Being daily in receipt
of numerous letters, written with the view of obtaining advice as to the
best method of receiving information respecting Occultism, and the direct
relation it bears to modern Spiritualism, and not having sufficient time
at my disposal to answer these requests, I now propose to facilitate the
mutual labour of myself and correspondents by naming herein a few of the
principal works treating upon Magism, and the mysteries of such modern
Hermetists.
To this I feel bound to add, respecting what I have stated before, to
wit: that would-be aspirants must not lure themselves with the idea of any
possibility of their becoming practical Occultists by mere book-knowledge.
The works of the Hermetic philosophers were never intended for the masses,
as Mr. Charles Sotheran, a learned member of the Society Rosæ Crucis,
in a late essay observes:
Gabriel Rossetti
in his disquisitions on the anti-papal spirit which
produced the Reformation shows that the art of speaking and writing in
a language which bears a double interpretation is of very great antiquity,
that it was in practice among the priests of Egypt, brought thence by the
Manichees, whence it passed to the Templars and Albigenses, spread over
Europe, and brought about the Reformation.
The ablest book that was ever written on Symbols and Mystic Orders, is
most certainly Hargrave Jennings The Rosicrucians, and yet
it has been repeatedly called "obscure trash" in my presence,
and that too, by individuals who were most decidedly well-versed in the
rites and mysteries of modern Freemasonry. Persons who lack even the latter
knowledge, can easily infer from this what would be the amount of information
they might derive from still more obscure and mystical works; for if we
compare Hargrave Jennings book with some of the mediaeval treatises
and ancient works of the most noted Alchemists and Magi, we might find the
latter as much more obscure than the former as regards language as
a pupil in celestial philosophy would find the Book of the Heavens, if he
should examine a far distant star with the naked eye, rather than with the
help of a powerful telescope.
Far from me, though, the idea of disparaging in anyone the laudable impulse
to search ardently after Truth, however arid and ungrateful the task may
appear at first sight; for my own principle has ever been to make the Light
of Truth the beacon of my life. The words uttered by Christ eighteen centuries
ago: "Believe and you will understand," can be applied in the
present case, and repeating them with but a slight modification, I may well
say: "Study and you will believe."
But to particularize one or another book on Occultism, to those who are
anxious to begin their studies in the hidden mysteries of nature, is something
the responsibility of which I am not prepared to assume. What may be clear
to one who is intuitional, if read in the same book by another person might
prove meaningless. Unless one is prepared to devote to it his whole life,
the superficial knowledge of Occult Sciences will lead him surely to become
the target for millions of ignorant scoffers to aim their blunderbusses
loaded with ridicule and chaff against. Besides this, it is in more than
one way dangerous to select this science as a mere pastime. One must bear
for ever in mind the impressive, fable of dipus, and beware of the
same consequences. dipus unriddled but one-half of the enigma offered
him by the Sphinx and caused its death; the other half of the mystery avenged
the death of the symbolic monster, and forced the King of Thebes to prefer
blindness and exile in his despair rather than face what he did not feel
himself pure enough to encounter. He unriddled the man, the form, and had
forgotten God, the idea.
