THE HIMALAYAN BROTHERS
by
H. P. Blavatsky
SIR,--
"On the
authority of an adept" (?) "they" (the Theosophists
and Madame Blavatsky) "are all mediums under the influence of the lower
spirits." Such is the sentence used by you in an editorial review of Mr. Sinnett's Occult World (Spiritualist, June 17th). Doubtful
as its pertinency might appear, I personally found
nothing very objectionable in it, the more so, as elsewhere you do me the honour
to express your conviction that (whether controlled by good or bad spirits) I
yet am a "strong physical medium"--that term precluding at least the suspicion
of my being a regular impostor. This letter then is not directed against you,
but rather against the pretensions of a would-be "adept." Another point
should be also attended to before I proceed, in order that the situation may be
as clearly defined as possible.
Finding
myself for the period of nearly seven years one of the best abused individuals
under the sun, I rather got accustomed to that sort of thing. Hence, I would
hardly take up the pen now to defend my own character.
If people, besides
forgetting that I am a woman, and an old woman, are dull enough to fail to
perceive that had I declared myself anything in creation, save a Theosophist and
one of the founders of our Society, I would have been in every respect--materially
as well as socially--better off in the world's consideration,
and that therefore, since, notwithstanding all the persecution and opposition
encountered, I persist in remaining and declaring myself one, I cannot well be
that charlatan and pretender some people would see in me--I really cannot help
it. Fools are unable, and the wise unwilling to see the absurdity of such an
accusation, for as Shakespeare puts it: Folly in fools bears not so strong a
note
As foolery in
the wise, when wit doth dote.It is not then to defend
myself that I claim space in your columns, but to answer one whose ex-cathedra
utterances have revolted the sense of justice of more than one of our
Theosophists in India, and to defend them--who have a claim on all the reverential
feeling that my nature is capable of.
A new
correspondent, one of those dangerous, quasi-anonymous individuals who abuse
their literary privilege of hiding their true personality and thus shirk responsibility
behind an initial or two, has lately won a prominent place in the columns of
your journal. He calls himself an "adept"; that is easy enough, but does
or rather can he prove it?
To begin
with, in the sight of the Spiritualists as much as in that of sceptics in general, an "adept," whether he hails
from
Could he but
prove what he claims, namely, the powers conferring upon a person the title of
an initiate, such epithets might well be scorned by him.
Aye,--but I ask again, is he ready to make good his claim? The language used by
him, to begin with, is not that which a true adept would ever use. It is
dogmatic and authoritative throughout, and too full of insulting aspersions
against those who are not yet proved to be worse or lower than himself; and
fails entirely to carry conviction to the minds of the profane as of those who
do know something of adepts and initiates--that it is one of such proficients who now addresses them.
Styling
himself an adept, whose "Hierophant is a western
gentleman," but a few lines further on he confesses his utter ignorance of
the existence of a body which cannot possibly be ignored by any true adept! I
say "cannot" for there is no accepted neophyte on the whole globe but
at least knows of the Himalayan Fraternity.
The sanction
to receive the last and supreme initiation, the real
"word at low breath" can come but through those
fraternities in
"an adept in the high art of manufacturing Parisian cothurns." J.K. speaks of Brothers "on the soul
plane," of "divine Kabbalah culminating in God," of "slave magic,"
and so on, a phraseology which proves to me most conclusively that he is but
one of those dabblers in western occultism which were so well represented some
years ago, by French-born "Egyptians" and "Algerians," who
told people their fortunes by the Tarot, and placed their visitors within enchanted
circles with a Tetragrammaton inscribed in the
centre.
I do not say
J.K. is one of the latter, I beg him to understand. Though quite unknown to me
and hiding behind his two initials, I will not follow his rude example and
insult him for all that. But I say and repeat that his language sadly betrays
him. If a Kabbalist at all, then himself and his
"Hierophant" are but the humble self-taught pupils of the mediaeval,
and so-called "Christian" Kabbalists; of
adepts, who, like Agrippa, Khunrath, Paracelsus,
Vaughan, Robert Fludd, and several others, revealed
their knowledge to the world but to better conceal it, and who never gave the
key to it in their writings. He bombastically asserts his own knowledge and
power, and proceeds to pass judgment on people of whom he knows and can know
nothing. Of the "Brothers" he says: "If they are true adepts,
they have not shown much worldly wisdom, and the organization which is to
inculcate their doctrine is a complete failure, for even the very first
psychical and physical principles of true Theosophy and occult science are
quite unknown to and unpractised by the members of
that organization--the Theosophical Society."
How does he
know? Did the Theosophists take him into their confidence? And if he knows
something of the British Theosophical Society, what can he know of those in
body and is a traitor. And if he does not, what has
he to say of its
practitioners, since the Society in general, and especially
its esoteric sections that count but a very few "chosen ones"--are
secret bodies?
The more
attentively I read his article the more am I inclined to laugh at the dogmatic
tone prevailing in it. Were I a Spiritualist, I would
be inclined to suspect in it a good "goak"
of John King, whose initials are represented in the signature of J.K. Let him
first learn, that mirific Brother of the
"Western Hermetic Circle in the soul-plane," a few facts about the
adepts in general, before he renders himself any more ridiculous.
(1) No true
adept will on any consideration whatever reveal himself as one, to the profane.
Nor would he ever speak in such terms of contempt of people, who are certainly
no more silly, and, in many an instance, far wiser
than himself. But were even the Theosophists the poor misled creatures he would
represent them to be, a true adept would rather help than deride them.
(2) There
never was a true Initiate but knew of the secret Fraternities in the East. It
is not Eliphas Levi who would ever deny their
existence, since we have his authentic signature to the contrary. Even P. B.
