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The
Occult World
By
Alfred
Percy Sinnett
Theosophy Wales are
pleased to present this
Tour
de Force of esoteric writing.
The
Occult World is an treatise on the Occult and Occult Phenomena, presented in
readable style,
by
an early giant of the Theosophical Movement.
Alfred
Percy Sinnett and his wife Patience were personally invited to join the
Theosophical
Society
by the founder of modern Theosophy,
Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky herself
Theosophists nowadays hesitate to use the
word “Occult” as it has been kicked around, adapted
and reworked to suit many purposes and
contexts.
A P Sinnett uses the word to describe the
study
of a deeper spiritual reality that extends
beyond
rigid rational thinking and the accepted
boundaries of the physical sciences.
The Occult World
By
A P Sinnett
Chapter
5
Later Occult
Phenomena
This Chapter
was added
to the second English edition.
I CANNOT let a second edition of this book
appear without recording some, at least, of the experiences which have befallen
me since its preparation. The most important of these, indeed, are concerned
with fragmentary instruction I have been privileged to receive from the
Brothers in reference to the great truths of cosmology which their spiritual
insight has enabled them to penetrate. But the exposition even of the little,
relatively, that I have learned on this head would exact a more elaborate
treatise than I can attempt at present.[
Subsequently published as Esoteric Buddhism. ] And the purpose of the present volume is to expound the outer
facts of the situation rather than to analyse a
system of philosophy.
This is not
entirely inaccessible to exoteric students, apart from what may be regarded as
direct revelation from the Brothers. Though almost all existing occult
literature is unattractive in its form, and rendered purposely obscure by the
use of an elaborate symbology, it does contain a great deal of information that
can be distilled from the mass by the application of sufficient patience. Some
industrious students of that literature have proved this. Whether the masters
of occult philosophy will ultimately consent to the complete exposition in
plain language of the state of the facts regarding the spiritual constitution
of Man, remains to be seen. Certainly, even if they are still reticent in a way
that no ordinary observer can comprehend, they are more disposed to be
communicative at this moment than they have been for a long time past.
But the first thing to do is to dissipate as much as possible the dogged
disbelief that encrusts the Western mind as to the existence of any abnormal
persons who can be regarded as masters of True Philosophy -distinguished from
all the speculations that have tormented the world - and as to the abnormal
nature of their faculties. I have endeavored already to point out plainly, but
may as well here emphasise the reason why I dwell
upon, the phenomena which exhibit these faculties. Rightly regarded, these are
the credentials of the spiritual teaching which their authors supply. Firstly,
indeed, in themselves abnormal phenomena accomplished by the willpower
of living men must be intensely interesting for every one endowed with an
honest love of science. They open out new scientific horizons. It is as certain
as the sun's next rising that the forward pressure of scientific discovery,
advancing slowly as it does in its own grooves, will ultimately, and probably
at no very distant date, introduce the ordinary world to some of the superior
scientific knowledge already enjoyed by the masters of occultism. Faculties
will be acquired by exoteric investigation that will bring the outworks of
science a step or two nearer the comprehension of some of the phenomena I have
described in the present volume. And meanwhile it seems to me very interesting
to get a glimpse beforehand of achievements which we should probably find
engaging the eager attention of a future generation, if we really could, as
Tennyson suggests -
-" sleep through terms of mighty wars,
And wake on science grown to more,
On secrets of the brain, the stars,
As wild as aught of fairy lore."
But even superior to their scientific interest is the importance of the lesson
conveyed by occult phenomena, when these distinctly place their authors in a
commanding position of intellectual superiority as compared with the world at
large. They show most undeniably that these men have gone far ahead of their
contemporaries in a comprehension of Nature as exemplified in this world; that
they have acquired the power of cognizing events by other means than the
material senses; that while their bodies are at one place, their perceptions
may be at another, and that they have consequently solved the great problem as
to whether the Ego of man is a something distinct from his perishable frame.
From all other teachers we can but find out what has been thought probable in
reference to the soul or spirit of man : from them we can find out what is the
fact; and if that is not a sublime subject of inquiry, surely it would be
difficult to say what is. But we cannot read poetry till we have learned the
alphabet; and, if the combinations b-a ba, and so on
are found to be insufferably trivial and uninteresting, the fastidious person who
objects to such foolishness will certainly never be able to read the " Idylls of the King."
So I return from the clouds to my patient record of phenomena, and to the
incidents which have confirmed the experiences and conclusions set forth in the
previous chapter of this book, since my return to
The very first incident which took place was in the nature of a pleasant
greeting from my revered friend, Koot Hoomi. I had written to him (per Madame Blavatsky, of
course) shortly before leaving
For some time the gift of the letter from Koot Hoomi in the way I have described was the only phenomenon
accorded to me, and, although my correspondence continued, I was not encouraged
to expect any further displays of abnormal power. The higher authorities of the
occult world, indeed, had by this time put a very much more stringent
prohibition upon such manifestations than had been in operation the previous
summer at Simla. The effect of the manifestations
then accorded was not considered to have been satisfactory on the whole. A good
deal of acrimonious discussion and bad feeling had ensued; and I imagine that
this was conceived to outweigh, in its injurious effect on the progress of the
Theosophical movement, the good effect of the phenomena on the few persons who
appreciated them. When I went up to Simla in August,
1881, therefore, I had no expectation of further events of an unusual nature.
