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Tuesday, 31 December 2019

Recent Blavatsky Projects from Daniel J. Caldwell


The indefatigable Daniel J. Caldwell has updated the Blavatsky Archives page recently and has included some interesting new publications and online documents, of which a sampling below (see http://blavatskyarchives.com ):

Theosophy: Divine Wisdom from Long Sealed Ancient Fountains
A comprehensive introduction to the basic teachings of Theosophy, culled from the major writings of H.P. Blavatsky, with William Q. Judge and others.
Hardcover, 490 Pages

Esoteric Buddhism
Paperback, 260 Pages
In the early 1880s A.P. Sinnett corresponded with the Mahatmas Koot Hoomi and Morya. In these letters the Masters gave Sinnett the basic ideas of Theosophy on the Occult Constitution of Man; the Planetary Chain; the World Periods; Life after death in Devachan and Kama Loka; the Progress of Humanity; Buddha; Nirvana and the Universe. Mr. Sinnett wrote ESOTERIC BUDDHISM based on his understanding of these teachings. This Theosophical classic was the first simple exposition of Theosophy in modern times.

Mary Unveiled: A.P. Sinnett and Maude Boyle-Travers
A monograph on a little-known but important period of early Theosophy.

THE THEOSOPHICAL GLOSSARY & Related Material: A Chronology;
A compilation of all the information concerning the writing of the Theosophical Glossary.

Master Serapis
Article from The Theosophist Vol. 140.8, May 2019

Monday, 26 August 2019

Blavatsky Book Review: The Judge Case - Ernest Pelletier


Published in 2004, this large hardcover volume generated a fair share of commentary and debate in the Theosophical community. The first section is a chronology which is an amazingly detailed bibliography of many very obscure theosophical publications and newspaper articles with brief descriptions and snippets, not just during Judge’s lifetime but with related accounts up until 2003. At 310 pages, this alone is a remarkably well-researched document.

For those who do not have the patience to wade through all of that material, the second section is a 130-page account of the events of the Judge case in 24 chapters, it forms what can be considered the central piece of the work. It is a well-written narrative that takes into account a lot of the lesser-known figures in the story, such as Richard Harte and Judge Khandalavala. One can say that it is faithful to Judge’s own take on the affairs and much research and speculation is given to support his position. Of note for its distinctiveness is chapter 17, titled ‘’Judge’s Initiation’’  which considers that Judge must have been through some sort of process of initiation during his trip to India in 1884. The Judge Case was a rather complex affair, with many underlying issues, and Pelletier does a good job at considering all of the unfortunate series of events that led up to that crisis.

That is not all – there is an entire second section, labelled ‘’Part 2’’, which contains a series of ten lengthy appendices which comprise another 500 pages, making for a 1000-page volume. Here we are given reproductions of the many pamphlets, articles and official documents that the affair generated (Olcott and Judge were lawyers by profession, after all). You also get all the material concerning the notorious Prayag letter debate, a lengthy and lively correspondence of Judge with Ernest Hargrove,  reproductions of two handwritten drafts of two of Judge’s final official letters, and much more. Moreover, there are two illustration sections, which reproduce various interesting items, mainly photographs of the prominent theosophists of the period.

It is more than just an account of the Judge affair, it practically covers much of the history of the Theosophical Society in the 19th century; it is a treasure trove of obscure documents and a gold mine for theosophical historians. This book is sure to be a valuable source book for theosophical enquirers for a long time to come.

Resources:
https://www.theosophycanada.com/the-judge-case.php

Thursday, 13 June 2019

Blavatsky & Philo of Alexandria

HPB, in the glossary of the Key to Theosophy, apparently consulting a bio on Philo, considers his writings to be of a kabbalistic nature -

"Philo-Judaeus. A Hellenized Jew of Alexandria, a famous historian and philosopher of the first century, born about the year 30 B. C., and died between the years 45 and 50 A. D. Philo's symbolism of the Bible is very remarkable. The animals, birds, reptiles, trees, and places mentioned in it are all, it is said, "allegories of conditions of the soul, of faculties, dispositions, or passions; the useful plants were allegories of virtues, the noxious of the affections of the unwise and so on through the mineral kingdom; through heaven, earth and stars; through fountains and rivers, fields and dwellings; through metals, substances, arms, clothes, ornaments, furniture, the body and its parts, the sexes, and our outward condition." (Dict. Christ. Biog.) All of which would strongly corroborate the idea that Philo was acquainted with the ancient Kabbala."

