to turn in this magazine to reading more
congenial to them; say to the miscellaneous papers on Hylo-Idealism,
by various writers.2
For LUCIFER tries to satisfy its readers of
whatever "school of thought," and shows itself equally
impartial to Theist and Atheist, Mystic and Agnostic, Christian
and Gentile. Such articles as our editorials, the Comments on
"Light on the Path," etc., etc.--are not intended for
Materialists. They are addressed to Theosophists, or readers who
know in their hearts that Masters of Wisdom do exist: and,
though absolute truth is not on earth and has to be searched
for in higher regions, that there still are, even on this silly,
ever whirling little globe of ours, some things that are not even
dreamt of in Western philosophy.
To return to our subject. It thus follows that, though "general
abstract truth is the most precious of all blessings"
for many of us, as it was for Rousseau, we have, meanwhile, to
be satisfied with relative truths. In sober fact, we are a poor
set of mortals at best, ever in dread before the face of even
a relative truth, lest it should devour ourselves and our petty
little preconceptions along with us. As for an absolute truth,
most of us are as incapable of seeing it as of reaching the moon
on a bicycle. Firstly, because absolute truth is as immovable
as the mountain of Mahomet, which refused to disturb itself for
the prophet, so that he had to go to it himself. And we have to
follow his example if we would approach it even at a distance.
Secondly, because the kingdom of absolute truth is not of this
world, while we are too much of it. And thirdly, because notwithstanding
that in the poet's fancy man is
. . . . . . . the abstract
Of all perfection, which the workmanship
Of heaven hath modelled. . . . . . .
in reality he is a sorry bundle of anomalies and paradoxes, an
empty wind bag inflated with his own importance, with contradictory
and easily influenced opinions. He is at once an arrogant and
a weak creature, which, though in constant dread of some authority,
terrestrial or celestial, will yet--
. . . . . . . like an angry ape,
Play such fantastic tricks before high Heaven
As make the angels weep.
Now, since truth is a multifaced jewel, the facets of which it
is impossible to perceive all at once; and since, again, no two
men, however anxious to discern truth, can see even one of those
facets alike, what can be done to help them to perceive it? As
physical man, limited and trammelled from every side by illusions,
cannot reach truth by the light of his terrestrial perceptions,
we say--develop in you the inner knowledge. From the time
when the Delphic oracle said to the enquirer "Man, know thyself,"
no greater or more important truth was ever taught. Without such
perception, man will remain ever blind to even many a relative,
let alone absolute, truth. Man has to know himself, i.e., acquire
the inner perceptions which never deceive, before he can
master any absolute truth. Absolute truth is the symbol of
Eternity, and no finite mind can ever grasp the eternal,
hence, no truth in its fulness can ever dawn upon it. To reach
the state during which man sees and senses it, we have to paralyze
the senses of the external man of clay. This is a difficult task,
we may be told, and most people will, at this rate, prefer to
remain satisfied with relative truths, no doubt. But to approach
even terrestrial truths requires, first of all, love of truth
for its own sake, for otherwise no recognition of it will
follow. And who loves truth in this age for its own sake? How
many of us are prepared to search for, accept, and carry it out,
in the midst of a society in which anything that would achieve
success has to be built on appearances, not on reality, on
self-assertion, not on intrinsic value? We are fully aware
of the difficulties in the way of receiving truth. The fair heavenly
maiden descends only on a (to her) congenial soil--the soil of
an impartial, unprejudiced mind, illuminated by pure Spiritual
Consciousness; and both are truly rare dwellers in civilized lands.
In our century of steam and electricity, when man lives at a maddening
speed that leaves him barely time for reflection, he allows himself
usually to be drifted down from cradle to grave, nailed to the
Procrustean bed of custom and conventionality. Now conventionality--pure
and simple--is a congenital LIE, as it is in every case a "simulation
of feelings according to a received standard" (F. W.
Robertson's definition); and where there is any simulation there
cannot be any truth. How profound the remark made by Byron,
that "truth is a gem that is found at a great depth; whilst
on the surface of this world all things are weighed by the
false scales of custom," is best known to those who are
forced to live in the stifling atmosphere of such social conventionalism,
and who, even when willing and anxious to learn, dare not accept
the truths they long for, for fear of the ferocious Moloch called
Society.
Look around you, reader; study the accounts given by world-known
travellers, recall the joint observations of literary thinkers,
the data of science and of statistics. Draw the picture of modern
society, of modern politics, of modern religion and modern life
in general before your mind's eye. Remember the ways and customs
of every cultured race and nation under the sun. Observe the doings
and the moral attitude of people in the civilized centres of Europe,
America, and even of the far East and the colonies, everywhere
where the white man has carried the "benefits" of so-called
civilization. And now, having passed in review all this, pause
and reflect, and then name, if you can, that blessed
Eldorado, that exceptional spot on the globe, where
TRUTH is the honoured guest, and LIE
and SHAM the ostracised outcasts?