Nor have I any stream of anecdotes to relate which will bear comparison with
those derived from the experience of the previous year. But none the less was
the progress of a certain undertaking in which I became concerned -the
establishment of a Simla branch of the Theosophical
Society -interspersed with little incidents of a phenomenal nature. When this
Society was formed, many letters passed between Koot Hoomi and ourselves which were not in every case
transmitted through Madame Blavatsky. In one case, for example, Mr. Hume, who
became president for the first year of the new Society - the Simla Eclectic Theosophical Society, as it was decided it
should be called -got a note from Koot Hoomi inside a letter received through the post from a
person wholly unconnected with our occult pursuits, who was writing to him in
connection with some municipal business. I myself, dressing for the evening,
have found an expected letter in my coat-pocket, and on another occasion under
my pillow in the morning. On one occasion, having just received a letter by the
mail from England which contained matter in which I thought she would be interested,
I went up to Madame Blavatsky's writing-room and read it to her. As I read it,
a few lines of writing, comment upon what I was reading, were formed on a sheet
of blank paper which lay before her. She actually saw the writing form itself,
and called to me, pointing to the paper where it lay. There I recognise Koot Hoomi's hand-and his thought, for the comment was to the
effect, " Didn't I tell you so? " and
referred back to something he had said in a previous letter.
By-the-by, it
may be as well to inform the reader that during the whole of the visit to Simla, of which I am now speaking, for several months
before it, and until several months later, Colonel Olcott was in Ceylon, where
he was engaged in a very successful lecturing tour on behalf of the
Theosophical Society , in reference to some of the
phenomena which occurred at Simla in 1880, when both
he and Madame Blavatsky were present. Ill-natured and incredulous people -when
it would be glaringly absurd about some particular phenomenon to say that
Madame Blavatsky had done it by trickery of her own -used to be fond of
suggesting that the wire-puller must be Colonel Olcott. In some of the
newspaper criticisms of the first edition of this book, even, it has been
suggested that Colonel Olcott must be the writer of the letters that I
innocently ascribe to Koot Hoomi,
Madame Blavatsky merely manipulating their presentation. But inasmuch as all
through the autumn of 1881, while Colonel Olcott was at Ceylon and I at Simla, the letters continued to come, alternating day by
day sometimes with the letters we wrote, my critics, in future, must
acknowledge that this hypothesis is played out.
For me myself -as I think it will also be for my appreciative readers -the most
interesting fact connected with my Simla experience
of 1881 was this : During the period in question I got into relations with one
other of the Brothers, besides Koot Hoomi. It came to pass that in the progress of his own
development it was necessary for Koot Hoomi to retire for a period of three months into absolute
seclusion, as regards not merely the body -which in the case of an Adept may be
secluded in the remotest corner of the earth without that arrangement checking
the activity of his " astral " intercourse with mankind - but as
regards the whole potent Ego with whom we had dealings. Under these
circumstances one of the Brothers with whom Koot Hoomi was especially associated agreed, rather reluctantly
at first, to pay attention to the Simla Eclectic
Society, and keep us going during Koot Hoomi's absence with a course of instruction in occult
philosophy. The change which came over the character of our correspondence when
our new master took us in hand was very remarkable. Every letter that emanated
from Koot Hoomi had
continued to bear the impress of his gently mellifluous style. He would write
half a page at any, time rather than run the least risk of letting a brief or
careless phrase hurt anybody's feelings. His hand writing, too, was always very
legible and regular. Our new master treated us very differently: he declared
himself almost unacquainted with our language, and wrote a very rugged hand
which it was sometimes difficult to decipher. He did not beat about the bush
with us at all. If we wrote out an essay on some occult ideas we had picked up,
and sent it to him, asking if it was right, it would sometimes come back with a
heavy red line scored through it, and " No " written on the margin.
On one occasion one of us had written, " Can you clear my conceptions
about so and so ? " The annotation found in the margin when the paper was
returned was, " How can I clear what you haven't got I " and so on.
But with all this we made progress under M-, and by degrees the correspondence,
which began on his side with brief notes, scrawled in the roughest manner on
bits of coarse Tibetan paper, expanded into considerable letters sometimes. And
it must be understood that while his rough and abrupt ways formed an amusing
contrast with the tender gentleness of Koot Hoomi, there was nothing in these to impede the growth of
our attachment to him as we began to feel ourselves tolerated by him as pupils
a little more willingly than at first. Some of my readers, I am sure, will realise what I mean by " attachment " in this
case. I use a colourless word deliberately to avoid
the parade of feelings which might not be generally understood; but I can
assure them that in the course of prolonged relations- even though merely of
the epistolary kind -with a personage who, though a man like the rest of us as
regards his natural place in creation, is elevated so far above ordinary men as
to possess some attributes commonly considered divine, feelings are engendered
which are too deep to be lightly or easily described.
