|
The Key to Theosophy Section
13 ON
THE MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT THE
THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY THEOSOPHY
AND ASCETICISM ENQUIRER. I have heard people say that your rules require all members to
be vegetarians, celibates, and rigid ascetics; but you have not told me anything
of the sort yet. Can you tell me the truth once for all about this? THEOSOPHIST.
The truth is that our rules require nothing of the kind. The Theosophical
Society does not even expect, far less require of any
of its members that they should be ascetics in any way, except—if
you call that asceticism—that they should try and benefit other
people and be unselfish in their own lives. ENQUIRER. But still many of your members are strict vegetarians, and
openly avow their intention of remaining unmarried. This, too, is most often the
case with those who take a prominent part in connection with the work of your
Society. THEOSOPHIST.
That is only natural, because most of our really earnest workers are members of
the Inner Section of the Society, which I told you about before. ENQUIRER. Oh! then you do require ascetic practices in that Inner
Section? THEOSOPHIST.
No; we do not require or enjoin them even there; but I see that I had better give you an
explanation of our views on the subject of asceticism in general, and then you
will understand about vegetarianism and so on. ENQUIRER. Please proceed. THEOSOPHIST.
As I have already told you, most people who become really earnest students of
Theosophy, and active workers in our Society, wish to do more than study
theoretically the truths we teach. They wish to know
the truth by their own direct personal experience, and to study
Occultism with the object of acquiring the wisdom and power, which they feel
that they need in order to help others, effectually and judiciously, instead of
blindly and at haphazard. Therefore, sooner or later, they join the Inner
Section. ENQUIRER. But you said that “ascetic practices” are not obligatory
even in that Inner Section? THEOSOPHIST.
No more they are; but the first thing which the members learn there is a true
conception of the relation of the body, or physical sheath, to the inner, the
true man. The relation and mutual interaction between these two aspects of human
nature are explained and demonstrated to them, so that they soon become imbued
with the supreme importance of the inner man over the outer case or body. They
are taught that blind unintelligent asceticism is mere folly; that such conduct
as that of St. Labro which I spoke of before, or that of the Indian Fakirs and
jungle ascetics, who cut, burn and macerate their bodies in the most cruel and
horrible manner, is simply self-torture for selfish ends, i.e.,
to develop will-power, but is perfectly useless for the purpose of assisting
true spiritual, or Theosophic, development. ENQUIRER. I see, you regard only moral asceticism as necessary.
It is as a means to an end, that end being the perfect equilibrium of the inner
nature of man, and the attainment of complete mastery over the body with all its
passions and desires? THEOSOPHIST.
Just so. But these means must be used intelligently and wisely, not blindly and
foolishly; like an athlete who is training and preparing for a great contest,
not like the miser who starves himself into illness that he may gratify his
passion for gold. ENQUIRER. I understand now your general idea; but let us see how you
apply it in practice. How about vegetarianism, for instance? THEOSOPHIST.
One of the great German scientists has shown that every kind of animal tissue,
however you may cook it, still retains certain marked characteristics of the
animal which it belonged to, which characteristics can be recognised. And apart
from that, every one knows by the taste what meat he is eating. We go a step
farther, and prove that when the flesh of animals is assimilated by man as food,
it imparts to him, physiologically, some of the characteristics of the animal it
came from. Moreover, occult science teaches and proves this to its students by
ocular demonstration, showing also that this “coarsening” or
“animalizing” effect on man is greatest from the flesh of the larger
animals, less for birds, still less for fish and other cold-blooded animals, and
least of all when he eats only vegetables. ENQUIRER. Then he had better not eat at all? THEOSOPHIST.
If he could live without eating, of course it would. But as the matter stands,
he must eat to live, and so we advise really earnest students to eat such food
as will least clog and weight their brains and bodies, and will have the
smallest effect in hampering and retarding the development of their intuition,
their inner faculties and powers. ENQUIRER. Then you do not adopt all the arguments which vegetarians in
general are in the habit of using? THEOSOPHIST.
Certainly not. Some of their arguments are very weak, and often based on
assumptions which are quite false. But, on the other hand, many of the things
they say are quite true. For instance, we believe that much disease, and
especially the great predisposition to disease which is becoming so marked a
feature in our time, is very largely due to the eating of meat, and especially
of tinned meats. But it would take too long to go thoroughly into this question
of vegetarianism on its merits; so please pass on to something else. ENQUIRER. One question more. What are your members of the Inner Section
to do with regard to their food when they are ill? THEOSOPHIST.
Follow the best practical advice they can get, of course. Don’t you grasp yet
that we never impose any hard-and-fast obligations in this respect? Remember
once for all that in all such questions we take a rational, and never a
fanatical, view of things. If from illness or long habit a man cannot go without
meat, why, by all means let him eat it. It is no crime; it will only retard his
progress a little; for after all is said and done, the purely bodily actions and
functions are of far less importance than what a man thinks and feels,
what desires he encourages in his mind, and allows to take root and
grow there. ENQUIRER. Then with regard to the use of wine and spirits, I suppose you
do not advise people to drink them? THEOSOPHIST.
