical views. Inserted.
-
- 85.19 the social respectabili[l/t]y it panders to Replaced.
-
- 87.40 [innoculated] with vice, _sic_
-
- 87.41 in his subsequent life[.] Added.
-
- 104.44 it grew importunate[.] Added.
-
- 116.8 the Hindu philosophical tenet[.] Added.
-
- 122.24 if he changes his a[l/t]titude Replaced.
-
- 122.33 that marriage is consummated.[”] Added.
-
- 124.32 [“]Not one would have the courage Added.
-
- 131.3 By [C/G]. H. Pember, M.A. Replaced.
-
- 132.32 by such cavalier treatment[.] Added.
-
- 134.12 this [insistance] upon the letter _sic_
-
- 147.29 are pearls of wisdom[.] Added.
-
- 147.32 of the Ros[i]crucians Inserted.
-
- 152.28 ‘the Great Goddess[’] Added.
-
- 152.29 in the minds of Theosophists.[”] Added.
-
- 158R.43 is the day[-]house of ♅ Inserted.
-
- 164.6 members of that society who[ who] always find Removed.
-
- 172.15 and a benefic[i]ent power Removed.
-
- 179.3.12 principle of the Theosophists,[)] Added.
-
- 185.35 all occupied with [“/‘]Fou;[”/’] Replaced.
-
- 195.22 clos[e] to the great fire Restored.
-
- 204.45 Life-renewal and Life-tran[s]mission inserted.
-
- 201.26 draw it from you[r] own beautiful soul! Added.
-
- 205.38 and is himself examined of no man.[”] Added.
-
- 206.1 not for my life, assuredly[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 206.13 because it can give _me_[,] pleasure. Removed.
-
- 206.17 I am surr[r]ounded with a whole world Removed.
-
- 206.31 may be made comfortable.[”] Added.
-
- 209.36 within his soul.[”] Removed.
-
- 218.44 most wonderfull[l]y Removed.
-
- 217.23 aim of this work[,] the bias of the writer Added.
-
- 224.33 the irrational[i]ty Inserted.
-
- 226.40 the p[h]yschic-astral and the divine-astral Removed.
-
- 230.11 in[ ]dulge in the practice Removed.
-
- 233.3 before the seventee[n]th century Inserted.
-
- 233.27 cons[e]quently the great cry Inserted.
-
- 236.27 pheno[nem/men]a of modern spiritualism Transposed.
-
- 256.7 the lustre of the firma[n/m]ent Replaced.
-
- 260.38 uplifted to his were Fleta’s eyes[.] Added.
-
- 261.17 but [eat] nothing more _sic>_
-
- 263.39 pushed the door open[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 265.38 a passionate and adoring eagerness[.] Added.
-
- 273.59 [l]ife of the Spirit Restored.
-
- 278.44 the only one to see me[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 283.15 repugnant to a belie[t/f] in this law Replaced.
-
- 284.31 in a position to apprecia[i/t]e Replaced.
-
- 292.17 as in the Jubilee[e] coinage Removed.
-
- 292.28 The question of what interpreta[ta]tion Removed.
-
- 293.68.2 (1 Corinthians xi, 11.[)] Added.
-
- 296.7 or [“/‘]problematical[”/’] Mahatma?” Replaced.
-
- 299.29 since it beg[u/a]n by a “play of words,” Replaced.
-
- 301.1.5 the Word of Truth, th[e] _Makheru_ of Egypt. Restored.
-
- 301.1.6 The preserved mummy was the bod[y] Restored.
-
- 301.15 [“]χρηστός ἑστιν επι τους,” Added.
-
- 302.16 and even by unbelievers,[”] _sic_
-
- 302.1.1 [“]Christianus quantum interpretatione Added.
-
- 303.2.3 or devoted to oracul[e/a]r services Replaced.
-
- 304.25 “the son of Iaso or _Ieso_, the [“]healer,” Removed.
-
- 305.4 of this rema[r]kable form. Inserted.
-
- 305.36 with [“/‘]oil that was taken from the wood Replaced.
-
- 305.37 he is called the Christ:[”/’] Replaced.
-
- 305.41 also as the Horus of both sexes.[”] Added.
-
- 305.2.1 for in[t]itiation into the Greek Removed.
-
- 306.34 the name of the Christ as the e[n/m]balmed Replaced.
- mummy
-
- 306.47 With the Greek [t]erminal _s_ Restored.
-
- 307.30 our Christology is mummified mythology.” Removed.
-
- 309.2.1 [“]The word שיה _shiac_, Removed.
-
- 310.19 ([“]λεγόμενος,” surnamed “χρηστος.”) Added.
-
- 303.3.3 [(]here Socrates is the _Chréstos_) Added.
-
- 303.4.12 circle and solar year,[”] _sic_
-
- 311.36 tran[s]gress> that law? Inserted.
-
- 313.1 while parasit[i]es eat slowly Removed.
-
- 317.9 in the [mechanicism] of the Universe _sic_
-
- 317.13 pessimism is ro[u/o]ted in the recognition Replaced.
-
- 322.29 and that _[“] system_ Added.
-
- 326.22 from any obligatory duty.[”] Removed.
-
- 326.28 thrown the blame and responsibi[i]lty Removed.
-
- 327.55 whether in[ it] its dead letter, Removed.
-
- 330L.14 having di[r/s]burdened our heart Replaced.
-
- 332L.18 they disarm cri[c/t]icism Replaced.
-
- 333R.61 even altars unto Baal[”] Added.
-
- 334R.51 [“]where the women wove hangings for the Added.
- grove”
-
- 335L.44 and the [“]Kaivalyanita.” Added.
-
- 334L.29 and by the famine....[’/”] Replaced.
-
- 349.32 knew that man to be a savage[.] Added.
-
- 351.36 recognised it as his own room[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 360.23 it was exceedingly solid and well fastened[.] Added.
-
- 361.20 [“]I may not readily understand you. Added.
-
- 366.13 were all in all to us![”] Added.
-
- 367.27 that reigneth over all![”] Added.
-
- 372.23 cannot subsist witho[n/u]t the spiritual force Inverted.
-
- 373.42 have themselves an organic form[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 375.8 —probably many[.] Added.
-
- 386.25 should he meet him in Heaven[,/.] Replaced.
-
- 387.25 [me] Ambrose’s sword _sic_ ?
-
- 389.34 [“/‘]thou> must be Replaced.
-
- 390.19 as you shall hear.[”] Added.
-
- 404.11 vegetable forms [a]s well? Restored.
-
- 406.30 from not[—/-]living matter.[’]” Replaced/Removed.
-
- 407.1.1 [“]missing link” Restored.
-
- 409.47 (actual or possible)[”] Added.
-
- 411.3 the root of [uo/ou]r present constitution Transposed.
-
- 412.19 in accepting the doct[r]ine of Atonement Inserted.
-
- 413.16 the[,] Church wishes the truth, Removed.
-
- 417.19 and transfer it [to ]the shoulders Inserted.
-
- 434.29 an hono[n/u]rable reputation Inverted.
-
- 436.1.14 to the [‘]Lord’ for a burnt-offering Restored.
-
- 437.19 must be the _d[’]evil_ worship _sic_
-
- 447.35 they were set in[.] Added.
-
- 447.27 which was habitual with him[.] Added.
-
- 450.2 learned to surrender his love.[”] Added.
-
- 456.14 follow and s[ie/ei]ze her thoughts Transposed.
-
- 469.7 [“]No one said aught Added.
-
- 472.3.1 [“]breaks through the Brahmarandra _sic_
-
- 474.5 three-fold r[h]ythm Inserted.
-
- 477.7 it would never [h/b]e his. Replaced.
-
- 477.27 by personal craving or desire[.] Added.
-
- 481.10 the quickest violet[.] Added.
-
- 484.10 the very ar[ô/o]ma of our thoughts Replaced.
-
- 486.5 the i[n]diosyncrasies of a nation Removed.
-
- 490.12 “Faith is the key of Christendom,[’/”] Replaced.
-
- 494.41 only a coun[f/t]erfeit Presentment Replaced.
-
- 495.23 _but for destruction_.[”] Added.
-
- 502.35 the Deit[r]y is either an anachronism, Removed.
-
- 502.39 in the tract entitle[s/d] “Autocentricism, or Replaced.
- the Brain Theory of Life and Mind.”
-
- 503.10 which certifies it[s] own nomenal existence. Added.
-
- 503.13 the nöetic or hyloic basis[.] Added.
-
- 503.14 admits of sci[e]ntific research Inserted.
-
- 503.28 such states of rapture the relatio[u/n]s Replaced.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lucifer, by Various
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lucifer, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Lucifer
- A Theosophical Magazine
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Various
-
-Release Date: December 5, 2019 [EBook #60852]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LUCIFER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from
-images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>This text is a compilation of the six numbers of the first Volume of
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, spanning September 1887 through February 1888.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Footnotes have been collected at the end of each issue of the
-magazine, and are linked for ease of reference. They have been resequenced for
-uniqueness across the text.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
-see the transcriber’s <a href='#endnote'>note</a> at the end of this text
-for details regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered
-during its preparation.</p>
-
-<div class='htmlonly'>
-
-<p class='c001'>Any corrections are indicated using an <ins class='correction' title='original'>underline</ins>
-highlight. Placing the cursor over the correction will produce the
-original text in a small popup.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
- <ul class='ul_1'>
- <li><a href='#No_1'>Volume I No. 1 September, 1887</a>
- </li>
- <li><a href='#No_2'>Volume I No. 2 October, 1887</a>
- </li>
- <li><a href='#No_3'>Volume I No. 3 November, 1887</a>
- </li>
- <li><a href='#No_4'>Volume I No. 4 December, 1887</a>
- </li>
- <li><a href='#No_5'>Volume I No. 5 January, 1888</a>
- </li>
- <li><a href='#No_6'>Volume I No. 6 February, 1888</a>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<div class='epubonly'>
-
-<p class='c001'>Any corrections are indicated as hyperlinks, which will navigate the
-reader to the corresponding entry in the corrections table in the
-note at the end of the text.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span> <br /> <span class="blackletter">A Theosophical Magazine,</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>DESIGNED TO “BRING TO LIGHT THE HIDDEN THINGS OF DARKNESS.”</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>EDITED BY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>H. P. BLAVATSKY AND MABEL COLLINS.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'><span class='small'><span class='fss'>THE LIGHT-BEARER IS THE MORNING STAR OR LUCIFER, AND “LUCIFER
-IS NO PROFANE OR SATANIC TITLE. IT IS THE LATIN LUCIFERUS.
-THE LIGHT-BRINGER, THE MORNING STAR, EQUIVALENT TO THE GREEK</span>
-φωσφορος ... <span class='fss'>THE NAME OF THE PURE PALE HERALD OF
-DAYLIGHT</span>.”—<span class='sc'>Yonge.</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='large'><i>VOLUME I.</i></span></div>
- <div class='c000'>SEPTEMBER 1887-FEBRUARY 1888.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class="blackletter">London</span>:</div>
- <div class='c000'>GEORGE REDWAY, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>KELLY &amp; CO., PRINTERS</div>
- <div><span class='small'>1 &amp; 3, GATE STREET, LINCOLNS INN FIELDS, LONDON, W.C.</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>AND MIDDLE MILL, KINGSTON-ON-THAMES.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c006'>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='66%' />
-<col width='33%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Astrological Notes</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_512'>512</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Auto-Hypnotic Rhapsody, An</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_472'>472</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Birth of Light, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_52'>52</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Blood Covenanting</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_216'>216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Blossom and the Fruit, The. The True Story of a Magician</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_443'>443</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Brotherhood</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_212'>212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Buddhism, The Four Noble Truths of</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_49'>49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Christian Dogma, Esotericism of the</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_368'>368</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Christmas Eve, A Remarkable</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_274'>274</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Correspondence</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a>, <a href='#Page_502'>502</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Emerson and Occultism</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_252'>252</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Evil, The Origin of</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_109'>109</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Fear</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_298'>298</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Freedom</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_185'>185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Ghost’s Revenge, A</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>God Speaks for Law and Order</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_292'>292</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Gospels, The Esoteric Character of the</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_490'>490</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Hand, The “Square” in the</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_181'>181</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Hauntings, A Theory of</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_486'>486</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Healing, The Spirit of</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_267'>267</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Hylo-Idealism and “The Adversary”</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_507'>507</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Infant Genius</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_296'>296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Interlaced Triangles, The Relation of Colour to the</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_481'>481</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Invisible World, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_186'>186</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Lady of Light, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_81'>81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Lama, The Last of a Good</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_51'>51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Law of Life, A: Karma</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Let Every Man Prove His Own Work</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_161'>161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>“Light on the Path,” Comments on</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Literary Jottings</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Love with an Object</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_391'>391</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>” To the Archbishop of Canterbury Greeting, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>; To the Readers of</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_340'>340</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Luniolatry</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_440'>440</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Morning Star, To the</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_339'>339</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Mystery of all Time, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_46'>46</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Mystic Thought, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_192'>192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Paradox, The Great</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Planet, History of a</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Quest, The Great</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Reviews</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>, <a href='#Page_497'>497</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Science of Life, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_203'>203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Signs of the Times, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Soldier’s Daughter, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_432'>432</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Some Words on Daily Life</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_344'>344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Theosophical and Mystic Publications</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Theosophist, A True (Count Tolstoi)</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_55'>55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Theosophy, Thoughts on, 134; and Socialism</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_282'>282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c009' colspan='2'>Three Desires, The <a href='#Page_476'>476</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Twilight Visions</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_365'>365</a>, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>Unpopular Philosopher, From the Note-Book of an</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>What is Truth?</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_425'>425</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>What’s in a Name? Why is the Magazine called “<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>”?</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>White Monk, The</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_384'>384</a>, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>1888</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_337'>337</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 id='No_1' class='c006' title='LUCIFER Vol. I No. 1 September 15th, 1887'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Vol. I.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON, SEPTEMBER <span class='fss'>15TH</span>, 1887.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 1.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c011'>WHAT’S IN A NAME? <br /> <span class='fss'>WHY THE MAGAZINE IS CALLED “LUCIFER.”</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c012'>What’s in a name? Very often there is more in it than the
-profane is prepared to understand, or the learned mystic to
-explain. It is an invisible, secret, but very potential influence
-that every name carries about with it and “leaveth wherever it
-goeth.” Carlyle thought that “there is much, nay, almost all, in names.”
-“Could I unfold the influence of names, which are the most important
-of all clothings, I were a second great Trismegistus,” he writes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The name or title of a magazine started with a definite object, is,
-therefore, all important; for it is, indeed, the invisible seedgrain, which
-will either grow “to be an all-over-shadowing tree” on the fruits of
-which must depend the nature of the results brought about by the said
-object, or the tree will wither and die. These considerations show
-that the name of the present magazine—rather equivocal to orthodox
-Christian ears—is due to no careless selection, but arose in consequence
-of much thinking over its fitness, and was adopted as the best symbol
-to express that object and the results in view.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now, the first and most important, if not the sole object of the
-magazine, is expressed in the line from the 1st Epistle to the Corinthians,
-on its title page. It is to bring light to “the hidden things of darkness,”
-(iv. 5); to show in their true aspect and their original real meaning
-things and names, men and their doings and customs; it is finally to
-fight prejudice, hypocrisy and shams in every nation, in every class of
-Society, as in every department of life. The task is a laborious one
-but it is neither impracticable nor useless, if even as an experiment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus, for an attempt of such nature, no better title could ever be
-found than the one chosen. “Lucifer,” is the pale morning-star, the
-precursor of the full blaze of the noon-day sun—the “Eosphoros” of the
-Greeks. It shines timidly at dawn to gather forces and dazzle the eye
-after sunset as its own brother ‘Hesperos’—the radiant evening star, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>the planet Venus. No fitter symbol exists for the proposed work—that
-of throwing a ray of truth on everything hidden by the darkness of
-prejudice, by social or religious misconceptions; especially by that idiotic
-routine in life, which, once that a certain action, a thing, a name, has
-been branded by slanderous inventions, however unjust, makes <em>respectable</em>
-people, so called, turn away shiveringly, refusing to even look at it from
-any other aspect than the one sanctioned by public opinion. Such an
-endeavour then, to force the weak-hearted to look truth straight in the
-face, is helped most efficaciously by a title belonging to the category of
-branded names.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Piously inclined readers may argue that “Lucifer” is accepted by all
-the churches as one of the many names of the Devil. According to
-Milton’s superb fiction, Lucifer is <em>Satan</em>, the “rebellious” angel, the
-enemy of God and man. If one analyzes his rebellion, however, it will
-be found of no worse nature than an assertion of free-will and independent
-thought, as if Lucifer had been born in the XIXth century. This
-epithet of “rebellious,” is a theological calumny, on a par with that other
-slander of God by the Predestinarians, one that makes of deity an
-“Almighty” fiend worse than the “rebellious” Spirit himself; “an
-omnipotent Devil desiring to be ‘complimented’ as all merciful when he
-is exerting the most fiendish cruelty,” as put by J. Cotter Morison.
-Both the foreordaining and predestining fiend-God, and his subordinate
-agent are of human invention; they are two of the most morally repulsive
-and horrible theological dogmas that the nightmares of light-hating
-monks have ever evolved out of their unclean fancies.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They date from the Mediæval age, the period of mental obscuration,
-during which most of the present prejudices and superstitions have been
-forcibly inoculated on the human mind, so as to have become nearly
-ineradicable in some cases, one of which is the present prejudice now
-under discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So deeply rooted, indeed, is this preconception and aversion to the name
-of Lucifer—meaning no worse than “light-bringer” (from <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>lux</i></span>, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>lucis</i></span>,
-“light,” and <i>ferre</i> “to bring”)<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c013'><sup>[1]</sup></a>—even among the educated classes, that
-by adopting it for the title of their magazine the editors have the
-prospect of a long strife with public prejudice before them. So absurd
-and ridiculous is that prejudice, indeed, that no one has seemed to ever
-ask himself the question, how came Satan to be called a <em>light-bringer</em>,
-unless the silvery rays of the morning-star can in any way be made
-suggestive of the glare of the infernal flames. It is simply, as Henderson
-showed, “one of those gross perversions of sacred writ which so extensively
-obtain, and which are to be traced to a proneness to seek for more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>in a given passage than it really contains—a disposition to be influenced
-by sound rather than sense, and an implicit faith in received interpretation”—which
-is not quite one of the weaknesses of our present age.
-Nevertheless, the prejudice is there, to the shame of our century.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This cannot be helped. The two editors would hold themselves as
-recreants in their own sight, as traitors to the very spirit of the proposed
-work, were they to yield and cry craven before the danger. If one
-would fight prejudice, and brush off the ugly cobwebs of superstition
-and materialism alike from the noblest ideals of our forefathers, one has
-to prepare for opposition. “The crown of the reformer and the innovator
-is a crown of thorns” indeed. If one would rescue Truth in all her
-chaste nudity from the almost bottomless well, into which she has been
-hurled by cant and hypocritical propriety, one should not hesitate to
-descend into the dark, gaping pit of that well. No matter how badly
-the blind bats—the dwellers in darkness, and the haters of light—may
-treat in their gloomy abode the intruder, unless one is the first to show
-the spirit and courage he preaches to others, he must be justly held as a
-hypocrite and a seceder from his own principles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hardly had the title been agreed upon, when the first premonitions of
-what was in store for us, in the matter of the opposition to be
-encountered owing to the title chosen, appeared on our horizon. One
-of the editors received and recorded some spicy objections. The scenes
-that follow are sketches from nature.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>I.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A Well-known Novelist.</i> Tell me about your new magazine. What class do you
-propose to appeal to?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> No class in particular: we intend to appeal to the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Novelist.</i> I am very glad of that. For once I shall be one of the public, for
-I don’t understand your subject in the least, and I want to. But you must remember
-that if your public is to understand you, it must necessarily be a very small one.
-People talk about occultism nowadays as they talk about many other things, without
-the least idea of what it means. We are so ignorant and—so prejudiced.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Exactly. That is what calls the new magazine into existence. We
-propose to educate you, and to tear the mask from every prejudice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Novelist.</i> That really is good news to me, for I want to be educated. What is
-your magazine to be called?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Lucifer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Novelist.</i> What! Are you going to educate us in vice? We know enough about
-that. Fallen angels are plentiful. You may find popularity, for soiled doves are in
-fashion just now, while the white-winged angels are voted a bore, because they are not
-so amusing. But I doubt your being able to teach us much.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>II.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A Man of the World</i> (<em>in a careful undertone, for the scene is a dinner-party</em>). I
-hear you are going to start a magazine, all about occultism. Do you know, I’m very
-glad. I don’t say anything about such matters as a rule, but some queer things have
-happened in my life which can’t be explained in any ordinary manner. I hope you
-will go in for explanations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span><i>Editor.</i> We shall try, certainly. My impression is, that when occultism is in any
-measure apprehended, its laws are accepted by everyone as the only intelligible
-explanation of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A M. W.</i> Just so, I want to know all about it, for ’pon my honour, life’s a mystery.
-There are plenty of other people as curious as myself. This is an age which is afflicted
-with the Yankee disease of ‘wanting to know.’ I’ll get you lots of subscribers. What’s
-the magazine called?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Lucifer—and (<em>warned by former experience</em>) don’t misunderstand the
-name. It is typical of the divine spirit which sacrificed itself for humanity—it was
-Milton’s doing that it ever became associated with the devil. We are sworn enemies
-to popular prejudices, and it is quite appropriate that we should attack such a
-prejudice as this—Lucifer, you know, is the Morning Star—the Lightbearer,...</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A M. W.</i> (<em>interrupting</em>). Oh, I know all that—at least I don’t know, but I take
-it for granted you’ve got some good reason for taking such a title. But your first
-object is to have readers; you want the public to buy your magazine, I suppose.
-That’s in the programme, isn’t it?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Most decidedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A M. W.</i> Well, listen to the advice of a man who knows his way about town.
-Don’t mark your magazine with the wrong colour at starting. It’s quite evident, when
-one stays an instant to think of its derivation and meaning, that Lucifer is an excellent
-word. But the public don’t stay to think of derivations and meanings; and the first
-impression is the most important. Nobody will buy the magazine if you call it
-Lucifer.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>III.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A Fashionable Lady Interested in Occultism.</i> I want to hear some more about the
-new magazine, for I have interested a great many people in it, even with the little you
-have told me. But I find it difficult to express its actual purpose. What is it?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> To try and give a little light to those that want it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A F. L.</i> Well, that’s a simple way of putting it, and will be very useful to me.
-What is the magazine to be called?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Lucifer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A F. L.</i> (<em>After a pause</em>) You can’t mean it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Why not?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A F. L.</i> The associations are so dreadful! What can be the object of calling it
-that? It sounds like some unfortunate sort of joke, made against it by its enemies.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Oh, but Lucifer, you know, means Light-bearer; it is typical of the Divine
-Spirit——</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A F. L.</i> Never mind all that—I want to do your magazine good and make it
-known, and you can’t expect me to enter into explanations of that sort every time I
-mention the title? Impossible! Life is too short and too busy. Besides, it would
-produce such a bad effect; people would think me priggish, and then I couldn’t talk at
-all, for I couldn’t bear them to think that. Don’t call it Lucifer—please don’t. Nobody
-knows what the word is typical of; what it means now is the devil, nothing more or less.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> But then that is quite a mistake, and one of the first prejudices we propose
-to do battle with. Lucifer is the pale, pure herald of dawn——</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Lady</i> (<em>interrupting</em>). I thought you were going to do something more interesting
-and more important than to whitewash mythological characters. We shall all have to
-go to school again, or read up Dr. Smith’s Classical Dictionary. And what is the use
-of it when it is done? I thought you were going to tell us things about our own lives
-and how to make them better. I suppose Milton wrote about Lucifer, didn’t he?—but
-nobody reads Milton now. Do let us have a modern title with some human meaning
-in it.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>IV.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>A Journalist</i> (<em>thoughtfully, while rolling his cigarette</em>). Yes, it is a good idea, this
-magazine of yours. We shall all laugh at it, as a matter of course: and we shall cut
-it up in the papers. But we shall all read it, because secretly everybody hungers after
-the mysterious. What are you going to call it?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Editor.</i> Lucifer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>Journalist</i> (<em>striking a light</em>). Why not <cite>The Fusee</cite>? Quite as good a title and not
-so pretentious.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The “Novelist,” the “Man of the World,” the “Fashionable Lady,”
-and the “Journalist,” should be the first to receive a little instruction.
-A glimpse into the real and primitive character of Lucifer can do them
-no harm and may, perchance, cure them of a bit of ridiculous prejudice.
-They ought to study their Homer and Hesiod’s Theogony if they would
-do justice to Lucifer, “<em>Eosphoros and Hesperos</em>,” the Morning and the
-Evening beautiful star. If there are more useful things to do in this
-life than “to whitewash mythological characters,” to slander and blacken
-them is, at least, as useless, and shows, moreover, a narrow-mindedness
-which can do honour to no one.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To object to the title of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, only because its “associations are
-so dreadful,” is pardonable—if it can be pardonable in any case—only
-in an ignorant American missionary of some dissenting sect, in one
-whose natural laziness and lack of education led him to prefer ploughing
-the minds of heathens, as ignorant as he is himself, to the more
-profitable, but rather more arduous, process of ploughing the fields of his
-own father’s farm. In the English clergy, however, who receive all a
-more or less classical education, and are, therefore, supposed to be
-acquainted with the <em>ins</em> and <em>outs</em> of theological sophistry and casuistry,
-this kind of opposition is absolutely unpardonable. It not only smacks
-of hypocrisy and deceit, but places them directly on a lower moral level
-than him they call the apostate angel. By endeavouring to show the
-theological Lucifer, fallen through the idea that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell;</div>
- <div class='line'>Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>they are virtually putting into practice the supposed crime they would
-fain accuse him of. They prefer reigning over the spirit of the masses
-by means of a pernicious dark <span class='fss'>LIE</span>, productive of many an evil, than
-serve heaven by serving <span class='fss'>TRUTH</span>. Such practices are worthy only of the
-Jesuits.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But their sacred writ is the first to contradict their interpretations and
-the association of Lucifer, the Morning Star, with Satan. Chapter
-XXII. of <cite>Revelation</cite>, verse 16th, says: “I, Jesus ... am the
-root ... and the bright and <em>Morning Star</em>” (ὀρθρινὸς “early rising”):
-hence Eosphoros, or the Latin Lucifer. The opprobrium attached to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>this name is of such a very late date, that the Roman Church found
-itself forced to screen the theological slander behind a two-sided
-interpretation—as usual. Christ, we are told, is the “Morning Star,”
-the <em>divine</em> Lucifer; and Satan the <em>usurpator</em> of the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Verbum</i></span>, the “infernal
-Lucifer.”<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c013'><sup>[2]</sup></a> “The great Archangel Michael, the conqueror of Satan, is
-identical in paganism<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c013'><sup>[3]</sup></a> with Mercury-Mithra, to whom, after defending
-the Sun (symbolical of God) from the attacks of Venus-Lucifer, was
-given the possession of this planet, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>et datus est ei locus Luciferi</i></span>.
-And since the Archangel Michael is the ‘Angel of the Face,’ and ‘the
-Vicar of the <em>Verbum</em>’ he is now considered in the Roman Church as
-the regent of that planet Venus which ‘the vanquished fiend had
-usurped.’” <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Angelus faciei Dei sedem superbi humilis obtinuit</i></span>, says
-Cornelius à Lapide (in Vol. VI. p. 229).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This gives the reason why one of the early Popes was called Lucifer,
-as Yonge and ecclesiastical records prove. It thus follows that the title
-chosen for our magazine is as much associated with divine and pious
-ideas as with the supposed rebellion of the hero of Milton’s “Paradise
-Lost.” By choosing it, <em>we throw the first ray of light and truth</em> on a
-ridiculous prejudice which ought to have no room made for it in this our
-“age of facts and discovery.” We work for true Religion and Science,
-in the interest of fact as against fiction and prejudice. It is our duty, as
-it is that of physical Science—professedly its mission—to throw light on
-facts in Nature hitherto surrounded by the darkness of ignorance. And
-since ignorance is justly regarded as the chief promoter of superstition,
-that work is, therefore, a noble and beneficent work. But natural
-Sciences are only one aspect of <span class='sc'>Science</span> and <span class='sc'>Truth</span>. Psychological
-and moral Sciences, or theosophy, the knowledge of divine truth,
-wheresoever found, are still more important in human affairs, and real
-Science should not be limited simply to the physical aspect of life and
-nature. Science is an abstract of every fact, a comprehension of every
-truth within the scope of human research and intelligence. “Shakespeare’s
-deep and accurate science in mental philosophy” (Coleridge),
-has proved more beneficent to the true philosopher in the study of the
-human heart—therefore, in the promotion of truth—than the more
-accurate, but certainly less deep, science of any Fellow of the Royal
-Institution.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Those readers, however, who do not find themselves convinced that the
-Church had no right to throw a slur upon a beautiful star, and that it did
-so through a mere necessity of accounting for one of its numerous loans
-from Paganism with all its poetical conceptions of the truths in Nature,
-are asked to read our article “The History of a Planet.” Perhaps, after
-its perusal, they will see how far Dupuis was justified in asserting that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>“all the theologies have their origin in astronomy.” With the modern
-Orientalists every myth is <em>solar</em>. This is one more prejudice, and a
-preconception in favour of materialism and physical science. It will be
-one of our duties to combat it with much of the rest.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c017'>Occultism is not magic, though magic is one of its tools.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Occultism is not the acquirement of powers, whether psychic or
-intellectual, though both are its servants. Neither is occultism the pursuit
-of happiness, as men understand the word; for the first step is
-sacrifice, the second, renunciation.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<p class='c017'>Life is built up by the sacrifice of the individual to the whole. Each
-cell in the living body must sacrifice itself to the perfection of the
-whole; when it is otherwise, disease and death enforce the lesson.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c017'>Occultism is the science of life, the art of living.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>COMMENTS ON “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='fss'>BY THE AUTHOR.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Before the eyes can see they must be incapable of tears.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c019'>It should be very clearly remembered by all readers of this volume
-that it is a book which may appear to have some little philosophy
-in it, but very little sense, to those who believe it to be written in
-ordinary English. To the many, who read in this manner it will be—not
-caviare so much as olives strong of their salt. Be warned and read
-but a little in this way.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There is another way of reading, which is, indeed, the only one of
-any use with many authors. It is reading, not between the lines but
-within the words. In fact, it is deciphering a profound cipher.
-All alchemical works are written in the cipher of which I speak; it has
-been used by the great philosophers and poets of all time. It is used
-systematically by the adepts in life and knowledge, who, seemingly
-giving out their deepest wisdom, hide in the very words which frame
-it its actual mystery. They cannot do more. There is a law of nature
-which insists that a man shall read these mysteries for himself. By no
-other method can he obtain them. A man who desires to live must
-eat his food himself: this is the simple law of nature—which applies
-also to the higher life. A man who would live and act in it cannot
-be fed like a babe with a spoon; he must eat for himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>I propose to put into new and sometimes plainer language parts of
-“Light on the Path”; but whether this effort of mine will really
-be any interpretation I cannot say. To a deaf and dumb man, a
-truth is made no more intelligible if, in order to make it so, some misguided
-linguist translates the words in which it is couched into every
-living or dead language, and shouts these different phrases in his
-ear. But for those who are not deaf and dumb one language is generally
-easier than the rest; and it is to such as these I address myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The very first aphorisms of “Light on the Path,” included under
-Number I. have, I know well, remained sealed as to their inner meaning
-to many who have otherwise followed the purpose of the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There are four proven and certain truths with regard to the entrance
-to occultism. The Gates of Gold bar that threshold; yet there are some
-who pass those gates and discover the sublime and illimitable beyond.
-In the far spaces of Time all will pass those gates. But I am one
-who wish that Time, the great deluder, were not so over-masterful. To
-those who know and love him I have no word to say; but to the
-others—and there are not so very few as some may fancy—to whom the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>passage of Time is as the stroke of a sledge-hammer, and the sense of
-Space like the bars of an iron cage, I will translate and re-translate
-until they understand fully.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The four truths written on the first page of “Light on the Path,” refer
-to the trial initiation of the would-be occultist. Until he has passed
-it, he cannot even reach to the latch of the gate which admits to knowledge.
-Knowledge is man’s greatest inheritance; why, then, should
-he not attempt to reach it by every possible road? The laboratory
-is not the only ground for experiment; <em>science</em>, we must remember,
-is derived from <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sciens</i></span>, present participle of <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>scire</i></span>, “to know,”—its origin
-is similar to that of the word “discern,” “to ken.” Science does
-not therefore deal only with matter, no, not even its subtlest and
-obscurest forms. Such an idea is born merely of the idle spirit of
-the age. Science is a word which covers all forms of knowledge.
-It is exceedingly interesting to hear what chemists discover, and to see
-them finding their way through the densities of matter to its finer
-forms; but there are other kinds of knowledge than this, and it is not
-every one who restricts his (strictly scientific) desire for knowledge to
-experiments which are capable of being tested by the physical senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Everyone who is not a dullard, or a man stupefied by some predominant
-vice, has guessed, or even perhaps discovered with some
-certainty, that there are subtle senses lying within the physical
-senses. There is nothing at all extraordinary in this; if we took the
-trouble to call Nature into the witness box we should find that everything
-which is perceptible to the ordinary sight, has something even
-more important than itself hidden within it; the microscope has opened
-a world to us, but within those encasements which the microscope
-reveals, lies a mystery which no machinery can probe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The whole world is animated and lit, down to its most material
-shapes, by a world within it. This inner world is called Astral by some
-people, and it is as good a word as any other, though it merely
-means starry; but the stars, as Locke pointed out, are luminous
-bodies which give light of themselves. This quality is characteristic
-of the life which lies within matter; for those who see it, need no
-lamp to see it by. The word star, moreover, is derived from the
-Anglo-Saxon “stir-an,” to steer, to stir, to move, and undeniably it is
-the inner life which is master of the outer, just as a man’s brain
-guides the movements of his lips. So that although Astral is no very
-excellent word in itself, I am content to use it for my present purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The whole of “Light on the Path” is written in an astral cipher and
-can therefore only be deciphered by one who reads astrally. And its
-teaching is chiefly directed towards the cultivation and development
-of the astral life. Until the first step has been taken in this development,
-the swift knowledge, which is called intuition with certainty, is impossible
-to man. And this positive and certain intuition is the only form of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>knowledge which enables a man to work rapidly or reach his true and
-high estate, within the limit of his conscious effort. To obtain knowledge
-by experiment is too tedious a method for those who aspire to
-accomplish real work; he who gets it by certain intuition, lays hands on
-its various forms with supreme rapidity, by fierce effort of will; as a
-determined workman grasps his tools, indifferent to their weight or
-any other difficulty which may stand in his way. He does not stay for
-each to be tested—he uses such as he sees are fittest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All the rules contained in “Light on the Path,” are written for all
-disciples, but only for disciples—those who “take knowledge.” To none
-else but the student in this school are its laws of any use or interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To all who are interested seriously in Occultism, I say first—take
-knowledge. To him who hath shall be given. It is useless to wait for it.
-The womb of Time will close before you, and in later days you will remain
-unborn, without power. I therefore say to those who have any
-hunger or thirst for knowledge, attend to these rules.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They are none of my handicraft or invention. They are merely the
-phrasing of laws in super-nature, the putting into words truths as absolute
-in their own sphere, as those laws which govern the conduct of the earth
-and its atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The senses spoken of in these four statements are the astral, or inner
-senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No man desires to see that light which illumines the spaceless soul
-until pain and sorrow and despair have driven him away from the life of
-ordinary humanity. First he wears out pleasure; then he wears out pain—till,
-at last, his eyes become incapable of tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This is a truism, although I know perfectly well that it will meet with
-a vehement denial from many who are in sympathy with thoughts which
-spring from the inner life. <em>To see</em> with the astral sense of sight is a form
-of activity which it is difficult for us to understand immediately. The
-scientist knows very well what a miracle is achieved by each child that is
-born into the world, when it first conquers its eye-sight and compels it
-to obey its brain. An equal miracle is performed with each sense
-certainly, but this ordering of sight is perhaps the most stupendous effort.
-Yet the child does it almost unconsciously, by force of the powerful
-heredity of habit. No one now is aware that he has ever done it at all;
-just as we cannot recollect the individual movements which enabled us to
-walk up a hill a year ago. This arises from the fact that we move and
-live and have our being in matter. Our knowledge of it has become
-intuitive.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With our astral life it is very much otherwise. For long ages past,
-man has paid very little attention to it—so little, that he has practically
-lost the use of his senses. It is true, that in every civilization the star
-arises, and man confesses, with more or less of folly and confusion, that
-he knows himself to be. But most often he denies it, and in being a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>materialist becomes that strange thing, a being which cannot see its own
-light, a thing of life which will not live, an astral animal which has eyes,
-and ears, and speech, and power, yet will use none of these gifts. This
-is the case, and the habit of ignorance has become so confirmed, that
-now none will see with the inner vision till agony has made the physical
-eyes not only unseeing, but without tears—the moisture of life. To be
-incapable of tears is to have faced and conquered the simple human
-nature, and to have attained an equilibrium which cannot be shaken by
-personal emotions. It does not imply any hardness of heart, or any
-indifference. It does not imply the exhaustion of sorrow, when the
-suffering soul seems powerless to suffer acutely any longer; it does not
-mean the deadness of old age, when emotion is becoming dull because
-the strings which vibrate to it are wearing out. None of these conditions
-are fit for a disciple, and if any one of them exist in him, it must be
-overcome before the path can be entered upon. Hardness of heart
-belongs to the selfish man, the egotist, to whom the gate is for ever closed.
-Indifference belongs to the fool and the false philosopher; those whose
-lukewarmness makes them mere puppets, not strong enough to face the
-realities of existence. When pain or sorrow has worn out the keenness
-of suffering, the result is a lethargy not unlike that which accompanies
-old age, as it is usually experienced by men and women. Such a condition
-makes the entrance to the path impossible, because the first step
-is one of difficulty and needs a strong man, full of psychic and physical
-vigour, to attempt it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is a truth, that, as Edgar Allan Poe said, the eyes are the windows
-for the soul, the windows of that haunted palace in which it dwells.
-This is the very nearest interpretation into ordinary language of
-the meaning of the text. If grief, dismay, disappointment or
-pleasure, can shake the soul so that it loses its fixed hold on the calm
-spirit which inspires it, and the moisture of life breaks forth, drowning
-knowledge in sensation, then all is blurred, the windows are darkened,
-the light is useless. This is as literal a fact as that if a man, at the edge
-of a precipice, loses his nerve through some sudden emotion he will
-certainly fall. The poise of the body, the balance, must be preserved,
-not only in dangerous places, but even on the level ground, and with
-all the assistance Nature gives us by the law of gravitation. So it is
-with the soul, it is the link between the outer body and the starry spirit
-beyond; the divine spark dwells in the still place where no convulsion
-of Nature can shake the air; this is so always. But the soul may lose
-its hold on that, its knowledge of it, even though these two are part of
-one whole; and it is by emotion, by sensation, that this hold is loosed.
-To suffer either pleasure or pain, causes a vivid vibration which is, to
-the consciousness of man, life. Now this sensibility does not lessen
-when the disciple enters upon his training; it increases. It is the
-first test of his strength; he must suffer, must enjoy or endure, more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>keenly than other men, while yet he has taken on him a duty which
-does not exist for other men, that of not allowing his suffering to
-shake him from his fixed purpose. He has, in fact, at the first step
-to take himself steadily in hand and put the bit into his own mouth;
-no one else can do it for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first four aphorisms of “Light on the Path,” refer entirely to astral
-development. This development must be accomplished to a certain extent—that
-is to say it must be fully entered upon—before the remainder
-of the book is really intelligible except to the intellect; in fact, before it
-can be read as a practical, not a metaphysical treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In one of the great mystic Brotherhoods, there are four ceremonies,
-that take place early in the year, which practically illustrate and
-elucidate these aphorisms. They are ceremonies in which only novices
-take part, for they are simply services of the threshold. But it will
-show how serious a thing it is to become a disciple, when it is
-understood that these are all ceremonies of sacrifice. The first one
-is this of which I have been speaking. The keenest enjoyment, the
-bitterest pain, the anguish of loss and despair, are brought to bear on
-the trembling soul, which has not yet found light in the darkness,
-which is helpless as a blind man is, and until these shocks can be
-endured without loss of equilibrium the astral senses must remain
-sealed. This is the merciful law. The “medium,” or “spiritualist,”
-who rushes into the psychic world without preparation, is a law-breaker,
-a breaker of the laws of super-nature. Those who break
-Nature’s laws lose their physical health; those who break the laws of
-the inner life, lose their psychic health. “Mediums” become mad,
-suicides, miserable creatures devoid of moral sense; and often end as
-unbelievers, doubters even of that which their own eyes have seen.
-The disciple is compelled to become his own master before he
-adventures on this perilous path, and attempts to face those beings
-who live and work in the astral world, and whom we call masters,
-because of their great knowledge and their ability to control not only
-themselves but the forces around them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The condition of the soul when it lives for the life of sensation as
-distinguished from that of knowledge, is vibratory or oscillating, as
-distinguished from fixed. That is the nearest literal representation of
-the fact; but it is only literal to the intellect, not to the intuition.
-For this part of man’s consciousness a different vocabulary is needed.
-The idea of “fixed” might perhaps be transposed into that of “at
-home.” In sensation no permanent home can be found, because change
-is the law of this vibratory existence. That fact is the first one which
-must be learned by the disciple. It is useless to pause and weep for
-a scene in a kaleidoscope which has passed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is a very well-known fact, one with which Bulwer Lytton dealt
-with great power, that an intolerable sadness is the very first experience
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>of the neophyte in Occultism. A sense of blankness falls
-upon him which makes the world a waste, and life a vain exertion.
-This follows his first serious contemplation of the abstract. In gazing,
-or even in attempting to gaze, on the ineffable mystery of his own
-higher nature, he himself causes the initial trial to fall on him. The
-oscillation between pleasure and pain ceases for—perhaps an instant
-of time; but that is enough to have cut him loose from his fast
-moorings in the world of sensation. He has experienced, however
-briefly, the greater life; and he goes on with ordinary existence
-weighted by a sense of unreality, of blank, of horrid negation. This
-was the nightmare which visited Bulwer Lytton’s neophyte in
-“Zanoni”; and even Zanoni himself, who had learned great truths,
-and been entrusted with great powers, had not actually passed the
-threshold where fear and hope, despair and joy seem at one moment
-absolute realities, at the next mere forms of fancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This initial trial is often brought on us by life itself. For life is
-after all, the great teacher. We return to study it, after we have
-acquired power over it, just as the master in chemistry learns more
-in the laboratory than his pupil does. There are persons so near
-the door of knowledge that life itself prepares them for it, and no
-individual hand has to invoke the hideous guardian of the entrance.
-These must naturally be keen and powerful organizations, capable
-of the most vivid pleasure; then pain comes and fills its great duty.
-The most intense forms of suffering fall on such a nature, till at last
-it arouses from its stupor of consciousness, and by the force of its
-internal vitality steps over the threshold into a place of peace. Then
-the vibration of life loses its power of tyranny. The sensitive nature
-must suffer still; but the soul has freed itself and stands aloof, guiding
-the life towards its greatness. Those who are the subjects of
-Time, and go slowly through all his spaces, live on through a long-drawn
-series of sensations, and suffer a constant mingling of pleasure
-and of pain. They do not dare to take the snake of self in a steady
-grasp and conquer it, so becoming divine; but prefer to go on fretting
-through divers experiences, suffering blows from the opposing
-forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When one of these subjects of Time decides to enter on the path of
-Occultism, it is this which is his first task. If life has not taught it
-to him, if he is not strong enough to teach himself, and if he has
-power enough to demand the help of a master, then this fearful trial,
-depicted in Zanoni, is put upon him. The oscillation in which he
-lives, is for an instant stilled; and he has to survive the shock of
-facing what seems to him at first sight as the abyss of nothingness.
-Not till he has learned to dwell in this abyss, and has found its
-peace, is it possible for his eyes to have become incapable of tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The difficulty of writing intelligibly on these subjects is so great that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>I beg of those who have found any interest in this article, and are yet
-left with perplexities and doubts, to address me in the correspondence
-column of this magazine. I ask this because thoughtful questions
-are as great an assistance to the general reader as the answers to them.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>Δ</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>To be <a href='#light2'>continued</a></i>.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<p class='c017'>Harmony is the law of life, discord its shadow, whence springs suffering,
-the teacher, the awakener of consciousness.</p>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Through joy and sorrow, pain and pleasure, the soul comes to a
-knowledge of itself; then begins the task of learning the laws of life,
-that the discords may be resolved, and the harmony be restored.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The eyes of wisdom are like the ocean depths; there is neither joy
-nor sorrow in them; therefore the soul of the occultist must become
-stronger than joy, and greater than sorrow.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE HISTORY OF A PLANET.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c019'>No star, among the countless myriads that twinkle over the sidereal
-fields of the night sky, shines so dazzlingly as the planet Venus—not
-even Sirius-Sothis, the dog-star, beloved by Isis. Venus
-is the queen among our planets, the crown jewel of our solar system.
-She is the inspirer of the poet, the guardian and companion of the lonely
-shepherd, the lovely morning and the evening star. For,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Stars teach as well as shine.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>although their secrets are still untold and unrevealed to the majority of
-men, including astronomers. They are “a beauty and a mystery,” verily.
-But “where there is a mystery, it is generally supposed that there must
-also be evil,” says Byron. Evil, therefore, was detected by evilly-disposed
-human fancy, even in those bright luminous eyes peeping at our wicked
-world through the veil of ether. Thus there came to exist slandered
-stars and planets as well as slandered men and women. Too often
-are the reputation and fortune of one man or party sacrificed for the
-benefit of another man or party. As on earth below, so in the heavens
-above, and Venus, the sister planet of our Earth,<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c013'><sup>[4]</sup></a> was sacrificed to the
-ambition of our little globe to show the latter the “chosen” planet of the
-Lord. She became the scapegoat, the <em>Azaziel</em> of the starry dome, for the
-sins of the Earth, or rather for those of a certain class in the human
-family—the clergy—who slandered the bright orb, in order to prove
-what their ambition suggested to them as the best means to reach
-power, and exercise it unswervingly over the superstitious and ignorant
-masses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This took place during the middle ages. And now the sin lies black
-at the door of Christians and their scientific inspirers, though the error
-was successfully raised to the lofty position of a religious dogma, as
-many other fictions and inventions have been.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Indeed, the whole sidereal world, planets and their regents—the
-ancient gods of poetical paganism—the sun, the moon, the elements,
-and the entire host of incalculable worlds—those at least which happened
-to be known to the Church Fathers—shared in the same fate. They
-have all been slandered, all bedevilled by the insatiable desire of
-proving one little system of theology—built on and constructed out of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>old pagan materials—the only right and holy one, and all those which
-preceded or followed it utterly wrong. Sun and stars, the very air
-itself, we are asked to believe, became pure and “redeemed” from
-original sin and the Satanic element of heathenism, only after the year
-I, A.D. Scholastics and scholiasts, the spirit of whom “spurned laborious
-investigation and slow induction,” had shown, to the satisfaction of
-infallible Church, the whole Kosmos in the power of Satan—a poor
-compliment to God—before the year of the Nativity; and Christians
-had to believe or be condemned. Never have subtle sophistry and
-casuistry shown themselves so plainly in their true light, however, as in
-the questions of the ex-Satanism and later redemption of various
-heavenly bodies. Poor beautiful Venus got worsted in that war of so-called
-divine proofs to a greater degree than any of her sidereal colleagues.
-While the history of the other six planets, and their gradual
-transformation from Greco-Aryan gods into Semitic devils, and finally
-into “divine attributes of the <em>seven eyes</em> of the Lord,” is known but to
-the educated, that of Venus-Lucifer has become a household story
-among even the most illiterate in Roman Catholic countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This story shall now be told for the benefit of those who may have
-neglected their astral mythology.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Venus, characterised by Pythagoras as the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sol alter</i></span>, a second Sun, on
-account of her magnificent radiance—equalled by none other—was the
-first to draw the attention of ancient Theogonists. Before it began to
-be called Venus, it was known in <em>pre</em>-Hesiodic theogony as Eosphoros
-(or Phosphoros) and Hesperos, the children of the dawn and twilight. In
-Hesiod, moreover, the planet is decomposed into two divine beings,
-two brothers—Eosphoros (the <em>Lucifer</em> of the Latins) the morning, and
-Hesperos, the evening star. They are the children of Astrœos and
-Eos, the starry heaven and the dawn, as also of Kephalos and Eos
-(<cite>Theog:</cite> 381, <cite>Hyg: Poet: Astron</cite>: 11, 42). Preller, quoted by Decharme,
-shows Phaeton identical with Phosphoros or Lucifer (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Griech: Mythol</cite></span>:
-1. 365). And on the authority of Hesiod he also makes Phaeton the son
-of the latter two divinities—Kephalos and Eos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now Phaeton or Phosphoros, the “luminous morning orb,” is carried
-away in his early youth by Aphrodite (Venus) who makes of him the
-night guardian of her sanctuary (<cite>Theog:</cite> 987-991). He is the “beautiful
-morning star” (<i>Vide</i> St. John’s <cite>Revelation</cite> XXII. 16) loved for its radiant
-light by the Goddess of the Dawn, Aurora, who, while gradually eclipsing
-the light of her beloved, thus seeming to carry off the star, makes it
-reappear on the evening horizon where it watches the gates of heaven.
-In early morning, Phosphoros “issuing from the waters of the Ocean,
-raises in heaven his sacred head to announce the approach of divine
-light.” (<cite>Iliad</cite>, XXIII. 226; <cite>Odyss:</cite> XIII. 93; Virg: <cite>Æneid</cite>, VIII. 589;
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Mythol: de la Grèce Antique</cite></span>. 247). He holds a torch in his hand and
-flies through space as he precedes the car of Aurora. In the evening he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>becomes Hesperos, “the most splendid of the stars that shine on the
-celestial vault” (<cite>Iliad</cite>, XXII. 317). He is the father of the Hesperides,
-the guardians of the golden apples together with the Dragon; the
-beautiful genius of the flowing golden curls, sung and glorified in all the
-ancient <em>epithalami</em> (the bridal songs of the early Christians as of the
-pagan Greeks); he, who at the fall of the night, leads the nuptial
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>cortège</i></span> and delivers the bride into the arms of the bridegroom. (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Carmen
-Nuptiale.</i></span> See <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Mythol: de la Grèce Antique</cite></span>. Decharme.)</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So far, there seems to be no possible <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>rapprochement</i></span>, no analogy to be
-discovered between this poetical personification of a star, a purely
-astronomical myth, and the <em>Satanism</em> of Christian theology. True, the
-close connection between the planet as Hesperos, the evening star, and
-the Greek Garden of Eden with its Dragon and the golden apples may,
-with a certain stretch of imagination, suggest some painful comparisons
-with the third chapter of Genesis. But this is insufficient to justify the
-building of a theological wall of defence against paganism made up of
-slander and misrepresentations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But of all the Greek <em>euhemerisations</em>, Lucifer-Eosphoros is, perhaps,
-the most complicated. The planet has become with the Latins, Venus,
-or Aphrodite-<em>Anadyomene</em>, the foam-born Goddess, the “Divine Mother,”
-and one with the Phœnician Astarte, or the Jewish Astaroth. They
-were all called “The Morning Star,” and the Virgins of the Sea, or <em>Mar</em>
-(whence Mary), the great Deep, titles now given by the Roman Church
-to their Virgin Mary. They were all connected with the moon and the
-crescent, with the Dragon and the planet Venus, as the mother of Christ
-has been made connected with all these attributes. If the Phœnician
-mariners carried, fixed on the prow of their ships, the image of the goddess
-Astarte (or Aphrodite, Venus Erycina) and looked upon the evening
-and the morning star as <em>their</em> guiding star, “the eye of their Goddess
-mother,” so do the Roman Catholic sailors the same to this day. They
-fix a Madonna on the prows of their vessels, and the blessed Virgin
-Mary is called the “Virgin of the Sea.” The accepted patroness of
-Christian sailors, their star, “<em>Stella Del Mar</em>,” etc., she stands on the
-crescent moon. Like the old pagan Goddesses, she is the “Queen of
-Heaven,” and the “Morning Star” just as they were.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Whether this can explain anything, is left to the reader’s sagacity.
-Meanwhile, Lucifer-Venus has nought to do with darkness, and everything
-with light. When called <em>Lucifer</em>, it is the “light bringer,” the first
-radiant beam which destroys the lethal darkness of night. When named
-Venus, the planet-star becomes the symbol of dawn, the chaste Aurora.
-Professor Max Müller rightly conjectures that Aphrodite, born of the
-sea, is a personification of the Dawn of Day, and the most lovely of all
-the sights in Nature (“Science of Language”) for, before her naturalisation
-by the Greeks, Aphrodite was Nature personified, the life and light
-of the Pagan world, as proven in the beautiful invocation to Venus by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>Lucretius, quoted by Decharme. She is <em>divine</em> Nature in her entirety,
-<em>Aditi-Prakriti</em> before she becomes Lakshmi. She is that Nature before
-whose majestic and fair face, “the winds fly away, the quieted sky pours
-torrents of light, and the sea-waves smile,” (Lucretius). When referred
-to as the Syrian goddess Astarte, the Astaroth of Hieropolis, the
-radiant planet was personified as a majestic woman, holding in one
-outstretched hand a torch, in the other, a crooked staff in the form of
-a cross. (<i>Vide</i> Lucian’s <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>De Dea Syriê</cite></span>, and Cicero’s <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>De Nat: Deorum</cite></span>,
-3 c.23). Finally, the planet is represented astronomically, as a globe
-<em>poised above the cross</em>—a symbol no devil would like to associate with—while
-the planet Earth is a globe with a cross <em>over it</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But then, these crosses are not the symbols of Christianity, but the
-Egyptian <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>crux ansata</i></span>, the attribute of Isis (who is Venus, and Aphrodite,
-Nature, also) ♀ or ♀ the planet; the fact that the Earth has the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>crux
-ansata</i></span> reversed, ♁ having a great occult significance upon which there
-is no necessity of entering at present.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now what says the Church and how does it explain the “dreadful
-association.” The Church believes in the devil, of course, and could not
-afford to lose him. “<em>The Devil is the chief pillar of the Church</em>” confesses
-unblushingly an advocate<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c013'><sup>[5]</sup></a> of the <cite>Ecclesia Militans</cite>. “All the Alexandrian
-Gnostics speak to us of the fall of the Æons and their Pleroma, and
-all attribute that fall <em>to the desire to know</em>,” writes another volunteer in
-the same army, slandering the Gnostics as usual and identifying <em>the
-desire to know</em> or occultism, magic, with Satanism.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c013'><sup>[6]</sup></a> And then, forthwith,
-he quotes from Schlegel’s <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Philosophie de l’Histoire</cite></span> to show that the seven
-rectors (planets) of Pymander, “commissioned by God to contain the
-phenomenal world in their seven circles, lost in love with their own
-beauty,<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c013'><sup>[7]</sup></a> came to admire themselves with such intensity that owing to
-this proud self-adulation they finally <em>fell</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Perversity having thus found its way amongst the angels, the most
-beautiful creature of God “revolted against its Maker.” That creature
-is in theological fancy Venus-Lucifer, or rather the informing Spirit or
-Regent of that planet. This teaching is based on the following speculation.
-The three principal heroes of the great sidereal catastrophe
-mentioned in <cite>Revelation</cite> are, according to the testimony of the Church
-fathers—“the Verbum, Lucifer his usurper (see editorial) and the grand
-Archangel who conquered him,” and whose “palaces” (the “houses”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>astrology calls them) are in the Sun, Venus-Lucifer and Mercury. This is
-quite evident, since the position of these orbs in the Solar system correspond
-in their hierarchical order to that of the “heroes” in Chapter xii of
-<cite>Revelation</cite> “their names and destinies (?) being closely connected in
-the theological (exoteric) system with these three great metaphysical
-names.” (De Mirville’s <cite>Memoir</cite> to the Academy of France, on the
-rapping Spirits and the Demons).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The outcome of this was, that theological legend made of Venus-Lucifer
-the sphere and domain of the fallen Archangel, or Satan before his
-apostacy. Called upon to reconcile this statement with that other fact,
-that the metaphor of “the morning star,” is applied to both Jesus, and his
-Virgin mother, and that the planet Venus-Lucifer is included, moreover,
-among the “stars” of the seven planetary spirits worshipped by the
-Roman Catholics<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c013'><sup>[8]</sup></a> under new names, the defenders of the Latin dogmas
-and beliefs answer as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Lucifer, the jealous neighbour of the Sun (Christ) said to himself in his
-great pride: ‘I will rise as high as he!’ He was thwarted in his design
-by Mercury, though the brightness of the latter (who is St. Michael) was
-as much lost in the blazing fires of the great Solar orb as his own was,
-and though, like Lucifer, Mercury is only the assessor, and the guard of
-honour to the Sun.”—(<cite>Ibid.</cite>)</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Guards of “dishonour” now rather, if the teachings of <em>theological</em>
-Christianity were true. But here comes in the cloven foot of the Jesuit.
-The ardent defender of Roman Catholic Demonolatry and of the worship
-of the seven planetary spirits, at the same time, pretends great wonder
-at the coincidences between old Pagan and Christian <em>legends</em>, between
-the fable about Mercury and Venus, and the <em>historical truths</em> told of
-St. Michael—the “angel of the face,”—the terrestrial double, or <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>ferouer</i></span>
-of Christ. He points them out saying: “like Mercury, the archangel
-Michael, is the <em>friend</em> of the Sun, his Mitra, perhaps, for Michael is a
-<em>psychopompic</em> genius, one who leads the separated souls to their appointed
-abodes, and like Mitra, he is the <em>well-known adversary of the demons</em>.”
-This is demonstrated by the book of the <cite>Nabatheans</cite> recently discovered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>(by Chwolson), in which the <a id='corr20.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Zoroastian'>Zoroastrian</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_20.1'><ins class='correction' title='Zoroastian'>Zoroastrian</ins></a></span> Mitra is called the “<em>grand enemy
-of the planet Venus</em>.”<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c013'><sup>[9]</sup></a> (<i>ibid</i> p. 160.)</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There is something in this. A candid confession, for once, of
-perfect identity of celestial personages and of <em>borrowing</em> from every pagan
-source. It <em>is</em> curious, if unblushing. While in the oldest Mazdean
-allegories, Mitra conquers the planet Venus, in Christian tradition
-Michael defeats Lucifer, and both receive, as war spoils, the planet of
-the vanquished deity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Mitra,” says Dollinger, “possessed, in days of old, the star of Mercury,
-placed between the sun and the moon, but he was given the planet of
-the conquered, and ever since his victory he is identified with Venus.”
-(<i>“Judaisme and Paganisme,” Vol. II., p. 109. French transl.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“In the Christian tradition,” adds the learned Marquis, “St. Michael
-<em>is apportioned in Heaven the throne and the palace of the foe he has vanquished</em>.
-Moreover, like Mercury, during the palmy days of paganism,
-which made sacred to this <em>demon</em>-god all the promontories of the
-earth, <em>the Archangel is the patron of the same in our religion</em>.” This
-means, if it does mean anything, that <em>now</em>, at any rate, Lucifer-Venus is
-a <em>sacred</em> planet, and no synonym of Satan, since St. Michael has become
-his legal heir?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The above remarks conclude with this cool reflection:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“It is evident that paganism has <em>utilised beforehand</em>, and most marvellously,
-all the features and characteristics of the <em>prince of the face of
-the Lord</em> (Michael) in applying them to that <em>Mercury</em>, to the Egyptian
-<em>Hermes Anubis</em>, and the <em>Hermes Christos</em> of the Gnostics. Each of these
-was represented as the first among the divine councillors, and the
-god nearest to the sun, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>quis ut Deus</i></span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Which title, with all its attributes, became that of Michael. The
-good Fathers, the Master Masons of the temple of <em>Church</em> Christianity,
-knew indeed how to utilize pagan material for their new dogmas.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fact is, that it is sufficient to examine certain Egyptian
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>cartouches</i></span>, pointed out by Rossellini (<cite>Egypte</cite>, Vol. I., p. 289), to find
-Mercury (the double of Sirius in our solar system) as Sothis, preceded
-by the words “<em>sole</em>” and “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>solis custode, sostegnon dei dominanti, e
-forte grande dei vigilanti</i></span>,” “watchman of the sun, sustainer of dominions,
-and the strongest of all the vigilants.” All these titles and attributes
-are now those of the Archangel Michael, who has inherited them from
-the <em>demons</em> of paganism.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Moreover, travellers in Rome may testify to the wonderful presence in
-the statue of Mitra, at the Vatican, of the best known Christian symbols.
-Mystics boast of it. They find “in his lion’s head, and the eagle’s
-wings, those of the courageous Seraph, the master of space (Michael);
-in his caduceus, the spear, in the two serpents coiled round the body,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>the struggle of the good and bad principles, and especially in the two
-keys which the said Mitra holds, like St. Peter, the keys with which this
-Seraph-patron of the latter opens and shuts the gates of Heaven,
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>astra cludit et recludit</i></span>.” (<cite>Mem</cite>: p. 162.)</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To sum up, the aforesaid shows that the theological romance of
-Lucifer was built upon the various myths and allegories of the pagan
-world, and that it is no <em>revealed</em> dogma, but simply one invented to
-uphold superstition. Mercury being one of the Sun’s <em>assessors</em>, or the
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>cynocephali</i></span> of the Egyptians and <em>the watch-dogs of the Sun</em>, literally,
-the other was <em>Eosphoros</em>, the most brilliant of the planets, “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>qui mane
-oriebaris</i></span>,” the early rising, or the Greek ὀρθρινὸς. It was identical
-with the <em>Amoon-ra</em>, the light-bearer of Egypt, and called by all
-nations “the <em>second born</em> of light” (the first being Mercury), the beginning
-of his (the Sun’s) ways of wisdom, the Archangel Michael being
-also referred to as the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>principium viarum Domini</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus a purely astronomical personification, built upon an occult
-meaning which no one has hitherto seemed to unriddle outside the
-Eastern wisdom, has now become a dogma, part and parcel of Christian
-revelation. A clumsy transference of characters is unequal to the task
-of making thinking people accept in one and the same trinitarian
-group, the “Word” or Jesus, God and Michael (with the Virgin occasionally
-to complete it) on the one hand, and Mitra, Satan and Apollo-Abbadon
-on the other: the whole at the whim and pleasure of Roman
-Catholic Scholiasts. If Mercury and Venus (Lucifer) are (astronomically
-in their revolution around the Sun) the symbols of God the Father, the
-Son, and of their Vicar, Michael, the “Dragon-Conqueror,” in Christian
-legend, why should they when called Apollo-<em>Abaddon</em>, the “King of
-the Abyss,” Lucifer, Satan, or Venus—become forthwith devils and
-demons? If we are told that the “conqueror,” or “Mercury-Sun,” or
-again St. Michael of the <cite>Revelation</cite>, was given the spoils of the
-conquered angel, namely, his planet, why should opprobrium be any
-longer attached to a constellation so purified? Lucifer is now the
-“Angel of the Face of the Lord,”<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c013'><sup>[10]</sup></a> because “that face is mirrored in it.”
-We think rather, because the Sun is reflecting his beams in Mercury
-seven times more than it does on our Earth, and twice more in Lucifer-Venus:
-the Christian symbol proving again its astronomical origin. But
-whether from the astronomical, mystical or symbological aspect, Lucifer
-is as good as any other planet. To advance as a proof of its demoniacal
-character, and identity with Satan, the configuration of Venus, which
-gives to the crescent of this planet the appearance of a cut-off horn is
-rank nonsense. But to connect this with the horns of “The Mystic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>Dragon” in <cite>Revelation</cite>—“one of which was broken”<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c013'><sup>[11]</sup></a>—as the two
-French Demonologists, the Marquis de Mirville and the Chevalier des
-Mousseaux, the champions of the Church militant, would have their
-readers believe in the second half of our present century—is simply
-an insult to the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Besides which, the Devil had no horns before the fourth century of
-the Christian era. It is a purely Patristic invention arising from their
-desire to connect the god Pan, and the pagan Fauns and Satyrs, with
-their Satanic legend. The demons of Heathendom were as hornless
-and as tailless as the Archangel Michael himself in the imaginations of
-his worshippers. The “horns” were, in pagan symbolism, an emblem
-of divine power and creation, and of fertility in nature. Hence the
-ram’s horns of Ammon, of Bacchus, and of Moses on ancient medals,
-and the cow’s horns of Isis and Diana, etc., etc., and of the Lord God of
-the Prophets of Israel himself. For Habakkuk gives the evidence that
-this symbolism was accepted by the “chosen people” as much as by the
-Gentiles. In Chapter III. that prophet speaks of the “Holy One from
-Mount Paran,” of the Lord God who “comes from Teman, and <em>whose
-brightness was as the light</em>,” and who had “<em>horns</em> coming out of his
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When one reads, moreover, the Hebrew text of Isaiah, and finds
-that no Lucifer is mentioned at all in Chapter XIV., v. 12, but simply
-הֵילֵל, <em>Hillel</em>, “a <em>bright</em> star,” one can hardly refrain from wondering that
-<em>educated</em> people should be still ignorant enough at the close of our century
-to associate a radiant planet—or anything else in nature for the
-matter of that—with the <span class='sc'>Devil</span>!<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c013'><sup>[12]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='c020'>H. P. B.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class="blackletter">THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><i>A TALE OF LOVE AND MAGIC</i>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='sc'>by Mabel Collins</span>,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Author of “<span class='sc'>The Prettiest Woman in Warsaw</span>,” &amp;c., &amp;c., And Scribe of “<span class='sc'>The Idyll of the White Lotus</span>,” and “<span class='sc'>Through the Gates of Gold</span>.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in28'>Only—</div>
- <div class='line in22'>One facet of the stone,</div>
- <div class='line in22'>One ray of the star,</div>
- <div class='line in22'>One petal of the flower of life,</div>
- <div class='line'>But the one that stands outermost and faces us, who are men and women.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><i>This strange story has come to me from a far country and
-was brought to me in a mysterious manner; I claim only to
-be the scribe and the editor. In this capacity, however, it is
-I who am answerable to the public and the critics. I therefore
-ask in advance, one favour only of the reader; that he will
-accept (while reading this story) the theory of the reincarnation
-of souls as a living fact.</i></p>
-
-<div class='c020'><i>M. C.</i></div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>INTRODUCTION.</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Containing two sad lives on earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>And two sweet times of sleep in Heaven.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>A LIFETIME.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Overhead the boughs of the trees intermingle, hiding the deep blue
-sky and mellowing the fierce heat of the sun. The boughs are so
-covered with white blossoms that it is like a canopy of clustered
-snow-flakes, tinged here and there with a soft pink. It is a natural orchard,
-a spot favoured by the wild apricot. And among the trees, wandering
-from shine to shade, flitting to and fro, is a solitary figure. It is that of a
-young woman, a savage, one of a wild and fierce tribe dwelling in the
-fastnesses of an inaccessible virgin forest. She is dark but beautiful.
-Her blue-black hair hangs far down over her naked body; its masses
-shield the warm, quivering, nervous brown skin from the direct rays
-of the sun. She wears neither clothing nor any ornament. Her eyes
-are dark, fierce and tender: her mouth soft and natural as the lips of
-an opening flower. She is absolutely perfect in her simple savage
-beauty and in the natural majesty of her womanhood, virgin in herself
-and virgin in the quality of her race, which is untaught, undegraded.
-But in her sublimely natural face is the dawn of a great tragedy. Her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>soul, her thought, is struggling to awake. She has done a deed that
-seemed to her quite simple, quite natural; yet now it is done a dim
-perplexity is rising within her obscure mind. Wandering to and fro
-beneath the rich masses of blossom-laden boughs, she for the first time
-endeavours to question herself. Finding no answer within she goes
-again to look on that which she has done.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A form lies motionless upon the ground within the thickest shade
-of the rich fruit trees. A young man, one of her own tribe, beautiful
-like herself, and with strength and vigour written in every line of his
-form. But he is dead. He was her lover, and she found his love sweet,
-yet with one wild treacherous movement of her strong supple arm she
-had killed him. The blood flowed from his forehead where the sharp
-stone had made the death wound. The life blood ebbed away from his
-strong young form; a moment since his lips still trembled, now they
-were still. Why had she in this moment of fierce passion taken that
-beautiful life? She loved him as well as her untaught heart knew how
-to love; but he, exulting in his greater strength, tried to snatch her
-love before it was ripe. It was but a blossom, like the white flowers
-overhead: he would have taken it with strong hands as though it were a
-fruit ripe and ready. And then in a sudden flame of wondrous new
-emotion the woman became aware that the man was her enemy, that
-he desired to be her tyrant. Until now she had thought him as herself,
-a thing to love as she loved herself, with a blind unthinking trust.
-And she acted passionately upon the guidance of this thing—feeling—which
-until now she had never known. He, unaccustomed to any
-treachery or anger, suspected no strange act from her, and thus, unsuspicious,
-unwarned, he was at her mercy. And now he lay dead at
-her feet. And still the fierce sun shone through the green leaves and
-silvern blossoms and gleamed upon her black hair and tender brown
-skin. She was beautiful as the morning when it rose over the tree tops
-of that world-old forest. But there is a new wonder in her dark eyes;
-a question that was not there until this strange and potent hour came
-to her. What ages must pass over her dull spirit ere it can utter the
-question; ere it can listen and hear the answer?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The savage woman, nameless, unknown save of her tribe, who regard
-her as indifferently as any creature of the woods, has none to help her
-or stay in its commencement the great roll of the wave of energy she
-has started. Blindly she lives out her own emotions. She is dissatisfied,
-uneasy, conscious of some error. When she leaves the orchard of wild
-fruit trees and wanders back to the clearer part of the forest beneath the
-great trees, where her tribe dwells, when she returns among them her lips
-are dumb, her voice is silent. None ever heard that he, the one she
-loved, had died by her hand, for she knew not how to frame or tell this
-story. It was a mystery to her, this thing which had happened. Yet it
-made her sad, and her great eyes wore a dumb look of longing. But
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>she was very beautiful and soon another young and sturdy lover was
-always at her side. He did not please her; there was not the glow in
-his eyes that had gladdened her in those of the dead one whom she
-had loved. And yet she shrunk not from him nor did she raise her arm
-in anger, but held it fast at her side lest her passion should break loose
-unawares. For she felt that she had brought a want, a despair upon
-herself by her former deed; and now she determined that she would act
-differently. Blindly she tried to learn the lesson that had come upon her.
-Blindly she let herself be the agent of her own will. For now she
-became the willing slave and serf of one whom she did not love, and
-whose passion for her was full of tyranny. Yet she did not, she dared
-not, resist this tyranny; not because she feared him, but because she
-feared herself. She had the feeling that one might have who had come
-in contact with a new and hitherto unknown natural force. She feared
-lest resistance or independence should bring upon her a greater wonder,
-a greater sadness and loss than that which she had already brought
-upon herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And so she submitted to that which in her first youth would no more
-have been endured by her than the bit by the wild horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The apricot blossom has fallen and fruit has followed it; the leaves
-have fallen and the trees are bare. The sky is grey and wild above, the
-ground dank and soft with fallen leaves below. The aspect of the
-place is changed, but it is the same; the face and form of the woman
-have changed; but she is the same. She is alone again in the wild
-orchard, finding her way by instinct to the spot where her first lover
-died. She has found it. What is there? Some white bones that lie
-together; a skeleton. The woman’s eyes fasten and feed on the sight
-and grow large and terrible. Horror at last is struck into her soul.
-This is all that is left of her young love, who died by her hand—white
-bones that lie in ghastly order! And the long hot days and sultry
-nights of her life have been given to a tyrant who has reaped no gladness
-and no satisfaction from her submission; for he has not learned yet
-even the difference between woman and woman. All alike are mere
-creatures like the wild things; creatures to hunt and to conquer.
-Dumbly in her dark heart strange questionings arise. She turns from
-this graveyard of her unquestioning time and goes back to her slavery.
-Through the years of her life she waits and wonders, looking blankly
-at the life around her. Will no answer come to her soul?</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>AFTER SLEEP, AWAKENING.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Splendid was the veil that shielded her from that other soul, the soul
-she knew and of which she showed her recognition by swift and sudden
-love. But the veil separated them; a veil heavy with gold and
-shining with stars of silver. And as she gazed upon these stars, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>delighted admiration of their brilliance, they grew larger and larger, till
-at length they blended together, and the veil became one shining sheen
-gorgeous with golden broideries. Then it became easier to see through
-the veil, or rather it seemed easier to these lovers. For before the veil
-had made the shape appear dim; now it appeared glorious and ideally
-beautiful and strong. Then the woman put out her hand, hoping to
-obtain the pressure of another hand through the shining gossamer.
-And at the same instant he too put out his hand, for in this moment
-their souls communicated, and they understood each other. Their
-hands touched; the veil was broken; the moment of joy was ended
-and again the struggle began.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>A LIFETIME.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Sitting, singing, on the steps of an old palace, her feet paddling in
-the water of a broad canal, was a child who was becoming more than a
-child; a creature on the threshold of life, of awakening sensation.
-A girl, with ruddy gold hair, and innocent blue eyes, that had in their
-vivid depths the strange startled look of a wild creature. She was as
-simple and isolated in her happiness as any animal of the woods or
-hills—the sunshine, the sweet air with the faint savour of salt in it, her
-own pure clear girlish voice, and the gay songs of the people that she
-sang—these were pleasure enough and to spare for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the space of unconscious happiness or unhappiness which
-heralds the real events of a life was already at an end. The great wave
-which she had set in motion was increasing in volume ceaselessly; how
-long before it shall reach the shore and break upon that far off coast?
-None can know, save those whose eyesight is more than man’s. None
-can tell; and she is ignorant, unknowing. But though she knows
-nothing of it, she is within the sweep of the wave, and is powerless
-to arrest it until her soul shall awake.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“My blossom, my beautiful wild flower,” said a voice close beside her.
-A young boatman had brought his small vessel so gently to the steps
-she had not noticed his approach. He leaned over his boat towards
-her, and touched her bare white feet with his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Come away with me, Wild Blossom,” he said. “Leave that
-wretched home you cling to. What is there to keep you there now
-your mother is dead? Your father is like a savage, and makes you live
-like a savage too. Come away with me, and we will live among people
-who will love you and find you beautiful as I do. Will you come?
-How often have I asked you, Wild Blossom, and you have never
-answered. Will you answer now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Yes,” said the girl, looking up with grave, serious eyes, that had
-beneath their beauty a melancholy meaning, a sad question.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>The man saw this strange look and interpreted it as clearly as he
-could.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Trust me,” he said, “I am not a savage like your father. When you
-are my little wife I will care for you far more dearly than myself.
-You will be my soul, my guide, my star. And I will shield you as
-my soul is shielded within my body, follow you as my guide, look up
-to you as to a star in the blue heavens. Surely you can trust my love,
-Wild Blossom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He had not answered the doubt in her heart, for he had not guessed
-what it was, nor could she have told him. For she had not yet learned
-to know what it was, nor to know of it more than that it troubled her.
-But she put it aside and silenced it now, for the moment had come to
-do so. Not till she had learned her lesson much more fully could the
-question ever be expressed even to her own soul, and before this could
-be, the question must be silenced many times.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Yes,” she said, “I will come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She held out her hand to him as if to seal the compact. He
-interpreted the gesture by his own desire, and taking her hand in his
-drew her towards him. She yielded and stepped into the boat. And
-then he quickly pushed away from the steps, and, dipping his oars in
-the water, soon had gone far away down the canal. Blossom looking
-earnestly back, watched the old palace disappear. In some of its old
-rooms and on its sunny steps her child-life had been spent. Now she
-knew that was at an end. She understood that all was changed henceforth,
-though she could not guess into what she was going, and she
-waited for her future with a strange confidence in the companion she
-had accepted. This puzzled her dimly. Yet how should she lack
-confidence, having known him long ago and thrown away his love and
-his life beneath the wild apricot trees, having seen afterwards the
-steadfastness of his love when her soul stood beside his in soul life?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A long way they went in the little boat. They left the canals and
-went out upon the open sea, and still the boatman rowed unwearyingly,
-his eyes all the while upon the beautiful wild blossom he had plucked
-and carried away with him to be his own, his dear and adored possession.
-Far away along the coast lay a small village of fishermen’s cots.
-It was to this that the young man guided his boat, for it was here
-he dwelled.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the door of his cot stood his old mother, a quaint old woman
-with wrinkled, rosy face, wearing a rough fishwife’s dress and coarse
-shawl; her brown hand shaded her eyes as she watched her son’s boat
-approaching. Presently a smile came on her mouth. “He’s gotten
-the blossom he’s talked of so often in his sleep. Will he be happy
-now, the good lad?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He was truly a good lad; for his mother knew him well, and the more
-she knew him the deeper grew her love. She would do anything for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>his happiness. And now she took to her arms the child, the Blossom,
-and cherished her for his sake. Before many days had passed the
-fishing village made a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>fête</i></span> day for the wedding of its strongest boatman.
-And the women’s eyes filled with tears when they looked at the sad,
-tender, questioning face of the beautiful Wild Blossom.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She had given her love without hesitation, in complete confidence.
-She had given more; herself, her life, her very soul. The surrender
-was now complete.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And now, when all seemed done and all accomplished, her question
-began to be answered. Dimly she knew that, spite of the husband
-at whose feet she bowed, spite of the babes she carried in her arms
-till their tiny feet were strong enough to carry them down over the
-shore to the marge of the blue waters, spite of the cottage home she
-garnished and cleansed and loved so dearly, spite of all, her heart was
-hungry and empty. What could it mean, that though she had all she
-had none? Blossom was grown a woman now, and there were some
-lines of care and of pain on her forehead. Yet, still, she was beautiful
-and still she bore her child-name of Blossom; but the beauty of her
-face grew sadder and more strange as the years went by, the years
-that bring ease and satisfaction to the stagnant soul. Wild Blossom’s
-soul was eager and anxious; she could not still the mysterious voices of
-her heart, and these told her (though perhaps she did not always understand
-their speech) that her husband was not in reality her king; that
-he heard no sound from that inner region in which she chiefly existed.
-For him contentment existed in the outward life that he lived, in sheer
-physical pleasure, in the excitement of hard work, and the dangers of
-the sea, in the beauty of his wife, the mirth of his happy children. He
-asked no more. But Wild Blossom’s eyes had the prophetic light
-in them. She saw that all this peace must pass, this pleasure end; she
-recognised that these things did not, could not, absolutely satisfy the
-spirit; her soul seemed to tremble within her as she began to feel
-the first dawn of the terrible answer to her sad questioning.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A deeper dream of rest;</div>
- <div class='line'>A stronger waking.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Many a long year later, a solitary woman dwelled in that fisherman’s
-cottage on the shore of the blue sea. She was old and bowed with
-age and trouble. But still her eyes were brighter than any girl’s in the
-village, and held in them the mysterious beauty of the soul; still her
-hair, once golden, now grey, waved about her forehead. The people
-loved her and were kind to her, for she was always gentle and full of
-generous thought. But they never understood her, for they were long
-ages behind her in her growth. She was ready now for the great central
-test of personal existence; the experience of life in civilization. When
-the old fishwife lay dead within her cottage, and the people came to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>grieve beside her body, they little guessed that she was going on to a
-great and glorious future; a future full of daring and of danger. When
-her eyes closed in death, her inner eyes opened on a sight that filled
-her with absolute joy. She was in a garden of fruit trees, and the
-blossom of the trees was at its full. When her eyes fell on this white
-maze of flowers and drank in its beauty, she remembered the name she
-had borne on earth and dimly understood its meaning. The blossoms
-hid from her the sky and all else until a soft pressure on her hand drew
-her eyes downwards; and then she saw beside her that one whom she
-had loved through the ages, and who, side by side with her, was experiencing
-the profound mystery, and learning the strange lesson of
-incarnation in the world where sex is the first great teacher. And with
-each phase of existence that they passed through, these two forged
-stronger and stronger links that held them together and compelled
-them again and again to meet, so that together they were destined to
-pass through the vital hour; the hour when the life is shaped for greater
-ends or for vain deeds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here within this sheltered place, where blossoms filled the air with
-sweetness and beauty, it seemed to them, that they had attained to
-the full of pleasure. They rested in perfect satisfaction, drinking deep
-draughts of the joy of living. To them existence seemed a final and
-splendid fact in itself; existence as they then had it. The moment in
-which they lived was sufficient, they desired none other, nor any other
-place, nor any other beauty, than those they had. None knows and none
-can tell what time or age was passed in this deep contentment and
-fulfilment of pleasure. At last Wild Blossom’s soul woke from its
-sleep, satiated; the hunger returned to gnaw at her heart; the longing
-to know reasserted itself. Holding tight the hand she held in hers,
-she sprang from the soft couch on which she lay. Then, for the first
-time, she noticed that the ground was so soft and pleasant, because there,
-where she had lain, had drifted great heaps of the fallen fruit blossoms.
-The ground was all white with them, though some had begun to lose
-their delicate beauty, to curl and wrinkle and turn dark. Then she
-looked overhead and saw that the trees had, with the loss of the delicate
-petals, lost their first fairness, the splendour of the spring. Now they
-were covered with small, hard, green fruit, scarce formed, unbeautiful to
-the eye, hard to the touch, acid to the taste. With a shudder of regret
-for the sweet spring time that was gone, Wild Blossom hurried away
-from the trees, still holding fast that other hand in hers. She was going
-to face new, strange experiences, perhaps terrible dangers: her task was
-the easier for that tried companionship, for the nearness of that other
-who was climbing the same steep ladder of life.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>END OF INTRODUCTION.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>
- <h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER I.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In a masked ball there is an element of adventure that appeals to
-the daring of both sexes, to the bright and witty spirits. Hilary
-Estanol was just such an one as the hero of a bright revel should
-be. A beautiful boy, with a lovely face, and eyes that had in them a
-deep sadness. In repose his face was almost womanish in its softness;
-but a chill brilliance was in his smile, a certain slight cynicism coloured
-all his speech. Yet Hilary had no reason to be a cynic, and he was not
-one who adopted anything from fashion or affectation. The spring of
-this uncalled-for coldness and indifference lay in himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To-night he was the centre of attraction in Madame Estanol’s drawing-rooms.
-This <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>bal masqué</i></span> was to celebrate his coming of age, and Hilary
-had never looked so womanish as when he stood among his friends
-receiving their congratulations and admiring their gifts. He wore the
-dress of a troubadour, and it was one which became him well, not only
-in its picturesqueness as a costume, but in the requirements of the
-character. He had the faculty of the improvisatore, his voice was rich
-and soft, his musical and poetic gifts swift and versatile. Hilary was
-adored by his friends, but disliked, indeed almost hated, by his one near
-relation, his mother. She was standing near him now, talking to a group
-who had gathered round her. She was one of the cleverest women of
-the day, and, still beautiful and full of a charming pride, held a court
-of her own. Her dislike for Hilary was founded on her estimate of his
-character. To one of her intimate friends she had said, not long before
-this night, “Hilary will disgrace his name and family before there is one
-grey thread in his dark hair. He has the qualities that bring despair and
-ensure remorse. God will surely forgive me that I say this of my son;
-but I see it before me, an abyss into which he will drag me with him;
-and I wait for it every day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A guest, just arrived, approached Madame Estanol with a smile, and
-after greeting her affectionately, said, in a whisper, “I have brought a
-friend with me. Welcome her in her character as a fortune-teller. She
-is very witty, and will amuse us presently, if you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She moved aside a little, and Madame Estanol saw standing behind
-her a stooping figure, an old haggard crone, with palsied head, and hand
-that trembled as it grasped her stick.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Ah, Countess! it is impossible to recognise your friend under this
-disguise,” said Madame Estanol. “Will you not tell me who she is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I am pledged to say nothing but that she is a fortune-teller,” said the
-Countess Bairoun. “Her name she herself will reveal only to one person;
-and that person must be born under the star that favoured her own birth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fortune-teller turned her bent head towards Madame Estanol, and
-fixed a pair of brilliant and fascinating eyes on hers. Immediately
-Madame Estanol became aware of a strong charm that drew her towards
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>this mysterious person. She advanced and held out her hand to assist
-the old woman in moving across the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Come with me,” she said, “I should like to introduce you to my son.
-He is the hero of this scene to-night, for the ball is held in honour of his
-coming of age.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They went together through the maskers that were now beginning to
-throng the large drawing-rooms, and everyone turned to look at the
-strange figure of the tottering old crone. Hilary Estanol was leaning
-against the high carved oak mantel frame of the inner drawing-room,
-surrounded by a laughing group of his intimate friends. He held his
-mask in his hand, and as he stood there smiling, his dark curls falling
-on his forehead, his mother thought, as she approached him, “My boy
-grows handsomer every hour of his gay young life.” When Hilary saw
-his mother’s strange companion he advanced a step, as if to welcome her,
-but Madame Estanol checked him with a smile. “I cannot introduce
-our visitor to you,” she said, “for I do not know her name. She will tell
-it to but one person, who must have been born under the same star as herself.
-Meantime, we are to greet her in her character as the fortune-teller.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This announcement was welcomed by a murmur of amusement and
-interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Then will our kind visitor perhaps exercise her craft for us?” asked
-Hilary, gazing with curiosity at the trembling head and grey locks before
-him. The old woman turned her head sideways, and gave him a look
-from those strange brilliant eyes. He, too, like his mother, felt the charm
-from them. But he felt more. Something suddenly wakened within him;
-a rush of inexplicable emotions roused him into amazement; he put his
-hand to his forehead; he was bewildered, almost faint.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was a small drawing-room which opened out of the room they
-were in. It was so tiny that it held but a table covered with flowers, a
-low couch and an easy-chair. The laughing group that surrounded
-Hilary went eagerly to convert this room into the sanctum of the prophetess.
-They lowered and softened the shaded light; drew close the
-blinds and shut the doors, locking all but one. Here was placed a
-guardian who was to admit grudgingly and one by one those who were
-fortunate enough to speak alone with the sybil, for she would only see
-certain of the guests whom she selected herself from the throng, describing
-their appearance and dress to the guardian of her improvised
-temple. These were all ladies of great position. They entered laughing
-and half defiant. They came out, some pale, some red, some trembling,
-some in tears. “Who can she be?” they whispered in terrified tones
-to one another, and in that terror showed how she had penetrated their
-hearts and touched on their secret thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At last the guardian of the door said that Hilary himself was to
-enter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When Hilary went in, the young man, as he closed the door on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>fortune teller and her new guest, turned with a laugh to the group
-behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Already she has startled him,” he said, “I heard him utter almost
-a cry as he entered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Could you see in?” asked one, “perhaps she has taken off her
-disguise for her host!”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“No, I saw nothing,” he answered. “Can none of you who have been
-in guess who she is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“No,” answered a girl who had come out from the ordeal with white
-and trembling lips. “It is impossible to guess. She knows everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was as they had supposed. She had taken off her disguise for her
-host. The staff, the large cloak, the wig and cap lay on the ground.
-With the swift use of a cosmetiqued kerchief she had removed from
-her fair skin the dark complexion of the ancient sybil. When Hilary
-entered she had completed this rapid toilette and sat leaning back in a
-low chair. She was dressed in a rich evening costume; she held a
-mask in her hand ready for use. But now her face was uncovered; her
-strange and brilliant eyes were fixed on Hilary; her beautiful mouth
-wore a half smile of amusement at his surprise. It was more than
-surprise that he experienced. Again that rush of inexplicable emotion
-overpowered him. He felt like one intoxicated. He regarded her very
-earnestly for a few moments.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Surely,” he said, “we have met before!”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“We were born under the same star,” she answered in a voice that
-thrilled him. Until now he had not heard her speak. The sense of
-some strong link or association that united them, was made doubly
-strong by the sound of that voice, rich, strong and soft. Suddenly he
-recognised the meaning of his emotion. He no longer struggled
-against it, he no longer was bewildered by it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He approached her and sat down upon the couch at her side. He
-regarded her with wonder and adoration, but no longer with awe or
-surprise. For he understood that the event which he had imagined
-would never come was already here—he was in love.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“You said you would disclose your name to the one who was born
-under the same star as yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Do you not know me?” she said with a slight look of surprise. She
-fancied everyone knew her at least by sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I do not,” he answered, “though indeed I am perplexed to think I
-can ever have lived without knowing you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Flattery produced no effect upon her, she lived in an atmosphere
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I am the Princess Fleta,” she answered. Hilary started and
-coloured a little at the words, and could ill control his emotion. The
-Princess Fleta held a position in the society of the country, which can
-only belong to one who stands next to a throne that rules an important
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>nation. She was a personage among crowned heads, one to whom an
-emperor might, without stooping, offer his love; and Hilary, the child of
-an officer of the Austrian army, and of a poor daughter of a decayed
-aristocratic family, Hilary had in the swift stirring of love at first
-sight, told his own heart that he loved her! It could never be unsaid,
-and he knew it. He had whispered the words within himself, the
-whisper would find a hundred echoes. He must always love her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Princess turned her wonderful eyes on him and smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I have done my work for to-night,” she said. “I have amused some
-of the people, now I should like to dance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hilary was sufficient of a courtier not to be deaf to this command,
-though his whole soul was in his eyes and all his thoughts fixed on her
-beauty. He rose and offered her his arm, she put on her mask and
-they left the room. When Hilary appeared among the crowd that
-hung round the door of the fortune teller’s sanctum, accompanied by a
-slender, graceful woman, whose face was hidden save for the great dark
-eyes, there was an irrepressible murmur of excitement and wonder.
-“Who can she be?” was repeated again a hundred times. But no one
-guessed. None dreamed this could be the Princess Fleta herself; for
-there were but few houses she would visit at, and no one imagined that
-there could be any inducement to bring her to Madame Estanol’s. The
-mystery of her presence she explained to Hilary while they danced
-together.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I am a student of magic,” she said, “and I have already learned some
-useful secrets. I can read the hearts of the courtiers who surround me,
-and I know where to look for true friends. Last night I dreamed of the
-friend I should find here. Do you care for these mystic occupations?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I know nothing of them,” said Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Let me teach you then,” said the Princess, with a light laugh.
-“You will be a good pupil, that I know. Perhaps I may make a disciple
-of you! and there are not many with whom that is possible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And why?” asked Hilary. “Surely it is a fascinating study to
-those who can believe in the secrets.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Scepticism is not the great difficulty,” answered the Princess, “but
-fear. Terror turns the crowd back from the threshold. Only a few dare
-cross it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And you are one of the few,” said Hilary, gazing on her with eyes
-of burning admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I have never felt fear,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And would it be impossible to make you feel it, I wonder,” said
-Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Do you desire to try?” she answered, with a smile at his daring
-speech. It did not sound so full of impertinence as it looks, for Hilary’s
-eyes and face were all alight with love and admiration, and his voice
-trembled with passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>“You can make the attempt if you choose,” she said, glancing at him
-with those strange eyes of hers. “Terrify me if you can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Not here, in my own house, it would not be hospitable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Come and see me, then, some day when you think it will amuse you.
-Try and frighten me. I will show you my laboratory, where I produce
-essences and incenses to please the gnomes and ghouls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hilary accepted this invitation with a flush of pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Take me to the Countess,” she said at last. “I am going home. But
-I want her first to introduce me to your mother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Countess was delighted that the Princess had made up her mind
-to this. She hardly thought Madame Estanol would be pleased to
-discover that the great lady had been masquerading in her drawing-room,
-and had not cared to throw off her disguise even for her hostess.
-And the Countess valued the friendship of Madame Estanol; so she was
-glad the wilful Princess had decided to treat her with politeness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Madame Estanol could scarcely conceal her surprise at learning what
-the dignity was which had been hidden under the disguise of the old
-fortune-teller. The Princess did not remove her mask, and, with a laugh,
-she warned Madame Estanol that some of her guests would not be
-pleased to discover who the sybil was who had read their hearts so
-shrewdly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When she had gone, Hilary’s heart and spirits had gone with her. It
-seemed as if he hardly cared to speak; his laughter had died away
-altogether. His thoughts, his very self, followed the fascinating
-personality that had bewitched him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Madame Estanol saw his abstraction, his flushed eager look, and the
-new softness of his eyes. But she said no word. She feared the
-Princess, who was well known to be full of caprice and wilfulness. She
-feared lest Hilary should be mad enough to yield to the charm of the
-girl’s beauty and confident manner; the charm of power, peculiar,
-or rather, possible only to one in a royal place. But she would say
-no word; knowing Hilary well, she knew that any attempt to influence
-him against it would only intensify his new passion.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER II.</h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>Two days later Hilary nerved himself to pay the visit to the Princess.
-He thought she could not consider it to be too soon, for it seemed to him
-two months since he had seen her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She lived in a garden-house some two or three miles away in the
-country. Her father’s palace in the city never pleased her; she only
-came there when festivities or ceremonials made her presence necessary.
-In the country, with her chaperone and her maids, she was free to do
-as she chose. For they were one and all afraid of her, and held her
-“laboratory” in the profoundest respect. None of them would have
-entered that room except to avoid some dreadful doom.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hilary was taken to the Princess in the garden, where she was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>walking to and fro in an avenue of trees which were covered with sweet
-scented blossoms. She welcomed Hilary with a charming manner, and
-the hour he spent with her here in the sunshine was one of the wildest
-intoxication. They began openly to play the pretty game of love.
-Now that no eyes were on them the Princess let him forget that she
-belonged to a different rank from his own. When she was tired of
-walking, “Come,” she said, “and I will shew you my laboratory. No one
-in this house ever enters it. If you should say in the city that you
-have been in that room you will be besieged with questions. Be careful
-to say nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I would die sooner,” exclaimed Hilary, to whom the idea of talking
-about the Princess and her secrets seemed like sacrilege.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The room was without windows, perfectly dark but for a softened light
-shed by a lamp in the centre of the high ceiling. The walls were
-painted black and on them were drawn strange figures and shapes in
-red. These had evidently not been painted by any artisan hand;
-though bold in touch, they were irregular in workmanship. Beside a
-great vessel which stood upon the ground, was a chair, and in this chair
-a figure upon which Hilary’s attention immediately became fastened.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He saw at once that it was not human, that it was not a lay figure,
-that it was not a statue. It resembled most a lay figure, but there
-was something strange about it which does not exist in the mere form
-on which draperies are hung. And its detail was elaborated; the skin
-was tinted, the eyes darkened correctly, the hair appeared to be human.
-Hilary remained at the doorway unable to advance because of the
-fascination this form exercised upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Princess looked back from where she stood in the centre of the
-room beneath the light; she saw the direction of his gaze and laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“You need not fear it,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Is it a lay figure?” asked Hilary, trying to speak easily, for he
-remembered that she despised those who knew fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Yes,” she answered, “it is my lay figure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was something that puzzled Hilary in her tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Are you an artist?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Yes,” she answered, “in life—in human nature. I do not work with
-a pencil or a brush; I use an agent that cannot be seen yet can be felt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“What do you mean?” asked Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She turned on him a strange look, that was at first distrustful, and then
-grew soft and tender.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I will not tell you yet,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hilary roused himself to answer her lightly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Have I to pass through some ordeal before you tell me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Yes,” she answered gaily, “and already an ordeal faces you. Dare
-you advance into the room or no?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hilary made a great effort to break the spell that was on him. He
-went hastily across the room to where she stood. Then he realised
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>that he had actually passed through an ordeal. He had resisted some
-force, the nature of which he knew not, and he had come out the victor.
-Realising this brought to him another conviction.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Princess,” he said, “there is some one else in this room besides you
-and me. We are not alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He spoke so suddenly, and from so great a sense of startled surprise,
-that he did not pause to think whether his question were a wise
-one or not. The Princess laughed as she looked at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“You are very sensitive,” she said. “Certainly we were born under
-the same star, for we are susceptible to the same influences. No, we
-are not alone. I have servants here whom no eyes have seen but
-mine. Would you like to see them? Do not say yes hastily. It
-means a long and tedious apprenticeship, obtaining mastery over these
-servants. But unless you conquer them you cannot often see me; for
-if you are much near to me they will hate you, and their hate is
-greater than your power to resist it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She spoke seriously now, and Hilary felt a strange sensation as he
-looked at this beautiful girl standing beneath the lamp light. He
-experienced a sudden dread of her as of someone stronger than himself;
-and also an impassioned desire to serve her, to be her slave, to give
-his life to her utterly. Perhaps she read the love in his eyes, for she
-turned away and moved towards the figure in the chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I know this distresses you,” she said. “You shall see it no longer.”
-She opened a large screen which was formed of some gold coloured
-material covered with shapes outlined in black. She arranged this so
-that the figure was altogether hidden from view and also the great
-vessel which stood beside it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Now,” she said, “you will breathe more freely. And I am going
-to shew you something. We did not come out of the sunshine for no
-purpose. And we must be quick, for my good aunt will be terrified
-when she finds I have brought you in here. I believe she will hardly
-expect to see you alive again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She opened a gold vessel, which stood upon a cabinet, while she spoke,
-and the air immediately became full of a strong sweet perfume. Hilary
-put his hand to his forehead. Was it possible that he could be so
-immediately affected, or was it his imagination that the red shapes and
-figures which were on the black wall moved and ordered and arranged
-themselves? Yet, so it was; to his eyes the forms mingled and again
-broke up and re-mingled. A word was formed and then another. It
-was unconsciously imprinted on Hilary’s memory before it changed and
-vanished; he noticed only the mysterious occurrence which was happening
-before his eyes. Suddenly he became aware that a sentence had
-been completed; that words had been written there which he would
-never have dared to utter; that on the wall before him had appeared in
-letters as of fire the secret of his heart. He staggered back and drew
-his eyes with difficulty from the wall to fix them in amazement and fear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>upon the Princess. Her face was flushed, her eyes were bright and
-tender.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Did you see it?” he asked in a trembling voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For a moment she hesitated then she answered, “Yes, I saw it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was a brief silence. Hilary looked again at the wall, expecting
-to see the thought in his mind written there. But the shapes
-were returning to their original appearance, and the perfume was dying
-out of the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Come,” said the Princess suddenly, “we have been here long enough.
-My aunt will be distressed. Let us go to her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She led the way from the room, and Hilary followed her. In another
-moment they were in a large drawing-room, flooded with sunshine and
-fragrant with flowers; the Princess’ aunt was busied with silks which she
-had entangled while at her embroidery; the Princess was on her knees
-beside her, holding a skein of yellow silk upon her hands. Hilary
-stood a moment utterly bewildered. Had he been dreaming? Was
-that black room and its terrible atmosphere a phantasy?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He had stayed long enough, and he now took his leave reluctantly.
-The Princess, who would have no ceremony at the Garden House, rose
-from her knees and said she would open the gate for him. Hilary
-flushed with pleasure at this mark of kindness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The gate she took him to was a narrow one that stood in a thick-set
-hedge of flowering shrubs. When he had passed through he looked
-back, and saw the Princess leaning on the gate, framed in gorgeous
-blossoms. She smiled and held out her hand to him. The richness of
-her presence intoxicated him, and he lost all sense of the apparently
-impassable gulf between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“You read the words,” he said, “and you give me your hand in
-mine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I read the words,” she answered, in a soft voice that thrilled him,
-“and I give you my hand in yours. Good-bye!”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She had touched his hand for an instant, and now she was gone.
-Hilary turned to walk through the flowering hedges to the city. But
-his heart, his thought, his soul remained behind. She had read the
-words, and she was not angry. She knew of his love for her and she was
-not angry. She had read his heart and had not taken offence. What
-might he not hope for?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then came another thought. She had read the words. Then that
-black room was no phantasy, but a fact as actual as the sunshine. What
-were the powers of this strange creature that he loved? He knew
-not; but he knew that he loved her.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>An overpowering desire carried him daily on that road between the
-flowery hedges to the Garden House. Only sometimes had he the
-courage to enter. Most often he lingered at that narrow gate, embosomed
-in flowers and looked longingly over it. The first time that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>he entered after this visit, in which his secret was written before his
-eyes, he found the Princess standing within the gate. She held out
-her hand to him saying simply, “I knew you were coming. I have
-prepared something, and I have <a id='corr38.4'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='presuaded'>persuaded</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_38.4'><ins class='correction' title='presuaded'>persuaded</ins></a></span> my aunt that no terrible
-thing will happen if you are in my laboratory for a little while. So
-come with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was brilliantly lit, this black walled room she called her laboratory.
-The great vessel stood in the midst of the floor beneath the lamp, and
-from it rose flame and smoke. A strong and vivid perfume filled the
-air, and the upper part of the high room was clouded with grey blue
-smoke, that shone in the light like silver.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the chair beside it sat a figure: it was that of a beautiful woman.
-A strange mixture of emotions overpowered Hilary. At the first glance
-he felt that this figure was the same he had seen the other day; at the
-second he recognised his mother. He rushed forward to her and became
-aware that she was lifeless; then he turned passionately upon the
-Princess with anger and horror in his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“What have you done? What have you done?” he cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Nothing,” she said, with a smile. “I have done no harm. Do
-you not see that is only an image? My lay figure, as I told you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He gave a long look at the inanimate shape that was so perfect a
-representation of his mother, and then he turned upon the Princess a
-look of more intense horror than before.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“What are you doing?” he asked, in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“No harm!” she answered lightly. “Your mother hates and fears
-me. I cannot endure that. I am making her love me. I am making
-her desire your presence here with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For a while they stood in silence by the side of the vessel and its
-flaming contents; then suddenly Hilary cried out: “I cannot bear it!
-Put an end to this terrible spell!”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Yes,” said the Princess, “I will, but not to its results.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She drew the screen before the seated figure, and threw something
-into the vessel that instantly quenched the flame.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then she led Hilary from the room, and they walked up and down
-beneath the trees, talking of things as lovers talk—things that interested
-themselves but none other.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When Hilary returned home his mother rose from her couch and
-held out her hand to him. She drew him to sit beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Hilary,” she said, “something tells me you have been with the
-Princess Fleta. It is well, and I am glad. She is a good friend for
-you; ask her if I shall come to see her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hilary rose without replying. The dew stood on his brow. For the
-first time he was conscious of actual fear, and the fear he felt was of the
-woman he loved.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i><a href='#blossom2'>To be continued</a>.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>A LAW OF LIFE: KARMA.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c025'>There is nothing more common to those who know anything
-about Theosophy than to be asked:—What is Karma? Karma
-is a Sanskrit word which has to be used by those who discuss the
-idea it conveys, simply because there is no English word to correspond
-to it. That is very easy to answer. Then comes the question:—What
-is the idea which it conveys? Than this there is nothing more difficult
-to answer, and the reason why this is the case is not far to seek. Let it
-once be granted that the constitution of man is complex and complicated,
-and that the soul has existed for ages that seem like an eternity, and
-existed, moreover, in a garb of flesh which has been changed thousands
-of times in the course of those ages. Let this be granted, and, in addition,
-that no action is without its effect in the physical, moral, and
-spiritual worlds, then, it will be seen, that the answer to the question:
-“What is Karma,” is very difficult, if not well-nigh impossible. Still,
-some endeavour may be made to give a general idea, though the details
-of any individual case can hardly be calculated.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Granting the principle of reincarnation, Karma is the <em>working</em>
-of the great law which governs those incarnations; but, taken in its
-wider sense, Karma may be defined as a manifestation of the One,
-Universal, Divine Principle in the phenomenal world. Thus, it may be
-further defined as “the great law of Harmony” which governs the
-Universe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But it may be replied that Harmony is not the great law of Nature,
-but, on the contrary, lack of harmony and discord. And what proof is
-there that Harmony is the law?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When such proof is required, the answer is at once made:—Too short
-a view of life and the universe has been taken. The man who denies the
-existence of harmony in the universe has transgressed the law and is
-experiencing the punishment. He does this unconsciously to himself,
-because the law of harmony forms an unconscious impulse to its re-adjustment
-when it has been broken. No better illustration can be given
-than in the definition of a fugue, which is:—“A musical composition
-in contrapuntal style, in which a subject is proposed by one part, and
-then responded to by the others according to certain rules.” Again, in
-musical chords, the composing notes, if taken by twos and threes, will be
-found in discord, but, when taken altogether, produce a harmony.
-Harmony is then the just adaptation of things to each other, and the
-universe, the personal element of man being eliminated, is essentially an
-evidence of harmony; otherwise it could not exist, for it would fall to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>pieces and no longer be a universe. To those who find only discord
-around them, the note to Rule 5, in the second part of “Light on the
-Path,” may convey a meaning. No other words can express it better.
-One reason for the apparent disharmony may be given. The desires of
-man are, as a rule, devoted to the gain of what may be called his personality.
-While such is the case in any man, to the exclusion of other
-interests, that man cannot dive deep into his own heart and perceive the
-real underlying harmony. He is incapable of understanding or even of
-perceiving it, because his attention is solely devoted to that which produces
-discord. Naturally, then, to him all things seem out of joint, the
-reign of discord is ever present, and he cries out perpetually against the
-injustice of the world he lives in. But if he will but turn his attention
-from his personality to the greater span of his life, and endeavour first
-to see evidence of harmony in those around him and then in himself, he
-will find that harmony; and his way will be made plain to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Granting, then, that it is the Great Law of Harmony or Karma which
-governs the Universe, and which is the Divine principle under one
-aspect manifested in Nature, then it is easy to understand that any
-action in violation of Nature’s laws will produce a deviation from the
-straight line of harmony; consequently the law of harmony will produce
-an adjusting effect. Now, who is to produce that effect? Nature, or the
-man who committed the action? Both, or rather, the latter under the
-influence of the former. The latter most certainly, unless man is to
-be regarded simply as a blind puppet. It is possible to compare the
-situation to that of a man whose progress is contingent upon an exact
-balance being preserved on a pair of scales in front of him. If his
-actions disturb the balance of those scales and add weight to one side
-or the other, it is necessary immediately to add a counter-balancing
-weight on the opposite side and so restore the balance or harmony. (Of
-course this is a physical illustration, and can hardly be carried very
-far on the moral plane.) That is to say that the one Divine principle is
-divided by man’s actions into two opposing forces of good and evil, and
-man’s progress depends on the exertion of his will to preserve harmony
-and prevent deviation to one side or the other. Evil only exists in contradistinction
-to good, and the preservation of such harmony as we have
-and the advance towards Universal Harmony—the abstract divinity—is
-what all right-minded persons theoretically aspire to.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has been thought that, in consequence of the attention paid to
-the classics in education, the word Nemesis would replace Karma with
-advantage. So perhaps it might have done, had the earliest traditions of
-Greek mythology been preserved. But the fatal tendency towards
-anthropomorphism set in very strongly even in the palmy days of
-Greece, and in consequence Nemesis only pourtrayed the personification
-of a human passion. Originally the balancing power, independent of
-Zeus and all the Olympian gods, who carried out her decrees, Nemesis
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>became simply the avenging deity; so much was this the case that in a
-general sense she might have been called the tutelary deity of those
-envious of their neighbour’s happiness. Between these points Nemesis
-appears as the personification of the moral reverence for law, of the
-natural fear of committing a wrong action, and hence the personification
-of conscience. It was after this period that Nemesis was said to direct
-human affairs, with a view to restore the balance between happiness and
-unhappiness. But, in earlier times, the idea of Nemesis was divided into
-those of <em>Nemesis</em> and <em>Adrasteia</em> (or what Orientalists would call good
-and evil Karma), for even then the idea of evil was beginning to be
-attached to Nemesis.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But Nemesis was closely linked to both the <em>Moirae</em> (Fates) and the
-<em>Eumenides</em> (Furies), who were all the children of Zeus and Night. The
-<em>Moirae</em> appear generally as divinities of fate in a strict sense, and act
-independently at the helm of necessity. They direct fate, and watch
-that the fate assigned to every being <em>by eternal laws</em> shall take its
-course (<cite>Aesch</cite>: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Prometheus Vinctus</i></span>, 511-515). Zeus, as well as gods and
-men, submits to them. They assign their proper functions to the
-Erinnyes who inflict the punishment, and are sometimes called their
-sisters (<cite>Aesch</cite>: <cite>Eumen</cite>: 335, 962; <cite>Prometheus</cite> 516, 696, 895). These
-latter were always considered to be more ancient than the Olympian
-gods, and were therefore not under the rule of Zeus, though they honoured
-and esteemed him. The crimes which they especially punished were
-(1), violation of the respect due to old age; (2), perjury; (3), murder;
-(4), violation of the law of hospitality; (5), improper conduct towards
-suppliants; and the punishment was inflicted not only after death but
-during life. (It is somewhat curious that these “crimes” are also those
-actions which entail the heaviest Karma.) No prayers, sacrifices, or
-tears could move them or protect the object of their persecution. When
-they feared that he would escape, they called in <em>Dikè</em> to their assistance,
-with whom they were closely connected, as justice was said to be their
-only object.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now when the meaning of all these “minor” Greek deities is considered,
-and further, if it is considered in connection with the definition
-of Karma, it will be seen that all are so many personifications of the
-main divisions of the law of ancient Nemesis or Karma. But the
-one word cannot, in popular estimation, replace the other; for, as said
-above, Nemesis has lost its original meaning, and is almost invariably
-associated with the idea of vengeance. Karma, however, has never
-lost its essential connection with the law of Harmony, though even in
-this case there is some tendency to confine it to the law of cause
-and effects, and to consider what is called evil Karma solely in
-relation to human life. This is almost inevitable, while the human
-personality takes the foremost place in the consideration of each
-man, and his own welfare, in time and eternity, is the goal of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>endeavours. As said above, while this is the case man cannot regard
-the great laws of the Universe, nor recognise himself as part of it, and
-thus his life is confined to the world of effects, and can never enter that
-of causes. Thus it is ignorance of the law of Harmony that leads
-him to struggle in vain, in this world, for the apparent advantage of
-surpassing his neighbour, and—worse—to instinctively carry the struggle
-beyond death, and attempt to advance in favour in the so-called heavenly
-kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This is the result of the pernicious doctrine of reward and punishment
-after death, in heaven or in hell. Nothing could have been found more
-calculated to circumscribe the view of life as a whole, and concentrate
-man’s attention on temporary matters. It is inevitable that man should
-regard his soul as something fashioned after his struggling personality,
-and very similar to it; and this view of his personality was not calculated
-to agree with the loftiness of the ideas about the soul. From this
-point of view he either rejected the idea of soul as altogether worthless,
-or else he transferred his interest to the soul’s welfare in Heaven—in
-either case concentrating his attention on what is inevitably transient.
-It is as though a man lost sight of the fact of respiration in its component
-parts of inspiration and expiration; that is to say, that one
-respiration is taken as the whole, and the millions of other respirations
-in the course of a human life are lost sight of and forgotten. Thus the
-man who adapts his life to the ordinary views, with regard to life
-on earth and life in Heaven, fixes his thoughts and aspirations on
-what is transient, and desires to intensify that. No truer words
-were ever spoken than by Christ when he said:—“What shall it profit
-a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul.” It is a loss
-which man will inevitably experience if he pursues this purblind course
-of endeavour, for he will lose sight of his <em>real</em> soul altogether, and he—as
-<em>he</em>, that is—will never regain it. He follows a flickering Will-o’-the-Wisp,
-and finds his way only into a treacherous marsh; the result being
-that the whole of that incarnation is wasted, and a stumbling block,
-perhaps, placed in the way of the next. This danger is, as said, due
-to neglect or ignorance of the idea of Karma, and to the purblind
-view consequently taken of the great scope of human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the <cite>Theosophist</cite>, of July, 1887, Mr. Subba Row deals with the
-doctrine of Karma as contained in the Bhagavadgita. His lecture contains
-one of the clearest elucidations of the metaphysical side of the
-question which it is possible to put in language, so far as the Kosmic
-aspect of Karma is concerned. In it, and the previous lectures, Mr.
-Subba Row dealt with three main bases or vehicles<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c013'><sup>[13]</sup></a> (states of matter)
-through which the light of the spirit is reflected into the phenomenal
-world. These vehicles, when traced to their origin, lead to <em>prakriti</em>, or
-matter; as opposed to <em>purusha</em>, or spirit.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span></div>
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c001'>“So Krishna says that all Karma is traceable to Upadhi, and hence to <em>Prakriti</em>.
-<em>Karma</em> itself depends upon conscious existence. Conscious existence entirely depends
-upon the constitution of man’s mind.... <em>Upadhi</em> is the cause of individual
-existence. Existence itself, I mean living existence, is, however, traceable to this light
-(of the Logos). All conscious existence is traceable to it, and, furthermore, when
-spiritual intelligence is developed, it directly springs from it.... Now it is through
-the action of this <em>Karma</em> that individual existence makes its appearance. On account
-of this <em>Karmae</em> individual existence is maintained, and it is on account of <em>Karma</em> that
-man suffers all the pains and sorrows of earthly existence. Birth, life, and death, and
-all the innumerable ills to which human nature is subject, are endured by mankind
-owing to this <em>Karma</em>.... Thus <em>Karma</em>, being the inevitable result of <em>Prakriti</em>,
-and <em>Prakriti</em> continuing to exist as long as you are a human being, it is useless to try
-to get rid of <em>Karma</em>.... When you renounce this desire (desire to do Karma
-other than from a sense of duty), <em>Karma</em> will become weaker and weaker in its ability
-to affect you, till at last you arrive at a condition in which you are not affected by
-<em>Karma</em> at all, and that condition is the condition of <em>Mukti</em>.”<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c013'><sup>[14]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Those philosophers who want to reject all <em>Karma</em> pretend to renounce it altogether.
-But that is an impossible task. No man, so long as he is a human being, can ever
-give up <em>Karma</em> altogether. He is at least bound to do that which the bare existence
-of his physical body requires, unless, indeed, he means to die of starvation, or otherwise
-put an untimely end to his life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Supposing you do give up <em>Karma</em>—that is abstain from it in action, how can you
-keep control over your own minds? It is useless to abstain from an act, and yet be
-constantly thinking of it. If you come to the resolution that you ought to give up
-<em>Karma</em>, you must necessarily conclude that you ought not even to think about these
-things. That being so, let us see in what a condition you will then place yourselves.
-As almost all our mental states have some connection with the phenomenal world, and
-are somehow or other connected with <em>Karma</em> in its various phases, it is difficult to
-understand how it is possible for a man to give up all <em>Karma</em>, unless he can annihilate
-his mind, or get into an eternal state of <em>Sushupti</em> (<em>dreamless</em> slumber). Moreover, if
-you have to give up all <em>Karma</em>, you have to give up good <em>Karma</em> as well as bad, for
-<em>Karma</em>, in its widest sense, is not confined to bad actions. If all the people in the
-world give up <em>Karma</em>, how is the world to exist? Is it not likely that an end will
-then be put to all good impulses, to all patriotic and philanthropic deeds, that all
-the good people, who have been and are exerting themselves in doing unselfish
-deeds for the good of their fellow men, will be prevented from working? If you
-call upon everybody to give up <em>Karma</em>, you will simply create a number of lazy
-drones, and prevent good people from benefiting their fellow beings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And furthermore, it may be argued that this is not a rule of universal applicability.
-How few are there in the world who can give up their whole <em>Karma</em>,
-and reduce themselves to a condition of eternal inactivity. And if you ask these
-people to follow this course, they may, instead of giving up <em>Karma</em>, simply become
-lazy, idle persons, who have not really given up anything. What is the meaning
-of the expression, to give up <em>Karma</em>? Krishna says that in abstaining from
-doing a thing there may be the effects of active <em>Karma</em>, and in active <em>Karma</em>
-there may be no real Karmic results. If you kill a man, it is murder, and you
-are held responsible for it; but suppose you refuse to feed your old parents and
-they die in consequence of your neglect, do you mean to say that you are not
-responsible for that <em>Karma</em>? You may talk in the most metaphysical manner you
-please, you cannot get rid of <em>Karma</em> altogether.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Taking all these circumstances into consideration, and admitting the many
-mischievous consequences that will follow as the result of recommending every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>human being to give up <em>Karma</em>, Krishna adds all that is to be found in the
-teaching that makes the Logos the means of salvation, and recommends man—if he
-would seek to obtain immortality—a method by following which he is sure to reach
-it, and not one that may end in his having to go through another incarnation, or
-being absorbed into another spiritual being whose existence is not immortal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“The recommendation to practice and obtain self-mastery, Krishna accepts. But
-he would add to it more effectual means of obtaining the desired end—means sufficient
-in themselves to enable you to reach that end. He points out that this practise of
-self-mastery is not only useful for training in one birth, but is likely to leave permanent
-impulses on a man’s soul which come to his rescue in future incarnations.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Krishna, in recommending his own method, combines all that is good in the five
-systems, and adds thereto all those necessary means of obtaining salvation that follow
-as inferences from the existence of the <em>Logos</em>, and its real relationship to man and to
-all the principles that operate in the cosmos. His is certainly more comprehensive
-than any of the theories from which these various schools of philosophy have started,
-and it is this theory that he is trying, in the second six chapters of the <a id='corr44.16'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Bhavadgita'>Bhagavadgita</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_44.16'><ins class='correction' title='Bhavadgita'>Bhagavadgita</ins></a></span>,to
-inculcate.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the above quoted lecture Karma was considered in its Kosmic and
-universal aspect, but no attempt was made to consider it in its individual
-aspect as applied to the various great sections of Being on this planet.
-The first approach to this is seen in the animal kingdom. Doubtless,
-the mineral and vegetable kingdoms are under the law of Harmony
-with Nature; it could not possibly be otherwise for they are closer to
-what is known as nature and much less individualised. But there is so
-little individualisation in these kingdoms that it is hardly possible to
-consider them in relation to the law of harmony, or to that of Cause
-and Effect on the plane of objectivity. But to anyone who has thought
-about the question it is plain that the animal kingdom, in its individuals,
-does come at least under the law of cause and effect. This may
-practically be called the working of Karma on the physical plane and by
-some has been called the law of Compensation, this being a term
-expressive of mechanical and physical energy. The word Karma had
-better be retained to express the working of the law of harmony
-on that plane where moral responsibility begins, and where “the
-law of compensation can be modified by will and reason,” and where
-therefore personal merit and demerit exists. To quote from an article
-in the Theosophist on the Karma of animals:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c001'>“A piece of iron is attracted to a magnet without having any desire in the matter.
-If it is exposed to air and water, it may become rusty and cannot prevent it. A plant
-or a tree may be straight or crooked on account of circumstances over which it has
-no control. An animal usually follows the instincts of its nature without any merit or
-demerit for so doing, a child or an idiot may smilingly kick over a lamp which may
-set a whole city on fire; the cause will have its effect, but the child or the idiot cannot
-be held responsible for it, because they have not sufficient intelligence to fully control
-their actions or to judge about the consequences. A person can only be held responsible
-according to his ability to perceive justice and to distinguish between good
-and evil. The power to discriminate properly is an attribute of the human mind, and
-the higher that mind is developed the more it becomes responsible for the effects it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>produces. A cat may kill a mouse or an ox gore a man; and to hold them morally
-responsible for it would be an act of injustice, cruelty and stupidity. Whether or not
-a dog may have sufficient reason to incur any moral responsibility is a matter of
-opinion, and no emphatic affirmation or denial will decide the case: but it is reasonable
-to suppose that a dog, though he may have sufficient reason to know what is good
-or bad for himself or for those to whom he is attached, has no moral responsibility.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus, though animals may be under the law of compensation, and
-under the law of harmony or Karma, they <em>are not</em> under the law of
-compensation, or the law of harmony or Karma in the same way as it
-applies to human beings. With humanity, a fresh element has been
-introduced—the intellectual, reasoning, and discriminating power. Consequently,
-while the universal law of harmony or Karma governs
-the whole Universe, the law of Harmony should be applied to the
-Universe as a whole, and its manifestations, the laws of Karma and
-Compensation, should be applied to man and animal respectively.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is more possible, perhaps, to consider the question in relation
-to the various grades of humanity so far as we can conceive of
-it and them. It would be better to commence with the highest and
-proceed downwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All Theosophists, and many who are not, have heard of Mahatmas,
-and many have speculated very wrongly about them. In this magazine,
-and in this article, it may be possible to write about them without
-disrespect, <em>because</em> only through these speculations is it possible to
-understand the law of harmony and its relation to man as Karma,
-and to divinity as harmony. The word Karma as limited above does
-not apply to the Mahatma.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Gazing only upon the eternal the Mahatma feels neither good nor ill, nor does
-either good or ill come to him. Personally, he cannot either suffer or rejoice, and is
-incapable of emotion, because he is indifferent to circumstances. But as he developes,
-his sympathies increase, until at last his sympathies enter into all beings, and with
-them he rejoices and suffers until they also pass beyond the sense of joy or pain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“They do not have good or evil Karma. The glory and good fortune and happiness,
-these go to the good men who look for temporary joys. Karma produces pleasure or
-pain by the ordering of circumstances. The Mahatma does not feel pleasure and
-pain, and is not affected by circumstances, therefore he is Karmaless. The law of
-cause and effect is only called Karma when it concerns temporary and changing
-circumstances. The acts of the Mahatma generate spiritual energy which goes to
-create the power that shall be his when he is no longer man, and consequently form an
-eternal factor in his future; thus, the Mahatma, being without personal desire, is
-outside the operation of the law of Karma.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>In his real condition he is in harmony with Nature, and its agent, and
-hence outside Karma. His physical body is however still within its
-limits of action. But to him this is a very small matter.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Archibald Keightley</span>, M.B.</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be <a href='#karma2'>continued</a>.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THE MYSTERY OF ALL TIME.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The inner light which guides men to greatness, and makes them
-noble, is a mystery through all time and must remain so while
-Time lasts for us; but there come moments, even in the midst
-of ordinary life, when Time has no hold upon us, and then all the
-circumstance of outward existence falls away, and we find ourselves face
-to face with the mystery beyond. In great trouble, in great joy, in keen
-excitement, in serious illness, these moments come. Afterwards they
-seem very wonderful, looking back upon them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What is this mystery, and why is it so veiled, are the burning
-questions for anyone who has begun to realise its existence. Trouble
-most often rouses men to the consciousness of it, and forces them to
-ask these questions when those, whom one has loved better than
-oneself, are taken away into the formless abyss of the unknown by
-death, or are changed, by the experiences of life, till they are no longer
-recognisable as the same; then comes the wild hunger for knowledge.
-Why is it so? What is it, that surrounds us with a great dim cloud
-into which all loved things plunge in time and are lost to us, obliterated,
-utterly taken from us? It is this which makes life so unbearable to the
-emotional natures, and which developes selfishness in narrow hearts. If
-there is no certainty and no permanence in life, then it seems to the
-Egotist, that there is no reasonable course but to attend to one’s own
-affairs, and be content with the happiness of the first person singular.
-There are many persons sufficiently generous in temperament to wish
-others were happy also, and who, if they saw any way to do it, would
-gladly redress some of the existing ills—the misery of the poor, the
-social evil, the sufferings of the diseased, the sorrow of those made
-desolate by death—these things the sentimental philanthropist shudders
-to think of. He does not act because he can do so little. Shall he take
-one miserable child and give it comfort when millions will be enduring
-the same fate when that one is dead? The inexorable cruelty of life
-continues on its giant course, and those who are born rich and healthy
-live in pleasant places, afraid to think of the horrors life holds within
-it. Loss, despair, unutterable pain, comes at last, and the one who has
-hitherto been fortunate is on a level with those to whom misery has
-been familiarised by a lifetime of experience. For trouble bites hardest
-when it springs on a new victim. Of course, there are profoundly
-selfish natures which do not suffer in this sense, which look only for
-personal comfort and are content with the small horizon visible to one
-person’s sight; for these, there is but little trouble in the world, there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>is none of the passionate pain which exists in sensitive and poetic
-natures. The born artist is aware of pain as soon as he is aware of
-pleasure; he recognises sadness as a part of human life before it has
-touched on his own. He has an innate consciousness of the mystery
-of the ages, that thing stirring within man’s soul and which enables him
-to outlive pain and become great, which leads him on the road to the
-divine life. This gives him enthusiasm, a superb heroism indifferent to
-calamity; if he is a poet he will write his heart out, even for a generation
-that has no eyes or ears for him; if he desires to help others personally,
-he is capable of giving his very life to save one wretched child
-from out a million of miserable ones. For it is not his puny personal
-effort in the world that he considers—not his little show of labour done;
-what he is conscious of is the over-mastering desire to work with the
-beneficent forces of super-nature, to become one with the divine mystery,
-and when he can forget time and circumstances, he is face to face with
-that mystery. Many have fancied they must reach it by death; but
-none have come back to tell us that this is so. We have no proof that
-man is not as blind beyond the grave as he is on this side of it. Has
-he entered the eternal thought? If not, the mystery is a mystery still.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To one who is entering occultism in earnest, all the trouble of the
-world seems suddenly apparent. There is a point of experience when
-father and mother, wife and child, become indistinguishable, and when
-they seem no more familiar or friendly than a company of strangers.
-The one dearest of all may be close at hand and unchanged, and yet
-is as far as if death had come between. Then all distinction between
-pleasure and pain, love and hate, have vanished. A melancholy, keener
-than that felt by a man in his first fierce experience of grief, overshadows
-the soul. It is the pain of the struggle to break the shell in which man
-has prisoned himself. Once broken then there is no more pain; all ties
-are severed, all personal demands are silenced for ever. The man has
-forced himself to face the great mystery, which is now a mystery no
-longer, for he has become part of it. It is essentially the mystery of
-the ages, and these have no longer any meaning for him to whom time
-and space and all other limitations are but passing experiences. It
-has become to him a reality, profound, indeed, because it is bottomless,
-wide, indeed, because it is limitless. He has touched on the greatness of
-life, which is sublime in its impartiality and effortless generosity. He
-is friend and lover to all those living beings that come within his consciousness,
-not to the one or two chosen ones only—which is indeed only
-an enlarged selfishness. While a man retains his humanity, it is certain
-that one or two chosen ones will give him more pleasure by contact,
-than all the rest of the beings in the Universe and all the heavenly host;
-but he has to remember and recognise what this preference is. It is
-not a selfish thing which has to be crushed out, if the love is the love
-that gives; freedom from attachments is not a meritorious condition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>in itself. The freedom needed is not from those who cling to you, but
-from those to whom you cling. The familiar phrase of the lover “I
-cannot live without you” must be words which cannot be uttered, to
-the occultist. If he has but one anchor, the great tides will sweep
-him away into nothingness. But the natural preference which must
-exist in every man for a few persons is one form of the lessons of Life.
-By contact with these other souls he has other channels by which to
-penetrate to the great mystery. For every soul touches it, even the
-darkest. Solitude is a great teacher, but society is even greater. It is
-so hard to find and take the highest part of those we love, that in the
-very difficulty of the search there is a serious education. We realise
-when making that effort, far more clearly what it is that creates the
-mystery in which we live, and makes us so ignorant. It is the swaying,
-vibrating, never-resting desires of the animal soul in man. The life of
-this part of man’s nature is so vigorous and strongly developed from the
-ages during which he has dwelt in it, that it is almost impossible to still
-it so as to obtain contact with the noble spirit. This constant and
-confusing life, this ceaseless occupation with the trifles of the hour, this
-readiness in surface emotion, this quickness to be pleased, amused or
-distressed, is what baffles our sight and dulls our inner senses. Till we
-can use these the mystery remains in its Sphinx-like silence.</p>
-
-<hr class='c029' />
-
-<p class='c030'>When the unit thinks only of itself, the whole, which is built of units
-perishes, and the unit itself is destroyed.</p>
-<hr class='c031' />
-<p class='c032'>So it is throughout nature on every plane of life. This, therefore, is
-the first lesson to be learnt.</p>
-<hr class='c031' />
-
-<p class='c032'>What the <em>true</em> occultist seeks, is not knowledge, or growth, or happiness,
-or power, for himself; but having become <em>conscious</em> that the harmony
-of which he forms part is broken on the outer plane, he seeks
-the means to resolve that discord into a higher harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This harmony is Theosophy—Divine or Universal Wisdom—the root
-whence have sprung all “religions,” that is all; “bonds which unite
-men together,” which is the true meaning of the word religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore, Theosophy is not <em>a</em> “religion,” but religion itself, the very
-“binding of men together” in one Universal Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THE FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS OF BUDDHISM.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>When a man immersed in the darkness of modern civilization
-awakens, however slightly, to the hollowness of his every-day
-life, he becomes sensible of a feeling of despair, for he is
-mentally brought face to face with what appears to him to be a
-meaningless yet cruel destiny. Now to any one so circumstanced, no
-truer source of consolation and encouragement can be offered than that
-which is to be found in a proper consideration of the “Four Noble
-Truths” of Buddhism. But to give this proper consideration to the
-Truths, or indeed to promote even a preliminary enquiry into their
-nature is by no means an easy task, because the fundamental ideas
-which they embody have scarcely any vitality in the present generation;
-nay more, they involve for the most part a complete inversion of
-maxims commonly accepted as axiomatic in current thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is, however, in the hopes of doing something towards the elucidation
-of the matter, that the present exposition is attempted.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first Noble Truth relates to human suffering. It proclaims that
-the conscious, separated, life of individual existence necessarily implies
-pain, sorrow and misery; that so long as a man feels that he is possessed
-of an <em>isolated self</em>, or so long as he regards himself and his fellow men
-as <em>detached personalities</em>, having antagonistic or even independent interests,
-so long must he suffer and be subject to trouble, grief and disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This first Noble Truth gives utterance to one aspect of an inexorable
-law of universal application, a law from whose operations no man can,
-or has, or ever will escape, until he has learnt and in the fullest sense
-realized the four Noble Truths.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first Truth may also be thus expressed: individual existence necessitates
-and involves change of state, whether manifested as birth
-growth, decay or death, and all changes of state are accompanied by
-pain in one form or another on some plane of being; while those who
-seem in their own eyes to have escaped from pain, or those who imagine
-that others escape from it, are alike deluded, for all men are overtaken by
-it soon or late.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The second Noble Truth deals with the cause of pain, and partially
-explains its meaning. According to this Truth, it is the desire or thirst
-for the continuance of individual life, with its various sensations and experiences,
-that constitutes the true basis of all suffering, whatever the
-outward form it may assume, and to whatever plane of consciousness
-it may belong. This thirst for life, called in the Sanscrit language
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>Tanha, gives rise in the mind of man to a delusive belief in the
-<em>permanence</em> and <em>reality</em> of that separate personality, which, according to
-Buddhism, is no more than an ephemeral mode of individual existence;
-it further leads him to suppose that the numerous mental states which
-in their aggregate make up the personality, are, in themselves <em>real</em>; and
-hence grows that rooted belief in the absolute reality of the manifold
-objects of sense, and that longing for their possession, that insatiable
-longing for the enhancement and for the multiplication of the experiences
-associated with these objects.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The second Truth, like the first, presents an aspect of the universal
-law already referred to.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This law, the Sanscrit name for which is Karma, is the governing and
-controlling power, ordering all individual existence, and by virtue of
-which Tanha operates.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The third Noble Truth announces the fact that, as the individual man
-grows strong in spiritual knowledge and charity, so Tanha is gradually
-dissolved, and there is for him a consequent cessation of sorrow and of
-pain. The individuality becoming proportionately freed from the
-bondage of Karma, Tanha is indeed a quite necessary adjunct of
-man’s incipient growth, for it represents the <em>creative</em> power which forces
-the individuality through the earlier stages of its development, yet,
-while performing this most useful function, being in fact indispensable
-to the lower nature of man, Tanha, at the same time, forges those
-Karmic fetters from which the spiritual self struggles desperately to
-get free.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As the man’s spiritual nature is evolved, the unconscious creative
-energy, in form of Tanha, is gradually replaced by the newly developed
-powers of the higher self, the <em>will</em> becomes more and more completely
-associated with the spirit, while the man himself, endowed with true
-Faith, true Hope, and true Love, becomes a conscious co-worker with
-the Universal or Macrocosmic Will, the “Great Builder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The fourth Noble Truth assures us that there is a way by which all
-men may, if they only choose, rapidly accomplish this displacement of
-Tanha by true Love; this way is called the Noble Eight-fold Path leading
-to enlightenment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus:—1. Right fundamental Belief, <i>i.e.</i>, the right basis mentally
-and spiritually upon which to establish true knowledge. 2. Right Intention,
-<i>i.e.</i>, goodwill towards all that lives, singleness of purpose, correctness
-and purity of motive. 3. Right Speech, <i>i.e.</i>, the use of becoming
-language, kindly temperate, fair and profitable; patient yet vigorous;
-thoughtful, courageous, honest and discriminating. 4. Right Behaviour
-<i>i.e.</i>, active philanthropy. 5. Right means of Livelihood, <i>i.e.</i>, honest and
-useful employment of one’s time, paying adequate attention to one’s
-own material needs and helping others to do the same, yet without care
-for the morrow. 6. Right Endeavour, <i>i.e.</i>, putting one’s heart in one’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>work. 7. Right Loneliness, <i>i.e.</i>, self-contained and harmonious <a id='corr51.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='within'>within.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_51.1'><ins class='correction' title='within'>within.</ins></a></span>
-8. Right Meditation. This is the Sanskrit <em>Yoga</em> and signifies union
-with the divine by practising the contemplation of the reality of being.
-It is the result of a sustained effort to concentrate the mind upon the
-universal, eternal and immutable law of life; the first stage of such
-concentration takes the form of an impartial review or survey of all one’s
-thoughts, actions, desires, sensations and experiences from a thoroughly
-impersonal standpoint. This Eightfold Path has four stages representing
-different degrees of advancement towards Buddhahood or the state of
-perfect enlightenment. The true Buddha or Tathâgata is one who
-has attained final emancipation from individual existence, whose
-purified spirit is freed from the last vestige of Tanha, one upon whom
-Karma has no more hold, for he has reached Para Nirvana, the <em>Eternal</em>,
-the Absolute Being.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>St. George Lane-Fox.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c031' />
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>THE LAST OF A GOOD LAMA.—Whatever may be said against godless Buddhism,
-its influence, wherever it penetrates, is most beneficent. One finds the Spirit of
-“Lord Buddha ... most pitiful, the Teacher of Nirvâna and the Law,” ennobling
-even the least philosophical of the dissenting sects of his religion—the Lamäism of the
-nomadic Kalmucks. The Caspian Steppes witnessed, only a few months ago, the
-solemn cremation and burial of a Mongolian saint, whose ashes were watered by as
-many Christian as Lamaic tears. The high priest to the Russian Calmucks of the
-Volga died December 26th, 1886, near Vétlyanka, once the seat of the most terrible
-epidemics. The Ghelungs had chosen the day of ceremony in accordance with their
-sacred books; the hour was fixed astrologically, and at noon on January 4th, 1887, the
-imposing ceremony took place. More than 80,000 people assembling from all the
-neighbouring Cossack <em>stanitzas</em> and Calmuck <em>ooloosses</em>, formed a procession surrounding
-the pillar of cremation. The corpse having been fixed in an iron arm-chair, used on
-such ceremonies, was introduced into the hollow pillar, the flames being fed with
-supplies of fresh butter. During the whole burning, the crowd never ceased weeping
-and lamenting, the Russians being most violent in their expressions of sorrow, and
-with reason. For long years the defunct Lama had been a kind father to all the poor
-in the country, whether Christian or Lamaist. Whole villages of proletarians had been
-fed, clothed, and their poll-taxes paid out of his own private income. His property in
-pasture lands, cattle, and tithes was very large, yet the Lama was ever in want of money.
-With his death, the poor wretches, who could hardly keep soul in their bodies, have no
-prospect but starvation. Thus the tears of the Christians were as abundant, if not
-quite as unselfish, as those of the poor Pagans. Only the year before, the good Lama
-received 4,000 roubles from a Calmuck <em>oolooss</em> (camp) and gave the whole to rebuild
-a burned down Russian village, and thus saved hundreds from death by hunger. He
-was never known during his long life to refuse any man, woman, or child, in need,
-whether Pagan or Christian, depriving himself of every comfort to help his poorer
-fellow-creatures. Thus died the last of the Lamas of the priestly hierarchy sent to the
-Astrakhan Calmucks from beyond the “Snowy Range” some sixty years ago. A
-shameful story is told of how a travelling Christian pilgrim imposed on the good Lama.
-The Lama had entrusted him with 30,000 roubles to be placed in the neighbouring
-town; but the Christian pilgrim disappeared, and the money with him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THE BIRTH OF LIGHT.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>Translated from Eliphas Levis <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie.”</span></i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>The “Lucifer” of the Kabalists is not a proscribed and fallen
-angel, but the spirit which illuminates and regenerates by fire;
-he is to the angels of peace what the comet is to the peaceful
-constellations of spring-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The fixed star is beautiful, radiant and calm; she drinks in the
-aromas of Heaven, and looks lovingly on her sisters; clad in her dazzling
-garments, and her brow adorned with diamonds, she smiles as she sings
-her morning and her evening hymn; she enjoys an eternal repose which
-nothing can disturb, and solemnly she treads the path assigned to her
-among the sentinels of light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the wandering comet, all bloodstained, and her tresses unloosed,
-rushes on from the depths of the sky; she dashes across the track of the
-peaceful spheres like a chariot of war breaking the ranks of a procession
-of vestals; she dares to breast the burning sword of the guardians of
-the sun, and, like a lost spouse who seeks the partner visioned in her
-lonely night watches, she forces her way even into the tabernacle of the
-King of Day.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then she rushes out, breathing forth the fires which consume herself
-and leaving in her train one long conflagration; the stars pale before
-her approach, the herded constellations, which browse upon the starry
-flowers in the vast meadows of the sky, seem to flee from her terrible
-breath. The grand council of the stars is called, and universal consternation
-reigns. At last the fairest of the fixed stars is charged to
-speak in the name of the heavenly concourse, and to propose a truce
-with the errant messenger.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My sister,” she says, “why troublest thou the harmony of these
-spheres? What harm have we done thee, and why, instead of wandering
-at hazard, dost thou not, like us, take up thy settled rank in the Court
-of the Sun? Why dost thou not join with us in chanting the evening
-hymn, attired, like us, in a robe of white clasped above the breast by
-one pure diamond? Why dost thou allow thy tresses, dripping with the
-sweat of fire, to float across the vapours of the night? If thou wouldst
-but take thy due place among the daughters of Heaven, how far more
-lovely thy mien! Thy face no more would be burnt up by the fatigue
-of thy unheard-of journeys; thy eyes would shine forth clear, and
-thy features smile with the tints of lily and of rose, like those of thy
-happy sisters; all the stars would recognise in thee a friend, and far
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>from fearing thy transit, they would rejoice at thy approach. For
-thou wouldst be united to us by the indissoluble ties of universal
-harmony, and thy peaceable existence would be but one voice the more
-in the anthem of Infinite Love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the comet replies:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Deem not, my sister, that I could stray at chance and disturb the
-harmony of the spheres. God has traced for me my path, as thine for
-thee, and if my course appears to thee uncertain and erratic, it is
-because thy rays cannot reach so far as to embrace the outlines of the
-great ellipse which has been given me for my career. My burning
-tresses are the banner of God; I am the messenger of the Suns, and
-I bathe me in their fires that I may distribute them on my path to those
-young worlds which have not yet sufficient heat, and to the declining
-stars that shiver in their solitude. If I court fatigue in my long
-journeyings, if my beauty is less mild than thine, if my attire less
-virginal, I am no less than thee a worthy daughter of the sky. Leave
-in my hands the awful secret of my destiny, leave to me the horror
-which encompasses me, and slander me not if thou canst not understand
-me. None the less, shall I fulfil my appointed task. Happy the stars
-that take their rest and shine like young queens in the stately concourse
-of the Universe; for me, I am cast out, a wanderer, and claim the Infinite
-as my only fatherland. They accuse me of setting on fire the planets
-which I warm, and of terrifying the stars which I illume. I am reproached
-with disturbing the harmony of the worlds, because I do not
-revolve round their own fixed points, and because I bind them one to
-the other, setting my face alone toward the only centre of all the Suns.
-So rest assured, thou fairest star, I will not deprive thee of one ray of
-thy so peaceful light; the rather, I will squander on thee my warmth
-and my own life. Who knows, but I may vanish from the sky when I
-have consumed myself? My lot will still have been a noble one! For
-know that in the Temple of God the fires that burn are not all one. Ye
-are the light of the golden torches, but I, the flame of sacrifice. Let
-each accomplish her own destiny!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Her words scarce uttered, the comet shakes her tresses loose, covers
-herself with her burning shield, and plunges once more into infinite
-space, where she appears to vanish for evermore.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is thus that Lucifer appears and disappears in the allegories of the Bible.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One day, so says the book of Job, the sons of God had assembled in
-the presence of their Lord, and among them came Lucifer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To him the Lord said: “Whence comest thou?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And he replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have journeyed round the world and travelled throughout it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is how a Gnostic gospel, re-discovered in the East by a learned
-traveller, explains, in treating of the symbolical Lucifer, the genesis of
-Light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>“Truth which is conscious of itself is living Thought. Truth is the
-Thought which is contained within itself; and formulated Thought is
-Speech. When the Eternal Thought sought for a <em>form</em> it said: ‘Let
-there be Light.’ Therefore this Thought that speaks is the <em>Word</em>, and
-this Word says: ‘Let there be Light, because the word itself is the light
-of the <em>spirit</em>.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The uncreated light, which is the divine Word, sends forth its rays
-because it wishes to be manifest, and when it says, “Let there be light,”
-it commands the eyes to open; it creates the <em>Intelligences</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And, when God said: “Let there be light,” Intelligence was made
-and light appeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then, the Intelligence which God had breathed forth, like a planet
-detached from the Sun, took the form of a splendid Angel and the
-heavens saluted him with the name of Lucifer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Intelligence awoke and it fathomed its own depths as it heard this
-apostrophe of the divine Word, “Let there be Light.” It felt itself to
-be free, for God had commanded it so to be, and it answered, raising its
-head and spreading its wings, “I will not be Slavery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Wilt thou be then Sorrow?” said the uncreated voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I will be Liberty,” answered the Light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Pride will seduce thee,” replied the supreme voice, “and thou wilt
-give birth to Death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I must needs combat with Death to conquer Life,” said once again
-the light created.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>God then unloosed from his bosom the thread of splendour which held
-back the superb spirit, and as he watched him dive into the night, cutting
-in it a path of glory, he loved the child of his thought, and smiling with
-a smile ineffable, he murmured to himself: “How fair a thing was
-this Light!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And Sorrow was the condition imposed upon the free being. If the
-chief of the angels had not dared confront the depths of night, the
-travail of God had not been complete, and the created light could not
-have separated itself from the light unrevealed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Perhaps Lucifer, in plunging into the night, drew with him a shower
-of Stars and Suns <em>by the attraction of his glory</em>? * * * * * * *</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>A TRUE THEOSOPHIST.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>A very large majority of people have no idea whatever about
-Theosophy, and regard Theosophists as more or less crazy
-members of a new sect. They naturally deny any superiority
-to one new sect among so many, and aver that, as a considerable number
-of sects have been “tried in the balances and found wanting,” this one
-is no better than its predecessors. Theosophists—the real ones—can
-only reply that they are unsectarian and superior to none. They believe
-that they have found a good road to the discovery of truth, and wish to
-share their discovery—if it can be so called—with others.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The very assumption of superiority would be a contradiction in terms
-to the name itself. But, while giving this emphatic denial with reference
-to the name “Theosophist,” no attempt is made to assert that all
-members of the Theosophical Society are also Theosophists. True
-indeed, that when they enter that society, they subscribe to rules and
-declare their objects to be such that, were they to carry them out
-thoroughly, no other name than Theosophists would be applicable.
-Nor does the name imply that, in the studies which Theosophists make
-their own, it is necessary that the sole and best place should be given to
-studies of Oriental philosophy. That again would be a contradiction,
-for it has most emphatically been stated that “there are those who are
-ignorant of the Eastern wisdom” who are nearer to divine wisdom, than
-some who have devoted their entire lives to Oriental studies. It is
-again the old story that, “the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Still while holding to the assertion that the study of Oriental wisdom
-is only one road out of many, it is necessary to remember the analogy
-which philology may here present to “religion.” Just as philology traces
-all languages to a common root—the Sanskrit or rather pre-Sanskrit—so
-the religions of the world can also be traced to a common root and
-birth place, identical with the cradle and birth place of the human
-race, which ethnology locates on the high plateaux of Central <a id='corr55.31'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Asia'>Asia.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_55.31'><ins class='correction' title='Asia'>Asia.</ins></a></span>
-Therefore it is, that the study of Oriental philosophy has something to
-be urged in its especial favour, because that philosophy has its home
-nearer to the source of the wisdom religion than any other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Still more must it be borne in mind, that members of the Theosophical
-Society are not necessarily Theosophists, for a very considerable number
-are attracted merely by the name and through curiosity. They either
-do not understand what they profess, or if they do, they do not practise
-it. But this is no attempt to run counter to the proverb, that the tree
-is known by its fruit, although there is some amount of injustice in <a id='corr55.40'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='it'>it.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_55.40'><ins class='correction' title='it'>it.</ins></a></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>All that is asserted is that, if this argument is used against a Society
-with aims and aspirations such as the Theosophical Society has, it can
-be used with even more terrible effect against <em>all</em> religions whether
-Christian, Mohammedan, Buddhist, etc. The real reason why this has
-come to pass, lies in a few words—the cultivation of the individual;
-and, as a later result of this, in anthropomorphism. It is only those
-individuals who can “grasp their whole individuality firmly,” and by
-the force of their “awakened spiritual will, reach out to the life beyond
-individuality”—it is only they, who can shake themselves loose from the
-curse which has gradually spread over the whole world. It is in consequence
-of this growth of individualism that the “blessings of civilization”
-have become the curse of mankind, and every religion, originally
-altruistic, has become inverted, and the reign of anti-Christ and hypocrisy
-has superseded that of Christ and truth. No sweeping accusation is
-made against the whole world in this statement. A dim and misty veil
-has been thrown over the face of Truth, and it is as though we saw
-everything outside the principal focus of a lens, and consequently, under
-full faith that we see the real image, perceive the inverted image. In
-the time of Elizabeth, for instance, men learnt to cultivate the individual
-within the circle of the race, and to attempt to unite in patriotism for
-the benefit of that race or empire. But it is a vain attempt, and the
-dissociating effects of this culture will soon be evident in the impossibility
-of the attempt. Originally the attempt was to cultivate the individual,
-but only with a view to the increase of that race and with that object as
-paramount. That is to say, that an English soldier would cultivate
-himself to the uttermost in order that the world should see what English
-soldiers were. But the time came when the egoistic element appeared
-in overwhelming force, and the cultivation was devoted to the sole aim
-of making this or that man stronger than any man of his own race, or
-any other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And now another aim has been substituted for the paramount one of
-patriotism. Mammon has superseded the latter, and the strength of the
-individual is cultivated and devoted to withstanding the pressure of life,
-and to getting a start in the great race to worship at the feet of the
-demon of cupidity. But again, while devoting their own lives and
-worse—the lives of their neighbours—to this worship, they yet professed
-to be Christians or members of other religions. They tried to worship
-two gods—Mammon on six days of the week and the other divinity on
-Sunday, or any day set apart for his service. But still, in most cases,
-it was not the divine instinct of search for the divine in their hearts, but
-a fear of wrath to come. It really was a pharisaical idea of “hedging,”
-to use a term of racing slang, with reference to the race of life. The end
-of it was that Mammon received the real worship of their hearts, and the
-other god only lip-service. Thus in the end hypocrisy became almost as
-paramount as Mammon. Time still passed on, and man almost lost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>sight of any idea of an offended and avenging deity, and any germ of
-spirituality was very nearly dead from want of cultivation. The
-material needs held him in complete sway, and the spread of physical
-science helped him mightily. Losing sight of all the subtler side of
-nature, he immersed himself in gross matter, and utilitarianism was the
-watchword and rallying cry. In all this change the age of mechanical
-inventions took no small part. Man can hardly be blamed as an individual
-nor as a whole. It is part of the great law of evolution, and
-the working out of the law of the survival of the fittest.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It may be asked what this has to do with the subject of the article;
-but in justification it is averred that a picture is most clearly seen by its
-contrast.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Perhaps the best definition of a Theosophist, is that given by the
-Alchemist, Thomas Vaughan:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A Theosophist is one who gives you a theory of the works of God,
-which has not a revelation, but an inspiration of his own for basis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A man once abandoning the old pathway of routine and entering on
-the solitary pathway of independent thought—Godward—he is a
-Theosophist, an original thinker, a seeker after the Eternal Truth, with
-an inspiration of his own to solve the Eternal problems.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such a one as this is the subject of the article. Count Tolstoi, the
-Russian novelist, is a true Theosophist, and his words and actions in
-contradiction and illustration of the foregoing, are taken from an interview
-with him by Mr. George Kennan (<cite>Century</cite>, June 1887). The
-interview first describes the surroundings amidst which Count
-Tolstoi lives, and gives also a description of the Count’s appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>Apparently the first thing which impressed Mr. Kennan was the sight
-of “a wealthy Russian noble, and the greatest of living novelists, shaking
-hands upon terms of perfect equality with a poor, ragged, and not over
-clean droshky driver,” who had been engaged in the streets.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then follows a description of the rooms, the furniture &amp;c., which was
-observed during the time that Mr. Kennan’s host had retired—not,
-indeed, to change his coat, but to put one on after a morning’s labour in
-the fields. Mr. Kennan, it seems, had journeyed through Siberia, and
-had there promised several of the exiles to visit Count Tolstoi on his
-return, and to tell him of their condition. In the course of conversation
-on these matters, Mr. Kennan asked Count Tolstoi whether he did not
-think that resistance to such oppression as the exiles had experienced
-was justifiable?</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That depends,” he replied, “upon what you mean by resistance; if you mean
-persuasion, argument, protest, I answer yes; if you mean violence—no. I do not
-believe that violent resistance to evil is ever justifiable under any circumstances.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He then set forth clearly, eloquently, and with more feeling than he had yet shown,
-the views with regard to man’s duty as a member of society which are contained in his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>book entitled “My Religion,” and which are further explained and illustrated in a
-number of his recently published tracts for the people. He laid particular stress upon
-the doctrine of non-resistance to evil, which, he said, is in accordance with both the
-teachings of Christ and the results of human experience. He declared that violence,
-as a means of redressing wrongs, is not only futile, but an aggravation of the original
-evil, since it is the nature of violence to multiply and reproduce itself in all directions.
-“The Revolutionists,” he said, “whom you have seen in Siberia, undertook to resist
-evil by violence, and what has been the result? Bitterness, and misery, and hatred,
-and bloodshed! The evils against which they took up arms still exist, and to them
-has been added a mass of previously non-existent human suffering. It is not in that
-way that the kingdom of God is to be realised on earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For a long time I did not suggest any difficulties or raise any objections.... It
-is one thing to ask a man in a general way whether he would use violence to resist
-evil, and quite another thing to ask him specifically whether he would knock down a
-burglar who was about to cut the throat of his mother. Many men would say <em>yes</em> to
-the first question who would hesitate at the second. Count Tolstoi, however, was
-consistent. I related to him many cases of cruelty, brutality, and oppression which
-had come to my knowledge in Siberia, and at the end of every recital I said to him,
-“Count Tolstoi, if you had been there and had witnessed that transaction, would you
-not have interfered with violence?” He invariably answered “No.” I asked him the
-direct question whether he would kill a highwayman who was about to murder an
-innocent traveller, provided there were no other way to save the traveller’s life. He
-replied, “If I should see a bear about to kill a peasant in the forest, I would sink an
-axe in the bear’s head; but I would not kill a man who was about to do the same
-thing.” There finally came into my mind a case which, although really not worse than
-many that I had already presented to him, would, I thought, appeal with peculiar force
-to a brave, sensitive, chivalrous man.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This was a case of most brutal treatment of a young girl who was
-exiled to Siberia. At a certain town on her journey the governor
-ordered that she was to put on the clothing of an ordinary convict.
-This she declined to do on the ground that administrative exiles had the
-right to wear their own clothing. Furthermore the clothing supplied to
-convicts is not always new, and it is quite possible that it is of the
-filthiest description and full of vermin. She argued that she would have
-been compelled to change at Moscow had it been necessary, and again
-declined. The local governor persisted and ordered that force should be
-used to effect the change. Accordingly, in the presence of nine or ten
-men, the change of clothing was effected—she was stripped naked,
-forcibly reclothed, and left bleeding and exhausted after ineffectual
-resistance.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now,” I said, “suppose all this had occurred in your presence; suppose that this
-bleeding, defenceless, half-naked girl had appealed to you for protection, and had
-thrown herself into your arms; suppose that it had been your daughter, would you
-still have refused to interfere by an act of violence?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was silent. Finally, ignoring my direct question as to what he personally would
-have done in such a case, Count Tolstoi said, “Even under such circumstances violence
-would not be justifiable. Let us analyse that situation carefully. I will grant, for the
-sake of argument, that the local governor who ordered the act of violence was an
-ignorant man, a cruel man, a brutal man—what you will; but he probably had an idea
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>that he was doing his duty; he probably believed that he was enforcing a law of the
-Government to which he owed obedience and service. You suddenly appear and set
-yourself up as a judge in the case; you assume that he is not doing his duty—that he
-is committing an act of unjustifiable violence—and then, with strange inconsistency,
-you proceed to aggravate and complicate the evil by yourself committing another act
-of unjustifiable violence. One wrong added to another wrong does not make a right;
-it merely extends the area of wrong. Furthermore, your resistance, in order to be
-effective—in order to accomplish anything—must be directed against the soldiers who
-are committing the assault. But those soldiers are not free agents; they are subject to
-military discipline and are acting under orders which they dare not disobey. To
-prevent the execution of the orders you must kill or maim two or three of the soldiers—that
-is, kill or wound the only parties to the transaction who are certainly innocent,
-who are manifestly acting without malice and without evil intention. Is that just? Is
-it rational? But go a step further: suppose that you do kill or wound two or three of
-the soldiers; you may or may not thus succeed in preventing the completion of the
-act against which your violence is a protest; but one thing you certainly will do, and
-that is, extend the area of enmity, injustice, and misery. Every one of the soldiers
-whom you kill or maim has a family, and upon every such family you bring grief and
-suffering which would not have come to it but for your act. In the hearts of perhaps
-a score of people you rouse the anti-Christian and anti-social emotions of hatred and
-revenge, and thus sow broadcast the seeds of further violence and strife. At the time
-when you interposed there was only one centre of evil and suffering. By your violent
-interference you have created half-a-dozen such centres. It does not seem to me, Mr.
-Kennan, that that is the way to bring about the reign of peace and good-will on earth.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Kennan had a manuscript written by one of those prisoners who
-took part in the desperate “hunger-strike” of 1884, with which he had
-been entrusted to hand on to Count Tolstoi. He read two or three
-pages of it, and then, alluding to the Nihilists, condemned their methods
-most heartily. Mr. Kennan appeared rather to sympathise with their
-motives. Count Tolstoi appears only to do so partially, and, while he
-earnestly desires a revolution, declines to have anything to do with one
-brought about by violence. Mr. Kennan objected that violence might
-close the mouth of the peaceable revolutionist and prevent his teaching
-and thoughts from ever becoming public.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But do you not see,” replied the Count, “that if you claim and exercise the right
-to resist by an act of violence what you regard as evil, every other man will insist upon
-his right to resist in the same way what he regards as evil, and the world will continue
-to be filled with violence? It is your duty to show that there is a better way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But,” I objected, “you cannot show anything if somebody smites you on the
-mouth every time you open it to speak the truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You can at least refrain from striking back,” replied the Count; “you can show
-by your peaceable behaviour that you are not governed by the barbarous law of
-retaliation, and your adversary will not continue to strike a man who neither resists nor
-tries to defend himself. It is by those who have suffered, not by those who have
-inflicted suffering, that the world has been advanced.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I said it seemed to me that the advancement of the world had been promoted not a
-little by the protests—and often the violent and bloody protests—of its inhabitants
-against wrong and outrage, and that all history goes to show that a people which
-tamely submits to oppression never acquires either liberty or happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The whole history of the world,” replied the Count, “is a history of violence, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>you can of course cite violence in support of violence; but do you not see that there is
-in human society an endless variety of opinions as to what constitutes wrong and
-oppression, and that if you once concede the right of any man to resort to violence to
-resist what he regards as wrong, he being the judge, you authorise every other man
-to enforce his opinions in the same way, and you have a universal reign of violence?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Count Tolstoi considers it <a id='corr60.6'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='necssary'>necessary</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_60.6'><ins class='correction' title='necssary'>necessary</ins></a></span> to labour for and help the poor by
-whom he is surrounded; but he is keenly alive to the danger of pauperising
-them. In doing this he runs counter to the ideas of organised society
-and the existing traits of human character. He declines to regard these
-as sacred and immutable, and is doing what he can to change them.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Count Tolstoi then related with great fulness of detail the history of his change of
-attitude toward the teaching of Christ, and the steps by which he was brought to see
-that that teaching, rightly understood, furnishes a reasonable solution of some of the
-darkest problems of human life. He based upon it not only his opposition to resistance
-as a means of overcoming evil, but his hostility to courts of justice, established churches,
-class distinctions, private property, and all civil and ecclesiastical organisation in
-existing forms. His frequent references to the New Testament, and his insistence on
-the precepts of Christ as furnishing the only rule for the right government of human
-conduct, might lead one to regard Count Tolstoi as a devout and orthodox Christian,
-but, judged by a doctrinal standard, he is very far from being so. He rejects the whole
-doctrinal framework of the Christian scheme of redemption, including original sin,
-atonement, the triune personality of God, and the divinity of Christ, and has very little
-faith in the immortality of the soul. His religion is a religion of this world, and it is
-based almost wholly upon terrestrial considerations. If he refers frequently to the
-teachings of Christ, and accepts Christ’s precepts as the rules which should govern
-human conduct, it is not because he believes that Christ was God, but because he
-regards those precepts as a formal embodiment of the highest and noblest philosophy
-of life, and as a revelation, in a certain sense, of the Divine will and character. He
-insists, however, that Christ’s precepts shall be understood—and that they were intended
-to be understood—literally and in their most obvious sense. He will not
-recognise nor tolerate any softening or modification of a hard commandment by subtle
-and plausible interpretation. If Christ said, ‘Resist not evil,’ he meant resist not
-evil. He did not mean resist not evil if you can help it, nor resist not evil unless it is
-unbearable; he meant resist not at all. How unflinchingly Count Tolstoi faces the
-logical results of his system of belief I have tried to show.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Count Tolstoi’s views as to his own action and practice have been
-recently published in an authorised interview which appeared in a
-Russian journal. He said:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“People say to me, ‘Well, Lef Nikolaivitch, as far as preaching goes, you preach;
-but how about your practice?’ The question is a perfectly natural one; it is always
-put to me, and it always shuts my mouth. ‘You preach,’ it is said, ‘but how do you
-live?’ I can only reply that I do not preach—passionately as I desire to do so. I
-might preach through my actions, but my actions are bad. That which I say is not
-preaching; it is only an attempt to find out the meaning and the significance of life.
-People often say to me, ‘If you think that there is no reasonable life outside the
-teachings of Christ, and if you love a reasonable life, why do you not fulfill the
-Christian precepts?’ I am guilty and blameworthy and contemptible because I do
-not fulfill them; but at the same time I say—not in justification, but in explanation,
-of my inconsistency—Compare my previous life with the life I am now living, and
-you will see that I am trying to fulfill. I have not, it is true, fulfilled one eighty-thousandth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>part, and I am to blame for it; but it is not because I do not wish to fulfill
-all, but because I am unable. Teach me how to extricate myself from the meshes of
-temptation in which I am entangled—help me—and I will fulfill all. I wish and hope
-to do it even without help. Condemn me if you choose—I do that myself—but condemn
-me, and not the path which I am following, and which I point out to those who ask me
-where, in my opinion, the path is. If I know the road home, and if I go along it
-drunk, and staggering from side to side, does that prove that the road is not the right
-one? If it is not the right one, show me another. If I stagger and wander, come to
-my help, and support and guide me in the right path. Do not yourselves confuse and
-mislead me, and then rejoice over it and cry, ‘Look at him! He says he is going
-home, and he is floundering into the swamp!’ You are not evil spirits from the
-swamp; you are also human beings, and you also are going home. You know that I
-am alone—you know that I cannot wish or intend to go into the swamp—then help
-me! My heart is breaking with despair because we have all lost the road; and while
-I struggle with all my strength to find it and keep in it, you, instead of pitying me
-when I go astray, cry triumphantly, ‘See! He is in the swamp with us!’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>In this report of Count Tolstoi, it is impossible not to recognise the
-generous, just, and sympathetic man—the true Theosophist. He may be
-mistaken, but he is endeavouring to carry out the precepts of Christ.
-Not indeed, doctrinal Christianity, but to put in practice the actual
-precepts of the Master he follows. He does this as far as he can; and
-even with this little (as he says) he is accused of quixotism, and is
-obliged to stay his hand in order to keep up the example he affords.
-Why is this. For fear of interested relatives and the lunatic asylum.
-Here we have a man endeavouring to carry out “under an inspiration
-of his own,” the precepts laid down by the last of the world’s great teachers.
-What is the result of his endeavours? That he is in danger of the same
-fate that the author of “Modern Christianity a civilized Heathenism,”
-threatened Christ with, were he to return in the XIXth century—the
-lunatic asylum. Nothing is so intolerable to modern minds as an
-example of what they (unconsciously to themselves) recognise as that
-which they ought to follow, but do not. Therefore it has to be put out
-of sight. Since madness has been defined as a mental state which is in
-contradiction to the average mental state, it is evident that all religious
-reformers ought to be put away in a lunatic asylum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is quite possible to recognise what an extraordinary effect Count
-Tolstoi’s principle of non-resistance to evil would have. Still it is a
-strictly Christian one. Christ went further, and ordained that the other
-cheek should be offered to the man who smites. It might be argued that
-this would result in a tacit acquiescence in evil. But if it be so, the whole
-of the Count’s life is a contradiction to this, and a standing protest against
-the existence of those who create, or rather perpetuate, this evil. Every
-reform, this included, is a protest against doing at Rome what Romans
-do, or the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>laisser aller</i></span>, which is the indolent curse of human progress.
-Count Tolstoi desires to see the reign of Christ on Earth, and in this
-accords well with the Theosophists who desire “Universal Brotherhood.”
-But neither of these can be effected save by the cultivation of the inner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>and spiritual man, so that it shall shine through and form the guide to
-the outer and physical man. But unfortunately the welfare of the latter
-is taken as the standard at present and humanity, without the spiritual
-man as a guide, is left to flounder in the ditch into which it has
-fallen.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Those who desire to follow Count Tolstoi, or to become real working
-Theosophists, may find something to think about in comparing his words
-with his actions. He endeavours to “go about doing good,” and to
-help his fellow men on the hard path of life. When it is followed it will
-be found that to run counter to the spirit of the age, and instead of the
-indolent <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>laisser aller</i></span>, to work not for self, but for humanity at large, is
-the hardest task ever set to men. Mankind as a rule does not want an
-example or to be worked for; both are rude awakenings from the lotus-eating
-state they desire to be left in. “Let us alone,” is their cry, and
-they resist with violence any attempt to rouse them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But those who desire a greater unity than that which any race or
-nation can afford—the unity of the human race—the Universal Brotherhood—cannot
-leave them alone. There is a power which impels Count
-Tolstoi to protest against the reign of violence, and he truly replies,
-that the readiest means of continuing this reign is to meet violence by
-violence. Therefore he, by his writings, and his words and life, endeavours
-to place before men the noblest philosophy of life that he recognises,
-in answer to the appeal which is silently uttered from the hearts
-of many men and women in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is a cry of despair at the ignorance which surrounds them and to
-which the Theosophical Society, <em>according to its avowed aims</em>, is an
-answer. It is best described in the words of Tennyson—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>An infant crying in the night,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with no language but a cry.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>A. I. R.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>A GHOST’S REVENGE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>Early in the year 187—, the singular and distressing attacks of
-mental depression from which Sir Selwyn Fox had long been
-a sufferer, increased in frequency.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His son Gaston (twenty-four years of age, of medicine by calling and
-letters by choice), whose devotion to his father was intense, urged him
-to go to London and procure that skilled medical advice which was
-not to be had in the neighbourhood of the baronet’s country seat, in
-Northumberland. But Sir Selwyn was inflexible in his determination
-to see no doctor. Affectionate as his manner always was with Gaston,
-he even showed impatience when pressed on this point; and Gaston,
-forced to abandon it, fell back on his own skill in an endeavour to assign
-some tangible cause for his father’s malady. But in this he was hopelessly
-baffled.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nothing in Sir Selwyn’s present state, no circumstance of his past
-history which was known to Gaston (who had rarely been apart from
-him since boyhood), excused or explained in any degree the melancholy
-which clouded his existence. His great fortune placed him beyond
-suspicion or suggestion of pecuniary embarrassment. All the surroundings
-of his home were well calculated to administer to the refined
-pleasures of a man widely known as an amateur of books and art.
-No entanglement of the affections could be supposed seriously to trouble
-the peace of one who had passed his meridian, and who, moreover,
-cherished still the memory of the wife he had long lost. He had friendships
-which, while they attested his worth, would have been sufficient in
-themselves to endear most men to life. Yet for months he had worn
-the air of a man to whom life was fast becoming an unendurable
-burden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His own skill and experience failing to open to Gaston any method
-of coping with a disease whose hidden source and origin he could not
-divine, he was on the point of writing to a leading London physician
-of his acquaintance, when a circumstance occurred which saved him from
-the necessity of this step.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sir Selwyn was alone in his room one evening when Gaston, who
-was reading in a room immediately beneath, heard sounds overhead
-which at once sent him upstairs to learn the cause. He had fancied
-that his father was speaking in a tone of troubled remonstrance to some
-unwelcome visitor, though he felt persuaded that no one, unless a
-servant of the house, could be with him at that hour. Hastening to his
-father’s room, his footsteps were arrested on the threshold by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>spectacle which the half-opened door revealed to him. Sir Selwyn
-sat motionless and rigid in his chair; his face was colourless, and
-all the features stiff, while the eyes, dilated and staring, seemed, though
-they were fixed on space, to hold within their vision some object not
-perceptible to Gaston. This was the more remarkable that Gaston
-stood directly in his father’s line of sight, though it was certain that Sir
-Selwyn neither looked at him nor saw him. In a word, it was the gaze
-of a man who sees, or believes that he sees, an apparition.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston took a step forward; the sound fell on the baronet’s ear and
-broke the spell which held him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His first look was one of inexpressible shame, succeeded immediately
-by one of indescribable relief. If detection were painful, as it clearly
-was, it appeared as though the pain were almost lost in the necessity
-now forced upon him of disclosing the secret of his misery. Gaston was
-at his father’s side in a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What is it, father?” he cried. “What is it? You have seen something.
-Tell me what it is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sir Selwyn, in whose expression exhaustion and pain were mingled,
-fixed his eyes for a while on his son’s face before he replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“If I should tell you, Gaston, you would not believe it. I do not
-believe it myself. And yet I see it, and know that it is there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I shall believe whatever you tell me, father,” answered Gaston.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Gaston,” began the baronet, “you are a doctor, and have read,
-read widely in all branches of science. Tell me, do you believe that we
-who are in the body may see and know a spirit from the dead?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You believe, father, that you have seen such a spirit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The whole force of my reason cannot persuade me otherwise,”
-answered his father. “All the powers of my mind compel me to deny
-it, and yet the thing is there before my eyes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The baronet had by this time regained his usual calm of manner, and
-his voice was resolute and quiet.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Is it here now, father?” asked Gaston.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” answered Sir Selwyn.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Where, father? Point to me the place where it stands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It stands now at my elbow, side by side with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston started involuntarily, the baronet’s tone bespoke such absolute
-conviction. He moved a step, and placed himself immediately at his
-father’s elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you see it now, father?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, for you have taken its place. Yes! I see it again. It is on
-this side now, exactly opposite to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There was in all this so little of the tone and manner of the mere
-spectre-ridden visionary, that Gaston could not but be impressed, and
-his alarm for his father’s state increased proportionately.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He began to question him in the direct matter-of-fact style of a doctor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>with his patient, inquiring into the particular nature of the vision, how
-often and in what circumstances it presented itself, whether his father
-were able to connect it with any event of his life, or whether it seemed
-to be causeless, a mere fabric of the imagination.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His object in this was to bring his father to exert his reason upon the
-matter, that so, if possible, he might end by convincing himself that he
-was haunted merely by some spectre of the brain. He was, however,
-only partially successful, and for this reason, that his father, while denying—and
-with perfect honesty of convincement—the reality of his
-vision, remained nevertheless persuaded that his bodily eye beheld it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I cannot well remember,” went on Sir Selwyn, “how many years it
-is since this spectre first began to haunt me. In the beginning I
-thought little of it; my health was more robust then than it has been
-in late years, and leading a more active life at that time than I am able
-to do at present, I had greater strength, both of mind and body, to
-assist me in banishing it from my thoughts and presence. Indeed, I
-could then at any time rid myself of the vision by a mere exertion of
-will; but I can do so no longer. It torments me now as it pleases. I am
-powerless against it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Does the form resemble that of anyone whom you have ever
-known?” asked Gaston.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” replied Sir Selwyn, after a moment’s pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And the person whose spirit you believe this to be is now dead, father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Dead many years,” answered Sir Selwyn.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And what is there in the vision that troubles you so greatly, father?”
-asked his son.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Its presence is tormenting,” replied Sir Selwyn, “because I feel that
-there is evil in it; it is malignant, and seems continually to threaten me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Is it here still, father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, since we have been speaking it has vanished. I shall see it no
-more to-night; but it will return to-morrow, and in the end it will kill
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, father, no,” said Gaston affectionately, but gravely. “Let me
-entreat you not to give way. You see how this vision, whatever it may
-be, vanishes when you begin to reason upon it. The mere fact of our
-having discussed it together will enable you to combat it more resolutely.
-Do this, and the same power will revive by which you dispelled the
-vision when first it troubled you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Indeed, the closing words of Sir Selwyn’s confession, notwithstanding
-the quiet assurance with which they were spoken, had practically convinced
-his son that the case was one of hallucination. They continued
-talking on the subject until, at the baronet’s usual hour of retiring, they
-separated for the night, when Gaston was so far satisfied that his arguments
-appeared at last to have given his father a somewhat increased
-measure of self-confidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>At breakfast the next day, Sir Selwyn assured his son that he had
-slept well, and both in speech and look he was more cheerful than
-Gaston had seen him during a considerable period. It seemed, in short,
-as though the effect of their conversation the previous night had already
-begun to bear out the son’s prediction; nor, at the end of a week, did
-this good effect appear to have been in any degree dissipated. “I have
-not seen it once,” said Sir Selwyn, in answer to a question from Gaston.
-Another week passed, and a third, and the baronet declared that there
-had been no recurrence of the visions. He became very reticent upon
-the subject, and it was evident that he now shrank from any allusion to
-it. Gaston, on his side, was only too willing to avoid its mention.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was at this time that Sir Selwyn received a letter from an old
-friend of his college days, now holding a high place in the Indian
-Government, reminding him of a long-promised visit, and begging him
-to fulfil his word without further delay.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A better invitation, thought Gaston, could not have arrived at a more
-opportune moment. Their pleasant English home had become charged
-for the baronet with associations which were wholly painful; a new
-scene and fresher interests would assist to push to completion the recovery
-which could not but be long delayed in his present situation. Sir
-Selwyn himself was of the same mind, and decided at once to accept
-his friend’s invitation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then arose in Gaston’s mind the question whether, in the circumstances,
-it were well or advisable that his father should make the
-journey alone. He thought it not advisable at all, and without plainly
-telling this to his father, begged that he might accompany him. But Sir
-Selwyn showed a strong reluctance to accede to this request, which was
-the more marked that father and son had never yet been separated on
-any tour of pleasure. Gaston continued to press his point, until he
-perceived, or thought that he perceived, what was his father’s reason for
-wishing to take this journey alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The thing which Sir Selwyn had striven for years to hide from his
-son he had just been forced to reveal to him. It was the sorrowful
-secret of his life, a secret which, to the baronet, had something of shame
-in it, and the revelation had been beyond measure painful to him. If,
-in one sense, the confession which had been wrung from him had
-brought father and son more closely together, it had, in another sense,
-placed a certain something between them of which the presence of
-Gaston was a constant reminder. With Gaston at his father’s side, the
-secret too was there. When Gaston’s delicate intuition had realised this
-for him, his entreaties to accompany his father were at an end. It was
-decided that Sir Selwyn should go to India alone, and in a fortnight
-from the receipt of his friend’s invitation he was on his way.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston was desolate at home, and at the end of ten days or so he
-went to Paris, intending to stay a week there and return to England;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>but the weather was pleasant, and from Paris he began to wander, in
-<a id='corr67.2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>leasurely</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_67.2'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>leasurely</ins></a></span> fashion, southwards; and before he had quite made up his
-mind as to where he wanted to go, he found himself in Rome. Rome
-was chilly, and he had lighted on a bad hotel, so he remained but a few
-days, and went on to Naples. He would wait to see Rome, he said,
-until his father was with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After a fortnight in Naples, he was on the point of returning home,
-when he received a cable message from his father, forwarded with letters
-from England. Sir Selwyn had reached India safely and in good health,
-and thought it probable that his stay would be of somewhat longer
-duration than his arrangements on leaving England had contemplated.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The prospect of five or six solitary months in the castle in Northumberland
-had no relish for Gaston, so he resolved to extend his
-tour by an excursion to Sicily. Accordingly, he took steamer one
-evening from Naples to Palermo: the beautiful old city where the
-traces yet linger of Saracen and Norman; with the tideless sea in front,
-and the purple hills behind, and between the hills and the sea the little
-lovely plain of the Shell of Gold. Naples is beautiful, but brutal; a
-paradise peopled by savages: an Oriental languor softens the life of
-Palermo, as it tinges with melancholy the national songs; and the rural
-element which enters so largely into the character of the whole Sicilian
-people makes them something of Arcadians in a modern Arcady.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston felt the charm of the place in an hour; the sense of want of
-companionship which had gone with him in his listless wanderings in
-Italy, here deserted him; he plucked ripe oranges in the garden of the
-hotel, and they became his lotos fruit, for he resolved that his wanderings
-should end in Palermo. He would remain here until his father
-returned from India.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But it chanced that there were few foreign visitors in Palermo that
-season, and within a week of Gaston’s arrival the hotel at which he
-stayed was emptied of all its guests, except himself and an old German
-baron, and the baron waited only for a steamer to take him to Malta,
-on his way to Egypt. An empty hotel in a foreign land is as cheerful
-an abode as a catacomb, and Gaston cast about for a change of
-quarters.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Strolling one day in a slumbrous corner of the town, where cypress
-trees stood sentinels at rusty iron gates, and the air smelled of lemon
-groves and roses, he was struck by the aspect of a tenantless and
-apparently deserted villa, walled within a garden, which, untended as
-it was, retained a certain monastic trimness. A weather-stained board
-over the iron gate, which was of fine workmanship, announced that the
-villa was to let. Gaston tried the gate, but it was locked. A broad-hatted
-priest who was passing at the moment, observing Gaston’s interest
-in the villa, stopped, took a pinch of snuff, and said that if the signor
-desired to have particulars of the place, he might obtain them from such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>a person in a street close at hand, which he indicated. Gaston thanked
-the father for his courtesy, and went to inquire if he could see the villa,
-with a view to hiring it for a short time.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At dinner that evening, the baron said that he expected to sail for
-Malta on the following day, and expressed his regret at leaving Gaston
-alone in the hotel. Gaston replied that he should be sorry to lose the
-companionship of the baron, but that he also was about to leave the
-hotel, and had taken a villa for the remainder of his stay in Palermo.
-He described the villa, and the baron, who spoke English well, exclaimed
-with a laugh:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“So! Is that the place? The Villa Torcello then has found a tenant
-at last!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Has it been long without one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Nearly thirty years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And what is the reason?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How! Did they not tell you? The Villa Torcello is the famous
-haunted house. Yes, I assure you, a real ghost! Are you not delighted?
-You may be able to make a story about it, you know, you who write
-novels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And whose is the ghost?” inquired Gaston, whose associations with
-this subject were by no means pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“They ought to have told you about it,” answered the baron. “Some
-people do not like ghosts. I do not like them myself, though to be sure
-I have never seen a ghost. The house, as you know, is called the Villa
-Torcello, but that was not its original name. Years ago it was called
-the Villa Verga, after its first owner, Signor Udalrico Verga, a young
-Sicilian of good family, who was well known and very popular in
-Palermo. He lived there all alone, and was much visited by a priest, a
-very handsome young man, a little older than himself, with whom he
-was on terms of great affection. One morning, thirty years ago—I
-believe it was in this very month—the gardener of the Signor Verga
-found his master lying dead in the garden, with a bullet-hole in the
-temple. There seemed no reason in the world why he should have
-killed himself, and as no weapon was found near the body, or in any
-part of the garden, it was concluded that he had been murdered. Suspicion
-fell on the priest, though for no cause except that he had been
-more intimate with the Signor Verga than anybody else. They were
-never known to have had a quarrel, and as for evidence, not a scrap
-could be produced against the priest, who, they say, showed the deepest
-grief for his friend. Indeed he died, in great distress of mind, six months
-afterwards. Some people, who would always regard him as the murderer,
-said that remorse for his crime killed him; but though I have heard this
-story many times since I first visited Palermo, I could never see that
-there was any reason whatever to suspect the priest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And the murder was never brought home to anyone?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>“It has remained a mystery from that day to this,” replied the baron.
-“A year or two after the death of Verga, his brother went to live in
-the Villa, changing its name to that of a property of his own in Calabria,
-the name which it still bears. But he could not stay in it, for he said
-that he saw the spirit of his brother walking in the garden in the
-evenings, on the path where the body was found. Since he left it, the
-house has never been occupied. As to the ghost, many stories are told,
-but the favourite one is that it haunts the place seeking someone to avenge
-the murder. That is a strange notion, don’t you think, Herr Fox?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The baron added no more to the story, and as he was busy with his
-letters during the rest of the evening, Gaston only saw him again to bid
-him good-bye on the following morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A day or two afterwards, Gaston settled himself in the Villa <a id='corr69.13'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Torcello'>Torcello.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_69.13'><ins class='correction' title='Torcello'>Torcello.</ins></a></span>
-His coming there created a momentary flutter of excitement in the
-quarter where the villa was situated; but this was not known to Gaston,
-who had neither friends nor acquaintances in the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He wrote to tell his father of his new residence, and to ask him
-whether he had visited Palermo in the tour he had made in Italy a few
-years before Gaston’s birth. One morning, the post from England
-brought him some flattering notices of a book he had published shortly
-before leaving, which made him think that it was time to set to work
-upon a new story. But the idea he was seeking did not come to him,
-and the indolent charm of his surroundings favoured no severe exertion
-of the intellect.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He walked in the town until it grew familiar to him; its avenues, and
-terraces by the sea, its deep shadowy gardens, its groves of orange trees
-and lemon; its narrow streets and the multiplied variety of the houses,
-with their odd and glaring contrasts of colour; its churches, where the
-religion of the west seems out of harmony with the architectural and
-decorative fashions of the east.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sometimes he hired a carriage and drove out into the country, and
-these excursions were usually prolonged throughout the day. On one
-such occasion, he was returning late in the afternoon, and the vetturino
-was guiding his horses in lazy fashion in and out amongst a straggling
-file of mule-carts laden with wine, in a narrow lane on the outskirts of
-the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What place is this?” called out Gaston presently, pointing to an old,
-discoloured building of considerable extent, which lay on the left of
-the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><i>Il Convento de’ Cappuccini, signor</i></span>,” replied the driver, and (never
-rejecting a chance to rest) pulled up his horses, adding: “The signor
-no see Il Convento? <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><i>Ma, è molto curioso, signor</i></span> (but it’s a queer
-place).”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston got down from the carriage, and at that moment a sandalled
-and brown-robed monk appeared at the entrance to the monastery.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>“<span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><i>Ecco il padre, signor!</i></span>” (There’s the father), said the driver, pointing
-to the Capucin, who bowed to Gaston with a courteous indication of
-readiness to receive him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston went across, and was presently following the monk through
-an outer chamber of the monastery, empty and cold, with bare walls and
-a dark stone floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The monk stopped at a heavy wooden door, and taking a key from
-his girdle, turned to Gaston and said, in a mixture of Italian and broken
-English, which is here translated:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The signor probably wishes to see our subterranean chambers.