It was by M--------- quite recently that a little manifestation of force was
given for my gratification, the importance of which turned on the fact that
Madame Blavatsky was entirely uninfluential in its
production, and eight hundred miles away at the time. For the first three
months of my acquaintance with him, M------ had rigidly adhered to the
principle he laid down w hen he agreed to correspond with the Simla Eclectic Society during Koot
Hoomi 's retirement. He would correspond with us, but
would perform no phenomena whatever. This narrative is so much engaged with
phenomena that I cannot too constantly remind the reader that these incidents
were scattered over a long period of time, and that as a rule nothing is more
profoundly distasteful to the great adepts than the production of wonders in
the outside world. Ordinary critics of these, when they have been thus
exceptionally accorded, will constantly argue, " But why did not the
Brothers do so and so differently ? then the incident would have been much more
convincing." I repeat that the Brothers, in producing abnormal phenomena
now and then, are not trying to prove their existence to an intelligent
jury of Englishmen. They are simply letting their existence become perceptible
to persons with a natural gravitation towards spirituality and mysticism. It is
not too much to say that all the while they are scrupulously avoiding
the delivery of direct proof of a nature calculated to satisfy the commonplace
mind. For the present, at all events, they prefer that the crass, materialistic
Philistines of the sensual, selfish world should continue to cherish the
conviction that " the Brothers " are myths. They reveal themselves,
therefore, by signs and hints which are only likely to be comprehended by
people with some spiritual insight or affinity. True the appearance of this
book is permitted by them, -no page of it would have been written if a word
from Koot Hoomi had
indicated disapproval on his part, - and the phenomenal occurrences herein
recorded are really in many cases absolutely complete and irresistible proofs for
me, and therefore for anyone who is capable of understanding that I am
telling the exact truth. But the Brothers, I imagine, know quite well that,
large as the revelation has been, it may safely be passed before the eyes of
the public at large just because the herd, whose convictions they do not wish
to reach, can be relied upon to reject it. The situation may remind the reader
of the farceur who undertook to stand on Waterloo Bridge with a hundred
real sovereigns on a tray, offering to sell them for a shilling apiece, and who
wagered that he would so stand for an hour without getting rid of his stock. He
relied on the stupidity of the passers-by, who would think themselves too
clever to be taken in. So with this little book. It contains a straightforward
statement of absolute truths, which, if people could only believe them, would revolutionise the world; and the statement is fortified by
unimpeachable credentials. But the bulk of mankind will be blinded to this
condition of things by their own vanity and inability to assimilate
super-materialistic ideas, and none will be seriously affected but those who
are qualified to benefit by comprehending.
Readers of the latter class will readily appreciate the way the phenomena that
I have had to record have thus followed in the track of my own growing
convictions, confirming these as they have in turn been inferentially
constructed, rather than provoking and enforcing them in the first instance.
And this has been emphatically the case with the one or two phenomena that have
latterly been accorded by M------. It was in friendship and kindness that these
were given, long after all idea of confirming my belief in the Brothers was
wholly superfluous and out of date. M------ came indeed to wish that I should
have the satisfaction of seeing him (in the astral body of course), and would
have arranged for this in Bombay, in January, when I went down there for a day
to meet my wife, who was returning from England, had the atmospherical
and other conditions just at that period permitted it. But, unfortunately for
me, these were not favourable. As M----- wrote in one
of several little notes I received from him during that day and the following
morning, before my departure from the headquarters of the Theosophical Society,
where I was staying, even they, the Brothers, could not " work miracles;
" and though to the ordinary spectator there may be but little difference
between a miracle and anyone of the phenomena that the Brothers do sometimes
accomplish, these latter are really results achieved by the manipulation of
natural laws and forces, and are subject to obstacles which are sometimes
practically insuperable.
But M------, as it happened, was enabled to show himself to one member of the Simla Eclectic Society, who happened to be at Bombay a day
or two before my visit. The figure was clearly visible for a few moments, and
the face distinctly recognised by my friend, who had
previously seen a portrait of M-------.
Then it passed across the open door of an inner room in which it had appeared,
in a direction where there was no exit; and when my friend, who had started
forward in its pursuit, entered the inner room, it was no longer to be seen. On
two or three other occasions previously, M----- had made his astral figure visible
to other persons about the headquarters of the Society, where the constant
presence of Madame Blavatsky and one or two other persons of highly sympathetic
magnetism, the purity of life of all habitually resident there, and the
constant influences poured in by the Brothers themselves, render the production
of phenomena immeasurably easier than elsewhere.
And this brings me back to certain incidents which took place recently at my
own house at Allahabad, when, as I have already
stated, Madame Blavatsky herself was eight hundred miles off, at Bombay.
Colonel Olcott, then on his way to Calcutta, was staying with us for a day or
two in passing.
He was accompanied by a young native mystic, ardently aspiring to be accepted
by the Brothers as a chela, or pupil, and the
magnetism thus brought to the house established conditions which for a short
time rendered some manifestations possible. Returning home one evening shortly
before dinner, I found two or three telegrams awaiting me, enclosed in the
usual way, in envelopes securely fastened before being sent out from the
telegraph office. The messages were all from ordinary people, on commonplace
business; but inside one of the envelopes I found a little folded note from
M-----. The mere fact that it had been thus transfused by occult methods inside
the closed envelope was a phenomenon in itself, of course (like many of the
same kind that I have described before) ; but I need not dwell on this point,
as the feat that had been performed, and of which the note gave me information,
was even more obviously wonderful. The note made me search in my writing-room
for a fragment of a plaster bas-relief that M----- had just transported
instantaneously from Bombay. Instinct took me at once to the place where I felt
that it was most likely I should find the thing which had been brought- the
drawer of my writing-table, exclusively devoted to occult correspondence ; and
there, accordingly, I found a broken corner from a plaster slab, with M-----'s
signature marked upon it. I telegraphed at once to Bombay, to ask whether
anything special had just happened, and next day received back word that M-----
had smashed a certain plaster portrait, and had carried off a piece. In due
course of time I received a minute statement from Bombay, attested by the
signatures of seven persons in all, which was, as regards all essential points,
as follows: -
" At about seven in the evening the following persons " (five are
enumerated, including Madame Blavatsky ) " were seated at the
dining-table, at tea, in Madame Blavatsky's veranda opposite the door in the
red screen separating her first writing-room from the long veranda. The two
halves of the writing-room were wide open, and the dining-table, being about
two feet from the door, we could all see plainly everything in the room. About
five or seven minutes after, Madame Blavatsky gave a start. We all began to
watch. She then looked all round her, and said, , What is he going to do ? '
and repeated the same twice or thrice without looking at or referring to any of
us. We all suddenly heard a knock -a loud noise, as of something falling and
breaking -behind the door of Madame Blavatsky's writing- room, when there was
not a soul there at the time. A still louder noise was heard, and we all rushed
in. The room was empty and silent; but just behind the red cotton door, where
we had heard the noise, we found fallen on the ground a Paris plaster mould,
representing a portrait, broken into several pieces. After carefully picking
the pieces up to the smallest fragments, and examining it, we found the nail,
on which the mould had hung for nearly eighteen months, strong as ever in the
wall. The iron wire loop of the portrait was perfectly intact, and not even
bent. We spread the pieces on the table, and tried to arrange them, thinking
they could be glued, as Madame Blavatsky seemed very much annoyed, as the mould
was the work of one of her friends in New York. We found that one piece, nearly
square and of about two inches, in the right corner of the mould, was wanting.
