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
Karmic Visions
By
H P Blavatsky
KARMIC VISIONS
Article by H. P. Blavatsky
Oh, sad no more! Oh, sweet
No more!
Oh, strange No more!
By a mossed brook bank on a stone
I smelt a wild weed-flower alone;
here was a ringing in my ears,
And both my eyes gushed out with tears,
Purely all pleasant things had gone before.
Buried fathom deep beneath with thee, NO MORE!
--TENNYSON
("The Gem," 1831)
I
A CAMP filled with war-chariots, neighing horses and legions of
long-haired soldiers. . . .
A regal tent, gaudy in its barbaric splendour. Its linen walls are
weighed down under the burden of arms. In its centre a raised seat covered with
skins, and on it a stalwart, savage-looking warrior. He passes in review
prisoners of war brought in turn before him, who are disposed of according to
the whim of the heartless despot.
A new captive is now before him, and is addressing him with passionate
earnestness. . . . As he listens to her with suppressed passion in his manly,
but fierce, cruel face, the balls of his eyes become bloodshot and roll with
fury. And as he bends forward with fierce stare, his whole appearance--his
matted locks hanging over the frowning brow, his big-boned body with strong
sinews, and the two large hands resting on the shield placed upon the right
knee--justifies the remark made in hardly audible whisper by a grey-headed
soldier to his neighbor:
"Little mercy shall the holy prophetess receive at the hand of
Clovis!"
The captive, who stands between two Burgundian warriors, facing the
ex-prince of the Salians, now king of all the Franks, is an old woman with
silver-white dishevelled hair, hanging over her skeleton-like shoulders. In
spite of her great age, her tall figure is erect; and the inspired black eyes
look proudly and fearlessly into the cruel face of the treacherous son of
Gilderich.
"Aye, King," she says, in a loud, ringing voice. "Aye,
thou art great and mighty now, but thy days are numbered, and thou shalt reign
but three summers longer. Wicked thou wert born . . . perfidious thou art to
thy friends and allies, robbing more than one of his lawful crown. Murderer of
thy next-of-kin, thou who addest to the knife and spear in open warfare,
dagger, poison, and treason, beware how thou dealest with the servant of
Nerthus!"1
"Ha, ha ha! . . . old hag of Hell!" chuckles the King, with an
evil, ominous sneer. "Thou hast crawled out of the entrails of thy
mother-goddess, truly. Thou fearest not my wrath? It is well. But little need I
fear thine empty imprecations. . . . I, a baptized Christian!"
"So, so," replies the Sybil. "All know that Clovis has
abandoned the gods of his fathers; that he has lost all faith in the warning
voice of the white horse of the Sun, and that out of fear of the Alemanni he
went serving on his knees Remigius, the servant of the Nazarene, at Rheims. But
hast thou become any truer in thy new faith? Hast thou not murdered in cold
blood all thy brethren who trusted in thee, after, as well as before, thy apostasy?
Hast not thou plighted troth to Alaric, the King of the West Goths, and hast
thou not killed him by stealth, running thy spear into his back while he was
bravely fighting an enemy? And is it thy new faith and thy new gods that teach
thee to be devising in thy black soul even now foul means against Theodoric,
who put thee down? . . . Beware, Clovis, beware! For now the gods of thy
fathers have risen against thee! Beware, I say, for. . . ."
"Woman!" fiercely cries the King--"Woman, cease thy
insane talk and answer my question. Where is the treasure of the grove amassed
by thy priests of Satan, and hidden after they had been driven away by the Holy
Cross? . . . Thou alone knowest. Answer, or by Heaven and Hell I shall thrust
thy evil tongue down thy throat for ever!" . . .
She heeds not the threat, but goes on calmly and fearlessly as before,
as if she had not heard.
". . . The gods say, Clovis, thou art accursed! . . . Clovis, thou
shalt be reborn among thy present enemies, and suffer the tortures thou hast
inflicted upon thy victims. All the combined power and glory thou hast deprived
them of shall be thine in prospect, yet thou shalt never reach it! . . . Thou
shalt . . ."
The prophetess never finishes her sentence.