-Many foreigners come here to see them. It is a very curious sight;
-we keep here the bodies of the wealthy Palermitans, whose relatives and
-friends assemble every year, on the Feast of All Souls, to visit them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>While he was speaking he unlocked the door, which led into a vaulted
-passage with a flight of stairs beyond. A faint, sickly smell pervaded
-the corridor, which became stronger and more offensive as they began
-to descend the steps.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They went down to a dusky place, around which Gaston’s eyes
-wandered for a few moments with no certain gaze, until they grew
-accustomed to the dimness. The daylight, such feeble daylight as
-filtered into that dismal magazine of mummies, was fading fast.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The monk took a bit of candle from a ledge and lighted it; at once
-a strange and weird effect was produced.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thousands of corpses, and skeletons, and horrible hooded figures
-which were of neither state, seemed in some manner to be awakened,
-seemed to rouse themselves, and take cognisance of Gaston and his
-guide.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Tighe Hopkins.</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be <a href='#ghost2'>concluded</a> in our next.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Note.</span>—The Editors regret that they are unable to publish, as
-announced, the translation of the “Death of Ivan Ilyitch,” by Count
-Tolstoi, a complete translation having just been issued by Messrs.
-Vizetelly.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Literary Jottings</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>“BUDDHISM IN CHRISTENDOM,
-OR JESUS THE ESSENE,”
-by Arthur Lillie, etc.—A queer and rather
-thickish volume, of a presumably scientific
-character, by an amateur Orientalist.
-Contents:—Familiar theories, built on
-two sacred and time-honoured names,
-which the author enshrines between garlands
-of modern gossip and libels on his
-critics, past and present. A true literary
-sarcophagus inhuming the decayed bodies
-of very old, if occasionally correct, theories
-jumbled up together with exploded speculations.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The volume—title and symbology—is
-pregnant with the atmosphere of the
-sacred poetry attached to the names of
-Gautama the Buddha, and “Jesus the
-Essene.” To find it sprinkled with the
-heavy drops of personal spite, is like
-gazing at an unclean fly fallen into the
-communion-wine of a chalice. One can
-but wonder and ask oneself, what shall
-be the next move in literature? Is it a
-new “Sacred Book of the East,” in which
-one will find the evidence by Policeman
-Endacott against Miss Cass welcomed and
-accepted as an historical fact? Or shall
-it be the Pentecostal tongues of fire
-examined in the light of the latest improved
-kerosene lamp?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But a well-informed chronicler at our
-elbow reports that the author of <em>Buddhism
-in Christendom, or Jesus the Essene</em>, is a
-strong medium who sits daily for spiritual
-development? This would account for
-the wonderfully mixed character of the
-contents of the volume referred to. It
-must be so, since it reads just as such a
-joint production would. It is a curious
-mixture of “spirit” inspiration, passages
-bodily taken from the reports of the
-Society “for <em>Spookical</em> Research,” as
-that misguided body was dubbed—for
-once wittily—by the <cite>Saturday Review</cite>,
-and various other little defamatory trifles
-besides. The “spirit guides” are proverbially
-revengeful and not always wise in their
-generation. A former work by the same
-medium having been three or four years
-ago somewhat painfully mangled by a real
-Sanskrit and Buddhist scholar in India,
-the “Spirit Angel” falls foul now of his
-critics. The wandering Spook tries to
-run amuck among them, without even
-perceiving the poor, good soul, that he
-only blots and disfigures with the corrosive
-venom of his spite the two noble
-and sacred characters whom his medium-author
-undertakes to interpret before ever
-he has learned to understand them....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This places “Lucifer” under the disagreeable
-necessity of reviewing the pretentious
-work at length in one of its future
-numbers. As the same mistakes and
-blunders occur in “Buddhism in Christendom”
-as in “Buddha and Early Buddhism,”
-the magazine must make it its
-duty, if not altogether its pleasure, to
-check the volume of 1883 by that of 1887.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>It is rumoured that “A CATECHISM
-ON EVERY-DAY LIFE,” by a Theosophical
-writer, is ready for press. Let
-us hope it will contain no special theology
-or dogmas, but only wise advice for practical
-life, in its application to the ordinary
-events in the existence of every theosophist.
-The time has come when the veil
-of illusion is to be pulled aside entirely,
-not merely playfully, as hitherto done.
-For if mere members of the theosophical
-body have nothing to risk, except, perhaps,
-an occasional friendly stare and
-laugh at those who, without any special
-necessity, as believed, pollute the immaculate
-whiteness of their respectable society
-skirts by joining an unpopular movement,
-real theosophists ought to look truth and
-fact right in the face. To become a true
-theosophist—<i>i.e.</i> one thoroughly imbued
-with altruistic feelings, with a willingness
-to forget self, and readiness to help his
-neighbour to carry the burden of life—is to
-become instantaneously transformed into
-a public target. It is to make oneself a
-ready thing for heavy “Mrs. Grundy” to
-sit upon: to become the object of ridicule,
-slander, and vilification, which will
-not stop even before an occasional criminal
-charge. For some theosophists, every
-move in the <em>true theosophical direction</em>, is
-a forlorn-hope enterprise. All this notwithstanding,
-the ranks of the “unpopular”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>society are steadily, if slowly increasing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For what does slander and ridicule
-really matter? When have fools ever
-been slandered, or rich and influential
-men and women ostracised, however
-black and soiled in their hearts, or in
-their secret lives? Who ever heard of a
-Reformer’s or an orator’s course of life
-running smooth? Who of them escaped
-from being pelted with dirt by his
-enemies?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gautama Buddha, the great Hindu
-Reformer, was charged by the Brahmins
-with being a demon, whose form was
-taken by Vishnu, to encourage men to
-despise the Vedas, deny the gods, and
-thus effect their own destruction.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Say we not well thou art a Samaritan, and
-hast a devil?” said the Pharisees to Jesus.
-“He deceiveth the people.... Stone him
-to death!”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“He who surpasses or subdues mankind,</div>
- <div class='line'>Must look down on the hate of those below,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c038'>says the great English poet. The latter
-is echoed in prose by the king of French
-poets. Writes Victor Hugo:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have your enemies; but who has not?
-Guizot has enemies, Thiers has enemies, Lamartine
-has enemies. Have I not been myself
-fighting for twenty years? Have I not been for
-twenty years past reviled, betrayed, sold, rended,
-hooted, taunted, insulted, calumniated? Have
-not my books been <a id='corr72L.33'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='paradied'>parodied</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_72L.33'><ins class='correction' title='paradied'>parodied</ins></a></span>, and my deeds
-travestied? I also am beset and spied upon, I
-also have traps laid for me, and I have even been
-made to fall into them. But what is all that to
-me? I disdain it. It is one of the most difficult
-yet necessary things in life to learn to disdain.
-Disdain protects and crushes. It is a
-breast plate and a club. You have enemies?
-Why, it is the story of every man who has done
-a great deed, created a new idea. It is the cloud
-which thunders around everything which shines.
-Do not trouble yourself about it. Do not give
-your enemies the satisfaction of thinking that
-they cause you any feeling, be disdainful.”
-(<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Choses Vues.</cite></span>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c039' />
-
-<h3 class='c018'>“THE LATEST ROMANCE OF SCIENCE,” Summarized by a Frenchman.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>If the Atomo-mechanical Theory of the
-Universe has caused considerable embarrassment
-to our materialists, and
-brought some of their much beloved
-scientific speculations to grief (see “Concepts
-of Modern Physics,” by Stallo), the
-layman must not be ungrateful to the
-great men for other boons received at
-their hands. Through the indefatigable
-labours of the most famous biologists and
-anthropologists of the day, the mystery
-which has hitherto enshrouded the origin
-of man is no more. It has vanished into
-thin air; thanks to the activity of the
-<em>officina</em> (workshop, in Queen’s English),
-in Haeckel’s brain, or, as a Hylo-Idealist
-would say, in the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vesiculo neurine
-of his hemispherical ganglia</i></span><a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c013'><sup>[15]</sup></a>—the origin
-of mankind has to be sought in <em>that</em>
-scientific region, and nowhere else.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Religiously read by the “Animalists”
-in its English translation in Protestant
-and Monarchical England, the “Pedigree
-of Man” is now welcomed with shouts
-of joy in Roman Catholic Republican
-France. A summary has just been compiled
-of it by a French <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>savant</i></span>, who rejoices
-in the name of Topinard. The
-summary on that “question of questions”
-(as Mr. Huxley calls it), is more interesting
-in reality than the “Pedigree of
-Man” itself. It is so deliciously fantastic
-and original, that one comes almost to
-regret that our numerous and frolicsome
-ancestors in the Zoological Gardens of
-Europe and America seem to show no intention
-of getting up a subscription list
-among themselves, for the raising of a
-lasting monument to the great Haeckel.
-Thus, ingratitude in man must surely be
-a phenomenon of <em>atavism</em>; another suggestive
-point being thus gained toward
-further proof of man’s descent from the
-ingrate and heartless, as well as tailless,
-pithecoid baboon.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Saith the learned Topinard:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“At the commencement of what geologists call
-the <em>Laurentian period</em> of the Earth, and the fortuitous
-union of certain elements of carbon,
-oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen, under conditions
-which <em>probably</em> only took place at that
-epoch, the first albuminoid clots were formed.
-From them, and by spontaneous generation,<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c013'><sup>[16]</sup></a>
-the first cellules or cleavage masses took their
-origin. These cellules were then sub-divided
-and multiplied, arranging themselves in the form
-of organs, and after a series of transformations,
-fixed by Mr. Haeckel at nine in number, originated
-certain vertebrata of the genus <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Amphioxus
-lanceolatus</i></span>. The division into sexes was marked
-out, the spinal marrow and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>chorda dorsalis</i></span>
-became visible. At the tenth stage the brain and
-skull made their appearance, as in the lamprey;
-at the eleventh, the limbs and jaws were developed ...
-the earth was then
-only in the <em>Silurian</em> period. At the sixteenth, the
-adaptation to terrestrial life ceased. At the seventeenth,
-which corresponds to the <em>Jurassic</em> phase
-of the history of the globe, the genealogy of man is
-raised to the kangaroo among the marsupials.
-At the eighteenth, he becomes a lemurian; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span><em>Tertiary period</em> commences. At the nineteenth,
-he becomes Catarrhinian, that is to say, an ape
-with a tail, a Pithecian. At the twentieth he
-becomes an anthropoid, continuing so throughout
-the whole of the <em>Miocene period</em>. At the twenty-first
-he becomes a man-ape, he does not possess language,
-nor in consequence the corresponding brain.
-Lastly, at the twenty-second, man comes forth ...
-in his inferior types.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Happy, privileged man! Hapless evolution-forsaken
-baboon! We are not told
-by science the secret why, while man has
-had plenty of time to become, say a Plato,
-a Newton, a Napoleon, or <em>even</em> a Haeckel,
-his poor ancestor should have been
-arrested in his growth and development.
-For, as far as is known, the rump of the
-cynocephalus seems as blue and as callous
-to-day, as it was during the reign of
-Psammetichus or Cheops; the macacus
-must have made as ugly faces at Pliny 18
-centuries back, as he does now at a Darwinian.
-We may be told that in the enormous
-period of time that must have
-elapsed since the beginning of evolution,
-2,000, or even 10,000, years mean very
-little. But then, one does not find even
-the Moneron any better off for the millions
-of years that have rolled away. Yet,
-between the gelatinous and thoughtful
-hermit of the briny deep and man, there
-must have elapsed quite sufficient time
-for some trifling transformation. That
-primordial protoplasmic creature, however,
-seems to fare no better at the hands
-of evolution, which has well-nigh forgotten
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>By this time, one would suppose that
-this ancestor of ours of stage <em>one</em>, ought to
-have reached, to say the least, a higher
-development: to have become, for instance,
-the amphibian “sozura” of the “fourteenth
-stage,” so minutely and scientifically described
-by Mr. Haeckel, and of which De Quatrefages
-so wickedly says in “The Human
-Species” (p. 108), that “it (the sozura) is
-<em>equally unknown to science</em>.” But we see
-quite the reverse. This tender-bodied little
-one, has remained but a moneron to this
-very hour: so much so, that Mr. Huxley,
-fishing him out from the abysmal ocean
-depths, took pity upon him, and gave
-him a father. He baptized our archaic
-ancestor, and named him <em>Bathybius
-Haeckelii</em>....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But all these are mysteries that will, no
-doubt, be easily explained to the full satisfaction—of
-science, by any biologist of
-Haeckel’s brain power. As all know, no
-acrobatic feats, from the top of one tree
-to another top, by the swiftest of chimpanzees,
-can ever approach, let alone
-equal, the rapid evolutions of fancy in his
-cerebral “officina,” whenever Haeckel is
-called upon to explain the inexplicable....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is one trifle, however, which
-seems to have the best of even his
-capacity for getting out of a scientific
-dilemma, and this is <em>the eighteenth stage</em>
-of his genealogy, in the “Pedigree of
-Man.” Man’s evolution from the Monera,
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>alias</i></span> Bathybius <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Haeckelii</i></span>, up to tailed
-and then tailless man, passes through the
-marsupials, the kangaroo, sarrigue, etc.
-Thus he writes:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>Eighteenth stage.</em> Prosimiæ allied to
-the Loris (Stenops) and Makis (Lemur),
-without marsupial bones, but <em>with
-placenta</em>.” (“<cite>Pedig. of Man.</cite>” p. 77.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now it may be perhaps interesting to
-the profane and the innocent to learn that
-no such “prosimiæ,” with placenta, exists in
-nature. That it is, in short, another
-creation of the famous German Evolutionist,
-and a child of his own brain. For
-De Quatrefages has pointed out several
-years ago, that:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The anatomical investigations of MM.
-Alphonse Milne, Edwards and Grandidier ...
-place it beyond all doubt that the prosimiæ of
-Haeckel have <em>no decidua and a diffuse placenta</em>.
-They are <em>indeciduata</em>. Far from <em>any possibility
-of their being the ancestors of the apes</em>, according
-to the principles laid down by Haeckel himself,
-they cannot even be regarded as the ancestors of
-the zonoplacential mammals ... and ought
-to be connected with the pachydermata, the
-edentata and the cetacea.” (p. 110.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>But, as that great French <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>savant</i></span> shows,
-“Haeckel, without the least hesitation,
-adds his <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>prosimiæ</i></span>,” to the other groups
-in the “Pedigree of Man,” and “attributes
-to them ... a discoidal placenta.”
-Must the world of the too
-credulous innocents again accept on faith
-these two creatures unknown to Science or
-man, only because “the proof of their
-existence arises <em>from the necessity of an
-intermediate type</em>?” This necessity, however
-being one only for the greater success
-of their inventor, Haeckel, that Simian
-Homer must not bear us ill will, if we do
-not hesitate to call his “genealogy” of
-man a romance of Science of the wildest
-type.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One thing is very suggestive in this
-speculation. The discovery of the absence
-of the needed placenta in the so-called
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>prosimiæ</i></span> now dates several years back.
-Haeckel knows of it, of course. So does
-Mr. Ed. B. Aveling, D.Sc., his translator.
-Why is the error allowed to remain uncorrected,
-and even unnoticed, in the
-English translation of the “Pedigree of
-Man,” of 1887? Do the “members of the
-International Library of Science and Free-thought,”
-fear to lose some of Haeckel’s
-admirers were these to learn the truth?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nevertheless Haeckel’s scientific “Pedigree
-of Man,” ought to awake and stir up
-to action the spirit of private enterprise.
-What a charming <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Féerie</i></span> could be made
-of it on the stage of a theatre! A <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>corps
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>de ballet</i></span>, composed of antediluvian reptiles
-and giant lizards, gradually, and stage by
-stage, metamorphosing themselves into
-kangaroos, lemurs, tailless apes and anthropoid
-baboons, and finally into a chorus
-of German biologists!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Féerie</i></span> would leave “Black
-Crook,” and “Alice in Wonder-Land,”
-nowhere. An intelligent manager, alive to
-his interests, would make his fortune were
-he but to follow the happy thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Nota bene</i></span>:—The suggestion is copyright.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c040'>THE BOOK OF LIFE, by Sidhartha
-(also) Vonisa; his discoveries from “6215
-to 6240, Anno Mundi.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A cross between an <em>octavo</em> and <em>duodecimo</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This volume, we see, is highly appreciated
-by the clergy, by whom, at this
-gloomy day of infidelity, even small
-favours seem to be thankfully received.
-The author (profane name unknown)
-hints, when he does not state plainly, that
-he is a reincarnation of Gautama Buddha,
-or Siddartha, as also of a few other no
-meaner historical personages. The work
-is a clever steering between the sandbanks
-of science and theology. Enough
-is given in careful agreement with the
-former to make it ignore the more abundant
-concessions to the gods of the latter—<i>e.g.</i>,
-Biblical chronology. The age of
-the world is allowed 6240 years from
-Adam, “seven hundred years after the
-brown and black races had been created”
-(p. 53 “Chronology”); the date of the
-earth’s incrustation and globe being left to
-the imagination of the reader. A chronological
-table of the principal historical
-events of the world is published on pages
-53-56. Among them the birth of Moses
-is placed 1572 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The Vedas are
-shown compiled in India, and the poems
-of Homer in Greece, “about 1200 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>”
-Siddartha or Gautama established Buddhism
-in India “from 808 to 726,” <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> we are
-told. Last, but not least, of the world
-epochs and <em>divine</em> signs of the time,
-comes the for ever memorable event of
-March 31st, 1885—namely, the “Book of
-Life, Vonisa, was completely written,”
-and it closes the list. The reader is notified,
-moreover, at the line beginning with
-<span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 6240, that the year 1884 <span class='fss'>C.E.</span> (Christian
-Era) is the “beginning of Messianic
-age and close of Christian age,” which
-might account for the appearance and
-publication in the year following of the
-original volume now under review.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The new Messiah declares that “although
-much of the work consists of discoveries
-which are original with the
-author, yet the reader will find in the
-Analytic Index a few hundred out of the
-many references which might be given to
-eminent authorities which were consulted
-in its preparation.” Among these, it
-seems, one has to include some theosophic
-writings, as it is stated in the
-“Book of Life” that—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>a.</i>) “Seven great forces were concerned in
-these vast movements of early creation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>b.</i>) “Seven Ages of the Earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>c.</i>) “Vayomer Elohim” translated “according
-to the laws of the Hebrew language,” means
-that “seven forces were used as three-fold
-factors,” and</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>d.</i>) <a id='corr74R.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='That'>“That</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_74R.15'><ins class='correction' title='That'>“That</ins></a></span> the first human beings were incarnated
-spirits” (pp. 26-27).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The above four declarations have the
-approval of theosophy. Whether the sentence
-that follows, namely, that “the work
-of incarnation (of the <em>spirits</em>) took place
-according to law,” and is “the clearest
-hypothesis <em>which science has to offer concerning
-the origin of man</em>,” will meet with
-the same approval from Messrs. Huxley,
-Haeckel, and Fiske, of the “Atomo-mechanical
-Theory,” is very doubtful.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nor is it so sure that the Ethnological
-department in the Anglo-Indian Bureau
-of Statistics is quite prepared to alter its
-census returns in accordance with Siddartha’s
-declaration, on page 29,that—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“One branch of the brown race was
-the Dravidian, <em>which still holds its place
-in Northern India</em>.” (?!)</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>A new book, bearing the title of
-SPIRIT REVEALED, is nearly ready
-for press. It is described as an extraordinary
-work. Its author is Wm. C.
-Eldon Serjeant, F.T.S., a writer of
-articles on the “Coming Reformation,”
-“Sparks from the World of Fire,” &amp;c., &amp;c.
-The work claims to “explain the Nature
-of the Deity, and to discuss His manifestations
-on every plane of existence, and
-to show forth the form of Christ, whose
-second coming is expected by Christians,
-and to proclaim the advent of the Messiah
-according to the belief of the Jews.” “Many
-subjects, involving questions of considerable
-obscurity in reference to the Deity,
-to the Scriptures, to men, to animals, and
-to things generally, are comprehensively
-treated and explained in accordance with
-the Word of the Spirit declared at various
-times through the sons of men.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c040'>PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY
-FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH:</p>
-
-<p class='c041'>These reports coming out <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>ad libitum</i></span>, without
-any definite date, cannot be regarded as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>periodical. Depending for their circulation
-chiefly on the consummation of what
-the learned editors offer as <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>bonâ fide</i></span>
-psychic and spiritualistic <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>exposés</i></span>—which
-the public accepts as most kind advertisements
-of the people so attacked—this
-publication occupies a position entirely
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sui generis</i></span>. The “Proceedings”
-offer to the public a very useful <em>manual</em>,
-something between a text and a guidebook,
-with practical instructions in diplomatic
-policy in the domain of the
-Psychic, in the form of scientific letters
-and private detective information. Sensitives
-discern in the “Proceedings” (by
-<em>telepathic impact</em>) the Machiavelian spirit
-of aristocratic Bismarck, seasoned with
-an aura strongly impregnated with the
-plebeian perfumes of honest <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>mouchards</i></span> on
-duty, but then they are, perhaps, prejudiced.
-On the other hand, some
-Russian spiritualistically inclined members
-of the S.P.R. have been heard
-to say, that the “Proceedings” reminded
-them of those of the happily defunct
-Third Section of the St. Petersburg
-Police. Thus, the tutelary “guides” of
-the learned association of the British
-Psychists, may one day turn out to be the
-departed spirits of Russian <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>gendarmes</i></span>
-after all?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Occasionally when the hunting grounds
-of this erudite body have afforded a
-specially successful chase—after mares’
-nests—a <cite>Supplement</cite> is added to the
-“Proceedings,” the magnitude of the
-added volume being in inverse ratio to
-the illumination of its contents, which
-are generally offered as a premium to
-materialism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hence, the “Proceedings” may be better
-described as the fluctuating and occasional
-records of a society bent upon
-giving the lie to its own name. For
-“Psychical” research is surely a misnomer,
-besides being a delusion and a
-snare for the unwary. <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> would
-suggest as a truer title, “Society
-for Hylo-<i>Pseumatical</i> Research.” This
-would give the S.P.R. the benefit of an
-open connection with Dr. Lewins’ unparalleled
-“Hylo-Idealism”<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c013'><sup>[17]</sup></a>—while it
-would enable it to sail under its <em>true</em>
-colours.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Whether <span class='sc'>Lucifer’s</span> advice be accepted
-or not, the profound philosophy of
-the phenomenon baptized “telepathy”
-and telepathic impact can only be studied
-scientifically, in our spasmodic contemporary.
-This new Greek stranger is the
-crowning work of the Psychic Fathers
-of our century. It is their “first” and
-“only” offspring, and is a <em>genuine</em> discovery
-as far as its Hellenic name goes.
-For, bereft of its Greek appellation, it
-becomes like America. The genius who
-<em>discovered</em> the phenomenon, is like
-Columbus on whom the Northmen, and
-even the Chinamen, had stolen a march
-centuries before. This phenomenon can
-only seem <em>new</em> when thus disguised
-under a name solemn and scientific—because
-incomprehensible to the average
-profane. Its plain description in English—as
-transference of thought or sensation
-from a distance—could never hope to have
-the same ring of classical learning in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nevertheless, the “Proceedings” with
-the two additional gigantic volumes of
-the psychic “Leviathan,” called “Phantasms
-of the Living,” are strongly recommended
-to invalids. They are priceless
-in cases of obstinate <em>insomnia</em>, as the best
-soporific known. <em>Directions</em>: The reader
-must be careful not to light a match in
-too close proximity to the said works.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“THE ADVERSARY.”</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The following books have been received
-and will be noticed in early numbers of
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>THE HISTORY OF THE ROSICRUCIANS,
-by Arthur E. Waite, and
-THE QUABALAH UNVEILED, by
-S.L. Mac-Gregor Mathers, from Mr. Redway;
-EARTH’S EARLIEST AGES, by
-<a id='corr75L.55'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='C. H.'>G. H.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_75L.55'><ins class='correction' title='C. H.'>G. H.</ins></a></span> Pember, from Messrs. Hodder and
-Stoughton: THE MYSTERY OF THE
-AGES, by the Countess of Caithness, from
-Mr. C. L. H. Wallace; AN ADVENTURE
-AMONG THE ROSICRUCIANS,
-by Dr. F. Hartmann, from the
-Occult Publishing Company, Boston; and
-NINETEENTH CENTURY COMMON
-SENSE, from the T. B. Lippincott
-Company, Boston, U.S.A.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Correspondence</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.</div>
- <div>ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 1.</div>
- <div class='c000'><i>To the Editor of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>We are told that, before judging a
-horary figure, we must ascertain if it is
-radical, and to decide this point several
-rules have been given. The first is with
-regard to the number of degrees on the
-cusp of the ascendant. Lilly says a
-figure is rarely radical if the first two or
-last three degrees of a sign ascend.
-Morrison fixes the limit at the first or
-second and last two degrees. Pearse
-gives the limit as the first and last five
-degrees, and Raphael as the first and last
-three.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>All the laws of nature are harmonious
-and rational; but in the rule of the first
-two authorities, this harmony seems
-absent. Why should the limit be 1 or 2
-degrees at the beginning of the sign and
-2 or 3 at the end?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Again, as an exception to the above
-rule, Lilly says that a figure may be
-radical even when 27° or more ascend, if
-the number corresponds to his age; and
-when 1° or 2° ascend, if the querent be very
-young, and his appearance agrees with
-the quality of the signs ascending. And
-here again there is the same want of
-harmony. Why should the age of the
-querent have to correspond accurately
-in one case and only approximately in
-the other? Furthermore, no astrologers
-seem to have given a logical explanation
-of these rules.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On reflecting on this problem I reasoned
-thus. In ♍ 29° 59´ 59´´ ♃ is absolutely
-without dignity; in ♐ 0° 0´ 1´´ he is in his
-house triplicity, and terms, a threefold
-dignity. Is it conceivable that this great
-change of power should be so sudden, as
-to be accomplished in less than 2 seconds
-of space? Analogy shows that it is probably
-otherwise, and that as the planets
-and cusps of houses have orbs of influence,
-<em>so also have the signs</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If this be true, it supplies the key to the
-above problem. If only the first or last
-few degrees of a sign ascend, then the
-cusp of the ascendant is within the orbs
-of the adjacent signs, and the house is
-not ruled solely by the planet which is
-its proper lord, but also partly by the
-planet ruling the adjacent sign; and this
-must hold good under all circumstances,
-even when the number of the degrees
-ascending agree with the age of the
-querent, or the ascending sign and
-planets therein describe him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Furthermore, if this be admitted, it also
-follows, as a logical conclusion, that if the
-first and last few degrees of a sign are on
-the cusp of any house, no conclusion can
-be drawn with certainty from the aspects
-of the lord of that house.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The exact limits of the orbs of the
-signs must be decided by experience; I
-am induced to fix the limits at 2° 30´ and
-27° 30´.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>NEMO.</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><i>To the Editor of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The belief in the power and efficacy of
-talismans and amulets was, at one period
-of the world’s history, universal. Even
-during the XVth century, the latest among
-the innumerable revivals of civilisation,
-the majority of learned and cultured men
-had a profound conviction of their reality.
-But such ideas are now scouted by popular
-opinion, because the philosophy underlying
-them is not understood. <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>,
-therefore, would certainly confer a boon
-on many by throwing light on the following
-points:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(1). Wherein does the power of a talisman
-lie? (2). How far does its efficacy
-depend on the signs traced upon it, and
-how far on the power and knowledge of
-the maker? (3). Granting that will-power
-and knowledge are the main factors in
-imparting to the talisman its power, how
-does that power remain attached to it
-after the death of the man who made it.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>β</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Theosophical <br /> and Mystic Publications</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>The Theosophist, a magazine of
-Oriental Philosophy, Art, Literature, and
-Occultism. Conducted by H. P. Blavatsky,
-and H. S. Olcott, Permanent President of
-the T. S. Vol. VIII., Nos. 94 and 95, July
-and August, 1887. Madras, India. In
-London, George Redway, 15, York Street,
-Covent Garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This journal is the oldest of the periodicals
-of the Theosophical Society, and has
-a distinct feature of its own: a number of
-Hindoo, Buddhist, and Parsi contributors
-among the most learned of British India.
-No journal is thus more reliable in the
-occasional information given in it upon
-the sacred tenets and scriptures of the
-East, since it is derived first hand, and
-comes from native scholars, well versed
-in their respective cults. From time to
-time <cite>The Theosophist</cite> has respectfully
-corrected mistakes—sins of omission and
-commission—by Western Orientalists, and
-will continue to perform its proposed
-task by issuing admirable articles.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As a marked instance of this, the four
-“Lectures on the Bhagavid Gita,” by a
-native scholar, Mr. T. Subba Rao, may
-be cited. Begun in the February number,
-they are now concluded in the July issue.
-No better, abler, or more complete exposition
-on that most philosophical, as
-the least understood, of the sacred books
-of the East, has ever been given in any
-work, past or present. In the June and
-July numbers, the “Ha-Khoshe-Cah, a
-Vision of the Infinite,” by Dr. Henry
-Pratt, a erudite Kabalist in England, is
-published.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Some very interesting articles on the
-“Norse Mythology,” by the learned
-Swedish scholar, Mr. C. H. A. Bjerregard
-(the Astor Library, New York), may also
-be found in the last numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><cite>The Theosophist</cite> is the journal of the
-Theosophical Society <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>par excellence</i></span>; the
-Minutes and records of the Society’s work,
-being given monthly in its “Supplements.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No evil wisher of the said Society, rushing
-into publicity with denunciations, and
-occasionally libellous attacks upon that
-body, ought—if he is a fair-minded and
-<em>honest</em> opponent, of course—to publish
-anything without first making himself well
-acquainted with the contents of <cite>The Theosophist</cite>,
-and especially with the <cite>Supplements</cite>
-attached to that journal.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This advice is given in all kindness to
-our traducers—the learned as the ignorant—for
-their direct benefit, though at an
-evident disadvantage to theosophy. For,
-as so many of our critics have been lately
-making fools of themselves, in their alleged
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>exposés</i></span> of our doctrines, it is to the
-advantage of our Society to let them go
-on undisturbed, and thus turn the laugh
-on the enemy. Two graphic instances
-may be cited. In “Buddhism in Christendom;
-or, Jesus the Essene,” by an impolite
-dabbler in Orientalism, the septenary
-doctrine of the Occultists is disfigured
-out of recognition, and is met
-by the unanimous hearty laugh of those
-who know something of the subject.
-Its unlucky author has evidently never
-opened a serious theosophical work,
-unless, indeed, the doctrine is too much
-above his head. As a refreshing contrast
-one finds, in “Earth and Its Earliest
-Ages,” by G. H. Pember, an author, who
-has most conscientiously studied and
-understood the fundamental doctrines of
-Theosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus, notwithstanding his attempt to
-connect it with the coming Antichrist,
-and show its numerous writers pledged to
-the work of Satan, “the Prince of the
-Powers of the Air,”<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c013'><sup>[18]</sup></a> the volume published
-by that learned and fair-minded gentleman
-is a true pearl in the <em>anti</em>-Theosophical
-literature. The correct enunciation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>of knowledge of the tenets he disapproves,
-as a sincere orthodox Christian, is remarkable;
-and his language, dignified, polite,
-and entirely free from any personality
-can but call forth as courteous a reply
-from those he arraigns. He has evidently
-read, and, what is more, <em>understood</em>,
-what he found in the <cite>Theosophist</cite>,
-and other mystic volumes. It shall,
-therefore, be the pleasure and duty of
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, who bears no malice for the
-personal attack, to review this interesting
-volume in its October issue, hoping to
-see as kind a notice of “Earth and Its
-Earliest Ages” in the <cite>Theosophist</cite> of
-Madras.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The Path; “a magazine devoted to
-the Brotherhood of Humanity, Theosophy
-in America, and the study of Occult
-Science, Philosophy, and Aryan Literature.”
-Edited by William Q. Judge. Price
-ten shillings per annum. New York,
-U. S. A. P. O. Box, 2659, etc. George
-Redway, 15 York Street, Covent Garden,
-London.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A most excellent and theosophical
-monthly, full of philosophical literature
-by several well-known mystics and
-writers. The best publication of its kind
-in the United States, and one that ever
-fulfils what it promises, giving more food
-for thought than many of the larger periodicals.
-Its August number is very
-interesting and fully up to its usual
-mark.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Jasper Niemann continues his excellent
-reflections in “Letters on the True.”
-Mr. E. D. Walker, in an article upon
-“The Poetry of Reincarnation in
-Western Literature,” cites the verses of
-Wordsworth, Tennyson, Dean Alford,
-Addison, H. Vaughan, Browning, etc., in
-proof of the fact that these poets were
-tinctured, if not imbued, with the philosophy
-of reincarnation. B. N. Acle
-continues <cite>Notes on the Astral Light</cite>, from
-Eliphas Levi. He cites the startling and
-lurid enunciation of that epigrammatical
-occultist, who says that “He who dies
-without forgiving his enemy, hurls himself
-into Eternity armed with a dagger, and
-devotes himself to the horror of eternal
-murder.” “<cite>The Symbolism of the Equilateral
-Triangle</cite>,” by Miss Lydia Bell,
-shows how much wisdom can be extracted
-from a little symbol when you know how
-to look for it there.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>S. B. makes some very pertinent remarks
-upon <cite>Theosophical Fiction</cite>, the
-growth of which is one sign of the times.
-“A true picture of life, either real or potential,
-which is found in a work of fiction,
-makes such reading one of the best
-sources of learning.” Thanks to the
-education which it is receiving from the
-more solid literature of theosophy, the
-public is becoming more critical, and
-has already formed a “standard of probability”
-for marvellous phenomena, which
-acts as a healthy check upon outside
-writers of fiction, who are therefore no
-longer able to trust entirely “to their
-imagination for their acts, and to their
-memory for their fancies.” Novel readers
-now like their supernatural not to be <em>unnaturally</em>
-supernatural, even if they do
-have to take it in minute doses, disguised
-in their favourite draught of love, murder
-and small talk. <cite>The Higher Carelessness</cite>
-(No. 7 of <cite>Thoughts in Solitude</cite>), by
-“Pilgrim,” is full of deep and beautiful
-reflections. This writer, like “American
-Mystic” whose article on the puzzling
-question, “<cite>Am I my Brothers Keeper</cite>,”
-comes next, has advanced some way upon
-the path of knowledge, and the thoughts
-of both of them have a special interest
-for contemplative and self-examining
-readers. “American Mystic,” by-the-bye,
-gives a new and striking turn to a phrase
-too often misunderstood. “Resist not
-evil” he quotes and explains that resistance,
-fierce and personal, to evil befalling
-oneself, is what is meant. <cite>Christianity—Theosophy</cite>,
-by Mr. Wm. H. Kembal, seeks
-to show that the fundamental aim of both,
-namely the Brotherhood of Humanity, is
-the same, and that they can and ought to
-unite their forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>Julius</em>, in <cite>Tea Table Talk</cite>, is as crisp,
-weird, and slyly-sentimental as ever.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Lotus: “Revue des Hautes
-Etudes Théosophiques. Tendant à favorises
-le rapprochement entre l’Orient et
-l’Occident.” Sous l’inspiration de H. P.
-Blavatsky</span> (nominally; but edited, in
-reality, by our able brother, F. K. Gaboriau,
-F.T.S.). Georges Carré, 112 Boulevard
-St. Germain, Paris. Subscription 15 fr.
-per annum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>An excellent monthly, presenting yet
-another aspect of theosophy; inspired by
-the desire to benefit the struggling masses
-of humanity, and to diffuse the true
-spirit of solidarity among men. The
-August number, besides translations of
-selected articles from the <cite>Theosophist</cite>, of
-special interest to its French readers,
-contains a capital article on “Freemasons
-and Theosophists,” the continuation of a
-series of studies on “Initiation,” and a
-discussion of the much-vexed question
-whether the “Will to Live” spoken of in
-the “Elixir of Life” is selfish or not. In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>the last few pages, the serious character
-of the journal is relieved by those brilliant
-sparkles of French wit to which that
-language lends itself so admirably.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Brief notes on books, articles in the
-press, pamphlets, &amp;c., give ample scope
-for caustic raillery, as well as appreciative
-comment, and the editor ought to be
-specially congratulated on this department
-of his review.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Aurore: Revue mensuelle sous la
-direction de Lady Caithness, Duchesse de
-Pomar. George Carré, 112 Boulevard
-St. Germain, Paris. Subscription, 15fr.
-per annum.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Mystic and Catholic Journal of
-Aristocratic France, somewhat tinged
-with humanitarianism, and showing the
-influence of the higher phases of modern
-spiritualism. The subject of reincarnation
-is its principal feature, and a mystical
-romance, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Amour Immortel</cite></span>, gives its
-various phases. <i>L’Aurore</i> is admirably
-conducted. Its articles are always in
-good taste, and perfectly adapted to the
-special public it appeals to.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The Occult Word: A monthly
-journal in the interest of Theosophy. Mrs.
-J. W. Cables, 40, Ambrose Street, Rochester,
-N. Y., U.S.A. Subscription, 1 dollar
-per annum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Brought out more in the style of a
-newspaper, this journal is another proof
-of the vitality of the Theosophic movement.
-It is more Christian in its tone
-and phraseology, and shows less traces of
-the influence of Eastern thought, than
-the publications already mentioned. Some
-thoughts in it are remarkably good, and
-its tendency most excellent. A most
-worthy little periodical.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The Occultist: A monthly journal
-of Psychological and Mystical Research.
-Edited by Mr. J. Thomas, F.T.S. London
-agent, E. W. Allen, 4 Ave Maria
-Lane, E.C. Subscription, 1 shilling per
-annum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As its price indicates, a tiny and unambitious
-publication of four pages, but
-one that contains, from time to time,
-thoughtful and suggestive articles. Its
-existence testifies to the devotion of its
-proprietor and editor to the cause of truth.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The Sphinx: “A monthly journal,
-devoted to the historical and experimental
-proof of the supersensuous conception of
-the world on a monistic basis.” Edited
-by Hübbe Schleiden, Dr. J. U. Th.
-Griebens Verlag, Leipzig; and George
-Redway, London. Subscription, 12s. 6d.
-per annum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As its title page implies, a learned and
-philosophical journal, doing its work with
-true German thoroughness and permeated
-with a real spirit of earnest investigation.
-It appeals, mainly, to thinkers and students—a
-numerous class in Germany, but
-somewhat sparsely represented in England.
-Dr. Carl Du Prel, the leader of
-the new school of transcendental philosophy
-in that country, is its leading contributor.
-But it contains from time to
-time articles of great interest to students
-of occultism.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>TRANSACTIONS OF THE “LONDON
-LODGE” OF THE T. S., NOS.
-12 AND 13.—Two able and interesting
-papers by Mr. A. P. Sinnett; the first on
-“Buddha’s Teaching,” the second on “The
-Relations of the Lower and Higher Self.”
-Dealing with Buddhism, Mr. Sinnett exposes
-several of the current misconceptions
-regarding Buddhist doctrines.
-Notably among these stand the utterly
-false ideas, current in the West, that
-Buddha recognised no conscious existence
-for the individual after death, and that
-Nervana is synonymous with annihilation.
-Mr. Sinnett draws a happy comparison
-between these misconceptions and
-the strange blindness shown by European
-scholars in accepting the allegorical
-legend that Buddha’s death was occasioned
-by eating roast <em>boar</em>, as a literal
-fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In his second paper, Mr. Sinnett follows
-up a line of thought originated by
-him in an earlier number of the “Transactions.”
-He explains his views with clearness,
-and adds considerably to the details
-of the outline sketched in his previous
-paper. But, as <span class='sc'><a id='corr79R.43'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Luficer'>Lucifer</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_79R.43'><ins class='correction' title='Luficer'>Lucifer</ins></a></span></span> hopes shortly
-to deal with this subject at length, it is
-unnecessary to enter into a detailed
-examination of Mr. Sinnett’s views at
-present.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The Esoteric: “A Magazine of
-Advance and Practical Esoteric Thought.”
-Boston, U.S.A. Subscription 6s. per
-annum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Principal feature—the identification of
-each issue with one of the signs of the
-Zodiac, which are held to be “important
-and real divisions of time or states of
-man’s life.” Contents—eighteen short
-articles, occupying 62 pages, the substance
-of which has been mainly gleaned
-from various mystic authors, and harmonizes
-well with some Theosophical teachings.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>From the Note Book of an Unpopular Philosopher</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>THE ESOTERIC VALUE OF CERTAIN WORDS AND DEEDS IN SOCIAL LIFE.</h4>
-
-<p class='c032'>A definition of <em>Public Opinion</em>. The
-gathering of a few fogies positively electrified
-by fanaticism and force of habit,
-who act on the many noodles negatively
-electrified by indifference. The acceptation
-of uncharitable views on “suggestion”
-by “telepathic impact” (what ever
-that may mean). The work of unconscious
-psychology.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>Sympathetic grief.</em>—The expression
-thereof in Society, for one’s sorrow, is like
-a solemn funeral procession, in which the
-row of mourning coaches is long, indeed,
-but the carriages of which are all empty.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>Mutual exchange of compliments.</em>—Expressions
-of delight and other acting in
-cultured society are the fig-leaves of the
-civilised Adams and Eves. These “aprons”
-to conceal truth are fabricated incessantly
-in social Edens, and their name is—<em>politeness</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>Keeping the Sabbath.</em>—Throwing
-public contumely on, and parading one’s
-superiority over Christ, “one greater
-than the temple” and Sabbath, who stood
-for his disciples’ rights to “break” the
-Sabbath, for the Sabbath was made for
-man, and not man for Sabbath (Matt. xii.
-and Mark ii., etc.).</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>Attending Divine Service.</em>—Breaking
-the express commandment of Jesus.
-Becoming “as the hypocrites are,” who
-love to pray in Synagogue and Temples,
-“that they may be seen of men.” (Matt.vi.)</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>Taking the Oath, on the Bible.</em>—A
-Christian law, devised and adopted to
-perpetuate and carry out the unequivocal
-commandment of the Founder of
-Christianity, “Swear not at all, neither
-by heaven nor by the earth” (Matt. v.). As
-the heaven and the earth are supposed to
-have been created <em>only</em> by God, a book
-written by <em>men</em> thus received the prerogative
-over the former.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>Unpopularity.</em>—We hate but those
-whom we envy or fear. Hatred is a concealed
-and forced homage rendered to the
-person hated; a tacit admission of the
-superiority of the unpopular character.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>The true value of <em>back-biting and
-slander</em>. A proof of the fast coming
-triumph of the victim chosen. The bite
-of the fly when the creature feels its end
-approaching.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'><i>A Few Illustrations to the Point from Schopenhauer.</i></h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>Socrates was repeatedly vilified and
-thrashed by the opponents of his philosophy,
-and was as repeatedly urged by his
-friends to have his honour avenged in the
-tribunals of Athens. Kicked by a rude
-citizen, in the presence of his followers, one
-of these expressed surprise for his not resenting
-the insult, to which the Sage replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Shall I then feel offended, and ask
-the magistrate to avenge me, if I also
-happen to be kicked by an ass?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To another remark whether a certain
-man had abused and called him names,
-he quietly answered:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No; for none of the epithets he used
-can possibly apply to me.” (From Plato’s
-“Georgics”)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='corr80R.33'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“The'>The</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_80R.33'><ins class='correction' title='“The'>The</ins></a></span> famous cynic, Cratus, having received
-from the musician Nicodromus a
-blow which caused his face to swell, coolly
-fixed a tablet upon his brow, inscribed
-with the two words, “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Nicodromus facit</i></span>.”
-The flute player hardly escaped with his
-life from the hands of the populace, which
-viewed Cratus as a household god.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Seneca, in his work “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>De Constanta
-Sapientis</cite></span>,” treats most elaborately of insults
-in words and deeds, or <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>contumelia</i></span>,
-and then declares that no Sage ever pays
-the smallest attention to such things.—“Well,
-yes!” the reader will exclaim,
-“but these men were all of them <em>Sages</em>!”—“And
-you, are you then only <em>fools</em>?
-Agreed!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c042' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. “It was Gregory the Great who was the first to apply this passage of Isaiah, “How art thou
-<a id='corr3.1.2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='allen'>fallen</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_3.1.2'><ins class='correction' title='allen'>fallen</ins></a></span> from Heaven, Lucifer, son of the morning,” etc., to Satan, and ever since the bold metaphor
-of the prophet, which referred, after all, but to an Assyrian king inimical to the Israelites, has been
-applied to the Devil.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Mirville’s Memoirs to the Academy of France, Vol. IV., quoting Cardinal Ventura.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Which paganism has passed long milleniums, it would seem, in <em>copying beforehand</em> Christian
-dogmas to come.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. “Venus is a second Earth,” says Reynaud, in <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Terre et Ciel</cite></span> (p. 74), “so much so
-that were there any communication possible between the two planets, their inhabitants
-might take their respective earths for the two hemispheres of the same world....
-They seem on the sky, <em>like two sisters</em>. Similar in conformation, these two worlds are
-also similar in the character assigned to them in the Universe.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Thus saith Des Mousseaux. “Mœurs et Pratiques des Demons.” p. X.—and he
-is corroborated in this by Cardinal de Ventura. The Devil, he says, “is one of the
-great personages <em>whose life is closely allied to that of the Church</em>; and without him
-... the fall of man could not have taken place. If it were not for him (the
-Devil), the Saviour, the Redeemer, the Crucified would be but the most ridiculous of
-supernumeraries and the Cross an insult to good sense.” And if so, then we should
-feel thankful to the poor Devil.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. De Mirville. “No Devil, no Christ,” he exclaims.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. This is only another version of Narcissus, the Greek victim of his own fair looks.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. The famous temple dedicated to the Seven Angels at Rome, and built by Michael-Angelo
-in 1561, is still there, now called the “Church of St Mary of the Angels.” In
-the old Roman Missals printed in 1563—one or two of which may still be seen in
-Palazzo Barberini—one may find the religious service (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>officio</i></span>) of the seven angels, and
-their <em>old</em> and occult names. That the “angels” are the pagan Rectors, under different
-names—the Jewish having replaced the Greek and Latin names—of the seven planets
-is proven by what Pope Pius V. said in his Bull to the Spanish Clergy, permitting and
-encouraging the worship of the said seven spirits of the stars. “One cannot exalt too
-much these <em>seven rectors</em> of the world, <em>figured by the seven planets</em>, as it is consoling to
-our century to witness by the grace of God the cult of these <em>seven ardent lights</em>, and
-of these <em>seven stars</em> reassuming all its lustre in the Christian republic.” (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Les Sept
-Esprits et l’Histoire de leur Culte</cite></span>; De Mirville’s 2nd memoir addressed to the
-Academy. Vol. II. p. 358.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Herodotus showing the identity of Mitra and Venus, the sentence in the <cite>Nabathean
-Agriculture</cite> is evidently misunderstood.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. “Both in Biblical and pagan theologies,” says de Mirville, “the Sun has its god, its defender,
-and its sacrilegious usurper, in other words, its Ormuzd, its planet Mercury (Mitra), and its Lucifer,
-Venus (or Ahriman), taken away from its ancient master, and now given to its conqueror.” (p. 164.)
-Therefore, Lucifer-Venus is quite <em>holy</em> now.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. In Revelation there is no “horn broken,” but it is simply said in Chapter XIII., 3. <a id='corr22.1.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='tha'>that</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_22.1.1'><ins class='correction' title='tha'>that</ins></a></span>
-John saw “one of his heads, as it were, wounded to death.” John knew naught in his generation of
-“a horned” devil.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. The literal words used, and their translation, are: “<em>Aïk Naphelta Mi-Shamayim Hillel Ben-Shachar
-Negdangta La-Aretz Cholesch El-Goüm</em>,” or, “How art thou fallen from the heavens,
-Hillel, Son of the Morning, how art thou cast down unto the earth, thou who didst cast down the
-nations.” Here the word, translated “Lucifer,” is הילל, Hillel, and its meaning is “shining brightly
-or gloriously.” It is very true also, that by a pun to which Hebrew words lend themselves so
-easily, the verb <em>hillel</em> may be made to mean “to howl,” hence, by an easy derivation, hillel may be
-constructed into “howler,” or a devil, a creature, however, one hears rarely, if ever, “howling.” In
-his Lexicon, Art. הל, Parkhurst says: “The Syriac translation of this passage renders it אילל ‘howl’;
-and even Jerome observes that it literally means <a id='corr22.2.9'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='‘to howl.’'>‘to howl.’”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_22.2.9'><ins class='correction' title='‘to howl.’'>‘to howl.’”</ins></a></span> Michaelis translates it, ‘Howl, Son of
-the Morning.’ But at this rate, Hillel, the great Jewish sage and reformer, might also be called a
-“howler,” and connected with the devil!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. Sanskrit Upadhi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. Liberation or Nirvana.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. Dr. Lewins, the Hylo-Idealist, in his appendices
-to “What is Religion?” by C. N.—“On
-the Brain Theory of Mind and Matter, the Creed
-of Physics, Physic and Philosophy.” W. Stewart
-&amp; Co.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Mark well: when a theosophist or an occultist
-speaks of “spontaneous generation,” because
-for him there exists no inorganic matter in
-Kosmos—he is forthwith set down as an <em>ignoramus</em>.
-To prove the descent of man from the
-animal, however, even spontaneous generation
-from dead or inorganic matter, becomes an axiomatic
-and scientific fact.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. ύλη “<em>matter</em> as opposed to mind”; therefore
-<em>Material-Idealism</em>—a contradiction in terms
-exactly parallel to the name “Psychic” and the
-very “anti-psychic” work of the Society referred
-to. <em>Pseuma</em> should replace <em>Psyche</em>, as it seeks
-for <em>frauds</em> and not <em>soul-action</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. Spiritualists, mystics, and metaphysical
-Orientalists need not feel jealous, as they are
-made to share the same fate, and are raised to
-the same dignity with the Theosophists. The
-writers of “The Perfect Way,” Mrs. Dr.
-Kingsford and Mr. E. Maitland, stand arm-in-arm
-with the humble writer of “Isis Unveiled”
-before the throne of Satan. Mr. Ed. Arnold,
-of “The Light of Asia,” and the late Mr.
-Kenealy, of the “Book of God.” are seen
-radiating in the same lethal light of brimstone and
-sulphur. Mr. C. C. Massey is shown stuck deep
-in Antichristian Metaphysics; our kind Lady
-Caithness is pointed out in the coils of the
-“Great Beast” of Romanism, and charged with
-“Goddess worship:” and even—ye Powers of
-mystical Perception!—Mr. Arthur Lillie’s
-Buddhist Monotheism is taken <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>au grand serieux</i></span>!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>
- <h2 id='No_2' class='c006' title='LUCIFER Vol. I No. 2 October 15th 1887'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c043'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Vol. I.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON, OCTOBER <span class='fss'>15TH</span>, 1887.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 2.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>THE LADY OF LIGHT.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>(<em>Written for</em> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Star of the Day and the Night!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Star of the Dark that is dying;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Star of the Dawn that is nighing,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c013'><sup>[19]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Still with the purest in white,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Still art thou Queen of the Seven;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thou hast not fallen from Heaven</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>How large in thy lustre, how bright</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The beauty of promise thou wearest!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The message of Morning thou bearest,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Aid us in putting to flight</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The Shadows that darken about us,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Illumine within, as without, us,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Shine through the thick of our fight;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Open the eyes of the sleeping;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Dry up the tears of the weeping,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Purge with thy pureness our sight,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thou light of the lost ones who love us,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thou lamp of the Leader above us,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Shine with transfiguring might,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Till earth shall reflect back as human</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thy Likeness, Celestial Woman,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>With the flame of thy radiance smite</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The clouds that are veiling the vision</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of Woman’s millennial mission,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Shine in the Depth and the Height,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And show us the treasuries olden</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of wisdom, the hidden, the golden,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lucifer, Lady of Light!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Gerald Massey.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>It is intensely interesting to follow season after season the rapid
-evolution and change of public thought in the direction of the
-mystical. The educated mind is most undeniably attempting
-to free itself from the heavy fetters of materialism. The ugly caterpillar
-is writhing in the agonies of death, under the powerful efforts of
-the psychic butterfly to escape from its science-built prison, and every
-day brings some new glad tidings of one or more such mental births to
-light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As the New York “Path” truly remarks in its September issue, when
-“Theosophical and kindred topics ... are made the texts for novels,”
-and, we may add, scientific essays and <em>brochures</em>, “the implication is that
-interest in them has become diffused through all social ranks.” That kind
-of literature is “paradoxically proof that Occultism has passed beyond
-the region of careless amusement and entered that of serious enquiry.”
-The reader has but to throw a retrospective glance at the publications
-of the last few years to find that such topics as Mysticism, Magic,
-Sorcery, Spiritualism, Theosophy, Mesmerism, or, as it is now called,
-Hypnotism, all the various branches in short of the <em>Occult</em> side of nature,
-are becoming predominant in every kind of literature. They visibly increase
-in proportion to the efforts made to discredit the movements in
-the cause of truth, and strangle enquiry—whether on the field of theosophy
-or spiritualism—by trying to besmear their most prominent heralds,
-pioneers and defenders, with tar and feathers.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The key-note for mystic and theosophic literature was Marion Crawford’s
-“Mr. Isaacs.” It was followed by his “Zoroaster.” Then followed
-“The Romance of Two Worlds,” by Marie Corelli; R. Louis Stephenson’s
-“Mr. Hyde and Dr. Jekyll;” “The Fallen Idol,” by Anstey; “King
-Solomon’s Mines” and the thrice famous “She,” by Rider Haggard;
-“Affinities” and “The Brother of the Shadow,” by Mrs. Campbell
-Praed; Edmund Downey’s “House of Tears,” and many others less
-noticeable. And now there comes a fresh outburst in Florence Marryat’s
-“Daughter of the Tropics,” and F. C. Philips’ “Strange Adventures
-of Lucy Smith.” It is unnecessary to mention in detail the literature
-produced by avowed theosophists and occultists, some of whose works
-are very remarkable, while others are positively scientific, such as S. L.
-Macgregor Mathers’ “Kabbalah Unveiled,” and Dr. F. Hartmann’s
-“Paracelsus,” “Magic, White and Black,” &amp;c. We have also to note
-the fact that theosophy has now crossed the Channel, and is making
-its way into French literature. “La France” publishes a strange
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>romance by Ch. Chincholle, pregnant with theosophy, occultism and
-mesmerism, and called “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>La Grande Pretresse</cite></span>,” while <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>La Revue politique
-et litteraire</cite></span> (19 Feb. 1887, <i>et seq.</i>) contained over the signature of
-Th. Bentzon, a novel called <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Emancipée</cite></span>, wherein esoteric doctrines
-and adepts are mentioned in conjunction with the names of well-known
-theosophists. A sign of the times!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Literature—especially in countries free from government censorship—is
-the public heart and pulse. Besides the glaring fact that were there
-no demand there would be no supply, current literature is produced
-only to please, and is therefore evidently the mirror which faithfully
-reflects the state of the public mind. True, Conservative editors, and
-their submissive correspondents and reporters, still go on slashing
-occasionally in print the fair faces of mystic spiritualism and theosophy,
-and some of them are still found, from time to time, indulging
-in a <em>brutal</em> personal attack. But they do no harm on the whole, except
-perhaps to their own editorial reputations, as such editors can never
-be suspected of an exuberance of culture and good taste after certain
-ungentlemanly personal attacks. They do good on the contrary.
-For, while the theosophists and spiritualists so attacked, may view the
-Billingsgate poured upon them in a true Socratean spirit, and console
-themselves with the knowledge that none of the epithets used can possibly
-apply to them, on the other hand, <em>too much</em> abuse and vilification generally
-ends by awakening the public sympathy for the victim, in the right-minded
-and the impartial, at any rate.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In England people seem to like fair play on the whole. It is not <em>bashi-boozook</em>-like
-actions, the doughty deeds of those who delight in mutilating
-the slain and the wounded, that can find sympathy for any great length
-of time with the public. If—as maintained by our lay enemies and repeated
-by some <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>naïf</i></span> and too sanguine missionary organs—Spiritualism
-and Theosophy are “dead as a door-nail” (<em>sic</em>, <em>vide</em> American Christian
-periodicals),—aye, “dead and buried,” why, in such case, good Christian
-fathers, not leave the dead at rest till “Judgment Day”? And if they are
-not, then editors—the profane as well as the clerical—why should you still
-fear? Do not show yourselves such cowards if you have the truth on your
-side. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Magna est veritas et prevalebit</i></span>, and “murder will out,” as it always
-has, sooner or later. Open your columns to <em>free</em> and fearless discussion,
-and do as the theosophical periodicals have ever done, and as <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> is
-now preparing to do. The “bright Son of the morning” fears no light.
-He courts it, and is prepared to publish any inimical contributions
-(couched, of course, in decent language), however much at variance with
-his <a id='corr84.41'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='theosopical'>theosophical</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_84.41'><ins class='correction' title='theosopical'>theosophical</ins></a></span> views. He is determined to give a fair hearing in any
-and every case, to both contending parties and allow things and thoughts
-to be judged on their respective merits. For why, or what should one
-dread when fact and truth are one’s only aim? <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Du choc des opinions
-jaillit la verité</i></span> was said by a French philosopher. If Theosophy and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Spiritualism are no better than “gigantic frauds and will-o’-the-wisps of
-the age” why such <em>expensive</em> crusades against both? And if they are
-not, why should Agnostics and searchers after truth in general, help
-bigoted and narrow-minded materialists, sectarians and dogmatists to
-hide our light under a bushel by mere brutal force and usurped authority?
-It is easy to surprise the good faith of the fair-minded. Still
-easier to discredit that, which by its intrinsic strangeness, is already unpopular
-and could hardly be credited in its palmiest days. “We welcome
-no supposition so eagerly as one which accords with and intensifies our
-own prejudices” says, in “Don Jesualdo,” a popular author. Therefore,
-<em>facts</em> become often cunningly concocted “frauds;” and self-evident, glaring
-lies are accepted as gospel truths at the first breeze of Don Basilio’s
-<cite>Calumnia</cite>, by those to whose hard-crusted pre-conceptions such slander is
-like heavenly dew.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But, beloved enemies, “the light of Lucifer” may, after all, dispel some
-of the surrounding darkness. The mighty roaring voice of denunciation,
-so welcome to those whose little spites and hates and mental stagnation
-in the grasp of the social <a id='corr85.19'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='respectabilily'>respectability</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_85.19'><ins class='correction' title='respectabilily'>respectability</ins></a></span> it panders to, may yet be silenced
-by the voice of truth—“the still small voice”—whose destiny it ever was to
-first preach in the desert. That cold and artificial light which still seems
-to shine so dazzlingly over the alleged iniquities of professional mediums
-and the supposed sins of commission and omission of <em>non-professional</em>
-experimentalists, of free and independent theosophists, may yet be
-extinguished at the height of all its glory. For it is not quite the perpetual
-lamp of the alchemist philosopher. Still less is it that “light
-which never shone on sea or land,” that ray of divine intuition, the spark
-which glimmers latent in the spiritual, never-erring perceptions of man
-and woman, and which is now awakening—for its time is at hand.
-A few years more, and the Aladdin’s lamp, which called forth the ministering
-genius thereof, who, making three salutes to the public, proceeded
-forthwith to devour mediums and theosophists, like a juggler who
-swallows swords at a village fair, will get out of order. Its light, over
-which the anti-theosophists are crowing victory to this day, shall get dim.
-And then, perhaps, it will be discovered that what was claimed as a
-direct ray from the source of eternal truth was no better than a penny
-rush-light, in whose deceitful smoke and soot people got hypnotized, and
-saw everything upside down. It will be found that the hideous monsters
-of fraud and imposture had no existence outside the murky and dizzied
-brains of the Aladdins on their journey of discovery. And that, finally,
-the good people who listened to them, had been all the time seeing
-sights and hearing things under unconscious and mutual <em>suggestion</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is a scientific explanation, and requires no black magicians or
-<em>dugpas</em> at work; for “suggestion” as now practised by the sorcerers of
-science is—<em>dugpaship</em> itself, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>pur sang</i></span>. No Eastern “adept of the <em>left</em>
-hand” can do more mischief by his infernal art than a grave hypnotiser
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>of the Faculty of Medicine, a disciple of Charcot, or of any other scientific
-<em>light</em> of the first magnitude. In Paris, as in St. Petersburg, crimes have
-been committed under “suggestion.” Divorces have occurred, and
-husbands have nearly killed their wives and their supposed co-respondents,
-owing to tricks played on innocent and respectable women,
-who have thus had their fair name and all their future life blasted for
-ever. A son, under such influence, broke open the desk of an avaricious
-father, who caught him in the act, and nearly shot him in a fit of rage.
-One of the keys of Occultism is in the hands of science—cold, heartless,
-materialistic, and crassly ignorant of the other truly psychic side of the
-phenomenon: hence, powerless to draw a line of demarcation between
-the physiological and the purely spiritual effects of the disease inoculated,
-and unable to prevent future results and consequences of which it has no
-knowledge, and over which it has, therefore, no control.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We find in the “Lotus” of September, 1887, the following:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>A French paper, the <cite>Paris</cite>, for August 12th, contains a long and excellent article by
-G. Montorgueil, entitled, <cite>The Accursed Sciences</cite>, from which we extract the following
-passage, since we are, unfortunately, unable to quote the whole:—</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>“Some months ago, already, in I forget what case, the question of ‘suggestion’ was
-raised and taken account of by the judges. We shall certainly see people in the dock
-accused of occult malpractices. But how will the prosecution go to work? What
-arguments will it bring to bear? The crime by ‘suggestion’ is the ideal of a crime
-without proof. In such a case the gravest charges will never be more than presumptions,
-and fugitive presumptions. On what fragile scaffolding of suspicions will the
-charge rest? No examination, but a moral one, will be possible. We shall have to
-resign ourselves to hearing the Solicitor-general say to the accused: ‘Accused, it
-appears from a perquisition made into your brain, etc.’</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>Ah, the poor jurymen! it is they who are to be pitied. Taking their task to heart,
-they already have the greatest difficulty in separating the true from the false, even in
-rough and ready cases, the facts of which are obvious, all the details of which are
-tangible and the responsibilities clear. And we are going to ask them on their soul
-and conscience to decide questions of black magic! Verily their reason will not
-hold out through the fortnight; it will give way before that and sink into thaumaturgy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We move fast. The strange trials for sorcery will blossom anew; somnabules who
-were merely grotesque will appear in a tragic light; the coffee grounds, which so far
-only risked the police court, will hear their sentence at the assizes. The evil eye
-will figure among criminal offences. These last years of the XIXth century will have
-seen us step from progress to progress, till we reach at last this judicial enormity: a
-second Laubardemont prosecuting another Urbain Grandier.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Serious, scientific, and political papers are full of earnest discussions
-on the subject. A St. Petersburg “Daily” has a long <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>feuilleton</i></span> on the
-“Bearing of <em>Hypnotic Suggestions</em> upon Criminal Law.” “Cases of
-Hypnotism with criminal motives have of late begun to increase in an
-ever progressing ratio,” it tells its readers. And it is not the only newspaper,
-nor is Russia the only country where the same tale is told.
-Careful investigations and researches have been made by distinguished
-lawyers and medical authorities. Data have been assiduously collected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>and have revealed that the curious phenomenon,—which sceptics have
-hitherto derided, and young people have included among their evening
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>petits jeux innocents</i></span>,—is a new and terrible danger to state and society.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Two facts have now become patent to law and science:—</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>(I.) <i>That, in the perceptions of the hypnotised subject, the visionary
-representations called forth by “suggestion,” become real existing
-actualities, the subject being, for the moment, the automatic executor
-of the will of the hypnotiser; and</i>—</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>(II.) <em>That the great majority of persons experimented upon, is subject to
-hypnotic suggestion.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus Liébeault found only <em>sixty</em> subjects intractable out of the <em>seven
-hundred</em> he experimented upon; and Bernheim, out of 1,014 subjects,
-failed with only <em>twenty-six</em>. The field for the natural-born <em>jadoo-wala</em>
-(sorcery-mongers), is vast indeed! Evil has acquired a play-ground on
-which it may now exercise its sway upon many a generation of unconscious
-victims. For crimes undreamt of in the waking state, and felonies
-of the blackest dye, are now invited and encouraged by the new “accursed
-science.” The real perpetrators of these deeds of darkness may now
-remain for ever hidden from the vengeance of human justice. The hand
-which executes the criminal suggestion is only that of an irresponsible
-automaton, whose memory preserves no trace of it, and who, moreover,
-is a witness who can easily be disposed of by compulsory suicide—again
-under “suggestion.” What better means than these could be offered to
-the fiends of lust and revenge, to those dark Powers—called human
-passions—ever on the look out to break the universal commandment:
-“Thou shalt not steal, nor murder, nor lust after thy neighbour’s wife?”
-Liébeault <em>suggested</em> to a young girl that she should poison herself with
-prussic acid, and she swallowed the supposed drug without one moment’s
-hesitation; Dr. Liégois <em>suggested</em> to a young woman that she owed him
-5,000 francs, and the subject forthwith signed a cheque for the amount
-Bernheim <em>suggested</em> to another hysterical girl a long and complicated
-vision with regard to a criminal case. Two days after, although the
-hypnotiser had not exercised any new pressure upon her in the interim,
-she repeated distinctly the whole suggested story to a lawyer sent to her
-for the purpose. Had her evidence been seriously accepted, it would
-have brought the accused to the guillotine.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These cases present two dark and terrible aspects. From the moral
-stand point, such processes and <em>suggestions</em> leave an indelible stain upon
-the purity of the subject’s nature. Even the innocent mind of a ten year
-old child can thus be <a id='corr87.40'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>innoculated</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_87.40'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>innoculated</ins></a></span> with vice, the poison-germ of which
-will develop in his subsequent <a id='corr87.41'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='life'>life.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_87.41'><ins class='correction' title='life'>life.</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On the judicial aspect it is needless to enter in great detail. Suffice
-to say that it is this characteristic feature of the hypnotic state—the
-absolute surrender of will and self-consciousness to the hypnotiser—which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>possesses such importance, from its bearing upon crime, in the
-eyes of legal authorities. For if the hypnotiser has the subject entirely
-at his beck and call, so that he can cause him to commit any crime, acting,
-so to say, invisibly within him, then what are not the terrible “judicial
-mistakes” to be expected? What wonder then, that the jurisprudence
-of one country after the other has taken alarm, and is devising, one after
-the other, measures for repressing the exercise of hypnotism! In Denmark
-it has just been forbidden. Scientists have experimented upon sensitives
-with so much success that a hypnotised victim has been jeered and
-hooted through the streets on his way to commit a crime, which he would
-have completed unconsciously, had not the victim been warned beforehand
-by the hypnotiser.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In Brussels a recent and sad case is well-known to all. A young girl
-of good family was seduced while in a hypnotised state by a man who
-had first subjected her to his influence at a social gathering. She only
-realised her condition a few months later, when her relatives, who divined
-the criminal, forced her seducer to make the only possible reparation—that
-of marrying his victim.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The French Academy has just been debating the question:—how far
-a hypnotised subject, from a mere victim, can become a regular tool of
-crime. Of course, no jurist or legislator can remain indifferent to this
-question; and it was averred that the crimes committed under <em>suggestion</em>
-are so unprecedented that some of them can hardly be brought within
-the scope of the law. Hence the prudent legal prohibition, just adopted
-in France, which enacts that no person, save those legally qualified to
-exercise the medical profession, shall hypnotise any other person. Even
-the physician who enjoys such legal right is permitted to hypnotise a
-person only in the presence of another qualified medical man, and with
-the written permission of the subject. Public <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>séances</i></span> of hypnotism are
-forbidden, and they are strictly confined to medical <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>cliniques</i></span> and laboratories.
-Those who break this law are liable to a heavy fine and
-imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the keynote has been struck, and many are the ways in which this
-<em>black art</em> may be used—laws notwithstanding. That it will be so used,
-the vile passions inherent in human nature are sufficient guarantee.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Many and strange will be the romances yet enacted; for truth is often
-stranger than fiction, and what is thought fiction is still more often truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No wonder then that occult literature is growing with every day.
-Occultism and sorcery are in the air, with no true philosophical knowledge
-to guide the experimenters and thus check evil results. “Works of
-<em>fiction</em>,” the various novels and romances are called. “Fiction” in the
-arrangement of their characters and the adventures of their heroes and
-heroines—admitted. Not so, as to the <em>facts</em> presented. These are <em>no
-fictions</em>, but true <em>presentiments</em> of what lies in the bosom of the future,
-and much of which is already born—nay corroborated by <em>scientific</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>experiments. Sign of the times! Close of a psychic cycle! The time for
-phenomena with, or through mediums, whether professional or otherwise,
-is gone by. It was the early season of the blossoming, of the era
-mentioned even in the Bible;<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c013'><sup>[20]</sup></a> the tree of Occultism is now preparing
-for “fruiting,” and the Spirit of the Occult is awakening in the blood
-of the new generations. If the old men only “dream dreams,” the young
-ones see already visions,<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c013'><sup>[21]</sup></a> and—record them in novels and works of
-fiction. Woe to the ignorant and the unprepared, and those who listen
-to the syrens of materialistic science! For indeed, indeed, many will be
-the unconscious crimes committed, and many will be the victims who
-will innocently suffer death by hanging and decapitation at the hands of
-the righteous judges and the <em>too innocent</em> jurymen, both alike ignorant of
-the fiendish power of “<span class='sc'>Suggestion</span>.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c011'>SELF-KNOWLEDGE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>The first necessity for obtaining self-knowledge is to become profoundly conscious
-of ignorance; to feel with every fibre of the heart that one is <em>ceaselessly</em>
-self-deceived.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The second requisite is the still deeper conviction that such knowledge—such
-intuitive and certain knowledge—can be obtained by effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The third and most important is an indomitable determination to obtain and
-face that knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Self-knowledge of this kind is unattainable by what men usually call “self-analysis.”
-It is not reached by reasoning or any brain process; for it is the
-awakening to consciousness of the Divine nature of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To obtain this knowledge is a greater achievement than to command the
-elements or to know the future.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>
- <h3 id='light2' class='c018'>COMMENTS ON “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>BY THE AUTHOR; (<i>continued</i>).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Before the ear can hear, it must have lost its sensitiveness.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>The first four rules of Light on the Path are, undoubtedly, curious
-though the statement may seem, the most important in the
-whole book, save one only. Why they are so important is that
-they contain the vital law, the very creative essence of the astral man.
-And it is only in the astral (or self-illuminated) consciousness that the rules
-which follow them have any living meaning. Once attain to the use of the
-astral senses and it becomes a matter of course that one commences to
-use them; and the later rules are but guidance in their use. When I
-speak like this I mean, naturally, that the first four rules are the ones
-which are of importance and interest to those who read them in print
-upon a page. When they are engraved on the man’s heart and on his
-life, unmistakably then the other rules become not merely interesting,
-or extraordinary, metaphysical statements, but actual facts in life which
-have to be grasped and experienced.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The four rules stand written in the great chamber of every actual
-lodge of a living Brotherhood. Whether the man is about to sell his
-soul to the devil, like Faust; whether he is to be worsted in the battle,
-like Hamlet; or whether he is to pass on within the precincts; in any case
-these words are for him. The man can choose between virtue and vice,
-but not until he is a man; a babe or a wild animal cannot so choose.
-Thus with the disciple, he must first become a disciple before he can
-even see the paths to choose between. This effort of creating himself
-as a disciple, the re-birth, he must do for himself without any teacher.
-Until the four rules are learned no teacher can be of any use to him;
-and that is why “the Masters” are referred to in the way they are. No
-real masters, whether adepts in power, in love, or in blackness, can
-affect a man till these four rules are passed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Tears, as I have said, may be called the moisture of life. The soul
-must have laid aside the emotions of humanity, must have secured a
-balance which cannot be shaken by misfortune, before its eyes can open
-upon the super-human world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The voice of the Masters is always in the world; but only those hear it
-whose ears are no longer receptive of the sounds which affect the personal
-life. Laughter no longer lightens the heart, anger may no longer
-enrage it, tender words bring it no balm. For that within, to which the
-ears are as an outer gateway, is an unshaken place of peace in itself
-which no person can disturb.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>As the eyes are the windows of the soul, so are the ears its gateways
-or doors. Through them comes knowledge of the confusion of the
-world. The great ones who have conquered life, who have become more
-than disciples, stand at peace and undisturbed amid the vibration and
-kaleidoscopic movement of humanity. They hold within themselves a
-certain knowledge, as well as a perfect peace; and thus they are not
-roused or excited by the partial and erroneous fragments of information
-which are brought to their ears by the changing voices of those around
-them. When I speak of knowledge, I mean intuitive knowledge. This
-certain information can never be obtained by hard work, or by experiment;
-for these methods are only applicable to matter, and matter is in
-itself a perfectly uncertain substance, continually affected by change.
-The most absolute and universal laws of natural and physical life, as
-understood by the scientist, will pass away when the life of this universe
-has passed away, and only its soul is left in the silence. What then will
-be the value of the knowledge of its laws acquired by industry and
-observation? I pray that no reader or critic will imagine that by what I
-have said I intend to depreciate or disparage acquired knowledge, or the
-work of scientists. On the contrary, I hold that scientific men are the
-pioneers of modern thought. The days of literature and of art, when
-poets and sculptors saw the divine light, and put it into their own great
-language—these days lie buried in the long past with the ante-Phidian
-sculptors and the pre-Homeric poets. The mysteries no longer rule the
-world of thought and beauty; human life is the governing power, not
-that which lies beyond it. But the scientific workers are progressing,
-not so much by their own will as by sheer force of circumstances, towards
-the far line which divides things interpretable from things uninterpretable.
-Every fresh discovery drives them a step onward. Therefore
-do I very highly esteem the knowledge obtained by work and
-experiment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But intuitive knowledge is an entirely different thing. It is not
-acquired in any way, but is, so to speak, a faculty of the soul; not the
-animal soul, that which becomes a ghost after death, when lust or liking
-or the memory of ill-deeds holds it to the neighbourhood of human beings,
-but the divine soul which animates all the external forms of the individualised
-being.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is, of course, a faculty which indwells in that soul, which is inherent.
-The would-be disciple has to arouse himself to the consciousness
-of it by a fierce and resolute and indomitable effort of will. I use the
-word indomitable for a special reason. Only he who is untameable, who
-cannot be dominated, who knows he has to play the lord over men, over
-facts, over all things save his own divinity, can arouse this faculty. “With
-faith all things are possible.” The sceptical laugh at faith and pride
-themselves on its absence from their own minds. The truth is that faith
-is a great engine, an enormous power, which in fact can accomplish all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>things. For it is the covenant or engagement between man’s divine part
-and his lesser self.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The use of this engine is quite necessary in order to obtain intuitive
-knowledge; for unless a man believes such knowledge exists within himself
-how can he claim and use it?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Without it he is more helpless than any drift-wood or wreckage on the
-great tides of the ocean. They are cast hither and thither indeed; so
-may a man be by the chances of fortune. But such adventures are purely
-external and of very small account. A slave may be dragged through
-the streets in chains, and yet retain the quiet soul of a philosopher, as
-was well seen in the person of Epictetus. A man may have every worldly
-prize in his possession, and stand absolute master of his personal fate, to
-all appearance, and yet he knows no peace, no certainty, because he is
-shaken within himself by every tide of thought that he touches on. And
-these changing tides do not merely sweep the man bodily hither and
-thither like driftwood on the water; that would be nothing. They enter
-into the gateways of his soul, and wash over that soul and make it blind
-and blank and void of all permanent intelligence, so that passing impressions
-affect it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To make my meaning plainer I will use an illustration. Take an
-author at his writing, a painter at his canvas, a composer listening to the
-melodies that dawn upon his glad imagination; let any one of these
-workers pass his daily hours by a wide window looking on a busy street.
-The power of the animating life blinds sight and hearing alike, and the
-great traffic of the city goes by like nothing but a passing pageant. But
-a man whose mind is empty, whose day is objectless, sitting at that same
-window, notes the passers-by and remembers the faces that chance to
-please or interest him. So it is with the mind in its relation to eternal
-truth. If it no longer transmits its fluctuations, its partial knowledge,
-its unreliable information to the soul, then in the inner place of peace
-already found when the first rule has been learned—in that inner place
-there leaps into flame the light of actual knowledge. Then the ears
-begin to hear. Very dimly, very faintly at first. And, indeed, so faint
-and tender are these first indications of the commencement of true
-actual life, that they are sometimes pushed aside as mere fancies, mere
-imaginings.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But before these are capable of becoming more than mere imaginings,
-the abyss of nothingness has to be faced in another form. The utter
-silence which can only come by closing the ears to all transitory sounds
-comes as a more appalling horror than even the formless emptiness of
-space. Our only mental conception of blank space is, I think, when
-reduced to its barest element of thought, that of black darkness. This is
-a great physical terror to most persons, and when regarded as an eternal
-and unchangeable fact, must mean to the mind the idea of annihilation
-rather than anything else. But it is the obliteration of one sense only;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>and the sound of a voice may come and bring comfort even in the
-profoundest darkness. The disciple, having found his way into this
-blackness, which is the fearful abyss, must then so shut the gates of his
-soul that no comforter can enter there nor any enemy. And it is in
-making this second effort that the fact of pain and pleasure being but
-one sensation becomes recognisable by those who have before been
-unable to perceive it. For when the solitude of silence is reached the
-soul hungers so fiercely and passionately for some sensation on which to
-rest, that a painful one would be as keenly welcomed as a pleasant one.
-When this consciousness is reached the courageous man by seizing and
-retaining it, may destroy the “sensitiveness” at once. When the ear no
-longer discriminates between that which is pleasant or that which is
-painful, it will no longer be affected by the voices of others. And then
-it is safe and possible to open the doors of the soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Sight” is the first effort, and the easiest, because it is accomplished
-partly by an intellectual effort. The intellect can conquer the heart, as
-is well known in ordinary life. Therefore, this preliminary step still
-lies within the dominion of matter. But the second step allows of no
-such assistance, nor of any material aid whatever. Of course, I mean
-by material aid the action of the brain, or emotions, or human soul. In
-compelling the ears to listen only to the eternal silence, the being we
-call man becomes something which is no longer man. A very superficial
-survey of the thousand and one influences which are brought to
-bear on us by others will show that this must be so. A disciple will
-fulfil all the duties of his manhood; but he will fulfil them according to
-his own sense of right, and not according to that of any person or body
-of persons. This is a very evident result of following the creed of
-knowledge instead of any of the blind creeds.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To obtain the pure silence necessary for the disciple, the heart and
-emotions, the brain and its intellectualisms, have to be put aside. Both
-are but mechanisms, which will perish with the span of man’s life. It
-is the essence beyond, that which is the motive power, and makes man
-live, that is now compelled to rouse itself and act. Now is the greatest
-hour of danger. In the first trial men go mad with fear; of this first
-trial Bulwer Lytton wrote. No novelist has followed to the second
-trial, though some of the poets have. Its subtlety and great danger lies
-in the fact that in the measure of a man’s strength is the measure of
-his chance of passing beyond it or coping with it at all. If he has power
-enough to awaken that unaccustomed part of himself, the supreme
-essence, then has he power to lift the gates of gold, then is he the true
-alchemist, in possession of the elixir of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is at this point of experience that the occultist becomes separated
-from all other men and enters on to a life which is his own; on to the
-path of individual accomplishment instead of mere obedience to the
-genii which rule our earth. This raising of himself into an individual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>power does in reality identify him with the nobler forces of life and make
-him one with them. For they stand beyond the powers of this earth
-and the laws of this universe. Here lies man’s only hope of success in
-the great effort; to leap right away from his present standpoint to his next
-and at once become an intrinsic part of the divine power as he has been
-an intrinsic part of the intellectual power, of the great nature to which he
-belongs. He stands always in advance of himself, if such a contradiction
-can be understood. It is the men who adhere to this position, who
-believe in their innate power of progress, and that of the whole race, who
-are the elders brothers, the pioneers. Each man has to accomplish the
-great leap for himself and without aid; yet it is something of a staff to
-lean on to know that others have gone on that road. It is possible that
-they have been lost in the abyss; no matter, they have had the courage
-to enter it. Why I say that it is possible they have been lost in the
-abyss is because of this fact, that one who has passed through is unrecognizable
-until the other and altogether new condition is attained by both.
-It is unnecessary to enter upon the subject of what that condition is at
-present. I only say this, that in the early state in which man is entering
-upon the silence he loses knowledge of his friends, of his lovers, of all who
-have been near and dear to him; and also loses sight of his teachers and
-of those who have preceded him on his way. I explain this because
-scarce one passes through without bitter complaint. Could but the mind
-grasp beforehand that the silence must be complete, surely this complaint
-need not arise as a hindrance on the path. Your teacher, or your predecessor
-may hold your hand in his, and give you the utmost sympathy the
-human heart is capable of. But when the silence and the darkness comes,
-you lose all knowledge of him; you are alone and he cannot help you,
-not because his power is gone, but because you have invoked your great
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>By your great enemy, I mean yourself. If you have the power to face
-your own soul in the darkness and silence, you will have conquered the
-physical or animal self which dwells in sensation only.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This statement, I feel, will appear involved; but in reality it is quite
-simple. Man, when he has reached his fruition, and civilization is at its
-height, stands between two fires. Could he but claim his great inheritance,
-the encumbrance of the mere animal life would fall away from
-him without difficulty. But he does not do this, and so the races of men
-flower and then droop and die and decay off the face of the earth,
-however splendid the bloom may have been. And it is left to the
-individual to make this great effort; to refuse to be terrified by his
-greater nature, to refuse to be drawn back by his lesser or more material
-self. Every individual who accomplishes this is a redeemer of the race.
-He may not blazon forth his deeds, he may dwell in secret and silence;
-but it is a fact that he forms a link between man and his divine part;
-between the known and the unknown; between the stir of the market-place
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>and the stillness of the snow-capped Himalayas. He has not to
-go about among men in order to form this link; in the astral he <em>is</em> that
-link, and this fact makes him a being of another order from the rest of
-mankind. Even so early on the road towards knowledge, when he has
-but taken the second step, he finds his footing more certain, and becomes
-conscious that he is a recognised part of a whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is one of the contradictions in life which occur so constantly
-that they afford fuel to the fiction writer. The occultist finds them
-become much more marked as he endeavours to live the life he has
-chosen. As he retreats within himself and becomes self-dependent, he
-finds himself more definitely becoming part of a great tide of definite
-thought and feeling. When he has learned the first lesson, conquered
-the hunger of the heart, and refused to live on the love of others, he
-finds himself more capable of inspiring love. As he flings life away it
-comes to him in a new form and with a new meaning. The world has
-always been a place with many contradictions in it, to the man; when he
-becomes a disciple he finds life is describable as a series of paradoxes.
-This is a fact in nature, and the reason for it is intelligible enough.
-Man’s soul “dwells like a star apart,” even that of the vilest among us;
-while his consciousness is under the law of vibratory and sensuous life.
-This alone is enough to cause those complications of character which are
-the material for the novelist; every man is a mystery, to friend and
-enemy alike, and to himself. His motives are often undiscoverable, and
-he cannot probe to them or know why he does this or that. The
-disciple’s effort is that of awaking consciousness in this starry part of
-himself, where his power and divinity lie sleeping. As this consciousness
-becomes awakened, the contradictions in the man himself become
-more marked than ever; and so do the paradoxes which he lives
-through. For, of course man creates his own life; and “adventures are
-to the adventurous” is one of those wise proverbs which are drawn from
-actual fact, and cover the whole area of human experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Pressure on the divine part of man re-acts upon the animal part. As
-the silent soul awakes it makes the ordinary life of the man more
-purposeful, more vital, more real, and responsible. To keep to the two
-instances already mentioned, the occultist who has withdrawn into his
-own citadel has found his strength; immediately he becomes aware of
-the demands of duty upon him. He does not obtain his strength by
-his own right, but because he is a part of the whole; and as soon as he
-is safe from the vibration of life and can stand unshaken, the outer
-world cries out to him to come and labour in it. So with the heart.
-When it no longer wishes to take, it is called upon to give abundantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Light on the Path” has been called a book of paradoxes, and very
-justly; what else could it be, when it deals with the actual personal
-experience of the disciple?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To have acquired the astral senses of sight and hearing; or in other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>words to have attained perception and opened the doors of the soul, are
-gigantic tasks and may take the sacrifice of many successive incarnations.
-And yet, when the will has reached its strength, the whole
-miracle may be worked in a second of time. Then is the disciple the
-servant of Time no longer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These two first steps are negative; that is to say they imply retreat
-from a present condition of things rather than advance towards another.
-The two next are active, implying the advance into another state
-of being.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c013'><sup>[22]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='c020'>Δ</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be <a href='#light3'>continued</a>.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator2.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>WILL AND DESIRE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'><span class='sc'>Will</span> is the exclusive possession of man on this our plane of consciousness. It
-divides him from the brute in whom instinctive desire only is active.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Desire</span>, in its widest application, is the one creative force in the Universe.
-In this sense it is indistinguishable from Will; but we men never know desire
-under this form while we remain only men. Therefore Will and Desire are
-here considered as opposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus Will is the offspring of the Divine, the God in man; Desire the motive
-power of the animal life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Most men live in and by desire, mistaking it for will. But he who would
-achieve must separate will from desire, and make his will the ruler; for desire is
-unstable and ever changing, while will is steady and constant.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Both will and desire are absolute <em>creators</em>, forming the man himself and his
-surroundings. But will creates intelligently—desire blindly and unconsciously.
-The man, therefore, makes himself in the image of his desires, unless he
-creates himself in the likeness of the Divine, through his will, the child of the
-light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His task is twofold: to awaken the will, to strengthen it by use and conquest,
-to make it absolute ruler within his body; and, parallel with this, to purify
-desire.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Knowledge and will are the tools for the accomplishment of this purification.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>
- <h3 id='karma2' class='c018'>A LAW OF LIFE: KARMA.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>In illustration of the Mahatmic condition, it may be well to quote
-some extracts from “Five Years of Theosophy,” on pp. 215, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>et seq.</i></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The principal object of the Yogi is to realise the oneness of
-existence, and the practice of morality is the most powerful means to
-that end. The principal obstacle to this realization is the inborn habit
-of man of always placing himself at the centre of the Universe.
-Whatever a man might act, think, or feel, the irrepressible personality
-is sure to be the central figure. This, as will appear on reflection, is
-that which prevents every individual from filling his proper sphere in
-existence, where he only is in place, and no other individual is. The
-realization of this harmony is the practical objective aspect of the
-‘Grand Problem.’.... It availeth nothing to intellectually grasp
-the notion of your being everything ... if it is not realized in
-daily life. To confuse ‘meum and tuum’ in the vulgar sense is but to
-destroy the harmony of existence by a false assertion of ‘I,’ and is as
-foolish as the attempt to nourish the legs at the expense of the arms.
-You cannot be one with Nature, unless all your acts, thoughts, and feelings,
-synchronize with the onward march of Nature. What is meant by
-a Brahmajnani being beyond the reach of Karma, can be realised only
-by a man who has found out his exact position in harmony with the
-one Life in Nature; that man can see how a Brahmajnani can act only
-in unison with Nature, and never in discord with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“To use the phraseology of old occult writers, the Brahmajnani is a
-real co-worker with Nature.... Many have fallen into the error
-of supposing that a human being can escape the operation of the law of
-Karma by adopting a condition of masterly inactivity, entirely losing
-sight of the fact that even a rigid abstinence from physical acts does not
-produce inactivity on the higher astral and spiritual planes....
-Such a supposition is nothing short of a delusion.... There is a
-tendency in every department of Nature for an act to repeat itself.
-The Karma acquired in the last preceding birth is always trying to forge
-fresh links in the chain, and thereby lead to continued material existence.
-This tendency can only be counteracted by unselfishly performing all the
-duties pertaining to the sphere in which a person is born. Such a
-course can alone produce purification of the mind, without which the
-capacity of perceiving spiritual truths can never be acquired.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such a moral standard as this may be considered as the main working
-factor in the existence of a Mahatma. He exists by, through, and in
-harmony, and, as Mahatma, is harmony itself. It is impossible to carry
-these speculations further, for beyond the fact that these considerations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>are in analogy with the great law of nature, ordinary human intelligence
-can gain nothing from them. The Mahatma is a Mahatma, and only
-those who have reached that supreme condition can describe it, and even
-then it is doubtful whether words would express it. The word Mahatma
-has been used with some hesitation, as it might possibly require an article
-of great length to give the least idea of what it means. But some idea
-of the true position of these exalted beings (known in India and Tibet by
-this name) may be gathered from the foregoing pages if any conception
-of the connection of humanity with the law of Karma, and also of
-liberated humanity with the law of harmony, can be obtained.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the preceding pages especial reference has been made to the fact
-that the Mahatma, as such, has no Karma, but it is by no means
-intended to convey the idea that all who enter Occultism, and even
-those who have progressed a very long way on the Path of Life, are
-Mahatmas. Nay, more! There are many of them who are very holy,
-and even exalted, beings, but who are still subject to the law of Karma,
-as applied to ordinary humanity. But they have acquired self-mastery
-to an extraordinary degree, and their whole attention is “fixed on the
-eternal.” Thus, so far as they are concerned, they generate no new
-Karma in the restricted sense, but only progress towards Universal
-Harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To put it shortly, they exhaust their old Karma of past lives, and
-devote themselves to the production of Harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is important to bear this in mind when the attention is turned to
-the Karmic condition of ordinary humanity. For we are at once
-brought face to face with the old and much disputed question between
-free-will and predestination.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At this point, therefore, it will be necessary to enter, at some length,
-on this question, because it has been supposed that the idea of Karma is
-identical, or nearly so, with that of predestination. Consequently, it
-will be necessary to attempt a definition of what Free-will and Will are.
-Will, to the ordinary man, is known according to his experience as the
-power to do or not to do an action. So far, he is perfectly right, but, as
-usual, man limits the action of his will to the physical plane, and takes
-no account of even the mental plane. Even if he does not commit an
-action, he cannot help thinking about it, because he has desired to do it—even
-if he has repressed that desire. Nothing is more common than
-to hear anyone say, “I can’t help my likes and dislikes,” or, in other
-words, their attractions and repulsions, desires and the reverse. Consequently,
-until a man can control his desires, those desires control his
-will, and, consequently, predestination appears to rule the day. Thus we
-find that it is desire which impels man onward on his course, and governs
-that course to a very large extent, and this is the principle which is at
-its highest development in mankind as a rule. Now if it be granted that
-the human personality—a transient thing—has been constituted by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>man’s vanity as the centre of the Universe, it is plain that the combination
-of this principle of desire with the pronounced personality,
-will only serve to intensify this personality and bind man fast to it.
-Man thus constituted is a prisoner, and, more often than not, is so attached
-to his prison that he prefers to flutter his wings against the bars of his
-cage, instead of endeavouring to escape. But are there any means of
-escape:—it may be asked? Desire binds man fast to his personality,
-and intensifies one personality against another. Hence it is productive
-of strife and discord, and militates strongly against the law of universal
-harmony, or Karma, in this aspect. Thus desire and Karma would
-seem to be in complete opposition, and desire cannot be said to be a
-consequence of Karma. But really this is a confusion of terms, for all
-this only exists in the world of effects and not in that of causes. Desire
-is an effect of the accentuated personality, and in its turn produces that
-personality. This constitutes the prison, and the only means of escape
-from this prison of discord is the endeavour to produce harmony in its
-place. Thus, therefore, we have a definition of will as being not only that
-which represses a desire, but also an emanation of the one divine
-principle, and proceeding from the divine in man. In one sense, this will,
-this harmonizer of the discord, is identical with Karma. As a consequence,
-we can see that Karma produces punishment. That punishment
-arises from the fact that the assertion of both desire and will in any
-man makes him the battle-field of two opposing forces—the desire to
-do anything, and thus gratify the desire, and the will to repress it. Thus
-man must be a co-worker with nature and the law of harmony. He has
-to repress the Typhonic principle of desire and dissipate its energy. If
-he does not, it will bind him more firmly to his “personal centre,” accentuate
-his punishment, and hang like a millstone round his neck in
-the shape of Karmic effects, which generate fresh tendencies and desires.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The real function of will is to promote harmony between man and
-the great law by repressing desire. Liberation from the <em>effects</em> of Karma
-will come to the man who grasps his whole individuality firmly (not merely
-his personality), and, by the force of his awakened <em>spiritual</em> will, recognises
-this individuality as not himself, but as a thing to use in passing beyond
-the life of the individuality.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus the direction of will should be towards realizing one’s aspirations,
-and so give man “a glimpse into the eternal;” the lower consciousness
-will mirror these aspirations, even unconsciously to itself, and then
-itself aspires and is elevated if all is in accord.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But this is not free-will in the ordinary sense of the term; and it
-does not seem possible that such should exist in view of the ideas
-of Karmic effects and of reincarnation. It is in these two that lie all the
-objections to free-will, because too short a view has been taken of human
-life. In the dim vistas of time, and the countless incarnations which
-have taken place in them, it will at once be seen that the individual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>being has generated innumerable causes, the effects of which are still
-to be experienced. Thus it is free-will that man has, but not in the ordinary
-sense; it is free-will limited by countless other free-wills around
-him—limited too and circumscribed by his own acts. Man makes
-himself a prisoner, and believes himself free. He is right in his belief
-in a measure, for in virtue of the will he is free—to aspire and soar
-into the sublime heights of his own higher nature. He is a prisoner and
-predestined when he confines himself to his personality. Karma is at
-once his gaoler and his liberator, and the decision lies in the intensity of
-his aspirations, and is therefore in his own hands. Thus from the personal
-view predestination is true, but not from that of the spirit, which is free.
-From the latter view, and to a reasoning mind, the Calvinistic doctrine
-sounds little short of blasphemy. It is most certainly a contradiction
-in terms to speak of God as an all-wise, all-powerful and entirely just
-God, and then to speak of predestination as one of his laws, a law
-which, in face of the above qualities, and with that of mercy in addition,
-dooms countless millions to an eternity of pain and suffering as punishment,
-and that too before they are even born. When the apparent
-injustice of the lives of men is viewed and argued, it is because men
-forget what they have done in previous lives, in which they have violated
-the law in a very material direction, which leads them into these positions
-and from which they have to escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus the aspirations of man constitute that which sets man free, and
-which therefore represent his free-will. It is then well to endeavour
-to trace these aspirations in man with regard to Karma. The second
-section of the third part of “Light on the Path,” speaks on this point
-with no uncertain voice. The Occultist must pluck and eat the fruit of
-the tree of knowledge, and step on either the good or the evil path.
-And to do this knowingly produces great Karmic results. The mass
-of men walk waveringly, uncertain as to their goal, their standard of
-life is indefinite; the Occultist cannot be half-hearted, nor can he
-return when he has passed the threshold. “The individuality has
-approached the state of responsibility by reason of growth; it cannot
-recede from it.” The one means of escape from Karma is for the
-Occultist to live in the Eternal. But below this—the threshold—many
-men aspire. On this point, we may quote, “Five Years of Theosophy,”
-p. 226.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The unintelligent aspiration towards goodness propagates itself and
-leads to good lives in the future; the intelligent aspiration propagates
-itself in the same way, plus the propagation of intelligence; and this
-distinction shows the gulf of difference which may exist between
-the growth of a human soul, which merely drifts along the stream of
-time, and that of one which is consciously steered by an intelligent
-purpose throughout. The human Ego, which acquires the habit of
-seeking for knowledge, becomes invested, life after life, with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>qualifications which ensure the success of such a search, until the final
-success, achieved at some critical period of its existence, carries it right
-up into the company of those perfected Egos, which are the fully
-developed flowers only expected from a few of the thousand seeds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now it is clear that a slight impulse in a given direction, even on
-the physical plane, does not produce the same effect as a stronger one;
-so exactly in this matter of engendering habits which are required to
-persist in their operation through a succession of lives it is quite
-obvious that the strong impulse of a very ardent aspiration towards
-knowledge will be more likely than a weaker one to triumph over
-the so-called accidents of nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These considerations bring us to the question of those habits of life
-which are more immediately associated with the pursuit of occult
-science. It will be quite plain that the generation within his own
-nature of affinities in the direction of spiritual progress is a matter
-which has very little to do with the outer circumstances of a man’s daily
-life. It cannot be dissociated from what may be called the outer
-circumstances of his moral life, for an occult student, whose moral
-nature is consciously ignoble, and who combines the pursuit of
-knowledge with the practice of wrong, becomes by that condition
-of things a student of sorcery rather than of true Occultism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus so far traced Karma in one of its aspects is, “the ethical law
-of causation.” This law descends in its action below the moral plane,
-and is observed as the law of compensation on the physical plane. Thus
-the physical, intellectual and emotional planes, are all affected by
-Karma. The key to the situation is the mind; and, as we have seen,
-the liberation of the mind must be the most difficult task. If the
-powers of the mind are concentrated on the attainment of the highest
-ideal, Karma has no basis in which to inhere and consequently the
-tendency to commit actions from lower motives is annihilated. Even
-repentance, from this point of view, is a mistake, as it necessarily draws
-the mind back to the actions and motives repented of. Consequently
-by the exertion of free will, in the aspiration to realize the ideal, man
-becomes his own Saviour; and the true way to do this is to look
-neither for reward nor punishment; to detach the mind from all considerations
-below that of the spiritual life, and to live only in the Eternal.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Archibald Keightley, M.B.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator5.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The great watch-word of the True is this:—in last analysis all things are
-divine.”—(<i>Jasper Niemand in the “Path”</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>
- <h3 id='ghost2' class='c018'>A GHOST’S REVENGE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'>(<i>Conclusion.</i>)</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>Gaston paused at the entrance to the chamber, and even detected
-himself in taking an involuntary step backwards, for
-the singular illusion was heightened by the circumstance that
-many of the figures which were suspended perpendicularly from the
-walls, and had fallen a little forward, looked as though they were trying
-to let themselves down. But the monk, nothing concerned, went stolidly
-on down the long narrow chamber, which had other chambers, or corridors,
-leading out of it in several directions. To speak more correctly,
-there was a series of vaults, branching several ways, some of which were
-shut off from the rest by open-work screens or gates of wool.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The walls on either side were piled high with coffins, the greater
-number of which had one of their sides of glass, exposing to view the
-hideous shrouded tenants. By whatever art it had been sought to
-preserve these bodies from decay, Nature had declared in every instance
-that it should not be, and no ghastlier assemblage of mummified and
-mouldering corpses could have mocked the grief of the relatives who
-should have given their dead to the grave. On the blackened and
-distorted faces of some, it was not difficult to read a look of supplication
-which the parted and fleshless lips seemed striving to translate in this
-way: “Take us away from this dreadful place and hide us in the decent
-earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They lay there, all of them, in their coffins, in wrappings of linen,
-silk, and velvet; men, and women, and children, and little infants;
-priests, nobles, merchants—a world of dead ones; hundreds and
-thousands of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Upon the faces of some, decay seemed working with a kind of
-fantastic cruelty: punching a hole in the cheek or forehead; pushing one
-eye from its socket, and leaving the other; stripping the skin from one
-side of the face, and leaving it like a bit of wrinkled parchment on the
-other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Some were made to laugh from ear to ear; some had the corners of
-the mouth drawn down and the features twisted, as though pain haunted
-them in death; others looked defiant, derisive, amazed, indignant.
-The majesty of death had fled from all of them, mockery and shame
-had come to take its place. The worms were being avenged on these
-who should have gone to feed them. Silent and rotting, they had no
-part in either world; and shrinking continually within their coffins, they
-cried mutely on decay to hasten his work, and give them the boon of
-nothingness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>Above the line of coffins, on both sides of the chamber, hundreds of
-clothed and hooded creatures—skeletons in all except the face, which
-for the most part retained its covering of dried and tarnished skin—were
-suspended from the walls. Each had a ticket pinned to its dress,
-bearing the name and the date of death.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was these figures on the walls which gave the chamber its most
-dreadful aspect. Some were suspended by the neck, like suicides left
-there for an example. Others in various gruesome fashions parodied
-the attitudes of life. There was a grotesque group composed of three
-figures which had tumbled together in such a manner that the two on
-either side appeared to whisper into the ears of the third. Some had
-the neck awry, the head on one side, in a listening or questioning
-attitude; of others the head had sunk forward on the narrow breast.
-The jaw of some had dropped, and protruded a row of teeth, with a
-savage or jeering air.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Every variety of grimace and grin was shown on those appalling
-faces; and as Gaston passed down the chamber fingers poked at him
-from gaping sleeves; he was laughed at, mocked at, scowled at; and
-when he looked behind him, all these skeletons were laughing, mocking,
-and scowling at one another. Many of the faces were little else but
-grinning mouths, and to those whose mouths stood wide open his
-imagination gave voices, so that the vaults seemed filled with the cries
-and laughter of the dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The monk went steadily on in front of him, waving his candle to and
-fro; and as the smell was nauseate and oppressed the nostrils, he spat
-occasionally upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His bit of candle burnt itself out before he had taken Gaston completely
-round, and he returned to fetch another, leaving Gaston in a
-corner of the vault where the light was a mere glimmer. Right opposite
-to him in this place was a massive coffin with rich chasings, whose
-grisly inmate was wrapped from head to foot in a mantle of black
-velvet. Every particle of flesh had melted from the face, the hair had
-fallen from the head, the eyeless sockets stared from the depths of the
-velvet hood. The skeleton was richly dight and finely housed; it was
-Death himself lying in state.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The monk came up with a fresh candle, and Gaston stooped down
-and peered into the coffin. Above the figure’s head was affixed a
-miniature on ivory, which represented a young man in the first prime of
-life, of a refined and beautiful countenance. In the folds of the mantle
-a card had tumbled, and stooping lower, Gaston read on it the name of
-Udalrico Verga. There was a small round hole in the skull, just over
-the left temple.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>Ucciso</em>, signor!</span>” (Murdered!) said the monk, behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Italian word sounded softly in the lips of the monk; but there
-was the tell-tale hole in the forehead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>This then was the hero and the victim of that old tragedy; this was
-the end of him! But for his punctured skull, he might have changed
-places with any of the least repulsive of his skeleton companions. But
-his little bullet-hole marked him out from all of them. Curiously, the
-hood had slipped off from the left side of the skull, and as this was the
-side next to the spectator, the bullet-hole compelled attention to itself at
-once.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The story of the murder which the baron had told to Gaston, and
-with which his thoughts had many times been occupied in the Villa
-Torcello, came before him again; and looking at the stark remains of
-the victim of that forgotten crime, he felt a sudden and irresistible
-longing to know its secret. If he could win it from the coffin there!
-But the grim rest within would be disturbed no more. And the young
-man pictured there beside the skeleton? Murder had no meaning for
-him; he had not come to know it when he was pictured thus. The
-face impressed Gaston strangely. He looked at it long, till he began to
-fancy that behind its delicate beauty he saw the tokens of a latent
-sensuality. But it was a face of singular sweetness, and if any evil were
-there, it existed only in the colourless form of a suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And the priest, who had died a suspect? Was <em>he</em> here, and did death
-whisper anything against him? No, the monk said; the priest was a
-native of Syracuse, and after his death his body had been carried
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gaston had seen enough; the chamber and its horrid tenants had
-given him a sense of physical sickness; and, above all, some curious
-malign influence seemed to issue from the coffin of Udalrico Verga,
-which was working its way into his brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The words of the Baron came into his mind: “They say the spirit
-haunts the place, seeking some one to avenge the murder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Placing a five-franc note in the hand of the monk, he left the chamber
-and the monastery at once; and entering the carriage, he was driven home.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>By morning he had shaken off the morbid effects of his visit to the
-Capucins’; but his imagination had become the seat of a vague and
-indefinable oppression. This, at length, when analysed, resolved itself
-into a certain feeling of injury on account of Udalrico Verga. The
-wonderful amiableness, joined to an almost womanly beauty, of the face
-he had seen imaged in the coffin, had touched his sympathies; and
-now the memory of it began to lay hold on his affections. For what
-cause, and by whose hand, had the young Udalrico died so brutally?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The tale of the murder stuck in his mind; it possessed him; it would
-not be dislodged. And the tale, though begun a whole generation since,
-was still unfinished. It told that Verga had been murdered; but who
-had murdered him?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This question uttered itself again and again; it grew <a id='corr104.44'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='importunate'>importunate.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_104.44'><ins class='correction' title='importunate'>importunate.</ins></a></span>
-One evening in particular it became a kind of clamour in his ears;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>when, walking by moonlight in the garden of the villa, he was suddenly
-conscious that a presence other than his own was with him. Turning
-about, he beheld vividly, at a distance from him of twelve or fifteen
-paces, the figure of a young and elegant man. The view of this figure
-which his eyes took in, and the impression which it made upon his
-mind, were so distinct, that, but for a single circumstance, he would have
-suspected nothing abnormal in the appearance. The features were those
-of Udalrico Verga.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His reason still urging him to reject the testimony of his sight, Gaston
-advanced nearer to the figure. It remained motionless, outlined distinctly
-in the moonlight, on the path bordered by a row of pepper trees
-where the body of Verga had been found. Again Gaston went forward;
-he could now by stretching out his hand almost have touched the figure;
-his eyes looked straight into the eyes of the man whom he knew to have
-lain for thirty years in his coffin. While gazing fixedly and with fascination
-upon this creature from the grave, which, though he knew it to be
-bodiless, seemed full real to him, Gaston felt his senses being subdued;
-and, before he could exert will enough to repel an influence which flowed
-in upon him as it were waves of blinding light, he was rapt out of
-himself, and held for the space of a minute or so in what is best described
-as a magnetic sleep or trance. He remained upright and rigid;
-his brain a whirl of excitement, with an accompanying painful consciousness;
-the body of the emotion being a confused and very indefinite
-feeling of fear—whether for himself or for some other person,
-he did not know. This feeling becoming slightly more definite, he knew
-that the fear he felt was not for himself, but for another; yet who that
-other was, he could not tell. It was the same when a voice said plainly
-in his ear, that what had been begun must be finished; the voice was
-piercing in its clearness, and he knew that it was the voice of one dear
-to him; but whose, he could not divine.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This curious sleep lasted, as I have said, for about a minute; and
-when Gaston awoke he was standing precisely as he had been when
-seized in the trance. He looked for the apparition; it was not there.
-He moved to the path, placed himself on the very spot where, but a
-minute before, the form in the likeness of Udalrico Verga had stood.
-There was nothing. He looked round him; from this path he could
-see over the whole garden; it slept motionless in the moonlight, and his
-was the only figure in it. Gaston returned to the house in a condition
-of extreme nervous excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In this condition, and almost before he had reached the room in
-which he usually sat, the story of the murder was flashed in upon his
-mind; he read it as plainly as if it were traced in English characters on
-the wall before him. Fancying himself still under some abnormous
-influence, which when it passed away would carry the story with it, he
-at once sat down and committed an abstract of it to paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>All that night, the story swam in his brain, and rising early next
-morning, he resolved—or rather was impelled—to commence writing it
-immediately. He did so, and in the full light of day the wraith of
-Udalrico Verga stood beside him, and he plainly saw it, during the whole
-time his pen was at work. But the vision had no longer any weakening
-or retarding effect upon his brain; rather its effects were quickening and
-coercive; and these effects increased, till it became a certainty to him
-that from the visible presence of the spirit of Verga he drew the main
-strength of his inspiration. The story grew under his pen to an elaborate
-romance, upon which, sustained throughout by an elation of mind that
-allowed little repose to the body, he was at work during many weeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In all this time, he never passed beyond the grounds of the villa,
-and when, by-and-bye, his face began to show marks of the mental and
-bodily stress to which his task subjected him, the peasant people of the
-town, who saw him walking in the garden sometimes of an evening, used
-to say:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“There is the English signor who went to live in the Villa Torcello
-eleven weeks ago; he used to go out every day, but it is nine weeks
-since he passed the gate. He cannot get out any more. He has seen the
-ghost of the Signor Verga, and it keeps him there. He grows like a
-ghost himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the story was finished at length, and Gaston sent the manuscript
-to his publishers in London. The ghost of Verga, which had remained
-visibly before him during the whole period of composition, vanished on
-the day the work was ended, and was never seen by him again. He
-went out every day as he had done formerly, and exercise brought back
-the colour to his face, and restored the tone of his mind. At this time
-he thought no more about the story than that it was a strange one,
-which had come to him in a strange manner, and that it ought to bring
-him the fame in fiction which he coveted.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A letter from Sir Selwyn, in which he said that he was on the point
-of starting for home, determined Gaston to return thither at once, that
-he might have everything in readiness for his father’s coming.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On the evening before his departure, while sorting a bundle of papers,
-he came upon a portion of manuscript of his story which he remembered
-having set aside as needing to be re-cast. He took it up and began to
-read it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The tragedy which formed the climax of the romance, had this
-feature, that the man who was murdered had (unconsciously, and by a
-singular operation of fate) planned his own death in planning that of
-the friend whom he falsely believed to have betrayed him in love. The
-chapter upon which Gaston had lighted, was devoted to a minute
-analysis of the character of the man whom blind force of circumstance
-had driven to an act of murder which his affection for its victim had
-rendered abhorrent in the highest degree.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>So remote from the ordinary had been the conditions under which
-the story was composed, and so small (it had seemed to Gaston) was the
-share of its inspiration which his own brain could claim, that now,
-within a few weeks of its composition, he read it almost as the work of
-another.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This exotic notion, that his own was not his own, deepened as he read
-further into the chapter, for something was there which disquieted him.
-Some shadowy unembodied likeness, and yet no likeness, but a faint
-whispering of resemblance; some voiceless hint that was but the
-failure of an echo. He turned back, and read again. It was not there,
-he had deceived himself. He shut the page, his mind at ease.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In a week from this time, he was home again, awaiting the coming of
-his father. Sir Selwyn landed in England a month later, and Gaston,
-who received him at the vessel’s side, was shocked at his appearance.
-Sir Selwyn’s handsome face seemed not so much to have aged as to
-have withered; the body, too, was shrunken, and desiccated, as though
-the vital fluids were exhausted. The nervous irritation of manner which
-had characterised an earlier stage of the disease, had given way to a
-species of torpor, in which even speech seemed an effort. It was the
-mental and bodily paralysis of melancholia in its acutest form.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The journey home was a sad one. What little Sir Selwyn said, told
-the story of the renewal of his sufferings, which dated from the day
-that he had written to Gaston of his intention to return to England.
-“But I am persuaded,” he said in conclusion, “that it draws near the end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Strangely enough, however, as Gaston thought, and quite contrary to
-his expectations, the sight of his beautiful home revived Sir Selwyn’s
-spirits. They dined together, and the baronet showed a brighter face
-over his wine. He sent for his bailiff, and spent an hour or more
-discussing the affairs of his estate. Afterwards, he walked with Gaston
-through the gardens and park, and began, for the first time, to talk of
-his travels. Then he questioned Gaston about his Italian tour, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What did you do with yourself all those weeks in Palermo? You
-mentioned no writing; but I am sure your pen was not idle so
-long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” said Gaston. “I wrote a famous story there. I did not mean
-to tell you of it until it was published. It was to be a surprise, for this
-is the book that is to make me famous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come, that sounds well!” said Sir Selwyn. “But you are beginning
-to be famous already. What could have been better than the
-reviews of your last book which you sent me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, but this one will do twice as much for me!” laughed Gaston.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am glad you feel that. No one could be more delighted than I am
-to hear it. Have you dedicated it to me, Gaston?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Otherwise, my dear father, it would be no book of mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>“Thank you, Gaston. You know how dear your fame is to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>In another month, during which Sir Selwyn’s health, with some fluctuations,
-had shown, on the whole, a disposition towards improvement,
-Gaston’s romance was published.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On the day on which some copies were forwarded to him from the
-publishers, he had gone on business to the neighbouring town, and did
-not return until late in the evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sir Selwyn’s valet, an old and devoted servant who had been with
-his master for many years, met him at the door, pale, and terrified.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Sir Selwyn has been taken strangely ill, sir,” he said. “We can
-none of us tell what is the matter with him. He rang his bell an hour
-ago, and when I went upstairs he was looking like a ghost, sitting up
-quite stiff in his arm-chair, with one of your new books in his hand. It
-seemed like a dead man speaking when he asked how soon you could
-return, and said that no doctor was to be sent for. He would not let
-me stay with him either, and, indeed, though I’ve known Sir Selwyn
-these forty years, I believe I should have been almost afraid to do so
-sir, he looked so terrible. I remained close outside; but there’s not
-been a sound in his room ever since, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fears which, even in thought, he dared not shape, came like a wave
-upon Gaston, as he hurried to his father’s room.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Death, or his image, sat there, in Sir Selwyn’s chair; or rather, the
-baronet’s aspect, as Gaston beheld him, grey and rigid, was like the
-phantom Life-in-Death; as though a corpse had been galvanised for a
-moment into a ghastly appearance of life. The jaw had begun to fall
-and the eyes were large and glassy; but the regular rising and falling
-of the breast showed that mechanical life was not yet extinct. Open on
-the ground beside Sir Selwyn lay Gaston’s new romance.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The spirit had all but taken its departure; but when Gaston bent
-over his father and pleaded for recognition, there was a faint twitching
-of the brow, and a half-convulsive movement of the whole body, as
-though the spirit were trying to force an entrance again; and Sir
-Selwyn, by an effort, fixed his eyes on his son’s face. His voice
-struggled in his throat, and he said, with a pause between every
-word:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“When I knelt beside him—for I still loved him—he said: ‘You
-have killed me, but I will never leave you, and one day I will come back
-from the grave and kill <em>you</em>’ He has kept his word. This is not your
-book, Gaston, <i>it-is-Udalrico’s</i>. This is my——”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The voice stopped. Sir Selwyn was dead. The Ghost of Udalrico
-Verga was avenged.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Tighe Hopkins.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE ORIGIN OF EVIL.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The problem of the origin of evil can be philosophically approached
-only if the archaic Indian formula is taken as the basis of the
-argument. Ancient wisdom alone solves the presence of the
-universal fiend in a satisfactory way. It attributes the birth of Kosmos
-and the evolution of life to the breaking asunder of primordial, manifested
-<span class='sc'>Unity</span>, into plurality, or the great illusion of form. <span class='sc'>Homogeneity</span>
-having transformed itself into Heterogeneity, contrasts have naturally
-been created: hence sprang what we call <span class='sc'>Evil</span>, which thenceforward
-reigned supreme in this “Vale of Tears.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Materialistic Western philosophy (so mis-named) has not failed to
-profit by this grand metaphysical tenet. Even physical Science, with
-Chemistry at its head, has turned its attention of late to the first proposition,
-and directs its efforts toward proving on irrefutable data the homogeneity
-of primordial matter. But now steps in materialistic Pessimism,
-a teaching which is neither philosophy nor science, but only a deluge
-of meaningless words. Pessimism, in its latest development, having
-ceased to be pantheistic, and having wedded itself to materialism,
-prepares to make capital out of the old Indian formula. But the atheistic
-pessimist soars no higher than the terrestrial homogeneous plasm of the
-Darwinists. For him the <em>ultima thule</em> is earth and matter, and he sees,
-beyond the <em>prima materia</em>, only an ugly void, an empty nothingness. Some
-of the pessimists attempt to poetize their idea after the manner of the
-whitened sepulchres, or the Mexican corpses, whose ghastly cheeks and
-lips are thickly covered with rouge. The decay of matter pierces through
-the mask of seeming life, all efforts to the contrary notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Materialism patronises Indian metaphora and imagery now. In a new
-work upon the subject by Dr. Mainländer, “Pessimism and Progress,”
-one learns that Indian Pantheism and German Pessimism are <em>identical</em>;
-and that it is the breaking up of homogeneous matter into heterogeneous
-material, the transition from uniformity to multiformity, which resulted
-in so unhappy a universe. Saith Pessimism:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This (transition) is precisely the original mistake, the <em>primordial sin</em>, which the
-whole creation has now to expiate by heavy suffering; it is just that <em>sin</em>, which, having
-launched into existence all that lives, plunged it thereby into the abysmal depths of evil
-and misery, to escape from which there is but one means possible, <i>i.e.</i>, by putting <em>an
-end to being itself</em>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This interpretation of the Eastern formula, attributing to it the first
-idea of escaping the misery of life by “putting an end to being”—whether
-that being is viewed as applicable to the whole Kosmos, or only to individual
-life—is a gross misconception. The Eastern pantheist, whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>philosophy teaches him to discriminate between Being or <span class='sc'>Esse</span> and conditioned
-existence, would hardly indulge in so absurd an idea as the
-postulation of such an alternative. He knows he can put an end to <em>form</em>
-alone, not to <em>being</em>—and that only on this plane of terrestrial illusion.
-True, he knows that by killing out in himself <em>Tanha</em> (the unsatisfied desire
-for existence, or the “<em>will</em> to live”)—he will thus gradually escape
-the curse of re-birth and <em>conditioned</em> existence. But he knows also that
-he cannot kill or “put an end,” even to his own little life except as a
-personality, which after all is but a change of dress. And believing but
-in One Reality, which is eternal <em>Be-ness</em>, the “<em>causeless</em> <span class='fss'>CAUSE</span>” from
-which he has exiled himself unto a world of forms, he regards the temporary
-and progressing manifestations of it in the state of <em>Maya</em> (change
-or illusion), as the greatest evil, truly; but at the same time as a
-process in nature, as unavoidable as are the pangs of birth. It is the only
-means by which he can pass from limited and conditioned lives of sorrow
-into eternal life, or into that absolute “Be-ness,” which is so graphically
-expressed in the Sanskrit word <em>sat</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “Pessimism” of the Hindu or Buddhist Pantheist is metaphysical,
-abstruse, and philosophical. The idea that matter and
-its Protean manifestations are the source and origin of universal
-evil and sorrow is a very old one, though Gautama Buddha was the
-first to give to it its definite expression. But the great Indian Reformer
-assuredly never meant to make of it a handle for the modern
-pessimist to get hold of, or a peg for the materialist to hang his distorted
-and pernicious tenets upon! The Sage and Philosopher, who sacrificed
-himself for Humanity by <em>living for it, in order to save it</em>, by teaching
-men to see in the sensuous existence of matter misery alone, had never
-in his deep philosophical mind any idea of offering a premium for
-suicide; his efforts were to release mankind from too strong an attachment
-to life, which is the chief cause of Selfishness—hence the
-creator of mutual pain and suffering. In his personal case, Buddha left
-us an example of fortitude to follow: in living, not in running away
-from life. His doctrine shows evil immanent, <em>not in matter</em> which is
-eternal, but in the illusions created by it: through the changes and
-transformations of matter generating life—because these changes are
-conditioned and such life is ephemeral. At the same time those
-evils are shown to be not only unavoidable, but necessary. For if we
-would discern good from evil, light from darkness, and appreciate the
-former, we can do so only through the contrasts between the two.
-While Buddha’s philosophy points, in its dead-letter meaning, only to the
-dark side of things on this illusive plane; its esotericism, the hidden
-soul of it, draws the veil aside and reveals to the Arhat all the glories of
-<span class='fss'>LIFE ETERNAL</span> in <em>all the Homogeneousness of Consciousness and Being</em>.
-Another absurdity, no doubt, in the eyes of materialistic science and
-even modern Idealism, yet a <em>fact</em> to the Sage and esoteric Pantheist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>Nevertheless, the root idea that evil is born and generated by the ever
-increasing complications of the homogeneous material, which enters into
-form and differentiates more and more as that form becomes physically
-more perfect, has an esoteric side to it which seems to have never
-occurred to the modern pessimist. Its dead-letter aspect, however,
-became the subject of speculation with every ancient thinking nation.
-Even in India the primitive thought, underlying the formula already
-cited, has been disfigured by Sectarianism, and has led to the ritualistic,
-purely dogmatic observances of the <em>Hatha Yogis</em>, in contradistinction to
-the philosophical Vedantic <em>Raja Yoga</em>. Pagan and Christian exoteric
-speculation, and even mediæval monastic asceticism, have extracted all
-they could from the originally noble idea, and made it subservient to
-their narrow-minded sectarian views. Their false conceptions of matter
-have led the Christians from the earliest day to identify woman with
-Evil and matter—notwithstanding the worship paid by the Roman
-Catholic Church to the Virgin.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the latest application of the misunderstood Indian formula by the
-Pessimists in Germany is quite original, and rather unexpected, as we
-shall see. To draw any analogy between a highly metaphysical teaching,
-and Darwin’s theory of physical evolution would, in itself, seem rather a
-hopeless task. The more so as the theory of natural selection does not
-preach any conceivable extermination of <em>being</em>, but, on the contrary,
-a continuous and ever increasing development of <em>life</em>. Nevertheless,
-German ingenuity has contrived, by means of scientific paradoxes
-and much sophistry, to give it a semblance of philosophical truth. The
-old Indian tenet itself has not escaped litigation at the hands of modern
-pessimism. The happy discoverer of the theory, that the origin of evil
-dates from the protoplasmic <em>Amœba</em>, which divided itself for procreation,
-and thus lost its immaculate homogeneity, has laid claim to the
-Aryan archaic formula in his new volume. While extolling its philosophy
-and the depth of ancient conceptions, he declares that it ought to
-be viewed “as the most profound truth <em>precogitated</em> and <em>robbed</em> by the
-ancient sages from modern thought”!!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It thus follows that the deeply religious Pantheism of the Hindu and
-Buddhist philosopher, and the occasional vagaries of the pessimistic
-materialist, are placed on the same level and identified by “modern
-thought.” The impassable chasm between the two is ignored. It matters
-little, it seems, that the Pantheist, recognising no reality in the manifested
-Kosmos, and regarding it as a simple illusion of his senses, has to view
-his own existence also as only a bundle of illusions. When, therefore,
-he speaks of the means of escaping from the sufferings of objective life,
-his view of those sufferings, and his motive for putting an end to existence
-are entirely different from those of the pessimistic materialist. For
-him, pain as well as sorrow are illusions, due to attachment to this life, and
-ignorance. Therefore he strives after eternal, changeless life, and absolute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>consciousness in the state of Nirvana; whereas the European pessimist,
-taking the “evils” of life as <em>realities</em>, aspires when he has the time
-to aspire after anything except those said mundane <em>realities</em>, to annihilation
-of “being,” as he expresses it. For the philosopher there is
-but one real life, <em>Nirvanic bliss</em>, which is a state differing in kind, not in
-degree only, from that of any of the planes of consciousness in the
-manifested universe. The Pessimist calls “Nirvana” superstition,
-and explains it as “cessation of life,” life for him beginning and ending
-on earth. The former ignores in his spiritual aspirations even the integral
-homogeneous unit, of which the German Pessimist now makes
-such capital. He knows of, and believes in only the direct cause of
-that unit, eternal and <em>ever living, because the ONE uncreated</em>, or rather
-not evoluted. Hence all his efforts are directed toward the speediest
-reunion possible with, and return to his <em>pre</em>-primordial condition, after his
-pilgrimage through this illusive series of visionary lives, with their unreal
-phantasmagoria of sensuous perceptions.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such pantheism can be qualified as “pessimistic” only by a believer
-in a personal Providence; by one who contrasts its negation of the
-reality of anything “created”—<i>i.e.</i> conditioned and limited—with his own
-blind and unphilosophical faith. The Oriental mind does not busy itself
-with extracting evil from every radical law and manifestation of life,
-and multiplying every phenomenal quantity by the units of very often
-imaginary evils: the Eastern Pantheist simply submits to the inevitable,
-and tries to blot out from his path in life as many “descents into rebirth”
-as he can, by avoiding the creation of new <em>Karmic</em> causes. The
-Buddhist philosopher knows that the duration of the series of lives of
-every human being—unless he reaches Nirvana “artificially” (“takes
-the kingdom of God by violence,” in Kabalistic parlance), is given,
-allegorically, in the <em>forty-nine days</em> passed by Gautama the Buddha
-under the Bo-tree. And the Hindu sage is aware, in his turn, that he has
-to light the <em>first</em>, and extinguish the <em>forty-ninth fire</em><a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c013'><sup>[23]</sup></a> before he reaches
-his final deliverance. Knowing this, both sage and philosopher wait
-patiently for the natural hour of deliverance; whereas their unlucky
-copyist, the European Pessimist, is ever ready to commit, as to preach,
-suicide. Ignorant of the numberless heads of the hydra of existences
-he is incapable of feeling the same philosophical scorn for life as he
-does for death, and of, thereby, following the wise example given him by
-his Oriental brother.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus, philosophical pantheism is very different from modern pessimism.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>The first is based upon the correct understanding of the
-mysteries of being; the latter is in reality only one more system of evil
-added by unhealthy fancy to the already large sum of real social evils.
-In sober truth it is no philosophy, but simply a systematic slander of life
-and being; the bilious utterances of a dyspeptic or an incurable hypochondriac.
-No parallel can ever be attempted between the two systems
-of thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The seeds of evil and sorrow were indeed the earliest result and consequence
-of the heterogeneity of the manifested universe. Still they
-are but an illusion produced by the law of contrasts, which, as described,
-is a fundamental law in nature. Neither good nor evil would exist were
-it not for the light they mutually throw on each other. <em>Being</em>, under
-whatever form, having been observed from the World’s creation to offer
-these contrasts, and evil predominating in the universe owing to <em>Ego</em>-ship
-or selfishness, the rich Oriental metaphor has pointed to existence as
-expiating the mistake of nature; and the human soul (psüche), was
-henceforth regarded as the scapegoat and victim of <em>unconscious</em> <span class='sc'>Over-Soul</span>.
-But it is not to Pessimism, but to Wisdom that it gave birth.
-Ignorance alone is the willing martyr, but knowledge is the master of
-natural Pessimism. Gradually, and by the process of heredity or
-<em>atavism</em>, the latter became innate in man. It is always present in us,
-howsoever latent and silent its voice in the beginning. Amid the early
-joys of existence, when we are still full of the vital energies of youth, we
-are yet apt, each of us, at the first pang of sorrow, after a failure, or at
-the sudden appearance of a black cloud, to accuse <em>life</em> of it; to feel <em>life</em>
-a burden, and often to curse our being. This shows pessimism in our
-blood, but at the same time the presence of the fruits of ignorance. As
-mankind multiplies, and with it suffering—which is the natural result of
-an increasing number of units that generate it—sorrow and pain are
-intensified. We live in an atmosphere of gloom and despair, but this is
-because our eyes are downcast and rivetted to the earth, with all its
-physical and grossly material manifestations. If, instead of that, man
-proceeding on his life-journey looked—not heavenward, which is but a
-figure of speech—but <em>within himself</em> and centred his point of observation
-on the <em>inner</em> man, he would soon escape from the coils of the great
-serpent of illusion. From the cradle to the grave, his life would then
-become supportable and worth living, even in its worst phases.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Pessimism—that chronic suspicion of lurking evil everywhere—is thus of
-a two-fold nature, and brings fruits of two kinds. It is a natural characteristic
-in physical man, and becomes a curse only to the ignorant. It is
-a boon to the spiritual; inasmuch as it makes the latter turn into the right
-path, and brings him to the discovery of another as fundamental a truth;
-namely, that all in this world is only <em>preparatory</em> because transitory.
-It is like a chink in the dark prison walls of earth-life, through which
-breaks in a ray of light from the eternal home, which, illuminating
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>the <em>inner</em> senses, whispers to the prisoner in his shell of clay of the origin
-and the dual mystery of our being. At the same time, it is a tacit proof
-of the presence in man of that <em>which knows, without being told</em>, viz:—that
-there is another and a better life, once that the curse of earth-lives is
-lived through.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This explanation of the problem and origin of evil being, as already
-said, of an entirely metaphysical character, has nothing to do with physical
-laws. Belonging as it does altogether to the spiritual part of man,
-to dabble with it superficially is, therefore, far more dangerous than to
-remain ignorant of it. For, as it lies at the very root of Gautama
-Buddha’s ethics, and since it has now fallen into the hands of the modern
-Philistines of materialism, to confuse the two systems of “pessimistic”
-thought can lead but to mental suicide, if it does not lead to worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Eastern wisdom teaches that spirit has to pass through the ordeal of
-incarnation and life, and be baptised with matter before it can reach
-experience and knowledge. After which only it receives the baptism of
-soul, or self-consciousness, and may return to its original condition of a
-god, <em>plus</em> experience, ending with omniscience. In other words, it can
-return to the original state of the homogeneity of primordial essence
-only through the addition of the fruitage of Karma, which alone is
-able to create an absolute <em>conscious</em> deity, removed but one degree
-from the absolute <span class='sc'>All</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Even according to the letter of the Bible, evil must have existed
-before Adam and Eve, who, therefore, are innocent of the slander of the
-original sin. For, had there been no evil or sin before them, there could
-exist neither tempting Serpent nor a Tree of Knowledge of <em>good and evil</em>
-in Eden. The characteristics of that apple-tree are shown in the verse
-when the couple had tasted of its fruit: “The eyes of them both were
-opened, and <em>they knew</em>” many things besides knowing they were naked.
-Too much knowledge about things of matter is thus rightly shown an
-evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But so it is, and it is our duty to examine and combat the new pernicious
-theory. Hitherto, pessimism was kept in the regions of philosophy
-and metaphysics, and showed no pretensions to intrude into the
-domain of purely physical science, such as Darwinism. The theory of
-evolution has become almost universal now, and there is no school (save
-the Sunday and missionary schools) where it is not taught, with more or
-less modifications from the original programme. On the other hand,
-there is no other teaching more abused and taken advantage of than
-evolution, especially by the application of its fundamental laws to the solution
-of the most compound and abstract problems of man’s many sided
-existence. There, where psychology and even philosophy “fear to tread,”
-materialistic biology applies its sledge-hammer of superficial analogies,
-and prejudged conclusions. Worse than all, claiming man to be only
-a higher animal, it maintains this right as undeniably pertaining to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>the domain of the science of evolution. Paradoxes in those “domains”
-do not rain now, they pour. As “man is the measure of all things,” therefore
-is man measured and analyzed by the animal. One German
-materialist claims spiritual and psychic evolution as the lawful property
-of physiology and biology; the mysteries of embryology and zoology
-alone, it is said, being capable of solving those of consciousness in man
-and the origin of his soul.<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c013'><sup>[24]</sup></a> Another finds justification for suicide in
-the example of animals, who, when tired of living, put an end to existence
-by starvation.<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c013'><sup>[25]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hitherto pessimism, notwithstanding the abundance and brilliancy of
-its paradoxes, had a weak point—namely, the absence of any real and
-evident basis for it to rest upon. Its followers had no living, guiding
-thought to serve them as a beacon and help them to steer clear of the
-sandbanks of life—real and imaginary—so profusely sown by themselves
-in the shape of denunciations against life and being. All they could do
-was to rely upon their representatives, who occupied their time very ingeniously
-if not profitably, in tacking the many and various evils of life to the
-metaphysical propositions of great German thinkers, like Schopenhauer
-and Hartmann, as small boys tack on coloured tails to the kites of their
-elders and rejoice at seeing them launched in the air. But now the programme
-will be changed. The Pessimists have found something more
-solid and authoritative, if less philosophical, to tack their jeremiads and
-dirges to, than the metaphysical <em>kites</em> of Schopenhauer. The day when
-they agreed with the views of this philosopher, which pointed at the
-Universal <span class='sc'>Will</span> as the perpetrator of all the World-evil, is gone to
-return no more. Nor will they be any better satisfied with the hazy
-“Unconscious” of von Hartmann. They have been seeking diligently
-for a more congenial and less metaphysical soil to build their pessimistic
-<em>philosophy</em> upon, and they have been rewarded with success, now that the
-cause of Universal Suffering has been discovered by them in the fundamental
-laws of physical development. Evil will no longer be allied
-with the misty and uncertain Phantom called “<span class='sc'>Will</span>,” but with an
-actual and obvious fact: the Pessimists will henceforth be towed by the
-Evolutionists.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The basic argument of their representative has been given in the
-opening sentence of this article. The Universe and all on it appeared
-in consequence of the “breaking asunder of <span class='sc'>Unity</span> into <em>Plurality</em>.”
-This rather dim rendering of the Indian formula is not made to refer, as
-I have shown, in the mind of the Pessimist, to the one Unity, to the
-Vedantin abstraction—Parabrahm: otherwise, I should not certainly
-have used the words “breaking up.” Nor does it concern itself much
-with Mulaprakriti, or the “Veil” of Parabrahm; nor even with the first
-manifested primordial matter, except inferentially, as follows from Dr.
-Mainländer’s exposition, but chiefly with terrestrial <em>protoplasm</em>. Spirit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>or deity is entirely ignored in this case; evidently because of the necessity
-for showing the whole as “the lawful domain of physical Science.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In short, the time-honoured formula is claimed to have its basis and
-to find its justification in the theory that from “a few, perhaps one, single
-form of the very simplest nature” (Darwin), “all the different animals
-and plants living to-day, and all the organisms that have ever lived on
-the earth,” have gradually developed. It is this axiom of Science, we
-are told, which justifies and demonstrates the Hindu philosophical <a id='corr116.8'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='tenet'>tenet.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_116.8'><ins class='correction' title='tenet'>tenet.</ins></a></span>
-What is this axiom? Why, it is this: Science teaches that the series of
-transformations through which the seed is made to pass—the seed that
-grows into a tree, or becomes an <em>ovum</em>, or that which develops into an
-animal—consists in every case in nothing but the passage of the fabric
-of that seed, from the homogeneous into the heterogeneous or compound
-form. This is then the scientific verity which checks the Indian formula
-by that of the Evolutionists, identifies both, and thus exalts ancient
-wisdom by recognizing it worthy of modern materialistic thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This philosophical formula is not simply corroborated by the individual
-growth and development of isolated species, explains our Pessimist; but
-it is demonstrated in general as in detail. It is shown justified in the
-evolution and growth of the Universe as well as in that of our planet.
-In short, the birth, growth and development of the whole organic world
-in its integral totality, are there to demonstrate ancient wisdom. From
-the universals down to the particulars, the organic world is discovered to
-be subject to the same law of ever increasing elaboration, of the transition
-from unity to plurality as “the fundamental formula of the evolution of
-life.” Even the growth of nations, of social life, public institutions, the
-development of the languages, arts and sciences, all this follows inevitably
-and fatally the all-embracing law of “the breaking asunder of unity into
-plurality, and the passage of the homogeneous into multiformity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But while following Indian wisdom, our author exaggerates this
-fundamental law in his own way, and distorts it. He brings this
-law to bear even on the historical destinies of mankind. He makes
-these destinies subservient to, and a proof of, the correctness of
-the Indian conception. He maintains that humanity as an integral
-whole, in proportion as it develops and progresses in its evolution, and
-separates in its parts—each becoming a distinct and independent branch of
-the unit—drifts more and more away from its original healthy, harmonious
-unity. The complications of social establishment, social relations, as
-those of individuality, all lead to the weakening of the vital power, the
-relaxation of the energy of feeling, and to the destruction of that integral
-unity, without which no inner harmony is possible. The absence of that
-harmony generates an inner discord which becomes the cause of the
-greatest mental misery. Evil has its roots in the very nature of the
-evolution of life and its complications. Every one of its steps forward is
-at the same time a step taken toward the dissolution of its energy, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>leads to passive apathy. Such is the inevitable result, he says, of every
-progressive complication of life; because evolution or development is a
-transition from the homogeneous to the heterogeneous, a scattering of
-the whole into the many, etc. etc. This terrible law is universal and applies
-to all creation, from the infinitesimally small up to man for, as he
-says, it is a fundamental law of nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now, it is just in this one-sided view of physical nature, which the
-German author accepts without one single thought as to its spiritual and
-psychic aspect, that his school is doomed to certain failure. It is
-not a question whether the said law of differentiation and its fatal consequences
-may or may not apply, in certain cases, to the growth and
-development of the animal species, and even of man; but simply, since it
-is the basis and main support of the whole new theory of the Pessimistic
-school, whether it is really a <em>universal</em> and fundamental law? We want
-to know whether this basic formula of evolution embraces the whole process
-of development and growth in its entirety; and whether, indeed, it is
-within the domain of physical science or not. If it is “nothing else than
-the transition from the homogeneous state to the heterogeneous,” as says
-Mainländer, then it remains to be proved that the given process “produces
-that complicated combination of tissues and organs which forms and
-completes the perfect animal and plant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As remarked already by some critics on “Pessimism and Progress,”
-the German Pessimist does not doubt it for one moment. His supposed
-discovery and teaching “rest wholly on his certitude that development
-and the fundamental law of the complicated process of organization represent
-but one thing: the transformation of unity into plurality.”
-Hence the identification of the process with dissolution and decay, and
-the weakening of all the forces and energies. Mainländer would be right
-in his analogies were this law of the differentiation of the homogeneous
-into the heterogeneous to really represent the fundamental law of the
-evolution of life. But the idea is quite erroneous—metaphysically as well
-as physically. Evolution does not proceed in a straight line; <em>no more</em> than
-any other process in nature, but journeys on <em>cyclically</em>, as does all the rest.
-The cyclic serpents swallow their tails like the Serpent of Eternity. And
-it is in this that the Indian formula, which is a Secret Doctrine teaching,
-is indeed corroborated by the natural Sciences, and especially by biology.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is what we read in the “Scientific Letters” by an anonymous
-Russian author and critic.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In the evolution of isolated individuals, in the evolution of the organic world, in that
-of the Universe, as in the growth and development of our planet—in short wherever
-any of the processes of progressive complexity take place, there we find, apart from
-the transition from unity to plurality, and homogeneity to heterogeneity a <em>converse
-transformation—the transition from plurality to unity, from the heterogeneous to the
-homogeneous</em>.... Minute observation of the given process of progressive complexity
-has shown, that what takes place in it is not alone the separation of parts, but
-also their mutual absorption.... While one portion of the cells merge into each
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>other and unite into one uniform whole, forming muscular fibres, muscular tissue, others
-are absorbed in the bone and nerve tissues, etc. etc. The same takes place in the
-formation of plants....”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>In this case material nature repeats the law that acts in the evolution
-of the psychic and the spiritual: both descend but to re-ascend and
-merge at the starting-point. <em>The homogeneous formative mass or element
-differentiated in its parts, is gradually transformed into the heterogeneous;
-then, merging those parts into a harmonious whole, it recommences a converse
-process, or reinvolution, and returns as gradually into its primitive or
-primordial state.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nor does Pessimism find any better support in pure Materialism, as
-hitherto the latter has been tinged with a decidedly optimistic bias. Its
-leading advocates have, indeed, never hesitated to sneer at the theological
-adoration of the “glory of God and all his works.” Büchner
-flings a taunt at the pantheist who sees in so “mad and bad” a world
-the manifestation of the Absolute. But, on the whole, the materialists
-admit a balance of good over evil, perhaps as a buffer against any
-“superstitious” tendency to look out and hope for a better one.
-Narrow as is their outlook, and limited as is their spiritual horizon, they
-yet see no cause to despair of the drift of things in general. The
-<em>pantheistic</em> pessimists, however, have never ceased to urge that a despair
-of conscious being is the only legitimate outcome of atheistic negation.
-This opinion is, of course, axiomatic, or ought to be so. If “in this life
-only is there hope,” the tragedy of life is absolutely without any <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>raison
-d’être</i></span> and a perpetuation of the drama is as foolish as it is futile.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The fact that the conclusions of pessimism have been at last assimilated
-by a certain class of atheistic writers, is a striking feature of the
-day, and another sign of the times. It illustrates the truism that the
-void created by modern scientific negation cannot and can never be
-filled by the cold prospects offered as a <em>solatium</em> to optimists. The
-Comtean “enthusiasm of Humanity” is a poor thing enough with
-annihilation of the Race to ensue “as the solar fires die slowly out”—if,
-indeed, <em>they do die</em> at all—to please physical science at the computed
-time. If all present sorrow and suffering, the fierce struggle for existence
-and all its attendant horrors, go for nothing in the long run, if
-<span class='sc'>Man</span> is a mere ephemeron, the sport of blind forces, why assist in the
-perpetuation of the farce. The “ceaseless grind of matter, force and
-law,” will but hurry the swarming human millions into eternal oblivion,
-and ultimately leave no trace or memory of the past, when things return
-to the nebulosity of the fire-mist, whence they emerged. Terrestrial life
-is no object in itself. It is overcast with gloom and misery. It does
-not seem strange, then, that the Soul-blind negationist should prefer the
-pessimism of Schopenhauer to the baseless optimism of Strauss and
-his followers, which, in the face of their teachings, reminds one of the
-animal spirits of a young donkey, after a good meal of thistles.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>One thing is, however, clear: the absolute necessity for some solution,
-which embraces the facts of existence on an optimistic basis.
-Modern Society is permeated with an increasing cynicism and honeycombed
-with disgust of life. This is the result of an utter ignorance of
-the operations of Karma and the nature of Soul-evolution. It is from
-a mistaken allegiance to the dogmas of a mechanical and largely spurious
-theory of Evolution, that Pessimism has risen to such undue importance.
-Once the basis of the Great Law is grasped—and what philosophy can
-furnish better means for such a grasp and final solution, than the
-esoteric doctrine of the great Indian Sages—there remains no possible
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>locus standi</i></span> for the recent amendments to the Schopenhauerian system
-of thought or the metaphysical subtleties, woven by the “philosopher of
-the Unconscious.” The reasonableness of <em>Conscious</em> Existence can be
-proved only by the study of the primeval—now esoteric—philosophy.
-And it says “there is neither death nor life, for both are illusions; being
-(or <em>be-ness</em>) is the only reality.” This paradox was repeated thousands
-of ages later by one of the greatest physiologists that ever lived. “Life
-is Death” said Claude Bernard. The organism lives because its parts
-are ever dying. The survival of the fittest is surely based on this
-truism. The life of the superior whole requires the death of the
-inferior, the death of the parts depending on and being subservient to it
-And, as life is death, so death is life, and the whole great cycle of lives
-form but <span class='sc'>one Existence</span>—<em>the worst day of which is on our planet</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He who <span class='fss'>KNOWS</span> will make the best of it For there is a dawn for
-every being, when once freed from illusion and ignorance by
-Knowledge; and he will at last proclaim in truth <em>and all Consciousness</em>
-to Mahamaya:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Broken Thy house is, and the Ridge-pole Split!</span></div>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='sc'>Delusion fashioned it!</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Safe pass I thence—deliverance to obtain.</span>”...</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>H. P. B.</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Man will regain his lost Eden on that day when he can look at every desire
-in the broad, quiet light of this question:—How can I give desire such vent as
-shall conduce to the benefit of other men?”—(<cite>Jasper Niemand in the “Path”</cite>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE GREAT PARADOX.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>Paradox would seem to be the natural language of occultism.
-Nay more, it would seem to penetrate deep into the heart of
-things, and thus to be inseparable from any attempt to put
-into words the truth, the reality which underlies the outward shows
-of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And the paradox is one not in words only, but in action, in the very
-conduct of life. The paradoxes of occultism must be lived, not uttered
-only. Herein lies a great danger, for it is only too easy to become lost
-in the intellectual contemplation of the path, and so to forget that the
-road can only be known by treading it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One startling paradox meets the student at the very outset, and
-confronts him in ever new and strange shapes at each turn of the road.
-Such an one, perchance, has sought the path desiring a guide, a rule of
-right for the conduct of his life. He learns that the alpha and the
-omega, the beginning and the end of <em>life</em> is selflessness; and he feels the
-truth of the saying that only in the profound unconsciousness of self-forgetfulness
-can the truth and reality of being reveal itself to his
-eager heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The student learns that this is the one law of occultism, at once the
-science and the art of living, the guide to the goal he desires to attain.
-He is fired with enthusiasm and enters bravely on the mountain track.
-He then finds that his teachers do not encourage his ardent flights
-of sentiment; his all-forgetting yearning for the Infinite—on the outer
-plane of his actual life and consciousness. At least, if they do not
-actually damp his enthusiasm, they set him, as the first and indispensable
-task, <em>to conquer and control his body</em>. The student finds that far from
-being encouraged to live in the soaring thoughts of his brain,
-and to fancy he has reached that ether where is true freedom—to
-the forgetting of his body, and his external actions and personality—he
-is set down to tasks much nearer earth. All his attention and
-watchfulness are required on the outer plane; he must never forget
-himself, never lose hold over his body, his mind, his brain. He must
-even learn to control the expression of every feature, to check the action
-of each muscle, to be master of every slightest involuntary movement.
-The daily life around and within him is pointed out as the object of his
-study and observation. Instead of forgetting what are usually called the
-petty trifles, the little forgetfulnesses, the accidental slips of tongue or
-memory, he is forced to become each day more conscious of these lapses,
-till at last they seem to poison the air he breathes and stifle him, till he
-seems to lose sight and touch of the great world of freedom towards
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>which he is struggling, till every hour of every day seems full of the
-bitter taste of self, and his heart grows sick with pain and the struggle
-of despair. And the darkness is rendered yet deeper by the voice
-within him, crying ceaselessly, “forget thyself. Beware, lest thou
-becomest self-concentrated—and the giant weed of spiritual selfishness
-take firm root in thy heart; beware, beware, beware!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The voice stirs his heart to its depths, for he feels that the words are
-true. His daily and hourly battle is teaching him that self-centredness
-is the root of misery, the cause of pain, and his soul is full of longing
-to be free.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus the disciple is torn by doubt. He trusts his teachers, for he
-knows that through them speaks the same voice he hears in the silence
-of his own heart. But now they utter contradictory words; the one,
-the inner voice, bidding him forget himself utterly in the service of
-humanity; the other, the spoken word of those from whom he seeks
-guidance in his service, bidding him <em>first</em> to conquer his body, his outer
-self. And he knows better with every hour how badly he acquits
-himself in that battle with the Hydra, and he sees seven heads grow
-afresh in place of each one that he has lopped off.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At first he oscillates between the two, now obeying the one, now the
-other. But soon he learns that this is fruitless. For the sense of freedom
-and lightness, which comes at first when he leaves his outer self unwatched,
-that he may seek the inner air, soon loses its keenness, and
-some sudden shock reveals to him that he has slipped and fallen on the
-uphill path. Then, in desperation, he flings himself upon the treacherous
-snake of self, and strives to choke it into death; but its ever-moving
-coils elude his grasp, the insidious temptations of its glittering scales
-blind his vision, and again he becomes involved in the turmoil of the
-battle, which gains on him from day to day, and which at last seems to
-fill the whole world, and blot out all else beside from his consciousness.
-He is face to face with a crushing paradox, the solution of which must
-be lived before it can be really understood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In his hours of silent meditation the student will find that there is one
-space of silence within him where he can find refuge from thoughts and
-desires, from the turmoil of the senses and the delusions of the mind.
-By sinking his consciousness deep into his heart he can reach this place—at
-first only when he is alone in silence and darkness. But when the
-need for the silence has grown great enough, he will turn to seek it even
-in the midst of the struggle with self, and he will find it. Only he must
-not let go of his outer self, or his body; he must learn to retire into this
-citadel when the battle grows fierce, but to do so without losing sight of
-the battle; without allowing himself to fancy that by so doing he has
-won the victory. That victory is won only when all is silence without as
-within the inner citadel. Fighting thus, from within that silence, the
-student will find that he has solved the first great paradox.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>But paradox still follows him. When first he thus succeeds in thus
-retreating into himself, he seeks there only for refuge from the storm in
-his heart. And as he struggles to control the gusts of passion and
-desire, he realises more fully what mighty powers he has vowed himself
-to conquer. He still feels himself, apart from the silence, nearer akin to
-the forces of the storm. How can his puny strength cope with these
-tyrants of animal nature?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This question is hard to answer in direct words; if, indeed, such an
-answer can be given. But analogy may point the way where the solution
-may be sought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In breathing we take a certain quantity of air into the lungs, and with
-this we can imitate in miniature the mighty wind of heaven. We can
-produce a feeble semblance of nature: a tempest in a tea-cup, a gale to
-blow and even swamp a paper boat. And we can say: “I do this; it is
-my breath.” But we cannot blow our breath against a hurricane, still
-less hold the trade winds in our lungs. Yet the powers of heaven are
-within us; the nature of the intelligences which guide the world-forces is
-blended with our own, and could we realise this and forget our outer
-selves, the very winds would be our instruments.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So it is in life. While a man clings to his outer self—aye, and even
-to any one of the forms he assumes when this “mortal coil” is cast aside—so
-long is he trying to blow aside a hurricane with the breath of his
-lungs. It is useless and idle such an endeavour; for the great winds of
-life must, sooner or later, sweep him away. But if he changes his <a id='corr122.24'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='altitude'>attitude</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_122.24'><ins class='correction' title='altitude'>attitude</ins></a></span>
-<em>in himself</em>, if he acts on the faith that his body, his desires, his
-passions, his brain, are not himself, though he has charge of them, and is
-responsible for them; if he tries to deal with them as parts of nature,
-then he may hope to become one with the great tides of being, and reach
-the peaceful place of safe self-forgetfulness at last.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>Faust.</span>”</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator4.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fear is the slave of pain and Rebellion her captive; Endurance her free
-companion and Patience her master. And the husband of Pain is Rapture.
-But the souls are few in whom that marriage is <a id='corr122.33'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='consummated.'>consummated.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_122.33'><ins class='correction' title='consummated.'>consummated.”</ins></a></span> (L. S. C.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>
- <h3 id='blossom2' class='c018'><span class="blackletter">THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN</i>.<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c013'><sup>[26]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Mabel Collins</span>,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='small'>Author of “<span class='sc'>The Prettiest Woman in Warsaw</span>,” &amp;c., &amp;c.,</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>And Scribe of “<span class='sc'>The Idyll of the White Lotus</span>,” and “<span class='sc'>Through the Gates</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>of Gold</span>.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER III.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>In a chapel of the great Cathedral in the city there was at certain
-hours always a priest who held there his confessional.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To him went Hilary some days later. In the interim he had
-not seen the Princess. His soul had been torn hither and thither, to and
-fro. His passion for the beautiful girl held him fast, while his horror of
-the magician repelled him from her. He went to the Cathedral in the
-afternoon determined that he would reveal all his distress to the priest.
-Father Amyot was in his confessional, but some one was with him, for
-the curtain was drawn. Hilary knelt down at the small altar of the
-chapel there to wait. Presently there was a slight sound; he turned his
-head to see if the confessional was now free. The Princess Fleta stood
-beside him, her eyes fixed on him; it was she who at this instant only
-had risen from her knees in the confessional. Hilary, amazed and dumb
-with wonder, could only gaze upon her. She kept her strange and fascinating
-eyes fixed on his for a moment and then turned and with swift,
-soft steps left the chapel. Hilary remained kneeling motionless before
-the altar, his mind absorbed in what was hardly so much thought as
-amazement. Fleta was not then what he thought her. If she were sensitive
-to religious impressions she could not be the cold magician which
-she had appeared to him to be when he recollected the last scene in the
-laboratory. Perhaps after all she used her power generously and for
-good. He began to see her in another light. He began to worship her
-for her goodness as well as for her strong attractions. His heart leaped
-with joy at the thought that her soul was as beautiful as her body. He
-rose from his knees and turned instinctively and without thought to follow
-her. As he did so he passed Father Amyot, who seeing that no one else
-came immediately to the confessional, had left it and flung himself at full
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>length upon the ground before the altar. He wore a long robe of coarse
-white cloth, tied at the waist with a black cord; a hood of the same cloth
-covered his shaven head. He was like a skeleton, perfectly fleshless and
-emaciated. His face lay sideways on the stone; he seemed unconscious,
-so profound was his abstraction. The eyes were open but had no sight
-in them. They were large grey blue eyes, full of a profound melancholy
-which gave them an appearance as if tears stood in them. This melancholy
-affected Hilary strangely; it touched his heart, made thrill and
-vibrate some deeply sensitive cord in his nature. He stood gazing a
-moment at the prostrate figure, and then with a profound obeisance left
-the chapel.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Princess Fleta had her horse waiting for her. She was a constant
-and daring rider, and seldom entered the city except on horseback, to the
-amazement of the court ladies, who in the city rode in carriages that they
-might dress beautifully. But Fleta had no vanity of this kind. Probably
-no other girl of her age would have willingly adopted the hideous dress
-of the witch and worn it before so many curious eyes. Her own beauty
-and her own appearance was a subject of but the slightest thought to
-her. She would walk down the fashionable promenade in her riding
-habit among the magnificent toilettes of the Court ladies. This she was
-doing now while a servant led her horse up and down. Hilary watched
-her from a distance, unable to summon courage to approach her in the
-midst of such a throng of personages. But presently Fleta saw him and
-came with her swift light step towards him. “Will you walk with me?”
-she asked. “There is no one here to be my companion but you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And why is that?” asked Hilary, as with flushed face and eager steps
-he accompanied her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Because there are none that sympathise with me. You alone have
-entered my laboratory.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But would not any of these be glad to come if you would admit
-them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='corr124.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Not'>“Not</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_124.32'><ins class='correction' title='Not'>“Not</ins></a></span> one would have the courage, except perhaps some few wild
-spirits who would dare anything for mere excitement. And they would
-not please me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary was silent. Her words showed him very plainly that he
-pleased her. But there was a chill in his nature which now asserted
-itself. Here in the midst of so many people her hold on him was
-lessened, and he doubted her more than ever. Was she merely playing
-with him for her own amusement? Her high position gave her this
-power and he could not resent it, for even to be her favourite for a day
-would be accounted by any man an honour and a thing to boast of.
-And Hilary was being signalled out for public honour. He felt the
-envious glances of the men whom he met, and immediately a cold veil
-fell on his heart. He desired no such envy. To his mind love was a
-thing sacred. His scorn of life and doubt of human nature awakened
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>at this moment of triumph. He did not speak, but the Princess
-answered his thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We will go away from here,” she said. “In the country you are a
-creature of passion. Here you become a cynic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How do you know my heart?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We were born under the same star,” she answered quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That is no sufficient answer,” he replied. “It conveys no meaning
-to me, for I know nothing of the mysterious sciences you study.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come then with me,” she answered, “and I will teach you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She signed to her servant, who brought her horse; she mounted and
-rode away with merely a smile to Hilary. She knew that in spite of
-the chill that was on him he would hunger for her in her absence and
-soon follow. And so he did. The pavements appeared empty though
-crowds moved over them; the city seemed lifeless and dull, though it
-was one of the gayest in the world. He turned from the streets, and
-walking into the country, found himself very soon at the narrow wicket
-gate of the Princess Fleta’s Garden House.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She was wandering up and down the avenue between the trees. Her
-dress was white now, and very long and soft, falling in great folds from
-her shoulders. As she moved slowly to and fro, the dancing sunlight
-playing on her splendid form, it seemed to Hilary that he saw before
-him not a mere woman, but a priestess. Her late visit to the Cathedral
-recurred to him; if the religious soul was in her, might she not, indeed,
-spite of her strange acts, be no magician, but a priestess? He returned
-to his former humour and was ready to worship at her feet. She
-greeted him with a smile that thrilled him; her eyes read his very soul,
-and her smile brought to it an unutterable joy. She turned and led the
-way to the house and Hilary followed her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She opened her laboratory door, and immediately Hilary became
-aware of the strong odour of some powerful incense. The dim smoke
-was still in the room but the flame had all died away in the vessel. By
-the side of the vessel lay a prostrate figure. Hilary uttered a cry of
-amazement and of horror as he recognised Father Amyot. He turned
-such a look of dismay upon the Princess that she answered his thought
-in a haughty tone which she had never before used in addressing him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is not time yet to ask me the meaning of what you may see
-here. Some day, perhaps, when you know more, you may have the
-right to question me: but not now. See, I can change this appearance
-that distresses you, in a moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She raised the prostrate figure, and flung off from it the white robe
-that resembled Father Amyot’s. Beneath, it was clothed in a dull red
-garment such as Hilary had first seen it in. With a few swift touches
-of her hand the Princess changed the expression of the face. Father
-Amyot was gone, and Hilary saw sitting in the chair before him that
-unindividualised form and face which at his visit to the laboratory had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>affected him with so much horror. The Princess saw the repugnance
-still in his face, and with a laugh opened the screen with which she had
-hidden the figure before.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now,” she said, “come and sit beside me on this couch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But before she left the great vessel she threw in more incense and lit
-it. Already Hilary was aware that the fumes of that which had been
-already burned had affected his brain. The red figures moved upon the
-black wall, and he watched them with fascinated eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They shaped themselves together not, this time, into words, but into
-forms. And the wall instead of black became bright and luminous. It
-was as though Hilary and Fleta sat alone before an immense stage.
-They heard the spoken words and saw the gestures and the movements
-of these phantasmal actors as clearly and with as much reality as
-though they were creatures of flesh and blood before them. It was a
-drama of the passions; the chief actors were Hilary and Fleta themselves.
-Hilary almost forgot that the real Fleta was at his side, so
-absorbed was he in the action of the phantasmal Fleta.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was bewildered, and he could not understand the meaning of what
-he saw, clearly though the drama was enacted in front of him. He saw
-the orchard full of blossoming trees; he saw the splendid savage woman.
-He knew that he himself and this Fleta at his side, were in some strange
-way playing a part under this savage guise; but how or what it was he
-could not tell. Fleta laughed as she watched his face. “You do not
-know who you are,” she cried. “That is a great loss and makes life
-much more difficult. But you will know by and bye if you are willing
-to learn. Come, let us look at another and a very different page
-of life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The stage grew dark and moving shadows passed to and fro upon it,
-great shadows that filled Hilary’s soul with dread. At last they drew
-back and left a luminous space where Fleta herself was visible. Fleta,
-in this same human shape that she wore now, yet strangely changed.
-She was much older and yet more beautiful; there was a wonderful fire
-in her brilliant eyes. On her head was a crown, and Hilary saw that
-she had great powers to use or abuse—it was written on her face. Then
-something drew his eyes down and he saw a figure lying helpless at her
-feet—why was it so still?—it was alive!—yes, but it was bound and
-fettered, bound hand and foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Are you afraid?” broke out Fleta’s voice with a ring of mocking
-laughter in it. “Surely you are not afraid—why should I not reign?
-why should you not suffer? You are a cynic; is there anything good
-to be expected?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Perhaps not,” said Hilary. “It may be that you are heartless and
-false. And yet, as I stand here now, I feel that though you may betray
-me by and bye, and take my life and liberty from me, yet I love your
-very treachery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>Fleta laughed aloud, and Hilary stood silent, confused by the words
-he had spoken hastily without pausing to think whether they were fit to
-speak or not. Well, it was done now. He had spoken of his love.
-She could refuse ever to see him again and he would go into the outer
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she said, “I shall not send you away. Do you not know,
-Hilary Estanol, that you are my chosen companion? Otherwise would
-you be here with me now? The word love does not alarm me; I have
-heard it too often. Only I think it very meaningless. Let us put it
-aside for the present. If you let yourself love me you must suffer; and
-I do not want you to suffer yet. When pain comes to you the youth
-will go from your face; you do not know how to preserve it, and I like
-your youth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary made no answer. It was not easy to answer such a speech,
-and Hilary was not in the humour for accomplishing any thing difficult.
-His brain was confused by the fumes of the incense and by the strange
-scenes so mysteriously enacted before his eyes. He scarcely knew what
-Fleta this was that stood beside him. And yet he knew he loved her
-though he distrusted her! With each moment that he passed by her
-side he worshipped her more completely, and the disbelief interfered less
-and less with his proud joy in being admitted to her intimacy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now,” said Fleta, “I want you to do a new thing. I want you to
-exercise your will and compel my servants who have been pleasing us
-with phantasies, to show us a phantasy of your own creation. You can
-do this very well, if you will. It only needs that you shall not doubt
-you can do it. Ah! how quickly does the act follow the thought!”
-She uttered the last words with a little cry of amused pleasure. For the
-dim shadows had rapidly masked the stage and then again withdrawn,
-leaving the figure of Fleta very clearly visible, beautiful and passionate,
-her face alight with love, held clasped in Hilary’s arms, her lips pressed
-close to his.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The real Fleta who sat beside him rose now with a shake of her head,
-and a laugh which was not all gay. The shadows closed instantly over
-the stage, and a moment later the illusion was all destroyed and the
-solid wall was there before Hilary’s eyes. He had become so accustomed
-to witness the marvellous inside this room that he did not pause
-to wonder; he followed Fleta as she crossed to the door, and tried to
-attract her attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Forgive me, my Princess,” he murmured over and over again.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, you are forgiven,” she said at last lightly. “You have not
-offended, so it is easy for me to forgive. I do not think a man can help
-what is in his heart; at all events, no ordinary man can. And you,
-Hilary, have consented to be like the rest. Are you content?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No!” he answered, instantly. And as he spoke he understood for
-the first time the fever that had stirred him all through his short bright
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>life. “Content! How should I be? Moreover, is not our star the star
-of restlessness and action?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For the first time, Fleta turned on him a glance of real tenderness and
-emotion. When he said the words “our star,” it seemed as if he had
-touched her heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah!” she said, “How sorely I long for a companion!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then she turned from him very abruptly, and almost before he knew
-she had moved she had opened the door, and was standing outside
-waiting for him. “Come!” she said impatiently. He followed her
-immediately, for he had no choice but to do so; yet he was disappointed.
-He was more deeply disappointed when he found that she led
-the way with swift steps into the room where her aunt sat. Arrived
-there, Fleta threw herself into a chair, took up a great golden fan and
-began to fan herself, while she talked about the gossip of the Court. The
-change was so sudden that for some moments Hilary could not follow
-her. He stood bewildered, till the aunt pushed a low chair towards him;
-and he felt then that the old lady was not surprised at his manner, but
-only sorry for him. And then suddenly the cynic re-asserted itself in his
-heart. A thought that bit like flame suddenly started into life. Had the
-bewildered emotion that had been, as he knew, visible on his face, been
-seen on others before; was Fleta not only playing with him, but playing
-with him as she had played with many another lover? The thought
-was more hateful than any he had ever suffered from; it wounded his
-vanity, which was more tender and delicate than his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta gave him no opportunity of anything but talk such as
-seemed in her stately presence too trivial to be endured, and so at last
-he rose and went his way. Fleta did not accompany him to the gate
-this time. She left him to go alone, and he felt as if she had withdrawn
-her favour in some degree; and yet perhaps that was foolish, he told himself,
-for after all, both he and she had said too much to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta was betrothed. She had been betrothed at her christening.
-Before long her marriage would take place; and then that crown seen
-in the vision would be placed on her head. Had it needed the vision to
-bring that fact to his mind, asked Hilary of himself? If so, ’twas time,
-he bitterly added, for Fleta was not a woman who was likely to give up
-a crown for the sake of love! His heart rose fiercely within him as he
-thought of all this. Why had she tempted him to speak of love? For
-surely he never would have dared to so address her had she not tempted
-him; so he thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If he could have seen Fleta now! As soon as he left the room she
-had risen and slowly moved back to her laboratory. Entered there, she
-drew away a curtain which concealed a large mirror let deep into the
-wall. She did this resolutely, yet as if reluctantly. Immediately her
-gaze became fixed on the glass. She saw Hilary’s figure within it moving
-on his way towards the city. She read his thoughts and his heart. At
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>last she dropped the curtain with a heavy sigh, and let her arms fall at
-her side with a gesture that seemed to mean despair; certainly it meant
-deep dejection. And presently some great tears dropped upon the floor
-at her feet</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>None, since Fleta was born, had seen her shed tears.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER IV.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>Father Amyot on the next morning sent a message to Hilary praying
-him to come and see him. This Hilary did at once, and in much perplexity
-as to what the reason of such a summons could be. He went
-straight to the Cathedral, for there he knew the ascetic priest passed all
-his time. He found him, as he expected, prostrate before the altar, and
-almost in the same attitude he had seen him in yesterday. Horribly too
-it reminded him of the attitude of that figure lying on the floor of Fleta’s
-laboratory when he had entered it. He had to touch Father Amyot to
-attract his attention; then at once the priest rose and led the way out of
-the Cathedral into the cloisters, which joined it to the monastery close at
-hand. He went on, without speaking, his head drooped. Hilary could
-but follow. At last they reached a bare cell in which was no furniture
-but a crucifix and a perpetual lamp burning before it, and against the
-wall a bench.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Here Father Amyot sat down, and he motioned with his hand to Hilary
-to sit beside him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then he fell into a profound reverie; and Hilary watching him, wondered
-much what was in his mind. Was Fleta even now working her
-spells upon him and moulding his thoughts according to her will?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It almost seemed like it, for her name was the first word he uttered
-“The Princess Fleta,” he commenced, “is about to go upon a long and
-dangerous journey.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary started and turned his face away, for he knew that he had
-turned pale. Was she really going to leave the city! How unexpected!
-how terrible!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In a very short time,” went on Father Amyot, “the Princess will be
-married and she has a mission which she desires to accomplish before her
-wedding, and she says that you can assist her in this. It is for the fulfilment
-of this mission that she is undertaking the journey I speak of; supposing
-you should agree to help her you would have to accompany her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary made no answer. He had no answer ready. His breath was
-taken away and he could not recover it all in an instant. The whole
-thing seemed incredible; he felt it to be impossible; and yet a conviction
-was already falling on him that it would take place.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Of course,” resumed Father Amyot, seeing that Hilary was not disposed
-to speak, “you will want to know your errand, you will want to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>know why you are going on this journey. This it will be impossible for
-you to know. The Princess does not choose to inform any one of what
-her errand is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Not even the person whom she says can help her?” exclaimed
-Hilary in amazement</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Not even you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Well,” said Hilary rising with a gesture of indignation, “let her find
-some one else to go blindly in her wake. I am not the man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So saying he walked across the cell to the doorway, forgetting even to
-say good-bye to Father Amyot.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the priest’s voice arrested him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You would travel alone, save for one attendant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary turned and faced the priest in amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, impossible!” he exclaimed, “——yet it is true.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To Hilary the cynic, the thing suddenly assumed an intelligible form.
-Fleta wanted to take a journey in which she would prefer a companion
-because of its danger; yet she could not give her confidence to any one.
-She proposed to herself to use his love for her; she offered him her
-society as a bribe to take care of her, to ask no questions and tell no tales.
-The idea did not please him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have heard of princesses risking anything, relying on the power of
-their position; I have heard that the royal caprice is not to be measured
-by the reason of other men and women. Perhaps it is so. But Fleta! I
-thought her different even from her own family.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These were the first thoughts that came into his mind. His ready
-conclusion was that Fleta was willing that he should be her lover if he
-would be her servant also. But immediately afterwards came the fair
-vision of Fleta herself in her white robes, and with the face of a priestess.
-Her purpose was inscrutable, like herself. He confessed this as he stood
-there, surging doubts in his mind. And then suddenly a fragrance came
-across his sense—a strong perfume, that he associated with Fleta’s dress—and
-next a breath of incense. His brain grew dizzy; he staggered
-back and leaned against the wall. He no longer appeared to himself to
-be in Father Amyot’s cell—he was in Fleta’s laboratory, and her hand
-touched his face, her breath was on his brow. Ah, what madness of joy
-to be with her! To travel with her, to be her associate and companion
-to pass all the hours of the day by her side. Suddenly he roused himself,
-and, starting forward, approached Father Amyot.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I will go,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It will cost you dear,” said the priest. “Think again before you
-decide.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is useless to think,” cried Hilary. “Why should I think? I feel—and
-to feel is to live.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Father Amyot seemed not to hear his words. He was apparently
-already buried in prayer. Evidently he had said all that he intended to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>say; and Hilary, after a glance at him, turned and left the cell. He knew
-the priest’s moods too well to speak again, when once that deep cloud of
-profound abstraction had descended on his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He went away, passing back as he had come, through the Cathedral.
-At the high altar he paused an instant, and then knelt and murmured a
-prayer. It was one he had learned, and he scarce attached any meaning
-to the familiar words. But it comforted him to feel that he had prayed,
-be it never so meaningless a prayer. For Hilary had been reared in all
-the habits of the devout Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then he went out and took his way towards the Garden House,
-walking with long strides. He was determined to know the truth, and
-that at once. Amid all the brilliant men who crowded her father’s Court
-was he indeed the only one who could touch her heart? An hour ago
-he would have laughed at any one who had told him he had touched it;
-yet now he believed he had. And what intoxication that belief was!
-For the first time he began to feel the absolute infatuation of love. And
-looking back it seemed to him that an hour ago he had not loved Fleta—that
-he had never loved her till this minute.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He found her standing at the gate, among the flowers. She was dressed
-in white, and some crimson roses were fastened at her neck. Her face
-was like a child’s, full of gaiety and gladness. Hilary’s heart bounded
-with the delight it gave him to see her like this. She opened the gate
-for him, and together they walked towards the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have been to see Father Amyot,” said Hilary. “He sent for me
-this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” answered Fleta, quietly. “He had a message to you from
-me. Are you willing to undertake a tiresome task for one you know so
-little?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My Princess,” murmured Hilary, bending his head as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But not your Queen,” said Fleta, with a laugh full of the glorious
-insolence only possible to one who had the royal blood in her veins, and
-knew that a crown was waiting for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, my Queen,” said Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“If you call me that,” said Fleta, quickly, and in a different tone, “you
-recognise a royalty not recognised by courtiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” replied Hilary simply.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The royalty of power,” added Fleta, significantly, and with a penetrating
-look into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Call it what you will,” answered Hilary, “you are my Queen. From
-this hour I give allegiance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Be it so,” said Fleta, with a light girlish laugh, “Be ready then, tomorrow
-at noon. I will tell you where to meet me. I will send a
-message in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Suddenly a recollection crossed Hilary’s mind which had hitherto
-been blotted out from it. “My mother,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>“Oh,” said Fleta, “I have been to see Madame Estanol. My father
-goes into the country to-day and she believes you go with him. She is
-glad you should join the Court.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Strange,” said Hilary, unthinkingly, “for she has always set her
-face against it.” Then the smile on Fleta’s face made him think his
-words foolish.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is as my Queen orders. Seemingly, men and women obey her
-even in their inmost hearts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” said Fleta, with a sigh, “that is just what they do not! It is
-that power which I have yet to obtain. They obey me, yes, but against
-the dictates of their inmost hearts. If you really loved me, we could
-obtain that power; but you are like the others. You do not love me
-with your inmost heart!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I do not!” exclaimed Hilary, in amazement, stunned by her words.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she answered, mournfully, “you do not. If you really loved
-me you would not calculate chances and risks, you would not consider
-whether I am profligate or virtuous, whether I am my father’s daughter
-or a child of the stars! I tell you, Hilary Estanol, if you were capable
-of loving me truly, you might find your way to the gods with me and
-even sit among them. But it is not so with you. You vacillate even in
-your love. You cannot give yourself utterly. That means grief to
-you, for you cannot find perfect pleasure in a thing which you take
-doubtingly and give but by halves. Still you shall travel with me;
-and you shall be my companion and friend. There is none other
-to whom I would give this chance. How do you think you will
-reward me? Oh, I know too well. Go now, but be ready when I send
-for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So saying she turned and went into the house, leaving him in the
-garden. For a few moments he stood there embarrassed, not knowing
-which way to turn or what to do. But he was not annoyed or disturbed,
-as his vanity might have led him to be at another time, by such
-cavalier <a id='corr132.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='treatment'>treatment.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_132.32'><ins class='correction' title='treatment'>treatment.</ins></a></span> He was aghast, horrified. Was this the girl he
-loved! this tyrant, this proud spirit, this strange woman, who before he
-had wooed her reproached him with not loving her enough! Within
-him lurked a conventional spirit, strong under all circumstances, even
-those of the most profound emotion, and Fleta’s whole conduct shocked
-and distressed that spirit so that it groaned, and more, upbraided him
-with his mad love. But the fierce growth of that love could not be
-checked. He might suffer because it lived, but he was not strong
-enough to kill it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He turned and walked away from the house and slowly returned to
-the city. He was ashamed and disheartened. His love seemed to disgrace
-him. He had entertained lofty ideas which now were discarded
-for ever. For he knew that to-morrow he would start upon a long
-journey, the end of which was to him unknown, by the side of a girl whom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>he could never marry, yet of whom he was the avowed lover. Well, be
-it so. Hilary began to look at these things from a fatalistic point of
-view; his weakness led him to shrug his shoulders and say that his fate
-was stronger than himself. So he went home gloomily yet with a burning
-and feverish heart. He immediately set to work making ready for
-his departure for an indefinite period. His mother he found was prepared
-for this, as Fleta had told him; and more—seemed to regard Fleta as a
-kind of gentle goddess who had brought good fortune into his path.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have always resisted the idea of your hanging about the Court,”
-she said, “but it is different if indeed the King wishes to have you with
-him. That must lead to your obtaining some honourable post. What I
-dreaded was your becoming a mere useless idler. And I am glad you
-are going into the country, dear, for you are looking very pale and quite
-ill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary assented tacitly and without comment to the deceit with which
-Fleta had paved the way for him.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be <a href='#blossom3'>continued</a>.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator3.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Spirituality is not what we understand by the words ‘virtue’ or ‘goodness.’
-It is the power of perceiving formless, spiritual essences.”—(<cite>Jasper
-Niemand in the “Path.”</cite>)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The discovery and right use of the true essence of Being—this is the whole
-secret of life.”—(<cite>Jasper Niemand in the “Path.”</cite>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h3 class='c018'><span class='sc'>Desire Made Pure.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>When desire is for the purely abstract—when it has lost all trace or tinge of
-“self”—then it has become pure.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first step towards this purity is to kill out the desire for the things of
-matter, since these <em>can</em> only be enjoyed by the separated personality.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The second is to cease from desiring for oneself even such abstractions as
-power, knowledge, love, happiness, or fame; for they are but selfishness
-after all.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Life itself teaches these lessons; for all such objects of desire are found Dead
-Sea fruit in the moment of attainment. This much we learn from experience.
-Intuitive perception seizes on the <em>positive</em> truth that satisfaction is attainable
-only in the infinite; the will makes that conviction an actual fact of consciousness,
-till at last all desire is centred on the Eternal.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THOUGHTS ON THEOSOPHY.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>“The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life,” this is the keynote
-of all true reform. Theosophy is the vehicle of the spirit that
-gives life, consequently nothing <em>dogmatic</em> can be truly
-<em>theosophical</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is incorrect, therefore, to describe a <em>mere</em> unearthing of dead letter
-dogmas as “Theosophic work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When a word, phrase, or symbol, having been once used for the
-purpose of suggesting an idea <em>new</em> to the mind or minds being operated
-on, is insisted upon irrespective of the said idea, it becomes a dead
-letter dogma and loses its vitalising power, and serves rather as an
-obstruction to, than as vehicle of the spirit; but, alas, this <a id='corr134.12'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>insistance</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_134.12'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>insistance</ins></a></span>
-upon the letter is too often carried on under the honoured name of
-“Theosophy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A man cannot acquire an idea <em>new to him</em> unless it <em>grows</em> in his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The mere familiarity with the <em>sound</em> of a word, or a phrase, or the
-mere familiarity with the <em>appearance</em> of a symbol, does not, of <em>necessity</em>,
-involve the possession of the idea properly associated with the said
-word, phrase or symbol. To insist, therefore, on the contrary cannot be
-theosophical; but would be better described as <em>un</em>theosophical.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It would certainly be theosophical work to point out kindly and
-temperately how certain words, phrases and symbols appear to have
-been misunderstood or misapplied, how various claims and professions
-may be excessive or confused as a consequence of ignorance or vanity,
-or both. But it is quite another thing to condemn a man or a body of
-men <em>outright</em>, for certain errors in judgment or action; even though
-they were the result of vanity, greed or hypocrisy; indeed such wholesale
-condemnation would, on the contrary, be untheosophical.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The one eternal, immutable law of life alone can judge and condemn
-a man absolutely. “Vengeance is <em>mine</em>, saith the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Were I asked how I would dare attempt “to dethrone the gods,
-overthrow the temple, destroy the law which feeds the priests and
-props the realm; I should answer as the Buddha is made to answer in
-the <em>Light of Asia</em>: ‘What thou bidst me keep is form which passes
-while the free truth stands; get thee to thy darkness.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What good gift hath my brother but it comes from search and
-strife (inward) and loving sacrifice.”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in3'>*</div>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Correspondence</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c046' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>ARE THE TEACHINGS ASCRIBED TO JESUS CONTRADICTORY?</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>There are none so blind as those who won’t see, excepting those who can’t!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In <cite>Light</cite>, for September 10th, there is a letter from Dr. Wyld, who writes as
-follows: “In the last number of <cite>Light</cite> there is a quotation from the <cite>Spiritual
-Reformer</cite> in which the writer shows the absurdity of the idea that Jesus was not
-an historic being. But while thanking the writer for this contribution, I would
-take the strongest objection to his assertion that many of Christ’s teachings
-are contradictory and mistaken. This is an assertion occasionally made by
-Spiritualists, and whenever I have met with it I have asked for evidence of
-the assertion, but hitherto I have received none.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But that might surely have been easily supplied. Here, for example, are
-a few very direct contradictions in the speaker’s own words. Every one knows
-how secret were the teachings in their nature; how secretly they were
-conveyed in private places apart; how secretly his secrets were to be kept; and
-yet in presence of the High Priest Jesus makes the astounding declaration:
-“<em>I have spoken openly to the world; I always taught in synagogues; and in
-secret spake I nothing.</em>”—John xviii. 20.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Jesus, in keeping with the mythical character, is made to claim equality and
-identity with the Father. He says (John x. 30), “<em>I and my Father are one</em>;”
-but in the same book (John xiv. 28), he says, “<em>The Father is greater than I</em>”—(Cf.
-Matthew xxiv. 36.) Again, he claims superiority over his Father.
-“<em>The Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment to the Son. As
-I hear I judge</em>” (John v. 22, 30). And then in the same gospel he says, “<em>I
-judge no man</em>,” (John viii. 15.) “<em>If any man hear my words and believe not,
-I judge him not; for I came not to judge the world</em>,” (John xii. 47). Again,
-“<em>I am one that bear witness of myself. Though I bear witness of myself,
-yet my record is true</em>,” (John viii. 14, 18); which is contradicted by (John v. 31)
-“<em>If I bear witness of myself, my witness is not true</em>.” He says (John v. 33,
-34) that “<em>John bare witness unto the truth, but I receive not testimony from
-man</em>,” and then tells the disciples, who are supposed to have been men, that
-“<em>they also shall bear witness</em>” to or of him (John xv. 27). Again he says,
-“<em>Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works</em>,”
-(Matthew v. 16). But “<em>Take heed that ye do not your alms before men to be
-seen of them</em>.” (Matthew vi. 1).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>Resist not evil, but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn
-to him the other also</em>,” (Matthew v. 39); for “<em>all that take the sword, shall
-perish with the sword</em>,” (Matthew xxvi. 52). Nevertheless, “<em>He that hath no
-sword let him sell his garment and buy one</em>,” (Luke xxii. 36). “<em>I came not to
-send Peace but a Sword</em>,” (Matthew x. 34). “<em>Be not afraid of them that kill
-the body</em>,” (Luke xii. 4). Nevertheless “<em>Jesus would not walk in Jewry because
-the Jews sought to kill him</em>,” (John vii. 1).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>I merely ask, for the sake of information, are these statements contradictory
-or are they not?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I will but offer one or two specimens of the more serious and fundamental
-contradictions in the <span lang="es" xml:lang="es"><i>olla podrida</i></span> of teaching assigned to Jesus. The teaching
-of the alleged founder of Christianity in the Gospel according to Matthew
-(ch. xix. 12), is that of the Saboi, the self-mutilators, who are still extant as the
-Russian Skoptsi<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c013'><sup>[27]</sup></a> and who emasculate themselves to save their spermatic souls,
-as Origen is reputed to have done. Jesus is made to say, “<i>There are Eunuchs
-which made themselves Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven’s sake</i>. He that is
-able to receive it, let him receive it.” And then in the opening verses of the
-very next chapter, the same teacher says, “<em>Suffer little children and forbid them
-not, to come unto me; for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven</em>.” But those who
-became Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven’s sake could not be suffering the
-little children to come unto him or to them. They would be forbidding them
-to come at all. If the Kingdom of Heaven be <em>such</em> as the children of Eunuchs
-it must be non-extant. As Hood’s deaf shopman said of the crackers going off,
-there were so many reports he did not know <em>which</em> to believe.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And where is the sense of talking so much nonsense about the “Golden
-Rule” or the Divine humanity on behalf of one who carried on the blindest
-warfare against human nature itself? Who declared that “<em>If any man come to
-me and hate not his father and mother, and wife and children, and brothers and
-sisters, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple</em>” (Luke xiv. 26). And who
-promised that every follower of his who “<i>left house, or parents, or brethren, or
-wife, or children, for the Kingdom of God’s sake should receive manifold more
-in the present and in the world to come life everlasting</i>.” Well may the grateful
-Musselman cry in his adorations, “<em>Thank God</em> <span class='fss'>OUR</span> <em>Father has no Son!</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But, I do not charge these contradictory sayings and teachings to any
-personal character. The collectors are but making use of the <em>Kurios</em>, the Lord
-of the pre-Christian Mythos, the mystical Christ of the Gnostics, as a puppet
-to represent them and their divers doctrines. They make the human image
-of a God of Love to be the preacher of everlasting punishment, and the
-bearer of a fan with which he fans the fires of hell; a false foreteller of that
-which never came to pass, and the forerunner of a fulfilment which did not
-follow. In short, they make this Marionette Messiah dance to any particular
-tune they play.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Jesus is posed as the original revealer of a father in Heaven, whereas the
-doctrine of the Divine Fatherhood was taught in three different Egyptian Cults
-during some four thousand years previously.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dr. Wyld implies that I deny the existence of a personal Jesus. That is the
-misrepresentation of ignorance. But the sole historical Jesus acknowledged by
-me is the only one who was ever known to the Jews, to Celsus, to Epiphanius,
-as the descendant of <span class='sc'>Joseph</span> Pandira, he, who according to Irenæus, lived to
-be over fifty years of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This, I admit, was not the kind of Jesus whom the Christians find in the
-Gospels and honour as a God.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Gospel histories do not contain the biography of Ben-Pandira, the son
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>of Joseph. Nor was it intended that they should. Their Jesus is the
-mythical Christ, the Horus of 12 years, and the adult Horus of 30 years; the
-Lord of the age, Æon or Cycle, who came and went, and was to come again
-for those who possessed the Gnosis.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Another writer in <cite>Light</cite>, a week earlier, could not understand how any one
-can deny the personal existence of the “Historical Christ!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The <em>Historical Christ</em>! You might as well demand our belief in the historical
-Chronos—Time, in person—or the historical Ghost, in man or out of him. If
-the writer knew anything of the pre-Christian Spiritualism—anything of the true
-nature or even the meaning of the name—he would perceive the Historic
-Impossibility of the personal Christ. An “Historical Christ” is as much a
-nonentity as the historical Mrs. Harris. But, <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><i>cui bono?</i></span> I have no hope in these
-matters of any orthodox Christian Spiritualists. They have to learn the primary
-lesson, at last, that Historic Christianity was not founded on our facts <em>until it
-had buried them</em>! That it was the negation of Gnosticism, the antithesis of
-phenomenal Spiritualism. That it substituted faith for facts; a physical resurrection
-for a spiritual continuity, and a corporeal Christ for the trans-corporeal
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Christian Revelation leaves no room for modern Spiritualism, and they
-are logically, truly Christians who reject it! It recognises no other rising again
-except at the last day, and then only for the few who believed in Jesus (John vi. 40).
