Ancient civilization saw nothing absurd in the claims
of astrology, no more than many an educated and thoroughly scientific man
sees in it today. Judicial astrology, by which the fate and acts of men
and nations might be foreknown, [hardly appeared, nor does it even now
appear, any more unphilosophical or unscientific than does natural astrology
or astronomy-by which the events of so-called brute and inanimate nature
(changes of weather, &c.), might be predicted. For it was not even prophetic
insight that was claimed by the votaries of that abstruse and really grand
science, but simply a great proficiency in that method of procedure which
allows the astrologer to foresee certain events in the life of a man by
the position of the planets at the time of his birth.
Once the probability, or even the simple possibility, of an occult influence
exercised by the stars upon the destiny of man admitted-and why should the
fact appear more improbable in the case of stars and
man than in that of the sun-spots and potatoes?-and astrology becomes no
less an exact science than astronomy. The earth, Prof. Balfour Stewart,
F.R.S., tells us-"is very seriously affected by what takes place in
the sun" . . . a connection "is strongly suspected between epidemics
and the appearance of the sun's surface."1
And if, as that man of science tells us, "a connection of some mysterious
kind between the sun and the earth is more than suspected"
. . . and the problem is a most important one "to
solve," how much more important the solution of that other mystery-the
undoubted affinity between man and the stars-an affinity believed in for
countless ages and by the most learned among men! Surely the destiny of
man deserves as much consideration as that of a turnip or a potatoe . .
. And if a disease of the latter may be scientifically foretold whenever
that vegetable crops out during a "sun-spot period," why should
not a life of disease, or health, of natural or violent death be as scientifically
prognosticated by the position and appearance of the constellation with
which man is as directly connected and which bears the same relation to
him as the sun bears to the earth?
In its days, astrology was greatly honoured, for when in able hands it
was often shown to be as precise and trustworthy in its predictions as astronomical
predictions are in our own age. Omens were studied by all imperial Rome,
as much, if not more than they are now in India. Tiberius practised the
science; and the Saracens in Spain held star-divination in the greatest
reverence, astrology passing into Western Europe through these, our first
civilizers. Alphonso, the wise king of Castile and Leon, made himself famous
in the thirteenth century by his "Astrological Tables" (called
Alphonsine); and his code of the Siata Purtidas; and the great astronomer
Kepler in the seventeenth, the discoverer of the three great laws of planetary
motions (known as Kepler's laws) believed in and proclaimed astrology a
true science. Kepler, the Emperor Rudolph's mathematician,
he to whom Newton is indebted for all his subsequent discoveries, is the
author of the "Principles of Astrology" in which he proves the
power of certain harmonious configurations of suitable planets to control
human impulses. In his official capacity of Imperial astronomer,
he is historically known to have predicted to Wallenstein, from the
position of the stars, the issue of the war in which that unfortunate general
was then engaged. No less than himself, his friend, protector and instructor,
the great astronomer Tycho de Brahe, believed in, and expanded, the astrological
system. He was forced, moreover, to admit the influence of the constellations
on terrestrial life and actions quite against his will or wish, and merely
because of the constant verification of facts.
Closely related to astrology is the Kabala and its system of
numerals. The secret wisdom of the ancient Chaldees left by them
as an inheritance to the Jews relates primarily to the mythological science
of the heavens and contains the doctrines of the hidden or occult wisdom
concerning the cycles of time. In the ancient philosophy, the sacredness
of numbers began with the great FIRST, the ONE,
and ended with the naught or Zero, the symbol of the infinite and boundless
circle, which represents the universe. All the intervening figures, in whatever
combination, or however multiplied, represent philosophical ideas relating
either to a moral or a physical fact in nature. They are the key to the
archean views on cosmogony, in its broad sense, including man and beings,
and relate to the human race and individuals spiritually as well as physically.