Although the explanations given are brief and from indirect sources (Smith and Wace’s Dictionary of Christian Biography) , the idea that Philo was aware of a secret Kabbalistic doctrine is a plausible one from an esoteric or mystic perspective. From an academic perspective, there has been much resistance. Adolphe Franck's The Kabbalah, a work Blavatsky was aware of, dismisses the idea.  The main problem is that Philo is very sparing in referring to Jewish tradition outside of the Greek Pentateuch, so it is by no means obvious from his writings that he even knew Hebrew or Aramaic. Happily, things are changing, the theory was put forth in the 1950s and is currently being revived with some interesting research:

Naomi G. Cohen, Philo’s Cher. 40–52, Zohar III 31a,
and BT Hag. 16a, Journal of jewish studies, vol. lvii, no. 2, autumn 2006

"It has been shown that Philo has culled this esoteric tradition from a commentary identified by him as ‘Jeremiah’, since as pointed out above, while Philo names Jeremiah in II Cher. §49, what he is obviously quoting is an esoteric commentary on the prophetic verse found in the Book of Jeremiah, for in the same section he also identifies the esoteric exegesis of the Pentateuch as belonging to Moses.The passage from the Zohar contains similar ideas, projects similar images, and uses the same biblical text, in the form found in the Septuagint and in Philo, but not in the MT, and BT Hagiga 16a contains desiccated ‘bare bones’ of this construct, divested of any discernable theosophical dimension.

Thus the very same midrashic building blocks which stem from the Septuagint reading of Jer. 3:4 appear in Philo and in the Zohar, and to some extent in BT Hagigah 16a as well. The completely different form that the tradition takes in these very different sources is apparently the result of their having been transplanted into very different cultural soils and climates. This supports the thesis that a pool of esoteric Midrash common to the Hebrew/Aramaic tradition and the Greco-Jewish ‘world’ existed in the days of the Second Temple—in the days of Philo who was more or less contemporary with Hillel and Shammai.

Further, since as we have seen, this specific tradition must have originated in Hellenistic Jewish circles for whom the Holy Scripture was the Septuagint, it also shows that contributions to this midrashic pool came not only from sources that originated in the Hebrew/Aramaic speaking communities, but that this was at least sometimes a two way street.59 And finally, it also lends support for the hypothesis, which, after a half-century of almost total eclipse, in recent years is gaining a more and more serious hearing in  scholarly circles, that some very early esoteric traditions are in fact embedded in the Zohar."

Tuesday, 14 May 2019

Blavatsky and the Neoplatonic Revival

Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie
Jay Bregman places Theosophists Thomas Moore Johnson (1851-1919) and AlexanderWilder's (1823-1909) platonic adventure as part of the American transcendentalist current begun by Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882),(1) which can be considered the first significant American philosophical school of thought. Sadly, the passing of Johnson and Wilder spelled the end of this idealistic school, fading out in the wave of materialist, technological, empirical impulses of the twentieth century. However, it is not to say that their work did not bear any fruits. In their time, Plato's Republic was an obscure rarity. Today, translations of this work have become something of a cottage industry, and is studied in a dizzying array of college courses all over the world. In this post, I would like to attempt a kind of rough charcoal sketch of the aftermath of their bold Platonic experiment, which saw the surprising revival of Neoplatonic studies in academia, which has influenced further growth in more alternative circles as well.

A short digression before beginning: despite the extensive amount of study Neoplatonism has garnered in the last 100 years, I think that it is a philosophy that remains undervalued and misunderstood, considering that it was a major part of the intellectual worldview in the West and the Middle East for at least a thousand years (mainly in the Aristotelian form known as the ‘Ammonian synthesis’, (after Ammonius Hermiae (c. 440 – c. 520), a philosopher who has been largely forgotten, but who is actually extremely influential in the history of philosophy) the last major expression in the west being with the Cambridge Platonists like Ralph Cudworth (1617 –1688). The greatest thinkers of the Medieval period in the Christian, Islamic and Jewish worlds, Aquinas (1225–1274),  Avicenna (980-1037), and Maimonides (1135-1204), were all thoroughly steeped in Neoplatonic philosophy (3). The main problem, as I see it, that there is a prevalent tendency for modern historians to interpret that philosophers of that period with a modern form of Aristotelianism that is more in tune with the sceptical, empirical, and rationalistic tendencies of modernism, an approach to Aristotelian thought that has no historical precedence, and as Lloyd Gerson argues (see Aristotle and Other Platonists,  Cornell University Press; 2006), is not an accurate presentation of Aristotle’s thought, but a rather materialistic one. Although this approach dominated the academic world from roughly 1930-1985, fortunately there are signs that things are changing as post-modern perspectives being to take hold.

In a letter to GRS Mead (1863-1933), Thomas Moore Johnson expressed a wildly ambitious desire to translate the entirety of the Enneads of Plotinus (2).  He did not get very far, but his idea proved to be prescient, because it was precisely a complete modern translation of Plotinus in English (and French) that proved to be the necessary catalyst for the revival in interest in Neoplatonism. It did not take long for two more intrepid mavericks to romantically take up the challenge, the Irishman Stephen Mackenna (1872 –1934)(1917-1930 edition) and  the Scott-born American Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie (1871-1940) (1918 edition).  
 
