Writings
of H P Blavatsky
Cardiff Theosophical Society in Wales
206 Newport Road, Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24 -1DL
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831 – 1891)
The Founder of Modern Theosophy
A
Paradoxical World
By
H
P Blavatsky
Open your ears
. . .
when loud
rumour speaks!
I, from the Orient to the drooping West,
Making the wind my post horse, still
unfold
The acts commenced on this ball of earth:
Upon my tongue continual slanders ride,
The which in every language I pronounce;
Stuffing the ears of men with false
reports.
I speak of peace, while covert enmity,
Under the smile of safety, wounds the
world:
And who but Rumour, who but only I . . .
--SHAKESPEARE
Why, I can smile. and murder while I
smile;
And cry content, to that which grieves my
heart;
And wet my cheeks with artificial tears,
And frame my face to all occasions . . .
--IBID.
WE live in an
age of prejudice, dissimulation and paradox, wherein, like dry leaves caught in
a whirlpool some of us are tossed helpless, hither and thither, ever struggling
between our honest convictions and fear of that cruellest of tyrants--PUBLIC
OPINION. Yea, we move on in life as in a Maelstrom formed of two conflicting
currents, one rushing onward, the other repelling us downward; one making us
cling desperately to what we believe to be right and true, and that we would
fain carry out on the surface; the other knocking us off our feet,
overpowering, and finally drowning us under the fierce, despotic wave of social
propriety and that idiotic, arbitrary and ever wool-gathering public opinion,
based on slander and idle rumour. No person need in our modern day be honest,
sincere, and righteous in order to curry favour or receive recognition as a man
of worth. He need only be a successful hypocrite, or have become for no mortal
reason he himself knows of--popular. In our age, in the words of Mrs. Montague,
"while every vice is hid by hypocrisy, every virtue is suspected to be
hypocrisy . . . and the suspicion is looked upon as wisdom." Thus, no one
seeming to know what to believe, and what to reject, the best means of becoming
a paragon of every virtue on blind faith, is--to acquire, popularity.
But how is
popularity to be acquired? Very easily indeed. Howl with the wolves. Pay homage
to the favourite vices of the day, and reverence to mediocrities in public
favour. Shut your eyes tight before any truth, if unpalatable to the chief
leaders of the social herd, and sit with them upon the dissenting minority. Bow
low before vulgarity in power; and bray loud applause to the rising donkey who
kicks a dying lion, now a fallen idol. Respect public prejudice and pander to
its cant and hobbies, and soon you will yourself become popular. Behold, now is
your time. No matter if you be a plunderer and murderer combined: you will be
glorified all the same, furnished with an aureole of virtues, and allowed even a
broader margin for impunity than contained in the truism of that Turkish
proverb, which states that "a thief not found out is honester than a
Bey." But now let a Socrates and Epictetus rolled into one suddenly become
unpopular. That which will alone remain of him in the hazy mind of Dame Rumour
is a pug nose and the body of a slave lacerated by the plying whip of his
Master. The twin sisters, Public Opinion and Mrs. Grundy, will soon forget
their classics. Their female aspect, siding with Xantippe, will charitably
endeavour to unearth various good reasons for her outbreaks of passion in the
shape of slops poured over the poor bald head; and will search as diligently
for some hitherto unknown secret vices in the Greek Sage. Their male aspect
will see but a lashed body before its mental eye, and will soon end by joining
the harmonious concert of Society slander directed against the ghosts of the
two philosophers. Result: Socrates-Epictetus will emerge out of the ordeal as
black as pitch, a dangerous object for any finger to approach. Henceforth, and
for æons to come, the said object will have become unpopular.
__________
The same, in
art, in politics, and even literature. "A damned saint, an honourable
villain," are in the present social order of things. Truth and fact have
become unpalatable, and are ostracised; he who ventures to defend an unpopular
character or an unpopular subject, risks to become himself anathema maranatha.
The ways of Society have contaminated all those who approach the threshold of civilized
communities; and if we take the word and severe verdict of Lavater for it,
there is no room in the world for one who is not prepared to become a
full-blown hypocrite. For, "He who by kindness and smooth attention can
insinuate a hearty welcome to an unwelcome guest, is a hypocrite superior to a
thousand plain-dealers," writes the eminent physiognomist. This would seem
to settle the line of demarcation and to preclude Society, for ever, from
becoming a "Palace of Truth."
