It is now some time since this theory, which was
first propounded in the oldest religion of the world, Vedaism, then taught
by various Greek philosophers, and afterwards defended by the Theosophists
of the Middle Ages, but which came to be flatly denied by the wise men
of the West, like everything else, in this world of negation, has been
gradually coming into prominence again. This once, contrary to the rule,
it is the men of science themselves who take up. Statistics of events of
the most varied nature are fast being collected and collated with the seriousness
demanded by important scientific questions. Statistics of wars and of the
periods (or cycles) of the appearance of great men at least those as have
been recognised as such by their contemporaries and irrespective of later
opinions; statistics of the periods of development and progress at large
commercial centres; of the rise and fall of arts and sciences; of cataclysms,
such as earthquakes, epidemics periods of extraordinary cold and heat; cycles
of revolutions, and of the rise and fall of empires, &c.; all these
are subjected turn to the analysis of the minutest mathematical calculations.
Finally, even the occult significance of numbers in names of persons and
names of cities, in events, and like matters, receives unwonted attention.
If, on the one hand, a great portion of the educated public is running into
atheism and scepticism, on the other hand, we find an evident current of
mysticism forcing its way into science. It is the sign of an irrepressible
need in humanity to assure itself that there is a Power Paramount over matter;
an occult and mysterious law which governs the world, and which we should
rather study and closely watch, trying to adapt ourselves to it, than blindly
deny, and break our heads against the rock of destiny. ore than one thoughtful
mind, while studying the fortunes and verses of nations and great empires,
has been deeply struck by one identical feature in their history, namely,
the inevitable recurrence of similar historical events reaching in turn
every one of them, and after the same lapse of time. This analogy is found
between the events to be substantially the same on the whole, though there
may be more or less difference as to the outward form of details. Thus,
the belief of the ancients in their astrologers, soothsayers and prophets
might have been warranted by the verification of many of their most important
predictions, without these prognostications of future events implying of
necessity anything very miraculous in themselves. The soothsayers and augurs
having occupied in days of the old civilizations the very same position
now occupied by our historians, astronomers and meteorologists, there was
nothing more wonderful in the fact of the former predicting the downfall
of an empire or the loss of a battle, than in the latter predicting the
return of a comet, a change of temperature, or, perhaps, the final conquest
of Afghanistan. The necessity for both these classes being acute, observers
apart, there was the study of certain sciences to be pursued then as
well as they are now. The science of today will have become an "ancient"
science a thousand years hence. Free and open, scientific study now is to
all, whereas it was then confined but to the few. Yet, whether ancient or
modern, both may be called exact sciences; for, if the astronomer of today
draws his observations from mathematical calculations, the astrologer of
old also based his prognostication upon no less acute and mathematically
correct observations of the ever-recurring cycles. And, because the secret
of this science is now being lost, does that give any warrant to say that
it never existed, or that, to believe in it, one must be ready to swallow
"magic," "miracles" and the like stuff? "If, in
view of the eminence to which modern science has reached, the claim to prophesy
future events must be regarded as either a child's play or a deliberate
deception," says a writer in the Novoyé Vremya, the best
daily paper of literature and politics of St. Petersburg, "then we
can point at science which, in its turn, has now taken up and placed on
record the question, in its relation to past events, whether there is or
is not in the constant repetition of events a certain periodicity; in other
words, whether these events recur after a fixed and determined period of
years with every nation; and if a periodicity there be, whether this periodicity
is due to blind chance or depends on the same natural laws, on which are
more or less dependent many of the phenomena of human life." Undoubtedly
the latter. And the writer has the best mathematical proof of it in the
timely appearance of such works as that of Dr. E. Zasse, under review, and
of a few others. Several learned works, treating upon this mystical subject,
have appeared of late, and of some of these works and calculations we will
now treat; the more readily as they are in most cases
from the pens of men of eminent learning. Having already in the June number
of the THEOSOPHIST noticed an article by Dr. Blohvitz
On the significance of the number Seven,1
with every nation and people a learned paper which appeared lately
in the German journal Die Gegenwart we will now summarize the opinions
of the press in general, on a more suggestive work by a well-known German
scientist, E. Zasse, with certain reflections of our own. It has just appeared
in the Prussian Journal of Statistics, and powerfully corroborates
the ancient theory of Cycles. These periods, which bring around ever-recurring
events, begin from the infinitesimal small say of ten years rotation and
reach to cycles which require 250, 500, 700 and 1000 years, to effect their
revolutions around themselves, and within one another. All are contained
within the Máhá-Yug, the "Great Age" or Cycle
of the Manu calculation, which itself revolves between two eternities the
"Pralayas" or Nights of Brahma. As, in the objective world
of matter, or the system of effects, the minor constellations and planets
gravitate each and all around he sun, so in the world of the subjective,
or the system of causes, these innumerable cycles all gravitate between
that which the finite intellect of the ordinary mortal regards as eternity,
and the till finite, but more profound, intuition of the sage and philosopher
views as but an eternity within THE ETERNITY.