With a terrible oath the King, crouching like a wild beast on his
skin-covered seat, pounces upon her with the leap of a jaguar, and with one
blow fells her to the ground. And as he lifts his sharp murderous spear the
"Holy One" of the Sun-worshipping tribe makes the air ring with a
last imprecation.
"I curse thee, enemy of Nerthus! May my agony be tenfold thine! . .
. . May the Great Law avenge. . . ."
The heavy spear falls, and, running through the victim's throat, nails
the head to the ground. A stream of hot crimson blood gushes from the gaping
wound and covers king and soldiers with indelible gore. . . .
II
Time--the landmark of gods and men in the boundless field of Eternity,
the murderer of its offspring and of memory in mankind--time moves on with
noiseless, incessant step through aeons and ages. . . . Among millions of other
Souls, a Soul-Ego is reborn: for weal or for woe, who knoweth! Captive in its
new human Form, it grows with it, and together they become, at last, conscious
of their existence.
Happy are the years of their blooming youth, unclouded with want or
sorrow. Neither knows aught of the Past nor of the Future. For them all is the
joyful Present: for the Soul-Ego is unaware that it had ever lived in other
human tabernacles, it knows not that it shall be again reborn, and it takes no
thought of the morrow.
Its Form is calm and content. It has hitherto given its Soul-Ego no
heavy troubles. Its happiness is due to the continuous mild serenity of its
temper, to the affection it spreads wherever it goes. For it is a noble Form,
and its heart is full of benevolence. Never has the Form startled its Soul-Ego
with a too-violent shock, or otherwise disturbed the calm placidity of its
tenant.
Two score of years glide by like one short pilgrimage; a long walk
through the sun-lit paths of life, hedged by ever-blooming roses with no
thorns. The rare sorrows that befall the twin pair, Form and Soul, appear to
them rather like the pale light of the cold northern moon, whose beams throw
into a deeper shadow all around the moon-lit objects, than as the blackness of
night, the night of hopeless sorrow and despair.
Son of a Prince, born to rule himself one day his father's kingdom;
surrounded from his cradle by reverence and honours; deserving of the universal
respect and sure of the love of all--what could the Soul-Ego desire more from
the Form it dwelt in?
And so the Soul-Ego goes on enjoying existence in its tower of strength,
gazing quietly at the panorama of life ever changing before its two
windows--the two kind blue eyes of a loving and good man.
III
One day an arrogant and boisterous enemy threatens the father's kingdom,
and the savage instincts of the warrior of old awaken in the Soul-Ego. It
leaves its dream-land amid the blossoms of life and causes its Ego of clay to
draw the soldier's blade, assuring him it is in defence of his country.
Prompting each other to action, they defeat the enemy and cover
themselves with glory and pride. They make the haughty foe bite the dust at
their feet in supreme humiliation. For this they are crowned by history with
the unfading laurels of valour, which are those of success. They make a
footstool of the fallen enemy and transform their sire's little kingdom into a
great empire. Satisfied they could achieve no more for the present, they return
to seclusion and to the dreamland of their sweet home.
For three lustra more the Soul-Ego sits at its usual post, beaming out
of its window on the world around. Over its head the sky is blue and the vast
horizons are covered with those seemingly unfading flowers that grow in the
sunlight of health and strength. All looks fair as a verdant mead in spring. .
. . . .
IV
But an evil day comes to all in the drama of being. It waits through the
life of king and of beggar. It leaves traces on the history of every mortal
born from woman, and it can neither be scared away, entreated. nor propitiated.
Health is a dewdrop that falls from the heavens to vivify the blossoms on earth
only during the morn of life. its spring and summer. . . . It has but a short
duration and returns from whence it came--the invisible realms.
How oft 'neath the bud that is
brightest and fairest,
The seeds of the canker in embryo lurk!
How oft at the root of the flower that is rarest--
Secure in its ambush the worm is at work. . . .
The running sand which moves downward in the glass, wherein the hours of
human life are numbered, runs swifter. The worm has gnawed the blossom of
health through its heart. The strong body is found stretched one day on the
thorny bed of pain.
The Soul-Ego beams no longer. It sits still and looks sadly out of what
has become its dungeon windows, on the world which is now rapidly being
shrouded for it in the funeral palls of suffering. Is it the eve of night
eternal which is nearing?
