[In order to leave no room for equivocation, the members of the
T.S. have to be reminded of the origin of the Society in 1875.
Sent to the U.S. of America in 1873 for the purpose of organizing
a group of workers on a psychic plane, two years later the writer
received orders from her Master and Teacher to form the nucleus
of a regular Society whose objects were broadly stated as follows:
(1) Universal Brotherhood;
(2) No distinction to be made by the members between* races, creeds, or social positions, but every member had to be judged
and dealt by on his personal merits;
(3) To study the philosophies of the East those of India chiefly,
presenting them gradually to the public in various works that
would interpret exoteric religions in the light of esoteric teachings;
(4) To oppose materialism and theological dogmatism in every possible
way, by demonstrating the existence of occult forces unknown to
Science, in Nature, and the presence of psychic and spiritual
powers in Man; trying, at the same time, to enlarge the views
of the Spiritualists by showing them that there are other, many
other agencies at work in the production of phenomena besides
the "Spirits" of the dead. Superstition had to be exposed
and avoided; and occult forces, beneficent and maleficent-
ever surrounding us and manifesting their presence in various
ways demonstrated to the best of our ability.
Such was the programme in its broad features. The two chief Founders
were not told what they had to do, how they had to bring about
and quicken the growth of the Society and results desired; nor
had they any definite ideas given them concerning the outward
organisation all this being left entirely with themselves. Thus,
as the undersigned had no capacity for such work as the mechanical
formation and administration of a Society, the management of the
latter was left in the hands of Col. H. S. Olcott, then and there
elected by the primitive founders and members President for
life. But if the two Founders were not told what they had
to do, they were distinctly instructed about what they
should never do, what they had to avoid, and what the Society
should never become. Church organisations, Christian and Spiritual
sects were shown as the future contrasts to our Society.1
To make it clearer:
(1) The Founders had to exercise all their influence to oppose
selfishness of any kind, by insisting upon sincere,
fraternal feelings among the Members at least outwardly; working
for it to bring about a spirit of unity and harmony, the great
diversity of creeds notwithstanding; expecting and demanding from
the Fellows, a great mutual toleration and charity for each other's
shortcomings; mutual help in the research of truths in every domain moral
or physical and even in daily life.
(2) They had to oppose in the strongest manner anything approaching
dogmatic faith and fanaticism belief in the infallibility
of the Masters, or even in the very existence of our invisible
Teachers, having to be checked from the first. On the other hand,
as a great respect for the private views and creeds of every member
was demanded, any Fellow criticising the faith or belief of another
Fellow, hurting his feelings, or showing a reprehensible self-assertion,
unasked (mutual friendly advices were a duty unless declined) such
a member incurred expulsion. The greatest spirit of free research
untrammelled by anyone or anything, had to be encouraged.
Thus, for the first year the Members of the T. Body, who representing
every class in Society as every creed and belief Christian clergymen,
Spiritualists, Freethinkers, Mystics, Masons and Materialists lived
and met under these rules in peace and friendship. There were
two or three expulsions for slander and backbiting.
The rules, however imperfect in their tentative character,
were strictly enforced and respected by the members. The original
$5 initiation fee was soon abolished as inconsistent with the
spirit of the Association: members had enthusiastically promised
to support the Parent Society and defray the expenses of machines
for experiments, books, the fees of the Recording Secretary,2 etc., etc. This was Reform No. 1. Three months after,
Mr. H. Newton, the Treasurer, a rich gentleman of New York, showed
that no one had paid anything or helped him to defray the current
expenses for the Hall of meetings, stationery, printing, etc.,
and that he had to carry the burden of those expenses alone.
He went on for a short time longer, then he resigned as
Treasurer. It was the President-Founder, Col. H. S. Olcott,
who had to pay henceforth for all. He did so for over 18 months.
The "fee" was re-established, before the Founders left
for India with the two English delegates now their mortal enemies;
but the money collected was for the Arya Samaj of Aryavarta with
which Society the Theosophical became affiliated. It is the President
Founder who paid the enormous travelling expenses from America
to India, and those of installation in Bombay, and who supported
the two delegates out of his own pocket for nearly 18 months.
When he had no more money left, nor the Corr. Secretary either a
resolution was passed that the "initiation fee" sums
should go towards supporting the Head Quarters.
Owing to the rapid increase of the Society in India, the present
Rules and Statutes grew out. They are not the outcome
of the deliberate thought and whim of the President Founder, but
the result of the yearly meetings of the General Council at the
Anniversaries. If the members of that G. C. have framed them so
as to give a wider authority to the Pres. Founder, it was the
result of their absolute confidence in him, in his devotion and
love for the Society, and not at all as implied in "A
Few Words" a proof of his love for power and authority.
Of this, however, later on.
It was never denied that the Organisation of the T.S. was very
imperfect. Errare humanum est. But, if it can be shown
that the President has done what he could under the circumstances
and in the best way he knew how no one, least of all a theosophist,
can charge him with the sins of the whole community, as now done.
from the founders down to the humblest member, the Society is
composed of imperfect mortal men not gods. This was always claimed
by its leaders. "He who feels without sin, let him
cast the first stone." It is the duty of every Member of
the Council to offer advice and to bring for the consideration
of the whole body any incorrect proceedings. One of the plaintiffs
is a Councillor. Having never used his privileges as one,
in the matter of the complaints now proffered and thus, having
no excuse to give that his just representations were not listened
to, he, by bringing out publicly what he had to state first privately sins
against Rule XII. The whole paper now reads like a defamatory
aspersion, being full of untheosophical and unbrotherly insinuations which
the writers thereof could never have had in view.