Soon after, the academic world began to pay more attention to Plotinus. The academic world was already in the process of a major re-evaluation of Greek philosophy, spear-headed in Germany with the Bibliotheca Teubneriana extensive series of ancient greek texts.  In the English world, Arthur Hilary Armstrong, (1909 –1997) was a pioneer and Émile Bréhier (1876-1952) produced an excellent complete French translation (1924–1938). By the 1960s, Plotinus broke a kind of academic embargo on Neoplatonic philosophers  with his inclusion in the Cambridge Loeb Classical Library (A. H. Armstrong, Enneads, 1966-1988) and in the French world, a comparable translation by Paul Henry and Hans-Rudolf Schwyzer appeared (1951-1973), capping a considerable breakthrough that saw his status rise from an obscure excentric footnote in the history of philosophy to a figure regularly considered to be the greatest philosopher between Aristotle and Aquinas.

Moreover, Wayne Hankey argues how neoplatonism plays an important role in contemporary French philosophy, beginning with Bergson and Heidegger:
 
In 1959 Hadot published a criticism of Heidegger‘s treatment of Platonism in the course of judging both that Heidegger is ―the prophet of this end of Platonism, which is, at the same time, the end of the world and that ―one is able to be tempted to interpret the thought of Heidegger as a sort of néo-platonisme. Pierre Aubenque‘s―Plotin et le dépassement de l‘ontologie grecque classique, was published in 1971. It sets up the question about the alternative metaphysics which might derive from Neoplatonism in the Heideggerian terms which have dominated French philosophy in the last two-fifths of the twentieth century. 

By either, or both, of these ways Plotinian thought might escape Heidegger‘s critique of onto-theology. Aubenque also suggests how Neoplatonism relates to a Derridean deconstruction of ontology: ‘’Fundamental Ontology or ―overcoming metaphysics: this alternative, which the contemporary project of a ―destruction or better of a ―deconstruction of the pseudo-evidences of classical ontology confronts anew, finds its exact prefiguration in Neoplatonism.’’ (Neoplatonism and Contemporary French Philosophy Dionysius 23 (2005): 161 - 190.)

Furthermore, Plotinus has even worked his way into mainstream French bookstores, thanks mainly to the "Les Écrits de Plotin", Les Éditions du Cerf, Paris, which publishes individual treatises in French translation, started by Pierre Hadot. As discussed previously, a renewed interest in Iamblichus (c. AD 245 – c. 325) would follow, and even a much-shunned philosopher like Proclus (412 –485 AD), has been the object of a renewed interest in study since the mid-1980s. Moreover, Platonism has continued to exist in a vital way in certain  individual and collective efforts. For example, Manly P. Hall,  David Fideler, with his Phanes Press and Alexandria journal, Kelley L. Ross, Ph.D , the thriving Prometheus Trust and the International Society for NeoplatonicStudies.   It is therefore safe to say that there has not been this much interest in Neoplatonism since the days of Ralph Cudworth and the Cambridge Platonists.
 
(1) For a history of American Transcendentalism see: Bregman J. (2009) Proclus Americanus. In: Vassilopoulou P., Clark S.R.L. (eds) Late Antique Epistemology. Palgrave Macmillan, London 
(2) Bowen, Patrick D. and K. Paul Johnson, eds. Letters to the Sage: Selected Correspondence of Thomas Moore Johnson Volume One: The Esotericists. Forest Grove, OR: The Typhon Press, 2016.
(3) See Christian Platonists and Platonizing Christians in History http://www.john-uebersax.com/plato/cp.htm 

See also:

The Brothers Guthrie: Pagan Christianity of the Early 20th Century
 
Interview with Tim Addey, co-founder and chair of The Prometheus Trust, a UK charity that supports scholarship in the Platonic tradition.

Monday, 8 April 2019

Blavatsky and the Iamblichus Revival


In Letters to the Sage, vol. 2, a regular recurrent topic in Alexander Wilder’s letters to T.M. Johnson is his pioneering work on translating Iamblichus’ On the Mysteries, which he spent several decades working on. Both Blavatsky and Olcott were supportive of this work, although he ultimately opted for another publisher when the work was assembled in book form, but it was serialized in The Theosophist magazine, beginning with the July, 1881 issue). The theosophy movement still continued to support the work, with Wizards Bookshelf offering a reprint of the Thomas Taylor translation in the 1980s.
 
Posterity has shown that these early theosophical efforts of reviving obscure neoplatonic works were important, considering the major rediscovery of the importance of Iamblichus in the history of western ideas. In the English language, it was the 1973 publication of John Dillon’s The Fragments of Iamblichus that brought to light the major influence of Iamblichus in determining the course of western philosophy for the medieval and early modern period. The fact that he is one of the most influential western thinkers of all time had been largely occluded due mainly to the loss of much of his writings and the rise of modern materialism. Since then, there has been a serious revival of interest in his work, a recent sample is Iamblichus and the Foundations of Late Platonism, Brill, 2012. https://brill.com/view/title/21497 .
 