V
Beautiful are the resorts on the midland sea. An endless line of
surf-beaten, black, ragged rocks stretches, hemmed in between the golden sands
of the coast and the deep blue waters of the gulf. They offer their granite
breast to the fierce blows of the northwest wind and thus protect the dwellings
of the rich that nestle at their foot on the inland side. The half-ruined
cottages on the open shore are the insufficient shelter of the poor. Their
squalid bodies are often crushed under the walls torn and washed down by wind
and angry wave. But they only follow the great law of the survival of the
fittest. Why should they be protected?
Lovely is the morning when the sun dawns with golden amber tints and its
first rays kiss the cliffs of the beautiful shore. Glad is the song of the
lark, as, emerging from its warm nest of herbs, it drinks the morning dew from
the deep flower-cups; when the tip of the rosebud thrills under the caress of
the first sunbeam, and earth and heaven smile in mutual greeting. Sad is the
Soul-Ego alone as it gazes on awakening nature from the high couch opposite the
large bay-window.
How calm is the approaching noon as the shadow creeps steadily on the
sundial towards the hour of rest! Now the hot sun begins to melt the clouds in
the limpid air and the last shreds of the morning mist that lingers on the tops
of the distant hills vanish in it. All nature is prepared to rest at the hot
and lazy hour of midday. The feathered tribes cease their song; their soft,
gaudy wings droop, and they hang their drowsy heads, seeking refuge from the
burning heat. A morning lark is busy nestling in the bordering bushes under the
clustering flowers of the pomegranate and the sweet bay of the Mediterranean.
The active songster has become voiceless.
"Its voice will resound as joyfully again to-morrow!" sighs
the Soul-Ego, as it listens to the dying buzzing of the insects on the verdant
turf. "Shall ever mine?"
And now the flower-scented breeze hardly stirs the languid heads of the
luxuriant plants. A solitary palm-tree, growing out of the cleft of a
moss-covered rock, next catches the eye of the Soul-Ego. Its once upright,
cylindrical trunk has been twisted out of shape and half-broken by the nightly
blasts of the north-west winds. And as it stretches wearily its drooping feathery
arms, swayed to and fro in the blue pellucid air, its body trembles and
threatens to break in two at the first new gust that may arise.
"And then, the severed part will fall into the sea, and the once
stately palm will be no more," soliloquises the Soul-Ego as it gazes sadly
out of its windows.
Everything returns to life in the cool, old bower at the hour of sunset.
The shadows on the sun-dial become with every moment thicker, and animate
nature awakens busier than ever in the cooler hours of approaching night. Birds
and insects chirrup and buzz their last evening hymns around the tall and still
powerful Form, as it paces slowly and wearily along the gravel walk. And now
its heavy gaze falls wistfully on the azure bosom of the tranquil sea. The gulf
sparkles like a gem-studded carpet of blue-velvet in the farewell dancing
sunbeams, and smiles like a thoughtless, drowsy child, weary of tossing about.
Further on, calm and serene in its perfidious beauty, the open sea stretches
far and wide the smooth mirror of its cool waters--salt and bitter as human
tears. It lies in its treacherous repose like a gorgeous, sleeping monster,
watching over the unfathomed mystery of its dark abysses. Truly the
monumentless cemetery of the millions sunk in its depths. . . .
Without a grave,
Unknell'd, uncoffined and unknown. . . .
while the sorry relic of the once noble Form pacing yonder, once that
its hour strikes and the deep-voiced bells toll the knell for the departed
soul, shall be laid out in state and pomp. Its dissolution will be announced by
millions of trumpet voices. Kings, princes and the mighty ones of the earth
will be present at its obsequies, or will send their representatives with
sorrowful faces and condoling messages to those left behind. . .
"One point gained, over those 'uncoffined and unknown'," is
the bitter reflection of the Soul-Ego.
Thus glides past one day after the other; and as swift-winged Time urges
his flight, every vanishing hour destroying some thread in the tissue of life,
the Soul-Ego is gradually transformed in its views of things and men. Flitting
between two eternities, far away from its birth-place, solitary among its crowd
of physicians, and attendants, the Form is drawn with every day nearer to its
Spirit-Soul. Another light unapproached and unapproachable in days of joy,
softly descends upon the weary prisoner. It sees now that which it had never
perceived before. . . . . .