"As above, so it is below," runs the old Hermetic maxim. As an
experiment in his direction, Dr. Zasse selected the statistical investigations
of all the wars, the occurrence of which has been recorded in history, as
a subject which lends itself more easily to scientific verification than
any other. To illustrate his subject in the simplest and most easily comprehensible
way, Dr. Zasse represents the periods of war and the periods of peace in
the shape of small and large rave-lines running over the area of the old
world. The idea is not new one, for, the image was used for similar illustrations
by ore than one ancient and mediaeval mystic, whether in words or picture by
Henry Kunrath, for example. But it serves well its purpose and gives us
the facts we now want. Before he treats, however, of the cycles of wars,
the author brings in the record of the rise and fall of the world's great
empires, and shows the degree of activity they have played in the Universal
History. He points out the fact that if we divide the map of the Old World
into five parts into Eastern, Central, and Western Asia, Eastern and Western
Europe, and Egypt then we will easily perceive that very 250 years, an
enormous wave passes over these areas, bringing into each in its turn the
events it has brought to the one next preceding. This wave we may call "the
historical wave" of the 250 years' cycle. The reader will please follow
this mystical number of years.
The first of these waves began in China, 2,000 years B.C. the "golden
age" of this Empire, the age of philosophy, of discoveries and reforms.
"In 1750 B.C., the Mongolians of Central Asia
establish a powerful empire. In 1500, Egypt rises from its temporary degradation
and carries its sway over many parts of Europe and Asia; and about 1250,
the historical wave reaches and crosses over to Eastern Europe, filling
it with the spirit of the Argonautic expedition, and dies out in 1000 B.C. at the siege of Troy."
A second historical wave appears about that time in Central Asia. "The
Scythians leave her steppes, and inundate towards the year 750 B.C.
the adjoining countries, directing themselves towards the South and West;
about the year 500 in Western Asia begins an epoch of splendour for ancient
Persia; and the wave moves on to the east of Europe, where, about 250 B.C., Greece reaches her highest state of culture and civilization and
further on to the West, where, at the birth of Christ, the Roman Empire
finds itself at its apogee of power and greatness."
Again, at this period we find the rising of a third historical wave at
the far East. After prolonged revolutions, about this time, China forms
once more a powerful empire, and its arts, sciences and commerce flourish
again. Then 250 years later, we find the Huns appearing from the depths
of Central Asia; in the year 500 A.D. a new and powerful
Persian kingdom is formed; in 750 in Eastern Europe the Byzantine empire;
and, in the year 1,000 on its western side springs up the second Roman
Power, the Empire of the Papacy, which soon reaches an extraordinary development
of wealth and brilliancy.
At the same time, the fourth wave approaches from the Orient.
China is again flourishing; in I 250, the Mongolian wave from Central Asia
has overflowed and covered an enormous area of land, including with it Russia.
About 1500, in Western Asia, the Ottoman Empire rises in all its might and
conquers the Balkan peninsula; but at the same time in Eastern Europe, Russia
throws off the Tartar yoke, and about 1750, during the reign of Empress
Catherine, rises to an unexpected grandeur and covers itself with I glory.
The wave ceaselessly moves further on to the West, and, beginning with the
middle of the past century, Europe is living over an epoch of revolutions
and reforms, and, according to the author, "if it is permissible to
prophetize, then, about the year 2,000, Western Europe will have lived one
of those periods of culture and progress so rare in history." The Russian
press, taking the cue, believes that "towards those days the Eastern
Question will be finally settled, the national dissensions of the European
peoples will come to an end, and the dawn of the new millennium will witness
the abolishment of armies and an alliance between all the European empires."
The signs of regeneration are also fast multiplying in Japan and China,
as if pointing to the approach of a new historical wave at the extreme East.
If, from the cycle of two-and-a-half century duration, we descend to
those which leave their impress every century, and, grouping together the
events of ancient history, will mark the development and rise of empires,
then we will assure ourselves that, beginning from the year 700 B.C.,
the centennial wave pushes forward, bringing into prominence the following
nations each in its turn the Assyrians, the Medes, the Babylonians, the
Persians, the Greeks, the Macedonians, the Carthaginians, the Romans and
the Germanians.
The striking periodicity of the wars in Europe is also noticed by Dr.