Owing to this,
the world is perishing from spiritual starvation. Thousands and millions have
turned their faces away from anthropomorphic ritualism. They believe no longer
in a personal governor and Ruler; yet this prevents them in no wise from
attending every Sunday "divine service," and professing during the
week adherence to their respective Churches. Other millions have plunged
headlong into Spiritualism, Christian and mental science or kindred mystic
occupations; yet how few will confess their true opinions before a gathering of
unbelievers! Most of the cultured men and women--save rabid materialists--are
dying with the desire to fathom the mysteries of nature and even--whether they
be true or imaginary--the mysteries of the magicians of old. Even our Weeklies
and Dailies confess to the past existence of a knowledge which has now become a
closed book save for the very few. Which of them, however, is brave enough to
speak civilly of the unpopular phenomena called "spiritualistic," or
dispassionately about Theosophy, or even to abstain from mocking remarks and
insulting epithets? They will talk with every outward reverence of Elijah's
chariot of fire, of the board and bed found by Jonah within the whale; and open
their columns for large subscriptions to fit out scientifico-religious expeditions,
for the purpose of fishing out from the Red Sea the drowned Pharaoh's golden
tooth-pick, or in the Desert, a fragment of the broken tables of stone. But
they would not touch with a pair of tongs any fact--no matter how well
proven--if vouchsafed to them by the most reliable man living who is connected
with Theosophy or Spiritualism. Why? Because Elijah flying away to heaven in
his chariot is a Biblical orthodox miracle, hence popular and a relevant
subject; while a medium levitated to the ceiling is an unpopular fact; not even
a miracle, but simply a phenomenon due to intermagnetic and
psycho-physiological and even physical causes. On one hand gigantic pretensions
to civilization and science, professions of holding but to what is demonstrated
on strictly inductive methods of observation and experiment; a blind trust in
physical science--that
science which
pooh-poohs and throws slur on metaphysics, and is yet honeycombed with
"working hypotheses" all based upon speculations far beyond the
region of sense, and often even of speculative thought itself: on the other
hand, just as servile and apparently as blind an acceptation of that which
orthodox science rejects with great scorn, namely, Pharaoh's tooth-pick,
Elijah's chariot and the ichthyographic explorations of Jonah. No thought of
the unfitness of things, of the absurdity, ever strikes any editor of a daily
paper. He will place unhesitatingly, and side by side, the newest ape-theory of
a materialistic F.R.S., and the latest discourse upon the quality of the apple
which caused the fall of Adam. And he will add flattering editorial comments
upon both lectures, as having an equal right to his respectful attention.
Because, both are popular in their respective spheres.
_______________
Yet, are all
editors natural-born sceptics and do not many of them show a decided leaning
towards the Mysteries of the archaic Past, that which is the chief study of the
Theosophical Society? The "Secrets of the Pyramids," the "rites
of Isis" and "the dread traditions of the temple of Vulcan with their
theories for transcendental speculation" seem to have a decided attraction
for the Evening Standard. Speaking some time since on the "Egyptian
Mysteries" it said:
We know little
even now of the beginnings of the ancient religions of Thebes and Memphis. . .
. All these idolatrous mysteries, it should also be remembered, were always
kept profoundly secret; for the hieroglyphic writings were understood only by
the initiated through all these ages. Plato, it is true, came to study from the
Egyptian priests; Herodotus visited the Pyramids: Pausanias and Strabo admired
the characters which were sculptured so large upon their outer casing that he
who ran could read them; but not one of these took the trouble to learn their
meaning. They were one and all content to give currency, if not credence, to
the marvellous tales which the Egyptian priests and people recounted and
invented for the benefit of strangers.
Herodotus and
Plato, who were both Initiates into the Egyptian mysteries, accused of
believing in and giving currency to marvellous tales invented by the Egyptian
priests, is a novel accusation. Herodotus and Plato refusing "to take the
trouble" of learning the meaning of the hieroglyphs, is another. Of course
if both "gave currency" to tales, which neither an orthodox
Christian, nor an orthodox Materialist and Scientist will endorse, how can an
editor of a Daily accept them as true? Nevertheless the information given and
the remarks indulged in, are wonderfully broad and in the main free from the
usual prejudice. We transcribe a few paragraphs, to let the reader judge.