They are worse for his moral and spiritual growth than meat, for alcohol in all
its forms has a direct, marked, and very deleterious influence on man’s
psychic condition. Wine and spirit drinking is only less destructive to the
development of the inner powers, than the habitual use of hashish, opium, and
similar drugs. THEOSOPHY
AND MARRIAGE ENQUIRER. Now to another question; must a man marry or remain a celibate? THEOSOPHIST.
It depends on the kind of man you mean. If you refer to one who intends to live in
the world, one who, even though a good, earnest Theosophist, and an ardent
worker for our cause, still has ties and wishes which bind him to the world,
who, in short, does not feel that he has done for ever with what men call life,
and that he desires one thing and one thing only—to know the truth, and to be
able to help others—then for such a one I say there is no reason why he should
not marry, if he likes to take the risks of that lottery where there are so many
more blanks than prizes. Surely you cannot believe us so absurd and fanatical as
to preach against marriage altogether? On the contrary, save in a few
exceptional cases of practical Occultism, marriage is the only remedy against
immorality. ENQUIRER. But why cannot one acquire this knowledge and power when living
a married life? THEOSOPHIST.
My dear sir, I cannot go into physiological questions with you; but I can give
you an obvious and, I think, a sufficient answer, which will explain to you the
moral reasons we give for it. Can a man serve two masters? No! Then it is
equally impossible for him to divide his attention between the pursuit of
Occultism and a wife. If he tries to, he will assuredly fail in doing either
properly; and, let me remind you, practical Occultism is far too serious and
dangerous a study for a man to take up, unless he is in the most deadly earnest,
and ready to sacrifice all, himself first of all,
to gain his end. But this does not apply to the members of our Inner
Section. I am only referring to those who are determined to tread that path of
discipleship which leads to the highest goal. Most, if not all of those who join
our Inner Section, are only beginners, preparing themselves in this life to
enter in reality upon that path in lives to come. THEOSOPHY
AND EDUCATION ENQUIRER. One of your strongest arguments for the inadequacy of the
existing forms of religion in the West, as also to some extent the materialistic
philosophy which is now so popular, but which you seem to consider as an
abomination of desolation, is the large amount of misery and wretchedness which
undeniably exists, especially in our great cities. But surely you must recognise
how much has been, and is being done to remedy this state of things by the
spread of education and the diffusion of intelligence. THEOSOPHIST.
The future generations will hardly thank you for such a “diffusion of
intelligence,” nor will your present education do much good to the poor
starving masses. ENQUIRER. Ah! but you must give us time. It is only a few years since we
began to educate the people. THEOSOPHIST.
And what, pray, has your Christian religion been doing ever since the fifteenth
century, once you acknowledge that the education of the masses has not been
attempted till now—the very work, if ever there could be one, which a Christian,
i.e., a
Christ-following church and people, ought to perform? ENQUIRER.
Well, you may be right; but now— THEOSOPHIST.
Just let us consider this question of education from a broad standpoint, and I
will prove to you that you are doing harm not good, with many of your boasted
improvements. The schools for the poorer children, though far less useful than
they ought to be, are good in contrast with the vile surroundings to which they
are doomed by your modern Society. The infusion
of a little practical Theosophy would help a hundred times more in
life the poor suffering masses than all this infusion of (useless) intelligence. ENQUIRER. But, really— THEOSOPHIST.
Let me finish, please. You have opened a subject on which we Theosophists feel
deeply, and I must have my say. I quite agree that there is a great advantage to
a small child bred in the slums, having the gutter for playground, and living
amid continued coarseness of gesture and word, in being placed daily in a
bright, clean school-room hung with pictures, and often gay with flowers. There
it is taught to be clean, gentle, orderly; there it learns to sing and to play;
has toys that awaken its intelligence; learns to use its fingers deftly; is
spoken to with a smile instead of a frown; is gently rebuked or coaxed instead
of cursed. All this humanises the children, arouses their brains, and renders
them susceptible to intellectual and moral influences. The schools are not all
they might be and ought to be; but, compared with the homes, they are paradises;
and they slowly are re-acting on the homes. But while this is true of many of
the Board schools, your system deserves the worst one can say of it. ENQUIRER. So be it; go on. THEOSOPHIST.
What is the real object of modern education? Is it to cultivate and
develop the mind in the right direction; to teach the disinherited and hapless
people to carry with fortitude the burden of life (allotted them by Karma); to
strengthen their will; to inculcate in them the love of one’s neighbour and
the feeling of mutual interdependence and brotherhood; and thus to train and
form the character for practical life? Not a bit of it. And yet, these are
undeniably the objects of all true education. No one denies it; all your
educationalists admit it, and talk very big indeed on the subject. But what is
the practical result of their action? Every young man and boy, nay, every one of
the younger generation of schoolmasters will answer: “The object of modern
education is to pass examinations,” a system not to develop right emulation,
but to generate and breed jealousy, envy, hatred almost, in young people for one
another, and thus train them for a life of ferocious selfishness and struggle
for honours and emoluments instead of kindly feeling. ENQUIRER. I must admit you are right there. THEOSOPHIST.