VI
How grand, how mysterious are the spring nights on the seashore when the
winds are chained and the elements lulled! A solemn silence reigns in nature.
Alone the silvery, scarcely audible ripple of the wave, as it runs caressingly
over the moist sand, kissing shells and pebbles on its up and down journey,
reaches the ear like the regular soft breathing of a sleeping bosom. How small,
how insignificant and helpless feels man, during these quiet hours, as he
stands between the two gigantic magnitudes, the star-hung dome above, and the
slumbering earth below. Heaven and earth are plunged in sleep, but their souls
are awake, and they confabulate, whispering one to the other mysteries
unspeakable. It is then that the occult side of Nature lifts her dark veils for
us, and reveals secrets we would vainly seek to extort from her during the day.
The firmament, so distant, so far away from earth, now seems to approach and
bend over her. The sidereal meadows exchange embraces with their more humble
sisters of the earth--the daisy-decked valleys and the green slumbering fields.
The heavenly dome falls prostrate into the arms of the great quiet sea; and the
millions of stars that stud the former peep into and bathe in every lakelet and
pool. To the grief-furrowed soul those twinkling orbs are the eyes of angels.
They look down with ineffable pity on the suffering of mankind. It is not the
night dew that falls on the sleeping flowers, but sympathetic tears that drop
from those orbs, at the sight of the Great HUMAN SORROW. . . .
Yes; sweet and beautiful is a southern night. But--
When silently we watch the bed, by the taper's flickering light,
When all we love is fading fast--how terrible is night. . . .
VII
Another day is added to the series of buried days. The far green hills,
and the fragrant boughs of the pomegranate blossom have melted in the mellow
shadows of the night, and both sorrow and joy are plunged in the lethargy of
soul-resting sleep. Every noise has died out in the royal gardens, and no voice
or sound is heard in that overpowering stillness.
Swift-winged dreams descend from the laughing stars in motley crowds,
and landing upon the earth disperse among mortals and immortals, amid animals
and men. They hover over the sleepers, each attracted by its affinity and kind;
dreams of joy and hope, balmy and innocent visions, terrible and awesome sights
seen with sealed eyes, sensed by the soul; some instilling happiness and
consolation, others causing sobs to heave the sleeping bosom, tears and mental
torture, all and one preparing unconsciously to the sleepers their waking
thoughts of the morrow.
Even in sleep the Soul-Ego finds no rest.
Hot and feverish its body tosses about in restless agony. For it, the
time of happy dreams is now a vanished shadow, a long bygone recollection.
Through the mental agony of the soul, there lies a transformed man. Through the
physical agony of the frame, there flutters in it a fully awakened Soul. The
veil of illusion has fallen off from the cold idols of the world, and the
vanities and emptiness of fame and wealth stand bare, often hideous, before its
eyes. The thoughts of the Soul fall like dark shadows on the cogitative
faculties of the fast disorganizing body, haunting the thinker daily, nightly,
hourly. . . .
The sight of his snorting steed pleases him no longer. The recollections
of guns and banners wrested from the enemy; of cities razed, of trenches,
cannons and tents, of an array of conquered spoils now stirs but little his
national pride. Such thoughts move him no more, and ambition has become powerless
to awaken in his aching heart the haughty recognition of any valourous deed of
chivalry. Visions of another kind now haunt his weary days and long sleepless
nights. . . .