Randolph, that wondrous, though erratic, genius of America, that half-initiated
seer, who got his knowledge in the East, had good reasons to know of their
actual existence, as his writings can prove.
(3) One who
ever perorates
upon his occult knowledge, and speaks of practising his powers in the name of
some particular prophet, deity, or Avatar, is but a sectarian mystic at best.
He cannot be an adept in the Eastern sense--a Mahatma, for his judgment will
always be biased and prejudiced by the colouring of
his own special and dogmatic religion.
(4) The great
science, called by the vulgar "magic," and by its Eastern proficients Gupta Vidya,
embracing as it does each and every science, since it is the acme of knowledge,
and constitutes the perfection of philosophy, is universal: hence--as very
truly remarked--cannot be confined to one particular nation or geographical
locality. But, as Truth is one, the method for the attainment of its highest
proficiency must necessarily be also one. It cannot be subdivided, for, once
reduced to parts, each of them, left to itself, will, like rays of light,
diverge from, instead of converging to, its centre, the ultimate goal of
knowledge; and these parts can rebecome the Whole
only by collecting them together again, or each fraction will remain but a
fraction.
This truism,
which may be termed elementary mathematics for little boys, has to be
re-called, in order to refresh the memory of such "adepts" as are too
apt to forget that "Christian Kabbalism" is
but a fraction of Universal Occult Science.
And, if they
believe that they have nothing more to learn, then the less they turn to
"Eastern Adepts" for information the better and the less trouble for both.
There is but one royal road to "Divine Magic"; neglect and abandon it
to devote yourself specially to one of the paths
diverging from it, and like a lonely wanderer you will find yourself lost in an
inextricable labyrinth. Magic, I suppose, existed millenniums before the
Christian era; and, if so, are we to think then, with our too learned friends,
the modern "Western Kabbalists," that it
was all Black Magic, practised by the "Old firm
of Devil & Co."? But together with every other person who knows
some-thing of what he or she talks about, I say that it is nothing of the kind;
that J.K. seems to be superbly ignorant even of the enormous difference which exists
between a Kabbalist and an Occultist.
Is he aware,
or not, that the Kabbalist stands, in relation to the
Occultist, as a little detached hill at the foot of the Himalayas, to Mount
Everest? That what is known as the Jewish Kabbala of Simon Ben Jochai, is already the disfigured version of its primitive
source, the Great Chaldean Book of Numbers? That as
the former, with its adaptation to the Jewish Dispensation, its mixed
international Angelology and Demonology, its Orphiels
and Raphaels and Greek Tetragrams,
is a pale copy of the Chaldean, so the Kabbala of the
Christian Alchemists and Rosicrucians is naught in
its turn but a tortured edition of the Jewish. By centralizing the Occult Power
and his course of actions, in some one national God or Avatar, whether in
Jehovah or Christ, Brahma or Mahomet, the Kabbalist
diverges the more from the one central Truth.
It is but the
Occultist, the Eastern adept, who stands a Free Man, omnipotent through its own
Divine Spirit as much as man can be on earth. He has rid himself of all human
conceptions and religious side-issues; he is at one and the same time a Chaldean Sage, a Persian Magi, a Greek Theurgist, an
Egyptian Hermetist, a Buddhist Rahat
and an Indian Yogi. He has collected into one bundle all the separate fractions
of Truth widely scattered over the nations, and holds in his hand the One
Truth, a torch of light which no adverse wind can bend, blow out or even cause
to waver. Not he the Prometheus who robs but a portion of the Sacred Fire, and
therefore finds himself chained to Mount Caucasus for his intestines to be
devoured by vultures, for he has secured God within himself and depends no more
on the whim and caprice of either good or evil deities.
True, "Koot Hoomi" mentions Buddha.
But it is not because the brothers hold him in the light of God or even of
"a God," but simply because he is the Patron of the Thibetan Occultists, the greatest of the Illuminati and
adepts, self-initiated by his own Divine Spirit or "God-self" unto
all the mysteries of the invisible universe. Therefore to speak of imitating
"the life of Christ," or that of Buddha, or Zoroaster, or any other
man on earth chosen and accepted by any one special nation for its God and
leader, is to show oneself a Sectarian even in Kabbalism,
that fraction of the one "Universal Science"--Occultism. The latter
is pre-historic and is coeval with intelligence. The Sun shines for the heathen
Asiatic as well as for the Christian European and for the former still more
gloriously, I am glad to say.
To conclude,
it is enough to glance at that sentence of more than questionable propriety,
and more fit to emanate from the pen of a Jesuit than that of a Kabbalist, which allows of the supposition that the
"Brothers" are only a branch of the old established firm of
"Devil and Co." to feel convinced that beyond some
"Abracadabra" dug out from an old mouldy
MS. of Christian Kabbalism, J.K. knows nothing. It is
but on the unsophisticated profane, or a very innocent Spiritualist, that his
bombastic sentences, all savouring of the Anche is son pittore, that he may
produce some sensation.
True, there
is no need of going absolutely to Thibet or India to
find some knowledge and power "which are latent in every human soul";
but the acquisition of the highest knowledge and power require not only many
years of the severest study enlightened by a superior intelligence and an
audacity bent by no peril; but also as many years of retreat in comparative
solitude, and association with but students pursuing the same object, in a
locality where nature itself preserves like the neophyte an absolute
and unbroken stillness if not silence! where the air
is free for hundreds of miles around of all mephytic
influence; the atmosphere and human magnetism absolutely pure, and--no animal
blood is spilt. Is it in London or even the most country-hidden village of
England that such conditions can be found?
H. P.BLAVATSKY First published 1881
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