We went into the room and searched for it, but could not find it. Shortly
afterwards, Madame Blavatsky suddenly arose and went into her room, shutting
the door after her. In a minute she called Mr. ------in, and showed to him a
small piece of paper. We all saw and read it afterwards. It was in the same
handwriting in which some of us have received previous communications, and the
same familiar initials. It told us that the missing piece was taken by the
Brother whom Mr. Sinnett calls , the Illustrious,'[ "My illustrious friend," was the expression I
originally used in application to the Brother I have here called M-, and it got
shortened afterwards into the pseudonym given in the statement. It is difficult
sometimes to know what to call the Brothers, even when one knows their real
names. The less these are promiscuously handled the better, for various
reasons, among which is the profound annoyance which it gives their real
disciples if such names get into frequent and disrespectful use among scoffers.
I regret now that Koot Hoomi's
name, so ardently venerated by all who have been truly subject to his
influence, should ever have been allowed to appear in full in the text of the
book.] To Allahabad,
and that she should collect and carefully preserve the remaining pieces."
The statement goes after this into some further details, which are unimportant
as regards the general reader, and is signed by the four native friends who
were with Madame Blavatsky at the time the plaster portrait was broken. A postcript, signed by three other persons, adds that these
three came in shortly after the actual breakage, and found the rest of the
party trying to arrange the fragments on the table.
It will be
understood, of course, but I may s well explicitly state, that the evening to
which the above narrative relates was the same on which I found Mr. -----'s
note inside my telegram at Allahabad, and the missing
piece of the cast in my drawer; and no appreciable time appears to have elapsed
between the breakage of the cast at Bombay and the delivery of the piece at Allahabad, for though I did not note the exact minute at
which I found the fragment - and, indeed, it may have been already in my drawer
for some little time before I came home- the time was certainly between seven
and eight, probably about half-past seven or a quarter to eight. And there is
nearly half an hour's difference of longitude between Bombay and Allahabad, so that seven at Bombay would be nearly
half-past at Allahabad. Evidently, therefore, the
plaster fragment, weighing two or three ounces, was really brought from Bombay
to Allahabad, to all intents and purposes,
instantaneously. That it was veritably the actual piece missing from the cast
broken at Bombay was proved a few days later, for all the remaining pieces at
Bombay were carefully packed up and sent to me, and the fractured edges of my
fragment fitted exactly into those of the defective corner, so that I was
enabled to arrange the pieces all together again and complete the cast.
The shrewd
reader -of the class of persons who would never have been " taken in
" by the man who sold sovereigns on Waterloo Bridge -will laugh at the
whole story. A lump of plaster of Paris sent a distance of eight hundred miles
across India in the wink of an eye by the willpower of somebody Heaven knows
where at the time -probably in Tibet ! The shrewd person could not manage the
feat himself, so he is convinced that nobody else could, and that the event
never occurred. Rather believe that the seven witnesses at Bombay and the present
writer are telling a pack of lies than that there can be anyone living in the
world who knows secrets of Nature, and can employ forces 'of Nature that shrewd
persons of the Times- reading, "Jolly Bank-holiday, three-penny
'bus young man " type know nothing about. Some friends of mine, criticising the first edition of this book, have found
fault with me for not adopting a more respectful and conciliatory tone towards
scientific scepticism when confronting the world with
allegations of the kind these pages contain. But I fail to see any motive for
hypocrisy in the matter. A great number of intelligent people in these days are
shaking themselves free at once from the fetters of materialism forged by
modern science and the entangled superstition of ecclesiastics, resolved that
the Church herself, with all her mummeries, shall fail to make them
irreligious; that science itself, with all its conceit, shall not blind them to
the possibilities of Nature. These are the people who will understand my
narrative and the sublimity of the revelations it embodies. But all people who
have been either thoroughly enslaved by dogma, or thoroughly materialised by modern science, have finally lost some
faculties, and will be unable to apprehend facts that do not fit in with their
preconceived ideas. They will mistake their own intellectual deficiencies for
inherent impossibility of occurrence on the part of the fact described; they
will be very rude in thought and speech towards persons of superior intuition,
who do find themselves able to believe and, in a certain sense, to understand;
and it seems to me that the time has come for letting the commonplace scoffers realise plainly that in the estimation of their more
enlightened contemporaries they do indeed seem a Beotian
herd, in which the better educated and the lesser educated -the orthodox savant
and the city clerk -differ merely in degree and not in kind.