And what are these examinations—the terror of modern boyhood and youth? They
are simply a method of classification by which the results of your school
teaching are tabulated. In other words, they form the practical application of
the modern science method to the genus homo, qua
intellection. Now “science” teaches that intellect is a result
of the mechanical interaction of the brain-stuff; therefore it is only logical
that modern education should be almost entirely mechanical—a sort of automatic
machine for the fabrication of intellect by the ton. Very little experience of
examinations is enough to show that the education they produce is simply a
training of the physical memory, and, sooner or later, all your schools will
sink to this level. As to any real, sound cultivation of the thinking and
reasoning power, it is simply impossible while everything has to be judged by
the results as tested by competitive examinations. Again, school training is of
the very greatest importance in forming character, especially in its moral
bearing. Now, from first to last, your modern system is based on the so-called
scientific revelations: “The struggle for existence” and the “survival of
the fittest.” All through his early life, every man has these driven into him
by practical example and experience, as well as by direct teaching, till it is
impossible to eradicate from his mind the idea that “self,” the lower,
personal, animal self, is the end-all, and be-all, of life. Here you get the
great source of all the after-misery, crime, and heartless selfishness, which
you admit as much as I do. Selfishness, as said over and over again, is the
curse of humanity, and the prolific parent of all the evils and crimes in this
life; and it is your schools which are the hot-beds of such selfishness. ENQUIRER. That is all very fine as generalities, but I should like a few
facts, and to learn also how this can be remedied. THEOSOPHIST.
Very well, I will try and satisfy you. There are three great divisions of
scholastic establishments, board, middle-class and public schools, running up
the scale from the most grossly commercial to the idealistic classical, with
many permutations and combinations. The practical commercial begets the modern
side, and the ancient and orthodox classical reflects its heavy respectability
even as far as the School Board pupil teacher’s establishments. Here we
plainly see the scientific and material commercial supplanting the effete
orthodox and classical. Neither is the reason very far to seek. The objects of
this branch of education are, then, pounds, shillings, and pence, the summum
bonum of the XIXth century. Thus,
the energies generated by the brain molecules of its adherents are all
concentrated on one point, and are, therefore, to some extent, an organized army
of educated and speculative
intellects of the minority of men, trained against the hosts of the ignorant,
simple-minded masses doomed to be vampirised, lived and sat upon by their
intellectually stronger brethren. Such training is not only untheosophical,
it is simply UNCHRISTIAN. Result: The direct outcome of this branch
of education is an overflooding of the market with money-making machines, with
heartless selfish men—animals—who have been most carefully trained to prey
on their fellows and take advantage of the ignorance of their weaker brethren! ENQUIRER. Well, but you cannot assert that of our great public schools,
at any rate? THEOSOPHIST.
Not exactly, it is true. But though the form
is different, the animating spirit is the same: untheosophical
and unchristian,
whether Eton and Harrow turn out scientists or divines and theologians. ENQUIRER. Surely you don’t mean to call Eton and Harrow
“commercial”? THEOSOPHIST.
No. Of course the Classical system is above all things respectable,
and in the present day is productive of some good. It does still
remain the favourite at our great public schools, where not only an
intellectual, but also a social education is obtainable. It is, therefore, of
prime importance that the dull boys of aristocratic and wealthy parents should
go to such schools to meet the rest of the young life of the “blood” and
money classes. But unfortunately there is a huge competition even for entrance;
for the moneyed classes are increasing, and poor but clever boys seek to enter
the public schools by the rich scholarships, both at the schools themselves and
from them to the Universities. ENQUIRER. According to this view, the wealthier “dullards” have to
work even harder than their poorer fellows? THEOSOPHIST.
It is so. But, strange to say, the faithful of the cult of the “Survival of
the fittest” do not practice their creed; for their whole exertion is to make
the naturally unfit supplant the fit. Thus, by bribes of large sums of money,
they allure the best teachers from their natural pupils to mechanicalise their
naturally unfit progeny into professions which they uselessly overcrowd. ENQUIRER. And you attribute all this to what? THEOSOPHIST.
All this is owing to the perniciousness of a system which turns out goods to
order, irrespective of the natural proclivities and talents of the youth. The
poor little candidate for this progressive paradise of learning, comes almost
straight from the nursery to the treadmill of a preparatory school for sons of
gentlemen. Here he is immediately seized upon by the workmen of the
materio-intellectual factory, and crammed with Latin, French and Greek
Accidence, Dates and Tables, so that if he have any natural genius it is rapidly
squeezed out of him by the rollers of what Carlyle has so well called “dead
vocables.” ENQUIRER. But surely he is taught something besides “dead vocables,”
and much of that which may lead him direct to Theosophy,
if not entirely into the Theosophical Society? THEOSOPHIST.