This Rule XIIth was one of the first and the wisest. It is by
neglecting to have it enforced when most needed, that the President-Founder
has brought upon himself the present penalty.3 It is
his too great indulgence and unwise carelessness that have led
to all such charges of abuse of power, love of authority, show,
of vanity, etc., etc. Let us see how far it may have been deserved.
As shown for 12 years the Founder has toiled almost alone in
the interests of the Society and the general good hence, not
his own, and, the only complaint he was heard to utter was, that
he was left no time for self-development and study. The
results of this too just complaint are, that those for whom he
toiled, are the first to fling at him the reproach of being ignorant
of certain Hindu terms, of using one term for another, for inst.
of having applied the word "Jivanmukta" to a Hindu chela,
on one occasion! The crime is a terrible one, indeed. . . . We know
of "chelas" who being Hindus, are sure never to confuse
such well known terms in their religion; but who, on the
other hand, pursue Jivanmuktaship and the highest Theosophical
Ethics through the royal road of selfish ambition, lies, slander,
ingratitude and backbiting. Every road leads to Rome; this is
evident; and there is such a thing in Nature as "Mahatma"-Dugpas. . . .
It would be desirable for the cause of Theosophy and truth,
however, were all the critics of our President in general, less
learned, yet found reaching more to the level of his all-forgiving
good nature, his thorough sincerity and unselfishness; as the
rest of the members less inclined to lend a willing ear to those,
who, like the said "Vicars of Bray" have developed a
hatred for the Founders for reasons unknown.
The above advice is offered to the two Theosophists who have just
framed their "Few Words on the Theosophical Organisation."
That they are not alone in their complaints (which, translated
from their diplomatic into plain language look a good deal in
the present case like a mere "querelle4 d'Allemand") and that the said complaints are in a great
measure just, is frankly admitted. Hence, the writer must be
permitted to speak in this, her answer, of Theosophy and theosophists
in general, instead of limiting the Reply strictly to the
complaints uttered. There is not the slightest desire to be personal;
yet, there has accumulated of late such a mass of incandescent
material in the Society, by that eternal friction of precisely
such "selfish personalities," that it is certainly wise
to try to smother the sparks in time, by pointing out their true
nature.
Demands, and a feeling of necessity for reforms have not originated
with the two complainants. They date from several years, and there
has never been a question of avoiding reforms, but rather
a failure of finding such means as would satisfy all the
theosophists. To the present day, we have yet to find that "wise
man" from the East or from the West, who could not only diagnosticate
the disease in the T. Society, but offer advice and a remedy
likewise to cure it. It is easy to write: "It would be out
of place to suggest any specific measures" (for such
reforms, which do seem more difficult to suggest than to
be vaguely hinted at) "for no one who has any faith in Brotherhood
and in the power of Truth will fail to perceive what is necessary," concludes
the critic. One may, perhaps, have such faith and yet fail to
perceive what is most necessary. Two heads are better than
one; and if any practical reforms have suggested themselves to
our severe judges their refusal to give us the benefit of their
discovery would be most unbrotherly. So far, however, we
have received only most impracticable suggestions for reforms
whenever these came to be specified. The Founders, and the whole
Central Society at the Headquarters, for instance, are invited
to demonstrate their theosophical natures by living like "fowls
in the air and lilies of the field," which neither sow nor
reap, toil not, nor spin and "take no thought for the morrow."
This being found hardly practicable, even in India, where a man
may go about in the garment of an Angel, but has, nevertheless,
to pay rent and taxes, another proposition, then a third one and
a fourth each less practicable than the preceding were offered
. . . the unavoidable rejection of which led finally to the criticism
now under review.
After carefully reading "A Few Words, etc.," no very
acute intellect is needed to perceive that, although no "specific
measures" are offered in them, the drift of the whole argument
tends but to one conclusion, a kind of syllogism more Hindu than
metaphysical. Epitomised, the remarks therein plainly say: "Destroy
the bad results pointed out by destroying the causes
that generate them." Such is the apocalyptic meaning
of the paper, although both causes and results are made painfully
and flagrantly objective and that they may be rendered in this
wise: Being shown that the Society is the result and fruition
of a bad President; and the latter being the outcome of such an
"untheosophically" organized Society and, its worse
than useless General Council "make away with all these
Causes and the results will disappear"; i.e., the
Society will have ceased to exist. Is this the heart-desire of
the two true and sincere Theosophists?
The complaints "submitted to those interested in the
progress of true Theosophy" which seems to mean "theosophy
divorced from the Society" may now be noticed in
order and answered. They specify the following objections:
I. To the language of the Rules with regard to the powers
invested in the President-Founder by the General Council. This
objection seems very right. The sentence . . . The duties of the
Council "shall consist in advising the P.F. in
regard to all matters referred to them by him" may be
easily construed as implying that on all matters not referred
to the Council by the Pres.-Founder . . . its members will hold
their tongues. The Rules are changed, at any rate they are corrected
and altered yearly. This sentence can be taken out. The harm,
so far, is not so terrible.
II. It is shown that many members ex-officio whose names
are found on the list of the General Council are not known
to the Convention; that they are, very likely, not even interested
in the Society "under their special care"; a body they
had joined at one time, then probably forgotten its existence
in the meanwhile to withdraw themselves from the Association.
The argument implied is very valid. Why not point it out of
officially to the Members residing at, or visiting the Head
Quarters, the impropriety of such a parading of names? Yet, in
what respect can this administrative blunder, or carelessness,
interfere with, or impede "the progress of true
Theosophy."5
III. "The members are appointed by the President-Founder.
. . ." it is complained; "the Gen. Council only advises
on what is submitted to it" . . . and "in the meantime"
that P.F. is empowered to issue "special orders"
and "provisional rules," on behalf of that ("dummy")
Council. (Rule IV, p. 20.) Moreover, it is urged that out of a
number of 150 members of the G. Council, a quorum of 5 and even
3 members present, may, should it be found necessary by the
President, decide upon any question of vital importance, etc.,
etc., etc.