-The Christians have no other world but one at the end of this; no other spirits
-extant excepting their physical Christ and the devil.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>People who will see nothing contradictory in direct opposites, no difference
-betwixt black and white, but rather the necessary duality of antiphonal truth,
-who can accept a misinterpretation of mythology for the Word of God, are of
-little account as witnesses for Spiritualism. They who tell a story about the
-whale swallowing Jonah are not likely to be credited when they come with
-another that looks very like Jonah swallowing the whale. Professed believers in
-the literal truth of the Gospel fables are of necessity “<em>Suspects</em>” as witnesses
-for abnormal and extraordinary facts.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Pointing to his antagonist on the platform, O’Connel once enquired of his
-audience, “Can ye believe a single word that a gentleman says who wears a
-waistcoat of <em>that</em> colour?” It was yellow, and they couldn’t.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What is the use of taking your “Bible oath” that this thing is true, if the
-Book you are sworn upon is a magazine of falsehoods already exploded or just
-going off?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Moreover, the Christian Priesthood has been preaching through all these
-centuries that the dead do <em>not</em> return; and the living have believed them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dr. Sprenger has calculated that nine million persons have been put to death
-as Witches, Wizards, or Mediums, since 1484, when Pope Innocent VIII. issued
-his Bull against Spiritualism and all its practices, which were considered to be
-the works of the devil.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Besides, if the Christian scheme of damnation be true, as assigned to the
-teaching of Jesus, no humane person should want to know that there is any
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Spiritualism can make no headway where it has to draw after it this dead
-weight of a tail.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>Christian Spiritualism also ostentatiously proclaims that it has nothing in the
-world to do with “Woman’s Rights,” “Vaccination,” or any such merely
-human interests. It would seek to create an interest in another life, whilst
-ignoring the vital interests of this. But that is to sign its own death-warrant
-and to seal its own speedy doom. This is to repeat the mistake and follow the
-failure of the Christian system of saving souls for another life whilst allowing
-them to be damned in this. At the same time, it would drag Spiritualism into
-the bankrupt business of Historic Christianity and bind up a third testament to
-save the other two, as a sort of Trinity in Unity. But as a system of thought,
-of religion, or morals and a mode of interpreting nature, Historic Christianity is
-moribund and cannot be saved, or resuscitated by transfusion of new blood into
-it; not if you bled Spiritualism to death in trying to give it a little new life.
-They try in vain to make our phenomena guarantee the miracles of mythology
-as spiritual realities. They try in vain to tether the other world in this and
-make it draw for the fraudulent old faith. They keep on jumping up and down
-to persuade themselves and others that they are free. But it is only a question
-of length of chain, for those who are still fettered fast at foot upon the ancient
-standing-ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have not answered the writer in the paper quoted by <cite>Light</cite>, and approved
-by Dr. Wyld, for the reason that his acquaintance with my data was too limited
-to make discussion profitable or useful. Those data are already presented in
-accessible books and pamphlets, and there is no need for me to repeat them in
-reply to him. Those who undertake to write on so perplexing a subject ought
-to be able to illuminate it and enlighten their opponents. The problems are
-not to be solved by any amount of personal simplicity. I am always ready to
-meet any competent and well-informed defender of the faith upon the platform
-or in the press. I should prefer it to be a bishop, who is also an Egyptologist.
-But beggars are not allowed to be choosers. I am prepared at any time to
-demonstrate the entirely mythical and mystical origin of the Christ, and the
-non-spiritual, non-historical beginnings of the vast complex called Christianity.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Gerald Massey.</span></div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[Any “Bishop Egyptologist,” or even Assyriologist, of whom we have heard there are not a few in
-England, is cordially invited to defend his position in the pages of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>. The “Son of the
-Morning” is the <em>Light-Bearer</em>, and welcomes light from every quarter of the globe.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[<span class='sc'>Note.</span>—As <cite>Lucifer</cite> cannot concur in the exclusively <em>exoteric</em> view, taken by Mr. Massey, of this
-allegorical, though none the less philosophical, scripture, the next number will contain an article
-dealing with the <em>esoteric</em> meaning of the New Testament.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>TO THE AUTHOR OF “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>There is a sentence in your “Comments” which has haunted me with a
-sense of irritation: “To obtain knowledge by experiment is too tedious a
-method for those who aspire to do real work,” &amp;c. Have we any knowledge, of
-whatever sort, that has been of use in the world, which has been obtained otherwise
-than experimentally? By patient and persistent toil of sifting and testing,
-we have obtained the little knowledge that is of service to us. Is there such a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>thing as “certain intuition”? Has intuitive knowledge, if such there be, been
-accepted as positive knowledge until it has been submitted to the test of experiment?
-Would it be right that it should be? Your illustration of the “determined
-workman” brings the question down (as I think the question should be
-brought) to the plane of practice. Is there any workman who can know his tools
-until he has tried them? Is not the history of knowledge the history of intuitions
-put to the test of practice? Intuitions, or what we call such, seem to me quite
-as apt and likely to deceive us as anything in the world; we only know them
-for good when we have tried them.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Interrogator.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>It seems to me there is some confusion in this letter between obtaining
-knowledge by experiment, and testing it by experiment. Edison knew that his
-discoveries were only things to look for, and he tested his knowledge by experiment.
-The actual work of great inventors is the bringing of intuitive knowledge
-on to the plane of practice by applying the test of experiment. But all inventors
-are seers; and some of them having died without being able to put into practice
-the powers which they knew existed in Nature were considered madmen. Later
-on, other men are more fortunate, and re-discover the laughed-at knowledge.
-This is an old and familiar story, but we need constantly to be reminded of it.
-How often have great musicians or great artists been regarded as “infant
-prodigies” in their childhood? They have intuitive knowledge of that power
-of which they are chosen interpreters, and experiment is only necessary in
-order to find out how to give that which they know to others.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Intuitive knowledge in reference to the subjects with which I have been dealing
-must indeed be tested by experiment; and it is the whole purpose of
-“Light on the Path” itself, and the “Comments” to urge men to test their
-knowledge in this way. But the vital difference between this and material
-forms of knowledge is that for all occult purposes a man must obtain his own
-knowledge before he can use it. There are many subjects of time content to
-linger on through æons of slow development, and pass the threshold of eternity
-at last by sheer force of the great wheel of life with which they move; possibly
-during their interminable noviciate, they may obtain knowledge by experiment
-and with well-tested tools. Not so the pioneer, the one who claims his divine
-inheritance now. He must work as the great artists, the great inventors have
-done; obtain knowledge by intuition, and have such sublime faith in his own
-knowledge that his life is readily devoted to testing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But for this purpose the testing has to be actually done in the astral
-life. In a new world, where the use of the senses is a pain, how can the workman
-stay to test his tools? The old proverb about the good workman who
-never quarrels with them, however bad they are, though of course had he the
-choice he would use the best, applies here.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As to whether intuitive knowledge exists or no, I can only ask how came
-philosophies, metaphysics, mathematics into existence? All these represent
-a portion of abstract truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Before I received this letter the “Comments” for this month were written,
-in which, as it happens, I have spoken a great deal about intuitive knowledge.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>Therefore, I will now only quote the definition of a philosopher from Plato,
-which is given near the end of Book V.,—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I mean by philosopher, the man who is devoted to the acquisition of knowledge,
-real knowledge, and not merely inquisitive. The more our citizens
-approach this temperament, the better the state will be. True knowledge in its
-perfection and its entirety, man cannot attain. But he can attain to a kind of
-knowledge of realities, if he has any knowledge at all, because he cannot know
-nonentities. Hence his knowledge is half-way between real knowledge and
-ignorance, and we must call it opinion.”</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Note.</span>—Several questions which have been received are held over to be answered next month.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-<h4 class='c023'><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>In the interesting and lucid article on “Karma” in your number of September
-15th, everything seems to hinge on the theory of re-incarnation. “Very well,”
-says the author of that paper, “let us take the principle of re-incarnation for
-granted.” But is not this a rather unphilosophical way of handling a subject of
-such gravity? Take this or that principle for granted, and you may go about
-to prove anything under the sun. It is the old weakness of begging the question.
-Is it not this taking for granted what cannot be proved, and is not attempted to
-be proved, that has led astray speculators—both scientific and religious—everywhere
-and in every age, and is it not upon similar assumptions that the whole
-monstrous fabric of theology rests? Of course, in every kind of speculation
-one is compelled to set out with an assumption of some sort; but then the first
-thing the reader demands is, that the grounds shall be shown upon which the
-assumption rests; the assumption, whatever it be, must be made good before
-one can be asked to accept that which is to be raised upon it. And here comes
-in my question: What is the warrant or sanction for the principle of re-incarnation?
-What is the principle grounded upon? Do we undergo re-incarnation,
-and how do you know it?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Having set out with the assumption, the author does not return to it again,
-and at the end of the article I am as uninstructed as at the outset respecting
-the pivotal principle upon which all that follows seems to turn.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Interrogator.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The author of “Karma” will go into this question fully in a paper devoted
-entirely to the subject of re-incarnation. The two subjects are inextricably
-interwoven, but it was decided that to treat the two at the same time would
-produce too great a confusion, and offer too wide an area of speculation for the
-mind to grapple with. Therefore this course was adopted of taking the principle
-of re-incarnation for granted. It is possible that the second paper should have
-come first, but the two theories stand side by side, not one before the other, so
-that the question of precedence was a difficult one. But it is necessary, in view
-of this blending of the ideas, that the reader shall have the complete presentation
-of both before him, and then draw his conclusions. Therefore indulgence
-is asked until the papers dealing with each subject are completed. As many
-readers may have felt the same difficulty as our correspondent, we are glad to
-insert this letter and reply.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>Reviews.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'><span class="blackletter">THE KABBALAH UNVEILED.</span></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Translated by S. L. Macgregor Mathers.</span><a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c013'><sup>[28]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The author of this welcome volume has supplied the present generation of
-students of theosophy and occultism with a text-book which has been long
-wanted and waited for. The “Zohar” is the great storehouse of the ancient
-Hebrew theosophy, supplemented by the philosophical doctrines of the mediæval
-Jewish Rabbis. It consists of several distinct yet allied tracts, each discussing
-some special branch of the subject; each tract again consists of several portions,
-a kernel of most ancient dogma, to which are added comments and explanations,
-in some cases by several hands and at very different epochs. There is sufficient
-proof that these kernels of dogma are remnants of one of the oldest systems of
-philosophy that have come down to us, and they show also intrinsic evidence
-that they are associated at least with the return from the Babylonish captivity.
-On the other hand, it is pretty certain that the Zohar, in its present form, was
-put together and first printed about 1558, at Mantua, and a little later in other
-editions at Cremona and Lublin. This Mantuan edition was a revision of the
-collection of tracts collected and edited in MS. form by Moses de Leon, of
-Guadalaxara, in Spain, about 1300; even the most hostile views of the antiquity
-of the Zohar grant this much, and although direct historical evidence is not
-forthcoming of the several steps in the course of transmission of these doctrines
-from ante-Roman times, yet, as aforesaid, the internal evidence is ample to
-show the essential origination of the specially Hebrew ideas found in the Zohar
-from Rabbis, more or less tinged with a Babylonish cast, who must have flourished
-antecedent to the building of the second Temple. The tradition of the
-mediæval Rabbis definitely assigned the authorship to Rabbi Schimeon ben
-Jochai, who lived in the reign of the Roman Emperor Titus, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 70-80; and it
-is the claim of authorship made on his behalf that the modern critic is so fond
-of contesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “Zohar,” or “Splendour,” or “Book of Illumination,” and the “Sepher
-Yetzirah” are almost the only extant books of the Kabbalah, Qbalah or Cabbala.
-The “Kabbalah Denudata” of Knorr von Rosenroth, is a Latin version of the
-former, with commentaries by himself and by certain learned Rabbis. No
-French and no German translation of the Zohar has ever been published, nor
-until the present time has any English version been printed. Eliphaz Levi has,
-however, paraphrased a few chapters of the “Book of Concealed Mystery,” and
-these have been printed in the <cite>Theosophist</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Some parts of the Zohar are written in pure Hebrew, but a large portion is
-in Aramaic Chaldee, and there are passages in other dialects; this variation of
-language adds immensely to the difficulties of an accurate translation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Knorr von Rosenroth was a most able and compendious Hebrew savant, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>his translation of much of the Zohar into Latin is a work of established
-reputation, and has been, indeed, almost the only means by which the students
-of our era have been able to consult Hebraic philosophy. The present
-revival of theosophical studies by the English speaking races has created a
-demand for the Kabbalah in an English dress, and hence the appearance of
-the present work is well timed, and will form an epoch in the history of
-occultism; and much good fruit will no doubt be borne by a more intimate
-acquaintance with Jewish lore, which will tinge the present tendency to
-supremacy of the Sanscrit and Hermetic forms of mysticism. There is much
-reason to suppose that an attentive study of each of these forms of knowledge
-may lead one to the Hidden Wisdom; but a skilful analogy, and an investigation
-into the three forms of dogma on parallel lines will give a breadth of grasp
-and a cosmopolitan view of the matter which should lead to a happy solution
-of the great problems of life in a speedy and satisfactory manner. The
-Kabbalah may, in concise terms, be said to teach the ancient Rabbinical
-doctrines of the nature and attributes of the Divinity, the cosmogony of our
-universe, the creation of angels and the human soul, the destiny of angels and
-men, the dogma of equilibrium, and the transcendental symbolism of the
-Hebrew letters and numerals.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Mathers, who is a most patient and persevering student, if not professor,
-of mystic lore, is at the same time a first-rate classical scholar, and a
-skilful interpreter of the Hebrew tongue, and his translation from the Latin,
-varied and improved by his own study of the original Chaldee, has produced
-an English version of the Kabbalah Denudata which is eloquent in its construction,
-true to its text, and lucid in its abstruseness. For the matter is
-abstruse, much of it, and some is practically incomprehensible to the beginner,
-to the world in general for certain, and perhaps to every one at the first glance.
-But it will be certainly perceived that those very portions which seem most
-extravagant at a first reading are just the passages from which later a light will
-arise and lead one on to a firm grasp of the subject. To take up this volume
-and read at odd moments is a useless and hopeless task; no progress will be
-made, at any rate at first, except by thoroughly abstracting one’s individuality
-from the things of common life; disappointment can only accompany superficial
-reading.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Great credit is due to the enterprise of Mr. Redway in publishing this volume,
-for which no very extensive sale could have been anticipated; that he has
-already distributed a considerable number is matter for congratulation to himself
-and to the public. It is hoped that his success will induce him to publish
-other volumes of antique lore, of which many yet remain more or less completely
-ignored by the present generation.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>The “Siphra Dtzenioutha,” the “Idra Rabba,” and the “Idra Zuta,” included
-in this volume are doubtless three of the most valuable of the tracts of the
-Zohar, yet there are others of equal interest. The “Book of the Revolutions of
-Souls” is a most curious and mysterious work, and the “Asch Metzareph” is a
-treatise on the relations between Theosophy and the oldest alchemical ideas
-which are known to exist; it is a work on the Asiatic plane, on the lowest of the
-four kabbalistic worlds of Emanation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Beyond the limits of the Zohar proper, the “Sepher Yetzirah,” is a treatise
-which for interest and instruction cannot be surpassed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Mathers supplies us with an introduction to the Qabalah, which stamps
-him as a master of the science, and although he refers us on some pages to
-Ginsburg (a recognised authority), yet his remarks and explanation are more
-deep and thorough than those published in Ginsburg’s little English pamphlet,
-and are more discursive and complete. My remarks on the difficulty of our
-subject hardly render it necessary for me to insist on the absolute necessity of a
-painstaking study of this introduction, which will supply in a great measure the
-want of a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>de novo</i></span> education in Hebrew, and Hebrew modes of thought and
-expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Mathers justly insists on the literal rendering of the Hebrew title by
-the spelling Qabalah, which is no doubt correct, but lays him open to a charge of
-pedantry, which perhaps does not much affect him, since it would only come from
-superficial and possibly scoffing critics. The use of the letter Q without its
-usual English companion the u is sanctioned and advised, in this connection, by
-the learned Max Müller and other Orientalists of repute. To avoid the printing
-of Hebrew letters, the publisher has adopted a scheme of printing Hebrew
-words in English capital letters (in addition to the mode of pronunciation),
-after a method given by the author in tabular form. To the Hebrew scholar
-this gives an idea of barbarism, which is painful to the eye and sadly mars the
-volume, whilst it only saves the student the task of learning an alphabet of 22
-letters. I differ from the author in representing the Hebrew Teth by T, while
-depicting the Tau by <span class='sc'>Th.</span>, the reverse would have been a closer imitation of the
-sounds. The Introduction includes a learned excursus upon the idea of
-“Negative Existence,” in which considerable light is thrown on that difficult
-subject; skilful definitions are added concerning the <span class='sc'>Ain</span>, the <span class='sc'>Ain Soph</span>,
-and <span class='sc'>Ain Soph Aur</span>, answering in English to Negativity, The Limitless, and
-Limitless Light, the first essences of Deity. Several pages are devoted to a clear
-description of the Ten Sephiroth, the Numerical Conceptions of Godhead, and
-their explanatory titles; the Four Worlds of Emanation, and the component
-elements of a Human Soul; the Mysteries of the Hexagram as a type of
-Macroprosopus, the Most Holy Ancient One, or God the Father—and the
-succeeding mystery of Microprosopus, the Lesser Countenance, typified in the
-Pentagram and corresponding to the Christian Personality of the “Son of
-God,” are all explained at length. The series of references to the <span class='sc'>Ihvh</span> the
-Tetragrammaton, the Concealed Name of unknown pronunciation, form a
-valuable dissertation. The book is supplied with nine well executed diagrams,
-explanatory of the Sephiroth, the sacred names, essences of the soul, and a
-very perfect and complete scheme of the Sephiroth in the four worlds of
-emanation associated with the Vision of Ezekiel. Mr. Mathers desires to call
-special attention to the differentiation of the Deity in the Emanations, into the
-female type in addition to masculine characteristics: note the idealism of the
-Superior HE, Binah, the Mother, and the Inferior HE, Malkuth, the Bride of
-Microprosopus, the Kingdom of God (the Son of God and his Bride the
-Church), note that Genesis i. 26, says “let <em>Us</em> make man in our image,”
-“male and female created he them;” the “<em>us</em>” is “Elohim,” a noun in
-the plural.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>The “Siphra Dtzenioutha,” or “Book of Concealed Mystery,” is the most
-difficult of comprehension. Mr. Mathers adds a running commentary of his
-own, which proves to be very valuable. It consists of five chapters; in the
-first are found references to the Mystical Equilibrium, the worlds of unbalanced
-force characterised as the Edomite kings, the Vast Countenance, Theli the
-Dragon, the powers of <span class='fss'>IHVH</span>, and the essence of the female power—the Mother.
-The second chapter mentions the Beard of Truth, and passes on to define
-Microprosopus. The third chapter treats of the Beard of Microprosopus in an
-allegorical manner, and of the formation of the Supernal Man. An annotation
-follows concerning Prayer, and a curious note on the word <span class='fss'>AMEN!</span> as composed
-of <span class='fss'>IHVH</span>, and <span class='fss'>ADNI</span> Adonai or Lord. Chapter IV. treats of the male and female
-essences, and has a curious note on the Hebrew letter Hé, speaking of it as
-female, and composed of D, Daleth, and I, Jod—a great mystery worthy of
-study. Chapter V. speaks of the Supernal Eden, the Heavens, the Earth, the
-Waters, the Giants-Nephilim in the earth, wars of the kings, the tree of knowledge
-of good and evil, the serpent, and the houses of judgment; so that this
-treatise is no less discursive than abstruse.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “Idra Rabba,” or “Greater Holy Assembly,” consisted of ten
-Rabbis, of whom Rabbi Schimeon was chief, and the book contains their
-several speeches and comments upon the doctrines laid down by Rabbi
-Schimeon, on a similar plan to the conversations narrated in the Book of Job.
-Twenty-five chapters are occupied with an allegory of the several parts of
-Macroprosopus, the type of God the Father; the twenty-sixth concerns the
-Edomite kings, the vanished creations; Chapters XXVII. to XLII. are an
-allegorical description of Microprosopus, the Son Deity, the V or Vau of the
-Tetragrammaton; Chapter XLIII. concerns the Judgments; XLIV., the
-Supernal Man; and XLV. is a Conclusion, in narrative form, of the passing
-away of three of the ten Rabbis, and the acknowledgment of R. Schimeon as
-chief of them all.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Very much of this descriptive volume referring to Deity is not only abstruse,
-but is, to the modern European, verbiage run wild; yet in this characteristic it is
-truly Oriental and Hebrew; some passages remind me very much of the “Song
-of Solomon,” there are the same exuberant and flowery outbursts of poetic
-imagery.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “Idra Zuta,” or “Lesser Holy Assembly,” is a similar treatise, explanatory
-of the Holy powers of the Deity, ascribing honour and power to
-Macroprosopus, Microprosopus, <span class='fss'>AIMA</span> the God Mother, and the Bride of God;
-with instructive allusions to the Prior Worlds of the so-called Edomite Kings,
-and the sexual aspects of Godhead. The work concludes with a narrative of the
-death of R. Schimeon and his burial, the whole “Idra” being his last dying
-declaration of doctrine.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is noteworthy that the words of the “Smaragdime Tablet of Hermes”—“that
-which is below is like that which is above” occur in paragraph 388 of
-the Idra Rabba, and are thus introduced, “We have learned through Barietha,
-the tradition given forth <em>without</em> the Holy City.” I note also that the Mischna
-is mentioned in the Idra Zuta. Want of space compels me to omit all
-extracts from this volume, which is a matter of regret, as many passages are
-very eloquently written.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>A flaw in this book is the construction of the Index, which should have contained
-sub-headings, as well as main headings. Of what value is the entry
-“Microprosopus,” followed by eleven lines each of fourteen page-numbers? A
-score of references, sub-divided between his characteristics, his relationships, and
-his titles would have been of more practical use. With this exception, and
-when the abomination of Hebrew in English letters has been tolerated, we must
-acknowledge the production of a most valuable theosophical and philosophical
-storehouse of ancient Hebrew doctrine, on which Mr. MacGregor Mathers may
-be heartily congratulated.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>W. Wynn Westcott, M.B.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'></h4>
-<p class='c035'>“AN ADVENTURE AMONG THE ROSICRUCIANS.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By a Student of Occultism.</span><a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c013'><sup>[29]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>A strange and original little story, charmingly fantastic, but full of poetic
-feeling and, what is more, of deep philosophical and occult truths, for those
-who can perceive the ground-work it is built upon. A fresh Eclogue of Virgil
-in its first part, descriptive of Alpine scenery in the Tyrol, where the author
-“dreamt” his adventure, with “shining glaciers glistening like vast mirrors in
-the light of the rising sun,” deep ravines with rushing streams dancing between
-the cliffs, blue lakes slumbering among the meadows, and daisy-sprinkled
-valleys resting in the shadow of old pine forests.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Gradually as the hero of the “Adventure” ascended higher and higher, he
-began losing the sense of the world of the real, to pass unconsciously into the
-land of waking dreams.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In these solitudes there is nothing to remind one of the existence of man, except occasionally the
-sawed-off trunk of a tree, showing the destructive influence of human activity. In some old, rotten,
-and hollow trunks rain-water has collected, sparkling in the sun like little mirrors, such as may be
-used by water-nymphs, and around their edges mushrooms are growing, which our imagination
-transforms into chairs, tables, and baldachinos for elves and fairies.... No sound could now
-be heard, except occasionally the note of a titmouse and the cry of a hawk who rose in long-drawn
-spiral motion high up into the air....”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Throwing himself upon the moss, he begins watching the play of the water
-until it becomes “alive with forms of the most singular shape,” with super-mundane
-beings dancing in the spray, “shaking their heads in the sunshine and
-throwing off showers of liquid silver from their waving locks.”...</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Their laughter sounded like that of the Falls of <em>Minnehaha</em>, and from the crevices of the rocks
-peeped the ugly faces of gnomes and kobolds, watching slyly the fairies.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then the dreamer asks himself a variety of questions of the most perplexing
-nature, except, perhaps, to the materialist, who cuts every psychological problem
-as Alexander cleft the Gordian knot....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What is the reason that we imagine such things?” he inquires.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Why do we endow ‘dead’ things with human consciousness and with sensation?... Is
-our consciousness merely a product of the organic activity of our physical body, or is it a function
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>of the universal life ... within the body? Is our personal consciousness dependent for its
-existence on the existence of the physical body, and does it die with it; or is there a spiritual consciousness,
-belonging to a higher, immortal, and invisible self of man, temporarily connected with
-the organism, but which may exist independently of the latter? If such is the case, if our physical
-organism is merely an instrument through which our consciousness acts, then this instrument is <em>not</em>
-our real self. If this is true, then our real self is there where our consciousness exists, and may exist
-independently of the latter.... Can there be any <em>dead</em> matter in the Universe? Is not even a
-stone held together by the ‘cohesion’ of its particles, and attracted to the earth by ‘gravitation’?
-But what else is this ‘cohesion’ and ‘gravitation’ but <em>energy</em>, and what is ‘energy’ but the <em>soul</em>,
-an interior principle called <em>force</em>, which produces an outward manifestation called <em>matter</em>?...
-All things possess life, all things possess soul, and there may be soul-beings ... invisible to
-our physical senses, but which may be perceived by our soul.” (p. 19.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The arch-druid of modern Hylo-Idealism, Dr. Lewins, failing to appear to
-rudely shake our philosopher out of his unscientific thoughts, a dwarf appears in
-his stead. The creature, however, does not warn the dreamer, as that <em>too</em>-learned
-<em>Idealist</em> would. He does not tell him that he transcends “the limits of the
-anatomy of his conscious Ego,” since “<em>psychosis</em> is now diagnosed by <em>medico-psychological
-symptomatology as vesiculo-neurosis in activity</em>,”<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c013'><sup>[30]</sup></a> and—as quoth
-the raven—“merely this, and nothing more.” But being a <em>cretin</em>, he laughingly
-invites him to his “Master.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The hero follows, and finds he is brought to a “theosophical monastery,” in
-a hidden valley of the most gorgeous description. Therein he meets, to his
-surprise, with adepts of both sexes; for, as he learns later:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What has intelligence to do with the sex of the body? Where the sexual instincts end, there ends
-the influence of the sex.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Meanwhile, he is brought into the presence of a male adept of majestic
-appearance, who welcomes and informs him that he is among “The Brothers of
-the Golden and Rosy Cross.” He is invited to remain with them for some
-time, and see how they live. His permanent residence with them is, however,
-objected to. The reasons given for it are as follow:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“There are still too many of the lower and animal elements adhering to your constitution....
-They could not resist long the destructive influence of the pure and spiritual air of this place; and,
-as you have not yet a sufficient amount of truly spiritual elements in your organism to render it firm
-and strong, you would, by remaining here, soon become weak and waste away, like a person in consumption;
-you would become miserable instead of being happy, and you would die.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then follows a philosophical conversation on <span class='sc'>Will</span>, in which the latter, in
-individual man, is said to become the stronger if it only uses the universal
-Will-Power in Nature, <em>itself remaining passive in the</em> <span class='sc'>Law</span>. This sentence has
-to be well understood, lest it should lead the reader into the error of accepting
-pure <em>mediumistic passivity</em> as the best thing for spiritual and occult development.
-A phenomenon is produced on a passing cloud, into which apparent life is
-infused by the Master’s hand, stretched towards it; this is again explained by
-showing that <span class='sc'>Life</span> is universal and identical with <span class='sc'>Will</span>. Other phenomena
-still more wonderful follow; and they are all explained as being produced
-through natural laws, in which science will not believe. The thoughts of the
-student are read and answered as though his mind were an opened book. A
-lovely garden, full of exotic plants and luxurious palm-trees, into which he is
-taken, striking him as something unnatural in the Tyrolean Alps; so much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>luxury, moreover, seeming to him to disagree with the ascetic views just
-expressed by the adept, he is told forthwith, in answer to his unexpressed
-thoughts, that the garden had been erected to make his visit an agreeable one;
-and that it was an <em>illusion</em>. “All these trees and plants ... require no
-gardeners, ... they cost us nothing but an effort of our imagination”—he
-learns.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Surely,” he said, “this rose cannot be an illusion ... or an effect of my
-imagination?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” answered the adept ... “but it is a product of the imagination
-of Nature, whose processes can be guided by the will of the adept. The whole
-world ... is nothing else but a world of the imagination of the <em>Universal
-Mind</em>, which is the <em>Creator</em> of forms....”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To exemplify the teaching, a Magnolia Tree in full blossom sixty feet high,
-standing at a distance, is made to look less and less dense. The green foliage
-fades into gray, becomes “more and more shadowy and transparent,” until “it
-seemed to be merely the ghost of a tree, and finally disappeared entirely from
-view.”</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Thus” continued the adept, “you see that tree stood in the sphere of my mind as it stood in
-yours. We are all living within the sphere of each other’s mind.... The Adept creates his
-own images; the ordinary mortal lives in the products of the imagination of others, or the imagination
-of nature. We live in the paradise of our own soul ... but the spheres of our souls
-are not narrow. They have expanded far beyond the limits of the visible bodies, and will continue to
-expand until they become one with the universal Soul....”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The power of the imagination is yet too little known to mankind, else they would better beware
-of what they think. If a man thinks a good or an evil thought, that thought calls into existence a
-corresponding form or power ... which may assume density and become living ...
-and live long after the physical body of the man who created it has died. It will accompany his
-soul after death, because <em>the creations are attracted to their creator</em>.” (p. 83.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Scattered hither and thither, through this little volume are pearls of <a id='corr147.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='wisdom'>wisdom.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_147.29'><ins class='correction' title='wisdom'>wisdom.</ins></a></span>
-For that which is rendered in the shape of dialogue and monologue is the fruit
-gathered by the author during a long research in old forgotten and mouldy,
-MSS. of the <a id='corr147.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Roscrucians'>Rosicrucians</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_147.32'><ins class='correction' title='Roscrucians'>Rosicrucians</ins></a></span>, or mediæval alchemists, and in the worm-eaten
-<em>infoglios</em> of unrecognized, yet great adepts of every age.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus when the author approaches the subject of theosophical retreats or
-communities—a dream cherished by many a theosophist—he is answered by
-the “Adept” that “the <em>true ascetic is he who lives in the world, surrounded by
-its temptations</em>; he in whose soul the animal elements are still active, craving for,
-the gratification of their desires and possessing the means for such gratification,
-but <em>who by the superior power of his will conquers his animal self</em>. Having
-attained that state he may retire from the world.... He expects no
-future reward in heaven; for what could heaven offer him except happiness
-which he already possesses? He desires no other good, but to create good for
-the world.”... Saith the Adept.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“If you could establish theosophical monasteries, where intellectual and spiritual development
-would go hand-in-hand, where a new science could be taught, based upon a true knowledge of the
-fundamental laws of the universe, and when, at the same time man would be taught how to obtain a
-mastery over himself, you would confer the greatest possible benefit upon the world. Such a convent
-would afford immense advantage for the advancement of intellectual research.... These
-convents would become centres of intelligence....”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>Then, reading the student’s thoughts:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You mistake,” he added; “it is not the want of money which prevents us to execute the idea.
-It is the impossibility to find the proper kind of people to inhabit the convent after it is established.
-Indeed, we would be poor Alchemists if we could not produce gold in any desirable quantity ...
-but gold is a curse to mankind, and we do not wish to increase the curse.... Distribute gold
-among men, and you will only create craving for more; give them gold, and you will transform
-them into devils. No, it is not gold that we need; it is men who thirst after wisdom. <em>There are
-thousands who desire knowledge, but few who desire wisdom....</em> Even many of your would-be
-Occultists ... have taken up their investigations merely for the purpose of gratifying idle
-curiosity, while others desire to pry into the secrets of nature, to obtain knowledge which they desire
-to employ for the attainment of selfish ends. Give us men or women who desire nothing else but the
-truth, and we will take care of their needs....”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>And then having given a startlingly true picture of modern civilisation, and
-explained the occult side of certain things pertaining to knowledge, the Adept
-led on the student to his laboratory, where he left him for a few minutes alone.
-Then another adept, looking like a monk, joined him, and drew his attention to
-some powders, by the fumigations of which the Elementals, or “Spirits of Nature”
-could be made to appear. This provoked the student’s curiosity. Sure of his
-invulnerability in the matter of tests and temptations, he begged to be allowed
-to see these creatures....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Suddenly the room looked dim, and the walls of the laboratory disappeared.
-He felt he was in the water, light as a feather, dancing on the waves, with the
-full moon pouring torrents of light upon the ocean, and the beautiful Isle of
-Ceylon appearing in the distance. The melodious sound of female voices
-made him espy near to where he was three beautiful female beings. The
-Queen of the Undines, the most lovely of the three—for these were the
-longed-for Elementals—entices the unwary student to her submarine palace.
-He follows her, and, forgetting theosophical convents, Adepts and Occultism,
-succumbs to the temptation....</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Was it but a dream? It would so appear. For he awakes on the mossy
-plot where he had lain to rest in the morning, and from whence he had followed
-the dwarf. But how comes it that he finds in his button-hole the exotic lily
-given to him by the adept lady, and in his pocket the piece of gold transmuted
-in his presence by the “Master”? He rushes home, and finds on the
-table of his hotel-room a promised work on “The Secret Symbols of the
-Rosicrucians,” and on its fly-leaf a few words in pencil. They ran thus:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>Friend, I regret ... I cannot invite you to visit us again for the present.
-He who desires to remain in the peaceful valley must know how to resist
-all sensual attractions, even those of the Water Queen. Study ... bring
-the circle into the square, mortify the metals.... When you have succeeded we
-shall meet again.... I shall be with you when you need me.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The work ends with the quotation from Paul’s Second Epistle to the Corinthians,
-where the man caught up into Paradise (whether in the body or out of
-the body ... God knoweth) “<em>heard unspeakable words, which it is not
-lawful for a man to utter</em>....”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “adventure” is more than worth perusal.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
- <h4 class='c023'>TABULA BEMBINA SIVE MENSA ISIACA. THE ISIAC TABLET OF CARDINAL BEMBO. ITS HISTORY AND OCCULT SIGNIFICANCE.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By W. Wynn Westcott, M.B. Bath. R. H. Fryar, 1887.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This work is a monograph of 20 foolscap folio pages, on the celebrated Isiac
-Tablet. It is well and clearly printed in good-sized type on good paper, and
-has for frontispiece a well-executed photogravure of the Tablet itself, from a
-drawing made by the author some years previously. It is written in the clear
-style which distinguishes Dr. Westcott’s writings, and in all quotations chapter
-and verse are scrupulously given. Three centuries ago this Tablet greatly exercised
-the minds of the learned, and continued to do so till the researches of
-modern Egyptologists began to throw some doubt upon its authenticity as a
-reliable specimen of ancient Egyptian art; since which time the interest in it has
-gradually declined. Undoubtedly occult, as its meaning and symbolism alike are,
-we feel that this monograph will be of service to all lovers and students of the
-mystical ideas of ancient Egypt. The first thing which strikes the eye of even
-the most careless observer is the careful and systematic arrangement of the
-figures and emblems in triads, or groups of three, which system of classification
-prevailed in the religious symbolism of the Egyptians. The Tablet, again, is
-divided by transverse horizontal lines into three principal portions, Upper,
-Lower, and Middle, the latter being sub-divided by vertical lines into three parts,
-the centre of which is occupied by a throned female figure, flanked on each
-side by a triad, of which the central figure in each instance is seated. Thus
-the Upper and Lower portions of the Tablet give each a Dodecad sub-divided
-into Triads, while the central portion forms a Heptad. This at once corresponds
-to the symbolism of the ספר יצירה, <em>Sepher Yetzirah</em>, Chapter
-VI., § 3. “The Triad, the Unity which standeth one and alone, the Heptad
-divided into Three as opposed to Three and the Centre Mediating between
-them, the Twelve which stand in war ... the Unity above the Triad, the
-Triad above the Heptad, the Heptad above the Dodecad and they are all
-bound together each with each.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Commencing with a description of the Tablet, Dr. Westcott gives as much as
-is known of its history, quoting from Kircher, Keysler, Murray, and others. It
-appears that it was first discovered in Rome, at a spot where a Temple of Isis
-had once stood. After the sack of Rome by the Constable De Bourbon, it fell
-into the hands of a smith, who sold it to Cardinal Bembo for a large sum. At
-his death it came into the possession of the Dukes of Mantua, at the taking of
-which city in 1630, it passed into the hands of Cardinal Pava. It is now in the
-Museum of Egyptian Antiquities at Turin. The dimensions are 4 ft. 2 in., by
-2 ft. 5½ in. Thus its experiences during the last few centuries have been
-rather stormy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After mentioning Æneas De Vico and Pignorius, Dr. Westcott gives us an
-extensive digest of the views of Athanasius Kircher, from whose plate in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>“Œdipus Ægyptiacus” the photogravure at the commencement is taken.
-Kircher undoubtedly more nearly grasped the esoteric design of the tablet than
-any one except Eliphas Levi, and his attempted explanation marks him alike as
-a profound scholar and an advanced mystic, notwithstanding the great
-disadvantages with which he had to contend in the utter ignorance of
-Egyptology as it is now understood, which prevailed at the date at which he
-wrote.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Quotations and notes from Montfauçon, Shuckford, Warburton, Jablonski,
-Caylus, Banier, Mackenzie, Kenealy, and Winckelman follow the excerpts from
-Kircher, and we then come to the views of modern Egyptologists on the
-subject, notably those of Professor Le Page Renouf as expressed to Dr
-Westcott in person. The reasons they assign for doubting the authenticity of
-the Tablet are briefly these:—that they consider the execution of the work
-stamps it as a Roman production; that the hieroglyphics will not read so as to
-make sense; that the running pattern with the masks would never have been
-employed by an Egyptian; and that some of the best known Egyptian deities
-are conspicuous by their absence. In answer to these attacks Dr. Westcott
-wisely remarks that “it is a gross absurdity to suppose that any man capable of
-designing such a tablet, over which immense energy, research, and knowledge
-must have been expended, to say nothing of the skill displayed in its execution,
-should have wasted his abilities in perpetrating a gigantic hoax; for that is, I
-suppose, what some modern writers mean who call it a ‘forgery’; but a <em>forgery</em>
-is a <em>deceitful imitation</em>. How it can be called an imitation considering that its
-special character is that of being different to any other Stelé or Tablet known is
-not clear; and how it can be a deceit is also incomprehensible, since it bears no
-name or date purporting to refer it to a definite author or period.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On page 16 Dr. Westcott observes that the Four Genii of the Dead are
-conspicuous by their absence, but he seems to overlook their representation in
-figure 41 of the Limbus, where the sepulchral vases beneath the couch have, as
-usual, the heads of the Genii of the Dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A quotation, together with a plate from Levi’s <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Histoire de la Magie,”</span>
-follows this, together with a disquisition on the Taro, which has so much
-exercised occult students of late. Altogether the book is an extremely
-interesting production, and Dr. Westcott puts forward his own views on the
-subject with much clearness.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>
- <h4 class='c023'>EARTH’S EARLIEST AGES <br /> AND THEIR CONNECTION WITH MODERN SPIRITUALISM AND THEOSOPHY.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By <a id='corr131.3'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='C. H.'>G. H.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_131.3'><ins class='correction' title='C. H.'>G. H.</ins></a></span> Pember, M.A.</span> (Hodder &amp; Stoughton).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>To meet with a book like this in the last quarter of the nineteenth century is
-like meeting a Pterodactyl strolling along the Row in the height of the season.
-But more careful perusal, while augmenting the reader’s wonder, mingles with it
-a certain respect for the writer’s courage and unflinching logic.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Granting his fundamental premiss—the verbal inspiration of the Bible—and
-accepting his first principle of interpretation, his argument is at least consistent,
-and is weakened by no half-hearted pandering to the facts of experience or the
-discoveries of science.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To quote Mr. Pember’s primary canon, he assumes—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>I. “That the first chapter of Genesis, equally with those which follow it, is, in its primary meaning,
-neither vision nor allegory, but plain history, and must, therefore, be accepted as a literal statement
-of facts.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>On this basis he gives an interpretation of Genesis, the main idea of which is
-the interposition of “The Interval” between the creation and the “Six Days”
-described in the text. During this period the earth was wholly given over to
-Satan and his host, and the “Six Days” creation was, according to Mr. Pember,
-the restoration and reformation of the world from this chaos of confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But space forbids to follow the author into details, since one-half of his
-volume is devoted to the subject indicated in its sub-title, and this portion is of
-greater interest to readers of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As an accurate and thorough student of the work of those he condemns, Mr.
-Pember stands unrivalled. He has both read and understood a very large part of
-the literature of Theosophy and Spiritualism. His quotations are fair and well
-chosen, his comments strictly moderate in tone and entirely free from any
-personal animus. And these traits are the more surprising since the author has
-certainly got the “Powers of the Air” very much on the brain. It is hardly
-even a rhetorical expression to say that it is his firm and unshakeable conviction,
-that all persons who do not hold the same views of Biblical criticism and
-Scriptural exegesis as Mr. Pember, are, to the extent of their difference from
-him, serving the Powers of Evil, the Personal Devil, the Antichrist, whose
-coming he expects in the very near future.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On this point only Mr. Pember does not seem to have the courage of his
-opinions; perhaps he does not see, or seeing does not realise, the inevitable
-conclusion to which his arguments point. But then he may, after all, take
-refuge in the famous <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>credo quia absurdum</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The author, moreover, is sure to meet with scant sympathy even from the
-materialists to whom he is most nearly allied in thought. For he accepts, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>en bloc</i></span>,
-the phenomena and wonders of spiritualism as of occultism, and never
-attempts even to question their reality. Meanwhile, he believes in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>resurrection of the <em>physical body</em> after death, in a physical kingdom of Christ
-upon earth, and so on. Indeed, his views are the most remarkable compound
-of pure materialism and wholesale acceptance of the psychic and so-called
-supernatural that have ever appeared in print.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To sum up, a few passages may be quoted to give an idea of the spirit of
-Mr. Pember’s treatment of this part of the subject, which at the same time will
-be the most telling criticism of his book to the minds of those who have grasped
-the ideas of which he speaks.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“... the existence, in all times of the world’s history, of persons with abnormal faculties, initiates of
-the great mysteries and depositors of the secrets of antiquity, has been affirmed by a testimony far too
-universal and persistent to admit of denial.... He who would be an adept must conform to the
-teaching of those demons, predicted leaders of the last apostasy, who forbid to marry, and command
-to abstain from meat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='badquotes1'></a>“We have never met with a single reported instance of a spirit entering the lower spheres with the
-glad tidings, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved.” On the contrary, among
-Spiritualists, as with Theosophists and Buddhists, sin can be expiated only by personal suffering....
-“Sin,” shrieks the familiar of “M. A. Oxon,” “is remediable by repentance and atonement and
-reparation personally wrought out in pain and shame, not by coward cries for mercy, and by feigned
-assent to statements which ought to create a shudder.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Pember, therefore, believes in vicarious atonement in its crudest form?
-He teaches that “repentance and faith” save man <em>from the consequences</em> of his
-actions!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After describing the “Perfect Way” as “an ecclesiastical compound of
-Heathenism” (<em>with a capital H</em>), the author proceeds to expound the doctrine of
-reincarnation as therein set forth. Nothing can be fairer or more correct than
-this exposition, at the conclusion of which we read:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Jews, Christians, Buddhists and Mahommedans ... will become able to unite in a universal
-belief that sin is expiated by transmigrations and in the worship of ‘the Great <a id='corr152.28'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Goddess'>Goddess’</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_152.28'><ins class='correction' title='Goddess'>Goddess’</ins></a></span>. The
-conception of a second league of Babel has been formed in the minds of <a id='corr152.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Theosophists.'>Theosophists.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_152.29'><ins class='correction' title='Theosophists.'>Theosophists.”</ins></a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>And even then, would not such a league be better than the sectarian wars,
-the religious persecutions, the tests and disabilities which still disfigure
-<em>Christendom</em> in the name of religion?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Further on the author refers to the occult axiom that “whereas God is I AM,
-or positive being, the Devil is NOT, and remarks:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“There is little doubt that the culminations of the Mysteries was the worship of Satan himself...
-It would appear, then, that from remote ages, probably from the time when the Nephilim [the fallen
-angels of Satan’s Host] were upon earth, there has existed a league with the Prince of Darkness, a
-Society of men consciously on the side of Satan, and against the Most High.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The spells by which spirits may be summoned from the unseen are now known to all; and those
-unearthly forms which in past times were projected from the void only in the labyrinths, caverns, and
-subterranean chambers of the initiated, are now manifesting themselves in many a private drawing-room
-and parlour. Men have become enamoured of demons, and ere long will receive the Prince of
-the Demons as their God.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Theosophy, says Mr. Pember, will become the creed of the intellectual and
-the educated, while Spiritualism influences the masses of mankind. And he
-traces the influences of Theosophy and Buddhism in “Broad-Churchism, Universalism,
-Comtism, Secularism, and Quietism.” Nay, even under the Temperance
-movement he spies the lurking serpent of esoteric teaching and guidance,
-and he cites letters from Christian friends complaining that these and other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>philanthropic movements are being swamped, and their periodicals occupied by
-Theosophists, who work on Buddhist principles.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In his concluding chapter, the author sums up a truly formidable array of
-evidences to prove that “the advocates of modern thought array themselves
-against every principle of the early revelations of the Divine Will,” apparently
-since they deny and repudiate the following “cosmic or universal laws”:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c040'>I. The law of the Sabbath.</p>
-<p class='c040'>II. The headship of the man over the woman.</p>
-<p class='c040'>III. The institution of marriage [<i>i.e.</i>, they practise <em>celibacy</em>].</p>
-<p class='c040'>IV. The law of substitution, that life must atone for life, and that without shedding of blood there
-is no remission, as taught in type by animal sacrifices. Latter-day philosophers affect
-the utmost horror of such a salvation, and will have none of Christ.</p>
-<p class='c040'>V. The command to use the flesh of animals as food.</p>
-<p class='c040'>VI. The decree that “whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man shall his blood be shed.”</p>
-<p class='c040'>VII. The direction to multiply and replenish the earth.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The charge of disobedience to such laws as these every mystic will joyfully
-admit, with the cry, “Happy will it be for all things living when such laws
-shall no longer be obeyed by any living creature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These laws, the disobedience to which Mr. Pember so much regrets in the
-later schools, date from the dark past when man had to form his physical existence
-and root it upon the earth. If they are some of the early revelations of
-the “Divine Will,” that is no reason why they should rule mankind when its
-condition is changed and it is emerging from the darkness of Materialism, and
-losing, from its natural growth towards that Divine will, the desire for physical
-existence. The Mosaic laws were made by the Jehovah, the God of anger and
-cruelty. In spite of the strange inconsistency by which the followers of Jesus
-Christ, the teacher of a gentle and sublime faith, read in their churches these
-Mosaic laws, yet they are empty words from a past of bloodshed to the humane
-or religious man. The occultist professes even more than religion—he dares
-to avow himself a follower of the light, an aspirant towards knowledge, and one
-who is determined to live the noblest life knowledge can indicate. What to
-him are the laws of murder, of the shedding of blood, of marriage and giving in
-marriage? It is not his aim to help people the earth, for he desires to lift
-himself and others above the craving for earth-life. He commits no murder, for
-all men are his brethren, and he no longer recognises the brutal law of the
-criminal, by which, when blood is shed, blood must be again shed to wash it
-away. He can have no interest either in the straightforward laws of the past, or
-the complicated modern law of the present—which permits of many things the
-Jews would have been ashamed of. The only law he recognises is that of charity
-and justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is a charming page in the <em>Introduction</em>, a ring of genuine sorrow for
-the failure of certain missionaries in their cowardly attack upon the theosophical
-leaders, as refreshing as it is ludicrous. The Jeremiad runs in this wise:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It would seem that the attack of the Madras Christian College upon Madame Blavatsky has by
-no means checked the movement in which she has been so conspicuous an actor, and, apparently,
-the failure is nowhere more manifest than in Madras itself. It was confidently predicted that the
-High Priestess of Theosophy and Buddhism would not dare to show her face again in that city.
-Nevertheless she did so, and ... received a warm welcome, not merely from the members of
-the Theosophical societies, but also from the members of the various colleges and from many other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>persons. She was conducted in procession from the shore to the Pancheappa Hall, and was there
-presented by the students with an address of sympathy and admiration, to which, among other
-signatures, were appended those of more than three hundred members of the very Christian College
-whose professors had assailed her.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>And he adds, “Satan is now setting in motion intellectual forces which will
-be more than a match for the missionaries, if they persist in carrying on the
-warfare in the old way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Too much praise cannot be rendered to Mr. Pember for his fairness and
-impersonality. He writes as becomes a scholar and a gentleman, and though
-one may smile at his intellectual blindness and stand amazed at the mental
-capacity which can digest the views which he maintains, one cannot but respect
-his earnestness, his thoroughness, and his mastery of the subject.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>B. K.</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>ISAURE AND OTHER POEMS.</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By W. Stewart Ross.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The poem which gives its name to this volume of ringing verse is, as may
-easily be conjectured, the lament of a poet over his love torn from him by
-inexorable death.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A true instinct has taught the author that it is such hours of agony as this,
-such piercing of the heart, such fierce and burning torture, which reveal to the
-noble soul capable of intense suffering the inner truths and realities of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To quote:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I stand on the cis-mortal,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And I gaze with ’wildered eye,</div>
- <div class='line'>To the mists of the trans-mortal,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And the signs called Live and Die.</div>
- <div class='line'>&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- <div class='line'>Let me dream in this cis-mortal,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And the noblest dream I can.</div>
- <div class='line'>&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- <div class='line'>Let me dream far from the formulæ,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And I may dream more nigh</div>
- <div class='line'>To the sable shore of mystery,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And the signs of Live and Die.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Some passages in this opening poem are instinct with the breath of mysticism,
-and rouse a keen desire that Mr. Stewart Ross had become acquainted, in that
-period of his life when this book was written, with the wider and grander view
-of life as a whole, of its purpose and meaning, of its laws and its realities,
-which occultism affords to a mind capable of grasping them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Surely the man who could write:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“For death and life are really one.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>And again:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“For the mystic Part is gathered</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Unto the mystic Whole.</div>
- <div class='line'>And the vague lines of non-Being</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Are scribbled o’er thy soul.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c038'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>must have the power to sense the keener air of the subtle life and grasp its
-glorious promise.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What pilgrim of the path has not felt:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Hard-paced the iron years have gone</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Over my head since then;</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ve haunted in a waking dream</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The paths of living men;</div>
- <div class='line'>But of this world my kingdom’s not,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Like him of Galilee,</div>
- <div class='line'>For I grasp hands they cannot feel,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>See forms they cannot see.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>In “Leonore: A Lay of Dipsomania,” one of the most terrible sides of
-human life is depicted with a vividness which tortures the reader, and flings a
-gloom on the inexorable sweep of life, fitly in keeping with the vision pictured
-in “A Nightmare.” A mystic, struggling with the negations of modern science,
-battling to assert the intuitive knowledge of his true self against its captious
-intellectualisms, speaks through this picture of desolation and decay, protesting
-against the disappearance of all that is great and valuable in life under the waves
-of oblivion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But no man in whom the spark of true poetic inspiration burns can ever in
-the depths of his own heart accept the lifeless, empty, unreal phantom which
-materialism offers as the aim, the purpose, the fulfilment of life. We hope,
-therefore, that Mr. Stewart Ross will some day give us a volume of poetry in
-which his true power and insight will find expression, and which will enroll his
-name on the list of those who have given new life to men.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/separator6.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>One cannot fill a vacuum from within itself.—L.S.C.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Many a man will follow a misleader.—L.S.C.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is not necessary for truth to put on boxing-gloves.—L.S.C.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>You cannot build a temple of truth by hammering dead stones. Its foundations
-must precipitate themselves like crystals from the solution of life.—L.S.C.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When a certain point is reached pain becomes its own anodyne.—L.S.C.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Some pluck the fruits of the tree (of knowledge) to crown themselves therewith,
-instead of plucking them to eat.—L.S.C.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Theosophical</span></span> <br /> <span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>and Mystic Publications</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>THE THEOSOPHIST; a magazine
-of Oriental Philosophy, Art, Literature,
-and Occultism, conducted by H. P.
-Blavatsky, and H. S. Olcott, Permanent
-President of the T. S. Vol. VIII., 1887.
-Madras, India. In London, George Redway,
-15, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The September number contains
-several articles of great interest. For
-lovers of the wonderful, as for the more
-scientifically inclined students of the laws
-of psycho-physics, the account given by
-Sreenath Chatterjee, of a self-levitating
-lama who stayed for some days in his
-house, is both interesting and instructive.
-It is endorsed by Colonel Olcott and
-another independent witness, and bears
-evident marks of genuine and careful
-observation. Curious and wonderful as
-such feats are, however, they have little
-to do with Theosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To many readers such articles as Mr.
-Khandalwala’s “The Bhagavat-Gita and
-the Microcosmic Principles” will be far
-more attractive. The questions propounded
-in this paper have a very important
-bearing upon a question which
-has recently been a good deal under
-discussion, and it is to be hoped that
-it will elicit from Mr. Subba Row the
-further explanation of his views which is
-so much needed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Visconde Figanière continues his
-“Esoteric Studies” with some abstruse
-but very interesting calculations as to the
-composition of the alchemical elements
-during various cycles. A page of moral
-maxims from the Mahabharata and a
-thoughtful paper on the “Kabbalah and
-the Microcosm” contribute to make this
-number full of valuable matter.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>THE PATH; “a magazine devoted
-to the Brotherhood of Humanity,
-Theosophy in America, and the Study of
-Occult Science, Philosophy, and Aryan
-Literature.” Edited by W. Q. Judge,
-New York, P. O. Box 2,659, and in
-London from George Redway.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the September issue, the opening
-paper is the fourth of “Jasper Niemand’s”
-admirable “Letters on the
-True.” Its subject is the “Mind”
-(<em>Manas</em>) or Heart in its relation to the
-Soul. Both analysis and synthesis are
-employed by the writer, with the intuition
-of a true mystic, and many suggestive
-gleams of light are thrown on an exceedingly
-difficult subject in the course of a
-few pages.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The idea of re-incarnation is traced by
-Mr. Walker in the writings of various
-poets: Mr. Johnston contributes an interesting
-paper on “Gospels and Upanishads,”
-and “Rameses” gives us a charming
-allegory under the archaic title of
-“Papyrus,” and the number concludes
-with “Tea-Table Talk,” which is, as usual,
-quaint, yet instructive. Finally, thanks
-are due to Mr. Judge for the kind and
-cordial welcome he has extended to <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>;
-the first number of which has, it is
-to be hoped, fulfilled the flattering expectations
-he expresses.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">LE LOTUS: “Revue des Hautes Etudes
-Théosophiques. Tendant à favoriser le
-rapprochement entre l’Orient et l’Occident.”
-Sous l’inspiration de H. P. Blavatsky</span>
-(nominally, but edited in reality, by
-our able brother, F. K. Gaborian, F. T. S.).
-Georges Carré, 112 Boulevard St. Germain,
-Paris.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This journal—the French Theosophist—contains
-in its September number an
-article by Madame Blavatsky on “Misconceptions,”
-in which various doctrines
-and ideas erroneously connected with
-Theosophy are dealt with. M. Barlet
-continues his series of articles on “Initiation,”
-and the reprint of the Abbé de
-Villars’ clever and humorous <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Comte de
-Gabalis,”</span> is continued. Some verses by
-Amaravella, and several pages of sparkling
-“Notes,” conclude the table of
-contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> owes thanks also to the <em>Lotus</em>
-for inserting an admirably translated extract
-from its prospectus.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>L’AURORE: Revue mensuelle sous la
-direction de Lady Caithness, Duchesse de
-Pomar, Georges Carré, 112 Boulevard St.
-Germain, Paris.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>The articles in the September number
-are neither so numerous nor so varied as
-those of the other Theosophical periodicals
-already referred to. Lady Caithness advocates,
-in the current issue, the theory
-that the English nation is descended from
-the lost ten tribes of Israel. As the very
-existence of these ten tribes is more than
-questionable, students must judge for
-themselves of the weight of the arguments
-advanced; the subject being too extensive
-even for comment here.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>THE SPHINX: “A monthly journal
-devoted to proving historically and experimentally
-the supersensuous conception of
-the world on a monistic basis.” Edited
-by Hübbe Schleiden. Dr. J. U. Th.
-Griebens Verlag, Leipzig.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The October number is a full and
-highly instructive one. Dr. Carl du
-Prel’s handling of the “Demon of Socrates”
-contrasts brilliantly with the lame
-and obscure treatment which the same
-subject received a while ago at the hands
-of a body, which professes to investigate
-matters pertaining to the soul and its
-activity. Herr Niemann’s proof of the
-existence of an esoteric or secret teaching
-in the Platonic dialogues is able and
-convincing; Mr. Finch contributes a
-most interesting article on his observations
-among the “Faith-Healers” in
-America, and Herr Carl zu Leiningen
-pursues his able exposition of the Kabbalistic
-doctrine of Souls.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>Three new works on mystic subjects
-are shortly to appear from the pen of Dr.
-Franz Hartmann, whose valuable book on
-Paracelsus is certainly in the hands of
-many of our readers.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Of these the first, and probably the
-most important, is entitled: “THE
-SECRET SYMBOLS OF THE
-ROSICRUCIANS,” and is to be published
-in Boston, U.S.A., by the Occult
-Publishing Company. It will contain
-numerous plates coloured by hand, giving
-accurate transcriptions of symbols and
-figures which have hitherto lain buried in
-rare, and in some cases, unattainable
-manuscripts. The value of the work as a
-text-book for students will be much enhanced
-by the copious vocabulary which
-Dr. Hartmann promises shall accompany
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The other two will probably be issued
-by Mr. Redway; the one being called:
-“IN THE PRONAOS OF THE
-TEMPLE OF THE R.C.,” and the
-other: “THE LIFE OF JEHOSHUA,
-THE ADEPT OF NAZARETH: AN
-OCCULT STUDY.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is an attempt to dispel the mists
-which for many centuries have been
-gathering around the person of the supposed
-founder of Christianity, and which
-have prevented mankind from obtaining a
-clear view of the “Redeemer.” It claims to
-give an approximately correct account of
-his life, his initiation into the Egyptian
-mysteries and of his ignominious death
-caused by an infuriated mob, excited by
-the Pharisees of the temple, who were
-bound to destroy his mortal form, because
-he had taught the religion of universal
-fraternal love and freedom of thought in
-opposition to priestcraft and superstition.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>While the book deals to a certain
-extent with the external life of Jehoshua,
-as far as its details have become known
-by historical researches into sources not
-generally known, it especially deals with
-his inner life—<i>i.e.</i> his method of thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The author says: “If we wish to give
-a correct picture of the character of a
-person, we must try to describe his
-thoughts as well as his acts, for the
-thought-life of a man constitutes his real
-life, while his outward life is merely a
-pictorial representation, a shadow of the
-actions that are taking place upon the
-interior stage of his mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“To describe this inner life, a dramatical
-representation of the processes going
-on in the soul of man will be better
-adapted to bring it to our understanding,
-than a merely verbal description of character.
-This maxim seems to have influenced
-those who wrote the accounts
-contained in the bible, and who describe
-interior processes in allegorical pictures
-of events, which may or may not have
-taken place on the outward plane. I have
-adhered to this plan in describing the
-thought-life of Jehoshua Ben-Pandira, but
-I have attempted to shape the allegories
-contained in this book in such a manner
-that the intelligent reader may easily
-perceive their true meaning, for I have
-made the forms sufficiently transparent,
-so that the truths which they are intended
-to represent may be easily seen through
-the external shell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Nevertheless, these descriptions are
-not mere fancies, but they are based upon
-historical facts, and upon information
-received from sources whose nature will
-be plain to every occultist. The events
-described have all actually taken place;
-but whether they have wholly or in part
-taken place on the external or internal
-plane, each intelligent reader is left to
-decide for himself.”</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Correspondence</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 2.</div>
- <div class='c000'><i>To the Editor of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The ancients assigned to the planets
-certain signs and degrees, in which they
-were essentially dignified, being there
-more powerful for good, and less powerful
-for evil; these were called their
-House, Exaltation, Triplicity, Term, and
-Face. Opposite to the first two were
-the places where they were essentially
-debilitated, being there less powerful for
-good and more powerful for evil; these
-were called their Detriment and Fall.
-Whether the latter three dignities have
-three corresponding debilities has not
-been stated.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To the seven known planets, the
-ancients apportioned the twelve zodiacal
-signs as their respective houses or chief
-dignity, thus: ☉ ruled ♌, and ☽ ruled ♋,
-both by day and night; while the remaining
-ten signs were divided between
-the remaining five planets, each planet
-ruling two signs, one by day and the
-other by night. But when ♅ and ♆ were
-discovered, the question arose where to
-place them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A. J. Pearce, the present editor of
-<i>Zadkiel’s Almanac</i>, has suggested that,
-as they were more remote from ☉ than
-was ♄, they should have the same houses
-and exaltations as ♄. Raphael dethrones
-♄ from ♒, and proclaims that ♅ reigns in
-his stead. Both these suggestions involve
-serious difficulties, nor do they settle the
-question once and for all with regard to
-any planets which may yet be discovered.
-It seems unlikely that planets of such
-diverse natures as ♄, ♅, and ♆ (not to
-mention any still more distant planets)
-should all bear equal rule in the same two
-signs, and to depose ♄ from his throne,
-pre-supposes a grave error on the part of
-the ancients, whose teaching on this point
-has been handed down with complete
-unanimity from the dim past: necessitating,
-also, a further process of dethronement,
-and a further ignoring of the
-teachings of antiquity, as further planetary
-discoveries are made.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first Raphael (the late R. C.
-Smith) rejected the ancient nocturnal
-and diurnal division of the Houses and
-Triplicities, in which he is followed by his
-successor. It appears to me that it is
-here that the error, with its consequent
-difficulties, first arose; and that by observing
-this distinction, ♅ and ♆ easily
-find their homes, with room to spare for
-their yet undiscovered brethren.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is obvious that Astrology can never
-become an even approximately perfect
-science, unless we are able in our calculations
-to take fully into account the
-influence of ♅ and ♆. With this end in
-view, I have been endeavouring, in my
-leisure moments, to solve the problem.
-To a certain extent I have been successful;
-and though I have not yet been able
-to substantiate all my conclusions as fully
-as I could wish, yet I deem it is the
-best interests of the Science to make
-them now public, that their truth or
-falsity may be as speedily as possible
-established by the investigations of
-astrologers generally.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>My conclusions are the following: that
-the ancient Diurnal and Nocturnal
-divisions are quite correct, so that if a
-figure is drawn for any time between
-sunrise and sunset, the planets which
-rule by day the signs on the cusps of
-the houses of the significators must be
-chiefly, and sometimes exclusively, considered;
-and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vice versâ</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>The Houses of the new planets are, I
-believe, these:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>♒, which is the day-house of ♄, is the
-night-house of ♅.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>♊, which is the day-house of ☿, is the
-night-house of ♆.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>♍, which is the night-house of ☿, is the
-<a id='corr158R.43'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='dayhouse'>day-house</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_158R.43'><ins class='correction' title='dayhouse'>day-house</ins></a></span> of ♅.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>♓, which is the night-house of ♃, is the
-day-house of ♆.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>The first two I have verified by horary
-figures drawn for the time of an event;
-the latter two I consider as highly probable,
-but have not yet been able to
-thoroughly substantiate them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>There is an old tradition (<cite>Esoteric
-Science in Human History</cite>, p. 180) that
-there are 12 principal planets in our solar
-system; this leaves 4 more to be discovered.
-It will be seen at a glance that
-these 4 will fill up the vacant signs, two
-planets ruling each sign, one by night
-and the other by day. The only alteration
-which will then have to be made
-will be to consider ☉ to rule ♌ by day
-only, and ☽ to rule ♋ by night only;
-this, however, will be only in accordance
-with nature: moreover, the fact that the
-ancients assigned only one house each
-to ☉ and ☽, and two to each of the other
-planets, denotes some essential astrological
-difference between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>With regard to the other essential
-dignities, Raphael considers ♏ to be the
-exaltation of ♅; I am inclined to believe
-♒ to be the exaltation of ♆. In the
-Triplicities there is a curious want of
-harmony; each, according to the ancients,
-being ruled by two planets, one by day
-and the other by night, except the watery
-triplicity, which is ruled by ♂ only.
-There seems to be no reason for this
-discrepancy, except the all-powerful one
-that there was no other known planet to
-share his dominion. I have ascertained
-that ♆ has strong dignity in ♏, and conclude
-that he rules the watery triplicity,
-probably by night. Furthermore, I believe
-♅ rules the airy triplicity. As for
-the Terms and Faces of the planets,
-they also, like the Planetary Hours, require
-re-arrangement so as to bring in ♅
-and ♆ but in what way this is to be
-done, I have not yet been able to discover.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I will take this opportunity of saying,
-in reply to inquiries, that the best books
-for beginners are Raphael’s <cite>Horary
-Astrology</cite> for that branch of the Science;
-A. J. Pearce’s <cite>Science of the Stars</cite> for
-Mundane and Atmospheric Astrology; A.
-J. Pearce’s <cite>Text Book of Astrology</cite> for
-Nativities, to be worked out by Primary
-Directions; and Raphael’s <cite>Guide to
-Astrology</cite> for the same, worked out by
-Secondary Directions excited by Transits.
-Raphael’s works are published by Foulsham
-and Co., 4, Pilgrim Street, E.C.; and
-Pearce’s works may be procured from the
-author, 54, East Hill, Wandsworth, S.W.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Nemo.</span></div>
-<hr class='c029' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c047'>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>For the purpose of correcting any prejudicial
-suspicion or erroneous misrepresentation
-of myself, arising from the
-insertion of the note at the end of the
-“Bath Occult Reprint Edition” of the
-“Divine Pymander” or as associated with
-the Society of the “H. B. of L.,” known
-to me only through the names of Peter
-Davidson and T. H. Burgoyne, alias
-D’Alton, Dalton, &amp;c., and whose
-secretary is announced to be “A convicted
-felon, and the supposed adept to
-be a Hindu of questionable antecedents,”
-I wish it to be understood I have now
-no confidence, sympathy, or connection
-therewith, direct or indirect, since or even
-prior to the date hereof, viz., May, 1886.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Yours truly,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Robt. H. Fryar</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>8, Northumberland Place, Bath.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>From the Note Book of an Unpopular Philosopher</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c048'>THE ESOTERIC VALUE OF CERTAIN WORDS AND DEEDS IN SOCIAL LIFE.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>To Show Anger.</i>—No “<em>cultured</em>” man
-or woman will ever show anger in Society.
-To check and restrain every sign of annoyance
-shows good manners, certainly,
-but also considerable achievement in
-hypocrisy and dissimulation. There is
-an occult side to this rule of good breeding
-expressed in an Eastern proverb:
-“Trust not the face which never shows
-signs of anger, nor the dog that never
-barks.” Cold-blooded animals are the
-most venomous.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>Non-resistance to Evil.</i>—To brag of
-it is to invite all evil-doers to sit upon you.
-To practice it openly is to lead people
-into the temptation of regarding you as a
-coward. Not to resist the evil you have
-never created nor merited, to eschew it
-yourself, and help others quietly to get
-out of its way, is the only wise course
-open to the lover of wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>“<i>Love Thy Neighbour.</i>”—When a
-parson has preached upon this subject,
-his pious congregation accepts it as
-tacit permission to slander and vilify
-their friends and acquaintances in neighbouring
-pews.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>International Brotherhood.</i>—When a
-Mussulman and a Christian swear mutual
-friendship, and pledge themselves to be
-brothers, their two formulas differ somewhat.
-The Moslem says: “Thy mother
-shall be my mother, my father thy father,
-my sister thy hand maid, and thou shalt
-be my brother.” To which the Christian
-answers: “Thy mother and sister shall
-be my hand-maidens, thy wife shall be
-my wife, and my wife shall be thy dear
-sister.”—<em>Amen.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>Brave as a Lion.</i>—The highest compliment—in
-appearance—paid to one’s
-courage; a comparison with a bad-smelling
-wild-beast—in reality. The recognition,
-also, of the superiority of animal over
-human bravery, considered as a virtue.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>A Sheep.</i>—A weak, silly fellow, figuratively,
-an insulting, contemptuous epithet
-among laymen; but one quite flattering
-among churchmen, who apply it to “the
-people of God” and the members of
-their congregations, comparing them to
-<em>sheep</em> under the guidance of the lamb.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>The Code of Honour.</i>—In France—to
-seduce a wife and kill her husband. There,
-offended honour can feel satisfied only
-with blood; here, a wound inflicted upon
-the offender’s pocket suffices.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>The Duel as a Point of Honour.</i>—The
-duel being an institution of Christendom
-and civilization, neither the old
-Spartans, nor yet the Greeks or Romans
-knew of it, as they were only uncivilized
-heathens.—(<i>See Schopenhauer.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>Forgive and Forget.</i>—“We should
-freely forgive, but forget rarely,” says
-Colton. “I will not be revenged, and
-this I owe to my enemy; but I will
-<em>remember</em>, and this I owe to myself.”
-This is real practical wisdom. It stands
-between the ferocious “Eye for eye, and
-tooth for tooth” of the Mosaic Law, and
-the command to turn the left cheek to
-the enemy when he has smitten you on
-the right. Is not the latter a direct encouraging
-of sin?</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>Practical Wisdom.</i>—On the tree of
-silence hangs the fruit of peace. The
-secret thou wouldst not tell to thine enemy,
-tell it not to thy friend.—(<em>Arabic.</em>)</p>
-
-<p class='c035'><i>Civilised Life.</i>—Crowded, noisy and
-full of vital power, is modern Society to
-the eye of matter; but there is no more
-still and silent, empty and dreary desert than
-that same Society to the spiritual eye of
-the Seer. Its right hand freely and lavishly
-bestows ephemeral but costly pleasures,
-while the left grasps greedily the leavings
-and often grudges the necessities of
-show. All our social life is the result and
-consequence of that unseen, yet ever
-present autocrat and despot, called
-<em>Selfishness</em> and <em>Egotism</em>. The strongest
-will becomes impotent before the voice
-and authority of <em>Self</em>.</p>
-
-<hr class='c042' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. The reader well versed in symbology and theogony is, of course, aware that every
-god and goddess of the ancient pantheons is androgynous in his or her genealogy.
-Thus our Lucifer, the “Morning Star,” being identical with Venus, is, therefore, the
-same as the Chaldean Istar, or the Jewish Astoreth, to whom the Hebrews offered cakes
-and buns, addressing her as the Lady of Light and the Queen of Heaven. She is
-the “great star,” <em>Wormwood</em>, whom the misanthropical St. John sees falling down to
-the earth in <cite>Revelation</cite> (Chapter viii.), as her great rival is <em>Aima</em>, the fruitful mother,
-or the third Sephiroth Binah (<span class='fss'>IHVH ALHIM</span>, or the female Jah-hovah), the “woman with
-child,” in Chapter xii. of the same.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. “It shall come to pass that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh; your sons and
-your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams; your young men
-shall see visions” (Joel ii. 28).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. It is curious to note that Mr. Louis Stevenson, one of the most powerful of our
-imaginative writers, stated recently to a reporter that he is in the habit of constructing
-the plots of his tales in <em>dreams</em>, and among others that of Dr. Jekyll. “I dreamed,”
-he continued, “the story of ‘Olalla’ ... and I have at the present moment two
-unwritten stories which I have likewise dreamed.... Even when fast asleep I
-know that it is I who am inventing.”... But who knows whether the idea of
-“invention” is not also “a dream”!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. The correspondence with reference to these “Comments” will be found in the Correspondence
-columns.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. This is an esoteric tenet, and the general reader will not make much out of it.
-But the Theosophist who has read “Esoteric Buddhism” may compute the 7 by 7 of
-the <em>forty-nine</em> “days,” and the <em>forty-nine</em> “fires,” and understand that the allegory
-refers esoterically to the seven human consecutive root-races with their seven subdivisions.
-Every monad is born in the first and obtains deliverance in the last
-seventh race. Only a “Buddha” is shown reaching it during the course of one life.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Haeckel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. Leo Bach.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. The sub-title, “a tale of love and magic,” having been simultaneously used by
-myself, Mr. Joseph Hutton, and another author, I think it best to change mine for one
-certainly less pretty, but equally descriptive. Is not this simultaneous use also a
-“sign of the times”?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. Of whom there are large colonies along the Black Sea and the coast of Imeretia and Poti.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. George Redway, 15, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. Copyrighted by Franz Hartmann, Boston Occult Publishing Co., 1887.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. “What is Religion: A Vindication of Free Thought.” By C. N., annotated by Robert Lewins,
-M. D. See his Appendices, p. 35, <i>et seq.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span></div>
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='No_3' class='c006' title='LUCIFER Vol. I No. 3 November 15th, 1887'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c043'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Vol. 1.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON, NOVEMBER <span class='fss'>15TH</span>, 1887.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 3.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>“LET EVERY MAN PROVE HIS OWN WORK.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>Such is the title of a letter received by the Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>. It
-is of so serious a nature that it seems well to make it the subject
-of this month’s editorial. Considering the truths uttered in its
-few lines, its importance and the bearing it has upon the much obscured
-subject of Theosophy, and its visible agent or vehicle—the Society of
-that name—the letter is certainly worthy of the most considerate
-answer.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“<i>Fiat justitia, ruat cœlum!</i>”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Justice will be done to both sides in the dispute; namely, Theosophists
-and the members of the Theosophical Society<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c013'><sup>[31]</sup></a> on the one
-hand, and the followers of the <em>Divine Word</em> (or Christos), and the so-called
-Christians, on the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We reproduce the letter:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>“<i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What a grand chance is now open in this country, to the exponents
-of a noble and advanced religion (if such this Theosophy be<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c013'><sup>[32]</sup></a>) for
-proving its strength, righteousness and verity to the Western world, by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>throwing a penetrating and illuminating ray of its declared light upon
-the terribly harrowing and perplexing practical problems of our age.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Surely one of the purest and least self-incrusted duties of man, is to
-alleviate the sufferings of his fellow man?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“From what I read, and from what I daily come into immediate
-contact with, I can hardly think it would be possible to over-rate in
-contemplation, the intense privation and agonizing suffering that is—aye,
-say it—<em>at this moment</em> being endured by a vast proportion of our
-brothers and sisters, arising in a large measure from their not absolutely
-having the means for procuring the <em>bare necessaries of existence</em>?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Surely a high and Heaven-born religion—a religion professing to
-receive its advanced knowledge and Light from ‘those more learned in
-the Science of Life,’ should be able to tell us something of how to deal
-with such life, in its primitive condition of helpless submission to the
-surrounding circumstances of—civilization!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“If one of our main duties is that of exercising disinterested love
-towards the Brotherhood, surely ‘those more learned’ ones, whether in
-the flesh, or out of it, can and will, if appealed to by their votaries, aid
-them in discovering ways and means for such an end, and in organising
-some great fraternal scheme for dealing <em>rightly</em> with questions which
-are so appalling in their complexity, and which must and do press with
-such irresistible force upon all those who are earnest in their endeavours
-to carry out the will of Christ in a Christian Land?</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>L. F. Ff.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“October 25, 1887.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This honest-spoken and sincere letter contains two statements; an
-implied accusation against “Theosophy” (<i>i.e.</i> the Society of that name),
-and a virtual admission that Christianity—or, again, rather its ritualistic
-and dogmatic religions—deserve the same and even a sterner rebuke.
-For if “Theosophy,” represented by its professors, merits on external
-appearance the reproach that so far it has failed to transfer divine wisdom
-from the region of the metaphysical into that of practical work,
-“Christianity,” that is, merely professing Christians, churchmen and
-laymen lie under a like accusation, evidently. “Theosophy” has, certainly,
-failed to discover <em>infallible</em> ways and means of bringing all its
-votaries to exercise “disinterested love” in their Brotherhood; it has
-not yet been able to relieve suffering in mankind at large; but neither
-has Christianity. And not even the writer of the above letter, nor any
-one else, can show sufficient excuse for the Christians in this respect.
-Thus the admission that “those who are earnest in their endeavour to
-carry out the will of Christ in a Christian land” <em>need the help of</em> “‘those
-more learned,’ whether (pagan adepts) in flesh, or (spirits?) out of it” is
-very suggestive, for it contains the defence and the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>raison d’être</i></span> of the
-Theosophical Society. Tacit though it is, once that it comes from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>pen of a sincere Christian, one who longs to learn some practical means
-to relieve the sufferings of the starving multitudes—this admission
-becomes the greatest and most complete justification for the existence of
-the Theosophical Brotherhood; a full confession of the absolute necessity
-for such a body independent of, and untrammelled by, any enchaining
-dogmas, and it points out at the same time the signal failure of Christianity
-to accomplish the desired results.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Truly said Coleridge that “good works may exist <em>without</em> saving (?)
-principles, therefore cannot contain in themselves the principles of
-salvation; but saving principles never did, never can exist without good
-works.” Theosophists admit the definition, and disagree with the
-Christians only as to the nature of these “saving principles.” The
-Church (or churches) maintain that the only saving principle is belief in
-Jesus, or the carnalized Christ of the soul-killing dogma; theosophy,
-undogmatic and unsectarian, answers, it is not so. The only <em>saving</em>
-principle dwells in man himself, and has never dwelt outside of his
-immortal divine self; <i>i.e.</i> it is the true Christos, as it is the true Buddha,
-the divine inward light which proceeds from the eternal unmanifesting
-unknown <span class='fss'>ALL</span>. And this light <em>can only be made known by its works</em>—<em>faith</em>
-in it having to remain ever blind in all, save in the man himself
-who feels that light within his soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore, the tacit admission of the author of the above letter covers
-another point of great importance. The writer seems to have felt that
-which many, among those who strive to help the suffering, have felt and
-expressed. The creeds of the churches fail to supply the <em>intellectual</em>
-light, and the true wisdom which are needed to make the practical
-philanthropy carried out, by the true and earnest followers of Christ, a
-<em>reality</em>. The “practical” people either go on “doing good” unintelligently,
-and thus often do harm instead; or, appalled by the awful
-problem before them, and failing to find in their “churches” any clue, or
-a hope of solution, they retire from the battlefield and let themselves
-be drifted blindly by the current in which they happen to be born.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Of late it has become the fashion for friends, as well as for foes, to
-reproach the Theosophical Society with doing no practical work, but
-losing itself in the clouds of metaphysics. Metaphysicians, we are
-told, by those who like to repeat stale arguments, have been learning
-their lesson for the last few thousand years; and it is now high time
-that they should begin to do some practical work. Agreed; but considering
-that the Christian churches count nearly nineteen centuries of
-existence, and that the Theosophical Society and Brotherhood is a body
-hardly twelve years old; considering again that the Christian churches
-roll in fabulous wealth, and number their adherents by hundreds of
-millions, whereas the Theosophical Brotherhood is but a few thousand
-strong, and that it has no fund, or funds, at its disposal, but that 98 per
-cent. of its members are as poor and as uninfluential as the aristocracy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>of the Christian church is rich and powerful; taking all this into consideration,
-there would be much to say if the theosophists would only
-choose to press the matter upon the public notice. Meanwhile, as
-the bitterest critics of the “leaders” of the Theosophical Society are
-by no means only outsiders, but as there are members of that society
-<a id='corr164.6'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='who who'>who</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_164.6'><ins class='correction' title='who who'>who</ins></a></span> always find a pretext to be dissatisfied, we ask: Can works of
-charity that will be known among men be accomplished without money?
-Certainly not. And yet, notwithstanding all this, none of its (European)
-members, except a few devoted officers in charge of societies, will do
-<em>practical</em> work; but some of them, those especially who have never lifted
-a finger to relieve suffering, and help their outside, poorer brothers, are
-those who talk the most loudly, and are the bitterest in their denunciations
-of the <em>unspirituality</em> and the unfitness of the “leaders of
-theosophy.” By this they remove themselves into the outer ring of
-critics, like those spectators at the play who laugh at an actor passably
-representing Hamlet, while they themselves could not walk on to the stage
-with a letter on a salver. While in India, comparatively poor theosophists
-have opened gratuitous dispensaries for the sick, hospitals, schools, and
-everything they could think of, asking no returns from the poor, as the
-missionaries do, no abandonment of one’s forefathers’ religion, as a
-heavy price for favours received, have the English theosophists, as a rule,
-done a single thing for those suffering multitudes, whose pitiful cry rings
-throughout the whole Heavens as a protest against the actual state of
-things in Christendom?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We take this opportunity of saying, in reply to others as much as to
-our correspondent, that, up till now, the energies of the Society have
-been chiefly occupied in organising, extending, and solidifying the
-Society itself, which work has taxed its time, energies, and resources to
-such an extent as to leave it far less powerful for practical charity than
-we would have wished. But, even so, compared with the influence and
-the funds at the disposal of the Society, its work in practical charity, if
-less widely known, will certainly bear favourable comparison with that
-of professing Christians, with their enormous resources in money,
-workers, and opportunities of all kinds. It must not be forgotten that
-practical charity is not one of the <em>declared</em> objects of the Society. It
-goes without saying, and needs no “declaration,” that every member of
-the Society must be practically philanthropic if he be a theosophist at
-all; and our declared work is, in reality, more important and more
-efficacious than work in the every-day plane which bears more evident
-and immediate fruit, for the direct effect of an appreciation of theosophy
-is to make those charitable who were not so before. Theosophy creates
-the charity which afterwards, and of its own accord, makes itself
-manifest in works.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='badquotes2'></a>Theosophy is correctly—though in this particular case, it is rather
-ironically—termed “a High, Heaven-born Religion.” It is argued that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>since it professes to receive its advanced knowledge and light from
-“those more learned in the Science of Life,” the latter ought and <em>must</em>, if
-appealed to by their votaries (the theosophists), aid them in discovering
-ways and means, in organising some great fraternal scheme,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The scheme was planned, and the rules and laws to guide such a
-practical brotherhood, have been given by those “more learned in the
-Science of (practical, daily, <em>altruistic</em>) life;” aye, verily “more learned” in
-it than any other men since the days of Gautama Buddha and the Gnostic
-Essenes. The “scheme” dates back to the year when the Theosophical
-Society was founded. Let anyone read its wise and noble laws
-embodied to this day in the Statutes of the Fraternity, and judge for
-himself whether, if carried out rigorously and applied to practical life,
-the “scheme” would not have proved the most beneficent to mankind
-in general, and especially to our poorer brethren, of “the starving multitudes.”
-Theosophy teaches the spirit of “non-separateness,” the
-evanescence and illusion of human creeds and dogma, hence, inculcates
-<i>universal love and charity for all mankind “without distinction of race,
-colour, caste or creed;”</i> is it not therefore the fittest to alleviate the sufferings
-of mankind? No true theosophist would refuse admission into a
-hospital, or any charitable establishment, to any man, woman or child,
-under the pretext that he is <em>not</em> a theosophist, as a Roman Catholic would
-when dealing with a Protestant, and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vice versa</i></span>. No true theosophist of
-the original rules would fail to put into practice the parable of the “Good
-Samaritan,” or proffer help only to entice the unwary who, he hopes,
-will become a pervert from his god and the gods of his forefathers.
-None would slander his brother, none let a needy man go unhelped, none
-offer fine talk instead of practical love and charity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Is it then the fault of Theosophy, any more than it is the fault of the
-Christ-teachings, if the majority of the members of the Theosophical
-Society, often changing their philosophical and religious views upon
-entering our Body, have yet remained practically the same as they
-were when professing <em>lip</em> Christianity? Our laws and rules are the same
-as given to us from the beginning; it is the general members of the Society
-who have allowed them to become virtually <em>obsolete</em>. Those few who
-are ever ready to sacrifice their time and labour to work for the poor, and
-who do, unrecognised and unthanked for it, good work wherever they can,
-are often too poor themselves to put their larger schemes of charity
-into objective practical form, however willing they may be.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The fault I find with the Theosophical Society,” said one of the most
-eminent surgeons in London to one of the editors, quite recently, “is
-that I cannot discover that any of its members really lead the Christ-life.”
-This seemed a very serious accusation from a man who is not
-only in the front rank of his profession, and valued for his kindly nature,
-by his patients, and by society, and well-known as a quiet doer of
-many good deeds. The only possible answer to be made was that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>Christ-life is undeniably the ideal of every one worthy in any sense of
-the name of a Theosophist, and that if it is not lived it is because
-there are none strong enough to carry it out. Only a few days later
-the same complaint was put in a more graphic form by a celebrated
-lady-artist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You Theosophists don’t do enough good for me,” she said pithily.
-And in her case also there is the right to speak, given by the fact that
-she leads two lives—one, a butterfly existence in society, and the other
-a serious one, which makes little noise, but has much purpose. Those
-who regard life as a great vocation, like the two critics of the Theosophical
-movement whom we have just quoted, have a right to demand
-of such a movement more than mere words. They themselves endeavour
-very quietly to lead the “Christ-life,” and they cannot understand
-a number of people uniting in the effort towards this life without practical
-results being apparent. Another critic of the same character who has
-the best possible right to criticise, being a thoroughly practical philanthropist
-and charitable to the last degree, has said of the Theosophists
-that their much talking and writing seems to resolve itself into mere
-intellectual luxury, productive of no direct good to the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The point of difference between the Theosophists (when we use this
-term we mean, not members of the Society, but people who are really
-using the organization as a method of learning more of the true wisdom-religion
-which exists as a vital and eternal fact behind all such efforts) and
-the practical philanthropists, religious or secular, is a very serious one, and
-the answer, that probably none of them are strong enough yet to lead
-the “Christ-life,” is only a portion of the truth. The situation can be put
-very plainly, in so many words. The religious philanthropist holds a
-position of his own, which cannot in any way concern or affect the
-Theosophist. He does not do good merely for the sake of doing good,
-but also as a means towards his own salvation. This is the outcome of
-the selfish and personal side of man’s nature, which has so coloured and
-affected a grand religion that its devotees are little better than the
-idol-worshippers who ask their deity of clay to bring them luck in business,
-and the payment of debts. The religious philanthropist who hopes
-to gain salvation by good works has simply, to quote a well-worn yet
-ever fresh witticism, exchanged worldliness for other-worldliness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The secular philanthropist is really at heart a socialist, and nothing
-else; he hopes to make men happy and good by bettering their physical
-position. No serious student of human nature can believe in this theory
-for a moment. There is no doubt that it is a very agreeable one, because
-if it is accepted there is immediate, straightforward work to undertake.
-“The poor ye have always with you.” The causation which produced
-human nature itself produced poverty, misery, pain, degradation, at the
-same time that it produced wealth, and comfort, and joy and glory. Lifelong
-philanthropists, who have started on their work with a joyous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>youthful conviction that it is possible to “do good,” have, though never
-relaxing the habit of charity, confessed to the present writer that, as a
-matter of fact, misery cannot be relieved. It is a vital element in
-human nature, and is as necessary to some lives as pleasure is to others.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is a strange thing to observe how practical philanthropists will eventually,
-after long and bitter experience, arrive at a conclusion which, to
-an occultist, is from the first a working hypothesis. This is, that misery
-is not only endurable, but agreeable to many who endure it. A noble
-woman, whose life has been given to the rescue of the lowest class of
-wretched girls, those who seem to be driven to vice by want, said, only a
-few days since, that with many of these outcasts it is not possible to raise
-them to any apparently happier lot. And this she distinctly stated
-(and she can speak with authority, having spent her life literally among
-them, and studied them thoroughly), is not so much from any love of vice,
-but from love of that very state which the wealthy classes call misery.
-They prefer the savage life of a bare-foot, half-clad creature, with no roof
-at night and no food by day, to any comforts which can be offered them.
-By comforts, we do not mean the workhouse or the reformatory, but the
-comforts of a quiet home; and we can give chapter and verse, so to speak,
-to show that this is the case, not merely with the children of outcasts,
-who might be supposed to have a savage heredity, but with the children
-of gentle, cultivated, and Christian people.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Our great towns hide in their slums thousands of beings whose history
-would form an inexplicable enigma, a perfectly baffling moral picture,
-could they be written out clearly, so as to be intelligible. But they are
-only known to the devoted workers among the outcast classes, to whom
-they become a sad and terrible puzzle, not to be solved, and therefore,
-better not discussed. Those who have no clue to the science of life are
-compelled to dismiss such difficulties in this manner, otherwise they
-would fall, crushed beneath the thought of them. The social question
-as it is called, the great deep waters of misery, the deadly apathy of those
-who have power and possessions—these things are hardly to be faced by
-a generous soul who has not reached to the great idea of evolution, and
-who has not guessed at the marvellous mystery of human development.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Theosophist is placed in a different position from any of these
-persons, because he has heard of the vast scope of life with which all
-mystic and occult writers and teachers deal, and he has been brought
-very near to the great mystery. Indeed, none, though they may have
-enrolled themselves as Fellows of the Society, can be called in any
-serious sense Theosophists, until they have begun to consciously taste
-in their own persons, this same mystery; which is, indeed, a law inexorable,
-by which man lifts himself by degrees from the state of a beast to
-the glory of a God. The rapidity with which this is done is different
-with every living soul; and the wretches who hug the primitive task-master,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span><em>misery</em>, choose to go slowly through a tread-mill course which
-may give them innumerable lives of physical sensation—whether pleasant
-or painful, well-beloved because tangible to the very lowest senses. The
-Theosophist who desires to enter upon occultism takes some of Nature’s
-privileges into his own hands by that very wish, and soon discovers that
-experiences come to him with double-quick rapidity. His business is
-then to recognise that he is under a—to him—new and swifter law of
-development, and to snatch at the lessons that come to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But, in recognising this, he also makes another discovery. He sees
-that it takes a very wise man to do good works without danger of doing
-incalculable harm. A highly developed adept in life may grasp the
-nettle, and by his great intuitive powers, know whom to relieve from
-pain and whom to leave in the mire that is their best teacher. The poor
-and wretched themselves will tell anyone who is able to win their confidence
-what disastrous mistakes are made by those who come from a
-different class and endeavour to help them. Kindness and gentle
-treatment will sometimes bring out the worst qualities of a man or
-woman who has led a fairly presentable life when kept down by pain
-and despair. May the Master of Mercy forgive us for saying such words
-of any human creatures, all of whom are a part of ourselves, according to
-the law of human brotherhood which no disowning of it can destroy. But
-the words are true. None of us know the darkness which lurks in the
-depths of our own natures until some strange and unfamiliar experience
-rouses the whole being into action. So with these others who seem more
-miserable than ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As soon as he begins to understand what a friend and teacher pain
-can be, the Theosophist stands appalled before the mysterious problem
-of human life, and though he may long to do good works, equally dreads
-to do them wrongly until he has himself acquired greater power and
-knowledge. The ignorant doing of good works may be vitally injurious,
-as all but those who are blind in their love of benevolence are compelled
-to acknowledge. In this sense the answer made as to lack of
-Christ-like lives among Theosophists, that there are probably none
-strong enough to live such, is perfectly correct and covers the whole
-question. For it is not the spirit of self-sacrifice, or of devotion, or of
-desire to help that is lacking, but the strength to acquire knowledge and
-power and intuition, so that the deeds done shall really be worthy of the
-“Buddha-Christ” spirit. Therefore it is that Theosophists cannot pose as
-a body of philanthropists, though secretly they may adventure on the path
-of good works. They profess to be a body of learners merely, pledged to
-help each other and all the rest of humanity, so far as in them lies, to a
-better understanding of the mystery of life, and to a better knowledge of
-the peace which lies beyond it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But as it is an inexorable law, that the ground must be tilled if the
-harvest is to be reaped, so Theosophists are obliged to work in the world
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>unceasingly, and very often in doing this to make serious mistakes, as do
-all workers who are not embodied Redeemers. Their efforts may not
-come under the title of good works, and they may be condemned as a
-school of idle talkers, yet they are an outcome and fruition of this
-particular moment of time, when the ideas which they hold are greeted
-by the crowd with interest; and therefore their work is good, as the
-lotus-flower is good when it opens in the mid-day sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>None know more keenly and definitely than they that good works
-are necessary; only these cannot be rightly accomplished without knowledge.
-Schemes for Universal Brotherhood, and the redemption of
-mankind, might be given out plentifully by the great adepts of life, and
-would be mere dead-letter utterances while individuals remain ignorant,
-and unable to grasp the great meaning of their teachers. To Theosophists
-we say, let us carry out the rules given us for our society before
-we ask for any further schemes or laws. To the public and our critics we
-say, try to understand the value of good works before you demand them
-of others, or enter upon them rashly yourselves. Yet it is an absolute
-fact that without good works the spirit of brotherhood would die in the
-world; and this can never be. Therefore is the double activity of
-learning and doing most necessary; we have to do good, and we have to
-do it <em>rightly</em>, with knowledge.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is well known that the first rule of the society is to carry out the
-object of forming the nucleus of a universal brotherhood. The practical
-working of this rule was explained by those who laid it down, to the
-following effect:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“HE WHO DOES NOT PRACTISE ALTRUISM; HE WHO IS NOT
-PREPARED TO SHARE HIS LAST MORSEL WITH A WEAKER OR
-POORER THAN HIMSELF; HE WHO NEGLECTS TO HELP HIS
-BROTHER MAN, OF WHATEVER RACE, NATION, OR CREED,
-WHENEVER AND WHEREVER HE MEETS SUFFERING, AND WHO
-TURNS A DEAF EAR TO THE CRY OF HUMAN MISERY; HE WHO
-HEARS AN INNOCENT PERSON SLANDERED, WHETHER A
-BROTHER THEOSOPHIST OR NOT, AND DOES NOT UNDERTAKE
-HIS DEFENCE AS HE WOULD UNDERTAKE HIS OWN—IS NO
-THEOSOPHIST.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>
- <h3 id='light3' class='c011'>THE DEMAND OF THE NEOPHYTE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'>[Continuation of <span class='sc'>Comments on Light on the Path</span>: By the Author.]</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Before the voice can speak in the presence of the Masters.”</p>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>Speech is the power of communication; the moment of entrance
-into active life is marked by its attainment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And now, before I go any further, let me explain a little the
-way in which the rules written down in “Light on the Path” are
-arranged. The first seven of those which are numbered are sub-divisions
-of the two first unnumbered rules, those with which I have dealt in the
-two preceding papers. The numbered rules were simply an effort of
-mine to make the unnumbered ones more intelligible. “Eight” to
-“fifteen” of these numbered rules belong to this unnumbered rule which
-is now my text.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As I have said, these rules are written for all disciples, but for none
-else; they are not of interest to any other persons. Therefore I trust no one
-else will trouble to read these papers any further. The first two rules,
-which include the whole of that part of the effort which necessitates the
-use of the surgeon’s knife, I will enlarge upon further if I am asked to
-do so. But the disciple is expected to deal with the snake, his lower self,
-unaided; to suppress his human passions and emotions by the force of
-his own will. He can only demand assistance of a master when this is
-accomplished, or at all events, partially so. Otherwise the gates and
-windows of his soul are blurred, and blinded, and darkened, and no
-knowledge can come to him. I am not, in these papers, purposing to
-tell a man how to deal with his own soul; I am simply giving, to the
-disciple, knowledge. That I am not writing, even now, so that all who
-run may read, is owing to the fact that super-nature prevents this by its
-own immutable laws.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The four rules which I have written down for those in the West who
-wish to study them, are as I have said, written in the ante-chamber of
-every living Brotherhood; I may add more, in the ante-chamber of every
-living or dead Brotherhood, or Order yet to be formed. When I speak
-of a Brotherhood or an Order, I do not mean an arbitrary constitution
-made by scholiasts and intellectualists; I mean an actual fact in supernature,
-a stage of development towards the absolute God or Good.
-During this development the disciple encounters harmony, pure
-knowledge, pure truth, in different degrees, and, as he enters these
-degrees, he finds himself becoming part of what might be roughly
-described as a layer of human consciousness. He encounters his equals,
-men of his own self-less character, and with them his association becomes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>permanent and indissoluble, because founded on a vital likeness of nature.
-To them he becomes pledged by such vows as need no utterance or
-framework in ordinary words. This is one aspect of what I mean by a
-Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If the first rules are conquered the disciple finds himself standing at
-the threshold. Then if his will is sufficiently resolute his power of speech
-comes; a two-fold power. For, as he advances now, he finds himself
-entering into a state of blossoming, where every bud that opens throws
-out its several rays or petals. If he is to exercise his new gift, he must
-use it in its two-fold character. He finds in himself the power to
-speak in the presence of the masters; in other words, he has the right
-to demand contact with the divinest element of that state of consciousness
-into which he has entered. But he finds himself compelled, by the
-nature of his position, to act in two ways at the same time. He cannot
-send his voice up to the heights where sit the gods till he has penetrated
-to the deep places where their light shines not at all. He has come
-within the grip of an iron law. If he demands to become a neophyte, he
-at once becomes a servant. Yet his service is sublime, if only from the
-character of those who share it. For the masters are also servants;
-they serve and claim their reward afterwards. Part of their service is to
-let their knowledge touch him; his first act of service is to give some of
-that knowledge to those who are not yet fit to stand where he stands.
-This is no arbitrary decision, made by any master or teacher or any
-such person, however divine. It is a law of that life which the disciple
-has entered upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore was it written in the inner doorway of the lodges of the old
-Egyptian Brotherhood, “The labourer is worthy of his hire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ask and ye shall have,” sounds like something too easy and simple
-to be credible. But the disciple cannot “ask” in the mystic sense in
-which the word is used in this scripture until he has attained the power
-of helping others.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Why is this? Has the statement too dogmatic a sound?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Is it too dogmatic to say that a man must have foothold before he
-can spring? The position is the same. If help is given, if work is
-done, then there is an actual claim—not what we call a personal claim
-of payment, but the claim of co-nature. The divine give, they demand
-that you also shall give before you can be of their kin.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This law is discovered as soon as the disciple endeavours to speak.
-For speech is a gift which comes only to the disciple of power and
-knowledge. The spiritualist enters the psychic-astral world, but he
-does not find there any certain speech, unless he at once claims it and
-continues to do so. If he is interested in “phenomena,” or the mere
-circumstance and accident of astral life, then he enters no direct ray of
-thought or purpose, he merely exists and amuses himself in the astral
-life as he has existed and amused himself in the physical life. Certainly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>there are one or two simple lessons which the psychic-astral can teach
-him, just as there are simple lessons which material and intellectual
-life teach him. And these lessons have to be learned; the man who
-proposes to enter upon the life of the disciple without having learned
-the early and simple lessons must always suffer from his ignorance.
-They are vital, and have to be studied in a vital manner; experienced
-through and through, over and over again, so that each part of the
-nature has been penetrated by them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To return. In claiming the power of speech, as it is called, the
-Neophyte cries out to the Great One who stands foremost in the ray of
-knowledge on which he has entered, to give him guidance. When he
-does this, his voice is hurled back by the power he has approached, and
-echoes down to the deep recesses of human ignorance. In some confused
-and blurred manner the news that there is knowledge and a
-<a id='corr172.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='beneficient'>beneficent</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_172.15'><ins class='correction' title='beneficient'>beneficent</ins></a></span> power which teaches is carried to as many men as will listen
-to it. No disciple can cross the threshold without communicating this
-news, and placing it on record in some fashion or other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He stands horror-struck at the imperfect and unprepared manner in
-which he has done this; and then comes the desire to do it well, and
-with the desire thus to help others comes the power. For it is a pure
-desire, this which comes upon him; he can gain no credit, no glory, no
-personal reward by fulfilling it. And therefore he obtains the power to
-fulfil it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The history of the whole past, so far as we can trace it, shows very
-plainly that there is neither credit, glory, or reward to be gained by this
-first task which is given to the Neophyte. Mystics have always been
-sneered at, and seers disbelieved; those who have had the added power of
-intellect have left for posterity their written record, which to most men
-appears unmeaning and visionary, even when the authors have the
-advantage of speaking from a far-off past. The disciple who undertakes
-the task, secretly hoping for fame or success, to appear as a teacher and
-apostle before the world, fails even before his task is attempted, and his
-hidden hypocrisy poisons his own soul, and the souls of those he
-touches. He is secretly worshipping himself, and this idolatrous practice
-must bring its own reward.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The disciple who has the power of entrance, and is strong enough to
-pass each barrier, will, when the divine message comes to his spirit,
-forget himself utterly in the new consciousness which falls on him. If this
-lofty contact can really rouse him, he becomes as one of the divine in his
-desire to give rather than to take, in his wish to help rather than be
-helped, in his resolution to feed the hungry rather than take manna
-from Heaven himself. His nature is transformed, and the selfishness
-which prompts men’s actions in ordinary life suddenly deserts him.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be <a href='#light4'>continued</a>.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>
- <h3 id='esoteric1' class='c011'>THE ESOTERIC CHARACTER OF THE GOSPELS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c035'>“.... Tell us, when shall these things be? And what shall be the sign <em>of thy
-presence</em>, and <em>of the consummation of the age</em>?”<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c013'><sup>[33]</sup></a> asked the Disciples of the <span class='sc'>Master</span>, on
-the Mount of Olives.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>The reply given by the “Man of Sorrow,” the <em>Chréstos</em>, on his trial,
-but also on his way to triumph, as <em>Christos</em>, or Christ,<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c013'><sup>[34]</sup></a> is prophetic,
-and very suggestive. It is a warning indeed. The answer must
-be quoted in full. Jesus ... said unto them:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Take heed that <em>no man</em> lead you astray. For many shall come in my name saying,
-I am the Christ; and shall lead many astray. And ye shall hear of wars ... but the
-end is not yet. <em>For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom;
-and there shall be famines and earthquakes in divers places.</em> But all these things are
-the beginning of travail.... Many false prophets shall arise, and shall lead many,
-astray ... then shall the end come ... when ye see the abomination of desolation
-which was spoken through Daniel.... Then if any man shall say unto you, <em>Lo, here
-is the Christ</em>, or There; believe him not.... If they shall say unto you, Behold, he is
-in the wilderness, go not forth; behold, he is in the inner chambers, believe them not.
-For as the lightning cometh forth from the East, and is seen even in the West, so
-shall be the <em>presence</em> of the Son of Man,” etc., etc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Two things become evident <em>to all</em> in the above passages, now that their
-false rendering is corrected in the revision text: (<i>a</i>) “the coming of
-Christ,” means <em>the presence of</em> <span class='sc'>Christos</span> in a regenerated world, and not
-at all the actual coming in body of “Christ” Jesus; (<i>b</i>) this Christ is to
-be sought neither in the wilderness nor “in the inner chambers,” nor in the
-sanctuary of any temple or church built by man; for Christ—the true
-esoteric <span class='sc'>Saviour</span>—<em>is no man</em>, but the <span class='sc'>Divine Principle</span> in every human
-being. He who strives to resurrect the Spirit <em>crucified in him by his own
-terrestrial passions</em>, and buried deep in the “sepulchre” of his sinful flesh;
-he who has the strength to roll back <em>the stone of matter</em> from the door of
-his own <em>inner</em> sanctuary, he <em>has the risen Christ in him</em>.<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c013'><sup>[35]</sup></a> The “Son of Man”
-is no child of the bond-woman—<em>flesh</em>, but verily of the free-woman—<em>Spirit</em>,<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c013'><sup>[36]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>the child of man’s own deeds, and the fruit of his own spiritual
-labour.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On the other hand, at no time since the Christian era, have the precursor
-signs described in <cite>Matthew</cite> applied so graphically and forcibly to
-any epoch as they do to our own times. When has nation arisen against
-nation more than at this time? When have “famines”—another name
-for destitute pauperism, and the famished multitudes of the proletariat—been
-more cruel, earthquakes more frequent, or covered such an area
-simultaneously, as for the last few years? Millenarians and Adventists
-of robust faith, may go on saying that “the coming of (the carnalised)
-Christ” is near at hand, and prepare themselves for “the end of the
-world.” Theosophists—at any rate, some of them—who understand the
-hidden meaning of the universally-expected Avatars, Messiahs, Sosioshes
-and Christs—know that it is no “end of the world,” but “the consummation
-of the age,” <i>i.e.</i>, the close of a cycle, which is now fast approaching.<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c013'><sup>[37]</sup></a>
-If our readers have forgotten the concluding passages of the article, “The
-Signs of the Times,” in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> for October last, let them read them
-over, and they will plainly see the meaning of this particular cycle.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Many and many a time the warning about the “false Christs” and
-prophets who shall lead people astray has been interpreted by charitable
-Christians, the worshippers of the dead-letter of their scripture,
-as applying to mystics generally, and Theosophists most especially. The
-recent work by Mr. Pember, “Earth’s Earliest Ages,” is a proof of it.
-Nevertheless, it seems very evident that the words in Matthew’s Gospel
-and others can hardly apply to Theosophists. For these were never
-found saying that Christ is “Here” or “There,” in wilderness or city,
-and least of all in the “inner chamber” behind the altar of any modern
-church. Whether Heathen or Christian by birth, they refuse to
-materialise and thus degrade that which is the purest and grandest ideal—the
-symbol of symbols—namely, the immortal Divine Spirit in man,
-whether it be called Horus, Krishna, Buddha, or Christ. None of them
-has ever yet said: “I am the Christ”; for those born in the West feel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>themselves, so far, only <em>Chréstians</em>,<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c013'><sup>[38]</sup></a> however much they may strive to
-become <em>Christians</em> in Spirit. It is to those, who in their great conceit and
-pride refuse to win the right of such appellation by first leading the life
-of <em>Chrestos</em>;<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c013'><sup>[39]</sup></a> to those who haughtily proclaim themselves <em>Christians</em>
-(the glorified, the anointed) by sole virtue of baptism when but a few
-days old—that the above-quoted words of Jesus apply most forcibly.
-Can the prophetic insight of him who uttered this remarkable warning
-be doubted by any one who sees the numerous “false prophets” and
-pseudo-apostles (<em>of Christ</em>), now roaming over the world? These have
-split the one divine Truth into fragments, and broken, in the camp of the
-Protestants alone, the rock of the Eternal Verity into three hundred and
-fifty odd pieces, which now represent the bulk of their Dissenting sects.
-Accepting the number in round figures as 350, and admitting, for argument’s
-sake, that, at least, one of these may have the approximate truth, still
-349 <em>must be necessarily false</em>.<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c013'><sup>[40]</sup></a> Each of these claims to have Christ exclusively
-in its “inner chamber,” and denies him to all others, while, in truth,
-the great majority of their respective followers daily put Christ to death on
-the cruciform tree of matter—the “tree of infamy” of the old Romans—indeed!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The worship of the dead-letter in the Bible is but one more form of
-<em>idolatry</em>, nothing better. A fundamental dogma of faith cannot exist
-under a double-faced Janus form. “Justification” <em>by Christ</em> cannot
-be achieved at one’s choice and fancy, <em>either</em> by “faith” or by “works”
-and James, therefore (ii., 25), contradicting Paul (Heb. xi., 31), and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vice
-versa</i></span>,<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c013'><sup>[41]</sup></a> one of them must be wrong. Hence, the Bible is <em>not</em> the “Word
-of God” but contains at best the words of fallible men and <em>imperfect</em>
-teachers. Yet read <em>esoterically</em>, it does contain, if not the <em>whole</em> truth,
-still, “<em>nothing but the truth</em>,” under whatever allegorical garb. Only:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Quot homines tot sententiæ</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>The “Christ principle,” the awakened and glorified Spirit of Truth,
-being universal and eternal, the true <em>Christos</em> cannot be monopolized by
-any one person, even though that person has chosen to arrogate to himself
-the title of the “Vicar of Christ,” or of the “Head” of that or
-another State-religion. The spirits of “Chrest” and “Christ” cannot be
-confined to any creed or sect, only because that sect chooses to exalt
-itself above the heads of all other religions or sects. The name has
-been used in a manner so intolerant and dogmatic, especially in our
-day, that Christianity is now the religion of arrogance <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>par excellence</i></span>, a
-stepping-stone for ambition, a sinecure for wealth, sham and power; a
-convenient screen for hypocrisy. The noble epithet of old, the one that
-made Justin Martyr say that “<em>from the mere name</em>, which is imputed to us
-as a crime, <em>we are the most excellent</em>,”<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c013'><sup>[42]</sup></a> is now degraded. The missionary
-prides himself with the so-called <em>conversion</em> of a heathen, who makes of
-Christianity ever a <em>profession</em>, but rarely a religion, a source of income
-from the missionary fund, and a pretext, since the blood of Jesus has
-washed them all by anticipation, for every petty crime, from drunkenness
-and lying up to theft. That same missionary, however, would not
-hesitate to publicly condemn the greatest saint to eternal perdition and
-hell fires if that holy man has only neglected to pass through the fruitless
-and meaningless form of baptism by water with accompaniment of <em>lip</em>
-prayers and vain ritualism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We say “lip prayer” and “vain ritualism” knowingly. Few Christians
-among the laymen are aware even of the true meaning of the word
-<em>Christ</em>; and those of the clergy who happen to know it (for they are
-brought up in the idea that to study such subjects is <em>sinful</em>) keep the
-information secret from their parishioners. They demand blind, implicit
-faith, and <em>forbid inquiry as the one unpardonable sin</em>, though nothing of
-that which leads to the knowledge of the truth can be aught else than
-holy. For what is “Divine Wisdom,” or <em>Gnosis</em>, but the essential reality
-behind the evanescent appearances of objects in nature—the very soul
-of the manifested <span class='sc'>Logos</span>? Why should men who strive to accomplish
-union with the one eternal and absolute Deity shudder at the idea of
-prying into its mysteries—however awful? Why, above all, should they
-use names and words the very meaning of which is a sealed mystery to
-them—a mere sound? Is it because an unscrupulous, power-seeking
-Establishment called a Church has cried “wolf” at every such attempt,
-and, denouncing it as “blasphemous,” has ever tried to kill the spirit of
-inquiry? But Theosophy, the “divine Wisdom,” has never heeded that
-cry, and has the courage of its opinions. The world of sceptics and
-fanatics may call it, one—an empty “<em>ism</em>”—the other “Satanism”: they
-can never crush it. Theosophists have been called Atheists, haters of
-Christianity, the enemies of God and the gods. They are none of these.
-Therefore, they have agreed this day to publish a clear statement of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>ideas, and a profession of their faith—with regard to monotheism and
-Christianity, at any rate—and to place it before the impartial reader to
-judge them and their detractors on the merits of their respective faiths.
-No truth-loving mind would object to such honest and sincere dealing,
-nor will it be dazzled by any amount of new light thrown upon the
-subject, howsoever much startled otherwise. On the contrary, such
-minds will thank <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, perhaps, while those of whom it was said
-“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>qui vult decipi decipiatur</em></span>”—let them be deceived by all means!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The editors of this magazine propose to give a series of essays upon
-the hidden meaning or esotericism of the “New Testament.” No more
-than any other scripture of the great world-religions can the Bible be
-excluded from that class of allegorical and symbolical writings which
-have been, from the pre-historic ages, the receptacle of the secret teachings
-of the Mysteries of Initiation, under a more or less veiled form.
-The primitive writers of the <em>Logia</em> (now the Gospels) knew certainly <em>the</em>
-truth, and the <em>whole</em> truth; but their successors had, as certainly, only
-dogma and form, which lead to hierarchical power at heart, rather than the
-spirit of the so-called Christ’s teachings. Hence the gradual perversion.
-As Higgins truly said, in the Christologia of St. Paul and Justin Martyr,
-we have the esoteric religion of the Vatican, a refined Gnosticism for the
-cardinals, a more gross one for the people. It is the latter, only still
-more materialized and disfigured, which has reached us in our age.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The idea of writing this series was suggested to us by a certain letter
-published in our October issue, under the heading of “Are the Teachings
-ascribed to Jesus contradictory?” Nevertheless, this is no attempt to
-contradict or weaken, in any one instance, that which is said by Mr.
-Gerald Massey in his criticism. The contradictions pointed out by the
-learned lecturer and author are too patent to be explained away by any
-“Preacher” or Bible champion; for what he has said—only in more
-terse and vigorous language—is what was said of the descendant of
-Joseph Pandira (or Panthera) in “Isis Unveiled” (vol. ii., p. 201), from
-the Talmudic <em>Sepher Toldos Jeshu</em>. His belief with regard to the
-spurious character of Bible and New Testament, <em>as now edited</em>, is
-therefore, also the belief of the present writer. In view of the recent
-revision of the Bible, and its many thousands of mistakes, mistranslations,
-and interpolations (some confessed to, and others withheld), it
-would ill become an opponent to take any one to task for refusing to
-believe in the authorised texts.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the editors would object to one short sentence in the criticism
-under notice. Mr. Gerald Massey writes:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What is the use of taking your ‘Bible oath’ that the thing is true, if
-the book you are sworn upon is a magazine of falsehoods already exploded,
-or just going off?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Surely it is not a symbologist of Mr. G. Massey’s powers and learning
-who would call the “Book of the Dead,” or the Vedas, or any other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>ancient Scripture, “a magazine of falsehoods.”<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c013'><sup>[43]</sup></a> Why not regard in the
-same light as all the others, the Old, and, <em>in a still greater measure</em>, the
-<em>New</em> Testament?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>All of these are “magazines of falsehoods,” if accepted in the exoteric
-dead-letter interpretations of their ancient, and especially their modern,
-theological glossarists. Each of these records has served in its turn
-as a means for securing power and of supporting the ambitious policy
-of an unscrupulous priesthood. All have promoted superstition, all made
-of their gods bloodthirsty and ever-damning Molochs and fiends, as all
-have made nations to serve the latter more than the God of Truth. But
-while cunningly-devised dogmas and intentional misinterpretations by
-scholiasts are beyond any doubt, “falsehoods already exploded,” the
-texts themselves are mines of universal truths. But for the world
-of the profane and sinners, at any rate—they were and still are like the
-mysterious characters traced by “the fingers of a man’s hand” on the
-wall of the Palace of Belshazzar: <em>they need a Daniel to read and understand
-them</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nevertheless, <span class='sc'>Truth</span> has not allowed herself to remain without
-witnesses. There are, besides great Initiates into scriptural symbology,
-a number of quiet students of the mysteries of archaic esotericism, of
-scholars proficient in Hebrew and other dead tongues, who have devoted
-their lives to unriddle the speeches of the Sphinx of the world-religions.
-And these students, though none of them has yet mastered all the
-“seven keys” that open the great problem, have discovered enough to
-be able to say: There <em>was</em> a universal mystery-language, in which all
-the World Scriptures were written, from <cite>Vedas</cite> to “Revelation,” from
-the “Book of the Dead” to the <cite>Acts</cite>. One of the keys, at any rate—the
-numerical and geometrical key<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c013'><sup>[44]</sup></a> to the Mystery Speech is now
-rescued; an ancient language, truly, which up to this time remained
-hidden, but the evidences of which abundantly exist, as may be proven
-by undeniable mathematical demonstrations. If, indeed, the Bible is
-forced on the acceptance of the world in its dead-letter meaning, in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>face of the modern discoveries by Orientalists and the efforts of
-independent students and kabalists, it is easy to prophesy that even the
-present new generations of Europe and America will repudiate it, as all
-the materialists and logicians have done. For, the more one studies
-ancient religious texts, the more one finds that the ground-work of the
-New Testament is the same as the ground-work of the Vedas, of the
-Egyptian theogony, and the Mazdean allegories. The atonements
-by blood—blood-covenants and blood-transferences from gods to men,
-and by men, as sacrifices to the gods—are the first key-note struck
-in every cosmogony and theogony; soul, life and blood were
-synonymous words in every language, pre-eminently with the Jews; and
-that blood-giving was life-giving. <a id='badquotes3'></a>“Many a legend among (geographically)
-alien nations ascribes soul and consciousness in newly-created
-mankind to the blood of the god-creators. Berosus records a Chaldean
-legend ascribing the creation of a new race of mankind to the admixture
-of dust with the blood that flowed from the severed head of the god
-Belus. “On this account it is that men are rational and partake of
-divine knowledge,” explains Berosus.<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c013'><sup>[45]</sup></a> And Lenormant has shown
-(<cite>Beginnings of History</cite>, p. 52, note) that “the Orphics ... said
-that the <em>immaterial part of man, his soul</em> (his life) sprang from the blood
-of Dionysius Zagreus, whom ... Titans tore to pieces.” Blood
-“revivifies the dead”—<i>i.e.</i>, interpreted metaphysically, it gives <em>conscious</em>
-life and a soul to the man of matter or clay—such as the modern
-materialist is now. The mystic meaning of the injunction, “Verily I
-say unto you, except <em>ye eat the flesh</em> of the Son of man and <em>drink his
-blood</em>, ye have not life in yourselves,” &amp;c., can never be understood or
-appreciated at its true <em>occult</em> value, except by those who hold some of the
-<em>seven keys</em>, and yet care little for St Peter.<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c013'><sup>[46]</sup></a> These words, whether said
-by Jesus of Nazareth, or Jeshua Ben-Panthera, are the words of an
-<span class='sc'>Initiate</span>. They have to be interpreted with the help of <em>three</em> keys—one
-opening the <em>psychic</em> door, the second that of physiology, and the
-third that which unlocks the mystery of terrestrial being, by unveiling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>the inseparable blending of theogony with anthropology. It is for
-revealing a few of these truths, with the <em>sole view of saving intellectual
-mankind from the insanities of materialism and pessimism</em>, that mystics
-have often been denounced as the servants of Antichrist, even by those
-Christians who are most worthy, sincerely pious and respectable men.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first key that one has to use to unravel the dark secrets involved
-in the mystic name of Christ, is the key which unlocked the door to the
-ancient mysteries of the primitive Aryans, Sabeans and Egyptians. The
-Gnosis supplanted by the Christian scheme was universal. It was the
-echo of the primordial wisdom-religion which had once been the
-heirloom of the whole of mankind; and, therefore, one may truly say
-that, in its purely metaphysical aspect, the Spirit of Christ (the divine
-<em>logos</em>) was present in humanity from the beginning of it. The author
-of the Clementine Homilies is right; the mystery of Christos—now
-supposed to have been taught by Jesus of Nazareth—“was identical”
-with that which <em>from the first</em> had been communicated “<em>to those who were
-worthy</em>,” as quoted in another lecture.<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c013'><sup>[47]</sup></a> We may learn from the Gospel
-<em>according</em> to Luke, that the “worthy” were those who had been
-initiated into the mysteries of the Gnosis, and who were “accounted
-worthy” to attain that “resurrection from the dead” <em>in this life</em> ...
-“those who knew that they could die no more, being equal to the angels
-as sons of God and sons of the Resurrection.” In other words, they were
-the great adepts <em>of whatever religion</em>; and the words apply to all those
-who, without being Initiates, strive and succeed, through personal efforts to
-<em>live the life</em> and to attain the naturally ensuing spiritual illumination in
-blending their personality—the (“Son”) with (the “Father,”) their individual
-divine Spirit, <em>the God within</em> them. This “resurrection” can never be
-monopolized by the Christians, but is the spiritual birth-right of every
-human being endowed with soul and spirit, whatever his religion may be.
-Such individual is a <em>Christ-man</em>. On the other hand, those who choose
-to ignore the Christ (principle) within themselves, must die <em>unregenerate
-heathens</em>—baptism, sacraments, lip-prayers, and belief in dogmas notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In order to follow this explanation, the reader must bear in mind the
-real archaic meaning of the paronomasia involved in the two terms
-<em>Chréstos</em> and <em>Christos</em>. The former means certainly more than merely
-“a good,” an “excellent man,” while the latter was never applied to any
-one living man, but to every Initiate at the moment of <em>his second birth
-and resurrection</em>.<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c013'><sup>[48]</sup></a> He who finds Christos within himself and recognises
-the latter as his only “way,” becomes a follower and an <em>Apostle of
-Christ</em>, though he may have never been baptised, nor even have met a
-“Christian,” still less call himself one.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>H. P. B.</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i><a href='#esoteric2'>To be continued.</a></i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THE “SQUARE” IN THE HAND.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>I am unable to say where or when the events related in the following
-pages took place. Neither can I give any details concerning
-the personal circumstances of the narrator. All I know is that she
-was a young woman of French nationality, and that the “uncle” of
-whom she speaks—her senior by some thirty years—was more distinguished
-as a philosopher than as an enthusiast. Whether the conspiracy
-against the reigning authorities in which our heroine and her friends
-were implicated, happened to be of any historical importance or not, is
-also more than I can say. As my object in reproducing the narrative is
-merely to illustrate the curious operation through natural channels of
-laws, which are usually regarded as “occult,” and the activity of which
-on the material plane has given rise to the common notion of “miracle,”
-I do not propose to trouble the reader or myself with any preamble of
-merely local interest. So, without more introduction, I leave the diary
-of the writer to recount the adventure set down therein by her own
-hand.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I was concerned in a very prominent way in a political struggle for
-liberty and the people’s rights. My part in this struggle was, indeed,
-the leading one, but my uncle had been drawn into it at my instance, and
-was implicated in a secondary manner only. The government sought
-our arrest, and, for a time, we evaded all attempts to take us, but at last
-we were surprised and driven under escort in a private carriage to a
-military station, where we were to be detained for examination. With
-us was arrested a man popularly known as ‘Fou,’ a poor weakling
-whom I much pitied. When we arrived at the station which was our
-destination, ‘Fou’ gave some trouble to the officials. I think he
-fainted, but at all events his conveyance from the carriage to the <em>caserne</em>
-needed the conjoined efforts of our escort, and some commotion was
-caused by his appearance among the crowd assembled to see us.
-Clearly the crowd was sympathetic with us and hostile to the military.
-I particularly noticed one woman who pressed forward as ‘Fou’ was
-being carried into the station, and who loudly called on all present to
-note his feeble condition and the barbarity of arresting a witless creature
-such as he. At that moment my uncle laid his hand on my arm and
-whispered: ‘Now is our time; the guards are all occupied with <a id='corr185.35'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“Fou;”'>‘Fou;’</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_185.35'><ins class='correction' title='“Fou;”'>‘Fou;’</ins></a></span>
-we are left alone for a minute; let us jump out of the carriage and run!’
-As he said this he opened the carriage door on the side opposite to the
-<em>caserne</em> and alighted in the street. I instantly followed, and the people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>favouring us, we pressed through them and fled at the top of our speed
-down the road. As we ran I espied a pathway winding up a hill-side
-away from the town, and cried: ‘Let us go up there; let us get away
-from the streets!’ My uncle answered: ‘No, no; they would see us
-there immediately at that height, the path is too conspicuous. Our best
-safety is to lose ourselves in the town. We may throw them off our
-track by winding in and out of the streets.’ Just then a little child,
-playing in the road, got in our way, and nearly threw us down as we
-ran. We had to pause a moment to recover ourselves. ‘That child
-may have cost us our lives,’ whispered my uncle breathlessly. A second
-afterwards we reached the bottom of the street which branched off right
-and left. I hesitated a moment; then we both turned to the right. As
-we did so—in the twinkling of an eye—we found ourselves in the midst
-of a group of soldiers coming round the corner. I ran straight into the
-arms of one of them, who the same instant knew me and seized me by
-throat and waist with a grip of iron. This was a horrible moment! The
-iron grasp was sudden and solid as the grip of a vice; the man’s arm
-held my waist like a bar of steel. ‘I arrest you!’ he cried, and the
-soldiers immediately closed round us. At once I realised the hopelessness
-of the situation; the utter futility of resistance. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">‘<i>Vous n’avez pas
-besoin de me tenir ainsi</i>,’</span> I said to the officer; <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">‘<i>j’irai tranquillement</i>.’</span> He
-loosened his hold and we were then marched off to another military
-station, in a different part of the town from that whence we had
-escaped. The man who had arrested me was a sergeant or some
-officer in petty command. He took me alone with him into the guard-room,
-and placed before me on a wooden table some papers which he
-told me to fill in and sign. Then he sat down opposite to me
-and I looked through the papers. They were forms, with blanks left for
-descriptions specifying the name, occupation, age, address and so forth of
-arrested persons. I signed these, and pushing them across the table to
-the man, asked him what was to be done with us. ‘You will be shot,’
-he replied, quickly and decisively. ‘Both of us?’ I asked. ‘Both,’ he
-replied. ‘But,’ said I, ‘my companion has done nothing to deserve
-death. He was drawn into this struggle entirely by me. Consider, too,
-his advanced age. His hair is white; he stoops, and, had it not been
-for the difficulty with which he moves his limbs, both of us would
-probably be at this moment in a place of safety. What can you gain
-by shooting an old man such as he?’ The officer was silent. He
-neither favoured nor discouraged me by his manner. While I sat
-awaiting his reply, I glanced at the hand with which I had just signed
-the papers, and a sudden idea flashed into my mind. ‘At least,’ I said,
-‘grant me one request. If my uncle <em>must</em> die, <em>let me die first</em>.’ Now I
-made this request for the following reason. In my right hand, the line
-of life broke abruptly halfway in its length; indicating a sudden and
-violent death. But the point at which it broke was terminated by a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>perfectly marked <em>square</em>, extraordinarily clear-cut and distinct. Such a
-square, occurring at the end of a broken line means <em>rescue</em>, <em>salvation</em>.
-I had long been aware of this strange figuration in my hand, and had
-often wondered what it presaged. But now, as once more I looked at
-it, it came upon me with sudden conviction that in some way I was
-destined to be delivered from death at the last moment, and I thought
-that if this be so it would be horrible should my uncle have been killed
-first. If <em>I</em> were to be saved I should certainly save him also, for my
-pardon would involve the pardon of both, or my rescue the rescue of
-both. Therefore it was important to provide for his safety until after
-my fate was decided. The officer seemed to take this last request into
-more serious consideration than the first. He said shortly: ‘I may be
-able to manage that for you,’ and then at once rose and took up the
-papers I had signed. ‘When are we to be shot?’ I asked him.
-‘To-morrow morning,’ he replied, as promptly as before. Then he went
-out, turning the key of the guard-room upon me.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The dawn of the next day broke darkly. It was a terribly stormy
-day; great black lurid thunderclouds lay piled along the horizon, and
-came up slowly and awfully against the wind. I looked upon them with
-terror; they seemed so near the earth, and so like living, watching
-things. They hung out of the sky, extending long ghostly arms downwards,
-and their gloom and density seemed supernatural. The soldiers
-took us out, our hands bound behind us, into a quadrangle at the back
-of their barracks. The scene is sharply impressed on my mind. A
-palisade of two sides of a square, made of wooden planks, ran round
-the quadrangle. Behind this palisade, and pressed up close against it
-was a mob of men and women—the people of the town—come to see
-the execution. But their faces were sympathetic; an unmistakable look
-of mingled grief and rage, not unmixed with desperation—for they were
-a down-trodden folk—shone in the hundreds of eyes turned towards us.
-I was the only woman among the condemned. My uncle was there, and
-poor ‘Fou,’ looking bewildered, and one or two other prisoners. On the
-third and fourth sides of the quadrangle was a high wall, and in a
-certain place was a niche partly enclosing the trunk of a tree, cut off at
-the top. An iron ring was driven into the trunk midway, evidently for
-the purpose of securing condemned persons for execution. I guessed
-it would be used for that now. In the centre of the square piece of
-ground stood a file of soldiers, armed with carbines, and an officer with
-a drawn sabre. The palisade was guarded by a row of soldiers somewhat
-sparsely distributed, certainly not more than a dozen in all. A
-Catholic priest in black cassock walked beside me, and as we were
-conducted into the enclosure, he turned to me and offered religious
-consolation. I declined his ministrations, but asked him anxiously if he
-knew which of us was to die first. ‘<em>You</em>,’ he replied; ‘the officer in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>charge of you said you wished it, and he has been able to accede to your
-request.’ Even then I felt a singular joy at hearing this, though I had
-no longer any expectation of release. Death was, I thought, far too
-near at hand for that. Just then a soldier approached us, and
-led me, bare-headed, to the tree trunk, where he placed me
-with my back against it, and made fast my hands behind me
-with a rope to the iron ring. No bandage was put over my
-eyes. I stood thus, facing the file of soldiers in the middle of
-the quadrangle, and noticed that the officer with the drawn sabre placed
-himself at the extremity of the line, composed of six men. In that
-supreme moment I also noticed that their uniform was bright with steel
-accoutrements. Their helmets were of steel and their carbines, as they
-raised them and pointed them at me, ready cocked, glittered in a fitful
-gleam of sunlight with the same burnished metal. There was an
-instant’s stillness and hush while the men took aim; then I saw the
-officer raise his bared sabre as the signal to fire. It flashed in the air;
-then, with a suddenness impossible to convey, the whole quadrangle
-blazed with an awful light—a light so vivid, so intense, so blinding, so
-indescribable that everything was blotted out and devoured by it. It
-crossed my brain with instantaneous conviction that this amazing glare
-was the physical effect of being shot, and that the bullets had pierced
-my brain or heart, and caused this frightful sense of all-pervading flame.
-Vaguely I remembered having read or having been told that such was the
-result produced on the nervous system of a victim to death from fire-arms.
-‘It is over,’ I said, ‘that was the bullets.’ But presently there
-forced itself on my dazed senses a sound—a confusion of sounds—darkness
-succeeding the white flash—then steadying itself into gloomy
-daylight; a tumult; a heap of stricken, tumbled men lying stone-still
-before me; a fearful horror upon every living face; and then ... it all
-burst on me with distinct conviction. The storm which had been gathering
-all the morning had culminated in its blackest and most electric point
-immediately over-head. The file of soldiers appointed to shoot me stood
-exactly under it. Sparkling with bright steel on head and breast and
-carbines, they stood shoulder to shoulder, a complete lightning conductor,
-and at the end of the chain they formed, their officer, at the
-critical moment, raised his shining, naked blade towards the sky.
-Instantaneously heaven opened, and the lightning fell, attracted by the
-burnished steel. From blade to carbine, from helmet to breastplate it
-ran, smiting every man dead as he stood. They fell like a row of nine-pins,
-blackened in face and hand in an instant—in the twinkling of an
-eye. <em>Dead.</em> The electric flame licked the life out of seven men in that
-second; not one moved a muscle or a finger again. Then followed a
-wild scene. The crowd, stupefied for a minute by the thunderbolt and
-the horror of the devastation it had wrought, recovered sense, and with
-a mighty shout hurled itself against the palisade, burst it, leapt over it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>and swarmed into the quadrangle, easily overpowering the unnerved
-guards. I was surrounded, eager hands unbound mine, arms were
-thrown about me; the people roared, and wept, and triumphed, and fell
-about me on their knees praising Heaven. I think rain fell, my face
-was wet with drops, and my hair—but I knew no more, for I swooned
-and lay unconscious in the arms of the crowd. My rescue had indeed
-come, and from the very Heavens!”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Anna Kingsford, M.D.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>FREEDOM.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Know, striving soul, on truth intent,</div>
- <div class='line'>That not with words by mortal sent—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Faint shimmerings of earthly light—</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall ever-living truth be taught,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or light to gild the path be bought,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That leads us upward from the night.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>But govern mind with ordered will,</div>
- <div class='line'>Subduing this with knowledge still,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Fanning the spark within that glows,</div>
- <div class='line'>The essence of that power divine,</div>
- <div class='line'>The pledge to man from mystic time,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The light from thrones above that flows.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Then may the spirit, bathed in light,</div>
- <div class='line'>Soar upward from the realms of night,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>No more a fettered earth-bound thing,</div>
- <div class='line'>But freed from clay, and doubt, and slime,</div>
- <div class='line'>Triumphant over death and time!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To the eternal ever cling!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>P. H. D.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE INVISIBLE WORLD.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>In many of the tasks of life the first step costs the great effort,
-and the investigation of truth in the higher regions of Nature
-justifies the familiar maxim. The first step for the modern inquirer
-is that which carries his consciousness across the threshold of matter
-into the invisible world. Never mind for the moment whether occult
-progress be attempted by a direct onslaught on the defences of the invisible
-world, or by purely internal combats with the desires of the lower self.
-The unseen must first become a reality for anyone who seriously desires
-to enter into relations with it, whether he sets his will to work to vanquish
-his own frailties, or the forces of Nature on the astral plane. An internal
-struggle with material desire undertaken for a spiritual purpose, just as
-much as the other kind of contest, is a recognition of the superior realm;
-and it is not a struggle of the kind we are contemplating at all, if it is
-merely undertaken for a worldly purpose, as thrifty habits may be cultivated,
-for instance, at the bidding of the grossest material selfishness.
-But though a recognition of the invisible world must in this way have
-been forced, at an early stage of his inquiry, on the mind of everyone
-who becomes an earnest explorer of Nature’s higher laws, its invisibility
-is a terrible barrier in the way of the progress that would otherwise be
-made by the throngs of intelligent materialists who people civilised countries
-at this epoch of our history. From the point of view of conventional
-thinkers—of those alike who sacrifice their Sunday mornings
-to provide for the contingency that there may be something in religion
-after all, and of those who are frankly incredulous of any Nature lying
-beyond the reach of instrumental research—a tremendous revolution in
-all their views of life is accomplished if they are somehow brought
-face to face with the reality of super-material phenomena, if they ever
-discover the invisible world and come to know it, or any part of it, as an
-unequivocal fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Long experienced explorers of the unseen often forget how profoundly
-clouded the whole region seems from the shore of materialistic thought.
-Indeed, from the shore of other systems where habits of metaphysical
-speculation would lead men to repudiate the charge of materialism,
-the unseen appears to be equally impenetrable to all human faculties.
-It is as though we lived beside an ocean always shrouded from view
-by a belt of mist. A few persons are in the constant habit of
-pushing out beyond in boats, but these, when they come back,
-are told, “Nonsense! there is no ocean; you have been dreaming!”
-For the vast majority, the mist is an infinite void. Only
-by a minority have the few who have passed through it, been even
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>encountered. Will anyone who knows his generation pretend to say that
-even among ordinary religious people the next world is a certain fact in
-Nature, like the next street? How many are there who do more than
-rest on the hypothesis that there may be somewhere a heaven to “go to”
-when the dreadful moment comes at which mortal man must perforce
-bid adieu to the warm precincts of the cheerful day. “God forbid!” a
-bishop is said to have piously remarked when warned, during danger at
-sea, that he would be in Heaven that night. The next world of commonplace
-orthodoxy is but too often regarded as a desperate resource for
-ruined men, whose fortune of life has been wrung from them to the last
-drop. For those who are bankrupt of breath, “let us trust” (as a frequent
-phrase expresses the idea) that some compensation may be provided by
-Providence hereafter, though it does all remain so hopelessly obscure.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah, if you could only show me that there really is a life beyond this—a
-perpetuation of this real individual Me after I am what my friends will
-call dead—you would be giving me a blessing that no words could
-over-estimate.” That is a passionate cry from many hearts to those who
-talk of other lives for the soul—of spiritual rewards, or the fruit of Karma
-in future states of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is a cry which few people indeed, even among those who have been
-in contact with the invisible world, are in a position to satisfy. Most of
-us are obliged to reply: “This satisfaction can only be acquired by a
-resolute effort; it is impossible for us to bring you proof of what we
-know, to save you trouble. If you would know whether Africa exists, we
-cannot bring you Africa to prove it; we can only give you directions how
-to get there if you are willing to undertake the journey.” “But why,” we
-might ask, “cannot you believe the testimony of those who have had
-proof of the sort you require.” The answer always is in effect: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“<i>C’est le
-premier pas qui coute</i></span>. It would be worth worlds to know, but to believe
-without personal knowledge—that would be an act of faith. I might as
-easily believe at once in the Roman Catholic Church.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is a great difference, really, between the surrender of that
-reason claimed by ecclesiastical tyranny and the faith required to enable
-a seeker after truth to gain personal cognisance of the invisible world.
-The priest and the occultist both claim faith from the neophyte; but the
-first bids him develop this by strangling his reason, the second by
-satisfying it. Sensible faith is that which recognises the logic of facts
-appealing to human intelligence. It is stupid to believe that which you
-have no reason for believing; it is no less stupid to disbelieve that which
-there is reason to believe. The majority of modern men and women,
-indeed—fed exclusively on the husks of knowledge—are too profoundly
-ignorant of the records accumulated by those who have penetrated the
-unseen to be called stupid for undervaluing them. But on one or the
-other horn of the dilemma they must take their place. They are unconscious
-of the existence of the records left, or of the work done by students of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>occultism in its various phases; or they must be held responsible for
-defects of understanding. Does anyone say: “What are the records you
-refer to?” The answer would be analogous to one that might be
-given to a person brought up in American backwoods, on modern
-practicalities exclusively, and who in mature life should hear someone
-refer to classical literature as important. “What book do you want me
-to read?” he might ask. What would an accomplished University
-devotee of Greek poetry <em>think</em> in reply, even if he tried to disguise his
-answer in polite terms?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Any fairly considerable acquaintance with the literature of occult
-research—including in that broad designation records of any supermaterial
-phenomena—will put any man in a position in which he must
-either believe in the existence of the invisible world, or discover that he
-is an irrational being, whose “convictions” are merely acts of submission
-to the decrees of the multitude. And then, for most of those who
-perceive that they must believe, or who find that they cannot
-continue to disbelieve, some personal contact with some phases of
-the invisible world will probably follow in the sequence of events;
-because, once <em>believing</em>—once saturated with a complete conviction that
-there are other planes of Nature—these will present themselves to the
-mind as so interesting, that it becomes worth while to take trouble in
-order to get the gratification of beholding their phenomena in some way
-or other; and then success will sooner or later be attained. While
-people merely think “there <em>may be</em> an invisible world, let us try if we
-can find it out,” they are easily baffled by failure. They draw one or two
-covers “blank” and retire from the effort declaring “there is nothing to
-be discovered; it is all a delusion.” The man who has read and
-assimilated what he has read is, as we have said above, saturated with a
-conviction on the subject. His state of mind remains unaffected by
-personal failure; and still impelled by the fascination of the idea, he
-will try again and again till he succeeds. When anyone says, “I <em>wish</em>
-I could see something out of the common way, but I never have any
-luck in such things,” the answer is: “Then you certainly do not wish
-<em>much</em>.” Probably such people do not wish enough to take the trouble
-merely to study. What they wish is that conclusive phenomena
-demonstrating the existence of the invisible world should always be on
-view at some London theatre, where inquirers might go without liability
-to disappointment, when other engagements permitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And yet, though it is so easy to blame and ridicule that attitude of
-mind, no one who has the influence of the higher occultism in his heart,
-and at the same time a capacity for sympathising with the best attributes
-of modern culture, can be otherwise than indefatigably anxious to waken
-up the present generation more fully to an appreciation of the sublime
-knowledge accessible to those who get across the outer barriers and
-come to realise the existence of the world beyond, once for all.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>Occultists will often fail to understand the situation aright. There are
-some who would do nothing but draw from their own knowledge of the
-invisible world a store of moral maxims, and serve these out to their
-brethren, fearing to suggest further inquiries lest danger should be
-incurred, for, of course, people are put in danger the higher they climb,
-falls being then more disastrous. But maxims to have any value must
-be in circuit with knowledge. “Be good!” is a sound maxim. “Be
-good children!” is often an efficient exhortation, but it will not survive
-the period when the persons addressed say “Why?” And all the
-educated world is saying “Why?” now in regard to injunctions which
-rest upon incredible assertions. Why is Society so tolerant of some misdoing
-which the Church has always specially condemned, though it lies
-outside the catalogue of offences like robbery and murder, proscribed by
-common convenience? Because maxims which merely rest upon religion
-have no longer any binding force; in other words, because religion is
-the science, or the sum total of the sciences of the invisible world, and
-men now claim to have cut and dried maxims overhauled on principles
-to which this age of science has accustomed them. It is quite possible
-to get this done. The fact that this <em>is</em> a scientific age is a declaration,
-in other words, that a time has come for putting a scientific complexion
-on religious thought; in other words again, for beginning to lead the
-public, in flocks, where hitherto rare pioneers only have penetrated in
-secret—across the threshold unto the limitless realms of the invisible
-world. By flocks we need not be supposed to mean crude masses of
-humanity selected on no system, but large numbers compared to the
-rare explorers of former times, considerable groups of the most
-intelligent and advanced minds of the age. A man of the present day,
-who has obtained the beautiful culture of modern civilisation, who may
-be an accomplished classic, a finely-trained man of science, a poet, an
-artist, and yet a person so ignorant or stupid (as to certain facets of his
-mind) as not to know anything about the invisible world, is a creature
-who provokes in the more enlightened observer a feeling analogous to
-that with which one might look at a lady of fashion, beautiful in the
-face, but whose winning draperies you know to hide ugly deformities or
-repulsive disease. Or treating the subject more abstractedly, this lovely
-culture of modern civilisation is like the soulless statue—the Galatea
-without life. Surely it is time that the gods informed the marble with
-the breath of the spirit; and have they not shown themselves ready to
-do this if the sculptor does but appeal to them?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The man who penetrates, or gets into relations of some sort or other
-with the invisible world, will not necessarily be illuminated at once with
-a flood of exhilarating knowledge. The new realm may open out
-before the explorer in many different ways; and there is much going
-astray amidst its innumerable mazes for new comers, as a rule. But to
-discuss these perils in detail would be to attempt an essay on all branches
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>of occultism. For the present we are arguing merely that to make no
-journeys there at all is to give up progress, to move no longer with the
-onward stream of evolution, to fall out of the line of march.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is deplorable that men of intelligence, in the present day, should
-neglect to pick up the threads which might guide them to some knowledge
-of the invisible world, for two reasons, or rather, the reasons why
-this is deplorable may be divided into two great classes, those which
-have reference to knowledge, as such, and those which have reference
-to the spiritual interests of mankind. To people who appreciate
-spiritual interests, nothing else is relatively worth a thought; but
-for men of modern civilisation at large knowledge is worth everything
-for its own sake; it is the end they are pursuing, and this being so,
-it is astounding that they neglect the most subtle, fascinating and
-intricate phenomena of all nature, those which have to do with supermaterial
-planes of existence and natural force. And from that point of
-view, any passage across the threshold of the invisible world will do as
-well as any other. The tables that move without hands, the pencils
-that write without fingers, are surely linked with mysteries of Nature
-not yet understood, and, therefore, worth examination. Investigations
-concerning them bring one face to face with the forces of the invisible
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Are we told that science cannot grasp these phenomena to investigate
-them? The statement is not true. They cannot be grasped at any
-time by anybody, but no more can the depths of stellar space be
-fathomed by whoever chooses whenever it suits his leisure. Great
-telescopes are scarce; nights perfectly fitted for observation must be
-waited for with patience. But when they come, the men who have got
-the telescopes take observations and make reports, and their records are
-studied by other astronomers, and used as the foundation of theories,
-as the raw material of current knowledge. If similar methods were
-adopted with even the crudest spiritualistic, not to speak of scientific,
-research in occult mystery, the world at large would not be blundering
-about as it is, with absurd denials of facts known to thousands. Clairvoyance
-again, by flights of perception through the invisible world,
-bridges gulfs that are materially impassable. But what does modern
-culture know of it? As a scientific fact, it is enormously more certain
-than the existence, for example, of the satellites of Mars; but who
-disputes the latter fact? They have been seen, those satellites, if they
-are not seen easily or often, and therefore their existence has been
-established. But five newspapers out of six in the present day—barometers
-of prevailing belief—would profess to disbelieve in clairvoyance
-if the subject had to be mentioned; to <em>disbelieve</em> in that which is
-an elementary truth having to do with the most easily accessible region
-of supermaterial knowledge!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To gain touch with this is <em>not</em> to be put at once in possession of that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>certainty concerning the survival after death of the real “Me” in each
-case, which is the great point to be established for most European
-doubters, but it is the first step. Students of the laws which govern existence
-in the higher realms of Nature can gain no hearing from those to
-whom that great point remains unsatisfied. Once the higher realm is
-felt to be a reality, the possibility of gaining a knowledge of the laws
-which prevail there presents itself to the mind with an altogether new
-significance. And finally, closer attention shows that this knowledge
-certainly has been gained; that the path leading to spiritual wisdom is
-defined; that with some of the powers which reign in the invisible world
-we may enter into more or less definite relations beforehand here; that of
-all practical pursuits which men of clear heads and resolute purpose can set
-themselves to, during the space of incarnate earthly life, immeasurably
-the most practical, in so far as it has to do with objects which dwarf all others
-in their importance, are those which have to do with the culture and development
-of that Higher Self within them which has its natural home in
-the invisible world, and is but a passing guest in the midst of material occupations.
-To use and apply the knowledge of supermaterial laws which
-occult studies disclose is a life’s task, but of that for the moment we need
-not speak. It is with the heedless and frivolous generation at large that
-we are concerned in this appeal—with those who waste great gifts of intelligence
-and splendid energies and courage and indomitable industry
-on transitory pursuits, on money-making (in excess), on discovery and
-research that merely subserve passing material wants, on the struggle for
-flattering distinctions which cast a meteoric gleam on the brief journey to
-personal oblivion, on the “solid realities” of the visible world, which, like the
-ice drops of a hailstorm, are as hard as bullets one minute and dissolved in
-new forms the next. It is all for want of taking the first step that
-they are squandering their lives. Their immediate predecessors <em>knew</em>
-no more than they perhaps of the hidden mysteries, but they were less
-critical of the distorted shape in which pious tradition told them of the
-future and of the powers above. The heirs of modern thought have
-grown in knowledge of molecules and of the transmutation of energy
-but as they look back upon the beliefs which contented their forefathers,
-they perceive that their fuller science of the physical plane has entirely
-shut out the wide, vague prospect that used to gleam on the earlier
-horizon.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Rational human creatures cannot afford to leave that prospect in a permanent
-eclipse. The neglect of all facts concerned with the durabilities
-of existence; the concentration of effort and interest on the hastily dissolving
-view of its physically manifested phases, is the crying folly of the
-period. To spring at once into complete conscious spiritual relationship
-with the higher planes of Nature is not an easy achievement. The great
-Realities lie within a domain which makes no direct appeal to the five
-senses of the earthly body, and the only way of approaching their comprehension
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>is to press on through the darkness, beyond which other men
-before us declare that they have reached illuminated altitudes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But meanwhile, the torpor of the educated world at large in regard to
-the promptings which ought now to stir its activity in this direction is
-little less than idiotic. Idiotic relatively, that is to say, to spiritual culture.
-There are men of illustrious fame in the various provinces of intellectual
-culture, who are behaving relatively to their own higher potentialities, as
-the luckless victim of a shallow skull may behave towards the teachings
-of science and art. But there is always one thing to be remembered
-about them; they are curable. Their cure can be undertaken with sure
-certainty of success at any moment, but for each sufferer from that inner
-cataract which shuts out from his consciousness the prospect of the
-invisible world, there is only one surgeon who can successfully perform
-the necessary operation—the man himself. What we can do who have
-accomplished the feat for ourselves, is to encourage others—not to <em>go</em>, but
-to come and do likewise.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>A. P. Sinnett.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/separator7.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>THE MYSTIC THOUGHT.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When will come rest? Is it alone the silent grave</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That can bring true peace to the restless soul</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That striving, yearns to reach some distant goal,</div>
- <div class='line'>Toss’d like a boat on the crest of a mighty wave?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is there oblivion in the cold, dark tomb</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To dull the heart and kill the abject fear</div>
- <div class='line'>Which loads the sense, when unknown dangers loom</div>
- <div class='line in2'>From regions that our sense perceives not here?</div>
- <div class='line'>When from the soul goes forth the mystic thought</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That we have higher purpose than we know,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And each must reap the fruit he cares to sow,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or learn the duties he himself has taught:</div>
- <div class='line'>Can this be killed?—no, surely!—but that lamp can save</div>
- <div class='line'>That burns within us here—and burns beyond the grave.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>P. H. Dalbiac.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>
- <h3 id='blossom3' class='c018'><span class="blackletter">THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN</i>.</div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Mabel Collins</span>,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='small'>Author of “<span class='sc'>The Prettiest Woman in Warsaw</span>,” &amp;c., &amp;c.,</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>And Scribe of “<span class='sc'>The Idyll of the White Lotus</span>,” and “<span class='sc'>Through the Gates</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>of Gold</span>.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<h3 class='c018'>CHAPTER V.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>Adventure is said to be sweet to the young; if it was so to
-Hilary, he must soon have found abundant pleasure in the
-possession of enough sweets. For the next few days scarcely an
-hour passed without an event large enough in his eyes to be an adventure.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was ready at the hour Fleta had named; and had provided against
-all probable contingencies by taking with him the smallest possible
-amount of luggage. For aught he knew they might have to climb mountains
-in the course of this journey. And moreover he knew Fleta’s unprincess-like
-distaste for superfluities; he would not have been surprised
-to see her start in her riding habit and take no luggage at all. The
-difficulty he dreaded was his mother’s surprise at this scant provision of
-his. But good luck—or was it something else?—took her away. She
-was summoned to visit a sick friend at a little distance out of the city,
-and said good-bye to Hilary before her departure. So Hilary made his
-preparations without being troubled by criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At noon a lad presented himself at the door of the Estanol’s house,
-with a note which he said he was to give into Hilary’s own hand. Hilary
-immediately went to him and took it, as he guessed it was from Fleta.
-A single line!—and no signature!—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am waiting for you outside the north gate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary took his valise in his hand, afraid to hire a carriage lest it
-should not please her that he brought any eyes to note their meeting.
-He walked out of the city by the quietest side streets he could select,
-hoping not to meet any of his friends. He met no one he knew, and
-with a sigh of relief passed out through the gate and walked on to the
-broad country road beyond it. Drawn up under some trees was a
-handsome travelling carriage, with four horses and postilions. Hilary
-was surprised. He had not expected so much luxury. When he
-reached the carriage he was even more surprised. Fleta was hardly
-dressed as for a journey; she wore a much richer robe than usual, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>her head and shoulders were covered with beautiful black lace. She
-leaned back in a corner of the roomy carriage, with a voluptuous dreamy
-expression on her face which was new to Hilary. Opposite her sat
-Father Amyot. Hilary could not but regard the priest with amazement.
-Was the town to lose its favourite confessor? How then could all the
-gossips in it be prevented from hearing of the Princess Fleta’s journey?
-But Hilary resolved not to harass himself with conjecture. He entered
-the carriage and Fleta motioned to him to seat himself at her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At her side! Yes, that was his place. And Father Amyot, the father
-confessor, beloved and almost worshipped by the people, in whose breast
-reposed the secrets and the sorrows of the city; Father Amyot, who was
-the model of piety to all who knew him, sat opposite in the carriage.
-Did he watch the lovers? Seemingly not. His eyes were lowered and
-his gaze was apparently fixed on his clasped hands. He sat there like
-a statue. Once or twice when Hilary glanced at his face, he fancied he
-must be there unwillingly. Was it so? Was he Fleta’s tool and
-servant held by her domineering temper to do her bidding? Surely
-not. Father Amyot was too well known as a man of power for the idea
-to be credible. Hilary checked himself for the hundredth time in these
-hopeless speculations and determined to enjoy the moment he was in
-possession of and not trouble about the next one till it came; nor
-yet endeavour to read others’ hearts. And so this young philosopher
-went open eyed, as he believed, to his destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The carriage rolled away at a great speed; it was drawn by four
-beautiful Russian horses, and the postilions were Fleta’s own, and accustomed
-to her likings. She was a most daring and intrepid rider and
-nothing pleased her in the way of motion except great speed. She was
-a lover of animals and her horses were the finest kept in the city. It
-was strange to Hilary to try and realise her singular independence of
-position, as to-day he felt impelled to. For himself he was still to a
-great extent in leading strings; he had made no position for himself,
-nor even planned any career; he was dependent on his mother’s fortune,
-and consequently, to a certain extent, could act only according to her
-approval. He was still so young that all this seemed natural enough.
-But Fleta was younger than himself, though it was difficult always to
-remember it, so dominant was her temper. A glance at her fresh face
-still so soft in its outlines as to have something childish about it
-when her expression permitted; at her figure, so slender in spite of
-its stateliness, recalled the fact that the Princess was indeed only a
-girl. Did the man who was about to marry her suppose that his young
-Queen was a creature unformed, fresh from the schoolroom, altogether
-malleable to his hand?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>During the whole of the afternoon they drove on with scarcely a
-pause, and with very little conversation to pass the time. Yet for
-Hilary it flew with swift wings. The mere sensation of his novel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>position was enough for him as yet. To be beside Fleta and to watch
-her mysterious face for so long together satisfied for the moment his
-longing soul. Fleta herself seemed buried in profound thought. She
-sat silent, her eyes on the country they passed through, but her mind, as
-far as Hilary could judge, wandering in some remote region. As for
-Father Amyot, his regard remained fixed upon a small crucifix which he
-held hidden within his clasped hands, and now and then his lips moved
-in prayer, while, on that austere face, no expression seemed to have room
-but that of adoration or contemplation of the divine.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At sundown they stopped at a very small way-side inn. Hilary
-could not believe they were going to stay here, for it looked little more
-than a place where men drink and horses are fed. Yet so it was. The
-carriage was driven round to the side of the small house, the horses
-taken out of it, and Fleta led the way in at a side door, followed by her
-two companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Within they found a motherly, plain and kindly woman, who evidently
-knew Fleta well; Hilary learned afterwards that this landlady had been a
-kitchen maid in the royal household. And now he saw strange things
-indeed. For this inn was in reality nothing but a drinking shop for
-the drivers who passed along the road. It had no parlour, nor any
-accommodation for travellers of a better sort. And Fleta knew this, as
-was evident at once. She drew a hard chair forward, <a id='corr195.22'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='clos'>close</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_195.22'><ins class='correction' title='clos'>close</ins></a></span> to the great
-fire which flamed up the wide open chimney, and sat down seemingly
-quite at her ease.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We must have some supper,” she said to the landlady. “Get us
-what you can. Can you find room for these gentlemen to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The landlady came near to Fleta and spoke in a low voice; the
-Princess laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“There are no bedrooms in this house, it seems,” she said, aloud, “in fact,
-it is not an hotel. Shall we drive on or shall we sit here through the night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The horses are tired,” said Father Amyot, speaking for the first time
-since they had left the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“True,” said Fleta, absently—for already she appeared to be
-thinking of something else. “I suppose, then, we must stay here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary had never passed, nor ever contemplated passing, a night in
-such rough fashion. He was fond of comfort, or rather of luxury. But
-what could he do when his Princess, the greatest lady in the land, set
-him the example. Any protest would have appeared effeminate, and
-his pride held him silent. Still, when after a very indifferent supper,
-they all returned to the hard wooden chairs beside the fire, Hilary for
-the moment very sincerely wished himself at home in his own comfortable
-rooms. As he wished this, suddenly he became aware that Fleta’s
-dark eyes had turned upon him, and he would not look up, for he
-believed she had read his thought. He wished he could have hidden it
-from her, for he had no mind to be held as more effeminate than herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>There was a sort of second kitchen even rougher and more cheerless
-than the one in which they sat; and there the postilions and other
-men, the ordinary customers of the house, were crowded together,
-drinking and talking and singing. Their presence was horrid to Hilary,
-who was conscious of refined susceptibilities, but Fleta seemed quite
-indifferent to the noise they made and the odour of their coarse
-tobacco; or rather it might be that she was unaware of anything
-outside her own thoughts. She sat, her chin on her hand, looking into
-the fire; and so graceful and perfect was her attitude that she had the
-air of being a masterpiece of art placed amid the commonest surroundings.
-She looked more lovely than ever from the contrast, but yet
-the incongruity was painful to Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The silence in the room in which they sat became the more marked
-from contrast with the increasing noise in the crowded room without.
-At last, however, the hour came for the house to be closed and the
-landlady politely showed her customers the door; all except those who
-were travellers on the road. These, including the postilions, gathered
-into the chimney corner and became quiet, at last falling sound asleep.
-To Hilary it seemed now that he was living through a painful dream,
-and he longed for the awakening—willing to awake, even if that meant
-that he would be at home and away from Fleta.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At last sleep came to him, and his head drooped forward; he sat there,
-upright in the wooden chair, fast asleep. When he awoke it was with a
-sense of pain in every limb, from the posture which he had maintained;
-and he could scarcely refrain from crying out when he attempted to move.
-But he instantly remembered that if the others were sleeping he must
-not wake them. Then he quickly looked round. Father Amyot sat
-near, looking just as he had looked since they entered the house; he
-might have been a statue. Fleta’s chair was empty.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary roused himself, sat up and stared at her empty place; then
-looked all round the kitchen. An idea occurred to him; possibly the
-landlady had found some resting place for the young Princess. A sense
-of oppression came over him; the kitchen seemed stifling. He rose with
-difficulty and stretched himself, then found his way out into the air. It
-was a glorious morning; the sun had just risen, the world seemed like a
-beautiful woman seen in her sleep. How sharp the sweet fresh air was!
-Hilary drew a deep breath of it. The country in which this lonely little
-inn stood was exceedingly lovely, and at this moment it wore its most
-fascinating appearance. A sense of great delight came upon Hilary;
-the uneasiness of the past night was at an end, and he was glad now and
-full of youth and strength. He turned and walked away from the house,
-soon leaving the road and plunging into the dewy grass. There was a
-stream in the valley, and here he determined to bathe. He soon reached
-it, and in another moment had hastily undressed, and was plunged in the
-ice-cold water. An intoxicating sense of vigour came over him as he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>experienced the keen contact. Never had he felt so full of life as now!
-It was not possible to remain long in the water, it was so intensely cold;
-he sprang out again and stood for a moment on the bank in the brilliant
-morning sunshine, looking like a magnificent figure carved by the god of
-the day, his flesh gleaming in the light. Slowly he began at last to put
-on his dress, feeling as if in some way this meant a partial return and
-submission to civilization. Something of the savage which lay deep
-hidden in him had been roused and touched. A fire burned that hitherto
-he had never felt, and which made him long for pure freedom and uncriticised
-life. And this was Hilary Estanol! It seemed incredible that
-a draught of fresh morning air, a plunge into ice-cold water beneath the
-open sky, should have been enough to unloose the savage in him, which
-was held fast beneath his conventional and languid self, as it is in all of
-us, and all those whom we meet in ordinary life. He moved hastily,
-striding on as though he were hurrying to some end, but it was merely a
-new pleasure in motion. There was a grove of old yew trees near the
-stream; a grove which with the superstitious was held to be sacred. That
-it should be revered was no wonder, so stately were the ancient trees, so
-deep the shadow they cast. Hilary went towards this grove, attracted
-by its splendid appearance; as he approached its margin a dim sense of
-familiarity came over him. Never had he left the city by this road, yet
-it seemed to him that he had entered the grove of yews by the early
-morning light already many a time. We are all accustomed to meet
-with this curious sensation; Hilary laughed at it and put it away. What
-if he had visited this spot in a dream? Now it was broad daylight, and
-he felt himself young and a giant. He plunged into the deep shadow,
-pleased by the contrast it made to the brilliant light without.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Suddenly his heart leaped within him and his brain reeled. For there
-before him, stood Fleta; and the brilliant Princess looked like a spirit of
-the night, so pale and grave and proud was her face and so much a part
-did she seem of the deep shadow of the wood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Is it you?” she said with a smile, a smile of mystery and deep unfathomable
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes it is!” he answered, and felt, as he spoke, that he said something
-in those words which he did not himself understand. They stood side by
-side for a moment in silence; and then Hilary remembered himself to be
-alone with this woman, alone with her in the midst of the world. They
-were separated by the hour from other men and women, for the world
-still lay asleep; they were separated by the deep shadow of the wood
-from all moving life that answered to the sun. They were alone—and
-overwhelmed by this sudden sense of solitude Hilary spoke out
-his soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Princess,” he said, “I am ready to be your blind servant, your dumb
-slave, speaking and seeing only when you tell me. You know well why
-I am willing to be the tool in your hands. It is because I love you. But
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>you must pay a price for your tool if you would have it! I cannot only
-worship at your feet. Fleta, you must give yourself to me, absolutely,
-utterly. Marry that man to whom you are betrothed if you desire to be
-a queen, but to me you must give your love, yourself. Ah! Fleta, you
-cannot refuse me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta stood still a long moment, her eyes upon his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she said, “I cannot refuse you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And to Hilary, for an instant of horror, it seemed to him that in her
-eyes was a glance of ineffable scorn. Yet there was love in the smile on
-her lips and in the touch of her hand as she laid it in his.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The bond is made,” she said, “all that you can take of me is yours.
-And I will pay you for your love with my love. Only do not forget that
-you and I are different—that we are after all, two persons—that we cannot
-love in exactly the same way. Do not forget this!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary knew not what to answer. As she spoke the last words he recognised
-his princess, he saw the queen before him. What did she mean?
-Well, he was so unhappy that his love had gone from him to a lady of
-royal birth. It could not be undone, this folly. He must be content to
-take that part which a subject may take in the life of a queen, even though
-he be her lover. The thought brought a pang, a swift stab to his heart
-and a sigh burst from his lips. Fleta put her hand on his arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do not be sad so soon,” she said, “let us wait for trouble. Come, let
-us go out into the sunshine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They went out, hand in hand; they wandered down beside the stream
-and looked into the gleaming waters.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>That day the journey began early, and was very protracted. Twice
-during it they halted at little inns to rest the horses and to obtain what
-food they could. By the evening they had entered upon the most
-deserted region of the great forest which was one of the prides of the
-country. The King’s hunting seat, where he now was, stood in a part of
-this forest, but in quite another region, a long distance from this wild
-place where Hilary and his companions now were. Hilary had never
-been within the forest, as few from the city ever penetrated it except as
-part of the King’s retinue, and then they only saw such tracts of it as
-were preserved and in order. Of this wilder region practically little
-was known, and the spirit of adventure within Hilary made him rejoice
-to find that their journey led them through this unpopulated district.
-His curiosity as to their destination was not now very acute, for the
-experiences of the passing moments were all sufficient. It is true that
-he was conscious of the great gulf fixed between himself and Fleta.
-He knew her to be his superior in every respect. He knew not only
-that he must always be separated from her by their difference in station
-but that he was more vitally separated from her by their difference in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>thought—and that even now. But he was made happy by a look of
-love that plunged deep from her eyes into his own now and again, and
-he was thrilled to the heart when her hand touched his with a light and
-delicate pressure that he alone could understand. Ah! that secret
-understanding which separates lovers from all the rest of the world.
-How sweet it is! How strange it is, too, for they are overpowered by a
-mutual sense of sympathy which appears to be a supreme intelligence,
-giving each the power to look into the other’s heart. Dear moments
-are they when this is realised, when all life outside the sacred circle in
-which the two dwell is obscure and dim, while that within is rich, and
-strong, and sweet. Hilary lived supremely content only in the consciousness
-of being near this woman whom he loved; for now that he
-had actually asked her love, and been granted it, nothing else existed
-for him save that sweet fact. He was indifferent to the hardships, and,
-indeed, probable dangers, of the journey they were upon, which might
-have made a more intrepid spirit uneasy; for now he was content to
-suffer, or even to die, if all conditions were shared with Fleta. All her
-life could not be shared with him, but all his could be shared with her.
-When a man reaches this point, and is content to face such a state of
-things between himself and the woman he loves, he may be reckoned
-as being in love indeed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Quite late at night it was when this day’s journey ended, and the
-splendid horses were really tired out. But a certain point evidently had
-to be reached, and the postilions pushed on. Fleta at last seemed to
-grow a little anxious, and several times rose in the carriage to look on
-ahead; once or twice she inquired of the postilions if they were certain
-of their way. They answered yes; though how that could be was to
-Hilary a mystery, for they had been for a long while travelling over mere
-grass tracts, of which there were many, to his eyes undistinguishable one
-from the other. But the postilions either had landmarks which he could
-not detect, or else knew their way very well. At last they stopped; and
-in the dim light Hilary saw that there was a gate at the side of the track,
-a gate wide enough to drive through, but of the very simplest construction.
-It might have defended merely a spot where young trees were planted,
-or some kind of preserving done; and it was set in a fence of the same
-character, almost entirely hidden by thick growth of wild shrubs. The
-Princess Fleta produced from her dress a whistle on which she sounded
-a clear ringing note, and then everybody sat still and waited. It seemed
-to Hilary that it was quite a long while that they waited; perhaps it was
-not really long, but the night was so still, the silence so profound, the
-feeling of expectancy so strong. He was, for the first time since they
-started, really very curious as to what would happen next. What did
-happen at last was this. There was a sound of laughter and footsteps,
-and presently two figures appeared at the gate; one that of a tall man,
-the other that of a young, slight girl. The gate was unlocked and thrown
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>wide open, and a moment later the young girl was in the carriage, embracing
-Fleta with the greatest enthusiasm and delight. Hilary hardly
-knew how everything happened, but presently the whole party was
-standing together inside the gate, the carriage had driven in and was
-out of sight. Then the tall man shut and locked the gate, after which
-he turned back, and walked on ahead with the young girl at his side,
-while Hilary followed with Fleta. The moon had risen now, and Hilary
-could see her beautiful face plainly, wearing on it an unusually gay and
-happy expression; her lips seemed to smile at her own thoughts. The
-sweet gladness in her face made Hilary’s heart spring with joy. It
-could not be rejoining her friends that made her so glad, for they had
-gone on and left her alone with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta—my princess—no, my Fleta,” he said, “are you happy to be
-with me? I think you are!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, I am happy to be with you—but I am not Fleta.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Not Fleta!” echoed Hilary, in utter incredulity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He stopped, and catching his companion’s hand, looked into her
-face. She glanced up, and her eyes were full of shy coquetry and ready
-gaiety.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I might be her twin sister, might I not, if I am not Fleta herself?
-Ah! no, Fleta’s fate is to live in a court—mine to live in a forest Live!—no,
-it is not life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What was it in that voice that made his heart grow hot with passion?
-Fiercely he exclaimed to himself that it <em>was</em>, it <em>must</em>, be Fleta’s voice.
-No other woman could speak in such tones—no other woman’s words
-give him such a sense of maddening joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh! yes,” he said, “it is life—when one loves, one lives anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, perhaps, when one loves!” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You told me this morning that you loved me, Fleta!” cried Hilary
-in despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah! but I am not Fleta,” was the mocking answer. It sounded like
-mockery indeed as she spoke. And yet the voice was Fleta’s. There
-was no doubt of that. He looked, he listened, he watched. The voice,
-the face, the glorious eyes, were Fleta’s. It was Fleta who was beside
-him, say she what she might.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They had been following the others all this while, and had now
-reached a clearing in the wood, where was a garden full of sweet flowers,
-as Hilary could tell at once by the rich scents that came to him on the
-night air.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am glad we have reached the house,” said his companion, “for I
-am very tired and hungry. Are not you? I wonder what we shall
-have for supper. You know this is an enchanted place which we call
-the palace of surprises. We never know what will happen next. That
-is why one can enjoy a holiday here as one can enjoy it no where else.
-At home there is a frightful monotony about the eating and drinking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>Everything is perfect, of course, but it is always the same. Now here
-one is fed like a Russian one day, and a Hungarian the next. There is
-a perpetual novelty about the menus, and yet they are always good. Is
-not that extraordinary. And oh! the wines, great heavens! what a
-cellar our sainted father keeps. I can only bless, with all my heart, the
-long dead founders of his order, who instituted such a system.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary had regarded his companion with increasing amazement during
-this speech. Certainly it was unlike Fleta. Was she acting for his
-benefit? But at the words “sainted father” another idea thrust that one
-out of his head. What had become of Father Amyot? He had not
-seen him leave the carriage, or approach the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, your holy companion has gone to his brethren,” said the girl,
-with a laugh. “They have a place of their own where they torture
-themselves and mortify the flesh. But they entertain us well, and that
-is what I care for. We will have a dance to-night. Oh! Hilary, the
-music here! It is better than that of any band in the world!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“If you are not, Fleta, how do you know my name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Simple creature! What a question! Why, Fleta has told me all
-about you. Did you never hear that the princess had a foster-sister, and
-that none could ever tell which was which, so like were we—and are we!
-Did you never hear that Fleta’s mother was blonde, and dull, and plain,
-and that Fleta is like none of her own family? Oh, Hilary, you, fresh
-from the city, you know nothing!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A sudden remembrance crossed Hilary’s mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I <em>have</em> heard,” he said, “that no one could tell where Fleta had
-drawn her beauty from. But I believe you draw it from <a id='corr201.26'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='you'>your</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_201.26'><ins class='correction' title='you'>your</ins></a></span> own
-beautiful soul!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah, you still think me Fleta? I have had some happy hours in the
-city before now when Fleta has let me play at being a princess. Ah, but
-the men all thought the princess in a strange, charming, delightful
-humour on these days. And when next they saw her, that humour was
-gone, and they were afraid to speak to her. Come in. I am starving!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They had entered a wide, low doorway, and stood now within the
-great hall. What a strange hall it was! The floor was covered with the
-skins of animals, many of them very handsome skins; and great jars
-held flowering plants, the scent from which made the air rich and heavy.
-A wood fire burned on the wide hearth, and before it, still in the dress
-she had travelled in, stood—Fleta.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yes, Fleta.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The girl who stood at Hilary’s side laughed and clapped her hands as
-he uttered a cry of amazement, even of horror.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This is some of your magic, Fleta!” he exclaimed involuntarily.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Princess turned at his words. She was looking singularly grave
-and stern; her glance gave Hilary a sense of almost fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she answered in a low, quiet voice that had a tone, as Hilary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>fancied, of pain, “it is not magic. It is all very natural. This is Adine,
-my little sister; so like me that I do not know her from myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She drew Adine to her with a gesture which had a protecting tenderness
-in it. This was the Princess who spoke, queen-like in her kindness.
-Hilary stood, unable to speak, unable to think, unable to understand.
-Before him stood two girls—each Fleta. Only by the difference of
-expression could he detect any difference between them. One threw
-him back the most coquettish and charming glance, as she went
-towards her grave sister. He could feel keenly how vitally different the
-two were. Yet they stood side by side, and though Fleta said “my
-little sister” there was no outward difference between them. Adine was
-as tall, as beautiful—and the same in everything!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do not be startled,” said Fleta quietly, “you will soon grow used
-to the likeness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Though I doubt,” added Adine, with a wicked glance from her
-brilliant eyes, “whether you will ever tell us apart except when we are
-not together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come,” said Fleta, “let us go and wash the travel stains off. It is
-just supper time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta talked of travel stains, but as Hilary looked at her queenly
-beauty, he thought she seemed as fresh as though she had but from this
-moment come from the hands of her maid. However, the two went
-away arm in arm, Adine turning at the door to have one last glance of
-amusement at Hilary’s utterly perplexed face. He was left alone, and
-he remained standing where he was, without power of thought or
-motion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Presently some one came and touched him on the shoulder; this was
-necessary in order to attract his attention. It was the tall man who had
-come to the gate to meet them. He was very handsome, and with the
-most cheerful and good-natured expression; his blue eyes were full of
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come,” he said, “come and see your room. I am master of the
-ceremonies here; apply to me for anything you want—even information!
-I may, or may not give it, according to the decision of the powers
-that be. Call me Mark. I have a much longer name, in fact, half-a-dozen
-much longer ones, and a few titles to boot; but they would not
-interest you, and in the midst of a forest where nobody has any dignity,
-a name of one syllable is by far the best.” While he talked on like
-this, apparently indifferent as to whether Hilary listened or no, he led
-the way out of the hall and down a wide, carpeted corridor. He opened
-the last door in this, and ushered Hilary in.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>To be <a href='#blossom4'>continued</a>.</i>)</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE SCIENCE OF LIFE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>What is Life? Hundreds of the most philosophical minds,
-scores of learned well-skilled physicians, have asked themselves
-the question, but to little purpose. The veil thrown over
-primordial Kosmos and the mysterious beginnings of life upon it, has
-never been withdrawn to the satisfaction of earnest, honest science.
-The more the men of official learning try to penetrate through its dark
-folds, the more intense becomes that darkness, and the less they see,
-for they are like the treasure-hunter, who went across the wide seas to
-look for that which lay buried in his own garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What is then this Science? Is it biology, or the study of life in its
-general aspect? No. Is it physiology, or the science of organic function?
-Neither; for the former leaves the problem as much the riddle of the
-Sphinx as ever; and the latter is the science of death far more than
-that of life. Physiology is based upon the study of the different organic
-functions and the organs necessary to the manifestations of life, but that
-which science calls living matter, is, in sober truth, <em>dead matter</em>. Every
-molecule of the living organs contains the germ of death in itself, and
-begins dying as soon as born, in order that its successor-molecule should
-live only to die in its turn. An organ, a natural part of every living
-being, is but the medium for some special function in life, and is a
-combination of such molecules. The vital organ, the <em>whole</em>, puts the
-mask of life on, and thus conceals the constant decay and death of its
-parts. Thus, neither biology nor physiology are the science, nor even
-branches of the <em>Science of Life</em>, but only that of the <em>appearances</em> of life.
-While true philosophy stands Œdipus-like before the Sphinx of life,
-hardly daring to utter the paradox contained in the answer to the riddle
-propounded, materialistic science, as arrogant as ever, never doubting
-its own wisdom for one moment, biologises itself and many others
-into the belief that it has solved the awful problem of existence. In
-truth, however, has it even so much as approached its threshold? It is
-not, surely, by attempting to deceive itself and the unwary in saying
-that life is but the result of molecular complexity, that it can ever hope to
-promote the truth. Is vital force, indeed, only a “phantom,” as Du-Bois
-Reymond calls it? For his taunt that “life,” as something independent,
-is but the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>asylum ignorantiæ</i></span> of those who seek refuge in abstractions,
-when direct explanation is impossible, applies with far more force and
-justice to those materialists who would blind people to the reality of
-facts, by substituting bombast and jaw-breaking words in their place.
-Have any of the five divisions of the functions of life, so pretentiously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>named—Archebiosis, Biocrosis, Biodiæresis, Biocænosis and Bioparodosis<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c013'><sup>[49]</sup></a>,
-ever helped a Huxley or a Hæckel to probe more fully the
-mystery of the generations of the humblest ant—let alone of man?
-Most certainly not. For life, and everything pertaining to it, belongs to
-the lawful domain of the <em>metaphysician</em> and psychologist, and physical
-science has no claim upon it. “That which hath been, is that which
-shall be; and that which hath been is named already—and it is known
-that it is MAN”—is the answer to the riddle of the Sphinx. But
-“man” here, does not refer to <em>physical</em> man—not in its esoteric meaning,
-at any rate. Scalpels and microscopes may solve the mystery of the
-material parts of <em>the shell of man</em>: they can never cut a window into
-his soul to open the smallest vista on any of the wider horizons of being.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is those thinkers alone, who, following the Delphic injunction, have
-cognized life in their <em>inner</em> selves, those who have studied it thoroughly
-in themselves, before attempting to trace and analyze its reflection in
-their outer shells, who are the only ones rewarded with some
-measure of success. Like the fire-philosophers of the Middle Ages, they
-have skipped over the <em>appearances</em> of light and fire in the world of effects,
-and centred their whole attention upon the producing arcane agencies.
-Thence, tracing these to the one abstract cause, they have attempted to
-fathom the <span class='sc'>Mystery</span>, each as far as his intellectual capacities permitted
-him. Thus they have ascertained that (1) the <em>seemingly</em> living mechanism
-called physical man, is but the fuel, the material, upon which life feeds,
-in order to manifest itself; and (2) that thereby the inner man receives
-as his wage and reward the possibility of accumulating additional experiences
-of the terrestrial illusions called lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One of such philosophers is now undeniably the great Russian novelist
-and reformer, Count Lef N. Tolstoi. How near his views are to the
-esoteric and philosophical teachings of higher Theosophy, will be found
-on the perusal of a few fragments from a lecture delivered by him at
-Moscow before the local Psychological Society.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Discussing the problem of life, the Count asks his audience to admit,
-for the sake of argument, <em>an impossibility</em>. Says the lecturer:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Let us grant for a moment that all that which modern science longs
-to learn of life, it has learnt, and now knows; that the problem has
-become as clear as day; that it is clear how organic matter has, by simple
-adaptation, come to be originated from inorganic material; that it is as
-clear how natural forces may be transformed into feelings, will, thought,
-and that finally, all this is known, not only to the city student, but to
-every village schoolboy, as well.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I am aware, then, that such and such thoughts and feelings originate
-from such and such motions. Well, and what then? Can I, or cannot
-I, produce and guide such motions, in order to excite within my brain
-corresponding thoughts? The question—what are the thoughts and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>feelings I ought to generate in myself and others, remains still, not only
-unsolved, but even untouched.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yet it is precisely this question which is the <em>one</em> fundamental question
-of the central idea of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='badquotes4'></a>Science has chosen as its object a few manifestations that accompany
-life; and <em>mistaking</em><a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c013'><sup>[50]</sup></a> the part for the whole, called these manifestations
-the integral total of life....”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The question inseparable from the idea of life is not <em>whence</em> life, but
-<em>how one should live</em> that life: and it is only by first starting with this
-question that one can hope to approach some solution in the problem of
-existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The answer to the query “How are we to live?” appears so simple to
-man that he esteems it hardly worth his while to touch upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>... One must live the best way one can—that’s all. This seems at
-first sight very simple and well known to all, but it is by far neither
-as simple nor as well known as one may imagine....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The idea of life appears to man in the beginning as a most simple
-and self-evident business. First of all, it seems to him that life is in
-himself, in his own body. No sooner, however, does one commence his search
-after that life, in any one given spot of the said body, than one
-meets with difficulties. Life is not in the hair, nor in the nails; neither is
-it in the foot nor the arm, which may both be amputated; it is not in the
-blood, it is not in the heart, and it is not in the brain. It is everywhere
-and it is nowhere. It comes to this: life cannot be found in any of its
-dwelling-places. Then man begins to look for life in Time; and that,
-too, appears at first a very easy matter.... Yet again, no sooner has he
-started on his chase than he perceives that here also the business is more
-complicated than he had thought. Now, I have <em>lived</em> fifty-eight years,
-so says my baptismal church record. But I know that out of these fifty-eight
-years I slept over twenty. How then? have I lived all these years,
-or have I not? Deduct the months of my gestation, and those I passed
-in the arms of my nurse, and shall we call this life, also? Again, out
-of the remaining thirty-eight years, I know that a good half of that time
-I slept while moving about; and thus, I could no more say in this case,
-whether I lived during that time or not. I may have lived a little, and
-vegetated a little. Here again, one finds that in time, as in the body, life is
-everywhere, yet nowhere. And now the question naturally arises, whence,
-then, that life which I can trace to nowhere? Now—will I learn....
-But it so happens that in this direction also, what seemed to me so easy at
-first, now seems impossible. I must have been searching for something
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>else, not for my life, <a id='corr206.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='assuredly,'>assuredly.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_206.1'><ins class='correction' title='assuredly,'>assuredly.</ins></a></span> Therefore, once we have to go in
-search of the whereabouts of life—if search we have to—then it should
-be neither in space nor in time, neither as cause nor effect, but as a something
-which I cognize within myself as quite independent from Space,
-time and causality.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>That which remains to do now is to study <em>self</em>. But how do I cognize
-life in myself?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is how I cognize it. I know, to begin with, that I live; and that
-I live wishing for myself everything that is good, wishing this since I can
-remember myself, to this day, and from morn till night. All that
-lives outside of myself is important in my eyes, but only in so far as it
-co-operates with the creation of that which is productive of <em>my</em> welfare.