Not much. For of history, he will attain only sufficient knowledge of his own
particular nation to fit him with a steel armour of prejudice against all other
peoples, and be steeped in the foul cess-pools of chronicled national hate and
blood-thirstiness; and surely, you would not call that—Theosophy? ENQUIRER. What are your further objections? THEOSOPHIST.
Added to this is a smattering of selected, so-called, Biblical facts, from the
study of which all intellect is eliminated. It is simply a memory lesson, the
“Why” of the teacher being a “Why” of circumstances and not of reason. ENQUIRER. Yes; but I have heard you congratulate yourself at the
ever-increasing number of the Agnostics and Atheists in our day, so that it
appears that even people trained in the system you abuse so heartily do
learn to think and reason for themselves. THEOSOPHIST.
Yes; but it is rather owing to a healthy reaction from that system than due to
it. We prefer immeasurably more in our Society Agnostics, and even rank
Atheists, to bigots of whatever religion. An Agnostic’s mind is ever opened to
the truth; whereas the latter blinds the bigot like the sun does an owl. The
best—i.e., the most
truth-loving, philanthropic, and honest—of our Fellows were, and are,
Agnostics and Atheists (disbelievers in a personal God). But there are no free-thinking boys and
girls, and generally early training will leave its mark behind in the shape of a
cramped and distorted mind. A proper and sane system of education should produce
the most vigorous and liberal mind, strictly trained in logical and accurate
thought, and not in blind faith. How can you ever expect good results, while you
pervert the reasoning faculty of your children by bidding them believe in the
miracles of the Bible on Sunday, while for the six other days of the week you
teach them that such things are scientifically impossible? ENQUIRER. What would you have, then? THEOSOPHIST.
If we had money, we would found schools which would turn out something else than
reading and writing candidates for starvation. Children should above all be
taught self-reliance, love for all men, altruism, mutual charity, and more than
anything else, to think and reason for themselves. We would reduce the purely
mechanical work of the memory to an absolute minimum, and devote the time to the
development and training of the inner senses, faculties and latent capacities.
We would endeavour to deal with each child as a unit, and to educate it so as to
produce the most harmonious and equal unfoldment of its powers, in order that
its special aptitudes should find their full natural development. We should aim
at creating free men and women, free intellectually, free morally,
unprejudiced in all respects, and above all things, unselfish. And we
believe that much if not all of this could be obtained by proper and truly
theosophical education. WHY,
THEN, IS THERE SO MUCH PREJUDICE AGAINST THE T.S.? ENQUIRER. If Theosophy is even half of what you say, why should there
exist such a terrible ill-feeling against it? This is even more of a problem
than anything else. THEOSOPHIST.
It is; but you must bear in mind how many powerful adversaries we have aroused
ever since the formation of our Society. As I just said, if the Theosophical
movement were one of those numerous modern crazes, as harmless at the end as
they are evanescent, it would be simply laughed at—as it is now by those who
still do not understand its real purport—and left severely alone. But it is
nothing of the kind. Intrinsically, Theosophy is the most serious movement of
this age; and one, moreover, which threatens the very life of most of the
time-honoured humbugs, prejudices, and social evils of the day—those evils
which fatten and make happy the upper ten and their imitators and sycophants,
the wealthy dozens of the middle classes, while they positively crush and starve
out of existence the millions of the poor. Think of this, and you will easily
understand the reason of such a relentless persecution by those others who, more
observant and perspicacious, do see the true nature of Theosophy, and therefore
dread it. ENQUIRER. Do you mean to tell me that it is because a few have understood
what Theosophy leads to, that they try to crush the movement? But if Theosophy
leads only to good, surely you cannot be prepared to utter such a terrible
accusation of perfidious heartlessness and treachery even against those few? THEOSOPHIST.
I am so prepared, on the contrary. I do not call the enemies we have had to
battle with during the first nine or ten years of the Society’s existence
either powerful or “dangerous”; but only those who have arisen against us in
the last three or four years. And these neither speak, write nor preach against
Theosophy, but work in silence and behind the backs of the foolish puppets who
act as their visible marionnettes. Yet,
if invisible to most of the
members of our Society, they are well known to the true “Founders” and the
protectors of our Society. But they must remain for certain reasons unnamed at
present. ENQUIRER. And are they known to many of you, or to yourself alone? THEOSOPHIST.
I never said I knew them. I may or may not know them—but I know of
them, and this is sufficient; and I
defy them to do their worst. They
may achieve great mischief and throw confusion into our ranks, especially among
the faint-hearted, and those who can judge only by appearances. They will
not crush the Society, do what they
may. Apart from these truly dangerous enemies—“dangerous,” however, only
to those Theosophists who are unworthy of the name, and whose place is rather outside
than within the T.S.—the
number of our opponents is more than considerable. ENQUIRER. Can you name these, at least, if you will not speak of the
others? THEOSOPHIST.