If a man would follow in the steps of Hermetic philosophers he must prepare
himself beforehand for martyrdom. He must give up personal pride and all
selfish purposes, and be ready for everlasting encounters with friends and
foes. He must part, once for all, with every remembrance of his earlier
ideas, on all and on everything. Existing religions, knowledge, science,
must rebecome a blank book for him, as in the days of his babyhood, for
if he wants to succeed he must learn a new alphabet on the lap of Mother
Nature, every letter of which will afford a new insight to him, every syllable
and word an unexpected revelation. The two hitherto irreconcilable foes,
science and theology the Montecchi and Capuletti of the nineteenth
century will ally themselves with the ignorant masses against the modern
Occultist. If we have outgrown the age of stakes, we are in the heyday,
per contra, of slander, the venom of the press, and all these
mephitic venticelli of calumny so vividly expressed by the immortal
Don Basilio. To science it will be the duty arid and sterile as a matter
of course of the Kabalist to prove that from the beginning of time
there was but one positive science Occultism; that it was the mysterious
lever of all intellectual forces, the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil
of the allegorical paradise, from whose gigantic trunk sprang in every direction
boughs, branches and twigs, the former shooting forth straight enough at
first, the latter deviating with every inch of growth, assuming more and
more fantastical appearances, till at last one after the other lost its
vital juice, got deformed, and, drying up, finally broke off, scattering
the ground afar with heaps of rubbish. To theology the Occultist of the
future will have to demonstrate that the Gods of the mythologies, the Elohims
of Israel as well as the religious and theological mysteries of Christianity,
to begin with the Trinity, sprang from the sanctuaries of Memphis and Thebes;
that their mother Eve is but the spiritualized Psyche of old, both of them
paying a like penalty for their curiosity, descending to Hades or hell,
the latter to bring back to earth the famous Pandoras box, the former
to search out and crush the head of the serpent symbol of time and
evil, the crime of both expiated by the pagan Prometheus and the Christian
Lucifer; the first delivered by Hercules, the second conquered by the Saviour.
Furthermore, the Occultist will have to prove to Christian theology,
publicly, what many of its priesthood are well aware of in secret, namely,
that their God on earth was a Kabalist, the meek representative of a tremendous
Power, which, if misapplied, might shake the world to its foundations; and
that of all their evangelical symbols, there is not one but can be traced
up to its parent fount. For instance, their incarnated Verbum or Logos was
worshipped at his birth by the three Magi led on by the star, and received
from them the gold, the frankincense and myrrh the whole of which is
simply an excerpt from the Kabalah our modern theologians despise, and the
representation of another and still more mysterious "Ternary"
embodying allegorically in its emblems the highest secrets of the Kabalah.
A clergy whose main object has ever been to make of their Divine Cross
the gallows of Truth and Freedom, could not do otherwise than try and bury
in oblivion the origin of that same cross, which, in the most primitive
symbols of the Egyptians magic, represents the key to heaven. Their
anathemas are powerless in our days the multitude is wiser; but the
greatest danger awaits us just in that latter direction, if we do not succeed
in making the masses remain at least neutral till they come to know
better in this forthcoming conflict between Truth, Superstition and
Presumption, or to express it in other terms, Occult Spiritualism, Theology
and Science. We have to fear neither the miniature thunderbolts of the clergy,
nor the unwarranted negations of science. But Public Opinion, this invisible,
intangible, omnipresent, despotic tyrant this thousand-headed Hydra,
the more dangerous for being composed of individual mediocrities is
not an enemy to be scorned by any would-be Occultist, courageous as he may
be. Many of the far more innocent Spiritualists have left their sheepskins
in the clutches of this ever-hungry, roaring lion, for he is the most dangerous
of our three classes of enemies. What will be the fate in such a case of
an unfortunate Occultist, if he once succeeds in demonstrating the close
relationship existing between the two? The masses of people, though they
do not generally appreciate the science of truth or have real knowledge,
on the other hand are unerringly directed by mere instinct; they have intuitionally if
I may be allowed to so express myself an idea of what is formidable
in its genuine strength. People will never conspire except against real
Power. In their blind ignorance, the Mysteries and the Unknown have
been, and ever will be, objects of terror for them. Civilization may progress;
human nature will remain the same throughout all ages. Occultists, beware!
Let it be understood then that I address myself but to the truly courageous
and persevering. Besides the danger expressed above, the difficulties in
becoming a practical Occultist in this country are next to insurmountable.
Barrier upon barrier, obstacles in every form and shape, will present themselves
to the student; for the keys of the Golden Gate leading to the Infinite
Truth lie buried deep, and the gate itself is enclosed in a mist which clears
up only before the ardent rays of implicit faith. Faith alone one grain
of which as large as a mustard-seed, according to the words of Christ, can
lift a mountain is able to find out how simple becomes the Kabalah
to the Initiate once he has succeeded in conquering the first abstruse difficulties.