-The Universe is important in my sight only because it can give <em><a id='corr206.13'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='me,'>me</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_206.13'><ins class='correction' title='me,'>me</ins></a></span></em>,
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Meanwhile, something else is bound up with this knowledge in me of
-my existence. Inseparable from the life I feel, is another cognition
-allied to it; namely, that besides myself, I am <a id='corr206.17'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='surrrounded'>surrounded</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_206.17'><ins class='correction' title='surrrounded'>surrounded</ins></a></span> with a whole
-world of living creatures, possessed, as I am myself, of the same instinctive
-realization of their exclusive lives; that all these creatures
-live for their own objects, which objects are foreign to me; that those
-creatures do not know, nor do they care to know, anything of my pretensions
-to an exclusive life, and that all these creatures, in order to
-achieve success in their objects, are ready to annihilate me at any moment.
-But this is not all. While watching the destruction of creatures similar
-in all to myself, I also know that for me too, for that precious <span class='fss'>ME</span> in
-whom alone life is represented, a very speedy and inevitable destruction
-is lying in wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is as if there were two “I’s” in man; it is as if they could never
-live in peace together; it is as if they were eternally struggling, and ever
-trying to expel each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One “I” says, “I alone am living as one should live, all the rest only
-seems to live. Therefore, the whole <i>raison d’être</i> for the universe is in
-that <em>I</em> may be made <a id='corr206.31'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='comfortable.'>comfortable.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_206.31'><ins class='correction' title='comfortable.'>comfortable.”</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The other “I” replies, “The universe is not for thee at all, but for its own
-aims and purposes, and it cares little to know whether thou art happy or
-unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Life becomes a dreadful thing after this!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One “I” says, “I only want the gratification of all my wants and desires,
-and that is why I need the universe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The other “I” replies, “All animal life lives only for the gratification of
-its wants and desires. It is the wants and desires of animals alone that
-are gratified at the expense and detriment of other animals; hence the
-ceaseless struggle between the animal species. Thou art an animal, and
-therefore thou hast to struggle. Yet, however successful in thy struggle,
-the rest of the struggling creatures must sooner or later crush thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>Still worse! life becomes still more dreadful....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the most terrible of all, that which includes in itself the whole of
-the foregoing, is that:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One “I” says, “I want to live, to live for ever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And that the other “I” replies, “Thou shalt surely, perhaps in a few
-minutes, die; as also shall die all those thou lovest, for thou and they
-are destroying with every motion your lives, and thus approaching ever
-nearer suffering, death, all that which thou so hatest, and which thou
-fearest above anything else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is the worst of all....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To change this condition is impossible.... One can avoid moving,
-sleeping, eating, even breathing, but one cannot escape from thinking.
-One thinks, and that thought, <em>my</em> thought, is poisoning every step in my
-life, as a personality.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No sooner has man commenced a conscious life than that consciousness
-repeats to him incessantly without respite, over and over the same
-thing again. “To live such life as you feel and see in your past, the life
-lived by animals and many men too, lived in <em>that</em> way, which made
-you become what you are now—is no longer possible. Were you to
-attempt doing so, you could never escape thereby the struggle with all
-the world of creatures which live as you do—for their personal objects;
-and then those creatures will inevitably destroy you.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To change this situation is impossible. There remains but one thing
-to do, and that is always done by him who, beginning to live, transfers
-his objects in life outside of himself, and aims to reach them.... But,
-however far he places them outside his personality, as his mind gets
-clearer, none of these objects will satisfy him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Bismarck, having united Germany, and now ruling Europe—if his
-reason has only thrown any light upon the results of his activity—must
-perceive, as much as his own cook does who prepares a dinner that will
-be devoured in an hour’s time, the same unsolved contradiction between
-the vanity and foolishness of all he has done, and the eternity and reasonableness
-of that which exists for ever. If they only think of it, each will
-see as clearly as the other; <em>firstly</em>, that the preservation of the integrity
-of Prince Bismarck’s dinner, as well as that of powerful Germany, is
-solely due: the preservation of the former—to the police, and the
-preservation of the latter—to the army; and that, so long only as both
-keep a good watch. Because there are famished people who would
-willingly eat the dinner, and nations which would fain be as powerful as
-Germany. Secondly, that neither Prince Bismarck’s dinner, nor the
-might of the German Empire, coincide with the aims and purposes
-of universal life, but that they are in flagrant contradiction with them.
-And thirdly, that as he who cooked the dinner, so also the might of
-Germany, will both very soon die, and that so shall perish, and as
-soon, both the dinner and Germany. That which shall survive alone is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>the Universe, which will never give one thought to either dinner or
-Germany, least of all to those who have cooked them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As the intellectual condition of man increases, he comes to the idea
-that no happiness connected with his personality is an achievement, but
-only a necessity. Personality is only that incipient state from which
-begins life, and the ultimate limit of life....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Where, then, does life begin, and where does it end, I may be asked?
-Where ends the night, and where does day commence? Where, on the
-shore, ends the domain of the sea, and where does the domain of land
-begin?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is day and there is night; there is land and there is sea; there
-is life and there is <em>no</em> life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Our life, ever since we became conscious of it, is a pendulum-like
-motion between two limits.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One limit is, an absolute unconcern for the life of the infinite Universe
-an energy directed only toward the gratification of one’s own
-personality.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The other limit is a complete renunciation of that personality, the
-greatest concern with the life of the infinite Universe, in full accord
-with it, the transfer of all our desires and good will from one’s self, to
-that infinite Universe and all the creatures outside of us.<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c013'><sup>[51]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The nearer to the first limit, the less life and bliss, the closer to the
-second, the more life and bliss. Therefore, man is ever moving from one
-end to the other; <i>i.e.</i> he lives. <span class='sc'>This motion is life itself.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And when I speak of life, know that the idea of it is indissolubly
-connected in my conceptions with that of <em>conscious</em> life. No other life is
-known to me except conscious life, nor can it be known to anyone
-else.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We call life, the life of animals, organic life. But this is no life at all,
-only a certain state or condition of life manifesting to us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But what is this consciousness or mind, the exigencies of which
-exclude personality and transfer the energy of man outside of him and
-into that state which is conceived by us as the blissful state of love?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What is conscious mind? Whatsoever we may be defining, we have to
-define it with our conscious mind. Therefore, with what shall we define
-mind?...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If we have to define all with our mind, it follows that conscious mind
-cannot be defined. Yet all of us, we not only know it, but it is the only
-thing which is given to us to know undeniably....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is the same law as the law of life, of everything organic, animal or
-vegetable, with that one difference that we <em>see</em> the consummation of an
-intelligent law in the life of a plant. But the law of conscious mind, to
-which we are subjected as the tree, is subjected to its law, we <em>see</em> it not,
-but fulfil it....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>We have settled that life is that which is not our life. It is herein that
-lies hidden the root of error. Instead of studying that life of which
-we are conscious within ourselves, absolutely and exclusively—since we
-can know of nothing else—in order to study it, we observe that which is
-devoid of the most important factor and faculty of our life, namely,
-intelligent consciousness. By so doing, we act as a man who attempts to
-study an object by its shadow or reflection does.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If we know that substantial particles are subjected during their
-transformations to the activity of the organism; we know it not because
-we have observed or studied it, but simply because we possess a certain
-familiar organism united to us, namely the organism of our animal,
-which is but too well known to us as the material of our life; <i>i.e.</i> that
-upon which we are called to work and to rule by subjecting it to the
-law of reason.... No sooner has man lost faith in life, no sooner has he
-transferred that life into that which is no life, than he becomes wretched,
-and sees death.... A man who conceives life such as he finds it in his
-consciousness, knows neither misery, nor death: for all the good in life
-for him is in the subjection of his animal to the law of reason, to do
-which is not only in his power, but takes place unavoidably in him. The
-death of particles in the animal being, we know. The death of animals
-and of man, as an animal, we know; but we know nought about the
-death of conscious mind, nor can we know anything of it, <em>just
-because that conscious mind is the very life itself</em>. And <em>Life can never be
-Death</em>....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The animal lives an existence of bliss, neither seeing nor knowing
-death, and dies without cognizing it. Why then should man have
-received the gift of seeing and knowing it, and why should death be so
-terrible to him that it actually tortures his soul, often forcing him to kill
-himself out of sheer fear of death? Why should it be so? Because the
-man who sees death is a sick man, one who has broken the law of his
-life, and lives no longer a conscious existence. He has become an animal
-himself, an animal which also has broken the law of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The life of man is an aspiration to bliss, and that which he aspires to
-is given to him. The light lit in the soul of man is bliss and life, and
-that light can never be darkness, as there exists—verily there exists for
-man—only this solitary light which burns within his <a id='corr209.36'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='soul.”'>soul.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_209.36'><ins class='correction' title='soul.”'>soul.</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>We have translated this rather lengthy fragment from the Report of
-Count Tolstoi’s superb lecture, because it reads like the echo of the
-finest teachings of the universal ethics of true theosophy. His definition
-of life in its abstract sense, and of the life every earnest theosophist
-ought to follow, each according to, and in the measure of, his <em>natural</em>
-capacities—is the summary and the Alpha and the Omega of practical
-psychic, if not spiritual life. There are sentences in the lecture which,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>to the average theosophist will seem too hazy, and perhaps incomplete.
-Not one will he find, however, which could be objected to by the
-most exacting, practical occultist. It may be called a treatise on the
-Alchemy of Soul. For that “solitary” light in man, which burns for
-ever, and can never be darkness in its intrinsic nature, though the
-“animal” outside us may remains blind to it—is that “Light” upon
-which the Neo Platonists of the Alexandrian school, and after them the
-Rosecroix and especially the Alchemists, have written volumes, though
-to the present day their true meaning is a dark mystery to most
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>True, Count Tolstoi is neither an Alexandrian nor a modern
-theosophist; still less is he a Rosecroix or an Alchemist. But that
-which the latter have concealed under the peculiar phraseology of the
-Fire-philosophers, purposely confusing cosmic transmutations with
-Spiritual Alchemy, all that is transferred by the great Russian thinker
-from the realm of the metaphysical unto the field of practical life. That
-which Schelling would define as a realisation of the identity of subject
-and object in the man’s inner Ego, that which unites and blends the
-latter with the universal Soul—which is but the identity of subject
-and object on a higher plane, or the unknown Deity—all that Count
-Tolstoi has blended together without quitting the terrestrial plane. He
-is one of those few <em>elect</em> who begin with intuition and end with <em>quasi</em>-omniscience.
-It is the transmutations of the baser metals—the <em>animal
-mass</em>—into gold and silver, or the philosopher’s stone, the development
-and manifestation of man’s higher, <span class='sc'>Self</span> which the Count has achieved.
-The <em>alcahest</em> of the inferior Alchemist is the <em>All-geist</em>, the all-pervading
-Divine Spirit of the higher Initiate; for Alchemy was, and is, as very
-few know to this day, as much a spiritual philosophy as it is a physical
-science. He who knows nought of one, will never know much of the
-other. Aristotle told it in so many words to his pupil, Alexander: “It
-is not a stone,” he said, of the philosopher’s stone. “<em>It is in every man
-and in every place</em>, and at all seasons, and is called the <em>end</em> of all
-philosophers,” as the <em>Vedanta</em> is <em>the end</em> of all philosophies.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To wind up this essay <em>on the Science of Life</em>, a few words may be
-said of the eternal riddle propounded to mortals by the Sphinx. To
-fail to solve the problem contained in it, was to be doomed to sure
-death, as the Sphinx of life devoured the unintuitional, who would live
-only in their “animal.” He who lives for Self, and only for <em>Self</em>, will
-surely die, as the higher “I” tells the lower “animal” in the Lecture.
-The riddle has seven keys to it, and the Count opens the mystery with
-one of the highest. For, as the author on “Hermetic Philosophy”
-beautifully expressed it: “The real mystery most familiar and, at the
-same time, most unfamiliar to every man, <em>into which he must be initiated
-or perish as an atheist, is himself</em>. For him is the elixir of life, to quaff
-which, before the discovery of the philosopher’s stone, is to drink the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>beverage of death, while it confers on the adept and the <em>epopt</em>, the true
-immortality. He may know truth as it really is—<em>Aletheia</em>, the breath
-of God, or Life, the conscious mind in man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is “the Alcahest which dissolves all things,” and Count Tolstoi
-has well understood the riddle.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>H. P. B.</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator4.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>SIN AGAINST LIFE.</h3>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>A newspaper paragraph lately declared that a certain American lady
-of great wealth, residing in London, had conceived the strange desire
-to possess a cloak made of the soft warm down on the breasts of birds of
-Paradise. Five hundred breasts, it was said, were required for this purpose, and
-two skilful marksmen, the story went on to aver, had been sent to New Guinea
-to shoot the poor little victims whose wholesale slaughter must be accomplished
-to gratify this savage whim. We rejoice to observe that the whole statement
-has been flatly contradicted by the <cite>World</cite>, apparently on the best possible
-authority; but, however little the lady concerned may deserve the reproach which
-the authors of the calumny endeavoured to evoke against her, the feeling it may
-have excited is worth analysis in a world where, if bird of Paradise cloaks are
-rare, most women who dress luxuriously adorn themselves in one way or another
-at the expense of the feathered kingdom. The principle involved in a bonnet
-which is decorated with the plumage of a single bird, slaughtered for its sake,
-is the same as that which would be more grotesquely manifest in a garment that
-would require the slaughter of five hundred. Too many rich people in this
-greedy age forget that the grandest privilege of those who possess the means is
-that they have the power of alleviating suffering. Too many, again, forget that
-the sympathies of those who rule the animate world should extend beyond the
-limits of their own kind; and thus we have the painful spectacle of human
-“sport” associated in civilised countries still, with pursuits which should no
-longer afford pleasure to men who have emerged from the primitive life of
-hunters and fishers. But how is it possible, let us consider, to stoop lowest
-from the proud estate of humanity in search of ignoble gratification? It is
-bad to kill any sentient creature for the sake of the savage pleasures of the chase.
-It is bad, perhaps worse, to cause their destruction for the sake of coldly profiting
-by their slaughter, and it is bad to squander money in this hard world of
-want and wide-spread privation on costly personal indulgence. But the acme
-of all that is reprehensible in these various departments of ill-doing is surely
-reached when women—who should, by virtue of their sex, be helping to soften
-the ferocities of life—contrive to collect the cream of evil from each of these
-varieties, and to sin against a whole catalogue of human duties by cruel
-acquiescence in an unworthy fashion.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>BROTHERHOOD.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The Theosophical Society has always placed in the forefront of its
-programme, as its first and most important object, the formation
-of the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood, without distinction of
-race, creed, caste or sex. It would doubtless be incorrect to say that
-this object of the Society has been entirely overlooked in the West,
-but it is to be feared that not a few members of the Society have
-accepted it as an amiable formula, to which no objection could be raised,
-and have turned their attention almost exclusively to the two remaining
-objects. And yet, without some attempt to understand the true meaning
-of this Universal Brotherhood, it is idle to expect that any great
-services can be rendered to the cause of Theosophy. It may be useful
-to see whether any explanation can be given of the reason for the
-neglect of this first object, and whether such light may be thrown on its
-meaning, as may render the idea a living reality to many who now but
-faintly grasp its significance.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the first place it may be said, that in many enlightened Western
-minds, there was already a familiarity with the idea thus enunciated.
-Christianity has always taught the “theoretical” equality in the sight of
-God, of all true believers, and politically the dogma of “equal rights” is
-practically beyond the reach of attack. The abolition of slavery, the
-extension of representative government, the spread of education, and
-perhaps also, in some degree, the influence of the scientific as opposed to
-the religious theories of the origin and destiny of man, have all combined
-to render this idea by no means difficult of apprehension, at least
-intellectually. Further its acceptance in this sense has not necessarily
-entailed any different view of the duties and responsibilities of life. In
-the East it cannot be said that this is the case. In India, the stringency
-of caste regulations causes class distinctions to assume a very definite
-form, while religious hatreds, if not more bitter than with us, enter more
-directly into the life of the people, and interpose stronger barriers
-between man and man than in Europe or America. Hence an Indian
-theosophist must, before he can accept the first object, even in its outward
-form, modify to some extent his intellectual conception of the
-relations in which he stands to the rest of mankind, and he will in his
-life give practical proof of the change. In his case the acceptance of the
-outward form can only follow on the appreciation of the inner meaning;
-that which results is that his theosophy is firmly founded on the
-principle of the Universal Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On the other hand, in the West, a familiarity with the external side
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>seems, in many cases, to have prevented any attempt to go below the
-surface, and to have caused men to be satisfied with vague philanthropic
-sentimentality, effecting nothing, and leading nowhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What then is this Universal Brotherhood, which is the main spring of
-Theosophy? and what are its results?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>Socialism</em> as preached in this 19th century it certainly is not. Indeed,
-there would be little difficulty in shewing that modern materialistic
-Socialism is directly at variance with all the teachings of theosophy.
-Socialism advocates a direct interference with the results of the law of
-<em>Karma</em>, and would attempt to alter the dénouement of the parable of the
-talents, by giving to the man who hid his talent in a napkin, a portion of
-the ten talents acquired by the labour of his more industrious fellow.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Neither is it true that in practical benevolence is the whole idea of
-universal brotherhood exemplified, though doubtless that unselfish and
-unceasing work for the good of mankind, which is true philanthropy
-must of necessity be one result of it. The philanthropist may be, and no
-doubt often is, a true theosophist in all but name, though there is still much
-of what may be called unintelligent benevolence, the result of a mere
-emotional impulse; and again there is much that is the result of very decided
-and very narrow sectarian views, to which it would be absolutely
-impossible to apply the epithet universal. The devotion and self-sacrifice
-shown in many individual instances by Christian missionaries of various
-denominations, may be taken as fairly exemplifying philanthropy both
-of the unintelligent and the narrow type. They are prepared to make
-any sacrifice for what they believe to be the ultimate good of humanity,
-and in that sense are practising what some others only preach, namely
-true unselfishness, but they are often hampered by an intellectual inability
-to view both sides of the question, and fail thereby to acquire that understanding
-of, and sympathy with the difficulties and the wants of those
-whom they are endeavouring to aid, which are necessary preliminaries to
-any work of lasting usefulness. In a word, they too often fail to realise
-that unity in mankind which truly underlies all individualism. But
-having said so much, it must be added that an understanding of the real
-meaning of “Brotherhood” must entail active benevolence, that is to say
-work for others in some form or other, upon every one who does not
-wilfully thrust aside the obligation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Where then are we to look for the explanation, and how are we to
-understand the spirit which must animate all true theosophists, if they
-are to realise and follow out the first rule of the Society? Not surely
-on the physical plane. Not by an attempt to force on the intellect as a
-fact to be accepted, or more truly a pill to be swallowed, a belief in
-similarities, equalities or identities, which have no existence. Only a
-realisation of what truly constitutes man can help us to form a conception
-of what brotherhood means.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Man is a complex organism as he exists on our earth to-day. He is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>partly transitory, partly eternal; in one sense the creature of circumstances,
-in another the creator of his own environment. But the true
-man, the underlying individuality is a reflection of the Divine. We are
-able to discern physical beauty, even when clad in rags. Is it impossible
-that we should also recognise the beauty of the soul, though it be for a
-time veiled beneath a gross material body? The physical body is indeed
-nothing but the garment of the ego, the true man; that momentarily
-suited to his needs and his deserts, the livery of his servitude, which
-must be worn, in ever changing forms, till the moment of his final
-emancipation. It is then beyond the physical, beyond the intellectual
-man, that we must look for that fraternity, arising out of unity and
-equality, which cannot be found on the purely material plane of existence.
-The divine soul of man, in which is posited his true individuality,
-is the real man, the immortal ego, which, through the accumulated experience
-of many earth lives is marching onward through the ages to
-its goal, reunion with the Infinite. What matters then the outward
-semblance, which our senses know as man? Our æsthetic perception
-may shrink from the rags, the dirt, the ugliness which belong to the
-physical environment. Our moral nature may revolt at association
-with vice, with low selfish courses of life, but within and behind all this
-we must endeavour to realise the continual presence of the immortal ego,
-one with us, as with all humanity, as sharing the divine nature, and ever
-struggling, as we are struggling, on the upward path that leads to the
-realisation of the Absolute. As Carlyle says in Sartor Resartus. “Mystical,
-more than magical, is that communing of Soul with Soul, both
-looking heavenward; here properly Soul first speaks with Soul; for only
-in looking heavenward, take it in what sense you may, not in looking
-earthward does what we can call Union, Mutual Love, Society, begin to be
-possible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It may be objected that in some cases it is impossible to recognise
-even the glimmerings of those higher aspirations, which are the tokens
-of the presence of the soul, the immortal ego. Such cases, however,
-must be comparatively rare. Still there are beings—it is almost impossible
-to call them human—who have so persistently concentrated all
-their efforts on the gratification of their lower consciousness, as to sever
-the frail link which binds them to their higher selves. Then the true
-man is no longer present in the human form, and brotherhood becomes
-an impossibility. But we may in truth almost ignore the existence of
-this type of mankind, for even when an intellectual materialism seems to
-be the sole ruling principle, we dare not deny the presence of that
-capacity for higher things which must exist in all who can still truly be
-called men.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Surely then it is in this view of our relations to our fellow men, that
-we shall find that guiding influence which may enable us to rise above
-the sordid considerations of our ordinary earthly existence. It is no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>sectarian belief that is here advanced; it is the essence of the teaching
-of Jesus, as it was of Gautama; nor is it a mere formula, to be accepted
-as an article of faith, and then laid on the shelf. Once understood, it
-must influence all who have sufficient strength of purpose to fight their
-own lower selfish personalities, and must lead them to the practical
-realisation of their aspirations towards true unselfishness and active
-benevolence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But there lurks a danger even in the use of the word unselfishness. It
-has been the text of sermons from every pulpit in Christendom for
-centuries, and with what small results? No doubt the duty nearest at
-hand must not be neglected, and it is the duty of every one to do what
-he can to render those about him happier. But many stop there and
-consider that all their work consists in the practice of self-abnegation in
-their own small circle. Does not the broader view of human life here
-set forth suggest a new sphere of usefulness, and therefore of duty? It
-is for every man to determine what he can do for the good of humanity;
-all are not equally gifted, but all can do something. Some theosophists
-appear to be satisfied with intellectual study, or the development of their
-own spiritual nature, and neither of these two courses is to be neglected;
-but something more must be done. “It is more blessed to give than to
-receive,” and the acquirement of knowledge brings with it the obligation
-of spreading it. This is work from which none need shrink, and all who
-truly desire to work for Theosophy, which is in the highest sense “the
-religion of humanity,” will find the work ready to their hand, and be
-able to assist in bringing the Light “to them that sit in darkness.”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>T. B. H.</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator3.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>PYTHAGORIC SENTENCES OF DEMOPHILUS.</h3>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>Esteem that to be eminently good, which, when communicated to another, will
-be increased to yourself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Be persuaded that those things are not your riches which you do not possess
-in the penetralia of the reasoning power.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As many passions of the soul, so many fierce and savage despots.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No one is free who has not obtained the empire of himself.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>BLOOD-COVENANTING.<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c013'><sup>[52]</sup></a></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>Particular attention has been recently directed to this subject
-of <em>Blood-Covenant</em> by the experiences of explorers in Africa,
-who appear to have discovered in that Dark Land some of the
-primitive facts the gory ghost of which has long haunted our European
-mind in the Eschatological phase.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Stanley, an especial sufferer from the practice, denounces the blood-brotherhood
-as a <em>beastly cannibalistic ceremony</em>. “For the fiftieth time
-my poor arm was scarified and my blood shed for the cause of
-civilization.” As the writer of this book observes: “The blood of a
-fair proportion of all the first families of equatorial Africa now courses
-in Stanley’s veins; and if ever there was an American citizen who could
-pre-eminently appropriate to himself the national motto ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>E pluribus
-unum</i></span>,’ Stanley is the man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In his book, Dr. Trumbull has collected a mass of data from a wide
-range of sources to illustrate what he terms the “<em>Primitive rite of
-covenanting by the inter-transfusion of blood</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dr. Trumbull is anxious to make the efficacy of the rite depend
-upon the recognition of a vivifying virtue in the blood itself, as the
-essence of life. But such recognition appears to have been remote
-enough from the Primitive thought. The Aborigines were not Jews or
-Christians. They gave of their life without always thinking of the
-exact equivalent or superior value received. They gave it as the witness
-to the troth they plighted and the covenant which they intended to
-keep. His theory of interpretation is that there was a dominating and
-universal conviction that the “blood is the life; that blood-transfer is
-soul-transfer, and that blood-sharing, human or <em>divine</em>-human, secures an
-inter-union of natures; and that a union of the human nature with the
-divine is the highest ultimate attainment reached out after by the most
-primitive, as well as the most enlightened, mind of humanity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His collection of facts may serve a most useful purpose as eye-openers
-to other people (and for other facts to follow), just as they appear to have
-been to himself. The book is interesting, if not profound; and nothing
-that follows in this article is intended to decry it, or to prevent the
-readers of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> from looking into it if they do not feel too great a
-“scunner” at sight of the gilded-gory illustration on the cover. But the
-work is written by one who talks to us out of a window of Noah’s Ark,
-and who still seems to think the Hebrew Bible is the rim of the universe.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>We value and recommend the book solely for its facts, not for its
-theories, nor for its bibliolatry.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In all studies of this kind which make use of the word “Primitive,”
-it is the fundamental facts that we first need; and next a first-hand
-acquaintanceship with all the facts, so that we may do our own thinking for
-ourselves and strike our light within by which we can read the facts
-without, as the primary and essential procedure in the endeavour to
-attain the truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Also the facts may be genuine and honestly presented, yet the interpretation
-may be according to an inadequate or a “bogus” theory.
-The truth is that no bibliolator can be trusted to interpret the past of
-our race now being unveiled by evolution. He is born and begotten
-with the blinkers on. His mode of interpretation is to get behind us, to
-lay the hands upon our eyes in front, and ask us to listen whilst he gives
-us his views of the past! But the non-evolutionist cannot interpret
-the past from lack of a true standpoint with regard to the beginnings or
-rather the processes of becoming. He can begin anywhere and at any
-time short of the starting-point. There is nothing for it but to break
-away, and turn round to see for ourselves whether the traditionary
-vision of the Blinkerists be true or false. The facts alone are the final
-determinatives of the Truth. But we must have the whole of them
-and not a few, whether judiciously or Jesuitically selected to
-support a Christian theory. Whereas, the object and aim of this <a id='corr217.23'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='work'>work,</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_217.23'><ins class='correction' title='work'>work,</ins></a></span>
-the bias of the writer, and the trend of his arguments, are all on the
-line of showing or suggesting that the blood-covenant was the result of
-some innate instinct or divine revelation which prefigured and foreshadowed,
-and may be taken to indicate and authorize, the Christian
-scheme of atonement, and the remission of sin by the shedding of innocent
-blood. The writer asserts that this primitive symbolism was
-“<em>made a reality in Jesus Christ</em>” in whom “<em>God was to give of his blood
-in the blood of his Son for the revivifying of the sons of Abraham in the
-Blood of the Eternal Covenant</em>.” But it can be demonstrated that the
-covenant by blood did not commence where Dr. Trumbull begins—with
-a religious yearning God-ward for the establishing of a brotherhood
-between the human nature and the Divine. The root-idea was not that
-of an “inter-union of the spiritual natures by the inter-commingling of
-blood for the sake of an inter-communion with deity.” That, at least,
-was by no means the “<em>primitive</em> rite,” which the blood-covenant is here
-called. The many forms of the blood-covenant can only be unified at
-the root, <i>i.e.</i>, in the beginning, not at the end. They are not to be
-understood apart from the primitive language of signs, as in Tattoo, the
-very primitive biology of the early observers, and the most primitive
-sociology of the Totemic times.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Time was, and may be still, when the blood-covenant would often
-serve as the one protection against being killed and eaten. Even the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>cannibals will not partake of their own Totemic brothers. Also the
-covenant was extended to certain animals which were made of kin and
-held to be sacred as brothers of the blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Blood-covenant takes many forms besides that of the blood-brotherhood,
-which are not to be explained by this writer’s theory of exchange.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When the blood of an African woman accidentally spurted into the
-eye of Dr. Livingstone, she claimed him for her blood relation, without
-there being any exchange of blood for blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dr. Trumbull claims the Egyptians as witnesses to the truth of his
-interpretation. But so far from their highest conception of “a union
-with the Divine nature” being an inter-flowing and interfusion of blood,
-the soul of blood was the very lowest, that is the first, in a series of seven
-souls!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Their highest type of the soul was the sun that vivified for ever
-called Atmu, the Father Soul.<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c013'><sup>[53]</sup></a> The bases of natural fact which lie
-at the foundation of the Blood-covenant, preceded any and all such
-ideas as those postulated by the writer as being extant from the first,
-such as “a longing for oneness of life with God;” an “out-reaching
-after inter-union and inter-communion with God.” There was no conception
-of a one God extant in the category of human consciousness
-when the rites of a blood-covenant were first founded. There could
-be no atonement where there was no sense of sin or a breaking of the
-law. All through, the writer is apt to confuse the past with the
-present, and eager to read the present into the past.<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c013'><sup>[54]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The real roots of matters like these are to be found only in certain
-facts of nature which were self-revealing, and not in the sphere of concepts
-and causation! And it is only when we can reach the natural genesis
-of primitive customs and fetishtic beliefs, and trace their lines of descent,
-that we can understand and interpret their meaning in the latest symbolical
-and superstitious phase of religious rites. Nothing can be more
-fatally false than to interpret the physics of the past by means of modern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>metaphysic, with the view of proving that certain extant doctrines of
-delusion are the lineal descendants of an original Divine revelation,
-which has been bound up in two Testaments for the favoured few.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The blood-covenant is undoubtedly a primitive rite; but the author
-of this work does not penetrate to its most primitive or significant
-phases. These are not to be read by the light of Hebrew revelation,
-but by the light of nature if at all. Many primitive customs and rites
-survived amongst the Semites, but they themselves were not amongst
-the aboriginal races of the world. We have to get far beyond their
-stage to understand the meaning of the myths, legends, rites, and
-customs, that were preserved by them as sacred survivals from the
-remoter past. The symbolical and superstitious phases of custom
-cannot be directly explained on the spot where we may first meet with
-them in going back. In becoming symbolical they had already passed
-out of their primary phase, and only indirectly represent the natural
-genesis of the truly primitive rite. I have spent the best part of my
-life in tracking these rites and customs to their natural origin, and in
-expounding the typology and symbols by which the earliest meaning
-was expressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What then was the root-origin of a blood-covenant? The primary
-perceptions of primitive or archaic men included the observation that
-they came from the mother, and first found themselves at her breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Next they saw that the child was fleshed by the mother, and formed
-from her blood, the flow of which was arrested to be solidified, and take
-form in their own persons. Thus the red amulet which was worn by
-the Egyptian dead, was representative of the blood of Isis, who came
-from herself, and made her own child without the fatherhood, when men
-could only derive their blood and descent from the mother. This
-amulet was put on by her, says Plutarch, when she found herself <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>enceinte</i></span>
-with Horus, her child, who was derived from the mother alone, or was
-traced solely to the blood of Isis. Primitive men could perceive that
-the children of one mother were of the same blood. This, the first form
-of a blood-brotherhood, was the first to be recognised as the natural fact.
-Uterine brothers were blood-brothers. The next stage of the brotherhood
-was Totemic; and the mode of extending the brotherhood to the
-children of several mothers implies, as it necessitated, some form of
-symbolic rite which represented them as brothers, or as typically becoming
-of the one blood. Here we can track the very first step in
-sociology which was made when the typical blood-brotherhood of the
-Totem was formed in imitation of the natural brotherhood of the
-mother-blood. The modes and forms of the Covenant can be identified
-by the Totemic mysteries, some of which yet survive in the crudest
-condition. The brotherhood was entered at the time of puberty; that
-is, at the time of re-birth, when the boy was re-born as a man, and the
-child of the mother attained the soul of the fatherhood, and was permitted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>to join the ranks of the begetters. The mystery is one with that
-of Horus, child of the mother alone, who comes to receive the soul of
-the father in <em>Tattu</em>, the region of establishing the son as the father,
-which is still extant in the mysteries, and the symbolism of <em>Tattoo</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This re-birth was enacted in various ways by typically re-entering the
-womb. One of these was by burial in the earth, the tomb or place of
-re-birth being the image of the maternal birth-place all the world over.
-Thus when the Norsemen or other races prepared a hole under the
-turf, and buried their cut and bleeding arms to let the blood flow, and
-commingle in one as the token of a covenant, they were returning
-typically to the condition of uterine twins, and the act of burial for the
-purpose of a re-birth was a symbolical mode of establishing the social
-brotherhood upon the original grounds of the natural brotherhood of
-blood. Thus the blood-covenant did not originate in the set transfusion
-or inter-fusion of blood. In the Totemic mysteries the pubescent lad
-was admitted by the shedding of his blood, with or without any interchange.
-The blood itself was the symbol of brotherhood, and the
-shedding of it was the seal of a covenant.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nor was this merely because flesh was formed of blood, or the first
-men were made of the mystical red soil, as with the <em>aarea</em> of the
-Tahitians, or the red earth of the Adamic man. Most of these primitive
-rites, the Blood-Covenant included, had their starting-point from the
-period of puberty. It was at this time the lads who were not brothers
-uterine were made brothers of the Totem at what was termed the
-festival of young-man-making. The proper period for circumcision, or
-cutting and sealing, as still practised by the oldest aborigines, is the
-time of puberty, the natural coming of age. It is then they enter the
-Totemic Brotherhood. Now in Egyptian, the word <em>khet</em> or <em>khut</em> =
-cut, means to cut and to seal. <em>Khetem</em> is to enclose, bind, seal, and is
-applied to sealing. The same root passes into Assyrian and Hebrew as
-<em>Khatan</em>, <em>Katam</em> or <em>Chatan</em>, with the same meaning. In Arabic,
-<em>Khatana</em> is to circumcise. Cutting and sealing are identical as the
-mode of entering into a Blood-Covenant. Circumcision was <em>one</em> form of
-the sealing, but there were various kinds of cuts employed, and
-different parts of the body were scarified and tattooed. In the primary
-phase, then, the blood-brotherhood was established by the shedding of
-blood; the register was written in blood, and instead of the covenant
-being witnessed by the seal of red wax, it was stamped in blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The reason for phallic localization is to be sought in the fact that the
-young men not only entered the Brotherhood by the baptism of blood,
-they were also received into the higher ranks of the fathers, and sworn
-in to live an orderly, legal and cleanly life, henceforth, as the pro-creators
-and loyal preservers of the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But this was not the only clue directly derived from nature. There is
-another reason why blood should have become the sacred sign of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>covenant. Amongst many primitive races blood, or the colour red, is
-the symbol of <em>Tapu</em>, the sign of sanctity. The bones of the dead were
-covered with red ochre as a means of protection by the most widely
-scattered races in the world. The stamp of a red hand on the
-building, or a crimson daub upon the gravestone will render them sacred.
-The Kaffirs will wash their bodies with blood as a protection against
-being wounded in battle. The colour of robin-redbreast still renders him
-<em>tapu</em> or sacred to English children.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Blood having become a sign of that which is true and sacred, on
-account of the Covenant, it is then made the symbol of all that is sacred.
-It can be used for the purpose of anointing the living or the dead, can
-be the seal of the marriage or other ceremonies and rites of covenanting.
-It is the primæval token of <em>tapu</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As I have elsewhere shown, blood was sworn by as the type of that
-which was true, the primary one of the typical Two Truths of Egypt.
-It was so in all the mysteries, and is so to-day, including the mysteries
-of Masonry. I have suggested the derivation of the masonic name from
-the Egyptian <em>Sen</em> = son, for blood and brotherhood. The working Mason
-in Egyptian is the <em>makh</em> (<em>makht</em>) by name. <em>Makh</em> means to work, inlay
-by rule and measure. We see that <em>makh</em> modifies into <em>mâ</em> for measure,
-and for that which is just and true.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>Mâ-sen</em> = Mason, would denote the true brotherhood; and as <em>sen</em> is
-also blood, the true brotherhood as the blood-brotherhood would be the
-masons in the mystical or occult sense. Red is the colour of <em>Mâ</em> or
-Truth personified, and <em>sen</em> is blood. Blood is sworn by because it is the
-colour of truth, or the true colour. Now in old English the word <em>seng</em>
-means both “blood” and “true.” Here, then, we find the origin of the
-oath, which constitutes the supreme expression in the vocabulary of our
-English roughs, when they use the oath of the blood-covenant, and
-swear by the word “bloody!” When they wax emphatic, everything
-they say becomes “bloody true.” This is the exact equivalent of
-“seng it is” for “it is true.” According to the primitive mysteries, this
-mode of swearing, or establishing the covenant, was sacred whilst kept
-piously secret, and it becomes impious when made public or profane.
-Such mysteries were very simply natural at first, and it was this primitive
-simplicity and nearness to nature which demanded the veil to
-protect them from the gaze of the later consciousness. Time was when
-the English felon would carry a red handkerchief with him to the
-scaffold, and hold it in his hand as a signal that he had betrayed no
-secrets, but died “bloody true,” or true blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These customs were symbolical, but there is a hint of the blood-covenant
-beyond them—a hint received direct from Nature herself—call
-it revelation if you please. In the first rude ethics we find that the
-time for the sexes to come together was recognised by the intimation of
-nature, made in her own sign-language at the period of feminine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>pubescence. Nature gave the hint, and a covenant was established.
-Henceforth, the child that could not enter that covenant would be
-protected from brutal assault, and was allowed, or rather compelled, to
-run about unclothed in token of her exemption. It is here in the
-swearing-in and covenanting of the sexes at the time of pubescence
-that we discover another real and most secret, <i>i.e.</i>, sacred root of the rite.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The self-revelation made by nature to primitive man was very
-primitive in its kind. She not only demonstrated that the blood was
-the life, or that the life passed away with the letting out of the blood,
-but in another domain, which our author has not entered, she showed
-that blood was, and how it was, the future life. Blood was the
-primary witness to the future life which the child received from the
-mother. It was the token of the time when the female could become
-the bearer of that future life which took flesh and form in her blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The blood-covenanting of the primitive races is still a part of the
-most elaborate system of making presents, which are the express
-witnesses of proffered troth and intended fealty. The most precious or
-sacred things are parted from in proof. The best is given on either
-side. And in the offering of blood, they were giving their
-very life, that in which the best attains supremacy. But these
-primitive rites can never be truly read except by those who are
-deeply grounded in the fact, and well acquainted with the evidence,
-that sign-language was primordial, that gestures preceded verbal speech,
-and acting was an earlier mode of representing than talking. Primitive
-men could only <em>do</em> that which we can <em>say</em>. In Egyptian that which is
-<em>said</em> is <em>done</em>. And in these primitive customs and religious rites we see
-the early races of men performing in pantomime the early drama of
-dumb or inarticulate humanity. And it seems as if this primitive
-language could produce an impression and reach a reality that are
-unapproachable by means of words. The significance of the teaching
-went all the deeper when it was incised in the flesh and branded into
-the blood. For example, what a terrific glimpse of reality is revealed by
-the fact that the Malagasy make their sign of a blood-covenant by an
-incision in the skin that covers the bosom, and this opening with its
-utterance of blood is called <em>ambavfo</em>, the “mouth of the heart.” Thus
-the covenant is made in the blood, which is the very life, uttering itself
-with the mouth of the heart. In Egyptian the covenant, the oath, and
-the life, have the same name of <em>Ankhu</em>; and the greatest oath was to
-swear by the life or the blood of the Pharaoh. The primitive mode was
-to slash the flesh and let the hot blood spout and speak for itself with
-the “mouth of the heart,” the utterance of the living letter and red seal
-of the wound, as true witness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No verbal covenant or written record of the modern races has ever
-had the full force and effect of these modes of covenanting amongst
-the primitive people of the past. The moderns do not keep their word
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>with anything like the inviolable sanctity of the aborigines; when once
-they are sworn to fealty, the covenant is almost never broken. Few
-things in poetry are more pathetic than the story related of Tolo, a
-chief of the Shastika Indians on the Pacific Coast. In the year 1852
-he entered into a tribal treaty with Colonel McKee and was desirous of
-making a covenant for life in some way that could not possibly be
-violated. Instead of exchanging blood he proposed a transfer of their
-own two personal names. Henceforth he was to be known as McKee,
-and the Colonel as Tolo. But the treaty was discarded, the covenant
-was not kept by the American Government. In reply, the Indian cast
-off the title of McKee and refused to resume his own tarnished and
-degraded name of Tolo! He considered that his very identity was lost
-by this mode of losing his good name! I doubt whether 1,800 years of
-Christianity have evolved in the later races of men a consciousness of
-truth, probity, and loyalty, so quick and profound as that!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The writer of this book remains stone-blind to its own teachings with
-regard to the doctrine of survivals, and of the past persisting as a pattern
-for the present.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To quote his own words, he rejoices in the “<em>blessed benefits of the
-covenant of blood</em>,” and is still a fervent supporter of the great delusion
-inculcated by the gospel of ruddy gore.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The doctrine is fundamentally the same whether the Greek murderer
-was cleansed from his guilt by the filthy purification of pig’s blood or the
-modern sinner is supposed to be washed white in the Blood of the
-Lamb.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As I had already written in my “Natural Genesis,” “the religious
-ritual of the moderns is crowded like a kitchen-midden with the refuse
-relics of customs that were natural once, and are now clung to as if they
-were supernatural in their efficacy because their origin has been unknown.
-Indeed, the current masquerade in these appurtenances of the
-past is as sorry a sight to the archaic student as are the straw crowns
-and faded finery of the kings and queens whose domain is limited to the
-lunatic asylum.” Dr. Trumbull endorses the doctrine that “<em>Mortals
-gave the blood of their first-born sons in sacrifice to the Supreme Being,
-then the Supreme Being gave the blood of his first-born male in sacrifice</em>”
-for men; and there you have the covenant of blood in its final form!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is true that first-born children were offered in sacrifice just as the
-first take of fish was returned to the waters with a lively sense of future
-favours from the Typhonian power thus propitiated, but where is the
-sense of talking about the thought of an intercommunion with the
-divine nature through a blood-union with God as a concept in the mind
-of primitive man? It is true the recognized nature-powers, or devils of
-physical force, were invoked with blood, but what was the status of these
-powers when the beasts of blood were their representatives on earth, and
-the blood, which is the life, was given to the Serpent, for instance, as the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>likeness of life itself because it sloughed its own skin and manifested
-the enviable power of self-renewal? The profounder and more fundamental
-our researches, the more clearly does it become apparent that we
-have been victimised by the unsuspected survival of the past in the
-present, and that the veriest leavings of primitive man have been palmed
-off upon us by the ignorant as sacred mysteries and revelations guaranteed
-to be original and divine. Continually we find that our errors of belief are
-based upon very simple truths that have been misunderstood through a
-misinterpretation of primitive matters and modes of representation by
-means of modern ignorance. The blood-covenant of the aboriginal races
-has undoubtedly survived and culminated as Christian in the frightful
-formula, “Without blood there is no remission of sin.” Not merely the
-blood of beasts or human creatures this time, but the ruddy life and
-ichor of a supposed Divine Being, who was made flesh on purpose to
-pour out the blood for Almighty vengeance to lap in the person of a
-gory ghost of God. One of the seven primal powers in Egypt was
-represented by the hawk, because it drank blood. One of the Seven in
-Akkad was the vampire. And this type of blood-drinking has been
-divinised at last as the Christian God.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Pindar says: “It is impossible for me to call one of the blessed gods
-a cannibal.” But the Christian scheme makes the Only God a cannibal,
-who offers the flesh and blood of his own Son and Very Self as
-sacrificial food made sacred for his followers. Such a god is, in two
-senses, <em>chimerical</em>. How natural an accompaniment is the picture of
-the Crucified Christ to the Zuni saying, “My Father, this day shalt thou
-refresh thyself with blood!” Such a doctrine is but an awful shadow of the
-primitive past—the shadow, so to say, of our old earth in the very far-off
-past—that remains to eclipse the light of Heaven to-day, and
-darken the souls of men in the present through the survival of savage
-spiritualism in its final Christian phase, where the extant doctrines are
-little more than an ignorant perversion of the most primitive knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is in this final and not in the primitive phase that we shall identify
-the <a id='corr224.33'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='irrationalty'>irrationality</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_224.33'><ins class='correction' title='irrationalty'>irrationality</ins></a></span>, the impiety, the disgusting grossness of Mythology
-under the surface of theological varnish and veneer. The only senselessness
-is in the survival of Myths without their sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Lastly, it is observable that in the genuine rite the covenant-makers
-always bled <em>directly</em> and suffered each for themselves. Later on we find
-that other victims were substituted by purchase, by fraud, or by force;
-hence the blood-covenant by proxy. Now the Christian scheme is that
-which culminated in the blood-covenant and atonement by proxy.
-“<em>His offspring for his life he gave</em>,” is said of an Akkadian ruler who
-sacrificed his own son as an expiatory offering to save himself from the
-consequences of his own sin. And this doctrine of the despicable, this
-type of the fatherhood, is elevated to the status of divinity by Dr.
-Trumbull. To quote his own words, the inspired author of the narrative
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>found in the Hebrew Genesis shows “Abel lovingly and trustfully
-reaching out toward God with <em>substitute</em> blood!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And there began for the Historic Christians that vast perversion of a
-primitive custom which culminated at last in the Christian doctrine of
-vicarious sacrifice, based upon the mythology of the Old Testament
-being literalized in the New. Now we have the ludicrous spectacle of
-salvation by means of a rite which has lost all the manhood, all the
-morality, all the meaning, that was put into it by the despised races of
-uncivilized men.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The eucharistic rite is incredibly primitive when really understood.
-The bread and wine of the Christian sacrament still represent the male
-spirit and the female source of life. The “Blood of Jesus,” which was
-to be “drink indeed,” is identical with the “Blood of Bacchus,” which
-preceded historic Christianity, and has been substituted for the human
-or animal blood of the earlier mysteries. Imbibing the blood of the
-Christ did not originate in any historic or personal transaction. Also
-the blood of Christ, or Mithras, or Horus, employed in drinking the
-covenant, was preceded by the blood of Charis. In some of the
-Gnostic mysteries we have the proof that the first form of the saving
-blood was feminine, not masculine at all. Irenæus presents us with a
-picture of profound interest from the anthropological point of view.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He tells us how Marcus performed the eucharistic rite with the blood
-of Charis, instead of the blood of Christ. He handed cups to the women
-and bade them consecrate these in his presence. Then, by the use of
-magical incantation, “Charis was thought to drop her own blood into the
-cup” thus consecrated. (B. I. 13, 2.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is but one known fact in natural phenomena which will fitly
-account as <em>Vera Causa</em> for a monthly Sacrament, celebrated every
-twenty-eight days, or thirteen times to the year; which fact was commemorated
-by the Blood-Covenant of Charis ( <i>Vide</i> “Nat. Gen.” V. ii.
-section 12, for proofs). This kind of blood-covenant can be paralleled in
-the Yain or Yonian mysteries of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When rightly understood, the eucharist is a survival of the “beastly
-cannibalistic ceremony,” whether considered as the blood of Charis or
-the blood of Christ, or partaken of as the red Tent wine or the “bloody
-wafer” of Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We welcome Dr. Trumbull’s contribution on the subject, although he
-has but “breathed a vein” of it, because these rites and customs have to
-be unveiled, and when they are at last exposed in all the simplicity of
-naked nature the erroneous ideas read into them, the delusive inferences
-drawn from them, the false illusions painted upon the veil
-that concealed the truth about them, will be doomed to pass away.
-To explain the true is the only effectual mode of exploding the
-false.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Gerald Massey.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Correspondence.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CORRESPONDENCE ADDRESSED TO THE AUTHOR OF “LIGHT ON THE PATH.”</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>I.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What are the senses called astral, in reality? Are they not really
-spiritual, seizing on the inner essence of things and interpreting it.
-The ordinary psychic or clairvoyant surely does not use the astral
-senses? Yet he sees things which we do not see. It would be well to explain
-this.”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>B. K.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> The senses called astral in the comments on “Light on the Path” are the
-senses which perceive the inner essence, certainly; which are cognisant of the
-life underlying every form of matter. The ordinary psychic or clairvoyant only
-perceives other forms of matter than those we ordinarily see, and perceives
-them as a child perceives the forms in this world at first, without understanding
-their meaning. The astral senses carry beyond matter, and enlighten man with
-regard to any form of life which especially interests him. They show the poet
-painter, and composer the things they express to other men, who regard these
-great ones as beings of another order—beings with the gift of genius. So
-they are, and the vigour of that genius carries them on into the inner life
-where meaning, and harmony, and the indefinable all-desired are to be perceived.
-Wordsworth saw it in nature, he recognised the “spirit in the woods”—not the
-wood-nymphs but the divine spirit of peace which teaches a lesson in life.
-Richard Jeffries saw it in nature, too, as perhaps no other man ever has seen it;
-through the finite visible world he perceived the infinite invisible one, and before
-he died he had begun to know that the visible world does not exist. Turner, perhaps,
-is the only parallel. By the invisible world I must repeat again that I do
-not mean what the spiritualists call by that name—a new world of other forms. I
-mean the formless world. It is the farthest limit man’s <em>consciousness</em> can reach
-to; and only the pure and star-like soul can become even aware of its existence.
-It is not man’s divine nature, but the man who enters it with any reverence for
-the great miracle of life can only do so by the aid of his divine nature, whether
-as a poet, a painter, or an occultist. The soul which enters it without reverence
-is unable to endure its extreme rarity of atmosphere and turns to the psychic-astral
-in which to live; such men become madmen and suicides, more or less
-pronounced, as men do who refuse to dwell in any form of physical life but
-the grossest and simplest. There is some law of life which impels men onward—call
-it evolution or developement or what you will; and a man can no more
-go downwards without suffering than a tree can be placed with its branches in
-the ground, instead of its roots, without discomfort, and in the end, death.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I propose to use two phrases which have been suggested to me; the <a id='corr226.40'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='physchic'>psychic</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_226.40'><ins class='correction' title='physchic'>psychic</ins></a></span>-astral
-and the divine-astral. This seems the only way to make my meaning clear,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>for the word astral has two meanings, its own proper derivative one, from the
-Sanskrit <em>stri</em> to strew light, and that given it by the use of all occultists.
-Paracelsus appropriated the word for all things sidereal, subject to the moon
-and stars, part and parcel of this material universe, even though formed as
-Dryden says of “purest atoms of the air.” In this sense the spiritualists and
-psychics have the right of custom to use it as they do, to describe their world
-of finer forms. In this meaning an astral shape is the form of the human soul,
-still in possession of the passions which make it human; and the astral senses
-perceive not the subtle and supreme glory which Shelley seized on in
-Prometheus, but a region full of shapes and forms differing but little from
-those we now wear, and still distinctly material.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “astral man” in the “Comments on Light on the Path” should have
-been written the divine-astral man, according to this evident difference of
-meaning between the present writer and all other writers on occultism.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>II.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Are not the <em>astral</em> senses used by every great poet or inventor though he
-does not see clairvoyantly at all? <i>i.e.</i> does not see elementals, astral pictures,
-forms, &amp;c.”</p>
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Faust.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The answer to the former question seems to contain the answer to this, which
-is clearly prompted by a conception of the word “astral” in its divine sense.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>III.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>1. “There is a law of nature which insists that a man shall read these mysteries
-for himself. Will all men seeking the occult path read these mysteries alike,
-or will each man find the interpretation peculiarly adapted to his own phrase of
-development. No two men read the mysteries contained in the Bhagavat
-Gita quite alike, each gains the glimpses of light which he is able to assimilate
-and no more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> This seems to be rather a statement of a truth than a question which can
-be answered in any way other than putting it into different words, perhaps not
-so good.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>2. “Is the outer world the reflection of the world within? like a shadowed
-reproduction in clumsy form, the inner being reality?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> This is what should be. But materialists have brought their sense of reality
-into the shadowed life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>3. “How is the intuition to be developed which enables one to grasp swift
-knowledge?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> To me no way is known but that of living the life of a disciple.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>4. “Can the laws in super-nature only act on their own plane, or can their
-reflection be brought down intact in their own purity to govern physical life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> Surely this must be so; yet rarely, for when it is accomplished the man
-would be divine, a Buddha!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>5. “To be incapable of tears”—does not that mean that the physical emotions,
-being merged into the inner physical, that tears are impossible as being an
-outward phase of the physical nature—whereas the psychical emotions, to use
-a physical term are vibratory.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> “The whole of ‘Light on the Path,’ is written in an astral cipher” is stated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>at the outset of the “comments;” the word “tears” does not refer to physical
-tears in any way.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is the only word which will convey any idea whatever of the moisture of
-life, that which bursts from the human soul in its experience of sensation and
-emotion, and in the passion of its hunger for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>6. “How is one to take the snake of self in a steady grasp and conquer it?”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>W.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> This is the great mystery which each man must solve for himself.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>IV.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Wallasey</span>, Oct. 1st</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Referring to the comments on “Light on the Path,” in the first number of
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, may I ask whether the full paradox “Before the eyes can see they
-must be incapable of tears, and yet no eyes incapable of tears can see,” <i>i.e.</i>, see
-good or God, is not truer and stronger than its part?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Therefore the soul of the occultist must become stronger than joy and
-greater than sorrow” I presume means that he must not <em>seek</em> joy or <em>fear</em> sorrow,
-not that he may not enjoy nor sorrow?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The phrase by itself may read “Before the eyes can see they must be incapable
-of tears,” tearless, dry, in fact dead! which is obviously not the
-author’s intention in “Light on the Path.”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Yours truly,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>A. E. I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> Once more I must refer to the preliminary statement in the comments that
-“Light on the Path,” is written in an astral cipher, and that tears do not
-mean the tears of the physical body, but the rain drops that come from the
-passion-life of the human soul. These being stayed for ever, the astral sight
-is no longer blinded or blurred. Divine love and charity then find room, when
-personal desire is gone. Joy and sorrow, <em>for oneself</em>, then drop naturally into
-another place than that which they filled before.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>V.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>(1.) I desire very strongly to obtain conquest over “self;” would my using
-the occult means for so doing, which apparently to me lie without the <em>ordinary</em>
-experience of Christians, necessitate my sacrificing any iota of my belief in the
-<em>power of Christ</em>?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(2.) If I submit myself to the occult conditions under which the four first
-rules in “Light on the Path” may be “engraved on my heart and life;” will
-these conditions permit me to <em>pray throughout</em> for the Divine help and strength
-of the Eternal Christ, who has passed the portal, opened the “way,” and whom
-I believe to be the “Master of Masters,” the “Lord of Angels”?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(3.) Do the words—“the disciple” ... “must then so shut the gates of
-his soul that <em>no comforter</em> can enter there nor any enemy”—mean, that we are
-wilfully to exclude ourselves from any desire for the sympathy, strength, and
-support of the spirit of One who said “No man cometh unto the Father but by
-Me,” and who drank the cup of agony to the very dregs for love of the Brotherhood?</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>L. H. Ff.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span><i>A.</i> (1.) Not any iota of your belief in the power of the Christ-spirit would or
-should be sacrificed; it would rather increase, for that spirit is the same Divine
-overshadowing which has inspired every Redeemer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(2.) It matters very little by what name you call the Master of Masters, so
-that you do appeal to “<em>Its</em>” power throughout.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(3.) Man can find no comforter save in the Divine Spirit within himself.
-Does not the tale of the life of Jesus illustrate this, looking at it from one point of
-view? In what dread isolation he lived and died; His disciples, even those
-who were most beloved by Him, could not reach His spirit in its sublime
-moments, or in the hours of its keenest suffering. So with every one who
-raises himself by effort above the common life of man, in however small a
-degree. Solitude becomes a familiar state, for nothing personal, not even a
-personal God, can comfort or cheer any longer.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>VI.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Is there any chance of self-deception? May one enter the path so gradually
-as to be conscious of no radical change, representing a change of life or stage
-of progression? How is it with one who has never experienced a great and
-lasting sorrow, or an all-absorbing joy, but who in the midst of both joy and
-sorrow strives to remember others, and to feel that he hardly deserves the joy,
-and that his sorrow is meagre in the presence of the great all-pain? How is
-such a one to enter through the gates? By what sign shall he know them?”</p>
-<div class='c020'>Y. H.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> It is difficult for such a one to know anything of what lies beneath the surface
-of his nature until it has been probed by the fiercer experiences of life.
-But, of course, the theory of re-incarnation makes it possible that such experiences
-are left behind in the past. The entrance to the gates is marked by
-one immutable sign; the sense that personal joy or sorrow no longer exist.
-The disciple lives for humanity, not for himself; works for all creatures that
-suffer instead of knowing that he himself has pain.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>“ESOTERIC BUDDHISM.”</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>“As the Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> kindly invite questions concerning Theosophy
-and kindred subjects, an honest enquirer into these matters would welcome an
-answer to the following difficulty:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In his book on ‘Esoteric Buddhism,’ Mr. Sinnett states that souls or
-spirits pass the long interval between the one incarnation and another in a sort
-of quiescent, and at least half-unconscious, state, losing enough of their identity
-to preclude their carrying any recollection of one incarnation on to the next.
-In his novel, “Karma,” Mr. Sinnett represents one character, Mrs. Lakesby,
-gifted with more than usual powers, as being very fond, when she has the
-chance, of allowing her spirit to escape from the trammels of the body and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>meeting the spirits of departed—that is, dead friends—“and others” on the
-Astral plane where she holds agreeable converse with them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How are these two statements reconcilable?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“October 22nd, 1887.</p>
-<div class='c020'>N. D.”</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Sinnett would probably reply that the answer could only be given fully
-by reprinting all that he has written in various published works, on the conditions
-of existence in Kama-Loca, and Devachan, and on the higher and
-lower aspects of <em>Self</em>. The normal course of events will conduct a human being
-who quits the material body through Kama-Loca to the Devachanic state, in
-which Mrs. Lakesby would not be able to interview him. But while in Kama-Loca
-she might at least imagine she did this, and, perhaps not too wisely, <a id='corr230.11'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='in dulge'>indulge</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_230.11'><ins class='correction' title='in dulge'>indulge</ins></a></span>
-in the practice of so doing. If we remember rightly the Baron, in
-“Karma,” who is represented as knowing a good deal more than Mrs. Lakesby,
-gifted as she is, throws some discredit upon her view concerning the Astral
-plane and its inhabitants. At the best when a clairvoyant can gain touch with a
-soul in Kama-Loca, it is the lower self remaining there, though it has left the
-body, that she deals with. And though that lower self may be very recognisable
-for people who have known it in the earthly manifestation, it will be <em>lower</em> than
-the lower self of earth and not higher because ethereal. That is to say on
-earth the living man is more or less under the guidance of his higher self. But
-the higher has no longer any business to transact with the lower self of Kama-Loca,
-and does not manifest there at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Finally it must always be remembered that a romance, even though written
-by an Occultist, is a romance still, designed to suggest broad conceptions rather
-than to expound scientific and doctrinal details.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>“Being courteously invited to address any questions bearing on the matter
-contained in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> to the Editors, Madame la Marechale Canrobert would
-gladly know:—First, What is the distinction made (page 11) between <em>the soul</em>
-and the starry spirit? Is it that soul which is again alluded to (page 91) as the
-animal soul, in opposition to the Divine soul? Second, What are the external
-forms of the individualised being spoken of also on page 91?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>A.</i> The human soul, that which is subject to human passions, but which
-can also yearn towards the nobility of the Divine soul, is that which is spoken
-of on page 11. The starry spirit is the Divine-astral. The animal soul is that
-which animates the mere physical life, the unintelligent existence of the body.
-The “external forms” referred to on page 91 are the successive human shapes
-which the starry spirit inspires during its long pilgrimage.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>M. C.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter"><span class='large'>Reviews.</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c046' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>THE REAL HISTORY OF THE ROSICRUCIANS.<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c013'><sup>[55]</sup></a></h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>Mr. Waite’s new book will be welcomed by that large class of readers
-who regard occultism, alchemy, and all like studies with antagonism
-and suspicion. Secret societies supposed to deal with such subjects
-are, from their point of view, better exposed and ridiculed than treated with
-respect or taken seriously. The author of the present volume does not, however,
-cast disrespect on occult science, nor does he discuss the Rosicrucians in
-a spirit of levity or disdain. He recognises that there may be, and probably is,
-a grand spiritual and moral philosophy in the higher aspects of true alchemy,
-but in these pages he treats the subject of the society from the historical, and
-not at all from the mystical side, and confines himself to tracing its recorded
-history, its rise, fall, and <i>raison d’etre</i>. The conscientious study of these records
-relating to the Brotherhood has brought Mr. Waite to the conclusion that
-they do not support the traditions which up to the present have surrounded
-the society with a veil of unknown antiquity and have endowed its members
-with a halo of marvellous wisdom. It is these conclusions that will charm the
-incredulous, and may probably blind them to the indications of an undercurrent
-of belief in the reality of occult science, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>per se</i></span>, which the author has
-evidently not desired to suppress. To investigate and disentangle the network
-of facts, theories, and traditions which must necessarily envelope a society that
-up to the commencement of the seventeenth century had not been heard of by the
-general public is no easy task, and Mr. Waite may be congratulated upon the
-calm and judicial spirit with which he has treated his subject, as well as upon
-the moderation with which he advances his own views. To be able to gather
-from these open records how far the members of such a society may have held
-in their keeping some of the inner secrets of Nature is of course impossible to
-ordinary humanity. The real character and aims of such an association can be
-known only to passed Initiates. In his preface Mr. Waite says: “I claim to
-have performed my task in a sympathetic but impartial manner, purged from
-the bias of any theory, and above all uncontaminated by the pretension to
-superior knowledge, which claimants have never been able to substantiate.”
-This statement is fully justified in the pages of the book under review. Its
-value does not lie so much in any new presentation of the facts or theories pertaining
-to the Rosicrucians, and which are so frequently distorted by ignorant commentators,
-as in the compact and systematic arrangement of some of the principal
-writings available. He has brought together not only the leading works
-of the various writers known, or supposed to be Rosicrucians, but he has also
-collected the criticisms and conjectures on these current at the time of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>appearance in Germany, together with others of a much more recent date.
-Consequently the reader has before him almost all the information of this
-description he could require, and which he could not obtain for himself except
-by the expenditure of time and trouble that very few are either able or willing
-to give.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is not surprising that Mr. Waite should have satisfied himself that the
-Rosicrucians have no sort of claim to the reverence and admiration in which
-scholars and mystics have held them up to the present time. But these
-conclusions will form only one more of other proofs to students of esotericism,
-that the task of writing a true and real history of a secret occult society from
-its records, where such exist, is an impossibility. For even when such societies
-left reliable information of their pursuits, aspirations, and beliefs, the language
-employed has always been of such a character as to baffle entirely the ordinary
-exoteric reader, whether he were historian, literateur, or scientist. Such literature
-can be interesting only to the student on the track of esoteric knowledge,
-or to one who has in a great measure acquired the meaning conveyed, for himself
-in other ways. This method of giving to the world, as it were, the proceeds,
-of life-long research in the realms of unseen Nature, has been adopted by
-alchemists, magicians, priests, and hierophants from all ages. None but those
-who were sufficiently steadfast in the cause of truth could read and understand
-what was thus written. The numerous and minute directions for the working of
-spells and cures, etc., left by Paracelsus, and which are apparently as straight
-forward and practicable as the receipts in a modern cookery book, would turn
-out probably much less successful in the hands of an amateur, no matter how
-highly educated on the physical plane, than the more delicate dishes taken
-from such receipts manipulated by an entirely inexperienced servant. For
-these elaborate instructions are given in terms that appeal simply to the
-material senses of those who are in search of power rather than of wisdom,
-whereas the real effort to produce the result has to take place on the Astral
-plane of nature. The spiritual or soul side of man, must be awakened and
-utilised, before the Philosopher’s stone, or the elixir of life, can be discovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The comprehension of the potentialities of the human body, their nurture
-and eventual utilisation for purely unselfish ends and spiritual, <i>i.e.</i>, real wisdom,
-is, or ought to be, the work of all secret occult societies. But to return to Mr.
-Waite’s book. The popular notion that this Brotherhood is of great, almost
-incredible antiquity, is utterly condemned by him. He fails to find any documentary
-evidence to show that it existed before the early part of the seventeenth
-century, and argues that the well-known antiquity of the Rose and Cross
-in symbolism is no proof of the antiquity of a society using them “at a period
-subsequent to the Renaissance.” Granting that the device of the Rose and
-Cross, as emblems of a particular order or brotherhood, does not guarantee its
-equal antiquity with them, still it must be admitted that these symbols bearing
-as they do a profoundly esoteric interpretation, and being adopted by a society
-of a distinctly occult character, is an argument in support of the theory that
-the founder or originator of this order had some reason other than fancy for
-thus labelling his fraternity. Elsewhere he says, “I have shown indisputably
-that there was no novelty in the Rosicrucian pretensions, and no originality in
-their views. They appear before us as Lutheran disciples of Paracelsus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>The author here seems to be not entirely logical in his deductions. When
-he states that he has not met in his search with either letters, records, or papers
-that mention or suggest the existence of such a society before the <a id='corr233.3'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='seventeeth'>seventeenth</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_233.3'><ins class='correction' title='seventeeth'>seventeenth</ins></a></span>
-century, he is of course, as a historian, safely ensconced from attack. In this
-capacity as an impartial seeker after facts, it is outside the area of his work in the
-absence of data to theorise on probabilities. When, however, in dealing with the
-manifestoes of the seventeenth century, he finds therein evidence that shows him
-the Brotherhood had no back history or ancestry, his conclusions are open to
-criticism. The very fact of the want of originality and novelty in the views,
-aims and aspirations set forth in the “Fama,” and “Confessio” surely gives
-strength to the theory that holds to the antiquity of the society, rather than
-to its being the outcome of a spontaneous effort. All true students of mysticism
-have good reason to believe, even when they do not absolutely know,
-that the various schools of occultism considered from their highest or most
-spiritual and abstract teaching, lead to the same goal. They may be called by
-different names, and their methods in minor details may not be the
-same, but the wisdom <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>au fond</i></span> is identical. Therefore when Mr. Waite
-casts discredit upon the Rosicrucians for not advertising novelties in their
-manifesto, in the mystical line of thought, he reminds us of a man who in
-making up his mind on the value of a violin, decides that it cannot be of great
-age, because it emits only the same set of sounds that such musical instruments
-have been accustomed to give forth from time immemorial.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As far as can be ascertained by studying the state of thought and society at
-the period when the Rosicrucians were first heard of in Europe, this particular
-order manifested itself as an antidote to the general tendency towards the
-material side of alchemy, which honey-combed the educated classes of
-Germany. Wonder-seekers then, as now, did not apprehend that ethics, both
-social and spiritual, are the fundamental basis of real wisdom, <a id='corr233.27'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='consquently'>consequently</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_233.27'><ins class='correction' title='consquently'>consequently</ins></a></span> the
-great cry was for power, no matter of what description, for the accumulation of
-wealth. The craving for arcane knowledge, so widely diffused, and which
-alchemists were truly known to possess, had gradually degenerated into a purely
-selfish desire for the secret of transmuting metals. To supply this eager demand
-charlatans of every description rushed to the front professing to teach all who
-joined their standards, <i>i.e.</i>, who could pay the necessary fee, how to turn
-common metal into pure gold. The craze for this power was so universal, the
-motive of it so unspiritual, that in order to stem the tide of the folly, and to
-checkmate the impostors who were bringing discredit on the <em>Sacred Art</em>, the
-“Fama” was issued by a body of people who took as their symbols the Rose
-and Cross. From this point of view the Rosicrucians historically come before
-the world in the light of a group of Reformers.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Different people interpret in different ways the two manifestoes—the “Fama”
-and “Confessio.” Mr. Waite appears to place great importance on the
-adherence to Christian dogmas observable in the wording of these papers. But
-in taking the documents literally, he seems to overlook the necessity that all
-writers were under, in those troubled times, of pandering to the narrow and
-prejudiced minds of the leaders of the so called Christian Church, by apparently
-adhering to the Ritual. Naturally, the author of the “Fama” worded it in such
-a manner as to avoid persecution or suspicion of heresy. Those to whom it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>was really addressed would not be misled by its tone of orthodoxy, and the
-general public and the church would pass it by as harmless. Moreover, as Mr.
-Waite remarks further on, “the philosophical and scientific opinions and pretentions
-of the Rosicrucian Society have more claim on our notice” than their
-theology. Speaking again of the school of thought current at the time this
-organization was floated, and which he tells us the Rosicrucians followed, he
-says.... “Mystics in an age of scientific and religious materialism, they
-were connected by an unbroken chain with the theurgists of the first Christian
-centuries, they were alchemists in the spiritual sense, and the professors of a
-Divine Magic. Their disciples, the Rosicrucians, followed closely in their footsteps,
-and the claims of the “Fama” and “Confessio” must be reviewed in the
-light of the great elder claims of alchemy and magic.” In spite of this, Mr.
-Waite judges the Society, it would appear, by what he admits to be the minor
-and less important side of its object, for he speaks of it eventually, as a body of
-“pre-eminently learned men and a Christian Sect.” We will not stop to consider
-the probability or possibility of a body of “pre-eminently learned men,” being at
-the same time a “Christian Sect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Having thus deprived the Rosicrucians of the dignity, reverence and romance,
-that cling round great antiquity; having saddled them with the tenets and
-dogmas of conventional mediæval christianity, Mr. Waite next proceeds to
-demolish their emblems, or at all events, to deny that they attached any esoteric
-interpretation to them. He says ... “The whole question of the Crucified
-Rose, in its connection with the Society is one of pure conjecture, that no
-Rosicrucian manifestoes, and no acknowledged Brother have ever given any
-explanation concerning it, and that no presumption is afforded by the fact of
-its adoption, for the antiquity of the Society, or for its connection with Universal
-Symbolism.” Allowing for the necessity in writing a history of a mystical
-society of taking the documents as they stand, Mr. Waite rather ignores
-the fact that the evidence for the statement above is of a negative character.
-That in their manifestoes and records there appears no explanation of their
-emblems, hardly justifies the conclusion that they were incapable of giving any.
-It would indeed have been a new departure in the annals of Secret Societies
-if the founders of this particular order had left behind the explanation of their
-signs and symbols. The study and interpretation of symbology forms a most
-important element in the education of occult disciples, and therefore to assume
-that the projectors of this organisation should be unaware of the mystic reading
-of the Rose and Cross, is a hypothesis that no student of mysticism could
-accept.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is, on the whole, generally assumed by those who have taken any pains to
-investigate the evidence, that Johann Valentin Andreas was the author of the
-“Fama,” the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Confessio Fraternitatis</cite></span>, and also of the “Chymical Marriage” of
-Christian Rosencreutz, and to that extent he must be looked upon exoterically as
-the founder of the Rosicrucian Society, as first known to history. He was deeply
-versed in mystic studies and alchemy, and had besides a widespread reputation
-as a scholar and learned man. His “Chymical Marriage,” to anyone with even a
-slight acquaintance with alchemical literature, reveals him as one who had
-penetrated deeply into some of the mysteries of nature. Consequently, he must
-have been well aware that the Rose and Cross bore a profoundly occult signification.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>Considering the man himself, the character of his studies, and his well
-known devotion to alchemy and mysticism, it is certainly more reasonable to
-suppose that he took those emblems (presuming he had any choice in the
-matter) for his society, not as some suggest, because they happened to form a
-part of his own armorial bearings, or that the Rose and Cross on a Heart was used
-by Martin Luther, but because he recognised their full value and importance
-as symbols of cosmic evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Waite seems, on the whole, to agree with the idea that Andreas was the
-author of the “Fama” and “Confessio,” and regards the “Chymical Marriage” as
-undoubtedly his production. He also allows that the latter pamphlet can only
-have been the work of a man deeply embued with alchemical speculations, a
-mystic and follower of Paracelsus. How then can he ask us to believe that the
-Society formed under such auspices was <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>au fond</i></span>, nothing but a Christian sect
-based on the teachings of Martin Luther! To the public at large these theories
-may perhaps appear sufficiently plausible in face of the wording of those parts
-of the manifestoes that touch on theology. To students of esotericism, however,
-such conclusions will be absolutely unacceptable, and we can not allow to pass
-without comment Mr. Waite’s hypothesis that the Rosicrucian Society, as it first
-came before the world, was simply a society for the propagation of the
-deteriorated Christianity of the middle ages. No mystic, whether calling himself
-Rosicrucian, Cabbalist, Theosophist, Christian, or Buddhist, would either, intellectually
-or spiritually, accept the narrow dogmas and intolerant views of the
-Christian church, even when to some extent cleansed of many of its grosser
-abuses by the energy of Martin Luther’s Reform.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The two lines of thought are essentially different. In the case of the
-Christian, no matter of what denomination, his thoughts are bound down and
-paralysed within the rigid circle drawn by the materialistic reading of Christ’s
-birth, life, and death. The true occultist takes those episodes spiritually or
-allegorically, finding their correspondences within himself as well as in the
-universe. To say that a human being can at one and the same time be an
-occultist, and a sectarian Christian, is as impossible as to speak of a Christian
-Jew. A true Christian, <i>i.e.</i>, one who understood and followed absolutely the
-teachings of Jesus, would be also a true Rosicrucian. Membership of particular
-churches or societies does not unfortunately endow the individual immediately
-with the virtue, knowledge or power, that is the theoretical goal of his initial
-action. Such membership is, or may be a step in the direction of Divine Wisdom,
-but one step does not carry him to the summit of the path. Men do not
-become either Rosicrucians, Christians, or Theosophists merely by joining the
-Societies working under those particular names. But certain tendencies in their
-temperaments urge them into the special Society where the mode of thought
-seems best fitted to help them, to realise the magnitude and glory of the
-possibilities inherent in their own souls.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Between the humanity of to-day, and the development of a sixth sense, which
-will enable it to perceive what now is imperceptible, there is but a thin veil of
-obstructing matter, metaphorically speaking. This veil is even now being continually
-pierced by psychics, first in one direction then in another, letting in
-through these tiny openings glimpses of the invisible world around. In a little
-while the veil will be worn away entirely, and the humanity of that future time
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>will doubtless wonder how the humanity of this age, which we find so enlightened,
-could have been so unintuitive and blind to the most important side
-of their natures. Until the race however has by soul evolution attained to this
-sixth sense, real histories of Mystical Societies can hardly be hoped for. Members
-of such Societies, who by study and training have attained some degree of
-knowledge <em>may</em> not disclose the secrets, non-members cannot get at them. The
-reading-classes of to-day may, after reading Mr. Waite’s book, think they have
-learnt something of the body of people called Rosicrucians, and until now
-supposed to have some claim to arcane knowledge. The students of occultism
-will know that the vital part of the subject is and must remain ever impregnable,
-excepting from its esoteric side.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>“NINETEENTH CENTURY SENSE.”</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>Sense! What is ”sense”? A word meaning either little or much; simple
-and clear to the understanding, or various and carrying with it many
-connotations. It is one or other according as we measure the depth, the
-thoroughness, or the <em>reality</em> of the knowledge acquired. From a purely
-physical “sensation” we may trace the word through endless shades of
-signification; through “good” sense, “sound” sense, through the artistic and
-finer sensibilities, the “moral” sense, till it loses itself in the vague hint of a
-dim, unformed consciousness, pointing the way to the new world of the “inner
-senses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>All these meanings and more are connoted by the phrase “Nineteenth
-Century Sense;” <a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c013'><sup>[56]</sup></a> for, by a daring metaphor, the tools which modern science
-places at our disposal are considered as “senses,” and even the faculty and
-power of analysis is sometimes included under the word.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Beginning with the simplest, the reader is led on to the most astounding
-<a id='corr236.27'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='phenonema'>phenomena</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_236.27'><ins class='correction' title='phenonema'>phenomena</ins></a></span> of modern spiritualism in the first thirty-seven pages of this strange
-work. The author depicts in vivid language his own experiences, and the
-triumphs of phenomena produced by one of his personal friends, in a style
-which is often quaint and striking, though at times the writer’s disregard of
-many of the accepted rules of composition becomes—to say the least—irritating.
-But the matter of his book earns forgiveness for the manner in
-which it is formulated.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After carrying his reader to a pitch of interest and expectation as to the
-phenomena he describes, Mr. Darby suddenly plunges him into the frozen sea
-of scepticism by stating that all the phenomena produced under what seemed
-the strictest test conditions, were produced by conjuring and legerdemain, and
-by explaining the physical causes of some of the visions he has so graphically
-described. It will suffice to cite a single instance in illustration. “The
-President of the American Branch of the Indian Society of Theosophists
-(Professor Coues) ... spent an evening with me some time back in
-conversation on the subject of psychical phenomena. We parted at midnight.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>At seven o’clock the next morning I suddenly awoke, beholding the astral of
-the professor standing at my bed-side.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This vision Mr. Darby explains by reference to the fact of the persistence of
-retinal images and the super-excitability of the nerves and brain. “Astral
-projections,” he concludes, “are of precisely similar significance.” We would
-feel obliged to the eminent American professor of physiology referred to if he
-would give his written opinion on the question thus raised. For Theosophists
-have heard of persons whose brains were in complete repose and fully occupied
-otherwise who have also seen the astral form of Professor Coues. How’s
-this?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He concludes, nevertheless, that materialistic agnosticism is the only
-“creed”? Far from it. This portion of the book is purely introductory; it
-forms the five door-steps leading to the Spiritus Sanctus—the laboratory of the
-Divine Spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>From this black depth of doubt and confusion, the reader is lifted suddenly
-into the clear ether, and his feet are placed on the “Rosicrucian Way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Whether called “Rosicrucian,” or by whatever other name, the “Way” is the
-“Way of Life,” the path which leads to freedom, to wisdom, to true living.
-Whole pages might well be quoted; a few aphorisms must suffice.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“A thing is to the sense that uses it what to the sense</div>
- <div class='line'>It seems to be; it is never anything else.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Many passages recall “Light on the Path,” though Mr. Darby probably never
-saw that book; but life is one, and <em>true</em> occultism is one.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Speaking of mankind as divided into two classes, <em>men</em> in whom is the Holy
-Ghost, the Divine Spirit or the <em>Logos</em>, he says:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“With people self-wise or over-sufficient, with the proud and the uncharitable, with all who are
-<em>without understanding as to the common good being the only good</em>, with him who fails to see that gifts
-<em>are in men as almoners only</em>—with all these the Holy Ghost is absent, otherwise so lacking in measure
-as to be incapable of making itself felt.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The italicised passages give the key-note of the true science and art of
-living. To quote again:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Settled into tranquillity by entirely satisfactory recognition of noumenon through phenomenon
-an end is reached where instrument is prepared and ready for use. Analysis has shown the Rosicrucian
-what he is; more than this—what he can become as to his Ego. If out of his understanding, he puts
-office [<em>the service of others</em>.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>] before self, he learns directly of the God, as the God comes to live
-in and to make use of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Proving to one’s self that one’s self is God”; and again, “God ... the One is in all; the All
-is in one.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The next chapter contrasts strangely with the one just quoted from—strangely,
-that is, to the outer sense. The one full of deep philosophy, of questionings of
-God, the Self, the World, clothed in the profound and significant paradoxes in
-which wisdom finds expression; the other an idyll, a sketch of nature, deeply
-coloured by the influence of Walt Whitman, whose <em>style</em>, perhaps, has had too
-great an influence on Mr. Darby, who has caught its jerky and unpleasant
-strings of detached sentences.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>This is Chapter V.; Chapter VI. deals with Matter in its relation to the Ego,
-the spirit of the treatment being indicated by the following conclusion:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That there shows itself, out of a process of exclusion, conducted even only so far as the analysis
-of matter, a something which is not matter. The analysis demonstrates the something to be of
-individual signification; further, that it is to it what a flute or other instrument is to harmony.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The final words express a purely occult doctrine, which is worked out at
-length in the succeeding chapter on the Ego.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is the fundamental thought of the book, the last fifty pages of which
-describe the author’s individual experiences in nascent psychic development.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They are not of a very striking character, but exhibit with sufficient clearness
-the early forms of this new growth. Unfortunately, the author seems to have
-lacked the desire to pursue the road thus opened to him, and the final pages of
-his work are but a lame and halting conclusion to a remarkable production.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The book is well adapted for those who stand halting on the verge of
-mysticism, while for the student who has advanced further, its pages may serve
-as a means for helping others.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator6.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> beg to acknowledge the following books, which will
-be noticed in future numbers:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>From Messrs. Ward and Downey: “A Modern Magician,” by Fitzgerald
-Molloy. “Twin Souls.”</p>
-<p class='c035'>From Messrs. David Nutt &amp; Co.: “The Gnostics and their Remains,” by
-C. H. King.</p>
-<p class='c035'>From the Authors: “Natural Genesis,” by Gerald Massey. “Sepher
-Yezirah,” by Dr. Wynn Westcott. “Palingenesia,” by “Theosopho and
-Ellora.” “Mohammed Benani,” by Ion Perdicaris. “Lays of Romance,” by
-W. Stewart Ross.</p>
-<p class='c035'>From George Redway: “Posthumous Humanity,” translated by Col. H. S.
-Olcott.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>⁂ The Editors regret that the pressure on their space prevents their
-noticing in detail the various Theosophical Magazines:—<span class='sc'>The Theosophist</span>,
-<span class='sc'>The Path</span>, <span class='sc'>Le Lotus</span>, and <span class='sc'>L’Aurore</span>. A full summary of their contents for
-November and December will appear next month. The same remark applies to
-a letter on “Karma,” received from Mr. Beatty, which will be published and
-fully answered next month.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>From the Note Book of an Unpopular Philosopher</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>I am Sternly Rebuked for some
-remarks made in the last number. My
-reflections with regard to the respective
-value of Mussulman and Christian
-pledges exchanged, as also on the doubtful
-propriety of zoological symbolism in
-the Churches—are pronounced wantonly
-wicked and calculated to hurt the tender
-feelings of Christian readers—if any.
-Protestant England—it is solemnly urged—is
-full of truly good men and women, of
-sincere church-goers, who “walk in the
-ways of the Lord.” No doubt there
-are such, and no doubt they do, or
-try to, which is a step in advance of
-those who do not. But then none of
-the “righteous” need recognize their faces
-in the mirror presented by the “Unpopular
-Philosopher” only to the <em>unrighteous</em>.
-And again—-</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<span class='sc'>The Ways of the Lord</span>....”
-The ways of <em>which</em> Lord? Is the jealous
-Lord of Moses meant, the God who thundered
-amidst the lightnings of Sinai, or
-the meek “Lord” of the Mount of Olives
-and Calvary? Is it the stern God that saith
-“<em>vengeance is mine</em>,” and who must be
-“<em>worshipped in fear</em>,” or the “man-God”
-who commanded <i>to love one’s neighbours
-as oneself</i>, <i>to forgive one’s enemies</i> and <em>bless
-those who revile us</em>? For the ways of the
-two Lords are wide apart, and can never
-meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No one who has studied the Bible can
-deny for one single moment that a large
-proportion (if <em>happily</em> not all) of modern
-Christians walk indeed “in the <em>ways</em>
-of the Lord”—Number I. This one
-is the “Lord” who <em>had respect unto
-Abel</em>, because the meat of his sacrifice
-smelt sweet in his nostrils; the “Lord”
-who commanded the Israelites to <em>spoil</em> the
-Egyptians of their jewels of silver and
-gold;<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c013'><sup>[57]</sup></a> also to “<em>kill every male among the
-little ones</em>,” as “<em>every woman ... but
-all the women children</em> (virgins) <em>to keep
-alive for themselves</em>” (Numb. XXXI., 17,
-<i>et seq.</i>); and to commit other actions too
-coarse to be repeated in any respectable
-publication.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hence the modern warriors who achieve
-such feats (with the modern improvement
-occasionally, of shooting their enemies
-out of the mouths of big guns) walk,
-most undeniably, “in the ways” of the
-Lord of the Jews, but <em>never in the
-ways</em> of Christ. So does the modern
-trader who keeps the Sabbath most
-rigorously, attending Divine Service
-thrice on that day, after treating during
-the whole week his hired clerks as the
-brood of Ham “who shall be their (Shem
-and Japhet’s) servants.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So does, likewise, he who helps himself,
-David-like, to a Bath-Sheba, the wife
-of Uriah, without the least concern
-whether he simply robs or kills the Hittite
-husband. For he has every right to take
-for his sampler “a friend of God”—the
-<em>God</em> of the old covenant.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But will either of these pretend they
-walk in the ways of their Lord of
-the <em>new</em> Dispensation? Yet, he who
-raises his voice in a protest against
-the “ways” of the Mosaic God,
-therefore, in favour of those preached by
-the very <em>antithesis</em> of Jehovah—the meek
-and gentle “Man of Sorrow”—he is forthwith
-set up on the pillory and denounced
-to public opprobrium as an <em>anti-Christian</em>
-and an Atheist! This, in the face of the
-words: “<em>Not every one that saith unto me
-Lord, Lord, shall enter into the Kingdom
-of Heaven; but he that doeth the will of
-my Father which is in Heaven.... And
-every one that heareth these words of mine,
-and doeth them not, shall be likened unto
-a foolish man, which built his house upon
-the sand.... and great was the fall
-thereof!</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>The “Will of My Father?”</span>
-Is this “Father” identical with the God
-of Mount Sinai and of the Commandments?
-Then what is the meaning of
-the whole Chapter V. of Matthew, of the
-Sermon on the Mount, in which every one
-of these Commandments is virtually
-criticised and destroyed by the new
-amendments?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<i>Ye have heard that it hath been said
-‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
-tooth’; but I say unto you that you resist
-not evil</i>,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>Glance at the big centres of our
-Christian civilisations. Look at the jails,
-the court and the prison-houses, the
-tribunals, and the police; see the distress,
-with starvation and prostitution as its
-results. Look at the host of the men of
-law and of judges; and then see how far
-the words of Christ, “Love your enemies,
-bless them that curse you, Judge not
-that ye be not judged,” apply to the
-whole structure of our modern civilised
-life, and how far we may be called
-<em>Christians</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>How well the commandment—“<em>He that
-is without sin among you, let him first
-cast a stone</em>”—is now obeyed, may be
-seen by following day after day, the law
-reports for slander, calumny and defamation.
-Obedience to the injunction,
-and warning against the sin of offending
-children, “<em>these little ones</em>,” of whom is the
-Kingdom of Heaven, is found in the
-brutal treatment of fatherless children on
-the streets by the Christian police, of
-other children by their parents, and
-finally, in the merciless flogging of wee
-bits of culprits driven to crime by their
-own parents and starvation. And is it
-those who denounce such an anti-Christian
-spirit in legislation, the
-Pharisaical church and society, who
-shall be branded for speaking the truth?
-The magistrate, who has sworn on the
-Bible—contrary to Christ’s express injunction—to
-administer justice; the pious
-defaulter, who swears falsely on it, but
-cannot be convicted; the sanctimonious
-millionaire who fattens on the blood and
-sweat of the poor; and the aristocratic
-“Jezebel” who casts mud from her
-carriage wheels on her “fallen” sister,
-on the street, a <em>victim perchance, of
-one of the men of her own high caste</em>—all
-these call themselves Christians.
-The <em>anti-Christians</em> are those who
-dare to look behind that veil of respectability.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The best answer to such paradoxical
-denunciation may be found in one of
-“Saladin’s” admirable editorials. The
-reader must turn to <cite>The Secular Review</cite>
-for October 22nd, 1887, and read some
-pertinent reflections on “The Bitter Cry
-of Outcast London,” and the “Child-thieves”
-flogging. Well may a “heathen
-Chinee” or a “mild Hindu” shudder
-in horror at the picture in it of that
-“drawing of blood” out of the baby-bodies
-of infant thieves. The process
-is executed by a Christian policeman
-acting under the orders and in the
-presence of a righteous Christian
-magistrate. Has either of the two ever
-given a thought during the “child-torture”
-to the words of their Christ:
-“<em>Whosoever shall offend one of these
-little ones, it is better for him that a
-millstone were hanged about his neck
-and he were cast into the sea</em>”?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yes, they <em>are</em> walking “in the ways of
-the God of Israel”! For, as “<em>it repented
-the Lord that he had made man</em>”
-so wicked and so imperfect, that “Lord”
-drowned and destroyed him “from the
-face of the Earth,” without more ado.
-Verily so, “<em>both man and beast, and the
-creeping thing and the fowls</em>,” though
-the latter had neither sinned, nor were
-they “wicked.” And why shouldn’t the
-righteous men on Earth do likewise? It
-repents the Christian citizens of pious
-<span class='sc'>Lugdunum</span> perchance also, that they
-create the starving little wretches, the
-foundlings abandoned to vice from the
-day of their birth? And the truly good
-Christian men, who would believe themselves
-damned to hell-fire were they to
-miss their Sabbath Service, forbidden by
-law to drown <em>their</em> creatures, resort to the
-next best thing they can; they “draw
-blood” from those little ones whom their
-“Saviour” and Master took under his
-special protection.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>May the shadow of “Saladin” never
-grow less, for the fearless honest words
-of truth he writes:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And whose blood was in the veins of
-these two boys? Whose blood reddened
-the twigs of the birch? Peradventure
-that of the magistrate himself, or of the
-chaplain of the prison. For mystical
-are the grinding of the wheels of the mill
-of misery. And God looks on and
-tolerates. And I am accounted a heretic,
-and my anti-Christian writings are produced
-against me in a Court of Justice
-to prevent my getting justice, because
-I fail to see in all this how Christianity
-“elevates” woman and casts a “halo
-of sacred innocence round the tender
-years of the child.” So be it. I have
-flung down my gage of battle, and the
-force of bigotry may break me to death;
-but it shall never bend me to submission.
-Unsalaried and ill-supported, I fight as
-stubbornly as if the world flung at my
-feet its gold and laurels and huzzas; for
-the weak need a champion and the
-wronged an avenger. It is necessary
-that Sham find an opponent and
-Hypocrisy a foe: these they will find in
-me, be the consequences what they may.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>Saladin.</span>”</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is the epitomized history of the
-“Unpopular Philosopher”; aye, the story
-of all those who, in the words of “Lara,”
-know that “Christianity will never save
-humanity, but humanity may save
-Christianity,” <i>i.e.</i>, the ideal spirit of the
-Christos-Buddha—of <span class='sc'>Theosophy</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class='c042' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Not all the members of the Theosophical Society are Theosophists; nor are the
-members of the so-called Christian Churches all Christians, by any means. True
-Theosophists, as true Christians, are very, <em>very</em> few; and there are practical Theosophists
-in the fold of Christianity, as there are practical Christians in the Theosophical
-Society, outside all ritualistic Christianity. “Not every one that saith unto me ‘Lord,
-Lord,’ shall enter the Kingdom of Heaven, but he that doeth the will of my Father.”
-(Matthew, vii. 21.) “Believe not in Me, but in the truths I utter.” (Buddha’s
-<cite>Aphorisms</cite>.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. “This” Theosophy is not a religion, but rather <em>the</em> <span class='fss'>RELIGION</span>—if one. So far, we
-prefer to call it a philosophy; one, moreover, which contains every religion, as it is the
-essence and the foundation of all. Rule III. of the Theos. Body says: “The Society
-represents no particular religious creed, is entirely <em>unsectarian</em>, and includes professors
-of all faiths.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. St. Matthew xxiv., 3, <i>et seq.</i> The sentences italicised are those which stand
-corrected in the New Testament after the recent revision in 1881 of the version
-of <em>1611</em>; which version is full of errors, voluntary and involuntary. The word
-“presence,” for “coming,” and “the consummation of the age,” now standing for
-“the end of the world,” have altered, of late, the whole meaning, even for the most
-sincere Christians, if we exempt the Adventists.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. He who will not ponder over and master the great difference between the meaning
-of the two Greek words—χρηστος and χριστος must remain blind for ever to the true
-esoteric meaning of the Gospels; that is to say, to the living Spirit entombed in the
-sterile dead-letter of the texts, the very Dead Sea fruit of <em>lip</em>-Christianity.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. For ye are the temple (“sanctuary” in the <em>revised</em> N. T.) of the living God.
-(II. Cor. vi., 16.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. Spirit, or the Holy Ghost, was feminine with the Jews, as with most ancient peoples,
-and it was so with the early Christians. <em>Sophia</em> of the Gnostics, and the third Sephiroth
-<em>Binah</em> (the <em>female</em> Jehovah of the Kabalists), are feminine principles—“Divine Spirit,”
-or <em>Ruach</em>. “<em>Achath Ruach Elohim Chiim.</em>” “One is <em>She</em>, the Spirit of the Elohim of
-Life,” is said in “Sepher Yezirah.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. There are several remarkable cycles that come to a close at the end of this century.
-First, the 5,000 years of the Kaliyug cycle; again the Messianic cycle of the
-Samaritan (also Kabalistic) Jews of the man connected with <em>Pisces</em> (Ichthys or “Fish-man”
-<em>Dag</em>). It is a cycle, historic and not very long, but very occult, lasting about 2,155
-solar years, but having a true significance only when computed by lunar months. It
-occurred 2410 and 255 B.C., or when the equinox entered into the sign of the <em>Ram</em>, and
-again into that of <em>Pisces</em>. When it enters, in a few years, the sign of <em>Aquarius</em>,
-psychologists will have some extra work to do, and the psychic idiosyncrasies of
-humanity will enter on a great change.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. The earliest Christian author, Justin Martyr, calls, in his first Apology, his co-religionists
-<em>Chrestians</em>, χρηστιανοι—not Christians.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. “Clemens Alexandrinus, in the second century, founds a serious argument on this
-paranomasia (lib. iii., cap. xvii., p. 53 <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>et circa</i></span>), that all who believed in <i>Chrest</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, “a
-good man”) both are, and are called Chrestians, that is, good men,” (Strommata,
-lib. ii. “Higgins’ <cite>Anacalypsis</cite>.”) And Lactantius (lib. iv., cap. vii.) says that it is only
-through <em>ignorance</em> that people call themselves Christians, instead of Chrestians:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“<i>qui proper ignorantium errorem cum immutata litera Chrestum solent dicere</i>.”</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. In England alone, there are over 239 various sects. (See Whitaker’s Almanac.)
-In 1883, there were 186 denominations only, and now they steadily increase with
-every year, an additional 53 sects having sprung up in only four years!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. It is but fair to St. Paul to remark that this contradiction is surely due to later
-tampering with his Epistles. Paul was a Gnostic himself, <i>i.e.</i>, A “Son of Wisdom,”
-and an Initiate into the true <em>mysteries of Christos</em>, though he may have thundered (or
-was made to appear to do so) against some Gnostic sects, of which, in his day, there were
-many. But his Christos was not Jesus of Nazareth, nor any living man, as shown so
-ably in Mr. Gerald Massey’s lecture, “Paul, the Gnostic Opponent of Peter.” He
-was an Initiate, a true “Master-Builder” or adept, as described in “Isis Unveiled,”
-Vol II., pp. 90-91.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. ὁσοντε ὲκ τοῦ κατηγορουμένου ἡμῶν ὀνομάτος χρησότατοι ὑπάρχομεν
-(<cite>First Apology</cite>).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. The extraordinary amount of information collated by that able Egyptologist shows
-that he has thoroughly mastered the secret of the production of the <cite>New Testament</cite>.
-Mr. Massey knows the difference between the spiritual, divine and purely metaphysical
-Christos, and the made-up “lay figure” of the carnalized Jesus. He knows also that
-the Christian canon, especially the <cite>Gospels</cite>, <cite>Acts</cite> and <cite>Epistles</cite>, are made up of fragments
-of gnostic wisdom, the ground-work of which is <em>pre-Christian</em> and built on the
-<span class='fss'>MYSTERIES</span> of Initiation. It is the mode of theological presentation and the interpolated
-passages—such as in Mark xvi. from verse 9 to the end—which make of the
-Gospels a “magazine of (<em>wicked</em>) falsehoods,” and throw a slur on <span class='sc'>Christos</span>. But the
-Occultist who discerns between the two currents (the true gnostic and the <em>pseudo</em>
-Christian) knows that the passages free from theological tampering belong to archaic
-wisdom, and so does Mr. Gerald Massey, though his views differ from ours.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. “The key to the recovery of the language, so far as the writer’s efforts have been
-concerned, was found in the use, strange to say, of the discovered integral ratio in
-numbers of diameter to circumference of a circle,” by a geometrician. “This ratio
-is 6,561 for diameter and 20,612 for circumference.” (Cabalistic MSS.) In one of
-the future numbers of “<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>” more details will be given, with the permission of
-the discoverer.—Ed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. Cory’s <cite>Anc. Frag.</cite>, p. 59, f. So do Sanchoniaton and Hesiod, who both ascribe
-the <em>vivifying</em> of mankind to the spilt blood of the gods. But blood and <em>soul</em> are one
-(<em>nephesh</em>), and the blood of the gods means here the informing soul.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. The existence of these <em>seven</em> keys is virtually admitted, owing to deep research in
-the Egyptological lore, by Mr. G. Massey again. While opposing the teachings of
-“Esoteric Buddhism”—unfortunately misunderstood by him in almost every respect—in
-his Lecture on “The Seven Souls of Man,” he writes (p. 21):—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This system of thought, this mode of representation, this septenary of powers, in
-various aspects, had been established in Egypt, at least, seven thousand years ago, as
-we learn from certain allusions to Atum (the god ‘in whom the fatherhood was
-individualised as the <em>begetter of an eternal soul</em>,’ the <em>seventh</em> principle of the
-<a id='corr179.3.12'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Theosophists,'>Theosophists,)</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_179.3.12'><ins class='correction' title='Theosophists,'>Theosophists,)</ins></a></span> found in the inscriptions lately discovered at Sakkarah. I say in
-various aspects, <em>because the gnosis of the Mysteries was, at least, sevenfold in its nature</em>—it
-was Elemental, Biological, Elementary (human), Stellar, Lunar, Solar and
-Spiritual—and <em>nothing short of a grasp of the whole system can possibly enable us to
-discriminate the various parts, distinguish one from the other, and determinate the
-which and the what, as we try to follow the symbolical Seven through their several
-phases of character</em>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. “Gnostic and Historic Christianity.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. “Verily, verily, I say unto thee, except a man <em>be born again</em> he cannot see the
-Kingdom of God.” (John iii. 4.) Here the birth <em>from above</em>, the spiritual birth, is
-meant, achieved at the supreme and last initiation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. Or Life-origination, Life-fusion, Life-division, Life-renewal and <a id='corr204.45'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Life-tranmission'>Life-transmission</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_204.45'><ins class='correction' title='Life-tranmission'>Life-transmission</ins></a></span>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. “Mistaking” is an erroneous term to use. The men of science know but too well
-that what they teach concerning life is a materialistic fiction contradicted at every step
-by logic and fact. In this particular question science is abused, and made to serve
-personal hobbies and a determined policy of crushing in humanity every spiritual aspiration
-and thought. “<em>Pretending</em> to mistake” would be more correct.—H. P. B.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. This is what the Theosophists call “living <em>the</em> life”—in a nut-shell.—H. P. B.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. “The Blood-Covenant, a Primitive Rite, and its bearings on Scripture.” By H.
-Clay Trumbull, <span class='fss'>D.D.</span> London: Redway.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. The Theosophists are reminded that the “seven souls” are what we call the
-“seven principles” in man. “Blood” is the <em>principle</em> of the Body, the lowest in our
-septenary, as the highest is “Atma,” which may well be symbolized by the Sun; Atma
-being the light and life in man, as the physical sun is the light and life of our solar
-system.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. The arcane doctrine teaches that the “blood” rites are as old as the Third-Root
-race, being established in their final form by the Fourth Parent race in commemoration
-of the separation of androgynous mankind, their forefathers, into males and females.
-Mr. G. Massey is a strict scholar, who holds only to that which is made evident to him,
-and ignores the Occultistic division of mankind into Races, and the fact that we are in
-our Fifth-Root race, and would, of course, refuse to carry mankind back into <em>pre</em>-Tertiary
-times. Yet his researches and the fruit of his life-labour, corroborate, by their
-numberless new facts revealed by him, most <a id='corr218.44'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='wonderfullly'>wonderfully</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_218.44'><ins class='correction' title='wonderfullly'>wonderfully</ins></a></span>, the teachings of the “Secret
-Doctrines.” (<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. A. E. Waite. Published by G. Redway.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. NINETEENTH CENTURY SENSE: The Paradox of Spiritualism. By John
-Darby. J. B. Lippincott, Philadelphia, and 10, Henrietta Street,
-Covent Garden, London.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. And no doubt also the Anglo-Indians to <em>spoil</em>
-the King of Burmah of his?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>
- <h2 id='No_4' class='c006' title='LUCIFER Vol. I No. 4 December 15th, 1887'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c043'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Vol. I.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON, DECEMBER <span class='fss'>15TH</span>, 1887.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 4.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>“LUCIFER” TO THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, <br /> GREETING!</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'><span class='sc'>My Lord Primate of all England</span>,—</p>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>We make use of an open letter to your Grace as a vehicle to
-convey to you, and through you, to the clergy, to their flocks,
-and to Christians generally—who regard us as the enemies of
-Christ—a brief statement of the position which Theosophy occupies in
-regard to Christianity, as we believe that the time for making that
-statement has arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Your Grace is no doubt aware that Theosophy is not a religion, but a
-philosophy at once religious and scientific; and that the chief work, so
-far, of the Theosophical Society has been to revive in each religion its
-own animating spirit, by encouraging and helping enquiry into the true
-significance of its doctrines and observances. Theosophists know that
-the deeper one penetrates into the meaning of the dogmas and ceremonies
-of all religions, the greater becomes their apparent underlying
-similarity, until finally a perception of their fundamental unity is reached.
-This common ground is no other than Theosophy—the Secret Doctrine
-of the ages; which, diluted and disguised to suit the capacity of the
-multitude, and the requirements of the time, has formed the living kernel
-of all religions. The Theosophical Society has branches respectively
-composed of Buddhists, Hindoos, Mahomedans, Parsees, Christians,
-and Freethinkers, who work together as brethren on the common
-ground of Theosophy; and it is precisely because Theosophy is not a
-religion, nor can for the multitude supply the place of a religion, that the
-success of the Society has been so great, not merely as regards its growing
-membership and extending influence, but also in respect to the performance
-of the work it has undertaken—the revival of spirituality in
-religion, and the cultivation of the sentiment of <span class='fss'>BROTHERHOOD</span> among
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We Theosophists believe that a religion is a natural incident in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>life of man in his present stage of development; and that although, in
-rare cases, individuals may be born without the religious sentiment, a
-community must have a religion, that is to say, <em>a uniting bond</em>—under
-penalty of social decay and material annihilation. We believe that no
-religious doctrine can be more than an attempt to picture to our present
-limited understandings, in the terms of our terrestrial experiences, great
-cosmical and spiritual truths, which in our normal state of consciousness
-we vaguely <em>sense</em>, rather than actually perceive and comprehend; and a
-revelation, if it is to reveal anything, must necessarily conform to the
-same earth-bound requirements of the human intellect. In our estimation,
-therefore, no religion can be absolutely true, and none can be
-absolutely false. A religion is true in proportion as it supplies the
-spiritual, moral and intellectual needs of the time, and helps the development
-of mankind in these respects. It is false in proportion as it hinders
-that development, and offends the spiritual, moral and intellectual
-portion of man’s nature. And the transcendentally spiritual ideas of the
-ruling powers of the Universe entertained by an Oriental sage would be as
-false a religion for the African savage as the grovelling fetishism of the
-latter would be for the sage, although both views must necessarily be true
-in degree, for both represent the highest ideas attainable by the respective
-individuals of the same cosmico-spiritual facts, which can never be
-known in their reality by man while he remains but man.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Theosophists, therefore, are respecters of all the religions, and for the
-religious ethics of Jesus they have profound admiration. It could not
-be otherwise, for these teachings which have come down to us are the
-same as those of Theosophy. So far, therefore, as modern Christianity
-makes good its claim to be the <em>practical</em> religion taught by Jesus, Theosophists
-are with it heart and hand. So far as it goes contrary to those
-ethics, pure and simple, Theosophists are its opponents. Any Christian
-can, if he will, compare the Sermon on the Mount with the dogmas of
-his church, and the spirit that breathes in it, with the principles that
-animate this Christian civilisation and govern his own life; and then he
-will be able to judge for himself how far the religion of Jesus enters into
-his Christianity, and how far, therefore, he and Theosophists are agreed.
-But professing Christians, especially the clergy, shrink from making this
-comparison. Like merchants who fear to find themselves bankrupt, they
-seem to dread the discovery of a discrepancy in their accounts which
-could not be made good by placing material assets as a set-off to spiritual
-liabilities. The comparison between the teachings of Jesus and the
-doctrines of the churches has, however, frequently been made—and often
-with great learning and critical acumen—both by those who would
-abolish Christianity and those who would reform it; and the aggregate
-result of these comparisons, as your Grace must be well aware, goes to
-prove that in almost every point the doctrines of the churches and the
-practices of Christians are <em>in direct opposition to the teachings of Jesus</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>We are accustomed to say to the Buddhist, the Mahomedan, the
-Hindoo, or the Parsee: “The road to Theosophy lies, for you, through
-your own religion.” We say this because those creeds possess a deeply
-philosophical and esoteric meaning, explanatory of the allegories under
-which they are presented to the people; but we cannot say the same thing
-to Christians. The successors of the Apostles never recorded the <em>secret
-doctrine</em> of Jesus—the “mysteries of the kingdom of Heaven”—which it
-was given to them (his apostles) alone to know.<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c013'><sup>[58]</sup></a> These have been
-suppressed, made away with, destroyed. What have come down upon
-the stream of time are the maxims, the parables, the allegories and the
-fables which Jesus expressly intended for the spiritually deaf and blind
-to be revealed later to the world, and which modern Christianity either
-takes all literally, or interprets according to the fancies of the
-Fathers of the secular church. In both cases they are like cut flowers:
-they are severed from the plant on which they grew, and from the root
-whence that plant drew its life. Were we, therefore, to encourage
-Christians, as we do the votaries of other creeds, to study their own
-religion for themselves, the consequence would be, not a knowledge of the
-meaning of its mysteries, but either the revival of mediæval superstition
-and intolerance, accompanied by a formidable outbreak of mere lip-prayer
-and preaching—such as resulted in the formation of the 239 Protestant
-sects of England alone—or else a great increase of scepticism, for
-Christianity has no esoteric foundation known to those who profess it.
-For even you, my Lord Primate of England, must be painfully aware
-that you know absolutely no more of those “mysteries of the kingdom
-of Heaven” which Jesus taught his disciples, than does the humblest
-and most illiterate member of your church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is easily understood, therefore, that Theosophists have nothing to
-say against the policy of the Roman Catholic Church in forbidding, or
-of the Protestant churches in discouraging, any such private enquiry
-into the meaning of the “Christian” dogmas as would correspond to the
-esoteric study of other religions. With their present ideas and knowledge,
-professing Christians are not prepared to undertake a critical
-examination of their faith, with a promise of good results. Its inevitable
-effect would be to paralyze rather than stimulate their dormant
-religious sentiments; for biblical criticism and comparative mythology
-have proved conclusively—to those, at least, who have no vested interests,
-spiritual or temporal, in the maintenance of orthodoxy—that the
-Christian religion, as it now exists, is composed of the husks of Judaism,
-the shreds of paganism, and the ill-digested remains of gnosticism and
-neo-platonism. This curious conglomerate which gradually formed
-itself round the recorded sayings (λογια) of Jesus, has, after the
-lapse of ages, now begun to disintegrate, and to crumble away from the
-pure and precious gems of Theosophic truth which it has so long overlain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>and hidden, but could neither disfigure nor destroy. Theosophy
-not only rescues these precious gems from the fate that threatens the
-rubbish in which they have been so long embedded, but saves that
-rubbish itself from utter condemnation; for it shows that the result of
-biblical criticism is far from being the ultimate analysis of Christianity,
-as each of the pieces which compose the curious mosaics of the Churches
-once belonged to a religion which had an esoteric meaning. It is only when
-these pieces are restored to the places they originally occupied that their
-hidden significance can be perceived, and the real meaning of the dogmas
-of Christianity understood. To do all this, however, requires a knowledge
-of the Secret Doctrine as it exists in the esoteric foundation of
-other religions; and this knowledge is not in the hands of the Clergy,
-for the Church has hidden, and since lost, the keys.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Your Grace will now understand why it is that the Theosophical
-Society has taken for one of its three “objects” the study of those
-Eastern religions and philosophies, which shed such a flood of light upon
-the inner meaning of Christianity; and you will, we hope, also perceive
-that in so doing, we are acting not as the enemies, but as the friends of
-the religion taught by Jesus—of true Christianity, in fact. For it is only
-through the study of those religions and philosophies that Christians
-can ever arrive at an understanding of their own beliefs, or see the
-hidden meaning of the parables and allegories which the Nazarene told
-to the spiritual cripples of Judea, and by taking which, either as
-matters of fact or as matters of fancy, the Churches have brought the
-teachings themselves into ridicule and contempt, and Christianity into
-serious danger of complete collapse, undermined as it is by historical
-criticism and mythological research, besides being broken by the sledge-hammer
-of modern science.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Ought Theosophists themselves, then, to be regarded by Christians as
-their enemies, because they believe that orthodox Christianity is, on the
-whole, opposed to the religion of Jesus; and because they have the
-courage to tell the Churches that they are traitors to the <span class='sc'>Master</span> they
-profess to revere and serve? Far from it, indeed. Theosophists know
-that the same spirit that animated the words of Jesus lies latent in the
-hearts of Christians, as it does naturally in all men’s hearts. Their
-fundamental tenet is the Brotherhood of Man, the ultimate realisation of
-which is alone made possible by that which was known long before the
-days of Jesus as “the Christ spirit.” This spirit is even now potentially
-present in all men, and it will be developed into activity when human
-beings are no longer prevented from understanding, appreciating and
-sympathising with one another by the barriers of strife and hatred
-erected by priests and princes. We know that Christians in their lives
-frequently rise above the level of their Christianity. All Churches
-contain many noble, self-sacrificing, and virtuous men and women, eager
-to do good in their generation according to their lights and opportunities,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>and full of aspirations to higher things than those of earth—followers
-of Jesus in spite of their Christianity. For such as these, Theosophists
-feel the deepest sympathy; for only a Theosophist, or else a person of
-your Grace’s delicate sensibility and great theological learning, can justly
-appreciate the tremendous difficulties with which the tender plant of
-natural piety has to contend, as it forces its root into the uncongenial
-soil of our Christian civilization, and tries to blossom in the cold
-and arid atmosphere of theology. How hard, for instance, must it not
-be to “love” such a God as that depicted in a well-known passage by
-Herbert Spencer:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The cruelty of a Fijian God, who, represented as devouring the souls of
-the dead, may be supposed to inflict torture during the process, is small, compared
-to the cruelty of a God who condemns men to tortures which are eternal....
-The visiting on Adam’s descendants through hundreds of generations, of
-dreadful penalties for a small transgression which they did not commit, the
-damning of all men who do not avail themselves of an alleged mode of obtaining
-forgiveness, which most men have never heard of, and the effecting of reconciliation
-by sacrificing a son who was perfectly innocent, to satisfy the assumed
-necessity for a propitiatory victim, are modes of action which, ascribed to a
-human ruler, would call forth expressions of abhorrence.”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>(“<cite>Religion: a Retrospect and a Prospect.</cite>”)</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Your Grace will say, no doubt, that Jesus never taught the worship of
-such a god as that. Even so say we Theosophists. Yet that is the very
-god whose worship is officially conducted in Canterbury Cathedral, by
-you, my Lord Primate of England; and your Grace will surely agree
-with us that there must indeed be a divine spark of religious intuition in
-the hearts of men, that enables them to resist so well as they do, the
-deadly action of such poisonous theology.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If your Grace, from your high pinnacle, will cast your eyes around,
-you will behold a Christian civilisation in which a frantic and merciless
-battle of man against man is not only the distinguishing feature, but the
-acknowledged principle. It is an accepted scientific and economic axiom
-to-day, that all progress is achieved through the struggle for existence
-and the survival of the fittest; and the fittest to survive in this Christian
-civilization are not those who are possessed of the qualities that are
-recognised by the morality of every age to be the best—not the generous,
-the pious, the noble-hearted, the forgiving, the humble, the truthful, the
-honest, and the kind—but those who are strongest in selfishness, in
-craft, in hypocrisy, in brute force, in false pretence, in unscrupulousness,
-in cruelty, and in avarice. The spiritual and the altruistic are “the
-weak,” whom the “laws” that govern the universe give as food to the
-egoistic and material—“the strong.” That “might is right” is the only
-legitimate conclusion, the last word of the 19th century ethics, for, as the
-world has become one huge battlefield, on which “the fittest” descend
-like vultures to tear out the eyes and the hearts of those who have fallen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>in the fight. Does religion put a stop to the battle? Do the churches
-drive away the vultures, or comfort the wounded and the dying? Religion
-does not weigh a feather in the <em>world</em> at large to-day, when worldly
-advantage and selfish pleasures are put in the other scale; and the
-churches are powerless to revivify the religious sentiment among men,
-because their ideas, their knowledge, their methods, and their arguments
-are those of the Dark Ages. My Lord Primate, your Christianity is
-five hundred years behind the times.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So long as men disputed whether this god or that god was the true
-one, or whether the soul went to this place or that one after death, you,
-the clergy, understood the question, and had arguments at hand to
-influence opinion—by syllogism or torture, as the case might require; but
-now it is the existence of any such being as God, at all, or of any kind
-of immortal spirit, that is questioned or denied. Science invents new
-theories of the Universe which contemptuously ignore the existence of
-any god; moralists establish theories of ethics and social life in which
-the non-existence of a future life is taken for granted; in physics, in
-psychology, in law, in medicine, the one thing needful in order to entitle
-any teacher to a hearing is that no reference whatever should be contained
-in his ideas either to a Providence, or to a soul. The world is
-being rapidly brought to the conviction that god is a mythical conception,
-which has no foundation in fact, or place in Nature; and that the immortal
-part of man is the silly dream of ignorant savages, perpetuated
-by the lies and tricks of priests, who reap a harvest by cultivating the
-fears of men that their mythical God will torture their imaginary souls
-to all eternity, in a fabulous Hell. In the face of all these things the clergy
-stand in this age dumb and powerless. The only answer which the
-Church knew how to make to such “objections” as these, were <em>the rack
-and the faggot</em>; and she cannot use that system of logic <em>now</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is plain that if the God and the soul taught by the churches be
-imaginary entities, then the Christian salvation and damnation are mere
-delusions of the mind, produced by the hypnotic process of assertion and
-suggestion on a magnificent scale, acting cumulatively on generations of
-mild “hysteriacs.” What answer have you to such a theory of the
-Christian religion, except a repetition of assertions and suggestions?
-What ways have you of bringing men back to their old beliefs but by
-reviving their old habits? “Build more churches, say more prayers,
-establish more missions, and your faith in damnation and salvation will
-be revived, and a renewed belief in God and the soul will be the necessary
-result.” That is the policy of the churches, and their only answer to
-agnosticism and materialism. But your Grace must know that to meet
-the attacks of modern science and criticism with such weapons as
-assertion and habit, is like going forth against magazine guns, armed with
-boomerangs and leather shields. While, however, the progress of ideas
-and the increase of knowledge are undermining the popular theology, every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>discovery of science, every new conception of European advanced
-thought, brings the 19th century mind nearer to the ideas of the Divine
-and the Spiritual, known to all esoteric religions and to Theosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Church claims that Christianity is the only true religion, and
-this claim involves two distinct propositions, namely, that Christianity
-is true religion, and that there is no true religion except Christianity.
-It never seems to strike Christians that God and Spirit could possibly
-exist in any other form than that under which they are presented in the
-doctrines of their church. The savage calls the missionary an Atheist,
-because he does not carry an idol in his trunk; and the missionary, in
-his turn, calls everyone an Atheist who does not carry about a fetish in
-his mind; and neither savage nor Christian ever seem to suspect that
-there may be a higher idea than their own of the great hidden power
-that governs the Universe, to which the name of “God” is much more
-applicable. It is doubtful whether the churches take more pains to
-prove Christianity “true,” or to prove that any other kind of religion
-is necessarily “false;” and the evil consequences of this, their teaching,
-are terrible. When people discard dogma they fancy that they have
-discarded the religious sentiment also, and they conclude that religion
-is a superfluity in human life—a rendering to the clouds of things that
-belong to earth, a waste of energy which could be more profitably expended
-in the struggle for existence. The materialism of this age is,
-therefore, the direct consequence of the Christian doctrine that there is
-no ruling power in the Universe, and no immortal Spirit in man except
-those made known in Christian dogmas. The Atheist, my Lord Primate,
-is the bastard son of the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But this is not all. The churches have never taught men any other
-or higher reason why they should be just and kind and true than the
-hope of reward and the fear of punishment, and when they let go their
-belief in Divine caprice and Divine injustice the foundations of their
-morality are sapped. They have not even natural morality to consciously
-fall back upon, for Christianity has taught them to regard it
-as worthless on account of the natural depravity of man. Therefore
-self-interest becomes the only motive for conduct, and the fear of being
-found out, the only deterrent from vice. And so, with regard to morality
-as well as to God and the soul, Christianity pushes men off the path that
-leads to knowledge, and precipitates them into the abyss of incredulity,
-pessimism and vice. The last place where men would now look for
-help from the evils and miseries of life is the Church, because they know
-that the building of churches and the repeating of litanies influence
-neither the powers of Nature nor the councils of nations; because they
-instinctively feel that when the churches accepted the principle of expediency
-they lost their power to move the hearts of men, and can now
-only act on the external plane, as the supporters of the policeman and
-the politician.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>The function of religion is to comfort and encourage humanity in its
-life-long struggle with sin and sorrow. This it can do only by presenting
-mankind with noble ideals of a happier existence after death, and of
-a worthier life on earth, to be won in both cases by conscious effort.
-What the world now wants is a Church that will tell it of Deity, or
-the immortal principle in man, which will be at least on a level with
-the ideas and knowledge of the times. Dogmatic Christianity is not
-suited for a world that reasons and thinks, and only those who can
-throw themselves into a mediæval state of mind, can appreciate a Church
-whose religious (as distinguished from its social and political) function
-is to keep God in good humour while the laity are doing what they
-believe he does not approve; to pray for changes of weather; and occasionally,
-to thank the Almighty for helping to slaughter the enemy. It
-is not “medicine men,” but spiritual guides that the world looks for to-day—a
-“clergy” that will give it ideals as suited to the intellect of this
-century, as the Christian Heaven and Hell, God and the Devil, were to
-the ages of dark ignorance and superstition. Do, or can, the Christian
-clergy fulfil this requirement? The misery, the crime, the vice, the
-selfishness, the brutality, the lack of self-respect and self-control, that
-mark our modern civilization, unite their voices in one tremendous cry,
-and answer—<span class='fss'>NO!</span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What is the meaning of the reaction against materialism, the signs of
-which fill the air to-day? It means that the world has become mortally
-sick of the dogmatism, the arrogance, the self-sufficiency, and the spiritual
-blindness of modern science—of that same Modern Science which men
-but yesterday hailed as their deliverer from religious bigotry and
-Christian superstition, but which, like the Devil of the monkish legends,
-requires, as the price of its services, the sacrifice of man’s immortal soul.
-And meanwhile, what are the Churches doing? The Churches are
-sleeping the sweet sleep of endowments, of social and political influence,
-while the world, the flesh, and the devil, are appropriating their watchwords,
-their miracles, their arguments, and their blind faith. The
-Spiritualists—oh! Churches of Christ—have stolen the fire from your altars
-to illumine their séance rooms; the Salvationists have taken your
-sacramental wine, and make themselves spiritually drunk in the streets;
-the Infidel has stolen the weapons with which you vanquished him
-once, and triumphantly tells you that “What you advance, has been
-frequently said before.” Had ever clergy so splendid an opportunity?
-The grapes in the vineyard are ripe, needing only the right labourers to
-gather them. Were you to give to the world some proof, on the level of the
-present intellectual standard of probability, that Deity—the immortal
-Spirit in man—have a real existence as facts in Nature, would not men hail
-you as their saviour from pessimism and despair, from the maddening
-and brutalizing thought that there is no other destiny for man but an
-eternal blank, after a few short years of bitter toil and sorrow?—aye;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>as their saviours from the panic-stricken fight for material enjoyment
-and worldly advancement, which is the direct consequence of believing
-this mortal life to be the be-all and end-all of existence?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the Churches have neither the knowledge nor the faith needed to
-save the world, and perhaps your Church, my Lord Primate, least of all,
-with the mill-stone of £8,000,000 a year hung round its neck. In vain you
-try to lighten the ship by casting overboard the ballast of doctrines
-which your forefathers deemed vital to Christianity. What more can your
-Church do now, than run before the gale with bare poles, while the
-clergy feebly endeavour to putty up the gaping leaks with the “revised
-version,” and by their social and political deadweight try to prevent the
-ship from capsizing, and its cargo of dogmas and endowments from going
-to the bottom?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Who built Canterbury Cathedral, my Lord Primate? Who invented
-and gave life to the great ecclesiastical organisation which makes an
-Archbishop of Canterbury possible? Who laid the foundation of the
-vast system of religious taxation which gives you £15,000 a year and a
-palace? Who instituted the forms and ceremonies, the prayers and
-litanies, which, slightly altered and stripped of art and ornament, make
-the liturgy of the Church of England? Who wrested from the people
-the proud titles of “reverend divine” and “Man of God” which the
-clergy of your Church so confidently assume? Who, indeed, but the
-Church of Rome! We speak in no spirit of enmity. Theosophy has
-seen the rise and fall of many faiths, and will be present at the birth and
-death of many more. We know that the lives of religions are subject to
-law. Whether you inherited legitimately from the Church of Rome, or
-obtained by violence, we leave you to settle with your enemies and
-with your conscience; for our mental attitude towards your Church is
-determined by its intrinsic worthiness. We know that if it be unable to
-fulfil the true spiritual function of a religion, it will surely be swept
-away, even though the fault lie rather in its hereditary tendencies, or in
-its environments, than in itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Church of England, to use a homely simile, is like a train
-running by the momentum it acquired before steam was shut off.
-When it left the main track, it got upon a siding that leads nowhere.
-The train has nearly come to a standstill, and many of the passengers
-have left it for other conveyances. Those that remain are for the most
-part aware that they have been depending all along upon what little
-steam was left in the boiler when the fires of Rome were withdrawn
-from under it. They suspect that they may be only playing at train
-now; but the engineer keeps blowing his whistle and the guard goes
-round to examine the tickets, and the breaksmen rattle their breaks, and
-it is not such bad fun after all. For the carriages are warm and comfortable
-and the day is cold, and so long as they are tipped all the company’s
-servants are very obliging. But those who know where they want to go,
-are not so contented.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>For several centuries the Church of England has performed the
-difficult feat of blowing hot and cold in two directions at once—saying
-to the Roman Catholics “Reason!” and to the Sceptics “Believe!”
-It was by adjusting the force of its two-faced blowing, that it has
-managed to keep itself so long from falling off the fence. But now the
-fence itself is giving way. Disendowment and disestablishment are in
-the air. And what does your Church urge in its own behalf? Its usefulness.
-It is <em>useful</em> to have a number of educated, moral, unworldly men,
-scattered all over the country, who prevent the world from utterly forgetting
-the name of religion, and who act as centres of benevolent work. But
-the question now is no longer one of repeating prayers, and giving alms to
-the poor, as it was five hundred years ago. The people have come of age,
-and have taken their thinking and the direction of their social, private and
-even spiritual affairs into their own hands, for they have found out
-that their clergy know no more about “things of Heaven” than
-they do themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the Church of England, it is said, has become so liberal that all
-ought to support it. Truly, one can go to an excellent imitation of the
-mass, or sit under a virtual Unitarian, and still be within its fold. This
-beautiful tolerance, however, only means that the Church has found it
-necessary to make itself an open common, where every one can put up
-his own booth, and give his special performance if he will only join in
-the defence of the endowments. Tolerance and liberality are contrary
-to the laws of the existence of any church that believes in divine damnation,
-and their appearance in the Church of England is not a sign of
-renewed life, but of approaching disintegration. No less deceptive is the
-energy evinced by the Church in the building of churches. If this were
-a measure of religion what a pious age this would be! Never was
-dogma so well housed before, though human beings may have to sleep
-by thousands in the streets, and to literally starve in the shadow of
-our majestic cathedrals, built in the name of Him who had not where to
-lay His head. But did Jesus tell you, your Grace, that religion lay not
-in the hearts of men, but in temples made with hands? You cannot
-convert your piety into stone and use it in your lives; and history shows
-that petrifaction of the religious sentiment is as deadly a disease as
-ossification of the heart. Were churches, however, multiplied a hundred
-fold, and were every clergyman to become a centre of philanthropy, it
-would only be substituting the work that the poor require from their
-fellow men but not from their spiritual teachers, for that which they ask
-and cannot obtain. It would but bring into greater relief the spiritual
-barrenness of the doctrines of the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The time is approaching when the clergy will be called upon to
-render an account of their stewardship. Are you prepared, my Lord
-Primate, to explain to <span class='fss'>YOUR MASTER</span> why you have given His children
-stones, when they cried to you for bread? You smile in your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>fancied security. The servants have kept high carnival so long in the
-inner chambers of the Lord’s house, that they think He will surely
-never return. But He told you He would come as a thief in the night;
-and lo! He is coming already in the hearts of men. He is coming to
-take possession of His Father’s kingdom there, where alone His kingdom
-is. But you know Him not! Were the Churches themselves not carried
-away in the flood of negation and materialism which has engulfed
-Society, they would recognise the quickly growing germ of the Christ-spirit
-in the hearts of thousands, whom they now brand as infidels and
-madmen. They would recognise there the same spirit of love, of self-sacrifice,
-of immense pity for the ignorance, the folly, and the sufferings
-of the world, which appeared in its purity in the heart of Jesus, as
-it had appeared in the hearts of other Holy Reformers in other ages;
-and which is the light of all true religion, and the lamp by which the
-Theosophists of all times have endeavoured to guide their steps along
-the narrow path that leads to salvation—the path which is trodden by
-every incarnation of <span class='sc'>Christos</span> or the <span class='sc'>Spirit of Truth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And now, my Lord Primate, we have very respectfully laid before you
-the principal points of difference and disagreement between Theosophy
-and the Christian Churches, and told you of the oneness
-of Theosophy and the teachings of Jesus. You have heard our profession
-of faith, and learned the grievances and plaints which we lay at the
-door of dogmatic Christianity. We, a handful of humble individuals, possessed
-of neither riches nor worldly influence, but strong in our knowledge,
-have united in the hope of doing the work which you say that your
-<span class='sc'>Master</span> has allotted to you, but which is so sadly neglected by that
-wealthy and domineering colossus—the Christian Church. Will you
-call this presumption, we wonder? Will you, in this land of free opinion,
-free speech, and free effort, venture to accord us no other recognition than
-the usual <em>anathema</em>, which the Church keeps in store for the reformer?
-Or may we hope that the bitter lessons of experience, which that policy
-has afforded the Churches in the past, will have altered the hearts and
-cleared the understandings of her rulers; and that the coming year,
-1888, will witness the stretching out to us of the hand of Christians in
-fellowship and goodwill? This would only be a just recognition that
-the comparatively small body called the Theosophical Society is no
-pioneer of the Anti-Christ, no brood of the Evil one, but the practical
-helper, perchance the saviour, of Christianity, and that it is only endeavouring
-to do the work that Jesus, like Buddha, and the other
-“sons of God” who preceded him, has commanded all his followers to
-undertake, but which the Churches, having become dogmatic, are entirely
-unable to accomplish.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And now, if your Grace can prove that we do injustice to the Church
-of which you are the Head, or to popular Theology, we promise to acknowledge
-our error publicly. But—“<span class='sc'>Silence gives Consent.</span>”</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>“EMERSON AND OCCULTISM.”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“’Tis thus at the roaring Loom of Time I ply,</div>
- <div class='line'>And weave for God the garment thou seest Him by.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>—<span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><cite>Erd. Geist</cite></span>, <span class='sc'>Faust</span>.</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>The sunset, to the boor a mere mass of evening vapours, presaging
-rain for his fields or heat for his harvest, expands for the poet,
-standing beside him and beholding the self-same firmament,
-into a splendid picture, rich in crimson and purple, in golden light and
-gleaming colour, mingled in harmonious purity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Whence so great a difference?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The poet has finer eyes; and within the mere material forms perceives
-a subtle essence, which flows everywhere through nature, adding to all it
-touches a new wealth of joy and power. The poet’s eyes have opened to
-a new reality; he no longer values things for themselves; but in proportion
-as they contain this quality, they become dear to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But beyond the poet, there is yet a third rank. The poet, it is true,
-rejoices in nature, and perceives its beauty and symbolic character.
-But he rests in the beauty of the symbol, and does not pass to the
-reality symbolised. Rapt in adoration of the beauty of the garment,
-he does not pierce through to Him who wears the garment. This
-remains for the philosopher—the sage. Yet the boor has his place in
-Nature. He has tilled and subdued the soil, has brought its latent
-powers into action; in command of nature, he is far in advance of the
-mere nomad savage, for whom nature is a maze of uncertain and unconquered
-forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The savage, the boor, the poet; these types have their parallels in
-mental life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When the crude conceptions of nature, which mark dawning civilisation,
-give place to those fair and truer, because more harmonious, views
-which bear the name of Science; when the principle of Continuity, the
-reign of Universal Law, have displaced the first notions of Chance and
-Discord, the work of the physical scientist is done; he must stand aside,
-and make way for the philosopher, the transcendentalist. Modern
-Science has replaced the crudities of mediæval theology by the idea of
-an orderly universe permeated by Law, binding alike the galaxy and
-the atom, as the tillage of the farmer has replaced the nomadism of the
-savage.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But within the world of the boor nestles the poet’s world, and within
-the world of the physical scientist lies an ethereal, spiritual universe, with
-its own powers, its own prophets. The great trilogy of friends at the
-beginning of this century, who rose like three mountain peaks above
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>their contemporaries, Goethe, Carlyle, and Emerson, were chosen by
-Destiny as prophets of this nature within nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Their gleanings have been rich enough to tempt many to enter the
-same field, though they have no more exhausted its wealth than Homer
-and Shakespeare have exhausted poetry.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The new world they have explored, is the land of hope of the future,
-for which we must leave the impoverished soil of theology, and the arid
-deserts of materialism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What these three masters taught, Occultism teaches; and we propose
-to show them as great natural masters in the mystic knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To do this with any completeness in the space at our disposal is
-necessarily impossible; for the present, we must content ourselves with
-shewing from the writings of one of the masters, Emerson, that he recognised
-some of the chief laws announced by Occultism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first truth to be insisted on, concerning this nature within nature,
-the spiritual universe, is that it exists for its own ends, and not as an
-adjunct to the material world; in other words, the end of morals is to
-make archangels rather than good citizens.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Spirit is the reality; matter, the secondary; or, as Goethe says, the
-<em>Garment</em> of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No occultist could insist on the subordinate character of matter more
-vehemently than Emerson—he writes:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Nature is a mutable cloud, which is always and never the same. Through the
-bruteness and toughness of matter, a subtle spirit bends all things to its own will.
-The world proceeds from the same spirit as the body of man. It is a <em>remoter and
-inferior incarnation of God</em>, a projection of God into the unconscious.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Occultist sees in this world of spirit the home of that true joy of
-which all earthly happiness is the shadow, and whispered intimation.
-There all ideals find their realization, all highest hopes their fulfilment;
-there flow abundant fountains of celestial bliss, whose least presence
-makes earthly things radiant.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Of spirit, Emerson writes:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But when following the invisible steps of thought, we come to enquire, Whence
-is matter? and where to? Many truths arise to us out of the recesses of consciousness.
-We learn that the highest is present to the soul of man, that the dread universal
-essence which is not wisdom, or love, or beauty, or power; but all in one, and each
-entirely, is that for which all things exist, and that by which they are; that spirit
-creates; that behind nature, throughout nature spirit is present. As a plant upon the
-earth, so a man rests upon the bosom of God; he is nourished by unfailing fountains,
-and draws, at his need, inexhaustible power.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>But to obtain a footing in this world of essential being, is to be
-emancipated from the domination of Time and Space, to enter a universe
-where they do not exist; for Space and Time are no realities, but, as
-Carlyle says, the “deepest of all <em>illusory appearances</em>.” Emancipation
-from Space and Time; how much more this implies than is at first sight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>apparent. The first fruit of this freedom is a feeling of eternalness, the
-real basis of the doctrine of immortality. It is an attainable reality, this
-sense of eternalness; let the sceptic and materialist say what they will.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Of this truth, also, we may bring Emerson as witness. He writes:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“To truth, justice, love, the attributes of the soul, the idea of <em>immutableness</em> is
-essentially associated. In the flowing of love, in the adoration of humility, there is no
-question of continuance.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Once recognise the truth that we can gain a footing in a world free
-from the tyranny of time, that the soul exists in such a world, and a new
-philosophy is at once required. Freedom from Time implies the eternity
-of the soul, and the facts of life and death take a new position and
-significance. If the soul be eternal, death must be an illusion, a garment
-in which Nature wraps some hidden law.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the following words of Emerson, on this subject:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is the secret of the world that <em>all things subsist and do not die</em>, but only retire a
-little from sight, and afterwards return again. Whatever does not concern us, is
-concealed from us. As soon as a person is no longer related to our present well-being,
-he is concealed or <em>dies</em>, as we say. When the man has exhausted for the time the nourishment
-to be drawn from any one person or thing, that object is withdrawn from his
-observation, and though still in his immediate neighbourhood, he does not suspect its
-presence. Nothing is dead; men feign themselves dead, and endure mock funerals
-and mournful obituaries, and there they stand looking out of the window, sound and
-well, in some new disguise. Jesus is not dead; he is very well alive; nor John, nor
-Paul, nor Mahomet, nor Aristotle.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>we have an accurate exposition of the occult doctrine of Reincarnation—the
-progressive discipline of the soul through many lives—which has
-been parodied in the popular fable of metemphsychosis.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The true occult doctrine does not picture a series of bodies in each of
-which the soul makes a temporary sojourn. In this, as in all else, it
-begins with spirit and then descends to matter. It depicts that vital
-energy which we call a soul, alternately exuding from itself and re-absorbing
-into its own nature an environment or physical encasement,
-whose character varies with the increasing stature of the soul.
-According to the teaching of occultism, the successive formations of this
-objective shell—whose purpose is to provide for the development of the
-animal nature—alternate with periods of subjective life, which give
-expansion to the powers of the soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As corollary to this doctrine, occultism postulates a second—that the
-incidents of each objective environment or physical life—are not fortuitous
-and isolated, but that they are bound to all that precede and follow
-them, and moreover that “the future is not arbitrarily formed by any
-separate acts of the present, but that the whole future is in unbroken
-continuity with the present, as the present is with the past.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To the various developments of this law, eastern philosophy has given
-the name of Karma; the west has as yet no name for it. But though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>unnamed, its leading ideas have not been unperceived by those western
-minds which have penetrated into the world of supernature.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus we find Emerson writing:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Every secret is told, every crime is punished, every virtue rewarded, every wrong
-redressed, in silence and certainty. Crime and punishment grow on one stem;
-punishment is a fruit that unsuspected ripens within the flower of pleasure which concealed
-it. You cannot do wrong without suffering wrong. The thief steals from
-himself; the swindler swindles himself. Everything in nature, even motes and
-feathers, goes by law and not by luck. <em>What a man sows, he reaps.</em>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The picture of an orderly universe, where matter is the garment of
-spirit—spirit visualised—where souls march onward in orderly procession
-to boundless perfection; where the life of each permeates and
-flows through the life of all; where the wrong of each is turned to the
-benefit of all by the firm hand of an invisible and ever active law,
-incessantly disciplining and correcting, till the last dross of self and sin
-is purged away, and instead of man there remains God only, working
-through the powers that were man’s; such is the conception Occultism
-holds.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I know not,” says Emerson—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I know not whether there be, as is alleged, in the upper region of our atmosphere
-a permanent westerly current, which carries with it all atoms which rise to that height,
-but I see that when souls reach a certain clearness of perfection, they accept a knowledge
-and motive above selfishness. A breath of Will blows eternally through the
-universe of souls in the direction of the Right and Necessary. It is the air which
-all intellects inhale and exhale, and it is the wind which blows the world into order
-and orbit.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Let us build altars to the Beautiful Necessity which rudely or softly educates men
-to the perception that there are no contingencies, that Law rules through existence,
-a Law which is not intelligent but intelligence, not personal nor impersonal—it disdains
-words, and passes understanding; it dissolves persons; it vivifies nature, yet
-solicits the pure in heart to draw on its all, its omnipotence.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Discipline always and everywhere throughout the universe; to
-discipline, development, all other facts are subordinate; for their sake,
-all laws are enunciated, all spiritual facts are insisted on; all truths
-which tend not to the melioration of human life—if any such there be—are
-worthless. Discipline, development. What development does
-Occultism predict for man? Man’s future destiny, in the view of
-Occultism, is so stupendous, that we prefer merely to erect a finger-post
-pointing out the direction of the path, using the words of Emerson:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The youth puts off the illusions of the child, the man puts off the ignorance and
-tumultuous passions of the youth; proceeding thence, puts off the egotism of manhood,
-and becomes at last a public and universal soul. He is rising to greater height, but
-also to realities; the outer relations and circumstances dying out, he is entering
-deeper into God, God into him, until the last garment of egotism falls, and he is with
-God, shares the will and the immensity of the First Cause.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>From first to last, Occultism has preached no doctrine more
-emphatically than the necessity of dependence on the intuitions, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>the reality of interior illumination. “Seek out the way by making the
-profound obeisance of the soul to the dim star that burns within; within
-you is the light of the world,” writes the Occultist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And this doctrine is repeated again and again in the writings of the
-philosopher we have been quoting from. He writes:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light which flashes across
-his mind from within, more than the lustre of the <a id='corr256.7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='firmanent'>firmament</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_256.7'><ins class='correction' title='firmanent'>firmament</ins></a></span> of bards and sages.
-From within or from behind, a light shines through us upon things, and makes us
-aware that we are nothing, but that the light is all. The consciousness in each man
-is a sliding scale, which identifies him now with the First Cause, and now with the
-flesh of his body; life above life, in infinite degrees. There is for each a Best
-Counsel, which enjoins the fit word and the fit act for every moment. There is no bar
-or wall in the soul where man, the effect, ceases, and God, the cause, begins. The
-walls are taken away, we lie open on one side to the deeps of spiritual nature, to the
-attributes of God. The simplest person who, in his integrity, worships God, becomes
-God; yet for ever and ever the influx of this better and universal self is new and
-unsearchable.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The life of one is the life of all. The good of one re-acts on all. The
-walls by which selfishness conceives itself enclosed and isolated, are
-unreal, have no existence. Spirit is fluid and all-pervading; its
-beneficent power flows unchecked from soul to soul, energising, harmonising,
-purifying. To resist all discordant tendencies which check
-this salutary flow, this all-permeating love, is to come under the reign
-of Universal Brotherhood; and to the honour of Occultism be it said,
-that Universal Brotherhood is blazoned highest on its standard.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Thus,” writes Emerson—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>—“Are we put in training for a love which knows not sex nor person, nor partiality,
-but which seeks virtue and wisdom everywhere. One day all men will be
-lovers, and every calamity will be dissolved in universal sunshine. An acceptance of
-the sentiment of love throughout Christendom for a season would bring the felon and
-the outcast to our side in tears, with the devotion of his faculties to our service.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>But to the axiom “Kill out the sense of separateness” Occultism adds
-another, “Yet stand alone.” Before the lesson of life can be learnt, the
-soul must in some sort detach itself from its environment, and view all
-things impersonally, in solitude and stillness. There is an oracle in the
-lonely recess of the soul to which all things must be brought for trial.
-Here all laws are tested, all appearances weighed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>About this truth always hangs a certain solemnity, and Emerson has
-given it a fitting expression in the following words:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The soul gives itself alone, original, and pure, to the Lonely, Original, and Pure, who,
-on that condition, gladly inhabits, leads, and speaks through it. Then it is glad, young,
-and nimble. Behold, it saith, I am born into the great, the universal mind. I, the
-imperfect, adore my own Perfect. I am somehow receptive of the great soul, and
-thereby I do overlook the sun and the stars, and feel them to be the fair accidents and
-effects which change and pass. More and more the surges of everlasting nature enter
-into me, and I become public and human in my regards and actions. So I come to
-live in thoughts, and act with energies, which are immortal.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>The last words of this sentence lead us to the occult idea of <em>Mahatma-hood</em>,
-which conceives a perfected soul as “living in thoughts, and acting
-with energies which are immortal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The <em>Mahatma</em> is a soul of higher rank in the realms of life, conceived
-to drink in the wealth of spiritual power closer to the fountain-head, and
-to distil its essence into the interior of receptive souls.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In harmony with this idea, Emerson writes:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Truth is the summit of being; justice is the application of it to affairs. All
-individual natures stand in a scale, according to the purity of this element in them.
-The will of the pure runs down from them into other natures, as water runs down from
-a higher into a lower vessel; this natural force is no more to be withstood than any
-other natural force. A healthy soul stands united with the Just and the True, as the
-magnet arranges itself with the pole, so that he stands to all beholders like a transparent
-object betwixt them and the sun, and whoso journeys towards the sun, journeys
-towards that person.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Occultism conceives the outer world and all its accidents to be so
-many veils, shrouding the splendour of essential nature, and tempering
-the fiery purity of spirit to the imperfect powers of the understanding
-soul. This illusory power Occultism considers to be the “active will of
-God,” a means to the ends of eternal spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the view of Occultism, life is a drama of thinly veiled souls; as
-Shakespeare writes:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>“We are such stuff</div>
- <div class='line'>As dreams are made of, and our little life</div>
- <div class='line'>Is rounded with a sleep!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>We shall conclude with two passages from Emerson’s essays, on the
-subject of illusions:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you see that kitten chasing so prettily her own tail? If you could look with
-her eyes, you might see her surrounded with hundreds of figures performing complex
-dramas, with tragic and comic issues, long conversations, many characters, many ups
-and downs of fate; and meantime it is only puss and her tail. How long before our
-masquerade will end its noise of tambourines, laughter, and shouting, and we shall
-find it was a solitary performance?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>We must supplement this rather playful passage with one in a higher
-strain:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“There is no chance, and no anarchy, in the universe. All is system and gradation.
-Every god is there sitting in his sphere. The young mortal enters the hall of the
-firmament; there is he alone with them alone, they pouring on him benedictions and
-gifts, and beckoning him up to their thrones. On an instant, and incessantly, fall
-snowstorms and illusions. He fancies himself in a vast crowd which sways this way
-and that, and whose movement and doings he must obey: he fancies himself poor,
-orphaned, insignificant. The mad crowd drives hither and thither, now furiously
-commanding this thing to be done, now that. What is he that he should resist their
-will, and think or act for himself? Every moment new changes and new showers of
-deceptions to baffle and distract him. And when, by-and-bye, for an instant, the air
-clears, and the cloud lifts a little, there are the gods still sitting around him on their
-thrones—they alone with him alone.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Charles Johnston, F.T.S.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>
- <h3 id='blossom4' class='c018'><span class="blackletter">THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN</i>.</div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Mabel Collins</span>,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='small'>Scribe of “<span class='sc'>The Idyll of the White Lotus</span>,” and “<span class='sc'>Through the Gates of Gold</span>.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[<em>Some of the readers of</em> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> <em>have taken great exception to the love passages
-between Fleta and Hilary, saying that they are not up to the standard of Theosophic
-thought, and are out of place in the magazine. The author can only beg that time may
-be given for the story to develope. None of us that is born dies without experiencing
-human passion; it is the base on which an edifice must rise at last, after many incarnations
-have purified it; “it is the blossom which has in it the fruit.” Hilary is still
-only a man, he has not yet learned to the full the lesson of human life and human passion.
-Fleta promises him all that he can take and that plainly is only what she can
-give—the deep love of the disciple. But she cannot instantly free his eyes from the
-illusions caused by his own passionate heart; till he has suffered and conquered, he
-cannot recognise her for what she is, the pledged servant of a great master, of necessity
-more white-souled than any nun need be.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>Another strange criticism is made, condemning portions of the story as though expressive
-of the author’s feelings and sentiments; whereas they are simply descriptive of the
-states through which Hilary is passing. They no more express the author’s feelings
-than do those later parts which refer to the ordeals of Fleta, the accepted disciple, express
-the author’s feelings. The two characters of the struggling aspirant and the advanced
-disciple, are studies from life. The stumbling-block of human passion which stands in
-Hilary’s way, is the same which lost Zanoni his high estate; in the coming chapters
-of “The Blossom and the Fruit,” we shall see Fleta flung back from the high estate she
-aims at, by this same stumbling-block, in an idealised and subtle form. She has not
-yet learned the bitter truth that the Occultist must stand absolutely alone, without
-even companionship of thought, or sympathy of feeling, at the times of the Initiations
-and the trials which precede them.</em>—M. C.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER VI.—(<i>Continued.</i>)</h4>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>Hilary found himself in a room which no longer permitted him
-to regret his own rooms at home, for it was more luxurious. A
-great bath stood ready filled with perfumed water, and he
-hastened to bathe himself therein, with a sort of idea that he was perhaps
-suffering from hallucinations, some of which he might wash away.
-His scanty luggage had been brought into the room, and when the bath
-was over Hilary got out a velvet suit which he thought would do well
-for evening-dress in this palace of surprises. He was but just ready
-when a knock came at his door, and without further ceremony, Mark
-opened it and looked in.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>“Come,” he said, “we don’t wait for anybody here. The cook won’t
-stand it. He is a very holy father indeed, and nobody dare say him
-nay, unless it were the Princess herself. She always does as she likes.
-Are you ready?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Quite,” replied Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Opening out of the entrance was a great oak door, double, and very
-richly carved. This had been shut when Hilary passed through before;
-now it stood open, and Mark led the way through it. They entered an
-immense room, of which the floor was polished so that it shone like a
-mirror. Two figures were standing in the midst of this room, dressed
-alike in clouds of white lace; they were the two Fletas, as to Hilary’s
-eyes they still seemed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His heart was torn as he gazed on them, waiting for a glance
-of love, a gleam of love-light, to tell him which was his own, his
-Fleta, his princess, the Fleta whom he served. There was none; they
-had been talking together very earnestly and both looked sad and a
-little weary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As Hilary’s eyes wandered from one face to the other his mind
-grew confused. And then suddenly a flash of bewitchingly beautiful
-laughter came on one of the faces; and immediately he decided that
-must be Adine. And yet, had he not seen just such laughter flash across
-Fleta’s face? But all this passed in a moment, and no more time was
-given him for thought. A table stood at one end of the hall, set as a
-king’s table might be; covered with the finest linen, edged with deep
-lace, and with gold dishes of fruit upon it; it was decorated with lovely
-flowers. Hilary opened his eyes a little even in the midst of his other much
-greater perplexities, to see this luxury here in the midst of the forest. And
-was it prepared in honour of Fleta, who ate a crust of dry bread in an ale-house
-with perfect cheerfulness, or rather, indifference? Fleta took her
-place at the end of the table; at least, one sister did so, and the other took
-her place beside Hilary—he could not yet determine which was which, and
-his whole soul was absorbed in the attempted solution of that problem.
-Mark sat at the other end of the table, evidently prepared to do such
-labours of carving as might be necessary. Two places were set at the
-other side of the table, but no one came to fill them. A very elaborate
-dinner was served, and a very good one; and Hilary thought he was
-satisfied now that it was Adine who sat next him, for she showed
-herself an unmistakable little gourmand. He had just come to this
-conclusion when his attention was distracted by the great doors being
-thrown open again for two persons to enter. Everyone rose, even Fleta,
-who advanced with a smile to meet these new comers. Hilary rose also
-and turned from the table. Two men stood there; one a man but
-little older than himself, and of extremely fine appearance. Little more
-than a boy, yet he had a dignity which made him something much
-more, and Hilary felt immediately a kind of jealousy, undefined, vague,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>but still jealousy. For Fleta had put both her hands into those of this
-handsome young man and greeted him with great warmth. At his side
-stood a small shrivelled old man, in the same dress that Father Amyot
-always wore. This circumstance again made Hilary wonder what had
-become of Father Amyot; but he concluded Adine’s account had been the
-correct one.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There was something familiar in the face of the young man, so Hilary
-thought; while he was thinking this, Fleta turned and introduced them
-to each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was the young king to whom Fleta was betrothed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is a history of those things which lie behind the scenes, not a
-history of that which is known to all the world. We will give this young
-King the name of Alan. Let those who like fix upon his kingdom and
-assign to him his true name.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He sat down opposite Hilary; and the old priest took his place
-beside him. Hilary returned to his chair, feeling that all strength, and
-hope, and power, and life had gone from him. By a fierce and terrible
-revulsion of his whole nature and all his recent feelings, he returned to
-his cynical estimate of mankind and most of all of Fleta. She had
-brought him to this place simply to taunt and harass him and show him
-his madness and folly in aspiring to her love in the face of such a rival.
-It cut Hilary’s heart like a knife to find the young King so magnificent
-a creature. And Fleta, why had she come here to meet him?
-Why had she brought her unhappy lover with her? Hilary tore himself
-with doubts, and fears, and questions; and sat silent, not even noticing
-the plates that were placed before him and taken away untouched. The
-others talked and laughed gaily, Alan being apparently possessed of a
-hundred things to say. Hilary did not hear what they were, but it
-annoyed him to find his rival speaking so much in that rich, musical
-voice of his, while he himself sat dumb, silenced by a bitter pain that
-tore his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are sad,” said a soft voice at his side, “it is hard, if you love
-Fleta, to see her monopolised by some one else. How often have I had
-to suffer it? Well, it must be so, I suppose. Why am I sorry for you.
-I wonder? For if Alan were not here you would monopolise Fleta, and
-have no eyes for anyone else. Ah me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The sigh was very tender, the voice very low and soft; and that voice
-was Fleta’s voice, those lovely eyes uplifted to his were Fleta’s <a id='corr260.38'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='eyes'>eyes.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_260.38'><ins class='correction' title='eyes'>eyes.</ins></a></span>
-Yes, it was so! He thought as he looked back. Did he not know Fleta
-well enough by now?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah, you are playing with me,” he exclaimed eagerly, “it is Fleta
-now, not Adine! Is it not so? Oh, my love, my love, be honest and
-tell me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He spoke like this under cover of the others’ voices, but Fleta looked
-round alarmed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>“Hush!” she said, “take care. Your life would be lost if you
-revealed our secret here. After dinner is over, come with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This appointment made Hilary happy again; his heart leaped up, his
-pulses throbbed; all the world changed. He found some fruit was
-before him, he began to eat it, and to drink the wine in his glass. Fleta
-was watching him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have just begun to dine!” said Fleta with a soft laugh. “Well,
-never mind; you are young and strong. Do you think you could live
-through a great many hardships?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary made the lover’s answer, which is so evident that it need not
-be recorded. He did not know how he said it, but he desired to tell her
-that for her he would endure anything. She laughed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It may be so!” she said thoughtfully; and then he caught her eyes
-fixed upon him with a searching glance that for an instant seemed to
-turn the blood cold in his veins. His terrible thoughts and doubts of
-her returned again the more fiercely for their momentary repulsion. He
-emptied his glass, but <a id='corr261.17'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>eat</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_261.17'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>eat</ins></a></span> nothing more, and was very glad when they
-all rose from the table together, a few moments later. He followed the
-figure of the girl who had sat next him since Alan’s entrance, believing
-that Fleta had then changed her place. She went across the great room
-and led the way into a greenhouse which opened out of it. A very
-wonderful greenhouse it was, full of the strangest plants. They were
-extremely beautiful, and yet in some way they inspired in him a great
-repugnance. They were of many colours, and the blossoms were
-variously shaped, but evidently they were all of one species.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“These are very precious,” said Fleta, looking at the flowers near her
-tenderly. “I obtain a rare and valuable substance from them. You
-have seen me use it,” she added, after a moment’s pause. Hilary
-longed to leave the greenhouse and sit elsewhere; but that was so
-evidently not Fleta’s wish that he could not suggest it. There were
-seats here and there among the flowers, and she placed herself upon one
-of them, motioning Hilary to sit beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now,” she said, “I am going to tell you a great many things which
-you have earned the right to know. To begin with, you are now in a
-monastery, belonging to the most rigid of the religious orders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Are you a Catholic?” asked Hilary suddenly. And then laughed at
-himself for such a question. How could Fleta be catalogued like this?
-He knew her to be a creature whose thought could not be limited.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she answered simply. “I am not a Catholic. But I belong to
-this order. I fear such an answer will be so unintelligible as to be like
-an impertinence. Forgive me, Hilary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Ah, what a tone she spoke in, gentle, sweet—the voice of the woman
-he loved. Hilary lost all control over himself. He sprang to his feet
-and stood before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I do not want to know your religion,” he exclaimed passionately, “I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>do not want to know where we are, or why we are here. I ask you only
-this—Are you indeed my love given to me, as you said this morning?—or
-is your love given to the king, and are you only laughing at me. It
-is enough to make me think so, to bring me here to meet him! Oh, it
-is a cruel insult, a cruel mockery! For, Fleta, you have made me love
-you with all my heart and soul. My whole life is yours. Be honest
-and tell me the truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have a powerful rival,” said Fleta deliberately. “Is he not
-handsome, courtly, all that a king should be? And I am pledged to
-him. Yes, Hilary, I am pledged to him. Would you have the woman
-you love live a lie for your sake, and hourly betray the man she
-marries?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I would have her give me her love,” said Hilary despairingly, “at all
-costs, at all hazards. Oh, Fleta, do not keep me in agony. You said
-this morning that you loved me, that you would give yourself to me. Are
-you going to take those words back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” said Fleta, “I am not. For I do love you, Hilary. Did I not
-see you first in my sleep? Did I not dream of you? Did I not come
-to your house in search of you? Unwomanly, was it not? No one
-but Fleta would have done it. And Fleta would only have done it for
-love. You do not know what she risked—what she risks now—for you!
-Oh, Hilary, if you could guess what I have at stake. Never mind.
-None can know my own danger but myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Escape from it!” said Hilary in a sort of madness. A passionate
-desire to help her came over him and swept all reasonable thoughts
-away. “You are so powerful, so free, there is no need for you to encounter
-danger. Does it lie in these people, in this strange place? Come
-back then to the city, to your home. What is there to induce you to
-run risks, you that have all that the world can offer? Is there anything
-you need that you cannot have?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” said Fleta, “there is. I need something which no power
-of royalty can give me. I need something which I may have to
-sacrifice my life to obtain. Yet I am ready to sacrifice it—oh, how
-ready! What is my life to me! What is my life to me! Nothing!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She had risen and was impatiently walking to and fro, moving her
-hands with a strange eager gesture as she did so; and her eyes were all
-aflame. This was the woman he loved. This, who said her life was
-nothing to her. Hilary forgot all else that was strange in her words
-and manner in the thought of this. Could she then return his love—no,
-it was impossible, if she meant these strange and terrible words that she
-uttered!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah, this it is that keeps me back,” she said, before he had time to
-speak. Her voice had altered, and her face had grown pale, so pale that
-he forgot everything else in watching her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This it is that keeps me from my strength, this longing for it!” And
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>with a heavy sigh she moved back to her seat and fell into it with a
-weariness he had never seen in her before. Her head drooped on her
-breast, she fell into profound thought. Presently she spoke again, disjointedly,
-and in such words as seemed unintelligible.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have always been too impatient, too eager,” she said sadly, “I
-have always tried to take what I longed for without waiting to earn it.
-So it was long ago, Hilary, when you and I stood beneath those blossoming
-trees, long ages ago. I broke the peace that kept us strong and
-simple. I caused the torment of pain and peril to arise in our lives.
-We have to live it out—alas, Hilary, we have to live it out!—and live
-beyond it. How long will it take us—how long will it take!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There was a despair, an agony in her voice and manner, that were so
-new, he was bewildered, he hardly recognised her. Her moods changed
-so strangely that he could not follow them, for he had not the key; he
-could not read her thought. He sat dumb, looking in her sad drawn
-face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My love, my love,” he murmured at last, hardly knowing that he
-spoke, hardly knowing what his thought was that he spoke, only full of
-longing. “Would that I could help you! Would that I understood
-you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you indeed wish to?” asked Fleta, her voice melting into a sort
-of tender eagerness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you not know it?” exclaimed Hilary. “My soul is burning to meet
-yours and to recognise it, to stand with you and help you. Why are
-you so far off, so like a star, so removed and unintelligible to me, who
-love you so! Oh, help me to change this, to come nearer to you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta rose slowly, her eyes fixed upon his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come,” she said. And she held out her hand to him. He put his
-into it, and together, hand in hand, they left the conservatory. They did
-not enter the great dining hall, where now there was music and dancing
-as Hilary could see and hear. They left the house of the strange
-flowers by a different doorway, which admitted them to a long dim
-corridor. Fleta opened the door by a key that was attached to a chain
-hanging from her waist; and she closed it behind her. Hilary asked
-no questions, for she seemed buried in thought so profound that he did
-not care to rouse her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At the end of the corridor was a small and very low doorway. Fleta
-stooped and knocked, and without waiting for any answer pushed the
-door <a id='corr263.39'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='open,'>open.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_263.39'><ins class='correction' title='open,'>open.</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“May I come in, Master?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come, child,” was the answer, in a very gentle voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am bringing some one with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come,” was repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They entered. The room was small, and was dimly lit by a shaded
-lamp. Beside the table, on which this stood, sat a man, reading. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>put a large book which he had been holding, on to the table, and turned
-towards his visitors. Hilary saw before him the handsomest man he had
-ever seen in his life. He was still young, though Hilary felt himself to
-be a boy beside him; he rose from his chair and stood before them very
-tall and very slight, and yet there was that in his build which suggested
-great strength. He looked attentively at Hilary for a moment, and then
-turned to Fleta.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Leave him here.” Fleta bowed and immediately went out of
-the room without another word. Hilary gazed upon her in amazement.
-Was this the proud, imperious princess who yielded such instant
-and ready obedience? It seemed incredible. But he forgot the extraordinary
-sight immediately afterwards in the interest excited by his new
-companion, who at once addressed him:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The Princess has often spoken to me of you,” he said, “and I know
-she has much wished that this moment should arrive. She will be
-satisfied if she thinks you appreciate with your inner senses the step you
-are about to take if you accord with her wishes. But I think it right
-you should know it in every aspect as far as that is possible. If you
-really desire to know Fleta, to approach her, to understand her, you must
-give up all that men ordinarily value in the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have it not to surrender,” said Hilary rather bitterly, “my life is
-nothing splendid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, but you are only at the beginning of it. To you the future is
-full of promise. If you desire to be the Princess Fleta’s companion,
-your life is no longer your own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No—it is hers—and it is hers now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Not so. It is not hers now, nor will it be hers then. Not even
-your love does she claim for her own. She has nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I don’t understand,” said Hilary simply. “She is the Princess of
-this country; she will soon be the Queen of another. She has all that
-the world has to give a woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you not know the woman you love better than to suppose that
-she cares for her position in the world?” demanded this man whom
-Fleta called her master. “At a word from me, at any hour, at any time
-she will leave her throne and never return to it. That she will do this
-certainly some day I know very well; and her sister will take her place,
-the world being no wiser than it now is. Fleta looks forward to this
-change eagerly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Well, perhaps,” admitted Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Neither has she your love nor your life as her own. In loving her
-you love the Great Order to which she belongs, and she will gladly give
-your love to its right owner. She has done this already in bringing you
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary started to his feet, stung beyond endurance.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This is mere nonsense, mere insult,” he said angrily, “Fleta has
-accepted my love with her own lips.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>“That is so,” was the answer, “and she is betrothed to King Alan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I know that,” said Hilary in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And what did you hold Fleta to be then? A mere pleasure seeker,
-playing with life like the rest, devoid of honour and principle? Was
-this your estimate of the woman you loved? What else indeed could it
-be, when you said, let her give her hand to King Alan while you know
-her love is yours! And you could love such a woman! Hilary Estanol,
-you have been reared in a different school than this. Does not your own
-conscience shame you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary stood silent. Every word struck home. He knew not what to
-say. He had been wilfully blinding himself; the bandages were rudely
-drawn aside. After a long pause he spoke, hesitatingly:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The Princess cannot be judged as other women would be; she is
-unlike all others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Not so, if she is what you seem to think her; then she is just like the
-rest, one of the common herd.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How can you speak of her in that way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How can you think of her as you do, dishonouring her by your
-thoughts?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The two stood opposite each other now, and their eyes met. A
-strange light seemed to struggle into Hilary’s soul as these bitter words
-rang sharply on his ear. Dishonouring her? Was it possible? He
-staggered back and leaned against the wall, still gazing on the
-magnificent face before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Who are you?” he said at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am Father Ivan, the superior of the order to which the
-Princess Fleta belongs,” was the reply. But another voice spoke
-when his ceased, and Hilary saw that Fleta had entered, and was
-standing behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And he is the master of knowledge, the master in life, the master in
-thought, of whom the Princess Fleta is but a poor and impatient disciple.
-Master, forgive me! I cannot endure to hear you speak as if you were a
-monk, the mere tool of a religion, the mere professor of a miserable
-creed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She sank on her knees before Father Ivan, in an attitude strangely
-full of humility. The priest bent down and lifted her to her feet. They
-stood a moment in silence, side by side, Fleta’s eyes upon his face
-devouring his expression with a passionate and adoring <a id='corr265.38'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='eagerness'>eagerness.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_265.38'><ins class='correction' title='eagerness'>eagerness.</ins></a></span>
-How splendid they looked! Suddenly Hilary saw it, and a
-wild, fierce, all-devouring flame of jealousy awoke in his heart—a
-jealousy such as King Alan, no, nor a hundred King Alans, could
-not have roused in him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For he saw that this Ivan, who wore a priest’s dress, yet was evidently
-no priest, who spoke as if this world had no longer any meaning for him,
-yet who was magnificent in his personal presence and power—he saw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>that this man was Fleta’s equal. And more, he saw that Fleta’s whole
-face melted and softened, and grew strangely sweet, as she looked on
-him. Never had Hilary seen it like that. Never had Hilary dreamed
-it could look like that. Stumbling like a blind man he felt for the door,
-which he knew was near, and escaped from the room—how he knew not.
-Hurriedly he went on, through places he did not see, and at last found
-himself in the open air. He went with great strides away through the
-tall ferns and undergrowth until he found himself in so quiet a spot that
-it appeared as if he were alone in the great forest. Then he flung
-himself upon the ground and yielded to an agony of despair which
-blotted out sky and trees and everything from his gaze, like a great
-cloud covering the earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>To be <a href='#blossom5'>continued</a>.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator3.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>TWILIGHT.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I sit alone in the twilight,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dreaming—but not as of old;</div>
- <div class='line'>Blind to the flickering fire-light,</div>
- <div class='line'>Mystic visions my spirit enfold.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>What means this struggle within me,</div>
- <div class='line'>This new hope of a far-off goal?</div>
- <div class='line'>This fighting against superstition,</div>
- <div class='line'>That would fetter my awakening soul?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Why cannot I pray as I once did,</div>
- <div class='line'>For self before all the world?</div>
- <div class='line'>Whence came the flash of lightning</div>
- <div class='line'>That self from its pedestal hurled?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>But what if I’m struggling blindly,</div>
- <div class='line'>What if this new hope is vain,</div>
- <div class='line'>Can I go back to my old faith?</div>
- <div class='line'>A voice whispers—“Never again.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>So I will press forward—believing</div>
- <div class='line'>Hands unseen will guide to the goal,</div>
- <div class='line'>And tho’ dim yet the light on my pathway,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nirväna breathes peace to my soul.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><i>K. D. K.</i></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE SPIRIT OF HEALING.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>It is somewhat difficult to say what real or theosophical work is
-when exactly defined, and, in consequence, it becomes very easy
-to speak of an effort as untheosophical—that is not sufficiently
-unselfish in motive. The fact is that the word Theosophy has such a
-very wide meaning, embracing, as it does, the true spirit of all creeds
-and religions, and confining itself to none in particular, that no work
-done in the spirit of truth and wisdom is really untheosophical. Hence,
-unless the speaker is possessed of more knowledge than ordinary men
-concerning the causes which underlie our actions, the application of the
-word untheosophical is incorrect. In fact, if it is once granted that it is
-possible to work from an impersonal standpoint in favour of a particular
-creed or religion, that work becomes theosophical in character. Thus
-it is only work (in the widest sense of the word and on all planes)
-from the personal standpoint, and which, therefore, militates against
-Universal Brotherhood, which can really be described as untheosophical.
-But this by no means presupposes that work which has outwardly the
-appearance of theosophical genuineness is not really selfish. It is, of
-course, the old story of the wolf in sheep’s clothing. We do but need
-one example—the truly-called <em>profession</em> of Medicine. We constantly
-hear of the wonderful self-sacrifice of medical men; of men who die at
-their posts rather than desert a possible case in times of epidemic and
-cholera; of men who suck tracheotomy tubes with almost certain death
-by diphtheria staring them in the face; finally we hear, though but
-seldom, of the honest, earnest devotion of a lifetime in places and districts
-where the fees are so small that it is barely possible for the doctor to
-live on his earnings. These are the heroes of the profession. Their
-work, for the most part, consists of an unselfish devotion to the alleviation
-of suffering, culminating in a final sacrifice of their personal selves—for
-death is nothing less than this. But we must turn to the less favourable
-side of the picture—the struggle not for a living, but for wealth, and
-work, fired by ambition and the search for fame. Of course, apart
-from the personal, selfish element in it, the ambitious struggle in other
-professions than those of the Church or Medicine is of no great or unnatural
-harm; but in these two cases it is more than harmful, it is a
-degrading betrayal of trust. It is Simonism with a vengeance;
-yes, kind friends, it approaches very nearly to the case of Judas,
-who held the bag, and betrayed his Master with a kiss. It may
-be asked why this sweeping denunciation is made of the two
-noblest professions; of those two which, considered from the ethical
-standpoint, consist of devotion to the service of man? The reason
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>is not very far to seek. The power which true healers possess—healers
-alike of body and soul, is not one which can be sold for money or
-bartered for wealth and fame. At least, if the possibility does exist,
-it bears a suspicious resemblance to the old idea of selling one’s soul to
-the devil in exchange for power and prosperity. It may be replied to
-this that there is no harm in bartering knowledge of drugs, of pathology,
-diagnosis of disease, surgical skill, etc.—in short, all the knowledge
-acquired by education—for money. I answer No! for it is material
-given for material, and nothing more. But these are not the sole
-properties of the true healer, and those who do not possess these other
-properties I speak of are not healers, and while they may <em>profess</em>
-medicine<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c013'><sup>[59]</sup></a> and may be <em>in</em> it, are yet not <em>of</em> it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As regards the Church and its professors of religion, the case is even
-worse; they have no material products of education to barter, and for the
-most part are contented with telling their flock to “do as I bid you, and not
-as I do.” But among them there are noble examples of unswerving unselfishness
-and devotion, although for the most part those who enter the
-Church are too young to understand fully the nature of their high calling.
-Unfortunately the call in too many cases is not a call to minister and
-heal souls, but to make a living and heal the souls in the process. But
-again, it may be asked, what are these wonderful powers which constitute
-the true healer, and which are not to be bought or sold? The first one
-which occurs naturally to the mind is the power of sympathy. The old
-joke in <cite>Punch</cite> about “the good bedside manner” has a considerable
-substratum of truth when divested of its unpleasing folly. The substratum
-of that manner is that which is given by sympathy; and this is
-one of the first elements which constitute the power of healing. It gives
-the power of suffering with the patient and therefore of understanding what
-the sufferer is enduring. It is beyond diagnosis, although it assists it by
-being much surer—at least, as to the reality of the suffering. But this
-power of sympathy only expresses a part of the meaning of the power to
-heal. Sympathy tends to annihilate the personal distinctions between
-the healer and the sufferer; it tends to exalt the consciousness of the
-healer not only to know the remedy for the disease, but to be himself
-the power of cure, and also it is a vast occult power in virtue of which
-all the “elder brethren” of the Universal Brotherhood live their lives;
-in virtue of which the world’s great enlighteners have not only lived
-their lives but <em>lived their death</em>, in order that they might benefit the
-sufferers who despised and rejected them. But this power of sympathy
-and the kindred powers which constitute the true healer, are really secret
-powers and secret remedies. Therefore they are openly tabooed by the
-medical profession, although the said professors cannot avoid using them.
-But secret remedies are to some degree justly avoided. For it is but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>natural to regard secret remedies with suspicion. At best their use seems
-like working in the dark and blindly, and, consequently, any results
-obtained must be empirical. Again, the medical profession seems to plume
-and feather itself upon possessing a slight leaven of its ideal condition,
-and, by constituting itself into a kind of trades’ union, declines as a body
-to have anything to do with any remedy of which the composition is
-not made fully known. This, at least, is the more charitable view, for,
-on the other hand, the doctors know only too well how eagerly the
-public rushes after any new “quack” medicine, and seeks to cure itself
-without calling in their aid. The doctors reply to this that they will
-have nothing to do with a medicine whose composition is a secret, and
-which is therefore devoted, to a great extent, to replenishing the purse of
-its discoverer, and not to the cure of diseases from a love of man and a
-hatred of suffering. This is a very high-sounding idea, and a noble one,
-when it is not what the Americans would call only “high-falutin.” But
-even when a remedy is made public property, it is not necessarily <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>pro
-bono publico</i></span>; in fact, as a rule, it serves only the good of the dispensing
-chemist. He sees the prescription and notes it, the public does not; and,
-as a rule, the chemist obtains the drugs cheaply, and compounds them at
-the same rate as this medicine was originally sold under the patent of
-its discoverer. Still, with all the dislike of the profession for secret
-remedies, there is no doubt at all that in the case of the heads of the profession
-some of the best results are obtained by the use of prescriptions,
-which practically constitute a secret formula. The especial combination
-which the particular man has discovered to be of use is his property, and
-his only until he writes a book, for the various chemists who make it
-up, and the various patients who drink it, are not to the full aware of its
-value and use. The difference between this and quack medicine lies
-merely in the peculiar names and large advertisements, but very often
-these are balanced by the fame of the particular surgeon or physician.
-But, in all honour to physicians and surgeons, who do in many cases
-have and show a large-hearted sympathy for suffering, it must be remembered
-that many of the greatest and busiest of them give hours of their
-valuable time to those who are too poor to pay in any other form than
-that of grateful thanks. There are, again, others who disregard all the
-rules which govern trades’ union society, and boldly take their stand
-upon Christ’s dictum, that “the Sabbath was made for man and not man
-for the Sabbath.” In other words, they say that any medicine which
-they personally find valuable in the alleviation of pain and disease must
-be used even at the risk of themselves being called “unprofessional.”
-Again, others will use these so-called secret remedies, and say
-nothing about it, preferring to pin their faith to the wittily termed
-eleventh commandment, “Thou shalt not be found out.” At this
-point it is possible to draw a parallel between the use of the terms “untheosophical”
-and “unprofessional.” It would seem that both are used
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>in very much the same trades’ union sense. In the case of the word
-“unprofessional,” it is to be regretted that it is due very largely to a lack
-of charity and of the spirit of enquiry. In the case of the word “untheosophical”
-it is often used in consequence of a lack of charity, and further
-in the spirit of scandal and gossip. Unless a man or woman is a theosophist
-pure and simple, who carries out in their <em>entirety</em>, the objects of the
-Theosophical Society, the use of the word untheosophical betrays <em>them</em>
-to be untheosophical and to fail in carrying out those objects which they
-have promised to further to the best of their power.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the light of the foregoing it is now possible to examine the manner
-in which Count Mattei’s remedies have been received. The Count himself
-is a member of a noble family of Bologna, he has travelled much, but
-returned there in 1847, and took part in the movement which led to the
-liberation of Italy. In early life he much wished to study medicine, but
-was prevented from doing so by his father’s wish. Still his desire for
-knowledge was not quenched, and he attempted to follow the bent of his
-own mind. He rightly concluded that the instincts of the lower animals
-would lead them to search for herbs and plants which would cure their
-ailments, and that careful observation of these instincts might disclose
-medicines of the greatest value to human sufferers. Thus he adopted
-the habit of taking walks in the company of a number of dogs which
-were suffering from various diseases, and carefully watched their proceedings.
-Gradually the new pharmacopœia assumed shape, and the instinct
-of the dogs showed that particular diseases were met by particular
-remedies. These observations were made more than sixty years ago,
-and were not forgotten amid the occupations of a busy life. Indeed, when
-those occupations became less, Count Mattei returned with ardour to his
-earlier studies. He became a deputy in the Roman Parliament, but
-retired into private life after finding that his political views were not
-those of the men by whom he was surrounded. After this retirement
-the Count devoted himself to the study of medicine, in order that he
-might fit himself to apply certain principles which he believed he had
-discovered to be valuable for sick and suffering humanity. By his own
-account and the testimony of his patients he was not deceived, and the
-present remedies which bear his name are the result of twenty-five years’
-unceasing labour and experiment. He rapidly acquired an enormous
-practice, and during the early years of it his advice and his medicines
-were entirely gratis. But an unfortunate combination of circumstances,
-as well as the expense entailed by the preparation of the remedies,
-rendered it necessary for the Count to demand some small remuneration
-for his services. Then he learned that his bounty was abused, and that
-certain doctors, who had asked and obtained the remedies from him, departed
-from Bologna and retailed the remedies at extravagantly exorbitant
-prices. To such an extent was this carried that there exist authentic
-cases where a thaler was demanded for a single globule, and for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>globules (20-30) necessary to give a bath, 1,000 francs were asked in New
-York. Some idea of the extortion may be given when Count Mattei
-refers to the thaler price as being 1,350 times the price at Bologna.
-This would be enough to justify any amount of secrecy on Count
-Mattei’s part, more especially as that secrecy entirely prevents the
-adulteration of the medicines which would inevitably follow, were they to
-become commercial property.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We have only too familiar an example in the ranks of the medical
-profession. Many of his confrères have been appealed to for the support
-of a physician, named Warburg. At this date it seems hardly
-possible to believe that this gentleman was the happy discoverer of
-Warburg’s Fever Tincture. Perhaps in this country the value of the
-compound was not so highly appreciated as in India. But it is impossible
-to open any treatise on either surgery or medicine which is about
-twenty years old and not find the use of Warburg’s tincture specially
-urged in all cases of high fever, and especially in cases of malarial fever
-and pyæmia. The compound had an enormous sale, and yielded a very
-substantial income to its discoverer, but as soon as he yielded to
-the pressure of professional opinion, and consented to publish his formula
-so that it might obtain an extended use, he obtained the reward
-of such philanthropy. Every chemist now prepares the prescription
-and sells it at very nearly the original price, and what is more, never
-refunds a fraction of a farthing in the shape of a royalty to the discoverer.
-Consequently, we have before us the edifying spectacle of the
-learned discoverer compelled to exist on the charity of his professional
-confrères. Count Mattei has, at all events, protected himself against
-this, for although he states that in the event of his death he has provided
-against the loss of his secret to the world, and intends to leave it carefully
-as a legacy to suffering humanity, there is not the slightest doubt
-that he alone is the possessor of his own secret. That it is possible to
-obtain wealth from using this system is very evident. Certain among
-the chief of his followers are in the habit of visiting London at
-intervals, and the number of those who consult them is really wonderful.
-I am assured by an eye-witness that the crowd is far beyond
-that which besieges the door of the most fashionable physician of the
-day. When one reads the literature of the subject, one becomes more
-and more astonished at its simplicity. All diseases resolve themselves
-into three main forms, and constitutions vary accordingly. There are
-sanguine and lymphatic constitutions, and the various combinations of
-these two; there are also febrile disturbances and diseases of the liver
-and spleen. Consequently there are three chief medicines, which
-are used in an extraordinary state of dilution. It is no use, here at
-least, to discuss the value of these infinitesimal doses, so that may be
-left for future discussion. To a professional mind the most extraordinary
-claim on Count Mattei’s part will be that of curing cancer by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>internal and external medicines, and wholly without the use of the
-knife. He claims positively to cure every case in which the cancer
-has not ulcerated, and to cure a large proportion even of those
-which have already done so. Even of those which have been
-neglected, and have remained long in the ulcerated state, he claims to
-restore a certain proportion (though not a large one) to health. Of
-course, to any man who has seen the difficulty which attends the early
-diagnosis of cancer, these claims are very high-sounding indeed—almost
-to absurdity. The difficulties which attend diagnosis, even almost to
-the time when the knife <em>has been</em> used, and the tissue submitted to the
-microscope, are very great. But in Count Mattei’s second division there
-is no such difficulty. It is then possible by certain indications, as well
-as by the use of the microscope, to be sure of the nature of the disease.
-Here Mattei steps in and claims that, by the use of one of his medicines,
-which exerts an <em>electric</em> influence on cancer, and by one of what he terms
-his vegetable electricities, he can restore the sufferer to health. Surely
-<em>conservative</em> surgery, if it be worthy of the name, will investigate such a
-claim. Of the vegetable electricities there is no doubt whatever. Cases
-of neuralgia and sciatica and articular rheumatic pain have been seen to
-yield to them as to magic; consequently, even in the last stages of
-cancer, when there is no refuge save the grave left to the sufferer, I have
-reason to believe Count Mattei, to some extent, when he claims to enable
-the said sufferer to sink gently away in full consciousness, and without
-the use of morphia.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To those who know anything of the occult uses and powers of plants,
-the fact that Count Mattei gathers his herbs at particular phases of the
-moon, will convey a good deal of meaning. Further, they will feel an
-additional assurance as to their value, and will no longer wonder, on one
-side at least, that Count Mattei chooses to keep his secret. It would
-seem probable to some extent that Count Mattei is one of the “elder
-brethren” of the race, although how far he is consciously so may be a
-matter for speculation, which could only be set at rest by Mattei himself
-and his compeers and superiors. What is definitely certain is that his
-system of medicine in its theories, if not in its practice, is a distinct step
-in advance in the healing art. Mattei is one of those pioneers of advance
-who spend the greater part of their lives in introducing for public use a
-secret of which they have become possessed. Mr. Keeley, of Philadelphia,<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c013'><sup>[60]</sup></a>
-appears to be another of those pioneers who are in advance of
-their times. But Mr. Keeley, in his work, resembles Friar Bacon, who
-blessed (?) the world with gunpowder. No doubt civilization has been
-enormously extended by its aid; but however much use it may have
-been to man in adapting the face of nature to his service, it has at any
-rate subserved the gratification of his passions. Count Mattei appears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>to have none of these “defects of his qualities,” and to have endeavoured
-to bless the world without giving to it attendant curses. Still it is
-always possible that when his secret shall become known it will draw
-attention to plants which have just as destructive and poisonous an influence
-as the plants and herbs he uses have of healing power. At all
-events, at present his secret is of use to the world, and so far as may be
-seen he makes a just and “brotherly” use of it. Has enough been said
-above to show that the fact that his medicines are “secret” compounds
-should be no barrier to their use? What is still more important is that
-true theosophists should recognise that Count Mattei has done what they
-endeavour to do, and devoted his life to Real Work.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>A. I. R.</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr50'>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY’S CONVENTION OF 1887.</h3>
-
-<hr class='c049' />
-<p class='c035'>Safely returned from my long tour of ten months, my first duty upon reaching
-home is to remind the Branches that the time approaches for the Annual Meeting
-of the Convention of the General Council—27th to 30th of December. It
-appears that the attendance this year will be much larger than ever before; some
-thinking that we shall register between 200 and 300 Delegates: besides the old,
-there will be some twenty new Branches entitled to representation and votes.
-The yearly extension of our Society is thus steadily augmenting the strength of
-the General Council, and the importance of its Annual Convention. As the
-Society settles gradually upon its constitutional basis, the volume of committee
-and parliamentary work lessens and more time becomes available for theosophical
-lectures, the formation of friendships, and the cultivation of a good mutual
-understanding as to the work before us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Adyar Library, to which considerable gifts of old MSS. and books have
-been made since last December, is already being put to use. The Dwaita
-Catechism was issued at the last Convention, and at this year’s the Vishistadvaita
-and Advaita Catechisms will be ready; as will also a compilation of Buddhistic
-Morals from the sacred literature of Ceylon. It is hoped that members of our
-many Branches will kindly bring forward as many ancient works upon every
-Department of Aryan knowledge as they can procure for this best of national
-monuments, the Adyar Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Every effort will be made to promote the comfort of Delegates, as heretofore.
-Lectures are being arranged for, but learned Mofussil members who are willing
-to read discourses upon special topics interesting to Delegates, are requested to
-at once correspond with the Secretary, and if the MSS. are ready, to send them
-in for approval.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>In conclusion let me assure our colleagues of all races, creeds and colors, that
-a hearty and brotherly welcome awaits them at their Theosophical home at Adyar.</p>
-
-<div class='column-container'>
-<div class='column left'>
-Adyar, 17th October, 1887.