"The numerals of Pythagoras," says Porphyry, "were hieroglyphical
symbols, by means whereof he explained all ideas concerning the nature
of all things" (De vitâ Pythag.). In the symbolical
kabala-the most ancient system left to us by the Chaldeans-the modes
of examining letters, words and sentences for hidden meaning were numerical.
The gemantria (one of the three modes) is purely arithmetical and
mathematical, and consists in applying to the letters of a word the sense
they bear as numbers-letters being used also for figures in the Hebrew
as in Greek. Figurative Gemantria deduces mysterious interpretations from
the shapes of letters used in occult manuscripts and the Bible.
Thus, as shown by Cornelius Agrippa, in Numbers (X. 35),
the letter Beth means the reversal of enemies. The sacred anagrams
known as Zeruph yield their mysterious sense by the second mode named Themura,
and consists in displacing the letters and substituting them one for
another and then arranging them in rows according to their numerical value.
If, of all operations in the occult sciences there is not one that is not
rooted in astrology, arithmetic and especially geometry are a part of the
first principles of magic. The most recondite mysteries and powers in nature
are made to yield to the power of numbers. And let this not be regarded
as a fallacy. He who knows the relative and respective numbers or the so-called
correspondence between causes and effects will alone be able to obtain of
a certainty the desired result. A small mistake, a trifling difference in
an astronomical calculation and-no correct prediction of a heavenly phenomenon
becomes possible. As Severinus Boethius puts it, it is by the proportion
of certain numbers that all things were formed. "God geometrizes"
saith Plato, meaning creative nature. If there are so many occult virtues
in natural things, "what marvel if in numbers which are pure and commixed
only with ideas, there should be found virtues greater and more occult?"
asks Agrippa. Even Time must contain the mystery number; so also does motion,
or action, and so, therefore, must all things that move, act, or are subjected
to time. But "the mystery is in the abstract power of number, in its
rational and formal state, not in the expression of it by the voice, as
among people who buy and sell." (De Occulta Phil. cap.
iii. p. cii.) The Pythagoreans claimed to discern many things in the numbers
of names. And if those who having understanding were invited to "compute
the number and name of the beast" by the author of St. John's Revelation
it is because that author was a Kabalist.
The wiseacres of our generations raise daily the cry that science and
metaphysics are irreconcilable; and facts prove as daily that it
is but one more fallacy among the many that are uttered. The reign of exact
science is proclaimed on every housetop, and Plato who is said to have trusted
to his imagination is sneered at, while Aristotle's method built on pure
reason is the one accepted by Science. Why? Because "the philosophical
method of Plato was the inverse of that of Aristotle." Its starting-point
was universals, the very existence of which is, "a matter of faith"
says Dr. Draper, and from these it descended to particulars, or details.
Aristotle, on the contrary, "rose from particulars to universals, advancing
to them by inductions" (Conflict between Religion and Science).
We humbly answer to this, that mathematics, the only exact and infallible
science in the world of sciences-proceeds from UNIVERSALS.
It is this year especially, the year 1881, which seems to defy and challenge
sober, matter-of-fact science, and by its extraordinary events above,
as below, in heaven as upon earth, to invite criticism
upon its strange "coincidences." Its freaks in the domains of
meteorology and geology were prognosticated by the astronomers, and these
every one is bound to respect. There is a certain triangle seen this year
on the horizon formed of the most brilliant stars which was predicted by
them, but none the less left unexplained. It is a simple geometrical combination
of heavenly bodies, they say. As to that triangle, formed of the three large
planets-Venus, Jupiter and Saturn-having aught to do with the destinies
of either men or nations-why that is pure superstition. "The mantle
of the astrologers is burnt and the predictions of some of them, whenever
verified, must be attributed to simple and blind chance."
We are not so sure of that; and, if permitted, will further on tell why-meanwhile,
we must remind the reader of the fact that Venus, the most intensely brilliant
of the three above-named planets, as was remarked in Europe and for all
we know in India also-suddenly parted company with its two companions and
slowly moving onward, stopped above them, whence it goes on dazzling the
inhabitants of the earth with an almost preternatural brilliancy.