Such an "untheosophical" display of authority,
is objected to by Messrs. M. M. Chatterji and A. Gebhard on the
ground that it leads the Society to Caesarism, to "tyranny"
and "papal infallibility," etc., etc. However right
the two complainants may be in principle it is impossible
to fail seeing the absurd exaggerations of the epithets used;
for, having just been accused on one page of "tyrannical
authority," of "centralization of power" and a
"papal institution" (p. 9) on page 11, the President-Founder
is shown "issuing special orders" from that "centre
of Caesarism" which no one is bound to obey, unless he
so wishes! "It is well known" remarks the principal
writer "that not only individuals but even Branches have
refused to pay this (annual) subscription . . . of . . . two shillings"
(p. 11 ); without any bad effect for themselves, resulting out
of it, as appears. Thus, it would seem it is not to a non-existent
authority that objections should be made, but simply to a
vain and useless display of power that no one cares for.
The policy of issuing "special orders" with such sorry
results is indeed objectionable; only, not on the ground of
a tendency to Caesarism, but simply because it becomes highly
ridiculous. The undersigned for one, has many a time objected
to it, moved however, more by a spirit of worldly pride
and an untheosophical feeling of self-respect than anything
like Yogi humility. It is admitted with regret that the world
of scoffers and non-theosophists might, if they heard of it, find
in it a capital matter for fun. But the real wonder is, how can
certain European Theosophists, who have bravely defied
the world to make them wince under any amount of ridicule, once
they acted in accordance with the dictates of their conscience
and duty make a crime of what is at the worst a harmless,
even if ridiculous, bit of vanity; a desire of giving importance not
to the Founder, but to his Society for which he is ready to
die any day. One kind of ridicule is worth another. The Western
theosophist, who for certain magnetic reasons wears his hair long
and shows otherwise eccentricity in his dress, will be spared
no more than his President, with his "special orders."
Only the latter, remaining as kindly disposed and brotherly to
the "individual Theosophist and even a Branch" that
snub him and his "order," by refusing to pay
what others do shows himself ten-fold more Theosophical an(1
true to the principle of Brotherhood, than the former,
who traduces and denounces him in such uncharitable terms, instead
of kindly warning him of the bad effect produced. Unfortunately,
it is not those who speak the loudest of virtue and theosophy,
who are the best examplars of both. Few of them, if any, have
tried to cast out the beam from their own eye, before they raised
their voices against the mote in the eye of a brother. Furthermore,
it seems to have become quite the theosophical rage in these days,
to denounce vehemently, yet never to offer to help pulling out
any such motes.
The Society is bitterly criticized for asking every well-to-do
theosophist (the poor are exempt from it, from the first) to pay
annually two shillings to help defraying the expenses at Head-Quarters.
It is denounced as "untheosophical," "unbrotherly,"
and the "admission fee" of £1, is declared no better
than "a sale of Brotherhood." In this our "Brotherhood"
may be shown again on a far higher level than any other association
past or present. The Theosophical Society has never shown the
ambitious pretension to outshine in theosophy and brotherliness,
the primitive Brotherhood of Jesus and his Apostles,6 and that "Organisation," besides asking and being
occasionally refused, helped itself without asking, and
as a matter of fact in a real community of Brothers. Nevertheless,
such actions, that would seem highly untheosophical and prejudicial
in our day of culture when nations alone are privileged to pocket
each other's property and expect to be honoured for it do not
seem to have been an obstacle in the way of deification and sanctification
of the said early "Brotherly" group. Our Society had
never certainly any idea of rising superior to the brotherliness
and ethics preached by Christ, but only to those of
the sham Christianity of the Churches as originally ordered
to by our MASTERS. And if we do no worse than
the Gospel Brotherhood did, and far better than any Church, which
would expel any member refusing too long to pay his Church rates,
it is really hard to see why our "Organisation" should
be ostracized by its own members. At any rate, the pens of the
latter ought to show themselves less acerb, in these days
of trouble when every one seems bent on finding fault with the
Society, and few to help it, and that the President-Founder is
alone to work and toil with a few devoted theosophists at Adyar
to assist him.
IV. "There is no such institution in existence as the Parent
Society" we are told (pp. 2 and 3). "It has disappeared
from the Rules and . . . has no legal existence" .
. . The Society being unchartered, it has not legally;
but no more has any Theosophist a legal existence, for the matter
of that. Is there one single member throughout the whole globe
who would be recognised by law or before a Magistrate as
a theosophist? Why then do the gentlemen "complainants"
call themselves "theosophists" if the latter qualification
has no better legal standing than the said "Parent Society"
of the Head Quarters itself? But the Parent-body does exist,
and will, so long as the last man or woman of the primitive group
of Theosophist Founders is alive. This as a body; as for
its moral characteristics, the Parent-Society means that small
nucleus of theosophists who hold sacredly through storm and blows
to the original programme of the T.S., as established under
the direction and orders of those, whom they recognise and will,
to their last breath as the real originators of the Movement,
their living, Holy MASTERS AND TEACHERS.7
V. The complaints then, that the T.S. "has Laws without sanction,"
a "legislative body without legality," a "Parent
Society without existence," and, worse than all "a
President above all rules" are thus shown only partially
correct. But even were they all absolutely true, it would
be easy to abolish such rules with one stroke of the pen, or to
modify them. But now comes the curious part of that severe philippic
against the T.S. by our eloquent Demosthenes. After six pages
(out of twelve) had been filled with the said charges, the writer
admits on the 7th, that they have been so modified! "The
above" we learn (rather late) "was written under misapprehension
that the 'Rules' bearing date 1885 were the latest. It has
since been found that there is a later version of the Rules dated
1886 which have modified the older rules on a great many points."