-</div>
-<div class='column right'>
-<span class='sc'>H. S. Olcott, p.t.s.</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>A REMARKABLE CHRISTMAS EVE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>It was a dark and solitary path, a narrow, hardly perceptible, footway
-in a dense forest, hemmed in by two walls of impenetrable thorns
-and wild creepers, covering, as with a net-work, the trunks of the
-tall, bare, moss-covered trees. The path led through the woods down to
-a deep valley in which a few country-houses were nestled. Night was fast
-approaching, and the hurricane, that blew across the country, boded evil
-to many a traveller, by land and sea. The wind, which had hitherto been
-only moaning through the trees, in low sad tones reminding one of a
-funereal dirge, was now beginning to roar with fury, filling the forest as
-with the howling of a hundred hungry wolves. Very soon a drizzling,
-ice-cold rain veiled the whole forest in a damp shroud of fog.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One solitary traveller was wearily wending his way along this deserted
-path. The hour was late, and the darkening shadows were creeping on
-steadily, making the gloom in the thicket still more depressing. The
-young man looked worn and tired, as he again and again brushed aside
-the entangled briars which impeded his progress forward. He was well-dressed,
-and wore a marine officer’s cap. But his coat was now in rags,
-torn by the hard, frozen, cruel thorns, and his hands were bleeding in the
-struggle he had had with the briars for a whole long night and a day
-since he had lost his way in the huge forest. Panting, he stopped at
-last; and, as he heaved a deep sigh, he fell down half-insensible at the
-foot of an old shaggy oak. Then, half-opening his weary eyes, he
-murmured in despair, as he placed his hand on his heart:—“I wonder
-how long <em>this</em> will yet beat.... I feel as if it were gradually stopping.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He closed his eyes once more, and very soon the feeble palpitations
-he was watching within himself, turned his half-paralysed thought into a
-new groove of ideas. Now the hardly audible beatings of his heart
-seemed to transform themselves into the ticking of an old clock quite
-near to him. He imagined the old Nüremberg timepiece in his mother’s
-room. He was dripping wet, chilled to the marrow of his bones, and
-was fast losing consciousness. But, forgetting for one moment his
-situation, and where he was, he caught himself soliloquising as was his
-custom, when alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This clock,” he thought, “has to be wound up ... else it will stop.
-So shall this heart. A man has to eat and drink to renew the fuel which
-feeds life, the clock too ... no; the clock is different to man. Let it
-rest for a week, for two, three months, even for a year.... Still, if wound
-up again, it will tick on as merrily as ever. But once the supply of the
-body is stopped—well, what then? Shall the working power cease for
-ever, or the ticking of the heart be resumed as that of the clock? No,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>no!... You may feed the dead body of man as much as you please!
-it shall awaken to life no more.... A queer problem to solve,—What
-becomes of that something which made the body move? The food is
-not the cause, is it?... No; the food is only the fuel.... There must
-be some inward fire ever burning, as long as it is supplied.... But
-when the supply of the fuel ceases? Ah!... that is it ... where does
-it go?... Does anything really die?... What form shall <em>my</em> inner fire
-take?... Shall it return to <em>its</em> primordial light ... and be no more?...
-Oh, how I suffer!... No, no; I must not allow this, <em>my</em> fire, to go out.
-No, not before I see once more my loved ones ... my mother and
-Alice....”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Arising with great effort he pursued his way with tottering steps, feeling
-his way in the darkness. But instantly a wild gust of wind, tearing along
-the narrow pathway, caused the great trees to sway and rock as if in very
-agony. Catching in its icy clasp the weakened form of the young man,
-the hurricane nearly upset him. Being already wet through and through
-with rain and cold, he shivered and groaned aloud, as he felt a sharp
-pain penetrating his limbs from the brain downwards. One more short
-struggle and he heavily fell on the cold hard ground. Clasping his hands
-over his brow, he could only whisper again: “Mother, I can do no
-more.... Farewell, mother, for ever! Alice—fare thee well!”...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>His strength was gone. For over thirty hours he had tasted no food.
-He had travelled night and day in the hope of being with his family on
-Christmas Eve, that blessed day of joy and peace. Never yet had he
-spent a Christmas Eve away from home; but that year had been an
-unusually unfortunate one for him. His vessel had been wrecked and he
-had lost all. It was only by the greatest of chances that he had been
-enabled to find his way back to his country, in time to take the train
-that brought him from a large seaport to the small town some twenty
-miles’ distance from his home. Once there, he had to travel that distance
-by coach. But just as he was preparing to start on his last journey, he
-met a poor sailor, a companion of his shipwreck. With tears in his
-eyes the man told him that having lost all, he had no more money left
-to take him to his wife and children, who were yet two days’ journey by
-rail from where he was; and that thus, he could not be with them to
-make merry Christmas together. So the good-hearted young officer,
-thinking he could easily walk the short distance that separated him
-from home, had emptied his purse into the sailor’s hands and started
-on his way on foot, hoping to arrive on that same evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He set out early in the morning and bethought himself of a
-short cut through the vast forests of his native place. But on that
-afternoon he hurt his foot badly, and being able to move only at a very
-slow pace, the night had overtaken him in the forest in which he had
-finally lost his way during that terrible night. He had wandered since
-the morning during the whole long day, until pain, exhaustion, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>the hurricane had overpowered him. And now, he was lying helpless
-on the bare frozen ground, and would surely die before the dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>How long he lay there he never remembered; but, when he came
-back to himself, he thought he could move, and resolved to make a last
-supreme effort after the short rest. The wind had suddenly fallen. He
-felt warmer and calmer now, as he sat leaning against a tree. Old habit
-brought him back to his previous train of thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Never, mother dear, never,” he addressed her in thought, “never have
-I spent a Christmas away from your dear selves.... Never, since my
-boyhood, when father died twelve years ago! I made a vow then that,
-come what would, I should spend each Christmas Eve at home; and
-now, though life seems slowly ebbing out of my body, I want to keep
-my promise. They must be waiting for me even now, they, and Alice,
-my sweet fair cousin, who tells me she never loved but me! Reginald
-and Lionel, my brothers, who are earnestly waiting for me; my shy
-pretty May, and little Fanny.... They are all longing to see me, my
-dear ones, all expecting their old brother Hugo to return and decorate
-their Christmas-tree.... Oh, mother, mother, see you I must! I will be
-with you on this Christmas Eve, come what may!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This passionate longing appeal seemed to give him a ten-fold strength.
-He made a desperate effort to rise from his place, and found he could
-do so quite easily. Then, overcome with joy, he flew rather than walked
-through the dense black forest. He must have surely mistaken the
-distance, as a minute later he found himself in the brushwood, and saw
-the well-known valley so familiar to him, and even discerned in the
-bright moonlight the home that contained all his dear ones. He ran
-still faster, more and more rapidly, and even forgot in his excitement to
-wonder whence he had found the power of using his lame foot so
-easily.... At last he reached the lawn, and approached the cosy
-old house, all wrapped in its snowy winter garments, and sparkling
-in moonlight like a palace of King Frost. From a large bay-window
-poured out torrents of light, and as he drew still nearer, trying to see
-through it, he caught a glimpse of the loved faces, which he stopped to
-look at, before knocking at the door....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, my mother! I see her there,” he exclaimed. “There she is,
-seated in her arm-chair, with her knitting by her side, her beautiful silvery
-hair as soft and glossy as ever under her snow-white cap. I see her
-kind eyes and placid features still unmarked by the furrows of age....
-She looks troubled.... She listens to the fierce gusts of wind which
-cause the windows to shake and rattle. How that wind <em>does</em> try to get
-into the house, and, finding itself no welcome guest, hark, how it rolls
-away.... How strange!... I <em>hear</em>, but I do <em>not feel</em> the wind....
-Oh!... Kneeling at my mother’s feet, there’s Alice. Her arms are
-clasped around mother’s knees; her golden curls fall on her back....
-But—but, why are her large violet eyes filled with tears as she looks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>with up-turned face into mother’s sad eyes?... Hush! What is she
-saying?... I hear it, even through that wall....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Don’t be uneasy, mother, dear, Hugo will come back. You know he
-told us so in his last letter. He said that after their shipwreck he was
-kindly cared for by those who saved the crew. He wrote also that he
-had borrowed money for the journey, and that he would be with us at
-the latest on Christmas Eve!... Bad roads and the stormy night will
-have detained him.... The coach, you say? Well, and though the
-coach has long since passed by, he may have taken a carriage. He will
-soon be here, mother.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='badquotes5'></a>“Ah, dear Alice, I see—she looks at her finger, with its little ruby
-ring I placed on it. She puts it to her lips, and I hear her murmuring
-my name....</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>(From Hugo’s diary, where he recorded that night’s experience.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>... I rushed into the house at that appeal, and, as I now remember,
-without knocking at the door, as if I had passed through the stone walls.
-I tried to speak, but no sound appeared to reach their ears. Nor did
-anyone seem to see or greet me.... I drew Alice by the arm, but she
-never turned round, only continued to murmur sweet words of consolation
-into my mother’s ear. Good God, what agony! Why do they
-not hear, or even see me.... Am I really here? I look round the room.
-The old home is just as I had left it nine months since. There is my
-father’s picture hanging over the mantel-piece, looking at me with his
-kind smile; the old piano open, with my favourite song on it.... The
-cat sleeping as usual, on the hearthrug, and purring, as she stretches out
-her lazy paws. Albums on the table, my photograph, with its bright
-and happy look! How different to my present self! Here am I, standing
-in an agony of doubt, before my loved ones, seeing them, feeling them,
-touching them ... and yet unseen by them, unnoticed, as one who is
-not there.... Not even my shadow on the wall over their own. But
-who then, am I?... Why have they grown so blind to my presence?
-Why do their hearts and senses remain so dense? I try again and
-again. I call them piteously by their names, but they heed me not.
-My heart, my love, all is here, but my physical body seems far away.
-Yes, it is far, far away, and now I see it, as it lies cold and lifeless in that
-forest, where I must have left it. It is surely for <em>me</em>, not for that body,
-that they care! And is it because I am no longer clothed with flesh that
-I must be as only a breath, an empty naught, to them?...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Full of despair, I turned away, and passing through the folding doors,
-arrived in the adjoining room, where my young brothers and sisters
-were busily occupied decorating the Christmas tree. There it stands,
-the old friend of my youth. I see it, and even discern its resinous perfume....
-Towering up towards the ceiling, its lower branches are
-bending to the ground, laden with golden fruits, with toys and wax
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>tapers. My brothers and sisters are gathered around it. But Reginald
-looks grave. I see him turning to May, and hear him saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Are you not anxious about Hugo? I wonder what can have become
-of him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I did not like to tell mother,” May replies with a little shiver, “but
-I had a dreadful dream last night. I saw Hugo white and cold. He
-looked sorrowfully at me, but when he tried to speak he could not. His
-look haunts me still!” she softly sobbed, with tears rolling down her
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But now little Fanny gives a scream of delight. The child has discovered
-among the Christmas presents a real pipe, a pipe with silver
-bells.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, <em>this</em> shall be for Hugo, and then he will have music whenever he
-smokes!” exclaims the little one, merrily laughing, and holding out the
-toy in the direction where I am standing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For a moment I hope she sees me. I try to take the pipe, but
-my hand cannot clasp it, and the toy seems to slip away from me
-as if it were a shadow.... I try to speak again, but it is of no use
-... they see me not, neither do they hear me!...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Grieved beyond words, I left them, and returning into the next room,
-went up straight to Alice, who was still at mother’s side, murmuring to
-her loving words. I spoke again, I entreated, I besought them to look
-at me, and my suffering was so great that I felt that death would be
-preferable to this!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then came a last and supreme effort. Concentrating all my will, I
-bent over Alice, and gasped out with my whole soul:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“If ever you loved me, Alice, know and hear me now!” I exclaimed,
-as I pressed my lips to hers.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She gave a shudder, a start, and then, opening her eyes wider and
-wider, she shrieked in terror:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Hugo! Hugo! Mother, do you see? Hugo is here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She tried to clasp me in her arms, but her hands met together, and
-only joined as if in prayer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Hugo, Hugo, stay, why can I not touch you? Mother, look! look!
-Here is Hugo!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She was growing wilder and more excited with every moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>My mother looked faint and frightened, as she said:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Alice, what is the matter, child? What do you see? Hugo is not
-here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The children, hearing Alice’s cry, flew into the room, all eager with
-expectation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Where is Hugo? Where is he?” they prattled.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I felt that I was invisible to all but Alice. She was the only one
-to see <a id='corr278.44'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='me,'>me.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_278.44'><ins class='correction' title='me,'>me.</ins></a></span> Therefore, realizing that the body had to be saved from its
-danger in the woods without loss of time, I drew her after myself with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>all my will. I slowly moved towards the door, never taking my look off
-her eyes. She followed me, as one in a state of somnambulism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>My mother looked stunned and bewildered.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Rising with difficulty from her place, she would have made for the
-door also, but sank back into her arm-chair powerless and covered her
-face with her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Boys, follow Alice,” said May. “Wait ... the carriage is there
-ready to go after the doctor’s children. Take it. Call the gardener and
-John to go with you. I will stay with mother.” And whispering to
-Reginald, she added, “Tell John to take rugs and blankets ... but I
-am afraid poor Hugo is dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She then turned to mother, who had fainted. I would see no more,
-but <em>willing</em> Alice to follow me, I left the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She came slowly after me, her face all white, her large eyes
-full of a look of terror, but also of resolution in them. On she
-would have gone on foot, in the drizzling rain, her golden hair all
-flying about her head, had she been allowed to do so by my brothers
-and servants. The strange cortege was ushered into the open carriage,
-the coachman being ordered to follow her directions. On it went, as
-speedily as the horse could go. I found myself floating now before
-them, and, to my own amazement, sliding backwards, with my face
-turned towards Alice, strongly willing that she should not lose sight of
-me. Two hours afterwards, the carriage entered the brushwood, and they
-were obliged to alight.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The night was now very dark and stormy, and notwithstanding
-the lanterns, the group made way with great difficulty into the
-thicket. The wind had begun to blow and howl with the same fury
-as when I had left the wood, and seemed to have caught them all in its
-chilly embrace. The boys and servants panted and shivered, but
-Alice heeded nothing. What cared <em>she</em> for that! The only thought of
-my beloved was I, Hugo.... On, on we went, her tender feet wounded
-with the brambles, and the wet sprays of branches brushing against her
-white face. On, on she ran, till, with a sudden and loud cry of joy and
-terror mixed, she fell down....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At the same instant <em>I</em> collapsed, and <em>fell also on the ground, as it
-seemed to me</em>; and then all became a blank.... As I learned later, at
-that moment the boys drew near, and lowering their lanterns found
-Alice with her arms clasped around a form, and when the lanterns were
-placed close to it they saw before them the body of their brother
-Hugo, a corpse!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Sure enough he is dead, the poor young master!” cried John, our
-old servant, who was close behind.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, no!” Alice answered. “No, he is not dead.... His body is
-cold, but his heart still beats. Let us carry him home.... Quick,
-quick!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>Lifting up the body gently and placing it in the carriage they
-covered it with rugs and shawls, and drove at a furious speed back
-to our home. It was near midnight when the carriage stopped at
-the gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Reginald, run on quickly and give the good news to mother!” cried
-Alice. “Tell May to have hot bottles and blankets ready, on the sofa
-in the drawing-room. It is warm there near the fire.... Tell them all
-that Hugo lives, for I <em>know</em> he does,” she went on repeating.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>More lights were brought out, and the servants carried carefully their
-burden into the house, where they placed it on the sofa, hot flannels and
-restoratives being immediately applied. Noiselessly and breathlessly
-went on the work of love around the apparently dead body, and was at
-last rewarded. A sigh was heard, a deeper <em>breath</em> was drawn, and then
-the eyes slowly opened and <em>I</em> looked round in vague surprise at all those
-loved and anxious faces crowding eagerly around me.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Don’t speak yet, Hugo,” whispered Alice anxiously. “Don’t, till
-you feel stronger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But I could not control my impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How am I here?” I asked. “Ah, I remember. I lost my way in
-the old forest.... Ah, yes; I recollect now all.... The cold biting
-wind, my lame foot, after I stumbled and fell, knocking my head against
-a stone, and all became a blank to me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Hush, Hugo, hush my boy,” said my mother wiping tears of joy
-from her still pale and suffering face. “You will tell us all that
-presently.... Now rest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But I could not refrain from speaking, as thoughts crowded into my
-head, and recollections came vividly back. “No, no, I am better,” I
-went on. “I am strong again, and I must let you know all that I
-dreamed. I was here, and I saw you all.... Oh, the torture I
-suffered when you knew me not!... Mother, darling, did you not see
-me, your son? But she, my Alice, saw and followed me, and it is she
-who saved me from death! Ah, yes! I remember now, you found my
-body, and then all was darkness again. Kiss me, mother! Kiss me all,
-let me feel that I am really with you in body, and am no longer an invisible
-shadow.... Mother I kept my promise; I am here on Christmas
-Eve! Light the tree, my little Fan, and give me the pipe with the bells
-I saw you holding, and heard you say it was for old brother Hugo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The child ran into the other room and returned with the pipe I had
-seen her playing with a few hours before. This was the greatest and
-final proof for me, as for my family. The event was no vision then,
-no hallucination, but true to its merest details! As my mother often
-said afterwards, referring to that wonderful night, it was a weird and
-strange experience, but one which had happened to others before, and
-will go on happening from time to time. Of late years, when I had
-been happily married to my Alice (who will not let me travel far away
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>without her, any longer) I have dived a good deal into such psychic
-mysteries, and I think I can explain my experience. I think that by
-privation, cold, and mental agony, I had been thrown into such abnormal
-conditions, that my astral body, as it is now generally called, my
-“conscious self,” was able to escape from the physical tenement and take
-itself to the home I so passionately desired to reach. All my thoughts,
-and longings being intensely directed towards it, I found myself there
-where I wished to be, in spirit. Then the agony of mind from the
-consciousness that I was invisible to all, added to the fear of death
-unless I could impress them with my presence, became finally productive
-of the supreme effort of will, the success of which alone could save me.
-This joined to Alice’s sensitiveness and her love for me, enabled her to
-sense my presence, and even to see my form, whereas others saw nothing.
-Man is a wonderful and marvellous enigma; but it is one which has to,
-and <em>will</em>, be completely unriddled some day, the scepticism of the age
-notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>Such is the simple story told to the writer by an old naval officer,
-about the most “memorable Christmas Eve” that came within his own
-experience.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Constance Wachtmeister.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator5.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>A HALF CONVERT.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Buddha! my earthly memory is so dimmed</div>
- <div class='line in4'>By this poor passing life which travels a hem</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Across my soul, and thought I cannot stem</div>
- <div class='line'>Pours like a flood to wash all traces limned</div>
- <div class='line'>Of former selves, that I shall ne’er recall</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The steps I came, nor know the fleshly tents</div>
- <div class='line in4'>In which I sojourned;—yet the fraying rents</div>
- <div class='line'>Of time-worn garments I have seen, and all</div>
- <div class='line'>The dust upon my feet, and I the sin</div>
- <div class='line'>Of tiger and of cobra passions striven</div>
- <div class='line'>To crush. These were strait gates, and through them driven</div>
- <div class='line'>My chariot wheels, so prithee set me free</div>
- <div class='line'>From other births, lest I seek Peter’s key,</div>
- <div class='line'>O! Sakya Muni, let me trembling in.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Mary N. Gale.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THEOSOPHY AND MODERN SOCIALISM.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>BY A SOCIALIST STUDENT OF THEOSOPHY.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>The writer of the article on “Brotherhood” in your last issue has
-given an erroneous impression of Socialism, which, as a student of
-Theosophy (I do not know if I can yet call myself a disciple),
-who has been, in a large measure, drawn to this great study <em>through
-Socialism</em>, I may, perhaps, be allowed to correct. Indeed, I should feel
-that I was shirking a task clearly indicated to me at the present
-moment, were I to leave such errors, so far as all readers of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>
-are concerned, uncorrected.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“T.B.H.,” the writer of the article in question—an interesting and, I
-believe, useful article in many respects—has, I venture to conjecture,
-confused the general system or class of systems known as Socialism,
-with certain methods of propagating its principles. Let me commence
-by quoting the paragraph in his article to which I take exception. He
-says (<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> No. 3, p. 213):—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>(1). “Socialism, as preached in this nineteenth century, it [the Universal Brotherhood,
-which is the mainspring of Theosophy.—J.B.B.] certainly is not. (2). Indeed,
-there would be little difficulty in showing that modern materialistic Socialism is
-directly at variance with all the teachings of Theosophy. (3). Socialism advocates a
-direct interference with the results of the law of <em>Karma</em>, and would attempt to alter
-the dénouement of the parable of the talents by giving to the man, who hid his talent
-in a napkin, a portion of the ten talents acquired by the labour of his more industrious
-fellow.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>I will first take the three statements contained in this paragraph
-separately, and, for convenience’s sake, in inverted order. The allegation
-against Socialism contained in the third is the most specific, and that
-which, in the eyes of Theosophists, must appear the most serious. This
-statement, namely, that “Socialism advocates a direct interference with
-the results of the law of Karma, and would attempt &amp;c.,” constitutes, in
-fact, the only definite premise in his argument. Of course, if Socialists
-do advocate, consciously or unconsciously, anything of the sort, they
-advocate a physical and psychical impossibility, and their movement is
-fore-doomed to failure. More than this, if they do so <em>consciously</em>, they
-are sinning against the light, and are impious as well as childish in their
-efforts. Of such, clearly, the Universal Brotherhood is not.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But neither Socialists nor Socialism, “as preached in this nineteenth
-century,” do anything of the kind. By “Materialistic” Socialism, I
-presume “T.B.H.” implies (if he has really <em>studied</em> Socialism at all,
-which I venture to doubt) so much of it as can be urged upon
-purely worldly grounds, such as the better feeding, housing, &amp;c., of
-those who do the active work of society, technical instruction, such
-general education as fits a man for the domestic and secular duties of
-life, and the reorganisation of society with these objects upon a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>“co-operative” basis,<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c013'><sup>[61]</sup></a> in which public salaried officers, elected by their
-fellows, will take the place of capitalists and landlords, and in which the
-production and distribution of wealth will be more systematically
-regulated. This system, of course, takes no account of the law of
-Karma.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In a rough sort of way, however, all Socialists recognise the law, so
-far as its effects are visible in this world on the physical, intellectual, and
-moral planes. The fact that “the evil that men do,” and classes and
-nations of men also, “lives after them,” none are more ready to own and
-act upon. The action and reaction of individual <em>will</em> and individual and
-social <em>circumstance</em>, both upon each other and upon individual and social
-<em>conditions</em>, forms part of the foundations of Socialism. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Quâ</i></span> Socialists
-we do not, of course, take any more account of the law of Karma than
-do non-Socialist Christians and Agnostics, but I maintain there is nothing
-whatever in Socialism repugnant to a <a id='corr283.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='beliet'>belief</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_283.15'><ins class='correction' title='beliet'>belief</ins></a></span> in this law. If anything,
-it is the other way. All Socialists, whether they call themselves Collectionists
-or Anarchists, Christian Socialists,<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c013'><sup>[62]</sup></a> Communists, or purely
-economic Socialists, are anxious to give freer play to human
-abilities and social impulses, by creating leisure and educational
-opportunities for all. We may thus, if it is permitted to me to
-speculate while criticising, become the instruments of a greater equalisation,
-distribution, and acceleration of Karmic growth, “good” or
-“evil,” upon and among individual souls, during their incarnation on this
-planet. This would come to pass by the transferring of a great deal of
-the responsibility for Karmic results which now lies with each individual
-in his personal capacity, upon the collective entities composed of individuals
-acting in public capacities; <i>e.g.</i>, as nations, provinces, communes,
-or trade corporations.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is surely true, even now, to speak of a collective, <i>e.g.</i>, a national or
-municipal Karma, as we do of a national conscience. We speak of
-reward or retribution to nations and cities as if they had distinct
-personalities—are these mere “figures of speech”? But what is more
-important is that Socialists may prepare the way for a revelation of the
-noble truths of Theosophy to the multitude; they may help to raise
-the intellectual and instinctive moral standard of the whole community
-to such an extent that all will, in the next generation following after the
-Social Revolution,<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c013'><sup>[63]</sup></a> be amenable to those truths. In this way Socialism
-would not, indeed, interfere with the results of the law of Karma, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>would, as the precursor of Theosophy, be the indirect means of enabling
-multitudes to rise and free themselves from its bonds.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As to the parable of the talents, well, Socialists would be only too
-glad to see its moral better enforced in this and other “civilised”
-countries. To them it seems impossible that it could be <em>less</em> enforced or
-taken to heart than it is now. They see that under the present system
-of Society—that vast engine of usury by which whole classes are held
-in economic servitude to other classes—many are encouraged to live in
-sloth and hide their talents, even if they put them to no worse uses than
-that. This could hardly happen under a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>régime</i></span> of economic Socialism
-(such a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>régime</i></span>, for instance, as Laurence Grönlund contemplates in his
-“Co-operative Commonwealth”); for these able-bodied or talented
-citizens who declined to work would simply be left to starve or sponge
-upon their relatives. Under a purely communist <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>régime</i></span>,<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c013'><sup>[64]</sup></a> no doubt
-there would be a few who would shirk their proper share in the social
-work, but at least none would be brought up from infancy, as now, to
-“eat the bread of idleness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Finally on this point, if to advocate such changes as Socialists
-advocate, the substitution of social co-operation for competition; of production
-with a view to use, for production with view to profit; of peace
-between nations, classes, and individuals, for war; of harmonious organisation
-to the advantage of all, for <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>laissez faire</i></span>, and chaos for the
-advantage (or supposed advantage) of a few. If I say, to advocate
-such changes be to advocate interference with the results of the law of
-Karma, so is every proposal for the amelioration of the physical or
-intellectual welfare of our fellows. And if participation in this and other
-movements, which may with equal justice be called “materialistic,” be
-prohibited to Theosophists, they may as well, for all good their
-Universal Brotherhood will do to the mass of those at present outside
-it, stay at home and content themselves with communing with the
-select few who alone will ever be in a position to <a id='corr284.31'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='appreciaie'>appreciate</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_284.31'><ins class='correction' title='appreciaie'>appreciate</ins></a></span> them. If,
-for one reason or other, they do not care to co-operate with Socialists,
-let them, at least, recognise that the latter are preparing their way for
-them, doing the dirty (?) and laborious work, without which Theosophy
-can never descend from the serene heights in which it now dwells, to
-replenish, spiritually, this sadly benighted world. For, apart from a
-healthier physical and psychical atmosphere than “civilised” life engenders
-in either rich or poor (collective Karmic effects), a fair amount
-of leisure and freedom from sordid care are indispensable in most
-human beings for the higher development of the perceptive or gnostic
-faculties. At present this minimum of leisure and economic independence
-is probably unattainable by nineteen-twentieths of the population.
-Yet this self-same society, with its scientific learning and experience, its
-machinery, and its business organisation, contains within it all the germs
-of such a reconstruction of the physical environment as shall very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>shortly place the means of spiritual and psychical regeneration within
-the reach of all.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“T. B. H.’s” second statement is that “Indeed there would be very
-little difficulty in showing that modern materialistic Socialism is directly
-at variance with all the teachings of Theosophy.” Such an expression
-as “materialistic Socialism” is, as I have already hinted, erroneous.
-<em>All</em> Socialism is materialistic in the sense that it concerns itself primarily
-with the material or physical conditions of mankind. So do chemistry
-and mechanics, pure or applied; so, in ordinary politics, do Liberalism
-and Conservatism. <em>No</em> Socialism is materialistic in the sense that it is
-based upon any materialistic, as distinct from spiritualistic or pantheistic
-conceptions of the universe. It has hardly any more to do with such
-questions than have cotton-spinning or boot-making. I do not, however,
-pretend to mistake “T. B. H’s” meaning. Taking Socialism in its essentially
-economic aspect (which I admit is the foremost for the present,
-and must remain so until it has been disposed of), he asserts that “there
-would be very little difficulty in proving &amp;c.” This is a mere general
-charge against it, although, I think, a less plausible, and therefore—from
-the point of view of harmony between Socialists and Theosophists—a
-less serious one, than the particular charge which follows it, and with
-which I have already endeavoured to deal. For my own enlightenment,
-I should be glad to have some samples, taken at random, of his skill in
-showing this variance; but I doubt if such a demonstration could effect
-any good. Meanwhile it is impossible to <em>answer</em> the charge on account
-of its vague, albeit sweeping and all-comprehensive character. “All
-the teachings of Theosophy” are quite too much for a student like
-myself to attempt to compare with Economic Socialism, as a system;
-nor do I think one with ten times the learning and discernment that I
-can claim, would readily attempt it. I merely record, therefore, my
-sincere conviction that on this general point “T. B. H.” is also mistaken,
-and that it is not Socialism, economic, or otherwise, which he has really
-been scrutinising and balancing, but the sayings or doings of some particular
-“Socialist,” whom he has seen or read of.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Individual Socialists have, of course, many faults which cannot fairly
-be charged to the social and economic tenets they profess. Thus one
-besetting fault of militant advocates of the cause is the use of violent
-language against individual capitalists, police officials and landlords. It,
-is so easy, even for men of a calibre superior to the average, to be drawn
-on from righteous indignation at a corrupt system, to abuse of the creatures
-and instruments thereof—or even, on occasion, to personal violence
-against them. Every good cause has its Peters, no less than its Judases.
-Socialism unfortunately has a rich crop of the former. Another still
-worse fault on the part of certain agitators, but one which might easily
-be predicted from the character of the struggle and the condition of the
-classes who must form the backbone of the Socialist Party, is the frequent
-appeal to lower motives, such as revenge and love of luxury.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>But such faults, although by all human prevision necessary incidents
-in the movement, are by no means inherent in Socialism. Even the
-purely “materialistic” socialism of Karl Marx, to which “T. B. H.”
-seems (although I think not with any clear picture of it in his mind) to
-refer, aims simply at securing the decencies and ordinary comforts of life
-to all, as a recompense for more evenly distributed social labour. The
-very conditions of life under a co-operative commonwealth such as Hyndman,
-Grönlund, and other followers of the late Karl Marx’s economic
-ideal, have in view—above all the obligation (virtual, at any rate) under
-which every able-bodied member of the community would find himself
-or herself, to do a few hours of useful work of one kind or another every
-day, and the elimination of the commercial and speculative element,
-with the wretched insecurity and dangerous temptations which it involves,—would
-preclude inordinate luxury. A healthy simplicity of life would
-become, first, “fashionable,” then usual.<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c013'><sup>[65]</sup></a> Communism, of course, goes
-further than economic socialism, as it implies not only the claim of the
-individual upon the community for the means of <em>labour</em> and the enjoyment
-of its fruits or their equivalent, but his claim for <em>subsistence</em>, irrespective
-of the amount and social value of the labour which he is able to
-perform. It would abolish, therefore, not only individual property in
-the means of production, but in the products themselves. The practicability
-of Communism, the motto of which is, “From each according to
-his abilities, to each according to his needs,” obviously depends upon the
-prevalence of more generous motives, of a higher sense of duty both to
-work and to give—a more perfect development, in fact, of the sense of
-human solidarity. It is for this very reason more commendable than
-mere economic socialism, as an ideal, to the attention of Theosophists;
-although its application, on the national or universal scale, cannot yet
-be said to have entered “the sphere of practical politics.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Communism, which may be either Collectivist or Anarchist, leads me
-to add a few words about Anarchism. I refer, of course, to the social ideal
-philosophically denoted by this name, and not to the means advocated
-by some of its supporters for putting an end to the present society.
-Anarchism involves Communism, as well as extreme decentralisation;
-more than this, it involves the abolition of all permanent machinery of
-law and order, such as “the State” is supposed to provide, and the
-abolition of physical force as a method of suasion, even for criminals and
-lunatics. As a protest against political domination of all kinds, and an
-antidote to the excessive centralisation advocated by some state-Socialists,
-Anarchism may be of some use, but it is obviously further even than
-Communism (of the Collectivist variety) from becoming a school of
-“practical” politics. It could only become so after society at large, all
-the world over, had grown sufficiently homogeneous and <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>solidaire</i></span> for its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>members to co-operate spontaneously and automatically for all necessary
-purposes, grouping themselves into large or small organizations (limbs
-and organs) as required, and forming a complete <em>body-social</em>, or Mesocosm,
-if I may be allowed to coin a word for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The erroneous conceptions of Socialism which I believe “T. B. H.” to
-have formed, do not necessarily invalidate the first statement in the
-paragraph of his article upon which I have been commenting, to wit, that
-the Universal Brotherhood which he has in view (and which, I understand
-from him, forms the first part of the programme of the Theosophical
-Society) is not “Socialism as preached in this 19th century,”—or at any
-other time, past or future, for that matter. Still, I am inclined to hope
-that a more intimate study of Socialism will lead him to see that, whether
-identical or not, they are at any rate not antagonistic. My own belief is
-that Theosophy and “materialistic” Socialism will be found to be working
-along different planes in the same direction.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Any Universal Brotherhood of Theosophists must be based upon
-Socialist principles, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>inter alia</i></span>: its foundations may extend further and
-deeper than those of Socialism, but cannot be less extensive. Greed and
-War (political or industrial) Social Caste and Privilege, Political Domination
-of Man over Man, are as out of place in a true Brotherhood as
-wolves in a flock of sheep. Yet the exclusion of these anti-social demons
-and the enthronement in their place of Universal Love and Peace, if
-effected by such a Brotherhood, would simply leave Socialists nothing
-to do but to organize the material framework of their co-operative commonwealths.
-To preach economic or “materialistic” Socialism to a
-world already converted to the highest and completest form of Socialism,
-would be to advocate the plating of gold with tin or copper.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Modern Socialism, if the noble aspirations of some of its apostles may
-be taken as an earnest of its future, is already developing (incidentally,
-of course, to its main economic and ethical doctrines) strong æsthetic
-and spiritual tendencies. No reader of William Morris or Edward
-Carpenter, to speak of English Socialists only, will fail to notice this. At
-present the mass of Socialists content themselves with basing their social
-and economic faith upon the ethical principles of Justice, Freedom and
-Brotherhood. But the highest, because most mystical of these principles,
-that of Brotherhood, or better, Human Solidarity—the ancient conception
-of “Charity”—forms the unconscious link between modern Socialism
-on the one hand, and Esoteric Buddhism, Esoteric Christianity, and
-Theosophy generally, on the other. I say <em>unconscious</em> link, but I mean
-to imply that it may soon be rendered conscious and visible. As the
-various “orthodox” varieties, first of Christianity, then of Mohammedanism,
-perish with the destruction or collapse of the Social systems that have
-grown up along with them, this simple religion of Human Solidarity will
-take possession of the deserted shrines of Christ and Allah, and will
-begin to seek out its own fount of inspiration. Then will be the time
-for the Universal Brotherhood of Theosophists to step into the breach.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>J. Brailsford Bright</span> (<i>M.A. Oxon.</i>).</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE GREAT QUEST.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“In many mortal forms I rashly sought</div>
- <div class='line'>The shadow of that idol of my thought.”</div>
- <div class='line in32'>—<cite>Shelley.</cite></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Après l’amour éteint si je vécus encore</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">C’est pour la vérité, soif aussi qui dévore!”</span></div>
- <div class='line in30'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">—<cite>Lamartine.</cite></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The loss of youth and love is the perpetual wail of the poets. A
-never-changing spring-time of life, where the sweet dreams of
-youth would be realised in the fruition of reciprocal love, such
-would be a heaven to them, and such <em>is</em> a heaven while it lasts. If we
-add to this the refined æsthetic taste that can delicately balance and
-appreciate to a nicety every joy of the senses, and the highly-developed
-intellect which can roam at will over the accumulated store of past ages
-of culture, what would there be left for poets to dream of? With heart,
-senses and mind worthily employed, and with the well-balanced nature
-that knows moderation alone can give continued bliss, could not man
-rest satisfied at last? What more could he desire?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is useless to deny that life has very sweet gifts to give, though the
-number is limited of those who are capable of receiving them in their
-fulness. But even while these gifts are being enjoyed, it is felt that the
-horizon is bounded. With what questioning uncertainty—albeit with
-fascination—does youth open its eyes upon the glamour of the dazzling
-world! The love of the Springtide, even in fruition, is continually
-building fairy bowers in the future—it never for long rests content in the
-present, while to the intellect the bounded scope of utmost learning is a
-still more definite goad towards a knowledge that shall transcend all
-past experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And even were man content to continue to drink of the one cup of
-bliss, he is never allowed to do so. The lessons of life, the great teacher,
-are continually being altered, and the tempest of the heart takes the
-place of the calm that was never expected to end.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If, then, we must look in vain to find permanent bliss in any of these
-things—if, beyond the highest intellectual culture of an intellectual age
-there gleams the vision of a higher knowledge—if behind the artistic refinement
-of this, as of all past flowers of civilization, the fount of all
-sweetness lies hid—if even the heart-binding communion of earthly
-love is but a faint reflex of the deep peace realized by him who has torn
-aside the veil that hides the Eternal, surely all man’s energies should
-be devoted to the quest which will yield him such results.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The whole philosophy of life may be summed up in the Four great
-Truths that Buddha taught, and no more convincing description of them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>can be read than that given in the lovely lines of the eighth book of the
-“Light of Asia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He who has once been deeply imbued with these great truths—who
-has realised the transitory nature of all earthly bliss, and the pains and
-sorrows that more than counterbalance the joys of life—will never in
-his truest moments desire to be again blessed, either in the present or in
-any future incarnation, with an uniformly happy life, for there is no such
-soporific for the soul as the feeling of satisfaction, as there is no such
-powerful goad as the feeling of dissatisfaction. He is bound to pass
-through periods of joy, but they will be looked forward to with fear
-and doubting, for then it is that the sense-world again fastens its
-fangs on the soul, to be followed by the pain of another struggle for
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When first setting out on the great quest, it seems as if many lifetimes
-would fail to appease the dominant passion of the soul, but nature
-works quickly in the hottest climates, and from the very intensity of the
-desire may spring the strength and will to conquer it. Though it is
-probably the same key-note that is struck throughout, the dominant
-desire will appear to take a different tone through the ascending scale
-of life. It is a speculation, but one which would seem to receive endorsement
-from the analogies of nature; for as the human embryo in its antenatal
-development, exhibits in rapid succession, but with longer pauses
-as it approaches the period of birth, the characteristics of the lower
-races of animal life from which man has evolved, so does the human
-soul realise in its passage through life the dominant desires and attractions
-which have affected it through countless past incarnations. The
-lower desires which in past lives may have been more or less completely
-conquered, will be experienced in rapid succession and left behind without
-much difficulty, till the great struggle of the life is reached, from
-which man must come out more or less victorious if he is to continue the
-progress at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If right intention were the only thing needed, if it were a guarantee
-against being led astray, or if straying did not necessitate retardation on
-the road, there would be no such supreme necessity that belief should
-be in accordance with facts; but even in worldly affairs we see every
-day that purity of intention is no guard against the failures that come
-from lack of knowledge. In the great spiritual science therefore, which
-deals with the problem of life as a whole—not the mere fragment which
-this earthly existence represents—it will be seen how vitally necessary it
-is that facts should be conceived correctly.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To us whose eyes are blinded to the heights above, by the mists of our
-own desires, the only rays of light which can illumine the darkness of
-our journey on the great quest, are the words (whether or not in the
-form of recognised revelation) left by the masters who have preceded us
-on the road, and the counsel of our comrades who are bound for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>same goal. But words are capable of many interpretations, and the
-opinions of our comrades are coloured by their own personality—the
-ultimate touch-stone of truth must therefore be looked for in the
-disciple’s own breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Having stated the necessity for correct belief, let us now consider the
-question of the great achievement—the annihilation of Karma—the
-attainment of Nirvana. It must be acknowledged as a logical proposition
-that Karma can never annihilate Karma, <i>i.e.</i>, that no thoughts
-words, or acts of the man in his present state of consciousness, can,
-ever free him from the circle of re-births. This view would seem to
-necessitate some power external to the man to free him—a power
-which has touch of him, and which would have to be allied to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now the teachings which have been put before the world in “Light
-on the Path” state the other side of the question. “Each man is to
-himself absolutely the <em>way</em>, the <em>truth</em>, and the <em>life</em>.” And again, “For
-within you is the light of the world, the only light that can be shed on
-the Path. If you are unable to perceive it within you, it is useless to
-look for it elsewhere.” It would seem that the solution of this great
-paradox must be sought for in the constitution of man, as described
-in theosophic writings. Indeed, it is the scientific statement of deep
-spiritual truths which gives to the Theosophic teachings their remarkable
-value, and which seems likely to carry conviction of their truth to the
-Western peoples, who have for too long been accustomed to the mere
-emotional sentimentality of the orthodox religions, and to the pessimistic
-negation of science.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The higher principles, as they have been called, in the constitution of
-man, particularly the divine Atma, through which he is allied to the all-pervading
-Deity, must ever remain deep mysteries. But at least they are
-cognisable by the intellect, as providing logical stepping-stones for spanning
-the great gulf between Humanity and Divinity,—the Power—the
-correct cognition of which provides the very link between both systems
-of thought—which is at the same time external to man, and
-has touch of him by its own divine light which enlightens him, and
-which is also the very man himself—his highest and truest Self.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For most of us it is the “God hidden in the Sanctuary,” of whose very
-existence we are unaware, is known under the name of Iswara or the
-Logos—the primal ray from the Great Unknown. It is the Chrestos of
-the Christians, but, save, perhaps, to a few mystics in the Roman or Greek
-churches, it has been degraded past recognition by their materialistic
-anthropomorphism. A help to its better understanding may be obtained
-by a reference to Sanscrit philosophy, which describes man’s nature as
-consisting of the three <em>gunas</em> or qualities—Satwa, goodness, Rajas, passion
-and Tamas, darkness, or delusion—and the nature of most men is made
-up almost entirely of the two last named—while the Logos is pure
-Satwa.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>The vexed question, therefore, as to whether man is freed by his own
-dominant will, or by the power of the Logos, will be seen to be very much
-a distinction without a difference. For the attainment of final liberation
-the God within and the God without must co-operate.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Desire being, as Buddha taught, the great obstacle in the way, its conquest
-by the dominant will is the thing that has to be done, but the
-Divine will cannot arise in its power, till the conviction of the Supreme
-desirability of attaining the eternal condition is rendered permanent;
-and it is this that necessitates the goad which the Logos is continually
-applying by its light on the soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We are now face to face with a very difficult problem—it is, in fact
-the gulf which separates the Occultist from the Religionist, and it is
-here that it is so necessary to get hold of the correct idea.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Strong limbs may dare the rugged road which storms,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Soaring and perilous, the mountain’s breast;</div>
- <div class='line'>The weak must wind from slower ledge to ledge,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With many a place of rest.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>The short cut to perfection referred to in the first two lines has been
-called in Theosophic writings “the perilous ladder which leads to the
-path of life.” To have faced the fearful abyss of darkness of the first
-trial, without starting back in terror at the apparent annihilation which
-the casting aside of the sense-life implies, and out of the still more awful
-silence of the second trial; to have had the strength to evoke the greater
-Self—the God that has hitherto been hidden in the sanctuary—such is
-the language used with reference to the very first—nay, the preliminary—steps
-on this path, while the further steps are represented by the
-ascending scale of the occult Hierarchy, where the neophyte or chela,
-through a series of trials and initiations, may attain the highest Adeptship,
-and the man may gradually leave behind him his human desires
-and limitations, and realise instead the attributes of Deity.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Pilgrim.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i><a href='#quest2'>To be continued</a>.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator6.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>“<i>GOD SPEAKS FOR LAW AND ORDER.</i>”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'><span class='sc'>Introduction.</span></h4>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The readers of the curious article which follows are requested to remember
-that the writers of signed papers in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, and not the editors,
-are responsible for their contents. Captain Serjeant’s views excite much
-interest among a large number of earnest people, who use Biblical forms and
-phraseology to picture to themselves the hidden things of nature and of spirit—things
-which we, the editors, and also the large majority of Theosophists, believe
-to be more clearly conveyed under the symbolism of the ancient Wisdom-Religion
-of the East, and better expressed in its terminology. The article is an
-attempt to explain the significance of a very curious cloud formation observed
-by many persons in Scotland, on the 16th of September last, a sketch of which
-appeared in the <cite>St. Stephens Review</cite> on the 24th of the same month. In the
-centre of the sketch appears a side view of the British Lion rampant, with his
-paw on the head of a bearded man, who bears a considerable likeness to Mr.
-Parnell; to the right of the Lion is an excellent likeness of Her Majesty,
-crowned, as in the <a id='corr292.17'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Jubileee'>Jubilee</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_292.17'><ins class='correction' title='Jubileee'>Jubilee</ins></a></span> coinage, and smiling very naturally; and to the left
-of the picture is an Irish harp. The appearance, by the testimony of many
-witnesses, must have been remarkably perfect and striking. Cloud-forms of a
-similar kind have been recorded many times in history, and they are usually
-connected in the public mind with some important political event. The Cross
-of Constantine will, no doubt, recur to the readers’ mind, but the sword and
-reversed crescent, which everyone saw in the sky when the Turks were driven
-out of Vienna, may be less generally known; as also the reversed thistles, with
-the outline of a Scotchman, armed with claymore and targe, and falling backward,
-which was observed in the clouds by the King and Court at Windsor on the
-night before the battle of Culloden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The question of what <a id='corr292.28'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='interpretatation'>interpretation</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_292.28'><ins class='correction' title='interpretatation'>interpretation</ins></a></span> is to be put upon remarkable cloud
-appearances, is of little interest to anyone who believes that such phenomena are
-merely accidental arrangements of the watery vapours of the atmosphere driven
-by currents of air. Apart, however, from the obvious consideration that this
-way of regarding the phenomenon only raises the further question of what
-causes the currents of air to run in these particular ways, it may be safely said
-that the chances are millions of millions of millions to one, against the appearance
-in the clouds of any such perfect and complete picture of well-known
-persons and emblems, as were seen in Scotland on the 16th of September. Of
-course it may be argued, on the other hand, that the clouds are for ever forming
-and re-forming in millions of millions of millions different ways, and that
-the mathematical chances are that one of these ways will occasionally represent
-an earth scene. But even if the infinite number of continual permutations and
-transformations of cloud substance be held to account for the occasional
-appearance of some graphic picture of human things, it does not in any way
-explain why these rare pictures, when they do occur, should be perfect and
-appropriate symbols; neither does it account for their appearance at the particular
-moment when the extraordinary events, to which they are appropriate,
-are occurring, or about to occur.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The phenomenon of vapours and fumes taking the shape of persons and
-things, is one of the oldest and best accredited facts in magic, and these cloud
-appearances, if they be viewed as having any significance, are merely instances
-of a similar action on a large scale produced by some conscious or unconscious
-force in nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If it be allowed, however, that the occasional assumption by vapours of the
-shapes and likenesses of terrestrial things is not a “fortuitous concourse of atoms,”
-but occurs in accordance with some obscure law of Nature that in itself is the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>result of the mutual interaction and interdependence of everything in the
-Universe, the important question still remains—whether these appearances, when
-they do occur, are “intended” as warnings or omens? Should the lion, the
-harp, her Majesty, and Mr. Parnell, of the Scottish cloud-picture, be taken as
-having any more significance in the affairs of the nation, or of the world at large,
-than chemical phenomena can be supposed to presage disturbances or rejoicings
-in the world of nature? To answer this question would involve considerations
-which only an advanced Occultist would be able to comprehend; so we shall
-merely say, that although there are natural symbols which carry in them a definite
-meaning for those who can read that secret language, still symbols are generally
-significant in proportion as people themselves put a significance into them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A triangle or a cube is nothing but a triangle or a cube to a yokel, but to an
-Occultist they contain the philosophy of the Universe. Even so, Captain
-Serjeant, “the New Dispensationist,” and Theosophist, can put the meaning he
-likes into this or any other symbolical representation. We do not quite agree
-with either his methods or his results in the case before us, but the conclusions
-he draws are the same that are now being reached by many minds pursuing very
-different paths; and these conclusions may be summed up by saying that great
-changes are approaching, both in the temporal and in the spiritual life of
-humanity, and that these changes will eventuate in better things and nobler ideas.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<h3 class='c018'><span class='sc'>An Interpretation of the Vision, by Serjeant.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>(The New Dispensationist.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus may be interpreted the symbolical appearance represented and described
-in the <i>St. Stephen’s Review</i> of 24th September 1887. The lion<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c013'><sup>[66]</sup></a> of the house
-of Judah<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c013'><sup>[67]</sup></a> arises with Victoria<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c013'><sup>[68]</sup></a> the female principle of the victor<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c013'><sup>[69]</sup></a> of this world
-of ignorance, error, sin, crime and misery. The lion represents that wisdom
-which is the only true and lasting power on earth. He shall crush out the
-anarchy and confusion now so manifest in <em>the world</em> which is the state of
-ignorance existing on this earth. Without a miracle shall all this be accomplished?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As insidious doubt has crept into the hearts of the children of men, so shall
-insidious truth creep in to dispel all doubt; ignorance developed into wisdom
-shall be the destruction of the world.<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c013'><sup>[70]</sup></a> Ignorance is the former or lower
-expression of knowledge, and knowledge is the former or lower expression of
-wisdom—ignorance<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c013'><sup>[71]</sup></a> is the cross—wisdom is the crown. Ignorance regarded in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>true light is really an incentive to knowledge, for no man would try to attain
-to knowledge were he not ignorant. And no man would strive to attain to
-wisdom, did he not possess the knowledge which ever silently proclaims to him
-its crowning happiness. Wisdom is not only the celestial crown which every
-embodied soul is ultimately destined to possess, but it is also that particular
-state of Heaven called the “New Jerusalem” which shall descend from the
-Spirit (<i>i.e.</i> God, see John iv., 24.) to earth in these latter days (see Revelation
-xxi.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Man was created<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c013'><sup>[72]</sup></a> an ignorant being for a great purpose, which he will
-ultimately realise and know. Were there no ignorance, there could be no error,
-without error there could be no sin. Were there no ignorance, no sin, there
-could be no crime, no unhappiness, no misery existing on the earth. When,
-therefore, general ignorance shall succumb to the disintegrating power of
-universal intelligence so rapidly developing in these latter days<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c013'><sup>[73]</sup></a> (see Daniel
-xii., 4), and which is the quickening of the Spirit of God in man; then the
-very conditions responsible for evolving error, sin, crime, unhappiness, and
-misery will be entirely done away with, and thus the consummation of the age—or,
-as the old translation of the Bible has it, the end of the world—will be
-brought about as a necessary consequence of purification by the Fire of the
-Spirit, <em>Truth</em>, which is the Divine Son of the Supreme Spirit, or God. “When
-He, the Spirit of Truth, is come, He shall guide you into all the Truth”; then
-shall the princes of the House of David<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c013'><sup>[74]</sup></a> arise from amongst the people to rule
-the nations in equity and justice, in prosperity and peace, and the reign of the
-One Almighty Spirit of Wisdom, Love, and Truth shall begin on earth—for
-the Lion (or wisdom) shall lie down with the Lamb (or innocence), and a little
-child (or truth, see Rev. xii., the coming man-child) shall lead them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The soul-stirring and elevating harp of the sweet and trusting daughters of
-Judah<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c013'><sup>[75]</sup></a> is hushed—no crown surmounts it; and angels weep and mourn over
-the discord now prevailing in the world. Where are the harmonious chords
-which, through their inherent, soft, loving and sympathetic notes once rendered
-powerless that enemy of man—the serpent? Lost, through the ignorance and
-sin of the puny earth-worms of this world! Yet Ireland, in common with the
-whole earth, shall be freed ere long from the yoke of ignorance which is so
-sorely oppressing all God’s creatures, for the crowned female head symbolically
-represents the “Sign in Heaven” <em>which has appeared</em>, of the Victoria or the
-woman<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c013'><sup>[76]</sup></a> clothed with the Sun, the Divine Mother from whom will proceed the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>Child of Wisdom, Love and Truth, who shall rule all nations with a rod of
-iron,<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c013'><sup>[77]</sup></a> and who shall be caught up unto God and unto His Throne.<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c013'><sup>[78]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='badquotes6'></a>The following quotation from one of the replies to two leading articles, which
-appeared in the <cite>Manchester Courier</cite> of May 4th and 13th, may also tend to
-throw some light on the vision of the crowned female head: “The present
-year heralds the jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, on whose glorious
-Empire the sun never sets. It shall also proclaim the jubilee of another Queen
-Victoria, well known to the ancients as the Bride of God who awaits the arrival
-of the Bridegroom. This Queen is She of Sheba<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c013'><sup>[79]</sup></a>—the female principle of the one
-who is the Victor<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c013'><sup>[80]</sup></a> of this world of ignorance and darkness, sin and crime; and
-He is the Solomon,<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c013'><sup>[81]</sup></a> or Man of Light, Truth and Life Eternal. On her
-glorious empire the golden rays of Love and Peace shall shine forth from the
-Living Sun which nevermore shall set. She is the woman clothed with the Sun,
-and from her will proceed the promised man-child who shall rule all nations
-with a rod of iron, and shall be caught up unto God and unto His Throne.
-Were the English nation but to realise the mighty import of the grand and
-everlasting truths which I now proclaim, it would, to a man, support us in
-that work in which we, the New Dispensationists, daily and hourly labour in the
-interests of a suffering humanity now being slowly ground to powder in the stern
-mill of social ignorance and degradation. The time has come for the promise
-to be made known of the fulfilment of the “Saving health of all nations”; the
-prophecies of the ancients relating to the ultimatum of the written Word of
-Truth clearly point to the present age; and the Eternal Fiat has gone forth
-from the Universal King: “Write, for these words are faithful and true”—“Behold,
-I make all things new.” (Revelation xxi, 5.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is fashionable in the world to covertly sneer at the things of the Spirit, and
-to regard the Living God in Heaven as a Being either unable or unwilling to
-manifest His Almighty Power and Presence to the world in this orthodox
-nineteenth century. To all who may be inclined to ignorantly hold what I have
-here written to be the outcome of a disordered imagination I would say, in
-the words of Paul, an apostle: “not of men, neither by men.”—“We speak
-wisdom among the full-grown, yet a wisdom, not of this world, nor of the rulers of
-this world, <em>which are coming to nought</em>: but we speak God’s wisdom in a mystery,
-even the wisdom that hath been hidden, which God foreordained before the worlds
-unto our glory, <em>which none of the Rulers of this world knoweth</em>.”<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c013'><sup>[82]</sup></a> “Now the
-natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness
-unto him; and he cannot know them because they are spiritually examined.
-But he that is spiritual examineth all things and is himself examined of no <a id='corr205.38'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='man.'>man.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_205.38'><ins class='correction' title='man.'>man.”</ins></a></span>
-(See 1 Corinthians, ii.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The year 1887 heralds the spiritual activity which will eventually culminate
-in the glorious consummation of the age.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>W. Eldon Serjeant.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>AN INFANT GENIUS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The idea of re-incarnation, that is to say of a succession of earth-lives
-passed through by each individual monad, seems so new
-and so daring to the Western World, that we are always being
-asked, “Where are your proofs? Are we to take such a startling hypothesis
-as this simply on your <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>ipse dixit</i></span>, or on the authority of some
-ancient Oriental book or <a id='corr296.7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“problematical”'>‘problematical’</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_296.7'><ins class='correction' title='“problematical”'>‘problematical’</ins></a></span> Mahatma?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To such a question the reply cannot be given in two or three words;
-for, while maintaining that there is at least as much reliance to be placed
-upon the Sacred Books of the East as on those of any other religion,
-and while holding firm to the belief that there <em>are</em> beings of a higher
-order of intelligence living upon this earth, and mixing even in its
-great life-currents, we cannot expect that merely because we say
-“Man does not leave this earth for good and all at Death,” we therefore
-shall gain credence. Before the world of Science our position
-would have to be that of a Young with his undulatory hypothesis of
-light, or a Dalton with his atomic theory. We cannot bring proof
-positive to those who desire an Euclidic demonstration; we can only
-offer to them a hypothesis, and bid them treat it calmly and dispassionately,
-not flying straightway into a fury of abuse at our great impudence in
-daring to suggest a heresy, but weighing it with care, and trying whether
-or no it will explain some of the dark riddles of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To ourselves, merely as a working hypothesis, the doctrine of reincarnation
-seems to throw so much long-sought-for light upon the bewildering
-enigmas of life, and the strange vagaries of a fickle fortune,
-that we could not, even if we would, lay aside so fluent an interpreter of
-the utterances of the Sphinx—Existence. The seeming injustices in
-the lot of man fall into line as units of the great battalion of cause and
-effect; “What a man sows that must he also reap.” How else account
-for all the misery that cries aloud on every hand, the starving multitudes,
-the good man persecuted, the charlatan triumphant? In the small
-purview of a life summed up in three-score years and ten, where is the
-indication of a Divine intelligence that metes to each his due?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But if this brief existence be not the only one that man incarnate
-must pass through, if it be, as we are assured, but one short link in a
-chain that spans a fathomless expanse of myriad years, then does the
-eternity of justice proclaim itself, handed on from birth to birth in the
-dark fuel of the torch of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Our purpose now, however, is not to strive to catalogue the countless
-instances where destiny appears to cry aloud, into the deaf ears of man,
-that life is fraught with dire responsibility for future life, but to point to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>a case where she, in kindlier mood, has shown the gracious aspect of her
-face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For the last few months London has been taken by storm by the
-marvellous musical talent of a child whose life, in this incarnation at
-least, is barely ten years old. We allude, of course, to Josef Hofmann.
-None of our readers who have heard this boy but must have wondered
-whence this phenomenal skill could have been derived. Other children
-have come before the public, and roused its listlessness a little with
-exhibitions of infantile precocity. But this young Josef has taken at
-once front rank among the stars of the musical world, and won a place
-only to be compared to that of the fairy-child Mozart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Whence comes this breadth of feeling, this grasp of musical
-expression? It is certain that it comes not from his teacher; for
-his father alone has filled that capacity, and it does not show itself
-in <em>his</em> performance; and again, the only unsatisfactory part of the boy’s
-playing is clearly the result of mannerisms such as the second-rate
-conductor of a provincial orchestra would, without fail, extol and
-inculcate. No; it is clear that the swing of rhythm, the determination of
-attack, the delicacy of sentiment, must come from a man’s heart beating
-within that boyish frame, and a man’s mind shining through that childish
-head. Could one forget the name of the performer for one instant, and
-shut from one’s eyes his physical presence, it were a <em>man</em> that was revealing
-to us the secrets of the notes. The rife experience of years must
-needs precede such rendering of musical thought; an experience earned in
-many a fight with varying fortune, in sympathy with many a tale of woe,
-in rejoicing over many a glimpse of Love and Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yet ten short years are all his tale! What magician could crowd into
-that tiny space the parti-coloured pictures of a fevered life of energy?
-No, it must be that the child has lived upon this earth before, has borne
-his lance in the thickest of the fray, has achieved distinction in some
-great branch of art and garnered up a store of thought and feeling, into
-the inheritance of which his heir, himself, has entered. He may
-squander it again; alas, so many have before; but there it is, for him
-to use aright or wrongly, and serious is the charge imposed upon his
-guardians that they shall lay the lesson to heart that to whom much is
-given, from him shall much be expected. But with that aspect of the
-case it is not for us here to deal. We have only adduced this boy’s
-genius as one of the indications that life is in its succession a far more
-complex problem than the materialists or the orthodox religionists
-would lead us to believe. There are countless other suggestive little
-facts of early talent that must have come within the circle of the daily
-life of each of us; but without the thread of Karma whereon to string
-them, we pass them by; and it is only when some remarkable
-phenomenon, such as that of Josef Hofmann, bursts upon the world,
-that men fall to wondering. Yet it is by the accumulation of small
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>details that a philosopher like Darwin worked out his scheme of natural
-evolution; and it is by the testing of such a theory as that of re-incarnation
-by many a little hitherto unexplained incident that we shall find
-its worth. Nor is it merely as a curious prying into mysteries that we
-should regard such research; for, once let a man convince himself that
-though “Art is long,” yet Life, in its recurrence, is longer, he will find
-in the thought that he is really laying up treasure in heaven (the <em>lives</em>
-to come), encouragement, despite all temporary failure, to do whatsoever
-his hand findeth to do with all his might.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>W. Ashton Ellis.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>FEAR.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Why fearest thou the darksome shades</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That creep across the path of life?</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Why tremble at the thought of strife</div>
- <div class='line'>That oftentimes the soul invades?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Why sicken at the thought of ills?</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The horrors that invade thy dreams,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The shadowland of forms, that seems</div>
- <div class='line'>Dark terror to the soul it fills?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Why weary of the onward way,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Or dread the roughness of the road?</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Why fear to struggle ’gainst the load,</div>
- <div class='line'>The heavy burthen of life’s clay?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Hast thou not seen?—when gone the night</div>
- <div class='line in4'>And stilled the dropping of the shower,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The weary drooping wayside flower</div>
- <div class='line'>Drink in new life from sunbeams bright.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Hast thou not loved, at dawn, to feast,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The longing of thy mortal eyes</div>
- <div class='line in4'>With vivid colours of the skies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Burst free from floodgates of the East?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>And hast thou never tried, in thought,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>To gain a clearer, truer view?</div>
- <div class='line in4'>A mystic glimpse, a vision new,</div>
- <div class='line'>That shows the darkness as it ought?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A phantom of material fear</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Unworthy of a moment’s dread;</div>
- <div class='line in4'>For darkness would itself be dead,</div>
- <div class='line'>Unless its mother light were near!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Then learn to grasp the purer light,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>And learn to know the holier creed—</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The brighter glow—the greater need,</div>
- <div class='line'>The nearer day—the murkier night.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>P. H. D.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>
- <h3 id='esoteric2' class='c011'>THE ESOTERIC CHARACTER OF THE GOSPELS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>II.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>The word Chréstos existed ages before Christianity was heard of. It is
-found used, from the fifth century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, by Herodotus, by Æschylus and
-other classical Greek writers, the meaning of it being applied to both
-things and persons.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus in Æschylus (Cho. 901) we read of Μαντεύματα πυθόχρηστα (<em>pythochrésta</em>)
-the “oracles delivered by a Pythian God” (<cite>Greek-Eng. Lex.</cite>)
-through a pythoness; and <em>Pythochréstos</em> is the nominative singular of an adjective
-derived from <em>chrao</em> χράω (Eurip. <cite>Ion</cite>, 1, 218). The later meanings coined freely
-from this primitive application, are numerous and varied. Pagan classics
-expressed more than one idea by the verb χράομαι “consulting an oracle”;
-for it also means “fated,” <em>doomed</em> by an oracle, in the sense of a <em>sacrificial victim
-to its decree</em>, or—“to the <span class='sc'>Word</span>”; as <em>chrésterion</em> is not only “the seat of an
-oracle” but also “an offering to, or for, the oracle.”<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c013'><sup>[83]</sup></a> <em>Chrestés</em> χρήστης is
-one who expounds or explains oracles, “a <em>prophet</em>, a <em>soothsayer</em>;”<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c013'><sup>[84]</sup></a> and
-<em>chrésterios</em> χρηστὴριος is one who belongs to, or is in the service of, an
-oracle, a god, or a “Master”;<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c013'><sup>[85]</sup></a> this Canon Farrar’s efforts notwithstanding.<a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c013'><sup>[86]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>All this is evidence that the terms Christ and Christians, spelt originally
-<em>Chrést</em> and <em>Chréstians</em> χρηστιανοὶ<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c013'><sup>[87]</sup></a> were directly borrowed from the Temple
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>terminology of the Pagans, and meant the same thing. The God of the Jews
-was now substituted for the Oracle and the other gods; the generic designation
-“Chréstos” became a noun applied to one special personage; and new terms
-such as <em>Chréstianoï</em> and <em>Chréstodoulos</em> “a follower or servant of Chrestos”—were
-coined out of the old material. This is shown by Philo Judæus, a
-monotheist, assuredly, using already the same term for monotheistic purposes.
-For he speaks of θεόχρηστος (<em>théochréstos</em>) “God-declared,” or one who is
-declared by god, and of λόγια θεόχρηστα (<em>logia théochrésta</em>) “sayings delivered
-by God”—which proves that he wrote at a time (between the first century
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and the first <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>) when neither Christians nor Chrestians were yet
-known under these names, but still called themselves the Nazarenes. The
-notable difference between the two words χράω—“consulting or obtaining response
-from a god or oracle” (χρεω being the Ionic earlier form of it), and χριω
-(<em>chrio</em>) “to rub, to anoint” (from which the name Christos), have not prevented
-the ecclesiastical adoption and coinage from Philo’s expression θεόχρηστος
-of that other term θεόχριστος “anointed by God.” Thus the quiet substitution
-of the letter ι for η for dogmatic purposes, was achieved in the easiest
-way, as we now see.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The secular meaning of <em>Chréstos</em> runs throughout the classical Greek literature
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>pari passu</i></span> with that given to it in the mysteries. Demosthenes’ saying
-ω χρηστέ (330, 27), means by it simply “you nice fellow”; Plato (in Phaed.
-264 B) has χρηστός ει ὅτι ἣγεῖ—“you are an excellent fellow to think....” But
-in the esoteric phraseology of the temples “chrestos,”<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c013'><sup>[88]</sup></a> a word which, like the
-participle <em>chréstheis</em>, is formed under the same rule, and conveys the same
-sense—from the verb χράομαι(“to consult a god”)—answers to what we
-would call an adept, also a high <em>chela</em>, a disciple. It is in this sense that it is
-used by Euripides (Ion. 1320) and by Æschylus (1 <span class='fss'>C</span>). This qualification was
-applied to those whom the god, oracle, or any superior had proclaimed this, that,
-or anything else. An instance may be given in this case.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The words χρῆσεν οικιστῆρα used by Pindar (p. 4-10) mean “the oracle
-<em>proclaimed</em> him the coloniser.” In this case the genius of the Greek language
-permits that the man so proclaimed should be called χρήστος (<em>Chréstos</em>).
-Hence this term was applied to every Disciple recognised by a Master, as also
-to every good man. Now, the Greek language affords strange etymologies.
-Christian theology has chosen and decreed that the name Christos should be
-taken as derived from χρίΩ, χρίσω (Chriso), “anointed with scented unguents
-or oil.” But this word has several significances. It is used by Homer,
-certainly, as applied to the rubbing with oil of the body after bathing (<cite>Il.</cite> 23,
-186; also in <cite>Od.</cite> 4, 252) as other ancient writers do. Yet the word χρίστης
-(<em>Christes</em>) means rather a <em>white-washer</em>, while the word Chrestes (χρήστης)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>means priest and prophet, a term far more applicable to Jesus, than that of the
-“Anointed,” since, as Nork shows on the authority of the Gospels, he never
-was anointed, either as king or priest. In short, there is a deep mystery underlying
-all this scheme, which, as I maintain, only a thorough knowledge of the
-Pagan mysteries is capable of unveiling.<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c013'><sup>[89]</sup></a> It is not what the early Fathers,
-who had an object to achieve, may affirm or deny, that is the important point,
-but rather what is now the evidence for the real significance given to the two
-terms <em>Chréstos</em> and <em>Christos</em> by the ancients in the pre-Christian ages. For
-the latter had no object to achieve, therefore nothing to conceal or disfigure,
-and their evidence is naturally the more reliable of the two. This evidence
-can be obtained by first studying the meaning given to these words by the
-classics, and then their correct significance searched for in mystic symbology.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now <em>Chrestos</em>, as already said, is a term applied in various senses. It qualifies
-both Deity and Man. It is used in the former sense in the Gospels, and in
-Luke (vi., 35), where it means “kind,” and “merciful.” <a id='corr301.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='χρηστός'>“χρηστός</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_301.15'><ins class='correction' title='χρηστός'>“χρηστός</ins></a></span> ἑστιν
-επι τους,” in 1 Peter (ii, 3), where it is said, “Kind is the Lord,” χρηστός
-ὁ κύριος. On the other hand, it is explained by Clemens Alexandrinus
-as simply meaning a good man; <i>i.e.</i> “All who believe in <em>Chrést</em> (a good
-man) both <em>are</em>, and <em>are called Chréstians</em>, that is good men.” (Strom. lib. ii.)
-The reticence of Clemens, whose Christianity, as King truly remarks in his
-“<em>Gnostics</em>,” was no more than a graft upon the congenial stock of his original
-Platonism, is quite natural. He was an Initiate, a new Platonist, before he became a
-Christian, which fact, however much he may have fallen off from his earlier views,
-could not exonerate him from his pledge of secrecy. And as a Theosophist and a
-<em>Gnostic</em>, one who <em>knew</em>, Clemens must have known that <em>Christos</em> was “the <span class='fss'>WAY</span>,”
-while <em>Chréstos</em> was the lonely traveller journeying on to reach the ultimate goal
-through that “Path,” which goal was <em>Christos</em>, the glorified Spirit of “<span class='sc'>Truth</span>,”
-the reunion with which makes the soul (the Son) <span class='fss'>ONE</span> with the (Father) Spirit.
-That Paul knew it, is certain, for his own expressions prove it. For what do
-the words πάλιν ὠδίνω, ἅχρις οὕ μορφωθῆ χριστὸς ἐνὺμῖν, or, as given in the
-authorised translations, “I am again in travail until <em>Christ be formed in you</em>”
-mean, but what we give in its esoteric rendering, <i>i.e.</i> “until you find <em>the</em> Christos
-within yourselves as your only ‘way.’” (<i>vide</i> Galatians iv., 19 and 20.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus Jesus, whether of Nazareth or Lüd,<a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' class='c013'><sup>[90]</sup></a> was a Chréstos, as undeniably as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>that he never was entitled to the appellation of <em>Christos</em>, during his life-time and
-before his last trial. It may have been as Higgins thinks, who surmises that
-the first name of Jesus was, perhaps, χρεισος the second χρησος, and the third
-χρισος. “The word χρεισος was in use before the H (cap. <em>eta</em>) was in the
-language.” But Taylor (in his answer to Pye Smith, p. 113) is quoted saying
-“The complimentary epithet Chrest ... signified nothing more than a
-good man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Here again a number of ancient writers may be brought forward to testify that
-<em>Christos</em> (or <em>Chreistos</em>, rather) was, along with χρησος = Hrésos, an adjective
-applied to Gentiles before the Christian era. In <cite>Philopatris</cite> it is said ει τυχοι
-χρηστος και εν εθνεσιν, <i>i.e.</i> “if chrestos chance to be even among the Gentiles,”
-etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Tertullian denounces in the 3rd chapter of his <cite>Apologia</cite> the word “<em>Christianus</em>”
-as derived by “crafty interpretation;”<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' class='c013'><sup>[91]</sup></a> Dr. Jones, on the other hand,
-letting out the information, corroborated by good sources, that <em>Hrésos</em>
-χρησός was the name given to Christ by the Gnostics, and even by <a id='corr302.16'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>unbelievers,”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_302.16'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>unbelievers,”</ins></a></span>
-assures us that the real name ought to be χρισος or Chrisos—thus
-repeating and supporting the original “pious fraud” of the early Fathers, a
-fraud which led to the carnalizing of the whole Christian system.<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' class='c013'><sup>[92]</sup></a> But I propose
-to show as much of the real meaning of all these terms as lies within my
-humble powers and knowledge. Christos, or the “Christ-condition,” was ever
-the synonym of the “Mahatmic-condition,” <i>i.e.</i>, the union of the man with the
-divine principle in him. As Paul says (Ephes. iii. 17) “κατοικησαι τον χριστον
-δια της πιστεως εν ταις καρδιαις ὑμωι.” “That you may find Christos in
-your <em>inner</em> man through <em>knowledge</em>” not faith, as translated; for <em>Pistis</em> is “knowledge,”
-as will be shown further on.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is still another and far more weighty proof that the name <em>Christos</em> is
-pre-Christian. The evidence for it is found in the prophecy of the Erythrean
-Sybil. We read in it ἹΗΣΟΥΣ ΧΡΕΙΣΤΟΣΘΕΟΝ ὙΙΟΣ ΣΩΤΗΡ ΣΤΑΥΡΟΣ. Read
-esoterically, this string of meaningless detached nouns, which has no
-sense to the profane, contains a real prophecy—only not referring to
-Jesus—and a verse from the mystic catechism of the Initiate. The
-prophecy relates to the coming down upon the Earth of the Spirit of
-Truth (Christos), after which advent—that has once more nought to do with
-Jesus—will begin the Golden Age; the verse refers to the necessity before
-reaching that blessed condition of inner (or subjective) theophany and theopneusty,
-to pass through the crucifixion of flesh or matter. Read exoterically,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>the words “<em>Iesous Chreistos theou yios soter stauros</em>,” meaning literally “Iesus,
-Christos, God, Son, Saviour, Cross,” are most excellent handles to hang a Christian
-prophecy on, but they are <em>pagan</em>, not Christian.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If called upon to explain the names <span class='sc'>Iesous Chreistos</span>, the answer is: study
-mythology, the so-called “fictions” of the ancients, and they will give you the
-key. Ponder over Apollo, the solar god, and the “Healer,” and the allegory
-about his son Janus (or Ion), his priest at Delphos, through whom alone could
-prayers reach the immortal gods, and his other son Asclepios, called the <em>Soter</em>,
-or Saviour. Here is a leaflet from esoteric history written in symbolical phraseology
-by the old Grecian poets.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The city of Chrisa<a id='r93' /><a href='#f93' class='c013'><sup>[93]</sup></a> (now spelt Crisa), was built in memory of Kreusa (or
-Creusa), daughter of King Erechtheus and mother of Janus (or Ion) by Apollo,
-in memory of the danger which Janus escaped.<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94' class='c013'><sup>[94]</sup></a> We learn that Janus,
-abandoned by his mother in a grotto “to hide the shame of the virgin who bore
-a son,” was found by Hermes, who brought the infant to Delphi, nurtured him
-by his father’s sanctuary and oracle, where, under the name of Chresis (χρησις)
-Janus became first a <em>Chrestis</em> (a priest, soothsayer, or Initiate), and then
-very nearly a <em>Chresterion</em>, “a sacrificial victim,”<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' class='c013'><sup>[95]</sup></a> ready to be poisoned by his
-own mother, who knew him not, and who, in her jealousy, mistook him, on the
-hazy intimation of the oracle, for a son of her husband. He pursued her to the
-very altar with the intention of killing her—when she was saved through the
-pythoness, who divulged to both the secret of their relationship. In memory
-of this narrow escape, Creusa, the mother, built the city of Chrisa, or Krisa.
-Such is the allegory, and it symbolizes simply the trials of Initiation.<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96' class='c013'><sup>[96]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>Finding then that Janus, the solar God, and son of Apollo, the Sun, means
-the “Initiator” and the “Opener of the Gate of Light,” or secret wisdom of
-the mysteries; that he is born from Krisa (esoterically <em>Chris</em>), and that he was
-a <em>Chrestos</em> through whom spoke the God; that he was finally Ion, the father of
-the Ionians, and, some say, an <em>aspect</em> of Asclepios, another son of Apollo, it is
-easy to get hold of the thread of Ariadne in this labyrinth of allegories. It is
-not the place here to prove side issues in mythology, however. It suffices to
-show the connection between the mythical characters of hoary antiquity and
-the later fables that marked the beginning of our era of civilization. Asclepios
-(Esculapius) was the divine physician, the “Healer,” the “Saviour,” Σωτηρ
-as he was called, a title also given to Janus of Delphi; and IASO, the daughter of
-Asclepios was the goddess of healing, under whose patronage were all the candidates
-for initiation in her father’s temple, the novices or <em>chrestoi</em>, called “the
-sons of Iaso.” (<i>Vide</i> for name, “Plutus,” by Aristoph. 701).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now, if we remember, firstly, that the names of <span class='sc'>Iesus</span> in their different
-forms, such as Iasius, Iasion, Jason and Iasus, were very common in ancient
-Greece, especially among the descendants of Jasius (the Jasides), as also the
-number of the “sons of Iaso,” the <em>Mystoï</em> and future Epoptai (Initiates), why
-should not the enigmatical words in the Sibylline Book be read in their legitimate
-light, one that had nought to do with a Christian prophecy? The secret
-doctrine teaches that the first two words ΙΗΣΟΥΣ ΧΡΕΙΣΤΟΣ mean simply
-“son of Iaso, a Chrestos,” or servant of the oracular God. Indeed IASO
-(Ιασω) <em>is in the Ionic dialect IESO</em> (Ἱησὼ), and the expression Ιησους
-(<em>Iesous</em>)—in its archaic form, ΙΗΣΟΥΣ—simply means “the son of Iaso or
-<em>Ieso</em>, the <a id='corr304.25'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“healer'>healer</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_304.25'><ins class='correction' title='“healer'>healer</ins></a></span>,” <i>i.e.</i> ο Ιησοῦς (υῖος). No objection, assuredly, can be
-taken to such rendering, or to the name being written <em>Ieso</em> instead of <em>Iaso</em>, since
-the first form is <em>attic</em>, therefore incorrect, for the name is <em>Ionic</em>. “Ieso” from
-which “O’ Iesous” (son of Ieso)—<i>i.e.</i> a genitive, not a nominative—<em>is Ionic
-and cannot</em> be anything else, if the age of the Sibylline book is taken into consideration.
-Nor could the Sibyl of Erythrea have spelt it originally otherwise,
-as Erythrea, her very residence, was a town in Ionia (from Ion or Janus)
-opposite Chios; and that the <em>Ionic</em> preceded the <em>attic</em> form.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Leaving aside in this case the mystical signification of the now famous Sibylline
-sentence, and giving its literal interpretation only, on the authority of all that
-has been said, the hitherto mysterious words would stand; “Son of <span class='sc'>Iaso,
-Chrestos</span> (the priest or servant) (of the) <span class='sc'>Son</span> of (the) <span class='sc'>God</span> (Apollo) the
-<span class='sc'>Saviour</span> from the <span class='sc'>Cross</span>”—(of flesh or matter).<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' class='c013'><sup>[97]</sup></a> Truly, Christianity can never
-hope to be understood until every trace of dogmatism is swept away from it,
-and the dead letter sacrificed to the eternal Spirit of Truth, which is Horus,
-which is Crishna, which is Buddha, as much as it is the Gnostic Christos and
-the true Christ of Paul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the <cite>Travels</cite> of Dr. Clarke, the author describes a heathen monument found
-by him.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span></div>
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Within the sanctuary, behind the altar, we saw the fragments of a <em>marble cathedra</em>, upon the
-back of which we found the following inscription, exactly as it is here written, no part of it having
-been injured or obliterated, affording perhaps the only instance known of a sepulchral inscription upon
-a monument of this <a id='corr305.4'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='remakable'>remarkable</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_305.4'><ins class='correction' title='remakable'>remarkable</ins></a></span> form.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The inscription ran thus: ΧΡΗΣΤΟΣ ΠΡΩΤΟΥ ΘΕΣΣΑΛΟΣ ΛΑΡΙΣΣΑΙΟΣ
-ΠΕΛΑΣΓΙΟΤΗΣ ΕΤΩΝ ΙΗ or, “Chrestos, the first, a Thessalonian from
-Larissa, Pelasgiot 18 years old Hero,” Chrestos the <em>first</em> (<em>protoo</em>), why?
-Read literally the inscription has little sense; interpreted esoterically, it is
-pregnant with meaning. As Dr. Clarke shows, the word Chrestos is found on
-the epitaphs of almost all the ancient Larissians; but it is preceded always by
-a proper name. Had the adjective Chrestos stood after a name, it would only
-mean “a good man,” a posthumous compliment paid to the defunct, the same
-being often found on our own modern tumular epitaphs. But the word
-Chrestos, standing alone and the other word, “protoo,” following it, gives it
-quite another meaning, especially when the deceased is specified as a “hero.”
-To the mind of an Occultist, the defunct was a neophyte, who had died in his
-18th year <em>of neophytism</em>,<a id='r98' /><a href='#f98' class='c013'><sup>[98]</sup></a> and stood in the first or highest class of discipleship,
-having passed his preliminary trials as a “hero;” but had died before the last
-mystery, which would have made of him a “Christos,” an <em>anointed</em>, one with the
-spirit of Christos or Truth in him. He had not reached the end of the “Way,”
-though he had heroically conquered the horrors of the preliminary theurgic trials.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='badquotes7'></a>We are quite warranted in reading it in this manner, after learning the place
-where Dr. Clarke discovered the tablet, which was, as Godfrey Higgins remarks,
-there, where “I should expect to find it, at Delphi, in the temple of the God
-IE.,” who, with the Christians became Jah, or Jehovah, one with Christ Jesus.
-It was at the foot of Parnassus, in a gymnasium, “adjoining the Castalian fountain,
-which flowed by the ruins of Crisa, probably the town called Crestona,” etc.
-And again. “In the first part of its course from the (Castalian) fountain, it (the
-river) separates the remains of the gymnasium ... from the valley of Castro,”
-as it probably did from the old city of Delphi—the seat of the great oracle of
-Apollo, of the town of Krisa (or Kreusa) the great centre of initiations and of the
-<em>Chrestoi</em> of the decrees of the oracles, where the candidates for the last <em>labour</em>
-were anointed with sacred oils<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' class='c013'><sup>[99]</sup></a> before being plunged into their last trance of
-forty-nine hours’ duration (as to this day, in the East), from which they arose
-as glorified adepts or <em>Christoi</em>.”</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In the Clementine Recognitions it is announced that the father anointed his son with <a id='corr305.36'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“oil'>‘oil</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_305.36'><ins class='correction' title='“oil'>‘oil</ins></a></span> that
-was taken from the wood of the Tree of Life, and from this anointing he is called the <a id='corr305.37'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Christ:”'>Christ:’</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_305.37'><ins class='correction' title='Christ:”'>Christ:’</ins></a></span> whence
-the Christian name. This again is Egyptian. Horus was the anointed son of the father. The mode
-of anointing him from the Tree of Life, portrayed on the monuments, is very primitive indeed; and
-the Horus of Egypt was continued in the Gnostic Christ, who is reproduced upon the Gnostic stones
-as the intermediate link betwixt the <em>Karest</em> and the Christ, also as the Horus of both <a id='corr305.41'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sexes.'>sexes.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_305.41'><ins class='correction' title='sexes.'>sexes.”</ins></a></span> (“<em>The
-name and nature of the Christ.</em>”—<span class='sc'>Gerald Massey.</span>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. G. Massey connects the Greek Christos or Christ with the Egyptian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span><em>Karest</em>, the “mummy type of immortality,” and proves it very thoroughly. He
-begins by saying that in Egyptian the “Word of Truth” is <em>Ma-Kheru</em>, and that
-it is the title of Horus. Thus, as he shows, Horus preceded Christ as the
-Messenger of the Word of Truth, the Logos or the manifestor of the divine
-nature in humanity. In the same paper he writes as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Gnosis had three phases—astronomical, spiritual, and doctrinal, and all three can be
-identified with the Christ of Egypt. In the astronomical phase the constellation Orion is called the
-<em>Sahu</em> or <em>mummy</em>. The soul of Horus was represented as rising from the dead and ascending to
-heaven in the stars of Orion. The mummy-image was the preserved one, the saved, therefore a
-portrait of the Saviour, as a type of immortality. This was the figure of a dead man, which, as
-Plutarch and Herodotus tell us, was carried round at an Egyptian banquet, when the guests were
-invited to look on it and eat and drink and be happy, because, when they died, they would become
-what the image symbolised—that is, they also would be immortal! This type of immortality was
-called the <em>Karest</em>, or <em>Karust</em>, and it <em>was</em> the Egyptian Christ. To <em>Kares</em> means to embalm, anoint,
-to make the Mummy as a type of the eternal; and, when made, it was called the <em>Karest</em>; so that
-this is not merely a matter of name for name, the <em>Karest</em> for the <em>Christ</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This image of the <em>Karest</em> was bound up in a woof without a seam, the proper vesture of the Christ!
-No matter what the length of the bandage might be, and some of the mummy-swathes have been
-unwound that were 1,000 yards in length, the woof was from beginning to end without a seam....
-Now, this seamless robe of the Egyptian <em>Karest</em> is a very tell-tale type of the mystical Christ, who
-becomes historic in the Gospels as the wearer of a coat or chiton, made without a seam, which neither
-the Greek nor the Hebrew fully explains, but which is explained by the Egyptian <em>Ketu</em> for the woof,
-and by the seamless robe or swathing without seam that was made for eternal wear, and worn by the
-Mummy-Christ, the image of immortality in the tombs of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Further, Jesus is put to death in accordance with the instructions given for making the <em>Karest</em>.
-Not a bone must be broken. The true <em>Karest</em> must be perfect in every member. “This is he who
-comes out sound; whom men know not is his name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the Gospels Jesus rises again with every member sound, like the perfectly-preserved <em>Karest</em>, to
-demonstrate the physical resurrection of the mummy. But, in the Egyptian original, the mummy
-transforms. The deceased says: “I am spiritualised. I am become a soul. I rise as a God.”
-This transformation into the spiritual image, the <em>Ka</em>, has been omitted in the Gospel.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This spelling of the name as Chrest or Chrést in Latin is supremely important, because it
-enables me to prove the identity with the Egyptian <em>Karest</em> or <em>Karust</em>, the name of the Christ as the
-<a id='corr306.34'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='enbalmed'>embalmed</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_306.34'><ins class='correction' title='enbalmed'>embalmed</ins></a></span> mummy, which was the image of the resurrection in Egyptian tombs, the type of immortality,
-the likeness of the Horus, who rose again and made the pathway out of the sepulchre for
-those who were his disciples or followers. <em>Moreover, this type of the Karest or Mummy-Christ is
-reproduced in the Catacombs of Rome.</em> No representation of the supposed historic resurrection of
-Jesus has been found on any of the early Christian monuments. But, instead of the missing fact, we
-find the scene of Lazarus being raised from the dead. This is depicted over and over again as the
-typical resurrection where there is no real one! The scene is not exactly in accordance with the rising
-from the grave in the Gospel. It is purely Egyptian, and Lazarus is an Egyptian mummy! Thus
-Lazarus, in each representation, <em>is</em> the mummy-type of the resurrection; Lazarus <em>is</em> the Karest, who
-was the Egyptian Christ, and who is reproduced by Gnostic art in the Catacombs of Rome as a form
-of the Gnostic Christ, who <em>was not and could not become an historical character</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Further, as the thing is Egyptian, it is probable that the name is derived from Egyptian. If so,
-Laz (equal to Ras) means to be raised up, while <em>aru is</em> the mummy by name. With the Greek
-<a id='corr306.47'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='erminal'>terminal</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_306.47'><ins class='correction' title='erminal'>terminal</ins></a></span> <em>s</em> this becomes Lazarus. In the course of humanising the mythos the typical representation
-of the resurrection found in the tombs of Rome and Egypt would become the story of Lazarus being
-raised from the dead. This Karast type of the Christ in the Catacombs is not limited to
-Lazarus.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>By means of the <em>Karest</em> type the Christ and the Christians can both be traced in the ancient
-tombs of Egypt. The mummy was made in this likeness of the Christ. It was the Christ by name,
-identical with the <em>Chrestoi</em> of the Greek Inscriptions. Thus the honoured dead, who rose again as the
-followers of Horus-Makheru, the Word of Truth, are found to be the Christians οι χρηστοι, on
-the Egyptian monuments. <em>Ma-Kheru</em> is the term that is always applied to the faithful ones who win
-the crown of life and wear it at the festival which is designated ‘Come thou to me’—an invitation
-by Horus the Justifier to those who are the ‘Blessed ones of his father, Osiris’—they who, having
-made the Word of Truth the law of their lives, were the Justified—οι χρηστοι, the Christians,
-on earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>In a fifth century representation of the Madonna and child from the cemetery of St. Valentinus,
-the new-born babe lying in a box or crib <em>is</em> also the <em>Karest</em>, or mummy-type, further identified as the
-divine babe of the solar mythos by the disk of the sun and the cross of the equinox at the back of
-the infant’s head. Thus the child-Christ of the historic faith is born, and visibly begins in the <em>Karest</em>
-image of the dead Christ, which was the mummy-type of the resurrection in Egypt for thousands of
-years before the Christian era. This doubles the proof that the Christ of the Christian Catacombs
-was a survival of the <em>Karest</em> of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Moreover, as Didron shows, there was a portrait of the Christ who had his body <em>painted red</em>!<a id='r100' /><a href='#f100' class='c013'><sup>[100]</sup></a>
-It was a popular tradition that the Christ <em>was</em> of a red complexion. This, too, may be explained as
-a survival of the Mummy-Christ. It was an aboriginal mode of rendering things <em>tapu</em> by colouring
-them red. The dead corpse was coated with red ochre—a very primitive mode of making the
-mummy, or the anointed one. Thus the God Ptah tells Rameses II. that he has “<em>re-fashioned his
-flesh in vermilion</em>.” This anointing with red ochre is called <em>Kura</em> by the Maori, who likewise made
-the Karest or Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We see the mummy-image continued on another line of descent when we learn that among other
-pernicious heresies and deadly sins with which the Knights Templars were charged, was the impious
-custom of adoring a Mummy that had red eyes. Their Idol, called Baphomet, is also thought to
-have been a mummy.... The Mummy was the earliest human image of the Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I do not doubt that the ancient Roman festivals called the <em>Charistia</em> were connected in their
-origin with the <em>Karest</em> and the <em>Eucharist</em> as a celebration in honour of the manes of their departed
-kith and kin, for whose sakes they became reconciled at the friendly gathering once a year....
-It is here, then, we have to seek the essential connection between the Egyptian Christ, the
-Christians, and the Roman Catacombs. These Christian Mysteries, ignorantly explained to be
-inexplicable, can be explained by Gnosticism and Mythology, but in no other way. It is not that
-they are insoluble by human reason, as their incompetent, howsoever highly paid, expounders now-a-days
-pretend. That is but the puerile apology of the unqualified for their own helpless ignorance—they
-who have never been in possession of the gnosis or science of the Mysteries by which alone these
-things can be explained in accordance with their natural genesis. In Egypt only can we read the
-matter to the root, or identify the origin of the Christ by nature and by name, to find at last that the
-Christ was the Mummy-type, and that our Christology is mummified <a id='corr307.30'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='mythology.”'>mythology.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_307.30'><ins class='correction' title='mythology.”'>mythology.</ins></a></span>—(<cite>Agnostic Annual.</cite>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The above is an explanation on purely scientific evidence, but, perhaps, a
-little too <em>materialistic</em>, just because of that science, notwithstanding that the
-author is a well-known Spiritualist. Occultism pure and simple finds the same
-mystic elements in the Christian as in other faiths, though it rejects as
-emphatically its dogmatic and <em>historic</em> character. It is a fact that in the terms
-Ιησοῦς ὁ χριστος (See <cite>Acts</cite> v. 42, ix. 14; 1 Corinth. iii. 17, etc.), the
-article ὁ designating “Christos,” proves it simply a surname, like that of
-Phocion, who is referred to as Φωκίων ὁ χρηστός (Plut. v.). Still, the
-personage (Jesus) so addressed—whenever he lived—was a great Initiate and a
-“Son of God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For, we say it again, the surname Christos is based on, and the story of the
-Crucifixion derived from, events that preceded it. Everywhere, in India as in
-Egypt, in Chaldea as in Greece, all these legends were built upon one and the
-same primitive type; the voluntary sacrifice of the <em>logoï</em>—the <em>rays</em> of the one
-<span class='sc'>Logos</span>, the direct manifested emanation from the One ever-concealed Infinite
-and Unknown—whose <em>rays</em> incarnated in mankind. They consented to <em>fall into
-matter</em>, and are, therefore, called the “Fallen Ones.” This is one of those
-great mysteries which can hardly be touched upon in a magazine article, but
-shall be noticed in a separate work of mine, <em>The Secret Doctrine</em>, very fully.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Having said so much, a few more facts may be added to the etymology of
-the two terms. Χριστος being the verbal adjective in Greek of χρίω “to be rubbed
-on,” <em>as ointment</em> or salve, and the word being finally brought to mean “the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>Anointed One,” in Christian theology; and <em>Kri</em>, in Sanskrit, the first syllable
-in the name of Krishna, meaning “to pour out, or rub over, to cover with,”<a id='r101' /><a href='#f101' class='c013'><sup>[101]</sup></a>
-among many other things, this may lead one as easily to make of Krishna, “the
-anointed one.” Christian philologists try to limit the meaning of Krishna’s
-name to its derivation from <em>Krish</em>, “black”; but if the analogy and comparison
-of the Sanskrit with the Greek roots contained in the names of Chrestos,
-Christos, and <em>Ch</em>rishna, are analyzed more carefully, it will be found that they
-are all of the same origin.<a id='r102' /><a href='#f102' class='c013'><sup>[102]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In Bockh’s ‘Christian Inscriptions,’ numbering 1,287, there is no single
-instance of an earlier date than the third century, wherein the name is not
-written <em>Chrest</em> or <em>Chreist</em>.” (<cite>The Name and Nature of the Christ</cite>, by G. Massey,
-“The Agnostic Annual.”)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yet none of these names can be unriddled, as some Orientalists imagine,
-merely with the help of astronomy and the knowledge of zodiacal signs in conjunction
-with phallic symbols. Because, while the sidereal symbols of the mystic
-characters or personifications in Puranâs or Bible, fulfil astronomical functions,
-their spiritual anti-types rule invisibly, but very effectively, the world. They
-exist as abstractions on the higher plane, as manifested ideas on the astral, and
-become males, females and androgyne powers on this lower plane of ours.
-<em>Scorpio</em>, as <em>Chrestos-Meshiac</em>, and Leo, as <em>Christos-Messiah</em> antedated by far
-the Christian era in the trials and triumphs of Initiation during the Mysteries,
-Scorpio standing as symbol for the latter, Leo for the glorified triumph of the
-“sun” of truth. The mystic philosophy of the allegory is well understood by
-the author of the “Source of Measures”; who writes: “One (Chrestos) causing
-himself to go down into the pit (of Scorpio, or incarnation in the womb) for the
-salvation of the world; this was the Sun, shorn of his <em>golden rays</em>, and <em>crowned
-with blackened</em><a id='r103' /><a href='#f103' class='c013'><sup>[103]</sup></a> <em>ones</em> (symbolizing this loss) as the thorns; <em>the other</em> was the
-triumphant <em>Messiah</em>, mounted up to the <em>summit of the arch of heaven</em>, personated
-as the <em>Lion of the tribe of Judah</em>. In both instances he had the Cross; once in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>humiliation (as the son of copulation), and once holding it in his control, as the
-law of creation, he being Jehovah”—in the scheme of the authors of dogmatic
-Christianity. For, as the same author shows further, John, Jesus and even
-Apollonius of Tyana were but epitomizers of the history of the Sun “under
-differences of aspect or condition.”<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104' class='c013'><sup>[104]</sup></a> The explanation, he says, “is simple
-enough, when it is considered that the names <em>Jesus</em>, Hebrew יש and
-Apollonius, or Apollo, are alike names of the <em>Sun in the heavens</em>, and, necessarily,
-the history of the one, as to his travels through <em>the signs</em>, with the personifications
-of his sufferings, triumphs and miracles, could be but the <em>history of the other</em>,
-where there was a wide-spread, common method of describing those travels by
-personification.” The fact that the Secular Church was founded by Constantine,
-and that it was a part of his decree “that the venerable day of the <em>Sun</em> should
-be the day set apart for the worship of Jesus Christ as <em>Sun</em>-day,” shows that
-they knew well in that “Secular Church” “that the allegory rested upon an astronomical
-basis,” as the author affirms. Yet, again, the circumstance that both
-Purânas and Bible are full of solar and astronomical allegories, does not militate
-against that other fact that all such scriptures in addition to these two are <em>closed</em>
-books to the scholars “having authority.”(!) Nor does it affect that other truth,
-that all those systems are <em>not the work of mortal man</em>, nor are they his invention
-in their origin and basis.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus “Christos,” under whatever name, means more than <em>Karest</em>, a mummy,
-or even the “anointed” and the <em>elect</em> of theology. Both of the latter apply to
-<em>Chréstos</em>, the man of sorrow and tribulation, in his physical, mental, and
-psychic conditions, and both relate to the Hebrew <em>Mashiac</em> (from whence
-Messiah) condition, as the word is etymologised<a id='r105' /><a href='#f105' class='c013'><sup>[105]</sup></a> by Fuerst, and the author of
-“The Source of Measures,” p. 255. Christos is the crown of glory of the
-suffering Chréstos of the mysteries, as of the candidate to the final <span class='fss'>UNION</span>, of
-whatever race and creed. To the true follower of the <span class='sc'>Spirit of Truth</span>, it
-matters little, therefore, whether Jesus, as man and Chrestos, lived during the
-era called Christian, or before, or never lived at all. The Adepts, who lived
-and died for humanity, have existed in many and all the ages, and many were
-the good and holy men in antiquity who bore the surname or title of Chrestos
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>before Jesus of Nazareth, otherwise Jesus (or Jehoshua) Ben Pandira was born.<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' class='c013'><sup>[106]</sup></a>
-Therefore, one may be permitted to conclude, with good reason, that Jesus,
-or Jehoshua, was like Socrates, like Phocian, like Theodorus, and so many others
-surnamed <em>Chréstos</em>, <i>i.e.</i>, the “good, the excellent,” the gentle, and the holy
-Initiate, who showed the “way” to the Christos condition, and thus became
-himself “the Way” in the hearts of his enthusiastic admirers. The Christians,
-as all the “Hero-worshippers” have tried to throw into the background
-all the other Chréstoï, who have appeared to them as rivals of <em>their</em> Man-God.
-But if the voice of the <span class='sc'>Mysteries</span> has become silent for many ages in the West,
-if Eleusis, Memphis, Antium, Delphi, and Crèsa have long ago been made the
-tombs of a Science once as colossal in the West as it is yet in the East, there
-are successors now being prepared for them. We are in 1887 and the
-nineteenth century is close to its death. The twentieth century has strange
-developments in store for humanity, and may even be the last of its name.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>H. P. B.</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i><a href='#esoteric3'>To be continued</a>.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/separator2.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c011'>SIMILITUDES OF DEMOPHILUS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>It is the business of a musician to harmonize every instrument, but of a well
-educated man to adapt himself harmoniously to every fortune.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is necessary that a well educated man should depart from life elegantly, as
-from a banquet.</p>
-
-<hr class='c050' />
-<h3 class='c018'>GOLDEN SENTENCES OF DEMOCRITUS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>It is beautiful to impede an unjust man; but if this be not possible, it is
-beautiful not to act in conjunction with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sin should be abstained from, not through fear, but, for the sake of the
-becoming.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Many who have not learnt to argue rationally, still live according to reason.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Vehement desires about any one thing render the soul blind with respect to
-other things.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The equal is beautiful in everything, but excess and defect to me do not
-appear to be so.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is the property of a divine intellect to be always intently thinking about
-the beautiful.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Correspondence.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>A LAW OF LIFE: KARMA.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>[The following letter has been received by the editors, in criticism on Mr.
-Keightley’s article on “Karma”; and as it raises many rather important points, an
-attempt has been made to answer them. Mr. Beatty’s letter is somewhat
-difficult to deal with, for though it asks many questions, they are so inextricably
-mingled with its author’s thoughts that it would be unfair to disentangle them
-from the context. It is a pity that Mr. Beatty, in his haste to criticize, did not wait
-for the conclusion of the article, as he might have saved himself some trouble.
-If his real desire is to learn, it would be well that he should approach the
-endeavour in a less flippant spirit and evolve the critic out of the criticaster.
-In many of his arguments he has, so to say, “given himself away,” but, in the
-interests of space and of the readers of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, only those questions and
-arguments which bear directly on the points at issue have been selected for
-answer. The point which Mr. Beatty does “not care to discuss,” and which
-refers to the mystery of Godliness, has been omitted. Perhaps, if Mr. Beatty
-continues to read, mark, learn, <em>and inwardly digest</em>, he may in some <em>future
-incarnation</em> solve the mystery.]</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>In an article in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, under the above heading, Mr. Keightley declares it
-to be “very difficult, if not well-nigh impossible,” to understand Karma, and I
-grant him that his essay is a practical demonstration of his allegation. The
-difficulty (1.) does not, however, hinder him from attempting to define the
-refractory term. “Karma,” he says, “is the working of the great law which governs
-reincarnation,” or “a manifestation of the One, Universal, Divine Principle in
-the phenomenal world,” or again, “the great law of harmony which governs the
-universe.” Now, waiving altogether the question of reincarnations, I shall
-proceed to examine whether Mr. Keightley makes good his contention that
-“harmony,” in his sense of the word, “governs the Universe.” He says, “the
-man who denies the existence of harmony in the universe has transgressed the
-law and is experiencing punishment. He does this unconsciously to himself,
-because the law of harmony forms an unconscious impulse to its readjustment
-when it has been broken.” Here there are several things to be considered. In
-the first place, it may be asked: (2.) Does a man, by merely denying the existence
-of a law of Nature or the universe, <a id='corr311.36'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='trangress'>transgress</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_311.36'><ins class='correction' title='trangress'>transgress</ins></a></span> that law? I think not.<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107' class='c013'><sup>[107]</sup></a> Secondly.
-Can a law of the universe be “broken”? Here again I must reply in the
-negative; for who is going to contend that the law of gravitation has ever been
-“broken,”<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108' class='c013'><sup>[108]</sup></a> has ever ceased to act, has ever required “re-adjustment”? A man
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>can break no law of Nature in the sense of bringing that law into abeyance. If
-then, a law of harmony governs the universe there can be no such thing as
-discord. (3.) Yet Mr. Keightley admits that there <em>is</em> discord, that the law of
-harmony has been “broken” and needs “readjustment” This is a surrendering
-of his position and a patent admission that harmony is not constant or universal.
-He then proceeds to draw an illustration from music. “In musical chords, the
-composing notes, if taken by twos and threes, will be found in discord, but,
-when taken together, produce a harmony.” This is a particularly unfortunate
-subject of illustration. For does it not show that discord is an element in the
-universe as well as harmony? Why are discords introduced into music? Simply
-to make the harmony more effective. The reason for this, however, does not lie in
-any so-called universal law of harmony, but rather in the constitution of animate
-existences. Fundamentally, sensation is the consciousness of difference. Where
-the difference is great the feeling is great. If we wish to have the keenest
-sensation of sweetness we must first taste something bitter. Thus it is that
-occasional discords heighten harmony. But are the discords any less real on
-that account? Certainly not; for there can no more be harmony without
-discord, than there can be an up without a down. This, moreover, is only another
-illustration of the fact that human knowledge is merely relative. Must we,
-however, admit that the universal law may be harmony while our experience
-tells us that there are discords without number? Unless ignorance be considered
-as superior to positive knowledge, I see no room for the admission. If a
-man’s house tumbles about his ears, does it become any less a fact by trying to
-persuade himself and his neighbours that it is still standing? This seems to be
-the method of Mr. Keightley. He has, however, yet another argument “The
-universe ... is essentially an evidence of harmony; otherwise it could not
-exist, for it would fall to pieces.” This is a palpable begging of the question,
-and, besides, very absurd. The universe is a harmony, because a universe must
-be a harmony! “Otherwise it could not exist.” Now how does our harmonist
-know whether it could exist or not? Of what other universe has he experience
-or knowledge? “It would fall to pieces.” Where, I wonder, would it fall to?
-Perhaps it is even now fast falling to pieces, and who can tell us differently?
-As far as ordinary people can judge, it seems, as regards the parts we are
-acquainted with, to be falling into more or less concrete masses, but not many
-sane people believe it can fall into nothingness. After all this vain contention
-for universal harmony we find Mr. Keightley settling down like ordinary mortals
-to the conviction that the world is far from harmonious or perfect. One
-unfortunate individual who cannot be persuaded that all is harmony, is told
-that “he is incapable of understanding it because his attention is solely devoted
-to that which produces discord.” How comes it that the universe does not fall
-to pieces as a result of this discord? Surely we are in a precarious
-condition, if every obstinate fool who persists in crying out when he has been
-hurt, endangers the stability of the universe. Did ever anyone meet with a
-universe where there is less evidence of harmony? One brute force ever in
-conflict with another. Infernal forces piling up mountain on the top of
-mountain; supernal forces blasting, rending, excoriating and tumbling these
-mountains down again into the valleys; the oak struggling against the
-inwarping ivy, the fawn attempting vainly to escape from the claws of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>tiger, the child agonising while <a id='corr313.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='parasities'>parasites</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_313.1'><ins class='correction' title='parasities'>parasites</ins></a></span> eat slowly and mercilessly into its
-lungs, liver, or brain; the strong everywhere victorious over the weak; each sect
-and each party exerting itself ferociously to scoop out the viscera of its rival.
-Such is the world, such all records declare it to have been, and such it gives
-ample promise of continuing. But if the world is not really so, and on the
-contrary is one immensity of joyous harmony, who can tell us why the evidence
-is so deceptive? Here again, Mr. Keightley introduces to us a most remarkable
-statement. “The one Divine principle is divided by man’s actions into two
-opposing forces of good and evil, and man’s progress depends on the exertion
-of his will to preserve harmony and prevent deviation to one side or the other.”
-Give us by all means in preference to this for common sense, for rationality and
-for every other quality that makes it digestible, the childish story of Eve, the
-apple and the fall.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Beyond doubt, Mr. Keightley has a profound faith in man as a power in the
-universe and an instrument for evil. By a most singular process of metaphysical
-alchemy man decomposes the “Divine principle” into “two opposing forces of
-good and evil.” It seems from this revised version of an old story that man
-introduced evil into the universe. Why is man so important that a universe
-should be polluted for his sake? Surely man did not make himself, and
-whatever powers were in him for evil or for good must have been potential in
-that from which he sprang. Man can create nothing, neither evil nor good,
-neither a tendency to do right nor an inclination to do wrong. “Man’s will” is
-always a tremendous force for good or evil in the hands of theologians and
-metaphysicians. Did man make his own “will?” If not, how can he be
-responsible for what he does? Everybody knows that man can act according to
-his likes or dislikes. But does anybody imagine that he can make his own likes
-or dislikes? (4.) He can do as he wishes, but he wishes according to his
-nature, and this he cannot transcend, consequently he is not responsible to the
-Author of his nature for what his nature inclines him to do. But what are we
-to understand by the rest of the sentence? Man’s will is “to preserve harmony
-and prevent deviation to one side or the other.” First the will brings about evil
-in the “Divine principle,” destroying harmony, then it is to reproduce harmony
-and at the same time to maintain a balance between good and evil, and “prevent
-deviation to the one side or the other.” This to Mahatmas and possessors of
-the “sixth sense” may seem plain logic, but it far surpasses my comprehension.<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' class='c013'><sup>[109]</sup></a>
-I am, perhaps, as averse to “the pernicious doctrine of reward and punishment
-after death, in heaven or in hell” as Mr. Keightley can be, but I can by no
-means deduce from it the results which to him appear so inevitable.
-“Nothing,” he says, “could have been found more calculated to circumscribe
-the view of life as a whole, and concentrate man’s attention on temporary
-matters.... He either rejected the idea of soul as altogether worthless, or else
-he transferred his interest to the soul’s welfare in heaven—in either case
-concentrating his attention on what is inevitably transient.” How the idea of
-never-ending existence in heaven or in hell can have the effect of circumscribing
-“the view of life as a whole,” and of concentrating “man’s attention on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>temporary matters,” is to me an insolvable puzzle. That it should have quite
-the opposite effect, does not seem to require proof. Why, in the name of
-mystery, should he “reject the idea of soul as worthless,” and how can
-transferring “his interest to the soul’s welfare in heaven” be called a concentrating
-of “his attention on what is inevitably transient?” Truly this
-Karma is a bewildering subject!<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' class='c013'><sup>[110]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c035'>Do plants and animals come under the law of Karma? is the next question
-discussed by Mr. Keightley. An extract from the <cite>Theosophist</cite> seems to
-discountenance such a thing. But are its arguments really conclusive against
-it? I do not think so. It says, “A piece of iron is attracted to a
-magnet without having any desire in the matter.” Now, in the first place,
-this is pure assumption, and has its origin in vainglorious human egotism.<a id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c013'><sup>[111]</sup></a>
-It is evident that from objective data alone we cannot decide what is the
-subjective state of the molecules of the attracted iron. In the second place,
-we are only acquainted with the iron as a cause producing changes in us.
-No matter how we interpret these changes, they cannot even tell us the real
-nature of iron, merely considered objectively. Again the extract proceeds:
-“An animal usually follows the instincts of its nature without any merit or
-demerit for so doing; a child or an idiot may smilingly kick over a lamp, which
-may set a whole city on fire.... A person can only be held responsible according
-to his ability to perceive justice, and to distinguish between good and
-evil.” According to this doctrine, man is not an “animal,” and does not follow
-his instincts. To those who are acquainted, even slightly, with the method and
-regularity of Nature, this contention will appear, on the face of it, untenable.
-For why should there be an exception in the case of man?<a id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c013'><sup>[112]</sup></a> Has man instincts,
-desires, and inclinations, or has he not? If he has, why should he have them
-if he is not to follow them? And if in any case he does not follow them, is
-it not with him as with the “animals”? Is it not because he is deterred by
-influences from without, or hereditary influences from within? And of all these
-instincts, desires and influences, how is he to know which to obey, to know
-which is of Divine sanction? He has conscience, of course, but conscience is a
-very variable quantity, and indeed, it might not be too much to say that there
-is hardly a crime in the world that has not, at one time or another, been commended
-by conscience. Conscience is only one phase of the man’s mental
-activity, and was no more created by him than was his power of vision. We
-talk of “children and idiots,” and their being irresponsible, but are not untamed
-savages also irresponsible? And if we admit that there may be beings as much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>higher than we, as we are higher than children, idiots, and savages, will they
-not, with reason and justice, regard us as irresponsible? The truth is, there
-never was a greater chimera conjured up by unreasoning fancy than that one of
-man’s responsibility to a Supreme Power. Man is responsible only to man, and
-man’s conduct is without merit except from a human view-point. We are good
-or bad by reason of all the forces that act on and through us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>My object in writing what I have written is to show to Theosophists the dense
-darkness in which I wander. Will some God-illumined mind not take pity
-upon, and draw me up from the labyrinthian gloom, where illusions mislead me
-at every step? My “sixth sense” seems wholly dormant, and Nirvana, that
-haven of rest, seems distant, by many a weary league of rocky path and burning
-desert. Pity me.</p>
-
-<div class='column-container'>
-<div class='column left'>
-5, Christie Street, Paisley.
-</div>
-<div class='column right'>
-<span class='sc'>J. H. Beatty.></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>(1.) The difficulty experienced in fathoming the mysteries of Karmic Law
-arises from the conditions of our present intellectual environment and general
-evolutionary status. It has been, also, frequently stated that a <em>complete</em>
-comprehension of its workings is reserved for the Initiate who has transcended
-the domain of terrestrial activity—viz., the necessity for soul-evolution through
-successive births. But, passing over this consideration, it is evident that, in
-the process of bringing down fragments of the Divine Truth on to the plane of
-mere intellectual interpretation, an inevitable distortion must ensue. The rays
-of spiritual light will be split up and refracted as they pass through the prism
-of the brain. Mr. Beatty will recognise this fact more clearly owing to his
-belief “that <em>human</em> knowledge is <em>merely relative</em>.” Surely, when that most
-familiar fact of our experience, the “perception of matter,” is, metaphysically
-speaking, an illusion, the relativity of <em>mental</em> conceptions of spiritual truths
-would appear to be a necessity. According to Huxley, Spencer, Du Bois
-Reymond, and all leading thinkers, we know nothing of things as they are even
-on this plane, which to the materialist is “All in all.” The essence of the
-thing “perceived” escapes us; all we really grasp is its presentation in
-consciousness. It is, therefore, clear that in interpreting realities on the superphysical
-plane, we cannot advance beyond word-symbols and adumbrations.
-The intuition of the individual must effect the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such considerations, however, in no way militate against the successful
-defence of Esoteric philosophy on purely intellectual lines. Translated into
-terms of human thought, its metaphysics must be shown to blend intimately
-with the <em>facts</em> of science and psychology, and its ability to solve the enigmas of
-life demonstrated. “Philosophy is chaos,” remarks the author of “Absolute
-Relativism,” referring to modern thought. If we are to avoid the spectacle of
-a future “moral chaos,” also, as the fruit of the materialistic Upas tree, some
-fresh impulse must be infused into the dry bones of Western metaphysics—some
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>raison d’être</i></span> assigned to life, and an ideal worthy of man’s noblest efforts
-presented to the multitude of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>laissez-faire</i></span> pessimists. Such is an aspect of
-the work now before us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(2.) A man may certainly injure himself<a id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c013'><sup>[113]</sup></a> by shutting his eyes to a spiritual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>interpretation of the Universe and its workings. The only acquisition he
-can carry with him after physical death is the <em>aroma</em> of the vast aggregate
-of mental states generated in one incarnation. The <em>personality</em> or brain-consciousness
-of the physical man is, after all, a mere feeler projected into
-this objective plane to harvest experience for its individual Self. It does
-not at all follow that any experience may be acquired which the Monad
-is enabled to assimilate. Abstract thinking, religious aspirations, scientific
-lore; poetry, the nobler emotions, and all such efflorescences of human
-consciousness, furnish the “material” which go to build up the <em>transcendental
-individuality</em> of the Ego progressing towards the Nirvana. The materialist
-presents a frequent instance of soul-death—so far as the fruitage of the
-personality is concerned. His knowledge may be enormous, but being unspiritualised,
-a mere creature of the physical brain, it cannot blossom into
-luxuriance in the Devachanic interim between successive births. Consequently,
-as the True Self—the “transcendental subject” of the neo-Kantian German
-school—only assimilates experience suitable to its own exalted nature, it becomes
-evident that, ideals apart, the philosophy of a man is of very great importance.
-At the same time, it need not be said that sectarian “religion” is almost more
-pernicious than materialism, inasmuch as it combines the two factors of crass
-ignorance and spiritual torpor.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(3.) Harmony <em>is</em> essentially the law of the Universe. The contrasted aspects
-of Nature come into being subsequently to the differentiation of matter from
-its several <em>protyles</em> in the commencement of a cycle of becoming, or Manwantara,
-and can have no reality except in the experience of conscious Egos.<a id='r114' /><a href='#f114' class='c013'><sup>[114]</sup></a> For
-beneath the surface of the great ocean of cosmic illusion—beneath the clash of
-apparently clashing forces—lies the Eternal Harmony. The semblance of
-discord is but a ripple on the stream of Maya, or illusion. One aspect of
-esoteric solution of apparent evils is dealt with in the last issue of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>
-(<i>vide</i> art., “Origin of Evil”). But Mr. Beatty will not find himself in a position
-to accept its validity so long as he continues to “waive the question of reincarnation,”
-the acceptance of that doctrine lying at the root of the real
-explanation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Universe must, at bottom, be a Harmony. Why?<a id='r115' /><a href='#f115' class='c013'><sup>[115]</sup></a> The equilibrating
-action of the forces around us is a sufficient proof of the fact; the apparent
-discord existing, as argued by Spinoza, solely in the sensations of conscious
-beings. The matter in reality involves the re-opening of the much debated
-question as to whether an optimistic or pessimistic pantheism is the creed of the
-true philosopher. Can we with von Hartmann postulate the strange contradiction
-of an absolutely wise (though from our standpoint unconscious) cause
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>behind phenomena confronted with a “worthless universe?” Obviously not.
-Moreover, as pantheists necessarily regard the individual mind as only a
-rushlight compared with the blazing sun of the Universal Mind, its source, how
-is a final conclusion as to the “unfathomable folly” of manifested being
-possible? On the other hand, a non-recognition of the Maya of appearances
-is a tacit impeachment of the wisdom of the Absolute. The pantheist—and
-pantheism alone accounts for consciousness itself—is, at least, logically driven
-into the admission that the “nature of things” is sound and that, probably,
-apparent flaws in the <a id='corr317.9'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>mechanicism</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_317.9'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>mechanicism</ins></a></span> of the Universe would, if viewed from a
-wider standpoint than the human, altogether vanish.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If, however, the Spinozistic axiom that evil <em>exists only in us</em>, is true—and
-it is not for a relativist of our critic’s type to deny the fact—pessimism
-is <a id='corr317.13'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='routed'>rooted</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_317.13'><ins class='correction' title='routed'>rooted</ins></a></span> in the recognition of the equilibrating action of the law of
-Karma. The examples cited by Mr. Beatty of brute forces “one in
-conflict with another;” of the sufferings of animals in the struggle
-for existence; and more especially of human suffering in no way controvert
-the views of the “Harmonists.” The first group is representative
-of those forces which balance one another by oscillating about a common centre
-of equilibrium, producing harmony by conflict, just as in the case of the so-called
-centripetal and centrifugal forces, which regulate the earth’s orbital
-journey. The second group is, undoubtedly, characterised by the infliction of
-much incidental pain. But in all instances where Nature immolates the
-individual organism on the altar of natural selection, she does it for the benefit
-of the species or the “survival of the fittest”—the individuals borne down by
-violence in the struggle, reaping, one and all, the results of a compensatory
-Karma. In the domain of <em>human</em> suffering, moral debasement, etc., an
-entirely new factor supervenes—the equilibrating influence of a <em>positive</em>
-Karma, which in biblical language demands “an eye for an eye and a tooth for
-a tooth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(4). “Why,” asks our critic, “is man so important that the Universe was
-polluted for his sake?” In the first place, Humanity is, by no means, unimportant;
-the panorama of evolution only existing in order to evolve the Ego
-from the animal stage up to that of a conscious God. The designation of
-nature as divided into “good” and “evil” principles, has been taken by Mr.
-Beatty in its absolute, as opposed to its relative, aspect. Man pollutes only himself
-and his fellows by “sin”; nature remaining constant <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>per se</i></span>. “How can he
-be responsible for what he does?” he continues. He is only so within certain
-wide limits defined by his previous Karma—the tendencies moral, mental and
-spiritual, generated in previous lives, continually driving him on to certain
-lines of action. The “Free Will absolute” of the theologians is as unpsychological
-and worthless a concept as it is possible to formulate. Not so the
-doctrine that the Ego is able to <em>mould</em> its tendencies of thought and emotion
-within “constitutional limits.” It was the recognition of this fact which led
-John Stuart Mill to take up a midway position between the equally absurd
-extremes of Free Will and Necessarianism. The same conviction led the
-prophet of Materialism, Dr. Louis Büchner, to contradict his whole
-system by admitting human liberty within a certain area mapped
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>out by “Heredity” and Environment, and Professor Clifford to
-invest the “conscious, automaton” Man with the power to control his
-own ideas!! Responsibility varies enormously, and is, perhaps, almost wanting
-in the savage (who, however, is in all cases the degraded relic of primæval
-civilisation). In all cases, the human Ego must be held to be the evolver of
-the group of tendencies which make up the personality of each re-birth. The
-sensualist is the victim of a “Frankenstein’s monster,” into which he has
-infused strength through many lives. We really cannot follow Mr. Beatty when
-he writes: “Has man instincts, desires, and inclinations, or has he not? If
-he has, <em>why should he have them if he is not to follow them</em>?” He has them
-because they are the heritage handed down to him from past lives, and also
-because his Karma as an individual is bound up with that of the race to which
-he belongs. It rests with him as to how far he chooses to <em>modify</em> them “for
-weal or woe,” for every moment the exhaustion of past Karma runs parallel with
-the creation of new. It is certainly a strange doctrine here enunciated by Mr.
-Beatty, that the possession of certain “instincts, etc,” justifies their gratification.
-Crime, debauchery and cruelty would be difficult to deal with on this hypothesis!
-It is certainly true—to some extent—that “we are good or bad by reason of all
-the forces that act on or through us.” These latter are the stimuli to action
-(<em>subject to the control of the will</em>), but are in their turn the resultant of previous
-Karma. Judging from the general tone of his criticism, it would appear that
-his first acquaintance with the esoteric philosophy does not date back to a very
-remote antiquity.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>A. K.</div>
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>“THE LATEST ATTACK ON CHRISTIANITY.”</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>In the July number of the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> there is an article reviewing the
-recent book of J. C. Morrison upon “The Service of Man or the Future
-Religion.” And although Mr. Morrison, in his book, writes to urge that the chief
-and primary principle of religion is “to promote the spirit of self-sacrifice, and to
-direct men’s energies to the service of their fellow creatures,” yet the <cite>Quarterly
-Review</cite> pours every kind of insult and obloquy on Mr. Morrison.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But herein is the gross contradiction, that the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> admits that
-the primary principle of Christianity has the very same objects in view, as Mr.
-Morrison urges the future religion should have. And yet the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>
-ridicules Mr. Morrison, and describes his book as an attack upon Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then, surely, when two persons thus fall out with one another, whilst both
-advocate the same lofty and noble principles, there must be some gross misunderstanding
-between them!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The error thus which they both labour under, is one and the same; for the
-<cite>Quarterly Review</cite> errs, in assuming that the teaching or doctrine of the Church
-is indisputably, and infallibly, the teaching or doctrine of Christ. And Mr.
-Morrison errs in assuming that the teaching or doctrine of Christ is the same
-as the doctrine of the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So that if the teaching of the Church is not the teaching of Christ, then Mr.
-Morrison in attacking the supposed Christianity of the Church is not really
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>attacking Christianity, but only attacking the spurious doctrine of the Church,
-which has passed current as Christianity; <em>ex gr.</em>, Isaiah, Jeremiah and Elijah,
-in denouncing the religion of the priests, did not attack true religion (as the
-priests would assert), but only their adulterated and spurious religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And Christ tells us that the Priests and Pharisees made the word of God
-of none effect by their traditions. And St Paul tells us that, with the authority
-of the Chief Priest, he had, before conversion, imprisoned and put men to
-death, and made them blaspheme (Acts xxvi., 11) against God and the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore, before we accept the Church and Christianity to be synonymous
-terms, and not only signifying but being actually the Church of Christ,
-and so, verily, Christianity, we must have a clear and definite understanding
-as to what we mean, and wish others to understand what we mean, by “the
-Church.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For the world, outside of Christianity, and often inside, is at its wits’ end to
-know which of the numerous churches and sects, which all claim to be the
-Church of Christ, is really and truly the Church of Christ; because the World
-witnesses that they all reject one another.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then surely, whilst the world witnesses rival and hostile churches all claiming
-to be “the Church” and Christianity, Mr. Morrison is not at all necessarily
-attacking the Church of Christ, or true Christianity, when he attacks the doctrine,
-or the Christianity of the churches.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And this proposition of course, opens and raises the question as to what is
-Christianity, which the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> either avoids or assumes to be
-established, as being “<em>a sound belief in the merits of the Saviour</em>,” which of course
-means belief in the Atonement as commonly taught. But how can the truth of
-Christianity be possibly established, whilst to this day the doctrine of Atonement
-taught by the Church as Christianity, cannot be reconciled as either good
-or true; and is moreover a mystery to the leaders of it, a stumbling block to
-the Jews, and foolishness to the world, making the preaching of the Church as
-Canon Liddon admits, utterly powerless? The <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> assumes that
-the doctrine of the Church has been taught as Christianity for 1,800 years; and
-that 1,800 years’ teaching of it has proved it to be Christianity, because the
-<cite>Quarterly Review</cite> assumes that there has been liberty for 1,800 years to disprove
-the doctrine of the Church, and that the doctrine of the Church, not
-having been disproved, is a proof that it cannot be disproved. But the fact that
-to this very day there is no liberty allowed in the pulpits of the National
-Churches to discuss the doctrine of the Church (it being a law with the rulers
-of the Church that “the doctrine of the Church may not be touched”),
-utterly refutes all the assumptions of the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For whilst there is no liberty, even for fair and candid criticism in the pulpit,
-on the doctrine of the Church, even in this age of liberty and education, there
-could have been none when the Church, for centuries, had power to imprison,
-slay, and excommunicate or boycott; and used it against those who even
-questioned the doctrine of the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But we are told, by the great Bishop Butler, in his “Analogy of Religion”
-(and whom the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> admits to be an authority of the very highest
-class), that the doctrine of Atonement is positively immoral, excepting for the
-supposed divine authority; and the Bishop himself looked forward to the day,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>when the progress of liberty and education should throw greater light upon this
-doctrine of the Church, and indisputably determine whether or no it has the
-divine authority, it was then supposed or asserted to have.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>So great has been our progress in education and liberty that <cite>The
-Guardian</cite> of the 3rd August, in its review of this book of Mr. Morrison’s, says,
-if Christianity is Calvinism with its doctrine of substitution and justification,
-then it is <em>madness</em> any longer to attempt defending the morality of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is true that it is one thing to make this admission in the review of a book,
-and another thing to publish it from the pulpit; and it is true that the admission
-would be withdrawn or crucified by silence; but the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> itself,
-in its argument by analogy of the human and divine mind, admits that this
-doctrine of Atonement is immoral, because it admits that no authority could be
-divine which called immorality morality, as it asserts that <em>whatever is moral
-humanly speaking, is also moral divinely speaking, only in an infinitely greater
-degree</em>, and the converse. So that an attack on an immoral doctrine of the
-Church is not an attack on Christianity, if the doctrine of the Church is not the
-teaching of Christ, as it can be shown that it is not, as soon as liberty is
-allowed in the pulpits of the National Churches, for explaining the truth of a
-<em>Crucified Christ</em>, and removing the mystery that has been created, which causes
-it to be a stumbling block to the Jews, and foolishness to the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We are told that the late Archbishop Whately said, that if the Christian
-Religion did not come from God, miraculously (in the sense commonly taught),
-yet the religion, nevertheless, exists, and therefore the phenomenon has to be
-explained how it could have arisen and been propagated without miracles.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> asserts that for 1,800 years all the attempts to
-explain it, without the aid of miracles, have utterly failed, and therefore it must
-be assumed to be miraculous.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But before there can be any justification for such a bold assumption, as that
-what is taught as Christianity is infallibly, and indisputably, the teaching of Jesus
-Christ, what is meant by the term Christianity, or Christian religion must be
-clearly defined: for the Roman Catholic Church denounces the Protestant,
-and the Protestant denounces the Roman Church, as having naught to do with
-Christianity; so that even if there is anything held in common between these
-Churches (as “the faith of the Primitive Church,” or “the faith once delivered
-to the Saints,” or any other faith), yet whatever it is, or is called, it would seem
-to be of not the slightest value whatever, in saving them from rejecting one
-another absolutely.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Canon Liddon, however, asserts that all the doctrine and teaching of the
-Church derives its authority from a miraculous resurrection of Jesus, with a material
-and physical body of flesh, blood, and bones, in direct defiance of the teaching
-of Jesus, that the flesh profiteth nothing, and that it was the words which He
-spoke, “<em>They were</em> spirit, <em>they</em> were life.” (John vi., 63.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And if we believe that the Holy Spirit of God could speak without the aid
-of a material body, composed of flesh, blood, and bones, in a still small voice
-to the conscience or soul of Moses and Elijah (1 Kings xix., 12); and if we
-believe that the same Holy Spirit is <em>present</em> even now (where two or three are
-gathered together—Matt, xvii., 23), why should not the presence of the still
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>small voice of the Holy Spirit, speaking to the conscience or soul of the Apostles,
-be of itself deemed sufficient, without needing the aid of a material body?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Again, if the <em>presence</em> of the still small voice of the Holy Spirit, speaking to the
-soul of man, has been deemed sufficient by the world both before the crucifixion
-of Christ, and since the crucifixion of Christ, why should it be deemed necessary
-to raise up the crucified One, with a body of flesh, blood and bones, only to
-teach what the still small voice of the Holy Spirit was able, willing, and <em>present</em>
-to teach, and to doubt which would be Atheism? And, moreover, whilst such
-teaching was sufficient, it would be a contradiction to vouchsafe more.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore, if the still small voice of the Holy Spirit is sufficient and <em>present</em>
-to guide us into all truth, it must have been sufficient for the Apostles also
-(John xvi., 13); and, therefore, Christ’s religion is not dependent upon a
-material resurrection of the body, with flesh, blood and bones.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Here, once more, we see the necessity of liberty being allowed in the pulpit, for
-fair and candid criticism on the doctrine of the Church, for the purpose of
-eliminating error and eliciting truth; so that it may be clearly seen and known
-what is Christ’s religion, as it might indeed be possible that a material resurrection
-would seem necessary to support the doctrine of the Church, though
-wholly unnecessary for the support of Christ’s religion, or gospel.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Although the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> asserts that men have failed for 1,800
-years to account for the existence of Christianity, unless it had a miraculous
-resurrection to support it, yet it by no means follows that, because a miracle
-is supposed to be needed to support a doctrine of the Church, therefore a
-miracle is needed for supporting the doctrine, gospel, or religion of Christ; which
-exists, and will continue to exist, without needing the aid of belief in a
-miraculous resurrection of the material body, to support it. And it only needs
-that there should be liberty allowed in the pulpits of the National Churches
-to show the deficiency of faith in Christ’s spiritual resurrection, to see there
-is no need for belief in that carnal, gross, and material resurrection of the
-body, with flesh, blood and bones.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then, let there be liberty allowed in the pulpits of the National Churches;
-because it is not true that there has ever been liberty for 1,800 years to explain the
-Mystery of a Crucified Christ; for, it is refused to the present day. If any
-man, on behalf of the Church, contradicts this, and asserts there is liberty
-to explain, in the Church, the truth of a crucified Christ, let him mention
-one Church, or one clergyman that will allow it, and I will test its truth by
-asking for the same permission that the rulers of the Synagogue accorded to
-St Paul at Antioch, Acts xiii., 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> says the clergy have no objection to free discussion—that
-it is the very air they breathe, and that it has been the life of Christian
-Truth. These are bold and brave words, but where is there even one clergyman
-that will endorse them, and act upon them? Where?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Isaiah says, “Open ye the gates that the truth may enter in” (xxvi., 2).
-But instead of reverencing the just and righteous “Son of Man,” the chief
-priests and rulers of the Ancient Church condemned “the Just One,” to be
-slain as a blasphemer, whose blood ought to be shed for an Atonement. And
-the chief priests of our Church have combined that this doctrine should not be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>touched, so that by their practice they make their statement of the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>
-utterly untrue. For if there is one clergyman, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1887, who will support the
-<i>Quarterly Review’s</i> statement, and open his pulpit for explaining the truth of
-“Christ crucified” and proclaiming Christian truth, as taught by Christ—Where
-is he? and who is he?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And if there is not one, then need the Church be surprised that men attack,
-not the Christianity of Jesus Christ, but only an erroneous doctrine of the
-Church, miscalled Christianity?</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>(Rev.) T. G. Headley.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'><i>Manor House, Petersham, S. W.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>P.S.—Although the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> admits that Mr. Morrison has established
-a high position in literature, and that he seeks to promote the same
-lofty and noble principles as true Christianity inculcates; yet it speaks of Mr.
-Morrison’s book as bad and incomplete; feeble and illogical; full of perversities,
-monstrosities, misrepresentations, and misquotations; adding, that it is bitter, unscrupulous,
-ignorant, inconsistent, offensive, bullying, brow-beating, overbearing,
-absurd, and ridiculous, as well as indecent and false; insulting and flagrant; inconsecutive
-and unjust; full of jugglery and a disgrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Is this an exhibition of how theologians, or the clergy, as the reviewer is most
-probably a clergyman, love free discussion, and crucify those from whom they
-differ by damning them in this gross manner?</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>ISLAM AND CHRISTIANITY.</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the numerous letters that have repeatedly appeared recently in the <cite>Times</cite>
-opposing the statements of the Rev. Canon Isaac Taylor, in his speech at the
-late Church Congress, on the very great progress of Islam, and the comparative
-failure of Christianity (as taught), in India and Africa, it is frequently asserted
-that <em>“Islam is the only religion that has laid an immutable barrier on human
-progress;”</em> and that <em><a id='corr322.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='no'>“no</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_322.29'><ins class='correction' title='no'>“no</ins></a></span> system could have been devised with more consummate skill
-(than the Koran of Islam) for shutting out the light of truth, from the Nations
-over which Islam has sway.”</em></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But surely this is equally as true of our Church, whilst it also makes it an
-immutable law, as it has done to this day, that “<em>the doctrine of the Church may
-not be touched</em>”? For how could any system have been devised with more consummate
-skill for shutting out the light of truth, than to delude the people to
-crucify “the Just One,” as a blasphemer whose blood ought to be shed for an
-atonement, and afterwards to quote Scripture in support of this doctrine (as
-necessary to be believed in order to escape being cursed here and damned
-hereafter), and stamp out and boycott all who doubted it?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And yet this is the present state of things.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And therefore, whilst the clergy have power to say that “<em>the doctrine of the
-Church may not be touched</em>,” how is the mystery of a Crucified Christ to be
-explained and translated, so that it may be seen to be “<em>a light to lighten the
-Gentiles, and also the glory of Israel</em>,” instead of being, as it is now, a
-stumbling block to the Jews, foolishness to the world, and a mystery to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>teachers of it, making those who accept it, in India and Africa, worse than they
-were before?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then is there not a cause for demanding that liberty should be allowed in the
-Church, for explaining, in the pulpit, the mystery of a Crucified Christ, so that
-it may no longer remain a mystery for want only of this liberty?</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>(Rev.) T. G. Headley.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>HYLO-IDEALISM.—AN APOLOGY.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>My attention has been directed to a somewhat slighting notice of the above
-theory of human nature, on pages 72 and 75 of your issue for September, the
-contents of which are, doubtless, most suggestive of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>nouvelles couches
-mentales</i></span> at the basis of all <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>nouvelles couches sociales</i></span>, and which Physical Science,
-in its vulgar realism, has altogether missed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>My main position, to which all else is but subsidiary, is that the worlds both of
-thought and thing, which thus become identified and unified, <em>must</em> be a product
-of <em>our own</em> personality or Egoity, which thus constitutes each Ego Protagonist
-and Demiurge, from whose tribunal there can be no possible appeal. This
-being granted, and even Max Müller, in his “Science of Thought,” considers the
-position <em>impregnable</em>, it matters not one jot, at least in the first line and as far as
-my main object is concerned, whether the Ego be a Body or a “Spirit.” Our
-own individuality, as sum and substance of all “things,” is the only essential
-point of the question. So that it may be argued either on the somatic (hylozoic)
-or “Spiritual” hypothesis of life and mind. I have always contended
-that Hylo-Idealism, or Auto-centricism, is the only thorough and legitimate outcome
-of the phenomenal world theory—this representative <span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><i>Weltanschanung</i></span>
-having been, for some generations past, the accredited creed both of physical
-science and philosophy. It is well summed up in Kant’s negation of “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><i>Das
-Ding an sich</i></span>.$1“$2”$3 Vulgar Physical Science, as interpreted by its greatest hierophants,
-from Newton to Huxley and Darwin, from its incarnate dualism, is fatally
-handicapped in its search after the <em>final</em> “good, beautiful, and true.” Even
-Cardinal Newman is in a similar case, when he predicates <em>two</em> luminous
-spectra, God and Self, as the sole entities. The former Spectrum, on the Hylo-ideal,
-or visional, or phenomenal hypothesis, <em>must</em> be only the functional <em>imago</em>
-of the latter; Self being thus proved to be “Alpha and Omega, beginning and
-ending, first and last.” Beyond Self, it is manifest, mortal mind can never
-range. Whether Self be body or “spirit” is, I repeat, for my chief contention,
-quite immaterial—I sit on both sides of the stile, facing both ways.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Robert Lewins</span>, M.D.</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>HYLO-IDEAISM.</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>As a hostile notice of the above philosophy has appeared in your columns, will you
-kindly permit me to say a few words in its defence? Not, of course, that I can
-hope in these few lines to really make clear to the casual reader the greatest
-change in human thought ever witnessed on earth (a change not merely as
-regards the form or matter of existence, but as regards its very nature)—yet I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>may hope that a few seasonable words may be the means of inducing at least a few
-to enquire further into a theory, the self-evident simplicity of which is so great,
-that, I am convinced, it needs but to be understood to command universal
-acceptance.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The term Hylo-Ideaism is no self-contradiction, but undeniable verity, based
-on the first two facts of all existence; viz., the assumption of the material on
-the one hand, and the actuality of the ideal on the other. The primary, undeniable
-and necessary assumption of the “reality” of existence supplies us with
-the first half of our designation, and the recognition of the correlative truism
-that this existence—based on our own assumption—is, therefore, only our own
-idea, completes our title, and amply vindicates the self-sufficiency of Hylo-Ideaistic
-philosophy. For here is not a mere unended argument, leaving us at
-both ends stranded on mere metaphysical speculation, but a self-sustaining
-circle<a id='r116' /><a href='#f116' class='c013'><sup>[116]</sup></a> where both ends meet, and materiality and ideality are blended as one,
-and indissoluble.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It matters not on what basis we proceed, whether we speak of existence as
-material or ideal, or “spiritual” or anything else—a moment’s reflection is
-sufficient to establish us in a position of consistent monism. For all thought
-or knowledge is but sensation, and sensation is and must be purely subjective,
-existing in, and by, the ego itself. As now we cannot outstrip our own sensations
-(only a madman could controvert this proposition—which includes <em>everything</em>)—therefore
-are we absolutely, and for ever, limited to self-existence, and the same
-holds good of all possible or imaginary existence whatsoever. For the first
-essential of any conscious existence—that which indeed constitutes it—is a
-sentient subject, and inasmuch as all connected with this subject—thought,
-knowledge, feeling, fancy, sentiment—are all <em>purely subjective</em>, <i>i.e.</i>, in the subject
-itself, so must the subject be to itself the sum of all things, and objective existence
-only its own fancy by which it realises itself. This then utterly disposes
-of all fancied objective dualism by reducing all existence within the ring-fence of
-the ego itself, and this not as mere speculative theory but as positive fact, which,
-whether we recognise it or not, remains fact still—we <em>are</em> limited to Self,
-whether we know it or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then finally, <em>in self</em>, we harmonise the antithesis between the material and
-the ideal by recognising the two as absolutely inter-dependent, each upon the
-other, and therefore one consistent and indivisible whole. The ideal (thought,
-fancy, sentiment) is, and must be, but the property and outcome of the material
-(the nominal reality), which, on the other hand, is itself (and can be) but the
-assumption of the ideal. Destroy reality and thought is dead, blind thought
-and reality is a blank; and thus are the ideal and the material but the two sides
-of one and the self-same shield, and the line of our argument joins itself in one
-consistent circle, which constitutes the existence of the Ego—He who creates
-light and darkness, heaven and earth, pleasure and pain, God and devil—who is,
-in Himself, the sum of all things, (viz. “thinks”) beyond which is naught,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>naught, naught, for the fancy of His own which imagines a “beyond” is, itself,
-but fancy—self-contained in Self.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Thou Unity of force sublime,</div>
- <div class='line'>Th’ eternal mystery of thy time</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Runs on unstay’d for ever;</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet, self-containing God of all,</div>
- <div class='line'>As raptur’d at thy feet I fall</div>
- <div class='line in4'>In thee myself I worship.</div>
- <div class='line in19'><span class='sc'>Herbert L. Courtney.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Cambridge, November, 1887.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[<span class='sc'>Editor’s Note.</span>—In reference to the supposed “slighting remark” of which
-Dr. Lewins speaks, and the no less supposed “hostile notice,” as Mr. Herbert
-L. Courtney puts it—contained in our September number—we demur to the
-accusation. Both gentlemen will find it, however, fully answered in the
-“Literary Jottings” of this number; where, also, their respective pamphlets
-“<span class='sc'>Auto-Centricism</span>,” “<span class='sc'>Humanism</span> <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>versus</i></span> <span class='sc'>Theism</span>,” and “The New Gospel
-of Hylo-Idealism”—are amply noticed by the “Adversary.”]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c051' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>ANSWERS TO QUERIES.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>A <span class='sc'>Correspondent</span> from New York writes:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>.... “The Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> would confer a great benefit on those who are attracted to the
-movement which they advocate, if they would state:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“(1.) Whether a would-be-theosophist-occultist is required to abandon his worldly ties and
-duties such as family affection, love of parents, wife, children, friends, etc.?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I ask this question because it is rumoured here that some theosophical publications have so stated,
-and would wish to know whether such a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sine quâ non</i></span> condition really exists in your Rules? The same,
-however, is found in the New Testament. ‘He that loveth father or mother more than Me, is not
-worthy of Me; and he that loveth son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me, etc., etc.,’
-is said in Matthew (x. 37). Do the <span class='sc'>Masters</span> of Theosophy demand as much?</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Yours in the Search of Light,</div>
- <div class='line in23'>“L. M. C.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is an old, old question, and a still older charge against theosophy,
-started first by its enemies. We emphatically answer, <span class='fss'>NO</span>; adding that no
-<em>theosophical</em> publication could have rendered itself guilty of such a <span class='fss'>FALSEHOOD</span>
-and calumny. No follower of theosophy, least of all a disciple of the “Masters
-of Theosophy” (the <em>chela</em> of a <em>guru</em>), would ever be accepted on such conditions.
-Many were the candidates, but “few the chosen.” Dozens were
-refused, simply because married and having a sacred duty to perform to wife
-and children.<a id='r117' /><a href='#f117' class='c013'><sup>[117]</sup></a> None have ever been asked to forsake father or mother; for
-he who, being necessary to his parent for his support, leaves him or her to
-gratify his own selfish consideration or thirst for knowledge, however great and
-sincere, <i>is “unworthy”</i> of the Science of Sciences, “or ever to approach a holy
-<span class='sc'>Master</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Our correspondent must surely have confused in his mind Theosophy with
-Roman Catholicism, and Occultism with the dead-letter teachings of the Bible.
-For it is only in the Latin Church that it has become a meritorious action, which
-is called serving God and Christ, to “abandon father and mother, wife and
-children,” and every duty of an honest man and citizen, in order to become
-a monk. And it is in St. Luke’s Gospel that one reads the terrible words, put in
-the mouth of Jesus: “If any <em>man</em> come to me, and <em>hate not his father, and
-mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters</em>, yea, <em>his own life</em> also,
-<span class='fss'>HE CANNOT BE MY DISCIPLE</span>.” (xiv. 26.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>Saint</em> (?) Jerome teaches, in one of his writings, “If thy father lies down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>across thy threshold, if thy mother uncovers to thine eyes the bosom which
-suckled thee, <i>trample on thy father’s lifeless body</i>, <span class='fss'>TRAMPLE ON THY MOTHER’S
-BOSOM</span>, and <em>with eyes unmoistened and dry, fly to the Lord, who calleth thee</em>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Surely then, it is not from any <em>theosophical</em> publication that our correspondent
-could have learnt such an infamous charge against theosophy and its <span class='fss'>MASTERS</span>—but
-rather in some <em>anti-Christian</em>, or <em>too</em> dogmatically “Christian” paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Our society has never been “more Catholic than the Pope.” It has done
-its best to follow out the path prescribed by the Masters; and if it has failed in
-more than one respect to fulfil its arduous task, the blame is certainly not to
-be thrown on either Theosophy, nor its Masters, but on the limitations of
-human nature. The <em>Rules</em>, however, of <em>chelaship</em>, or discipleship, are there, in
-many a Sanskrit and Tibetan volume. In Book IV. of <em>Kiu-ti</em>, in the chapter on
-“<em>the Laws of Upasans</em>” (disciples), the qualifications expected in a “regular
-<em>chela</em>” are: (1.) Perfect physical health.<a id='r118' /><a href='#f118' class='c013'><sup>[118]</sup></a> (2.) Absolute mental and physical
-purity. (3.) Unselfishness of purpose; universal charity; pity for all animate
-beings. (4.) Truthfulness and unswerving faith in the laws of Karma. (5.) A
-courage undaunted in the support of truth, even in face of peril to life. (6.) An
-intuitive perception of one’s being the vehicle of the manifested divine <em>Atman</em>
-(spirit). (7.) Calm indifference for, but a just appreciation of, everything that
-constitutes the objective and transitory world. (8.) Blessing of both parents<a id='r119' /><a href='#f119' class='c013'><sup>[119]</sup></a>
-and <em>their permission to become an Upasan</em> (chela); and (9.) Celibacy, and freedom
-from any obligatory <a id='corr326.22'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='duty.”'>duty.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_326.22'><ins class='correction' title='duty.”'>duty.</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The two last rules are most strictly enforced. No man <em>convicted of disrespect
-to his father or mother</em>, or <em>unjust abandonment of his wife</em>, can ever be accepted
-even as a <em>lay chela</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is sufficient, it is hoped. We have heard of chelas who, having <em>failed</em>,
-perhaps in consequence of the neglect of some such duty, for one or another
-reason, have invariably thrown the blame and <a id='corr326.28'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='responsibiilty'>responsibility</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_326.28'><ins class='correction' title='responsibiilty'>responsibility</ins></a></span> for it on the
-teaching of the Masters. This is but natural in poor and weak human beings
-who have not even the courage to recognise their own mistakes, or the rare
-nobility of publicly confessing them, but are always trying to find a scapegoat.
-Such we pity, and leave to the Law of Retribution, or Karma. It is not these
-weak creatures, who can ever be expected to have the best of the enemy
-described by the wise Kirátárjuniya of Bharavi:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The enemies which rise within the body.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hard to be overcome—the evil passions—</div>
- <div class='line'>Should manfully be fought, <em>who conquers these</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Is equal to the conqueror of worlds</em>.” (xi. 32.)</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</div>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>We have received several communications for publication, bearing on the
-subjects discussed in the editorial of our last issue, “Let every man prove his
-own work.” A few brief remarks may be made, not in reply to any of the letters—<em>which,
-being anonymous, and containing no card from the writers, cannot be
-published</em> (nor are such noticed, as a general rule)—but to the ideas and
-accusations contained in one of them, a letter signed “M.” Its author takes
-up the cudgels on behalf of the Church. He objects to the statement that this
-institution lacks the enlightenment necessary to carry out a true system of
-philanthropy. He appears, also, to demur to the view that “the practical
-people either go on doing good unintentionally and often do harm,” and points
-to the workers amid our slums as a vindication of Christianity—which, by-the-bye,
-was in no sense attacked in the editorial so criticized.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To this, repeating what was said, we maintain that more mischief has been
-done by emotional charity than sentimentalists care to face. Any student of
-political economy is familiar with this fact, which passes for a truism with all
-those who have devoted attention to the problem. No nobler sentiment than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>that which animates the unselfish philanthropist is conceivable; but the question
-at issue is not summed up in the recognition of this truth. The practical
-results of his labours have to be examined. We have to see whether he does
-not sow the seeds of a greater—while relieving a lesser—evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The fact that “thousands are making great efforts in all the cities throughout
-our land” to meet want, reflects immense credit on the character of such
-workers. It does not affect their creed, for such natures would remain the
-same, whatever the prevailing dogmas chanced to be. It is certainly a very
-poor illustration of the fruits of centuries of dogmatic Christianity that England
-should be so honeycombed with misery and poverty as she is—especially on the
-biblical ground that a tree must be judged by its fruits! It might, also, be
-argued, that the past history of the Churches, stained as it is with persecutions,
-the suppression of knowledge, crime and brutality, necessitates the turning over
-of a new leaf. The difficulties in the way are insuperable. “Churchianity”
-has, indeed, done its best to keep up with the age by assimilating the teachings
-of, and making veiled truces with, science, but it is incapable of affording a true
-spiritual ideal to the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The same Church-Christianity assails with fruitlesss pertinacity, the ever-growing
-host of Agnostics and Materialists, but is <em>as absolutely ignorant, as the
-latter, of the mysteries beyond the tomb</em>. The great necessity for the Church,
-according to Professor Flint, is to keep the leaders of European thought within
-its fold. By such men it is, however, regarded as an anachronism. The Church
-is eaten up with scepticism within its own walls; free-thinking clergymen being
-now very common. This constant drain of vitality has reduced the true religion
-to a very low ebb, and it is to infuse a new current of ideas and aspirations into
-modern thought, in short, to supply a logical basis for an elevated morality, a
-science and philosophy which is suited to the knowledge of the day, that Theosophy
-comes before the world. Mere physical philanthropy, apart from the infusion of new
-influences and ennobling conceptions of life into the minds of the masses,
-is worthless. The gradual assimilation by mankind of great spiritual truths
-will alone revolutionize the face of civilization, and ultimately result in a far
-more effective panacea for evil, than the mere tinkering of superficial misery. Prevention
-is better than cure. Society creates its own outcasts, criminals, and
-profligates, and then condemns and punishes its own Frankensteins, sentencing
-its own progeny, the “bone of its bone, and the flesh of its flesh,” to a life of
-damnation on earth. Yet that society recognises and enforces most hypocritically
-Christianity—<i>i.e.</i> “Churchianity.” Shall we then, or shall we not, infer that
-the latter is unequal to the requirements of mankind? Evidently the former,
-and most painfully and obviously so, in its present dogmatic form, which makes
-of the beautiful ethics preached on the Mount, a Dead Sea fruit, a whitened
-sepulchre, and no better.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Furthermore, the same “M.,” alluding to Jesus as one with regard to whom
-there could be only two alternatives, writes that he “was either the Son of God
-or the vilest impostor who ever trod this earth.” We answer, not at all. Whether
-the Jesus of the New Testament ever lived or not, whether he existed as an
-historical personage, or was simply a lay figure around which the Bible allegories
-clustered—the Jesus of Nazareth of Matthew and John, is the ideal for every
-would-be sage and Western candidate Theosophist to follow. That such an
-one as he, was <em>a</em> “Son of God,” is as undeniable as that he was neither the <em>only</em>
-“Son of God,” nor the first one, nor even the last who closed the series of the
-“Sons of God,” or the children of Divine Wisdom, on this earth. Nor is that
-other statement that in “His life he (Jesus) has ever spoken of himself as
-co-existent with Jehovah, the Supreme, the Centre of the Universe,” correct,
-whether in <a id='corr327.55'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='in it its'>in its</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_327.55'><ins class='correction' title='in it its'>in its</ins></a></span> dead letter, or hidden mystic sense. In no place does Jesus
-ever allude to “<em>Jehovah</em>”; but, on the contrary, attacking the Mosaic laws and
-the alleged Commandments given on Mount Sinai, he disconnects himself and
-his “Father” most distinctly and emphatically from the Sinaitic tribal God.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>The whole of Chapter V., in the Gospel of Matthew, is a passionate protest of
-the “man of peace, love and charity,” against the cruel, stern, and selfish
-commandments of “the man of war,” the “Lord” of Moses (Exod. xv., 3).
-“Ye have heard that it was said by them of old times,”—so and so—“But I
-say unto you,” quite the reverse. Christians who still hold to the Old Testament
-and the Jehovah of the Israelites, are at best <em>schismatic Jews</em>. Let them
-be that, by all means, if they will so have it; but they have no right to call
-themselves even <em>Chréstians</em>, let alone <em>Christians</em>.<a id='r120' /><a href='#f120' class='c013'><sup>[120]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is a gross injustice and untruth to assert, as our anonymous correspondent
-does, that “the freethinkers are notoriously unholy in their lives.” Some of
-the noblest characters, as well as deepest thinkers of the day, adorn the ranks of
-Agnosticism, Positivism and Materialism. The latter are the worst enemies of
-Theosophy and Mysticism; but this is no reason why strict justice should not be
-done unto them. Colonel Ingersoll, a rank materialist, and the leader of freethought
-in America, is recognised, even by his enemies, as an ideal husband,
-father, friend and citizen, one of the noblest characters that grace the United
-States. Count Tolstoi is a freethinker who has long parted with the orthodox
-Church, yet his whole life is an exemplar of Christ-like altruism and self-sacrifice.
-Would to goodness every “Christian” should take those two “<em>infidels</em>” as his
-models in private and public life. The munificence of many freethinking
-philanthropists stands out in startling contrast with the apathy of the monied
-dignitaries of the Church. The above fling at the “enemies of the Church,” is
-as absurd as it is contemptible.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What can you offer to the dying woman who fears to tread alone the <span class='fss'>DARK
-UNKNOWN</span>?” we are asked. Our Christian critic here frankly confesses (<i>a.</i>) that
-Christian dogmas have only developed <em>fear</em> of death, and (<i>b.</i>) the <em>agnosticism</em> of
-the <em>orthodox believer</em> in Christian theology as to the future <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>post-mortem</i></span> state.
-It is, indeed, difficult to appreciate the peculiar type of bliss which orthodoxy
-offers its believers in—<em>damnation</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The dying man—the average Christian—with a <em>dark</em> retrospect in life can
-scarcely appreciate this boon; while the Calvinist or the Predestinarian, who
-is brought up in the idea that God may have pre-assigned him from eternity to
-everlasting misery, through no fault of that man, but simply because he is God, is
-more than justified in regarding the latter as ten times worse than any devil or
-fiend that unclean human fancy could evolve.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Theosophy, on the contrary, teaches that <em>perfect, absolute justice</em> reigns in
-nature, though short-sighted man fails to see it in its details on the material and
-even psychic plane, and that every man determines his own future. The true
-Hell is life on Earth, as an effect of Karmic punishment following the preceding
-life during which the evil causes were produced. The Theosophist fears <em>no
-hell</em>, but confidently expects rest and bliss during the <em>interim</em> between two
-incarnations, as a reward for all the unmerited suffering he has endured in an
-existence into which he was ushered by Karma, and during which he is, in most
-cases, as helpless as a torn-off leaf whirled about by the conflicting winds of
-social and private life. Enough has been given out at various times regarding
-the conditions of post-mortem existence, to furnish a solid block of information
-on this point. Christian theology has nothing to say on this burning question,
-except where it veils its ignorance by mystery and dogma; but Occultism, unveiling
-the symbology of the Bible, explains it thoroughly.—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Literary Jottings</span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>HYLO-IDEALISM <i>versus</i> “LUCIFER,” and the “ADVERSARY.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Under the head of <span class='sc'>Correspondence</span>
-in the present number, two remarkable
-letters are published. (See Text.) Both
-come from fervent Hylo-Idealists—a
-Master and Disciple, if we mistake not—and
-both charge the “Adversary,” one, of
-a “slighting,” the other, of a “hostile notice”
-of Hylo-Idealism, in the September
-number of “<cite>Lucifer</cite>.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such an accusation is better met and
-answered in all sincerity; and, therefore,
-the reply is, a flat denial of the charge.
-No <em>slight</em>—nor <em>hostility</em> either, could be
-shown to “Hylo-Idealism,” as the “little
-stranger” in the happy family of philosophies
-was hitherto as good as unknown
-to “Lucifer’s” household gods. It was
-<em>chaff</em>, if anything, but surely no hostility;
-and even that was concerned with only
-some dreadful words and sentences, with
-reference to the new teaching, and had
-nothing whatever to do with Hylo-Idealism
-proper—a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>terra incognita</i></span> for the writer
-at the time. But now that three pamphlets
-from the pens of our two correspondents
-have been received in our office, for
-review, and carefully read, Hylo-Idealism
-begins to assume a more tangible form
-before the reviewer’s eye. It becomes
-easier to separate the grain from the
-chaff, the theory from the (no doubt)
-scientific, nevertheless, most irritating,
-words in which it is presented to the
-reader.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is meant in all truth and sincerity.
-The remarks which our two correspondents
-have mistaken for expressions of hostility,
-were as justified <em>then</em>, as they are
-<em>now</em>. What ordinary mortal, we ask, before
-he had time (to use Dr. Lewins’
-happiest expressions) to “<em>asself</em> or <em>cognose</em>”—let
-alone <em>intercranialise</em><a id='r121' /><a href='#f121' class='c013'><sup>[121]</sup></a> (!!)—the
-hylo-idealistic theories, however profound
-and philosophical these may be, who,
-having so far come into direct contact
-with only the <em>images</em> thereof “subjected
-by his own <em>egoity</em>” (<i>i.e.</i> as words and sentences),
-who could avoid feeling his hair
-standing on end, over “<em>his organs of mentation</em>,”
-while spelling out such terrible
-words as “<em>vesiculo-neurosis</em> in conjunction
-with <em>medico-psychological symptomatology</em>,”
-“<em>auto-centricism</em>,” and the like?
-Such interminable, outlandish, multisyllabled
-and multicipital, newly-coined compound
-terms and whole sentences, maybe,
-and no doubt are, highly learned and
-scientific. They may be most expressive
-of true, real meaning, to a specialist
-of Dr. Lewins’ powers of thought; nevertheless,
-I make bold to say, that they are
-far more calculated to obscure than to
-enlighten the ordinary reader. In our
-modern day, when new philosophies spring
-out from the spawn of human overworked
-intellect like mushrooms from their mycelium
-after a rainy morning, the human
-brain and its capacities ought to be taken
-into a certain thoughtful consideration,
-and spared useless labour. Notwithstanding
-Dr. Lewins’ praiseworthy efforts
-to prove that brain (as far as we understand
-his aspirations and teachings) is the
-only reality in the whole kosmos, its limitations
-are painfully evident, on the whole.
-As philanthropists and theosophists, we
-entreat the founder of Hylo-Idealism and
-his disciples to be merciful to their new
-god, the “Ego-Brain,” and not tax too
-heavily its powers, if they would see it
-happily reign. For otherwise, it is sure to
-collapse before the new theory—or, let us
-call it philosophy—is even half appreciated
-by that “Ego-Brain.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>By speaking as we do, we are only pursuing
-a life-long policy. We have
-criticized and opposed the coinage of
-hard Greek and Latin words by the New
-York Pantarchists; laughed at Hæckel’s
-pompous tendency to invent thirty-three
-syllabled terms, and speak of the <em>perigenesis</em>
-of <em>plastidules</em>, instead of honest
-whirling atoms—or whatever he means;
-and derided the modern psychists for calling
-simple thought transference “telepathic
-impact.” And now, we tearfully beg Dr.
-Lewins, in the interests of humanity, to
-have pity on his poor readers: for, unless
-he hearkens to our advice, we shall be
-compelled, in dire self-defence, to declare
-an open war to his newly-coined words.
-We shall fight the usurper “Solipsism” in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>favour of the legitimate king of the Universe—<span class='sc'>Egoism</span>—to
-our last breath.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>At the same time, as we have hitherto
-been ignorant of the latest philosophy,
-described by Mr. H. L. Courtney as “the
-greatest change in human thought,” may
-we be permitted to enquire whether it is
-spelt as its Founder spells it, namely,
-“Hylo-Idealism,” or as his disciple, Mr.
-Courtney does, who writes Hylo-Ideaism?
-Is the latter a <em>schism</em>, an improvement on
-the original name, a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>lapsus calami</i></span>, or
-what? And now, having <a id='corr330L.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='dirburdened'>disburdened</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_330L.14'><ins class='correction' title='dirburdened'>disburdened</ins></a></span>
-our heart of a heavy weight, we may proceed
-to give an opinion (so far very superficial),
-on the three Hylo-Idealistic (or
-<cite>Ideaistic</cite>) pamphlets.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'><i>Under the extraordinary title of</i>
-“AUTO-CENTRICISM” and “HUMANISM
-<i>versus</i> THEISM,” or “Solipsism
-(Egoism)=Atheism” (W. Stewart
-&amp; Co., 41, Farringdon Street, E.C.;
-and Freethought Publishing Co., 63,
-Fleet Street, E.C.)—Dr. Lewins publishes
-a series of letters on the subject
-of the philosophy of which he is the
-founder. It is impossible not to feel admiration
-for the manner in which these
-letters are written. They show a great deal
-of sincere conviction and deep thought, and
-give evidence of a most wide and varied
-reading. However his readers may dissent
-from the writer’s conclusions, the
-research with which he has strengthened
-his theory, cannot fail to attract their attention,
-and smooth their way through the
-somewhat tortuous labyrinth of arguments
-before them. But—</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>Dr. Lewins is among those who regard
-consciousness as a function of the nerve-tissue;
-and in this aspect, he is an uncompromising
-materialist. Yet, on the other
-hand, he holds that the Universe, God,
-and thought, have no reality whatever,
-apart from the individual Ego. The Ego
-is again resolvable into brain-process.
-We thus arrive at the doctrine that Brain
-is the workshop in which all our ideas of
-external things are originated. Apart
-from brain there is no Ego, no external
-world. What, then, is the Brain itself—this
-solitary object in a void universe?
-Hylo-Idealism does not say. Thus, the
-author cannot escape the confusion of
-thought which his unique working-union
-of materialism and idealism involves.
-The <em>oscillation</em> between these two poles is
-strikingly apparent in the subjoined quotations.
-At one point Matter is discussed
-as if it were an objective reality; at another,
-it is regarded as a mere “phantasm
-of the Ego.” The Brain alone survives
-throughout in solitary state. We quote
-from the two pamphlets—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Matter Asserted.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>Matter</em>, organic and inorganic, is now fully
-known ... to perform all <em>material</em> operations.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Auto-Centricism</cite>, p. 40.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Man is <em>all body and matter</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c052'>—<cite>Do</cite>, p. 40.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Abstract thought [is] <em>neuropathy</em> ... disease
-of the <em>nervous centres</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Humanism versus Theism</cite>, p. 25.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What we call mind ... is a function of
-certain <em>nerve structures in the organism</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Humanism v. Theism</cite>, p. 24.</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Matter Denied.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>All discovery</em> is ... a <em>subjective phenomenon</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Humanism v. Theism</cite>, p. 17.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>All things</em> are for us but <em>modes of perception</em>.”—[Mental
-figments].</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “celestial vault and garniture of Earth,”
-are “a <em>mere projection of our own inner consciousness</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Humanism v. Theism</cite>, p. 17.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We <em>get rid of Matter altogether</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Humanism v. Theism</cite>, p. 17.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The whole objective world ... is <em>phenomenal
-or ideal</em>.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Auto-Centricism</cite>, p. 9.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>Everything</em> is spectral” (<i>i.e.</i>, unreal).</p>
-<div class='c020'>—<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 13.</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Matter is at one time credited with a
-real being, and again resolved into a mere
-mental figment as <em>circumstances demand</em>.
-If Matter is, as the author frequently
-states, unreal, it is, at least clear that the
-brain, one of its many phases, goes with
-it!!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As to the learned doctor’s assertion that
-perception is relative, a theory which runs
-through his whole work, we have but one
-answer. This conception is, in no sense
-whatever, a monopoly of Hylo-Idealists,
-as Dr. Lewins appears to think. The illusory
-nature of the phenomenal world—of
-the things of sense—is not only a belief
-common to the old Brahminical metaphysics,
-and to the majority of modern
-psychologists, but it is also a vital tenet of
-Theosophy. The latter distinctly realises
-matter as a “bundle of attributes,” ultimately
-resolvable into the subjective
-sensations of a “percipient.” The connection
-of this simple truth with the hylo-idealistic
-denial of soul is not apparent.
-Its acceptance has, also, no bearing on the
-problem as to whether there may not
-exist a duality—<em>within the limits of manifested
-being</em>—or contrast between Mind
-and the Substance of matter. This
-Cosmic Duality is symbolised by the
-Vedantins in the relations between the
-Logos and Mulaprakriti—<i>i.e.</i>, the Universal
-Spirit and the “material” basis (or
-root) of the objective planes of nature.
-The <em>Monism</em>, then, of Dr. Lewins and
-other negative thinkers of the day, is evidently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>at fault, when applied to unify the
-contrast of mental and material facts in
-the conditioned universe. Beyond the
-latter, it is indeed valid, but that is
-scarcely a question for practical philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To close with a reference this once to
-Dr. Lewins’ letter (see “Correspondence”
-in the text), in which he makes his subsequent
-assertion to the effect that God
-is the “functional (<i>sic</i>) image,” of the
-Ego, we should prefer to suggest that all
-individual “selves” are but dim reflections
-of the universal soul of the Kosmos. The
-orthodox concept of God is not, as he
-contends, a myth or phantasm of the
-brain; it is rather an expression of a
-vague consciousness of the universal, all-pervading
-Logos. It is because <span class='sc'>Self</span>
-pinions man within a narrow sphere
-“beyond which mortal mind can never
-range,” that the destruction of the personal
-sense of separateness is indispensable
-to the Occultist.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>“THE NEW GOSPEL OF HYLO-IDEALISM,
-<cite>or Positive Agnosticism</cite>,”
-(Freethought Publishing Co., 73, Fleet
-Street, E. C. Price 3d.), is another
-pamphlet on the same subject, in
-which Mr. Herbert L. Courtney contributes
-his quota to the discussion of the
-“Brain Theory of mind and matter.” He
-is, if we mistake not, an avowed disciple
-of Dr. Lewins, and, perhaps, identical
-with the “C. N.,” who watched over the
-cradle of the “new philosophy.” The
-whole gist of the latter may be summed
-up as an attempt to frame a working-union
-of Materialism and Idealism. This
-result is effected on two lines (1) in the
-acceptance of the idealistic theorem, that
-the so-called external world only exists in
-our consciousness; and (2) in the designation
-of that consciousness, in its turn, as
-a mere function of Brain. The first
-of these contentions is unquestionably
-valid, in so far as it concerns the world
-of appearances, or <em>Maya</em>; it is, however,
-as “old as the hills,” and incorporated
-into the Hylo-Ideal argument from anterior
-sources. The second is untenable,
-for the simple reason that on the premises
-of the new creed itself, the brain, as an
-object of perception, can possess no reality
-outside of the Ego. Hegelians might
-reply that Brain is but an <i>i.e.</i> of the Ego,
-and cannot hence determine the existence
-of the latter—its creator.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>Metaphysicism will, however, find much
-to interest them in Mr. Courtney’s brochure,
-representative, as it is, of the new
-and more subtle phase into which modern
-scepticism is entering. Some expressions
-we may demur to—<i>e.g.</i>, “That which we
-see is not Sirius, but the light-wave.” So
-far from the light-wave being “seen,” it is
-a mere working hypothesis of Science.
-All we experience is the retinal sensation,
-the objective counterpart to which is a
-matter of pure inference. So far as we
-can learn, Hylo-Idealism is chiefly based
-upon gigantic paradoxes, and even contradictions
-in terms. For, with regard to
-the speculations anent the Noumenon
-(p. 8.) what justification can be found for
-terming it “<span class='sc'>Matter</span>,” especially as it is
-said to be “unknowable”? Obviously it
-may be of the nature of mind, or—<em>something</em>
-<span class='sc'>Higher</span>. How is the Hylo-Idealist
-to know?</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>“LAYS OF ROMANCE AND CHIVALRY,”
-by Mr. W. Stewart Ross.
-(Stewart and Co., Farringdon Street.)
-In this neat little volume the author presents
-to the reader a collection of vigorous
-verse, mostly of chivalrous character.
-Some of these pieces, such as the “Raid
-of Vikings” and “Glencoe,” are of merit,
-despite an occasional echo of Walter
-Scott, whose style seems to have had a
-considerable modifying influence on the
-author’s diction. It is in the “Bride of
-Steel” that this feature is most noticeable—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I love thee with a warrior’s love,</div>
- <div class='line'>My Sword, my Life, my Bride!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Dear, dear as ever knighthood bore,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Though yet no gout of battle-gore</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy virgin blade hath dyed!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Apart from this unconscious influence
-of the great Scottish bard, the ring of originality
-and feeling which characterises
-Mr. Stewart Ross’s poetry is most refreshing.
-The little volume sparkles with
-the vein of romance, and after perusing it,
-in spite of occasional anachronisms and
-other literary errors, we are not surprised
-to hear of the favourable reception
-hitherto accorded to it.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>In the <cite>Secular Review</cite> for November
-26th, Mr. Beatty makes an attack upon
-a former article in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, entitled
-“The Origin of Evil.” We find, however,
-Mr. Beatty exhibiting crass ignorance
-of the ideas he criticises, as when,
-for instance, he speaks of the “<em>Buddhistic</em>”
-Parabram (<i>sic</i>). To begin with,
-every tyro in Oriental philosophy knows
-that “Parabrahm” is a Hindu Vedantic
-idea, and has no connection whatever
-with Buddhist thought. If Mr. Beatty
-wishes to become a serious critic, he
-must first learn the <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, <i>c</i>, of the subject
-with which he professes to deal. His
-article is unfinished, but it seems only
-fair at the present stage to call his attention
-to so glaring an error.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>THE GNOSTICS AND THEIR
-REMAINS, ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL.
-By C. W. King, M.A. Second
-Edition. David Nutt, 270 Strand, London,
-1887. pp. 466, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It would be unfair to the erudite and
-painstaking author of “<cite>The Gnostics and
-Their Remains</cite>” for a reviewer to take the
-title of his book as altogether appropriate,
-for it suggests too high a standard of criticism.
-Mr. King says in the introduction
-that his book is intended to be subsidiary
-to the valuable treatise of M. Matter,
-adding: “I refer the reader to him for
-the more complete elucidation of the <em>philosophy</em>
-of Gnosticism, and give my full attention
-to its <em>Archæological</em> side.” The
-italics are the author’s, and they disarm
-<a id='corr332L.18'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='cricicism'>criticism</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_332L.18'><ins class='correction' title='cricicism'>criticism</ins></a></span> as far as the philosophical side
-of Gnosticism is concerned; for thus italicised,
-this passage is, at the outset, as
-plain a confession as could, in conscience,
-be expected of an author of a fact which
-the reader would probably have found out
-for himself, before he closed the volume:
-namely, that the work is chiefly valuable
-as an Archæological compendium of
-“Gnostic Remains.” Unfortunately, the
-most interesting point about the Gnostics
-is their philosophy, of which their Archæological
-remains are, properly speaking,
-little more than illustrations. But the fact
-is, that the hard-shelled Archæologist is
-the last man in the world to appreciate the
-real esoteric signification of symbolism.
-All true symbols have many meanings, and
-for the purposes of descriptive Archæology
-the more superficial of these meanings are
-sufficient. Ignorance of the deeper meaning
-may indeed be bliss for the Archæologist,
-for it necessitates an amount of ingenuity
-in the fitting together of “remains,”
-that commands the admiration of the
-public, and is productive in the Archæological
-bosom of that agreeable sensation
-known as “fancying oneself.” As a
-laborious collector and compiler, and an
-ingenious worker-up of materials into
-interesting reading, too much can hardly
-be said in Mr. King’s praise, and had he
-a greater intuitional power, and a knowledge
-of esoteric religion, his great
-industry and erudition would make his
-writings valuable even to students of
-Occultism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Since the publication of the former
-edition of his work, twenty-three years ago,
-Mr. King has come across and read the
-<cite>Pistis Sophia</cite>. The discovery of this, the
-only remaining Gnostic Gospel, or rather,
-Gospel fragment, is attributed to
-Schwartze, and the Latin translation to
-Petermann (in 1853). But Mr. King
-does not seem to be aware that
-as far back as 1843, another and
-ampler copy than that in the British
-Museum was in the hands of a Russian
-Raskolnik (dissident), a Cossack, who
-lived and married in Abyssinia; and another
-is in the possession of an Englishman, an
-Occultist, now in the United States, who
-brought it from Syria. It seems a pity
-that in the interim Mr. King did not
-also read <cite>Isis Unveiled</cite>, by H. P.
-Blavatsky, published by Bouton in New
-York in 1876, as its perusal would have
-saved him a somewhat absurd and ludicrous
-blunder. In his <cite>Preface</cite>, Mr. King
-says:—“There seems to be reason for
-suspecting that the Sibyl of Esoteric
-Buddhism drew the first notions of her
-new religion from the analysis of the
-<em>inner man</em>, as set forth in my first
-edition.”<a id='r122' /><a href='#f122' class='c013'><sup>[122]</sup></a> The only person to whom this
-passage could apply is one of the Editors,
-the author of <cite>Isis Unveiled</cite>. And this,
-her first publication, contains the same
-and only doctrine she has always, or
-ever, promulgated. <cite>Isis Unveiled</cite> has
-passed through eight editions, and has
-been read by many thousands of persons;
-and not only they, but everyone
-who is not strangely ignorant
-of the very literature with which it was
-Mr. King’s business to make himself
-conversant, are perfectly aware that the
-two large volumes which compose that
-work are entirely devoted to a defence of
-the philosophy, science, and religion of
-the ancients, especially of the old
-Aryans, whose religion can hardly be
-called a “new” one, still less—“Esoteric
-Buddhism.” If properly spelt, however,
-the latter word, or Buddhism, ought
-to be written with one “d,” as in
-this case it means Wisdom. But “Budhism,”
-or the wisdom-religion of the
-Aryans, was still less a religion, in
-the exoteric sense, than is Buddhism,
-but rather a philosophy. In that
-part of <cite>Isis Unveiled</cite> which treats of
-the Gnostics, Mr. King will find a few
-quotations from his writings side by side
-with quotations from other writers on the
-same subject; but he will find no “new
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>religion” there, or anywhere else, in the
-works of H. P. Blavatsky. And, if anyone
-drew the “first notions” of their religion
-from his “analysis of the inner man,” it
-must have been the early Aryans, who,
-unfortunately, have neglected to acknowledge
-the obligation. What makes Mr.
-King’s self-complacency the more ridiculous,
-is that in his preface he himself
-accuses someone else of “the grave error
-of representing their (the Gnostics’) doctrines
-as <em>novel</em>, and the pure <em>inventions</em>
-of the persons who preached them.” And
-in another place he confesses that he owes
-to Matter the first idea which has now
-become a settled conviction with him, that
-“the seeds of the <em>gnosis</em> were originally
-of Indian growth.” If Matter “faintly
-discerned” this truth, on the other hand
-Bailly, Dupuis, and others had seen it
-quite clearly, and had declared it most
-emphatically. So that Mr. King’s “discovery”
-is neither very new nor very
-original.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. King must be aware that of late
-years immense additions have been made
-to western knowledge of eastern philosophies
-and religions—a new region in
-ancient literature having, in fact, been
-opened up by the labours of Orientalists,
-both European and Eastern. A study of
-these Oriental systems throws a strong
-though often a false light upon the inner
-meaning of Gnostic symbolism and ideas
-generally, which Mr. King acknowledges
-to have come from Indian sources; and
-certainly the reader has a right to expect
-a little more knowledge in that direction
-from a writer of Mr. King’s pretensions,
-than is displayed. For example, in the
-section about Buddhism in the work before
-us: one is tempted sometimes to ask
-whether it is flippancy or superficiality
-that is the matter with the author—when
-he calls the ancient Indian
-gymnosophists “fakirs,” and confounds
-them with Buddhists. Surely he need
-hardly be told that fakirs are Mahomedans,
-and that the Gymnosophists he mentions
-were Brahmin Yogis.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The work, however, is a valuable one
-in its way; but the reader should not
-forget that “there seems reason for
-suspecting” that the author does not
-always know exactly what he is talking
-about, whenever he strays too far from
-Archæology, on which he is no doubt an
-authority.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>THE JEWISH WORLD enters bravely
-enough (in its issue of the 11th November
-1887) on its new character of professor of
-symbology and History. It accuses in no
-measured terms one of the editors of
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> of ignorance; and criticises
-certain expressions used in our October
-number, in a foot-note inserted to explain
-why the “Son of the Morning” <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>
-is called in Mr. G. Massey’s little poem,
-“Lady of Light.” The writer objects, we
-see, to Lucifer-Venus being called in one
-of its aspects “the Jewish Astoreth;” or
-to her having ever been offered cakes by
-the Jews. As explained in a somewhat
-confused sentence: “There <em>was no Jewish
-Astoreth</em>, though the Syrian goddess,
-Ashtoreth, or Astarte, often appears in
-Biblical literature, the moon goddess, the
-complement of Baal, the Sun God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This, no doubt, is extremely learned
-and conveys quite <em>new</em> information. Yet
-such an astounding statement as that the
-whole of the foot-note in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> is
-“pure imagination and bad history” is
-very risky indeed. For it requires no
-more than a stroke or two of our pen to
-make the whole edifice of this denial
-tumble on the <cite>Jewish World</cite> and mangle
-it very badly. Our contemporary has
-evidently forgotten the wise proverb that
-bids one to let “sleeping dogs lie,” and
-therefore, it is with the lofty airs of
-superiority that he informs his readers
-that though the Jews in Palestine lived
-surrounded with (? <i>sic</i>) this pagan form of
-worship, and <em>may, at times</em>, (?!) have
-wandered towards it, they <span class='sc'>had nothing
-in their worship in common with
-Chaldean or Syrian beliefs in multiplicity
-of deities</span>? (!!)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is what any impartial reader
-might really term “bad history,” and
-every Bible worshipper describe as a <em>direct
-lie</em> given to the Lord God of Israel. It is
-more than <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>suppressio veri suggestio
-falsi</i></span>, for it is simply a cool denial of facts
-in the face of both Bible and History.
-We advise our critic of the <cite>Jewish World</cite>
-to turn to <em>his</em> own prophets, to Jeremiah,
-foremost of all. We open “Scripture”
-and find in it: “the Lord God” while
-accusing <em>his</em> “backsliding Israel and
-treacherous Judah” of following in “the
-ways of Egypt and of Assyria,” of drinking
-the waters of Sihor, and “serving
-strange Gods” enumerating his grievances
-in this wise:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“According <em>to the number of thy cities</em> are thy
-gods, O Judah, (Jer. ii. 28.).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ye have turned back to the iniquities of your
-forefathers who went after other gods to serve
-them (xi.) ... <em>according to the number of the
-streets of Jerusalem</em> have ye set up altars to that
-shameful thing, even altars unto <a id='corr333R.61'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Baal'>Baal”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_333R.61'><ins class='correction' title='Baal'>Baal”</ins></a></span> (<cite>Ib.</cite>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>So much for Jewish <em>monotheism</em>. And
-is it any more “pure imagination” to say
-that the Jews offered cakes to their
-Astoreth and called her “Queen of
-Heaven”? Then the “Lord God” must,
-indeed, be guilty of more than “a delicate
-expansion of facts” when thundering to,
-and through, Jeremiah:—</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span></div>
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Seest thou not what they do in the cities of
-Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem? The
-children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the
-fire, and the women knead their dough <span class='fss'>TO MAKE
-CAKES</span> <em>to the Queen of Heaven</em>, and to pour out
-drink offerings <em>unto the gods</em>.” (Jer. vii. 17-18).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The Jews <em>may</em> <span class='fss'>AT TIMES</span>” only (?) have
-wandered towards pagan forms of worship
-but “had <em>nothing in common</em> in it with
-Syrian beliefs in multiplicity of deities.”
-Had they not? Then the ancestors of the
-editors of the <cite>Jewish World</cite> must have
-been the victims of “suggestion,” when,
-snubbing Jeremiah (and not entirely
-without good reason),they declared to him:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“As for the word that thou hast spoken unto
-us in the name of the Lord, we will not hearken
-unto thee. But we will certainly do whatsoever
-thing goeth forth out of our own mouth, to burn
-incense unto the Queen of Heaven<a id='r123' /><a href='#f123' class='c013'><sup>[123]</sup></a> ... <em>as we
-have done, we</em>, <span class='fss'>AND OUR FATHERS</span>, <em>our kings, and
-our princes, in the cities of Judah, and in the
-streets of Jerusalem</em>, for <em>then</em> had we plenty of
-victuals, and were well, and saw no evil. But
-<em>since we left off to burn incense to the Queen of
-Heaven</em>, and to <em>pour out drink offerings unto her</em>
-... and (<em>to</em>) <em>make her cakes to worship her ...
-we have wanted all things</em>, and have been consumed
-by the sword and by the <a id='corr334L.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='famine...’'>famine....”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_334L.29'><ins class='correction' title='famine...’'>famine....”</ins></a></span>
-(Jer. xliv. 16, 17, 18, 19).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus, according to their own confession,
-it is not “at times” that the Jews made
-cakes for, and worshipped Astoreth and
-the strange gods, but constantly: doing,
-moreover, <em>as their forefathers</em>, kings and
-princes <em>did</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>Bad</em> history”? And what was the
-“golden calf” but the sacred heifer, the
-symbol of the “Great Mother,” first the
-planet Venus, and then the moon? For
-the esoteric doctrine holds (as the Mexicans
-held) that Venus, the morning star,
-was <em>created before the sun and moon; metaphorically</em>,
-of course, not astronomically,<a id='r124' /><a href='#f124' class='c013'><sup>[124]</sup></a>
-the assumption being based upon, and
-meaning that which the <em>Nazars</em> and the
-Initiate alone understood among the Jews,
-but that the writers of the <cite>Jewish World</cite>
-are not supposed to know. For the same
-reason the Chaldeans maintained that the
-moon was produced before the sun (<em>see
-Babylon—Account of Creation, by George
-Smith</em>). The morning star, Lucifer-Venus
-was dedicated to that Great Mother
-symbolized by the heifer or the “Golden
-Calf.” For, as says Mr. G. Massey in his
-lecture on “The Hebrews and their Creations,”
-“This (the Golden Calf) being of
-either sex, it supplied a twin-type for
-Venus, as Hathor or Ishtar (Astoreth), the
-double star, that was male at rising, and
-female at sunset” She is the “Celestial
-Aphrodite,” <em>Venus Victrix</em> νιχηφόρος associated
-with <em>Ares</em> (see Pausanias i, 8, 4,
-11, 25, 1).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We are told that “happily for them
-(the Jews) there was no Jewish Astoreth.”