To give an idea of the current position of Iamblichus in the academic world, below are some extracts from John Bussanich’s “New Editions of Iamblichus: A Review Essay,” Ancient Philosophy 25.2 (2005): 478-494. https://www.academia.edu/247793/New_Editions_of_Iamblichus
 
Since he lived in Apamea in southeastern Turkey, it is not surprising that of all the Platonists in late antiquity it was Iamblichus who looked to the East most creatively and sought to harmonize its wisdom traditions with those of archaic and classical Greece. Like its aptly-named sister-city Zeugma, to which it was connected by a bridge over the Euphrates, Apamea was the home of that elusive second century CE Pythagorean-Platonist Numenius and as well as the refuge of Amelius (ca. 270 CE), a key disciple of Plotinus, and later of Iamblichus (born in Syria), who settled there in his mature years after long postings in Egypt and Italy. As a crossroads for caravans running East and West Apamea was a fitting base of operations for these Platonists who mixed Plato and Pythagorean oral traditions with the Oriental wisdom of the Brahmins, Magi, Egyptians, and Chaldaeans.
 
What is certain is that in the first half of the twentieth century Iamblichus’ immersion in Hermetic and Chaldaean wisdom and magic provoked antipathy from many classical scholars and ancient philosophers. These two masterly editions and commentaries make an essential contribution to the revaluation of Iamblichus’ thought which has been underway for a generation.
 
They join the editions of his major writings by Des Places and of the fragments of his commentaries on Plato and Aristotle by Dillon and Larsen and these fundamental studies of his thought: Carlos Steel, The Changing Self: A Study on the Soul in Later Neoplatonism: Iamblichus, Damascius and Priscianus (1978); John Finamore, Iamblichus and the Theory of the Vehicle of the Soul (1985); Garth Fowden, The Egyptian Hermes (1986); Dominic O’Meara, Pythagoras Revived: Mathematics and Philosophy in Late Antiquity (1989); Beate Nasemann, Theurgie und Philosophie in Iamblichus de mysteriis (1991); Greg Shaw, Theurgy and the Soul: The Neoplatonism of Iamblichus (1995); Emma Clarke, Iamblichus De Mysteriis: A Manifesto of the Miraculous (2001); and important articles by H.D. Saffrey, P. Athanassiadi, John Finamore, John Dillon and others.
 
With the changes in intellectual fashions marked by the explosion of scholarship on late antiquity in the past fifty years, including Neoplatonism, it is useful to recognize to what extent twentieth-century attitudes towards Iamblichus, especially among English-language scholars, are rooted in the seminal work of E.R. Dodds, who both perpetuated some of the extreme rationalist biases of earlier European scholarship against the religious dimension of his thought but who also recognized the Syrian’s philosophical genius. The religious and philosophical aspects of Iamblichus’ thought, which certainly would not have been recognized by its author as separate or distinct, sit uncomfortably side by side in Dodds’ interpretive perspective.
 
In his great 1933 edition of Proclus’ Elements of Theology he observed that ‘the historical importance of Iamblichus has hardly been sufficiently recognized’ because his primary metaphysical writings have been lost and his views have had to be reconstructed from fragments and from what Dodds called ‘the semi-philosophical’ De Mysteriis (1933, xix). Dodds’s schizophrenic image of Iamblichus comes into focus in the very next sentence: ‘Mystagogue and thaumaturgist though he was, and in intellectual quality immeasurably inferior to a Posidonius or a Plotinus, his contribution to the final shaping of Neoplatonism is scarely less than theirs’ (xix). How could an inferior intellect determine the character of Neoplatonism, a tradition for which Dodds had great respect? And, more disturbingly, how could a magician or mystagogue be a creative ‘philosophical’ thinker?
 
Dodds’s grand vision of late antique thought in decline is motivated in part by his sense of the gradual defeat of Hellenic rationalism by Oriental irrationalism, a war whose earlier battles in archaic and classical Greece were charted, with a good deal of Freudian cartography, in that classic of mid-century scholarship The Greeks and the Irrational (1951).
 
Even as Iamblichus scholarship has become more comprehensive and self-critical, it has continued to be shaped consciously and unconsciously by Dodds’s pathbreaking work, sometimes confirming his inspired judgments and sometimes replicating his biases in milder form.
 
In 1910 Praechter dubbed him the ‘Neoplatonic Chrysippus’, the second founder of the Neoplatonic school (114, cited by Dodds), which is appropriate for someone who was both synthesizer and innovator.
 
Iamblichus systematized the Platonism he inherited both methodologically and philosophically. In the first respect he articulated an educational curriculum, which may have begun with the Pythagorean curriculum before proceeding to the study of Aristotelian and then Platonic texts (DA 6-7).
 
Iamblichus’ major surviving work in religious thought is the De Mysteriis, an abbreviation of the title coined by Ficino in the fifteenth century: De Mysteriis Aegyptiorum, Chaldaeorum, Assyriorum. As Athanassiadi has argued (1995, 246) this title may be less extravagant than it is usually thought to be if Iamblichus’ knowledge of Hermetic doctrine and Egyptian religion generally is given its due. The actual title is ‘The Master Abamôn’s Response to Porphyry’s Letter to Anebo, and the solutions to the difficulties contained in it’.
 