The morning after the occurrence of the incident just detailed, B---- R-----,
the young native aspirant for chelaship, who
had accompanied Colonel Olcott, and was staying at my house, gave me a note
from Koot Hoomi , which he
found under his pillow in the morning. One which I had written to Koot Hoomi , and had given to
B----- R----- the previous day, had been taken, he told me, at night, before he
slept. The note from Koot Hoomi
was a short one, in the course of which he said, " To force phenomena in
the presence of difficulties magnetic or other is forbidden as strictly as for
a bank cashier to disburse money which is only entrusted to him. Even to do
this much for you so far from the headquarters would be impossible but for the
magnetisms 0---- and B----- R----,- have brought with them -and I could do no
more." Not fully realising the force of the
final words in this passage, and more struck by a previous passage, in which Koot Hoomi wrote -" It is
easy for us to give phenomenal proofs when we have necessary conditions "
-I wrote next day, suggesting one or two things which I thought might be done
to take additional advantage of the conditions presented by the introduction
into my house of available magnetism different from that of Madame Blavatsky,
who had been so much, however absurdly, suspected of imposing on me. I gave
this note to B---- R----- on the evening of the 13th of March -the plaster
fragment incident had taken place on the 11th- and on the morning of the 14th I
received a few words from Koot Hoomi
, simply saying that what I proposed was impossible, and that he would write
more fully through Bombay. When in due time I so heard from him, I learned that
the limited facilities of the moment had been exhausted, and that my
suggestions could not be complied with; but the importance of the explanations
I have just been giving turns on the fact that I did, after all, exchange
letters with Koot Hoomi at
an interval of a few hours, at a time when Madame Blavatsky was at the other
side of India.
The account I
have just been giving of the instantaneous transmission of the plaster of Paris
fragment from Bombay to Allahabad forms a fitting
prelude to a remarkable series of incidents I have next to record. The story
now to be told has already been made public in India, having been fully related
in " Psychic Notes," [Newton
& Co., Calcutta.] a
periodical temporarily brought out at Calcutta, with the object especially of
recording incidents connected with the spiritualistic mediumship
of Mr. Eglinton, who stayed for some months at
Calcutta during the past cold season. The incident was hardly addressed to the
outside world; rather to spiritualists, who while infinitely closer to a
comprehension of occultism than people still wrapped in the darkness of
orthodox incredulity, about all super-material phenomena, are nevertheless to a
large extent inclined to put a purely spiritualistic explanation on all
such phenomena. In this way it had come to pass that many spiritualists in
India were inclined to suppose that we who believed in the Brothers were in
some way misled by extraordinary mediumship on the
part of Madame Blavatsky. And at first the " spirit guides" who spoke
through Mr. Eglinton confirmed this view. But a very
remarkable change came over their utterances at last. Shortly before Mr. Eglinton's departure from Calcutta, they declared their
full knowledge of the Brotherhood, naming the " Illustrious " by that
designation, and declaring that they had been appointed to work in concert with
the Brothers thenceforth. On this aspect of affairs, Mr. Eglinton
left India in the steamship Vega, sailing from Calcutta, I believe, on
the 16th of March. A few days later, on the morning of the 24th, at AIahabad, I received a letter from Koot
Hoomi, in which he told me that he was going to visit
Mr. Eglinton on board the Vega at sea,
convince him thoroughly as to the existence of the Brothers, and if successful
in doing this notify the fact immediately to certain friends of Mr. Eglinton's at Calcutta. The letter had been written a day
or two before, and the night between the 21st and 22nd was mentioned as the
period when the astral visit would be paid. Now the full explanation of all the
circumstances under which this startling programme was carried out will take
some little time, but the narrative will be the more easily followed if I first
describe the outline of what took place in a few words. ' The promised visit
was actually paid, and not only that but a letter written by Mr. Eglinton at sea on the 24th describing it -and giving in
his adhesion to a belief in the Brothers fully and completely- was transported
instantaneously that same evening to Bombay, where it was dropped "out of
nothing " like the first letter I received on my return to India before
several witnesses; by them identified and tied up with cards written on by them
at the time ; then taken away again and a few moments later dropped down, cards
from Bombay and all, among Mr. Eglinton's friends at Calcutta
who had been told beforehand to expect a communication from the Brothers at
that time. All the incidents of this series are authenticated by witnesses and
documents, and there is no rational escape, for any one who looks into the
evidence, from the necessity of admitting that the various phenomena as I have
just described them have actually been accomplished, " impossible "
as ordinary science will declare them.
For the details of the various incidents of the series, I may refer the reader
to the account published in Psychic Notes of March 30, by Mrs. Gordon,
wife of Colonel W. Gordon, of Calcutta, and authenticated with her signature.
Colonel Olcott, Mrs. Gordon explains in the earlier part of her statement,
which for brevity's sake I condense, had just arrived at Calcutta on a visit to
Colonel Gordon and herself. A letter had come from Madame Blavatsky-
"dated
Bombay the 19th, telling us that something was going to be done, and expressing
the earnest hope that she would not be required to assist, as she had had
enough abuse about phenomena. Before this letter was brought by the post peon,
Colonel Olcott had told me that he had had an intimation in the night from his Chohan (teacher) that K. H.[ We had got into the habit at this time of using these initials
for the Mahatma's name. ] Had
been to the Vega and seen Eglinton. This was
at about eight o'clock on Thursday morning, the 23rd. A few hours later a
telegram, dated at Bombay, 22nd day,21 hours 9 minutes, that is, say 9 minutes
past 9 P.M. on Wednesday evening, came to me from Madame Blavatsky, to this
effect: ' K. H. just gone to Vega.' This telegram came as a 'delayed'
message, and was I to me from Calcutta, which accounts for its not reaching me
until midday on Thursday. It corroborated, as will be seen, the message of the
previous night to Colonel Olcott. We then felt hopeful of getting the letter by
occult means from Mr. Eglinton. A telegram later on
Thursday asked us to fix a " time for a sitting, so we named 9 o'clock
Madras time, on Friday, 24th. At this hour we three- Colonel Olcott, Colonel
Gordon, and myself -sat in the room which had been occupied by Mr. Eglinton.. We had a good light, and sat with our chairs
placed to form a triangle, of which the apex was to the north. In a few minutes
Colonel Olcott saw outside the open window the two' Brothers' whose names are
best known to us, and told us so; he saw them pass to another window, the glass
doors of which were closed. He saw one of them point his hand towards the air
over my head, and I felt something at the same moment fall straight down from
above on to my shoulder, and saw it fall at my feet in the direction towards
the two gentlemen. I knew it would be the letter, but for the moment I was so
anxious to see the' Brothers' that I did not pick up what had fallen. Colonel
Gordon and Colonel Olcott both saw and heard the letter fall. Colonel Olcott
had turned his head from the window for a moment to see what the I Brother' was
pointing at, and so noticed the letter falling from a point about two feet from
the ceiling. When he looked again the two 'Brothers' had vanished.