-The <cite>Jewish World</cite> has yet to learn, we
-see, that there would have been no Greek
-Venus Aphrodite; no <em>Ourania</em>, her
-earlier appellation; nor would she have
-been confounded with the Assyrian
-Mylitta (Herod, 1, 199; Pausan., 1, 14, 7;
-Hesiod, Μυληταν την Ουρανιαν Ασσυριοι)
-had it not been for the Phœnicians
-and other Semites. We say the “Jewish
-Astoreth,” and we maintain what we
-say, on the authority of the Iliad,
-the Odyssey, of Renan, and many
-others. Venus Aphrodite is one with
-the Astarte, Astoreth, etc. of the
-Phœnicians, and she is one (as a planet)
-with “Lucifer” the “Morning Star.” So
-far back as the days of Homer, she was
-confounded with <em>Kypris</em>, an Oriental
-goddess brought by the Phœnician
-Semites from their Asiatic travels (<cite>Iliad</cite>,
-V, 330, 422, 260). Her worship appears
-first at Cythere, a Phœnician settlement
-depôt or trade-establishment (<cite>Odys.</cite>, VIII.
-362.; Walcker, <span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><i>griech. götterl.</i></span> I, 666.)
-Herodotus shows that the sanctuary of
-Ascalon, in Syria, was the most ancient of
-the fanes of Aphrodite Ourania (I, 105):
-and Decharme tells us in his <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Mythologie
-de la Grèce Antique</i></span>, that whenever the
-Greeks alluded to the origin of Aphrodite
-they designated her as <em>Ourania</em>, an epithet
-translated from a <em>semitic word</em>, as Jupiter
-<em>Epouranios</em> of the Phœnician inscriptions,
-was the <em>Samemroum</em> of Philo of Byblos,
-according to Renan (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Mission de Phenicie</i></span>).
-Astoreth was a goddess of generation,
-presiding at human birth (as Jehovah
-was <em>god of generation</em>, foremost of all).
-She was the moon-goddess, and a planet at
-the same time, whose worship originated
-with the Ph&oelig;nicians and Semites. It
-flourished most in the Phœnician settlements
-and colonies in Sicily, at Eryax. There
-hosts of <em>Hetairae</em> were attached to her
-temples, as hosts of <em>Kadeshim</em>, called by
-a more sincere name in the Bible, were,
-to the house of the Lord, <a id='corr334R.51'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='where'>“where</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_334R.51'><ins class='correction' title='where'>“where</ins></a></span> the women
-wove hangings for the grove” (II. Kings,
-xxiii, 7). All this shows well the Semitic
-provenance of Astoreth-Venus in her
-capacity of “great Mother.” Let us pause.
-We advise sincerely the <cite>Jewish World</cite> to
-abstain from throwing stones at other
-peoples’ beliefs, so long as its own faith is
-but a house of glass. And though Jeremy
-Taylor may think that “to be proud of
-one’s learning is the greatest ignorance,”
-yet, in this case it is but simple justice to
-say that it is really desirable for our friends
-the Jews that the writer in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> of the
-criticised note about Astoreth <em>should know
-less</em> of history and the Bible, and her unlucky
-critic in the <cite>Jewish World</cite> learn a
-little more about it.</p>
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>Adversary.</span>”</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class='large'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Theosophical</span></span></span> <br /> <span class='large'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>and Mystic Publications</span></span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>THE THEOSOPHIST for October
-opens with the first of a series of articles
-on the “Elohistic Cosmogony.” The
-views put forward by the writer are certainly
-both striking and original, and,
-although Dr. Pratt diverges very considerably
-from the recognised standard of
-kabalistic orthodoxy, his interpretation of
-the Jewish version of cosmic evolution
-will assuredly excite considerable interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Following on Dr. Pratt’s learned
-article, come a few—unfortunately, too
-few—pages of extremely interesting notes
-on the Folk-lore of the Himalayan tribes,
-contributed by Captain Banon. The
-<cite>Theosophist</cite> has often been indebted to
-Captain Banon for similar notes respecting
-such little known tribes and people;
-and it is much to be regretted that the
-many members of the Theosophical
-Society who reside in or visit such out-of-the-way
-places, do not make it a rule to
-collect these traditions and send them for
-publication in the <cite>Theosophist</cite> or one of
-the other Theosophical magazines.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dr. Hartmann continues his series of
-“Rosicrucian Letters,” with a number of
-extracts from the papers of Karl von
-Eckartshausen, who died in 1792. Dr.
-Hartmann deserves the gratitude of all
-students for rendering accessible these
-records and notes of past generations of
-“seekers after the Truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dr. Buck contributes a pithy and
-thoughtful article on “The Soul Problem,”
-and Mr. Lazarus continues his exposition
-of the kabalistic doctrine of the Microcosm.
-Besides these there are further
-instalments of two valuable translations
-from Hindu works of great antiquity and
-authority; the “Crest Jewel of Wisdom,”
-by Sankaracharya and the <a id='corr335L.44'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Kaivalyanita.”'>“Kaivalyanita.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_335L.44'><ins class='correction' title='Kaivalyanita.”'>“Kaivalyanita.”</ins></a></span>
-It is much to be desired that one of our
-Hindu brothers, who adds to a knowledge
-of his own mystic literature, an acquaintance
-with Western modes of thought and
-expression, would devote a series
-of articles to the exposition of the
-fundamental standpoint and ideas of such
-works as these. Such an article would
-add enormously to the value of these
-translations to the Western world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the <cite>November</cite> number, Dr. Pratt
-takes up the <em>Jehovistic</em> cosmogony, which
-he contrasts and compares with the <em>Elohistic</em>
-version already referred to. In his
-view, the Jehovistic teaching embodies
-the conception of the world as “created”
-and “ruled” by an <em>extra-natural</em> and
-<em>personal</em> deity, as opposed to the more
-philosophical and pantheistic conception
-of the earlier Elohistic writers.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Under the title of <cite>An Ancient Weapon</cite>,
-this issue contains an instructive account
-of the evocation of certain astral forces
-according to the ancient Vedic rites. As
-here described, the <em>evil intention</em>, with
-which the rite is performed, transforms it
-into a ceremony of <em>Black Magic</em>, but
-this does not render the account any less
-valuable.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is followed by the first of a series
-of articles on <cite>The Allegory of the Zoroastrian
-Cosmogony</cite>, which promises to
-furnish much food for thought and study.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><cite>Rosicrucian Letters</cite> contains this time
-an extract from an old MS., headed <cite>The
-Temple of Solomon</cite>, which is well worthy
-of careful attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Besides these we have a sketch of the
-life and writings of Madvachary, the great
-teacher of Southern India, and some
-further testimonies to the fact of “self-levitation”
-from eye-witnesses. Rama
-Prasad gives some most valuable details
-of the “Science of Breathing,” one of the
-most curious branches of occult physics,
-while the remainder of the number is
-occupied by an article on “Tetragrammaton,”
-which may be interesting to students
-of the Kabbala, and continuations of the
-“Kabbala and the Microcosm,” and of the
-translations from Indian books mentioned
-in connection with the October number.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These two numbers contain much valuable
-matter and well maintain the reputation
-which the <cite>Theosophist</cite> originally
-gained for itself.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>In THE PATH for October we notice
-especially the following articles:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><cite>Nature’s Scholar</cite>, a most poetically-conceived
-and well-worked-out Idyll, by
-J. C. Ver Plank, in which the underlying
-occult truth is presented to the reader in
-a most attractive form.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Following this is a much needed warning
-against the dangers of <em>Astral Intoxication</em>.
-Admirably expressed, it points out
-the true, and indicates the false, path
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>with great clearness; and we desire to
-call the earnest attention of such of our
-readers as are engaged in <em>psychic</em> development
-to its importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Pilgrim” contributes some further
-<em>Thoughts in Solitude</em>, the leading idea of
-which may be indicated by its concluding
-lines, which are quoted from Sir Philip
-Sydney of heroic fame:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Then farewell, World! thy uttermost I see,</div>
- <div class='line'>Eternal Love, maintain thy life in me!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'><cite>Tea-Table Talk</cite> is even more interesting
-and suggestive than usual, and, besides
-those above mentioned, this well-filled
-number contains Part IV. of the series
-of articles on <cite>The Poetry of Re-incarnation
-in Western Literature</cite>, which
-deals with the <em>Platonic Poets</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The <cite>November</cite> number opens with an
-able continuation of Mr. Brehon’s article
-on <cite>The Bhagavat-Gita</cite>, commenced so
-long ago as last April, of which we hope
-to peruse a further instalment. Following
-this is a short article indicating the term
-“Medium” from the loathsome connotations
-which phenomenal spiritualism has
-attached to it. We then come to a paper
-on Goethe’s <cite>Faust</cite>, read before one
-of the branches of the Theosophical
-Society in America. It is of great interest
-to students of literature and will furnish a
-clue to the real meaning of much of the
-poet’s writing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Johnston makes some most suggestive
-remarks on <cite>Cain and Abel</cite>;
-Harij speaks in no uncertain tones of
-<em>Personalities</em> and Truth, while Hadji
-Erinn points out the <em>Path of Action</em>, and
-warns the members of the T. S. that they
-must not expect their road to become
-easier and plainer before them, while yet
-the society is undergoing the trials of its
-education.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Zadok gives some able answers to
-questions on various points of practical
-occultism and Julius, in <cite>Tea-Table Talk</cite>,
-points out how many people are really
-entering on the path of Theosophy—even
-though unconsciously.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>LE LOTUS, for October and November,
-is even more interesting than usual.
-In the October number are contained two
-very valuable articles. The first of these
-is a paper on Paracelsus from the pen of
-Dr. Hartmann, who is especially qualified
-to handle the subject by his profound
-study of the work, and especially the
-manuscripts, of that great occultist. M.
-“Papus” contributes a most lucid and
-able exposition of some Kabbalistic
-doctrines, the <em>practical</em> value of which
-has been hitherto but little realised even
-by professed students of mysticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The opening article in the November
-issue is headed, <cite>The Constitution of the
-Microcosm</cite>. It is written in a clear and
-attractive style, and contains a most
-thorough and complete explanation of the
-various classifications of the principles
-which enter into the constitution of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Amaravella” has evidently studied the
-whole subject very deeply, and he shows
-the relation of these various classifications
-to one another in a way which
-will clear up many of the misconceptions
-which have arisen.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>M. “Papus” writes on Alchemy in a
-manner which shows how conversant he
-is with this little-understood topic. We
-therefore look forward with great anticipations to
-the perusal of his book “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Traité
-élémentaire de science occulte</cite></span>,” the
-fourth chapter of which contains the
-article referred to.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is very evident that Theosophy is
-making great and rapid progress in
-France, and this is in great measure due
-to the untiring and unselfish devotion of
-the editor of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Le Lotus</i></span>, M. Gaboriau,
-whom we congratulate most warmly on
-the success which has attended his
-efforts.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>L’Aurore</cite></span> for October contains an
-article on the so-called “Star of Bethlehem,”
-which repeats the assurance that
-the world is entering on a new and happier
-life-phase.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Unfortunately, it seems more than
-probable that before this amelioration takes
-place, the world must pass through the
-valley of the shadow of Death, and endure
-calamities far worse than any it has yet
-seen. Lady Caithness continues her
-erudite and interesting article on the lost
-ten tribes of Israel. Her thesis is put
-forward in admirable language, and supported
-by a great wealth of biblical quotations.
-Unfortunately, the task undertaken
-is an impossible one. There never were
-twelve tribes of Israel—two only—Judah
-and the Levites, having had a real existence
-in the flesh. The remainder are but
-euhemerizations of the signs of the Zodiac,
-and were introduced because they were
-necessary to the Kabalistic scheme on
-which the “History” of the Jews was
-written.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Lady Barrogill relates the well-known
-story of an English bishop and the ghost
-of a Catholic priest, who haunted his
-former residence in order to secure the
-destruction of some notes he had taken
-(contrary to the rule of the Church) of an
-important confession which he had heard.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Besides these articles we find the continuation
-of the serial romance, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’amour
-Immortel,</span>” and <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> has to thank
-the editor for the appreciative notice contained
-in this number.</p>
-
-<hr class='c042' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. S. Mark, iv. 11; Matthew, xiii. 11; Luke, viii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. So medicine is, in the Shakespearian use of the word, and also from its Greek
-derivation, not to give drugs, but to cure or heal.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. The discoverer of the new power now known as the Keeley-motor and inter-etheric
-force.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. Co-operative, that is to say, in the sense that the various sections and individual members of
-society shall <em>willingly</em> co-operate, being fully conscious of their interdependance.</p>
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>St. George Lane Fox.</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. Socialists who consider their Christianity to supply them with sufficient motives for their Socialism.
-They do not strictly form a sect either of Socialists or of Christians.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. This word, of course, is employed in the general sense, without any reference to the physical
-character which the revolution may assume. It may be attended with violence, or it may be as
-peaceful as, for instance, the religious revolution accomplished by Constantine in the fourth century.
-All I am postulating is a more or less sudden transformation of the existing social order, effected by
-one of those impulses with which evolution seems to complete its periods, and of which Theosophy
-may some day afford the explanation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. The only kind to which T. B. H.’s remarks are in any way applicable.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r65'>65</a>. I do not, of course, mean to predict that “sin” (or its Theosophical equivalent) would die out.
-It is, after all, a relative matter to the capacities and potentialities of the individual and his surroundings.
-Under Socialism, sensuality, social or plutocratic pride, and other sins fostered by the
-present order, would simply give way to ambition (to obtain popular distinction, <i>e.g.</i>, as an artist or
-inventor) and perhaps to magic and other at present unfashionable vices.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r66'>66</a>. It is somewhat difficult to follow the argument of this passage, unless the meaning of the words
-is explained. The Lion of the House of Judah is equivalent to “the Lord” and to “the Victor”
-mentioned below. In the writer’s phraseology “Victor is the symbol of the Trinity of Wisdom, Love,
-Truth.” Now the Lion is symbolical of Wisdom; but, as it is impossible to sever one element of the
-Trinity from another, it is necessary to remember that whenever the word wisdom is used it carries
-with it the other two as well. The above sentence would then seem to mean the conjunction of the
-male and female principles to effect the purpose of the manifestation of the Trinity above mentioned;
-by which manifestation all ignorance is dispelled. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r67'>67</a>. Judah means <em>praised</em>; the true idea being <em>the Lord be praised</em>. Too much attention cannot be
-paid to the meanings of the words used in the sacred writings of all nations and peoples.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r68'>68</a>. <i>i.e.</i> the Queen, on whose lands <em>the Sun never sets</em>; it must be remembered that—“neither is
-the woman without the man, nor the man without the woman in the Lord.”—(1 Corinthians xi, <a id='corr293.68.2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='11.'>11.)</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_293.68.2'><ins class='correction' title='11.'>11.)</ins></a></span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r69'>69</a>. “And no man can say <em>Jesus is Lord</em> (<i>i.e.</i> Victor), but in the Holy Spirit.”—(1 Corinthians xii., 3,
-Revised Version.) It is especially necessary to remember that whenever allusion is made to Victoria, it
-is not Her Most Gracious Majesty who is meant but the unseen Victoria whose outward manifestation
-the Queen is alleged to be. It is as though the Queen is the mouth-piece of the intelligence behind,
-as the Foreign Secretary may be the mouth-piece of the Foreign policy of the Government. The
-language used is purely symbolical and by using words as symbols an esoteric meaning is attached
-to the most commonplace events in life. It is a truly occult argument, but one which matter-of-fact
-people will regard as nonsensical. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r70'>70</a>. According to the explanations of the writer (<i>v. supra</i>), <em>The World</em> signifies a state of ignorance
-and darkness. Taken in this sense the above sentence becomes a truism. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r71'>71</a>. Ignorance is the equivalent of the Body, which is the Cross. By this light the Wisdom means the
-<a id='corr273.59'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='ife'>life</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_273.59'><ins class='correction' title='ife'>life</ins></a></span> of the Spirit. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r72'>72</a>. To say that Man was created ignorant for a great purpose would argue the idea of a creator,
-according to orthodox ideas. But the writer is known to repudiate this idea entirely. It is difficult,
-therefore, to see what he means, unless it is that the man of flesh was ushered into existence by an
-evolution which he has not yet completed—ignorant, to acquire knowledge gradually. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r73'>73</a>. This is a <em>very</em> optimistic view of the case, and we can only hope to see it realised. The article
-“Signs of the Times” agrees with the views of the writer of this article. There is a development
-going on, but the forces against which it has to contend are too dense for an early realisation of this
-dreamlike Golden Age. It is too good to be true; but that it is possible to help it is also true. The
-Kingdom of Heaven may be taken by violence, and an entrance effected in an instant, but the process
-of attaining the position whence the attack may be delivered, is one extending over years. No student
-of occultism needs to be told this. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r74'>74</a>. David means <em>beloved</em>; he was the first King of Israel, chosen of the Spirit. Israel means <em>one
-who strives with God</em>—<i>i.e.</i> one who strives against ignorance in order that he may be blessed together
-with his posterity. It was a name given to Jacob when he wrestled with the Angel (Genesis xxxii., 28),
-and applies <em>to all</em> who contend on the side of the Deity.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r75'>75</a>. In the writer’s phraseology, Judah is the equivalent of Erin in this case. It becomes exceedingly
-difficult to follow his meaning, for as everything is the equivalent of everything else, we are landed in
-a hopeless maze of paradox. On the principle that there is no truth without a paradox, there must
-be a great truth in this article (as there is), but its disentanglement is a matter of much labour and
-thought. The line of argument is the Judah meaning “be praised”—certain people who praised or
-followed the Lord (or Wisdom) were “oppressed and laid aside <em>their harps</em>.” There are people unjustly
-oppressed in Ireland, not by the outer troubles, but by the causes of the undoubted misery
-which prevails there. Consequently, the daughters of Judah and Erin are equivalent terms and
-interchangeable as symbols. The fact is that the author uses a peculiar cryptogram, as he himself
-states. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r76'>76</a>. See “The Mother, the woman clothed with the Sun,” Vols. I. and II.; and also the celebrated
-picture of “The Woman clothed with the Sun,” by Carl Müller.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r77'>77</a>. <i>i.e.</i>, The Sceptre that endureth.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r78'>78</a>. <cite>Revelation</cite>, xii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r79'>79</a>. The Queen of the South or Zenith (<i>i.e.</i> the most supreme point of the Heavens) who shall rise in
-judgment with this generation (see Matthew xii, 42), She’ba represents two Hebrew words (<i>Shebhā</i>
-and <em>Shebhȧ</em>). The first of these is an obscure term, compared by Gesenius with the Ethiopic for
-“man”; the second signifies an oath or covenant.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r80'>80</a>. <i>i.e.</i>, The Christ, the Messiah.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r81'>81</a>. <i>i.e.</i>, The man of “Sol” or the Sun. Hence, Christians worship on Sunday instead of on the
-Sabbath or on Saturday, as the Jews worship.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r82'>82</a>. <i>i.e.</i>, Theosophy, or the hidden outcome of the hidden wisdom of the ages.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r83'>83</a>. The word χρεών is explained by Herodotus (7. 11. 7.) as that which an oracle declares, and τὸ
-χρεών is given by Plutarch (Nic. 14.) as “fate,” “necessity.” <i>Vide</i> Herod, 7. 215; 5. 108; and
-Sophocles, Phil. 437.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r84'>84</a>. See Liddell and Scott’s Greek-Engl. Lex.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r85'>85</a>. Hence of a <em>Guru</em>, “a teacher,” and <em>chela</em>, a “disciple,” in their mutual relations.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r86'>86</a>. In his recent work—“The Early Days of Christianity,” Canon Farrar remarks:—“Some have
-supposed a pleasant play of words founded on it, as ... between <em>Chréstos</em> (‘sweet’ Ps. xxx., iv., 8)
-and Christos (Christ)” (I. p. 158, <em>foot-note</em>). But there is nothing to suppose, since it <a id='corr299.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='begun'>began</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_299.29'><ins class='correction' title='begun'>began</ins></a></span> by a
-“play of words,” indeed. The name <em>Christus</em> was <em>not</em> “distorted into Chrestus,” as the learned
-author would make his readers believe (p. 19), but it was the adjective and noun <em>Chréstos</em> which
-became distorted into <em>Christus</em>, and applied to Jesus. In a foot-note on the word “Chrestian,”
-occurring in the First Epistle of Peter (chap. iv., 16), in which in the <em>revised</em> later MSS. the word was
-changed into <em>Christian</em>, Canon Farrar remarks again, “Perhaps we should read the ignorant heathen
-distortion, <em>Chréstian</em>.” Most decidedly we should; for the eloquent writer should remember his
-Master’s command to render unto Cæsar that which is Cæsar’s. His dislike notwithstanding, Mr.
-Farrar is obliged to admit that the name <em>Christian</em> was first <span class='fss'>INVENTED</span>, by the sneering, mocking
-Antiochians, as early as A.D. 44, but had not come into general use before the persecution by Nero.
-“Tacitus,” he says, “uses the word Christians with something of apology. It is well known that in
-the N. T. it only occurs three times, and always involves a hostile sense (<cite>Acts</cite> xi. 26, xxvi. 28, as it
-does in iv. 16).” It was not Claudius alone who looked with alarm and suspicion on the Christians,
-so nicknamed in derision for their carnalizing a subjective principle or attribute, but all the pagan
-nations. For Tacitus, speaking of those whom the masses called “Christians,” describes them as a
-set of men <em>detested for their enormities</em> and crimes. No wonder, for history repeats itself. There
-are, no doubt, thousands of noble, sincere, and virtuous <em>Christian-born</em> men and women now. But
-we have only to look at the viciousness of Christian “heathen” converts; at the <em>morality</em> of those
-proselytes in India, whom the missionaries themselves decline to take into their service, to draw a
-parallel between the converts of 1,800 years ago, and the modern heathens “touched <em>by grace</em>.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r87'>87</a>. Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Lactantius, Clemens Alexandrinus, and others spelt it in this way.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r88'>88</a>. <i>Vide</i> Liddell and Scott’s Greek and English Lexicon. <em>Chréstos</em> is really one who is
-continually warned, advised, guided, whether by oracle or prophet. Mr. G. Massey is not correct in
-saying that “... The Gnostic form of the name Chrest, or Chrestos, denotes the <em>Good
-God</em>, not a human original,” for it denoted the latter, <i>i.e.</i>, a good, holy man; but he is quite right
-when he adds that “<em>Chrestianus</em> signifies ... ‘Sweetness and Light.’” “The <em>Chrestoi</em>, as the
-<em>Good People</em>, were pre-extant. Numerous Greek inscriptions show that the departed, the hero,
-the saintly one—that is, the ‘Good’—was styled <em>Chrestos</em>, or the Christ; and from this meaning of
-the ‘Good’ does Justin, the primal apologist, derive the Christian name. This identifies it with the
-Gnostic source, and with the ‘Good God’ who revealed himself according to Marcion—that is, the
-Un-Nefer or Good-opener of the Egyptian theology.”—(<cite>Agnostic Annual.</cite>)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r89'>89</a>. Again I must bring forward what Mr. G. Massey says (whom I quote repeatedly because he has
-studied this subject so thoroughly and so conscientiously).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My contention, or rather explanation,” he says, “is that the author of the Christian name is the
-Mummy-Christ of Egypt, called the <em>Karest</em>, which was a type of the immortal spirit in man, the
-Christ within (as Paul has it), the divine offspring incarnated, the Logos, the Word of Truth, <a id='corr301.1.5'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='th'>the</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_301.1.5'><ins class='correction' title='th'>the</ins></a></span>
-<em>Makheru</em> of Egypt. It did not originate as a mere type! The preserved mummy was the <em>dead <a id='corr301.1.6'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='bod'>body</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_301.1.6'><ins class='correction' title='bod'>body</ins></a></span>
-of any one</em> that was <em>Karest</em>, or mummified, to be kept by the living; and, through constant repetition,
-this became a type of the resurrection from (not of!) the dead.” See the explanation of this
-further on.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r90'>90</a>. Or Lydda. Reference is made here to the Rabbinical tradition in the Babylonian Gemara, called
-<em>Sepher Toledoth Jeshu</em>, about Jesus being the son of one named Pandira, and having lived a century
-earlier than the era called Christian, namely, during the reign of the Jewish king Alexander Jannæus
-and his wife Salome, who reigned from the year 106 to 79 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Accused by the Jews of having
-learned the magic art in Egypt, and of having stolen from the Holy of Holies the Incommunicable
-Name, Jehoshua (Jesus) was put to death by the Sanhedrin at Lud. He was stoned and then crucified
-on a tree, on the eve of Passover. The narrative is ascribed to the Talmudistic authors of “Sota”
-and “Sanhedrin,” p. 19, Book of Zechiel. See “Isis Unveiled,” II. 201; Arnobius; Elephas Levi’s
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Science des Esprits</cite></span>,” and “The Historical Jesus and Mythical Christ,” a lecture by G. Massey.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r91'>91</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><a id='corr302.1.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Christianus'>“Christianus</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_302.1.1'><ins class='correction' title='Christianus'>“Christianus</ins></a></span> quantum interpretatione de unctione deducitas. Sed ut cum perferam Chrestianus
-pronunciatus a vobis (nam nec nominis certa est notitia penes vos) de suavitate vel benignitate compositum
-est.”</span> Canon Farrar makes a great effort to show such <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>lapsus calami</i></span> by various Fathers as
-the results of disgust and fear. “There can be little doubt,” he says (in <cite>The Early Days of
-Christianity</cite>) “that the ... name Christian ... was a nick-name due to the wit of the
-Antiochians.... It is clear that the sacred writers avoided the name (Christians) because it was
-employed by their enemies (Tac. Ann. xv. 44). It only became familiar when the virtues of
-Christians had shed lustre upon it....” This is a very lame excuse, and a poor explanation to give
-for so eminent a thinker as Canon Farrar. As to the “virtues of Christians” ever shedding <em>lustre</em>
-upon the name, let us hope that the writer had in his mind’s eye neither Bishop Cyril, of Alexandria,
-nor Eusebius, nor the Emperor Constantine, of murderous fame, nor yet the Popes Borgia and the
-Holy Inquisition.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r92'>92</a>. Quoted by G. Higgins. (See Vol. I., pp. 569-573.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r93'>93</a>. In the days of Homer, we find this city, once celebrated for its mysteries, the chief seat of Initiation,
-and the name of <em>Chrestos</em> used as a title during the mysteries. It is mentioned in the <cite>Iliad</cite>, ii., 520
-as “Chrisa” (χρῖσα). Dr. Clarke suspected its ruins under the present site of <em>Krestona</em>, a small
-town, or village rather, in Phocis, near the Crissæan Bay. (See E. D. Clarke, 4th ed. Vol. viii.
-p. 239, “Delphi.”)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r94'>94</a>. The root of χρητός (<em>Chretos</em>) and χρηστος (<em>Chrestos</em>) is one and the same; χράω which means
-“consulting the oracle,” in one sense, but in another one “consecrated,” <em>set apart</em>, belonging to
-some temple, or oracle, or devoted to <a id='corr303.2.3'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='oraculer'>oracular</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_303.2.3'><ins class='correction' title='oraculer'>oracular</ins></a></span> services. On the other hand, the word χρε (χρεω)
-means “obligation,” a “bond, duty,” or one who is under the obligation of pledges, or vows
-taken.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r95'>95</a>. The adjective χρηστὸς was also used as an adjective before proper names as a compliment, as
-in Plat. Theact. p. 166A, “Ὁυτος ὁ Σωκράτης ὁ χρηστός;” <a id='corr303.3.3'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='here'>(here</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_303.3.3'><ins class='correction' title='here'>(here</ins></a></span> Socrates is the <em>Chréstos</em>),
-and also as a surname, as shown by Plutarch (V. Phocion), who wonders how such a rough and dull
-fellow as Phocion could be surnamed <em>Chréstos</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r96'>96</a>. There are strange features, quite suggestive, for an Occultist, in the myth (if one) of Janus.
-Some make of him the personification of <em>Kosmos</em>, others, of <em>Cælus</em> (heaven), hence he is “two-faced”
-because of his two characters of spirit and matter; and he is not only “Janus <em>Bifrons</em>” (two-faced),
-but also <em>Quadrifrons</em>—the perfect square, the emblem of the Kabbalistic Deity. His temples were
-built with <em>four</em> equal sides, with a door and <em>three</em> windows on each side. Mythologists explain it as
-an emblem of the <em>four</em> seasons of the year, and <em>three</em> months in each season, and in all of the twelve
-months of the year. During the mysteries of Initiation, however, he became the Day-Sun and the
-Night-Sun. Hence he is often represented with the number 300 in one hand, and in the other 65, or
-the number of days of the Solar year. Now <em>Chanoch</em> (Kanoch and <em>Enosh</em> in the Bible) is, as may
-be shown on Kabalistic authority, whether son of Cain, son of Seth, or the son of Methuselah, one
-and the same personage. As <em>Chanoch</em> (according to Fuerst), he is the <em>Initiator</em>, <em>Instructor</em>—of the
-astronomical circle and solar <a id='corr303.4.12'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>year,”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_303.4.12'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>year,”</ins></a></span> as son of Methuselah, who is said to have lived 365 years and been
-taken to heaven alive, as the representative of the Sun (or god). (See Book of Enoch.) This patriarch
-has many features in common with Janus, who, exoterically, is Ion but <span class='sc'>Iao</span> cabalistically, or Jehovah,
-the “Lord God of Generations,” the mysterious Yodh, or <span class='sc'>One</span> (a phallic number). For Janus or Ion
-is also <em>Consivius, a conserendo</em>, because he presided over generations. He is shown giving hospitality
-to Saturn (<em>Chronos</em> “time”), and is the <em>Initiator</em> of the year, or time divided into 365.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r97'>97</a>. <em>Stauros</em> became the cross, the instrument of crucifixion, far later, when it began to be represented
-as a Christian symbol and with the Greek letter T, the Tau. (Luc. Jud. Voc.) Its primitive meaning was
-phallic, a symbol for the male and female elements; the great serpent of temptation, the body which
-had to be killed or subdued by the dragon of wisdom, the seven-vowelled solar chnouphis or Spirit of
-Christos of the Gnostics, or, again, Apollo killing Python.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r98'>98</a>. Even to this day in India, the candidate loses his name and, as also in Masonry, his age
-(monks and nuns also changing their Christian names at their taking the order or veil), and begins
-counting his years from the day he is accepted a chela and enters upon the cycle of initiations. Thus
-Saul was “a child of one year,” when he began to reign, though a grown-up adult. See 1 Samuel
-ch. xiii. 1, and Hebrew scrolls, about his initiation by Samuel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r99'>99</a>. Demosthenes, “De Corona,” 313, declares that the candidates for <a id='corr305.2.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='intitiation'>initiation</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_305.2.1'><ins class='correction' title='intitiation'>initiation</ins></a></span> into the Greek
-mysteries were anointed with oil. So they are now in India, even in the initiation into the <em>Yogi</em>
-mysteries—various ointments or unguents being used.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r100'>100</a>. <i>Because he is cabalistically the new Adam, the “celestial man,” and Adam was made of red
-earth.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r101'>101</a>. Hence the memorialising of the doctrine during the <span class='fss'>MYSTERIES</span>. The pure monad, the “god”
-incarnating and becoming <em>Chrestos</em>, or man, on his trial of life, a series of those trials led him to the
-<em>crucifixion of flesh</em>, and finally into the Christos condition.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r102'>102</a>. On the best authority the derivation of the Greek <em>Christos</em> is shown from the Sanskrit root
-<em>ghársh</em> = “rub”; thus: <i>ghársh-ā-mi-to</i>, “to rub,” and ghársh-tá-s “flayed, sore.” Moreover, Krish,
-which means in one sense to plough and make furrows, means also to cause pain, “to torture to
-torment,” and ghrsh-tā-s “rubbing”—all these terms relating to Chrestos and Christos conditions.
-One has <em>to die in Chrestos</em>, <i>i.e.</i>, kill one’s personality and its passions, to blot out every idea of
-separateness from one’s “Father,” the Divine Spirit in man; to become one with the eternal and absolute
-<em>Life</em> and <em>Light</em> (<span class='sc'>Sat</span>) before one can reach the glorious state of <em>Christos</em>, the regenerated man, the
-man in spiritual freedom.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r103'>103</a>. The Orientalists and Theologians are invited to read over and study the allegory of Viswakarman,
-the “Omnificent,” the Vedic God, the architect of the world, who sacrificed himself <em>to himself</em> or the
-world, after having offered up all worlds, <em>which are himself</em>, in a “Sarva Madha” (general sacrifice)—and
-ponder over it. In the Purânic allegory, his daughter <em>Yoga-siddha</em> “Spiritual consciousness,”
-the wife of <em>Surya</em>, the Sun, complains to him of the too great effulgence of her husband; and Viswakarmâ,
-in his character of <em>Takshaka</em>, “wood cutter and carpenter,” placing the Sun upon his lathe cuts
-away a part of his brightness. Surya looks, after this, crowned with dark thorns instead of rays, and
-becomes Vikarttana (“shorn of his rays”). All these names are terms which were used by the candidates
-when going through the trials of Initiation. The Hierophant-Initiator personated Viswakarman; the
-father, and the general <em>artificer</em> of the gods (the adepts on earth), and the candidate-Surya, the
-Sun, who had to kill all his fiery passions and wear the crown of thorns <em>while crucifying his body</em>
-before he could rise and be re-born into a new life as the glorified “Light of the World”—Christos.
-No Orientalist seems to have ever perceived the suggestive analogy, let alone to apply it!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f104'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r104'>104</a>. The author of the “Source of Measures” thinks that this “serves to explain why it has been that
-the <em>Life of Apollonius of Tyana, by Philostratus</em> has been so carefully kept back from translation and
-popular reading.” Those who have studied it in the original have been forced to the comment that
-either the “<cite>Life of Apollonius</cite> has been taken from the New Testament, or that New Testament
-narratives have been taken from the <cite>Life of Apollonius</cite>, because of the manifest sameness of the
-<em>means of construction</em> of the narrative.” (p. 260).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r105'>105</a>. <a id='corr309.2.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“The'>The</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_309.2.1'><ins class='correction' title='“The'>The</ins></a></span> word שיה <em>shiac</em>, is in Hebrew the same word as a verbal, signifying <em>to go down into the pit</em>.
-As a noun, <em>place of thorns, pit</em>. The <em>hifil</em> participle of this word is [Hebrew] or Messiach, or the Greek
-<em>Messias</em>, <em>Christ</em>, and means “he who causes to go down into the pit” (or hell, in dogmatism). In
-esoteric philosophy, this going down <em>into the pit</em> has the most mysterious significance. The Spirit
-“Christos” or rather the “Logos” (<em>read</em> Logoï), is said to “go down into the pit,” when it incarnates
-in flesh, <em>is born as a man</em>. After having robbed the <em>Elohim</em> (or gods) of their secret, the <em>pro-creating</em>
-“fire of life,” the Angels of Light are shown cast down into the pit or abyss of matter, called <em>Hell</em>, or
-the bottomless pit, by the kind theologians. This, in Cosmogony and Anthropology. During the
-Mysteries, however, it is the <em>Chréstos</em>, <em>neophyte</em>, (as man), etc., who had to descend into the crypts
-of Initiation and trials; and finally, during the “Sleep of Siloam” or the final <em>trance</em> condition,
-during the hours of which the new Initiate has the last and final mysteries of being divulged to him.
-Hades, Schéol, or Patala, are all one. The same takes place in the East now, as took place 2,000
-years ago in the West, during the <span class='sc'>Mysteries</span>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r106'>106</a>. Several classics bear testimony to this fact. Lucian, c. 16, says Φωκίων ὁ χρηστὸς, and Φωκίων
-ὁ ἐπὶκλην (<a id='corr310.19'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='λεγόμενος,”'>“λεγόμενος,”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_310.19'><ins class='correction' title='λεγόμενος,”'>“λεγόμενος,”</ins></a></span> surnamed “χρηστος.”) In Phædr. p. 226 E, it is written, “you mean
-Theodorus the Chrestos.” “Τὸν χρηστὸν λεγεις Θεὸδωρον”. Plutarch shows the same; and Χρηστος—Chrestus,
-is the proper name (see the word in <cite>Thesaur.</cite> Steph.) of an orator and disciple of Herodes
-Atticus.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r107'>107</a>. Mr. Keightley’s meaning (and it is difficult for the words to bear any other interpretation) was
-that the denial of harmony is evidence that, at some previous time, the man who denies has set himself
-in opposition to the law, in virtue of those very desires and instincts of his animal personality to
-which Mr. Beatty alludes later on. In this sense, Mr. Beatty is right in saying that a law of the
-universe cannot be broken; but its limits may be transgressed, and consequently an attempt made by
-man to make himself into a small, but rival universe. It is the old story of the china pot and the
-iron kettle, and the fact that china gets the worst of it is conclusive that the china is struggling <em>against</em>
-Nature.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r108'>108</a>. Will Mr. Beatty explain the phenomenon of a comet flirting its tail round the sun in defiance of
-the “<em>law</em> of gravitation”?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r109'>109</a>. Very little doubt that it does. Mankind is only very gradually developing its fifth sense on the
-intellectual plane. Intuition might have carried our critic over the difficulty, but in some parts of
-his criticism he seems hardly to have begun to evolute the intellectual sense.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r110'>110</a>. “This Karma,” as Mr. Beatty expresses it, would not be quite so bewildering a subject if critics
-would bear in mind the context and not fall foul of a detached expression—not even a sentence. The
-“interest of the soul’s welfare in heaven” is concentrated by John Smith on John Smith as John Smith
-in heaven, and in order that the said John Smith may go on enjoying the things he loved on earth.
-As his earth life has ended, John Smith has changed and is “transient.” If he were not transient
-a very natural inference would follow, that progress, evolution, &amp;c., on whatever plane of being does
-not prevail.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r111'>111</a>. Mr. Beatty hardly maintains his position of consistent materialism here; and it is at least as
-vainglorious to deny as to assert.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r112'>112</a>. Man has the “animal” in him of course, but he has also the power of judgment or discrimination.
-Mr. Beatty’s wish to be critically pessimistic seems here to run away with his power of discrimination.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r113'>113</a>. No law of Nature can be set aside, but a man <em>transgresses</em> a law of his [mental] being when he
-deliberately places himself under the sway of certain “evil” forces. The gist of Mr. Beatty’s
-criticism is not quite evident here.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f114'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r114'>114</a>. The <em>phenomenal</em> contrast is not denied, but it is representative of no fundamental want of
-harmony. In the same way the contrast of Subject and Object is essential to our present finite
-consciousness, although it has no basis of reality beyond the limits of conditional being. Moreover,
-even in this phenomenal Universe, equilibrium (harmony) is most certainly maintained by the very
-conflict of the contrasted forces alluded to.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f115'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r115'>115</a>. Mr. Beatty asks how the Universe would come to a stand-still, if the law of Harmony was
-suspended. Now suppose, for instance, the law of “gravity” was not <em>counterbalanced</em> by the action
-of other “forces,” what would happen? Science assures us that everything would have long before
-gravitated to a common centre, and a universal dead-lock have ensued! <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Vice versa</i></span>, if “gravity”
-were to lapse. <cite>Verb. Sap.</cite></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f116'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r116'>116</a>. Yet, unless <em>metaphysical</em> speculation comes to the rescue of the new philosophy, and, completing,
-explains it on the old Vedantic lines, the “circle,” instead of being a “self-sustaining” one, is more
-than likely to become a—“vicious circle.”—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f117'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r117'>117</a>. We know but two cases of <em>married</em> “chelas” being accepted; but both these were Brahmins and
-had <em>child-wives</em>, according to Hindu custom, and they were <em>Reformers</em> more than <em>chelas</em>, trying to abrogate
-child-marriage and slavery. Others had to obtain the consent of their wives before entering the
-“Path,” as is usual in India since long ages.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f118'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r118'>118</a>. This rule 1. applies only to the “temple chelas,” who must be <em>perfect</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f119'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r119'>119</a>. Or one, if the other is dead.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f120'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r120'>120</a>. See “<a href='#esoteric1'>The Esoteric Character of the Gospels</a>,” in this number.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f121'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r121'>121</a>. “<span class='sc'>Auto-Centricism</span>, or, <cite>The Brain
-Theory of Life and Mind</cite>,” p. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f122'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r122'>122</a>. This modest assumption is followed by the
-generous promise to furnish “investigators of the
-same order” as the supposed “Sibyl,” with “a
-still more profound theosophy.” This is extremely
-considerate and kind. But if it is <em>Pistis-Sophia</em>
-which the author had in his mind, then he
-had better apply to Theosophists for the explanation
-of the most recondite points in that gnostic
-fragment, while translating it, as he proposes
-doing from Latin. For though the world of the
-Orientalists “of the same order” as <em>himself</em>, may
-labour under the mistaken impression that no
-one except themselves knew or know anything
-about <em>Pistis-Sophia</em> till 1853—Theosophists know
-better. Does Mr. King really imagine that no
-one besides himself knows anything about the
-Gnostics “and their remains,” or what <em>he</em> knows
-is the only correct thing to know? Strange
-delusion, if so; yet quite a harmless one, we
-confess.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f123'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r123'>123</a>. Astoreth-Diana, Isis, Melita, Venus, etc.,
-etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f124'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r124'>124</a>. Because the stars and planets are the symbols
-and houses of Angels and Elohim, who were,
-of course, “created,” or evoluted before the
-physical or cosmic sun or moon. “The sun god
-was called the child of the moon god Sin, in Assyria,
-and the lunar god Taht, is called the father of
-Osiris, the sun god ‘in Egypt.’” (G. Massey.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>
- <h2 id='No_5' class='c006' title='LUCIFER Vol. I No. 5 January 15th, 1888'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c043'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Vol. I.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON, JANUARY <span class='fss'>15TH</span>, 1888.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 5.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c043'>
- <div><span class="blackletter"><span class='xlarge'>1888.</span></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>People usually wish that their friends shall have a happy new
-year, and sometimes “prosperous” is added to “happy.” It is
-not likely that much happiness or prosperity can come to those
-who are living for the truth under such a dark number as 1888; but
-still the year is heralded by the glorious star Venus-Lucifer, shining so
-resplendently that it has been mistaken for that still rarer visitor, the
-star of Bethlehem. This too, is at hand; and surely something of the
-Christos spirit must be born upon earth under such conditions. Even if
-happiness and prosperity are absent, it is possible to find something
-greater than either in this coming year. Venus-Lucifer is the sponsor
-of our magazine, and as we chose to come to light under its auspices, so
-do we desire to touch on its nobility. This is possible for us all
-personally, and instead of wishing our readers a happy or prosperous
-New Year, we feel more in the vein to pray them to make it one worthy
-of its brilliant herald. This can be effected by those who are courageous
-and resolute. Thoreau pointed out that there are artists in life, persons
-who can change the colour of a day and make it beautiful to those with
-whom they come in contact. We claim that there are adepts, masters
-in life who make it divine, as in all other arts. Is it not the greatest art
-of all, this which affects the very atmosphere in which we live? That
-it is the most important is seen at once, when we remember that every
-person who draws the breath of life affects the mental and moral
-atmosphere of the world, and helps to colour the day for those about
-him. Those who do not help to elevate the thoughts and lives of others
-must of necessity either paralyse them by indifference, or actively drag
-them down. When this point is reached, then the art of life is converted
-into the science of death; we see the black magician at work. And no
-one can be quite inactive. Although many bad books and pictures are
-produced, still not everyone who is incapable of writing or painting well
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>insists on doing so badly. Imagine the result if they were to! Yet so
-it is in life. Everyone lives, and thinks, and speaks. If all our readers
-who have any sympathy with <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> endeavoured to learn the art
-of making life not only beautiful but divine, and vowed no longer to be
-hampered by disbelief in the possibility of this miracle, but to commence
-the Herculean task at once, then 1888, however unlucky a year, would
-have been fitly ushered in by the gleaming star. Neither happiness nor
-prosperity are always the best of bedfellows for such undeveloped
-mortals as most of us are; they seldom bring with them peace, which is
-the only permanent joy. The idea of peace is usually connected with
-the close of life and a religious state of mind. That kind of peace will
-however generally be found to contain the element of expectation. The
-pleasures of this world have been surrendered, and the soul waits
-contentedly in expectation of the pleasures of the next. The peace of
-the philosophic mind is very different from this and can be attained to
-early in life when pleasure has scarcely been tasted, as well as when it
-has been fully drunk of. The American Transcendentalists discovered
-that life could be made a sublime thing without any assistance from
-circumstances or outside sources of pleasure and prosperity. Of course
-this had been discovered many times before, and Emerson only took up
-again the cry raised by Epictetus. But every man has to discover this
-fact freshly for himself, and when once he has realised it he knows that
-he would be a wretch if he did not endeavour to make the possibility a
-reality in his own life. The stoic became sublime because he recognised
-his own absolute responsibility and did not try to evade it; the Transcendentalist
-was even more, because he had faith in the unknown and
-untried possibilities which lay within himself. The occultist fully
-recognises the responsibility and claims his title by having both tried
-and acquired knowledge of his own possibilities. The Theosophist who
-is at all in earnest, sees his responsibility and endeavours to find knowledge,
-living, in the meantime, up to the highest standard of which he is
-aware. To all such <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> gives greeting! Man’s life is in his own
-hands, his fate is ordered by himself. Why then should not 1888 be a
-year of greater spiritual development than any we have lived through?
-It depends on ourselves to make it so. This is an actual fact, not a
-religious sentiment. In a garden of sunflowers every flower turns
-towards the light. Why not so with us?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And let no one imagine that it is a mere fancy, the attaching of
-importance to the birth of the year. The earth passes through its
-definite phases and man with it; and as a day can be coloured so can a
-year. The astral life of the earth is young and strong between
-Christmas and Easter. Those who form their wishes now will have
-added strength to fulfil them consistently.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>TO THE MORNING STAR.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Lucifer, Lucifer Son of the Morning,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Trembling and fair on the opening skies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Heralding, truly, a day that is dawning,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Telling the “Light of the World” shall arise.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Lucifer, Lucifer, all through the Ages</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Weary hearts struggled and watched for the light,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now it is coming, and thou the forerunner,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Mystical prophet, the herald of Right.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>There in the desert of Night where thou dwellest,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Round thee in myriads the feebler lights stand;</div>
- <div class='line'>Lucifer, Lucifer, ever thou tellest</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The glorious Kingdom of Right is at hand.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Rising and setting, O, Star of the Morning!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Strangely prophetic, thou atom of light;</div>
- <div class='line'>Revealing in silence the law of creation.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Out from the unseen abyss of the night,</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Into a world where the stars, sympathetic,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Seem to be fraught with a pulsating breath;</div>
- <div class='line'>Brilliant, yet shining like tear-drops pathetic,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>But sinking at last in oblivion of death!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Sinking, but wrapped in the shroud of the Morning,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Folded in splendour as light shall arise;</div>
- <div class='line'>Lucifer, herald of Truth that is dawning,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Ride through thy glorious pathway, the skies!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Soon in the east, with a splendour triumphant,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Morning shall break like a great altar-fire,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ignorance, darkness, and gross superstition,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Shall melt in its beams, and in silence expire!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Helen Fagg.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>.... “<span class='sc'>The</span> faith that you call sacred—‘sacred as the most delicate or manly or
-womanly sentiment of love and honour’—is the faith that nearly all of your fellow men
-are to be lost. Ought an honest man to be restrained from denouncing that faith because
-those who entertain it say that their feelings are hurt? You say to me: ‘There
-is a hell. A man advocating the opinions you advocate will go there when he dies.’ I
-answer: ‘There is no hell, the Bible that teaches it is not true.’ And you say: ‘How
-can you hurt my feelings?’”—<span class='sc'>R. G. Ingersoll.</span>—<cite>Secular Review.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>“TO THE READERS OF ‘LUCIFER.’”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>Our magazine is only four numbers old, and already its young life
-is full of cares and trouble. This is all as it should be; <i>i.e.</i>, like
-every other publication, it must fail to satisfy <em>all</em> its readers, and
-this is only in the nature of things and the destiny of every printed organ.
-But what seems a little strange in a country of culture and freethought
-is that <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> should receive such a number of <em>anonymous</em>, spiteful,
-and often abusive letters. This, of course, is but a casual remark, the
-waste-basket in the office being the only addressee and sufferer in this
-case; yet it suggests strange truths with regard to human nature.<a id='r125' /><a href='#f125' class='c013'><sup>[125]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sincerity is true wisdom, it appears, only to the mind of the moral
-philosopher. It is rudeness and insult to him who regards dissimulation
-and deceit as culture and politeness, and holds that the shortest, easiest,
-and safest way to success is to let sleeping dogs and old customs alone.
-But, if the dogs are obstructing the highway to progress and truth, and
-Society will, as a rule, reject the wise words of (St.) Augustine, who
-recommends that “no man should prefer custom before reason and
-truth,” is it a sufficient cause for the philanthropist to walk out of, or
-even deviate from, the track of truth, because the selfish egoist chooses
-to do so? Very true, as remarked somewhere by Sir Thomas Browne
-that not every man is a proper champion for the truth, nor fit to take
-up the gauntlet in its cause. Too many of such defenders are apt, from
-inconsideration and too much zeal, to charge the troops of error so
-rashly that they “remain themselves as trophies to the enemies of truth.”
-Nor ought all of us (members of the Theosophical Society) to do
-so personally, but rather leave it only to those among our numbers
-who have voluntarily and beforehand sacrificed their personalities
-for the cause of Truth. Thus teaches us one of the Masters of Wisdom
-in some fragments of advice which are published further on for the
-benefit of the Theosophists (see the article that follows this). While
-enforcing upon such public characters in our ranks as editors, and
-lecturers, etc., the duty of telling fearlessly “the Truth to the face of <span class='fss'>LIE</span>,”
-he yet condemns the habit of private judgment and criticism in every
-individual Theosophist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Unfortunately, these are not the ways of the public and readers.
-Since our journal is entirely unsectarian, since it is neither theistic
-nor atheistic, Pagan nor Christian, orthodox nor heterodox, therefore, its
-editors discover eternal verities in the most opposite religious systems
-and modes of thought. Thus <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> fails to give full satisfaction to
-either infidel or Christian. In the sight of the former—whether he be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>an Agnostic, a Secularist, or an Idealist—to find divine or occult lore
-underlying “the rubbish” in the Jewish Bible and Christian Gospels is
-sickening; in the opinion of the latter, to recognise the same truth as in
-the Judeo-Christian Scriptures in the Hindu, Parsi, Buddhist, or
-Egyptian religious literature, is vexation of spirit and blasphemy.
-Hence, fierce criticism from both sides, sneers and abuse. Each party
-would have us on its own sectarian side, recognising as truth, only that
-which its particular <em>ism</em> does.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But this cannot nor shall it be. Our motto was from the first, and ever
-shall be: “<span class='sc'>There is no Religion higher than—Truth</span>.” Truth
-we search for, and, once found, we bring it forward before the world,
-whencesoever it comes. A large majority of our readers is fully satisfied
-with this our policy, and that is plainly sufficient for our purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is evident that when toleration is not the outcome of indifference
-it must arise from wide-spreading charity and large-minded sympathy.
-Intolerance is preeminently the consequence of ignorance and jealousy.
-He who fondly believes that he has got the great ocean in his family
-water-jug is naturally intolerant of his neighbour, who also is pleased to
-imagine that he has poured the broad expanses of the sea of truth into
-his own particular pitcher. But anyone who, like the Theosophists knows
-how infinite is that ocean of eternal wisdom, to be fathomed by no one
-man, class, or party, and realizes how little the largest vessel made by man
-contains in comparison to what lies dormant and still unperceived in
-its dark, bottomless depths, cannot help but be tolerant. For he sees
-that others have filled their little water-jugs at the same great
-reservoir in which he has dipped his own, and if the water in the
-various pitchers seems different to the eye, it can only be because it
-is discoloured by impurities that were in the vessel before the pure
-crystalline element—a portion of the one eternal and immutable truth—entered
-into it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is, and can be, but one absolute truth in Kosmos. And little as
-we, with our present limitations, can understand it in its essence, we still
-know that if it is absolute it must also be omnipresent and universal;
-and that in such case, it must be underlying every world-religion—the
-product of the thought and knowledge of numberless generations of
-thinking men. Therefore, that a portion of truth, great or small, is
-found in every religious and philosophical system, and that if we would
-find it, we have to search for it at the origin and source of every such
-system, at its roots and first growth, not in its later overgrowth of
-sects and dogmatism. Our object is not to destroy any religion but
-rather to help to filter each, thus ridding them of their respective
-impurities. In this we are opposed by all those who maintain, against
-evidence, that their particular pitcher alone contains the whole ocean.
-How is our great work to be done if we are to be impeded and harassed
-on every side by partisans and zealots? It would be already half
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>accomplished were the intelligent men, at least, of every sect and system,
-to feel and to confess that the little wee bit of truth they themselves
-own must necessarily be mingled with error, and that their neighbours'
-mistakes are, like their own, mixed with truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Free discussion, temperate, candid, undefiled by personalities and
-animosity, is, we think, the most efficacious means of getting rid of
-error and bringing out the underlying truth; and this applies to publications
-as well as to persons. It is open to a magazine to be tolerant or
-intolerant; it is open to it to err in almost every way in which an
-individual can err; and since every publication of the kind has a
-responsibility such as falls to the lot of few individuals, it behoves it
-to be ever on its guard, so that it may advance without fear and without
-reproach. All this is true in a special degree in the case of a theosophical
-publication, and <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> feels that it would be unworthy of that
-designation were it not true to the profession of the broadest tolerance
-and catholicity, even while pointing out to its brothers and neighbours
-the errors which they indulge in and follow. While thus keeping strictly,
-in its editorials, and in articles by its individual editors, to the spirit and
-teachings of pure theosophy, it nevertheless frequently gives room
-to articles and letters which diverge widely from the esoteric
-teachings accepted by the editors, as also by the majority of theosophists.
-Readers, therefore, who are accustomed to find in magazines
-and party publications only such opinions and arguments as the editor
-believes to be unmistakably orthodox—from his peculiar standpoint—must
-not condemn any article in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> with which they are not
-entirely in accord, or in which expressions are used that may be offensive
-from a sectarian or a <em>prudish</em> point of view, on the ground that such are
-unfitted for a theosophical magazine. They should remember that
-precisely because <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> is a theosophical magazine, it opens its
-columns to writers whose views of life and things may not only slightly
-differ from its own, but even be diametrically opposed to the opinion of
-the editors. The object of the latter is to elicit truth, not to advance
-the interest of any particular <em>ism</em>, or to pander to any hobbies, likes or
-dislikes, of any class of readers. It is only snobs and prigs who, disregarding
-the truth or error of the idea, cavil and strain merely over
-the expressions and words it is couched in. Theosophy, if meaning
-anything, means truth; and truth has to deal indiscriminately and in
-the same spirit of impartiality with vessels of honour and of dishonour
-alike. No theosophical publication would ever dream of adopting
-the coarse—or shall we say terribly sincere—language of a Hosea or a
-Jeremiah; yet so long as those holy prophets are found in the Christian
-Bible, and the Bible is in every respectable, pious family, whether
-aristocratic or plebeian; and so long as the Bible is read with bowed
-head and in all reverence by young, innocent maidens and school-boys,
-why should our Christian critics fall foul of any phrase which may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>have to be used—if truth be spoken at all—in an occasional article
-upon a scientific subject? It is to be feared that the same sentences
-now found objectionable, because referring to Biblical subjects, would
-be loudly praised and applauded had they been directed against any
-gentile system of faith (<em>Vide certain missionary organs</em>). A little charity,
-gentle readers—charity, and above all—<em>fairness</em> and <span class='fss'>JUSTICE</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Justice demands that when the reader comes across an article in this
-magazine which does not immediately approve itself to his mind by
-chiming in with his own peculiar ideas, he should regard it as a problem
-to solve rather than as a mere subject of criticism. Let him endeavour
-to learn the lesson which only opinions differing from his own can teach
-him. <em>Let him be tolerant, if not actually charitable</em>, and postpone
-his judgment till he extracts from the article the truth it must contain,
-adding this new acquisition to his store. One ever learns more from
-one’s enemies than from one’s friends; and it is only when the reader
-has credited this hidden truth to <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, that he can fairly presume
-to put what he believes to be the errors of the article, he does not like,
-to the debit account.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator6.png' alt='decorative' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>ADAPTATIONS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>We have been asked to give permission for Mr. Gerald Massey’s lines on
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, Lady of Light, to be “adapted” and sung to the “Lord Jesus Christ”
-in a chapel. This is flattering for both parties concerned. The editors have
-no objection, but Mr. Massey is obdurate enough to refuse his permission and
-sufficiently unfeeling to have called the pretty “adaptation” a <span class='fss'>PARODY</span>. The
-“Lady of Light” was to have run in this wise:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Star of the Day and the Night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Star of the Dark that is dying,</div>
- <div class='line'>Star of the Dawn that is nighing,</div>
- <div class='line'>Jesu, our Saviour, our Light!” etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>But how truly appropriate it would be if Mr. Massey’s lines on Shakspeare
-were also “adapted” and applied to the Lord Buddha.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“FOR HIM NO MARTYR-FIRES HAVE BLAZED,</div>
- <div class='line'>NO RACK BEEN USED, NOR SCAFFOLDS RAISED;</div>
- <div class='line'>FOR HIM NO LIFE WAS EVER SHED</div>
- <div class='line'>TO MAKE THE CONQUEROR’S PATHWAY RED.</div>
- <div class='line'>OUR PRINCE OF PEACE IN GLORY HATH GONE,</div>
- <div class='line'>WITHOUT A SINGLE SWORD BEING DRAWN;</div>
- <div class='line'>WITHOUT ONE BATTLE-FLAG UNFURLED,</div>
- <div class='line'>TO MAKE HIS CONQUEST OF OUR WORLD.</div>
- <div class='line'>AND FOR ALL TIME HE WEARS HIS CROWN</div>
- <div class='line'>OF LASTING, LIMITLESS, RENOWN;</div>
- <div class='line'>HE REIGNS WHATEVER MONARCHS FALL,</div>
- <div class='line'>HIS THRONE IS AT THE HEART OF ALL.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>SOME WORDS ON DAILY LIFE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'>(<i>Written by a Master of Wisdom.</i>)</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>“It is divine philosophy alone, the spiritual and psychic blending of
-man with nature, which, by revealing the fundamental truths
-that lie hidden under the objects of sense and perception, can
-promote a spirit of unity and harmony in spite of the great diversities
-of conflicting creeds. Theosophy, therefore, expects and demands from
-the Fellows of the Society a great mutual toleration and charity for
-each other’s shortcomings, ungrudging mutual help in the search for
-truths in every department of nature—moral and physical. And this
-ethical standard must be unflinchingly applied to daily life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Theosophy should not represent merely a collection of moral verities,
-a bundle of metaphysical ethics, epitomized in theoretical dissertations.
-Theosophy <em>must be made practical</em>; and it has, therefore, to be disencumbered
-of useless digressions, in the sense of desultory orations
-and fine talk. Let every Theosophist only do his duty, that which he
-can and ought to do, and very soon the sum of human misery, within
-and around the areas of every Branch of your Society, will be found
-visibly diminished. Forget <span class='sc'>Self</span> in working for others—and the task
-will become an easy and a light one for you....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do not set your pride in the appreciation and acknowledgment of
-that work by others. Why should any member of the Theosophical
-Society, striving to become a Theosophist, put any value upon his
-neighbours’ good or bad opinion of himself and his work, so long as he
-himself knows it to be useful and beneficent to other people? Human
-praise and enthusiasm are short-lived at best; the laugh of the scoffer
-and the condemnation of the indifferent looker-on are sure to follow, and
-generally to out-weigh the admiring praise of the friendly. Do not
-despise the opinion of the world, nor provoke it uselessly to unjust
-criticism. Remain rather as indifferent to the abuse as to the praise of
-those who can never know you as you really are, and who ought, therefore,
-to find you unmoved by either, and ever placing the approval or condemnation
-of your own <em>Inner Self</em> higher than that of the multitudes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Those of you who would know yourselves in the spirit of truth, learn
-to live alone even amidst the great crowds which may sometimes surround
-you. Seek communion and intercourse only with the God within your
-own soul; heed only the praise or blame of that deity which can never
-be separated from your <em>true</em> self, <em>as it is verily that God itself</em>: called
-the <span class='sc'>Higher Consciousness</span>. Put without delay your good intentions
-into practice, never leaving a single one to remain only an intention—expecting,
-meanwhile, neither reward nor even acknowledgment for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>the good you may have done. Reward and acknowledgment are in yourself
-and inseparable from you, as it is your Inner Self alone which can
-appreciate them at their true degree and value. For each one of you
-contains within the precincts of his inner tabernacle the Supreme Court—prosecutor,
-defence, jury and judge—whose sentence is the only one
-without appeal; since none can know you better than you do yourself,
-when once you have learned to judge that Self by the never wavering light
-of the inner divinity—your higher <span class='sc'>Consciousness</span>. Let, therefore, the
-masses, which can never know your true selves, condemn your outer
-selves according to their own false lights....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The majority of the public Areopagus is generally composed of self-appointed
-judges, who have never made a permanent deity of any idol
-save their own personalities—their lower selves; for those who try
-in their walk in life, to follow their <em>inner light</em> will never be found
-judging, far less condemning, those weaker than themselves. What does
-it matter then, whether the former condemn or praise, whether they
-humble you or exalt you on a pinnacle? They will never comprehend
-you one way or the other. They may make an idol of you, so long as
-they imagine you a faithful mirror of themselves on the pedestal or
-altar which they have reared for you, and while you amuse or benefit
-them. You cannot expect to be anything for them but a temporary
-<em>fetish</em>, succeeding another fetish just overthrown, and followed in your
-turn by another idol. Let, therefore, those who have created that idol
-destroy it whenever they like, casting it down with as little cause as they
-had for setting it up. Your Western Society can no more live without
-its Khalif of an hour than it can worship one for any longer period; and
-whenever it breaks an idol and then besmears it with mud, it is not the
-model, but the disfigured image created by its own foul fancy and which
-it has endowed with its own vices, that Society dethrones and breaks.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Theosophy can only find objective expression in an all-embracing
-code of life, thoroughly impregnated with the spirit of mutual tolerance,
-charity, and brotherly love. Its Society, as a body, has a task before it
-which, unless performed with the utmost discretion, will cause the world
-of the indifferent and the selfish to rise up in arms against it. Theosophy
-has to fight intolerance, prejudice, ignorance, and selfishness,
-hidden under the mantle of hypocrisy. It has to throw all the light it
-can from the torch of Truth, with which its servants are entrusted. It
-must do this without fear or hesitation, dreading neither reproof nor
-condemnation. Theosophy, through its mouthpiece, the Society, has to
-tell the <span class='sc'>Truth</span> to the very face of <span class='sc'>Lie</span>; to beard the tiger in its den,
-without thought or fear of evil consequences, and to set at defiance
-calumny and threats. <em>As an Association</em>, it has not only the right, but
-the duty to uncloak vice and do its best to redress wrongs, whether
-through the voice of its chosen lecturers or the printed word of its
-journals and publications—making its accusations, however, as impersonal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>as possible. But its Fellows, or Members, have <em>individually</em> no such
-right. Its followers have, first of all, to set the example of a firmly outlined
-and as firmly applied morality, before they obtain the right to
-point out, even in a spirit of kindness, the absence of a like ethic unity
-and singleness of purpose in other associations or individuals. No
-Theosophist should blame a brother, whether within or outside of the
-association; neither may he throw a slur upon another’s actions or
-denounce him, lest he himself lose the right to be considered a Theosophist.
-For, as such, he has to turn away his gaze from the imperfections
-of his neighbour, and centre rather his attention upon his own
-shortcomings, in order to correct them and become wiser. Let him not
-show the disparity between claim and action in another, but, whether
-in the case of a brother, a neighbour, or simply a fellow man, let him
-rather ever help one weaker than himself on the arduous walk of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The problem of true Theosophy and its great mission are, first, the
-working out of clear unequivocal conceptions of ethic ideas and duties,
-such as shall best and most fully satisfy the right and altruistic feelings
-in men; and second, the modelling of these conceptions for their adaptation
-into such forms of daily life, as shall offer a field where they may
-be applied with most equitableness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Such is the common work placed before all who are willing to act
-on these principles. It is a laborious task, and will require strenuous
-and persevering exertion; but it must lead you insensibly to progress,
-and leave you no room for any selfish aspirations outside the limits
-traced.... Do not indulge personally in unbrotherly comparison
-between the task accomplished by yourself and the work left undone by
-your neighbours or brothers. In the fields of Theosophy <em>none is held
-to weed out a larger plot of ground than his strength and capacity will
-permit him</em>. Do not be too severe on the merits or demerits of one
-who seeks admission among your ranks, as the truth about the actual
-state of the inner man can only be known to Karma, and can be dealt
-with justly by that all-seeing <span class='sc'>Law</span> alone. Even the simple presence
-amidst you of a well-intentioned and sympathising individual may help
-you magnetically.... You are the free volunteer workers on the fields
-of Truth, and as such must leave no obstruction on the paths leading to
-that field.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“<em>The degree of success or failure are the landmarks the masters have to
-follow, as they will constitute the barriers placed with your own hands
-between yourselves and those whom you have asked to be your teachers.
-The nearer your approach to the goal contemplated—the shorter the distance
-between the student and the Master.</em>”</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>
- <h3 id='blossom5' class='c018'><span class="blackletter">THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN</i>.</div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Mabel Collins.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER VII.</h4>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The cloud lifted to reveal Fleta’s face. She was bending over him;
-she was at his side; she was almost leaning her face on his.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My dear, my dear,” she said in a soft whispering voice, “has
-the blow been too great? Tell me, Hilary, speak to me? Have you
-still your senses?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And you love that man?” was Hilary’s sole answer, fixing his eyes
-in a cold strange gaze on her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh! Hilary, you talk of what is unknown to you! I love him, yes,
-and with a love so profound it is unimaginable to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And you tell me this! You tell this to the man who loves you, and
-who has already devoted his whole life to you! Do you want a madman
-for your service?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A life!” exclaimed Fleta, with a strange tone that had a ring as of
-scorn in it. “What is a life? I count it nothing. Our great aims lie
-beyond such considerations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary raised himself and looked into her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Then you are mad,” he said, “and if so, a madman in your service
-is but fit. Nevertheless, my Princess, do not forget with what forces you
-have to contend. I am but a man; you have accepted my love. Only
-just now you have made me a murderer at heart—in desire. How soon
-shall I be one in reality? That depends on you, Fleta. The next time
-I see your gaze fixed on that man’s face as I saw it but now I will kill
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta rose to her full height and lifted her face to the sky; as she
-stood there a sort of shiver passed through her, a shiver as of pain.
-Instantly Hilary’s humour changed. “You are ill,” he exclaimed. She
-turned her eyes on him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“When that murderous mood is on you, it will not be Father Ivan
-that you kill, but me, whom you profess to love. Do you understand
-that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah!” cried Hilary, uttering a sound as if his heart was bursting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>under the torture, “that is because you love him so! Well, I can only
-long and serve. I have no power to protest. Yet I ask you, oh!
-Princess, is it fit to use a man’s heart to play at your queenly coquetries
-with? A king, your betrothed—a mysterious priest, the man you love—are
-not these enough but that you must take a boy, obscure and untaught
-in such misfortunes, and trample on his love? It is unlike the
-nobility I have seen in you. Good-bye, for this, Princess! I am never
-your lover again as I was before. I can never believe in your pure
-sweet heart—only this morning it seemed to me as a pearl, as a drop of
-limpid water. Good-bye, my idol! Yet I am your servant to obey
-always, for I gave you my life to do with as you would. Call me, and I
-come, like your dog; but I will not stay by you, for no longer is it anything
-but pain to do so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>With these wild, fierce reproaches, which seemed to stir the quiet air
-of the woodland, and make it seethe and burn with passion and despair,
-he turned and went from her. Fleta stood motionless, and her eyes
-drooped heavily; only she murmured, “We were born under the same
-star!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Her voice was very low, yet it reached Hilary’s ear. The words seemed
-to lash his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Under the same star!” he repeated, in a voice of agony, standing
-suddenly still. “No, Fleta. You are the queen, I the subject. Not
-only so, but you know it, and use your power to the full. Did you not
-promise yourself utterly to me to be mine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I promised to give you my love for yours; I promised to give you
-all that you can take of me. My love is greater than you can even
-imagine, else I would not have listened to one word of your reproaches.
-They have humbled me, but I have borne it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah, Fleta! you talk enigmas,” exclaimed Hilary, moving rapidly
-back to her side; “you are enough to madden a man; yet I cannot but
-love you. Why is this? Every act of yours proves you heartless, faithless,
-and yet I love you! Why is this? Oh, that I could read the riddle
-of your existence! Who are you?—What is this mysterious place?—Who
-is that priest whose rule you acknowledge? I <em>will</em> know!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta turned on him a sudden sweet smile, that seemed to light up his
-inner being as the flame of a lamp illumines a dusky room.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” she said, “find out. I cannot tell you, yet I desire you—oh!
-indeed, I desire you to know. Compel the secret—force it. Yes, yes,
-Hilary!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She spoke eagerly, with a bright ring in her voice that thrilled his soul.
-He forgot the Princess, the conspirator, the religieuse—he only remembered
-the girl he loved—young, fresh, flower-like, with the fair sweet face
-close to his own. With an unutterable cry of love he held out his arms
-to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, my dear, my love, come!” he said, in trembling tones that vibrated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>with his passion. But Fleta turned away without a word and walked
-through the tall ferns, her robe trailing on the ground. No backward
-glance, no turn of the head, not even a movement of those white
-statuesque hands which hung at her sides. In one was a long grass
-which she had plucked before she came to him. Even that, though it
-fluttered in the wind, had a strangely stiff air, as if it had become a
-part of that statue which but a moment since was a woman. Hilary
-stood gazing after this retreating figure, powerless to move, powerless to
-rouse in his mind any thought but one; and that was not a thought.
-It was knowledge—consciousness. He knew, he felt, that he dared
-not follow Fleta and address her as men address the women they love;
-he dared not woo her with the fever on his lips that burned there. And
-why? Not because of her royal birth, or her beauty, or her power.
-He knew not why—he could not understand himself. It was as though
-a spell were cast on him that held him silent and motionless.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When at last she was out of sight a sudden reaction took place. The
-whole burning force of the strong young man’s nature broke loose and
-raged wildly through his whole system; he no longer was capable of
-thought, he only felt the blood that rushed to his head and made his
-brain reel as though he had drunk strong wine. He suddenly became
-aware that he had aged, grown, become a new creature in these last
-moments of experience. He had called himself a man five minutes ago;
-but now he knew that when he had uttered those words, he was only a
-boy. Across a great gulf of feeling he looked back at the love that was
-in him when he had so spoken. Now his passion burned like a fire on
-the altar of life; every instant the flames grew stronger and mounted
-more fiercely to his inflamed brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The savage had burst forth. The savage untamed man, which
-smoulders within, and hides behind the cultivated faces of a gentle age.
-One strong touch on the chord of passion, and Hilary Estanol, a
-chivalric and courteous product of a refined time, knew himself to be a
-man, and knew that man to be a <a id='corr349.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='savage'>savage.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_349.32'><ins class='correction' title='savage'>savage.</ins></a></span> A savage, full of desire, of
-personal longing, thinking of nothing but his own needs. And to
-Hilary this sudden starting forth of the nature within him seemed like a
-splendid unfolding. He remained standing, erect, strong, resolute.
-His seething mind hastily went over his whole position and Fleta’s.
-Everything suddenly bore a new, vivid, stirring aspect.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This is a nest of conspirators!” he exclaimed to himself. “That
-man, Ivan, is a conspirator or worse, else he would not hide here. What
-crowned head is it that he threatens? He is a criminal. I will discover
-his secret; I will rescue Fleta from him; by the strength of my
-love I will win her love from him; I will make her my own. Come, I
-must calm myself—I must be sober, for I have to find out the meaning
-of this mysterious place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He walked slowly through the wood, trying to still the throbbing in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>his brain, to check the fierce pulsations of his heart and blood. He knew
-that now he needed all his instincts, all his natural intelligence, all his
-power of defence; for, in his present humour, he walked as an enemy to
-all men; by his new tide of feeling he had made every man his enemy.
-The young King Otto had a prior right to the Fleta whom he desired to
-make his own; King Otto was indeed his enemy. Ivan had her love;
-how bitterly did Hilary hate that priest! And Adine, the false Fleta—what
-was she but a mere tool of the priest’s, a creature used to baffle and
-blind him? She was the one most likely to trip his steps, for she defied
-even the knowledge which his love gave him of Fleta’s face!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was full of energy and activity, and his blood desired to be stilled
-by action. He had quickly decided that he must immediately do two
-things: inspect the whole exterior of the house, so as to get some notion
-of what rooms were in it, and what their uses; and explore the outer
-circle of the grounds, to see if there was any difficulty about leaving
-them. As the latter task involved most exercise, he chose to undertake
-it first, and swiftly, with long strides, made his way through the woodlands
-in the direction where the boundaries must lie. It did not take
-him long to traverse a considerable distance; for he felt stronger than
-ever in his life before. He had been a delicate lad, now he knew himself
-to be a strong man, as if new blood ran in his veins. The moon was
-high in the heavens, it was nearly full, and its light was strong. By it
-he soon discovered that the strange place in which he was had a more
-cunning and effective defence than any high wall or iron barrier. It was
-surrounded by tangled virgin woodland growth, where, as it seemed, no
-man’s foot could have ever trodden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary found it hard to believe that such wild land existed within a
-drive of the city. But it was there, and there was no passing through
-it, unless he worked his way with a wood-axe, inch by inch, as men do
-when they make a clearing. Such a task was hopeless, even if he had
-the tools, for it was impossible to tell in what direction to move.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He returned at last, after many fruitless efforts; there seemed to be
-no vestige of a path. He had discovered the gate by which their entrance
-had been made; and discovered also that it was guarded. A figure
-moved slowly to and fro in the shadow of the trees; not with the air of
-one strolling for pleasure, but with the regular movements of a sentry.
-It was an unfamiliar figure, but dressed in the garb of the order.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary went quietly along by the side of the path that led to the
-house. It was useless to waste more time on this investigation; quite
-clearly he was a prisoner. And it seemed to him equally clear that unless
-he could escape, no information would be of any use to him. He must
-be able to carry it to the city, where he would be free to take it to
-Fleta’s father, or even to other crowned heads in other countries, according
-to its nature. As he walked quietly on, revolving his position,
-he saw that the task he had set himself was no light one, even for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>strong man possessed by love. These monks belonged to an extraordinarily
-powerful order, and were men of great ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Here he was, in the very heart of one of their secret centres, which
-was, presumably, political. Fleta and King Otto were under their
-influence. And they were magicians; very certain he felt that they
-knew some of Nature’s secrets, and had trained Fleta in her mysterious
-powers. And from this hidden and carefully guarded place he was
-determined to escape, taking with him its secret—and Fleta! Fleta,
-his love, his own, yet whom he had to win by his strength.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER VIII.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>In the long corridor through which Fleta had led Hilary to Father Ivan’s
-room there was another door, which was fastened in a very different
-manner. It was held in its place by iron clamps which would puzzle the
-beholder, for they fastened on the outside as though they secured the door
-of a prison instead of being any protection for the inhabitant of the room
-beyond. It was inside this door that Fleta was now lying down to rest
-for the night. Had Hilary known this what agony would have torn
-him! He would have felt that he must break those bars and release
-the prisoner within them, however supernatural the strength might be
-which would be needed. He was spared the sharp pain of knowing
-this, however, and he was not likely to learn it, for a strange sentinel
-patrolled the long corridor with even step—Father Ivan himself. Without
-any pause he went steadily to and fro.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was about midnight that Father Ivan went into his room and
-glanced at a clock on the chimney-piece; not quite midnight, but very
-nearly. Hilary was lying awake in his room, tossing to and fro on a
-very luxurious and tempting bed, which gave him, however, no hope of
-rest. He had wandered round and round the house a dozen times, only to
-find himself bewildered by its strange shape, and the shrubberies which
-grew up close to the walls, and disheartened by the solid barricading of
-those windows which it was easy to approach. And yet at last he found a
-window wide open, and a room brightly lit; a lamp stood on the table
-and showed the pleasant room, well-furnished, and with a bed in it, dressed
-in fine linen and soft laces such as perhaps only members of an ascetic
-order know how to offer to their guests. Hilary stood a moment on the
-threshold, and then suddenly recognised it as his own <a id='corr351.36'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='room,'>room.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_351.36'><ins class='correction' title='room,'>room.</ins></a></span> It gave
-him an odd feeling, this, as if he had been watched and arranged for;
-treated like a prisoner. Well, it was useless to evade that dark fact—a
-prisoner he was. Recognising defeat for the moment, Hilary determined
-to accept it as gracefully as might be. He entered, closed his window
-and the strong shutters which folded over it, and then quickly laid
-himself down with intent to sleep. But sleep would not come, and he
-found all his thoughts and all his interest centred on Father Ivan. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>tried to prevent this but could not; he chased Fleta’s image in vain—he
-could scarcely remember her beautiful face! What was its shape
-and colour? He tortured himself in trying to recall the face he loved
-so dearly. But always Father Ivan’s figure was before his eyes; and
-suddenly it struck him that this vision was almost real, for he saw Ivan
-raise his hand in a commanding gesture which seemed to be directed
-towards himself. A moment later and he fell fast asleep, like a tired
-child. At this moment Ivan was standing in his own room, looking for
-an instant at the clock. He stood, perhaps, a little longer than was
-needed in order to see the time; and a frown came on his fine clear
-forehead which drew the arched eyebrows together. Then he turned
-quickly, left his room, and closed its door behind him. He went to the
-door which was so strongly barred, and noiselessly loosened its fastenings,
-which swung heavily yet quite softly away from it. He opened the
-door and went in.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In a sort of curtained recess was a low divan, which quite filled it,
-rising hardly a foot from the ground. This was covered with great rugs
-made of bear and wolf skin. Fleta lay stretched upon them, wrapped
-in a long cloak of some thick white material, which was bordered all
-round with white fur, and, indeed, lined with it, too. And yet when
-Ivan stooped and touched her hand it was cold as ice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come,” he said; and turning, went slowly away from her. Fleta
-rose and followed him. Her eyes were half-closed, and had something of
-the appearance of a sleep-walker’s, and yet not altogether, for though
-they appeared dim and unseeing yet there was purpose, and consciousness,
-and resolution in them. No one who had not seen Fleta before in
-this state could have recognised those eyes, so set and strange were
-they. Ivan approached a large curtained archway, and drawing the
-curtain aside he motioned to Fleta to pass through. As she did so he
-touched one of her hands, as it hung at her side. Immediately she
-raised it, and throwing the cloak aside showed that she held a white silk
-mask. Her dress beneath the cloak was of white silk. Slowly she
-raised the mask to her face and was about to put it on when a change
-of state came so suddenly upon her that it was like a tropical tornado.
-She opened her starry eyes wide and vivid light flashed from them; she
-flung the mask away upon the floor and clasped her hands violently
-together, while her whole frame shook with emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Why must I mask myself?” she exclaimed. “You have not told
-me why.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have,” said Ivan, very quietly. “No woman has ever entered there
-till now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What then?” cried Fleta, fiercely. “There is no shame in being a
-woman! Have I not assailed that door in vain in a different character?
-Now, a woman, I demand entrance. Master, I will not disguise
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>“Be it so,” said Ivan, “yet take the mask with you lest your mood
-should change again. You were willing, you remember, but a while
-since.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta stood motionless regarding the mask as it lay on the floor.
-Then she lifted her head suddenly and looked Ivan straight in the
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I will cast my sex from me, and mask my womanhood without any
-such help as that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Immediately that she had spoken Ivan walked on. They were in a
-long corridor, lit, and with the walls faintly coloured in pale pink on
-which shone some silver stars. Yet, bright though it was, this corridor
-seemed strangely solemn. Why was it so? Fleta looked from side to
-side, and could not discover. There was something new to her which
-she did not understand. Though she had been instructed in so many of
-the mysteries, and so much of the knowledge of the order, she had never
-entered this corridor, nor indeed had she before known of its existence.
-They slowly neared the end of it where was a high door made of oak,
-and seemingly very solidly fastened; but Father Ivan opened it easily
-enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My God!” cried Fleta instantly, in a low voice of deep amazement.
-“Where am I? What country am I in? Father, was that corridor
-a magic place? This is no longer my own country! How far
-have you carried me in this short time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A long way my daughter; come, do not delay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A vast plain, prairie-like, stretched before them, encircled on the right
-by the narrowing end of a huge arm of mountains which disappeared
-upon the far horizon. Upon the plain was one spot, was one place,
-where a livid flame-like light burned, and could be seen, though the
-whole scene was bathed in strong moonlight. Ivan commenced to
-rapidly take his way down a steep path which lay before them. And
-then Fleta became aware that they were themselves upon a height and
-had to descend into the plain. She did not look back; all her thoughts
-were centred on that vivid light which she now saw came from the
-windows of a great building. Then she suddenly saw that a number of
-persons were in the plain; although it was so large yet there were
-enough people to look like a crowd, which was gathering together from
-different directions. All were approaching the building.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Father,” she said to Ivan, who was leading the way rapidly. “Will
-they go in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Into the Temple? Those on the plain? Indeed no. They are
-outside worshippers; that crowd is in the world and of it, and yet has
-courage to come here often when there is no light, and the icy winds
-blow keen across the plain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And they never enter. Why, my master, they can have no
-strength.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>Ivan glanced back for an instant, a curious look in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is not always strength that is needed,” he said in a low voice.
-Fleta did not seem to hear him; her eyes were fixed on the temple
-windows. Suddenly she stopped and cried out:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Is this a dream?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are not asleep,” said Ivan with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Asleep! no,” she answered, and went on her way with increased
-rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Very soon they stood on the plain and advanced with great speed
-towards the temple. Fleta was naturally hardy; but now it seemed to
-her that the very idea of fatigue was absurd. She could scale mountains
-in order to reach that light. And yet what was it in it that drew
-her so? None but herself could have told. But Fleta’s heart beat
-passionately with longing at the sight of it. Ivan turned on her a
-glance of compassion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Keep quiet,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was answered with a look and tone of fervour.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes: if it is in human power,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The great crowds were slowly gathering towards the temple and
-formed themselves into masses of silent and scarcely moving figures.
-Fleta was now among them and though so absorbed by the idea of the
-goal before her, she was attracted by the strange appearance of these
-people. They were of all ages and nationalities, but more than two-thirds
-of them were men; they one and all had the appearance of sleep-walkers,
-seeming perfectly unconscious of the scene in which they
-moved and of their object in reaching it. Their whole nature was turned
-inwards; so it appeared to Fleta. Why then had they come to this
-strange place, so difficult of access, if when come they could neither see
-nor hear? Fleta considered these things rapidly in her mind and would
-again have asked an explanation of Father Ivan but that while her
-steps slackened a little, his had hastened. He had already reached the
-door of the temple—when Fleta reached it he was not there. Of course
-he had entered, and Fleta, without fear or hesitation, put her hand on
-the great bar which held the door and lifted it. It was not difficult to
-lift; it seemed to yield to her touch, and swung back smoothly. With
-a slight push the great door opened a little before her—not wide; only
-as far as she had pushed it. Ah! there was the light! There, in her
-eyes! It was like life and joy to Fleta. She turned her eyes up to gaze
-on it, and stood an instant with her hands clasped, in ecstacy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Someone brushed lightly by, and, passing her, went straight in.
-That reminded her that she, too, desired to go straight in. She nerved
-herself for the supreme effort. For she was learned enough to know
-that only the initiate in her faith could enter that door; and she had
-not, in any outward form, passed the initiation. But she believed she
-had passed it in her soul; she had tested her emotions on every side
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>and found the world was nothing to her; she had flung her mask away
-believing her woman’s shape and face to be the merest outward appearance,
-which would be unseen at the great moment. And now it hardly
-seemed as if she were a woman—she stood transfigured by the nobility
-of her aspirations—and some who stood on the step outside remained
-there awestruck by her majestic beauty. By a supreme effort she
-resolved to face all—and to conquer all. She boldly entered the door
-and went up the white marble steps within it. A great hall was before
-her, flooded with the clear, soft light she loved; an innumerable number
-of objects presented themselves to her amazed eyes, but she did not
-pause to look at them—she guessed that the walls were jewelled from
-their sparkling—she guessed that the floor was covered with flowers,
-which lay on a polished silver surface, from the gleaming and the
-colour—and who were these, the figures in silver dresses with a jewel
-like an eye that saw, clasped at the neck? A number came towards her.
-She would not allow herself to feel too exultant—she tried to steady
-herself—and yet joy came wildly into her heart, for she felt that she
-was already one of this august company. But their faces, as they gathered
-nearer, were all strange and unfamiliar. She looked from one to
-another.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Where is Ivan?” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Suddenly all was changed. The white figures grew in numbers till
-there seemed thousands—with outstretched hands they pushed Fleta
-down the steps—down, down, down, resist how she might. She did
-more! She fought, she battled, she cried aloud, first for justice, then for
-pity. But there was no relenting, no softening in these superhuman
-faces. Fleta fled at last from their overpowering numbers and inexorable
-cruelty, and then there came a great cry of voices, all uttering the same
-words;</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You love him! Go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta fell, stunned and broken, at the foot of the outer step, and the
-great door closed behind her. But she was not unconscious for more
-than a few minutes. She opened her eyes and looked at the starry sky.
-Then she felt suddenly that she could not endure even that light and
-that the stars were reading her soul. She rose and hurried away,
-blindly following in any path that her feet found. It did not take her
-to any familiar place. She found herself in a dark wood. The moss
-was soft and fragrant and violets scented it. She lay down upon it,
-drawing her white cloak round her and hiding her eyes from the light.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>
- <h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER IX.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>It seemed to her that for long ages she was alone. Her mind achieved
-great strides of thought which at another time would have appeared
-impossible to her. She saw before her clearly her own folly, her own
-mistake. Yesterday she would not have credited it—yesterday it would
-have been unmeaning to her. But now she understood it, and understood
-too how heavy and terrible was her punishment; for it was already upon
-her. She lay helpless, her eyes shut, her whole body nerveless. Her
-punishment was here. She had lost all hope, all faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A gentle touch on her hand roused her consciousness, but she was too
-indifferent to open her eyes. It mattered little to her what or who was
-near her. The battle of her soul was now the only real thing in life to
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A voice that seemed strangely familiar fell on her ears; yet last time
-she had heard it it was loud, fierce, arrogant; now it was tender and soft,
-and full of an overwhelming wonder and pity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You, Princess Fleta, here? My God! what can have happened?
-Surely she is not dead? No! What is it, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta slowly opened her eyes. It was Hilary who knelt beside her;
-she was lying on the dewy grass, and Hilary knelt there, the morning
-sun shining on his head and lighting up his beautiful boy’s face. And
-Fleta as she lay and looked dully at him felt herself to be immeasurably
-older than he was; to be possessed of knowledge and experience which
-seemed immense by his ignorance. And yet she lay here, nerveless,
-hopeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What is it?” again asked Hilary, growing momently more
-distressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you want to know?” she said gently, and yet with an accent of
-pity that was almost contempt in her tone. “You would not understand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, tell me!” said Hilary. “I love you—let me serve you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She hardly seemed to hear his words, but his voice of entreaty made
-her go on speaking in answer:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have tried,” she said, “and failed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Tried what?” exclaimed Hilary, “and how failed? Oh, my Princess,
-I believe these devils of priests have given you some fever—you do not
-know what you are saying!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I know very well,” replied Fleta; “I am in no fever. I am all but
-dead—that is no strange thing, for I am stricken.” Hilary looked at her
-as she lay, and saw that her words were true. How strange a figure
-she looked, lying there so immovably, as if crushed or dead, upon the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>dewy grass; wrapped in her white robes. And her face was white with
-a terrible whiteness; the great eyes looked out from the white face with
-a sad, smileless gaze; and would those pale drawn lips never smile
-again? Was the radiant, brilliant Fleta changed for ever into this
-paralysed white creature? Hilary knew that even if it was so he loved
-her more passionately and devotedly than before. His soul yearned
-towards her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Tell me, explain to me, what has done this?” he cried out, growing
-almost incoherent in his passionate distress. “I demand to know by my
-love for you. What have you tried to do in this awful past night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta opened her eyes, the lids of which had drooped heavily, and
-looked straight into his as she answered:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I have tried for the Mark of the White Brotherhood. I have tried to
-pass the first initiation of the Great Order. I did not dream I could
-fail, for I have passed through many initiations which men regard with
-fear. But I have failed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I cannot believe,” said Hilary, “that you could fail in anything. You
-are—dreaming—you are feverish. Let me lift you, let me carry you into
-the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, I have failed,” answered Fleta dully; “failed, because I had not
-measured the strength of my humanity. It is in me—in me still! I am
-the same as any other woman in this land. I, who thought myself
-supreme—I, who thought myself capable of great deeds! Ah, Hilary,
-the first simple lesson is yet unlearned. I have failed because I loved—because
-I love like any other fond and foolish woman! And yet no
-spark of any part of love but devotion is in my soul. That is too
-gross. Is it possible to purge even that away? Yes, those of the
-White Brotherhood have done it. I will do it even if it take me a
-thousand years, a dozen lifetimes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She had raised herself from the ground as she spoke, for a new fierce
-passion had taken the place of the dull despair in her manner; she had
-raised herself to her feet, and then unable to stand had fallen on to her
-knees. Hilary listened yet hardly heard; only some of her words
-hurried into his mind. He bent down till his face touched her white
-cloak where it lay on the grass, and kissed it a dozen times.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have failed because of love? Oh, my Princess, then it is not
-failure! Men live for love, men die for love! It is the golden power of
-life. Oh, my Princess, let me take you from this terrible place—come back
-with me to the world where men and women know love to be the one great
-joy for which all else is well lost. Fleta, while I doubted that you loved
-me I was as wax; but now that I know you do, and with a love so great
-that it has power to check the career of your soul, now I am strong, I
-am able to do all that a strong man can do. Come, let me raise you
-and take you away from here to a place of peace and delight!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He had risen to his feet and stood before her, looking magnificent in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>the morning sunshine. He was slight of build, yet that slightness was
-really indicative of strength; when Hilary Estanol had been effeminate
-it was because he had not cared to be anything else. He stood grandly
-now, his hands stretched towards her; a man, lofty, transformed by the
-power of love. Fleta looking at him saw in his brilliant eyes the gleam
-of the conquering savage. She rose suddenly and confronted him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are mistaken,” she said abruptly. “It is not you that I love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then, as suddenly as Fleta had moved and spoken, the man before
-her vanished, with his nobility, and left the savage only, unvarnished,
-unhumanised.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My God,” gasped Hilary, almost breathless from the sudden blow,
-“then it is that accursed priest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” answered Fleta, her eyes on his, her voice dull, her whole form
-like that of a statue, so emotionless did she seem, “it is that accursed
-priest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She moved away from him and looked about her. The spot was
-familiar. She was in the woodland about the monastery. She
-could find her way home now without difficulty. And yet how
-weak she was, and how hard it was to take each footstep! After
-moving a few paces she stood still and tried to rouse herself, tried to use
-her powerful will.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Where are my servants?” she said in a low voice. “Where are
-those who do my bidding?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She closed her eyes, and standing there in the sunlight, used all her
-power to call the forces into action which she had learned to control.
-For she was a sufficiently learned magician to be the mistress of some
-of the secrets of Nature. But now it seemed she was helpless—her old
-powers were gone. A low, bitter cry of anguish escaped from her lips
-as she realised this awful fact. Hilary, terrified by the strange sound
-of her voice, hastily approached her and looked into her face. Those
-dark eyes, once so full of power, were now full of an agony such as one
-sees in the eyes of a hunted and dying creature. Yet Fleta did not
-faint or fail, or cling to the strong man who stood by her side. After
-a moment she spoke, with a faint yet steady voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you know the way to the gate?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” replied Hilary; who indeed had but recently explored the
-whole demesne.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Take my hand,” she said, “and lead me there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She used her natural power of royal command now; feeble though
-she was, she was the princess. Hilary did not dream of disobeying her.
-He took the cold and lifeless hand she extended to him, and led her
-as quickly as was possible over the grass, through the trees and
-flowering shrubs, to the gateway. As they neared it she spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are to go back to the city,” she said. “Do not ask why—you
-must go; yet I will tell you this—it is for your own safety. I have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>lost my power—I can no longer protect you, and there are both angels
-and devils in this place. I have lost all! all! And I have no right to
-risk your sanity as well as my own. You must go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And leave you here?” said Hilary, bewildered.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am safe,” she answered proudly. “No power in heaven or earth
-can hurt me now, for I have cast my all on one stake. Know this,
-Hilary, before we part; I shall never yield or surrender. I shall cast
-out that love that kills me from my heart—I shall enter the White
-Brotherhood. And, Hilary, you too will enter it. But, oh! not yet!
-Bitter lessons have you yet to learn! Good-bye, my brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The sentinel who guarded the gate now approached them in his walk;
-Fleta moved quickly towards him. After a few words had passed
-between them he blew a shrill, fine whistle. Then he approached
-Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Come,” he said, “I will show you the way for some distance and
-will then obtain you a horse and a guide to the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary did not hesitate in obeying Fleta’s commands; he knew he
-must go. But he turned to look once more into her mysterious face.
-She was no longer there. He bowed his head, and silently followed the
-monk through the gate into the outer freedom of the forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta meantime crept back to the house through the shelter of the
-trees. Her figure looked like that of an aged woman, for she was
-bowed almost double and her limbs trembled as she moved. She did
-not go to the centre door of the house, but approached a window which
-opened to the ground and now stood wide. It was the window of
-Fleta’s own room; she hurried towards it with feeble, uncertain steps.
-“Rest! Rest! I must rest!” she kept murmuring to herself. But on
-the very threshold she stumbled and fell. Someone came immediately
-to her and tried to raise her. It was Father Ivan. Fleta disengaged
-herself, tremblingly yet resolutely. She rose with difficulty to her feet
-and gazed very earnestly into his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And you knew why I should fail?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” he answered, “I knew. You are not strong enough to stand
-alone amid the spirit of humanity. I knew you clung to me. Well
-have you suffered from it. I know that very soon you will stand alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Of what use would that mask have been?” demanded Fleta, pursuing
-her own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“None. If you had obeyed me and worn it you would have been of
-so craven a spirit you could never have reached the temple, never have
-seen the White Brotherhood. You have done these things, which are
-more than any other woman has accomplished.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I will do yet more,” said Fleta. “I will be one of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Be it so,” answered Ivan. “To do so you must suffer as no woman
-has yet had strength to suffer. The humanity in you must be crushed
-out as we crush a viper beneath our feet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>“It shall be. I may die, but I will not pause. Good-bye, my master.
-As I am a queen in the world of men and women, so you are king in
-the world of soul, and to you I have done homage; that homage they
-call love. It is so, perhaps. I am blind yet, and know not. But no
-more may you be my king. I am alone, and all knowledge I gain I
-must now gain myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Ivan bowed his head as if in obedience to an unanswerable decree,
-and in a moment had walked away among the trees. Fleta watched
-him stonily till he was out of sight, then dragged herself within the
-window to fall helplessly upon the ground, shaken by sobs and strong
-shudders of despair.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER X.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>It was late in the day before Fleta again came out of her room. She
-seemed to have recovered her natural manner and appearance; and
-yet there was a change in her which anyone who knew her well must
-see. She had not been into the general rooms, or greeted the other
-guests; nor did she do so now. Her face was full of resolution, but
-she was calm, at all events externally. Without going near the guest
-rooms or the great entrance hall, she made her way round the house to
-where a very small door stood almost hidden in an angle of the wall.
-It was such a door as might lead to the cellars of a house, and when
-Hilary had explored the night before he had scarcely noticed it. But
-it was exceedingly solid and well <a id='corr360.23'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='fastened'>fastened.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_360.23'><ins class='correction' title='fastened'>fastened.</ins></a></span> Fleta gave a peculiar
-knock upon it with a fan which she carried in her hand. It was immediately
-opened, and Father Amyot appeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you want me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes; I want you to go on an errand for me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Where am I to go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I do not know; probably you will know. I must speak to one of
-the White Brotherhood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Amyot’s face clouded and he looked doubtfully at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What is there you can ask that Ivan cannot answer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Does it matter to you?” said Fleta imperiously. “You are my
-messenger, that is all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You cannot command me as before,” said Father Amyot.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What! do you know that I have failed? Does all the world
-know it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The world?” echoed Amyot, contemptuously. “No; but all the
-Brotherhood does, and all its servants do. No one has told me, but I
-know it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Of course,” said Fleta to herself. “I am foolish.” She turned away
-and walked up and down on the grass, apparently buried in deep
-thought. Presently she raised her head suddenly, and quickly moved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>towards Amyot, who still stood motionless in the dim shadow of the
-little doorway. She fixed her eyes on him; they were blazing with an
-intense fire. Her whole attitude was one of command.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Go,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Father Amyot stood but for a moment; and then he came out slowly
-from the doorway, shutting it behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have picked up a lost treasure,” he said. “You have found
-your will again. I obey. Have you told me all your command?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes. I must speak to one of the White Brothers. What more can
-I say? I do not know one from another. Only be quick!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Instantly Amyot strode away over the grass and disappeared. Fleta
-moved slowly away, thinking so deeply that she did not know any one
-was near her till a hand was put gently on her arm. She looked up, and
-saw before her the young king, Otto.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Have you been ill,” he asked, looking closely into her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she answered. “I have only been living fast—a century of
-experience in a single night! Shall I talk to you about it, my
-friend?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I think not,” answered Otto, who now was walking quietly by her
-side. <a id='corr361.20'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='I'>“I</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_361.20'><ins class='correction' title='I'>“I</ins></a></span> may not readily understand you. I am anxious above all to
-advance slowly and grasp each truth as it comes to me. I have been
-talking a long time to-day to Father Ivan; and I feel that I cannot yet
-understand the doctrines of the order except as interpreted through
-religion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Through religion?” said Fleta. “But that is a mere externality.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“True, and intellectually I see that. But I am not strong enough to
-stand without any external form to cling to. The precepts of religion,
-the duty of each towards humanity, the principle of sacrifice one for
-another, these things I can understand. Beyond that I cannot yet go.
-Are you disappointed with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, indeed,” answered Fleta. “Why should I be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Otto gave a slight sigh as of relief. “I feared you might be,” he
-answered; “but I preferred to be honest. I am ready, Fleta, to be a
-member of the order, a devout member of the external Brotherhood.
-How far does that place me from you who claim a place among
-the wise ones of the inner Brotherhood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta looked at him very seriously and gravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I claim it,” she said; “but is it mine? Yet I will win it, Otto;
-even at the uttermost price, I will make it mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And at what cost?” said Otto. “What is that uttermost
-price?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I think,” she said slowly, “I already feel what it is. I must
-learn to live in the plain as contentedly as on the mountain tops. I
-have hungered to leave my place in the world, to go to those haunts
-where only a few great ones of the earth dwell, and from them learn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>the secret of how to finally escape from the life of earth altogether.
-That has been my dream, Otto, put into simple words; the old dream
-of the Rosicrucian and those hungerers after the occult who have always
-haunted the world like ghosts, unsatisfied, homeless. Because I am a
-strong-willed creature, because I have learned how to use my will, because
-I have been taught a few tricks of magic I fancied myself fitted
-to be one of the White Brotherhood. Well, it is not so. I have failed.
-I shall be your queen, Otto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The young king turned on her a sudden look full of mingled
-emotions. “Is that to be, Fleta? Then may I be worthy of your companionship.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta had spoken bitterly, though not ungently. Otto’s reply had
-been in a strange tone, that had exultation, reverence, gladness, in it; but
-not any of the passion which is called love. A coquette would have
-been provoked by a manner so entirely that of friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Otto,” said Fleta, after a moment’s pause, during which they had
-walked on side by side. “I am going to test your generosity. Will
-you leave me now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My generosity?” exclaimed Otto. “How is it possible for you to
-address me in that way?” Without any further word of explanation
-he turned on his heel and walked quickly away. Fleta understood his
-meaning very well; she smiled softly as she looked for a moment after
-him. Then, as he vanished, her whole face changed, her whole expression
-of attitude, too. For a little while she stood quite still, seemingly
-wrapt in thought. Then steadily and swiftly she began to move across
-the grass and afterwards to thread her way through the trees. Having
-once commenced to move, she seemed to have no hesitation as to the
-direction in which she was going. And, indeed, if you had been able to
-ask her how she knew what path to take, she would have answered that
-it was very easy to know. For she was guided by a direct call from Amyot,
-as plainly heard as any human voice, though audible only to her inner
-hearing. To Fleta, the consciousness of the double life—the spiritual
-and the natural—was a matter of constant experience, and, therefore,
-there was no need for the darkness of midnight to enable her to hear a
-voice from what ordinary men and women call the unseen world. To
-Fleta it was no more unseen than unheard. She saw at once, conquering
-time and space, the spot where she would find Father Amyot at the
-end of her rapid walk; and more, the state she would find him in. The
-sun streamed in its full power and splendour straight on the strange
-figure of the monk, lying rigidly upon the grass. Fleta stood beside
-him and looked down on his face, upturned to the sky. For a little
-while she did nothing, but stood there with a frown upon her forehead
-and her dark eyes full of fierce and changing feeling. Amyot was in one
-of his profound trances, when, though not dead, yet he was as one dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Already my difficulties crowd around me,” exclaimed Fleta aloud.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>“What folly shall I unknowingly commit next? My poor servant—dare
-I even try to restore you—or will Nature be a safer friend?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Full of doubt and hesitation, she turned slowly away and began to
-pace up and down the grass beside the figure of the priest. Presently
-she became aware that she was not alone—some one was near her.
-She started and turned quickly. Ivan stood but a pace from her, and his
-eyes were fixed very earnestly upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He was not dressed as a priest, but wore a simple hunting dress, such
-as an ordinary sportsman or the king incognito might wear. Simple it was,
-and made of coarse materials; but its easy make showed a magnificent
-figure which the monkish robes had disguised. His face had on it a
-deep and almost pathetic seriousness; and yet it was so handsome, so
-nobly cut, and made so brilliant by the deep blue eyes, which were
-bluer than their wont now, even in the full blaze of the sun—that in fact
-as a man merely, here stood one who might make any woman’s heart,
-queen or no queen, beat fiercely with admiration. Fleta had never seen
-him like this before; to her he had always been the master, the adept in
-mysterious knowledge, the recluse who hid his love of solitude under a
-monkish veil. This was Ivan! Young, superb, a man who must be
-loved. Fleta stood still and silent, answering the gaze of those questioning,
-serious blue eyes, with the purposeful, rebellious look which
-was just now burning in her own. The two stood facing each other for
-some moments, without speaking—without, as it seemed, desiring to
-speak. But in these moments of silence a measuring of strength was
-made. Fleta spoke first.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Why have you come?” she demanded. “I did not desire your
-presence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have questions to ask which I alone can answer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are the one person who cannot answer them, for I cannot ask
-them of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is of me that you must ask them,” was all Ivan’s reply. Then he
-added: “It is of me you have to learn these answers. Learn them by
-experience if you like, and blindly. If you care to speak, you shall be
-answered in words. This will spare you some pain, and save you years
-of wasted time. Are you too proud?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There was a pause. Then Fleta replied deliberately:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, I am too proud.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Ivan bowed his head and turned away. He stooped over Father
-Amyot, and taking a flask from his pocket, rubbed some liquid on the
-monk’s white and rigid lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I forbid you,” said Ivan, “to use your power over Amyot again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You forbid me?” repeated Fleta in a tone of profound amazement.
-Evidently this tone was entirely new to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, and you dare not disobey me. If you do, you will suffer
-instantly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>Fleta looked the amazement which was evidently beyond her power
-to express in words. Ivan’s manner was cold, almost harsh. Never
-had he addressed her without gentleness before. Hastily she recovered
-herself, and without pausing to address to him any other word she
-turned away and went quickly through the trees and back to the house.
-Otto was standing at one of the windows; she went straight to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I wish to go back to the city at once,” she said, “will you order my
-horses?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“May I come with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, but you may follow me to-morrow if you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>To be <a href='#blossom6'>continued</a>.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>SPECULATION.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Man’s reasoning faith can outlive and can ride</div>
- <div class='line in2'>O’er countless speculations. Navies float</div>
- <div class='line in2'>On changeful waves, and for this ark-like boat</div>
- <div class='line'>Winds from all quarters, every swelling tide</div>
- <div class='line'>Will serve. By all the virgin spheres that glide</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Like timid guests across sky-floor we note</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Where lies the pole-star. Those who only quote</div>
- <div class='line'>Their compass, fail, and antique charts must slide</div>
- <div class='line'>To error, in this shifting sand of thought</div>
- <div class='line'>And <em>new-found science</em>, where sweet isles of palm</div>
- <div class='line'>And olive sink, that were as land-marks sought,</div>
- <div class='line'>While others rise from Ocean’s fertile bed.</div>
- <div class='line'>No storm, nor heat, nor cold I fear; my dread</div>
- <div class='line'>Is lest the ship should meet a death-like calm.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c002'>REVOLUTION.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ah! wondrous happy rounding universe</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Where suns and moons alike as tears e’er mould</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Themselves to beauteous circles! He that rolled</div>
- <div class='line'>The planets, curved their paths; though seas immerse</div>
- <div class='line'>Both shattered ship and shell, naught <em>shall escape</em></div>
- <div class='line in2'>Th’ inevitable wheel that must restore</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The seeming lost. The potent buried lore</div>
- <div class='line'>Of saint and sage revives to melt and shape</div>
- <div class='line'>Our thoughts to comeliness, and souls that leave</div>
- <div class='line'>Earth’s shores float back as craft that cruising sails;</div>
- <div class='line'>Each blessed gift that hourly from us flies,</div>
- <div class='line'>God will rain down albeit in other guise;—</div>
- <div class='line'>And e’en the very dew-drop <em>noon exhales</em></div>
- <div class='line'>May find again the self-same rose at eve.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Mary W. Gale.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>TWILIGHT VISIONS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“At evening time there shall be light.”</span></div>
- <div class='line in20'><span class='small'>—<span class='sc'>Zech.</span> xiv., 7.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The day’s work done, I cast my pen aside</div>
- <div class='line'>And rose, with aching eye and troubled brain,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thinking how oft my fellow workers here</div>
- <div class='line'>Have suffered in the flesh for labours wrought</div>
- <div class='line'>In love to all mankind; and how the world</div>
- <div class='line'>Cares nought for words which teach not of itself;</div>
- <div class='line'>For to the world, itself is all in all,</div>
- <div class='line'>And nought outside it can the world conceive</div>
- <div class='line'>As real and true. And yet this earth must cease</div>
- <div class='line'>To be for ever to each mortal, when</div>
- <div class='line'>The Spirit casts off earth, and, in new life</div>
- <div class='line'>Will feel and know the world to be the vale</div>
- <div class='line'>Of deathly shadows compass’d round about</div>
- <div class='line'>With ignorance and error, sin and crime,</div>
- <div class='line'>With yearnings, longings, miseries, and griefs,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all that makes the “Breath of Lives” to seem</div>
- <div class='line'>As Angels wrestling with the powers of hell.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A gentle Spirit with the twilight came</div>
- <div class='line'>And rested on my soul; then hope with peace,</div>
- <div class='line'>Long since to me as strangers, touched my heart,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, sitting at the organ, soft and sweet</div>
- <div class='line'>There streamed a flow of harmony, tho’ I</div>
- <div class='line'>Scarce seemed to touch the keys, yet simple hymns</div>
- <div class='line'>Called forth a train of Spirits bright and young,</div>
- <div class='line'>Amongst them saw I all that I had known</div>
- <div class='line'>And loved in days when life seem’d sweet to me.</div>
- <div class='line'>I was a child again, and saw myself</div>
- <div class='line'>As such—no aching eye—no troubled brain</div>
- <div class='line'>Had that young being who in faith and hope</div>
- <div class='line'>Sang songs of holiness, of peace and truth—</div>
- <div class='line'>There, resting on his Mother’s breast, with arms</div>
- <div class='line'>Clasped round her neck, with loving eyes that watched</div>
- <div class='line'>The loving face, whereon a parent’s smile</div>
- <div class='line'>Was ever present in the days now past,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now buried in the dust with former things.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>In saddened notes swelled forth “Thy will be done!”</div>
- <div class='line'>And then appeared a radiant spirit form</div>
- <div class='line'>Of one who, as a babe, was called away,</div>
- <div class='line'>From out this world of wretchedness and sin.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>An infant—which scarce breathed upon the earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Ere God, in His great mercy, took her home</div>
- <div class='line'>To dwell with Him, and she, an Angel bless’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now looks in pity on her parents here,</div>
- <div class='line'>A weeping witness of the vacant lives</div>
- <div class='line'>Which in the world their souls are forced to pass</div>
- <div class='line'>As, hung’ring for the love of One in heaven</div>
- <div class='line'>They stagger on from day to day in doubt—</div>
- <div class='line'>In misery, which none but they can know.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Some cursed bonds can ne’er be snapped in twain,</div>
- <div class='line'>Save death or sin alone be brought to bear</div>
- <div class='line'>To shatter human customs hard and vile,</div>
- <div class='line'>And false and horrible as hell itself.</div>
- <div class='line'>For man exists in darkness, bound by laws</div>
- <div class='line'>Which curse and damn his very soul on earth;</div>
- <div class='line'>Mankind will not accept the Master’s words</div>
- <div class='line'>Or listen to His cry within the soul.</div>
- <div class='line'>And so the world in falsehood wanders on</div>
- <div class='line'>And dooms the inner Man of Light again</div>
- <div class='line'>To suffer crucifixion in the flesh;</div>
- <div class='line'>The Trinity—of Wisdom, Love and Truth—</div>
- <div class='line'>The Christ, is absent from this “Christian” World</div>
- <div class='line'>And ignorance with hatred lies and sin</div>
- <div class='line'>Reign rampant in their infidel abode.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Abide with me, fast falls the eventide.”</div>
- <div class='line'>O Lord! we suff’ring mortals here on earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Have nought but Thee, Thou Guide of all mankind</div>
- <div class='line'>To lead us in our wand’rings, and to turn</div>
- <div class='line'>Our falt’ring footsteps from the way of death;</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy Angels true are sent to fainting souls,</div>
- <div class='line'>And lovingly their voices soft are heard</div>
- <div class='line'>Peace! troubled hearts, hereafter all shall be</div>
- <div class='line'>Made up in heaven. Know that sufferings</div>
- <div class='line'>Are sent in love that we may minister,</div>
- <div class='line'>To all your needs, and bear you safely home</div>
- <div class='line'>To that good land ordained for all mankind—</div>
- <div class='line'>The kingdom bright—of happiness and love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whereon your lives shall ever be a rest</div>
- <div class='line'>In one long summer day of light and joy.</div>
- <div class='line'>No mortal e’er can comprehend the peace</div>
- <div class='line'>Of God, which shall be yours, when, from the world</div>
- <div class='line'>Your glorious inner beings stand apart</div>
- <div class='line'>For ever! Soon shall you know all that we</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>Would tell you now—yet hope and struggle on.</div>
- <div class='line'>“At evening time there shall be Light! and then—</div>
- <div class='line'>The Living Light shall lead you home to God,</div>
- <div class='line'>Home to the place which He hath made,—’tis yours</div>
- <div class='line'>For ever! We are sent to tell you this</div>
- <div class='line'>And by the Mighty One we do not lie!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“O Glorious Angels of our Loving God!</div>
- <div class='line'>Pray tell us if this land, we fain would know,</div>
- <div class='line'>Contains the dear ones we have loved on earth?</div>
- <div class='line'>For what were heaven e’en to us, if we</div>
- <div class='line'>Could nevermore be all in all to those</div>
- <div class='line'>Who when on earth were all in all to <a id='corr366.13'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='us!'>us!”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_366.13'><ins class='correction' title='us!'>us!”</ins></a></span></div>
- <div class='line'>A voice replied—’twas one I oft have heard</div>
- <div class='line'>And learned to love with more than mortal love,</div>
- <div class='line'>“Look up, my own! and see me with thee now</div>
- <div class='line'>For ever on this earth. If then ’tis so,</div>
- <div class='line'>How canst thou think that I shall ever be</div>
- <div class='line'>Apart from thee in heav’n—the land of love</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein alone life’s consummation finds</div>
- <div class='line'>A fullness in its own eternal self?</div>
- <div class='line'>For God is all—thus He is life and love</div>
- <div class='line'>And love eternal is the power that welds</div>
- <div class='line'>Each atom in the universal chain</div>
- <div class='line'>Of infinite expanse throughout the skies—</div>
- <div class='line'>Which ever shows to godly men on earth</div>
- <div class='line'>The Power of powers that reigneth over <a id='corr367.27'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='all!'>all!”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_367.27'><ins class='correction' title='all!'>all!”</ins></a></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='c009'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Then in the gloom a glorious form appeared,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, standing by my side, it pressed its lips</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the troubled brow which none could calm</div>
- <div class='line'>On earth, save she who was beside me then.</div>
- <div class='line'>And so an Angel from our loving God</div>
- <div class='line'>Came down to comfort, in the eventide—</div>
- <div class='line'>To show, by light of love, God’s holy truth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which from the world—in darkness—hath been hid</div>
- <div class='line'>Because the world in darkness will exist,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, living thus, man sins against himself</div>
- <div class='line'>And so against his loving God of Life.</div>
- <div class='line'>The promised Light appeared at evening time,</div>
- <div class='line'>And by its living rays did I perceive—</div>
- <div class='line'>Mankind to wander on in sin and shame;</div>
- <div class='line'>Thus <span class='fss'>HELL</span> prevails to-day where heaven should be....</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Wm. C. Eldon Serjeant.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>London, <i>6th December, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>ESOTERICISM OF THE CHRISTIAN DOGMA.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Creation as taught by Moses and the Mahatmas.</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='fss'>BY THE ABBÉ ROCA</span> (<i>Honorary Canon</i>).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[Extracts translated from the “<span class='sc'>Lotus</span>” <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Revue des Hautes Etudes Theosophiques</i></span>.
-Journal of “Isis,” the French Branch of The Theosophical Society. December, 1887.
-Paris, George Carrés, 58, Rue St André des Arts.—<span class='fss'>VERBAL TRANSLATION.</span>]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>I.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>Thanks to the light which is now reaching us from the far East
-through the Theosophical organs published in the West, it is
-easy to foresee that the Catholic teaching is about to undergo a
-transformation as profound as it will be glorious. All our dogmas will
-pass from “the letter which killeth” to “the spirit which giveth life,” from
-the mystic and sacramental to the scientific and rational form, perhaps
-even to the stage of experimental methods.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The reign of faith, of mystery and of miracle, is nearing its close; this
-is plain and was, moreover, predicted by Christ himself. Faith vanishes
-from the brains of men of science, to make way for the clear perception
-of the essential truths which had to be veiled at the origin of
-Christianity, under symbols and figures, so as to adapt them, as far as
-possible, to the needs and weaknesses of the infancy of our faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Strange! It is at the very hour when Europe is attaining the age of
-reason, and when she is visibly entering upon the full possession of her
-powers, that India prepares to hand on to us those loftier ideas which
-exactly meet our new wants, as much from the intellectual, as from the
-moral, religious, social and other standpoints.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One might believe that the “<span class='sc'>Brothers</span>” kept an eye from afar on the
-movements of Christendom, and that from the summits of their
-Himalayan watch towers, they had waited expectantly for the hour
-when they would be able to make us hear them with some chance of
-being understood....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is certain that the situation in the West is becoming more and
-more serious. Everyone knows whence comes the imminence of the
-catastrophe which threatens us; hitherto men have only evoked the
-animal needs, they have only awakened and unchained the brute forces
-of nature, the passional instincts, the savage energies of the lower
-Kosmos. Christianity does indeed conceal under the profound esotericism
-of its Parables, those truths, scientific, religious, and social, which
-this deplorable situation imperiously demands, but sad to say, sad indeed
-for a priest, hard, hard indeed for Christian ears to hear, all our priesthoods,
-that of the Roman Catholic Church equally with those of the
-Orthodox Russian, the Anglican, the Protestant, and the Anglo-American
-churches, seem struck with blindness and impotence in face
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>of the glorious task which they would have to fulfil in these terrible
-circumstances. They see nothing; their eyes are plastered and their
-ears walled up. They do not discover; one is tempted to say, they do
-not even suspect what ineffable truths are hidden under the dead letter
-of their teachings.</p>
-
-<p class='c035'>Say, is it not into that darkness that we are all stumbling, in State
-and in Church, in politics as in religion! A double calamity forming
-but one for the peoples, which suffer horribly under it, and for our
-civilisation which may be shipwrecked on it at any moment. May God
-deliver us from a war at this moment! It would be a cataclysm in
-which Europe would break to pieces in blood and fire, as Montesquieu
-foresaw: “Europe will perish through the soldiers, if not saved in time.”
-We must escape from this empiricism and this fearful confusion. But
-who will save us? The Christ, the true Christ, the Christ of esoteric
-science.<a id='r126' /><a href='#f126' class='c013'><sup>[126]</sup></a> And how? Thus: the same key which, under the eyes of
-the scientific bodies, shall open the secrets of Nature, will open their
-own intellects to the secrets of true Sociology; the same key which,
-under the eyes of the priesthoods, shall open the Arcana of the mysteries
-and the gospel parables, will open their intellects to these same secrets
-of Sociology. Priests and savants will then develope in the radiance of
-one and the same light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And this key—I can assert it, for I have proved it in application to
-all our dogmas—<span class='sc'>this key is the same which the Mahatmas
-offer and deliver to us at this moment</span>.<a id='r127' /><a href='#f127' class='c013'><sup>[127]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is here an interposition of Providence, before which we should
-all of us offer up our own thanksgivings. For my part, I am deeply
-touched by it; I feel I know not what sacred thrill! My gratitude is
-the more keen since, if I confront the Hindu tradition with the occult
-theosophic traditions of Judeo-Christianity, from its origin to our own
-day, through the Holy Kabbala, I can recognise clearly the agreement
-of the teaching of the “Brothers” with the esoteric teaching of Moses,
-Jesus, and Saint Paul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>People are sure to say: “You abase the West before the East, Europe
-before Asia, France before India, Christianity before Buddhism. You
-are betraying at once your Country and your Church, your quality as a
-Frenchman, and your character as a Priest.” Pardon me, gentlemen!
-I abase nothing whatever; I betray nothing at all! A member of
-Humanity, I work for the happiness of Humanity; a son of France, I
-work for the glory of France; a Priest of Jesus Christ, I work for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>triumph of Jesus Christ. You shall be forced to confess it; suspend,
-therefore, your anathemas, and listen, if you please!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We are traversing a frightful crisis. For the last hundred years we
-have been trying to round the <em>Cape of Social Tempests</em>, which I spoke of
-before; we have been enduring, without intermission, the fires, the
-lightnings the thunders, and the earthquakes of an unparalleled hurricane,
-and we feel, clearly enough, that everything is giving way around us;
-under our feet and over our heads! Neither pontiffs, nor savants, nor
-politicians, nor statesmen, show themselves capable of snatching us from
-the abysses towards which we are being, one is tempted to say, driven
-by a fatality! If, then, I discover, in the distant East, through the
-darkness of this tempest, the blessed star which alone can guide us,
-amidst so many shoals, safe and sound to the longed-for haven of
-safety, am I wanting in patriotism and religion because I announce to
-my brethren the rising of this beneficent star?...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I know as well as you that it was said to Peter: “I <em>will</em> give
-thee the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, that thou mayest open its
-gates upon earth”; yes, doubtless, but note the tense of this verb: I <em>will
-give</em> thee: in the future. Has the Christian Pontiff already received
-them—those magic Keys? Before replying look and see what Rome
-has made of Christendom; see the lamentable state of Europe; not
-only engaged in open war with foreign nationalities, but also exhausting
-herself in fratricidal wars and preparations to consummate her own
-destruction; behold everywhere Christian against Christian, church
-against church, priesthood against priesthood, class against class, school
-against school, and, often in the same family, brother against brother,
-sons against their father, the father against his sons! What a spectacle!
-And a Pope presides over it! And while, all around, men prepare for a
-general slaughter, he, the Pope, thinks only of one thing—of his temporal
-domain, of his material possessions! Think you that this state of things
-forms the Kingdom of Heaven, and say you still that the Pontiff of Rome
-has already received the Keys thereof?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is written, perchance, in the decrees of Providence, that these mysterious
-Keys shall be brought to the brethren of the West by the
-“Brothers” of the East.... Such is, indeed, the expectation of all
-the nations; the prophetic East sighs for the tenth incarnation of
-Vishnu, which shall be the crown of all the Avatars which have preceded
-it, and the Apocalypse, on its side, announces the appearance of
-the <em>White Horse</em> which is the symbol of the Christ risen, glorious and
-triumphant before the eyes of all the peoples of the earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is how I, priest of Jesus Christ, betray Jesus Christ, when I
-acclaim the wisdom of the Mahatmas and their mission in the
-West!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have spoken of the opportuneness of the hour chosen by them for
-coming to our help. I must insist upon this point.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>[<em>The Abbé then enforces his argument by references to the position of
-Modern Science, and concludes</em>:—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The phenomena of motion,” by means of which men of science claim
-to explain everything, explain nothing at all, because the very cause of
-that motion is unknown to our physicists as they themselves admit.
-“Consider, say to us the Mahatmas by the mouth of their Adepts, that
-behind each physical energy is hidden another energy, which itself
-serves as envelope to a spiritual force which is the living soul of every
-manifested force.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And thus Nature offers us an infinite series of forces one within
-another, serving mutually as sheaths, which, as d’Alembert suspected,
-produce all sensible phenomena and reach all points of the circumference
-starting from a central point, which is God....</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>II.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>I can now, after these preliminaries, give an example of the transformation
-which, thanks to the Mahatmas, will soon take place in the
-teaching of the Christian Church. I will take particularly the dogma
-of the <em>Creation</em>, informing my readers that they will find in a book I am
-preparing, <em>The New Heavens and the New Earth</em>, an analogous work on
-all the dogmas of the Catholic faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Matter exists in states of infinite variety, and, sometimes, even of
-opposite appearance. The world is constituted in two poles, the North
-or Spiritual, and the South or Material pole: these two poles correspond
-perfectly and differ only in form, that is, in appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Regarded from above, as the Easterns regard it, the universal
-substance presents the aspect of a spiritual or divine <em>emanation</em>; looked
-at from below, as the Westerns are in the habit of viewing it, it offers,
-on the contrary, the aspect of a material creation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One sees at once the difference which must exist between the two
-intellectualities and, consequently, between the two civilisations of the
-East and the West. Yet there is no more error in the Genesis of Moses,
-which is that of the Christian teaching, than there is in the Genesis of
-the Mahatmas, which is that of the Buddhist doctrine. The one and
-the other of these Geneses are absolutely founded on one and the same
-reality. Whether one descends or ascends the scale of being, one only
-traverses, in the East from above downwards, in the West from below
-upwards, the same ladder of essences, more or less spiritualised, more
-or less materialised, according as one approaches to, or recedes from,
-<em>Pure Spirit</em>, which is God.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was, therefore, not worth while to fulminate so much on one side or
-the other, here, against the theory of <em>emanation</em>, there, against the theory
-of <em>Creation</em>. One always comes back to the principle of Hermes
-Trismegistus: the universe is dual, though formed of a single substance.
-The Kabbalists knew it well, and it was taught long ago in the Egyptian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>sanctuaries, as the occultists have never ceased to repeat it in the temples
-of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It will soon be demonstrated, I hope, by scientific experiments such
-as those of Mr. William Crookes, the Academician, that everywhere,
-throughout all nature, <em>spirit</em> and <em>matter</em> are not <em>two</em> but <em>one</em>, and that
-they nowhere offer a real division in life. Under every physical force
-there is a spiritual or a psychic force: in the heart of the minutest atom
-is hidden a vital soul, the presence of which has been perfectly
-determined by Claude Bernard in germs imperceptible to the naked
-eye. “This soul, human, animal, vegetal or mineral, is but a ray lent by
-the universal soul to every object manifested in the Kosmos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Corporeal man and the sensible universe, says the theosophical
-doctrine, are but the appearance imparted to them by the cohesion of
-the interatomic or inter-astral forces which constitute both exteriorly.
-The visible side of a being is an ever-changing Maya.” The language
-of St. Paul is in no way different: “The aspect of the world,” he says,
-“is a passing vision, an image which passes and renews itself continually—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>transit
-figura hujus mundi</i>.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The real man, or the <em>microcosm</em>—and one can say as much of the
-<em>macrocosm</em>—is an astral force which reveals itself through this physical
-appearance, and which, having existed before the birth of this form,
-does not share its fate at the hour of death: surviving its destruction.
-The material form cannot subsist <a id='corr372.23'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='withont'>without</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_372.23'><ins class='correction' title='withont'>without</ins></a></span> the spiritual force which
-sustains it; but the latter is independent of the former, for form is
-created by spirit, and not spirit by form.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This theory is word for word that of the “Brothers” and the Adepts,
-at the same time it is that of the Kabbalists and the Christians of the
-School of Origen, and the Johannine Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There could not be a more perfect agreement. Transfer this teaching
-to the genesis of the Kosmos and you have the secret of the formation of
-the World; at the same time you discover the profound meaning of
-the saying of St. Paul: “The invisible things of God are made visible
-to the eye of man through the visible things of the creation,” a saying
-so well translated by Joseph de Maistre by the following: “The world
-is a vast system of invisible things, visibly organised.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The whole of the Kosmos is like a two-faced medal of which both
-faces are alike. The materialists know only the lower side, while the
-occultists see it from both sides at once; from the front and from the
-back. It is always nature, and the same nature, but <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>natura naturata</i></span> from
-below, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>natura naturans</i></span> from above; here, intelligent cause; there, brute
-effect; spiritual above, corporeal below, etherealised at the North, concreted
-at the South Pole.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The distinction accepted everywhere in the West down to our own
-day, as essential and radical, between spirit on the one hand and matter
-on the other, is no longer sustainable. The progress of science, spurred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>on as it will be by Hindu ideas, will soon force the last followers of this
-infantile belief to abandon it as ridiculous....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yes, all, absolutely all in the world is life, but life differently organised
-and variously manifested through phenomena which vary infinitely
-from the most spiritualised beings, such as the Angels, as well known to
-Buddhists as to Christians, though called by other names, down to the
-most solidified of beings, such as stones and metals. In the bosom of
-the latter, sleep, in a cataleptic condition, milliards of vital elementary
-spirits. These latter only await, to thrill into activity, the stroke of the
-pick or hammer to which they will owe their deliverance and their
-escape from the <em>limbus</em>, of which the Hindu doctrine speaks as well as
-the Catholic. Here lies, for these souls of life, the starting point of the
-<em>Resurrection</em> and of the <em>Ascension</em>, taught equally by both the Eastern
-and the Western traditions, but not understood among us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>[<i>The Abbé sketches in eloquent words the development of these “spirits
-of the elements,” and then continues</i>:—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But as they ascend, so the spirits can also descend, for they are always
-free to transfigure themselves in the divine light, or to bury themselves
-in the satanic shadow of error and evil. Hence, while time is time,
-“these ceaseless tears and gnashings of teeth” of which the gospel
-Parables speak metaphorically, and which will last as long as shall last
-the elaboration of the social atoms destined for the collective composition
-of the beatific Nirvana.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Nature is ever placing under our eyes examples of organic transformations,
-analagous to those I am speaking of, as if to aid us in comprehending
-our own destiny. But it seems that many men “have eyes in
-order not to see,” as Jesus said. See how in order to remove these
-cataracts, science, even in the West, constantly approaching more and
-more that of the East, is at work producing in its turn phenomena,
-which corroborate at once the Parables of the Gospels and the teachings
-of nature. I will not speak of the Salpêtrière and the marvels of hypnotism
-in the hands of M. Charcot and his numerous disciples throughout
-the whole world. There are things which strike me even more.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>M. Pictet, at Geneva, is creating diamonds with air and light. This
-should not astonish those who know that our coal mines are nothing but
-“stored-up sunlight.” With an even more marvellous industry, do not
-the flowers extract from the atmosphere the luminous substance of which
-they weave their fine and joyous garments? And “all that is sown in
-the earth under a material form, does it not rise under a spiritual form,”
-as St. Paul says?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The glorious entities, which we call celestial spirits, have themselves an
-organic <a id='corr373.42'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='form,'>form.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_373.42'><ins class='correction' title='form,'>form.</ins></a></span> It is defined in the canons of our dogma, whatever the
-ignorance-mongers of ultramontanism may pretend. God alone has no
-body, God alone is <em>pure Spirit</em>—and even to speak thus we must consider
-the Deity apart from the person of Jesus Christ, for in the “<em>Word
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>made flesh</em>” God dwells <em>corporeally</em>, according to the true and beautiful
-saying of St. Paul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And it is because God has no body that he is present everywhere in
-the infinite, under the veils of cosmic light and ether, which serve as his
-garment and under the electric, magnetic, interatomic, interplanetary,
-interstellar and sound fluids, which serve him as vehicles....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And it is also because God has no created form that the Kabbala
-could, without error, call him <em>Non-Being</em>. Hegel probably felt this esoteric
-truth when he spoke, in his heavy and cumbrous language, of the
-equivalence of Being and Non-Being.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>All visible forms are thus the product, at the same time as they are
-the garment and the manifestation, of spiritual forces. All sensible order
-is, in reality, an <em>organic concretion</em>, a sort of living <em>crystallisation</em> of
-intelligent powers fallen from the state of <em>spirituality</em> into the state of
-materiality; in other words, fallen from the North to the South pole of
-nature, in consequence of a catastrophe called by Holy Scripture the
-<em>Fall from Eden</em>. This cataclysm was the punishment of a frightful
-crime, of an audacious revolt spoken of in the traditions of all Temples
-and called in our dogma <em>original sin</em>. The primary priesthood of the
-Christian church has hitherto lacked the light needed to explain this
-biological phenomenon, which is an ascertained fact of physiology and
-sociology, as I hope to prove. Questioned on this point, the priests have
-always replied: It is a mystery. Now there are no mysteries save for
-ignorance, and the Christ announced that “every hidden thing should be
-brought to light, and proclaimed on the house-tops.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is why so many new lights, coming from the East and elsewhere,
-enter scientifically, in our day, into the Christian mind. Glory to the
-Theosophists, glory to the Adepts, glory to the Kabbalists, glory above
-all to the Hermetists everywhere, glory to those new missionaries whose
-coming M. de Maistre foresaw, and whom M. de Saint-Ives d’Alveydre
-lately hailed as the elect of God, charged by him to establish a
-communion of knowledge and of love between all the religious centres
-of the earth!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Priests of the Roman Catholic Church, we shall enter in our turn this
-wise communion of saints, on the day when we shall consent to read
-anew our sacred texts, no longer in “the dead letter” of their
-exotericism, but in the “living spirit” of their esotericism, and in the
-threefold sense which Christian tradition has always canonically recognised
-in them.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>L’Abbe Roca</span> (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Chanoine</cite></span>).</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Chateau de Pallestres, France.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[This is a very optimistic way of putting it, and if realized would be like
-pouring the elixir of life into the decrepit body of the Latin Church. But
-what will his Holiness the Pope say to it?—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>
- <h3 id='quest2' class='c018'>THE GREAT QUEST.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Continued</span> from the December (1887) number.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>The Religionist, of course, denies that man can become a god or
-ever realise in himself the attributes of Deity. He may recognise
-the necessity of re-incarnation for ordinary worldly men, and
-even for those who are not constant in their detachment and devotion,
-but he denies the necessity for that series of trials and initiations which
-must cover, at all events, more than one life-time—probably <a id='corr375.8'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='many'>many.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_375.8'><ins class='correction' title='many'>many.</ins></a></span>
-It would appear as if the theory of evolution might be called in, to
-aid this latter view. If it is acknowledged that we, as individuals,
-have been for ever whirling on the wheel of conditioned existence;
-if at the beginning of each manwantara the divine monad which
-through the beginningless past has inhabited in succession the vegetable,
-animal, and human forms, takes to itself a house of flesh in exact
-accordance with previous Karma, it will be seen that (while inhabiting
-a human body) during no moment in the past eternity have we been
-nearer the attainment of Nirvana than at any other. If then there
-is no thinkable connection between evolution and Nirvana, to imagine
-that evolution, through stages of Adeptship, conducts to Nirvana,
-is a delusion. “It is purely a question of divine grace”—says the
-Religionist. If in answer to this view, it is contended that the light
-of the Logos is bound, eventually, to reach and enlighten every
-individual, and that the steady progress to perfection through Chelaship
-and Adeptship would, therefore, be a logical conclusion, it is objected
-that to assert that the light of the Logos must eventually reach and enlighten
-all, would involve the ultimate extinction of the objective
-Universe, which is admitted to be without beginning or end, although it
-passes through alternate periods of manifestation and non-manifestation.
-If to escape from this untenable position we postulate fresh emanations
-of Deity into the lowest organisms at the beginning of each manwantara,
-to take the place of those who pass away into Nirvana, we are met by
-other difficulties. Firstly, putting out of consideration the fact that
-such a supposition is expressly denied by what is acknowledged as
-revelation, the projection into the evolutionary process of a monad free
-from all Karma, makes the law of Karma inoperative, for the monad’s
-first association with Karma remains unexplained; and also it becomes
-impossible to say what the monad was, and what was the mode of its
-being prior to the projection into evolution. It must be noted that
-although the law of Karma does not explain <em>why</em> we are, yet it satisfactorily
-shows <em>how</em> we are what we are; and this is the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>raison d’être</i></span> of
-the law. But the above theory takes away its occupation. It makes
-Karma and the monad independent realities, joined together by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>creative energy of the Deity, while Karma ought to be regarded as a
-mode of existence of the monad—which mode ceases to be when
-another mode, called liberation, takes its place. Secondly, if the monad
-in attaining liberation only attains to what it was before its association
-with Karma, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>à quoi bon</i></span> the whole process; while, if it is stated that the
-monad was altogether non-existent before its projection, the Deity
-becomes responsible for all our sufferings and sins, and we fall into
-either the Calvinist doctrine of predestination as popularly conceived,
-or into the still more blasphemous doctrine of the worshippers of
-Ahriman, besides incurring many logical difficulties. The teaching of
-our eastern philosophers is that the real interior nature of the monad
-is the same as the real interior essence of the Godhead, but from
-beginningless past time it has a transitory nature, considered illusive,
-and the mode in which this illusion works is known by the name of
-Karma.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But were we not led astray in the first instance? Ought we not to
-have acquiesced in the first above given definition of the theory of
-evolution? The premiss was satisfactory enough—the mistake was in
-allowing the religionist’s deduction as a logical necessity. When the
-religionist states that there is no thinkable connection between evolution
-and Nirvana, he merely postulates for the word evolution a more
-limited scope than that which the Occultist attaches to it, viz., the
-development of soul as well as that of mere form. He is indeed right
-in stating that the natural man, while he remains such, will never
-attain the ultimate goal of Being. True it is, for the Occultist as for
-the religionist, that, to free himself from the fatal circle of rebirths, he
-must “burst the shell which holds him in darkness—tear the veil that
-hides him from the eternal.” The religionist may call this the act of
-divine grace; but it may be quite as correctly described as the
-“awakening of the slumbering God within.” But the error of the
-religionist is surely in mistaking the first glimmer of the divine
-consciousness for a guarantee of final emancipation, at, say, the next
-death of the body, instead of merely the first step of a probationary
-stage in the long vista of work for Humanity on the higher planes of
-Being!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To provide ourselves with an analogy from the very theory of Evolution
-which we have been discussing, is it not more logical to imagine
-that, in the same way in which we see stretched at our feet the infinite
-gradations of existence, through the lower animal, vegetable, and
-mineral kingdoms—between which indeed, thanks to the recent
-investigations of scientific men—there is no longer recognised to be any
-distinct line of demarcation—so the heights (necessarily hidden from our
-view) which still remain to be scaled by us in our upward progress to
-Divinity, should be similarly filled with the gradations of the unseen
-hierarchy of Being? And that, as we have evolved during millions of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>centuries of earth-life through these lower forms up to the position we
-now occupy, so may we, if we choose, start on a new and better road of
-progress, apart from the ordinary evolution of Humanity, but in which
-there must also be innumerable grades?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>That there will be progress for Humanity as a whole, in the direction
-of greater spirituality, there is no doubt, but that progress will be partaken
-of by continually decreasing numbers. Whether the weeding out
-takes place at the middle of the “great fifth round,” or whether it be
-continually taking place during the evolutionary process, a ray of light
-is here thrown on the statement met with in all the Bibles of Humanity
-as to the great difficulty of the attainment. “For straight is the gate,
-and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find
-it; but wide is the gate, and broad is the way that leadeth unto destruction,
-and many there be that go in thereat.” This and parallel
-passages doubtless refer to the weeding out of those who are unfit to
-continue the progress, on which the more spiritualized Humanity will
-then have entered. The most vivid picture of the comparative handful
-of elect souls, who are fit to achieve the great quest, will be obtained by
-contemplating the fact already stated, that the objective universe, with
-its myriads of inhabitants, will never, in the vast abysses of the future,
-cease to be; and that the great majority of humanity—the millions of
-millions—will thus for ever whirl on the wheel of birth and death.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But though Nature may give us an almost infinite number of chances
-to attempt the great quest, it were madness to put by the chance offered
-now, and allow the old sense-attractions to regain their dominance, for
-it must be remembered that the barbarism and anarchy which every
-civilisation must eventually lapse into, are periods of spiritual deadness,
-and that it is when “the flower of civilisation has blown to its full, and
-when its petals are but slackly held together,” that the goad within men
-causes them to lift their eyes to the sunlit mountains, and “to recognise
-in the bewildering glitter the outlines of the Gates of Gold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There are no doubt realms in the Devaloka where the bliss of heaven
-may be realised by those who aspire to the selfish rewards of personal
-satisfaction, but these cease to exist with the end of the manwantara,
-and with the beginning of the next the devotee will again have to endure
-incarceration in flesh. The eighth chapter of the Bhagavad Gita does
-indeed state that there is a path to Nirvana through the Devaloka, and
-amongst the countless possibilities of the Infinite who shall assert that this
-is not so? but the context surely implies such a detachment and devotion
-through life as is difficult for us even to contemplate, much less to
-realize.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>However distant, therefore, may appear to us the achievement of the
-great quest, when we consider how much more closely we are allied to
-the animal than to the God, it must necessarily seem an infinitely far-off
-goal, but though we may have to pass through many life-times before we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>reach it, our most earnest prayer should be, that we may never lose
-sight of that celestial goal, for surely it is the one thing worthy of
-achievement!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To many the foregoing may appear as mere speculations, and the
-firmest faith indeed can scarcely call itself knowledge, but, however
-necessary the complete knowledge may be, we may at least hope that
-its partial possession is adequate to the requirements of the occasion.
-To us whose feet tread, often wearily, towards the path of the great
-quest, and whose eyes strain blindly through the mists that wrap us
-round, steady perseverance and omnipotent hope must be the watch-words—perseverance
-to struggle on, though the fiends of the lower self
-may make every step a battle, and hope that at any moment the entrance
-to the path may be found.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As an example of these two qualities, and also because all words that
-strike a high key are bound to awaken responsive echoes in noble hearts,
-let us conclude with the following extract from the Ramayana:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Thus spoke Rama. Virtue is a service man owes himself, and
-though there were no heaven nor any God to rule the world, it were not
-less the binding law of life. It is man’s privilege to know the right and
-follow it. Betray and persecute me brother men! Pour out your rage
-on me O malignant devils! Smile, or watch my agony in cold disdain
-ye blissful Gods! Earth, hell, heaven combine your might to crush me—I
-will still hold fast by this inheritance! My strength is nothing—time
-can shake and cripple it; my youth is transient—already grief has
-withered up my days; my heart—alas! it is well-nigh broken now.
-Anguish may crush it utterly, and life may fail; but even so my soul
-that has not tripped shall triumph, and dying, give the lie to soulless
-destiny that dares to boast itself man’s master.”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>Pilgrim.</span>”</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator1.png' alt='decorative description' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>WHISPER OF A ROSE.</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Behold me! an offspring of Darkness and Light.</div>
- <div class='line'>With soft, tender petals of radiant white,</div>
- <div class='line'>With golden heart mystery, full of perfume</div>
- <div class='line'>That is Soul of my Breath—the Secret of Bloom.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Infinity’s centre is heart of the rose,</div>
- <div class='line'>And th’ breath of Creation its perfume that flows</div>
- <div class='line'>Through ages and eons and time yet untold—</div>
- <div class='line'>But the <em>Soul</em> of the <em>Breath</em> I may not unfold.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Mora.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>
- <h3 id='light4' class='c018'>THE SECLUSION OF THE ADEPT.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>[CONTINUATION OF “COMMENTS ON LIGHT ON THE PATH,” BY THE AUTHOR.]</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Before the voice can speak in the presence of the Masters, it must have lost
-the power to wound.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>Those who give a merely passing and superficial attention to the
-subject of occultism—and their name is Legion—constantly
-inquire why, if adepts in life exist, they do not appear in the
-world and show their power. That the chief body of these wise ones
-should be understood to dwell beyond the fastnesses of the Himalayas,
-appears to be a sufficient proof that they are only figures of straw.
-Otherwise, why place them so far off?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Unfortunately, Nature has done this and not personal choice or
-arrangement. There are certain spots on the earth where the advance
-of “civilisation” is unfelt, and the nineteenth century fever is kept at
-bay. In these favoured places there is always time, always opportunity,
-for the realities of life; they are not crowded out by the doings of an
-inchoate, money-loving, pleasure seeking society. While there are
-adepts upon the earth, the earth must preserve to them places of
-seclusion. This is a fact in nature which is only an external expression
-of a profound fact in super-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The demand of the neophyte remains unheard until the voice in which it
-is uttered has lost the power to wound. This is because the divine-astral
-life<a id='r128' /><a href='#f128' class='c013'><sup>[128]</sup></a> is a place in which order reigns, just as it does in natural life. There
-is, of course, always the centre and the circumference as there is in nature.
-Close to the central heart of life, on any plane, there is knowledge, there
-order reigns completely; and chaos makes dim and confused the
-outer margin of the circle. In fact, life in every form bears a more or
-less strong resemblance to a philosophic school. There are always the
-devotees of knowledge who forget their own lives in their pursuit of it;
-there are always the flippant crowd who come and go——Of such,
-Epictetus said that it was as easy to teach them philosophy as to eat
-custard with a fork. The same state exists in the super-astral life; and
-the adept has an even deeper and more profound seclusion there in
-which to dwell. This place of retreat is so safe, so sheltered, that no
-sound which has discord in it can reach his ears. Why should this be,
-will be asked at once, if he is a being of such great powers as those say
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>who believe in his existence? The answer seems very apparent. He
-serves humanity and identifies himself with the whole world; he is
-ready to make vicarious sacrifice for it at any moment—<em>by living not by
-dying for it</em>. Why should he not die for it? Because he is part of the
-great whole, and one of the most valuable parts of it. Because he lives
-under laws of order which he does not desire to break. His life is not
-his own, but that of the forces which work behind him. He is the flower
-of humanity, the bloom which contains the divine seed. He is, in his
-own person, a treasure of the universal nature, which is guarded and
-made safe in order that the fruition shall be perfected. It is only at definite
-periods of the world’s history that he is allowed to go among the herd
-of men as their redeemer. But for those who have the power to separate
-themselves from this herd he is always at hand. And for those who
-are strong enough to conquer the vices of the personal human nature, as
-set forth in these four rules, he is consciously at hand, easily recognised,
-ready to answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But this conquering of self implies a destruction of qualities which
-most men regard as not only indestructible but desirable. The “power
-to wound” includes much that men value, not only in themselves, but in
-others. The instinct of self-defence and of self-preservation is part of
-it; the idea that one has any right or rights, either as citizen, or man, or
-individual, the pleasant consciousness of self-respect and of virtue.
-These are hard sayings to many; yet they are true. For these words
-that I am writing now, and those which I have written on this subject,
-are not in any sense my own. They are drawn from the traditions of
-the lodge of the Great Brotherhood, which was once the secret splendour
-of Egypt. The rules written in its ante-chamber were the same as those
-now written in the ante-chamber of existing schools. Through all time
-the wise men have lived apart from the mass. And even when some
-temporary purpose or object induces one of them to come into the
-midst of human life, his seclusion and safety is preserved as completely
-as ever. It is part of his inheritance, part of his position, he has an
-actual title to it, and can no more put it aside than the Duke of
-Westminster can say he does not choose to be the Duke of Westminster.
-In the various great cities of the world an adept lives for a while from
-time to time, or perhaps only passes through; but all are occasionally
-aided by the actual power and presence of one of these men. Here in
-London, as in Paris and St. Petersburgh, there are men high in development.
-But they are only known as mystics by those who have the
-power to recognise; the power given by the conquering of self. Otherwise
-how could they exist, even for an hour, in such a mental and
-psychic atmosphere as is created by the confusion and disorder of a
-city? Unless protected and made safe their own growth would be
-interfered with, their work injured. And the neophyte may meet an
-adept in the flesh, may live in the same house with him, and yet be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>unable to recognise him, and unable to make his own voice heard by
-him. For no nearness in space, no closeness of relations, no daily
-intimacy, can do away with the inexorable laws which give the adept
-his seclusion. No voice penetrates to his inner hearing till it has become
-a divine voice, a voice which gives no utterance to the cries of self.
-Any lesser appeal would be as useless, as much a waste of energy and
-power, as for mere children who are learning their alphabet to be taught
-it by a professor of philology. Until a man has become, in heart and
-spirit, a disciple, he has no existence for those who are teachers of
-disciples. And he becomes this by one method only—the surrender of
-his personal humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For the voice to have lost the power to wound, a man must have
-reached that point where he sees himself only as one of the vast multitudes
-that live; one of the sands washed hither and thither by the sea
-of vibratory existence. It is said that every grain of sand in the ocean
-bed does, in its turn, get washed up on to the shore and lie for a moment
-in the sunshine. So with human beings, they are driven hither and
-thither by a great force, and each, in his turn, finds the sunrays on him.
-When a man is able to regard his own life as part of a whole like this he
-will no longer struggle in order to obtain anything for himself. This is
-the surrender of personal rights. The ordinary man expects, not to
-take equal fortunes with the rest of the world, but in some points, about
-which he cares, to fare better than the others. The disciple does not
-expect this. Therefore, though he be, like Epictetus, a chained slave, he
-has no word to say about it. He knows that the wheel of life turns
-ceaselessly. Burne Jones has shown it in his marvellous picture—the
-wheel turns, and on it are bound the rich and the poor, the great and the
-small—each has his moment of good fortune when the wheel brings him
-uppermost—the King rises and falls, the poet is <em>fêted</em> and forgotten, the
-slave is happy and afterwards discarded. Each in his turn is crushed as
-the wheel turns on. The disciple knows that this is so, and though it is
-his duty to make the utmost of the life that is his, he neither complains
-of it nor is elated by it, nor does he complain against the better fortune of
-others. All alike, as he well knows, are but learning a lesson; and he
-smiles at the socialist and the reformer who endeavour by sheer force
-to re-arrange circumstances which arise out of the forces of human
-nature itself. This is but kicking against the pricks; a waste of life and
-energy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In realising this a man surrenders his imagined individual rights, of
-whatever sort. That takes away one keen sting which is common to all
-ordinary men.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When the disciple has fully recognised that the very thought of individual
-rights is only the outcome of the venomous quality in himself,
-that it is the hiss of the snake of self which poisons with its sting his own
-life and the lives of those about him, then he is ready to take part in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>yearly ceremony which is open to all neophytes who are prepared for it.
-All weapons of defence and offence are given up; all weapons of mind
-and heart, and brain, and spirit. Never again can another man be
-regarded as a person who can be criticised or condemned; never again
-can the neophyte raise his voice in self-defence or excuse. From that
-ceremony he returns into the world as helpless, as unprotected, as a newborn
-child. That, indeed, is what he is. He has begun to be born
-again on to the higher plane of life, that breezy and well-lit plateau from
-whence the eyes see intelligently and regard the world with a new
-insight.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have said, a little way back, that after parting with the sense of
-individual rights, the disciple must part also with the sense of self-respect
-and of virtue. This may sound a terrible doctrine, yet all occultists
-know well that it is not a doctrine, but a fact. He who thinks himself
-holier than another, he who has any pride in his own exemption from
-vice or folly, he who believes himself wise, or in any way superior to
-his fellow men, is incapable of discipleship. A man must become as a
-little child before he can enter into the kingdom of heaven.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Virtue and wisdom are sublime things; but if they create pride and a
-consciousness of separateness from the rest of humanity in the mind of a
-man, then they are only the snakes of self re-appearing in a finer form.
-At any moment he may put on his grosser shape and sting as fiercely as
-when he inspired the actions of a murderer who kills for gain or hatred,
-or a politician who sacrifices the mass for his own or his party’s interests.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In fact, to have lost the power to wound, implies that the snake is not
-only scotched, but killed. When it is merely stupefied or lulled to sleep
-it awakes again and the disciple uses his knowledge and his power for
-his own ends, and is a pupil of the many masters of the black art, for
-the road to destruction is very broad and easy, and the way can be
-found blindfold. That it is the way to destruction is evident, for when a
-man begins to live for self he narrows his horizon steadily till at last the
-fierce driving inwards leaves him but the space of a pin’s-head to dwell
-in. We have all seen this phenomenon occur in ordinary life. A man
-who becomes selfish isolates himself, grows less interesting and less
-agreeable to others. The sight is an awful one, and people shrink from
-a very selfish person at last, as from a beast of prey. How much more
-awful is it when it occurs on the more advanced plane of life, with the
-added powers of knowledge, and through the greater sweep of successive
-incarnations!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore I say, pause and think well upon the threshold. For if the
-demand of the neophyte is made without the complete purification, it will
-not penetrate the seclusion of the divine adept, but will evoke the
-terrible forces which attend upon the black side of our human nature.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span></div>
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Before the soul can stand in the presence of the Masters its feet must be washed
-in the blood of the heart.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The word soul, as used here, means the divine soul, or “starry
-spirit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“To be able to stand is to have confidence;” and to have confidence
-means that the disciple is sure of himself, that he has surrendered his
-emotions, his very self, even his humanity; that he is incapable of fear
-and unconscious of pain; that his whole consciousness is centred in the
-divine life, which is expressed symbolically by the term “the Masters;”
-that he has neither eyes, nor ears, nor speech, nor power, save in and
-for the divine ray on which his highest sense has touched. Then is he
-fearless, free from suffering, free from anxiety or dismay; his soul
-stands without shrinking or desire of postponement, in the full blaze of
-the divine light which penetrates through and through his being. Then
-he has come into his inheritance and can claim his kinship with the
-teachers of men; he is upright, he has raised his head, he breathes the
-same air that they do.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But before it is in any way possible for him to do this, the feet of the
-soul must be washed in the blood of the heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The sacrifice, or surrender of the heart of man, and its emotions, is
-the first of the rules; it involves the “attaining of an equilibrium which
-cannot be shaken by personal emotion.” This is done by the stoic
-philosopher; he, too, stands aside and looks equably upon his own
-sufferings, as well as on those of others.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the same way that “tears” in the language of occultists expresses
-the soul of emotion, not its material appearance, so blood expresses, not
-that blood which is an essential of physical life, but the vital creative
-principle in man’s nature, which drives him into human life in order to
-experience pain and pleasure, joy and sorrow. When he has let the
-blood flow from the heart he stands before the Masters as a pure spirit
-which no longer wishes to incarnate for the sake of emotion and
-experience. Through great cycles of time successive incarnations in
-gross matter may yet be his lot; but he no longer desires them, the
-crude wish to live has departed from him. When he takes upon him
-man’s form in the flesh he does it in the pursuit of a divine object, to
-accomplish the work of “the Masters,” and for no other end. He looks
-neither for pleasure nor pain, asks for no heaven, and fears no hell; yet
-he has entered upon a great inheritance which is not so much a compensation
-for these things surrendered, as a state which simply blots out
-the memory of them. He lives now not in the world, but with it; his
-horizon has extended itself to the width of the whole universe.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>Δ</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE WHITE MONK.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'>By the Author of the “Professor of Alchemy.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'><span class='sc'>Part I.—Ralph’s Story.</span></h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>“It was after this manner, as they say,” began Ralph, swinging
-himself on to a bench and pouring out for himself a tankard of
-our good home-brewed, as I crouched in the hay opposite to
-him. “Two centuries agone and thirty years or so, there dwelt in this
-very house which I serve—and which one day, young master, you shall
-rule!—Sir Gilbert de Troyes, your ancestor, and his lady, and four fair
-sons, and a lovely daughter. Of these sons, twain were at the wars, one
-was in his nurse’s lap, and another was gone to Italy, to finish his
-studies at Parma. Thus did the old nobles use to ruin their sons!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This young foregoer of yours (a goodly youth!) fell in with the usual
-temptations of Satan. He held, with the poets, that the world is the
-best book for men to read; and he studied it, I ween, with diligence.
-Now there was a certain damsel, winsome enough, I doubt not, in the
-Italian style, with black hair and the devil—save the mark!—in her
-wandering eyes. So it came to pass that Master Gilbert, younger,
-wooed her for his bride, like an honest gentleman, as the old tales say
-he was; and so great is the power of one upright soul amongst others,
-that the young witch—she was but young, poor soul! and teachable—was
-charmed herself from her Italian ways, and vowed to love and follow
-only him; and the day before their marriage, she was walking with him
-in the streets of Parma, by night—for Master Gilbert had a governor along
-with him in Italy, who must be hoodwinked—when there chanced to
-espy them one Pietro Rinucci, a clerkly fellow (with a curse upon him!)
-who was even studying also at Parma, and who loved the Italian witch
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This Rinucci had been favoured of the girl, and only when she saw
-the Englishman, with his blue eyes and his honest ways, had she
-scorned her countryman and left him. Rinucci, after the manner of his
-race-fellows, then dogged her steps, tracked her to her early meetings
-with young Gilbert de Troyes, who was his unsuspecting friend, and
-listened to their innocent ravings of love conjoined to virtue.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Afterward, had he gone to the damsel’s poor lodging and there, with
-Heaven knows what direful threats! conjured her to renounce her
-honest lover and return to himself. The signorina was not like an
-English girl—she neither stormed nor yielded—she cajoled and blinded
-him. ‘If he would go, she would consider; perchance she did not love
-the Briton truly; perchance it was a whim; she knew not. Might she
-but think? it was a whirl, and her heart, alas! was o’er susceptible;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>’twould pass; he must leave her now, at least, and she would see.
-Meantime Pietruccino should wear this pretty crimson ribbon of hers till
-they met again.’ After even such words, and for a kiss, he left her.
-But the cunning villain was more than her match, and waited all the
-next day round the corners, whence he could see her goings out and
-comings in. He saw her glide to her trysting-place; he followed
-cautiously; he heard her give a signalling whispered call; he heard it
-answered by a short, low whistle; young Gilbert de Troyes swung
-merrily round the corner and fell into his Italian sweetheart’s arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“He met his death, poor, noble young fellow! ’Tis an old tale
-repeated. I need scarce have wasted all these words upon it—but that
-one’s heart must needs ache at these things. In the course of nature
-that Italian snake, Rinucci, was bound to finish his rival there and then.
-So he got behind the unwary schoolboy—for the lad was, indeed, little
-more—and stabbed him, all too deep, in the back of the neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Folk say Rinucci triumphed as he set his foot on his dying college-mate,
-and wiped his dagger, with a laugh, before the horror-stricken
-girl. Myself can scarcely believe it; he was too young in murder then
-for that.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Be this as it may, certain it is that he dragged away the mourning
-damsel from the corpse of the man who would have saved her soul, and
-took her back to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A sickening story, boy. Wilt thou have more, young master?
-Yea? Why, there is worse to come. For Mistress Italiana—no
-tradition tells her name—was spirited as any gipsy woman, and full of
-crafty lore, such as her race delight in. She broke her heart over her
-English lover’s corpse; but she had still the Southern amusement left
-her of revenge. She concocted an evil greenish powder, and coloured
-Signor Pietro’s sweetmeats with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The fellow ate largely, praising the daintiness of the confection.
-It was deadly enough, I daresay, in all conscience, but it killed him not.
-These reptiles live on poison; morally, ’tis certain, belike, and also
-physically it agreed with him. Perchance he may have felt a qualm or
-two, though tradition says nought of it. Anyway, the next fytte of
-this story shows us the mysterious disappearance of the Italian girl, of
-whom no word hath ever since been told.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“She left behind her, whether willingly or no, a quantity of the
-false seasoning, which Master Pietro had caused to be analysed, and
-which he seems to have carefully preserved.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Some time after these events, we find Signor Pietro Rinucci
-entered into the Monastery of Dominicans at Brescia, a repentant
-neophyte. He had turned remorseful, no doubt, and in good time!
-The fellow had ever strong imaginations. He was received in due time
-as a brother; wore the garb of the Order, and cast his eyes down.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>Tradition saith he was in great turmoil of soul at this time—judge for
-yourself, young master, by what followed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“One fine morning Brother Petrus was missing from his small,
-damp cell, and none could tell what had become of him. None, that is,
-save the poverty-stricken ropemaker who had supplied him with cords
-to scale the monastery walls; and his discretion had been paid for.
-The fact being, I doubt not, that discipline being ever repugnant to our
-young bravo’s manners, he had fled it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In the meantime, the news of Gilbert de Troyes’ death had been
-brought to these very doors, and certainly the grooms who then tended
-the good horses of your ancestors must, even in this saddle-room, have
-spent their sorrow in each other’s company. But Ambrose de Troyes,
-newly back from the wars, and second-born of the family, rose in his
-wrath, and swore to avenge his brother. For all might know that the
-death blow had been dealt by one Pietro Rinucci, fellow-scholar of
-Gilbert’s, whose absence afterward from the University had puzzled the
-doctors and caused inquisition into the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“So away went Ambrose, the soldier, to Parma. And mind ye,
-Ambrose was no careless school-boy, no mean foe to a man, but a great,
-staunch fellow who had seen service, and who was, moreover, by Nature
-something stern and hard of purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But at Parma they told him Rinucci was escaped into a monastery
-which they named, and showed a painted portrait of him, and did so
-minutely, point by point, describe the man, that Ambrose swore he
-should know him, should he meet him in <a id='corr386.25'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Heaven,'>Heaven.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_386.25'><ins class='correction' title='Heaven,'>Heaven.</ins></a></span> And that was a
-strong assertion, note ye.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Well, Ambrose journeyed on towards the secluded spot where the
-Monastery of Dominicans lay, and was enforced to rest one night
-at the village of Santa Rosa on his road. Having stabled his steed,
-refreshed it and himself, and practised his arm some moments with the
-good sharp sword, he slung the weapon round him and went forth for a
-stroll to pass the time.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“He came to the equivalent of what would be to us in England an
-ale-house, but some way out of the village, meet for travellers to pause
-and rest a moment on their way. Ambrose went in to look about him
-and ordered drink for himself. He lacked a companion to pledge, but
-looking round the little room saw no one but a moody man who seemed
-lost in thought, though enjoying some passing sour wine. Ambrose
-himself could stomach neither the fare nor the company, so he quickly
-got him on his way a little further; when, meeting with a simple shrine
-to the Virgin, the God-fearing soldier took his rosary from under his
-baldrick, and knelt him down to pray. For something had sore perplexed
-him; he had seemed to see in the features of that morose
-comrade at the inn the most exact resemblance of Rinucci. But
-Rinucci was safe at the Monastery, waiting till his time should come, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>the avenger should denounce him. But even as he rose from prayer
-did Ambrose see a mounted messenger speeding to him, who told
-him breathlessly the news had just reached Santa Rosa that the
-Monk Petrus was escaped and roaming at large somewhere in the
-country.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Then Ambrose de Troyes knew he had his man; and natheless, like
-the large-hearted fellow he was, he would but meet him quite alone. So
-he rewarded the newsbringer and sent him away. Once more he fell on
-his knees before our Lady’s image, and besought that his cause might
-find Heaven’s favour, and his action in it be in every point just and
-serviceable. (For he looked upon himself as sent to do such things as
-might cause his brother’s soul to rest in peace.) Then he went rapidly
-retracing his steps towards the inn again, and, led by Destiny, out came
-Pietro Rinucci, unarmed, to meet him. Ambrose de Troyes looked into
-the assassin’s eyes and knew him. Stranger still, the piercing eyes of
-the cunning Italian saw, in the traits of this bronzed warrior, relationship
-to the Gilbert who had been his friend and victim.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘I arrest thee, Pietro Rinucci, for the murder of my brother, Gilbert
-de Troyes, and, though I may not draw upon a tonsured monk (yea, I
-know thee through all thy false disguises!), yet, before I hale thee to
-the ecclesiastical courts, I will show thee, snake, what I think of thee,
-and of all such!’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And Ambrose de Troyes smote the villain a shameful blow upon the
-face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Even at that instant, the monk whips <a id='corr387.25'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>me</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_387.25'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>me</ins></a></span> Ambrose’s sword from its
-scabbard, and, with the fatal dexterity of his race, ran in upon the
-stately Englishman and laid him, bleeding quick to death, upon the hot
-white road.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Oh Margaret, my sister Margaret!’ the dying man raved, as if he
-thirsted for help from the hand that had been kind to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘A right pestilent breed of Britons! but easy to kill—easy to kill,’
-quoth the Monk, as he laid down the red sword by the dying man’s side
-and left him alone in his agony.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“This scene was witnessed by a terrified young country-girl, who
-crouched behind a heap of stones, meanwhile, until the murderer’s
-flight, and then ran to assist De Troyes, who thought she was his sister
-Margaret, and said marvellous tender words, of home and of her
-kindness, and of the little brother he had left in the nursery.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“After this, there comes a period of Rinucci’s life of which we know
-but little. He seems to have raced about the country, in hiding always,
-but doing little harm for him. Italy, however, is debateable ground for
-one of her own recreant monks, so we find Messer Pietro fleeing Justice
-and coming over here to England. Whether he had had some of his heart-searchings
-that he knew so often, I know not, but deem it very likely.
-Here is the flaw, to my mind, in the foreigners’ constitutions. They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>recognize their sins as such, not so we English! We say our evil deeds
-are fate, congenital infirmity, ignorance, negligence, or even virtues;
-they say their sins are sins, and yet they do them. Had I but half the
-talent of sinning that Messer Pietro seems to have owned, my faith, I
-would have gloried in it! So did not he, however; he went to a father
-confessor, fell on the earth, and implored absolution—for life was still
-sweet to him, he said, and he would not die yet awhile.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The father sent him for penance to travel as a pilgrim, in a white
-penitential garb to England, there to walk to the shrine of St. Thomas
-à Becket, foully slain on earth by violence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The father did well for his mother-country, but evilly for us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The monk Petrus performed at all points the penalty enjoined him,
-and afterward, having no especial call to Italy again, he followed his
-roving instincts and wandered about England, even till chance brought
-him to this, our, town. In this country he knew no men well enough to
-desire to kill them; besides, at this period, one of his fits of penitence
-seems to have been on him. Certes, he wore the monkish habit, only
-different in its white colour from that of other fraternities, and the folk
-grew acquainted with his white figure as he roamed the land in deepest
-meditation, with his eyes bent upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now, one day, say the chronicles (which are made up of village
-tales), the White Monk, as our townsfolk called him, was sitting in a
-thicket by a brook in which he was bathing his travelled feet, when
-there came by the sister of his victims, even Mistress Margaret de
-Troyes herself, and walked the pleasant fringes of the forest, very near
-to where the wanderer sat, on the further side the elders. She was
-accompanied by her mother and by another lady, both of whom were
-pressing the claims of some noble suitor upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The other ladies were in deepest mourning for Gilbert and for
-Ambrose, and Mistress Margaret herself, though she wore no such signs
-of grief, was most plainly clad in a pale, pure garb of lavender. She
-listened quietly to all they urged, then spoke and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘My mother, he is a light, false man. I care not for him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It was protested to her, her high birth, the respect in which he would
-hold her for herself; above all, her fair beauty, would all ensure his
-faithfulness. But Margaret said:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘I beseech ye, press me no further. Heaven knows I wish the
-gentleman much good, and that he may aspire to higher things. I will
-pray for him, weep for him if need be; but, ladies, though I be but a
-simple English maiden, I hold myself all too good for such as he to
-marry and draw down, perchance, to like thoughts with himself. I hate
-all evil—not the doers, mother; but the evil. We are all weak and
-changeable, and I dare not come in contact of my free will with evil
-influence. God might punish me by weakness of resolve against
-infection.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>“They urged her yet once more; she might triumph and convert a
-soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘In truth,’ confessed fair Margaret de Troyes, ‘ye wound me sorely,
-dearest ladies mine! At such a time, when good Ambrose de Troyes
-is scarce cold in his grave, to bid his sister make her choice amongst his
-townsfolk; and celebrate the marriage feast with a breaking heart! My
-Ambrose—to think that thou, who, if I but spake of a moment’s weariness,
-would quickly place a cushion for my head, and sit by the hour on our
-window-seat chafing my feet, that thou should’st be bleeding in the
-death-struggles, on the hard, parched road, in a foreign land, and I be
-far away, not able so much as to raise thy dear head upon my knee!
-Oh, I loved him so tenderly, strong brother of mine! I gloried in my
-brown-maned soldier. We prayed together the night before he left on
-his sacred errand, and, at his entreaty, I laid my hand upon his head
-and blessed him in Our Lady’s name. He was a grave, good man; and
-you would have me turn my thoughts from him to that other! What
-though I know Ambrose to be now one of God’s angels; yet he hath
-left me behind him on the earth—the first unkindness he hath ever done
-me! And his mother and mine would have me think of wedlock!’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The fair, pale Englishwoman bent her head, and Pietro heard her
-weeping.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Well, it is but guesswork thenceforth. Folk say, in their coarse way
-of speaking, that the White Monk ‘loved’ the lady Margaret. Forfend!
-The love of such a man were an insult all too gross to offer to the
-memory of any Damoiselle de Troyes. Say, rather, he kindled to the
-worship of goodness in that form first of all.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We know that from that hour when he first saw and heard her,
-Rinucci, the stained wretch, wandered ever where there was a chance to
-see her, even from afar. Once, indeed he even spoke with her.
-Under the favour of his sacred garment he dared to near her, and
-asked:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Maiden, how say you? Is there mercy in Heaven for the worst
-sinners, or no?’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Nay, holy father,” answered the damsel, smiling, <a id='corr389.34'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='“thou'>‘thou</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_389.34'><ins class='correction' title='“thou'>‘thou</ins></a></span> must be
-better seen in these high mysteries than I who dwell in the world, where
-we all need mercy. We can but hope that our God is more pitiful than
-are our fellow creatures to our faults.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Maiden,’ besought the White Monk further, ‘can such as thou look
-pityingly upon a vice-stained fellow man?’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But Margaret wept, and answered him:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Oh, father, search me not over this problem. I have lost the
-dearest to me in the world, two brothers, by an assassin’s hand. If that
-man stood before me, tell me, <em>could</em> I look at him forgivingly? Oh,
-never, father! Human nature is too weak.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The rencounter was over, for Pietro dared speak no more. But,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>according to the custom of that day, Mistress Margaret bent her fair
-head to receive the blessing of the holy father.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The monk started back in horror; even he was not too base to
-feel that. But as the maiden still stood humbly waiting, he was forced
-to stretch his hands forth from the distance, and murmur: ‘Benedicite!’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The days went by and the townsfolk noted how the White Monk
-wasted, and how strange he was. He would mutter to himself like a
-madman. He never said a word of holy import to the cottagers with
-whom he lodged at small cost. He ate almost nothing and appeared to
-spend his days in solitary musing. His conduct smacked so oddly of
-mania that Giles Hughson, his landlord, took to watching whither he
-went and what he did. He saw him always following Margaret, but
-seeking to avoid her if she turned where she might see him. He seemed
-to dread her greatly, yet, to worship her, or, at least to follow her like a
-lost soul looking after the light from some vanishing angel’s wing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Once Margaret turned and saw him, but recognised him not as the
-man she had spoken withal. She, taking him for a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>frère quetant</i></span>, silently,
-without looking upon him, pressed into his hand money, which he took,
-and which was found on him when he died, as you shall <a id='corr390.19'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='hear.'>hear.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_390.19'><ins class='correction' title='hear.'>hear.”</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Percy Ross.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i><a href='#whitemonk2'>To be continued</a>.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator7.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The following remarkable passage was published some five years ago in the
-<cite>Theosophist</cite>, of Madras (1883); and it is needless to call attention in more
-detail to the fidelity with which it is being since then verified.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Protesting against the arbitrary chronology of the Sanskritists in the question
-of Indian antiquity who make it dependent on the Greeks and Chandragupta—whose
-date is represented as “the sheet-anchor of Indian chronology” that
-“nothing will ever shake” (Prof. Max Müller and Weber), the author of the
-prophecy remarks that “it is to be feared that as regards India, the chronological
-ship of the Sanskritists has already broken from her moorings and gone adrift
-with all her precious freight of conjectures and hypotheses.” And then
-adds:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We are at the end of a cycle—geological and other—and at the beginning
-of another. Cataclysm is to follow cataclysm. The pent-up forces are bursting
-out in many quarters; and not only will men be swallowed up or slain by
-thousands, “new” land appear and “old” subside, volcanic eruptions and tidal
-waves appal; but secrets of an unsuspected past will be uncovered to the
-dismay of Western theorists and the humiliation of an imperious science. This
-drifting ship, if watched, may be seen to ground upon the upheaved vestiges of
-ancient civilisations, and fall to pieces. We are not emulous of the prophet’s
-honours: but still, let this stand as a prophecy.” (See also “<cite>Five Years of
-Theosophy</cite>,” p. 388.)</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>LOVE WITH AN OBJECT.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>Some distinguished contributors to theosophical literature have of
-late been describing what qualities are necessary to constitute a
-perfect man, <i>i.e.</i>, an Adept. They said that among other things it
-was absolutely and indispensably necessary, that such a being should
-possess Love—and not merely Love in the abstract—but love regarding
-some object or objects. What can they possibly mean by speaking of
-“love with an object,” and could there possibly be love without any
-object at all? Can that feeling be called love, which is directed solely
-to the Eternal and Infinite, and takes no cognizance of earthly
-illusions? Can that be love which has no object or—in other words—is
-the love of forms or objects the true love at all? If a man loved all
-things in the universe alike, without giving any preference to any of
-them, would not such a love be practically without any object; would it
-not be equal to loving nothing at all; because in such a case the
-individuality of any single object would be lost to sight?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A love which is directed towards all things alike, an universal love, is
-beyond the conception of the mortal mind, and yet this kind of love,
-which bestows no favours upon any one thing, seems to be that eternal
-love, which is recommended by all the sacred books of the East and the
-West; because as soon as we begin to love one thing or one being more
-than another, we not only detract from the rest an amount of love which
-the rest may rightfully claim; but we also become attached to the object
-of our love, a fate against which we are seriously warned in various
-pages of these books.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The <cite>Bhagavad Gita</cite> teaches that we should not love or hate any object
-of sense whatsoever, nor be attached to any object or thing, but renounce
-all projects and fix our thoughts solely on It, the Eternal, which is
-no-thing and no object of cognition for us, but whose presence can be
-only subjectively experienced by, and within ourselves. It says: “He
-is esteemed, who is equal-minded to companions, friends, enemies,
-strangers, neutrals, to aliens and kindred, yea to good and evil men”
-(Cap. vi., 14); and further on it says: “He whose soul is united by
-devotion, seeing the same in all around, sees the soul in everything and
-everything in the soul. He who sees Me (Brahmâ) everywhere and
-everything in Me, him I forsake not and he forsakes not me.... He
-who sees the same in everything—Arjuna!—whether it be pleasant or
-grievous, from the self-resemblance, is deemed to be a most excellent
-Yogin” (Cap. vi., 29, 32).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On almost every page of the <cite>Bhagavad Gita</cite> we are instructed only to
-direct our love to that which is eternal in every form, and let the form
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>itself be a matter of secondary consideration. “He must be regarded
-as a steadfast renouncer, who neither hates nor desires.”... “In a
-learned and modest Brahman, in a cow, in an elephant, in a dog, and a
-Swapāka; they who have knowledge see the same thing.”... “Let no
-man rejoice in attaining what is pleasant, nor grieve in attaining what is
-unpleasant; being fixed in mind, untroubled, knowing Brahma and
-abiding in Brahma.”... “He who is happy in himself, pleased with
-himself, who finds also light in himself, this Yogin, one with Brahmâ,
-finds <em>Nirvana</em> in Him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The great <em>Hermes Trismegistus</em> teaches the same identical doctrine;
-for he says: “Rise and embrace me with thy whole being, and I will
-teach thee whatsoever thou desirest to know.” The <cite>Bible</cite> also tells us
-that “God is Love” (1. John iv., 8), and that we should love Him with
-all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind (Math. xxii., 37),
-and while it teaches that we should love nothing else but God (Math.
-xx., 37), who is All in All (Ephes. i., 23), yet it affirms, that this God is
-omnipresent, eternal and incomprehensible to the finite understanding
-of mortals (1. Timoth. vi., 16). It teaches this love to be the most
-important of all possessions, without which all other possessions are
-useless (1. Corinth, xiii., 2), and yet this God, whom we are to love, is
-not an “object” (John i., 5), but everywhere. He is in us and we in
-Him (Rom. xii., 5). We are to leave all objects of sense and follow
-Him alone (Luc. v., 2), although we have no means of intellectually
-knowing or perceiving Him, the great Unknown, for whose sake we are
-to give up house and brethren, sisters, father, mother, wife, children and
-lands (Mark x., 29).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What can all this mean, but that love itself is the legitimate object of
-love? It is a divine, eternal, and infinite power, a light, which reflects
-itself in every object while it seeks not the object, but merely its own
-reflection therein. It is an indestructible fire and the brighter it burns,
-the stronger will be the light and the clearer will its own image appear.
-Love falls in love with nothing but its own self, it is free from all other
-attractions. A love which becomes attached to objects of sense, ceases
-to be free, ceases to be love, and becomes mere desire. Pure and eternal
-love asks for nothing, but gives freely to all who are willing to take.
-Earthly love is attracted to persons and things, but Divine spiritual love
-seeks only that which is divine in everything, and this can be nothing
-else but love, for love is the supreme power of all. It holds together
-the worlds in space, it clothes the earth in bright and beautiful colours,
-it guides the instincts of animals and links together the hearts of human
-beings. Acting upon the lower planes of existence it causes terrestrial
-things to cling to each other with fond embrace; but love on the spiritual
-plane is free. Spiritual love is a goddess, who continually sacrifices
-herself for herself and who accepts no other sacrifice but her own self,
-giving for whatever she may receive, herself in return. Therefore the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span><cite>Bhagavad Gita</cite> says: “Nourish ye the gods by this and let the gods
-nourish you. Thus nourishing each other ye shall obtain the highest
-good” (Cap. iii., ii.,); and the Bible says: “To him who has still more
-shall be given, and from him who has not, even what he has shall be
-taken away” (Luke xix., 26).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Love is an universal power and therefore immortal, it can never die.
-We cannot believe that even the smallest particle of love ever died, only
-the instruments through which it becomes manifest change their form;
-nor will it ever be born, for it exists from eternity, only the bodies into
-which it shines are born and die and are born again. A Love which is
-not manifest is non-existent for us, to come into existence means to
-become manifest. How then could we possibly imagine a human being
-possessed of a love which never becomes manifest; how can we possibly
-conceive of a light which never shines and of a fire which does not give
-any heat?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But “as the sun shines upon the lands of the just and the unjust, and
-as the rain descends upon the acres of the evil-minded as well as upon
-those of the good”; likewise divine love manifesting itself in a perfect
-man is distributed alike to every one without favour or partiality.
-Wherever a good and perfect human being exists, there is divine love
-manifest; and the degree of man’s perfection will depend on the degree
-of his capacity to serve as an instrument for the manifestation of divine
-love. The more perfect he is, the more will his love descend upon and
-penetrate all who come within his divine influence. To ask favours of
-God is to conceive of Him as an imperfect being, whose love is not free,
-but subject to the guidance of, and preference to, mortals. To expect
-favours of a Mahatma is to conceive him as an <em>imperfect</em> man.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>True, “prayer,” <i>i.e.</i> the elevation and aspiration of the soul “in spirit
-and in truth” (John xiv., 14), is useful, not because it will persuade the
-light to come nearer to us, but because it will assist us to open our eyes
-for the purpose of seeing the light that was already there. Let those
-who desire to come into contact with the Adepts enter their sphere by
-following their doctrines; seeking for love, but not for an object of love,
-and when they have found the former, they will find a superabundance
-of the latter throughout the whole extent of the unlimited universe;
-they will find it in everything that exists, for love is the foundation
-of all existence and without love nothing can possibly continue
-to exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Love—divine love—is the source of life, of light, and happiness. It is
-the creative principle in the Macrocosm and in the Microcosm of man.
-It is <em>Venus</em>, the mother of all the gods, because from her alone originates
-Will and Imagination and all the other powers by which the
-universe was evolved. It is the germ of divinity which exists in the
-heart of man, and which may develop into a life-giving sun, illuminating
-the mind and sending its rays to the centre of the universe; for it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>originates from that centre and to that centre it will ultimately return.
-It is a divine messenger, who carries Light from Heaven down to the
-Earth and returns again to Heaven loaded with sacrificial gifts.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is worshipped by all, some adore it in one form and some in
-another, but many perceive only the form and do not perceive the divine
-spirit. Nevertheless the spirit alone is real, the form is an illusion.
-Love can exist without form, but no form can exist without love. It is
-pure Spirit, but if its light is reflected in matter, it creates desire and
-desire is the producer of forms. Thus the visible world of perishable
-things is created. “But above this visible nature there exists another,
-unseen and eternal, which, when all created things perish, does not
-perish” (Bh. G. viii. 20), and “from which they who attain to it never
-return.” This is the supreme abode of Love without any object, unmanifested
-and imperishable, for there no object exists. There love is
-united to love, enjoying supreme and eternal happiness within her own
-self and that peace, of which the mortal mind, captivated by the illusion
-of form, cannot conceive. Non-existent for us, and yet existing in that
-Supreme <em>Be-ness</em>, in which all things dwell, by which the universe
-has been spread out, and which may be attained to by an exclusive
-devotion.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Emanuel.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator4.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>SELF MASTERY.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>(A SONNET.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>O! for the power to lay this burden low!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>This weight of self; to kill all vain desire</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To clasp to our outer selves the scorching fire,</div>
- <div class='line'>So that the God within shall live and grow!</div>
- <div class='line'>O! for the strength to face the hidden foe,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To raise our being higher still and higher,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To breathe the breath that Holy ones inspire,</div>
- <div class='line'>To break the bonds that bind to Earth below!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Great, Infinite Soul! that broodeth o’er us ever,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Say, can the human will <em>unaided</em> win</div>
- <div class='line'>The Victor’s crown (and earthly bondage sever),</div>
- <div class='line in2'>—A Heavenly flight, triumphant over sin?</div>
- <div class='line'>O Human and Divine, forsake us never,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thine is the power by which we enter in!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Dum Spiro, Spero.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Reviews.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>A MODERN MAGICIAN. <span class='sc'>A Romance</span>, by J. Fitzgerald Molloy, in Three Volumes. Ward &amp; Downey, 12, York Street, Covent Garden.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Opinions may be greatly divided as to the merits of this book; and to those
-who look for unexceptionable literary style as a primary element in fiction, it
-may not be satisfactory. But to all those who regard ideas as the first requisite,
-this work will probably prove of great interest. It has been somewhat curious
-to note the reception with which Mr. Molloy has met. The <cite>Pall Mall Gazette</cite>,
-for instance, devotes considerable length to him, and somewhat smartly calls him
-“a novelist born, but not made”; after which it proceeds, with more apparent
-animus than judiciousness, to criticise the pedantic style of conversation and narrative
-which the author occasionally makes use of. Curiously enough, the critic
-selects for his worst blows the phrases used by the chief inspector of the detectives.
