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
“My
Books”
By
H
P Blavatsky
SOME time ago,
a Theosophist, Mr. R_____, was travelling by rail with an American gentleman,
who told him how surprised he had been by his visit to our
Now I did not
say "trash" so far as I remember; but what I did say in substance was:
"Leave it alone;
Such is also
now my sincere opinion. The full consciousness of this sad truth dawned upon me
when, for the first time after its publication in 1877, I read the work through
from the first to the last page, in
This was done
to the great disgust of some, who warned me that I was spoiling its sale; but
as my chief object in writing it was neither personal fame nor gain, but
something far higher, I cared little for such warnings. For more than ten years
this unfortunate "master-piece," this "monumental work," as
some reviews have called it, with its hideous metamorphoses of one word into
another, thereby entirely transforming the meaning,l with its misprints and
wrong quotation-marks, has given me more anxiety and trouble than anything else
during a long life-time which has ever been more full of thorns than of roses. But
in spite of these perhaps too great admissions, I maintain that
The first
enemies that my work brought to the front were Spiritualists, whose fundamental
theories as to the spirits of the dead communicating in propriâ personâ I
upset. For the last fifteen years--ever since this first publication--an
incessant shower of ugly accusations has been poured upon me.
Every libellous
charge, from immorality and the "Russian spy" theory down to my acting
on false pretences, of being a chronic fraud and a living lie, an habitual
drunkard, an emissary of the Pope, paid to break down Spiritualism, and Satan
incarnate. Every slander that can be thought of has been brought to bear upon
my private and public life. The fact that not a single one of these charges has
ever been substantiated; that from the first day of January to the last of December,
year after year, I have lived surrounded by friends and foes like as in a
glass-house,--nothing could stop these wicked, venomous, and thoroughly unscrupulous
tongues. It has been said at various times by my ever active opponents that
(1)
(2) that it was
written by me under the dictation of Evil Powers and the departed spirits of
Jesuits (sic); and finally
(3) that my two
volumes had been compiled from MSS, (never before heard of), which Baron de
Palm--he of the cremation and double-burial fame--had left behind him, and
which I had found in his trunk!3 On the other hand, friends, as unwise as they
were kind, spread abroad that which was really the truth, a little too
enthusiastically, about the connection of my Eastern Teacher and other
Occultists with the work; and this was seized upon by the enemy and exaggerated
out of all limits of truth. It was said that the whole of
Now, no one has
any right to hold me responsible for what any one may say, but only for that
which I myself state orally, or in public print over my signature. And what I
say and maintain is this: Save the direct quotations and the many afore
specified and mentioned misprints, errors and misquotations, and the general
make-up of Isis Unveiled, for which I am in no way responsible, (a) every word
of information found in this work or in my later writings, comes from the
teachings of our Eastern Masters; and (b) that many a passage in these works has
been written by me under their dictation. In saying this no supernatural claim
is urged, for no miracle is performed by such a dictation. Any moderately intelligent
person, convinced by this time of the many possibilities of hypnotism (now
accepted by science and under full scientific investigation), and of the
phenomena of thought-transference, will easily concede that if even a hypnotized
subject, a mere irresponsible medium, hears the unexpressed thought of his
hypnotizer, who can thus transfer his thought to him--even to repeating the
words read by the hypnotizer mentally from a book--then my claim has nothing impossible
in it. Space and distance do not exist for thought; and if two persons are in
perfect mutual psycho-magnetic rapport, and of these two, one is a great Adept
in Occult Sciences, then thought-transference and dictation of whole pages,
become as easy and as comprehensible at the distance of ten thousand miles as
the transference of two words across a room.
Hitherto, I
have abstained--except on very rare occasions--from answering any criticism on
my works, and have even left direct slanders and lies unrefuted, because in the
case of
What I am
determined to do is to give facts, undeniable and not to be gainsaid, simply by
stating the peculiar, well known to many but now almost forgotten, circumstances,
under which I wrote my first English work. I give them seriatim.
(1) When I came
to
(2) I had never
been at any college, and what I knew I had taught myself; I have never
pretended to any scholarship in the sense of modern research; I had then hardly
read any scientific European works, knew little of Western philosophy and sciences.
The little which I had studied and learned of these, disgusted me with its
materialism, its limitations, narrow cut-and-dried spirit of dogmatism, and its
air of superiority over the philosophies and sciences of antiquity.
(3) Until 1874
I had never written one word in English, nor had I published any work in any
language. Therefore--
(4) I had not
the least idea of literary rules. The art of writing books, of preparing them
for print and publication, reading and correcting proofs, were so many close[d]
secrets to me.