So much the better. Why recall, in such case, mistakes in
the past if these exist no longer? But the accusers do not see
it in this light. They are determined to act as a theosophical
Nemesis; and in no way daunted by the discovery, they add that
nevertheless "it is necessary to examine the earlier
rules to ascertain the underlying principle, which rules
through the present ones as well." This reminds of the fable
of "the Wolf and the Lamb." But you see "the
chief point is, that the Convention has no power to make any
rules, as such a power is opposed to the spirit of Theosophy,"
. . . etc., etc.
Now this is the most extraordinary argument that could be made.
At this rate no Brotherhood, no Association, no Society is possible.
More than this; no theosophist, however holy his present life
may be, would have the right to call himself one; for were it
always found necessary to examine his earlier life,
"to ascertain the underlying principle" which
rules through the nature of the present man ten to one, he would
be found unfit to be called a theosophist! The experiment would
hardly be found pleasant to the majority of those whom association
with the T.S. has reformed; and of such there are a good many.
After such virulent and severe denunciations one might expect
some good, friendly and theosophically practical advice.
Not at all, and none is offered, since we have been already told
(p. 9) that it would be "out of place to suggest any specific
measures, as no one who has any faith in Brotherhood and in the
power of Truth will fail to perceive what is necessary."
The President-Founder has no faith in either "Brotherhood,"
or "the power of Truth" apparently. This is made evident
by his having failed to perceive (a) that the Head
Quarters opened to all Theosophists of any race or social
position, board and lodging free of charge the whole year round was
an unbrotherly Organisation; (b) that "the
central office at Adyar for keeping records and concentrating
information" with its European and Hindu inmates working
gratuitously and some helping it with their own money whenever
they have it ought to be carried on, according to the method
and principle of George Miller of Bristol, namely, the numerous
households and staff of officers at Adyar headed by the Pres.-Founder
ought to kneel every morning in prayer for their bread and milk,
appealing for their meals to "miracle"; and that finally,
and (c) all the good the Society is doing, is no good whatever
but "a spiritual wrong," because it presumes to call
a limited line of good work (theosophy) Divine Wisdom."
The undersigned is an ever patient theosophist, who has hitherto
laboured under the impression that no amount of subtle scholasticism
and tortured casuistry but would find like the Rosetta stone its
Champollion some day. The most acute among theosophists arc now
invited to make out in A Few Words" what the writers or
writer is driving at unless in plain and unvarnished language,
it be Down with the Theosophical Society, President-Founder and
its Head-Quarters!" This is the only possible explanation
of the twelve pages of denunciations to which a reply is now attempted.
What can indeed be made out of the following jumble of contradictory
statements:
(a) The President Founder having been shown throughout
as a "tyrant," a "would be Caesar,"
"aiming at papal power" and a "Venetian
Council of Three," and other words to that effect implied
in almost every sentence of the paper under review, it is confessed
in the same breath that the "London Lodge" of the Theosophical
Society has completely ignored the Rules (of the
Pope Caesar) published at Adyar! (p. 4) And yet, the "L.L.
of the T.S." still lives and breathes and one has heard of
no anathema pronounced against it, so far. . . .
(b) Rule XIV stating that the Society has "to deal
only with scientific and philosophical subjects,"
hence, "it is quite evident {?} that the power and
position claimed in the Rules for the P't Founder and the
Gen. Council and Convention are opposed to the spirit of the declared
Objects."
It might have been as well perhaps to quote the entire paragraph
in which these words appear,8
once that hairs are split
about the possibly faulty reaction of the Rules? Is it
not self-evident, that the words brought forward "only with
scientific and philosophical subjects" are inserted as a
necessary caution to true theosophists, who by dealing
with politics within any Branch Society might bring disgrace
and ruin on the whole body in India to begin with? Has the Society
or has it not over 140 Societies scattered through four parts
of the world to take care of? As in the case of "Mahatmas"
and "Mahatmaship" active work of the Theosophical Society
is confused willingly or otherwise, it is not for the writer
to decide with Theosophy. No need of entering here upon the difference
between the jar that contains a liquid and the nature of, or that liquid itself.
"Theosophy teaches self-culture . . . and not control,"
we are told. Theosophy teaches mutual-culture before self-culture
to begin with. Union is strength. It is by gathering many
theosophists of the same way of thinking into one or more groups,
and making them closely united by the same magnetic bond of fraternal
unity and sympathy that the objects of mutual development
and progress in Theosophical thought may be best achieved. "Self-culture"
is for isolated Hatha Yogis, independent of any Society
and having to avoid association with human beings; and this is
a triply distilled SELFISHNESS. For
real moral advancement there "where two or three are gathered"
in the name of the SPIRIT OF
TRUTH there that Spirit or Theosophy will
be in the midst of them.
To say that theosophy has no need of a Society a vehicle and
centre thereof is like affirming that the Wisdom of the Ages
collected in thousands of volumes, at the British Museum has no
need of either the edifice that contains it, nor the works in
which it is found. Why not advise the British Gov't on its lack
of discrimination and its worldliness in not destroying
Museum and all its vehicles of Wisdom? Why spend such sums of
money and pay so many officers to watch over its treasures, the
more so, since many of its guardians may be quite out of keeping
with, and opposed to the Spirit of that Wisdom? The Directors
of such Museums may or may not be very perfect men, and some of
their assistants may have never opened a philosophical work: yet,
it is they who take care of the library and preserve it for future
generations who are indirectly entitled to their thanks. How much
more gratitude is due to those who like our self-sacrificing theosophists
at Adyar, devote their lives to, and give their services gratuitously
to the good of Humanity!