-Now, if there is one thing more common than another, it is to find the half educated,
-but uncultured, men of the class from which police inspectors are drawn,
-using the longest words and phrases, not so much as a proof of their culture, as
-with the object of impressing their hearers. The reviewer was perhaps right
-to assail Mr. Molloy for sending his hero to Scotland Yard to hunt up news of
-his erring wife, who, as he was perfectly aware, had fled with another man. But
-this, and other trifling mistakes of similar character, are venial errors, and could
-only be so strongly animadverted upon in a paper which devotes itself to hunting
-plagiarisms in impossible places, through envy of successful authors; or by a
-reviewer who is a personal enemy of the author. As Macintosh well said:
-“The critic who is discerning in nothing but faults, may care little to be told that
-this is the mark of unenviable disposition, but he might not feel equally easy,
-were he convinced that he thus gives absolute proofs of ignorance and want of
-taste.” To make matters worse, and more interesting to <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, the reviewer
-is plainly a partisan of the Society for Psychical Research, to which Mr. Molloy
-somewhat unfeelingly alludes as the “Society of Scientific Cackle.” The review
-in the <cite>Pall Mall Gazette</cite> starts with smartness and intelligence, but allows itself
-to run off into partisanship and prejudice. But all that is in strict keeping
-with the tone of a “Gazette” which generally starts useful work well, continues it
-badly, and ends by throwing mud out of the gutter at anybody or anything
-which happens to run counter to it. For instance, here is a specimen of the
-reviewer:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“As a story teller he (the author) is the Bobadil of fashionable mysticism: as a literary workman he
-is a pretentious bungler: his syntax is inconceivable, his dialogue impossible, his style a desperately
-careful expression of desperately slovenly thinking, his notions of practical affairs absurd, and his conception
-of science and philosophy a superstitious guess; yet he has an indescribable flourish, a dash of
-half-ridiculous poetry, a pathetic irresponsibility, a captivating gleam of Irish imagination, and, above
-all, an unsuspicious good nature, that compel a humane public to read his books rather than mortify
-him by a neglect which he has done nothing malicious to deserve.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such criticism can only be met from the point of view of the reviewer, by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>“Set a thief to catch a thief,” and from that of Mr. Molloy, by “Heaven save
-me from the penny-a-liners, actuated by personal animus!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The reviewer may be allowed to have pointed out a few glaring errors in Mr.
-Molloy’s style and syntax, but we add that, in pointing these out, he has only
-exposed himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As regards the central figure of Benoni, the adept in the book, <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> may,
-perhaps, say a few words. Slightly as the character is drawn, and startling as
-are the deeds of this personage, there is a majesty about him which commands
-respect, and we may congratulate Mr. Molloy on his effort. We do not entirely
-accord with the author in the deeds which he sets Benoni to do, but with regard
-to the words and precepts which he puts into the adept’s mouth, we do absolutely
-agree, and recommend our readers, and especially all the Theosophists, to
-read Mr. Molloy’s book. Here the <cite>Pall Mall</cite> reviewer—being, as said, an
-admiring follower of the Society for Psychical Research—again falls foul of Mr.
-Molloy; but we may safely quote the impressive and truthful words of Benoni,
-and leave the rest to others.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Amerton, the hero of the book, reproaches the adept with having seen
-trouble approaching him, and with having neglected to warn him. Benoni replies:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That is true. It was not permitted that I should serve you then; to test your strength it was necessary
-that you should bear the trial unaided. When, some years ago. you came to me in Africa, and
-asked me to solve experiences which perplexed you, and later besought Amuni, the faithful One, to show
-you the pathway leading towards light, you but obeyed a dictate of your nature impossible to resist.
-That within you urged you forward to seek the sacred mysteries of life and death. But these cannot be
-obtained by those who are not prepared to endure with patience, and grow strong in spirit. You have
-suffered, and thus taken the first step towards the attainment of your desires.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But, surely,” said Philip, “you might have warned me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I should have but inflicted additional pain on you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Was there no escape?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“None, indeed,” replied the mystic.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Then I was destined to meet humiliation and pain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Benoni looked at him with mingled pity and affection in his gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A child,” he said, in his low, sonorous voice, “is grieved for a broken toy, or is humiliated by correction.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But you don’t compare my wrongs to a child’s grievances?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“His sorrows are as real and bitter to him as your afflictions are to you. It is only when time has
-passed, he reviews his distress with wonder, seeing the pettiness of its cause. So will it be with you. Ten
-years hence, you will regard this grief, desolating your life, with equanimity; forty years later, you will
-remember it with indifference, as an item in your fate. Then shall you look back upon the brightness
-and darkness of your existence as one regards the lights and shadows chequering his pathway through
-woods in spring. How futile seem woe and joy, weighed with the consideration that all men are as
-shadows that fade, and as vapours which flee away.... Think, my friend,” continued the
-mystic earnestly, “of your existence but as a journey towards a goal, on which hardships must be
-suffered by the way. You are now but working out the fulfillment of your fate. Remember, those
-who would ascend must suffer; affliction is the flame which purifies; pain teaches compassion.” (pp.
-89, 90. Vol. III.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>When asked of himself, Benoni replies:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Misfortune cannot compass, distress overwhelm, nor disappointments assail me, because the
-things of the world are as naught to my senses, and man’s life seems but a dream. Before this stage
-affliction must have crucified the senses; self must be conquered, slain, and entombed.” (p. 91, Vol.
-III.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>There are other passages equally true from the occult standpoint, and we
-trust their readers will benefit by them and appreciate them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>As regards Amerton’s character, we see the natural, born, mystic turning aside
-and voluntarily taking upon himself, though warned, the bonds of married life.
-These become intolerable to him, and the unhappiness of two persons results.
-Occultism is a jealous mistress, and, once launched on that path, it is necessary
-to resolutely refuse to recognise any attempt to draw one back from it.
-Amerton wanted to crush out his natural tendencies to occultism, and failed.
-It is as hard to draw back from them, and turn attention solely to the things of
-the world, as it is, when studying occultism, to turn our attention solely to the
-invisible regions, and neglect absolutely the physical world.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The other characters in the novel make it light, graceful and pleasant reading.
-The interest is ever preserved from the first to the last scene, and certainly
-no one could find, in all the three volumes, one dull page in them. Moreover,
-Mr. Fitzgerald Molloy seems an acute observer. Some of his secondary
-heroes, such as the wealthy widow, Mrs. Henry Netley, a plebeian enamoured of
-rank and title, and Lord Pompey Rokeway, “a gay, though ancient, personage,”
-who uses rouge, wig, and corsets, and imagines every woman in love with him—are
-portraits from nature, to one who knows anything of modern society. In
-short, “The Modern Magician,” as a work of fiction, can fearlessly bear comparison
-with any of the modern productions written lately upon occult subjects,
-with the solitary exception of Rider Haggard’s “She,” and surpasses some in
-unabated interest. We might be more exacting and severe, perhaps, were it a
-purely theosophical work. As it stands, however, we must congratulate Mr.
-Molloy in having clothed the subject of mysticism in such graceful robes; had
-he been as good a literary workman as he is an excellent constructor of plots, the
-book should have met with unqualified approval. Meanwhile, we wish it the
-greatest success.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c054'>“THE TWIN SOUL: <span class='sc'>a Psychological and Realistic Romance</span>,” in two
-volumes, by an Anonymous Author. Ward &amp; Downey, 12, York Street,
-Covent Garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is quite another kind of literary production than the “Modern
-Magician,” just reviewed. It aspires to more serious and philosophical
-mysticism, but fails rather ungloriously. There are passages in it which, taken
-out of the work, especially at the beginning of Volume I., might be made the
-subjects of short and rather useful little treatises upon mystic theories; but, as a
-whole, the book is one of the most disappointing novels published for some time. It
-begins well, goes on from bad to worse, promises much, holds nothing, and ends
-nowhere, seeming to be written not as a work of fiction, but simply to ventilate
-the author’s ideas. These—the work being anonymous—have to be judged by
-the novel alone. It is rumoured that the “Twin Soul” is the occasional work
-of twelve years’ labour, and the disconnected character of its events bears out
-the rumour. Its style is pedantic, though good in writing, while the matter and
-plot are heavy, and delivered in a long-winded and didactic manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The story is that of one Mr. Rameses, an exceedingly virtuous, learned, and
-solemn Oriental millionaire, whose real nationality remains to the end a mystery,
-and whose story is narrated by a somewhat cynical English philosopher, called
-De Vere. The latter tells the story in the style which suits him best, and is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>perfectly natural. He is humorous and amusing, even if slightly ponderous.
-But alas for the reader! Mr. De Vere suddenly stops short at an early stage,
-and the story is taken up, without any apparent cause or reason, by a man
-unknown, who “had less sympathy with Mr. Rameses,” and who has all the
-defects of Mr. De Vere’s qualities, and a good many of his own besides, for he
-is even more ponderous and more cynical, without his humour. Mr. Rameses
-is a peculiar character, but, as sketched, he is quite in keeping with his Oriental
-origin. He believes in many theories: re-incarnation, socialism, certain occult
-doctrines, the possibility of recovering the memory of past incarnations, and, as a
-matter of course, the modern craze of the day, the theory of “twin souls.” He
-is perpetually in search of his “twin,” and hunts her with the pertinacity of a
-sleuth-hound under all forms, and in all places. Mr. De Vere is the possessor
-of an Assyrian collection, Egyptian papyri, and also of two female mummies—Amenophra
-and Lurulâ, the first the daughter of a Pharaoh, the second a priestess
-of Isis—of which the sarcophagi are covered with hieroglyphics, which Mr. Rameses
-reads with most surprising ease. The hero, claiming his memory as a palimpsest,
-which by certain processes clearly discovers the obliterated record of his past
-incarnations, cannot, in spite of this, make up his mind which of the two mummies
-was formerly the body of his twin-soul. Finally, he solves the doubt by declaring
-them both to have been the mortal casket of his beloved—with Lurulâ for
-choice. The reader here has great hopes held out to him that there will be a
-grand ceremony, at which the mummies are to be unrolled, and at which the
-soul of the deceased mummy will be summoned back to shuffle on a mortal coil
-again. Alas! such hopes are fallacious; for the ceremony never takes place,
-owing to Mr. Rameses falling in love with the sister of a Hindu lady married to
-an English baronet. After much hesitation the lady so honoured by his choice
-is also declared to be the vehicle of his twin-soul, <i>i.e.</i>, to save appearances—to
-be a re-incarnation of the ego which formerly dwelt in the mummy or mummies.
-Finally, after a long-winded oration over the mystic properties of a magnificent
-present of jewels, Mr. Rameses wins “the fair Niona,” as she is called—who,
-although a Hindu, is a Zoroastrian Sun-worshipper. They are married, notwithstanding
-their “paganism,” according to Roman Catholic rites, and the pair
-start to spend the honeymoon in Egypt, where, in the Temple of Isis at Thebes,
-they are to be again united according to the—to them—more sacred ritual of Sun-worship.
-After a very interesting dream about the Deluge, which broke through
-an isthmus uniting Gibraltar to North Africa, and destroyed a vast civilization
-which occupied the floor of the present Mediterranean Sea, they arrive safely in
-Egypt. Here the fair Hindu of Zoroastrian persuasion and Italian name, has
-another interesting psychic vision, an interview with the Sphinx, which makes her
-incontinently faint, and lose consciousness. Then they proceed to Thebes, and,
-after due care, make selection of the site of the Temple of Isis. They build
-their bonfire and ignite it, but at the supreme moment Niona gives a gasp, faints,
-and this time dies outright, with as little reason for it as every other incident in
-the novel has. The return to Cairo is immediately commenced, and here Niona,
-in strict keeping with Mr. Rameses’s habits, is at once converted into a mummy.
-It must be rather interesting to possess the body of three defunct twin souls,
-and reflect upon their virtues.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The rest of the book is occupied by various disquisitions of the author,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>disguised flimsily under conversations of his characters on the social and
-political customs of the Nineteenth century. Read carefully, the conversations
-contain ideas, but are likely to offend on account of their length and ponderousness.
-As regards the construction of the book and the characters, Mr. Rameses
-is interesting, in spite of his solemnity and his love of mummies, and Mr. De Vere
-is amusing. The other <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>dramatis personæ</i></span> seem to have been created merely as
-pegs upon which to hang the author’s opinions. What, for instance, is the
-object of entering into detail upon the passionate episodes in the career of Mr.
-Rameses’s secretary, or the mercenary marriage of Lady Gwendoline Pierrepoint
-with “Old Methusaleh”? Their only excuse can be that they may serve
-to increase the contrast between such marriages and that with a twin soul.
-Taken as a whole, the ideas are interesting, and the mystic utterances in the
-first volume almost correct from the orthodox occult point. But the manner in
-which they are displayed is irritating, and this chiefly because the reader is
-perpetually being brought up to a point of interest, and as perpetually left
-disappointed.</p>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-<h4 class='c055'>POSTHUMOUS HUMANITY.<a id='r129' /><a href='#f129' class='c013'><sup>[129]</sup></a></h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>This is a translation from the French by Colonel H. S. Olcott, President of
-the Theosophical Society, of the remarkable work of that name, by a well-known
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>savant</i></span>, Adolphe d’Assier. The original work appeared a few years ago, and produced
-a stir both in the sceptical public and unbelieving science, and an outcry
-among the spiritists of France, whose pet theories about the “spirits” of the dead
-it upset. “Posthumous Humanity” was not only a singularly interesting work,
-but it was one of the first, and perhaps the loudest, of the bugle notes that
-heralded the last act of the fierce battle between materialistic science and spiritualism;
-for it ended in the virtual defeat of the former, at any rate, upon one
-line: it forced the hand of the majority of sceptics in the recognition of what is
-called in mysticism the “astral body” of man and animal, and by more pretentious
-than wise investigators “the <em>phantasms</em> of the living,” forgetting those of
-the dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>That a learned member of an academy of science should, of all men, write a
-serious book on the phenomena of “the Borderland,” accepting as facts in nature
-such things as ghostly appearances, and the projection of the double, is
-almost a phenomenon in itself. And what makes the case the more remarkable
-as an indication of a new current in public opinion, is the fact that these things,
-which it has hitherto been the fashion to consign with a laugh or a shudder to
-the limbo of exploded superstitions, are treated by the author in a perfectly
-scientific spirit. He accounts for them, not by the usual supposition of hallucination
-or stupidity on the part of observers, but by an exceedingly ingenious
-and plausible postulation of forces at work in us, and around us, which are as
-little “supernatural” as any of the recognised forces of nature, or portions of
-man’s constitution. Not only has M. d’Assier the courage to face the probable
-ridicule of the wiseacres, but he has the audacity to turn the tables upon “men of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>science,” by actually making fun of their unmeasured pretensions, and twitting
-them mercilessly about their past mistakes. Not the least remarkable feature
-in the case is the fact that the author, who started into these researches an ardent
-positivist, has come out of them an ardent positivist still. He believes that
-what he has accomplished is to extend the reign of matter into a region previously
-believed to belong to spirit, thus planting the standard of positivism in a
-wider and more fruitful region, which he has happily reclaimed from the winds
-and tides of superstition. But the fact is, that although our author has gone a
-good deal further than most of those who start out “on their own hook” to explore
-the realms of the Occult, he cannot be said to have penetrated very far into
-the mysteries of being. He has peeped in at the door of the psychic antechamber
-to the spiritual world proper—the ante-chamber in which the members
-of Psychical Research Societies amuse themselves and others by playing blindman’s
-buff with hypothesis—and his interesting volume tells us of the wonderful
-things that go on there. The result of his researches, as he says in his <cite>Preface</cite>,
-is the conclusion that “posthumous humanity is, in fact, but a special example of
-posthumous animality, and that the latter presents itself as the immediate consequence
-of the living world.” Every tyro in theosophy knows that this conclusion
-is a fair approximation to the truth, and were man nothing but an animal of high
-degree, it might possibly be the whole truth. But man is an animal, plus <em>something</em>,
-and this something <em>more</em>, is precisely what M. d’Assier leaves entirely out
-of sight, as indeed he could hardly help doing if he attached any importance to
-remaining a Positivist. It is this <em>something more</em>, of whose very existence our
-author seems profoundly unconscious, that has the chief interest for us, for that
-is the spiritual and eternal part of man, in contradistinction to the psychic portion
-which fades away and disappears after a time, as M. d’Assier very justly
-declares.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It seems a pity that a learned and ingenious man, like our author, should not have
-begun investigations of this kind by making himself familiar with at least the bare
-outline of the metaphysical and psychological system that underlies the schools of
-philosophy of India. This system is the result of very profound research into such
-phenomena as our author deals with, and also into other far deeper and more
-important manifestations that he has not considered at all; and these researches
-have for thousands of years occupied, to a greater or lesser degree, almost every
-thinking man among races which are acknowledged to be possessed of a very
-high degree of intellectual acuteness and spiritual insight. Were our Western
-adventurers into the borderland between spirit and matter—the astral world—to
-take this obvious precaution, they would know that the ground over which
-they now laboriously make their way, has not only been traversed before, but
-pretty fully surveyed and mapped out, and that their supposed discoveries
-amount virtually to no more than a verification of results long ago obtained by
-others. This very needed exception in the work under review has been obviated
-by the translator’s notes and supplement, without diminishing the practical
-value of M. d’Assier’s treatise as a useful contribution to occult literature. For, as
-his labours do actually confirm much of the teachings of Theosophy, with regard to
-that part of the constitution of man, which is common to him and the animals,
-the work, as it now stands, is really a valuable occult treatise as to facts. The
-important question with the world, in these times, being not so much <em>what is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>said</em>, as <em>who it is that says it</em>, the fact that an incorrigible positivist, has published
-his belief in the actuality of a psychic plane of existence, and of the temporary
-survival in it after death of a certain part or principle of the animal
-(including man), is of the greatest help and importance to theosophy. It will
-probably affect public opinion far more profoundly than if a thousand Eastern
-sages proclaimed the same elementary fact of Occultism in chorus. No better
-illustration of, and testimony to, the reality of plain, broad facts in connection
-with wraiths, “doubles,” and other such apparitions, can be found than in d’Assier’s
-“Posthumous Humanity” in its new English garb, by Colonel Olcott, and with
-the translator’s <cite>Preface</cite> and annotations to the text. These add greatly to the
-value of the book for the student of Occultism. In fact, these additions serve the
-same purpose which a notice of the work in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> might have been expected
-to have in view; for they correct the author in some particulars, add additional
-information in others, and generally forestall the critic who writes from the
-Theosophical standpoint. Besides this, the translator has added a highly interesting
-and unique <em>appendix</em>, giving the opinions of numerous Hindus of various
-castes and sects upon psychic phenomena of that kind, collected from various
-parts of India, which, by itself, has considerable value to the student of mystical
-sciences. In conclusion, we may record almost a general opinion—save, of
-course, that of rank materialists—that no work yet published on the subject
-dealt with by our author is better calculated to reach the scientifically-minded enquirer.
-It is written with calmness and logical clearness that takes the scoffer’s
-laugh out of his mouth. It goes as far as anyone new to the subject could be
-reasonably expected to follow; and the direction it takes is the right one. It is
-preeminently <em>the</em> book for the too sceptical and ignorant enquirer to begin
-with.</p>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<p class='c028'>ספר יצירה, <cite>Sepher Yetzirah, The Book of Formation, and
-the Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom</cite>; <cite>translated from the Hebrew,
-and collated with Latin Versions. By Dr. W. Wynn Westcott,
-Bath: Robert H. Fryar</cite>, 1887.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is a treatise of about 30 quarto pages on that well-known Hebrew occult
-work, the Sepher Yetzirah. It consists of an introduction, giving the historic
-aspects of the matter, an English translation of the Sepher Yetzirah and the
-Thirty-two Paths, and several pages of notes, giving remarks on and variant
-readings of difficult and disputed passages.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The introductory pages bear the stamp of considerable literary research, and
-the translation of the Book of Formation itself is intelligible and concise. But
-we can hardly say as much for the Thirty-two Paths, which, abstruse and difficult
-of comprehension in the original, are, we are afraid, no more intelligible in the
-translation. Owing to the unpopularity of the subject, there are readers who
-will be readily drawing the conclusion that Dr. Westcott himself does not altogether
-understand their mystical bearing and symbolism. Yet the notes on the
-actual text of the “Sepher Yetzirah” are valuable, and show considerable
-occult knowledge. But a still greater error is made by the translator. We
-notice that Dr. Westcott has invariably rendered the word Elohim by “God,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>notwithstanding that it is a plural noun, as shown by the plural word
-“Chiim” joined thereto in the ninth section of the first chapter. This will, no
-doubt, prove grateful to the staff and readers of the <cite>Jewish World</cite>, whose editors
-pride themselves, against all fact and truth, on the <em>Monotheism</em> of their early
-ancestors. It cannot fail to strike the Kabalists as an unfortunate deviation
-from the original meaning in favour of one laboriously fabricated by both Jewish
-and Christian falsificators.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The “Book of Formation” is a treatise consisting of 6 chapters and 33
-sections, and thus its compilation is pentacular. The 6 chapters refer to the
-Yetziratic World, the 6 periods of Genesis; while the 33 sections have a close
-analogy with the Thirty-two Paths which are added at the end of the work. It is
-a philosophical disquisition on the occult meanings of the ten numbers of the
-decimal scale, and the 22 letters of the Hebrew sacred alphabet. The first
-chapter deals with the numbers, which it divides into a Tetrad (symbolising
-Spirit, Air, Water, and Fire), and a Hexad (symbolising Height, Depth, East,
-West, South and North). The second chapter treats generally of the 22 letters,
-produced from the Air or the number 2, and divided into 3 Mother-letters, 7
-double-letters, and 12 simple letters. The third chapter shows the symbolic
-reference of the 3 Mother-letters to Air, Water, and Fire; the fourth chapter
-that of the 7 double-letters to the Planets &amp;c.; the fifth chapter that of the 12
-simple letters to the signs of the Zodiac, &amp;c.; and the sixth chapter forms the
-synthesis.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The 32 paths are no other than symbolical developments of the 10 Sephiroth
-or numbers, and the 22 letters which form the connecting links between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Altogether the work is interesting and worthy of careful study.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>TREBLE CHORDS.</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Poems by Catherine Grant Furley.</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>Edinburgh: R. and R. Clark.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is an inviting little book of verse, with an ill-chosen title. Why “Treble
-Chords,” when the author cannot compose anything more than a single part?
-The octave is spanned by treble or threefold chords, but Miss Furley has not
-yet reached the octave of attainment! No, the book must be re-christened at
-its second birth; and the protest of the <cite>Girton Girl</cite>, and the more sustained
-poem of the <cite>Other Isolt</cite>, are assuredly good enough to interest and delight a
-sufficient number of women to send it into a second edition. The writer has a
-distinct faculty of seeing, as well as the tendency to take the “other side,” as
-she does in <cite>Isolt of Brittany</cite> and in <cite>Galatea to Pygmalion</cite>. The moral of the
-latter poem is thus presented:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“O, frequent miracle! so often seen</div>
- <div class='line'>We scarcely pause to think what it may mean—</div>
- <div class='line'>Man’s power to raise within a woman’s heart</div>
- <div class='line'>A love he does not know, nor could impart;</div>
- <div class='line'>To wake a soul within the marble breast,</div>
- <div class='line'>Then long to soothe it back to stony rest;</div>
- <div class='line'>For, though the woman’s sweeter to caress,</div>
- <div class='line'>The statue’s more convenient to possess.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'><span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>Here is a specimen of the sonnets, not the best, perhaps, but to the purpose:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>CIRCE.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Men call me Circe, but my name is Love;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And my cup holds the draught of sweet and sour,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of gain, joy, loss, renouncement, all the dower</div>
- <div class='line'>That woman’s love brings man. I hold above</div>
- <div class='line'>Your outstretched hand the chalice; ere you prove</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Its potency, bethink you; it has power</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To test your soul. If in a sinful hour</div>
- <div class='line'>You touch it, you shall sink as those who strove</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of old to win my heart. Lo! there they be,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not men but beasts; for with impure desire</div>
- <div class='line in2'>They sought me, and Love holds <em>that</em> blasphemy;</div>
- <div class='line'>And for their sin doth bid them dwell in mire</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor know their shame. Had they been pure in thought,</div>
- <div class='line'>My cup had strengthened them and injured not.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>It is but a tiny handful, this, of first flowers; not even a gathering of first-fruits.
-But they have the fragrance of promise, and a freshness of real rarity.
-Whether the fruit will set and mature must depend upon the sunshine and the
-rain and other surroundings of the struggling life, and on the depth of soil and
-strength of rootage. Of these we cannot judge; but the first-flowers are sweet
-and pretty and worth a word of welcome.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>G. M.</div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<h3 class='c018'>THE CREATOR, AND WHAT WE MAY KNOW OF THE METHOD OF CREATION.<a id='r130' /><a href='#f130' class='c013'><sup>[130]</sup></a></h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>The above is the title of a lecture, forming the seventeenth of what are known
-as the “Fernley Lectures,” delivered annually, by the leading minds in the
-Ministry of the Wesleyan Methodist Society. This specific lecture is the latest
-of the series, and was delivered in Manchester, August 1st in present year, by
-the Rev. W. H. Dallinger, LL.D., F.R.S., Pres. R.M.S., etc., Governor of
-Wesley College, Sheffield.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The lecture occupies an unique position amongst its fellows, and will bear
-a most favourable comparison with any that have been delivered by the various
-Presidents of the Royal Society on the sciences of the day. For clearness of
-argument and lucidity of thought—<em>as far as it goes</em>—it is unsurpassed, and, as a
-specimen of the power of English language, it is a treat to all who can estimate its
-value. It is all this, and more, and here its significance and suggestiveness comes
-in, and I can do no less than characterise its delivery under the circumstances, to
-an auditory that represents (in the eyes of the sect itself, at all events) the purest
-form of Evangelical religion, as a startling phenomenon, and as such I consider
-a notice of it in no way out of place in a theosophical journal. That such a
-lecture should be allowed to be delivered and favourably received, not only by
-the audience, but by the Wesleyan body at large, is a “sign of the times” that
-the intelligent observer cannot fail to discern. It is, undoubtedly, an index
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>finger that marks a large advance in the progress of human emancipation from
-the increasingly intolerable yoke of Churchianic or Ecclesiastical tyranny; and
-all “friends of progress” will cheerfully render to the worthy and eloquent
-lecturer the thanks that are due for his manly and outspoken views upon the
-profoundest question of the age. The strangest part is the spectacle of a
-“Minister of the Gospel,” himself a scientist of no mean order, proclaiming
-from a Methodist platform his adherence to, and acceptance of, the doctrines of
-Charles Darwin, as true exponents of the “Method of Creation,” which means
-that “Natural Selection,” and survival of the “Fittest,” accounts for the origin
-of species and the indefinite variety of extinct and extant animal forms of life.
-Why not include vegetable forms <a id='corr404.11'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='s'>as</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_404.11'><ins class='correction' title='s'>as</ins></a></span> well? Methinks the fabulous “missing
-link” between the vegetable and animal kingdoms may, without much difficulty,
-be actually spotted. Nature, as delineated by the great “Naturalist,” must
-have been very peevish and unkind to her worshippers, when she mocks them
-by destroying every vestige, even to the veriest fragmentary fossil, of this anxiously
-looked for and expectant missing link, between the animal (brute)
-and man! To my view, the continuous chain of sequential life forms, as presented
-in the Darwinian theory, evinces a vast number of “missing links,” and,
-unless these can be supplied, it will not bear the strain when tested by the unclouded
-intellect of man. The philosopher of Materialism may accept the
-Darwinian theories (for as yet they are nothing less or more) as gospel, but the
-spiritual philosopher will not, nor can he accept them as truth, simply because
-he recognises a factor, which is an abomination in the eyes of the materialistic
-“wise ones.” It is this factor that the eloquent and learned lecturer pleads
-for, without suspecting what it really is. I have reason to know that our reverend
-scientist regards this “Spiritual” factor with the utmost contempt. But
-I leave this, and pass on to notice some of the really valuable thoughts and facts
-that ennoble the lecture, which is addressed to “thoughtful and earnest
-minds, not concerned specially with questions of philosophy, metaphysics, and
-science, but alive to the advanced knowledge and thought of our times, and
-anxious to know how the great foundation of religious belief, the existence of
-Deity, is affected by the splendid advance of our knowledge of nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This expression “existence of Deity” is conveniently elastic enough to cover
-the ground of argument by a scientific theologian, inasmuch as it may be taken
-to mean a personal God, according to sound Evangelical belief, and thus assume
-a plausible defence of Theism versus Atheism; or, it may admit of a much
-wider application to an “Unknown God”; for when the lecturer does venture to
-delineate the characteristic of Deity as the Creator, it is such terms as “Inscrutable
-Power or Creator,” “Eternal Mind,” “Infinite Intelligence,” &amp;c., which is
-tantamount to saying that the Primal Cause of all that is, is unknowable; and
-if this is what Dr. Dallinger really means, he is at one with the Spiritual
-Philosopher; but this will be a curious weapon in the hands of an ecclesiastical
-theologian—as dangerous as it is curious. By the use of these terms the
-reverend author shields himself from the charge of materialistic heresy, albeit to
-the clear-sighted one there are several, if not many, weak and vulnerable points
-in the defensive armour; but if the adherents and votaries of the “faith once
-delivered to the saints” might be a little chary in their acceptance of him as a
-“sound” exponent of religious truth, yet all progressive minds will hail him as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>a fearless champion for the truth as delivered by the Book of Nature and
-interpreted by the splendid achievements of modern science.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The study of phenomena, their succession and their classification, is the essential work of science.
-It has no function, and is possessed of no instrument with which to look behind or below the sequence,
-in quest of some higher relation. The eye and mind of the experimentalist know only of antecedent
-and consequent. These fill the whole circle of his research; let him find these, and he has
-found all.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Here the domain of “science” is defined by a master mind, which tells us
-that “the researches of science are physical.” The observable, finite contents
-of space and time are the subjects of its analysis. Existence, not the cause of
-existence, succession, not the reason of succession, method, not the origin of
-method, are the subjects of physical research. A primordial cause cannot be
-the subject of experiment nor the object of demonstration. It must for ever
-transcend the most delicate physical re-action, the profoundest analysis, and the
-last link in the keenest logic. Science refuses absolutely to recognise mind as
-the primal cause of the sequences of matter. This is just—within the strict
-region of its research—for phenomena, their sequences and classification, are its
-sole domain. But observe; science universally puts <em>force</em> where the reason
-asks for cause. The forces affecting matter are tacitly assumed to be competent
-to account for every activity, every sequence, every phenomenon, and all the
-harmonies of universal being, a nexus for the infinite diversities and harmonies,
-a basis for all the equilibrium of nature, is found by modern science in force.
-But force is as absolutely inscrutable as mind. Force can never be known in
-itself; it is known by its manifestations. It is not a phenomenon, it produces
-phenomena. We cannot know it; but we know nothing without it. The
-ultimate analysis of physical science is the relations of matter and force. In
-irreducible terms, therefore, the final analysis of science is <em>matter as affected by
-motion</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We now see, from the above excerpta, the goal to which the “splendid
-discoveries” of modern science lead its votaries, as portrayed by an authority
-that claims to speak not as other men; and if it is not a veritable dismal
-swamp, leading to nothing or negation; a miasma suffocating the aspirations of
-those who are trusting to the leadership of <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>savants</i></span> to guide them in the path
-that conveys them to the habitat of true wisdom and knowledge of themselves;
-then I can only say of such, “miserable comforters are ye all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the question intervenes here: is this a true definition of the end and
-aim of science? It may be to the majority of the Royal Society; but I may
-tell those who claim to be the conservators of science, and who arrogate to
-themselves the right to define the boundaries of even physical science, that they
-do not possess the <em>all</em> of human intelligence, and that there are, outside their
-societies, men who refuse to bow the knee to the modern scientific Baal, who
-refuse to be cajoled by the use of terms that mystify but certainly do not
-enlighten. For instance, who is one wit the wiser when, having reached the
-end of its tether, science discovers that “matter and motion” govern and
-regulate all things observable by the human eye, or within the range of the
-human mind? To the credit of the author of the last Fernley Lecture, he
-sees and acknowledges the dilemma into which “materialistic” science is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>driven; but whether “theological” science, so ably represented by himself, can
-altogether evade it, is a question that I do not here stay to propound. This
-much, however, I may say, scientific dicta notwithstanding, there is another
-department of scientific research which <em>does</em> form the <em>nexus</em>—the <em>veritable</em>
-missing link—between the known and their unknown, and this is the science of
-psychology, which commences just where the professors of science (physical)
-confess themselves baffled, and are unable, or rather unwilling, to advance
-further in this to them <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>terra incognita</i></span>. The wilful ignoring of this by
-Materialistic leaders of thought ends by putting them out of court in the
-discussion of the profound problems arising out of the discoveries of the
-psychological scientist. In presence of facts, the evidence for which are world
-wide and as demonstrable—<em>on their own plane or ground</em>—as geological, or
-astronomical facts which the psychologist adduces, of what conceivable use are
-the “relations of matter and force” of the physicist, as explanatory of the
-laws, &amp;c., pertaining to the new world discovered by psychological <em>Savants</em>?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It will be new to many of your readers to find the Rev. Dr. “hob-nobbing”
-with Professor Huxley, who is quoted as—<em>not</em> a Materialist! The learned
-professor appears to be indignant with those who are zealous for “the fundamental
-article of the faith materialistic,” who “parade force and matter as the
-Alpha and Omega of existence,” and says, “If I were forced to choose between
-Materialism and Idealism, I would elect for the latter”; and the lecturer adds,
-“Truly, if our choice must be between them, this is the normal alternative.” It
-were better had the Professor given some inkling as to what <em>he</em> meant by this
-high-sounding term “Idealism.”<a id='r131' /><a href='#f131' class='c013'><sup>[131]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The author again says—“I adopt gladly the language of Professor Huxley:
-Belief, in the scientific sense of the word, is a serious matter, and needs,
-strong foundations. If it were given me to look beyond the abyss of geologically
-recorded time to the still more remote period when the earth was passing
-through physical and chemical conditions, I should expect to be a witness of
-the evolution of living protoplasm from <a id='corr406.30'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='not—living matter.’'>not-living matter.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_406.30'><ins class='correction' title='not—living matter.’'>not-living matter.</ins></a></span>”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“So should I,” adds the Rev. Dr., who brings in Mr. Crooks (?), of whom
-the lecturer says, “I do not forget the recent and splendid service done by
-Mr. Crooks to the philosophical side of chemistry. It is a most subtle and
-exquisite means of endeavouring to deduce the <em>method</em>, the ‘<em>law</em>’ according to
-which what we know as the ‘chemical elements’ were built up. He obtains
-indications of a primitive element—a something out of which the elements
-were evolved. He calls it <em>protyle</em> or first stuff, and from its presence concludes
-that the elements, as we know them, have been evolved from simpler matter—or
-perhaps, indeed, from one sole kind of matter.” In the following sentences
-he tries hard to depreciate this “splendid discovery” by Mr. Crooks, the reason
-for which is anything but difficult to discover. Dr. Dallinger <em>knows</em> that Mr.
-Crooks published a work entitled “Researches in the Phenomena of
-Spiritualism,” containing his <em>Experimental</em> Investigations in Psychic Force,
-which he, in conjunction with his friend Huxley, thinks it beneath him to
-notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>But <em>I</em> claim the “splendid discovery” of Mr. Crooks to be of far more transcendent
-importance than the learned scientist will admit. It comes marvellously
-near to the scientific demonstration of the ethic propounded by the “philosophy
-of spirit,” “There is but one life, and one substance, by which life is manifested
-in an infinitude of forms in all universes, from the simplest to the most complex
-organic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On this subject the Lecture contains the following eloquent, and, I may add,
-brilliant peroration.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Life, it is well known, has its phenomena inherent in, and strictly confined to, a highly complex
-compound, with fixed chemical constituents. This compound, in its living state, is known as protoplasm.
-It is clear, colourless, and to our finest optical resources, devoid of discoverable structure.
-There is not a living thing on earth but possesses its life in protoplasm, from a microscopic fungus, to
-Man. To depict the properties of Life in irreducible simplicity, take one of the lowliest instances
-within the range of science. Let it be one of the exquisitely minute, almost infinitely prolific, and
-universally diffused living forms that set up, and carry on, putrefaction. The lesser of them may,
-when considered as solid specks, vary from the fifty-thousand-millionth of a cubic inch to the twenty-billionth
-of a cubic inch (evidently far beneath the unaided optic power of the human eye to see). I
-select one that is oval in shape. Its mission as an organism, is to break up and set free the chemical
-elements that had been locked up in dead organic compounds. (Query—Was this tiny creature self-generated,
-or was it the product of the <em>dead</em> organism?) Its own substance wears out by this and
-other means; and it has the power to renovate the waste from the dead decomposition in which it
-lives, constructing, in the lavatory of its protoplasm, new living matter. But more; this vital and
-inconceivably minute speck multiplies with astounding rapidity in two ways; by the first and common
-process, in the course of a minute and a half, the entire body is divided into two precisely similar
-bodies, each one perfect; almost immediately these again divide, and so on in geometric ratio through
-all the populated fluid; the rapidity of this intense and wonderful vital action transcending all thought.
-By this process alone, a single form may, in three hours, give rise to a population of organisms as
-great as the human population of the globe. This is life—whether vegetable or animal none can determine—in
-the simplest form in which it can be known, and which distinguish it for ever and everywhere
-from what is not life.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Several equally interesting examples of recent scientific discoveries are given,
-but space forbids me to more than mention them. Science, as represented by
-the <em>Savants</em>, evidently believes in an unbridged chasm between the forms of life
-and not-life. The Scientist and Philosopher of Spirit join issue on this, for they
-declare that “Life is present everywhere, and <em>in</em> all forms, organic or non-organic,
-and without the presence of Life no forms—not even mineral—could be
-phenomenal or <em>ex</em>istent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Your space does not permit me to deal with more than one other, and, to
-many, the more important subject of Biblical records coming within the domain
-of science. Here is a specimen of how the learned scientist and theologian
-deals with the biblical account of Creation.</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And God said, ‘Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind.’ That is the utterance
-of the human conception, which can alone represent to us the divine resolve to fill the earth with life—and
-the joy of living things. ‘And it was so.’ But what epochs of countless ages filled the incalculable
-interval?”<a id='r132' /><a href='#f132' class='c013'><sup>[132]</sup></a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The boldness of this utterance from one in the position of the Reverend Lecturer
-can be well imagined. It contains the elements of combustion which need
-but the spark of investigation to deal a death blow to the established Churchianic
-dogma of Biblical infallibility in its literal sense. I conclude by repeating
-that such a deliverance by a ministerial representative of the Wesleyan denomination
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>is a phenomenon that strikingly indicates the “Signs of the times,” and
-which shows that the emancipation of the human mind from the bonds of theological
-presumption is not far distant.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>William Oxley.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Higher Broughton, Manchester, <i>December</i> 11th, 1887.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>ABSOLUTE MONISM; OR, MIND IS MATTER AND MATTER
-IS MIND. By <span class='sc'>Sundaram Iyer</span>, F.T.S. Madras, 1887.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Under the above title the author issues an address delivered at the last
-convention of the delegates of the Theosophical Society at Adyar. Metaphysicians,
-who note with interest all criticisms of Western psychology
-from the Oriental standpoint, will welcome the appearance of this extremely
-able and instructive <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>brochure</i></span>, which constitutes the first instalment of
-Absolute Monism. The object of the writer is to discuss the point whether an
-examination of all theories, as to relations of mind and body, “does not lead us
-to the Unistic theory that Mind is Matter, and Matter is Mind.” He endeavours
-to merge the apparent dualism of subject and object into a fundamental
-unity:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Is mind a product of organized matter? No ... for organized matter is only a combination
-of material particles, as is unorganized matter. How is it, then, that there is the manifestation of
-Mind in the one case, and not in the other?... Can subjective facts ever emerge out of a group
-of molecules? Never; as many times never as there are molecules in the group. And why?
-Because Mind cannot issue from No Mind.” (p. 13.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>The line of argument adopted <em>versus</em> Materialism—the doctrine that mental
-facts are the <em>resultant</em> of chemical changes in the brain; force and matter being
-the only Ultimates of Existence—is unquestionably forcible. Mind can never
-be resolved into a “bye-product” of brain activity, for several valid reasons. In
-the first place, in its aspect of thought, it exhibits <em>concentration on an end</em>,
-<em>intelligence</em> and <em>interest</em> in the subject under consideration, all of which
-characteristics, according to Tyndall and Du Bois Reymond, are necessarily
-absent from those remarshallings of atoms and molecules which are declared to
-“cerebrate out” mental phenomena! In the second place, the gulf between
-consciousness and molecular change has never been bridged; an admission to
-which the leading physicists and physiologists of the day lend all the weight of
-their authority. The terms “consciousness” and “matter” are expressive of
-things so utterly contrasted, that all attempts to deduce the former from the
-latter have met with signal discredit. Nevertheless, materialists assume the
-contrary, whenever the necessities of their philosophy demand it. Hence, we
-find men, like Büchner, admitting in one place that “in the relation of soul and
-brain, phenomena occur which <em>cannot be explained by ... matter and force</em>,”
-and elsewhere resolving mind into the “<em>activity of the tissues of the brain</em>,” “a
-mode of motion”—contradictions, the flagrancy of which is enhanced by the
-fact that the same author invests the physical automaton Man with a power to
-control his actions! Lastly, the degradation of consciousness into “brain-function”
-by constituting philosophers, theologians, scientists, and all alike
-“conscious automata”—(machines whose thoughts are determined <em>for</em>, not <em>by</em>
-their conscious Egos)—knocks away the basis of argument. The only resource
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>becomes universal scepticism; a denial of the possibility of attaining truth.
-Can impartiality, correct thinking and agreement, be expected on the part of
-controversialists who form part of a comedy of Automata?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If mind is not inherent in matter, it cannot be evolved by mere nervous
-complexity. The combination of two chemical elements cannot result in a
-compound in which something more than the constituent factors are present.
-It is sometimes urged that, since the properties of substances are often altogether
-changed in the course of chemical combinations—new ones arising with the
-temporary lapse of the old—consciousness may be explained as a “peculiar
-property” of matter under some of its conditions. Mr. Sundaram Iyer meets
-this objection ably. “Aquosity,” it is said, is a property of oxygen and hydrogen
-in combination, though not in isolation. To this he answers, “chemical
-properties are either purely subjective facts or objectivo-subjective ones” (p. 57).
-They exist only in the consciousness of the percipient, and represent no external
-and independent reality. Psychologists of the type of Huxley would do well
-to recall this fact, apart from the considerations springing from other data.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Our author is loud in his praises of <em>Panpsychism</em>, that phase of pantheism
-which regards all matter as saturated with a potential psyche. He speaks of
-the “catholicity, sublimity and beauty ... not to say the philosophy, and
-logic, and truthfulness of this creed of thought.” It is, however, clear that
-some of the authorities he cites in support of this view, more especially Clifford,
-Tyndall, and Ueberweg, represent a phase of thought which is too materialistic
-to do justice to an elevated pantheistic concept. Clifford’s <em>conscious</em> mind-<em>stuff</em>
-is sublimated materialism, and Ueberweg speaks of those “sensations” present
-in “inanimate” objects which are “concentrated” in the human brain, as if
-they represented so many substances to be weighed in scales. Instructive and
-thoughtful as is the discussion of this subject (pp. 32-63), its value would have
-been increased by a survey of the pantheistic schools of German speculation, so
-many of whose conclusions are absolutely at one with esoteric views as to the
-Logos and the metaphysics of consciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After discussing the primary and secondary (so-called) qualities of matter,
-as tabulated by Mill, Hamilton and others, Mr. Sundaram Iyer passes on the
-question: “What is force?”</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Force <em>is</em> matter ... it may be related to matter in ... four ways:—firstly, it may be an
-extraneous power to matter, acting upon it from without; secondly, it may be an inherent power in
-matter, influencing it from within, but yet distinct from the substance of matter; thirdly, it may be
-an innate power in matter, influencing it from within, and not distinct from the substance of matter;
-or fourthly, it may be a function of the substance of matter.” (p. 76-7.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>After an interesting criticism of current theories, he concludes that:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Function is simply the phenomenal effect of the latent cause, namely force, but never force itself.
-This potential existence, which is in matter, <em>is a physical existence</em>. If not it cannot, as shown
-before, produce any impression whatsoever upon or in the substance of matter.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Matter is force and force is matter. It is not quite evident, however, whether
-this position is strictly reconcilable with the remark that “the primary qualities
-of matter are all simplifiable into ... extension and (its) motion (actual or
-<a id='corr409.47'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='possible).'>possible).”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_409.47'><ins class='correction' title='possible).'>possible).”</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If force is a <em>physical existence</em>, and the real <em>substance</em> of matter at the same
-time, we get back no further into the mystery of what things-in-themselves
-really are. Physical existence remains the reality behind physical existence and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>the realization of matter and force, as aspects only of one basis, in no way
-simplifies the crux.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is not clear, moreover, what is the exact meaning the author intends by
-the use of the word “force.” Is it motion—molar or molecular—or the unknown
-cause of motion? According to Professor Huxley, “force” is merely an expression
-used to denote the <em>cause</em> of motion, whatever that may be. We only <em>know</em>
-this cause in its <em>aspect</em> of motion, and cannot penetrate behind the veil in
-order to grasp the Noumenon of which motion is the phenomenal effect. The
-necessity, therefore, of recognising the fact that <em>motion</em> is all that falls within the
-cognizance of sense, forbids the (profane) scientist to use the term “force” as
-representative of anything but an abstraction. The question is complicated by
-the consideration that the <em>substantiality</em> of various so-called “forces” appears
-most probable, and that this substantiality becomes objectively real to sense,
-only on a plane beyond this—the domain of matter in its order of physical
-differentiations.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The materialistic doctrine that force merely = a motion of matter is contradicted
-by the fact that, as shown by Mill, <em>motion can be temporarily neutralized</em>.
-Lift a heavy weight on to a shelf and the mechanical energy expended in the
-act is latent in the potentiality of the weight to fall to the ground again. There
-is <em>no immediate equivalent</em>, as the attraction of the earth for the object remains
-the same (the now greater distance tending to diminish the amount though in
-a very minute degree.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It may be further noted that, granting Mr. Sundaram Iyer’s definition of
-matter as “<em>extension pure and simple</em>,” to be correct (p. 112), it is difficult to
-understand how he predicates this barren content as endowed with <em>motion</em>
-(p. 83.) What moves?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The rest of the <em>brochure</em> is taken up with some excellent criticism of current
-conceptions of atoms, space and heterogenealism (a creed now so sorely wounded
-by Mr. Crooke’s “Protyle.”) Dealing with one of the late Mr. G. H. Lewe’s
-utterances, the author remarks with great truth: “By some mysterious law of
-occurrence the self-contradictions of the bulk of the erudite and enlightened
-are in point of gravity, palpableness, and number in direct proportion to their
-erudition and enlightenment.” With how many contrasted dicta from the pages
-of our Büchners, Spencers, Bains etc., etc., could this conclusion be supported.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>One word before we close. Is the title of the work well chosen? It appears
-to us the least satisfactory sentence which has been traced by the writer’s
-pen. The definition of “mind as matter and matter as mind” not only offers
-no solution of the great psychological problem discussed, but does injustice to
-the contents of the work itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the process of definition we “assemble representative examples of the
-phenomena,” under investigation and “our work lies in generalizing these, in
-detecting community in the midst of difference.” Now, there is <em>no community
-whatever</em> between mental and material facts. For as Professor Bain writes:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Extension is but the first of a long series of properties all present in matter,
-<em>all absent in mind</em> ... our mental experience, our feelings and thoughts, have
-no <em>extension</em>, no <em>place</em>, no <em>form</em><a id='r133' /><a href='#f133' class='c013'><sup>[133]</sup></a> or <em>outline</em>, or <em>mechanical division</em> of parts; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>we are incapable of attending to anything mental until we shut off the view of
-all that.”—“<cite>Mind and Body.</cite>” pp. 125 and 135.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The phenomenal contrast of mind and matter is not only at the root of <a id='corr411.3'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='uor'>our</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_411.3'><ins class='correction' title='uor'>our</ins></a></span>
-present constitution but an essential of our terrestrial consciousness. Duality
-is illusion in the ultimate analysis; but within the limits of a Universe-cycle or
-Great Manwantaræ it holds true. The <em>two</em> bases of manifested Being—the
-Logos (spirit) and Mulaprakriti, (Matter, or rather its Noumenon) are unified in
-the absolute reality, but in the Manvantaric Maya, under space and time conditions,
-they <em>are contrasted though mutually interdependent aspects of the</em> <span class='fss'>ONE
-CAUSE</span>.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator8.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>EDITORS’ NOTES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>We have a good deal of correspondence now in type, but must stand over till
-next month owing to lack of space.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In particular we wish to acknowledge a letter on Hylo-Idealism, signed C. N.,
-forwarded to us by Dr. Lewins from a correspondent of his now in the East.
-This letter places Hylo-Idealism in a new and very different light, and its
-straightforward style and language are in strong contrast to the turgid effusions
-of such writers as G. M. McC. An extract from one of the latter’s letters to
-the “<cite>Secular Review</cite>” (January 7, 1888), for instance, says that “Specialism <em>is</em>
-Superficialism, and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vice versa</i></span>, both being <em>fractionalism</em>; and that the true
-desideratum is generalisationism (<i>i.e.</i> <em>all-roundism</em> and <em>all-throughism</em>), whereby
-and wherein the Kantian and Hegelian metaphysic may be precipitated and
-modern Materialism sublimed? There is only one alembic for both, and that
-is Solipsism—that true ‘wisdom of the ages,’ in which the profoundest thinker
-is at one with the little child.—G. M. McC.”!!!<a id='r134' /><a href='#f134' class='c013'><sup>[134]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<p class='c028'>The following books have been received and will be noticed in due course:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Absolute Relativism; or, the Absolute in Relation,” by W. B. McTaggart.
-(W. Stewart &amp; Co.)</p>
-<p class='c035'>“Spirit Revealed,” by Captain William C. Eldon Serjeant. (George
-Redway.)</p>
-<p class='c035'>“A Modern Apostle,” and other Poems, by Constance C. W. Naden. (Kegan
-Paul, Trench &amp; Co.)</p>
-<p class='c035'>“Manuel of Etheropathy,” by Dr. Count Manzetti.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Correspondence.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c049' />
-<h3 class='c018'>THE CHURCH AND THE DOCTRINE OF ATONEMENT.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>As it is often supposed that the clergy are required to be united as one man in
-teaching a doctrine called Atonement, and that this doctrine requires the clergy
-either to teach that “God required the blood of Jesus to be shed and offered
-as a sacrifice for an Atonement,” or to leave the Church if they reject it;
-therefore, since I reject this doctrine, it is sometimes wondered how I can
-either have been admitted to ordination, or, being admitted, how I can remain
-in, or expect to have a hearing in, the pulpits of the National Churches.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>The explanation</em> of my position is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I offered myself as a candidate for ordination much later than is usual; and
-<em>one</em> of the three beneficed clergy, whose testimonials, as to the candidate’s
-religious views being orthodox, each candidate is required to provide before
-being accepted as a candidate for examination and ordination, <em>informed</em> the
-Bishop of London (Jackson) that I did not hold Church of England views on
-the Atonement. The Bishop, therefore, before accepting me as a candidate,
-required a personal interview; when I told the Bishop, in reply to his question,
-whether I had any difficulty in accepting the <a id='corr412.19'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='doctine'>doctrine</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_412.19'><ins class='correction' title='doctine'>doctrine</ins></a></span> of Atonement as taught in
-the second of the XXXIX. Articles, that I was entering the Church in order to
-teach, that it was the work of Jesus Christ to devote His life a living sacrifice to
-persuade us to believe that in His love, His mind, His spirit towards us, we
-saw (so far as it could be manifested in the human form) the love, mind, and
-spirit of God towards us; and that the sacrifice of Jesus consisted in His leaving
-nothing undone that love could do or suffer, even to drinking to its very
-dregs the cup of our hatred, whilst blind and ignorant, in order that we might
-accept and believe His testimony.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And, in addition, I told the Bishop that if the XXXIX. Articles did not allow
-of this teaching, and demanded of the clergy to believe and teach that “God
-required the blood of Jesus to be shed and offered as a sacrifice for an Atonement,
-either to appease God’s wrath, satisfy His justice, or propitiate His favour,”
-then such a doctrine was immoral, anti-Christian, contrary to the Scriptures, and
-made God to be no better than Shylock, a wolf, or a devil. And I dared the
-Bishop to refuse accepting me as a candidate.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Bishop made no reply, neither assenting nor dissenting, and I returned
-to Petersham to await the result of this interview. After a day or two the
-Bishop’s chaplain wrote that I might consider my proposal to come to the
-Bishop’s examination for Orders accepted; and I was ordained without one
-word of comment upon the conversation at this private interview. But my first
-vicar only allowed me to preach three times, and then for the rest of the year
-he boycotted me from either preaching, reading, or even speaking in the parish,
-excepting only in a particular part of it. My second vicar, after allowing me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>to preach three times, also boycotted me entirely. I appealed to the Bishop,
-but he declined to interfere. So after striving in vain to find a clergyman who
-would allow me to preach what I was ordained to teach, I published pamphlets,
-and delivered them by the hundred and thousand at the church doors after the
-service, wherever there was a large congregation; but after a time the Bishop
-was appealed to to stop me; when he not only denied me, as Peter denied Jesus,
-but he threatened to instruct the police to prevent me; and the ruling powers
-at St Paul’s Cathedral did instruct the chief of the police to prevent me.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As a last resort, I write letters in the Press wherever I can find a newspaper willing
-to open its columns, to explain my views and appeal to the people to obtain liberty
-in the Church for teaching the truth of “Christ Crucified.” But so great
-is the opposition to this, that the chief organ of the Church and the
-Press (the <cite>Times</cite>) refuses even to allow me to advertise for a pulpit, on the
-ground that it is <em>inadmissible</em>; notwithstanding all the minutest details of
-divorce trials are freely <em>admissible</em>, thus proving that everything is admissible
-excepting one thing, viz.: the truth of Christ Crucified.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And yet the Archbishop of Canterbury has recently told the world that “<a id='corr413.16'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='the,'>the</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_413.16'><ins class='correction' title='the,'>the</ins></a></span>
-Church wishes the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, to be told,”
-and the Bishops of Carlisle, Durham, Peterborough, Manchester, Liverpool and
-Bedford, have also used words to the same effect. But although I have spent
-the best part of my life (17 years) in striving to find one clergyman (from the
-highest to the lowest), I have not found one who would allow this liberty to
-speak the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, concerning Christ
-Crucified. And I appeal to the rulers of the Church to allow this liberty—and to
-the people to demand and obtain this liberty, if the rulers of the Church refuse
-it. For I have a letter from Canon Liddon, in which he says to me, “I can
-believe with all my heart, although I only know you from the two letters which
-you have written to me (upon my sermons), that if you were to preach, people
-would go to hear you as they go to hear me.” Is there not a cause then, why I
-should complain of being thus cruelly and unjustly boycotted for 17 years without
-any reason?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The chief organ of the Church and the Press (the <cite>Times</cite>) in the
-supposed chief Christian city in the world, refused to publish, even as an
-advertisement, any one of the three following appeals, on the ground that they
-were <em>inadmissible</em>. Yes, <em>inadmissible</em>, whilst all the minutest details of the Barrett
-trial, the Dilke trial, the Colin Campbell trial, the Seabright trial, and a host of
-others of a like nature, were all <em>freely admissible</em>.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>I.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>“A pulpit wanted, in the National Church, in which liberty will be allowed to
-teach the truth of Christ Crucified, openly and fearlessly, in order that it may
-no longer remain either a stumbling-block to the Jews, foolishness to the world,
-or a mystery to the teachers of it (as it is to this day, for want only of this
-liberty), but may verily be seen to be, as it is, and as St. Paul asserted
-it to be, the power of God, and wisdom of God for the salvation of all men.”</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>II.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>“The Rev. T. G. Headley, of Petersham, S.W., appeals to the Clergy and
-people of the Church of England for a pulpit in which he may be allowed to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>preach seven sermons: I. on Unbelief; II. the Trial of Abraham; III. the
-Day of Judgment; IV. Mary Magdalene; V. Conversion of St. Paul; VI. Jesus,
-only; VII. Inspiration.”</p>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>III.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>“The Rev. T. G. Headley, of Petersham, S.W., appeals to the Clergy
-for a pulpit in which he may be allowed to explain the mystery of Christ
-Crucified, that it may no longer remain a mystery.”</p>
-<div class='c020'>Rev. <span class='sc'>T. G. Headley</span>.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Manor House, Petersham, S.W.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>[This persistent refusal is the more remarkable as other preachers are allowed
-to teach worse, <em>from an orthodox standpoint, of course</em>. Is it <em>inadmissible</em> “to
-explain the mystery of Christ Crucified,” as the Rev. Mr. Headley is likely to,
-lest it should interfere with the explanation and description of Jehovah—“<em>one
-with Christ Jesus</em>” in the orthodox dogma—by the Rev. H. R. Haweis, M. A.?
-Says this truthful and cultured if not very pious orator: “At first the chief
-attributes of Satan were given to Jehovah. It was God who destroyed
-the world, hardened Pharaoh, tempted David, provoked to sin, and punished
-the sinner. This way of thinking lingered even as late as 700 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>: ‘I
-the Lord make peace and create evil’ (Isa. xlv. 7). We have an odd survival
-of this identification of God with the Devil in the word ‘<em>Deuce</em>,’ which is none
-other than ‘<em>Deus</em>,’ but which to us always means the Devil. As the Jew grew
-more spiritual he gradually transferred the devilish functions to a ‘Satan,’ or
-accusing spirit. The transition point appears in comparing the early passage (2
-Sam. xxiv.), when <em>God</em> is said to ‘move’ David to number the people, with the
-later (1 Chron. xxi.), where <em>Satan</em> is said to be the instigator who ‘provoked’
-the numbering. But Satan is not yet the King Devil. We can take up our
-Bible and trace the gradual transformation of Satan from an accusing angel
-into the King Devil of popular theology.”—(<em>The Key</em>, etc p. 22.) This, we
-believe, is an even more damaging teaching for the Orthodox Church than any
-theory about “Christ Crucified.” Mr. Headley seeks to prove Christ, the Rev.
-Haweis ridiculing and making away with the Devil, <em>destroys and makes away
-for ever with Jesus</em>, as Christ, also. For, as logically argued by Cardinal Ventura
-de Raulica, “<em>to demonstrate the existence of Satan, is to re-establish</em> <span class='fss'>ONE OF
-THE FUNDAMENTAL DOGMAS OF THE CHURCH</span>, <em>which serves as a basis for
-Christianity, and without which</em>, Satan (and Jesus) would be but names”; or
-to put it in the still stronger terms of the pious Chevalier des Mousseaux,
-“<em>The Devil is the chief pillar of Faith</em> ... if it was not for him, the
-Saviour, the Crucified, the Redeemer, would be but the most ridiculous of
-supernumeraries, and the Cross an insult to good sense.” (See <cite>Isis Unveil.</cite> vol.
-i., 103; vol. ii., 14.) Truly so. Were there no Devil, a Christ to save the
-World from him would be hardly wanted! Yet, the Rev. Haweis says: (p. 24)
-“I cannot now discuss the teaching of the N. T. on the King Devil, or I
-might show that Jesus did not endorse the popular view of one King Devil,
-and ... notice the way in which our translators have played fast and loose
-with the words <em>Diabolus and Satan</em>;” adding that the Tree and Serpent
-worship was an Oriental cult, “of which the narrative of Adam and Eve is a
-Semitic form.” Is this <em>admissible</em> orthodoxy?—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>SOCIALISM AND THEOSOPHY.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Mesdames</span>,—In the December number of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> Mr. J. B. Bright takes
-exception to some remarks on Socialism in an article on “Brotherhood,” which
-appeared in your pages a month previously.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As the writer of that article, I think it right to accept Mr. Bright’s challenge,
-and endeavour to replace my somewhat hasty generalisations by a more precise
-statement of the teachings of Theosophy, as they appear to me to bear on the
-question at issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Mr. Bright objects to my use of the phrase “<em>materialistic</em> Socialism.” My
-intention was to draw a distinction between that which “concerns itself
-primarily with the material or physical condition of mankind,” and that other
-form of purely voluntary association, springing, as regards each of its members,
-from a recognition of their unity of purpose, and the realisation of the idea of
-brotherhood, for an example of which we may turn to the communistic system
-of the early Christian Church. I would point out that this is not a fanciful
-distinction, as in the first case what is described as “a juster distribution of
-wealth” is the very essence of the Socialistic idea, while in the second it is
-only an incident, arising from the conviction that worldly possessions have in
-themselves no value in comparison with “the things of the spirit.” I maintain
-then that the teachings of Theosophy are opposed to “modern materialistic
-Socialism,” and I will endeavour to point out, as briefly as possible, in what this
-opposition consists.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There is at the outset a fundamental difference between Theosophy and
-Socialism in the value they attach to the “material and physical” well-being of
-mankind. Theosophy regards any given earth life as an infinitesimal link in the
-chain of lives which leads from the first glimmerings of a separate consciousness
-up to the very threshold of Divinity and All-knowledge. And taking the
-doctrines of Re-incarnation and Karma, as interacting laws, it sees in the
-apparent injustices of physical life, and in the inequalities of intellectual and
-moral development among mankind, the results of good or bad use made of
-opportunities in previous incarnations. The Universe is governed by the great
-law of Harmony, whose agent is Karma, and infractions of this law, or rebellion
-against it, are punished by the action of Karma, whether in the individual or
-the race. Thus the position of every individual in respect to his fellow men,
-and the position of every nation (the compound, as it were, of individual
-Karmas) in respect to other nations, is the direct result of previously acquired
-characteristics and affinities. The re-incarnation of an individual will be
-governed by his personal affinities; firstly, to the general Karma of his nation:
-secondly, to the particular circumstances of his parentage and condition in life.
-Theosophy therefore teaches that so far as regards his individual Karma, a
-man’s place in Society is what he has made it, and he has no right to cry out
-against the injustice of the law which he has broken, and which inexorably
-exacts the penalty of his default. This does not however quite hold good as
-regards the national or the cyclic Karma. It is quite possible that by the
-action of cyclic Karma injustice may be done to individuals, to be atoned for
-no doubt in future existences, but at the same time calculated to impede their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>due and regular development. The combating of this cyclic Karma, in so far
-as it deals unjustly with individuals, is the work of the great and wise ones of
-this earth, and every true Theosophist will to the best of his ability take part in
-the struggle. But the Socialist movement is itself a part of the cyclic Karma,
-and in its endeavour to rectify what seem, from its limited point of view, injustices,
-it cannot fail to be unjust to those the justice of whose position in life
-it declines to recognise. Thus it cannot be otherwise than that it should meet
-with opposition from those whose object is the improvement of humanity as a
-whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I must in the second place point out that the teaching of Theosophy is
-entirely opposed to the idea that any very great progress can be made by
-humanity as a whole, within the space of a few generations. Speaking of the
-destruction of evil in the human heart, the author of “Light on the Path”
-says, “Only the strong can kill it out. The weak must wait for its growth, its
-fruition, its death. And it is a plant which lives and increases throughout the
-ages. It flowers when man has accumulated unto himself innumerable existences.”
-This is undoubtedly Theosophical teaching, but I do not think it
-tallies with Mr. Bright’s view that “this self same society——contains
-within it all the germs of such a reconstruction of the physical environment as
-shall shortly place the means of spiritual and psychical regeneration within the
-reach of all.” It is impossible that Socialism or any other external organisation
-can “raise the intellectual and instinctive moral standard of the whole community
-to such an extent that all will, in the next generation after the Social
-Revolution, be amenable to the truths” of Theosophy. This would be
-equivalent to saying that every member of the community was prepared
-definitely to undertake the task of self-conquest, and it happens unfortunately
-that almost all the external work of Socialism is in the opposite direction.
-Further, it must be distinctly pointed out that this task of self-conquest must
-be undertaken and carried through by each man for himself, and only those
-who have reached a certain point in human evolution are ready for the struggle.
-There is one other point on which I feel some stress must be laid. It seems
-to me impossible that Theosophy, recognising as it does the immense gulf
-which exists between ordinary humanity (in which term I of course include all
-its followers), and those who are on the threshold of Divinity, can fail to recognise
-at the same time the principle of hierarchy in its best and noblest
-sense. I mean of course a spiritual hierarchy, but even this is incompatible
-with that innate hatred of domination which is so obvious in Socialism.
-There is no doubt some inconsistency in this hatred of domination, as in
-practice Socialists are prepared to substitute for the existing domination of
-intelligence that of mere numbers, but this, if anything, only makes the contrast
-between the two ideas somewhat stronger. It is only right to point out
-that an accepted disciple (not a mere student) practically surrenders his personal
-liberty, and pledges himself to obedience to those great ones who are the
-initiators of the Theosophical movement.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have endeavoured thus far to particularise my general statement that the
-teachings of Theosophy were opposed to Socialism. I think Mr. Bright’s
-objections to my other statements are in effect answered in what I have already
-said, but I may perhaps be permitted to deal with them separately. If Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>Bright has understood the meaning of the article on Brotherhood, he will, I
-think, see that whereas the Theosophical idea of brotherhood is based on the
-identity of the Divine spirit inherent in humanity, and thence working downwards,
-the brotherhood of Socialism is based on the assumption of equality on
-the material, or intellectual plane, and has, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>per se</i></span>, no existence at all on the
-higher plane. The brotherhood of Theosophy, once rightly understood, will
-no doubt be manifested on the lower planes, but that does not make it the
-same thing as an idea of Brotherhood which begins and ends in physical
-existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As to my remark that Socialism is an attempt to interfere with the action of
-the Laws of Karma, I should perhaps have added the word “individual,”
-which, in conjunction with my reference to the parable of the talents, should
-make the meaning clear. Socialism aims at the levelling of classes, which is
-nothing else than a redistribution of the responsibilities of life. I understand
-the parable of the talents to indicate the true meaning of the differences in
-opportunities accorded to individuals during their life on earth. Every
-opportunity is also a responsibility, and from those to whom much is given
-much will be demanded. Further, responsibility is thrust upon those who can
-bear it, and to relieve them from it, and transfer <a id='corr417.19'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='it the'>it to the</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_417.19'><ins class='correction' title='it the'>it to the</ins></a></span> shoulders of the weaker
-brethren, is an interference with the laws of Karma, and can only lead to a
-retardation of the general evolution of humanity. I will only say in conclusion
-that I have endeavoured to confine my remarks to the view of Socialism advanced
-by Mr. Bright. It is indeed hardly necessary to point out that Theosophy
-can never be a party to the incitements to violence, and the appeals to the
-baser passions which Mr. Bright rightly deprecates, but which are unfortunately
-too often the stock-in-trade of the Socialist orator.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I feel that there are many points in Mr. Bright’s letter to which I should be
-glad to reply more in detail, but I fear that in so doing I might be considered
-as trenching too much on those purely political aspects of the question which
-are outside the scope of Theosophical work.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I am, Mesdames,</div>
- <div class='line in9'>Your obedient servant,</div>
- <div class='line in14'><span class='sc'>Thos. B. Harbottle</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>WHAT IS THEOSOPHY?</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'><em>The question is answered by Schopenhauer as follows</em>:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“... Starting from the plane of <em>mental conception</em> (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Vorstellung</cite></span>), and
-proceeding on our way towards the attainment of <em>objective knowledge</em>, we shall
-never be able to arrive at a higher point than our own conception (imagination),
-<i>i.e.</i> of the external appearance of the object of our observation; but we shall
-never be able to penetrate into the interior of the things and to find out what
-they really are (not what they merely appear to be). So far I agree with <em>Kant</em>.
-But as a counterpoise to this truth I have called attention to another one;
-namely, that we are not merely the <em>cognising subject</em>, but we are also ourselves
-a part of object of our cognition, we are ourselves the <em>Thing itself</em>. There is
-consequently an interior way open to us from that self-existing and interior
-essence of things, which we cannot approach from the outside; a kind of subterranean
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>passage, a secret connection, by which we by treason, as it were,
-may at once penetrate into a fortress which was impregnable from the outside.
-The <em>Thing itself</em> can as such enter our consciousness only in a direct manner,
-<i>i.e.</i> <em>by becoming conscious of its own self</em>. To attempt to know it objectively is
-to ask for a self-contradiction.” (<cite>The World as Will and Conception.</cite> Vol. ii.,
-Cap. 18).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What Schopenhauer expresses in modern philosophical language might
-perhaps be stated in a few words by saying, that man cannot become conscious
-of the truth unless the truth is in him, and in that case it is not the man who
-recognises the truth, but the truth which recognises itself in man. He who
-wants to know it objectively must separate himself from it, because no one can
-see his own face without the help of a mirror; but if he separates himself
-from it, the truth exists in him no longer. It is therefore the truth itself
-which may become self-conscious in man, provided there exists any truth
-in him.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>F. H.</div>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>A NOTE OF EXPLANATION.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>I would much rather suffer an unintentional misrepresentation of my meaning
-than take the trouble to reply, and have no desire to magnify small matters of
-difference. But a very critical friend calls my attention to certain statements
-and apparent discrepancies in the “Esoteric Character of the Gospels,” on
-which I will beg leave to say a word.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I find it affirmed on p. 300, in a foot-note, that “Mr. G. Massey is not correct
-in saying that ‘<i>The Gnostic form of the name Chrest or Chrestos denotes the Good
-God, not a human original,’ for it denoted the latter, that is, a good, holy man.</i>”
-But either the statement has no meaning as an answer to me, or it is based on a
-misunderstanding of mine.<a id='r135' /><a href='#f135' class='c013'><sup>[135]</sup></a> I was showing that the <em>original</em> Christ of the Gnosis
-was not one particular form of human personality, like the supposed historic
-Christ, and that the name denoted a divine, and not a human <em>original</em>. I was
-perfectly well aware, as your quotations show, that the name was <em>afterwards</em>
-conferred on the “good” as the Chrestoi or Chrestiani. Nor do I say, or anywhere
-imply, that the “<em>Karest</em>,” or mummy-type of immortality <em>was</em> the <em>only
-form of the Christ</em>, as your quotations again will prove. I have written enough
-about that Gnostic Christ who was the Immortal Self in man, the reflection of,
-or emanation from, the divine nature in humanity, and in both sexes, not merely
-in one.<a id='r136' /><a href='#f136' class='c013'><sup>[136]</sup></a> This is the Christ that never could become a one person or be limited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>to one sex. This you accept and preach; yet you can add “<i>Still the personage
-(Jesus) so addressed by Paul—wherever he lived—was a great initiate, and a
-‘Son of God.’</i>”<a id='r137' /><a href='#f137' class='c013'><sup>[137]</sup></a> But the Christos of Paul, being the Gnostic Christ, as you
-admit (301), it cannot be a personage named Jesus, or a great Initiate, who
-was addressed by him. It appears to me that in passages like these, you are
-giving away all that is worth contending for, and vouching for that which never
-has been, and never can be, proved. I have searched for Jesus
-many years in the Gospels and elsewhere without being able to catch hold
-of the hem of the garment of any human personality. Ben-Pandira we know
-a little of, but cannot make him out in the Christ of the Gospels. The Christ of
-the Gnosis can be identified, but not with any historic Jesus.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We do not go to the Christian Gospels to learn the true nature of the Christ,
-or the incarnation according to the Gnostic religion (I use this term in preference
-to yours of the “Wisdom-Religion,” as being more definite and explanatory;
-not as a religion, supposed by the <em>Idiotai</em> to have followed in the wake of
-Historic Christianity!). These were known in Egypt, more than six thousand
-years ago. When the monuments began the Cult of the Supreme God Atum
-was extant. We know not how many æons earlier, but six thousand years will
-do. Atum = Adam was the divine father of an eternal soul which was personated
-as his son, named Iu-em-hept (the Greek Imothos or Æsculapius), an image of
-whom used to be seen (on shelf 3,578, b. 1874), in the British Museum. He
-was the second Atum = Adam, and is called the “Eternal Word” in the Ritual.
-In external phenomena this type represented the Solar God, re-born monthly
-or annually in the lunar orb; in human phenomena the Christ or Son of God
-as the essential and eternal soul in man. But he was neither a man nor an Initiate.
-He was just what the Logos, the Word of Truth or Ma-Kheru, the
-Buddha or Christ is in other Cults.<a id='r138' /><a href='#f138' class='c013'><sup>[138]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>I cordially agree with “M,” a correspondent whom you quote, and wish that
-all our orthodox friends would as frankly face the facts. If any historic Jesus
-ever did claim to be the Gnostic Christ made flesh<a id='r139' /><a href='#f139' class='c013'><sup>[139]</sup></a> once for all, he would be
-the supremest impostor in history.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Let us define to ourselves very strictly what it is we do mean, or we shall introduce
-the direst confusion into the conflict, and we shall be unable to distinguish
-the face of friend from foe in the cloud of battle-dust which we may raise.
-What I find is, that Historic Christianity was based either upon the suppression
-or the perversion of all that <em>was</em> esoteric in Gnostic Christianity. And to bring
-any aid from the one to the support of the other is to try and re-establish with
-the left hand all that you are knocking down with the right.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I am also taken to task on page 307 for alluding to the Bible as a “Magazine
-of falsehoods already exploded, or just going off,” by the writer who adds force
-to my words later on in characterizing these same writings as a “Magazine of
-(<em>wicked</em>) falsehoods”<a id='r140' /><a href='#f140' class='c013'><sup>[140]</sup></a> (p. 178), which was going farther than I went, who do set
-down as much to ignorance as to knavery. What I meant was, that the “Fall
-of Man” in the Old Testament, is a falsification of fable, now exploded, and
-that the redemption from that fall, which is promised in the New, whether by
-an “Initiate” or “Son of God” is a fraud based on the fable, and a falsehood
-that is going to be exploded. There is no call to mix up the Book of the Dead,
-the Vedas, or any other sacred writings, in this matter. Each tub must stand
-on its own bottom, and the one that won’t, can’t hold water.<a id='r141' /><a href='#f141' class='c013'><sup>[141]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Gerald Massey.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>P.S. By the by, I see the Adventists, and other misleading Delusionists are
-all agog just now about the wonderful fulfilment of prophecy, and corroboration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>of historic fact, that we are now witnessing. The “Star of Bethlehem” has reappeared,
-so they say, to prove the truth of the Christian story. But, sad
-to say, it is not the star of Christ that is now visible in the south-east before sunrise
-every morning. It is Venus in her heliacal rising. It is Venus as the
-Maleess, or Lucifer as “Sun of the Morning.” This particular Star of Bethlehem—there
-are various others less brilliant and less noticeable—generally does
-return once every nineteen months or so, when the planet Venus is the Morning
-Star. Only the gaping camel-swallowers, who know all about the “Star of
-Bethlehem,” and the fulfilment of prophecy, are not up in Astronomy, and they
-will no doubt squirm and strain at this small gnat of real fact offered to them
-by way of an explanation.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>G. M.</div>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>[<i>We give room to this remarkable letter with the object of comparison. The Secularists are loud
-in proclaiming the modes of expression of the Theosophists as “stultic profundity,” and the
-Esoteric Doctrine as “a hopeless chaos,” a “rudely methodised madness.” At the same time the
-Hylo-Idealists are</i> <span class='fss'>PERSONÆ GRATISSIMÆ</span> <i>in the “Secular Review,” and no such remarks are passed
-about their theories and style</i>. Readers please to compare. “Fiat Justitia, ruat Saladinus!”—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>HYLO-IDEALISM—THE SECRET OF JESUS.</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Behold, the Kingdom of Heaven is within you.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>The primacy of Self is indisputable, if by reason of one fact only—that this,
-self-same, Self is the initial postulate of all sane philosophy. And, when
-Philosophy soars to Metaphysic, Scientific Analysis “takes up the wondrous
-tale,” and its burden is Self-hood also. All roads lead to Rome. All analysis
-runs into the Egoistic Synthesis. “The One [Ego] remains, the Many change
-and pass.” Yet the passing is only the flux and ebb of the One. In Hegel’s
-words, “that which passes away passes away into its own self: only the passing
-away passes away.” Which things are an allegory, and yet “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>solvitur ambulando</i></span>.”
-A recent traveller in the United States tells us, that, in the Emerson country,
-he chanced upon cross-roads, and found there an apparently contradictory
-direction-post. One arm of it bore the inscription, “This is the way to Concord,”
-the other, pointing in the opposite direction, was similarly worded, “This is the
-way to Concord.” The Hylo-Ideal Thesis is this Ideal Concord, to be reached
-whether you travel by way of Eastern Idealism, or by the route of plainer
-Western Materialism. For, and here all contradictions are reconciled, in the
-one Subject-object which is Self, there is no diversity, neither Jew nor Greek,
-neither Idealism only, nor Materialism only, or exclusively, but all is one.<a id='r142' /><a href='#f142' class='c013'><sup>[142]</sup></a>
-And in Unity there is no class distinction, no nomenclature, no “otherness,”
-no Ebal <em>and</em> Gerizim, but only the Mount of God. What the Ego is, <em>all</em> is.<a id='r143' /><a href='#f143' class='c013'><sup>[143]</sup></a>
-It is the <em>x</em> of every problem and answers to any value save the spurious and
-indifferent one of the Dualist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I find Hylo-Idealism (Auto-centricism)—this “pearl of great price”—canvassed
-and examined by many modern thinkers, only to be contemptuously
-cast away, though it would have made each one of them in turn “richer than
-all his tribe.” But it was ever thus. In this rejection there is no despair in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>the view of the <em>illuminati</em>. All is ours, and paltering with the central truth of
-SOLIPSISM, as men have ever paltered, does not change or diminish the truth
-itself, or lessen the assurance of its ultimate victory, since to go from, or flee
-from, the Egoistic presence is an impossibility. We wander here and there, but
-to seek to transcend ourselves is vain. There must, sooner or later, be the
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>resipiscentia</i></span>, the coming home at last to Self, and Self only, as to the better
-home at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In this view there is no <em>Logos</em>—save that indisputable one, which maketh all
-things to every one of us—no “true Light” save that effulgent one which
-“lighteth every man that cometh into the world,” namely, his own creative and
-illuminating Egoity—<em>sans</em> which there is but nothingness. Such a Gospel
-as this should be termed the Evangel of common-sense were it not that that
-phrase shows only one side of the question—“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Virginibus, puerisque est</i></span>” but it
-is also the very acme of the exalted intelligence, “the last and sharpest height”
-of human thought where the atmosphere is all too rare for mortal breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The highest and the lowliest<a id='r144' /><a href='#f144' class='c013'><sup>[144]</sup></a> are ever thus akin—“Aryan worship secreted in
-the Holy of Holies the utensils of the dairy.” Grasp but the centre truth of
-truths—that the Ego and its products are <em>one</em>, that every one of us spins, from
-his own consciousness, the web of thing and circumstance, which envelopes
-him—and you see at once and as it were instinctively, that in this Universe-circle
-of Egoity there is no “otherness” even thinkable, no lower and no
-higher, no difference, nothing essentially common or unclean, everything being,
-not so much cleansed of God, as very THEOBROMA,<a id='r145' /><a href='#f145' class='c013'><sup>[145]</sup></a> God’s food and
-nutrient element, seeing that in it, and by it, and through it, we and all things
-CONSUBSTANTIALLY EXIST.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>veræ causæ</i></span> and other figments are not so much unsearchable, or past
-finding out, as out of court or indifferent. Whether all be of God, or all be
-from a “clam-shell,” does not matter—does not, by one jot, affect our Thesis.
-Indifferently we are by origin, patricians or “gutter-snipes.” The Ego is free
-of the Cosmos—equal to either fortune, high or low, makes <em>its own</em> universe,
-calls it by its own name, and it “lives and moves and has its being.”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>G. M. McC.</div>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>GERALD MASSEY ON SHAKSPEARE.</h4>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c035'>Mr. Massey has sent us a circular, the contents of which should be of interest
-to the lovers of Shakspeare and the buyers of rare books. The writer says:</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My work on the Secret Drama of Shakspeare’s Sonnets, with
-Sketches of his Private Friends, and of his own Life and Character, first
-published in the year 1866, the Second Edition of which was issued,
-with a Supplement, for Subscribers in 1872, has now been out of print
-many years. It is frequently enquired for, and very rarely to be found
-in the catalogues of second-hand booksellers. Therefore I am about to
-reproduce the work. It will have to be re-cast and re-written where
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>necessary, as the writing can now be more definitely done. Errors must
-be confessed and corrected. The new volume will be on lines similar
-to those of the earlier work, accentuated in many of the details, but
-modified in others. There will be something new and more decisive to
-say concerning both sets of the Sonnets, which I call the Southampton
-and Herbert series; and not without reason or warrant will the Comparative
-method be pushed much farther than before. The work will
-be written up to date in the light of the latest knowledge. The most
-recent data, the latest results of Shakspearian Siftings, will be utilised;
-and something will have to be said concerning the current Baconian
-Craze, which was no doubt foreseen by the Great Humourist when he
-wrote, ‘<em>A most fine figure! To prove you a Cypher!</em>’ is my aim to
-fight one last battle on this field for what I maintain to be the cause of
-truth and right; to entrust a final answer on the Sonnet question to
-the types of John Guttenberg, and leave in his safe keeping a plea that
-shall be heard hereafter, as a permanent memorial to the writer’s love
-and admiration for Shakspeare the Poet and Man. After twenty years
-the ground is felt to be firmer underfoot. The building will have a more
-concrete base. I am enabled to give a closer clinch to my conclusions,
-and, as I think, complete my case. Necessarily the book must be large,
-700 or 800 pp. The price will be One Guinea.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/separator3.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class='large'><span class="blackletter"><span class='sc'>Correspondence</span></span></span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='large'>INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='large'>ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 3.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><i>To the Editor of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c041'>Question, at London, 11.45 a.m., Feb.
-26th, 1887.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Will the quesited die from his present
-illness?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hearing by letter that my uncle, an
-octogenarian, was seriously ill from pneumonia,
-I drew a figure for the moment
-of the impression to do so, which occurred
-while reading the communication. His
-illness had commenced about February
-7th, and he was now confined to his bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The following are the elements of the
-figure:—</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='33%' />
-<col width='16%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c056'>Cusp of</td>
- <td class='c007'>10th</td>
- <td class='c057'>house 0° ♓.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c056'>—</td>
- <td class='c007'>11th</td>
- <td class='c057'>house 3° ♈.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c056'>—</td>
- <td class='c007'>12th</td>
- <td class='c057'>house 20° ♉.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c056'>—</td>
- <td class='c007'>1st</td>
- <td class='c057'>house 4° 38’♋.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c056'>—</td>
- <td class='c007'>2nd</td>
- <td class='c057'>house 20° ♋.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c056'>—</td>
- <td class='c007'>3rd</td>
- <td class='c057'>house 8° ♌.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c028'>Planets’ places: ♆ 25° 10’ ♉; ♅ 11° 46
-R ♎; ♄ 15° 54’ R ♉. ♃ 5° 48’ R ♏;
-♂ 20° 31’ 31” ♓; ☉ 7° 35’ 50” ♓; ♀ 27°
-53’ 14” ♓; ☿ 23° 18’ 58” ♓; ☽ 16° 22’ 36”
-♈. Caput Draconis 27° 35’ ☊; ⨁ 13
-24’ ♌.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As the quesited was the 4th of my
-mother’s brothers and sisters, my mother
-being the 8th and last, I took the 10th
-house of the figure for herself, the 12th
-(or 3rd from the 10th) for her eldest
-brother or sister, the 2nd for the 2nd,
-the 4th for the 3rd, the 6th for the 4th—the
-quesited—and the 1st (the 8th from
-the 6th) for his 8th, or house of death.
-♂ was lord of his first house, and ☽ of his
-8th. The aspect was ☽ 25° 51’ 5” ♂,
-separating from the quindecile, and applying
-to the semisextile. As the significators
-were in good aspects, separating
-from one and applying to the other, and
-within orbs of both, it signified sure
-recovery; more especially as ♂ received
-☽ by house, and was dignified by triplicity.
-Nevertheless, the severity of the illness
-was shown by <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Cauda Draconis</i></span> in quesited’s
-4th house; by ♄, lord of quesited’s
-4th, posited in quesited’s 8th, retrograde,
-in his detriment, and in close □ to ☽, lady
-of quesited’s 8th and posited in his 6th.
-Furthermore, as ☽, the applying planet
-of the two significators, was in a cardinal
-sign and in a succeedent house of the
-figure, each degree signified a week;
-therefore as ☽ wanted 4° 8’ 55” of the
-perfect semisextile aspect, I judged that
-he would be convalescent in 4 weeks and
-1 day, or March 27th. <em>On March 29th
-he walked out in his garden for the first
-time</em>, and fully recovered from his attack.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Nemo.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Erratum.</span>—Page 76, 2nd column, line 2, <em>for</em> ♍ <em>read</em> ♏.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c042' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f125'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r125'>125</a>. “<span class='sc'>Verbum Sap.</span>” It is not our intention to notice anonymous communications, even though
-they should emanate in a round-about way from Lambeth Palace. The matter “<em>Verbum Sap</em>”
-refers to is not one of taste; the facts must be held responsible for the offence; and, as the Scripture
-hath it, “Woe to them by whom the offence cometh!”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f126'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r126'>126</a>. “The Christ of esoteric science” is the <em>Christos</em> of Spirit—an impersonal
-principle entirely distinct from any carnalised Christ or Jesus. Is it this Christos that
-the learned Canon Roca means?—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f127'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r127'>127</a>. The capitals are our own; for these “Mahatmas” are the real Founders and
-“Masters” of the Theosophical Society.—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f128'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r128'>128</a>. Of course every occultist knows by reading Eliphas Levi and other authors that
-the “astral” plane is a plane of unequalised forces, and that a state of confusion
-necessarily prevails. But this does not apply to the “divine astral” plane, which is a
-plane where wisdom, and therefore order, prevails.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f129'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r129'>129</a>. <cite>Posthumous Humanity</cite>, a study of Phantoms, by Adolphe d’Assier, Member of the Bordeaux
-Academy of Sciences. Translated and annotated by Henry S. Olcott, President of the Theosophical
-Society. George Redway, London, 1887. 8vo. pp. 360.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f130'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r130'>130</a>. The Fernley Lecture, 1887, by Dr. Dallinger. T. Woolmer, 2, Castle Street, City Road, London
-E.C. (1s. 6d., paper covers.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f131'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r131'>131</a>. Both the Idealism of Mr. Herbert Spencer, and the Hylo-Idealism of Dr. Lewins are more materialistic
-and atheistic than any of the honestly declared materialistic views—Buchner’s and Molaschott’s
-included.—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f132'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r132'>132</a>. A few years—and, who knows? perhaps only few months more, and Protestant England will have
-reverend scientists explaining to their congregations from the pulpits that Adam and Eve were but the
-<a id='corr407.1.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='missing'>“missing</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_407.1.1'><ins class='correction' title='missing'>“missing</ins></a></span> link”—<em>two tailless baboons</em>.—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f133'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r133'>133</a>. Nevertheless <em>objectively</em> viewed thoughts are actual entities to the occultist.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f134'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r134'>134</a>. See also his letter under Correspondence.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f135'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r135'>135</a>. The remark made has never been meant as “an answer,” but simply as an observation that the
-word “Chrestos” applied to a “good man,” a “human original,” and not to a “good God only.”
-If such was not the intention of Mr. Massey, and he amplifies his idea elsewhere, it was not so
-amplified in his article in the “Agnostic Annual.” It is, therefore, simply a bare statement of facts
-referring to that particular article and no more. I do not for one moment oppose Mr. Massey’s
-conclusions, nor doubt his undeniable learning in the direction of those particular researches, <i>i.e.</i>,
-about the words “Christos” and “Chrestos.” What I say is, that he limits them to the negation of
-an historical Christ, and, for reasons no doubt very weighty, does not touch upon their principal
-esoteric meaning in the temple-phraseology of the Mysteries.—H.P.B.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f136'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r136'>136</a>. This is absolutely and preeminently a Theosophical doctrine taught ever since 1875, when the
-Theosophical Society was founded.—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f137'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r137'>137</a>. This, I am afraid, is a misunderstanding (due, no doubt, to my own fault) on the part of our
-learned correspondent, of the meaning that was intended to be conveyed in the articles now criticized.
-If he goes to the trouble of reading over again the paragraph that misled him (see p. 307, 5th paragraph),
-he will, perhaps, see that it is so. That which was really meant was that, though the terms
-<em>Christos</em> and <em>Chréstos</em> are generic surnames, still, the personage so addressed (not by Paul, necessarily,
-but by any one), was a great Initiate and a “Son of God.” It is the name “Jesus,” placed in the
-sentence in parentheses that made it both clumsy and misleading. Whether Paul knew of Jehoshua
-Ben Pandira (and he must have heard of him), or not, he could never have applied the surname used
-by him to Jesus or any other <em>historic</em> Christ. Otherwise his <cite>Epistles</cite> would not have been
-withheld and exiled as they were. The sentence which precedes the two incriminated statements,
-shows that no such thing, as understood by Mr. Massey, could have been really meant, as it is
-said “Occultism pure and simple finds the same mystic elements in the Christian as in other
-faiths, <em>though it rejects emphatically its dogmatic and historic character</em>.” The two statements,
-viz., that Jesus or Jehoshua Ben Pandira <em>whenever he lived</em>, was a great Initiate and the “Son
-of God”—just as Apollonius of Tyana was—and that Paul never meant either him or any other living
-Initiate, but a metaphysical Christos present in, and <em>personal</em> to, every mystic Gnostic as to every initiated
-Pagan—are not at all irreconcileable. A man may know of several great Initiates, and yet place
-his own ideal on a far higher pedestal than any of these.—[H.P.B.]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f138'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r138'>138</a>. Nor shall I dispute this statement in general. But this does not invalidate in one iota
-<em>my</em> claim. The temple priests assumed the names of the gods they served, and this is as well known
-a fact, as that the defunct Egyptian became an “Osiris”—was “osirified”—after his death. Yet
-Osiris was assuredly neither “man nor an Initiate,” but a being hardly recognised as such by the
-Royal Society of materialistic science. Why, then, could not an “Initiate,” who had succeeded in
-merging his spiritual being into the <em>Christos state</em>, be regarded as a Christos after his last and supreme
-initiation, just as he was called <em>Chrestos</em> before that? Neither Plotinus, Porphyry nor Apollonius
-were Christians, yet, according to esoteric teaching, Plotinus realized this sublime state (of becoming
-or uniting himself with his <em>Christos</em>) six times, Apollonius of Tyana four times, while Porphyry reached
-the exalted state only once, when over sixty years of age. The Gnostics called the “<em>Word</em>”
-“Abraxas” and “Christos” indiscriminately, and by whatever name we may call it, whether Ma-Kheru,
-or Christos or Abraxas, it is all one. That mystic state which gives to our inner being the
-impulse that attracts “the soul toward its origin and centre, the Eternal good,” as Plotinus teaches,
-and makes of man a god, the Christos or the unknown made manifest, is a preeminently theosophical
-condition. It belonged to the temple mysteries, and the teachings of the Neo-Platonists.—[H.P.B.]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f139'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r139'>139</a>. “Christ made flesh,” would be a claim worse than imposture, as it would be <em>absurdity</em>, but a
-man of flesh assuming the <em>Christ-condition</em> temporarily, is indeed an occult, yet living, fact.—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f140'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r140'>140</a>. Just so, if it has been originally written to be accepted in its dead letter sense. But, as I entirely
-agree with Mr. Massey, that historic Christianity was based upon the suppression, and especially
-the <em>perversion</em> of that which was esoteric in gnosticism, it is difficult to see in what it is that we
-disagree? The perversion of esoteric facts in the gospels is not so cleverly done as to prevent the
-true occultist from reading the Gospel narratives between the lines.—[H.P.B.]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f141'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r141'>141</a>. If Mr. G. Massey kindly waits till the conclusion of “the Esoteric character of the gospels” to
-criticise the statements, he may perhaps arrive at the conviction that we are not so far apart in our
-ideas upon this particular question as he seems to think. Of course my critic being an Egyptologist,
-opposed to the Aryan theory, and arriving at his conclusions only by what he finds in strictly
-authenticated and accepted documents—and I, as a Theosophist and an Occultist of a certain school,
-accepting my proofs on data which he rejects—<i>i.e.</i> esoteric teachings—we can hardly agree upon
-every point. But the question is not whether there was or never was an <em>historical</em> Christ, or Jesus,
-between the years 1 and 33 <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>—but simply were the Gospels of the gnostics (of Marcion and
-others, for instance) perverted later by Christians—esoteric allegories founded on <em>facts</em>, or simply
-meaningless fictions? I believe the former, and esoteric teachings explain many of the allegories.—[H.P.B.]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f142'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r142'>142</a>. Hence the Spirit of <em>Non-Separateness</em> in esoteric philosophy must be the <span class='fss'>ONE</span> <em>truth</em>.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f143'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r143'>143</a>. Only this “Ego” is <em>universal</em>, not <em>individual</em>: <em>Absolute</em> Consciousness, not the <em>human</em> Brain.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f144'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r144'>144</a>. Then why not term the philosophy “<em>High-Low</em>-Idealism” <em>vice</em> “Hylo-Idealism”?—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f145'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r145'>145</a>. “Theobroma”—the same as <em>cacao-butter</em>. We take exception <em>to the phraseology</em>, not to Dr.
-Lewins’ ideas.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>
- <h2 id='No_6' class='c006' title='LUCIFER Vol. I No. 6 February 15th, 1888'><span class='xxlarge'>LUCIFER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c043'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Vol. I.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON, FEBRUARY <span class='fss'>15TH</span>, 1888.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 6.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='doublehr100'>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>“WHAT IS TRUTH?”</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<em>Truth</em> is the Voice of Nature and of Time—</div>
- <div class='line'><em>Truth</em> is the startling monitor <em>within us</em>—</div>
- <div class='line'>Nought is without it, it comes from the stars,</div>
- <div class='line'>The golden sun, and every breeze that blows....”</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>—<span class='sc'>W. Thompson Bacon.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“... Fair Truth’s immortal sun</div>
- <div class='line'>Is sometimes hid in clouds; not that her light</div>
- <div class='line'>Is in itself defective, but obscured</div>
- <div class='line'>By my weak prejudice, imperfect faith</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the thousand causes which obstruct</div>
- <div class='line'>The growth of goodness....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>—<span class='sc'>Hannah More.</span></div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>“What is Truth?” asked Pilate of one who, if the claims of
-the Christian Church are even approximately correct, must
-have known it. But He kept silent. And the truth which
-He did not divulge, remained unrevealed, for his later followers as much
-as for the Roman Governor. The silence of Jesus, however, on this
-and other occasions, does not prevent his present followers from acting
-as though they had received the ultimate and absolute Truth itself;
-and from ignoring the fact that only such Words of Wisdom had been
-given to them as contained a share of the truth, itself concealed in
-parables and dark, though beautiful, sayings.<a id='r146' /><a href='#f146' class='c013'><sup>[146]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This policy led gradually to dogmatism and assertion. Dogmatism
-in churches, dogmatism in science, dogmatism everywhere. The
-possible truths, hazily perceived in the world of abstraction, like those
-inferred from observation and experiment in the world of matter, are
-forced upon the profane multitudes, too busy to think for themselves,
-under the form of <em>Divine revelation</em> and <em>Scientific authority</em>. But the
-same question stands open from the days of Socrates and Pilate down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>to our own age of wholesale negation: is there such a thing as <em>absolute
-truth</em> in the hands of any one party or man? Reason answers, “there cannot
-be.” There is no room for absolute truth upon any subject whatsoever,
-in a world as finite and conditioned as man is himself. But there are
-relative truths, and we have to make the best we can of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In every age there have been Sages who had mastered the absolute
-and yet could teach but relative truths. For none yet, born of mortal
-woman in <em>our</em> race, has, or could have given out, the whole and the final
-truth to another man, for every one of us has to find that (to him) final
-knowledge <em>in</em> himself. As no two minds can be absolutely alike, each
-has to receive the supreme illumination <em>through</em> itself, according to its
-capacity, and from no <em>human</em> light. The greatest adept living can reveal
-of the Universal Truth only so much as the mind he is impressing it
-upon can assimilate, and no more. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Tot homines, quot sententiæ</i></span>—is an
-immortal truism. The sun is one, but its beams are numberless; and
-the effects produced are beneficent or maleficent, according to the nature
-and constitution of the objects they shine upon. Polarity is universal,
-but the polariser lies in our own consciousness. In proportion as our consciousness
-is elevated towards absolute truth, so do we men assimilate it
-more or less absolutely. But man’s consciousness again, is only the sunflower
-of the earth. Longing for the warm ray, the plant can only turn to
-the sun, and move round and round in following the course of the
-unreachable luminary: its roots keep it fast to the soil, and half its life
-is passed in the shadow....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Still each of us can relatively reach the Sun of Truth even on this
-earth, and assimilate its warmest and most direct rays, however differentiated
-they may become after their long journey through the physical
-particles in space. To achieve this, there are two methods. On the
-physical plane we may use our mental polariscope; and, analyzing the
-properties of each ray, choose the purest. On the plane of spirituality,
-to reach the Sun of Truth we must work in dead earnest for the
-development of our higher nature. We know that by paralyzing
-gradually within ourselves the appetites of the lower personality, and
-thereby deadening the voice of the purely physiological mind—that
-mind which depends upon, and is inseparable from, its medium or <em>vehicle</em>,
-the organic brain—the animal man in us may make room for the spiritual;
-and once aroused from its latent state, the highest spiritual senses and
-perceptions grow in us in proportion, and develop <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>pari passu</i></span> with the
-“divine man.” This is what the great adepts, the Yogis in the East
-and the Mystics in the West, have always done and are still doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But we also know, that with a few exceptions, no man of the world,
-no materialist, will ever believe in the existence of such adepts, or even
-in the possibility of such a spiritual or psychic development. “The
-(ancient) fool hath said in his heart, There is no God”; the modern
-says, “There are no adepts on earth, they are figments of your diseased
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>fancy.” Knowing this we hasten to reassure our readers of the Thomas
-Didymus type. We beg them to turn in this magazine to reading more
-congenial to them; say to the miscellaneous papers on Hylo-Idealism,
-by various writers.<a id='r147' /><a href='#f147' class='c013'><sup>[147]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> tries to satisfy its readers of whatever “school of
-thought,” and shows itself equally impartial to Theist and Atheist, Mystic
-and Agnostic, Christian and Gentile. Such articles as our
-editorials, the Comments on “Light on the Path,” etc, etc.—are not
-intended for Materialists. They are addressed to Theosophists, or
-readers who know in their hearts that Masters of Wisdom <em>do</em> exist: and,
-though <em>absolute</em> truth is not on earth and has to be searched for in higher
-regions, that there still are, even on this silly, ever-whirling little globe
-of ours, some things that are not even dreamt of in Western philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To return to our subject. It thus follows that, though “general
-<em>abstract</em> truth is the most precious of all blessings” for many of us, as it
-was for Rousseau, we have, meanwhile, to be satisfied with relative
-truths. In sober fact, we are a poor set of mortals at best, ever in
-dread before the face of even a relative truth, lest it should devour
-ourselves and our petty little preconceptions along with us. As for an
-absolute truth, most of us are as incapable of seeing it as of reaching
-the moon on a bicycle. Firstly, because absolute truth is as immovable
-as the mountain of Mahomet, which refused to disturb itself for the
-prophet, so that he had to go to it himself. And we have to follow his
-example if we would approach it even at a distance. Secondly, because
-the kingdom of absolute truth is not of this world, while we are too
-much of it. And thirdly, because notwithstanding that in the poet’s
-fancy man is</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“... the abstract</div>
- <div class='line'>Of all perfection, which the workmanship</div>
- <div class='line'>Of heaven hath modelled....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c038'>in reality he is a sorry bundle of anomalies and paradoxes, an empty
-wind bag inflated with his own importance, with contradictory and easily
-influenced opinions. He is at once an arrogant and a weak creature,
-which, though in constant dread of some authority, terrestrial or celestial,
-will yet—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“... like an angry ape,</div>
- <div class='line'>Play such fantastic tricks before high Heaven</div>
- <div class='line'>As make the angels weep.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Now, since truth is a multifaced jewel, the facets of which it is impossible
-to perceive all at once; and since, again, no two men, however
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>anxious to discern truth, can see even one of those facets alike, what can
-be done to help them to perceive it? As physical man, limited and
-trammelled from every side by illusions, cannot reach truth by the light
-of his terrestrial perceptions, we say—develop in you the <em>inner</em> knowledge.
-From the time when the Delphic oracle said to the enquirer
-“Man, know thyself,” no greater or more important truth was ever taught.
-Without such perception, man will remain ever blind to even many a
-relative, let alone absolute, truth. Man has to <em>know himself</em>, <i>i.e.</i>, acquire
-the <em>inner</em> perceptions which never deceive, before he can master any
-absolute truth. Absolute truth is <em>the symbol of Eternity</em>, and no <em>finite</em> mind
-can ever grasp the eternal, hence, no truth in its fulness can ever dawn
-upon it. To reach the state during which man sees and senses it, we have
-to paralyze the senses of the external man of clay. This is a difficult
-task, we may be told, and most people will, at this rate, prefer to remain
-satisfied with relative truths, no doubt. But to approach even terrestrial
-truths requires, first of all, <em>love of truth for its own sake</em>, for otherwise no
-recognition of it will follow. And who loves truth in this age for its
-own sake? How many of us are prepared to search for, accept, and
-carry it out, in the midst of a society in which anything that would
-achieve success <em>has to be built on appearances, not on reality, on self-assertion,
-not on intrinsic value</em>? We are fully aware of the difficulties
-in the way of receiving truth. The fair heavenly maiden descends
-only on a (to her) congenial soil—the soil of an impartial, unprejudiced
-mind, illuminated by pure Spiritual Consciousness; and both are truly
-rare dwellers in civilized lands. In our century of steam and electricity,
-when man lives at a maddening speed that leaves him barely time for
-reflection, he allows himself usually to be drifted down from cradle to
-grave, nailed to the Procrustean bed of custom and conventionality. Now
-conventionality—pure and simple—is a congenital <span class='fss'>LIE</span>, as it is in every
-case a “<em>simulation</em> of feelings according to a received standard” (F. W.
-Robertson’s definition); and where there is any simulation <em>there cannot be
-any truth</em>. How profound the remark made by Byron, that “truth is a
-gem that is found at a great depth; whilst on the surface of this world
-all things are weighed <em>by the false scales of custom</em>,” is best known to
-those who are forced to live in the stifling atmosphere of such social
-conventionalism, and who, even when willing and anxious to learn, dare
-not accept the truths they long for, for fear of the ferocious Moloch
-called Society.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Look around you, reader; study the accounts given by world-known
-travellers, recall the joint observations of literary thinkers, the data of
-science and of statistics. Draw the picture of modern society, of
-modern politics, of modern religion and modern life in general before
-your mind’s eye. Remember the ways and customs of every cultured
-race and nation under the sun. Observe the doings and the moral
-attitude of people in the civilized centres of Europe, America, and even
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>of the far East and the colonies, everywhere where the white man has
-carried the “benefits” of so-called civilization. And now, having passed
-in review all this, pause and reflect, and then name, <em>if you can</em>, that
-blessed <em>Eldorado</em>, that exceptional spot on the globe, <em>where</em> <span class='fss'>TRUTH</span> <em>is
-the honoured guest, and</em> <span class='sc'>Lie</span> <em>and</em> <span class='sc'>Sham</span> <em>the ostracised outcasts</em>? <span class='sc'>You
-cannot.</span> Nor can any one else, unless he is prepared and determined
-to add his mite to the mass of falsehood that reigns supreme in every
-department of national and social life. “Truth!” cried Carlyle, “truth,
-though the heavens crush me for following her, no falsehood, though a
-whole celestial Lubberland were the prize of Apostasy.” Noble words,
-these. But how many think, and how many will <em>dare</em> to speak as
-Carlyle did, in our nineteenth century day? Does not the gigantic
-appalling majority prefer to a man the “paradise of Do-nothings,” the
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>pays de Cocagne</i></span> of heartless selfishness? It is this majority that recoils
-terror-stricken before the most shadowy outline of every new and unpopular
-truth, out of mere cowardly fear, lest Mrs. Harris should denounce,
-and Mrs. Grundy condemn, its converts to the torture of being rent
-piecemeal by her murderous tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Selfishness</span>, the first-born of Ignorance, and the fruit of the teaching
-which asserts that for every newly-born infant a new soul, <em>separate
-and distinct</em> from the Universal Soul, is “created”—this Selfishness is
-the impassable wall between the <em>personal</em> Self and Truth. It is the
-prolific mother of all human vices. <em>Lie</em> being born out of the necessity
-for dissembling, and <em>Hypocrisy</em> out of the desire to mask <em>Lie</em>. It is the
-fungus growing and strengthening with age in every human heart in
-which it has devoured all better feelings. Selfishness kills every noble
-impulse in our natures, and is the one deity, fearing no faithlessness or
-desertion from its votaries. Hence, we see it reign supreme in the world
-and in so-called fashionable society. As a result, we live, and move, and
-have our being in this god of darkness under his trinitarian aspect of
-Sham, Humbug, and Falsehood, called <span class='sc'>Respectability</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Is this Truth and Fact, or is it slander? Turn whichever way you
-will, and you find, from the top of the social ladder to the bottom, deceit
-and hypocrisy at work for dear Self’s sake, in every nation as in every
-individual. But nations, by tacit Agreement, have decided that selfish
-motives in politics shall be called “noble national aspiration,
-patriotism,” etc.; and the citizen views it in his family circle as “domestic
-virtue.” Nevertheless, Selfishness, whether it breeds desire for aggrandizement
-of territory, or competition in commerce at the expense of one’s
-neighbour, can never be regarded as a virtue. We see smooth-tongued
-<span class='sc'>Deceit</span> and <span class='sc'>Brute Force</span>—the <em>Jachin</em> and <em>Boaz</em> of every International
-Temple of Solomon—called Diplomacy, and we call it by its right name.
-Because the diplomat bows low before these two pillars of national glory
-and politics, and puts their masonic symbolism “in (cunning) strength
-shall this my house be established” into daily practice; <i>i.e.</i>, gets by deceit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>what he cannot obtain by force—shall we applaud him? A diplomat’s
-qualification—“dexterity or skill in securing advantages“—for one’s
-own country at the expense of other countries, can hardly be achieved
-by speaking <em>truth</em>, but verily by a wily and deceitful tongue; and, therefore,
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> calls such action—a <em>living</em>, and an evident <span class='sc'>Lie</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But it is not in politics alone that custom and selfishness have agreed
-to call deceit and lie virtue, and to reward him who lies best with public
-statues. Every class of Society lives on <span class='fss'>LIE</span>, and would fall to pieces
-without it. Cultured, God-and-law-fearing aristocracy being as fond of
-the forbidden fruit as any plebeian, is forced to lie from morn to noon
-in order to cover what it is pleased to term its “little peccadillos,” but
-which <span class='sc'>Truth</span> regards as gross immorality. Society of the middle
-classes is honeycombed with false smiles, false talk, and mutual
-treachery. For the majority religion has become a thin tinsel veil thrown
-over the corpse of spiritual faith. The master goes to church to
-deceive his servants; the starving curate—preaching what he has ceased
-to believe in—hood-winks his bishop; the bishop—his God. <em>Dailies</em>,
-political and social, might adopt with advantage for their motto Georges
-Dandin’s immortal query—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Lequel de nous deux trompe-t-on ici?”</span>—Even
-Science, once the anchor of the salvation of Truth, has ceased
-to be the temple of <em>naked</em> Fact. Almost to a man the Scientists strive
-now only to force upon their colleagues and the public the acceptance
-of some personal hobby, of some new-fangled theory, which will shed
-lustre on their name and fame. A Scientist is as ready to suppress
-damaging evidence against a current scientific hypothesis in our times,
-as a missionary in heathen-land, or a preacher at home, to persuade his
-congregation that modern geology is a lie, and evolution but vanity and
-vexation of spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Such is the actual state of things in 1888 <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>, and yet we are taken
-to task by certain papers for seeing this year in more than gloomy
-colours!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Lie has spread to such extent—supported as it is by custom and
-conventionalities—that even chronology forces people to lie. The
-suffixes <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> and <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> used after the dates of the year by Jew and
-Heathen, in European and even Asiatic lands, by the Materialist and
-the Agnostic as much as by the Christian, at home, are—a <em>lie</em> used to
-sanction another <span class='fss'>LIE</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Where then is even relative truth to be found? If, so far back as
-the century of Democritus, she appeared to him under the form of a
-goddess lying at the very bottom of a well, so deep that it gave but little
-hope for her release; under the present circumstances we have a certain
-right to believe her hidden, at least, as far off as the ever invisible
-<em>dark</em> side of the moon. This is why, perhaps, all the votaries of hidden
-truths are forthwith set down as lunatics. However it may be, in no
-case and under no threat shall <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> be ever forced into pandering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>to any universally and tacitly recognised, and as universally practised
-lie, but will hold to fact, pure and simple, trying to proclaim truth
-whensoever found, and under no cowardly mask. Bigotry and intolerance
-may be regarded as orthodox and sound policy, and the encouraging of
-social prejudices and personal hobbies at the cost of truth, as a wise
-course to pursue in order to secure success for a publication. Let it be
-so. The Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> are Theosophists, and their motto is
-chosen: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Vera pro gratiis</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>They are quite aware that <span class='sc'>Lucifer’s</span> libations and sacrifices to the
-goddess Truth do not send a sweet savoury smoke into the noses of the
-lords of the press, nor does the bright “Son of the Morning” smell sweet
-in their nostrils. He is ignored when not abused as—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>veritas odium paret</i></span>.
-Even his friends are beginning to find fault with him. They cannot see <em>why
-it should not be a purely Theosophical magazine</em>, in other words, why it
-refuses to be dogmatic and bigoted. Instead of devoting every inch of
-space to theosophical and occult teachings, it opens its pages “to the
-publication of the most grotesquely heterogeneous elements and conflicting
-doctrines.” This is the chief accusation, to which we answer—why
-not? Theosophy is divine knowledge, and knowledge is truth;
-every <em>true</em> fact, every sincere word are thus part and parcel of Theosophy.
-One who is skilled in divine alchemy, or even approximately
-blessed with the gift of the perception of truth, will find and extract it
-from an erroneous as much as from a correct statement. However
-small the particle of gold lost in a ton of rubbish, it is the noble metal
-still, and worthy of being dug out even at the price of some extra
-trouble. As has been said, it is often as useful to know what a
-thing <em>is not</em>, as to learn what it <em>is</em>. The average reader can hardly hope
-to find any fact in a sectarian publication under all its aspects, <em>pro</em> and
-<em>con</em>, for either one way or the other its presentation is sure to be
-biassed, and the scales helped to incline to that side to which its
-editor’s special policy is directed. A Theosophical magazine is thus,
-perhaps, the only publication where one may hope to find, at any rate,
-the unbiassed, if still only approximate truth and fact. Naked truth
-is reflected in <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> under its many aspects, for no philosophical or
-religious views are excluded from its pages. And, as every philosophy
-and religion, however incomplete, unsatisfactory, and even foolish some
-may be occasionally, must be based on a truth and fact of some kind,
-the reader has thus the opportunity of comparing, analysing, and
-choosing from the several philosophies discussed therein. <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>
-offers as many facets of the One universal jewel as its limited space
-will permit, and says to its readers: “Choose you this day whom ye will
-serve: whether the gods that were on the other side of the flood
-which submerged man’s reasoning powers and divine knowledge, or the
-gods of the Amorites of <em>custom</em> and <em>social falsehood</em>, or again, the
-Lord of (the highest) Self—the bright destroyer of the dark power of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>illusion?” Surely it is that philosophy that tends to diminish,
-instead of adding to, the sum of human misery, which is the best.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At all events, the choice is there, and for this purpose only have we
-opened our pages to every kind of contributors. Therefore do you find
-in them the views of a Christian clergyman who believes in his God
-and Christ, but rejects the wicked interpretations and the enforced
-dogmas of his ambitious proud Church, along with the doctrines of the
-Hylo-Idealist, who denies God, soul, and immortality, and believes in
-nought save himself. The rankest Materialists will find hospitality in
-our journal; aye, even those who have not scrupled to fill pages of it
-with sneers and personal remarks upon ourselves, and abuse of the
-doctrines of Theosophy, so dear to us. When a journal of <em>free thought</em>,
-conducted by an Atheist, inserts an article by a Mystic or Theosophist in
-praise of his occult views and the mystery of Parabrahmam, and passes
-on it only a few casual remarks, then shall we say <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> has found a
-rival. When a Christian periodical or missionary organ accepts an
-article from the pen of a free-thinker deriding belief in Adam and his
-rib, and passes criticism on Christianity—its editor’s faith—in meek
-silence, then it will have become worthy of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, and may be said
-truly to have reached that degree of tolerance when it may be placed
-on a level with any Theosophical publication.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But so long as none of these organs do something of the kind, they are
-all sectarian, bigoted, intolerant, and can never have an idea of truth and
-justice. They may throw innuendoes against <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> and its editors,
-they cannot affect either. In fact, the editors of that magazine feel proud
-of such criticism and accusations, as they are witnesses to the absolute
-absence of bigotry, or arrogance of any kind in theosophy, the result of
-the divine beauty of the doctrines it preaches. For, as said, Theosophy
-allows a hearing and a fair chance to all. It deems no views—if sincere—entirely
-destitute of truth. It respects thinking men, to whatever
-class of thought they may belong. Ever ready to oppose ideas and
-views which can only create confusion without benefiting philosophy,
-it leaves their expounders personally to believe in whatever they please,
-and does justice to their ideas when they are good. Indeed, the conclusions
-or deductions of a philosophic writer may be entirely opposed
-to our views and the teachings we expound; yet, his premises and
-statements of facts may be quite correct, and other people may profit
-by the adverse philosophy, even if we ourselves reject it, believing we
-have something higher and still nearer to the truth. In any case, our
-profession of faith is now made plain, and all that is said in the foregoing
-pages both justifies and explains our editorial policy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>To sum up the idea, with regard to absolute and relative truth,
-we can only repeat what we said before. <em>Outside a certain highly
-spiritual and elevated state of mind, during which Man is at one with
-the</em> <span class='sc'>Universal Mind</span>—<em>he can get nought on earth but relative truth,</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span><em>or truths, from whatsoever philosophy or religion</em>. Were even the goddess
-who dwells at the bottom of the well to issue from her place of confinement,
-she could give man no more than he can assimilate. Meanwhile,
-every one can sit near that well—the name of which is
-<span class='sc'>Knowledge</span>—and gaze into its depths in the hope of seeing Truth’s
-fair image reflected, at least, on the dark waters. This, however, as
-remarked by Richter, presents a certain danger. Some truth, to be
-sure, may be occasionally reflected as in a mirror on the spot we gaze
-upon, and thus reward the patient student. But, adds the German
-thinker, “I have heard that some philosophers in seeking for Truth, to
-pay homage to her, have seen their own image in the water and adored
-it instead.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is to avoid such a calamity—one that has befallen every founder of
-a religious or philosophical school—that the editors are studiously careful
-not to offer the reader only those truths which they find reflected in their
-own personal brains. They offer the public a wide choice, and refuse to
-show bigotry and intolerance, which are the chief landmarks on the path
-of Sectarianism. But, while leaving the widest margin possible for comparison,
-our opponents cannot hope to find <em>their faces</em> reflected on the
-clear waters of our <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, without remarks or just criticism upon the
-most prominent features thereof, if in contrast with theosophical views.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This, however, only within the cover of the public magazine, and so
-far as regards the merely intellectual aspect of philosophical truths.
-Concerning the deeper spiritual, and one may almost say religious,
-beliefs, no true Theosophist ought to degrade these by subjecting them to
-public discussion, but ought rather to treasure and hide them deep within
-the sanctuary of his innermost soul. Such beliefs and doctrines should
-never be rashly given out, as they risk unavoidable profanation by the
-rough handling of the indifferent and the critical. Nor ought they to be
-embodied in any publication except as hypotheses offered to the consideration
-of the thinking portion of the public. Theosophical truths,
-when they transcend a certain limit of speculation, had better remain
-concealed from public view, for the “evidence of things not seen” is no
-evidence save to him who sees, hears, and senses it. It is not to be
-dragged outside the “Holy of Holies,” the temple of the impersonal
-divine <em>Ego</em>, or the indwelling <span class='sc'>Self</span>. For, while every fact outside <em>its</em>
-perception can, as we have shown, be, at best, only a relative truth,
-a ray from the absolute truth can reflect itself only in the pure mirror of
-its own flame—our highest <span class='sc'>Spiritual Consciousness</span>. And how can
-the darkness (of illusion) comprehend the <span class='fss'>LIGHT</span> that shineth in it?</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator9.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>
- <h3 class='c018'>THE SOLDIER’S DAUGHTER.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><span class='small'>(Judges xi., 6-xi., 39.)</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>In the early days of Israel’s history, whilst Israel was struggling to
-be a nation and a kingdom, there was a people called the
-Ammonites, who were making war upon the Israelites.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And we are told that the Israelites, in great distress and fear, went
-out of their country, into the land of Tob, to find a man named Jephthah,
-who was a man of mighty valour, in order to persuade him to return
-with them, and be the captain and leader of their army, to fight against,
-and save them from the Ammonites.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now this man Jephthah was himself an Israelite by birth, but because
-his mother had not been legally married to his father, Gilead, the sons
-of Gilead’s lawful wife conspired together to drive him from his
-hearth, home, and country, as a disgrace to the family and to Israel;
-but the true reason was that they were envious and jealous of him, in
-like manner as the brethren of Joseph who had previously conspired
-against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For Jephthah himself was wholly innocent of having done anything
-to disgrace either the family or the nation. And therefore, in common
-justice, he ought not to have been made to suffer merely for the form
-and manner of his birth; over which neither Jephthah nor any of us
-have any control, either as to the time, when, or the manner, in which we
-should be born. But although Jephthah was despised and cast out as a
-dog, in the days of Israel’s prosperity, yet in the day of Israel’s adversity
-and weakness, Israel no longer allowed any mean and petty distinctions
-to prevent her from recognising the noble character of Jephthah, and
-she entreated him to forget past ill-usage, and return to be her captain
-and leader to save her from the Ammonites.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And as this proposal of Israel afforded Jephthah the long wished-for
-opportunity of returning to his country, and of establishing an <a id='corr434.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='hononrable'>honourable</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_434.29'><ins class='correction' title='hononrable'>honourable</ins></a></span>
-reputation, <em>therefore</em> he was not only ready to forget and forgive
-the insults and injuries which he had received in the past from his
-brethren, but he was also ready to return with them, and share their
-troubles and dangers, even to sacrificing his life, if need be, in order to
-save their lives and property.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Jephthah was the more willing to return and make this sacrifice because
-he had a daughter, an only daughter and child; and she was all
-the world to him, as he was to her; “for beside her he had neither son
-nor daughter,” and she had patiently and willingly suffered with him,
-and borne all his sorrows as her own.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But imagine the horror of Jephthah, after having saved the lives and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>property of his brethren and countrymen by risking his own life, at being
-then required, by these very brethren and countrymen, to shed the blood
-of his only child! Immediately after the war was over, Jephthah was
-required to sacrifice his daughter as a burnt offering to the Lord of
-Battles, for having assisted Israel to overcome the Ammonites; and so
-great was the love of this heroine for her father, and for everything
-that concerned his honour and glory, that she willingly consented to be
-sacrificed as a burnt offering.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Can anything be conceived more heartrending and terrible than that
-Jephthah should thus be required by these very brethren and countrymen
-whom he had saved, to shed the blood of his only child as a sacrifice,
-in acknowledgment that he owed his victory to miraculous assistance
-and favour, and not to his own skill and valour?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What to him was the deliverance either of Israel or of his brethren
-(who had cared naught for him), if they now required him to sacrifice
-the only being in the world that he loved, and that loved him, and who
-was therefore all the world to him?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is true that Jephthah had made a foolish and rash vow, in the mad
-excitement of the moment before going into battle, that if he came out
-of the battle victorious, he would sacrifice, as a burnt offering to the
-Lord, the first thing that came to meet him from his house as he
-returned from the battle; but when the first person that met Jephthah
-was his only daughter, <em>what could that Deity be, which accepted as a
-sacrifice the blood of this child?</em> What could the religion of Jephthah’s
-brethren and countrymen be, that allowed and required him to commit
-such an evil deed?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For if Jephthah had saved his brethren and countrymen from their
-enemies, could they not now save Jephthah from shedding the blood of
-his daughter as a sacrifice, in the name of religion, <em>when</em> the very deed
-itself proclaimed the religion, and their conception both of religion and
-of the Deity, to be evil? And if his brethren and countrymen
-would not save his daughter, but even required him to fulfil his vow,
-could not Jephthah save himself and his child by refusing to commit
-this evil deed? But if, in order to save his own blood from being shed
-as a blasphemer for an atonement, Jephthah had to flee from the
-country as an outcast and a criminal, whither could he flee to, that
-would make life worth keeping? For surely the world would be no
-desirable place for an honest man to live in, if he had to live at enmity
-with men both at home and abroad, because he had made a rash and
-foolish vow, which no Deity worthy of being worshipped could or would
-require him to perform?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Because under such a sanguinary conception of religion, and of the
-Deity, there was no remission, or redemption either, with, or without,
-the shedding of blood. If Jephthah refused to shed the blood of his
-daughter, then both his own and his daughter’s would be shed by his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>brethren and countrymen, whilst if Jephthah shed the blood of his
-daughter, as a sacrifice to save his own, what remission or redemption
-was there in this? None!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And he cried for a deliverer to save him and his daughter, from this
-great trouble. For he had staked his life and his all upon obtaining a
-position and reputation for himself and his daughter at home in Israel;
-and now, to give up hope of this for ever, and to shed the blood of
-his daughter, or again flee as an outcast—what was it but a living death
-to Jephthah, either way, whether he remained and sacrificed his
-daughter, or fled to save her?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But who, in this agonising moment of Jephthah’s trouble, could raise
-his voice to demand, in the name of religion, this diabolical sacrifice of
-his innocent child?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yes; diabolical. For what spirit, or voice, but that of a devil or fiend
-could <em>counsel</em> men to shed the blood of this pure and noble girl? And
-where could the devil or fiend be found who would <em>commit</em> the deed
-itself?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Jephthah is mockingly told that he is the fiend who must sacrifice his
-child, as Abraham is said to have offered Isaac. And Jephthah is told
-that he has no one to blame but himself, for having made the vow. But
-who heard the vow? or who accepted the vow? Who could he, or they
-be, who would require the fulfilling of it?<a id='r148' /><a href='#f148' class='c013'><sup>[148]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Are they worthy of the name of brethren and countrymen who would
-persuade Jephthah <em>to assassinate</em> his daughter, in the name of religion, or
-even look on at such an assassination? Would it not be blasphemy to
-say that a good Deity required Jephthah to kill his innocent child?
-And would not a good Deity release Jephthah from his vow, and forbid
-him to sacrifice his daughter, in like manner as the Scriptures teach us
-Abraham was forbidden to sacrifice his son Isaac? And if it is said, it
-would have been faithless and sinful of Jephthah after returning from
-the battle victorious, to have refused the offering of his daughter as a
-sacrifice; yet surely to bind Jephthah to break the Sixth Commandment,
-and to shed innocent blood in the name of religion, would be
-making the Deity that required such a sacrifice to be evil, and His
-worshippers to be the doers of evil; and thus Jephthah would be required
-to sell himself to the devil.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And how could men be other than the doers of evil, and the priests of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>evil, who would counsel Jephthah to commit this evil deed, and be
-ready to commit it themselves if he hesitated? How? Whether
-Jephthah received any miraculous assistance or not, in the war, yet he
-was in no wise bound to surrender his personality and to become an
-abject slave to the supposed power that helped him. For Jephthah’s
-personal services were needed as an instrument to deliver and save the
-Israelites, or his services would not have been asked for. It was also
-possible that he might have given certain services, which even a
-miraculous power was unable to give—as we read in the Book of Judges
-that “Judah could not drive out the inhabitants of the valley, because
-they had chariots of iron.” (Judges i. 19.)<a id='r149' /><a href='#f149' class='c013'><sup>[149]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And again, if all the glory of Jephthah’s victory had to be ascribed to
-a miraculous power, then likewise all the shame would have to be
-ascribed to that power also, for having ordained that Jephthah’s daughter
-should be the first person to meet him after the war, to pay <em>the price of
-victory</em> to Jephthah, with <em>death to his child</em>—for whom, alone, he coveted
-victory.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Victory on such terms was defeat and shame, not glory; for surely
-such views of religious worship must be the <em><a id='corr437.19'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>d’evil</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_437.19'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>d’evil</ins></a></span></em> worship which the
-Psalmist speaks of (Psalm cvi., 37), and not the service or worship of a
-good God who would have mercy and <em>not</em> sacrifice, as Abraham learnt
-when he went out of the Philistine city into the wilderness, and communed
-with God alone on Mount Moriah.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But it was one thing for a single individual like Abraham, at the
-close of a long life, to acquire the knowledge “that God would have
-mercy and not sacrifice”; and quite another thing for a Town, a City, a
-Nation, or the World, to have acquired this knowledge in its infancy; as
-even Abraham only acquired this knowledge by going out of the city
-into the wilderness, and communing alone with God.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We can well understand how impossible it would have been for
-Abraham even to have attempted, on his return from the mountain, to
-teach the Philistines the faith or gospel (that God would have mercy
-and not sacrifice), from the very fact that when Jesus Christ came <em>into
-the world</em> to teach the faith or gospel, which Abraham had gone <em>out of
-the world</em> to learn, Jesus was condemned by Caiaphas to be crucified
-with malefactors, as a blasphemer. And to this very day this doctrine
-of the power of Caiaphas, the adversary of Jesus, continues to be taught
-as the doctrine of the Church, which it is necessary to believe in order
-to obtain the blessing of the Church here and of God hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Therefore it is manifestly evident that after Abraham had acquired
-the knowledge that God would have mercy and not sacrifice, yet he
-could not publish it, but could only lay it up in his heart as a secret
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>treasure, to be disclosed in the distant future, which in the vision of his
-mind he saw. Meanwhile he prayed that the Lord would raise up
-messengers and stewards to prepare the world to receive this faith or
-gospel, because of its being too Herculean a task for any one person to
-alter suddenly the religion of a people.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For whilst priests continued to teach, and the people to believe that
-sacrifices of human beings were acceptable to God, how was the man
-who dared (suddenly and without the cloak of a parable) to reveal and
-publish the contrary, to escape being himself slain as a blasphemer, whose
-blood it would be doing God service to shed for an atonement? And
-until the world was sufficiently educated to declare the generation of
-him who should be unjustly slain (Isaiah liii.), it could only be like
-throwing pearls to swine for such an one to attempt the task.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then from whence, and from whom could Jephthah, who had saved
-others, now look for the salvation of his daughter, or of himself, if he
-refused to sacrifice that daughter?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And, in the anguish of his soul, Jephthah rent his clothes, and bemoaned
-his trouble, whilst his daughter fled to the mountains to pour
-out the sorrow of her soul, during the few short days she had yet to live.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is true that, in order to save her father from the cruel pain of
-assassinating his devoted child, the noble girl may have voluntarily leapt
-into the sulphurous flames on the burning altar; just as the noble
-Roman soldier Curtius on his horse leapt down into the dark and awful
-volcanic gulf as a sacrifice to save his countrymen.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the more heroic and divine these persons were, the more
-demoniacal and diabolical must be the religion of those persons who
-required them thus to suffer.<a id='r150' /><a href='#f150' class='c013'><sup>[150]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is true that the priests of such a religion may have believed in it
-themselves, and may have been ready to sacrifice their own sons and
-daughters in like manner; but that in no wise lessens the crime, but on
-the contrary it intensifies it a hundred fold. How were the people to
-be saved from a religion, of which the priests themselves needed to be
-saved, whilst the priests had the sole education of the people from
-infancy upwards, as well as the Chief power in the State to make and
-unmake its laws, even to making and unmaking its kings?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Whilst the priests and rulers of the church taught such a cruel religion,<a id='r151' /><a href='#f151' class='c013'><sup>[151]</sup></a>
-would not the people and priests need a Mediator to deliver and save
-them from practising it?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If He who mediated to deliver and save us was Himself condemned
-to be slain, and crucified with thieves as a blasphemer whose blood
-ought to be shed for an Atonement, what hope of salvation can there be
-for the world from such a Religion, until the people not only uplift the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>Crucified Jesus as having been no blasphemer, but also expose the
-doctrine to be evil and false which is quoted as an authority for requiring
-the blood of “the Just one” to be shed for an Atonement? And if it
-is said that we have no longer women brought like Jephthah’s daughter
-to be assassinated and burnt as a sacrifice, or noble men condemned to
-be burnt as heretics, yet we have to the present day noble men and
-women condemned by the Church as evil (to be accursed here and
-damned hereafter), simply and solely because they refuse to believe this
-evil doctrine of Atonement, which is oftentimes such a burden to their
-soul (either to accept or reject) that they are driven to the very verge of
-madness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is no uncommon thing to hear priests revile even our Queen as
-being no true Christian, simply because they suppose she does not
-believe in this evil doctrine of atonement, which is the doctrine of
-Caiaphas, the enemy of Christ, and not Christ’s doctrine, teaching, or
-gospel.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Should not such scriptural stories as these of the assassination of
-Jephthah’s noble daughter, of the crucifixion of Jesus, and the spilling
-of the blood of a whole host of martyrs, awaken men who have
-slumbered to rise, to hear, to see, to speak, and run to save the world
-from having to believe in this sanguinary doctrine, which is a stumbling-block
-to the Jews, foolishness to the world, and a mystery even to the
-teachers of it. This doctrine of Atonement can not be reconciled as
-either good or true; and therefore it is the cause of all progress being
-prevented so far as the world is dependent on the Church for progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Yet the man who doubts or denies the goodness of this doctrine is
-branded by the Church, to the present day, as a Sceptic and Atheist,
-whom all sound Churchmen should avoid. And for sixteen centuries
-the Church used its sovereign power to condemn those who rejected its
-doctrine of Atonement as criminals, whom it would be doing God
-service to burn as heretics; and the Church is only prevented from
-doing so now <em>because</em> (to its great regret) it has no longer the power which
-it formerly had in the days of “the Inquisition.” The doctrine remains
-the same still, and therefore the people owe it, as a duty to the long
-roll of martyrs, to expose it. For it has been the cause of much evil,
-and even to this day it assassinates the souls of noble men and women,
-who incarcerate themselves in monasteries and nunneries in the vain
-attempt to attain a sound belief in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But when the Church is willing to allow (what it has refused to the
-present day) liberty in the pulpit for explaining the mystery and
-translating the truth of a “Crucified Christ,” then it will be seen that
-the truth is not only a light to the Gentiles, but also the glory of
-Israel; and the truth shall make us free.<a id='r152' /><a href='#f152' class='c013'><sup>[152]</sup></a> (John viii., 32.)</p>
-
-<div class='column-container'>
-<div class='column left'>
-Manor House, Petersham, S.W.
-</div>
-<div class='column right'>
-<span class='sc'>Rev. T. G. Headley.</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>LUNIOLATRY.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>A friend has just informed me of the fact that when President
-Cleveland was making his recent tour through the States an
-old negro presented him with <em>the left hind foot of a grave-yard
-rabbit, which had been killed in the dark of the moon</em>. In making
-his present the negro said he had sent it because he desired the reelection
-of President Cleveland. “<em>Tell him to preserve it carefully,
-and that as long as he keeps it he will always get there.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The friend whom I speak of had just been reading a lecture of mine
-on “Luniolatry,” in which the imagery and significance of the hare and
-rabbit in the moon were spoken of all too briefly, and he wishes to
-know if I can interpret the meaning of the negro’s gift. I guess so.
-As previously explained the hare and the rabbit are both zootypes or
-living images of lunar phenomena. A rabbit pounding rice in a mortar
-is a Chinese sign of the moon. Swabian children are still forbidden to
-make the likeness of a rabbit or hare in shadow on the wall, as it
-would be a sin against the moon. The hare in the moon is a well-known
-Hindu type of Buddha. It is mythically represented that
-Buddha once took the form of a hare on purpose to offer himself as
-food for a poor famishing creature, and so the Buddha was translated
-in that shape to be eternized as the hare in the moon. That is one
-illustration of the way in which the book of external nature was filled
-full of mystic meanings, the essence of which escapes altogether in
-trying to read such things as historical, no matter whether they are
-related of Buddha, Horus, or Jesus. This hare or rabbit in the moon is
-a symbol or superstition with various races, Black, Brown, Red, Yellow,
-and White. When the meaning was understood it was a symbol; when
-the clue is lost it becomes a superstition of the ignorant; thus the
-ancient symbolism survives in a state of dotage with the negroes as
-well as with the “noble Caucasian.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The frog in the moon was another lunar type. In a Chinese myth—that
-is, a symbolic representation—the lunar frog has three legs, like
-the Persian ass in the Bundahish. In both cases the three legs stand
-for three phases of the moon reckoned at ten days each in a luni-solar
-month of thirty days. Now it happens that the rabbit’s period of
-gestation is thirty days; and the early races included very curious
-observers amongst their naturalists, who had to think in things and
-express their thought in gesture-signs and <em>zootypes</em> before there were
-such things as printer’s types. Hence the frog that dropped its tail, the
-serpent that sloughed its skin, the rabbit with its period of thirty days,
-were all symbols of the moon. Enough that the rabbit <em>was</em> a zootype
-of the moon, and the rabbit is equal to the hare. Hor-Apollo tells us
-that when the Egyptians would denote “an opening,” they delineate a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span>hare, because this animal always has its eyes open (B. I. 26). This can
-be corroborated in several ways. The name of the hare in Egyptian
-is “Un,” which means open, to open, the opener. It was applied
-to Osiris, “Un-Nefer,” in his lunar character as the good opener,
-otherwise the splendid or glorious hare, because “Nefer” means the
-handsome, beautiful, perfect, or glorious. Also the city of Unnut
-was that of the hare, “Un,” and this was the metropolis of the
-15th Nome of Upper Egypt, which is another mode of identifying
-the open-eyed hare with the moon at the full, called the “Eye of
-Horus,” and with the woman of the moon who brings her orb to the
-full on the 15th day of the month (Egyptian Ritual, ch. lxxx). The
-hare was also a symbol of the opening period at puberty, a sign
-therefore of being open, unprohibited, or “it is lawful” (Sharpe).
-Hence the Namaqua Hottentots would only permit the hare to be
-eaten by those who had attained the age of the adult male. The
-proverb, “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Somnus leporinus</i></span>,” relates to the hare that sleeps with its
-eyes open; and in our old English pharmacopœia of the folk-lore or
-leech-craft, the brains and eyes of the hare are prescribed as a cure for
-somnolency, and a sovereign medicine for making or keeping people
-wide-awake. The rabbit equates with the hare, and has the same
-symbolical value. Now it is sometimes said that the hare-rabbit is of
-both sexes. So the moon was both male and female in accordance with
-the dual lunation. The new moon with the horns of the bull or the
-long ears of the ass, the rabbit, or hare was considered to be male.
-The dark lunation or hinder part was female. In the ancient symbolism
-the front or fore-part is masculine, the hinder-part or the tail is
-feminine. The two were head and tail in the earliest coinage as well
-as on the latest coins. In Egypt the South was front and is male;
-the North was the hinder-part and is female. Hence the old Typhon
-of the Northern part was denoted by the tail-piece, and it follows that
-Satan with the long tail is of feminine origin, and so the devil was
-female from the first. The same symbolism was applied to the moon.
-In the light half it was the male moon, in the dark half female. The
-new moon was the Lord of Light, the Increaser, the sign of new life,
-of saving and healing. The new moon was the messenger of
-immortality to men in the form of the hare or the rabbit. The
-waning moon represented the devil of darkness, the Typhonian power
-that said to men “even as I die and do not rise again so will it be
-with you.” Offerings were made to the new moon. When the moon
-was at the full the Egyptians sacrificed a black pig to Osiris. This
-represented Typhon, his conquered enemy. But in the dark half of
-the lunation Typhon had the upper hand when he tore Osiris into
-fourteen parts during the fourteen nights of his supremacy. The
-lunar zootype then is male in front, and female in the hinder-part of the
-animal. In the hieroglyphics the khepsh-leg or hind-quarter is the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_442'>442</span>ideographic type of Typhon, the evil power personified. Further, the
-left side is female and Typhonian; the right is male. Ergo, <em>the left
-hind leg of the grave-yard animal that was killed in the dark of the
-moon</em>, stood for the hind (or last) quarter of the moon; literally the end
-of it. And if the negro laid hold of that rabbit’s foot the right way, we
-can read the symbol that he probably did not understand, although
-he knew the rabbit’s hind foot was a good fetish. It shows the
-survival of <em>intended</em> symbolism, which represents some sort of victory
-over the power of darkness analogous to taking the brush of the fox
-(another Typhonian animal) after it has been hunted to death. This
-was the last leg that the devil of darkness had to stand on, and so it was
-a trophy snatched from the Typhonian power to be worn in triumph as
-a token of good luck, of repetition or renewal, thence a second term.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It would be a sort of equivalent for taking the scalp of Satan, who
-could only be typified by the tail or hinder leg. The gift was tantamount
-to wishing “<em>A Happy New Moon to You!</em>” expressed in the
-language of symbolism, which was acted instead of being spoken. The
-negroes consider this particular talisman bequeathed by “<em>Brer Rabbit</em>”
-represents all the virtues and powers of renewal that are popularly
-attributed to the New Moon. But do not let me be misunderstood by
-those who know that in the Negro Märchen the rabbit is the good one
-of the typical two, and that the fox plays the Typhonian part. The
-rabbit or hare of the moon may be pourtrayed in two characters or in
-one of two. In both he is the hero, the Lord of Light and conqueror
-of the Power of Darkness, the rabbit, so to say, that rises again from
-the graveyard in or as the New Moon. The figure of the hind quarter
-and latter end of the dying moon is thus a type of the conquered
-Typhon, but the magical influence depends upon its being also a type
-of the conqueror, the rabbit of the resurrection or the New Moon. It
-is a curious coincidence that the luckiest of all Lucky Horse-Shoes in
-England is one that has been cast off the <em>left hind foot</em> of a Mare.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Lastly, this hind leg of the lunar rabbit is a fellow-type with the leg
-of pig that is still eaten in England on Easter Monday, which is a
-survival of the ancient sacrifice of the pig Typhon, in the solar or
-annual reckoning, as pourtrayed in the planisphere of Denderah, where
-we see the god Khunsu offering the pig by the leg in the disc of the full
-moon. It must have been a potent fetish long ages ago in Africa, and
-a medicine of great power according to the primitive mysteries of the
-dark land. It may be surmised that much of this fetishtic typology is
-still extant amongst the negroes in the United States, and it is to be
-hoped that the Bureau of Ethnology at Washington, which has done,
-and is doing, such good work under the direction of Major J. W. Powell
-in collecting and preserving the relics of the Red Men, will extend the
-range of its researches to the black race in America, and not leave those
-matters to irresponsible story-tellers.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Gerald Massey.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_443'>443</span>
- <h3 id='blossom6' class='c011'><span class="blackletter">THE BLOSSOM AND THE FRUIT</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>THE TRUE STORY OF A MAGICIAN</i>.</div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Mabel Collins.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c022' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>CHAPTER XII.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>It was the day of the Princess Fleta’s wedding and the whole city
-was <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>en fête</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary Estanol paced the streets wildly, like a creature distracted.
-He had never seen her face since the day he returned from the
-secret monastery. He could not trust himself to go near her. He felt
-that the savage in him must kill, must destroy, if too much provocation
-were given him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He held this savage in check as well as he could. He would not trust
-himself under the same roof with the woman he loved as he loved
-nothing else in life, and who had given him her love while she gave
-herself to another man. Herself! How much that meant Hilary
-seemed only now to know, now that he heard her marriage bells ringing,
-now that she was absolutely given. Yes, she had given herself away to
-another man. Was it possible? Hilary stood still now and again in the
-midst of the crowded street trying to remember the words she had said
-to him in that wood in the early morn when she had accepted his love.
-What had she taken from him then? He had never been the same since.
-His heart lay cold, and chill, and dull within him save when her smile or
-its memory woke him to life and joy. Were these gone for ever?
-Impossible. He was still young—a mere boy. She could not have stolen
-so much from him! No—he had the first right—he would be her lover
-still and always, to whoever else she gave herself in name. This was the
-point of thought to which Hilary perpetually returned. Undoubtedly she
-was his, and he would claim her. But obscured and excited as his mind
-was he had sufficient intelligence to know that his must be a secret claim
-even though it stood before all others. He could not go and claim her
-at the altar, for she had not given him any right to. What she had said
-was, “Take from me what you can.” Well, he could not make her his
-wife. He could not marry a royal Princess. She was not of his class.
-This being so, what could he hope for? Nothing—and yet he had her
-love—yes, the last kind touch of her hand, the last sweet smile on her
-lips, were still with him, and drove his blood rioting through his veins.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At last the procession is coming—the soldiers have already cleared the
-way and with their horses keep back the crowd. Hilary stands now,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_444'>444</span>still as a carven figure, watching only for one face. He sees it suddenly—ah!
-so beautiful, so supremely beautiful, so mysterious—and everything
-in Heaven and earth becomes invisible, non-existent, save that one dear
-face. A voice rang out on the air, clear, shrill, above all other voices.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta! Fleta! My love! my love!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What a cry! It penetrated to Fleta’s ears; it reached the ears of her
-bridegroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the church, amid the pomp and ceremony, and the crowd of great
-people, Otto did a thing which made those near him stare. He went to
-meet his bride and touched her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta,” he said, “that voice was the voice of one who loves you.
-What answer do you make to it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta put her hand in his.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That is my answer,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And so they stepped up the broad low steps to the altar. None heard
-what had been said except the king.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta’s father was strangely unlike herself. He was a rugged, morose,
-sombre man, ill-disposed towards all humanity, as it would seem, save
-those few who held the key to his nature. Of these, his daughter was
-one; some said she was the only one. Others said her power lay in the
-fact that she was not his daughter, but a child of other parents
-altogether than those reputed to be hers; and that a State secret was
-involved in the mystery of her birth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At all events, it was seldom indeed that the king interfered with
-Fleta. But he did so now, at this moment, with all the eyes of the
-Court upon them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He spoke low into her ear, he stood beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta,” he said, “is this marriage right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta turned on him a face so full of torture, of deathly pain, that he
-uttered an ejaculation of horror.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Say no word, my father,” she said, “it is right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And then she turned her head again, and fixed her glorious eyes on
-Otto.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>What a strangely beautiful bride she was! She was dressed with
-extraordinary simplicity; her robe had been arranged by her own hands
-in long, soft lines that fell from her neck to her feet, and a long train lay
-on the ground behind her, but it was undecked by any lace or flowers.
-No flowers were in her hair, no jewels on her neck. Never had a princess
-been dressed so simply, a princess who was to be a queen. The Court
-ladies stared in amazement. But they knew well that there was a grace
-so supreme, a dignity so lofty, in this royal girl, that however simple
-her dress she outshone them all, and would outshine any woman who
-stood beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>No one heard any of what passed between the three chief actors in
-this scene; yet everyone was aware that there was something unusual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_445'>445</span>in it. There was an atmosphere of mystery, of excitement, of strangeness.
-And yet what else would be possible where the Princess Fleta
-was concerned? In her father’s Court she was looked upon as a wild,
-capricious, imperious creature whose will none could resist. None
-would have wondered had they believed her carriage to have passed
-over the body of an accepted lover, now thrown aside and discarded.
-So did these people interpret the character of Fleta. Otto knew this,
-felt it, understood it; knew that those creatures of intrigue and pleasure
-would have thought her far less worthy had they judged her character
-more nearly as he did. To him she was pure, stainless, unattainable;
-virgin in soul and thought. This he said to her when, on
-leaving the cathedral, they entered a carriage together and alone.
-They had together passed through crowds of congratulators, nobles,
-great ladies, diplomats from different parts of Europe. They had bowed
-and smiled, and answered courteously the words addressed to them.
-And yet how far away were their thoughts all the while! They
-neither of them knew who they had met, who they had spoken to. All
-was lost in one absorbing thought. But it was not the same thought.
-No, indeed, their minds were separated widely as the poles.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta was filled with the sense of a great purpose. This marriage was
-but the first step in a giant programme. Her thoughts had flown now
-from this first step and were dwelling on the end, the fulfilment; as an
-artist when he draws his first sketch sees in his own mind the completed
-picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Otto had but one overwhelming thought; a very simple one, expressed
-instantly, in the first words he uttered when they were
-alone:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta, you did not fancy that I doubted you? I never meant that!
-And yet it seemed as if there was reproach in your eyes! No, Fleta,
-never that. But the cry was so terrible—it cut my heart. You did not
-fancy I meant any doubt?—assure me, Fleta!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No, I did not,” replied Fleta quietly. “You know whose voice
-it was.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No—it was unrecognisable—it was nothing but a cry of torture.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah! but I knew it,” said Fleta. “It was Hilary Estanol who cried
-out my name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“He said ‘Fleta, my love, my love,’” added Otto. “Is he that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” said Fleta unmoved, indeed strangely calm. “He is. More,
-Otto; he has loved me long centuries ago, when this world wore a
-different face. When the very surface of the earth was savage and
-untaught so were we. And then we enacted this same scene. Yes
-Alan, we three enacted it before, without this pomp, but with the natural
-splendour of savage beauty and undimmed skies. Otto, I sinned then
-I expiated my sin. Again and again have I expiated it. Again and
-again has Nature punished me for my offence against her. Now at last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_446'>446</span>I know more, I see more, I understand more. The sin remains. I
-desired to take, to have for myself, to be a conqueror. I conquered—I
-have conquered since! how often! That has been my expiation:
-satiety. But now I will no longer enjoy. I will stand on that error,
-that folly, and win from it strength which shall lift me from this
-wretched little theatre where we play the same dramas for ever through
-the fond weariness of recurring lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Otto had drawn back from her, and gazed intently upon her as she
-spoke, passion and vehemence gradually entering her low voice. As she
-ceased he passed his hand over his forehead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta,” he said, “is this some spell of yours upon me? While you
-spoke I saw your face change, and become the face of one familiar to
-me, but far, far back! I smelled the intense rich scent of innumerable
-fruit blossoms——Fleta, tell me, are you dreaming or speaking fables,
-or is this thing true? Have I lived for you before, loved you, served
-you, ages back, when the world was young?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” said Fleta.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Ah!” cried Otto suddenly, “I feel it—there is blood on you—blood
-on your hand!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta raised her beautiful hand, and looked at it with an infinite
-sadness on her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is so,” she answered. “There is blood on it, and there will be,
-until I have got beyond the reign of blood and of death. You held me
-down then, Otto; you triumphed by brute force, not knowing that in
-me lay a power undreamed of by you—a vital, stirring will. I could
-have crushed you. But already I had used my will once, and found the
-bitter, unintelligible suffering it produced. I determined to try and
-understand Nature before I again used my power. So I submitted to
-your tyranny; you learned to love it, and through many lives have
-learned to love it more. It has brought you a crown at last, and a little
-army of soldiers to defend it for you, and half-a-dozen crafty old
-diplomats who want you to keep it, and who think they can make you
-do just as their respective monarchs wish. Move your puppets, Otto.
-No such kingdom satisfies me. I mean to win my own crown. I will
-be a queen of souls, not of bodies; a queen in reality, not in
-name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She seemed to wrap herself in an impenetrable veil of scorn as she
-ceased speaking and leaned back in the carriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Some great emotion was stirring Otto through and through. At
-last he spoke; and the man seemed changed—a different being. From
-under the gentle manner, the docile, ready air, came struggling up the
-fierce spirit of opposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You despise the crown you married me for? Is that so? Well, I
-will teach you to respect it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A smile dawned on Fleta’s clouded face and then was gone again in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_447'>447</span>a moment. This was all the answer she vouchsafed to the kingly threat.
-Otto turned and looked at her steadily.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“A magnificent creature,” he said, “beautiful, and with a brain of
-steel, and perhaps for all I know, a heart like it. You won a great deal
-from me, Fleta, a little while since. Did I not submit to the masquerading
-of your mysterious Order? Did I not trust my life to those
-treacherous monks of yours, submit to be blindfolded and led into their
-haunt by secret ways. For what end? Ivan told me of aspirations, of
-ideas, of thoughts, which only sickened my soul and filled me with
-shame and despair. For I am a believer in order, in moral rule, in the
-government of the world in accordance with the principles of religion.
-I told you I was willing to become a member of the order; yes, because
-my nature is in sympathy with its avowed tenets. But its secret
-doctrines as I have heard them from you, as I have heard them from the
-man you call your master, are to me detestable. And it is for the
-carrying out of this unholy theory or doctrine that you propose to
-surrender your life? No, Fleta; you are now my queen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes,” said Fleta. “I am now your queen. I know that I have
-chosen the lot willingly. You need not again tell me that I have the
-crown I purposed to obtain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>At this moment they arrived at the palace. There was yet a weary
-mass of ceremony and speaking of polite nothings to be passed through
-before there was any chance of their being alone again. Otto relapsed
-into the pleasant and kindly manner which was habitual with <a id='corr447.27'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='him'>him.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_447.27'><ins class='correction' title='him'>him.</ins></a></span>
-Fleta fell into one of her abstracted moods, and the court adopted its
-usual policy under such circumstances—let her be undisturbed. Few
-of the men cared to risk the satirical answers that came readiest to her
-lips when she was roused out of such a mood as this.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And yet at last someone did venture to rouse her; and a smile, delicious
-as a burst of sunshine, came swiftly and suddenly on her mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was Hilary Estanol. Pale, worn, the mere ghost of himself, his
-dark eyes looking strangely large in the white face they were set <a id='corr447.35'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='in'>in.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_447.35'><ins class='correction' title='in'>in.</ins></a></span>
-They were fixed on her as though there were nothing else in the world
-to look at.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta held out her hand to him; his companion—a military officer who
-had brought him under protest, and in some doubt, for Hilary had no
-friends at Court—drew back in amazement. He understood now Hilary’s
-importunity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary bent over Fleta’s hand and held his lips near it for an instant,
-but did not touch it. A sort of groan came to her ear from his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have resigned me?” she asked in a low vibrating whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You have cast me off,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Be it so,” she replied, “but you have lived through it, and you
-now claim nothing. Is it not so? I read it in the dumb pain in your
-eyes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_448'>448</span>“Yes,” said Hilary, straightening himself and standing upright close
-beside her, and looking down upon her beautiful dark head. “It is so.
-I will not cry for the moon, nor will I weary any woman with my regret
-or entreaty, even you, Fleta, though it is no dishonour to humble oneself
-at the feet of such as you. No; I will bear my pain like a man. I
-came here to say good-bye. You are still something like the Fleta that
-I loved. To-morrow you will not be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How can you tell?” she said with her inscrutable smile. “Still, I
-think you are right. And now that we are no longer lovers will you
-enter with me another bond? Will you be my comrade in undertaking
-the great task? I know you are fearless.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The great task?” said Hilary vaguely, and he put his hand to his
-forehead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The one great task of this narrow life—To learn its lesson and go
-beyond it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes, I will be your comrade,” said Hilary in an even voice and
-without enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Then meet me at two this very morning at the gate of the garden-house
-where you used to enter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was now just midnight. Hilary noticed this as he turned away, for
-a little clock stood on a bracket close by. He looked at it, and looked
-back at Fleta. Could she mean what she said? But already the Fleta
-he knew had vanished; a cold, haughty, impassive young queen was
-accepting the uninteresting homage of a foreign minister. The guests
-were beginning to take their departure. Fleta and Otto did not propose
-to take any journey in honour of their wedding as is the custom in some
-places; the king opened for their use the finest set of guests’ chambers
-in the palace, and these they occupied, remaining among the visitors
-until all had departed. On the next day Otto was to take his queen
-home; but he had had to give way to the wishes of Fleta and her father
-as to the postponing of the journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>From the great drawing-rooms Fleta went quietly away when the last
-guest had departed; she moved like a swift shadow noiselessly along
-the corridors. She entered her own room, and there began, without
-summoning any attendant, to hastily take off her bridal robes. On
-a couch was lying the white robe and cloak which she had worn when
-she had endeavoured to enter the hall of the mystics. These she put
-on, and wrapping the cloak round her turned to leave the room. As
-she did so she came face to face with Otto, who had entered noiselessly,
-and was standing in silence beside her. She seemed scarcely to notice
-him, but changed her direction and proceeded towards another door.
-Otto quickly placed himself again in her way.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” he said; “you do not leave this room to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And why?” asked Fleta, looking gravely at his set face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Because you are now my wife. I forbid it. Stay here, and with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_449'>449</span>me. Come, let me take off that cloak, without any trouble; the
-white gown under it suits you even better than your wedding-dress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He unfastened the clasps which held the cloak together. Fleta made
-no opposition, but kept her eyes on his face; he would not meet
-her gaze, though his face was white and rigid with the intensity of his
-passion and purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you remember,” said Fleta, “the last thing that you did when
-you were with Father Ivan? Do you remember kneeling before him
-and uttering these words—‘I swear to serve the master of truth and the
-teacher of life——’”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That master—that teacher!” interrupted Otto hotly. “I reserved
-my reason even in that incense-scented room. That master—that
-teacher—is my own intelligence—so I phrased it in my own mind—I
-recognise no other master.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Your own intelligence!” repeated Fleta. “You have not yet learned
-to use it. You did not so phrase the vow then; you only rephrased it
-so afterwards, when you were away, and alone, and began again to
-struggle for your selfish freedom. No, Otto, you have not begun to use
-your intelligence. You are still the slave of your desires, eaten up with
-the longing for power and the lust of the tyrannical soul. You do not
-love me—you only desire to possess me. You fancy your power is all
-you wish it to be. Well, put it to the test. Take this cloak from my
-shoulders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Otto came close, and took the cloak in his hands; and then a sudden
-passion filled him—he seized her in his arms and pressed his lips to
-hers—yet he did not do so, either, for the attempt was instantaneously
-surrendered. He staggered back, white and trembling.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta stood erect and proud before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“That vow you took,” she said quietly, “you knew very well in the
-inner recesses of your soul, in your true unblinded self, to make you a
-slave of the Great Order. That vow may yet save you from yourself,
-if you do not resent it too fiercely. But remember this; I am a
-neophyte of that order, and you being its slave, are under my command.
-I am your queen, Otto, but not your wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She passed him as she said this, and he made no effort to detain
-her; indeed, the trembling had not yet left him, and his whole strength
-was taken by the attempt to control it. As she reached the door he
-succeeded in speaking:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Why did you marry me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Did I not tell you?” she said, pausing a moment and turning to
-look at him. “I think I did. Because I have to learn to live on the
-plain as contentedly as on the mountain tops. There is but one way
-for me to do this, and that is to devote my life as your queen to the
-same great purpose it would serve were I the silver-robed initiate I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_450'>450</span>desire to be. I go now to commence my work, with the aid of a lover
-who has learned to surrender his <a id='corr450.2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='love.'>love.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_450.2'><ins class='correction' title='love.'>love.”</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She moved magnificently from the room, looking much taller even
-than her natural height. And Otto let her go without any word or
-sign.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>It was a fragrant night—a night rich with sweet flower-scents, not only
-from the flower beds near, but coming from afar on the breeze. Hilary
-stood at the gate, leaning on it and looking away at the sky, where a
-faint streak of different light told of the sun’s coming. It was quite
-clear, though there had been no moonlight; one of those warm, still
-nights when it is easy to find one’s way, though hard to see into the face
-of one near by, a night when one walks in a dream amid changing
-shadows, and when the outer mysteriousness and the dimness of one’s
-soul are as one. So with Hilary; so had he walked to the gate. He
-waited for the woman he loved, the only woman any man could
-ever love, having once known her. And yet no fever burned now in his
-veins, no intoxication mounted from his heart to his brain. Standing
-there, and regarding himself and his own feelings very quietly in the
-stillness, it seemed to him as if he had died yesterday when that wild
-cry had been unknowingly uttered; as if his soul or his heart, or,
-indeed, his very self had gone forth in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A light touch was laid on his shoulder, and then the gate was opened.
-He passed through and walked by Fleta up the flower-bordered pathway.
-She moved on without speaking, her white cloak hanging loose
-from her neck, and her bare arms gleaming as it fell back from
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You who know so much tell me something,” said Hilary. “Why are
-you so wise?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Because I burned my soul out centuries ago,” said Fleta. “When
-you have burned out your heart you will be strong as I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Another question,” said Hilary. “Why did you fail in that
-initiation?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta stopped suddenly, and fixed fierce questioning eyes upon him.
-She was terrible in this quick rush of anger. But Hilary looked on her
-unmoved. It seemed to him that nothing would ever be able to move
-him again. Was he dead indeed that he could thus endure the scorching
-light of those brilliant eyes?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What makes you ask me that?” cried Fleta in a voice of pain. “Do
-you demand to know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Yes; I do wish to know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For a moment Fleta covered her face with her hands, and her whole
-form shrank and quivered. But only for a moment; then she dropped
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_451'>451</span>her hands at each side and stood erect, her queenly head poised
-royally.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is my punishment,” she said in a murmuring voice, “to discover
-so soon how absolute are the bonds of the Great Order; how the pupil
-can command the master as well as the master the pupil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then she turned abruptly upon Hilary, approaching him more nearly,
-while she spoke in a quick, fierce voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Because, though I have burned out my soul, I have not burned out
-my heart! Because, though I cannot love as men do, and have almost
-forgotten what passion means, yet I can still worship a greater nature
-than my own so deeply that it may be called love. I have not learned
-to stand utterly alone and to know myself as great as any other with the
-same possibilities, the same divinity in myself. I still lean on another,
-look to another, hunger for the smile of another. O, folly, when I know
-so well that I cannot find any rest while that is in me. O, Ivan, my
-teacher, my friend, what torture it is to wrest the image of you from its
-shrine within me. Powers and forces of indifferent Nature, I demand
-your help!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She raised her arms as she uttered this invocation, and it struck
-Hilary at the moment how little like a human being she looked. She
-might have been the spirit of the dawn. Her voice had become unutterably
-weird and mournful, like the deep cry of a broken soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Without pausing for any answer she dropped her arms, drew her cloak
-around her, and walked away over the dewy grass. Hilary, as silent, as
-mournful, but seemingly without emotion, dropped his head and quietly
-followed her track. Of old—only yesterday—what an age ago!—he
-would have kept his eyes fixed on her shining dark hair or the movements
-of her delicate figure. Suddenly Fleta stopped, turned and
-confronted him. He raised his eyes in surprise and looked at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are no longer devoured by jealousy,” she said. “You can hear
-me speak as I did just now without its turning you into a savage. What
-has happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Her eyes seemed to penetrate his impassive and languid expression,
-looking for the soul beneath. She was longing that his answer should
-be the one she needed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am hopeless,” answered Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Of what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Of your love. I understand at last that you have a great purpose
-in your life, and that I am a mere straw on a stream. I thought I had
-some claim on you; I see I cannot have. I surrender myself to your
-will. That is all I have left to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta stood meditatively for a moment Then she looked up very
-sadly in his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It is not enough,” she said. “Your gift must be a positive one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Then she again turned and went on her way to the house. Here
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_452'>452</span>everything was silent and even dark, for the shutters were all closed, and
-evidently the place was deserted. Fleta opened a side door with a key
-which was attached to her girdle; they entered and she locked it behind
-them. She led the way through the quiet dim house to the door
-of the laboratory; they entered the room in silence. It wore a quite new
-aspect to Hilary’s eyes, and he looked round in wonder. All was pale;
-there was no incense burning, no lamps were lit; the colour had gone from
-the walls; a faint grey light through a skylight, which had always hitherto
-been curtained, dimly broke on the darkness of the room which still
-lurked deeply in the lower part. But Hilary found enough light to see
-that the thing he so hated was not present; that lay figure which was to
-him always such a horror was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Where is it?” he said after a moment, wondering at the sense of
-relief with which its absence filled him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What?—oh! the figure. Again you ask a question which I am
-compelled to answer. Well, I cannot use that power at present; I have
-again to win the right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How did you win the right before?” asked Hilary, fixing his eyes
-on her; a fierce desire to know this possessed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta started, turned towards him, and for a moment the proud
-imperiousness which ordinarily characterised her came over her form
-and her features. But in another moment it was gone. She stood
-before him, pale, gentle and sublime.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I will tell you,” she said in a clear yet very low voice. “By taking
-your life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary looked at her in complete perplexity and bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do you not remember,” she said, “that forest, that new earth and sky,
-all so sweet and strong, that wealth of apricot blossom that came
-between us and the sky? Ah, Hilary, how fresh and vivid life was then,
-while we lived and loved and understood not that we did either! Was
-it not sweet? I loved you. Yes, I loved you—loved you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Her voice broke and trembled. Hilary’s numbed heart suddenly
-sprang again to life. Never had her voice contained such tones of
-tenderness and passion before.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, my dear, my Fleta, you love me still—now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He sprang towards her, but she seemed to sweep him aside with one
-majestic action of her bare arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“With that passion,” she said, with a pale solemnity, “I can never love
-now. I have not forgotten entirely what such love is—no, Hilary, I
-have not forgotten—else how should I have found you again among the
-multitudes of the earth?” She held out her hand to him, and, as he
-clasped it, he felt it was soft and tender, that the warm life
-blood of a young creature responded to his touch. “I knew you by
-your dear eyes which once were so full of pure love for me that they
-were like stars in my life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_453'>453</span>“What came between us?” asked Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She looked strangely at him, drew her hand away, folded her cloak
-round her and then answered in one word:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Passion!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I remember it now!” cried Hilary in sudden excitement “My
-God! I see your beautiful wild face before me, I see your lips as lovely
-as the soft blossom above us. Fleta, I loved you as men love—I
-hungered for you—what harm lay in that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“None,” she answered, standing now motionless and statue-like,
-wrapped in her long, white cloak, seeming like a lovely ghost rather
-then a living woman. “None—for men who care only to be men, to
-reproduce men, to be and to do nothing more than that! But I had
-another power within me, that seemed stronger than myself—a stirring
-of the dumb soul within. When that moment came, Hilary, then came
-the great decision, the fierce struggle between two souls hurled together
-out of the dimness of life, and finding light in the fever of love—yes,
-light!—the fire that is love makes it possible for men to live. It gives
-them hope, it animates them, it makes them believe in a future, it
-enables them to create men to fill that future.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In those old days beneath those apricot blossoms, you and I,
-Hilary, were but children on this earth, new to its meaning, knowing
-nothing of its purpose. How could we guide ourselves? We were
-ignorant of the great power of sex, we were only at the beginning of its
-lesson. So it must be with all. They must go through with the lesson,
-they cannot guess it from the first! Nor could we. I did not know
-what I did, Hilary, my lover, when I took your life. Had I known I
-should only have been like a beast of prey. But I did not know. You
-asserted your power—you claimed me. I asserted mine—I conquered.
-I wanted power; and killing you as I did with that one emotion only
-stirring within me, I got what I longed for. Not at once—not till I had
-suffered patiently, not till I had struggled hard to understand myself
-and the force that was at work within me. And this for life after life, incarnation
-after incarnation. You not only loved me but you were mine—I
-conquered you and used your life and love for my own ends—to add
-to my power, to actually create the life and strength I needed. By your
-life, by your strength, I became a magician, read by my insight the
-mysteries of alchemy and the buried secrets of power. Yes, Hilary, it is
-so. To you I owe myself. I have become free from the common
-burdens of humanity, its passions, its personal desires, its weary
-repetitions of experiences till their edge grows blunted by long usage.
-I have seen the Egyptian and the Roman, men of the old superb
-civilisations, trying to reproduce their past pleasures, their past magnificence
-to-day, in this modern life. It is useless, life after life full of
-selfishness and pleasure, ends in the weariness of living that kills men’s
-souls and darkens their thought. But you and I, Hilary, have escaped
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_454'>454</span>from this dismal fate. I would not be content to live again as I had lived
-before, to use the life principle which lies in love, only for pleasure or the
-bringing of eidolons on to the earth. I determined to rise, to raise myself,
-to raise you, and out of our love perpetually to create something nobler
-than we ourselves. I have succeeded, Hilary, I have succeeded. We
-stand now before the gate of the first initiation. I tried to enter it and
-failed for want of strength—for want of strength, Hilary! I could not
-pluck my master’s image utterly out of my soul—I looked for him to
-lean on—at least to find comfort in seeing that face I knew. Give me
-strength, Hilary! Be my comrade! Help me to enter and your
-strength shall come back to you a hundredfold. For your reward shall
-be that you too shall enter with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She had changed from moment to moment as she spoke. She looked
-like an inspired priestess—like a Divine being. Now she stood like a
-flame with a strange appearance, as if her whole soul and self, spirit and
-body, rose upwards in adoration. The dawn had come; the first rays
-of the sun shot through the skylight and fell on her transfigured face
-and gleaming hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary looked at her as a worshipper might look at his idol.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I am yours,” he said, “but I know not how to prove it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She held out her hand to him, and lowered her eyes from the light to
-which they had been raised until they met his.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“We must discover the great secret together, Hilary. No longer may
-you give yourself to me without knowledge. Hitherto our lives have
-been but the lives of the blossom; now we must be wise and enter the
-state when the fruit comes. We have to find out what that power is
-which the sun represents to us; to discover the pure creative power.
-But we have not strength yet, Hilary; alas! I dread and fear sometimes.
-More strength means more sacrifice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She drew her cloak closer round her, the light faded from her eyes
-and face, and turning away she went and sat down on a couch which
-was back in the shadow. Hilary felt a profound sense of sadness, of
-sympathy, of sorrow, sweep over his being. He followed her and sat
-down beside her. One pale hand lay on the couch, outside her cloak.
-He laid his upon it, and fell deep into thought. Thus they sat, silent,
-breathing softly, for long hours, till the sun was high. But still, even
-then, the room was very dim and cool, and full of shadows.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>On the next day, the same day rather, for they sat together in the
-laboratory till long after the sun was high, Hilary, to his own amazement,
-found that he had an official post in the household of the young
-Queen which would keep him continually about her. Indeed, he had to
-pack up instantly on being informed of the fact, in order to follow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_455'>455</span>Fleta to her own dominions. How this had been effected none could
-tell—Hilary, least of all, for he saw immediately on presenting himself
-in King Otto’s presence that he was regarded by him with dislike and
-distrust. Before, Otto had scarcely noticed him. The present state of
-things was decidedly a change for the worse. However, Hilary had
-already perceived very clearly that to serve under Fleta was to serve
-under a hard master. And he had no longer any kind of choice. Life
-was inconceivable without her—without the pain caused by her difficult
-service. He had rather suffer that than enjoy any other kind of
-pleasure. And, indeed, pleasure, apart from Fleta, did not appear
-to him to exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And yet he was still capable of doubting her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Fleta had chosen a companion of royal birth to travel with her; a
-young duchess who bore the same family name as Fleta herself. This girl
-had been reared in a nunnery, and then taken to court, where she took part
-in all the pageants and immediately found herself surrounded by suitors.
-She was not very pretty, and certainly not at all clever. To go with
-Fleta seemed to her delightful, as it would introduce her to a new court
-and a fresh series of suitors. It struck Hilary as quite extraordinary
-that Fleta should choose this child as her companion—not that the
-Duchess was any younger than Fleta—indeed, they were almost of an
-age; but Fleta appeared to carry within her beautiful head the wisdom
-of centuries, while the Duchess was a mere school-girl trained in court
-etiquette.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>These three were to travel together in Fleta’s own favourite travelling
-carriage. She simply refused to travel with her husband. When he
-addressed her on the subject, she merely replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You would weary me; and, moreover, I have work to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And so they started; and as Hilary took his place, he thought of
-that strange drive when he and Fleta, and Father Amyot, had been the
-three. Recollecting this made him wonder what had become of Father
-Amyot; for the priest had not returned to his duties in the city. He
-asked Fleta, while the thought was in his mind, why Amyot was not
-with her now.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“He is of no use to me,” she answered coldly.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The journey was a very long and a very weary one to Hilary; for
-the Duchess, finding no one else to flirt with, insisted upon flirting with
-him; while Fleta lay back in her corner of the carriage hour after hour,
-with her eyes closed. What was the work she had to do? Hilary, who
-had overheard her answer to the King, wondered very much. And yet,
-as he watched her intently he saw that her face changed. It grew darker,
-more inscrutable, more set in purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Late one evening, and when they were indeed travelling later than
-usual, hoping to reach their destination that same night, a curious thing
-happened. All day long Fleta had been silent, seemingly buried in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_456'>456</span>thought; but sometimes when Hilary was watching her he noticed her
-lips move as if in speech. He sat opposite her whenever he could; this
-was not always possible, as the young Duchess would talk to him, and
-the carriage being very large and roomy, he had to change his position,
-and go nearer to her in order to carry on a conversation with any
-comfort. But as it grew dark the Duchess grew tired, and
-leaned back half asleep, for indeed they had had a long day’s
-journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary withdrew himself to the corner opposite Fleta. It grew so
-dark he could no longer see her; they had a swinging-lamp in the roof
-of the carriage, but he did not want to light it unless Fleta wished it so;
-and, indeed, he longed for the quiet and the darkness very much. It
-made him feel more alone with her, he could try to follow and <a id='corr456.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sieze'>seize</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_456.14'><ins class='correction' title='sieze'>seize</ins></a></span> her
-thoughts then without the perpetual disturbance of the little Duchess’s
-quick eyes on him and her light voice in his ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He sat still and thought of Fleta—Fleta herself in her glorious
-beauty—sitting there opposite him shrouded by the darkness. He could
-endure it no longer—the man rose up in him and asserted itself—he
-leaned forward and put his hand upon her. He had scarcely done so
-when the Duchess uttered a shrill cry.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“My God!” she exclaimed, in a voice of horror, “who is in the
-carriage with us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She flung herself across and knelt upon the floor between Hilary
-and Fleta; her terror was so great she did not know what she was
-doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary leaned across her and instantly discovered that she was
-right—that there was another man in the carriage besides himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Oh, kill him! kill him!” cried the little Duchess, in an agony of
-fear; “he is a thief, a murderer, a robber!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary rose up and precipitated himself upon this person whom he
-could not see. A sense of self-defence, of defence of the women with him,
-seized him as we see it seize the animals. He discovered that this man
-had risen also. Blindly and furiously he attacked him, and with extraordinary
-strength. Hilary was young and full of vigour, but slight and
-not built like an athlete. Now, however, he seemed to be one. He
-found his adversary to be much larger and stronger than himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A fearful struggle followed. The carriage drove on through unseen
-scenery as fast as possible; Fleta could have stopped it had she thrown
-the window down and cried out to the postilions. But Fleta remained
-motionless—she might have fainted, she was so still. The little Duchess
-simply cowered on the ground beside her, clinging to her motionless
-figure. This terrified girl had not the presence of mind to think of
-stopping the carriage, and so obtaining help. She was too horror-struck
-to do anything. And, indeed, it was horrible, for the swaying struggling
-forms sometimes were right upon the two women, sometimes at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_457'>457</span>other side of the carriage; it was a deadly, horrible, ghastly struggle,
-all the more horrid for the silence. There were no cries, no exclamations,
-for indeed, so far as Hilary was concerned, he had no breath to
-spare for them. There were only gasps, and heavy breathings, and the
-terrible sound that comes from a man’s throat when he is fighting for
-his life. How long this hideous battle lasted none could tell—Hilary
-had no idea of the passage of time. The savage in him had now come
-so entirely uppermost and drowned all other consciousness, that his one
-thought was he must kill—kill—kill—and at last it was done. There
-was a moment when his adversary was below him, when he could use
-his whole force upon him—and then came a gasp and an unearthly cry—and
-silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Absolute silence for a little while. No one moved, no one stirred.
-The Duchess was petrified with horror. Hilary had sunk exhausted on
-the seat of the carriage—not only exhausted, but bewildered, for a host
-of other emotions besides savage fury began to rise within him. What—who—-was
-this being he had destroyed? At that moment they were
-urged into a gallop, for they were entering the city gates. Hilary threw
-down the window next him with a crash. “Lights, lights!” he cried out,
-“bring lights.” The carriage stopped, and there was a crowd immediately
-at the windows, and the glare of torches fell into the carriage,
-making it bright as day. The little Duchess was crouched in the
-corner on the ground in a dead faint. Fleta sat up, strangely white, but
-calm. Nothing else was to be seen, alive or dead, save Hilary himself;
-and so horror-struck was he at this discovery that he turned and buried
-his face in the cushions of the carriage, and he never knew what
-happened—whether he wept, or laughed, or cursed—but some strange
-sound of his own voice he heard with his ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There was a carriage full of servants behind Fleta’s carriage; when
-hers stopped so suddenly they all got out and came quickly to the
-doors.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The Duchess has fainted,” said Fleta, rising so as to hide Hilary;
-“the journey has been too long. Is there a house near where she can
-lie still a little while, and come on later to the palace?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Immediately offers of help were made, and the servants and those
-who were glad to help them carried the poor little Duchess away.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“On to the palace!” cried Fleta, and shut the door and drew down
-the blinds. The postilion started the horses with all speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Suddenly the blood in Hilary’s body began to surge and burn.
-Was it Fleta’s arms that clung round him? Fleta’s lips that printed
-warm, living kisses on his neck, his face, his hair? He turned and faced
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Tell me the truth,” he said. “Are you a devil?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“No,” she answered, “I am not. I want to find my way to the pure
-good that governs life. But there are devils about me, and you have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_458'>458</span>killed one of them to-night. Hush, calm yourself; remember what
-we are in the eyes of the world. For we are at the palace door, and
-Otto is standing there to receive us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>She stepped out, the young queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary followed her, stumbling, broken. He said he was ill, to those
-who spoke to him; and stood staring in wonder at the brilliant sight
-before him.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>The great hall of the palace was illuminated gloriously by huge dragons
-made of gold, placed high up on the walls; within these strange creatures
-were powerful lamps, which shed their light not only through the eyes
-and opened mouths, but from the gleaming claws. The whole place was
-filled with a blaze of light from them; and the dresses of the household
-assembled below seemed to Hilary another blaze of light, so gay were
-they. Yet this was only a domestic reception. It was late, and
-Otto had refused to allow any more general demonstration to take
-place that night. Yet Fleta, when she threw off her travelling cloak
-and hood, might have been the centre of any pageant. She showed no
-trace of the weariness of travel, or even of the strange excitement she
-had passed through. She was pale, but her face was calm and wore its
-most haughty and unapproachable expression. Her dress of black lace
-hung about her slender form like clouds. Otto was filled with pride as
-he noted her superb dignity and beauty; with hatred, as he observed
-that her eyes never met his own, that she treated him with just the same
-civility as the steward, or any servant of the establishment. No one
-could notice this but himself and perhaps Hilary, supposing the latter
-to be capable of regarding anyone but Fleta herself; for she was too
-much a woman of the world, this mystic, this wild girl, to admit anyone
-even to the most evident of the secrets of her life.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After a few moments passed among the little crowd assembled in the
-great hall, Fleta proposed to go to her own rooms for the night, and a
-stately little procession formed itself at once to conduct her there. But
-before going she beckoned to Hilary.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The Duchess must come to me to-night,” she said. “I wish her to
-be in my own room. Send a carriage and servants to fetch her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>How her eyes glittered! Had he ever seen them shine so vividly
-before?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Tell me one thing,” he said hoarsely. “I believe you have taken to
-yourself that creature’s life and very body that I killed for you. Is it
-not true?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You are shrewd,” she said with a laugh. “Yes, it is true. My
-whole being is stronger for his death; I absorbed his vital power the
-instant you wrenched it from him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_459'>459</span>“And he?” said Hilary, with wild eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Was one of those half-human, half-animal creatures that haunt men
-to their ill, and which fools call ghosts or demons. I have done him a
-service in taking his life into my own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary shuddered violently.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“You doubt me,” said Fleta very quietly. “You still doubt if it is
-not I who am the devil. Be it so. I am indifferent to your opinion of
-me, Hilary; you cannot help loving and serving me. We were born
-under the same star. Now go and give orders about the Duchess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Under the same star! Those words had not come to his mind for a
-long while; yet how horribly true they were. For he, Hilary, it was
-who had actually done this dreadful deed and killed this unseen, unknown,
-unimaginable creature. Horror made him clutch his hands
-together as he thought that he had touched this thing, more, had killed
-it hideously. Might it not have been some good thing striving to baffle
-Fleta? Ah, yes! he still doubted her. And yet to doubt her so completely
-made the very earth to sink away from under his feet. He
-himself, his life, his all, were given to her, be she good or evil! Staggering
-and overpowered by the terrible thoughts that crushed his wearied
-brain, Hilary found his way to a supper-table; and too exhausted to
-think of anything else but recruiting his strength, sat down to drink
-wine—and to try to eat. This latter seemed impossible, but the wine
-revived him; and presently he remembered that it was his business to
-look after the Duchess.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>By-and-bye she was carried into the palace; she could not yet stand,
-for she had only come out of one fainting fit to fall into another.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And now came a strange and dreadful scene—one which only a few
-witnessed, Hilary as it happened being among those few, for he saw the
-Duchess taken to the suite of rooms Fleta occupied. In the corridor
-Fleta came out to them; she was still in her travelling-dress, and looked
-very quiet and even subdued. But at the sight of her the young
-Duchess screamed as if she saw some awful thing; she would not let
-Fleta touch her, she absolutely refused to enter her room.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But you must be with me,” said Fleta in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I will not,” answered the Duchess with a firm resolution which
-amazed everyone who knew her. She rose up and walked unassisted
-along the corridor and down the great staircase; she met the young
-king coming up it; he had heard her shrill cries and came to see what
-was happening.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“What is the matter, little cousin?” seeing her tear-stained and
-agitated face.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Fleta wants me to be in her room all night! I would not do it for
-all the world! She is a devil—she would kill me or make her lover kill
-me, and then no one would ever hear of me or even find my body. No!
-No!”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_460'>460</span>And so she ran on, down the wide stairs, leaving Otto thunderstruck.
-He noticed that a number of persons were gathering on the landing
-and stairs, and so, with a stern and quiet face, he passed through the
-little throng, making no observation. He went down the corridor and
-straight into Fleta’s room. Here he found her standing silent, dark,
-like a sombre statue. One other person was in the room—Hilary
-Estanol. He was in the most extraordinary state of agitation, pouring
-out words and accusations; some horror appeared to possess and blind
-him, for he took no notice of the king’s entrance. Fleta did, however;
-she looked up at him and smiled—such a strange, sweet, subtle smile.
-Seldom, indeed, had Fleta given him a look like this. Otto’s heart
-leaped within him, and he knew himself her slave. For he loved her
-increasingly with every passing moment; and she had but to turn her
-face on him softly to make the loving soul in him burn with ardour.
-But that burning was fiery indeed. He turned upon Hilary and stayed
-his words by a sudden sharp order:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Leave the room,” he said. “And you had better go and see Doctor
-Brandener before you go to bed, for you are either in a fever or mad.
-Go at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary was in a condition in which an order given in such a tone took
-the place of the action of his own brain, and he mechanically obeyed it.