It is an
immemorial tradition that the pyramid of Cheops communicated by subterranean
passages with the great Temple of Isis. The hints of the ancient writers as to
the subterranean world which was actually excavated for the mysteries of
Egyptian superstition, curiously agree. . . . Like the source of the Nile
itself, there is hardly any line of inquiry in Egyptian lore which does not end
in mystery. The whole country seems to share with the Sphinx an air of
inscrutable silence. Some of its secrets, the researches of Wilkinson,
Rawlinson, Brugsch, and Petrie have more or less fully revealed to us; but we
shall never know much which lies concealed behind the veil of time.1 We can
hardly hope even to realize the glories of Thebes in its prime, when it spread
over a circuit of thirty miles, with the noble river flowing through it, and
each quarter filled with palaces and temples. And the tyranny of the Ethiopian
priests, at whose command kings laid down and died, will always remain one of
the strangest enigmas in the whole problem of primitive priestcraft.2
It was a
tradition of the ancient world that the secret of immortality was to be found in
Egypt, and that there, amongst the dark secrets of the antediluvian world which
remained undeciphered, was the "Elixir of Life." Deep, it was said,
under the Pyramids had for ages lain concealed the Table of Emerald, on which,
as the legend ran, Hermes had engraved before the Flood, the secret of alchemy;
and their weird associations justified the belief that still mightier wonders
here remained hid. In the City of the Dead to the north of Memphis, for
instance, pyramid after pyramid rose for centuries towering above each other;
and in the interior passages and chambers of the rock-cut tombs were pictured
the mystic wisdom of the Egyptians in quaint symbols. . . . A vast subterranean
world, according to tradition, extended from the Catacombs of Alexandria to
Thebes' Valley of Kings, and this is surrounded with a whole wealth of
marvellous story. These, perhaps, culminate in the ceremony of initiation into
the religious mysteries of the Pyramids. The identity of the legend has been
curiously preserved through all ages, for it is only in minor details that the
versions differ. The ceremonies were undoubtedly very terrible. The candidates
were subjected to ordeals so frightful that many of them succumbed, and those
who survived, not only shared the honours of the priesthood, but were looked
upon as having risen from the dead. It was commonly believed, we are told, that
they had descended into Hell itself. . . . They were, moreover, given draughts
of the cups of Isis and Osiris, the waters of life and death, and clothed in
the sacred robes of pure white linen, and on their heads the mystic symbol of
initiation--the golden grasshopper. Instructed in the esoteric doctrines of the
sacred college of Memphis, it was only the candidates and priests who knew
those galleries and shrines that extended under the site upon which the city
stood and formed a subterranean counterpart to its mighty temples, and those
lower crypts in which were preserved the "seven tables of stone," on
which was written all the "knowledge of the antediluvian race, decrees of
the stars from the beginning of time, the annals of a still earlier world, and
all the marvellous secrets both of heaven and earth."3 And here, too,
according to mythological tradition, were the Isiac serpents which possessed mystic
meanings at which we can now only vainly guess. When the monuments are silent,
certainty is impossible in Egyptology; and in thirty centuries vestiges have
been ruthlessly swept away which can never be replaced.
_______________
Does not this
read like a page from "Isis Unveiled," or one of our theosophical
writings--minus their explanations? But why speak of thirty centuries, when the
Egyptian Zodiac on the ceiling of the Dendera temple shows three tropical
years, or 75,ooo solar years? But listen further:
We can, in a
sense, understand the awful grandeur of the Theban necropolis, and of the
sepulchral chambers of Beni Hassan. . . . The cost and toil devoted to the
"everlasting palaces" of departed monarchs; the wonders of the
Pyramids themselves, as of the other royal tombs; the decoration of their
walls; the embalmed bodies all point to the conclusion that this huge
subterranean world was made a complete ante-type of the real world above. But
whether or no it was a verity in this primitive cult that there was an actual
renovation of life at the end of some vast cycle is lost in learned conjecture.