The DM’s combination of oriential wisdom with Platonic philosophy alarmed earlier scholars like Dodds, but the suspicions remain alive in Armstrong 1987, 184, who refers to ‘the more spiritual, Plotinian, side of the tradition” and in Wallis, who contrasts Plotinian rationalism with Iamblichus’ superstition (1972, 100). However, other scholars assert that Iamblichus’ thought is more attractive precisely because it recognizes the limits of Plotinus’ putative rationalism, as in Shaw’s distinction between the theurgical Platonism of Iamblichus and his descendants and the non-theurgical Platonism of Porphyry and Plotinus (1995, 5).
 
Thus, differences among scholars tend now to turn more on how similar or not the complementary relationship between theurgy and philosophy in Iamblichus makes his thought in comparison to earlier Neoplatonists. In other words, disputes about theurgy are more fine-grained—and truer to the texts—than they were in Dodds’s milieu. A softer version of these judgments appears in FD’s edition of DA: ‘With Iamblichus and his advocacy of theurgy as a necessary complement to theology, Platonism also becomes more explicitly a religion. Before his time, the mystery imagery so popular with Platonist philosophers (going back to Plato himself), was, so far as can be seen just that—imagery’ (3). They maintain that theurgy is ‘is really only magic with a philosophical underpinning…Partly this was a response to a Christian emphasis on the miracle-working holy man’ (7).

Monday, 11 February 2019

Wilder’s footnotes to Blavatsky Indian Letter


1-The "authorities" are not altogether clear, and the matter is by no means beyond controversy. One legend describes the Emperor of India, Vikramaditya, as having learned of the Infant Salivahana, born of a virgin, simultaneously with Jesus at Bethlehem, and as being slain by him when on an expedition to destroy the young child, then in his fifth year. Salivahana was immediately crowned at Oujein. This was at the time of the beginning of the present era; and Salivahana is said to have left the earth in the year 79. Major Wilford explains that this name signifies "borne upon a tree."

The account generally accepted relates that when Kali was about to destroy the world, Vishnu made an avatar or descent for its salvation. He became the son of Vasudeva and Devaki. The king, Kansa, having commanded to destroy all male infants born at that time, he was carried away and placed with a foster-mother in another country. Hence Devaki is revered as Mother of the God.-A. W.

2-The government of Magadha or Northern India had fallen into the possession of the Maurya monarchs, belonging to the Sudra caste. King Chandragupta was allied to seleukos, and his successor Piyadarsi was the prince known to us as Asoka. Having embraced Buddhism, this prince labored zealously to disseminate the doctrines, not only over India, but to other countries, clear to Asia Minor and Egvpt. The cave temples, however, were constructed by older sovereigns, but the Brahmans often seized the sanctuaries of other worships and made them their own.-A. W.

3- Fergusson agrees with this description. In his treatise on "Architecture" he remarks: "The building resembles to a very great extent an early Christian Church. In Its arrangements, consisting of a nave and side aisles terminating in an apse or aide-dome round which the aisle is carried; Its arrangements and dimensions are very similar to those of the choir of Norwich cathedral."

General Furlong, while accepting the theory of the later origin of the structure, considers the temples at Karli as at first Buddhistic, adding the significant fact that Buddhism Itself appropriated the shrines and symbology of earlier worships. In confirmation of this the Rev. Dr. Stevenson, writing for the "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society," insists that the worship of Siva was "an aboriginal superstition," which Brahmanism had adopted, but imperfectly assimilated. The rock-temples appear to have belonged to this worship, but there is no account or tradition of their construction, and Mr. J. D. Baldwin ascribes them to an earlier population.-A. W

4- A ghaut is a "bluff" near a body of water, rather than a mountain.-A. W.

5- This description indicates that, not Devaki, the mother of Krishna, but Uma, Maya or Prakriti the Sakti or consort of Siva, was the divinity here honored. It may be that the Brahmans, appropriated an archaic sanctuary to their own religion, named the divinity anew, but it was to be Sakti plainly enough. It is stated by Mr. Keane that a similar figure, known as the Shee-lah-na-gig is found in the Tara cemetery, and other sacred places in. Ireland.

6- Akbar was a Moghul monarch who came to the throne of Mahommedan India, about three centuries ago. Disgusted with the cruelties and arbitrary requirements of the Koran, he made himself familiar with other beliefs, finally adopting a mystic theism. His long reign was peaceful and prosperous, and he is grateful1y remembered.

7-Probably Joel, 11,19: "I will no more make :you a reproach among the heathen."

8- The Solar and Lunar races were Aryan alike. The Lunar peoples repudiated the Solar divinities or relegated them to a subordinate rank.

9- Probably the hanging gardens of the Median queen of Nebuchadnezzar.

10- In his great work on Rajasthan.

11- This statement is confirmed by several ancient classic writers.

12- The term Rajpoot signifies man of royal descent. The other designations of this caste, are Kshathriya, Rajauya and Rajbausi, all denoting royal association. After the Aryan Invaders of India bad begun to devote themselves to husbandry and the arts of civilized life, the military class remained apart and became a distinct caste and people. Like the princes of Assyria they are altogether kings and kingly.