Diplomas, and Charters are objected to, and chiefly the "admission
fee." The latter is a "taxation," and therefore
"inconsistent with the principle of Brotherhood". . . .
A "forced gift is unbrotherly," etc., etc. It
would be curious to see where the T.S. would be led to, were the
P't. F. to religiously follow the proffered advices. "Initiation"
on admission, has been made away with already in Europe, and has
led to that which will very soon become known; no use mentioning
it at present. Now the "Charters" and Diplomas would
follow. Hence no document to show for any group, and no diploma
to prove that one is affiliated to the Society. Hence also perfect
liberty to any one to either call himself a theosophist, or deny
he is one. The "admission fee"? Indeed, it has to be
regarded as a terrible and unbrotherly "extortion,"
and a "forced gift," in the face of those thousands
of Masonic Lodges, of Clubs, Associations, Societies, Leagues,
and even the "Salvation Army." The former, extort yearly
fortunes from their Members; the latter throttle in the
name of Jesus the masses and appealing to voluntary contributions
make the converts pay, and pay in their turn every one of their
"officers," none of whom will serve the "Army"
for nothing.
Yet it would be well, perchance, were our members to follow the
example of the Masons in their solidarity of thought and action
and at least outward Union, notwithstanding that receiving
a thousand times more from their members they give them in return
still less than we do, whether spiritually or morally. This solitary
single guinea expected from every new member is spent in less
than one week, as was calculated, on postage and correspondence
with theosophists. Or are we to understand that all correspondence
with members now left to "self-culture" is also
to cease and has to follow diplomas, Charters and the rest? Then,
truly, the Head Quarters and Office had better be closed. A simple
Query however: Have the 1£ the yearly contribution
to the L.L. of the T.S., and the further sum of 2/6d. to the Oriental
Group been abolished as "acts of unbrotherly extortion,"
and how long, if so, have they begun to be regarded as "a
sale of Brotherhood"?
To continue: the charges wind up with the following remarks, so
profound, that it requires a deeper head than ours to fathom all
that underlies the words contained in them. "Is the T.S.
a Brotherhood, or not?" queries the plaintiff "If the
former, is it possible to have any centre of arbitrary power?9 To hold that there is necessity for such a centre is only
a roundabout way of saying that no Brotherhood is possible,10 but in point of fact that necessity itself is by no means proved
{!?}. There have been no doubt Brotherhoods under high Masters. . . ."
{there "have been" and still are. H.P.B. "but
in such cases the Masters were never elected for geographical
or other considerations {?}. The natural leader of men was always
recognised by his embodying the spirit of Humanity. To institute
comparisons would be little short of blasphemy. The greatest among
men is always the readiest to serve and yet is unconscious of
the service. Let us pause before finally tying the millstone of
worldliness around the neck of Theosophy. Let us not forget that
Theosophy does not grow in our midst by force and control but
by sunshine of brotherliness and the dew of self-oblivion.
If we do not believe in Brotherhood and Truth let us put ashes
on our head and weep in sack-cloth and not rejoice in the
purple of authority and in the festive garments of pride and worldliness.
It is by far better that the name of Theosophy should never be
heard, than that it should be used as the Motto of a papal
authority." . . .
Who, upon reading this, and being ignorant that the above piece
of rhetorical flowers of speech is directed against the luckless
Pres't Founder would not have in his "mind's eye" an
Alexander Borgia, a Caligula, or to say the least General Booth
in his latest metamorphosis! When, how, or by doing what, has
our good-natured unselfish, ever kind President merited such a
Ciceronian tirade? The state of things denounced exists now for
almost twelve years, and our accuser knew of it and even took
an active part in its organisation, Conventions, Councils, Rules,
etc., etc., at Bombay, and at Adyar. This virulent sortie is
no doubt due to "SELF-CULTURE"?
The critic has outgrown the Movement and turned his face from
the original programme; hence his severity. But where is the true
theosophical charity, the tolerance and the "sunshine
.,f brotherliness" just spoken of, and so insisted
upon?
Verily it is easy to preach the "dew of self-oblivion"
when one has nothing to think about except to evolve such finely
rounded phrases; were every theosophist at Adyar to have his daily
wants and even comforts, his board, lodging and all, attended
to by a wealthier theosophist; and were the same "sunshine
of brotherliness" to be poured upon him, as it is upon the
critic who found for himself an endless brotherly care, a fraternal
and self-sacrificing devotion in two other noble-minded members,
then would there be little need for the President Founder to
call upon and humble himself before our theosophists. For, if
he has to beg for 2 annual shillings it is, in order that
those Europeans and Hindus who work night and day at Adyar,
giving their services free and receiving little thanks or honour
for it, should have at least one meal a day. The fresh
"dew of self-oblivion" must not be permitted to chill
one's heart, and turn into the lethal mold of forgetfulness
to such an extent as that. The severe critic seems to have
lost sight of the fact that for months, during the last crisis,
the whole staff of our devoted Adyar officers, from President
down to the youngest brother in the office, have lived on 5d.
a day each, having reduced their meals to the minimum. And
it is this mite, the proceeds of the "2 shill. contribution,"
conscientiously paid by some, that is now called extortion,
a desire to live "in the purple of authority and the
festive garments of pride and worldliness"!