The conjunction of two planets happens but rarely; that of three
is still more rare; while the conjunction of four and five planets becomes
an event. The latter phenomenon took place in historical times but once,
2449 years B. C., when it was observed by the Chinese astronomers and has
not recurred since then. That extraordinary meeting of five large planets
forebode all kinds of evils to the Celestial Empire and its peoples, and
the panic then created by the predictions of the Chinese astrologers was
not in vain. During the following 500 years, a series of internal broils,
revolutions, wars, and changes of dynasty marked the end of the golden age
of national felicity in the Empire founded by the great Fu-hi.
Another conjunction is known to have happened just before the beginning
of the Christian era. In that year, three large planets had approached so
closely together as to be mistaken by many for one single star of an immense
size. Biblical scholars were more than once inclined to identify these "three
in one" with the Trinity, and at the same [time with the "star
of the wise men of the East." But they saw themselves thwarted in such
pious desires by their hereditary enemies-the irreverent men of science,
who proved that the astronomical conjunction took place a year before the
period claimed for the alleged birth of Jesus. Whether the phenomenon forbode
good or evil is best answered by the subsequent history and development
of Christianity, than which, no other religion cost so many human victims,
shed such torrents of blood, nor brought the greater portion of humanity
to suffer from what is now termed the "blessings of Christianity and
civilization."
A third conjunction took place in 1563 A. D. It appeared near the great
nebula in the constellation of Cancer. There were three great planets and
according to the astronomers of those days-the most nefarious: Mars, Jupiter
and Saturn. The constellation of Cancer has always had a bad reputation;
that year the mere fact of its having in its neighborhood a triune conjunction
of evil stars, caused the astrologers to predict great and speedy disasters.
These did come to pass. A terrible plague broke out and raged in all Europe,
carrying off thousands upon thousands of victims.
And now, in 1881, we have again a visit of three other "Wanderers."
What do they forebode? Nothing good; and it would seem, as if of the great
evils they are likely to pour on the devoted heads of
hapless humanity, the fatal prelude is already being played. Let us enumerate
and see how far we are from the truth. The nearly simultaneous and certainly
in some cases unexpected deaths of great and the most remarkable men of
our age. In the region of politics, we find the Emperor of Russia, Lord
Beaconsfield, and Aga Khan;2 in that of literature,
Carlyle and George Eliot; in the world of art, Rubinstein, the greatest
musical genius. In the domain of geology-earthquakes which have already
destroyed the town of Casamiceiola on the Island of Ischia, a village in
California and the Island of Chio which was laid entirely waste by the terrible
catastrophe-one, moreover, predicted for that very day by the astrologer
Raphael. In the domain of wars, the hitherto invincible Great Britain was
worsted at the Cape by a handful of Boers; Ireland is convulsed and threatens;
a plague now rages in Mesopotamia; another war is preparing between Turkey
and Greece; armies of Socialists and red-handed Nihilists obscure the sun
of the political horizon in Europe; and the latter thrown into a violent
perturbation is breathlessly awaiting the most unexpected events [in the
future-defying the perspicacity of the most acute of her political men.
In the religious spheres the heavenly triangle pointed its double horn at
the monastic congregations and-a general exodus of monks and nuns-headed
by the children of Loyola, followed in France. There is a revival of infidelity
and mental rebellion, and with it a proportionate increase of missionary
labourers (not labour), who like the hordes of Attila destroy much and build
but little. Shall we add to the list of signs of these nefasti dies,
the birth of the New Dispensation at Calcutta? The latter though
having but a small and quite a local importance, shows yet a direct bearing
upon our subject, i.e., the astrological meaning of
the planetary conjunction. Like Christianity with Jesus and his Apostles
the New Dispensation can henceforth boast of having had a forerunner
in starry heaven-the present triune conjunction of planets. It proves, moreover,
our kabalistic theory of periodical cyclic recurrences of events. As the
Roman sceptical world of 1881 years ago, we are startled by a fresh revival
of mendicant Ebionites, fasting Essenes and Apostles upon whom descend "cloven
tongues like as of fire," and of whom we cannot even say as of the
Jerusalem twelve, "that these men are full of new wine," since
their inspiration is entirely due to water, we are told.