What he now sees is a throng of bayonets clashing against each other in
a mist of smoke and blood: thousands of mangled corpses covering the ground,
torn and cut to shreds by the murderous weapons devised by science and
civilization, blessed to success by the servants of his God. What he now dreams
of are bleeding, wounded and dying men, with missing limbs and matted locks,
wet and soaked through with gore
VIII
A hideous dream detaches itself from a group of passing visions, and
alights heavily on his aching chest. The night-mare shows him men, expiring on
the battle field with a curse on those who led them to their destruction. Every
pang in his own wasting body brings to him in dream the recollection of pangs
still worse, of pangs suffered through and for him. He sees and feels the
torture of the fallen millions, who die after long hours of terrible mental and
physical agony; who expire in forest and plain, in stagnant ditches by the
road-side, in pools of blood under a sky made black with smoke. His eyes are
once more rivetted to the torrents of blood, every drop of which represents a
tear of despair, a heart-rent cry, a life-long sorrow. He hears again the
thrilling sighs of desolation, and the shrill cries ringing through mount,
forest and valley. He sees the old mothers who have lost the light of their
souls; families, the hand that fed them. He beholds widowed young wives thrown
on the wide, cold world, and beggared orphans wailing in the streets by the
thousands. He finds the young daughters of his bravest old soldiers exchanging
their mourning garments for the gaudy frippery of prostitution, and the
Soul-Ego shudders in the sleeping Form. . . . His heart is rent by the groans
of the famished; his eyes blinded by the smoke of burning hamlets, of homes
destroyed, of towns and cities in smouldering ruins. . . .
And in his terrible dream, he remembers that moment of insanity in his
soldier's life, when standing over a heap of the dead and the dying, waving in
his right hand a naked sword red to its hilt with smoking blood, and in his
left, the colours rent from the hand of the warrior expiring at his feet, he
had sent in a stentorian voice praises to the throne of the Almighty,
thanksgiving for the victory just obtained! . . . .
He starts in his sleep and awakes in horror. A great shudder shakes his
frame like an aspen leaf, and sinking back on his pillows, sick at the
recollection, he hears a voice--the voice of the Soul-Ego--saying in him:--
"Fame and victory are vainglorious words. . . . Thanksgiving and
prayers for lives destroyed--wicked lies and blasphemy!" . . . .
"What have they brought thee or to thy fatherland, those bloody
victories!" whispers the Soul in him. "A population clad in iron
armour," it replies. "Two score millions of men dead now to all
spiritual aspiration and Soul-life. A people, henceforth deaf to the peaceful
voice of the honest citizen's duty, averse to a life of peace, blind to the
arts and literature, indifferent to all but lucre and ambition. What is thy
future Kingdom, now? A legion of war-puppets as units, a great wild beast in
their collectivity. A beast that, like the sea yonder, slumbers gloomily now,
but to fall with the more fury on the first enemy that is indicated to it.
Indicated, by whom? It is as though a heartless, proud Fiend, assuming sudden
authority, incarnate Ambition and Power, had clutched with iron hand the minds
of a whole country. By what wicked enchantment has he brought the people back
to those primeval days of the nation when their ancestors, the yellow-haired
Suevi, and the treacherous Franks roamed about in their warlike spirit,
thirsting to kill, to decimate and subject each other? By what infernal powers
has this been accomplished? Yet the transformation has been produced and it is
as undeniable as the fact that alone the Fiend rejoices and boasts of the
transformation effected. The whole world is hushed in breathless expectation.
Not a wife or mother, but is haunted in her dreams by the black and ominous
storm-cloud that overhangs the whole of Europe. The cloud is approaching. . . .
. .It comes nearer and nearer Oh woe and horror! I foresee once more for earth
the suffering I have already witnessed. I read the fatal destiny upon the brow
of the flower of Europe's youth! But if I live and have the power, never, oh
never shall my country take part in it again! No, no, I will not see-
The glutton death gorged with
devouring lives. . . .
"I will not hear-
. . . . . .robb'd mothers'
shrieks
While from men's piteous
wounds and horrid gashes
The lab'ring life flows
faster than the blood! . . . ."
IX
Firmer and firmer grows in the Soul-Ego the feeling of intense hatred
for the terrible butchery called war; deeper and deeper does it impress its
thoughts upon the Form that holds it captive. Hope awalocns at times in the
aching breast and colours the long hours of solitude and meditation; like the
morning ray that dispels the dusky shades of shadowy despondency, it lightens
the long hours of lonely thought. But as the rainbow is not always the
dispeller of the storm-clouds but often only a refraction of the setting sun on
a passing cloud, so the moments of dreamy hope are generally followed by hours
of still blacker despair. Why, oh why, thou mocking Nemesis, hast thou thus
purified and enlightened, among all the sovereigns of this earth, him, whom
thou hast made helpless, speechless and powerless? Why hast thou kindled the
flame of holy brotherly love for man in the breast of one whose heart already
feels the approach of the icy hand of death and decay, whose strength is
steadily deserting him and whose very life is melting away like foam on the
crest of a breaking wave?