(5) When I
started to write that which developed later into
Thus, the
conditions for becoming the author of an English theosophical and scientific
work were hopeful, as everyone will see. Nevertheless, I had written enough to
fill four such volumes as
be erased, and
the literary connection of subjects attended to. When the work was ready, we
submitted it to Professor Alexander Wilder, the well-known scholar and
Platonist of
fault is not
mine, but because it was Dr. Wilder's express wish that his name should not
appear except in footnotes. I have never made a secret of it, and every one of
my numerous acquaintances in
From that
moment the real difficulty began. I had no idea of correcting galley proofs;
Colonel Olcott had little leisure to do so; and the result was that I made a
mess of it from the beginning. Before we were through with the first three
chapters, there was a bill for six hundred dollars for corrections and alterations,
and I had to give up the proof-reading. Pressed by the publisher,
Colonel Olcott
doing all that he possibly could do, but having no time except in the evenings,
and Dr. Wilder far away at Jersey City, the result was that the proofs and
pages of Isis passed through a number of willing but not very careful hands,
and were finally left to the tender mercies of the publisher's proof-reader.
Can one wonder after this if "Vaivaswata" (Manu) became transformed
in the published volumes into "Viswamitra," that thirty-six pages of
the Index were
irretrievably lost, and quotation-marks placed where none were needed (as in
some of my own sentences!), and left out entirely in many a passage cited from
various authors?
If asked why
these fatal mistakes have not been corrected in a subsequent edition, my answer
is simple: the plates were stereotyped; and notwithstanding all my desire to do
so, I could not put it into practice, as the plates were the property of the
publisher; I had no money to pay for the expenses, and finally the firm was
quite satisfied to let things be as they are, since, notwithstanding all its
glaring defects, the work--which has now reached its seventh or eighth edition,
is still in demand. And now--and perhaps in consequence of all this--comes a
new accusation: I am charged with wholesale plagiarism in the Introductory
Chapter "Before the Veil"!
Well, had I
committed plagiarism, I should not feel the slightest hesitation in admitting
the "borrowing." But all "parallel passages" to the
contrary, as I have not done so, I do not see why I should confess it; even
though "thought transference" as the
Finnish epic,
the Kalevala, published it as his own superb poem, Hiawatha, and forgot to
acknowledge the source of his inspiration, the Continental press has repeatedly
brought out other like accusations. The present year is especially fruitful in
such "thought transferences." Here we have the Lord Mayor of the City
of
a book, and
forthwith the
Finally, every
one who has read La Vie de Jésus, by Renan, will find that he has plagiarised
by anticipation, some descriptive passages rendered in flowing verse in the
Light of the World. Yet even Sir Edwin Arnold, whose versatile and recognised
genius needs no borrowed imagery, has failed to thank the French Academician
for his pictures of Mount Tabor and Galilee in prose, which he has so elegantly
versified in his last poem. Indeed, at this stage of our civilisation and fin
de siècle, one should feel highly honoured to be placed in such good and
numerous company, even as a--plagiarist. But I cannot claim such a privilege
and, simply for the reason already told that out of the whole Introductory
chapter "Before the Veil," I can claim as my own only certain
passages in the
Glossary appended to it, the Platonic portion of it, that which is now
denounced as "a bare-faced plagiarism" having been written by
Professor A. Wilder.
That gentleman
is still living in or near
to 22 the text
is his, save a few intercalated passages which break the Platonic narrative, to
show the identity of ideas in the Hindu Scriptures. Now who of those who know
Dr. A. Wilder personally, or by name, who are aware of the great scholarship of
that eminent Platonist, the editor of so many learned works,5 would be insane
enough to accuse him of "plagiarising" from any author's work! I give
in the footnote the names of a few of the Platonic and other works he has edited.
The charge would be simply preposterous!
The fact is
that Dr. Wilder must have either forgotten to place quotes before and after the
passages copied by him from various authors in his Summary; or else, owing to
his very difficult handwriting, he has failed to mark them with sufficient
clearness. It is impossible, after the lapse of almost fifteen years, to
remember or verify the facts. To this day I had imagined that this disquisition
on Platonists was his, and never gave a further thought to it. But now enemies
have ferretted out unquoted passages and proclaim louder than ever "the
author of
of
me--personally.
But in view of
the facts as given above; and considering that--
(a) The
language in
b) It was not
written for the public,--the latter having always been only a secondary
consideration with me--but for the use of Theosophists and members of the
Theosophical Society to which
c) Though I
have since learned sufficient English to have been enabled to edit two
magazines--the Theosophist and LUCIFER--yet, to the present hour I never write
an article, an editorial or even a simple paragraph, without submitting its
English to close scrutiny and correction.