Our "Brother" is right. Let us "weep in sack cloth
and ashes on our head" if the T.S. has many more such unbrotherly
criticisms to bear. Truly "it would be far better that
the name of Theosophy should never be heard than that it should
be used as a motto" not of papal authority which
exists nowhere at Adyar outside the critic's imagination but
as a motto of a "self-developed fanaticism." All the
great services otherwise rendered to the Society, all the noble
work done by the complainant will pale and vanish before such
an appearance of cold-heartedness. Surely he cannot desire the
annihilation of the Society? And if he did it would be
useless: the T.S. cannot be destroyed as a body. It is
not in the power of either Founders or their critics; and neither
friend nor enemy can ruin that which is doomed to exist, all
the blunders of its leaders notwithstanding. That which was generated
through and founded by the "High Masters" and under
their authority if not their instruction MUST AND
WILL LIVE. Each of us and all will receive his or her Karma
in it, but the vehicle of Theosophy will stand indestructible
and undestroyed by the hand of whether man or fiend.
No; "truth does not depend on show of hands"; but in
the case of the much abused President-Founder it must depend on
the show of facts. Thorny and full of pitfalls was the
steep path he had to climb up alone and unaided for the first
years. Terrible was the opposition outside the Society he had
to build sickening and disheartening the treachery he often encountered
within the Head Quarters. Enemies gnashing their teeth in his
face around, those whom he regarded as his staunchest friends
and co-workers betraying him and the Cause on the slightest provocation.
Still, where hundreds in his place would have collapsed and given
up the whole undertaking in despair, he, unmoved and unmovable,
went on climbing up and toiling as before, unrelenting and undismayed,
supported by that one thought and conviction that he was doing
his duty. What other inducement has the Founder ever had, but
his theosophical pledge and the sense of his duty toward THOSE
he had promised to serve to the end of his life? There was but
one beacon for him the hand that had first pointed to him his
way up: the hand of the MASTER he loves and
reveres so well, and serves so devotedly though occasionally,
perhaps, unwisely. As President elected for life, he has nevertheless
offered more than once to resign in favour of any one found worthier
than him, but was never permitted to do so by the majority not
of "show of hands" but show of hearts, literally as
few are more beloved than he is even by most of those, who may
criticize occasionally his actions. And this is only natural:
for, cleverer in administrative capacities, more learned in philosophy,
subtler in casuistry, in metaphysics or daily life policy, there
may be many around him; but the whole globe may be searched through
and through and no one found stauncher to his friends, truer to
his word, or more devoted to real, practical theosophy than the
President-Founder; and these are the chief requisites in a leader
of such a movement one that aims to become a Brotherhood of men.
The Society needs no Loyolas; it has to shun anything approaching
casuistry; nor ought we to tolerate too subtle casuists. There,
where every individual has to work out his own Karma, the judgment
of a casuist who takes upon himself the duty of pronouncing upon
the state of a brother's soul, or of guiding his conscience, is
of no use, and may become positively injurious. The Founder claims
no more rights than every one else in the Society: the right
of private judgment, which, whenever it is found to disagree
with Branches or individuals is quietly set aside and ignored as
shown by the complainants themselves.
This, then, is the sole crime of the would-be culprit, and no
worse than this can be laid at his door. And yet what is the reward
of that kind man? He, who has never refused a service, outside
what he considers his official duties to any living being; he
who has redeemed dozens of men, young and old, from dissipated,
often immoral lives and saved others from terrible scrapes by
giving them a safe refuge in the Society; he, who has placed others
again, on the pinnacle of Saintship through their status in
that Society, when otherwise they would have indeed found
themselves now in the meshes of "worldliness" and perhaps
worse; he, that true friend of every theosophist, and verily
"the readiest to serve and as unconscious of the service" he
is now taken to task for what? for insignificant blunders, for
useless "special orders," a childish, rather
than untheosophical love of display, out of pure devotion to his
Society.
Is, then, human nature to be viewed so uncharitably by
us, as to call untheosophical, worldly and sinful the natural
impulse of a mother to dress up her child and parade it to the
best advantages? The comparison may be laughed at, but if it is,
it will be only by him who would, like the fanatical Christian
of old, or the naked, dishevelled Yogi of India have no more
charity for the smallest human weakness. Yet, the simile is quite
correct, since the Society is the child, the beloved creation
of the Founder; he may be well forgiven for this too exaggerated
love for that for which he has suffered and toiled more than all
other theosophists put together. He is called "worldly,"
"ambitious of power" and untheosophical for it.
Very well; let then any impartial judge compare the life of the
Founder with those of most of his critics, and see which was the
most theosophical, ever since the Society sprang into existence.
If no better results have been achieved, it is not the President
who ought to be taken to task for it, but the Members themselves,
as he has been ever trying to promote its growth, and the majority
of the "Fellows" have either done nothing, or created
obstacles in the way of its progress through sins of omission
as of commission. Better unwise activity, than an overdose
of too wise inactivity, apathy or indifference which are
always the death of an undertaking.
Nevertheless, it is the members who now seek to sit in Solomon's
seat; and they tell us that the Society is useless, its President
positively mischievous, and that the Head-Quarters ought to be
done away with, as "the organisation called Theosophical
presents many feature seriously obstructive to the progress
of Theosophy." Trees, however, have to be judged by their fruits. It was just
shown that no "special orders" issuing from the "Centre
of Power" called Adyar, could affect in any way whatever
either Branch or individual; and therefore any theosophist bent
on "self culture," "self-involution" or any
kind of selfness, is at liberty to do so; and if, instead
of using his rights he will apply his brain-power to criticize
other people's actions then it is he who becomes the obstructionist
and not at all the "Organisation called Theosophical."
For, if theosophy is anywhere practised on this globe, it is at
Adyar, at the Head-Quarters. Let "those interested in the
progress of true theosophy" appealed to by the writers look
around them and judge. See the Branch Societies and compare them
with the group that works in that "Centre of Power."