And now the hand of Fate is upon the couch of pain. The hour for the
fulfilment of nature's law has struck at last. The old Sire is no more; the
younger man is henceforth a monarch. Voiceless and helpless, he is nevertheless
a potentate, the autocratic master of millions of subjects. Cruel Fate has
erected a throne for him over an open grave, and beckons him to glory and to
power. Devoured by suffering, he finds himself suddenly crowned. The wasted
Form is snatched from its warm nest amid the palm groves and the roses; it is
whirled from balmy south to the frozen north, where waters harden into crystal
groves and "waves on waves in solid mountains rise"; whither he now
speeds to reign and--speeds to die.
X
Onward, onward rushes the black, fire-vomiting monster, devised by man
to partially conquer Space and Time. Onward, and further with every moment from
the health-giving, balmy South flies the train. Like the Dragon of the Fiery
Head, it devours distance and leaves behind it a long trail of smoke, sparks
and stench. And as its long, tortuous, flexible body, wriggling and hissing
like a gigantic dark reptile, glides swiftly, crossing mountain and moor,
forest, tunnel and plain, its swinging monotonous motion lulls the worn-out
occupant, the weary and heartsore Form, to sleep. . . .
In the moving palace the air is warm and balmy. The luxurious vehicle is
full of exotic plants; and from a large cluster of sweet-smelling flowers
arises together with its scent the fairy Queen of dreams, followed by her band
of joyous elves. The Dryads laugh in their leafy bowers as the train glides by,
and send floating upon the breeze dreams of green solitudes and fairy visions.
The rumbling noise of wheels is gradually transformed into the roar of a
distant waterfall, to subside into the silvery trills of a crystalline brook.
The Soul-Ego takes its flight into Dreamland. . . .
It travels through aeons of time, and lives, and feels, and breathes
under the most contrasted forms and personages. It is now a giant, a Yotun, who
rushes into Muspelheim, where Surtur rules with his flaming sword.
It battles fearlessly against a host of monstrous animals, and puts them
to flight with a single wave of its mighty hand. Then it sees itself in the
Northern Mistworld, it penetrates under the guise of a brave bowman into
Helheim, the Kingdom of the Dead, where a Black-Elf reveals to him a series of
its lives and their mysterious concatenation. "Why does man suffer?"
enquires the Soul-Ego. "Because he would become one," is the mocking
answer. Forthwith, the Soul-Ego stands in the presence of the holy goddess,
Saga. She sings to it of the valorous deeds of the Germanic heroes, of their
virtues and their vices. She shows the soul the mighty warriors fallen by the
hands of many of its past Forms, on battlefield, as also in the sacred security
of home. It sees itself under the personages of maidens, and of women, of young
and old men, and of children. It feels itself dying more than once in those
forms. It expires as a hero-Spirit, and is led by the pitying Walkyries from
the bloody battlefield back to the abode of Bliss under the shining foliage of
Walhalla. It heaves its last sigh in another form, and is hurled on to the
cold, hopeless plane of remorse. It closes its innocent eyes in its last sleep,
as an infant, and is forthwith carried along by the beauteous Elves of Light
into an other body--the doomed generator of Pain and Suffering. In each case
the mists of death are dispersed, and pass from the eyes of the Soul-Ego, no
sooner does it cross the Black Abyss that separates the Kingdom of the Living
from the Realm of the Dead. Thus "Death" becomes but a meaningless
word for it, a vain sound. In every instance the beliefs of the Mortal take
objective life and shape for the Immortal, as soon as it spans the Bridge. Then
they begin to fade, and disappear. . . .
"What is my Past?" enquires the Soul-Ego of Urd, the eldest of
the Norn sisters. "Why do I suffer?"
A long parchment is unrolled in her hand, and reveals a long series of
mortal beings, in each of whom the Soul-Ego recognises one of its dwellings.
When it comes to the last but one, it sees a blood-stained hand doing endless
deeds of cruelty and treachery, and it shudders Guileless victims arise around
it, and cry to Orlog for vengeance.
"What is my immediate Present?" asks the dismayed Soul of
Werdandi, the second sister.