YOU CANNOT. Nor can any one else,
unless he is prepared and determined to add his mite to the mass
of falsehood that reigns supreme in every department of national
and social life. "Truth!" cried Carlyle, "truth,
though the heavens crush me for following her, no falsehood, though
a whole celestial Lubberland were the prize of Apostasy."
Noble words, these. But how many think, and how many will dare
to speak as Carlyle did, in our nineteenth century day? Does
not the gigantic appalling majority prefer to a man the "paradise
of Do-nothings," the pays de Cocagne of heartless
selfishness? It is this majority that recoils terror-stricken
before the most shadowy outline of every new and unpopular truth,
out of mere cowardly fear, lest Mrs. Harris should denounce, and
Mrs. Grundy condemn, its converts to the torture of being rent
piecemeal by her murderous tongue.
SELFISHNESS, the first-born of Ignorance,
and the fruit of the teaching which asserts that for every newly-born
infant a new soul, separate and distinct from the Universal
Soul, is "created"--this Selfishness is the impassable
wall between the personal Self and Truth. It is the prolific
mother of all human vices, Lie being born out of the necessity
for dissembling, and Hypocrisy out of the desire to mask
Lie. It is the fungus growing and strengthening with age in every
human heart in which it has devoured all better feelings. Selfishness
kills every noble impulse in our natures, and is the one deity,
fearing no faithlessness or desertion from its votaries. Hence,
we see it reign supreme in the world and in so-called fashionable
society. As a result, we live, and move, and have our being in
this god of darkness under his trinitarian aspect of Sham, Humbug,
and Falsehood, called RESPECTABILITY.
Is this Truth and Fact, or is it slander? Turn whichever way you
will, and you find, from the top of the social ladder to the bottom,
deceit and hypocrisy at work for dear Self's sake, in every nation
as in every individual. But nations, by tacit agreement, have
decided that selfish motives in politics shall be called "noble
national aspiration, patriotism," etc.; and the citizen views
it in his family circle as "domestic virtue." Nevertheless,
Selfishness, whether it breeds desire for aggrandizement of territory,
or competition in commerce at the expense of one's neighbour,
can never be regarded as a virtue. We see smooth-tongued DECEIT
and BRUTE FORCE--the Jachin
and Boaz of every International Temple of Solomon--
called Diplomacy, and we call it by its right name. Because the
diplomat bows low before these two pillars of national glory and
politics, and puts their masonic symbolism "in (cunning)
strength shall this my house be established" into daily practice;
i.e., gets by deceit what he cannot obtain by force--shall
we applaud him? A diplomat's qualification--"dexterity or
skill in securing advantages"--for one's own country at the
expense of other countries, can hardly be achieved by speaking
truth, but verily by a wily and deceitful tongue; and,
therefore, LUCIFER calls such action--a living,
and an evident LIE.
But it is not in politics alone that custom and selfishness have
agreed to call deceit and lie virtue, and to reward him who lies
best with public statues. Every class of Society lives on LIE,
and would fall to pieces without it. Cultured, God-and-law-fearing
aristocracy, being as fond of the forbidden fruit as any plebeian,
is forced to lie from morn to noon in order to cover what it is
pleased to term its "little peccadillos," but which
TRUTH regards as gross immorality. Society
of the middle classes is honeycombed with false smiles, false
talk, and mutual treachery. For the majority religion has become
a thin tinsel veil thrown over the corpse of spiritual faith.
The master goes to church to deceive his servants; the starving
curate--preaching what he has ceased to believe in--hoodwinks
his bishop; the bishop--his God. Dailies, political and
social, might adopt with advantage for their motto Georges Dandin's
immortal query--"Lequel de nous deux trompe-t-on
ici?"--Even Science, once the anchor of the salvation
of Truth, has ceased to be the temple of naked Fact. Almost
to a man the Scientists strive now only to force upon their colleagues
and the public the acceptance of some personal hobby, of some
new-fangled theory, which will shed lustre on their name and fame.
A Scientist is as ready to suppress damaging evidence against
a current scientific hypothesis in our times, as a missionary
in heathen-land, or a preacher at home, to persuade his congregation
that modern geology is a lie, and evolution but vanity and vexation
of spirit.
Such is the actual state of things in 1888 A.D.,
and yet we are taken to task by certain papers for seeing this
year in more than gloomy colours!