"Learned
conjecture" does not go far nowadays, being of a pre-eminently
materialistic character, and limited somehow to the sun. But if the
unpopularity of the Theosophical Society prevents the statements of its members
from being heard; if we ignore "Isis Unveiled" and the "Secret
Doctrine," the Theosophist, etc., full of facts, most of which are as well
authenticated by references to classical writers and the contemporaries of the
MYSTERIES in Egypt and Greece, as any statement made by modern
Egyptologists--why should not the writer on the "Egyptian Mysteries"
turn to Origen and even to the Æneid for a positive answer to this particular
question? This dogma of the return of the Soul or the Ego after a period of
1,000 or 1,500 years into a new body (a theosophical teaching now) was
professed as a religious truth from the highest antiquity. Voltaire wrote on
the subject of these thousand years of post mortem duration as follows:
This opinion
about resurrection (rather "reincarnation") after ten centuries,
passed to the Greeks, the disciples of the Egyptians, and to the Romans (their
Initiates only), disciples of the Greeks. One finds it in the VIth Book of the
Æneid, which is but a description of the mysteries of Isis and of Ceres
Eleusina;
Has omnis ubi
mille rotam
volvere per annos,
Lethœum ad fluvium deus evocat agmine
magno;
Scilicet immemores, supera ut convexa
revisant.
This
"opinion" passed from the Pagan Greeks and Romans to Christians, even
in our century, though disfigured by sectarianism; for it is the origin of the
millennium. No pagan, even of the lower classes, believed that the Soul would
return into its old body: cultured Christians do, since the day of the
Resurrection of all flesh is a universal dogma, and since the Millenarians wait
for the second advent of Christ on earth when he will reign for a thousand
years.
_______________
All such
articles as the above quoted are the paradoxes of the age, and show ingrained
prejudices and preconceptions. Neither the very conservative and orthodox
editor of the Standard, nor yet the very radical and infidel editors of many a
London paper, will give fair or even dispassionate hearing to any Theosophical
writer. "Can any good come out of Nazareth?" the Pharisees and
Sadducees of old are credited with asking. "Can anything but twaddle come
from Theosophical quarters?" repeat the modern followers of cant and
materialism.
Of course not.
We are so very unpopular! Besides which, theosophists who have written the most
upon those subjects at which, in the words of the Evening Standard, "we
can now only vainly guess" are regarded by Mrs. Grundy's herds as the
black sheep of Christian cultured centres. Having had access to Eastern secret
works, hitherto concealed from the world of the profane, the said theosophists
had means of studying and of ascertaining the value and real meaning of the
"marvellous secrets both of heaven and earth," and thus of disinterring
many of the vestiges now seemingly lost to the world of students. But what
matters that? How can one so little in odour of sanctity with the majorities, a
living embodiment of every vice and sin, according to most charitable souls, be
credited with knowing anything? Nor does the possibility of such charges being
merely the fruit of malice and slander, and therefore entitled to lie sub
judice, nor simple logic, ever trouble their dreams or have any voice in the
question. Oh no! But has the idea ever crossed their minds that on that
principle the works of him who was proclaimed:
"The
greatest, wisest, meanest of mankind"
ought also to
become unpopular, and Baconian philosophy be at once shunned and boycotted? In
our paradoxical age, as we now learn, the worth of a literary production has to
be judged, not on its own intrinsic merits, but according to the private
character, the shape of the nose, and the popularity or unpopularity of the
writer thereof. Let us give an example, by quoting a favourite remark made by
some bitter opponent of "The Secret Doctrine." It is the reply given
the other day to a theosophist who urged a would-be Scientist and supposed
Assyriologist to read the said work. "Well," he said, "I grant
you there may be in it a few facts valuable to students of antiquity and to
scientific speculation. But who can have the patience to read 1,500 pages of
dreary metaphysical twaddle for the sake of discovering in it a few facts,
however valuable?"
O imitatores
servum pecus! And yet how joyfully you would set to work, sparing neither time,
labour nor money, to extract two or three ounces of gold from tons of quartz
and useless alluvial soil. . . .
_______________
Thus, we find
the civilized world and its humanities ever unfair, ever enforcing one law for
the wealthy and the mighty, and another law for the poor and the uninfluential.