Of course I can. We have to contend against (1) the hatred of the Spiritualists,
American, English, and French; (2) the constant opposition of the clergy of all
denominations; (3) especially the relentless hatred and persecution of the
missionaries in India; (4) this led to the famous and infamous attack on our
Theosophical Society by the Society for Psychical Research, an attack which was
stirred up by a regular conspiracy organized by the missionaries in India.
Lastly, we must count the defection of various prominent (?) members, for
reasons I have already explained, all of whom have contributed their utmost to
increase the prejudice against us. ENQUIRER. Cannot you give me more details about these, so that I may know
what to answer when asked—a brief history of the Society, in short; and why
the world believes all this? THEOSOPHIST.
The reason is simple. Most outsiders knew absolutely nothing of the Society
itself, its motives, objects or beliefs. From its very beginning the world has
seen in Theosophy nothing but certain marvellous phenomena, in which two-thirds
of the non-spiritualists do not believe. Very soon the Society came to be
regarded as a body pretending to the possession of “miraculous” powers. The
world never realised that the Society taught absolute disbelief in miracle
or even the possibility of such; that in the Society there were only
a few people who possessed such psychic powers and but few who cared for them.
Nor did it understand that the phenomena were never produced publicly, but only
privately for friends, and merely given as an accessory, to prove by direct
demonstration that such things could be produced without dark rooms, spirits,
mediums, or any of the usual paraphernalia. Unfortunately, this misconception
was greatly strengthened and exaggerated by the first book on the subject which
excited much attention in Europe—Mr. Sinnett’s Occult World.
If this work did much to bring the Society into prominence, it attracted still
more obloquy, derision and misrepresentation upon the hapless heroes and heroine
thereof. Of this the author was more than warned in the Occult World,
but did not pay attention to the prophecy—for such it was, though
half-veiled. ENQUIRER. For what, and since when, do the Spiritualists hate you? THEOSOPHIST.
From the first day of the Society’s existence. No sooner the fact became known
that, as a body, the T.S. did not believe in communications with the spirits of
the dead, but regarded the so-called “spirits” as, for the most part, astral
reflections of disembodied personalities, shells, etc., than the Spiritualists
conceived a violent hatred to us and especially to the Founders. This hatred
found expression in every kind of slander, uncharitable personal remarks, and
absurd misrepresentations of the Theosophical teachings in all the American
Spiritualistic organs. For years we were persecuted, denounced and abused. This
began in 1875 and continues to the present day. In 1879, the headquarters of the
T.S. were transferred from New York to Bombay, India, and then permanently to
Madras. When the first branch of our Society, the British T.S., was founded in
London, the English Spiritualists came out in arms against us, as the Americans
had done; and the French Spiritists followed suit. ENQUIRER. But why should the clergy be hostile to you, when, after all,
the main tendency of the Theosophical doctrines is opposed to Materialism, the
great enemy of all forms of religion in our day? THEOSOPHIST.
The Clergy opposed us on the general principle that “He who is not with me is
against me.” Since Theosophy does not agree with any one Sect or Creed, it is
considered the enemy of all alike, because it teaches that they are all, more or
less, mistaken. The missionaries in India hated and tried to crush us because
they saw the flower of the educated Indian youth and the Brahmins, who are
almost inaccessible to them, joining the Society in large numbers. And yet,
apart from this general class hatred, the T.S. counts in its ranks many
clergymen, and even one or two bishops. ENQUIRER. And what led the S.P.R. to take the field against you? You were
both pursuing the same line of study, in some respects, and several of the
Psychic Researchers belonged to your society. THEOSOPHIST.
First of all we were very good friends with the leaders of the S. P. R.; but
when the attack on the phenomena appeared in the Christian College
Magazine, supported by the
pretended revelations of a menial, the S. P. R. found that they had compromised
themselves by publishing in their “Proceedings” too many of the phenomena
which had occurred in connection with the T.S. Their ambition is to pose as an authoritative
and strictly scientific body; so
that they had to choose between retaining that position by throwing overboard
the T.S. and even trying to destroy it, and seeing themselves merged, in the
opinion of the Sadducees of the grand monde,
with the “credulous” Theosophists and Spiritualists. There was
no way for them out of it, no two choices, and they chose to throw us overboard.
It was a matter of dire necessity for them. But so hard pressed were they to
find any apparently reasonable motive for the life of devotion and ceaseless
labour led by the two Founders, and for the complete absence of any pecuniary
profit or other advantage to them, that our enemies were obliged to resort to
the thrice-absurd, eminently ridiculous, and now famous “Russian spy
theory,” to explain this devotion. But the old saying, “The blood of the
martyrs is the seed of the Church,” proved once more correct. After the first
shock of this attack, the T.S. doubled and tripled its numbers, but the bad
impression produced still remains. A French author was right in saying, “Calomniez,
calomniez toujours et encore, il en restera toujours quelque chose.”
Therefore it is,
that unjust prejudices are current, and that everything connected with the T.S.,
and especially with its Founders, is so falsely distorted, because based on
malicious hearsay alone. ENQUIRER. Yet in the 14 years during which the Society has existed, you
must have had ample time and opportunity to show yourselves and your work in
their true light? THEOSOPHIST.