The dogma of it is logical, easy and absolute. The necessary union of ideas
and signs; the trinity of words, letters, numbers, and theorems; the religion
of it can be compressed into a few words. "It is the Infinite condensed
in the hand of an infant," says Éliphas Lévi. Ten ciphers,
twenty-two alphabetical letters, one triangle, a square and a circle. Such
are the elements of the Kabalah from whose mysterious bosom sprang all the
religions of the past and present; which endowed all the Freemasonic associations
with their symbols and secrets, which alone can reconcile human reason with
God and Faith, Power with Freedom, Science with Mystery, and which has alone
the keys of present, past and future.
The first difficulty for the aspirant lies in the utter impossibility
of his comprehending, as I said before, the meaning of the best books written
by Hermetic philosophers. These, who mainly lived in the mediaeval ages,
prompted on the one hand by their duty towards their brethren, and by their
desire to impart only to them and their successors the glorious truths,
and on the other very naturally desirous to avoid the clutches of the bloodthirsty
Christian Inquisition, enveloped themselves more than ever in mystery. They
invented new signs and hieroglyphs, renovated the ancient symbolical language
of the high priests of antiquity, who had used it as a sacred barrier between
their holy rites and the ignorance of the profane, and created a veritable
Kabalistic slang. This latter, which continually blinded the false neophyte,
attracted towards the science only by his greediness for wealth and power
which he would have surely misused were he to succeed, is a living, eloquent,
clear language, but it is and can become such only to the true disciple
of Hermes.
But were it even otherwise, and could books on Occultism, written in
a plain and precise language be obtained in order to get initiated in the
Kabalah, it would not be sufficient to understand and meditate on certain
authors. Galatinus and Pic de la Mirandola, Paracelsus and Robertus de Fluctibus
do not furnish one with the key to the practical mysteries. They simply
state what can be done and why it is done; but they do not tell one how
to do it. More than one philosopher who has by heart the whole of the
Hermetic literature, and who has devoted to the study of it upwards of thirty
or forty years of his life, fails when he believes he is about reaching
the final great result. One must understand the Hebrew authors, such as
Sepher Yetzirah, for instance, learn by heart the great book of the
Zohar in its original tongue, master the Kabalah
Denudata from the Collection of 1684 (Paris); follow up the Kabalistic
pneumatics at first, and then throw oneself headlong into the turbid waters
of that mysterious* . . . never tried to explain: the
Prophecy of Ezekiel and the Apocalypse, two Kabalistic treatises,
reserved without doubt for the commentaries of the Magi kings, books closed
with the seven seals to the faithful Christian, but perfectly clear to the
Infidel initiated in the Occult Sciences.
Thus the works on Occultism, were not, I repeat, written for the masses,
but for those of the Brethren who make the solution of the mysteries of
the Kabalah the principal object of their lives, and who are supposed to
have conquered the first abstruse difficulties of the Alpha of Hermetic
philosophy.
To fervent and persevering candidates for the above science, I have to
offer but one word of advice, "try and become." One single journey
to the Orient, made in the proper spirit, and the possible emergencies arising
from the meeting of what may seem no more than the chance acquaintances
and adventures of any traveller, may quite as likely as not throw wide open
to the zealous student the heretofore closed doors of the final mysteries.
I will go farther and say that such a journey, performed with the omnipresent
idea of the one object, and with the help of a fervent will, is sure to
produce more rapid, better, and far more practical results, than the most
diligent study of Occultism in books even though one were to devote
to it dozens of years.
In the name of Truth, yours,
H. P. BLAVATSKY
[From The Spiritual Scientist.
H. P. Blavatsky
* The cutting is here imperfect some paragraph
or so wanting.
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