Society, politics, commerce, literature, art and sciences, religion and ethics,
all are full of paradoxes, contradictions, injustice, selfishness and
unreliability. Might has become right, elsewhere than in colonies and for the
detriment of "black men." Wealth leads to impunity, poverty to
condemnation even by the law, for the impecunious having no means of paying
lawyers are debarred from their natural right to appeal to the courts for
redress. Hint, even privately, that a person, notorious for having acquired his
wealth by plunder and oppression, or unfair play on the Stock Exchange, is a
thief, and the law to which he will appeal will ruin you with damages and court
expenses and imprison you into the bargain for libel, for "the greater the
truth, the greater the libel." But let that wealthy thief slander your
character publicly, accuse you falsely of breaking all the ten commandments,
and if you are in the slightest degree unpopular, an infidel, or too radical in
your views, no matter how honourable and honest you may be, yet you will have
to swallow the defamation, and let it get root in the minds of people; or, go
to law and risk many hundreds or even thousands out of your pocket and get--one
farthing damages! What chance has an "infidel" in the sight of a
bigoted, ignorant jury? Behold those rich speculators who arrange bogus
quotations on the Stock Exchange for shares which they wish to foist upon an
innocent public that makes for everything whose price is rising. And look at
that poor clerk, whose passion for gambling--which the example of those same
wealthy capitalists has fired--if caught in some small embezzlement, the
righteous indignation of the rich capitalists knows no bounds. They ostracise
even one of their own confreres because he has been so indiscreet as to be
found out in dealings with the unhappy wretch! Again, what country boasts more
of Christian charity, and its code of honour, than old England? Yea, you have
soldiers and champions of freedom, and they take out the deadly machine-guns of
your latest purveyor of death and blow to fragments a stockade in Solymah, with
its defending mob of half-armed savages, of poor "niggers," because
you hear that they perchance may molest your camps. Yet it is to that self-same
continent you send your almighty fleets, into which you pour your soldiers,
putting on the hypocritical mask of saving from slavery these very black men
whom you have just blown into the air! What country, the world over, has so
many philanthropic societies, charitable institutions, and generous donors as
England has? And where, on the face of the earth, is the city which contains more
misery, vice and starvation, than London--the queen of wealthy metropoles.
Hideous poverty, filth and rags glare from behind every corner, and Carlyle was
right in saying that the Poor Law was an anodyne--not a remedy. "Blessed
are the poor," said your Man-God. "Avaunt the ragged, starving beggar
from our West End streets!" you shout, helped by your Police Force; and
yet you call yourselves His "humble" followers. It is the
indifference and contempt of the higher for the lower classes which has
generated and bred in the latter that virus which has now grown in them into
self-contempt, brutal indifference and cynicism, thus transforming a human
species into the wild and soulless animals which fill the Whitechapel dens.
Mighty are thy powers, most evidently, O, Christian civilization!
_______________
But has not our
Theosophical "Fraternity" escaped the infection of this paradoxical
age? Alas, no. How often the cry against the "entrance fee" was heard
among the wealthiest Theosophists. Many of these were Freemasons, who belonged
to both institutions--their Lodges and Theosophy. They had paid fees upon
entering the former, surpassing ten times the modest £ I, paid for their
diploma on becoming Theosophists. They had to pay as "Widow's Sons,"
a large price for every paltry jewel conferred upon them as a distinction, and
had always to keep their hands in their pockets ready to spend large sums for
paraphernalia, gorgeous banquets with rich viands and costly wines. This
diminished in no way their reverence for Freemasonry. But that which is good
for the masonic goose is not fit sauce for the theosophical gander. How often
was the hapless President Founder of our Society, Col. H. S. Olcott taunted
with selling theosophy for £ I per head! He, who worked and toiled from January
1st to December 31st for ten years under the broiling sun of India, and managed
out of that wretched pound of the entrance fee and a few donations to keep up
the Headquarters, to establish free schools and finally to build and open a
library at Adyar of rare Sanskrit works--how often was he condemned,
criticised, misjudged, and his best motives misinterpreted. Well, our critics
must now be satisfied. Not only the payment of the entrance fee but even that
of two shillings yearly, expected from our Fellows to help in paying the
expenses of the anniversary meetings, at the Headquarters at Madras (this large
sum of two shillings, by-the-bye, having never been sent in but by a very
limited number of theosophists), all this is now abolished. On December 27th
last "the Rules were completely recast, the entrance fee and annual dues
were abolished," writes a theosophist-stoic from Adyar. "We are on a
purely voluntary contribution footing. Now if our members don't give, we starve
and shut up--that's all."