"The decree of Orlog is on thyself!" is the answer. "But
Orlog does not pronounce them blindly, as foolish mortals have it."
"What is my Future?" asks despairingly of Skuld, the third
Norn sister, the Soul-Ego. "Is it to be for ever with tears, and bereaved
of Hope?" . . .
No answer is received. But the Dreamer feels whirled through space, and
suddenly the scene changes. The Soul-Ego finds itself on a, to it, long
familiar spot, the royal bower, and the seat opposite the broken palm-tree.
Before it stretches, as formerly, the vast blue expanse of waters, glassing the
rocks and cliffs; there, too, is the lonely palm, doomed to quick
disappearance. The soft mellow voice of the incessant ripple of the light waves
now assumes human speech, and reminds the Soul-Ego of the vows formed more than
once on that spot. And the Dreamer repeats with enthusiasm the words pronounced
before.
"Never, oh, never shall I, henceforth, sacrifice for vainglorious
fame or ambition a single son of my motherland! Our world is so full of
unavoidable misery, so poor with joys and bliss, and shall I add to its cup of
bitterness the fathomless ocean of woe and blood, called WAR? Avaunt, such
thought! . . . Oh, never more. . . ."
XI
Strange sight and change. . . .The broken palm which stands before the
mental sight of the Soul-Ego suddenly lifts up its drooping trunk and becomes
erect and verdant as before. Still greater bliss, the Soul-Ego finds himself as
strong and as healthy as he ever was. In a stentorian voice he sings to the
four winds a loud and a joyous song. He feels a wave of joy and bliss in him,
and seems to know why he is happy.
He is suddenly transported into what looks a fairy-like Hall, lit with
most glowing lights and built of materials, the like of which he had never seen
before. He perceives the heirs and descendants of all the monarchs of the globe
gathered in that Hall in one happy family. They wear no longer the insignia of
royalty, but, as he seems to know, those who are the reigning Princes, reign by
virtue of their personal merits. It is the greatness of heart, the nobility of
character, their superior qualities of observation, wisdom, love of Truth and
Justice, that have raised them to the dignity of heirs to the Thrones, of Kings
and Queens. The crowns, by authority and the grace of God, have been thrown
off, and they now rule by "the grace of divine humanity," chosen
unanimously by recognition of their fitness to rule, and the reverential love
of their voluntary subjects.
All around seems strangely changed. Ambition, grasping greediness or envy--miscalled
Patriotism--exist no longer. Cruel selfishness has made room for just altruism,
and cold indifference to the wants of the millions no longer finds favour in
the sight of the favoured few. Useless luxury, sham pretences--social and
religious--all has disappeared. No more wars are possible, for the armies are
abolished. Soldiers have turned into diligent, hard-working tillers of the
ground, and the whole globe echoes his song in rapturous joy. Kingdoms and
countries around him live like brothers. The great, the glorious hour has come
at last! That which he hardly dared to hope and think about in the stillness of
his long, suffering nights, is now realized. The great curse is taken off, and
the world stands absolved and redeemed in its regeneration! . . . .
Trembling with rapturous feelings, his heart overflowing with love and
philanthropy, he rises to pour out a fiery speech that would become historic,
when suddenly he finds his body gone, or, rather, it is replaced by another
body. . . . Yes, it is no longer the tall, noble Form with which he is
familiar, but the body of somebody else, of whom he as yet knows nothing.
Something dark comes between him and a great dazzling light, and he sees the
shadow of the face of a gigantic timepiece on the ethereal waves. On its
ominous dial he reads:
"NEW ERA: 970,995 YEARS SINCE THE INSTANTANEOUS DESTRUCTION BY
PNEUMO-DYNO-VRIL OF THE LAST 2,000,000 OF SOLDIERS IN THE FIELD, ON THE WESTERN
PORTION OF THE GLOBE. 971,000 SOLAR YEARS SINCE THE SUBMERSION OF THE EUROPEAN
CONTINENTS AND ISLES. SUCH ARE THE DECREE OF ORLOG AND THE ANSWER OF SKULD. . .
."
He makes a strong effort and--is himself again. Prompted by the Soul-Ego
to REMEMBER and ACT in conformity, he lifts his arms to Heaven and swears in
the face of all nature to preserve peace to the end of his days--in his own
country, at least.