Internet References

Karla Caves

Friday, 25 January 2019

Blavatsky Letter to Wilder from India 2/2


Howdah
I will not stop to tell you of the beautiful avenues of centenarian trees full of monkeys above and fakirs below, neither of the Ganges with its blue waters and crocodiles. But I remind you of the ancient city mentioned in the Mahabarata near which took place all the fights between the Solar race and the Lunar.(8) The ruins of that city are four miles from Cawnpur, whole miles of fortresses and temples and palaces with virgin forests growing out of the room's, and monkeys again on the top of every stone. We went there on a she-elephant called ''active Peri'' (Tchamchoala Pari). Can't say that the ride on its back gives you any foretaste of the joys of heaven. There was no howda on it, and I for one, sitting on her tail, which she lovingly twirled around my legs, felt every moment a sensation something between sea-sickness and a fall during a nightmare. Olcott was perched on her left ear; Scott, a fellow of ours, a new convert, on the other; and Moolja Thecheray on her back. But the elephant was the securest vehicle and guide in such a journey. With her trunk she broke all the boughs before us, drove away the monkeys, and supported us when one of us was going to fall. 

Kurukshetra


We were half smashed, yet arrived safely to the ruins and landed near the cave of a holy sannyasi, called Lucky Brema, an astrologer, theurgist, thaumaturgist, etc., etc., another fakir just exhumed and resuscitated after a few months' sojourn in his grave, where he hibernated for lack of anything better to do. I suppose he prophesied all manner of evils to us for not believing in his idols, and so we departed. But the ruins must be five thousand years old, and they are pretty well historical.  

THE TAJ MAHAL·. 
At Agra we saw Taj Mahal, that "poem in marble," as this tomb is called; and really it is the wonder of the age. The builder of it boasted that there was not one inch of either stone, wood or metal in this construction, which is truly gigantic-all pure marble and carved into an open fret-work like a piece of lace. It is enormous in size; sublime as an architectural conception grand and appalling. In Agra, this dirtiest of all towns, with its half-ruined huts of dried cow-dung, it looks like a magnificent pearl on a heap of manure. 
 
Deeg Palace
HONORS BESTOWED BY MAHARAJAH. 
We visited in Rajpootana, Bhurtpur and Jeypur, two independent States. The Maharajas sent us their carriages, runners, horsemen with banners, and elephants. I imagined myself the Empress of Delhi. We went to Deeg, near Bhurtpur-something like the garden of Semiramis,(9) with six hundred and sixty-three fountains and jets, and the marble palace, four halls, pavilions, temples, etc., the palace, covering an area of two square miles, and with the garden, four. It was built by Suraj Mull Sing, three hundred and fifty years ago. But the old palace is two hundred years old. It is the place where a Rani (queen), seeing the Mussulmans ready to enter the fortress, assembled ten thousand women and children, and all her treasures, and burned herself and the rest in the sight of the invading army. 
 
Observatory, Jaipur
JEYPUB, THE PARIS OF INDIA-THE BHUTS. 
From there we went to Jeypur, the "Paris of India" it is called. It is indeed a Paris, as to the beauty and magnificent symmetry of its squares and streets, but it looks like a Paris of red sugar candy. Every house and building is of a dark pink color with white marble cornices and ornaments. All is built in the Eastern style of architecture. It was built by Jey Sing, the adept and astrologer; and his observatory, occupying an enormous palace with immense court-yards and towers, is full of machinery, the name and use of which is entirely forgotten. 

People are afraid to approach the building. They say it is the abode of Bhuts, or spirits, and that they descend every night from Bhutisvara (a temple of Siva, called the ''Lord of the Bhuts" or "spirits" or demons, as the Christians translate, overlooks the town from the top of a mountain thirty-eight hundred feet high), and play at astronomers there. 

A magnificent collection of over forty tigers is right on a square, a public thoroughfare in the middle of the town. Their roaring is heard miles off.
 
Amer Fort
AMBAIR AND ARCHAIC RUINS. 
We went on the Raja's elephants to Ambair, the ancient city and fortress taken by the Rajpoots from the Minas, 500 years, B.C. The first view of Ambair brings the traveller into a new world. Nothing can surpass its gloomy grandeur, solidity, the seeming impregnability of the Fort circumscribing the town for twelve miles round and extending over seven hills. It is deserted now for over twelve generations; centenarian trees grow in its streets and squares; its tanks and lees are full of alligators. But there is an indescribable charm about the beautiful, forsaken town, alone, like a forgotten sentry in the midst of wilderness, high above the picturesque valley below. Hills covered with thick brushwood, the abode of tigers, are crowned with ramparts, and towers and castles all around the ruined city. 
 
The ruined heap of Kuntalgart is considered to be three thousand years old. Higher still is the shrine and temple of Bhutisvara (of "unknown age," as the English prudently say). Read Bishop Heber's enthusiastic narrative of Ambair or Amberi. 
 