A brave and
praiseworthy reform but rather a dangerous experiment. The "B. Lodge of
the T.S." in London never had an entrance fee from its beginning, eighteen
months ago; and the results are that the whole burden of its expenses has
fallen upon half a dozen of devoted and determined Theosophists. This last
Anniversary Financial Report, at Adyar, has moreover brought to light some
curious facts and paradoxical incongruities in the bosom of the Theosophical
Society at large. For years our Christian and kind friends, the Anglo-Indian
missionaries, had set on foot and kept rolling the fantastic legend about the
personal greediness and venality of the "Founders." The
disproportionate]y large number of members, who, on account of their poverty
had been exonerated from any entrance fees, was ignored, and never taken into
account. Our devotion to the cause, it was urged, was a sham; we were wolves in
sheep's clothing; bent on making money by psychologizing and deceiving those
"poor benighted heathen" and the "credulous infidels" of
Europe and America; figures are there, it was added; and the 100,000
theosophists (with which we were credited) represented £ 100,000 etc., etc.
Well, the day
of reckoning has come, and as it is printed in the General Report of the Theosophist
we may just mention it as a paradox in the region of theosophy. The Financial
Report includes a summary of all our receipts from donations and Initiation
fees, since the beginning of our arrival in India, i.e. February 1879, or just
ten years. The total is 89,I40 rupees, or about £6,600. Of the Rs 54,000 of
donations, what are the large sums received by the Theosophical (Parent)
Society in the respective countries? Here they are:
IN INDIA .
. . .
. . Rupees
40,000
IN EUROPE
. .
. .
. " 7,000
IN AMERICA .
. .
. . " 700!!
Total 47,700 rupees or £3,600
Vide infra
"Theosophical Activities": "The President Founder's
Address."
The two
"greedy Founders" having given out of their own pockets during these
years almost as much, in the result there remain two impecunious beggars,
practically two pauper-Theosophists. But we are all proud of our poverty and do
not regret either our labour or any sacrifices made to further the noble cause
we have pledged ourselves to serve. The figures are simply published as one
more proof in our defence and a superb evidence of the PARADOXES to be entered
to the credit of our traducers and slanderers.
Lucifer,
February, 1889
1 The more
so since the literature of theosophy, which is alone able to throw light on
those mysteries, is boycotted, and being "unpopular" can never hope
to be appreciated.
2 Because
these priests were real Initiates having occult powers, while the "Kings"
mentioned died but for the world. They were the "dead in life." The
writer seems ignorant of the metaphorical ways of expression.
3 Much of
which knowledge and the mysteries of the same "earlier races" have
been explained in the "Secret Doctrine," a work, however, untouched
by the English dailies as unorthodox and unscientific--a jumble, truly.
______________________
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Preface
Theosophy and the Masters General Principles
The Earth Chain Body and Astral Body Kama – Desire
Manas Of Reincarnation Reincarnation Continued
Karma Kama Loka
Devachan
Cycles
Arguments Supporting Reincarnation
Differentiation Of Species Missing Links
Psychic Laws, Forces, and Phenomena
Psychic Phenomena and Spiritualism
Quick Explanations with
Links to More Detailed Info
What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis Anthropogenesis Root Races
Ascended Masters After Death States
The Seven Principles of Man Karma
Reincarnation Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical
Society
History of the Theosophical
Society
Theosophical Society Presidents
History of the Theosophical
Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the
Theosophical Society
Explanation of the Theosophical
Society Emblem
The Theosophical Order of
Service (TOS)
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
Index of
Searchable
Full Text
Versions of
Definitive
Theosophical
Works
H P Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine
Isis Unveiled by H P Blavatsky
H P Blavatsky’s Esoteric Glossary
Mahatma Letters to A P Sinnett 1 - 25
A Modern Revival of Ancient Wisdom
(Selection of Articles by H P Blavatsky)
The Secret Doctrine – Volume 3
A compilation of H P Blavatsky’s
writings published after her death
Esoteric Christianity or the Lesser Mysteries
The Early Teachings of The Masters
A Collection of Fugitive Fragments
Fundamentals of the Esoteric Philosophy
Mystical, Philosophical,
Theosophical, Historical
and Scientific
Essays Selected from "The Theosophist"
Edited by George Robert Stow Mead
From Talks on the Path of Occultism - Vol. II
In the Twilight”
Series of Articles
The In the
Twilight” series appeared during
1898 in The
Theosophical Review and
from 1909-1913
in The Theosophist.
compiled from
information supplied by
her relatives
and friends and edited by A P Sinnett
Letters and
Talks on Theosophy and the Theosophical Life
Obras
Teosoficas En Espanol
Theosophische
Schriften Auf Deutsch
An Outstanding
Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of
Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
Try
these if you are looking for a local
Theosophy
Group or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Cardiff
Theosophical Society in Wales
206 Newport Road, Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24 -1DL