How, or when, have we been given such an opportunity? Our most prominent members
had an aversion to anything that looked like publicly justifying themselves.
Their policy has ever been: “We must live it down;” and “What does it
matter what the newspapers say, or people think?” The Society was too poor to
send out public lecturers, and therefore the expositions of our views and
doctrines were confined to a few Theosophical works that met with success, but
which people often misunderstood, or only knew of through hearsay. Our journals
were, and still are, boycotted; our literary works ignored; and to this day no
one seems even to feel quite certain whether the Theosophists are a kind of
Serpent-and-Devil worshippers, or simply “Esoteric Buddhists”—whatever
that may mean. It was useless for us to go on denying, day after day and year
after year, every kind of inconceivable cock-and-bull stories about us; for, no
sooner was one disposed of, than another, a still more absurd and malicious one,
was born out of the ashes of the first. Unfortunately, human nature is so
constituted that any good said of a person is immediately forgotten and never
repeated. But one has only to utter a calumny, or to start a story—no matter
how absurd, false or incredible it may be, if only it is connected with some
unpopular character—for it to be successful and forthwith accepted as a
historical fact. Like Don Basilio’s
“CALUMNIA,” the rumour springs up, at first, as a soft gentle breeze hardly
stirring the grass under your feet, and arising no one knows whence; then, in
the shortest space of time, it is transformed into a strong wind, begins to blow
a gale, and forthwith becomes a roaring storm! A calumny among news, is what an
octopus is among fishes; it sucks into one’s mind, fastens upon our memory,
which feeds upon it, leaving indelible marks even after the calumny has been
bodily destroyed. A calumnious lie is the only masterkey that will open any and
every brain. It is sure to receive welcome and hospitality in every human mind,
the highest as the lowest, if only a little prejudiced, and no matter from
however base a quarter and motive it has started. ENQUIRER. Don’t you think your assertion altogether too sweeping? The
Englishman has never been over-ready to believe in anything said, and our nation
is proverbially known for its love of fair play. A lie has no legs to stand upon
for long, and— THEOSOPHIST.
The Englishman is as ready to believe evil as a man of any other nation; for it
is human nature, and not a national feature. As to lies, if they have no legs to
stand upon, according to the proverb, they have exceedingly rapid wings; and
they can and do fly farther and wider than any other kind of news, in England as
elsewhere. Remember lies and calumny are the only kind of literature we can
always get gratis, and without paying any subscription. We can make the
experiment if you like. Will you, who are so interested in Theosophical matters,
and have heard so much about us, will you put me questions on as many of these
rumours and “hearsays” as you can think of? I will answer you the truth, and
nothing but the truth, subject to the strictest verification. ENQUIRER. Before we change the subject, let us have the whole truth on
this one. Now, some writers have called your teachings “immoral and
pernicious”; others, on the ground that many so-called “authorities” and
Orientalists find in the Indian religions nothing but sex-worship in its many
forms, accuse you of teaching nothing better than Phallic worship. They say that
since modern Theosophy is so closely allied with Eastern, and particularly
Indian, thought, it cannot be free from this taint. Occasionally, even, they go
so far as to accuse European Theosophists of reviving the practices connected
with this cult. How about this? THEOSOPHIST.
I have heard and read about this before; and I answer that no more utterly
baseless and lying calumny has ever been invented and circulated. “Silly
people can see but silly dreams,” says a Russian proverb. It makes one’s
blood boil to hear such vile accusations made without the slightest foundation,
and on the strength of mere inferences. Ask the hundreds of honourable English
men and women who have been members of the Theosophical Society for years
whether an immoral precept or a pernicious
doctrine was ever taught to them. Open the Secret Doctrine,
and you will find page after page denouncing the Jews and other
nations precisely on account of this devotion to Phallic rites, due to the dead
letter interpretation of nature symbolism, and the grossly materialistic
conceptions of her dualism in all the exoteric
creeds. Such ceaseless and malicious misrepresentation of our
teachings and beliefs is really disgraceful. ENQUIRER. But you cannot deny that the Phallic element does
exist in the religions of the East? THEOSOPHIST.
Nor do I deny it; only I maintain that this proves no more than does its
presence in Christianity, the religion of the West. Read Hargrave Jenning’s Rosicrucians,
if you would assure yourself of it. In the East, the Phallic
symbolism is, perhaps, more crude, because more true to nature, or, I would
rather say, more naive and sincere than in the West. But it is not more
licentious, nor does it suggest to the Oriental mind the same gross and coarse
ideas as to the Western, with, perhaps, one or two exceptions, such as the
shameful sect known as the “Maharajah,” or Vallabhacharya sect. ENQUIRER. A writer in the Agnostic journal—one
of your accusers—has just hinted that the followers of this disgraceful sect
are Theosophists, and “claim true Theosophic insight.” THEOSOPHIST.