-This was the best possible thing that could have happened to him; for
-he was in fact in a high fever, and if he had not, without thinking about
-it, done as he was told and gone to the resident doctor of the palace, he
-would probably have wandered raving about all night. As it was he
-was obliged to drink a strong sleeping draught, and was placed in his
-bed, where he fell at once into a sleep so profound it seemed like
-death.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hilary gone, Fleta closed the door behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Do not let there be any struggle of wills between us to-night,” said
-Fleta very softly. “I warn you, I am much stronger than I was; I am
-very much stronger than you are, now. And you found before that you
-could not even come near enough to touch me. Let me rest, and that
-quietly; I wish to retain my beauty, both for your sake and my
-own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Otto paused a few moments before he made any answer to this
-extraordinary speech. Then he spoke with difficulty; and as he did so
-raised his hand to brush away some great drops of sweat which had
-gathered on his forehead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I know I am powerless against you to-night, Fleta,” he said. “I
-cannot even move nearer to you. But be warned; I intend to probe the
-mystery of your being. I intend to conquer you at last. I will do it if
-I have to visit hell itself for the magic which shall be stronger than
-yours.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_461'>461</span>——*———</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c011'>TWILIGHT VISIONS.</h3>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>PART II.—THE CRESCENT.</h4>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c035'>“<em>The</em> <span class='sc'>Lord</span> <i>appeared of old unto me, saying, ‘Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love:
-therefore with loving-kindness have I drawn thee.’</i>”—<span class='sc'>Jer.</span> xxxi., 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“In life, in death, O Lord! abide with me!”</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou, Ruler o’er the Living Rosy Cross—</div>
- <div class='line'>Great Master Mason of the mortal frame,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which is the temple of the Holy Ghost—</div>
- <div class='line'>Grand Power of all who through the secret sun</div>
- <div class='line'>Dost hold the soul in tenement of clay</div>
- <div class='line'>To guide it safely through the gloom of night</div>
- <div class='line'>Into the golden morn, when all things then</div>
- <div class='line'>In Light of Love—thine own Eternal Self—</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall truly stand revealed to those that strive</div>
- <div class='line'>In truth to know the Power which all mankind</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall worship in the Universal King.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>My children! saith the living God of Love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now “if with all your hearts ye truly seek,”<a id='r153' /><a href='#f153' class='c013'><sup>[153]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Ye surely shall find me your King in Heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>And finding me shall know yourselves to be</div>
- <div class='line'>Anointed Princes—Rulers of the Earth—</div>
- <div class='line'>The Powers of Light sent by me in the flesh,</div>
- <div class='line'>And named Michael! You are here to fight,</div>
- <div class='line'>To hurl down Satan to his black abyss,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where ignorance and error, sin and crime,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hellish spirits dark for ever dwell</div>
- <div class='line'>With all who in the bonds of slavery</div>
- <div class='line'>Lead deathly lives as creatures of the world—</div>
- <div class='line'>The wretched earth-worms of that bounden sphere,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which is the only Hell mankind can know!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The night is now far spent, and in the sky</div>
- <div class='line'>From out a dark blue setting there hath shone</div>
- <div class='line'>In ages past, as now, full many a star</div>
- <div class='line'>Proclaiming to mankind the Light of Heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>Each with its own peculiar brilliancy</div>
- <div class='line'>Illumining the minds of men with rays</div>
- <div class='line'>Which point to other realms beyond this world,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ever tell of one star differing</div>
- <div class='line'>In glory from its fellow star on high.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_462'>462</span>What great and hidden meaning lieth here!</div>
- <div class='line'>Why are the stars above held forth to man</div>
- <div class='line'>As entities which tell of other states?</div>
- <div class='line'>The Stars of Heaven are never seen by man;</div>
- <div class='line'>As man, he cannot know that glorious light</div>
- <div class='line'>Sent forth—from States of Wisdom not in skies—</div>
- <div class='line'>Through brilliant rays which meet not mortal gaze,</div>
- <div class='line'>And are invisible save to the one</div>
- <div class='line'>Who—seeing through perception—contacts light,</div>
- <div class='line'>That Light of ancient days, since passed away</div>
- <div class='line'>Into the sombre gloom of deepest night;</div>
- <div class='line'>Because in ignorance and selfishness</div>
- <div class='line'>Man willed to dwell in darkness on this earth.</div>
- <div class='line'>And now behold the fallen Lucifer!—</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou Morning Star of Truth—again arise—</div>
- <div class='line'>To touch with thy bright rays the mind of man</div>
- <div class='line'>And open to his gaze the Light of Love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Reflected in the silv’ry Crescent now</div>
- <div class='line'>About to crown the Living Cross of Truth.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Shine forth, fair Luna! Man hath waited long</div>
- <div class='line'>For thee—O bringer of the Golden Light.</div>
- <div class='line'>Surmount the Cross—thou Goddess of the Gods—</div>
- <div class='line'>Which suff’ring mortals here in agony</div>
- <div class='line'>Have borne along, desiring of their King—</div>
- <div class='line'>Of whom thou art—those better things on earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which He hath promised them in days of old,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall take the place of former things to pass—</div>
- <div class='line'>With mourning, weeping, bitterness, and death—</div>
- <div class='line'>Away for ever, as the first-born states</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Heaven and earth and sea no more to be.<a id='r154' /><a href='#f154' class='c013'><sup>[154]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Fair Keeper of the rays shed by the Sun!</div>
- <div class='line'>Whilst feeble mortals now deny thy power,</div>
- <div class='line'>We of the morn declare thee as thou art;</div>
- <div class='line'>The mediate force to govern all mankind,</div>
- <div class='line'>The force of love which mortals cannot know.</div>
- <div class='line'>For that man holds as love is passion foul:</div>
- <div class='line'>It hath transformed the earth into a hell,</div>
- <div class='line'>And none save thou can mediately stand</div>
- <div class='line'>To rid the earth—by Truth who comes from thee—</div>
- <div class='line'>From that curs’d tyrant in the world or hell,</div>
- <div class='line'>The devil—Satan—he that doth deceive,</div>
- <div class='line'>Accuser of our brethren, soon to be</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_463'>463</span>Bound hand and foot in heaven, then cast to earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>When angels dark and all who fight for him</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall fall with him through Michael’s power and might.<a id='r155' /><a href='#f155' class='c013'><sup>[155]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The grandest vision seen in heaven from earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Has burst upon the wond’ring mind of man,</div>
- <div class='line'>For woman has appear’d with Sun array’d—</div>
- <div class='line'>She stands on Luna, o’er her holy brow</div>
- <div class='line'>A coronet of twelve bright golden stars:</div>
- <div class='line'>She crieth out and travaileth in pain</div>
- <div class='line'>To be delivered of the Child of Truth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which is, in love, to rule mankind as one,</div>
- <div class='line'>The one great body in the Spirit <span class='sc'>Christ</span><a id='r156' /><a href='#f156' class='c013'><sup>[156]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Who cometh now a second time to man</div>
- <div class='line'>Through her who clothes him with a mortal form,</div>
- <div class='line'>Our Holy Mother in the Living God.</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet about the woman, as of old,</div>
- <div class='line'>Damned Satan’s lurks, with seven diadems—</div>
- <div class='line'>The dragon stands as knowledge of the World,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which would devour the holy child of God.</div>
- <div class='line'>But so-called knowledge is not ever true,</div>
- <div class='line'>Frail mortals know not that the states of Heaven</div>
- <div class='line'>Permit below themselves the states of Hell</div>
- <div class='line'>To be—that mortals there may feel the Truth—</div>
- <div class='line'>The everlasting fire, consuming Self—</div>
- <div class='line'>Destroying all the former things in man</div>
- <div class='line'>Through fiery sufferings induced by self,</div>
- <div class='line'>Through freedom granted by a Loving God.</div>
- <div class='line'>The Universal King in love ordains</div>
- <div class='line'>That man shall ever reap the crop he sows,</div>
- <div class='line'>And so the Woman clothed with the Sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who sows the seed of love amongst mankind,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall reap the fruits of love in Heaven—her home—</div>
- <div class='line'>Where happiness and peace eternal reign,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein the dragon hath no place—no power.</div>
- <div class='line'>All hail! thou glorious Bride, in Light array’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>O, woman, clothed with the Bridegroom’s Power,<a id='r157' /><a href='#f157' class='c013'><sup>[157]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_464'>464</span>Arise and shine! The time is now at hand</div>
- <div class='line'>To change this earth into a heaven bright,</div>
- <div class='line'>This hell into a paradise of Saints;</div>
- <div class='line'>Through thee alone can mortals rise from earth</div>
- <div class='line'>To soar into Eternity—God’s Peace;</div>
- <div class='line'>Through thee alone can man perceive the light—</div>
- <div class='line'>The Sun of Wisdom,<a id='r158' /><a href='#f158' class='c013'><sup>[158]</sup></a> which shall soon appear</div>
- <div class='line'>Acknowledged King supreme of all that is,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which He hath made in love for all mankind.</div>
- <div class='line'>Woman! behold a groaning world awaits</div>
- <div class='line'>The crushing of the Serpent’s power through thee;</div>
- <div class='line'>Look on the fairest cities of this globe,</div>
- <div class='line'>In misery the love-starved of the earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Now walk the streets; whilst degradation vile</div>
- <div class='line'>Confronts them in their daily—hourly lives,</div>
- <div class='line'>Because mankind will sell itself for gold</div>
- <div class='line'>To one, who is the prince of hell; he rules</div>
- <div class='line'>The States of falsehood in this mortal world</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein the moaning of tormented souls</div>
- <div class='line'>Appeals to God<a id='r159' /><a href='#f159' class='c013'><sup>[159]</sup></a> in mortal agony</div>
- <div class='line'>To ease the burdens of their earthly lives</div>
- <div class='line'>By teaching them of thee, O Queen of Heaven!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Woman, behold the sighing, wretchedness,</div>
- <div class='line'>Depravity, disease and death on earth!</div>
- <div class='line'>Pure life has left these mortals who transgress</div>
- <div class='line'>The laws of God by being of the world;</div>
- <div class='line'>They know not happiness and peace and thee.</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou art of nations all, the Saving Health.</div>
- <div class='line'>Stretch forth thine hands and save, O Queen of Heaven!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Woman! behold the man of war exists</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose work it is to shed the blood of him</div>
- <div class='line'>Who truly is a portion of thyself;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nay more, thine <span class='fss'>ALL</span>, within this weary state;</div>
- <div class='line'>The Father of thy loved ones in the flesh!</div>
- <div class='line'>How long wilt thou permit ungodly strife</div>
- <div class='line'>To keep thee from thy lawful throne on earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>The one great Empire that shall bow to thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>That thou alone can’st rule, Queen of the South?<a id='r160' /><a href='#f160' class='c013'><sup>[160]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_465'>465</span>O, Bride of Heaven, thou knowest well that He—</div>
- <div class='line'>The Son of Man—thy bridegroom—came to save,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not to destroy, the lives of men on earth!<a id='r161' /><a href='#f161' class='c013'><sup>[161]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Great Spirit Love! Bright Queen of Highest Heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>Send forth thy potent force, and let it fire</div>
- <div class='line'>The hearts of all within this little sphere;</div>
- <div class='line'>Show worldly rulers in their sinful states</div>
- <div class='line'>That thou alone art Queen of all Mankind;</div>
- <div class='line'>And in these petty princes of the earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Destroy, we pray thee, all the mortal lusts</div>
- <div class='line'>Of self, of gold, and praise, and feeble power,</div>
- <div class='line'>Implanted in their natures by the one</div>
- <div class='line'>Who rules them with their subjects in this hell</div>
- <div class='line'>Created by themselves through ignorance</div>
- <div class='line'>Of thee, O, Spirit Love, Blest Queen of Heaven!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Wm. C. Eldon Serjeant.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c028'>London, 28th January, 1888.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>EDITORS’ NOTE.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This second part of the three which form the bulk of the poem called “Twilight
-Visions” by their author—from a purely Kabalistic standpoint of universal symbolical
-Esotericism, is most suggestive. Its literary value is apparent. But literary form in
-occultism counts for nothing in such mystic writing if its spirit is sectarian—if the
-symbolism fails in universal application or lacks correctness. In this, Part II., however
-(of the third to come we can yet say nothing), the Christian-Judæan names may
-be altered and replaced by their Sanskrit or Egyptian equivalents, and the ideas will
-remain the same. It seems written in the universal “mystery-language,” and may be
-readily understood by an occultist, of whatever school or nationality. Nor will any true
-mystic, versed in that international tongue, whose origin is lost in the dark night of
-pre-historic ages, fail to recognise a true Brother, who has adopted the phraseology of
-the Initiates of the ancient Judæan Tanaim—Daniel and St. John of the Apocalypse—and
-partially that of the Christian Gnostics, only to be the more readily understood
-by the profane of Christian lands. Yet the author means precisely the same thing
-that would be in the mind of any Brahminical or Buddhist Initiate, who, while
-deploring the present degenerated state of things, would place all his hope in the
-transient character of even the <em>Kali Yuga</em>, and trust in the speedy coming of the
-Kalki Avatar. We say again, the divine Science and Wisdom—<cite>Theosophia</cite>—is universal
-and common property, and the same under every sky. It is the physical type
-and the outward appearance in the dress, that make of one individual a Chinaman
-and of another a European, and of a third a red-skinned American. The inner man is
-one, and all are “Sons of God” by birth-right.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The editors regret that, by an over-sight, the sub-title, “The Cross,” that headed
-Part I. of “Twilight Visions,” published in our January number, should have been
-omitted.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_466'>466</span>
- <h4 id='whitemonk2' class='c023'>THE WHITE MONK.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>By the Author of “A Professor of Alchemy.”</div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>“Margaret had been in grief so sad and potent since her
-brother’s death, that it at last brought her into a fever, from
-which, with difficulty, she recovered, and which kept her long
-to her chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“During this time the monk roamed like a restless spirit, seeming to
-seek her, and despairing because he found her not. Giles Hughson even
-went so far as to suspect he was no true priest at all, until he had seen
-his tonsure. Even then he was drawn into most sacrilegious surmises
-by what he beheld some few nights after.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Having some work to do in Castle Troyes garden, he noted the White
-Monk, his lodger, glide noiselessly through the grounds, hidden behind
-the thick black walls of yew, and pause under the casement of Mistress
-Margaret and stand there listening intently for a certain space. At last,
-with a gesture of despair, he slung himself with infinite agile stillness up
-some feet of the ivy that covered the wall, from which insecure footing he
-did long and earnestly search if he might see her shadow cross the room.
-Giles, the gardener, swore afterwards that the sight of that priest, with
-his cowl fallen back from his dark face, and that look of straining,
-terrified attention had in it something so partaking of the unearthly, that
-for the life of him he dared not accost the daring intruder. ‘Time
-enough if there were need,’ he excused himself afterwards, ‘but Castle
-Troyes is ever well enow defended, and at that time there must have
-been enough of inmates watching over Margaret, the beautiful, to win
-her back to life.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The horrible recklessness of an act such as this, with the carbines of
-a round thirty men within a few yards of him, made the monk seem to
-Giles a creature of charmed life, who may not be addressed as
-ordinary mortals.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But the White Monk saw his discoverer when he descended and
-glided away again, scared by some noise made by Margaret’s attendants.
-And thus there occurred a tragedy, which you shall learn as far as it was
-ever known.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Now Giles Hughson had a young son afflicted with total dumbness,
-but whom Mistress Margaret de Troyes had taught to write; and it is
-through this scholarship of his that we come to know as much as we do
-of what really happened. The White Monk appeared fond of this boy,
-possibly because he had seen Margaret kiss him. Thus the lad had
-greater access to the monk’s small attic than any other; and this is the
-tale he tells of the night after Giles had espied his lodger clinging to the
-wall of Castle Troyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_467'>467</span>“The boy had noiselessly, so as not to disturb the often musings of
-the solitary one, stepped up the attic stairs to fetch some trifle he wanted
-of the monk. Pausing timidly at the door, he beheld the familiar white-clad
-figure, with an air of terrible malignity, mixing some powder of a
-greenish colour, which, at the sight of the intruder, he hastily laid aside,
-thinking it had not been seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“But the lad was unnerved by the expression he had caught on the
-monk’s face, and he forgot not so lightly.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“At the frugal supper, that very night, he observed the monk ate even
-less than was his wont, and of one dish only, the which he also pressed
-upon the young lad by his side, seeming to wish to keep the others from
-him. The others of the family, Giles Hughson and his dame, did eat as
-usual, and were both found dead on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The monk strove to comfort the poor boy by every means in his
-power, but it was all of no avail. The lad seized a moment, fled into
-the wood, and there wrote down all that he had seen and suspected, with
-which account he presently did seek the justices. These caused proper
-inquiry into the manner of the deaths of the workman and his wife to be
-made, and, finding they had died of potent poison, instituted careful
-search for the person of the White Monk, who had vanished from the
-cottage.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“At length they found him, in a strange state for one of his way of
-living. Into the wood had he gone, but not so far as that he could hide
-him. He had stopped beside a little brook, where he had sat when first
-he saw fair Margaret, the sister of his victims. There, even there, was
-he found, in so deep contemplation that he never heard his pursuers’
-footsteps. He had made a cross of two elder branches (folk about us
-say that the elder-wood formed the Cross whereon Christ died), and
-having set it on the summit of a bank, was deep in prayer, as it seemed,
-before it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“One of his Italian repentances, I doubt not.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“He seemed in sore distress of mind, and lost to all thought of his
-surroundings.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“So they took him; the foreign wild beast, tracked at last. But not
-without trouble for he fought like the panther he was. Escaping
-lissomely from their hands at the moment when they would have bound
-him, the ex-bravo snatched a genuine stiletto from the folds of his
-monastic frock and stabbed one man to death, laughing coarsely at the
-stupid astonishment of the harquebusiers to see this weapon in so
-unseemly a hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“He had no chance, being taken thus unawares, and exhaustion came
-upon him; so, with tremours, the officers of justice held him fast.
-Before the first cord was fastened round his struggling wrists, he fell back,
-rigid, in their arms; sighed once or twice, smiled bitterly to himself at
-their consternation, and flung his head back, dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_468'>468</span>“A small quantity of a green powder was found on him (a large dose,
-I ween, had killed so hardy a villain!), and by comparing the signs of
-death with those of Giles Hughson and his wife, they saw he had
-poisoned himself some time within the last five hours. Whether he had
-seen Margaret again, and by seeing her upon the earth, had come to
-know himself too bad for it; or whether the weariness attendant upon
-sins so heavy had worn him out at last, remains a mystery. The leeches
-said a man so wasted and wan as this could scarce, in the way of Nature,
-have lived many years longer; but I question this, and so did the men
-who had so great trouble to hold him!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“News travelled slowly in those days from Italy to England, and it
-was not until very shortly after the White Monk’s death that our town
-learnt it had harboured Pietro Rinucci, the slayer of the two good
-brothers, Ambrose and Gilbert de Troyes. No one ever told Mistress
-Margaret that she had spoken with such a man. And now the beautiful
-maiden rose from her bed, and asked for her mostly costly gowns, of
-amber, blue and rosy colours; and went amongst her friends brightly,
-wreathed with pearls and radiant in smiles. She was thought to have
-recovered, though she looked ethereal as a daisy or white cloud; but
-she said and averred that she was dying, and that her brother Ambrose
-had appeared to her in a vision, bidding her make all speed to do what
-remained to her upon the earth and be soon ready, when he should come
-behind the angels to fetch her hence. Her kinsfolk thought she
-wandered in her mind. She asked for the man who had wooed her,
-and held long speech with him, very merrily, and yet with tears;
-beseeching him to pause e’er he rashly threw away his life on this earth,
-since we know not in the beginning, whither our pleasant sins may carry
-us, and when we have no enjoyment of them, save by memory, what
-are they to us? The instruments of our present ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘All this,’ said the lovely Margaret with a smile, ‘hath right off, my
-Lord, been heard, by you and others; but from a lady’s lips (and that
-lady who is even now bent to consider the past failings of her own life,
-soon to be taken from her) it hath been made evident to me, these poor
-oft-repeated words shall have some power. God bless you, my Lord—farewell.’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The gentleman came out from her boudoir exceeding sobered, and
-essaying as he might to conceal his tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The words of this dying angel—for so indeed she seemed—he vowed
-should be as a challenge to him from God to purify his ways. And
-indeed from that day the gentleman made such progress in godliness as
-can be made by one of his complexion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And now a strange and terrible portent was observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Those who watched by the Lady Margaret, began to see a vision,
-and of that most dreaded being, the White Monk!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Night or day, it mattered not; with a chill like to that of Death
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_469'>469</span>itself, the horrified watchers knew the presence of the phantom.
-In the dark corners of the room would shape themselves dimly the
-features of the murderer, Rinucci, and his monastic gown, so glaring
-white in its dimness through the dark that the eye could not search it,
-and gone, ever gone, if some bold spirit neared the spot where he had
-thought he saw it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><a id='corr469.7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='No'>“No</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_469.7'><ins class='correction' title='No'>“No</ins></a></span> one said aught of this to the Lady Margaret, in fear to fright
-her; and she alone, of all who watched, did never see nor feel the
-constant presence. It seemed sometimes as though the phantom
-yearned to make itself visible to her kind, half-divine eyes, but her
-thoughts were too high-set for it to be given her to see a sight so
-horrible.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“She was much upheld by visions then—her contemplative soul
-shaped to itself many fair sights and sounds that others knew not.
-Sitting by the open casement in her sun-coloured gown, with white
-arms, pearl encircled, leaning out, and her smile ever brighter as she
-murmured to herself, she would stretch far over the lattice and grasp
-at rosy clouds, which she said floated past her in the peopled air. She
-would reply, still leaning out and smiling, to what she vowed was said
-to her by wandering happy spirits. And all this while, behind her,
-there would stand the White Mystery, with slight hand lifting
-the cowl from a face whose eyes were as deep as death and more
-despairing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Small marvel that the murderer’s ghost should cling to our saint
-while she yet lived on earth! He may have known that, once dead,
-restored to Heaven, she would thenceforth move in worlds where such
-as he should never have the force to breathe.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And in her due hour she died; and after that for a space no one saw
-aught of the dread ghost. His spirit, drawn by some power to enter
-our house, wherein was held all he knew of goodness, had now no
-further business there, for a while. His loathed name, fraught with
-horror to your ancestors’ home, was now never spoken. It was thought,
-doubtless, that since Margaret de Troyes—the innocent avenger—had
-unwittingly caused the murderer’s death, the house he had so deeply
-injured was for ever free from his godless presence. And, indeed, for
-a while, the chronicles are silent respecting him. The next two generations
-were happy, and no great misfortune blasted the house. But in
-the third generation there were harsh feuds in the city, and much
-bloodshed, and several of your name came to violent and sometimes
-mysterious ends. Then it was that there arose a searching into past
-traditions to discover the secret of a certain white spectre said to appear
-about the castle previous to each calamity. Not all saw it; but still it
-grew known, and it bore a marked resemblance to an ancient portrait—hung
-up for curiosity’s sake—of Pietro Rinucci.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Well, young master, I myself served your grandfather, and I myself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_470'>470</span>can bear witness to the presence of the White Monk’s ghost on one of
-the shrewd moments of the family destinies. Wilt hear it? So your
-father was then a stalwart young man, away at the wars in Spain.
-Your uncles, two blithe young gallants, were at home at the time I
-speak of, and there was some merry-making toward in the castle.
-Myself was seeing to the torches in the garden, when I chanced to see
-your uncle, Geoffrey de Troyes, come hastily into the yew-walk with his
-rapier drawn, followed by another youth whom I knew well, his rival,
-and in some sort, his enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“As the guests danced within, these nobles fought without. A man
-dared not have interposed; it was matter of life and death to them, and
-they were there to prove it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I was glad, as I stood on the further side the hedge, to mark the
-vigour and the skill of our Geoffrey. Methought the vantage was with
-him, and with my whole heart I hated his opponent, the cold, selfish
-Ernle Deane, and wished him to succumb.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And so, by mine honour, he should have done, for my boy was the
-pride of us all for swordsmanship; but it was not to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Geoffrey de Troyes never suffered more from his mortal wound than
-I did in my heart and my pride, as I led him, bleeding piteously
-to this very stable-room, where he sank on the hay and said he must
-die.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘Look to it,’ groaned the poor young noble, as he lay dying, ‘that
-Mistress Beatrice Savile has this token from me—my gold chain—warn
-her from me when I am dead, that she wed not Ernle Deane—he
-is bad to the core, and she is too good to mend him. Oh! but for that
-hateful vision!’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘What vision, a God’s name?’ I cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And he told me trembling—he who had never trembled of his whole
-life!—that even at the moment when he had thought to subdue his
-enemy—even as he raised his sword to strike home to a worthless heart—even
-then had his arm fallen paralysed and a frightful shiver quite
-unmanned him at the sight of a poor monk in white, who stood some
-yards away, and raised his cowl with a thin white hand, and fixed
-unearthly eyes upon him with a steadfast look that drew the soul away
-from the deadliest earthly peril.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“‘And so I fell!’ cried the shamed noble, crimsoning though the pallor
-of exhaustion. ‘<em>I</em>—a practised hand, a not unworthy courage—a De
-Troyes! I fell—for this!—and so would any man have fallen,’ he
-defiantly ended, ‘for ’twas a devil—’twas Pietro Rinucci himself, who
-came from hell to lure me from my hopes of earthly happiness. O, life!
-O, Beatrice!’</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And I nursed him and wept over him like any woman, whilst one
-young, bright life more departed,</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“In truth, young master,” ended honest Ralph, “the noble Geoffrey
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_471'>471</span>may have been deceived, and fancied this; but, you shall pardon me, I
-would rather think that armies of devils nightly march these grounds
-than that one De Troyes was ever seen to quail, save under magic!
-Thus it is that I, and that many of us yet believe in the spectre of Pietro
-Rinucci, ‘the White Monk.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Oh these faithful servitors, they would die for us children of the
-house, I believe, and yet they have ever this curious bent to terrify
-the childish minds. I know not when it was precisely that I thus first
-heard the White Monk’s story, but this I know, I was young enough to
-sit with my clenched fistlets supporting my chin, and my eyes and
-mouth very wide open.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“And was he always in <em>white</em>, that fearful man?” I asked, somewhere
-toward the middle of the story. “<em>Always in white?</em>” I know
-not why, but this detail struck my child’s phantasy more powerfully
-than all the rest; <em>this</em> was awful, this was the pith of the whole matter,
-and from that moment I sat trembling, and drinking in the history
-with reluctant suspense, until it became the bane of my life for a term
-of years.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>For hours I lay shuddering ofttimes in my bed, dreading with my
-body and my soul lest the Monk should appear to me! And never had
-I courage to speak of this to anyone of the many loving house mates who
-would so promptly have put an end to my fears by leaving me no more
-alone at night. There is a keen, hard honour for children to maintain,
-and to them the confession of nocturnal terror is as flight to the soldier.
-So, as the banquet sped its course below, I shuddered lonely in my bed
-in the oaken room, often weeping angrily amidst my fears because I
-alone, the only son of the house, was the only soul in it left
-desolate.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A little later I was comforted in some sort by my baby sister
-Margaret, who was put to sleep in an adjacent cot, and being too tiny
-for Fear to reach, would sleep secure, all gold and white in the
-dusky gleam of our rushlight—the one oasis of hope throughout the
-terrible oaken room. Yet she in her turn, became a source of fear to
-me. Should the Monk appear, and should the dire extremity cause me
-to shriek, what would become of Marguerite? She would die of sudden
-terror. Worse—if he should stand by her bedside, raising his cowl off
-the awful face, and her blue eyes should open at that instant? How
-should I protect her?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But before I wander further, I must begin straight and tell how we
-lived, and where, and to what end.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Percy Ross.</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_472'>472</span>
- <h4 class='c058'>AN AUTO-HYPNOTIC RHAPSODY.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<em>When all desires</em> that dwell in the heart <em>cease, then the mortal becomes immortal, and obtains Brahman</em>.</div>
- <div class='line'><em>When all the fetters of the heart</em> here on earth <em>are broken</em>;</div>
- <div class='line'><em>When all that bind us to</em> this life <em>is undone, then the mortal becomes immortal—here my teaching ends</em>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>—<span class='sc'>Katha Upanishad.</span></div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c045'>I (Âtman) have crossed the sea—I have reached the other shore—I
-have triumphed over gravitation, my soul is in the sun-currents,
-moving sunwards with the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Where the currents are bearing me to I scarcely know, but yet something
-has been revealed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I died the mystical death, I was received by the Dawn-Maidens—the
-bright ones of the eternal twilights, the two bright Ushas, Ahana and
-Antigone, Isis, and Nephtys of Aanru.<a id='r162' /><a href='#f162' class='c013'><sup>[162]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Ahana-Aurora of Eternity laid me asleep on her bosom, giving
-me <em>amrita</em><a id='r163' /><a href='#f163' class='c013'><sup>[163]</sup></a> to drink, as Hebe gave to Herakles, and then I at once knew
-that I (<em>Atman</em>) was immortal; the Mask of Personality had fallen to
-earth, the Âtma was revealed—my true <span class='sc'>Self</span>—I knew my name,
-and found myself soaring sunwards. Then the Voice of that <span class='sc'>Dawn</span>
-said, “I give you the ‘Amrita’ of the cessation of deaths,” and her lips
-burning with sun-ardours, kissed my forehead, and said, “I bring you to
-the sun; when blind—on earth, that Sanskara of sorrow—you fancied
-your sun was nothing but a great centre of physical force—light
-and heat, and their equivalents; but it was Maya, the Earth-Queen of
-illusions, who thus deceived your earth eyes. Look now, and you can
-see nothing but a vast group of mighty spirit-wills clustered round a
-yet mightier Spirit centre, drawing from thence inspiration, and ever-radiating
-sun effluxes, for the good and advancement of those unhappy
-lower wills yet sunk in the earth. What you called light was intelligence,
-and heat was—love. Did not Koré suggest this to you, O my weak child,
-for she, too, was one of the Ushas, a Maiden of the Dawn, kindling your
-soul to love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I was silent to this question, for a dread sorrow clung to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Though” (began again the Voice) “the sun-souls attract the earth-souls,
-the lost ones, for a while, to bring them up to themselves by the
-path that leads to Nirvana<a id='r164' /><a href='#f164' class='c013'><sup>[164]</sup></a> ‘where there is no sorrow’; yet the sun-groups
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_473'>473</span>of Spirits are themselves attracted by a grander centre of force,
-and the Sun, with his planet-children, are speeding in a mighty orbit
-round a far mightier Soul-centre—the lost Pleiad—lost on earth to be
-found in Heaven. Dost thou not hear the solemn music of that tempest
-flight?” And then she touched my ears, and I heard the myriad voiced
-song of the blessed ones as they passed on rejoicing, and the
-Voice continued: “That lost Pleiad, the dove-woman, the ‘Woman
-Clothed with the Sun,’ who, as Jeremiah prophesied, should ‘compass
-man,’ is that eternal womanhood which attracts all men.” And the
-chorus of the psalm I heard them sing, as they passed on Pleiad-ward,
-was “Freedom and Love—Love in Bi-unity. The Two in One foretold
-has come even to earth.” And the souls in that Pleiad-world are
-infinite in number as the sands of the seas of countless worlds, elective
-affinities attract like to like, forming celestial choirs, each member of
-which breathes the akasian air synchronously with the other, and what you
-call in your earth-symbol-language their “hearts,” beat and throb in
-unison together as one heart, and thus become coalesced in, and by,
-love.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Listen, O my child, to the music of their breathing,” and I said, “Is
-Koré there?” Then I heard voices in Heaven, and I began to breathe
-the interior akasa breath synchronously with her—our breaths became
-one, I was mingled with, and melted in her; and lo! a great mystery!
-that Dawn-maiden changed to Koré, and Koré gave me the amrita of
-the Pleiad, and I knew that our biune love was immortal.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have passed over the deep waters, I am free, I have infinite peace
-and infinite joy, at rest for ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Have I not, like Herakles, slept on the bosom of Athéné, breathing
-the wisdom of her breaths? I, too, breathe internally akasian love-breaths,
-I live in the love-choirs of the Pleiad Sun, I am in the true
-Nirvana, where there is no sorrow and no desire, for desire is lost in an
-ever-abiding and eternal fruition. The Lotus has bloomed in the
-Sun-fire,<a id='r165' /><a href='#f165' class='c013'><sup>[165]</sup></a> and my soul is newborn in the pure white calyx, and floats
-down the golden waters that wash the eternal shores. I have found the
-“Path,” “suffering, and the cause of suffering” (separation from the
-loved one) have been seen, and have passed away, whilst we ever rise
-and pass onwards by the star-paths. I am no more blind, but, like
-Orion of old, gazing eastwards on that rising sun, the red flush of whose
-dawn is ever blushing in our central souls. I have received my sight.—<span class='sc'>Om</span>....</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. J. C.</div>
- <div class='line'>Lucerne.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c028'>Since writing the foregoing, A. J. C. has met with the following note
-contained in Mr. Edwin Arnold’s interesting essay, “Death and Afterwards,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_474'>474</span>which throws light on the views in said Rhapsody: “That which
-safely bears our ‘solid world’ in the gulfs of space is no base or
-basis, no moveless central rock, but <em>throbbing energies</em> in complex and
-manifold action, <em>in swing and wave and thrill</em>; whirling us onward in
-mighty sweeps of three-fold <a id='corr474.5'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='rhythm'>rythm</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_474.5'><ins class='correction' title='rhythm'>rythm</ins></a></span> <em>to which our hearts are set</em>. So
-therefore not solidity of base in fixity of status is our supreme and vital
-need, but moving <em>power beyond our ken or senses</em>; known to us in
-<em>energising action</em>, and working through blue ‘void’; impelling us in rings
-of spiral orbit round a moving sun in which we are dependent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The same book contains Walt Whitman’s beautiful and striking
-poem on Death, in which the poet says:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome?”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Yes, one other, the writer of the foregoing Rhapsody, has attempted a
-song in praise of Death the deliverer, and the Italian poet, Leopardi,
-stated in beautiful verse years ago that the world had two good things
-in it—Love and Death.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">“Due belle cose ho il mondo</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">L’amor e la Morte”...</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c059' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>OUR OTHER HALF.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>When our ancient brethren, the Kabalists, Jewish as well as Oriental,
-taught that the divine monad, starting on its long journey from the bosom
-of the Infinite One was divided into halves, they had a double meaning,
-one exoteric, the other esoteric. The exoteric one, being that the two
-halves, swept through cycles upon cycles of time, in search of each
-other; and, that, when they finally met, in a perfect union, or marriage,
-the two halves became one on earth, and after death, united again.
-The true explanation, however, the esoteric one, is, that each and every
-one of us, contains within himself, both the halves: the feminine
-predominating through some incarnations, the masculine through others.
-It adds that, when we evolute into the perfect being, the Adept, the
-Mahatma, both principles are in perfect harmony. Or, as the Kabalists
-have recorded it, harmony is in equilibrium, and equilibrium exists by the
-analogy of contraries. How often we discern in the most masculine of
-men, distinct feminine traits of character, and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vice versa</i></span>, in the gentlest
-of the fair sex, discover masculine traits.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Jewish Kabbalists represented these two principles in the letters
-forming their Ineffable Name. Its first three characters mean Eve, or
-Eva, or Hâyah היה or woman, or by another reading it means mother,
-and is, in fact, the proper name as given in Genesis for Eve, “the mother
-of all living.” Adding the character י Yodh or Yah, the male, the
-number one, the masculine, we have Jehovah, or Jah-eve, or being as
-male-female, the perfect number—10, symbolised by the Sephirothal
-Adam Kadmon.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A few evenings ago, while pondering on this subject, in a room devoted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_475'>475</span>to occult research, where an Eastern incense burning with a ruddy glow
-on the triangular-shaped altar, sent its refreshing fragrance through the
-apartment, my outer senses were lulled, and the inner ones came into
-play, and I became conscious of my other “half.” I saw standing before
-me, a being, whom I had hitherto considered as my guardian angel
-stretching out her hands to me, and saying—“my beloved one, know thy-<em>self</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The fire on the altar burnt low. The north-east wind, which had been
-blowing in furious gusts outside, lashing the bosom of the lake into
-white foam, died away, sounding like some far distant choral chant. An
-unearthly silence ensued, and seemed to pervade the infinitudes of space.
-A thousand voices spoke to me, saying, “Man, know thyself.” Shadowy,
-ghostly forms filled the apartment. One, more distinct than the rest,
-tall in form, clad in a long flowing garment of pure white, the long black
-hair falling in curly locks over his shoulders, the silky beard reaching to
-his waist, the light of centuries of centuries gleaming forth from his dark
-eyes—extended his right hand toward me. A thrill of unutterable
-delight passed through my being. Slowly I emerged from my earthly
-casket, looked for an instant at its sleeping form, then felt irresistibly
-drawn to the fair being, who still stood with outstretched hands, and
-seemed to lose myself in her. The twain had become one. The mystic
-union had taken place. For a few brief moments I realized the possibilities
-of <em>jnânayoga</em>, the wisdom-power of the adepts. Space was
-annihilated. I could see systems upon systems of worlds, galaxies of
-stars, suns and systems of suns, whirling through space. I thought of
-some distant place, and I was there. Complex problems solved
-themselves quite naturally: I had become all <span class='fss'>THOUGHT</span>....</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The extended hand of the tall form flashed before my eyes, and I
-became unconscious. When I awoke, I found lying on the altar a full-blown
-white rose. The north-east wind was again roaring in fierce
-gusts, the fire on the altar had died out. The mirrors had draped
-themselves with their curtains of black. The two interlaced triangles
-had merged into a circle, of pure gold in colour. Once more I took
-upon myself my objective life. But I had solved the problem which
-has taken me seven years to solve. I was content....</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>Bertrand Stonex</span>,” F.T.S.</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator2.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_476'>476</span>
- <h4 class='c023'>THE THREE DESIRES.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c027'>The first three of the numbered rules of “Light on the Path” must
-appear somewhat of an unequal character to bracket together.
-The sense in which they follow each other is purely spiritual.
-Ambition is the highest point of personal activity reached by the mind,
-and there is something noble in it, even to an Occultist. Having conquered
-the desire to stand above his fellows, the restless aspirant, in
-seeking what his personal desires are, finds the thirst for life stand next
-in his way. For all that are ordinarily classed as desires have long since
-been subjugated, passed by, or forgotten, before this pitched battle of the
-soul is begun. The desire for life is entirely a desire of the spirit, not
-mental at all; and in facing it a man begins to face his own soul. But
-very few have even attempted to face it; still fewer can guess at all at
-its meaning.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The connection between ambition and the desire of life is of this
-kind. Men are seldom really ambitious in whom the animal passions
-are strong. What is taken for ambition in men of powerful physique is
-more often merely the exercise of great energy in order to obtain full
-gratification of all physical desires. Ambition pure and simple is the
-struggle of the mind upwards, the exercise of a native intellectual force
-which lifts a man altogether above his peers. To rise—to be preeminent
-in some special manner, in some department of art, science, or
-thought, is the keenest longing of delicate and highly-tuned minds. It
-is quite a different thing from the thirst for knowledge which makes of
-a man a student always—a learner to the end, however great he may
-become. Ambition is born of no love for anything for its own sake, but
-purely for the sake of oneself. “It is I that will know, I that will rise,
-and by my own power.”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition;</div>
- <div class='line'>By that sin fell the angels.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>The place-seeking for which the word was originally used, differs in
-degree, not in kind, from that more abstract meaning now generally
-attached to it. A poet is considered ambitious when he writes for fame.
-It is true; so he is. He may not be seeking a place at court, but he is
-certainly seeking the highest place he knows of. Is it conceivable that
-any great author could really be anonymous, and remain so? The
-human mind revolts against the theory of the Baconian authorship of
-Shakespeare’s works, not only because it deprives the world of a splendid
-figure, but also because it makes of Bacon a monster, unlike all other
-human beings. To the ordinary intelligence it is inconceivable that a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_477'>477</span>man should hide his light in this purposeless manner. Yet it is conceivable
-to an occultist that a great poet might be inspired by one greater
-than himself, who would stand back entirely from the world and all
-contact with it. This inspirer would not only have conquered ambition
-but also the abstract desire for life, before he could work vicariously to
-so great an extent. For he would part with his work for ever when
-once it had gone to the world; it would never <a id='corr477.7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='he'>be</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_477.7'><ins class='correction' title='he'>be</ins></a></span> his. A person who
-can imagine making no claim on the world, neither desiring to take
-pleasure from it nor to give pleasure to it, can dimly apprehend the
-condition which the occultist has reached when he no longer desires
-to live. Do not suppose this to mean that he neither takes nor
-gives pleasure; he does both, as also he lives. A great man, full of
-work and thought, eats his food with pleasure; he does not dwell on
-the prospect of it, and linger over the memory, like the gluttonous
-child, or the gourmand pure and simple. This is a very material image,
-yet sometimes these simple illustrations serve to help the mind more
-than any others. It is easy to see, from this analogy, that an advanced
-occultist who has work in the world may be perfectly free from the
-desires which would make him a part of it, and yet may take its
-pleasures and give them back with interest. He is enabled to give more
-pleasure than he takes, because he is incapable of fear or disappointment.
-He has no dread of death, nor of that which is called annihilation.
-He rests on the waters of life, submerged and sleeping, or above
-them and conscious, indifferently. He cannot feel disappointment,
-because although pleasure is to him intensely vivid and keen, it is the
-same to him whether he enjoys it himself or whether another enjoys it. It
-is pleasure, pure and simple, untarnished by personal craving or <a id='corr477.27'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='desire'>desire.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_477.27'><ins class='correction' title='desire'>desire.</ins></a></span>
-So with regard to what occultists call “progress”—the advance from
-stage to stage of knowledge. In a school of any sort in the external
-world emulation is the great spur to progress. The occultist, on the contrary,
-is incapable of taking a single step until he has acquired the faculty
-of realizing progress as an abstract fact. Someone must draw nearer to
-the Divine in every moment of life; there must always be progress.
-But the disciple who desires that he shall be the one to advance in the
-next moment, may lay aside all hope of it. Neither should he be
-conscious of preferring progress for another or of any kind of vicarious
-sacrifice. Such ideas are in a certain sense unselfish, but they are
-essentially characteristic of the world in which separateness exists,
-and form is regarded as having a value of its own. The shape of
-a man is as much an <em>eidolon</em> as though no spark of divinity inhabited
-it; at any moment that spark may desert the particular shape, and
-we are left with a substantial shadow of the man we knew. It is in
-vain, after the first step in occultism has been taken, that the mind
-clings to the old beliefs and certainties. Time and space are known
-to be non-existent, and are only regarded as existing in practical life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_478'>478</span>for the sake of convenience. So with the separation of the divine-human
-spirit into the multitudes of men on the earth. Roses have their
-own colours, and lilies theirs; none can tell why this is when the same
-sun, the same light, gives the colour to each. Nature is indivisible. She
-clothes the earth, and when that clothing is torn away, she bides her
-time and re-clothes it again when there is no more interference with her.
-Encircling the earth like an atmosphere, she keeps it always glowing
-and green, moistened and sun-lit. The spirit of man encompasses the
-earth like a fiery spirit, living on Nature, devouring her, sometimes
-being devoured by her, but always in the mass remaining more ethereal
-and sublime than she is. In the individual, man is conscious of the vast
-superiority of Nature; but when once he becomes conscious that he is
-part of an indivisible and indestructible whole, he knows also that the
-whole of which he is part stands above nature. The starry sky is a
-terrible sight to a man who is just self-less enough to be aware of his
-own littleness and unimportance as an individual; it almost crushes him.
-But let him once touch on the power which comes from knowing himself
-as part of the human spirit, and nothing can crush him by its greatness.
-For if the wheels of the chariot of the enemy pass over his body,
-he forgets that it is his body, and rises again to fight among the crowd
-of his own army. But this state can never be reached, nor even approached,
-until the last of the three desires is conquered, as well as the
-first. They must be apprehended and encountered together.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Comfort, in the language used by occultists, is a very comprehensive
-word. It is perfectly useless for a neophyte to practise discomfort or
-asceticism as do religious fanatics. He may come to prefer deprivation
-in the end, and then it has become his comfort. Homelessness is
-a condition to which the religious Brahmin pledges himself; and in the
-external religion he is considered to fulfil this pledge if he leaves wife
-and child, and becomes a begging wanderer, with no shelter of his own
-to return to. But all external forms of religion are forms of comfort,
-and men take vows of abstinence in the same spirit that they take
-pledges of boon companionship. The difference between these two
-sides of life is only apparent. But the homelessness which is demanded
-of the neophyte is a much more vital thing than this. It
-demands the surrender from him of choice or desire. Dwelling with
-wife and child, under the shelter of a familiar roof-tree, and fulfilling
-the duties of citizenship, the neophyte may be far more homeless,
-in the esoteric sense, than when he is a wanderer or an outcast. The
-first lesson in practical occultism usually given to a pledged disciple
-is that of fulfilling the duties immediately to hand with the same
-subtle mixture of enthusiasm and indifference as the neophyte would
-imagine himself able to feel when he had grown to the size of a ruler
-of worlds and a designer of destinies. This rule is to be found in the
-Gospels and in the Bhagavad Gita. The immediate work, whatever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_479'>479</span>it may be, has the abstract claim of duty, and its relative importance
-or non-importance is not to be considered at all. This law can never
-be obeyed until all desire of comfort is for ever destroyed. The
-ceaseless assertions and re-assertions of the personal self must be
-left behind for ever. They belong as completely to the character
-of this world as does the desire to have a certain balance at the bank,
-or to retain the affections of a loved person. They are equally subject
-to the change which is characteristic of this world; indeed, they are
-even more so, for what the neophyte does by becoming a neophyte
-is simply to enter a forcing-house. Change, disillusionment, disheartenment,
-despair will crowd upon him by invitation; for his wish is to
-learn his lessons quickly. And as he turns these evils out they will
-probably be replaced by others worse than themselves—a passionate
-longing for separate life, for sensation, for the consciousness of growth
-in his own self, will rush in upon him and sweep over the frail barriers
-which he has raised. And no such barriers as asceticism, as renunciation,
-nothing indeed which is negative, will stand for a single moment against
-this powerful tide of feeling. The only barrier is built up of new
-desires. For it is perfectly useless for the neophyte to imagine he can
-get beyond the region of desires. He cannot; he is still a man,
-Nature must bring forth flowers while she is still Nature, and the human
-spirit would loose its hold on this form of existence altogether did it not
-continue to desire. The individual man cannot wrench himself instantly
-out of that life of which he is an essential part. He can only change
-his position in it. The man whose intellectual life dominates his animal
-life, changes his position; but he is still in the dominion of desire. The
-disciple who believes it possible to become selfless in a single effort, will
-find himself flung into a bottomless pit as the consequence of his rash
-endeavour. Seize upon a new order of desires, purer, wider, nobler; and
-so plant your foot upon the ladder firmly. It is only on the last and
-topmost rung of the ladder, at the very entrance upon Divine or
-Mahatmic life, that it is possible to hold fast to that which has neither
-substance or existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first part of “Light on the Path” is like a chord in music; the
-notes have to be struck together though they must be touched
-separately. Study and seize hold of the new desires before you have
-thrust out the old ones; otherwise in the storm you will be lost. Man
-while he is man has substance and needs some step to stand on, some
-idea to cling to. But let it be the least possible. Learn as the
-acrobat learns, slowly and with care, to become more independent.
-Before you attempt to cast out the devil of ambition—the desire of
-something, however fine and elevated, outside of yourself,—seize on the
-desire to find the light of the world within yourself. Before you attempt
-to cast out the desire of conscious life, learn to look to the unattainable
-or in other language to that which you know you can only reach in unconsciousness.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_480'>480</span>In knowing that your aim is of this lofty character, that
-it will never bring conscious success, never bring comfort to you, that it
-will never carry you <em>in your own temporary personal self</em> to any haven of
-rest or place of agreeable activity, you cut away all the force and power
-of the desires of the lower astral nature. For what avail is it, when
-these facts have been once realised, to desire separateness, sensation or
-growth?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The armour of the warrior who rises to fight for you in the battle
-depicted in the second part of “Light on the Path,” is like the shirt of
-the happy man in the old story. The king was to be cured of all his
-ills by sleeping in this shirt; but when the one happy man in his
-kingdom was found, he was a beggar, without care, without anxiety—and
-shirtless. So with the divine warrior. None can take his armour and
-use it, for he has none. The king could never find happiness like that
-of the careless beggar. The man of the world, however fine and
-cultivated he may be, is hampered by a thousand thoughts and feelings
-which have to be cast aside before he can even stand on the threshold of
-occultism. And, be it observed, he is chiefly handicapped by the
-armour he wears, which isolates him. He has personal pride, personal
-respect. These things must die out as the personality recedes. The
-process described in the first part of “Light on the Path,” is one which
-takes off that shell, or armour, and casts it aside for ever. Then the
-warrior arises, armourless, defenceless, offenceless, identified with the
-afflicters and the afflicted, the angered and the one that angers; fighting
-not on any side, but for the Divine, the highest in all.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator5.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>GOLDEN SENTENCES OF DEMOCRITUS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c035'>It is beautiful to impede an unjust man; but if this be not possible, it is
-beautiful not to act in conjunction with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Sin should be abstained from, not through fear, but, for the sake of the
-becoming.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Many who have not learnt to argue rationally, still live according to reason.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Vehement desires about any one thing render the soul blind with respect to
-other things.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The equal is beautiful in everything, but excess and defect to me do not
-appear to be so.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is the property of a divine intellect to be always intently thinking about
-the beautiful.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_481'>481</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>THE RELATION OF COLOUR TO THE INTERLACED <br /> TRIANGLES, OR THE PENTACLE.<a id='r166' /><a href='#f166' class='c013'><sup>[166]</sup></a></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>Colour registers grades of vibration. Vibration registers grades
-of life. Life, esoterically considered, is ascent towards its source—the
-great First Cause, the celestial sun which lights universal
-creation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>If a ray of white light is passed through a triangular piece of
-glass, called a prism, it becomes separated into the seven colours known
-as the “solar spectrum.” Careful scientific analysis has proven that
-these colours are produced by different rates of vibration.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It has shown that the slowest vibrations are red, the quickest <a id='corr481.10'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='violet'>violet.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_481.10'><ins class='correction' title='violet'>violet.</ins></a></span>
-The red ray of the spectrum gives 477 millions of millions (or billions)
-of vibrations in a second, the orange 506, the yellow 535, the green 577,
-the blue 622, Indigo 658, and violet 699.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus there is a regular ascent in the colour-scale from red to violet, and
-the trans-violet rays go on octaves higher, becoming invisible to the
-physical eye as their rates of vibration increase.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It has also been discovered that these seven prismatic rays of the
-solar spectrum correspond to the seven notes on the musical scale, the
-ray of slowest vibration, red, being a correlate of the base note of the
-musical gamut, and the violet ray answering to the highest musical
-note.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When the vibrations exceed a certain limit, the tympanum of the ear
-has not time to recoil before a succeeding impulse arrives, and it remains
-motionless. Darkness and silence are, therefore, equivalents for the
-cessation of vibrations on the retina of the eye and tympanum of the
-ear respectively. Incidentally it may be stated that cold is also
-considered to be the cessation of vibrations through the nerves of
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Colour, therefore, is to light what pitch is to sound—both depend on
-length of vibrations.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The thought will immediately suggest itself in this connection that
-if colour and music are thus correlated, the perfect clairvoyant might <em>see</em>
-a concert as well as hear it. This is true, and there are instances on
-record of such transcendent views. In one case of this kind, it was not
-alone a poetical play of colour springing into life under the touch of a
-German professor’s hands, but a host of airy sprites clothed in the
-various rays which called them forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><em>Isis</em> declares that “sounds and colours are all spiritual numerals; and
-as the seven prismatic rays proceed from one spot in Heaven, so the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_482'>482</span>seven powers of Nature, each of them a number, are the seven radiations
-of the unity, the central spiritual sun.”<a id='r167' /><a href='#f167' class='c013'><sup>[167]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is easy to follow along the lines of these suggestions, and trace the
-origin of chanting the seven vowels to one of their gods, among the
-Egyptians, as a hymn of praise at sunrise. In the so-called mythical
-Golden Age this must have been the mode of putting themselves <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>en
-rapport</i></span> or <em>in tune</em> with the Cosmic powers, and ensuring harmony while
-the vibrations were synchronous.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The third necessary correlation to be considered in this analysis is
-that of form. Scientific research has proven that not only are music
-and colour due to rates of vibration, but form also marshals itself into
-objective being in obedience to the same mysterious law. This is
-demonstrated by the familiar experiment of placing some dry sand on
-a square of glass, and drawing a violin bow across the edge. Under the
-influence of this intonation, the sand assumes star shapes of perfect
-proportion; if other material is placed on the square of glass at the
-same time, other shapes are assumed, varying in proportion to the power
-resident in the atoms to <em>respond</em> to the vibrations communicated.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is noticeable, however, that the vibration makes the spaces, and the
-sand falls into the <em>rest</em> places.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We have now discovered a triangular key—light, music, form—which
-will disclose to us the exact relations which colour sustains to the
-interlaced triangles, the six-rayed star, universal symbol of creative
-force acting upon matter.<a id='r168' /><a href='#f168' class='c013'><sup>[168]</sup></a> This triangular key is simply three modes of
-one being, three differential expressions of one force—vibration.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>That which causes the vibration we can only represent by the
-Ineffable Name, behind which burns the quenchless glory of En Soph,
-the Boundless.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus, in our symbology we start from the centre of a circle, which
-should be represented by white light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The seven rays issuing therefrom, must first pass through the interior
-and invisible triangle of Akasa, the prism A.U.M., before they can flow
-outward, and by their action upon chaos, wheel the myriad forms of
-physical life into consonance with their rates of vibration. In this
-manner is the visible formulated from the invisible. By such subtle
-music is born the gorgeous flora of our tropics, drinking its wealth of
-colour from the yellow and warm rays of the sunlight; and in accord
-with the same harmony is produced the subdued vegetation of colder
-climes. The blue and violet beams carry the quick pulses of the parent
-flame deep within the earth, and by-and-bye she gives back that which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_483'>483</span>she has received, transformed into a thousand brilliant hues woven in
-the magic loom of Love, presided over by the solar spectrum. Or, as
-Egyptian myth phrases it, Osiris (the sun) weds Isis (the earth), and
-the child, Horus-Apollo, glorifies all things as the product of this
-divine union.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The culmination of light resides in the yellow ray, and hence to that
-colour is given the East point in our symbolised centre of radiation.<a id='r169' /><a href='#f169' class='c013'><sup>[169]</sup></a>
-The others follow in the order of the solar spectrum.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But it is noticeable in this connection, that <em>in</em> that order, the coarsest
-and warmest of the visible rays—red—is placed next to the coldest and
-most refined ray, the violet. Here we have the analogy of contraries.
-The ray of lowest refrangibility and the ray of highest refrangibility
-become next-door neighbours in the divergent circle of necessity. What
-is the result? It is not hard to discover, when we know that the cooling
-colours are essential to the balanced action of the thermal rays. “A
-small amount of blue when combined with other rays will even increase
-the heat, because it kindles into activity its opposite warm principle, red,
-through chemical affinity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Having determined the law which should govern the symbology of
-colours at the centre of our circle, we come next to the interlaced
-triangles.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The truly Theosophical Pentacle should be made by the interlacing of
-a white triangle with a black triangle—the white representing pure
-spirit, the black, gross matter. This is the true symbology, for the reason
-that white reflects all colours, and black absorbs all colours. It is the
-face of the White Ancient looking into the face of the Black
-Ancient.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Absolute blackness appears to give back nothing; nor does it ever,
-save through processes of slow evolution, wrought by continued vibration
-upon its molecules from the Divine Centre of Light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Continuous vibration polarizes these particles, so that at last rising
-from the lowest grade of refrangibility to the highest, into the invisible
-octaves of being, our planetary chain in its culmination will reach a
-point where every atom will give an answering thrill of resonance to the
-throbbing of the heart of the Universe—the Central Spiritual Sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As every substance in Nature has its colour, so the human family
-publish their grades of advancement to the clairvoyant eye by their
-astral colours; and seekers after the true Light may know what “ray”
-they are in, by a comparison of their own auras with the colours of the
-overshadowing soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The middle rays of the solar spectrum—blue, green, and yellow—give
-a very powerful triangle, a wonderful <em>working</em> triangle of forces; for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_484'>484</span>green is Hermetic silver, yellow is Hermetic gold, and blue is a despatch-messenger
-from the “Lord of the Worlds,” Jupiter.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The blue and the yellow of this group, on account of their position—the
-third and the fifth reckoned both ways—have been chosen as the
-colours of our incense-holders, alternating on the points of the Pentacle.
-As odours are also correlated with colours, and as sandal-wood is the
-perfume which belongs to the sun, we use that incense to intensify the
-vibrations from the radiating points, in order to increase the volume of
-accord which will reach other centres at a distance; for the akasa is
-more sensitive than an Eolian harp—it registers the very <a id='corr484.10'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='arôma'>aroma</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_484.10'><ins class='correction' title='arôma'>aroma</ins></a></span> of our
-thoughts. It was, therefore, no exaggeration of the poet when he
-said:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Guard well thy thought:</div>
- <div class='line'>Our thoughts are <em>heard</em> in Heaven.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>But if colours and sounds are spiritual numerals, then the seven
-symbolical points of the Pentacle represent numbers of the greatest
-importance in world-building, and in soul-building also. For we must
-all build our own souls. And the symbology of the interlacing of the
-triangle of spirit with the triangle of matter, finds its correspondence in
-man, the little world, who, though a spiritual ego, yet dwells in a physical
-house, and whose business it is to merge himself completely into the
-region of the white triangle.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>When Man has raised his vibrations into perfect harmony with the
-universal sun, he has then unbound himself from the wheel of re-birth—the
-Zodiac—and is ready to enter Nirvana.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The word “heaven” in Hebrew signifies the abode of the sun. When,
-therefore, the Nazarene said “The Kingdom of Heaven is within you,”
-he virtually declared that all the seven cosmic powers are resident
-within us.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Esoteric science recognises man as a septenary, working in conjunction
-with other orders of numerals which register divine vibrations.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>All nature listens to that universal song, and the music of the spheres is
-no fable. The swarming zöospores in the protoplasm of plants hear it, and
-thrilled by that enchantment, fall into invisible rhythm, bringing up by quick
-marches into the region of Day the tiny dwellers in stem and leaf. How do
-we know that the mystery of the six-sided cell of the honey-bee may not
-find its solution here? Perhaps the bee is susceptible only to vibrations
-which fall into these lines, and faithfully obeys the master-musician in
-the construction of its hexagonal house. The great law of cosmic and
-microcosmic correspondence was revealed ages ago to the Sages who
-<em>listened</em>, and listening, <em>heard</em> the wondrous revelations breathed forth
-from the harp of Akasa. Sighing winds from other worlds passed over
-the delicate strings, and as they passed, uttered in soundless tones the
-profound mystery of near and remote planets. These Sages dwelt in
-that White Palace—the Lotus of the Heart—the sun-palace indeed.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_485'>485</span>From centre to circumference their vast circle of vision was permeated
-by the reflected <em>All</em>, and from the White Palace they ascended the
-sacred mountain Meru, where dwelleth wisdom and love.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The key which opens the White Palace is held by the seven mystic
-children of the Royal Arch of the Rainbow, guarding the seven gates of
-the Sun, every gate of which answers to a musical note, and every note
-of which enfolds three tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Hence, if we understand the analogies of colour, we may open the six
-doors of Nature, and also the seventh, to Nirvana.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>M. L. Brainard.</span></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator6.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>QUESTIONS.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>What can we do in temptation’s hour?</div>
- <div class='line'>How shall we conquer its fiery power?</div>
- <div class='line'>How can we master it—standing <em>alone</em>,</div>
- <div class='line'>Just on the threshold of things unknown?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Strong is its power as Death and Hell,</div>
- <div class='line'>Led by its lure, even angels fell!</div>
- <div class='line'>Dazed by the glare of a rising light</div>
- <div class='line'>How shall poor mortals see aright?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Tempted we were in the morning of life,</div>
- <div class='line'>With earth’s simple joys that are ever rife,</div>
- <div class='line'>To idly bask in the sun’s warm beam</div>
- <div class='line'>And to care no jot for a holier dream.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Tempted again in the heyday sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>To choose fair paths and in gardens run,</div>
- <div class='line'><em>Claiming</em> as ours, all joy—all love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Flowerets of bliss from the Heavens above.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Temptings come now, in life’s later prime,</div>
- <div class='line'>Deeper and stronger than in past time,</div>
- <div class='line'>To feed with fuel the inward fire,</div>
- <div class='line'>The passionate dream of the <i>soul’s desire</i>!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c060' />
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Two feet are creeping on paths unknown,</div>
- <div class='line'>Weary and mournful, sad and lone;</div>
- <div class='line'>Two eyes are looking and longing for light,</div>
- <div class='line'>Two hands are locked in a desperate fight.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A heart is breaking with pain and grief,</div>
- <div class='line'>A soul in strong agony cries for relief;</div>
- <div class='line'>Echoes no kindred chord above?</div>
- <div class='line'>Stretcheth no Hand in responsive love?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Is our Great God, but a God of stone?</div>
- <div class='line'>Are we—His people—dazed and alone?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is there no Ear that can hear us cry?</div>
- <div class='line'>No Christ,—to succour us e’er we die?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'>L. F. Ff.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_486'>486</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>A THEORY OF HAUNTINGS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_4 c033'>Very few persons realise the powerful and long-lasting effects of
-human “auras”—those mysterious psychical emanations which
-are mentally cognised, and which silently impress one as to the
-character of a locality, the <a id='corr486.5'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='indiosyncrasies'>idiosyncrasies</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_486.5'><ins class='correction' title='indiosyncrasies'>idiosyncrasies</ins></a></span> of a nation, a family, or an
-individual. Personal auras are strictly speaking the effects of the innate,
-and presumably hidden natures, of individuals, and are entirely
-the effluence of soul and mind. A house, or a neighbourhood, becomes
-imbued with the individual or collective auras of its inhabitants, which
-convey to the psychic senses, and thence to the mind, a powerful impression
-of character. At the same time within the aura of individuals,
-or families, are indelibly imprinted their thought-pictures, which may,
-or may not, have been embodied in acts; the faces and forms of
-relatives, friends, visitors, of the very animals they pet, the image of
-their pursuits, in short the whole life. These are imprinted in the
-<em>astral</em> element which surrounds each individual soul, as the atmosphere
-surrounds our bodies; and as the air we breathe becomes changed in
-respiration, so this ethereal atmosphere becomes transformed by personal
-impress.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Education, morality, religion, health, disease, happiness or misery, are
-largely the effects of the widely diffused auras of individuals continually
-given forth into the ambient atmosphere. As a man, or body of men,
-think, act, and live, such is the quality of the aura, or odylic sphere they
-emanate. This has an effect for good or evil upon all who approach
-within its radius; a formative, educating effect upon the ignorant, if it is
-of a high, intellectual, or spiritual quality; or a depressing, stultifying,
-deforming effect upon the minds and souls of innocent, or negative
-sensitives, when it is of an impure, debased, or brutal character.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thought governs the world. It is by thought, and its embodiment in
-acts, that progress is made. Every thought has its aura, and nothing
-can prevent its diffusion in the atmospheres, both the astral and the
-natural or physical. Hence being continually surrounded by the effects
-of thoughts universally diffused, we are insensibly governed by their
-aura of good or evil, and we grow in beauty, or are warped in deformity,
-mental and bodily, from infancy, under the moulding consequences of
-the local thought-auras of the family, neighbourhood and nation in which
-we happen to be born.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Psychometry proves that even stones retain the impression of the
-scenes which have been enacted in their neighbourhood. That is, the
-stone having been bathed in the psychic emanations of creatures, human
-and animal, during, perhaps, centuries, retains such auras indestructibly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_487'>487</span>in its atmosphere; and a psychometric clairvoyant will gradually
-perceive the most trivial details of the more active life which has daily
-passed in the vicinity of the stone. A fragment from the Temple of
-Diana of Ephesus, for instance, were it procurable, would enable a good
-psychometrist to describe every minute particular of the ancient temple
-worship and ceremonies. A stone from the Colosseum held in the hand,
-or to the forehead of a psychometrist, would produce a vision of the
-scenes in the arena which were wont to attract the Roman population.
-A fossil of some antediluvian animal would bring before the mind’s eye
-surroundings corresponding to the period in which the animal had lived.
-In truth, upon the plane of more ethereal matter adjacent to this, are
-to be found the images of all things, subject neither to time nor the
-changes of time; and there our image-producing faculties, temporarily
-divested of the blinding veil of flesh, may call them up at will.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The aura of a great crime becomes diffused in the neighbourhood of
-its commission, and concealment would be impossible if the psychic
-vision of men were open instead of being closed. A picture of the deed
-committed becomes impressed upon the astral atmosphere, with the faces
-and forms of those engaged in its commission. This effect is never
-destroyed, but may be recalled at will by a good clairvoyante. At the
-same time the aura of good deeds is equally powerful and indestructible.
-The one is like a transitory convulsion, disturbing the beauty of order
-and harmony with Nature; the other is the fixed and equable moral
-atmosphere arising from thoughts and actions consonant with wisdom.
-In short, the aura of good thoughts and deeds is the <em>pabulum</em> of souls;
-the invigorating and supporting air they inspire and respire, producing
-health, happiness, mental activity, and inciting to progress. If it were
-not for the good on the earth, we might doubtless often cry in vain—“Heaven
-help us!”—for we should be so smothered under evil auras
-that spiritual breathing, and rapport with purer realms of life, would be
-a radical impossibility.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A crime is the insane product of an unbalanced, disordered mind. It
-causes a species of astral electric disturbance, which is as sensibly felt by
-sensitives as any explosion or convulsion on the natural plane. Astral,
-or ethereal molecules become violently displaced, and forced into new
-conditions of juxtaposition. A mysterious terror pervades the air, which
-affects all neighbouring minds, even to the very animals. It is as if the
-living soul of Nature had been violently wrenched from its normal condition
-of peace and happiness, and stood electrified with horror, whilst
-upon its veil of ethereal matter is fixed an indestructible image of the
-painful tragedy which has been suddenly enacted.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We are, in fact, surrounded, upon the soul plane of life, by an
-atmosphere which receives, so to speak, a photographic impression of
-even our very thoughts, which is a mirror to reflect our whole life, an
-image-world, retaining sounds as well as forms. It may be made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_488'>488</span>subject to our will, which can call up before the mind, and make visible
-to the eye of the soul whatsoever, without exception, we will to see, to
-hear, or to know. The phantoms or apparitions of which we so frequently
-hear, are matters of fact to all psychic seers; are things as
-absolutely existent as any objects on the more familiar plane of dense
-matter. Once to realise this great fact, and to understand some of the
-laws which would enable us consciously to control, and illustrate to our
-satisfaction, certain of the hidden mysteries of the inner world of
-ethereal matter, from which our own proceeds as an effect from a cause,
-would set us upon a mountain height of knowledge whence all clouds
-of superstition, doubt, and uncertainty, would roll away.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>There are many stories extant of certain haunting apparitions which
-have been seen at various times during the lapse of centuries, reappearing
-again and again in the same families as warnings, or otherwise; or
-it may be a mysterious sound, such as the cry of the “banshee” in
-Ireland. The popular fallacy regarding such apparitions is that a <em>human</em>
-soul, or “spirit”—it may be wrongly called—is compelled, as a retribution
-for the commission of some crime, to remain on the earth haunting
-the scene of its former sins. Or, if the visitant be a benevolent ghost,
-it is supposed that it is some ancestor or ancestress, ever present in
-loving watchfulness over the destinies of the family, giving warning
-of death or danger. The idea of a human soul being chained in this
-melancholy fashion to the earth is exceedingly repugnant to most
-minds, and naturally excites the utmost compassion for the poor ghost
-which has to wear out so dreary a doom. Such a hypothesis contradicts
-all those religious teachings which assign to souls either a state
-of absolute unconscious sleep, until the day of judgment, or an abode,
-presumably in a conscious state, in heaven or hell. It contradicts all
-those more modern teachings of “progress” after death, of the gradual
-ascension of the soul to its place of rest. If we accept the ideas of
-Eastern teachers concerning those occult mysteries—that the higher
-self, the spiritualised entity, gradually separates from its more animal,
-or lower principles of organism, which adhere together for a longer or
-shorter period as a shell-like or shadowy personality—even then, these
-principles or ethereal molecules which go to form an astral body, disintegrate
-after a time. They would not be likely, at all events, to
-endure over a century. Apparitions of persons deceased <em>within</em> a
-century might be considered as essentially ghosts, or shades—the
-shadowy, sidereal shapes of personalities passed away from the physical
-plane, and in a condition of gradual separation from all that can attach
-them to the earth. And it is presumable that a phantom which is seen
-repeatedly during the lapse of centuries, is merely a reflection in the
-astral light, called up by the will of a seer; or projected upon the plane
-of soul-vision either by some psychological disturbance, or by some
-change of condition on the part of those who see the phantom. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_489'>489</span>immediate action may be due to “<em>elementals</em>,” those mysterious entities
-called by Liebnitz “Monads,” which are in close attendance upon
-mankind, and have so much to do with his very existence that he would
-fare but indifferently without them. Not only are they as intimately
-consociated with him as his own thoughts, but certain grades of them
-depend upon him also for their existence. These beings often become
-tutelary, or “house-spirits,” and the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>rôle</i></span> of re-appearing again and
-again, as a sort of hereditary ghost, to give warning of death or danger,
-is not incompatible with their condition of existence. Time does not
-exist for them, and one century would be like any other. They live
-in the personal or family aura, and become intimately blended with the
-daily lives of its members. When, as in the case of royal or noble
-houses, the family aura remains undisturbed in its ancient palaces or
-castles during centuries, a haunting elemental would find it an easy
-matter to make itself visible, frequently by a semi-materialisation, or a
-condensation of the ethereal atoms of its body. In such a case it would
-be seen objectively by anyone who happened to be present. In other
-cases, when an apparition is only a reflection in the astral light, a
-sensitive in moments of abnormal or psychic lucidity would perceive
-it. Others sympathetically inclined would perceive the same. At
-length, after repeated similar visions, the locality would get the name
-of being haunted. The image so repeatedly beheld becomes fixed in
-the atmosphere of that particular spot. Upon entering a locality with
-such a reputation a species of psychological inebriation would assail
-every individual so constituted as to fall under the effects of the aura
-already established, and they would then always behold the spectre thus
-ideally produced. These mental or astral spectres need not necessarily
-be merely immovable pictures. They will move, or walk, threaten, or
-act a pantomime exactly as they may have the reputation of doing; or
-as the person who beholds them expects or imagines them to be doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In some respects these apparitions or warning cries may be mental
-legacies left indelibly impressed in the astral light by the powerful will
-of a departed ancestor, friendly or inimical, as a blessing or a curse;
-or even by a member of some alien family, as a pursuing Nemesis which
-falls as a retribution upon the perpetrator of evil, but can possess no
-power over the innocent and good.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Frank Fairholme.</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='small'>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator5.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_490'>490</span>
- <h3 id='esoteric3' class='c018'>THE ESOTERIC CHARACTER OF THE GOSPELS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>III.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>No one can be regarded as a Christian unless he professes, or is supposed
-to profess, belief in Jesus, by baptism, and in salvation, “through the
-blood of Christ.” To be considered a good Christian, one has, as a
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>conditio sine quâ non</i></span>, to show faith in the dogmas expounded by the Church
-and to profess them; after which a man is at liberty to lead a private and
-public life on principles diametrically opposite to those expressed in the
-Sermon on the Mount. The chief point and that which is demanded of him
-is, that he should have—or <em>pretend to have</em>—a blind faith in, and veneration for,
-the ecclesiastical teachings of his special Church.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Faith is the key of <a id='corr490.12'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Christendom,’'>Christendom,”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_490.12'><ins class='correction' title='Christendom,’'>Christendom,”</ins></a></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c038'>saith Chaucer, and the penalty for lacking it is as clearly stated as words can
-make it, in St. Mark’s Gospel, Chapter xvi., verse 16th: “He that believeth
-and is baptised shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It troubles the Church very little that the most careful search for these words
-in the oldest texts during the last centuries, remained fruitless; or, that the
-recent revision of the Bible led to a unanimous conviction in the truth-seeking
-and truth-loving scholars employed in that task, that no such <em>un-Christ</em>-like
-sentence was to be found, except in some of the latest, fraudulent texts.
-The good Christian people had assimilated the consoling words, and they had
-become the very pith and marrow of their charitable souls. To take away the
-hope of eternal damnation, for all others except themselves, from these chosen
-vessels of the God of Israel, was like taking their very life. The truth-loving
-and God-fearing revisers got scared; they left the forged passage (an interpolation
-of eleven verses, from the 9th to the 20th), and satisfied their consciences
-with a foot-note remark of a very equivocal character, one that would grace
-the work and do honour to the diplomatic faculties of the craftiest Jesuits.
-It tells the “believer” that:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The two oldest Greek MSS. and some other authorities <span class='fss'>OMIT</span> from verse 9 to the end. Some
-authorities <em>have a different ending</em> to the Gospel.”<a id='r170' /><a href='#f170' class='c013'><sup>[170]</sup></a>—</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c041'>—and explains no further.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>But the two “oldest Greek MSS.” <em>omit</em> the verses <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>nolens volens</i></span>, as these <em>have
-never existed</em>. And the learned and truth-loving revisers know this better than
-any of us do; yet the wicked falsehood is printed at the very seat of Protestant
-Divinity, and it is allowed to go on, glaring into the faces of coming generations
-of students of theology and, hence, into those of their future parishioners.
-Neither can be, nor are they deceived by it, yet both <em>pretend</em> belief
-in the authenticity of the cruel words worthy of a <em>theological Satan</em>. And this
-Satan-Moloch is their own <em>God of infinite mercy and justice</em> in Heaven, and the
-incarnate symbol of love and charity on Earth—blended in one!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_491'>491</span>Truly mysterious are your paradoxical ways, oh—Churches of Christ!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have no intention of repeating here stale arguments and logical <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>exposés</i></span> of
-the whole theological scheme; for all this has been done, over and over again,
-and in a most excellent way, by the ablest “Infidels” of England and America.
-But I may briefly repeat a prophecy which is a self-evident result of the present
-state of men’s minds in Christendom. Belief in the Bible <em>literally</em>, and in a
-<em>carnalised</em> Christ, will not last a quarter of a century longer. The Churches
-will have to part with their cherished dogmas, or the 20th century will witness
-the downfall and ruin of all Christendom, and with it, belief even in a
-Christos, as pure Spirit. The very name has now become obnoxious, and
-theological Christianity must die out, <em>never to resurrect again</em> in its present form.
-This, in itself, would be the happiest solution of all, were there no danger from
-the natural reaction which is sure to follow: crass materialism will be the
-consequence and the result of centuries of blind faith, unless the loss of old
-ideals is replaced by other ideals, unassailable, because <em>universal</em>, and built on
-the rock of eternal truths instead of the shifting sands of human fancy. Pure
-immateriality must replace, in the end, the terrible anthropomorphism of those
-ideals in the conceptions of our modern dogmatists. Otherwise, why should
-Christian dogmas—the perfect counterpart of those belonging to other exoteric
-and pagan religions—claim any superiority? The bodies of all these were
-built upon the same astronomical and physiological (or phallic) symbols.
-Astrologically, every religious dogma the world over, may be traced to, and
-located in, the Zodiacal signs and the Sun. And so long as the science of
-comparative symbology or any theology has only two keys to open the
-mysteries of religious dogmas—and these two only very partially mastered,
-how can a line of demarcation be drawn, or any difference made between the
-religions of say, Chrishna and Christ, between salvation through the blood of the
-“first-born primeval male” of one faith, and that of the “only <em>begotten</em> Son”
-of the other, far younger, religion?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Study the Vedas; read even the superficial, often disfigured writings of our
-great Orientalists, and think over what you will have learnt. Behold Brahmans,
-Egyptian Hierophants, and Chaldean Magi, teaching several thousand years
-before our era that the gods themselves had been only mortals (in previous
-births) until they won their immortality by <em>offering their blood to their Supreme
-God</em> or chief. The “Book of the Dead,” teaches that mortal man “became
-one with the gods through an interflow of a common life in the common blood
-of the two.” Mortals gave the blood of their first-born sons in sacrifice to the
-Gods. In his <cite>Hinduism</cite>, p. 35, Professor Monier Williams, translating from
-the <cite>Taitiriya Brâhmana</cite>, writes:—“By means of the sacrifice the gods obtained
-heaven.” And in the <cite>Tandya Brâhmana</cite>:—“The lord of creatures offered
-himself a sacrifice for the gods.”... And again in the <cite>Satapatha Brâhmana</cite>:—“He
-who, knowing this, sacrifices with the <em>Purusha-madha</em> or the sacrifice of
-the primeval male, becomes everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Whenever I hear the Vedic rites discussed and called “disgusting human
-sacrifices,” and cannibalism (<i>sic.</i>), I feel always inclined to ask, where’s the
-difference? Yet there is one, in fact; for while Christians are compelled to accept
-the allegorical (though, when understood, highly philosophical) drama of the New
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_492'>492</span>Testament Crucifixion, as that of Abraham and Isaac literally,<a id='r171' /><a href='#f171' class='c013'><sup>[171]</sup></a> Brahmanism—its
-philosophical schools at any rate—teaches its adherents, that this (<em>pagan</em>)
-sacrifice of the “primeval male” is a purely allegorical and philosophical
-symbol. Read in their dead-letter meaning, the four gospels are simply slightly
-altered versions of what the Church proclaims as Satanic plagiarisms (by anticipation)
-of Christian dogmas in Pagan religions. Materialism has a perfect
-right to find in all of them the same sensual worship and “solar” myths as
-anywhere else. Analysed and criticised superficially and on its dead-letter face,
-Professor Joly (“Man before Metals,” pp. 189-190) finding in the <em>Swastika</em>, the
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>crux ansata</i></span>, and the cross pure and simple, mere sexual symbols—is justified in
-speaking as he does. Seeing that “the father of the sacred fire (in India) bore
-the name of <em>Twashtri</em>, that is the divine carpenter who made the <em>Swastika</em>
-and the <em>Pramantha</em>, whose friction produced the divine child <em>Agni</em>, in Latin
-<em>Ignis</em>; that his mother was named <em>Maya</em>; he himself, styled <em>Akta</em> (<em>anointed</em>,
-or <em>Christos</em>) after the priests had poured upon his head the spirituous <em>soma</em>
-and on his body butter purified by sacrifice”; seeing all this he has a full right
-to remark that:—</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The close resemblance which exists between certain ceremonies of the worship of <em>Agni</em> and certain
-rites of the Catholic religion may be explained by their common origin. <em>Agni</em> in the condition of
-<em>Akta</em>, or anointed, is suggestive of Christ; <em>Maya</em>, Mary, his mother; <em>Twashtri</em>, St. Joseph, the
-carpenter of the Bible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Has the professor of the Science Faculty of Toulouse explained anything by
-drawing attention to that which anyone can see? Of course not. But if, in
-his ignorance of the esoteric meaning of the allegory he has added nothing to
-human knowledge, he has on the other hand destroyed faith in many of his
-pupils in both the “<em>divine</em> origin” of Christianity and its Church and helped to
-increase the number of Materialists. For surely, no man, once he devotes
-himself to such comparative studies, can regard the religion of the West in any
-light but that of a pale and enfeebled copy of older and nobler philosophies.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The origin of all religions—Judaeo-Christianity included—is to be found in
-a few primeval truths, not one of which can be explained apart from all the
-others, as each is a complement of the rest in some one detail. And they are
-all, more or less, broken rays of the same Sun of truth, and their beginnings
-have to be sought in the archaic records of the Wisdom-religion. Without the
-light of the latter, the greatest scholars can see but the skeletons thereof covered
-with masks of fancy, and based mostly on personified Zodiacal signs.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>A thick film of allegory and <em>blinds</em>, the “dark sayings” of fiction and parable,
-thus covers the original esoteric texts from which the New Testament—<em>as now
-known</em>—was compiled. Whence, then, the Gospels, the life of Jesus of Nazareth?
-Has it not been repeatedly stated that no human, <em>mortal</em> brain could have
-invented the life of the Jewish Reformer, followed by the awful drama on
-Calvary? We say, on the authority of the esoteric Eastern School, that all this
-came from the Gnostics, as far as the name Christos and the astronomico-mystical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_493'>493</span>allegories are concerned, and from the writings of the ancient <em>Tanaïm</em> as
-regards the Kabalistic connection of Jesus or Joshua, with the Biblical personifications.
-One of these is the mystic esoteric name of Jehovah—not the present
-fanciful God of the profane Jews ignorant of their own mysteries, the God
-accepted by the still more ignorant Christians—but the compound Jehovah of
-the pagan Initiation. This is proven very plainly by the glyphs or mystic
-combinations of various signs which have survived to this day in the Roman
-Catholic hieroglyphics.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The Gnostic Records contained the epitome of the chief scenes enacted
-during the mysteries of Initiation, since the memory of man; though even that
-was given out invariably under the garb of semi-allegory, whenever entrusted to
-parchment or paper. But the ancient Tanaïm, the Initiates from whom the
-wisdom of the Kabala (<em>oral tradition</em>) was obtained by the later Talmudists,
-had in their possession the secrets of the mystery language, and it is <em>in this
-language that the Gospels</em> were written.<a id='r172' /><a href='#f172' class='c013'><sup>[172]</sup></a> He alone who has mastered the
-esoteric cypher of antiquity—the secret meaning of the numerals, a common
-property at one time of all nations—has the full proof of the genius which was
-displayed in the blending of the purely Egypto-Jewish, Old Testament allegories
-and names, and those of the pagan-Greek Gnostics, the most refined of all the
-mystics of that day. Bishop Newton proves it himself quite innocently, by
-showing that “St. Barnabas, the companion of St. Paul, in his epistle (ch. ix.)
-discovers ... the name of Jesus crucified in the number 318,” namely, Barnabas
-finds it in the mystic Greek I H T—the <em>tau</em> being the glyph of the cross. On
-this, a Kabalist, the author of an unpublished MS. on the Key of Formation
-of the Mystery Language, observes:—“But this is but a play upon the Hebrew
-letters <em>Jodh</em>, <em>Chith</em>, and <em>Shin</em>, from whence the I H S as the monogram of
-Christ coming down to our day, and this reads as יהש or 381, the sum of
-the letters being 318 or the number of Abraham and his Satan, and of Joshua
-and his Amalek ... also the number of Jacob and his antagonist ...
-(Godfrey Higgins gives the authority for the number 608).... It is the
-number of Melchizedek’s name, for the value of the last is 304 and Melchizedek
-was the priest of the most high God, without beginning nor ending of days.”
-The solution and secret of Melchizedek are found in the fact that “in the
-ancient Pantheons the two planets which had existed from eternity (<em>æonic</em>
-eternity) and were eternal, were the Sun and the Moon, or Osiris and Isis,
-hence the terms of <em>without beginning nor ending of days</em>. 304 multiplied by
-two is 608. So also the numbers in the word Seth, who was a type of the year.
-There are a number of authorities for the number 888 as applying to the name
-of Jesus Christ, and as said this is in antagonism to the 666 of the Anti-Christ....
-The staple value in the name of Joshua was the number 365, the
-indication of the Solar year, while Jehovah delighted in being the indication of
-the Lunar year—and Jesus Christ was both Joshua and Jehovah in the
-Christian Pantheon....”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This is but an illustration to our point to prove that the Christian application
-of the compound name Jesus-Christ is all based on Gnostic and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_494'>494</span>Eastern mysticism. It was only right and natural that Chroniclers like the
-initiated Gnostics, pledged to secresy, should veil or <em>cloak</em> the final meaning of
-their oldest and most sacred teachings. The right of the Church fathers to
-cover the whole with an epitheme of euhemerized fancy is rather more
-dubious.<a id='r173' /><a href='#f173' class='c013'><sup>[173]</sup></a> The Gnostic Scribe and Chronicler deceived no one. Every
-Initiate into the Archaic gnosis—whether of the pre-Christian or post-Christian
-period—knew well the value of every word of the “mystery-language.”
-For these Gnostics—the inspirers of primitive Christianity—were “the most
-cultured, the most learned and most wealthy of the Christian name,” as Gibbon
-has it. Neither they, nor their humbler followers, were in danger of accepting
-the dead letter of their own texts. But it was different with the victims of
-the fabricators of what is now called <em>orthodox</em> and <em>historic</em> Christianity. Their
-successors have all been made to fall into the mistakes of the “foolish
-Galatians” reproved by Paul, who, as he tells them (Galat. iii. 1-5), having
-begun (by believing) in the Spirit (of Christos), “ended by believing in <em>the
-flesh</em>,”—<i>i.e.</i>, a <em>corporeal</em> Christ. For such is the true meaning of the Greek
-sentence,<a id='r174' /><a href='#f174' class='c013'><sup>[174]</sup></a> “ἐναρξάμενοι Πνεύματι νῦν σαρκι ἐπιτελεῖσθε.” That Paul
-was a gnostic, a founder of a new sect of <em>gnosis</em> which recognized,
-as all other gnostic sects did, a “Christ-Spirit,” though it went against its
-opponents, the rival sects, is sufficiently clear to all but dogmatists and
-theologians. Nor is it less clear that the primitive teachings of Jesus, whenever he
-may have lived, could be discovered only in Gnostic teachings; against which
-discovery, the falsifiers who dragged down Spirit into matter, thus degrading
-the noble philosophy of primeval Wisdom-Religion, have taken ample
-precautions from the first. The works of Basilides alone—“The philosopher
-devoted to the contemplation of Divine things,” as Clement describes him—the
-24 volumes of his <em>interpretations upon the Gospels</em>—were all burned by
-order of the Church, Eusebius tells us (H. E., iv. 7).</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>As these <cite>Interpretations</cite> were written at a time when the Gospels we have
-now, were not yet in existence,<a id='r175' /><a href='#f175' class='c013'><sup>[175]</sup></a> here is a good proof that the Evangel, the
-doctrines of which were delivered to Basilides by the Apostle Matthew, and
-Glaucus, the disciple of Peter (<cite>Clemens Al.</cite> “<cite>Strom.</cite>” vii. 7, § 106), must
-have differed widely from the present New Testament Nor can these
-doctrines be judged by the distorted accounts of them left to posterity by
-Tertullian. Yet even the little this partisan fanatic gives, shows the chief gnostic
-doctrines to be identical, under their own peculiar terminology and personations,
-with those of the <em>Secret Doctrine</em> of the East. For, discussing Basilides,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_495'>495</span>the “pious, god-like, theosophic philosopher,” as Clement of Alexandria
-thought him, Tertullian exclaims:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“After this, Basilides, the <em>heretic</em>, broke loose.<a id='r176' /><a href='#f176' class='c013'><sup>[176]</sup></a> He asserted that there is a Supreme God, by
-name Abraxas, by whom Mind (<em>Mahat</em>) was created, which the Greeks call <em>Nous</em>. From this
-emanated the Word; from the Word, Providence; from Providence, Virtue and Wisdom; from
-these two again, Virtues, <em>Principalities</em>,<a id='r177' /><a href='#f177' class='c013'><sup>[177]</sup></a> <em>and Powers</em> were made; thence infinite productions and
-emissions of angels. Among the lowest angels, indeed, and those that made this world, he sets
-<em>last of all</em> the god of the Jews, whom he denies to be God himself, affirming that he is but one of the
-angels.”<a id='r178' /><a href='#f178' class='c013'><sup>[178]</sup></a> (Isis Unv. vol. ii.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Another proof of the claim that the Gospel of Matthew in the usual Greek texts
-is not the original gospel written in Hebrew, is given by no less an authority
-than S. Jerome (or Hieronymus). The suspicion of a conscious and gradual
-<em>euhemerization</em> of the Christ principle ever since the beginning, grows into a
-conviction, once that one becomes acquainted with a certain confession contained
-in book ii. of the “Comment. to Matthew” by Hieronymus. For we find in
-it the proofs of a deliberate substitution of the whole gospel, the one now in the
-Canon having been evidently re-written by this too zealous Church Father.<a id='r179' /><a href='#f179' class='c013'><sup>[179]</sup></a>
-He says that he was sent toward the close of the fourth century by “their
-Felicities,” the Bishops Chromatius and Heliodorus to Cæsarea, with the
-mission to compare the Greek text (the only one they ever had) with the Hebrew
-original version preserved by the Nazarenes in their library, and to translate it.
-He translated it, but under protest; for, as he says, the <em>Evangel</em> “exhibited
-matter <em>not for edification, but for <a id='corr495.23'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='destruction.'>destruction.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_495.23'><ins class='correction' title='destruction.'>destruction.”</ins></a></span></em><a id='r180' /><a href='#f180' class='c013'><sup>[180]</sup></a> The “destruction” of what?
-Of the dogma that Jesus of Nazareth and the <em>Christos</em> are one—evidently; hence
-for the “destruction” of the newly planned religion.<a id='r181' /><a href='#f181' class='c013'><sup>[181]</sup></a> In this same letter the
-Saint (who advised his converts to kill their fathers, trample on the bosom that
-fed them, by walking over the bodies of their mothers, if the parents stood as
-an obstacle between their sons and Christ)—admits that Matthew did not wish
-his gospel to be <em>openly written</em>, hence that the MS. <em>was a secret</em> one. But
-while admitting also that this gospel “was written in Hebrew characters and
-<em>by the hand of himself</em>” (<cite>Matthew</cite>), yet in another place he contradicts
-himself and assures posterity that <em>as it was tampered with, and re-written by a
-disciple of Manicheus, named Seleucus</em> ... “the ears of the Church properly
-refused to listen to it.” (<cite>Hieron.</cite>, “Comment. to Matthew,” book ii.
-chapter xii., 13.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='pageno' id='Page_496'>496</span>No wonder that the very meaning of the terms <em>Chrestos</em> and <em>Christos</em>, and the
-bearing of both on “Jesus of Nazareth,” a name coined out of Joshua the
-<em>Nazar</em>, has now become a dead letter for all with the exception of non-Christian
-Occultists. For even the Kabalists have no original data now to rely upon.
-The <em>Zohar</em> and the Kabala have been remodelled by Christian hands out of
-recognition; and were it not for a copy of the Chaldean <cite>Book of Numbers</cite> there
-would remain no better than garbled accounts. Let not our Brothers, the
-so-called Christian Kabalists of England and France, many of whom are
-Theosophists, protest too vehemently; for <em>this is history</em> (See Munk). It is as
-foolish to maintain, as some German Orientalists and modern critics still do,
-that the Kabala has never existed before the day of the Spanish Jew, Moses de
-Leon, accused of having forged this pseudograph in the 13th century, as to
-claim that any of the Kabalistical works now in our possession are as original
-as they were when Rabbi Simeon Ben Jochaï delivered the “traditions” to
-his son and followers. Not a single of these books is immaculate, none has
-escaped mutilation by Christian hands. Munk, one of the most learned and
-able critics of his day on this subject, proves it, while protesting as we do, against
-the assumption that it is a post-Christian forgery, for he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“It appears evident to us that the author made use of ancient documents,
-and among these of certain <em>Midraschim</em> or collections of traditions and Biblical
-expositions, which we do not now possess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After which, quoting from Tholuck (l. c. pp. 24 and 31), he adds:</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Haya Gaon, who died in 1038, is to our knowledge the first author who
-developed the theory of the Sephiroth and he gave to them the names which we
-find again to be among the Kabalists (Tellenik, Moses ben Schem Tob di Leon,
-p. 13, note 5); this doctor, <em>who had intimate intercourse with the Syrian and
-Chaldean Christian savans</em>, was enabled by these last to acquire a knowledge of
-some of the Gnostic writings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Which “Gnostic writings” and esoteric tenets passed part and parcel into the
-Kabalistic works, with many more modern interpolations that we now find in
-the <em>Zohar</em>, as Munk well proves. The Kabala is Christian now, not Jewish.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Thus, what with several generations of most active Church Fathers ever
-working at the destruction of old documents and the preparation of new
-passages to be interpolated in those which happened to survive, there remains of
-the <em>Gnostics</em>—the legitimate offspring of the Archaic Wisdom-religion—but a
-few unrecognisable shreds. But a particle of genuine gold will glitter for ever;
-and, however garbled the accounts left by Tertullian and Epiphanius of the
-Doctrines of the “Heretics,” an occultist can yet find even in them traces of
-those primeval truths which were once universally imparted during the
-mysteries of Initiation. Among other works with most suggestive allegories in
-them, we have still the so-called <cite>Apocryphal Gospels</cite>, and the last discovered
-as the most precious relic of Gnostic literature, a fragment called <em>Pistis-Sophia</em>,
-“Knowledge-Wisdom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In my next article upon the Esoteric character of the Gospels, I hope to be
-able to demonstrate that those who translate <em>Pistis</em> by “Faith,” are utterly
-wrong. The word “faith” as <em>grace</em> or something to be believed in through
-unreasoned or blind faith, is a word that dates only since Christianity. Nor
-has Paul ever used this term in this sense in his Epistles; and Paul was undeniably—an
-<span class='sc'>Initiate</span>.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>H. P. B.</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_497'>497</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Reviews.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c046' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>“SPIRIT REVEALED.”<a id='r182' /><a href='#f182' class='c013'><sup>[182]</sup></a></h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>The new work by Captain Serjeant (New Dispensationist and Fellow of the
-Theosophical Society) is certainly what he describes it as being, the “book for
-the age,” if, at least, it be admitted that the age requires arousing. I have no
-hesitation in saying that no such book has before been presented to the public.
-It sounds forth like a trumpet to arouse the sleepers from their crass forgetfulness
-of every law of Brotherly Love and Spiritual Truth. One might almost
-imagine, in reading it, the sensation produced upon his contemporaries by
-Ezekiel, when first he gave forth his prophecies to a wondering world; or by
-Bunyan, when he startled the English of his time with the magnificent allegory
-of the “Pilgrim’s Progress.” It is true that here and there whole passages are
-bodily transplanted from St John’s “Revelation,” but they are so marvellously
-dovetailed into the context that, without constant reference to the Apocalypse,
-it is almost impossible to say where the quotations begin and where they end.
-From a literary point of view this may be a fault; but if we recognise the one
-Spirit speaking through many voices we cannot deny that the same truth may
-call for repetition and expansion, and the same Spirit may emit again, with
-fuller details, what it has emitted before.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Were this an <em>orthodox</em> journal, I am aware that I dare not advance such
-tenets for fear the luckless editors should be deemed blasphemous by their
-subscribers. But <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> at least must allow that the Universal Spirit has not
-in the sacred books of olden times breathed its last words. Then, again,
-Captain Serjeant disclaims all <em>personal</em> responsibility for these utterances when
-he states that the very passages which the reader will find the most glowing
-in the fierceness of their heat, are not words conceived by his own personality,
-but given to him by processes well-known to Spiritualists as “direct” and
-“automatic” writing.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The root idea of the volume is that <em>one Spirit</em> permeates all men and all
-things, and that this Spirit is that of Wisdom, Love and Truth; yet that this
-Spirit is denied or hidden out of sight by its own children; and that not till it
-is again made manifest in the public affairs of the world, can mankind hope for
-that happiness which it is now vainly pursuing in every other direction save the
-right one, namely, <em>within</em>. The dedication of the book sounds the key-note
-of its contents; for it is inscribed to “Love, the Queen of Heaven; and to
-Faith, the Star of the Soul.” The inscription closes with the words “Follow
-after Love—Love never faileth,” and the reader is intentionally left to supply
-the third term, “God is Love.” It is in this conception of the Supreme that
-we shall find the whole meaning of the work. The words “God” and the
-“Father,” as also the “Mother” and “Christ,” are employed pretty freely;
-yet with this clue, we shall see that the writer believes in no <em>personal</em> Deity, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_498'>498</span>in one Universal Spirit, of whom each intelligence is a manifestation in the
-flesh, little though such being may show or know it.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It is impossible in a short review to touch upon all the striking features of
-“Spirit Revealed,” and I must, therefore, content myself with noticing but a
-very few, referring the readers of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> to the book itself; for they will find
-in it a “Guide, Philosopher and Friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The preface reminds one of a passage in Ezekiel too often forgotten. “And
-they were <em>scattered</em>, because there is no shepherd: and they became meat to all
-the beasts of the field, <em>when they were scattered</em>.” Captain Serjeant points
-out the necessity of a bond of <em>union</em> in these words:—</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“The contentions amongst many religious sects have been to a considerable
-extent responsible for the rise, growth, and development of numerous societies
-of professed religious, as well as of an anti-religious character. Each and every
-one of these Societies possesses its own peculiar views on the Deity, as well as
-on life and death, and though the majority of the more enlightened of them
-have evidently the same fundamental principles underlying the teachings which
-they endeavour to inculcate in the minds of men generally, yet the manifest
-confusion generated by what are seemingly conflicting opinions, tends, unhappily,
-to increase the bewilderment and distrust experienced in connection with the
-truths of the Spirit throughout all classes of Society in the nineteenth century.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>He then proceeds to claim for his work that it “places in the hands of
-Christian Ministers” (Note, that he employs the word “Christ” continually
-in the sense of the divine Spirit within mankind) “many powerful weapons
-wherewith to establish and uphold the universal Church of the Living God.”
-The preface, which is conceived throughout in the most elevated style of
-address, concludes with an appeal to “all who, in their hearts, are ready and
-willing to labour loyally in the interests of their less enlightened fellow creatures
-existing in this ignorant, selfish, and love-starved world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After a brief Introduction, couched in a prophetic form, the writer deals with
-the nature of God, man, matter, the power of Spirit manifest in and through
-matter, the omnipresence of Spirit, the Intelligent Principle, and the Seven
-Rays of Truth. In these seven chapters is comprised what I may call the
-theoretical part of the book. The following quotations must suffice to show in
-what vein these world-riddles are worked out. “We are endued with two
-natures, one of which is human or mortal, and subject to chemical change,
-commonly termed dissolution or death; the other, immortal or spiritual, capable
-of adding to itself by an inherent power to comprehend the nature, qualities and
-capabilities of all created visible things, which comprehension signifies the
-reconversion of all material existences into true ideas.” “It is an absolute
-fact that <em>everything is literal</em>. To the spiritual man symbols are literal; they
-are indeed more literal than the natural man considers what he terms facts or
-realities.“ ”<em>The ultimate atom is Spirit.</em> Finite wills are points on which the
-Infinite Will acts, for no creature can will without being a manifestation of the
-Supreme Intelligence who first wills that it shall will.“</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The subsequent portion of the book deals partly with an expansion of the
-general tenets laid down in these seven chapters, and their application to the
-present <em>practical</em> needs of the world; partly with prophetic utterances as to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_499'>499</span>near approach of an awakening of the peoples to their real position as members
-of one great Spiritual community. Under the first heading a very important
-document is presented to the world, being a form for enrolment in the
-“Universal Rights Support Association,” which if generally adopted in the true
-spirit would indeed herald the millennium. Under the second heading in
-Chapter XIII. a remarkable reading of part of the Apocalypse is given,
-commencing with the words from Daniel, “and at that time shall Michael stand
-up, the great Prince which standeth for the children of the people: and there
-shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a Nation even to
-that same time: At that time the people shall be delivered, every one that shall
-be found written in the book.” Such words as these are not to be understood
-on the first reading, and indeed will probably meet with nothing but derision
-from many. Yet <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> will see in them another and a most powerful battery
-opened against the powers of darkness to wage war with which is his own chief
-mission.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In conclusion I can only add that, in my humble opinion, few men have shown
-such courage in facing the ridicule of society as Captain Serjeant, and that he
-has chosen to risk the forfeiture of a place in social circles to which his right
-is undeniable, rather than give way to the temptation to prophesy smooth things.
-He is one of the foremost in the New Dispensation movement, and a man whose
-working power must be enormous, if it be measured by the labours which he
-daily and voluntarily undertakes. His peculiar style of writing lays him open
-to the accusation of calling himself the coming Messiah. If his accusers would
-only meet him face to face, they would find that no man is humbler than he, and
-none is more fully conscious nor more loudly proclaims that “individuality is
-but an emanation from the one Great Spirit,” in which alone he recognises the
-true Christ, the Saviour of the world. He would tell them that in <em>themselves</em> is
-incarnate the Spirit of Wisdom, and that it only awaits its union with the Spirit
-of Love, to manifest itself as the Spirit of Truth. How little he values his own
-personality and his own well-being or fame, those who know him best can testify.
-If Theosophy is to be a living thing, and not a mere intellectual amusement, it
-is by such men as this that it must be followed. Were there many such the
-world would soon be freed from its misery, by the force of their united volition.
-Verily their reward is at hand.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>William Ashton Ellis.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">TRAITÉ ÉLÉMENTAIRE DE SCIENCE OCCULTE, par <span class='sc'>Papus</span>.</span></h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>Published by Georges Carré, 58, Rue St Audré des Arts.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>This, the latest of the admirable publications now being issued by M.
-Georges Carré, under the auspices of “L’Isis,” the French branch of the
-Theosophical Society, deserves a hearty welcome at the hands of all students of
-Occultism, as it fulfils the promise of its title, which is high praise indeed.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The book is written and constructed on correct Occult principles; it contains
-seven chapters, three devoted to theory and four to the application and
-practical illustration of that theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>After an eloquent introductory chapter, M. Papus proceeds to lead his readers
-by easy transitions into the mysterious science of numbers. This—the first key
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_500'>500</span>to <em>practical</em> Occultism—is at once the simplest and the most subtle of sciences.
-Hitherto there has existed no really elementary exposition of its primary,
-fundamental principles. And, as this science of numbers lies at the base of
-every one of those applications of occult science which are still to any extent
-studied, a knowledge of it is almost indispensable.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Astrology, Chiromancy, Cartomancy, in short, all the arts of divination, rest
-ultimately on numbers and their occult powers, as a foundation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>And yet, though the students of each of these several arts must, perforce,
-acquire a certain knowledge of numerical science, yet very few of them possess
-that knowledge in a systematic and co-ordinated form.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Of course M. Papus does not, and cannot, give anything like a complete textbook
-on the subject, but he does give, in clear language, the fundamental
-guiding principles of this science. Moreover, he illustrates the methods of
-numerical working, by numerous and well-chosen examples—an aid which is
-simply invaluable to the student who is making his first entrance into this field
-of study. In the third chapter these abstract formulæ are given as they relate to
-man, as an individual, and as a member of that larger whole, called humanity.
-This completes the purely theoretical portion of the book, and in the fourth
-chapter we are shown how these general principles work in their application.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Signs and symbols are proved to be the <em>natural</em> expressions of ideas in
-accordance with fixed laws, and the method is applied by way of illustration to
-the interpretation of the Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus. The relation
-between number and form is shown as exhibited in geometrical figures, and M.
-Papus gives a clue to a subject which has puzzled many—the actual <em>influence</em> in
-life of <em>names</em>. This chapter is most enthralling, but lack of space forbids any
-detailed comments, for so much would have to be said.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Chapters five and six are almost equally interesting; full of lucid illustration
-and valuable hints to the practical student, they form almost a manual in themselves.
-But on one point M. Papus is certainly in error, though, since it is on a matter
-of history, its importance is relatively small. He attaches <em>far</em> too much weight
-to the Jews and to their national system of occultism—the Kabbala. True,
-that system is the most familiar in Europe; but it has been so much overlaid
-by a semi-esoteric veil, and additions and interpolations by Christian Occultists,
-that its inner grossness is lost sight of; so that students are apt to be led
-away from the truth, and to form erroneous conceptions as to the value and
-meaning of many symbols, the importance of which in practical work is very
-great. What esoteric knowledge the Jews possessed, they derived either from
-the Egyptians or the Babylonians during the captivity. Hence M. Saint-Ives
-d’Alvidre, his gigantic erudition notwithstanding, is altogether mistaken in the
-stress he lays on their knowledge, their place in history and their mission as a
-nation. This, however, is but a matter of small moment in a book, the practical
-value of which it would be difficult to over-estimate.</p>
-
-<hr class='c053' />
-<h4 class='c023'>THE NEW WAGNER JOURNAL.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>We have received from Mr. Geo. Redway, Publisher, 15, York Street, W.C.,
-the prospectus of a new Journal, “<span class='sc'>The Meister</span>,” which is about to be edited
-for the <cite>Richard Wagner Society</cite> by Mr. Wm. Ashton Ellis, author of “Theosophy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_501'>501</span>in the Works of Richard Wagner” (Theosophical Society’s Transactions),
-and of “Richard Wagner as Poet, Musician and Mystic,” read before the
-Society of Fine Arts. As Mr. Ellis is a member of the Committee of the
-Wagner Society, and a member of Council of the London Lodge of the
-Theosophical Society, we hope that prominence will be given to the esoteric
-side of Richard Wagner’s works; and for this hope we have justification not
-only in the pamphlets above alluded to but also in the words of the prospectus
-of the <span class='sc'>Meister</span>. “Religion, Art, and Social Questions are in these works
-(Wagner’s) presented to his readers under novel aspects, and such as are of
-the greatest interest to a generation which is eagerly scanning the horizon for
-some cloud which may be the harbinger of refreshing rain long looked for to
-quench the thirst of the arid sands of Materialistic Science.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The prospectus presents us with a specimen of the cover of the journal, designed
-by Mr. Percy Anderson, an artist who has already made a name for
-himself in other walks of the decorative art, and whose first attempt in this
-direction shows great power of broad effects of light and shade, and considerable
-expertness in symbolism. We hope in our next issue to review the first
-number of the <span class='sc'>Meister</span> which, we understand, will appear on the 13th inst.
-It will be published for the present <em>quarterly</em>, at the subscription rate of 4s. per
-annum, but we trust that it may shortly become a full-fledged “monthly.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/separator4.png' alt='decorative separator' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c018'>NEW YEAR’S EVE.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>All sound was hushed, except the sad sad bells,</div>
- <div class='line'>Chanting their requiem o’er the dying year;</div>
- <div class='line'>Alone I knelt beneath the watchful stars,</div>
- <div class='line'>And held communion with my restless soul.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The Old Year died, the sad bells all were stilled,</div>
- <div class='line'>And o’er a silent city, shone the pure cold moon.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then unrestrained my soul poured forth its cry,</div>
- <div class='line'>“O God Eternal, Changless, Sacred, O. M.</div>
- <div class='line'>Let my past die with the Old Year to-night.</div>
- <div class='line'>And when the joy-bells hail the New Year’s birth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Let each sweet note waft up a pæan of praise,</div>
- <div class='line'>Straight from a new-born Soul unto its Maker.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The New Year dawned, madly the bells clashed forth</div>
- <div class='line'>Beneath the stars, I still knelt on—in peace.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c037'><span class='sc'>Katie Duncan King.</span></div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_502'>502</span>
- <h3 class='c018'><span class="blackletter">Correspondence.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<hr class='c046' />
-
-<h4 class='c023'>AUTOCENTRICISM.<a id='r183' /><a href='#f183' class='c013'><sup>[183]</sup></a></h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>Man has made God in his own image. Taking his thoughts and passions, fears,
-hope and aspirations, with part thereof he endows his fellow-men, whose natures
-he knows only as figured and interpreted by his own, and thus he becomes a
-social being; with part thereof he inspires the inanimate world—“the sun,
-the moon, the stars, the sea, the hills, and the plains,” and thus he becomes a
-poet; “with the residue” he forms his God, and “falleth down unto it, and
-worshippeth it, and prayeth unto it, and saith, Deliver me, for thou art my God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The first of these processes is legitimate, indeed necessary, for there is
-a foundation of unity in human nature, however diverse and complex are
-its varied developments; and the humanity which dwells in all can recognize
-itself under strange disguises.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The second process is innocent and elevating, so long as it is kept within
-just limits, and claims to reach results subjectively, not objectively, true.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The third process is inevitable at a certain stage of racial evolution, but
-beyond that stage becomes absolutely noxious and degrading, because it
-extols as truth that which conscience and reason have begun to condemn as
-untruth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Dead are the Gods of Egypt, those supreme plutocrats, under whom costly
-mummification and burial in a sculptured tomb were the conditions of
-posthumous life, so that a poor man could by no means enter into the kingdom
-of Osiris. Dead are Jupiter, Apollo, Pallas, Aphrodite, the products and
-reflexes of Greek majesty, beauty and intellect; or, if not dead, they are
-immortalised only by the art of their human creators. Dead, or dying, as a
-power to be loved and feared, is that Jehovah who reproduces the cruelty,
-selfishness and stubbornness of the typical Jew, with his substratum of conscience,
-showing itself from time to time in a more or less wrong-headed zeal
-for righteousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In its infancy, every race unconsciously forms an ideal, and makes this ideal
-its God. As the race grows in civilisation the ideal is modified, and for some
-time the god continues to undergo corresponding changes, and is, so to speak,
-kept up to date. But increasing experience and knowledge bring increasing
-secularism of thought and feeling, and incapacitate the mind for reconstructing
-its Divinity. Religion loses its life-blood. In this stage, the <a id='corr502.35'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Deitry'>Deity</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_502.35'><ins class='correction' title='Deitry'>Deity</ins></a></span> is either
-an anachronism, incompatible with the highest instincts of his worshippers,
-and therefore holding them back morally and intellectually, or else he becomes
-a nonentity, an abstraction, which can have no influence on life and conduct.
-It is this effete conception which Dr. Lewins combats in the tract <a id='corr502.39'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='entitles'>entitled</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_502.39'><ins class='correction' title='entitles'>entitled</ins></a></span>
-“Autocentricism, or the Brain Theory of Life and Mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Man, in brief, is his own God. Saints and mystics, and all the most beautiful
-souls of all religions, have seen this truth as in a glass darkly. Christ
-expressed it in mystic form when he said, “The Kingdom of Heaven is
-within you,” and, “I and my Father are one.” But in Christ’s time Animism
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_503'>503</span>was so ingrained in human nature that it was impossible he could escape it.<a id='r184' /><a href='#f184' class='c013'><sup>[184]</sup></a>
-He had not the scientific data on which to found a true cosmology; and even
-had he possessed the data, he would have lacked the power to use them.
-Scientific habits of thought were necessarily alien to the mind of the Galilean
-peasant.<a id='r185' /><a href='#f185' class='c013'><sup>[185]</sup></a> He could <em>feel</em> rather than <em>comprehend</em> the unity of God, Man, and
-the World; but he could not know that this unity is centred in the thought-cells
-of the cerebral hemispheres, and that the Divine glory is the offspring of
-a material organism.<a id='r186' /><a href='#f186' class='c013'><sup>[186]</sup></a> Scientific synthesis can now give a solid basis to Christian
-and Buddhist mysticism, to Berkleyan and Kantian Idealism, by declaring that
-the brain is the one phenomenon which certifies <a id='corr503.10'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='it'>its</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_503.10'><ins class='correction' title='it'>its</ins></a></span> own nomenal existence.
-It thinks, therefore it is; it creates, therefore it exists. Yet Dualism is condemned,
-whatever stand-point we adopt. “For my main argument ... it
-matters not a jot or tittle whether you proceed on the nöetic or hyloic <a id='corr503.13'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='basis'>basis.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_503.13'><ins class='correction' title='basis'>basis.</ins></a></span>
-A European ought to take the latter, which admits of <a id='corr503.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='scintific'>scientific</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_503.14'><ins class='correction' title='scintific'>scientific</ins></a></span> research and
-discovery. An Asiatic or African, who has not the genius for original
-realistic research, may safely be left to the former.”<a id='r187' /><a href='#f187' class='c013'><sup>[187]</sup></a> Beyond himself, no
-man can think. We are apt to be deluded by the exigencies of language, and
-to look upon “our” ideas, “our” imaginations, as in some way separable from
-ourselves; as possessions rather than components of the Ego. Yet nothing
-is clearer than that the sum of these sentient states actually <em>constitutes</em> the Ego,
-so far as it knows itself; and that a “dominant” idea, engrossing the attention
-to the exclusion of all others, is for the time absolutely identical with and
-equivalent to the mind which it is said to “rule.” For moments which are
-eternities, because the sense of time is abolished, the musician may be
-“absorbed in” or identified with his sonata, the poet with his verse, the mystic
-with his vision of the Divine Essence. “I am as great as God, and He
-as small as I,” sings Angelus Silesius; but we may rather say that in such
-states of rapture the <a id='corr503.28'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='relatious'>relations</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_503.28'><ins class='correction' title='relatious'>relations</ins></a></span> of “great” and “small,” of “internal” and
-“external,” of “space” and “infinitude,” of “time” and “eternity,” are
-annihilated, and the whole universe fused into one point of light.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This feeling, rationalised and stripped of mystery, though not of wonder and
-solemnity, is the truth and life of Hylo-Idealism. Worship is done away
-with, not by iconoclasm, but by apotheosis. “By it we are, indeed, for ever
-and entirely relieved from the humiliating and overwhelming sense of human
-insignificance, thus making ourselves quite at home in the more than terrestrial
-grandeurs of the universe, in which our planet is but a sand-grain.”<a id='r188' /><a href='#f188' class='c013'><sup>[188]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In conclusion, I should like to recommend Dr. Lewins’s tractate, with its
-Introduction by Mr. Courtney, and its succinct and luminous Appendix by
-G. M. Mc., and also Mr. Courtney’s articles reprinted from “Our Corner” to
-the attention of all sincere souls. Hylo-Idealism, or “Autocentricism,” has
-the merit of not being negative merely, but also positive and constructive,
-substituting for the “renunciation” preached by Christ and Buddha, a perfect
-fulfilment of self, and conquering selfishness by self-expansion. It is thus
-especially potent in the fields of theoretical and practical ethics, indeed the
-central idea of Spinoza’s admirable and still unsurpassed analysis of the
-Passions is distinctly deducible from our thesis, though generally regarded as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_504'>504</span>an excrescence rather than a natural growth from his own. Upon all this I
-cannot, at present, dwell, but must content myself with the bare indication of
-fields of thought and action which are “white already to the harvest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On the Nile, <i>Dec.</i> 1887.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>C. N.</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-<h4 class='c023'>WHAT OF PHENOMENA?</h4>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“I avail myself of your invitation to correspondents, in order to ask a question.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“How is it that we hear nothing now of the signs and wonders with which Neo-theosophy
-was ushered in? Is the ‘age of miracles’ past in the Society?</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Yours respectfully,</div>
- <div class='line in17'>“*”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Occult phenomena,” is what our correspondent apparently refers to.
-They failed to produce the desired effect, but they were, in no sense of the
-word, “miracles.” It was supposed that intelligent people, especially men of
-science, would, at least, have recognised the existence of a new and deeply
-interesting field of enquiry and research when they witnessed physical effects
-produced at will, for which they were not able to account. It was supposed that
-theologians would have welcomed the proof, of which they stand so sadly in
-need in these agnostic days, that the soul and the spirit are not mere creations
-of their fancy, due to ignorance of the physical constitution of man, but entities
-quite as real as the body, and much more important. These expectations were
-not realized. The phenomena were misunderstood and misrepresented, both
-as regards their nature and their purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In the light which experience has now thrown upon the matter the explanation
-of this unfortunate circumstance is not far to seek. Neither science nor
-religion acknowledges the existence of the Occult, as the term is understood and
-employed in theosophy; in the sense, that is to say, of a super-material, but not
-super-natural, region, governed by law; nor do they recognise the existence of
-latent powers and possibilities in man. Any interference with the every-day
-routine of the material world is attributed, by religion, to the arbitrary will of a
-good or an evil autocrat, inhabiting a supernatural region inaccessible to man,
-and subject to no law, either in his actions or constitution, and for a knowledge
-of whose ideas and wishes mortals are entirely dependent upon inspired communications
-delivered through an accredited messenger. The power of working
-so-called miracles has always been deemed the proper and sufficient credentials
-of a messenger from heaven, and the mental habit of regarding any occult power
-in that light is still so strong that any exercise of that power is supposed to be
-“miraculous,” or to claim to be so. It is needless to say that this way of
-regarding extraordinary occurrences is in direct opposition to the scientific
-spirit of the age, nor is it the position practically occupied by the more intelligent
-portion of mankind at present. When people see wonders, nowadays, the
-sentiment excited in their minds is no longer veneration and awe, but curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was in the hope of arousing and utilizing this spirit of curiosity that occult
-phenomena were shown. It was believed that this manipulation of forces of
-nature which lie below the surface—that surface of things which modern science
-scratches and pecks at so industriously and so proudly—would have led to enquiry
-into the nature and the laws of those forces, unknown to science, but perfectly
-known to occultism. That the phenomena did excite curiosity in the minds of
-those who witnessed them, is certainly true, but it was, unfortunately, for the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_505'>505</span>part of an idle kind. The greater number of the witnesses developed an
-insatiable appetite for phenomena for their own sake, without any thought of
-studying the philosophy or the science of whose truth and power the phenomena
-were merely trivial and, so to say, accidental illustrations. In but a few
-cases the curiosity which was awakened gave birth to the serious desire to study
-the philosophy and the science themselves and for their own sake.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Experience has taught the leaders of the movement that the vast majority of
-professing Christians are absolutely precluded by their mental condition and
-attitude—the result of centuries of superstitious teaching—from calmly examining
-the phenomena in their aspect of natural occurrences governed by law. The
-Roman Catholic Church, true to its traditions, excuses itself from the
-examination of any occult phenomena on the plea that they are necessarily the
-work of the Devil, whenever they occur outside of its own pale, since it has a
-lawful monopoly of the legitimate miracle business. The Protestant Church
-denies the personal intervention of the Evil One on the material plane; but,
-never having gone into the miracle business itself, it is apparently a little
-doubtful whether it would know a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>bona-fide</i></span> miracle if it saw one, but, being just
-as unable as its elder sister to conceive the extension of the reign of law
-beyond the limits of matter and force, as known to us in our present state of
-consciousness, it excuses itself from the study of occult phenomena on the plea
-that they lie within the province of science rather than of religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Now science has its miracles as well as the Church of Rome. But, as it is
-altogether dependent upon its instrument maker for the production of these
-miracles, and, as it claims to be in possession of the last known word in regard
-to the laws of nature, it was hardly to be expected that it would take very kindly
-to “miracles,” in whose production apparatus has no part, and which claim to be
-instances of the operation of forces and laws of which it has no knowledge.
-Modern science, moreover, labours under disabilities with respect to the investigation
-of the Occult quite as embarrassing as those of Religion; for, while
-Religion cannot grasp the idea of natural law as applied to the supersensuous
-Universe, Science does not allow the existence of any supersensuous universe
-at all to which the reign of law could be extended; nor can it conceive the
-possibility of any other state of consciousness than our present terrestrial one.
-It was, therefore, hardly to be expected that science would undertake the task
-it was called upon to perform with much earnestness and enthusiasm; and,
-indeed, it seems to have felt that it was not expected to treat the phenomena of
-occultism less cavalierly than it had treated divine miracles. So it calmly proceeded
-at once to pooh-pooh the phenomena; and, when obliged to express
-some kind of opinion, it did not hesitate, without examination, and on hearsay
-reports, to attribute them to fraudulent contrivances—wires, trap-doors and so
-forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>It was bad enough for the leaders of the movement, when they endeavoured
-to call the attention of the world to the great and unknown field for scientific
-and religious enquiry which lies on the borderland between matter and spirit,
-to find themselves set down as agents of his Satanic Majesty, or as superior
-adepts in the charlatan line; but the unkindest cut of all, perhaps, came from a
-class of people whose own experiences, rightly understood, ought certainly to
-have taught them better: the occult phenomena were claimed by the Spiritualists
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_506'>506</span>as the work of their dear departed ones, but the leaders in Theosophy
-were declared to be somewhat less even than mediums in disguise.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Never were the phenomena presented in any other character than that of
-instances of a power <em>over perfectly natural though unrecognised forces</em>, and
-incidentally over matter, possessed by certain individuals who have attained to
-a larger and higher knowledge of the Universe than has been reached by scientists
-and theologians, or can ever be reached by them, by the roads they are now
-respectively pursuing. Yet this power is latent in all men, and could, in time,
-be wielded by anyone who would cultivate the knowledge and conform to the
-conditions necessary for its development. Nevertheless, except in a few isolated
-and honourable instances, never was it received in any other character than
-as would-be miracles, or as works of the Devil, or as vulgar tricks, or as
-amusing gape-seed, or as the performances of those dangerous “spooks” that
-masquerade in séance rooms, and feed on the vital energies of mediums and
-sitters. And, from all sides, theosophy and theosophists were attacked with a
-rancour and bitterness, with an absolute disregard alike of fact and logic, and
-with malice, hatred and uncharitableness that would be utterly inconceivable,
-did not religious history teach us what mean and unreasoning animals ignorant
-men become when their cherished prejudices are touched; and did not the
-history of scientific research teach us, in its turn, how very like an ignorant man
-a learned man can behave, when the truth of his theories is called in question.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>An occultist can produce phenomena, but he cannot supply the world with
-brains, nor with the intelligence and good faith necessary to understand and
-appreciate them. Therefore, it is hardly to be wondered at, that <em>word</em> came to
-abandon phenomena and let the ideas of Theosophy stand on their own intrinsic
-merits.</p>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>MR. MOHINI M. CHATTERJI.</div>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Will you kindly afford publicity in the pages of Lucifer to the enclosed
-letter I have just received from Mr. Mohini M. Chatterji who has been
-staying for a few months at Rome, with English friends, on his way back
-to India.—Yours very truly,</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>A. P. Sinnett</span>.</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE LONDON LODGE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>,—I understand that among the members of your Society there is a rumour
-to the effect that I have joined the Roman Catholic Church, which has caused
-much annoyance to my friends and also to myself. I beg therefore that you
-will do me the justice to make it known that the rumour is entirely false and
-that I have no desire to join any Christian Church.—I am, Sir, your obedient
-servant,</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Mohini M. Chatterji</span>.</div>
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Rome</span> (Italy), <i>January 30th, 1888</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><i>To the Editors of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>On behalf of the members of the London Lodge, I beg to state that the
-rumour referred to in Mr. Mohini’s letter emanated from two acquaintances of
-his belonging to the Romish Church, who themselves derived their information
-from the R. C. priesthood. As for the members of the L. L. they never believed
-in this report.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Bertram Keightley</span>, Hon. Sec.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_507'>507</span>
- <h3 class='c011'><span class="blackletter">CORRESPONDENCE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c032'>[The editors have received the two following
-letters—one from the learned
-Founder of Hylo-Idealism, the other from
-a gentleman, a casual correspondent, of
-whom they know <em>absolutely nothing</em> except
-his most extraordinary way of expressing
-his thoughts in words and terms
-hitherto unheard by ordinary mortals.
-Both take the editors to task for using
-their undeniable right of criticism and
-editorial judgment. As <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>, however,
-is a magazine <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sui generis</i></span>, and as its
-policy is the greatest possible tolerance
-and fairness to all parties concerned, it
-will abstain from its legal prerogative of
-leaving the letters without reply or notice.
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> hands them over, therefore, to
-the “<span class='sc'>Adversary</span>,” to be dealt with according
-to their respective merits. The
-editors have never pretended to an
-“understanding of Hylo-Idealism” nor
-do they entertain any such rash hope for
-the future. They belong to that humble
-class of mortals who labour to their dying
-day under the belief that 2 × 2 = 4, and
-can by no means, even hylo-idealistic,
-make 5. “C. N.”’s letter placed the new
-“philosophy” in an entirely different
-light; firstly, because it is written in good
-English, and because the style of the
-writer is extremely attractive; and secondly,
-because at least one point has now
-been made clear to the editors: “Hylo-Idealism”
-is, like modern spiritualism, the
-<em>essence of transcendental materialism</em>. If
-in Mr. Huxley’s opinion Comte’s Positivism
-is, in practice, “Catholicism <em>minus</em>
-Christianity,” in the views of the editors
-of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> Hylo-Idealism is “Metaphysics
-<em>minus</em> psychology and—<em>physics</em>.”
-Let its apostles explain away its flagrant
-contradictions, and then <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> will be
-the first to render justice to it as a philosophy.
-Meanwhile, it can only acknowledge
-a number of remarkably profound
-thoughts that are to be found scattered in
-independent solitude throughout the
-letters of Dr. Lewins (Humanism <i>v.</i>
-Theism) and others, and—no more.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'><i>re</i> HYLO-IDEALISM.</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>To the Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Perhaps space may be found in the
-February or other early issue of your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_508'>508</span>interesting and suggestive serial for the
-present curt communication. In a footnote
-of your January number I am
-coupled with Mr. H. Spencer as being more
-Atheist than Moleschott and Büchner—to
-say nothing of such compromising and
-irresolute scientists as Darwin, Huxley,
-and Co. Now, that atheistic or non-animist
-standpoint is the pivot on which
-my whole synthesis revolves; and is, I
-contend, the burning problem at this
-epoch—ethical and intellectual—of the
-human mind—<em>thoroughly</em> to establish
-on certain concrete, rational and
-scientific <em>data</em>, that is to say—not on the
-Utopias of Speculation and Metaphysics.
-My principle is exactly that of Kant (inter
-alios) when he formulates the “Thing in
-Itself.” But we have only to study the
-short and handy “Critique of Kant,”
-referred to in your columns—by Kuno
-Fischer, translated by Dr. Hough, to see
-how fast and loose that “all-shattering”
-metaphysician played with his all-destructive
-theme. Not only does he entirely
-reverse it and its corollaries in his
-critique of the “Practical Reason,” and
-of “Judgment,” but also in the second
-edition of the “Critique of Pure Reason”
-itself, in which originally, as its corollary,
-or rather concomitant, he, like myself,
-only on less sure premises, disposes of
-God, the Soul (Anima or Vital Principle),
-and Immortality—that is of another “personal”
-life after death. I hold with
-Lucretius, Epicurus, and others in ancient
-and modern times, of whom Shelley is a
-typical case, that no greater benefit can
-be bestowed on humanity than the elimination
-from sane thought of this
-ghastly and maddening Triune Spectre.
-God alone is quite <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“l’infame”</span> Voltaire
-dubs the Catholic Church. Looking
-through Nature “red in tooth and claws”
-to its <em>pseudo</em> Author, we must expect to
-find a <em>Pandemon</em>. For any omnipotent
-Being who, unconditioned and unfettered
-in all respects, “<em>willed</em>” such a world of
-pain and anguish for sentient creatures,
-must be a Demon <em>worse</em> than mythology
-has fabled of Satan, Moloch, Mammon,
-or other fiends. It must be noted that in
-the classic Pantheon, the Fates, or Fatal
-Sisters, are “above” all the Immortals
-of Olympus, including Jove himself—a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_509'>509</span>saving provision quite inadmissible in
-modern Monotheism, which endows its
-Divinity<a id='r189' /><a href='#f189' class='c013'><sup>[189]</sup></a> with absolute omnipotence and
-fore-knowledge.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Robert Lewins, M.D.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<h4 class='c023'>HYLO-IDEALISM.</h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>To the Editors of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have to thank you for your kind insertion
-of my note on above in January issue
-of the Magazine.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I have not the slightest desire to quarrel
-with your prefaced comments on my style
-of writing. It seems to you to be “turgid,”
-and you take advantage of some unkind
-epithets lately dealt out to Theosophy in
-the <cite>Secular Review</cite> to return the compliment
-to me with interest added. Be it so.
-It would seem but fair to, let me say,
-compliment those, and those only, who
-have directly complimented you; but I
-have no wish, as I have just said, to find
-fault with <em>any</em> comment on Hylo-Idealism
-or on the methods of its advocacy. <em>All</em>
-criticism is, I know, received by the excogitator
-of the system with thanks, and,
-save that both he and I think your note
-<i>re “Theobroma”</i> not a little at fault (for
-explanation I refer you to the well-known
-Messrs. Epps), I can say the same for myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I can see, however, in spite of the
-raillery with which you honour us, that a
-right understanding of Hylo-Idealism—I
-beg pardon, <em>High-low</em> Idealism—is still
-very far from being yours. Why, in a
-recent issue of <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> the old difficulty
-of, as I call it, the “Coincident assumption
-of Materiality” is started as if it had
-never before been thought of. It is, in
-point of fact, fully dealt with in my “Appendix”
-to the “Auto-Centricism” pamphlet,
-which has already passed under
-your review! It is not worth while to
-enter once more upon this point; suffice
-it then to say, in addition, that I explained
-it also, at full length, to a Theosophical
-writer—Mr. E. D. Fawcett—in the <cite>Secular
-Review</cite>, some months ago. He had
-started the same venerable objection, but
-after my reply, he so far honoured me as
-not to return to the charge. Let him do
-so now, and then a Theosophical attack
-and a Hylo-Ideal defence will be before
-you. But, really, it is no argument
-against my position to extract some half-dozen
-lines of my writing from a contemporary
-and to follow this <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>soupçon</i></span> with
-three printer’s “shrieks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I shall wait with interest the promised
-letter from “C. N.,” placing Hylo-Idealism
-in a “new and very different light,” as you
-say. This is something quite new. Dr.
-Lewins, C. N., and I have, none of us,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_510'>510</span>been able, hitherto, to find any material
-difference between our several presentations
-of the system.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c026'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I have the honour to be, Mesdames,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Your most obedient servant,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>G. M. McC.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c023'>TO DR. LEWINS, AND THE HYLO-IDEALISTS&nbsp;AT LARGE.</h4>
-
-<p class='c035'>The several learned gentlemen of the
-above persuasion, who have honoured
-<span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> with their letters and articles,
-will please to accept the present as a collective
-Reply. Life is too short to
-indulge very often in such lengthy explanations.
-But <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“une fois n’est pas
-coutume.”</span></p>
-
-<p class='c028'>In “coupling” Dr. Lewins’ name with
-those he mentions—especially with Mr.
-Herbert Spencer’s—the Editors had
-assuredly no intention of saying anything
-derogatory to the dignity of the founder
-of Hylo-Idealism. They have called the
-latter system—its qualification of <em>Idealistic</em>
-notwithstanding——“atheistical,” and to
-this Dr. Lewins himself does not demur.
-Quite the contrary. If his protest
-(against a casual remark made in a footnote
-of two lines!) means anything at
-all, it means that he feels hurt to find his
-name associated with the names of such
-“compromising and (in <em>atheism</em>) irresolute
-scientists as Darwin, Huxley, and Co.”
-What is it that our erudite correspondent
-demurs to, then? Just that, and nothing
-more. His prefixed adjectives refer to
-the half-heartedness of these gentlemen
-in the matter of atheism and materialism,
-not surely, to their scientific achievements.
-Indeed, these illustrious naturalists are
-timid enough to leave half-opened doors
-in their speculations for something to
-enter in which is not quite matter, and
-yet what it is they do not, or <em>do not wish</em> to
-know.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Indeed, they derive man, his origin and
-consciousness, <em>only</em> from the lower forms
-of animal creation and the brutes, instead
-of attributing life, mind and intellect—as
-the followers of the new System do—simply
-to the pranks played by <em>Prakriti</em>
-(the great Ignorance and Illusion) on our
-“diseased nervous centres”—<em>abstract
-thought</em> being synonymous with <em>Neuropathy</em>
-in the teachings of the Hylo-Idealists
-(see <cite>Auto-Centricism</cite>, p. 40).
-But all this has been already said and
-<em>better said</em> by Kapila, in his <cite>Sankhya</cite>, and
-is very old philosophy indeed; so that
-Messrs. Darwin and Co. have been, perhaps,
-wise in their generation to adopt
-another theory. Our great Darwinists are
-practical men, and avoid running after the
-hare and the eagle at the same time, as
-the hare in such case would be sure to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_511'>511</span>run away, and the eagle to be lost in the
-clouds. They prefer to ignore the ideas
-and conceptions of the Universe, as held
-by such “loose,” and—as philosophically
-expressed by our <em>uncompromising</em>
-opponent—“all-shattering metaphysicians
-as Kant was.” Therefore letting all such
-“metaphysical crack-brained theories”
-severely alone, they made man and his
-thinking <em>Ego</em> the lineal descendant of the
-revered ancestor of the now tailless
-baboon, our beloved and esteemed first
-cousin. This is only logical <em>from the
-Darwinian standpoint</em>. What is, then,
-Dr. Lewins’ quarrel with these great men,
-or with us? They have their theory, the
-inventor of Hylo-Idealism has his theory,
-we, Metaphysicians, have our ideas and
-theories; and, the <em>Moon</em> shining with impartial
-and equal light on the respective
-occiputs of Hylo-Idealists, Animalists,
-and Metaphysicians, she pours material
-enough for every one concerned to allow
-each of them to “live and let live.” No
-man can be at once a Materialist and an
-Idealist, and remain consistent. Eastern
-philosophy and occultism are based on
-the <em>absolute unity</em> of the Root Substance,
-and they recognise only one infinite and
-universal <span class='sc'>Cause</span>. The Occultists are <span class='sc'>Unitarians</span>
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>par excellence</i></span>. But there is such
-a thing as conventional, time-honoured
-terms with one and the same meaning
-attached to them all—at any rate on
-this plane of illusion. And if we want to
-understand each other, we are forced to
-use such terms in their generally-accepted
-sense, and avoid calling mind matter, and
-vice versâ. The definition of a <i>materialised
-“Spirit”</i> as frozen whiskey is in its place
-in a humouristic pun: it becomes an
-absurdity in philosophy. It is Dr. Lewins’
-argument that “the very first principle of
-logic is, that two ‘causes’ are not to
-be thought of when one is sufficient;”
-and though the first and the ultimate, the
-Alpha and the Omega in the existence of
-the Universe, is one absolute cause, yet,
-on the plane of manifestations and differentiations,
-matter, as phenomenon, and
-Spirit as noumenon, cannot be so loosely
-confused as to merge the latter into the
-former, under the pretext that one self-evident
-natural cause (however secondary
-in the sight of logic and reason) is “sufficient
-for our purpose,” and we need not
-“transcend the proper conditions of
-thought” and fall back upon the lower
-level of “lawless and uncertain fancy”—i.e.,
-metaphysics. (<i>Vide</i> “Humanism <i>v.</i>
-Theism,” pp. 14, 15.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We have nothing whatever, I say it
-again, against “Hylo-Idealism” with
-the exception of its compound and
-self-contradictory name. Nor do we
-oppose Dr. Lewins’ earlier thoughts, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_512'>512</span>embodied in “C. N’s” “<span class='fss'>HUMANISM</span> <em>versus</em>
-<span class='fss'>THEISM</span>.” That which we permit ourselves
-to object to and oppose is the later
-system grown into a <em>Bifrontian</em>, Janus-like
-monster, a hybrid <em>duality</em> notwithstanding
-its forced mask of Unity. Surely it is
-not because Dr. Lewins calls “Spirit—a
-<em>fiction</em>” and attributes Mind, Thought,
-Genius, Intellect, and all the highest
-attributes of thinking man to simple
-effects or functions of Hylo-zoism, that
-the greatest problem of psychology, <em>the
-relation of mind to matter</em>, is solved? No
-one can accuse “The Adversary” of too
-much tenderness or even regard for the
-conclusions of such rank materialists as
-the Darwinians generally are. But surely
-no impartial man would attribute their
-constant failure to explain the relations
-of mind to matter, and the confessions of
-their ignorance of the ultimate constitution
-of that matter itself, to timidity and
-irresoluteness, but rather to the right
-cause: <i>i.e.</i>, the <em>absolute impossibility of
-explaining spiritual effects by physical
-causes</em>, in the first case; and the presence
-of that in matter which baffles and mocks
-the efforts of the physical senses to perceive
-or feel, and therefore to explain it,
-in the second case. It is not, evidently, a
-desire to <em>compromise</em> that forced Mr.
-Huxley to confess that “in strictness we
-(the Scientists) know nothing about the
-composition of matter,” but the <em>honesty</em> of
-a man of science in not speculating upon
-what he did not believe in, and knew
-nothing about. Does J. Le Conte insult
-the majesty of physical science by
-declaring that the creation or destruction,
-increase or diminution of matter, “<em>lies
-beyond the domain of science?</em>”<a id='r190' /><a href='#f190' class='c013'><sup>[190]</sup></a> And to
-whose prejudices does Mr. Tyndall pander,
-he, who once upon a time shocked the
-whole world of believers in spiritual
-existence, by declaring in his Belfast
-address that in matter alone was “the
-promise and potency of every form and
-quality of life” (just what Dr. Lewins
-does) when he maintains that “the passage
-<em>from the physics of the brain to the
-corresponding facts of</em> <span class='fss'>CONSCIOUSNESS</span>
-<em>is unthinkable</em>,” and adds:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Granted that a definite thought and a molecular
-action in the brain occur simultaneously;
-we do not possess the intellectual organ nor
-apparently any rudiments of the organ, which
-would enable us to pass by a process of
-reasoning from one to the other. They appear
-together, but <em>we do not know why</em>. Were our
-minds and senses so expanded, strengthened and
-illuminated, as to enable us to see and feel the
-very molecules of the brain; were we capable of
-following all their motions, all their groupings,
-all their electric discharges, if such there be; and
-were we intimately acquainted with the corresponding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_513'>513</span>states of thought and feeling, we should
-be as far as ever from the solution of the problem.
-‘How are these physical processes connected
-with the facts of consciousness?’ The chasm
-between the two classes of phenomena would still
-remain intellectually impassable.”<a id='r191' /><a href='#f191' class='c013'><sup>[191]</sup></a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>To our surprise, however, we find that
-our learned correspondent—Tyndall,
-Huxley &amp; Co., notwithstanding—has
-passed the <em>intellectually impassable</em>
-chasm by modes of perception, “anti-intellectual,”
-so to speak. I say this in
-no impertinent mood; but merely following
-Dr. Lewins on his own lines of
-thought. As his expressions seem absolutely
-antiphrastic in meaning to those
-generally accepted by the common herd,
-“anti-intellectual” would mean with the
-Hylo-Idealists “anti-spiritual” (spirit
-being a <em>fiction</em> with them). Thus their
-Founder must have crossed the impassable
-chasm—say, by a hylo-zoistic process
-of perception, “starting from the region of
-rational cogitation” and not from “that
-lower level of lawless and uncertain fancy,”
-as Theosophists, Mystics, and other <em>hoi
-polloi</em> of thought, do. He has done it to
-his own “mental satisfaction,” and this is
-all a Hylo-Idealist will ever aspire to, as
-Dr. Lewins himself tells us. He “cannot
-deny that there may be <em>behind</em> (?) nature
-a ‘cause of causes,’<a id='r192' /><a href='#f192' class='c013'><sup>[192]</sup></a> but if so, it is a god
-who hides himself, or itself, from mortal
-thought. Nature is at all events vice-regent
-plenipotentiary, and with <em>her</em>
-thought has alone to deal.” Just so, and
-we say it too, for reasons given in the footnote.
-“There is a natural solution for
-everything,” he adds. “Of course, if there
-be no ‘cause,’ this solution is the arrangement
-and co-ordination of invariable
-sequences in our own minds ... rather
-than an ‘explanation’ or ‘accounting for’
-phenomena. Properly speaking we can
-‘account for’ nothing. <em>Mental satisfaction</em>—unity
-between microcosm and
-macrocosm, not the search after ‘First
-Causes.’ ... is the true chief end of
-man.” (Hum. <i>v.</i> Theism, p. 15.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>This seems the backbone of Hylo-Idealistic
-philosophy, which thus appears
-as a cross breed between Epicurianism
-and the “Illusionism” of the Buddhist
-Yogachâras. This stands proven by the
-contradictions in his system. Dr. Lewins
-seems to have achieved that, to do which
-every mortal scientist has hitherto failed,
-firstly, by declaring (in Hum. <i>v.</i> Theism,
-p. 17) the whole objective world—“<em>phenomenal</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_514'>514</span>or <em>ideal</em>”,<a id='r193' /><a href='#f193' class='c013'><sup>[193]</sup></a> and “everything in it
-<em>spectral</em>” (Auto-Centricism, p. 9), and yet
-<em>admitting the reality of matter</em>. More
-than this. In the teeth of all the scientific
-luminaries, from Faraday to Huxley, who
-all confess to knowing <span class='fss'>NOTHING</span> of matter,
-he declares that—“Matter organic and
-inorganic <em>is now fully known</em>” (Auto-Centricism,
-p. 40)!!</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>I humbly beg Dr. Lewins’ pardon for
-the rude question; but does he really
-mean to say what he does say? Does he
-want his readers to believe that up to his
-appearance in this world of matter, thinking
-men did not know what they were
-talking about, and that among all the
-“Ego Brains” of this globe his brain is
-the one omniscient <em>reality</em>, while all others
-are empty phantasms,or <em>spectral</em> balloons?
-Besides which, matter cannot surely be
-<em>real</em> and <em>unreal</em> at the same time. If
-<em>unreal</em>—and he maintains it—then all
-Science can know about it is that it
-knows <em>nothing</em>, and this is precisely what
-Science confesses. And if <em>real</em>—and
-Dr. Lewins, as shown, declares it likewise—then
-his <em>Idealism</em> goes upside
-down, and <em>Hylo</em> alone remains to mock
-him and his philosophy. These may be
-trifling considerations in the consciousness
-of an <em>Ego</em> of Dr. Lewins’ power, but they
-are very serious contradictions, and also
-impediments in the way of such humble
-thinkers as Vedantins, Logicians, and
-Theosophists, toward recognising, let
-alone appreciating, “Hylo-Idealism.”
-Our learned correspondent pooh-poohs
-Metaphysics, and at the same time not
-only travels on purely metaphysical
-grounds, but adopts and sets forth the
-most metaphysical tenets, the very gist of
-the <span class='fss'>PARA</span>-metaphysical Vedanta philosophy,
-tenets held also by the Buddhist
-“Illusionists”—the <em>Yogachâras</em> and
-<em>Madhyamikas</em>. Both schools maintain
-that all is void (<em>sarva sûnya</em>), or that
-which Dr. Lewins calls spectral and
-phantasmal. Except internal sensation
-or intelligence (<em>vijnâna</em>) the Yogachâras
-regard everything else as illusion.
-Nothing that is material can have any
-but a <em>spectral</em> existence with them. So
-far, our “Bauddhas” are at one with <em>the</em>
-Hylo-Idealists, but they part at the
-crucial moment. The New School teaches
-that the Brain (the originator of consciousness)
-is the only factor and Creator
-of the visible Universe; that in <em>it</em> alone
-all our ideas of external things are born,
-and that, apart from it, nothing has real
-existence, everything being illusion. Now
-what has that Brain, or rather the
-material its particles and cells are composed
-of, distinct in it from other matter
-that it should be rendered such honours?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_515'>515</span><em>Physically</em>, it differs very little indeed
-from the brain stuff and cranium of any
-anthropoid ape. Unless we divorce consciousness,
-or the <span class='fss'>EGO</span>, from matter, one
-materialistic philosophy is as good as the
-other, and none is worth living for. What
-his Brain-Ego <em>is</em>, Dr. Lewins does not
-show anywhere. He urges that his
-“atheistic or <em>non-animist</em> (soulless) standpoint
-is the <em>pivot</em>” on which his “whole
-synthesis revolves.” But as that “pivot”
-is no higher than the physical brain with
-its hallucinations, then it must be a
-broken reed indeed. A philosophy that
-goes no further than superficial Agnosticism,
-and says that “what Tennyson
-says of Deity <em>may</em> be true, but it is not
-in the region of natural cogitation; for it
-transcends the logical <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>Encheiresis
-naturæ</i></span>“ (Hum. <i>v.</i> Theism)—is no
-philosophy, but simply <em>unqualified
-negation</em>. And one who teaches that
-”<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>savants</i></span>, or specialists, are the last to
-reach the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>summa scientiæ</i></span>, for the constant
-<em>search</em> after knowledge must ever
-prevent its <em>fruition</em>” (ibid), cuts the
-ground himself under his feet, and thus
-loses the right, not only to be considered a
-man of science, but likewise his claim to the
-title of philosopher, for he rejects all knowledge.
-Dr. Lewins, quoting Schiller, “to
-the effect that truth can never be reached
-while the mind is in its analytic throes,”
-shows the poet-philosopher saying that:—“To
-capture the fleeting phantom he
-(the analyst) must fetter it by rules, must
-anatomatise its fair body into concepts,
-and imprison <em>its living spirit</em> into a bare
-skeleton of words”—and thus brings this
-as a prop and proof of his own arguments
-that we need not trouble ourselves with
-the “cause of causes.” But Schiller
-believed in spirit and immortality, while
-the Hylo-Idealists deny them <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>in toto</i></span>.
-What he says above is accepted by every
-Occultist and Theosophist, simply because
-<em>he refers to the purely intellectual</em> (not
-Spiritual) <em>analysis</em> on the physical plane,
-and according to the present scientific
-methods. Such analysis, of course, will
-never help man to reach the real <em>inner</em>
-soul-knowledge, but must ever leave him
-stranded in the bogs of fruitless speculation.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The truth is, that Hylo-Idealism is at
-best <span class='fss'>QUIETISM</span>—only on the purely
-material plane. “Let us eat and drink,
-for to-morrow we die,” seems its motto.
-Dr. Lewins tells us that he holds his
-views with Epicurus. I beg leave to
-contradict again. Epicurus insisted upon
-the necessity of making away with an
-unphilosophical, anthropomorphic deity—
-a bundle of contradictions—and so do we,
-the Theosophists. But Epicurus believed
-in gods, finite and conditioned in space
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_516'>516</span>and time, still <em>divine</em> when compared to
-objective ephemeral man: again, just as
-we, Theosophists, believe in them.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>We feel sorry to have to say unpleasant
-truths. The Founder of Hylo-Idealism is
-evidently a marvellously well-read man,
-his learning is great and undeniable; and,
-we have always had an instinctive respect
-for, and sympathy with, thinkers of his
-calibre. But, we have been sent pamphlets
-and books on Hylo-Idealism for
-review, and one would be truant to his
-duty to conceal one’s honest and sincere
-views on anything. Therefore, we say that,
-contradictions and inconsistencies in the
-Hylo-Idealistic system apart, we find in it
-a mass of ideas and <em>arguments</em> which
-come forcibly home to us, because they
-are part and parcel of the Eastern
-Idealism. Our premises and propositions
-seem to be almost identical in some
-respects, but the conclusions we come to
-disagree in every point, the most important
-of which is the true nature of
-matter. This, which “has been <em>fabled</em>
-as ‘Spirit,’” writes Dr. Lewins in 1878,
-“is really merely the ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vis insita</i></span>’ of
-matter or ‘nature’—the latter a misnomer
-if creation or birth is a delusion, as it
-must be on the hypothesis of the eternity
-of matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Here the Doctor speaks evidently of
-“Spirit” from the Christian stand-point,
-and criticises it from this aspect. And
-from this stand-point and aspect he is
-perfectly right; but as wrong from those
-of Eastern philosophy. Did he but view
-Spirit, <em>as one with eternal matter</em>, which,
-though eternal <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>in esse</i></span> is but finite and
-conditioned during its periodical manifestations,
-he would not so materialise its
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vis insita</i></span>—which is <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vis vitæ</i></span> but when
-applied to individual manifestations, the
-living subjects of illusion, or animated
-bodies. But this would lead us too far,
-and we must close the subject with one
-more protest. There is a casual remark
-in “Humanism <i>v.</i> Theisms” to the effect
-(on the authority of Ueberweg) that “the
-early Greek thinkers and Sages were
-Hylo-Zoists.” Aye, learned Doctor; but
-the early Greek thinkers understood Hylo-Zoism
-(from “<em>Hyle</em>” <em>primordial</em> matter,
-or what the greatest chemist in England,
-Mr. Crookes, has called “protyle” <em>undifferentiated
-matter</em>, and “<em>Zoe</em>,” life) in
-a way very different from yours. So are
-we, Theosophists and Eastern Occultists,
-“Hylo-Zoists”; but it is because with us
-“life” is the synonym both of Spirit and
-Matter, or the <span class='sc'>One</span> eternal and infinite
-<span class='sc'>Life</span> whether manifested or otherwise.
-That <span class='sc'>Life</span> is both the eternal <span class='sc'>Idea</span> and
-its periodical <span class='sc'>Logos</span>. He who has
-grasped and mastered this doctrine completely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_517'>517</span>has thereby solved the mystery of
-<span class='sc'>Being</span>.</p>
-
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>The Adversary.</span>”</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>P.S.—We have in type a very excellent
-article by Mr. L. Courtney, which could
-not find room in this present number, but
-will appear in March. In it, the writer
-says all that he <em>can</em> possibly say in favour
-of Hylo-Idealism, and that is all one can
-do. Thus, <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span> will give one fair
-chance more to the new System; after
-which it will have gained a certain right
-to neither answer at such length, nor
-accept any article on Hylo-Idealism that
-will go beyond a page or so.—“A.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c050' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_518'>518</span>
- <h3 class='c011'>INTERESTING TO ASTROLOGERS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>ASTROLOGICAL NOTES—No. 4.</div>
- <div class='c000'><i>To the Editor of</i> <span class='sc'>Lucifer</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'><span class='sc'>Question</span>, at London, 1887, March 2nd,
-6.8 p.m. What will be the duration of
-quesited’s life?</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Though the preceding figure showed
-that my relative would recover from his
-illness,<a id='r194' /><a href='#f194' class='c013'><sup>[194]</sup></a> yet it was obvious that the end
-could not be far distant; and I drew the
-present figure for the minute of the impression,
-to interrogate the stars.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The following are the elements of the figure:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Cusp of 10th house 14 ♊.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>— 11th house 21 ♋.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>— 12th house 22 ♌.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>— 1st house 17° 45’ ♍.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>— 2nd house 10 ♎.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>— 3rd house 9 ♏.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c036'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Planets’ places are:</div>
- <div class='line in4'>♆ 25. 13. 15 ♉.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>♅ 11. 37. 30 R. ♎.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>♄ 15. 46. 30 R ♋.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>♃ 5. 41. 30 R ♏.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>♂ 23. 50. 45 ♓.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>☉ 11. 52. 19 ♓.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>♀ 3. 10. 30 ♈.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>☿ 29. 36. 15 ♓.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>☽ 8. 28. 15 ♊.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Caput Draconis 27. 21. 38 ♌.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>⨁ 14. 20. 56 I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c035'>As in the previous figure the 6th house
-is the quesited’s 1st, and the 1st house is
-his 8th. As the time of the question was
-after sunset, ☿ ruling ♏ by night was lord
-of his 8th, and ♅ ruling ♒ by night was
-lord of his 1st. The aspect of the significators
-is ☿ 167° 58’ 45” ♅, separating
-from the Quincunx and applying to the
-Opposition. The Quincunx is, like the
-Conjunction and Parallel, convertible in
-nature, being good with benefics and evil
-with malefics, and when a benefic and
-malefic are thus joined, the stronger rules.
-It was therefore in this case doubly evil,
-as the significators were separating from
-one evil aspect and applying to another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_519'>519</span>though not within orbs of either. As
-☿, the applying planet, was in a common
-sign, and is an angle of the figure, each
-degree signified a week; and as 12° 1′
-15´´ were wanted to complete the opposition,
-the critical period was shown to be
-a fraction over 12 weeks, or May 25th.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Danger to life was also shown by <em>Cauda
-Draconis</em> in quesited’s 1st house; by ☉ in
-quesited’s 1st afflicted by a very close
-Quincunx of ♅ lord of his 1st, ♅ moreover
-receiving ☉ in his Detriment, and
-☉ receiving ♅ in his Fall; and by ☽, lady
-of quesited’s 6th, posited in his 4th, and
-afflicted by a rather close Quartile of ☉
-posited in his 1st, ☉ moreover receiving ☽
-in his Anti-triplicity (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sit venia verbo</i></span>).
-Nevertheless, as the significators were
-not actually in any evil aspect, ☿ moreover
-receiving ♅ in his Triplicity, and
-being almost out of ♓ his Fall and
-Detriment, and the Detriment of ♅; ☽,
-lady of his 6th, and posited in his 4th,
-applying to a Trine of ♅ lord of his 1st;
-and ☿ lord of his 8th applying to Conjunction
-with ♀ lady of his 4th, ♀
-moreover receiving ☿ in her exaltation;—all
-this denoted that May 25th would
-be the time, not indeed of certain death,
-but of imminent danger, the beginning of
-the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>⨁ being in the 4th house of the figure,
-almost on the cusp, denoted a legacy to
-my father.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The actual result was as follows: After
-having been for some time in fair health,
-considering his age and recent illness, <em>he
-was suddenly taken ill and in great
-danger on the night of May 27th, and on
-the morning of May 31st was in articulo
-mortis, and given up by his two physicians</em>.
-From this, however, he rallied;
-relapsed on the night of July 6th; rallied
-again; but <em>died on July 19th</em> at 8.30 a.m.,
-after a sudden seizure of only 15 minutes’
-duration, <em>and my father received a legacy
-under his will</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The quesited suffered much in his last
-illness from cough and dyspnœa. The
-certificate of death was—“<em>Primary</em>:
-emphysema, morbus cordis. <em>Secondary</em>:
-thrombus, syncope.” With this may be
-compared ♄ in ♋, having dignity in
-quesited’s 8th house, and afflicting ♅ lord
-of quesited’s 1st. ♄ in ♋ denotes
-“phthisis, ulceration in lungs, obstructions
-and bruises in breast, ague, scurvy,
-cancer, and cough.”</p>
-
-<div class='c020'><span class='sc'>Nemo.</span></div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c042' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f146'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r146'>146</a>. Jesus says to the “Twelve”—“Unto you is given the mystery of the Kingdom of God; but
-<em>unto them that are without, all things are done in parables</em>,“ etc. (Mark iv. <span class='fss'>II</span>.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f147'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r147'>147</a>. <i>e.g.</i>, to the little article “Autocentricism”—on the same “philosophy,” or again, to the apex of
-the Hylo-Idealist pyramid in this Number. It is a letter of protest by the learned Founder of the
-School in question, against a <em>mistake</em> of ours. He complains of our “coupling” his name with those
-of Mr. Herbert Spencer, Darwin, Huxley, and others, on the question of atheism and materialism, as
-the said lights in the psychological and physical sciences are considered by Dr. Lewins too
-flickering, too “compromising” and weak, to deserve the honourable appellation of Atheists or even
-Agnostics. See “Correspondence” in Double Column, and the reply by “The Adversary.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f148'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r148'>148</a>. Jehovah, of course, in his own national character of Baal, Moloch, Typhon, etc. The final and
-conclusive identification of the “Lord God” of Israel with Moloch, we find in the last chapter of
-<cite>Leviticus</cite>, concerning <em>things devoted not to be redeemed</em>.... “A man shall devote unto the Lord
-of all that he hath, <em>both of man</em> and beast.... None devoted, which shall be devoted of men,
-shall be redeemed, <em>but shall surely be put to death</em> ... for it is <em>most holy unto the Lord</em>.” (See
-Leviticus xxvii., 28, 29, 30.)</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>“Notwithstanding the numerous proofs that the Israelites worshipped a variety of gods, and even
-offered human sacrifices until a far later period than their Pagan neighbours, they have contrived to
-blind posterity in regard to truth. They sacrificed human life as late as 169 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> (<i>Vide</i> “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Joseph.
-contra Apion</cite></span>,” 11, 8—what Antiochus Epiphanius found in the Temple), and the <cite>Bible</cite> contains a
-number of such records. At a time when the Pagans had long abandoned the abominable practice,
-and had replaced the sacrificial man by the animal, and the ox of Dionysius was sacrificed at the
-Bacchic Mysteries (“Anthon,” p. 365), Jephthah is represented sacrificing his own daughter to the
-<a id='corr436.1.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Lord’'>‘Lord’</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_436.1.14'><ins class='correction' title='Lord’'>‘Lord’</ins></a></span> for a burnt-offering.” <cite>Isis Unveiled</cite>, vol ii., pp. 524, 525.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f149'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r149'>149</a>. It is said in the “Holy Book,” that it was “the Lord (who) was with Judah,” who “could not
-drive out the inhabitants of the valley, because they had chariots of iron,” (Judges i. 19), and not
-“Judah” at all. This is but natural, according to popular belief and superstition that “the Devil is
-afraid of <em>iron</em>.” The strong connection and even identity between Jehovah and the Devil is ably
-insisted upon by the Rev. Haweis. See his “Key” (p. 22).—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f150'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r150'>150</a>. And yet it is this “demoniacal and diabolical religion” that passed part and parcel into
-Protestantism.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f151'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r151'>151</a>. So “the people and priests” do now. And as the late Rev. Henry Ward Beecher once said in
-a sermon, “could Jesus come back and behave in the streets of Christian cities as he did in those of
-Jerusalem, he would be declared an impostor and then confined in prison.”—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f152'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r152'>152</a>. Only, as such <em>truth</em> and <em>freedom</em> amounts to the Church committing suicide and burying herself
-with her own hands, she will never allow such a thing. She will die her natural death the day when
-there will not exist a man, woman or child to believe any longer in her dogmas. And this beneficent
-result might be achieved within her own hierarchy, were there many such sincere, brave and honest
-clergymen who, like the writer of this article, fear not to speak the truth—whatever may come—[<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f153'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r153'>153</a>. See Deut. iv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f154'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r154'>154</a>. See Rev. xxi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f155'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r155'>155</a>. See Rev. xii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f156'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r156'>156</a>. <i>i.e.</i>, The invisible, universal, and eternal principle which mortals can only conceive of as the sum
-total of the combined spirits of Truth, Love, and Wisdom, when manifested in that “Son of Man,”
-or <span class='fss'>HUMANITY</span>, which is also the “Son of God,” collectively and individually.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f157'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r157'>157</a>. In the Kabala, the Bride of the “Heavenly Man,” <em>Tetragrammaton</em>, is Malkuth—the foundation
-or kingdom. It is our earth, which, when <em>regenerated</em> and purified (as matter), will be united to
-her bridegroom (Spirit). But in Esotericism there are two aspects of the <span class='fss'>LOGOS</span>, or the “Father-Son,”
-which latter becomes his own father; one is the <span class='fss'>UNMANIFESTED</span> Eternal, the other the
-manifested and periodical <span class='fss'>LOGOS</span>. The “Bride” of the former is the universe as nature in the
-abstract. She is also his “<span class='fss'>MOTHER</span>”; who, “clothed with the bridegroom’s power,” gives birth to
-the manifested universe (the second <em>logos</em>) through her own inherent, mystic power, and is, therefore,
-the Immaculate Mother; “the woman clothed with the sun, and travailing” in child birth, in
-Revelation, ch. xii.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f158'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r158'>158</a>. See Psalm lxxxiv., 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f159'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r159'>159</a>. <i>i.e.</i> The Universal Spirit in whom all things exist and have being. That Eternal Principle which
-fills all Space and Time, and is <span class='sc'>Space</span> and Time (in its abstract sense, as otherwise it would be an
-<em>extra-Cosmic</em> God), and is perfect in perfection.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f160'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r160'>160</a>. See Matt. xii., 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f161'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r161'>161</a>. Luke ix., 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f162'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r162'>162</a>. <em>Aanru</em> is the celestial field where the defunct’s soul received wheat and corn, growing therein
-<em>seven cubits high</em>. (See “Book of the Dead,” 124 <i>et seq.</i>)—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f163'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r163'>163</a>. <em>Amrita</em> (immortal) applied to the Soma juice, and called the “Water of Life.”—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f164'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r164'>164</a>. This is a doctrine of the Visishtadwaita sect of the Vedantins. The <em>Jiva</em> (spiritual life principle,
-the living <em>Monad</em>) of one who attained Moksha or Nirvana, <a id='corr472.3.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>“breaks</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_472.3.1'><ins class='correction' title='sic'>“breaks</ins></a></span> through the Brahmarandra and
-goes to <em>Suryamandala</em> (the region of the sun) through the Solar rays. Then it goes, through a dark
-spot in the Sun, to Paramapeda to which it is directed by the Supreme Wisdom acquired by <em>Yoga</em>,
-and helped thereinto by the <em>Devas</em> (gods) called Archis, the “Flames,” or Fiery Angels, answering
-to the Christian archangels.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f165'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r165'>165</a>. <i>Vide</i> Legend of Jyotishka, mentioned in “Life of Buddha from the Bkah-Hgyur.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f166'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r166'>166</a>. A paper read before the Chicago Branch of the Theosophical Society, by its Secretary, M. L.
-Brainard.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f167'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r167'>167</a>. “<span class='sc'>Isis Unveiled</span>,” Vol 1., p. 514.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f168'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r168'>168</a>. Hence in Kabalistic symbolism the <em>pentacle</em>, or the six-pointed star, is the sign of the <em>manifested</em>
-“Logos,” or the “Heavenly man,” the Tetragrammaton. “The four-lettered Adni (<em>Adonai</em>, “the
-Lord”), is the <em>Eheieh</em> (the symbol of <em>life</em> or existence), is the Lord of the six limbs (6 Sephiroth) and
-his Bride (<em>Malkuth</em>, or physical nature, also Earth) is his seventh limb.” (Ch. <cite>Book of Numbers</cite> viii.
-3-4.)—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f169'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r169'>169</a>. It is the secret of the great reverence shown in the East for this colour. It is the colour of the
-<em>Yogi</em> dress in India, and of the <em>Gelupka</em> sect (“Yellow caps”) in Thibet. It symbolizes <em>pure blood</em>
-and sunlight, and is called “the stream of life.” Red, as its opposite, is the colour of the <em>Dugpas</em>,
-and black magicians.—<span class='sc'>Ed.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f170'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r170'>170</a>. Vide “Gospel according to St. Mark,” in the <em>revised</em> edition printed for the Universities of
-Oxford and Cambridge, 1881.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f171'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r171'>171</a>. <i>Vide</i> “The Soldier’s Daughter,” in this number, by the Rev. T. G. Headley, and notice the
-desperate protest of this <em>true</em> Christian, against the <em>literal</em> acceptance of the “blood sacrifices,”
-“Atonement by blood,” etc., in the Church of England. The reaction begins: another <em>sign of
-the times</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f172'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r172'>172</a>. Thus while the three Synoptics display a combination of the pagan Greek and Jewish symbologies
-the <cite>Revelation</cite> is written in the mystery language of the Tanaïm—the relic of Egyptian and Chaldean
-wisdom—and St John’s Gospel is purely Gnostic.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f173'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r173'>173</a>. “The claim of Christianity to possess Divine authority rests on the ignorant belief that the
-mystical Christ could and did become a Person, whereas the gnosis proves the corporeal Christ to
-be only a <a id='corr494.41'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='counferfeit'>counterfeit</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_494.41'><ins class='correction' title='counferfeit'>counterfeit</ins></a></span> Presentment of the trans-corporeal man; consequently, historical portraiture is,
-and ever must be, a fatal mode of falsifying and discrediting the Spiritual Reality.” (G. Massey,
-“Gnostic and Historic Christianity.”)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f174'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r174'>174</a>. This sentence analyzed means “Shall you, who in the beginning looked to the <em>Christ-Spirit</em>, now
-<em>end</em> by believing in a Christ of flesh,” or it means nothing. The verb ἐπιτελοῦμαι has not the
-meaning of “becoming perfect,” but of “ending by,” becoming so. Paul’s lifelong struggle with
-Peter and others, and what he himself tells of his vision of a Spiritual Christ and not of Jesus of
-Nazareth, as in the <cite>Acts</cite>—are so many proofs of this.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f175'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r175'>175</a>. See “Supern. Relig.,” vol. ii., chap. “Basilides.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f176'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r176'>176</a>. It was asked in “Isis Unveiled,” were not the views of the Phrygian Bishop Montanus, also
-deemed a <span class='fss'>HERESY</span> by the Church of Rome? It is quite extraordinary to see how easily that Church
-encourages the abuse of one <em>heretic</em>, Tertullian, against another <em>heretic</em>, Basilides, when the abuse
-happens to further her own object.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f177'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r177'>177</a>. Does not Paul himself speak of “<em>Principalities</em> and <em>Powers</em> in heavenly places” (Ephesians iii.
-10; i. 21), and confess that there be <em>gods</em> many and <em>Lords</em> many (Kurioi)? And angels, powers
-(Dunameis), and <em>Principalities</em>? (See 1 Corinthians, viii. 5; and Epistle to Romans, viii. 38.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f178'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r178'>178</a>. Tertullian: “Præscript.” It is undeniably owing only to a remarkably casuistical, sleight-of-hand-like
-argument that Jehovah, who in the <em>Kabala</em> is simply a Sephiroth, the third, left-hand
-power among the Emanations (Binah), has been elevated to the dignity of the <em>One</em> absolute God.
-Even in the Bible he is but one of the <em>Elohim</em> (See Genesis, chapter iii. v. 22. “The Lord God”
-making no difference between himself and others.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f179'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r179'>179</a>. This is <em>history</em>. How far that <em>re-writing</em> of, and tampering with, the primitive gnostic fragments
-which are now become the New Testament, went, may be inferred by reading “Supernatural
-Religion,” which went through over twenty-three editions, if I mistake not. The host of authorities
-for it given by the author, is simply appalling. The list of the English and German Bible critics alone
-seems endless.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f180'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r180'>180</a>. The chief details are given in “Isis Unveiled,” vol. ii pp. 180-183, <i>et seq.</i> Truly faith in the
-infallibility of the Church must be <em>stone-blind</em>—or it could not have failed being killed and—dying.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f181'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r181'>181</a>. See Hieronymus: “De Viros,” illust. cap. 3; Olshausen: “Neuen Test.,” p. 32. The Greek
-text of Matthew’s Gospel is the only one used or ever possessed by the Church.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f182'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r182'>182</a>. By Captain Wm. C. Eldon Serjeant. Published by Geo. Redway, York Street, Covent Garden.
-Price 7s. 6d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f183'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r183'>183</a>. “Autocentricism; or, the Brain Theory of Life and Mind,” being the substance of letters written
-to the Secular Review (1883-4). By Robert Lewins, M.D. “The New Gospel of Hylo-Idealism, or
-Positive Agnosticism.” By Herbert L. Courtney.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f184'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r184'>184</a>. “Autocentricism,” &amp;c., p. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f185'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r185'>185</a>. <em>Christ</em>—A Galilean peasant! [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f186'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r186'>186</a>. Nor does Dr. Lewins <em>know</em>: assumption is no proof. [<span class='sc'>Ed.</span>]</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f187'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r187'>187</a>. “Autocentricism,” &amp;c., p. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f188'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r188'>188</a>. Ibid, p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f189'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r189'>189</a>. Deuce, <i>i.e.</i>, Devil, is the synonym of <em>Deus</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f190'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r190'>190</a>. “<cite>Correl.</cite> of <cite>Vital with Chem. and Physical
-Forces</cite>.” Appendix.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f191'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r191'>191</a>. “Fragments of Science.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f192'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r192'>192</a>. We Theosophists, who do not <em>limit</em> nature,
-do not see the “cause of causes” or the <em>unknowable</em>
-deity <em>behind</em> that which is limitless, but
-identify that abstract Nature with the deity itself,
-and explain its visible laws as secondary effects
-on the plane of Universal Illusion.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f193'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r193'>193</a>. We call the <em>noumenal</em>—the “ideal.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f194'>
-<p class='c028'><a href='#r194'>194</a>. <span class='sc'>Note.</span>—This was shown by the preceding
-figure; a weak aspect in horary astrology can
-only symbolize a weak result. Hence, though
-the weakly good semisextile was sufficient to
-indicate convalescence from a self-limited disease
-like pneumonia, yet it did not denote complete
-restoration to health. Had the significators
-been applying to a Trine, I should have judged
-not only convalescence from the acute attack,
-but a continuance of a vigorous old age.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<p class='c028'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c028'>Some longer stories and articles are continued from number to number of
-the publication. Where the continued text appears in this volume, the
-‘to be continued’ note a the bottom of each section is linked to the
-next. On occasion, the promised continuation is not to be found in thi
-text, and no link is provided.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>On p. <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, the footnote now numbered 56 was referenced both in the title
-of the review and on the repetition of that phrase in the body of the
-review. The first of these has been removed as redundant.
-On occasion, diacritical marks in foreign words were not printed, and have
-not been added here.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The copious quotations give rise to the occasional puzzle with quotation
-marks, which make it difficult to say what the authors intended. Where there
-is no simple resolution, the text is given here as printed. The problematic
-paragraphs appear on p. <a href='#badquotes1'>151</a>, p. <a href='#badquotes2'>164</a>, p. <a href='#badquotes3'>179</a>,
-p. <a href='#badquotes4'>205</a>, p. <a href='#badquotes5'>277</a>, p. <a href='#badquotes6'>295</a>, p. <a href='#badquotes7'>305</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>Other errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected as
-noted below.</p>
-
-<p class='c028'>The references are to the page and line in the original. Where
-the page is printed in columns, ‘L’ and ‘R’ refer to the left and
-right columns. Those referenced with three numbers indicate the page,
-footnote and line within the note. Since footnotes have sometimes been
-moved to follow a paragraph, all references are to their
-position in the printed text.</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='12%' />
-<col width='69%' />
-<col width='18%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_3.1.2'></a><a href='#corr3.1.2'>3.1.2</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>How art thou [f]allen from Heaven</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_20.1'></a><a href='#corr20.1'>20.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in which the Zoroast[r]ian Mitra</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_22.1.1'></a><a href='#corr22.1.1'>22.1.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>tha[t] John saw</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_22.2.9'></a><a href='#corr22.2.9'>22.2.9</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>it literally means ‘to howl.’[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_38.4'></a><a href='#corr38.4'>38.4</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>I have p[re/er]suaded my aunt</td>
- <td class='c057'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_44.16'></a><a href='#corr44.16'>44.16</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>chapters of the Bha[ga]vadgita</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_51.1'></a><a href='#corr51.1'>51.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>self-contained and harmonious within[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_55.31'></a><a href='#corr55.31'>55.31</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the high plateaux of Central Asia[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_55.40'></a><a href='#corr55.40'>55.40</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>some amount of injustice in it[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_60.6'></a><a href='#corr60.6'>60.6</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>Count Tolstoi considers it nec[e]ssary</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_67.2'></a><a href='#corr67.2'>67.2</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in [leasurely] fashion</td>
- <td class='c057'><em>sic</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_69.13'></a><a href='#corr69.13'>69.13</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in the Villa Torcello[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_72L.33'></a><a href='#corr72L.33'>72L.33</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>my books been par[a/o]died</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_75L.55'></a><a href='#corr75L.55'>75L.55</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>by [C/G]. H. Pember</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_79R.43'></a><a href='#corr79R.43'>79R.43</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>But as <span class='sc'>Lu[fic/cif]er</span> hopes shortly to deal</td>
- <td class='c057'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_74R.15'></a><a href='#corr74R.15'>74R.15</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]That the first human beings</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_80R.33'></a><a href='#corr80R.33'>80R.33</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]The famous cynic, Cratus,</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_84.41'></a><a href='#corr84.41'>84.41</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>his theosop[h]ical views.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_85.19'></a><a href='#corr85.19'>85.19</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the social respectabili[l/t]y it panders to</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_87.40'></a><a href='#corr87.40'>87.40</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[innoculated] with vice,</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_87.41'></a><a href='#corr87.41'>87.41</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in his subsequent life[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_104.44'></a><a href='#corr104.44'>104.44</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>it grew importunate[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_116.8'></a><a href='#corr116.8'>116.8</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the Hindu philosophical tenet[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_122.24'></a><a href='#corr122.24'>122.24</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>if he changes his a[l/t]titude</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_122.33'></a><a href='#corr122.33'>122.33</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>that marriage is consummated.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_124.32'></a><a href='#corr124.32'>124.32</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]Not one would have the courage</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_131.3'></a><a href='#corr131.3'>131.3</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>By [C/G]. H. Pember, M.A.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_132.32'></a><a href='#corr132.32'>132.32</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>by such cavalier treatment[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_134.12'></a><a href='#corr134.12'>134.12</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>this [insistance] upon the letter</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_147.29'></a><a href='#corr147.29'>147.29</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>are pearls of wisdom[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_147.32'></a><a href='#corr147.32'>147.32</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>of the Ros[i]crucians</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_152.28'></a><a href='#corr152.28'>152.28</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>‘the Great Goddess[’]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_152.29'></a><a href='#corr152.29'>152.29</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in the minds of Theosophists.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_158R.43'></a><a href='#corr158R.43'>158R.43</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>is the day[-]house of ♅</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_164.6'></a><a href='#corr164.6'>164.6</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>members of that society who[ who] always find</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_172.15'></a><a href='#corr172.15'>172.15</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and a benefic[i]ent power</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_179.3.12'></a><a href='#corr179.3.12'>179.3.12</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>principle of the Theosophists,[)]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_185.35'></a><a href='#corr185.35'>185.35</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>all occupied with [“/‘]Fou;[”/’]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_195.22'></a><a href='#corr195.22'>195.22</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>clos[e] to the great fire</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_204.45'></a><a href='#corr204.45'>204.45</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>Life-renewal and Life-tran[s]mission</td>
- <td class='c057'>inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_201.26'></a><a href='#corr201.26'>201.26</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>draw it from you[r] own beautiful soul!</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_205.38'></a><a href='#corr205.38'>205.38</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and is himself examined of no man.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_206.1'></a><a href='#corr206.1'>206.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>not for my life, assuredly[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_206.13'></a><a href='#corr206.13'>206.13</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>because it can give <em>me</em>[,] pleasure.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_206.17'></a><a href='#corr206.17'>206.17</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>I am surr[r]ounded with a whole world</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_206.31'></a><a href='#corr206.31'>206.31</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>may be made comfortable.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_209.36'></a><a href='#corr209.36'>209.36</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>within his soul.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_218.44'></a><a href='#corr218.44'>218.44</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>most wonderfull[l]y</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_217.23'></a><a href='#corr217.23'>217.23</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>aim of this work[,] the bias of the writer</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_224.33'></a><a href='#corr224.33'>224.33</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the irrational[i]ty</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_226.40'></a><a href='#corr226.40'>226.40</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the p[h]yschic-astral and the divine-astral</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_230.11'></a><a href='#corr230.11'>230.11</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in[ ]dulge in the practice</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_233.3'></a><a href='#corr233.3'>233.3</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>before the seventee[n]th century</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_233.27'></a><a href='#corr233.27'>233.27</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>cons[e]quently the great cry</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_236.27'></a><a href='#corr236.27'>236.27</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>pheno[nem/men]a of modern spiritualism</td>
- <td class='c057'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_256.7'></a><a href='#corr256.7'>256.7</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the lustre of the firma[n/m]ent</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_260.38'></a><a href='#corr260.38'>260.38</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>uplifted to his were Fleta’s eyes[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_261.17'></a><a href='#corr261.17'>261.17</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>but [eat] nothing more</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_263.39'></a><a href='#corr263.39'>263.39</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>pushed the door open[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_265.38'></a><a href='#corr265.38'>265.38</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>a passionate and adoring eagerness[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_273.59'></a><a href='#corr273.59'>273.59</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[l]ife of the Spirit</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_278.44'></a><a href='#corr278.44'>278.44</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the only one to see me[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_283.15'></a><a href='#corr283.15'>283.15</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>repugnant to a belie[t/f] in this law</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_284.31'></a><a href='#corr284.31'>284.31</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in a position to apprecia[i/t]e</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_292.17'></a><a href='#corr292.17'>292.17</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>as in the Jubilee[e] coinage</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_292.28'></a><a href='#corr292.28'>292.28</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>The question of what interpreta[ta]tion</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_293.68.2'></a><a href='#corr293.68.2'>293.68.2</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>(1 Corinthians xi, 11.[)]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_296.7'></a><a href='#corr296.7'>296.7</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>or [“/‘]problematical[”/’] Mahatma?”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_299.29'></a><a href='#corr299.29'>299.29</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>since it beg[u/a]n by a “play of words,”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_301.1.5'></a><a href='#corr301.1.5'>301.1.5</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the Word of Truth, th[e] <em>Makheru</em> of Egypt.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_301.1.6'></a><a href='#corr301.1.6'>301.1.6</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>The preserved mummy was the bod[y]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_301.15'></a><a href='#corr301.15'>301.15</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]χρηστός ἑστιν επι τους,”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_302.16'></a><a href='#corr302.16'>302.16</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and even by unbelievers,[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_302.1.1'></a><a href='#corr302.1.1'>302.1.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]Christianus quantum interpretatione</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_303.2.3'></a><a href='#corr303.2.3'>303.2.3</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>or devoted to oracul[e/a]r services</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_304.25'></a><a href='#corr304.25'>304.25</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>“the son of Iaso or <em>Ieso</em>, the [“]healer,”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_305.4'></a><a href='#corr305.4'>305.4</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>of this rema[r]kable form.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_305.36'></a><a href='#corr305.36'>305.36</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>with [“/‘]oil that was taken from the wood</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_305.37'></a><a href='#corr305.37'>305.37</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>he is called the Christ:[”/’]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_305.41'></a><a href='#corr305.41'>305.41</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>also as the Horus of both sexes.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_305.2.1'></a><a href='#corr305.2.1'>305.2.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>for in[t]itiation into the Greek</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_306.34'></a><a href='#corr306.34'>306.34</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the name of the Christ as the e[n/m]balmed mummy</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_306.47'></a><a href='#corr306.47'>306.47</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>With the Greek [t]erminal <i>s</i></td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_307.30'></a><a href='#corr307.30'>307.30</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>our Christology is mummified mythology.”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_309.2.1'></a><a href='#corr309.2.1'>309.2.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]The word שיה <em>shiac</em>,</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_310.19'></a><a href='#corr310.19'>310.19</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>([“]λεγόμενος,” surnamed “χρηστος.”)</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_303.3.3'></a><a href='#corr303.3.3'>303.3.3</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[(]here Socrates is the <em>Chréstos</em>)</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_303.4.12'></a><a href='#corr303.4.12'>303.4.12</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>circle and solar year,[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_311.36'></a><a href='#corr311.36'>311.36</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>tran[s]gress> that law?</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_313.1'></a><a href='#corr313.1'>313.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>while parasit[i]es eat slowly</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_317.9'></a><a href='#corr317.9'>317.9</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in the [mechanicism] of the Universe</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_317.13'></a><a href='#corr317.13'>317.13</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>pessimism is ro[u/o]ted in the recognition</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_322.29'></a><a href='#corr322.29'>322.29</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and that <em>[“] system</em></td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_326.22'></a><a href='#corr326.22'>326.22</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>from any obligatory duty.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_326.28'></a><a href='#corr326.28'>326.28</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>thrown the blame and responsibi[i]lty</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_327.55'></a><a href='#corr327.55'>327.55</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>whether in[ it] its dead letter,</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_330L.14'></a><a href='#corr330L.14'>330L.14</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>having di[r/s]burdened our heart</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_332L.18'></a><a href='#corr332L.18'>332L.18</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>they disarm cri[c/t]icism</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_333R.61'></a><a href='#corr333R.61'>333R.61</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>even altars unto Baal[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_334R.51'></a><a href='#corr334R.51'>334R.51</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]where the women wove hangings for the grove”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_335L.44'></a><a href='#corr335L.44'>335L.44</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and the [“]Kaivalyanita.”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_334L.29'></a><a href='#corr334L.29'>334L.29</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and by the famine....[’/”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_349.32'></a><a href='#corr349.32'>349.32</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>knew that man to be a savage[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_351.36'></a><a href='#corr351.36'>351.36</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>recognised it as his own room[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_360.23'></a><a href='#corr360.23'>360.23</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>it was exceedingly solid and well fastened[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_361.20'></a><a href='#corr361.20'>361.20</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]I may not readily understand you.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_366.13'></a><a href='#corr366.13'>366.13</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>were all in all to us![”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_367.27'></a><a href='#corr367.27'>367.27</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>that reigneth over all![”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_372.23'></a><a href='#corr372.23'>372.23</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>cannot subsist witho[n/u]t the spiritual force</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inverted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_373.42'></a><a href='#corr373.42'>373.42</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>have themselves an organic form[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_375.8'></a><a href='#corr375.8'>375.8</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>—probably many[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_386.25'></a><a href='#corr386.25'>386.25</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>should he meet him in Heaven[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_387.25'></a><a href='#corr387.25'>387.25</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[me] Ambrose’s sword</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i> ?</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_389.34'></a><a href='#corr389.34'>389.34</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“/‘]thou> must be</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_390.19'></a><a href='#corr390.19'>390.19</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>as you shall hear.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_404.11'></a><a href='#corr404.11'>404.11</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>vegetable forms [a]s well?</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_406.30'></a><a href='#corr406.30'>406.30</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>from not[—/-]living matter.[’]”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced/Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_407.1.1'></a><a href='#corr407.1.1'>407.1.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]missing link”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_409.47'></a><a href='#corr409.47'>409.47</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>(actual or possible)[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_411.3'></a><a href='#corr411.3'>411.3</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the root of [uo/ou]r present constitution</td>
- <td class='c057'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_412.19'></a><a href='#corr412.19'>412.19</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in accepting the doct[r]ine of Atonement</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_413.16'></a><a href='#corr413.16'>413.16</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the[,] Church wishes the truth,</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_417.19'></a><a href='#corr417.19'>417.19</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>and transfer it [to ]the shoulders</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_434.29'></a><a href='#corr434.29'>434.29</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>an hono[n/u]rable reputation</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inverted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_436.1.14'></a><a href='#corr436.1.14'>436.1.14</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>to the [‘]Lord’ for a burnt-offering</td>
- <td class='c057'>Restored.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_437.19'></a><a href='#corr437.19'>437.19</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>must be the <i>d[’]evil</i> worship</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_447.35'></a><a href='#corr447.35'>447.35</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>they were set in[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_447.27'></a><a href='#corr447.27'>447.27</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>which was habitual with him[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_450.2'></a><a href='#corr450.2'>450.2</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>learned to surrender his love.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_456.14'></a><a href='#corr456.14'>456.14</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>follow and s[ie/ei]ze her thoughts</td>
- <td class='c057'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_469.7'></a><a href='#corr469.7'>469.7</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]No one said aught</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_472.3.1'></a><a href='#corr472.3.1'>472.3.1</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]breaks through the Brahmarandra</td>
- <td class='c057'><i>sic</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_474.5'></a><a href='#corr474.5'>474.5</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>three-fold r[h]ythm</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_477.7'></a><a href='#corr477.7'>477.7</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>it would never [h/b]e his.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_477.27'></a><a href='#corr477.27'>477.27</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>by personal craving or desire[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_481.10'></a><a href='#corr481.10'>481.10</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the quickest violet[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_484.10'></a><a href='#corr484.10'>484.10</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the very ar[ô/o]ma of our thoughts</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_486.5'></a><a href='#corr486.5'>486.5</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the i[n]diosyncrasies of a nation</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_490.12'></a><a href='#corr490.12'>490.12</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>“Faith is the key of Christendom,[’/”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_494.41'></a><a href='#corr494.41'>494.41</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>only a coun[f/t]erfeit Presentment</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_495.23'></a><a href='#corr495.23'>495.23</a></td>
- <td class='c007'><em>but for destruction</em>.[”]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_502.35'></a><a href='#corr502.35'>502.35</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the Deit[r]y is either an anachronism,</td>
- <td class='c057'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_502.39'></a><a href='#corr502.39'>502.39</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>in the tract entitle[s/d] “Autocentricism, or the Brain Theory of Life and Mind.”</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_503.10'></a><a href='#corr503.10'>503.10</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>which certifies it[s] own nomenal existence.</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_503.13'></a><a href='#corr503.13'>503.13</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>the nöetic or hyloic basis[.]</td>
- <td class='c057'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_503.14'></a><a href='#corr503.14'>503.14</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>admits of sci[e]ntific research</td>
- <td class='c057'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><a id='c_503.28'></a><a href='#corr503.28'>503.28</a></td>
- <td class='c007'>such states of rapture the relatio[u/n]s</td>
- <td class='c057'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
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