" There is no veranda outside, and the window is several feet from the
ground.
" I now turned and picked up what had fallen on me, and found a letter in
Mr. Eglinton's handwriting, dated on the Vega
the 24th ; a message from Madame Blavatsky, dated at Bombay the 24th, written
on the backs of three of her visiting cards; also a larger card, such as Mr. Eglinton had a packet of, and used at his séances.
On this latter card was the, to us, well-known handwriting of K. H., and a few
words in the handwriting of the other' Brother,' who was with him outside our
window, and who is Colonel Olcott's chief. All these
cards and the letter were threaded together with a piece of blue sewing silk.
We opened the letter carefully, by slitting up one side, as we saw that some
one had made on the flap in pencil three Latin crosses, and so we kept them
intact for identification. The letter is as follows: -
"'S. S. Vega, Friday, 24th March, 1882. " , My DEAR MRS.
GORDON,
-At last your hour of triumph has come! After the many battles we have had at
the breakfast-table regarding K. H.'s existence, and
my stubborn scepticism as to the wonderful powers
possessed by the " Brothers," I have been forced to a complete
belief in their being living distinct persons, and just in proportion to my
scepticism will be my firm unalterable opinion
respecting them. I am not allowed to tell you all I know, but K. H. appeared
to me in person two days ago, and what he told me dumfounded me. Perhaps Madame
B. will have already communicated the fact of K. H.'s
appearance to you. The "Illustrious " is uncertain whether this can
be taken to Madame or not, but he will try, notwithstanding the many
difficulties in the way. If he does not I shall post it when I arrive at port.
I shall read this to Mrs. B---- and ask her to mark the envelope; but whatever
happens, you are requested by K. H. to keep this letter a profound secret
until you hear from him though Madame. A storm of opposition is certain to be
raised, and she has had so much to bear that it is hard she should have more.'
Then follow some remarks about his health and the trouble which is taking him
home, and the letter ends.
" In her note on the three visiting cards Madame Blavatsky says:
-' Headquarters, March 24th.
These cards and contents to certify to my doubters that the attached letter
addressed to Mrs. Gordon by Mr. Eglinton was just
brought to me from the Vega, with another letter from himself to me,
which I keep. K. H. tells me he saw Mr. Eglinton and
had a talk with him, long and convincing enough to make him a believer in the
"Brothers," as actual living beings, for the rest of his natural
life. Mr. Eglinton writes to me: " The letter
which I enclose is going to be taken to Mrs. G. through your influence. You
will receive it wherever you are, and will forward it to her in ordinary
course. You will learn with satisfaction of my complete conversion to a belief
in the "Brothers", and I have no doubt K. H. has already told you how
he appeared to me two nights ago," etc., etc.. K. H. told me all.
He does not, however, want me to forward the letter in "ordinary
course", as it would defeat the object, but commands me to write this and
send it off without delay, so that it would reach you all at Howrah tonight, the 24th. I do so. ...H. P. Blavatsky.'
" The handwriting on these cards and signature are perfectly well known to
us. That on the larger card (from Mr. Eglinton's
packet) attached was easily recognised as coming from
Koot Hoomi . Colonel Gordon
and I know his writing as well as our own; it is so distinctly different from
any other I have ever seen, that among thousands I could select it. He says,
William Eglinton thought the manifestation could only
be produced through H. P. B. as a "medium", and that the power would
become exhausted at Bombay. We decided otherwise. Let this be a proof to all that
the spirit of living man has as much potentiality in it (and often more)
as a disembodied soul. He was anxious to test her, he often
doubted; two nights ago he had the required proof and will doubt no more. But
he is a good young man, bright, honest, and true as gold when once convinced.
..
"This card
was taken from his stock today. Let it be an additional proof of his wonderful mediumship. ...K. H.'
" This is written in blue ink, and across it is written in red ink a few words
from the other 'Brother' (Colonel Olcott's Chohan or chief). This interesting and wonderful phenomenon
is not published with the idea that anyone who is unacquainted with the
phenomena of spiritualism will accept it. But I write for the millions of spiritualists,
and also that a record may be made of such an interesting experiment. Who knows
but that it may pass on to a generation which will be enlightened enough to
accept such wonders?"
A postscript adds that since the above statement was written, a paper had been
received from Bombay, signed by seven witnesses who saw the letter arrive there
from the Vega.
As I began by saying, this phenomenon was addressed more to spiritualists than
to the outer world, because its great value for the experienced observer of
phenomena turns on the utterly unmediumistic
character of the events. Apart from the testimony of Mr. Eglinton's
own letter to the effect that he, an experienced medium, was quite convinced
that the interview he had with his occult visitant was not an interview with
such " spirits " as he had been used to, we have the three-cornered
character of the incident to detach it altogether from mediumship
either on his part or on that of Madame Blavatsky.
Certainly there
have been cases in which under the influence or mediumship
the agencies of the ordinary spiritual séance have transported letters
half across the globe. A conclusively authenticated case in which an unfinished
letter was thus brought from London to Calcutta will have attracted the attention
of all persons who have their understanding awakened to the importance of these
matters, and who read what is currently published about them, quite recently.
But every spiritualist will recognise that the
transport of a letter from a ship at sea to Bombay, and then from Bombay to
Calcutta, with a definite object in view, and in accordance with a prearranged
and pre-announced plan, is something quite outside the experience of mediumship.