The year 1881, then, of which we have lived but one-third, promises,
as predicted by astrologers and astronomers, a long and gloomy list of disasters
on land, as on the seas. We have shown elsewhere (Bombay Gazette,
March 30, 1881) how strange in every respect was the grouping of the
figures of our present year, adding that another such combination will not
happen in the Christian chronology before the year 11811, just 9,930 years
hence, when-there will be no more a "Christian" chronology we
are afraid, but something else. We said: "Our year 1881, offers that
strange fact, that from whichever of four sides you look at its figures-from
right or left, from top or bottom, from the back, by holding the paper up
to the light-or even upside down, you will always have before you
the same mysterious and kabalistic numbers of 1881. it is the correct number
of the three figures which have most perplexed mystics for over eighteen
centuries. The year 1881, in short, is the number of the great Beast of
the Revelation, the number 666 of St. John's Apocalypsis-that
Kabalistic Book par excellence. See for yourselves: 1+8+8
+1 make eighteen; eighteen divided thrice gives three times six, or placed
in a row, 666, "the number of man."
This number has been for centuries the puzzle of Christendom and was
interpreted in a thousand different ways. Newton himself worked for years
over the problem, but, ignorant of the secret Kabala, failed. Before the
Reformation it was generally supposed in the Church to have reference to
the coming Antichrist. Since then the Protestants began to apply it in that
spirit of Christian charity which so characterizes Calvinism to the Latin
Popish Church, which they call the "Harlot," the "great Beast"
and the "scarlet woman," and forthwith the latter returned the
compliment in the same brotherly and friendly spirit. The supposition that
it refers to the Roman nation-the Greek letters of the word Latinus as
numerals, amounting to exactly 666-is absurd.
There are beliefs and traditions among the people which spring no one
knows from whence and pass from one generation to the other, as an oral
prophecy, and an unavoidable fact to come. One of such traditions, a correspondent
of the Moscow Gazette happened to hear in 1874 from the mountaineers
of the Tyrolian Alps, and subsequently from old people in Bohemia. "From
the first day of 1876," says that tradition, "a sad, heavy period
will begin for the whole world and will last for seven consecutive years.
The most unfortunate and fatal year for all will be 1881. He who will
survive it, has an iron head."
An interesting new combination, meanwhile, of the year 1881, in reference
to the life of the murdered Czar, may be found in the following dates, every
one of which marks a more or less important period in his life. It proves
at all events what important . and mysterious a part, the figures 1 and
8 played in his life. 1 and 8 make 18; and the Emperor was born April 17
(1+7=8) in 1818. He died in 1881-the figures of the year of his birth and
death being identical, and coinciding, moreover, with the date of his birth
17=1+7=8. The figures of the years of the birth and death being thus the
same, as four times 18 can be formed out of them, and the sum-total of each
year's numerals is 18. The arrival at Petersburg of the late Empress-the
Czar's bride-took place on September 8; their marriage April 16-(8+8=16);
their eldest daughter, the Grand Duchess Alexandra, was born August 18;
the late Czarevitch Nicolas Alexandrovitch, on September the 8, 1843; (1+8+4+3=16,
i.e., twice 8). The present Czar, Alexander III, was
born February 26, (2+6=8); the proclamation of the ascension to the throne
of the late Emperor was signed February 18; the public proclamation about
the Coronation day took place April 17 (l+7=8). His entrance into Moscow
for the coronation was on August 17 (1+7=8); the Coronation itself being
performed August 26 (2+6=8); the year of the liberation of the Serfs, 1861,
whose numerals sum up 16-i.e., twice 8!