He wrote a falsehood, and that’s all. There never was, nor is there at
present, one single Vallabhacharya in our Society. As to their having, or
claiming Theosophic insight, that is another fib, based on crass ignorance about
the Indian Sects. Their “Maharajah” only claims a right to the money, wives
and daughters of his foolish followers and no more. This sect is despised by all
the other Hindus. But you
will find the whole subject dealt with at length in the Secret Doctrine,
to which I must again refer you for detailed explanations. To
conclude, the very soul of Theosophy is dead against Phallic worship; and its
occult or esoteric section more so even than the exoteric teachings. There never
was a more lying statement made than the above. And now ask me some other
questions. IS THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY A MONEY-MAKING CONCERN? ENQUIRER. Agreed. Well, have
either of the Founders, Colonel H. S. Olcott or H.P. Blavatsky, ever made any
money, profit, or derived any worldly benefit from the T.S., as some papers say? THEOSOPHIST.
Not one penny. The papers lie. On the contrary, they have both given all they
had, and literally beggared themselves. As for “worldly benefits,” think of
the calumnies and vilification they have been subjected to, and then ask the
question! ENQUIRER. Yet I have read in a good many missionary organs that the
entrance fees and subscriptions much more than covered all expenses; and one
said that the Founders were making twenty thousand pounds a year! THEOSOPHIST.
This is a fib, like many others. In the published accounts of January, 1889, you
will find an exact statement of all the money ever received from any
source since 1879. The total received from all sources (entrance fees,
donations, etc., etc.) during these ten years is under six thousand pounds, and
of this a large part was contributed by the Founders themselves from the
proceeds of their private resources and their literary work. All this has been
openly and officially admitted, even by our enemies, the Psychic Research
Society. And now both the Founders are penniless: one, too old and ill to work
as she did before, unable to spare time for outside literary work to help the
Society in money, can only write for the Theosophical cause; the other keeps
labouring for it as before, and receives as little thanks for it. ENQUIRER. But surely they need money to live? THEOSOPHIST.
Not at all. So long as they have food and lodging, even though they owe it to
the devotion of a few friends, they need little more. ENQUIRER. But could not Madame Blavatsky, especially, make more than
enough to live upon by her writings? THEOSOPHIST.
When in India she received on the average some thousand rupees a year for
articles contributed to Russian and other papers, but gave it all away to the
Society. ENQUIRER. Political articles? THEOSOPHIST.
Never. Everything she has written throughout the seven years of her stay in
India is all there in print. It deals only with the religions, ethnology, and
customs of India, and with Theosophy—never with politics, of which she knows
nothing and cares less. Again, two years ago she refused several contracts
amounting together to about 1,200 roubles in gold per month; for she could not
accept them without abandoning her work for the Society, which needed all her
time and strength. She has documents to prove it. ENQUIRER. But why could not both she and Colonel Olcott do as
others—notably many Theosophists—do: follow out their respective professions
and devote the surplus of their time to the work of the Society? THEOSOPHIST.
Because by serving two masters, either the professional or the philanthropic
work would have had to suffer. Every true Theosophist is morally bound to
sacrifice the personal to the impersonal, his own present good
to the future benefit
of other people. If the Founders do not set the example, who will? ENQUIRER. And are there many who follow it? THEOSOPHIST.
I am bound to answer you the truth. In Europe about half-a-dozen in all, out of
more than that number of Branches. ENQUIRER. Then it is not true that the Theosophical Society has a large
capital or endowment of its own? THEOSOPHIST.
It is false, for it has none at all. Now that the entrance fee of £l and the
small annual due have been abolished, it is even a doubtful question whether the
staff at the head-quarters in India will not soon be starved to death. ENQUIRER. Then why not raise subscriptions? THEOSOPHIST.
We are not the Salvation Army; we cannot and have never
begged; nor have we ever followed the example of the Churches and sects and
“taken up collections.” That which is occasionally sent for the support of
the Society, the small sums contributed by some devoted Fellows, are all
voluntary donations. ENQUIRER. But I have heard of large sums of money given to Mme.
Blavatsky. It was said four years ago that she got £5,000 from one rich, young
“Fellow,” who went out to join them in India, and £10,000 from another
wealthy and well-known American gentleman, one of your members who died in
Europe four years ago. THEOSOPHIST.
Say to those who told you this, that they either themselves utter, or repeat, a
gross falsehood. Never has “Madame
Blavatsky” asked or received ONE
PENNY from the two above-named gentlemen, nor anything like that from anyone
else, since the Theosophical Society was founded. Let any man living try to
substantiate this calumny, and it will be easier for him to prove that the Bank
of England is a bankrupt than that the said “Founder” has ever made any
money out of Theosophy. These two calumnies have been started by two high-born
ladies, belonging to the London aristocracy, and have been immediately traced
and disproved. They are the dead bodies, the carcases of two inventions, which,
after having been buried in the sea of oblivion, are once more raised on the
surface of the stagnant waters of slander. ENQUIRER. Then I have been told of several large legacies left
to the T.S. One—some £8,000—was left to it by some eccentric Englishman,
who did not even belong to the Society. The other—£3,000 or £4,000—were
testated by an Australian F.T.S. Is this true? THEOSOPHIST.