E. Zasse. Beginning with 1700 A.D., every ten years
have been signalized by either a war or a revolution. The periods of the
strengthening and weakening of the warlike excitement of the European nations
represent a wave strikingly regular in its periodicity, flowing incessantly,
as if propelled onward by some invisible fixed law. This same mysterious
law seems at the same time to make these events coincide with astronomical
wave or cycle, which, at every new revolution, is accompanied by the very
marked appearance of spots in the sun. The periods, when the European powers
have shown the most destructive energy, are marked by a cycle of 50 years'
duration. It would be too long and tedious to enumerate them from the beginning
of History. We may, therefore, limit our study to the cycle beginning with
the year 1712, when all the European nations were fighting at the
same time the Northern, and the Turkish wars, and the war for the throne
of Spain. About 1761, the "Seven Years' War"; in 1810 the wars
of Napoleon I. Towards 1861, the wave has a little deflected from its regular
course, but, as if to compensate for it, or, propelled, perhaps, with unusual
forces, the years directly preceding, as well as those which followed it,
left in history the records of the most fierce and bloody war the Crimean
war in the former period, and the American Rebellion in the latter one.
The periodicity in the wars between Russia and Turkey appears peculiarly
striking and represents a very characteristic wave. At first the intervals
between the cycles, returning upon themselves, are of thirty years' duration 17I0,
1740, 1770; then these intervals diminish, and we have a cycle of twenty
years 1790, 1810, 1829-30; then the intervals widen again 1853 and 1878.
But, if we take note of the whole duration of the in-flowing tide of the
warlike cycle, then we will have at the centre of it from 1768 to 1812 three
wars of seven years' duration each, and, at both ends, wars of two years.
Finally, the author comes to the conclusion that, in view of facts, it
becomes thoroughly impossible to deny the presence of a regular periodicity
in the excitement of both mental and physical forces in the nations of the
world. He proves that in the history of all the peoples and empires of the
Old World, the cycles marking the millenniums, the centennials as well as
the minor ones of 50 and 10 years' duration, are the most important, inasmuch
as neither of them has ever yet failed to bring in its rear some more or
less marked event in the history of the nation swept over by these historical
waves.
The history of India is one which, of all histories, is the most vague
and least satisfactory. Yet, were its consecutive great events noted down,
and its annals well searched, the law of cycles would be found to have asserted
itself here as plainly as in every other country in respect of its wars,
famines, political exigencies and other matters.
In France, a meteorologist of Paris went to the trouble of compiling
the statistics of the coldest seasons, and discovered, at the same time,
that those years, which had the figure 9 in them, had been marked by the
severest winters. His figures run thus: In 859 A.D.,
the northern part of the Adriatic sea was frozen and was covered for three
months with ice. In 1179, in the most moderate zones, the earth was covered
with several feet of snow. In 1209, in France, the depth of snow and the
bitter cold caused such a scarcity of fodder that most of the cattle perished
in that country In 1249, the Baltic Sea, between Russia, Norway and Sweden
remained frozen for many months and communication was held by sleighs. In
1339, there was such a terrific winter in England, that vast numbers of
people died of starvation and exposure. In 1409, the river Danube was frozen
from its sources to its mouth in the Black Sea. In 1469 all the vineyards
and orchards perished in consequence of the frost. In 1609, in France, Switzerland
and Upper Italy, people had to thaw their bread and provisions before they
could use them. In 1639, the harbour of Marseilles was covered with ice
to a great distance. In 1659 all the rivers in Italy were frozen. In 1699
the winter in France and Italy proved the severest and longest of all. The
prices for articles of food were so much raised that half of the population
died of starvation. In 1709 the winter was no less terrible. The ground
was frozen in France, Italy and Switzerland, to the depth of several feet,
and the sea, south as well as north, was covered with one compact and thick
crust of ice, many feet deep, and for a considerable space of miles, in
the usually open sea. Masses of wild beasts, driven out by the cold from
their dens in the forests, sought refuge in villages and even cities; and
the birds fell dead to the ground by hundreds. In 1729, 1749 and 1769 (cycles
of 20 years' duration) all the rivers and streams were ice-bound all over
France for many weeks, and all the fruit trees perished. In 1789, France
was again visited by a very severe winter. In Paris, the thermometer stood
at 19 degrees of frost. But the severest of all winters proved that of 1829.
For fifty-four consecutive days, all the roads in France were covered with
snow several feet deep, and all the rivers were frozen. Famine and misery
reached their climax in the country in that year. In 1839 there was again
in France a most terrific and trying cold season. And now the winter of
1879 has asserted its statistical rights and proved true to the fatal influence
of the figure 9. The meteorologists of other countries are invited to follow
suit and make their investigations likewise, for the subject is certainly
one of the most fascinating as well as instructive kind.
Enough has been shown, however, to prove that neither the ideas of Pythagoras
on the mysterious influence of numbers, nor the theories of ancient world-religions
and philosophies are as shallow and meaningless as some too forward free-thinkers
would have had the world to believe.
Theosophist, July, 1880
H. P. Blavatsky
1 See Volume I, pp. 345-50.
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