Admire the "progress of theosophy" at Paris, London
and even America. Behold, in the great "Brotherhood,"
a true Pandemonium of which the Spirit of Strife and Hatred
himself might be proud! Everywhere quarreling, fighting for supremacy;
backbiting, slandering, scandal-mongering for the last two years;
a veritable battlefield, on which several members have so disgraced
themselves and their Society by trying to disgrace others, that
they have actually become more like hyenas than human beings by
digging into the graves of the Past, in the hopes of bringing
forward old forgotten slanders and scandals!
At Adyar alone, at the Head-Quarters of the Theosophical Society,
the Theosophists are that which they ought to be everywhere else:
true theosophists and not merely philosophers and
Sophists. In that centre alone are now grouped together
the few solitary, practically working Members, who labour and
toil, quietly and uninterruptedly, while those Brothers for whose
sake they are working, sit in the dolce far niente of the
West and criticize them. Is this "true theosophical and brotherly
work," to advise to put down and disestablish the only "centre"
where real brotherly, humanitarian work is being accomplished?
"Theosophy first, and organisation after." Golden words,
these. But where would Theosophy be heard of now, had not its
Society been organised before its spirit and a desire for it had
permeated the whole world? And would Vedanta and other Hindu philosophies
have been ever taught and studied in England outside the walls
of Oxford and Cambridge, had it not been for that organization
that fished them like forgotten pearls out of the Ocean of Oblivion
and Ignorance and brought them forward before the profane world?
Nay, kind Brothers and critics, would the Hindu exponents of that
sublime philosophy themselves have ever been known outside the
walls of Calcutta, had not the Founders, obedient to the ORDERS
received, forced the remarkable learning and philosophy of those
exponents upon the recognition of the two most civilized and cultured
centres of Europe London and Paris?
Verily it is easier to destroy than to build. The words
"untheosophical" and "unbrotherly" are ever
ringing in our ears; yet, truly theosophical acts and words are
not to be found in too unreasonable a super-abundance among those
who use the reproof the oftener. However insignificant, and however
limited the line of good deeds, the latter will have always
more weight than empty and vainglorious talk, and will be theosophy,
whereas theories without any practical realisation are at
best philosophy. Theosophy is an all-embracing Science; many are
the ways leading to it, as numerous in fact as its definitions,
which began by the sublime, during the day of Ammonius Saccas,
and ended by the ridiculous in Webster's Dictionary. There is
no reason why our critics should claim the right for themselves
alone to know what is theosophy and to define it. There
were theosophists and Theosophical Schools for the last 2,000
years, from Plato down to the mediæval Alchemists, who knew
the value of the term, it may be supposed. Therefore, when we
are told that "The question is not whether the T.S. is
doing good, but whether it is doing that kind of good which
is entitled to the name of Theosophy" we turn round
and ask: "And who is to be the judge in this mooted question?"
We have heard of one of the greatest Theosophists who ever lived,
who assured his audience that whosoever gave a cup of cold
water to a little one in his [Theosophy's name, would have
a greater reward than all the learned Scribes and Pharisees. "Woe
to the world because of offences!"
Belief in the Masters was never made an article of faith in the
T.S. But for its Founders, the commands received from Them when
it was established have ever been sacred. And this is what one
of them wrote in a letter preserved to this day:
"Theosophy must not represent merely a collection of moral
verities, a bundle of metaphysical Ethics epitomized in theoretical
dissertations. Theosophy must be made practical, and has, therefore,
to be disencumbered of useless discussion. . . . It has to find objective
expression in an all-embracing code of life thoroughly impregnated
with its spirit the spirit of mutual tolerance, charity and love.
Its followers have to set the example of a firmly outlined and
as firmly applied morality before they get 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 and individuals.
As said before no Theosophist should blame a brother whether
within or outside of the association, throw a slur upon his actions
or denounce him11
lest he should himself lose the right of being
considered a theosophist. Ever turn away your gaze from the imperfections
of your neighbor and centre rather your attention upon your own
shortcomings in order to correct them and become wiser. . . .
Show not the disparity between claim and action in another man
but whether he be brother or neighbour rather help him in his
arduous walk in life. . . .
"The problem of true theosophy and its great mission is the
working out of clear, unequivocal conceptions of ethic ideas and
duties which would satisfy most and best the altruistic and right
feelings in us; and the modeling of these conceptions for their
adaptation into such forms of daily life where they may be applied
with most equitableness. . . . Such is the common work in view for
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 no room for
any selfish aspirations outside the limits traced. . . . Do not indulge
in unbrotherly comparisons between the task accomplished by yourself
and the work left undone by your neighbor or brother, in the field
of Theosophy, as 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, and dealt with justly by
KARMA alone. Even the simple presence amidst
you of a well-intentioned and sympathizing individual may help
you magnetically. . . . You are the Free-workers in the Domain of
Truth, and as such, must leave no obstructions on the paths leading
to it." . . . {The letter closes with the following lines
which have now become quite plain, as they give the key to the
whole situation} . . . "The degrees of success or failure
are the landmark we shall 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." . . .
A complete answer is thus found in the above lines to the paper
framed by the two Theosophists. Those who are now inclined to
repudiate the Hand that traced it and feel ready to turn their
backs upon the whole Past and the original programme of the T.S.
are at liberty to do so. The Theosophical body is neither a Church
or a Sect and every individual opinion is entitled to a hearing.
A Theosophist may progress and develop, and his views may outgrow
those of the Founders, grow larger and broader in every direction,
without for all that abandoning the fundamental soil upon which
they were born and nurtured. It is only he who changes diametrically
his opinions from one day to another and shifts his devotional
views from white to black who can be hardly trusted in his remarks
and actions. But surely, this can never be the case of the two
Theosophists who have now been answered. . . . Meanwhile, peace and
fraternal good will to all.