I heard of the first; and I also know that, whether legally left or not, the
T.S. has never profited by it, nor have the Founders ever been officially
notified of it. For, as our Society was not then a chartered body, and thus had
no legal existence, the Judge at the Court of Probate, as we were told, paid no
attention to such legacy and turned over the sum to the heirs. So much for the
first. As for the second, it is quite true. The testator was one of our devoted
Fellows, and willed all he had to the T.S. But when the President, Colonel
Olcott, came to look into the matter, he found that the testator had children
whom he had disinherited for some family reasons. Therefore, he called a
council, and it was decided that the legacy should be refused, and the moneys
passed to the legal heirs. The Theosophical Society would be untrue to its name
were it to profit by money to which others are entitled virtually, at any rate
on Theosophical principles, if not legally. ENQUIRER. Again, and I say this on the authority of your own journal, the
Theosophist, there’s a
Rajah of India who donated to the Society 25,000 rupees. Have you not thanked
him for his great bounty in the January Theosophist
for 1888? THEOSOPHIST.
We have, in these words, “That the thanks of the Convention be conveyed to
H.H. the Maharajah …… for his promised munificent gift of
Rupees 25,000 to the Society’s Fund.” The thanks were duly conveyed, but the
money is still a “promise,” and has never reached the Headquarters. ENQUIRER. But surely, if the Maharajah promised and received thanks for
his gift publicly and in print, he will be as good as his promise? THEOSOPHIST.
He may, though the promise is 18 months old. I speak of the present and not of
the future. ENQUIRER. Then how do you propose to go on? THEOSOPHIST.
So long as the T.S. has a few devoted members willing to work for it without
reward and thanks, so long as a few good Theosophists support it with occasional
donations, so long will it exist, and nothing can crush it. ENQUIRER. I have heard many Theosophists speak of a “power behind the
Society” and of certain “Mahatmas,” mentioned also in Mr. Sinnett’s
works, that are said to have founded the Society, to watch over and protect it. THEOSOPHIST.
You may laugh, but it is so. THE WORKING STAFF OF THE T.S. ENQUIRER. These men, I have heard, are great Adepts, Alchemists, and what
not. If, then, they can change lead into gold and make as much money as they
like, besides doing all kinds of miracles at will, as related in Mr. Sinnett’s
“Occult World,” why do not they find you money, and support the Founders and
the Society in comfort? THEOSOPHIST.
Because they did not found a “miracle club.” Because the Society is intended
to help men to develop the powers latent in them through their own exertions and
merit. Because whatever they may or may not produce in the way of phenomena,
they are not false coiners; nor
would they throw an additional and very strong temptation on the path of members
and candidates: Theosophy is not to be bought.
Hitherto, for the past 14 years, not a single working member has
ever received pay or salary from either the Masters or the Society. ENQUIRER. Then are none of your workers paid at all? THEOSOPHIST.
Till now, not one. But as every one has to eat, drink, and clothe himself, all
those who are without any means of their own, and devote their whole time to the
work of the society, are provided with the necessaries of life at the
Head-quarters at Madras, India, though these “necessaries” are humble
enough, in truth! (See Rules at the end.) But now that the Society’s work has
increased so greatly and still goes on increasing (N.B., owing to slanders)
in Europe, we need more working hands. We hope to have a few members
who will henceforth be remunerated—if the word can
be used in the cases in question. For every one of these Fellows,
who are preparing to give all their time to the Society, are quitting
good official situations with excellent prospects, to work for us at less
than half their former salary. ENQUIRER. And who will provide the funds for this? THEOSOPHIST.
Some of our Fellows who are just a little richer than the rest. The man who
would speculate or make money on Theosophy would be unworthy to remain in our
ranks. ENQUIRER. But you must surely make money by your books, magazines, and
other publications? THEOSOPHIST.
The Theosophist of Madras,
alone among the magazines, pays a profit, and this has regularly been turned
over to the Society, year by year, as the published accounts show. Lucifer
is slowly but steadily ingulfing money, never yet having paid its
expenses—thanks to its being boycotted by the pious booksellers and railway
stalls. Le Lotus, in
France—started on the private and not very large means of a Theosophist, who
has devoted to it his whole time and labour—has ceased to exist, owing to the
same causes, alas! Nor does the New York Path
pay its way, while the Revue Théosophique
of Paris has
only just been started, also from the private means of a lady-member. Moreover,
whenever any of the works issued by the Theosophical Publishing Company in
London do pay, the proceeds will be devoted to the service of the
Society. ENQUIRER. And now please tell me all you can about the Mahatmas. So many
absurd and contradictory things are said about them, that one does not know what
to believe, and all sorts of ridiculous stories become current. THEOSOPHIST.
Well may you call them “ridiculous!” ***
*** *** |
|
|