Will the effort
made and the expenditure of force, whatever may have been required to
accomplish the wonderful feat thus recorded, be repaid by proportionately
satisfactory effects on the spiritualistic world ? There has been a great deal
written lately in England about the antagonism between spiritualism and theosophy,
and an impression has arisen in some way that the two cultes
are incompatible. Now, the phenomena and the experiences of spiritualism are
facts, and nothing can be incompatible with facts. But theosophy brings on the
scene new interpretations of those facts, it is true, and sometimes these prove
very unwelcome to spiritualists long habituated to their own interpretation.
Hence, such spiritualists are now and then disposed to resist the new teaching
altogether, and hold out against a belief that there can be anywhere in
existence men entitled to advance it. This is consequently the important
question to settle before we advance into the region of metaphysical
subtleties. Let spiritualists once realise that the
Brothers do exist, and what sort of people they are, and a great step will have
been accomplished. Not all at once is it to be expected that the spiritual
world will consent to revise its conclusions by occult doctrines. It is only by
prolonged intercourse with the Brothers that a conviction grows up in the mind
that as regards spiritual science they cannot be in error. At first, let
spiritualists think them in error if they please; but at all events it will be
unworthy of their elevated position above the Beotian
herd if they deny the evidence of phenomenal facts; if they hold towards
occultism the attitude which the crass sceptic of the
mere Lankester type occupies towards spiritualism
itself. So I cannot but hope that the coruscation of phenomena connected with
the origin and adventures of the letter written on board the Vega may
have flashed out of the darkness to some good purpose, showing the
spiritualistic world quite plainly that the great Brother to whom this work is
dedicated is, at all events, a living man, with faculties and powers of that
entirely abnormal kind which spiritualists have hitherto conceived to inhere
merely in beings belonging to a superior scheme of existence.
For my part, I
am glad to say that I not only know him to be a living man by reason of all the
circumstances detailed in this volume, but I am now enabled to realise his features and appearance by means of two
portraits, which have been conceded to me under very remarkable conditions. It
was long a wish of mine to possess a portrait of my revered friend ; and some
time ago he half promised that some time or other he would give me one. Now, in
asking an adept for his portrait, the object desired is not a photograph, but a
picture produced by a certain occult process which I have not yet had occasion
to describe, but with which I had long been familiar by hearsay. I had heard,
for example, from Colonel Olcott, of one of the circumstances under which his
own original convictions about the realities of occult power were formed many
years ago in New York, before he had actually entered on "the path."
Madame Blavatsky on that occasion had told him to bring her a piece of paper
which he would be certainly able to identify, in order that she might get a
portrait precipitated upon it. We cannot, of course, by the light of ordinary
knowledge form any conjecture about the details of the process employed; but
just as an adept can, as I have had so many proofs, precipitate writing in
closed envelopes, and on the pages of uncut pamphlets, so he can precipitate
color in such a way as to form a picture. In the case of which Colonel Olcott
told me he took home a piece of note-paper from a club in New York- a piece
bearing a club stamp -and gave this to Madame Blavatsky. She put it between the
sheets of blotting-paper on her writing-table, rubbed her hand over the outside
of the pad, and then in a few moments the marked paper was given back to him
with a complete picture upon it representing an Indian fakir in a state of samadhi. And the artistic execution of this drawing
was conceived by artists to whom Colonel Olcott afterwards showed it to be so
good that they compared it to the works of old masters whom they specially
adored and affirmed that as an artistic curiosity it was unique and priceless.
Now in aspiring to have a portrait of Koot Hoomi, of course I was wishing for a precipitated picture,
and it would seem that just before a recent visit Madame Blavatsky paid to Allahabad, something must have been said to her about a
possibility that this wish of mine might be gratified. For the day she came she
asked me to give her a piece of thick white paper and mark it. This she would
leave in her scrapbook, and there was reason to hope that a certain highly
advanced chela, or pupil, of Koot Hoomi's, not a full adept
himself as yet, but far on the road to that condition, would do what was
necessary to produce the portrait.
Nothing
happened that day nor that night. The scrapbook remained lying on a table in
the drawing-room, and was occasionally inspected. The following morning it was
looked into by my wife, and my sheet of paper was found to be still blank.
Still the scrapbook lay in full view on the drawing-room table. At half-past
eleven we went to breakfast; the dining-room, as is often the case in Indian
bungalows, only being separated from the drawing-room by an archway and
curtains, which were drawn aside. While we were at breakfast Madame Blavatsky
suddenly showed, by the signs with which all who know her are familiar, that
one of her occult friends was near. It was the chela
to whom I have above referred. She got up, thinking she might be required to go
to her room; but the astral visitor, she said, waved her back, and she returned
to the table. After breakfast we looked into the scrapbook, and on my marked
sheet of paper, which had been seen blank by my wife an hour or two before, was
a precipitated profile portrait. The face itself was left white, with only a
few touches within the limits of the space it occupied ; but the rest of the
paper all round it was covered with cloudy blue shading. Slight as the method
was by which the result was produced, the outline of the face was perfectly
well-defined, and its expression as vividly rendered as would have been
possible with a finished picture.
At first Madame
Blavatsky was dissatisfied with the sketch. Knowing the original personally,
she could appreciate its deficiencies; but though I should have welcomed a more
finished portrait, I was sufficiently pleased with the one I had thus received
to be reluctant that Madame Blavatsky should try any experiment with it herself
with the view of improving it, for fear it would be spoilt. In the course of
the conversation, M---- put himself in communication with Madame Blavatsky, and
said that he would do a portrait himself on another piece of paper. There was no
question in this case of a " test phenomenon" ; so after I had
procured and given to Madame Blavatsky a (marked) piece of Bristol board, it
was put away in the scrapbook, and taken to her room, where, free from the
confusing cross magnetisms of the drawing-room, M---- would be better able to
operate.