Considering all
this and much more, I ask now every impartial and honest man and woman whether
it is just or even fair to criticize my works--Isis, above all others--as one
would the writings of a born American or English author! What I claim in them
as my own is only the fruit of my learning and studies in a department,
hitherto left uninvestigated by Science, and almost unknown to the European
world. I am perfectly willing to leave the honour of the English grammar in
them, the glory of the quotations from scientific works brought occasionally to
me to be used as passages for comparison with, or refutation by, the old
Science, and finally the general make-up of the volumes, to every one of those
who have helped me. Even for the Secret Doctrine there are about half-a-dozen
Theosophists who have been busy in editing it, who have helped me to arrange
the matter, correct the imperfect English, and prepare it for print.
But that which
none of them will ever claim from first to last, is the fundamental doctrine,
the philosophical conclusions and teachings. Nothing of that have I invented,
but simply given it out as I have been taught; or as quoted by me in the Secret
Doctrine (Vol. I, p. 46 [xlvi]) from Montaigne: "I have here made only a
nosegay of culled (Eastern) flowers, and have brought
nothing of my
own but the string that ties them." Is any one of my helpers prepared to
say that I have not paid the full price for the string?
H.P. BLAVATSKY
Lucifer, May,
1891
1 Witness
the word "planet" for "cycle" as originally written,
corrected by some unknown hand, (Vol. I., p. 347, 2nd par.), a
"correction" which shows Buddha teaching that there is no rebirth on
this planet (!!) when the contrary is asserted on p. 346, and the Lord Buddha
is said to teach how to "avoid" reincarnation; the use of the word
"planet," for plane, of "Monas" for Manas;
and the
sense of whole ideas sacrificed to the grammatical form, and changed by the substitution
of wrong words and erroneous punctuation, etc., etc., etc.
2
encyclopædia."--North
American Review.
"It
must be acknowledged that she is a remarkable woman, who has read more, seen more.
and thought more than most wise men. Her work abounds in quotations from a dozen
different languages, not for the purpose of a vain display of erudition, but to
substantiate her peculiar views . . . her pages are garnished with foot-notes
establishing, as her authorities, some of the profoundest writers of the past.
To a large class of readers, this remarkable work will prove of
absorbing
interest . . . demands the earnest attention of thinkers, and merits an
analytic reading."--
"The
appearance of erudition is stupendous. Reference to and quotations from the most
unknown and obscure writers in all languages abound, interspersed with allusions
to writers of the highest repute, which have evidently been more than skimmed
through."--N.Y. Independent. "An extremely readable and exhaustive
essay upon the paramount importance of reestablishing the Hermetic Philosophy
in a world which blindly believes that it
has outgrown
it."--N.Y. World.
"Most
remarkable book of the season."--Com. Advertiser.
"[To]
Readers who have never made themselves acquainted with the literature of mysticism
and alchemy, the volume will furnish the materials for an interesting study--a
mine of curious information."--Evening Post.
"They
give evidence of much and multifarious research on the part of the author, and
contain a vast number of interesting stories. Persons fond of the marvellous will
find in them an abundance of entertainment."--
comprises fifty
pages, and we venture nothing in saying that such an index of subjects was
never before
compiled by any human being. . . But the book is a curious one and will no
doubt find its way into libraries because of the unique subject matter it
contains . . . will certainly prove attractive to all who are interested in the
history, theology, and the mysteries of the ancient world."--Daily
Graphic.
"The
present work is the fruit of her remarkable course of education, and amply confirms
her claims to the character of an adept in secret science, and even to the rank
of a hierophant in the exposition of its mystic lore."--
"One
who reads the book carefully through, ought to know everything of the marvellous
and mystical, except perhaps, the passwords.
versatility,
and the prodigious variety of subjects which it notices and handles, it is one
of the remarkable productions of the century."--
3 This
Austrian nobleman, who was in complete destitution at
ex-diplomat
had annexed without permission.
4 I will not
name him. There are names which carry a moral stench about them, unfit for any
decent journal or publication. His words and deeds emanate from the cloaca
maxima of the Universe of matter and have to return to it, without touching me.
5 A. Wilder,
M.D., the editor of Serpent and Siva Worship, by Hyde Clarke and C. Staniland
Wake; of Ancient Art and Mythology, by Richard Payne Knight, to which the editor
has appended an Introduction, Notes translated into English and a new and
complete Index; of Ancient Symbol Worship, by Hodder M. Westropp and C. Staniland
Wake, with an Introduction, additional Notes and Appendix by the editor; and
finally, of The Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries; "A Dissertation, by
Thomas Taylor, translator of 'Plato,' 'Plotinus,' 'Porphyry,' 'Jamblichus,' 'Proclus,'
'Aristotle,' etc., etc., etc.," edited with Introduction, Notes,
Emendations,
and Glossary, by Alexander Wilder, M.D.; and the author of various learned
works, pamphlets and articles for which we have no space here. Also the editor
of the "
______________________
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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
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