...........
...
A distant beating of drums and long cries of what he fancies in his
dream are the rapturous thanksgivings, for the pledge just taken. An abrupt
shock, loud clatter, and, as the eyes open, the Soul-Ego looks out through them
in amazement. The heavy gaze meets the respectful and solemn face of the
physician offering the usual draught. The train stops. He rises from his couch
weaker and wearier than ever, to see around him endless lines of troops armed
with a new and yet more murderous weapon of destruction--ready for the
battlefield.
--SANJNA
Lucifer, June, 1888
1 "The Nourishing" (Tacit., Germ. Xl)--the Earth, a
Mother-Goddess, the most beneficent deity of the ancient Germans.
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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
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Cosmogenesis Anthropogenesis Root Races
Ascended Masters After Death States
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Reincarnation Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical
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A Modern Revival of Ancient Wisdom
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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,
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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”
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1898 in The
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from 1909-1913 in The Theosophist.
compiled from
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Letters and
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Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
Guide to the
Theosophy Wales King Arthur Pages
Arthur draws the Sword from the Stone
The Knights of The Round Table
The Roman Amphitheatre at Caerleon,
Eamont Bridge, Nr Penrith, Cumbria, England.
(History of the Kings of Britain)
The reliabilty of this work has long been a subject of
debate but it is the first definitive account of Arthur’s
Reign
and one which puts Arthur in a historcal context.
and his version’s political agenda
According to Geoffrey of Monmouth
The first written mention of Arthur as a heroic figure
The British leader who fought twelve battles
King Arthur’s ninth victory at
The Battle of the City of the Legion
King Arthur ambushes an advancing Saxon
army then defeats them at Liddington Castle,
Badbury, Near Swindon, Wiltshire, England.
King Arthur’s twelfth and last victory against the Saxons
Traditionally Arthur’s last battle in which he was
mortally wounded although his side went on to win
No contemporary writings or accounts of his life
but he is placed 50 to 100 years after the accepted
King Arthur period. He refers to Arthur in his inspiring
poems but the earliest written record of these dates
from over three hundred years after Taliesin’s death.
Mallerstang Valley, Nr Kirkby Stephen,
A 12th Century Norman ruin on the site of what is
reputed to have been a stronghold of Uther Pendragon
From
wise child with no earthly father to
Megastar
of Arthurian Legend
History of the Kings of Britain
Drawn from the Stone or received from the Lady of the Lake.
Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur has both versions
with both swords called Excalibur. Other versions
5th & 6th Century Timeline of Britain
From the departure of the Romans from
Britain to the establishment of sizeable
Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms
Glossary of
Arthur’s uncle:- The puppet ruler of the Britons
controlled and eventually killed by Vortigern
Amesbury, Wiltshire, England. Circa 450CE
An alleged massacre of Celtic Nobility by the Saxons
History of the Kings of Britain
Athrwys / Arthrwys
King of Ergyng
Circa 618 - 655 CE
Latin: Artorius; English: Arthur
A warrior King born in Gwent and associated with
Caerleon, a possible Camelot. Although over 100 years
later that the accepted Arthur period, the exploits of
Athrwys may have contributed to the King Arthur Legend.
He became King of Ergyng, a kingdom between
Gwent and Brycheiniog (Brecon)
Angles under Ida seized the Celtic Kingdom of
Bernaccia in North East England in 547 CE forcing
Although much later than the accepted King Arthur
period, the events of Morgan Bulc’s 50 year campaign
to regain his kingdom may have contributed to
Old Welsh: Guorthigirn;
Anglo-Saxon: Wyrtgeorn;
Breton: Gurthiern; Modern Welsh; Gwrtheyrn;
*********************************
An earlier ruler than King Arthur and not a heroic figure.
He is credited with policies that weakened Celtic Britain
to a point from which it never recovered.
Although there are no contemporary accounts of
his rule, there is more written evidence for his
existence than of King Arthur.
How Sir Lancelot slew two giants,
From Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur
How Sir Lancelot rode disguised
in Sir Kay's harness, and how he
From Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur
How Sir Lancelot jousted against
four knights of the Round Table,
From Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur
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