Lie has spread to such extent--supported as it is by custom and
conventionalities--that even chronology forces people to lie.
The suffixes A.D. and B.C.
used after the dates of the year by Jew and Heathen, in European
and even Asiatic lands, by the Materialist and the Agnostic as
much as by the Christian, at home, are--a lie used to sanction
another LIE.
Where then is even relative truth to be found? If, so far back
as the century of Democritus, she appeared to him under the form
of a goddess lying at the very bottom of a well, so deep that
it gave but little hope for her release; under the present circumstances
we have a certain right to believe her hidden, at least, as far
off as the ever invisible dark side of the moon. This is
why, perhaps, all the votaries of hidden truths are forthwith
Set down as lunatics. However it may be, in no case and under
no threat shall LUCIFER be ever forced into
pandering to any universally and tacitly recognised, and as universally
practised lie, but will hold to fact, pure and simple, trying
to proclaim truth whensoever found, and under no cowardly mask.
Bigotry and intolerance may be regarded as orthodox and sound
policy, and the encouraging of social prejudices and personal
hobbies at the cost of truth, as a wise course to pursue in order
to secure success for a publication. Let it be so. The Editors
of LUCIFER are Theosophists, and their motto
is chosen: Vera pro gratiis.
They are quite aware that LUCIFER'S libations
and sacrifices to the goddess Truth do not send a sweet savoury
smoke into the noses of the lords of the press, nor does the bright
"Son of the Morning" smell sweet in their nostrils.
He is ignored when not abused as--veritas odium paret.
Even his friends are beginning to find fault with him. They cannot
see why it should not be a purely Theosophical magazine,
in other words, why it refuses to be dogmatic and bigoted. Instead
of devoting every inch of space to theosophical and occult teachings,
it opens its pages "to the publication of the most grotesquely
heterogeneous elements and conflicting doctrines." This is
the chief accusation, to which we answer--why not? Theosophy is
divine knowledge, and knowledge is truth; every true fact,
every sincere word are thus part and parcel of Theosophy. One
who is skilled in divine alchemy, or even approximately blessed
with the gift of the perception of truth, will find and extract
it from an erroneous as much as from a correct statement. However
small the particle of gold lost in a ton of rubbish, it is the
noble metal still, and worthy of being dug out even at the price
of some extra trouble. As has been said, it is often as useful
to know what a thing is not, as to learn what it is.
The average reader can hardly hope to find any fact in a sectarian
publication under all its aspects, pro and con,
for either one way or the other its presentation is sure to be
biassed, and the scales helped to incline to that side to which
its editor's special policy is directed. A Theosophical magazine
is thus, perhaps, the only publication where one may hope to find,
at any rate, the unbiassed, if still only approximate truth and
fact. Naked truth is reflected in LUCIFER
under its many aspects, for no philosophical or religious views
are excluded from its pages. And, as every philosophy and religion,
however incomplete, unsatisfactory, and even foolish some may
be occasionally, must be based on a truth and fact of some kind,
the reader has thus the opportunity of comparing, analysing, and
choosing from the several philosophies discussed therein. LUCIFER
offers as many facets of the One universal jewel as its limited
space will permit, and says to its readers: "Choose you this
day whom ye will serve: whether the gods that were on the other
side of the flood which submerged man's reasoning powers and divine
knowledge, or the gods of the Amorites of custom and social
falsehood, or again, the Lord of (the highest) Self--the bright
destroyer of the dark power of illusion?" Surely it is that
philosophy that tends to diminish, instead of adding to, the sum
of human misery, which is the best.
At all events, the choice is there, and for this purpose only
have we opened our pages to every kind of contributors. Therefore
do you find in them the views of a Christian clergyman who believes
in his God and Christ, but rejects the wicked interpretations
and the enforced dogmas of his ambitious proud Church, along with
the doctrines of the Hylo-Idealist, who denies God, soul, and
immortality, and believes in nought save himself. The rankest
Materialists will find hospitality in our journal; aye, even those
who have not scrupled to fill pages of it with sneers and personal
remarks upon ourselves, and abuse of the doctrines of Theosophy,
so dear to us. When a journal of free thought, conducted
by an Atheist, inserts an article by a Mystic or Theosophist in
praise of his occult views and the mystery of Parabrahmam, and
passes on it only a few casual remarks, then shall we say LUCIFER
has found a rival. When a Christian periodical or missionary organ
accepts an article from the pen of a free-thinker deriding belief
in Adam and his rib, and passes criticism on Christianity--its
editor's faith--in meek silence, then it will have become worthy
of LUCIFER, and may be said truly to have
reached that degree of tolerance when it may be placed on a level
with any Theosophical publication.
