Mahatma Letter No. 8: Difference between revisions
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'''sets of circumstances legitimate & illegitimate ______ may be a matter open to argument | '''sets of circumstances legitimate & illegitimate ______ may be a matter open to argument) prevented the for this extension of a power, which is essentially hostile to the highest interests of humanity.''' | ||
Then about the English-speaking vaquil. Was the man so much to blame? You and yours have never taught him that there was any thing in [[Yog]] [[Vidya]]. The only people who have taken the trouble to educate him at all have in so doing taught him materialism. You are disgusted with him, but who is to blame? '''He who having no teaching but a materialistic one, rejects as reasons, the vague rumours that have reached him as to spiritual possibilities, & you (I mean your brotherhood) who knowing all about these have failed to __larize the knowledge have in fact failed to teach him better?''' I judge perhaps as an outsider, but it does seem to me, that the impenetrable veil of secrecy by which you surround yourselves, the enormous difficulties which you oppose to the communication of your spiritual knowledge, are the main causes of the rampant materialism which you so much deplore. '''You are the only people who possess any real __ __ knowledge of things spiritual in __ millions upon millions possess a sort of knowledge of these thro __ pure life, meditations and in fact the higher discipline of all religions worthy of the name. But this knowledge of theirs __ suffering others __ souls, is not a character to produce objective ___ or tangible__ that they can __ to __ others by __ less spiritually minded to __ convictions to their own.''' You alone do possess the means of bringing home to the ordinary run of men, convictions of this nature, | Then about the English-speaking vaquil. Was the man so much to blame? You and yours have never taught him that there was any thing in [[Yog]] [[Vidya]]. The only people who have taken the trouble to educate him at all have in so doing taught him materialism. You are disgusted with him, but who is to blame? '''He who having no teaching but a materialistic one, rejects as reasons, the vague rumours that have reached him as to spiritual possibilities, & you (I mean your brotherhood) who knowing all about these have failed to __larize the knowledge have in fact failed to teach him better?''' I judge perhaps as an outsider, but it does seem to me, that the impenetrable veil of secrecy by which you surround yourselves, the enormous difficulties which you oppose to the communication of your spiritual knowledge, are the main causes of the rampant materialism which you so much deplore. '''You are the only people who possess any real __ __ knowledge of things spiritual in __ millions upon millions possess a sort of knowledge of these thro __ pure life, meditations and in fact the higher discipline of all religions worthy of the name. But this knowledge of theirs __ suffering others __ souls, is not a character to produce objective ___ or tangible__ that they can __ to __ others by __ less spiritually minded to __ convictions to their own.''' You alone do possess the means of bringing home to the ordinary run of men, convictions of this nature, | ||
Revision as of 14:10, 23 August 2012
Quick Facts | |
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People involved | |
Written by: | A. O. Hume |
Received by: | Koot Hoomi/A. P. Sinnett |
Sent via: | A. P. Sinnett/H. P. Blavatsky |
Dates | |
Written on: | November 20, 1880 See below. |
Received on: | December 1, 1880 See below. |
Other dates: | none |
Places | |
Sent from: | Simla, India |
Received at: | Allahabad, India, by A. P. Sinnett |
Via: | none |
This is Letter No. 99 in Barker numbering. See below for Context and background.
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Page 1 transcription, image, and notes
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My Dear Koot Humi, I have sent Sinnett your letter to me and he has kindly sent me yours to him — I want to make some remarks on this, not by way of cavil, but because I am so anxious that you should understand me. Very likely it is my conceit, but whether or no I have a deep rooted conviction that I could work effectually if I only saw my way, and I cannot bear the idea of your throwing me over under any misconception of my views. And yet every letter I see of yours, shows me that you do not yet realize what I think and feel.* To explain this I venture to jot down a few comments on your letter to Sinnett. You say that if Russia does not succeed in taking Tibet, it will be due to you and herein at least you will deserve our gratitude — I do not agree to this in the sense in which you mean it. (1) If I thought that Russia would on the whole govern Tibet or India in such wise as to make the inhabitants on the whole happier than they are under the existing Gov[ernmen]ts, I would myself welcome and work for her advent. But so far as I can judge the Russian Gov[ernmen]t is a corrupt despotism, hostile to individual liberty of action and therefore to real progress and it would only be in common with all well wishers of man kind & not as an Englishman (& indeed I have no nationality) that I should feel grateful to you or any one else who by legitimate means (& what are under different |
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Page 2
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Page 3
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Perhaps you will retort "how about Slade's case?" but do not forget that he was taking money for what he did; making a living out of it. Very different would be the position of a man, who came forward to teach gratuitously, manifestly at the sacrifice of his own time, comfort and convenience, what he believed it to be for the good of mankind to know. At first no doubt everyone would say the man was mad or an impostor — but then when phenomenon on phenomenon was repeated and repeated, they would have to admit there was something in it, and within three years, you would have all the foremost minds in any civilized country intent upon the question and tens of thousands of anxious enquirers out of whom ten per cent. might prove useful workers, and one in a thousand perhaps develop the necessary qualifications for becoming ultimately an adept. If you desire to react on the native through the European mind that is the way to work it. Of course, I speak under correction and in ignorance of conditions, possibilities, etc., but |
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Page 4
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Then I come to the passage. "Has it occurred to you that the two Bombay publications if not influenced may at least have not been prevented by those who might have done so because they saw the necessity for that much agitation to effect the double result of making a needed diversion after the brooch grenade, & perhaps of trying the strength |
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Page 5
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Then come your remarks about Colonel Olcott. Dear old Olcott, whom everyone who knows must love. I fully sympathize in all you say |
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Page 6
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Page 7
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To return to Olcott — I do not think his connection with the proposed Society would be any evil. . . . |
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Page 8
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Page 9
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Page 10
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Page 11
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Yours sincerely, |
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Context and background
Physical description of letter
The original is in the British Library, Folio 3. According to George Linton and Virginia Hanson,
ML-99 is a letter from AOH to KH, forwarded to APS by KH with his comments thereon (ML-98). AOH's letter is in black ink on folded paper.[1]
Publication history
Commentary about this letter
Notes
- ↑ George E. Linton and Virginia Hanson, eds., Readers Guide to The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett (Adyar, Chennai, India: Theosophical Publishing House, 1972), 47.