H. P. BLAVATSKY
Corres. Sec'ty, T.S.
Ostende, Oct. 3rd, 1886
Theosophist, June, 1924
H. P. Blavatsky
* These opening words enclosed in brackets were
presumably on the first manuscript page by H.P.B., which was lost, but they
were later restored from a typed copy at Adyar and included in
the August 1931 reprinting of the article in the Theosophist.
Eds . back to text
1 A liberal Christian member of the T.S. having objected
to the study of Oriental religions and doubted whether there was
room left for any new Society a letter answering his objections
and preference to Christianity was received and the contents copied
for him; after which he denied no longer the advisability of such
a Society as the professed Theosophical Association, A few extracts
from this early letter will show plainly the nature of the Society
as then contemplated, and that we have tried only to follow, and
carry out in the best way we could the intentions of the true
originators of the Society in those days. The pious gentleman
having claimed that he was a theosophist and had a right
of judgment over other people was told . . .
"You have no right to such a title. You are only a philo-theosophist;
as one who has reached to the full comprehension of the name
and nature of a theosophist will sit in judgment on no man
or action. . . . You claim that your religion is the highest and
final step toward divine Wisdom on this earth, and that it has
introduced into the arteries of the old decaying world new blood
and life and verities that had remained unknown to the heathen?
If it were so indeed, then your religion would have introduced
the highest truths into all the social, civil and international
relations of Christendom. Instead of that, as any one can perceive,
your social as your private life is not based upon a common moral
solidarity but only on constant mutual counteraction and purely
mechanical equilibrium of individual powers and interests. . . .
If you would be a theosophist you must not do as those around
you do who call on a God of Truth and Love and serve the dark
Powers of Might, Greed and Luck. We look in the midst of your
Christian civilisation and see the same sad signs of old: the
realities of your daily lives are diametrically opposed to your
religious ideal, but you feel it not; the thought that the very
laws that govern your being whether in the domain of politics
or social economy clash painfully with the origins of your religion does
not seem to trouble you in the least. But if the nations of the
West are so fully convinced that the ideal can never become practical
and the practical will never reach the ideal then, you have to
make your choice: either it is your religion that is impracticable,
and in that case it is no better than a vain-glorious delusion,
or it might find a practical application, but it is you, yourselves,
who do not care to apply its ethics to your daily walk in life. . . .
Hence, before you invite other nations 'to the King's festival
table' from which your guests arise more starved than before,
you should, ere you try to bring them to your own way of thinking,
look into the repasts they offer to you. . . . Under the dominion
and sway of exoteric creeds, the grotesque and tortured shadows
of the theosophical realities, there must ever be the same oppression
of the weak and the poor and the same typhonic struggle of the
wealthy and the mighty among themselves. . . . It is esoteric
philosophy alone, the spiritual and psychic blending of man
with Nature that, by revealing fundamental truths, can bring that
much desired mediate state between the two extremes of human Egotism
and divine Altruism and finally lead to the alleviation of human
suffering. . . " (See next to last page for continuation.
[See p. 35.) back to text
2 Mr. Cobb. back to
text
3 For years the wise rule by which any member accused
of backbiting or slander was expelled from the Society after sufficient
evidence has become obsolete. There have been two or three solitary
cases of expulsion for the same in cases of members of no importance.
Europeans of position and name were allowed to cover the Society
literally with mud and slander their Brothers with perfect impunity.
This is the President's Karma and it is just. back to
text
4 This may be a reference to the legal term, querela,
for "bill of complaint"; Gebhard being in Germany, the
"Allemand" is clear. Eds THEOSOPHY.
back to text
5 Furthermore the writer of the complaints in "A
Few Words, etc.," is himself a member on the General Council
for over two years (see Rules 1885). Why has he not spoken earlier?
back to text
6 Yet, the Theosophical Brotherhood does seem doomed
to outrival the group of Apostles in the number of its denying
Peters. its unbelieving Thomases, and even Iscariots occasionally,
ready to sell their Brotherhood for less than thirty sheckels
of silver! back to text
7 The members of the T.S. know, and those who do not
should be told, that the term ' Mahatma," now so subtly analysed
and controverted, for some mysterious reasons had never been applied
to our Masters before our arrival in India. For years they were
known as the "Adept-Brothers," the "Masters,"
etc. It is the Hindus themselves who began applying the term to
the two Teachers, This is no place for an etymological disquisition
on the fitness or unfitness of the qualification, in the case
in hand. As a state Mahatmaship is one thing, as a double
noun, Maha-atma (Great Soul) quite another one. Hindus
ought to know the value of metaphysical Sanskrit names used; and
it is they the first, who have used it to designate the MASTERS.
back to text
8 XIV "The Society having to deal only with scientific
and philosophical subjects, and having Branches in divergent parts
of the world under various forms of Government, does not permit
its members such, to interfere with politics, and repudiates any
attempt on the part of any one to commit it in favor of or against
any political party or measure. Violation of this rule will meet
with expulsion."
This rather alters the co complexion put on the charge, which
seems to conveniently forget that "scientific and philosophical
subjects" are not the only declared objects of the Society.
Let us not leave room for a doubt that there is more animus underlying
the charges than would he strictly theosophical. back to
text
9 It is the first time since the T.S. exists
that such an accusation of "arbitrary power," is
brought forward. Not many will be found of this way of thinking.
back to text
10 No need taking a roundabout way, to say that
no Brotherhood would ever be possible if many theosophists shared
the very original views of the writer. back to text
11 It is in consequence of this letter that Art. XII
was adopted in Rules and a fear of lacking the charity
prescribed, that led so often to neglect its enforcement. back
to text
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