To conclude, we may mention here a far more curious discovery made in
relation, and as a supplement, to the above calculation, by a Jewish Rabbi
in Russia-a Kabalist, evidently, from the use he makes of the Gemantria
reckoning. It was just published in a St. Petersburg paper. The Hebrew
letters as stated have all their numerical value or correspondence in arithmetical
figures. The number 18 in the Hebrew Alphabet is represented by the letters-"HETH" = 8, and "JOD"
= 10, i.e., 18. United together Heth and Jod form the word
"khaï," or "Hai," which literally translated means
the imperative-live and alive. Every orthodox Jew during
his fast and holy days is bound to donate for some pious purpose a sum of
money consisting of, and containing the number 18 in it. So, for instance,
he will give 18 copecks, or 18 ten copeck bits, 18 rubles or 18 times 18
copecks or rubles-according to his means and degree of religious fervour.
Hence, the year 1818-that of the Emperor's birth-meant, if read in Hebrew-"khaï,
khaï"-or live, live-pronounced emphatically twice;
while the year 1881-that of his death read in the same way, yields the fatal
words "Khaï-tze" rendered in English, "thou living
one depart"; or in other words, "life is ended."
Of course, those sceptically inclined will remark that it is all due
to blind chance and "coincidence." Nor would we much insist upon
the contrary, were such an observation to proceed but from uncompromising
atheists, and materialists, who, denying the above, remain only logical
in their disbelief, and have as much right to their opinion as we have to
our own. But we cannot promise the same degree of indulgence whenever attacked
by orthodox religionists. For, that class of persons while pooh-poohing
speculative metaphysics, and even astrology-a system based upon strictly
mathematical calculations, pertaining as much to exact science as biology
or physiology, and open to experiment and verification-will, at the same
time, firmly believe that potatoe disease, cholera, railway accidents, earthquakes
and the like are all of Divine origin and, proceeding directly of
God, have a meaning and a bearing on human life in its highest aspects.
It is to the latter class of theists that we say: prove to us the existence
of a personal God either outside or inside physical nature, demonstrate
him to us as the external agent, the Ruler of the Universe; show him concerned
in human affairs and destiny and exercising on them an influence, at least,
as great and reasonably probable as that exercised by the sun-spots upon
the destiny of vegetables and then-laugh at us. Until then, and so long
as no one is prepared with such a proof and solution, in the words of Tyndall-"Let
us lower our heads, and acknowledge our ignorance, priest and philosopher,
one and all."
Theosophist, June, 1881
H. P. Blavatsky
1 One of the best known
vegetable epidemics is that of the potatoe disease. The years 1846. 1860,
and 1872 were bad years for the potatoe disease. and those years are not
very far from the years of maximum sun-spots . . . there is a curious connection
between these diseases affecting plants and the state of the sun. . . .
A disease that took place about three centuries since, of a periodical and
very violent character, called the "sweating sickness" . . . took
place about the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth
century . . . and this is exactly the sun-spot period. . . . (The Sun
and the Earth, Lecture by Prof. Balfour Stewart)
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2 H. H. Aga Khan was one of the most remarkable
men of the century. Of all the Mussulmen, Shiahs or Soonis, who rejoice
in the green turban, the Aga's claims to a direct descent from Mahomet through
Ali rested on undeniable proofs. He again represented the historical "Assassins"
of the Old Man of the Mountain. He had married a daughter of the late Shah
of Persia; but political broils forced him to leave his native land and
seek refuge with the British Government in India. In Bombay he had a numerous
religious following. He was a high-spirited, generous man and a hero. The
most noticeable feature of his life was that he was born in 1800-and died
in 1881, at the age of 81. In his case too the occult influence of the year
1881 has asserted itself.
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