Now it will be understood that neither the producer of the sketch I had
received, nor M-----, in the natural state, is an artist. Talking over the
whole subject of these occult pictures, I ascertained from Madame Blavatsky
that the supremely remarkable results have been obtained by those of the adepts
whose occult science as regards this particular process has been superseded to
ordinary artistic training. But entirely without this, the adept can produce a
result which, for all ordinary critics, looks like the work of an artist, by
merely realising very clearly in his imagination the
result he wishes to produce, and then precipitating the coloring matter in
accordance with that conception.
In the course
of about an hour from the time at which she took away the piece of Bristol
board- or the time may have been less -we were not watching it, Madame
Blavatsky brought it me back with another portrait, again a profile, though
more elaborately done. Both portraits were obviously of the same face, and
nothing, let me say at once, can exceed the purity and lofty tenderness of its
expression. Of course it bears no mark of age. Koot Hoomi, by the mere years of his life, is only a man of what
we call middle age; but the adept's physically simple and refined existence
leaves no trace of its passage ; and while our faces rapidly wear out after
forty - strained, withered, and burned up by the passions to which all ordinary
lives are more or less exposed- the adept age, for periods of time that I can
hardly venture to define, remains apparently the perfection of early maturity.
M-----, Madame Blavatsky's special guardian still, as I judge by a portrait of
him that I have seen, though I do not yet possess one, in the absolute prime of
manhood, has been her occult guardian from the time she was a child; and now
she is an old lady. He never looked, she tells me, any different from what he
looks now.
I have now
brought up to date the record of all external facts connected with the revelations
I have been privileged to make. The door leading to occult knowledge is still
ajar, and it is still permissible for explorers from the outer world to make
good their footing across the threshold. This condition of things is due to
exceptional circumstances at present, and may not continue long. Its
continuance may largely depend upon the extent to which the world at large
manifests an appreciation of the opportunity now offered. Some readers who are
interested, but slow to perceive what practical action they can take, may ask
what they can do to show appreciation of the opportunity. My reply will be modelled on the famous injunction of Sir Robert Peel:
" Register, register, register! " Take the first steps towards making
a response to the offer which emanates from the occult world - register,
register, register; in other words, join the Theosophical Society -the one and
only association which at present is linked by any recognised
bond of union with the Brotherhood of Adepts in Tibet. There is a Theosophical
Society in London, as there are other branches in Paris and America, as well as
in India. If there is as yet but little for these branches to do, that fact
does not vitiate their importance. After a voter has registered, there is not
much for him to do for the moment. The mere growth of branches of the
Theosophical Society, as associations of people who realise
the sublimity of adeptship, and have been able to
feel that the story told in this little book, and more fully, if more
obscurely, in many greater volumes of occult learning, is absolutely true
-true, not as shadowy religious " truths" or orthodox speculations
are held to be true by their votaries, but true as the " London
Post-Office Directory" is true; as the Parliamentary reports people read
in the morning are true; the mere enrolment of such people in a society under
conditions which may enable them sometimes to meet and talk the situation over
if they do no more, may actually effect a material result as regards the extent
to which the authorities of the occult world will permit the further revelation
of the sublime knowledge they possess. Remember, that knowledge is real
knowledge of other worlds and other states of existence -not vague conjecture
about hell and heaven and purgatory, but precise knowledge of other worlds
going on at this moment, the condition and nature of which the adepts can
cognize, as we can the condition and nature of a strange town we may visit.
These worlds are linked with our own, and our lives with the lives they
support; and will the further acquaintance with the few men on earth who are in
a position to tell us more about them be superciliously rejected by the advance
guard of the civilized world, the educated classes of England ? Surely no
inconsiderable group will be sufficiently spiritualized to comprehend the value
of the present opportunity, and sufficiently practical to follow the advice
already quoted, and - register, register, register.
______________________
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Concerns about the fate of the
wildlife as
Tekels Park is to
be Sold to a Developer
Concerns are
raised about the fate of the wildlife as
The Spiritual
Retreat, Tekels Park in Camberley,
Surrey, England
is to be sold to a developer.
Tekels Park is a
50 acre woodland park, purchased
for the Adyar Theosophical Society in England
in 1929.
In addition to
concern about the park, many are
worried about the future of the Tekels Park
Deer
as they are not a
protected species.
Anyone planning a
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A B C D EFG H IJ KL M N OP QR S T UV WXYZ
Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
1.22MB
Quick Explanations
with Links to More Detailed Info
What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis
Anthropogenesis
Root Races
Karma
Ascended Masters After Death States
Reincarnation
The Seven Principles of Man Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical Society
History of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical Society Presidents
History of the Theosophical Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the Theosophical Society
Explanation of the Theosophical Society Emblem
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
An Outstanding
Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of
Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
An
Outline of Theosophy
Charles
Webster Leadbeater
Theosophy - What it is How is it Known? The Method of Observation
General Principles The Three Great Truths The Deity
Advantage Gained from this
Knowledge The Divine Scheme
The Constitution of Man The True Man Reincarnation
The Wider Outlook Death Man’s Past and Future
Cause and Effect What Theosophy does for us
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Bangor Conwy & Swansea Lodges are members
of the Welsh
Regional Association (Formed 1993).
Theosophy Cardiff
separated from the Welsh Regional
Association in
March 2008 and became an independent
body within the Theosophical Movement in March 2010
High
Drama & Worldwide Confusion
as
Theosophy Cardiff Separates from the
Welsh Regional Association (formed 1993)
Theosophy Cardiff Cancels its Affiliation
to the Adyar Based Theosophical Society