Sila Devi Temple
The palace of Dilaram Bagh is another miracle in marble, preserved because kept restored. Its innumerable halls, private apartments, terraces, towers, etc., are all built of marble. Some rooms have ceilings and walls inlaid with mosaic work, and lots of looking-glasses and vari-colored marbles. Some walls are completely carved lace-work-like again through and through; and the beauty of the design is unparalleled. Long passages, three and four hundred yards long, descend and ascend sloping without steps, and are marble also, though entirely dark. The bath halls, inlaid with colored marble, remind one of the best baths of Old Rome, but are vaster and higher. There are curious nooks and corners and secret passages and old armor and old furniture, which can set crazy an antiquarian. 

Sheesh Mahal
THE RAJPOOTS. 
Remember, Todd(10) assures us that the Rajpoots trace their lineage backward without one single break for over two thousand and eighty years; that they knew the use of fire-arms in the third century, if I mistake not.(11) It is a grand people, Doctor; and their history is one of the most sublime poems of humanity; nay, by its virtues and heroic deeds it is one of the few redeeming ones in this world of dirt. The Rajpoots(12) are the only Indian race whom the English have not yet disarmed: they dare not. When you see a Rajpoot nobleman, he reminds you of the Italian, or rather the Provencal medieval Barons or troubadours. With his long hair, whiskers and mustaches brushed upward, his little white or colored toga, long white garments, and his array of pistols, guns, bow and arrows, long pike, and two or three swords and daggers, and especially the shield of rhinoceros skin on which their forefather, the Sun, shines adorned with all his rays, he does look picturesque, though he does look at the same time as a perambulating store of arms of every epoch and age. 
 
Rajputs
No foreigner is allowed to live in Jeypur. The few that are settled there live out of town but permission is obtained to pass whole days in examining the curiosities of the town, We have several "Fellows" of the Theosophical Society among Rajpoots, and they do take seriously to Theosophy. They make a religion of it. Your signature on the diplomas is now scattered all over Rajpootana. 
 
And now I guess you have enough of my letter. I must have wearied you to death. Do write and address Bombay, 108 Girgam Back Road. I hope this letter will find you in good health. Give my cordial salutations to Bouton and ask him whether he would publish a small pamphlet or book-'' Voyage'' or'' Bird's Eye View of India,'' or something to this effect. I could publish curious facts about some religious sects here. 
Missionaries do nothing here. In order to obtain converts they are obliged to offer premiums and salaries for the lifetime of one who would accept the "great truths of Christianity." They are nuisances and off color here. My love to Mrs. Thompson if you see her. Olcott's love to you. 

Yours ever sincerely, H. P BLAVATSKY
The Word Vol. 7 July 1908 (203-213)

Part 1

Wednesday, 9 January 2019

Blavatsky Letter to Wilder from India 1/2

Three elephants, Karla cave entrance
Below is a Blavatsky letter to Alexander Wilder, written soon after her arrival in India. It is a good example of the wonderful literary quality of her letter-writing as well as her travel writing, two forms of literature that she was well-suited for and are beginning to be appreciated. It makes one regret that new editions of her collected letters and her travel narrative, In the Land of the Blue Mountains seem to be stalled. From The Word Vol. 7 July 1908 (203-213)

Agra, April 28, 1879.
My dear Doctor, my very dear friend: 


How I do regret that you are not with us I How often I think of you, and wonder whether the whole of your archeological and poetical soul would not jump out in fits of rapture were you but to travel with us now, instead of squatting with your legs upon the ceiling, no doubt,-in your cold room of Orange street! Here we are travelling for this last month by rail, bullock- cart, elephant, camel and bunder boat, stopping from one to three days in every town, village and port; seeing subterranean India, not the upper one, and-part and parcel in the archaic ages of Manu, Kapilas and Aryanism. 
True, ever since the beginning of March we are being toasted, baked and roasted. The sun is fierce, and the slightest breeze sends waves of red hot air, puffs like from a baking furnace, full into your face and throat, and suffocates you at every step. But how I love the ineffable coolness and glory of the mornings and after sunset here. The moon of America, is at best, when compared with that of India, like a smoky olive-oil lamp. 
We get up at four and go to bed at nine. We travel more by night and in the morning and afternoons. But I want to tell you something of our travelling. I will skip the landscape parts of it, and stop only at the ruins of old cities and spots, deemed ancient already, during the Macedonian invasion-if there ever was one-by the historians in Alexander's suite. 

Karla Caves, entrance
First of all, we went to Randallat (Dekkan Plateau) to the Karli caves; cut in the heart of the living rock on the brow of the mountain, and, as the English archeologists generally concede- the chief cave-the largest as well as the most complete hitherto discovered in India ''was excavated at a time when the style was in its greatest purity.'' The English want us to believe that it was excavated not earlier than the era of Salivahana, about A.D. 75; and the Brahmans tell us that it was the first temple dedicated to Devaki; the Virgin in India.(1) It is hewn upon the face of the precipice, about eight hundred feet above the plain on which are scattered the most ancient Buddhist temples (of the first period of Buddhism about the age of Asoka). This alone would prove that the Karli temple is more ancient than 75 A.D.; for in their hatred toward the Buddhists, the Brahmans would have never selected for their Temple a spot in such close proximity to those of their enemies. "Never," says one of their Puranas, "never build a holy shrine without first ascertaining that for twenty kosses (two miles) around, there is no place belonging to the Nosties (atheists).(2)