But so long as none of these organs do something of the kind,
they are all sectarian, bigoted, intolerant, and can never have
an idea of truth and justice. They may throw innuendoes against
LUCIFER and its editors, they cannot affect
either. In fact, the editors of that magazine feel proud of such
criticism and accusations, as they are witnesses to the absolute
absence of bigotry, or arrogance of any kind in theosophy, the
result of the divine beauty of the doctrines it preaches. For,
as said, Theosophy allows a hearing and a fair chance to all.
It deems no views--if sincere--entirely destitute of truth. It
respects thinking men, to whatever class of thought they may belong.
Ever ready to oppose ideas and views which can only create confusion
without benefiting philosophy, it leaves their expounders personally
to believe in whatever they please, and does justice to their
ideas when they are good. Indeed, the conclusions or deductions
of a philosophic writer may be entirely opposed to our views and
the teachings we expound; yet his premises and statements of facts
may be quite correct, and other people may profit by the adverse
philosophy, even if we ourselves reject it, believing we have
something higher and still nearer to the truth. In any case, our
profession of faith is now made plain, and all that is said in
the foregoing pages both justifies and explains our editorial
policy.
To sum up the idea, with regard to absolute and relative truth,
we can only repeat what we said before. Outside a certain highly
spiritual and elevated state of mind, during which Man is at one
with the UNIVERSAL MIND--he
can get nought on earth but relative truth, or truths, from whatsoever
philosophy or religion. Were even the goddess who dwells at
the bottom of the well to issue from her place of confinement,
she could give man no more than he can assimilate. Meanwhile,
every one can sit near that well--the name of which is KNOWLEDGE--and
gaze into its depths in the hope of seeing Truth's fair image
reflected, at least, on the dark waters. This, however, as remarked
by Richter, presents a certain danger. Some truth, to be sure,
may be occasionally reflected as in a mirror on the spot we gaze
upon, and thus reward the patient student. But, adds the German
thinker, "I have heard that some philosophers in seeking
for Truth, to pay homage to her, have seen their own image in
the water and adored it instead." . . . .
It is to avoid such a calamity--one that has befallen every founder
of a religious or philosophical school--that the editors are studiously
careful not to offer the reader only those truths which they find
reflected in their own personal brains. They offer the public
a wide choice, and refuse to show bigotry and intolerance, which
are the chief landmarks on the path of Sectarianism. But, while
leaving the widest margin possible for comparison, our opponents
cannot hope to find their faces reflected on the clear
waters of our LUCIFER, without remarks or
just criticism upon the most prominent features thereof, if in
contrast with theosophical views.
This, however, only within the cover of the public magazine, and
so far as regards the merely intellectual aspect of philosophical
truths. Concerning the deeper spiritual, and one may almost say
religious, beliefs, no true Theosophist ought to degrade these
by subjecting them to public discussion, but ought rather to treasure
and hide them deep within the sanctuary of his innermost soul.
Such beliefs and doctrines should never be rashly given out, as
they risk unavoidable profanation by the rough handling of the
indifferent and the critical. Nor ought they to be embodied in
any publication except as hypotheses offered to the consideration
of the thinking portion of the public. Theosophical truths, when
they transcend a certain limit of speculation, had better remain
concealed from public view, for the "evidence of things not
seen" is no evidence save to him who sees, hears, and senses
it. It is not to be dragged outside the 'Holy of Holies,"
the temple of the impersonal divine Ego, or the indwelling
SELF. For, while every fact outside its
perception can, as we have shown, be, at best, only a relative
truth, a ray from the absolute truth can reflect itself only in
the pure mirror of its own flame--our highest SPIRITUAL
CONSCIOUSNESS. And how can the darkness (of
illusion) comprehend the LIGHT that shineth
in it?
Article by H. P. Blavatsky
Lucifer, February, 1888
1 Jesus says to the "Twelve"--"Unto
you is given the mystery of the Kingdom of God; but unto
them that are without, all things are done in parables,"
etc. (Mark iv. II.)
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2 e.g., to the article
"Autocentricism"--on the same "philosophy,"
or again, to the apex of the Hylo-Idealist pyramid in this Number.
It is a letter of protest by the learned Founder of the School
in question, against a mistake of ours. He complains of
our "coupling" his name with those of Mr. Herbert Spencer,
Darwin, Huxley, and others, on the question of atheism and materialism,
as the said lights in the psychological and physical sciences
are considered by Dr. Lewins too flickering, too "compromising"
and weak, to deserve the honourable appellation of Atheists or
even Agnostics. See "Correspondence" in Double Column,
and the reply by "The Adversary."
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