The first temple, after having passed a large entrance-portico, fifty-two feet wide with sculptured figures and three colossal elephants barring the way, is dedicated to Siva, and must be of later date. It is of oblong form and reminds strikingly of a Catholic cathedral.(3)
Great Chatya, Karla Caves

It is one hundred and twenty-six feet long and forty-six broad, with a circular apse. The roof, dome-like, rests on forty-one gigantic pillars with rich and magnificent sculptured figures. As you can see in Fergusson's Cave-Temples, the linga is a dome surmounted by a wooden chattar or umbrella, under which used to sit the Maharaj-Hierophant, and judge his people. The linga is evidently empty inside, and used to be illuminated from within during the initiation mysteries (this is esoteric, not historical), and must have presented an imposing sight.

I know that it has a secret passage inside leading to immense subterranean chambers, but no one as yet has been able to find out the outward entrance. Tradition says that the Mussulmans, looking out for the pagoda-treasures, had once upon a time destroyed some masonry around the linga in order to penetrate into it. But lo! there began creeping out of it gigantic ants and snakes by the million, who attacked the invaders, and, having killed many of them, who died in fearful tortures, the Mussulmans hurried to repair the damage done and retired. 
A SHRINE OF THE SAKTI.
Right above this temple are two stories more of temples to which one has to climb acrobat-like, or be dragged upward. All the face of the ghaut' (mountain) (4) is excavated, and the neighboring temple is dedicated to Devaki. Passing on: after having passed a subterranean tank full of water, and mounted four dilapidated steps to a balcony with interior rock benches and four pillars, one enters into a large room full of echoes because surrounded by eleven small cells, all sculptured. 


Image from Temple of Ekvira Devi
In this first hall is the cut-out image of Devaki. The goddess sits with legs apart and very indecently, according to profane persons, who are unable to understand the symbol. A thin stream of water from the rock threads down from between the legs of the lady,-representing the female principle.(5) The water dropping down into a small crevice in the stone floor, is held sacred. Pilgrims-I have watched them for hours, for we passed two days and slept in this temple-cave, and with folded hands having prostrated themselves before the Devaki, plunge their fingers into this water, and then touch with it their forehead, eyes, mouth and breast. Tell me what difference can we perceive between this and the R. Catholic worshipping their Virgin and crossing themselves with holy water. 
I cannot say that we felt very secure while sleeping on that balcony, without windows or doors, with nothing between us and the tigers who roam there at night. Fortunately, we were visited that night only by a wild cat which climbed the steep rock to have a look at us, or rather at our chickens, perhaps. 


Allahabad Pillar
NORTHWARD TO ALLAHABAD.
Returning through Bombay, we went to Allahabad, eight hundred and forty-five miles from Bombay the ancient Pragayana of the Hindus, and held sacred by them, as it is built at the confluence of the Ganges and Jumna rivers. One of Asoka's columns is yet in the centre of Akbar's Fort.(6) But it was so hot-one hundred and forty-four degrees in the sun-that we ran away to Benares, five hours distant from there.

BENARES, THE HOLY CITY.
There's much to see in ancient Kasika, the sacred. It is the Rome of Hindu pilgrims, as you know. According to the latest statistics there are five thousand temples and shrines in it. Conspicuous among all is the great Durga Temple, with its celebrate
Durga Temple, Varanasi
d tanks. Amid temples and palaces and private buildings, all the roofs and walls and cornices are strung round and covered with sacred monkeys. Thousands of them infest the city. They grin at one from the roofs, jump through one's legs, upset passers-by, throw dirt at one's face, carry away your hats and umbrellas, and make one's life miserable. They are enough to make you strike your grandmother. Olcott's spectacles were snatched from his nose and carried away into a precinct which was too sacred for a European to get into. And so, good-bye eyeglasses. 

CAWNPUR AND THE MASSACRE.
From thence to Cawnpur, the city of Nana Sahib, the place where seventy-eight English people were murdered during the Mutiny, and thrown by him into a well. Now a magnificent marble monument, a winged angel, presumably a female, stands over it; and no Hindu is allowed inside!! The garden around is lovely, and the inscription on the tombs of the slaughtered ones admirable. ''Thou will not, 0 Lord,'' says one of them from Joel (I don't remember verbatim) "allow the heathen to prevail over thy people, "-or something to that effect.(7) The heathen are termed ''criminal rebels'' on every tomb!



Kanpur Well site

Had the "heathen" got rid of their brutal invaders in 1857, I wonder how they would have termed them. The sweet Christians, the followers of the "meek and lowly Jesus" made at that time Hindus innocent of this particular Cawnpur murder, to wash the blood-soaked floors of the barracks by licking the blood with their tongues, (historical). But people insolent enough to prefer freedom to slavery will be always treated as rebels by their captors. O vile humanity, and still viler civilization!

 

Part 2