THE SECRET DOCTRINE:
THE SYNTHESIS
OF
SCIENCE, RELIGION, AND PHILOSOPHY.
by H. P. BLAVATSKY
§ VI.
THE MUNDANE EGG.
WHENCE this universal symbol? The Egg was
incorporated as a sacred sign in the cosmogony of every people on the
Earth, and was revered both on account of its form and its inner
mystery. From the earliest mental conceptions of man, it was known as
that which represented most successfully the origin and secret of being.
The gradual development of the imperceptible germ within the closed
shell; the inward working, without any apparent outward interference of
force, which from a latent nothing produced an active
something, needing nought save heat; and which, having
gradually evolved into a concrete, living creature, broke its shell,
appearing to the outward senses of all a self-generated, and
self-created being -- must have been a standing miracle from the
beginning.
The secret teaching explains the reason for this reverence by the
Symbolism of the prehistoric races. The "First Cause" had no name in the
beginnings. Later it was pictured in the fancy of the thinkers as an
ever invisible, mysterious Bird that dropped an Egg into Chaos, which
Egg becomes the Universe. Hence Brahm was called Kalahansa, "the swan in
(Space and) Time." He became the "Swan of Eternity," who lays at the
beginning of each Mahamanvantara a "Golden Egg." It typifies the great
Circle, or O, itself a symbol for the universe and its spherical bodies.
The second reason for its having been chosen as the symbolical
representation of the Universe, and of our earth, was its form. It was a
Circle and a Sphere; and the ovi-form shape of our globe must have been
known from the beginning of symbology, since it was so universally
adopted. The first manifestation of the Kosmos in the form of an egg was
the most widely diffused belief of antiquity. As Bryant shows (iii.,
165), it was a symbol adopted among the Greeks, the Syrians, Persians,
and Egyptians. In chap. liv. of the Egyptian Ritual, Seb, the god of
Time and of the Earth, is spoken of as having laid an egg, or the
Universe, "an egg conceived at the hour of the great one of the Dual
Force" (Sec. V., 2, 3, etc.).
Ra is shown like Brahma gestating in the Egg of the Universe. The
deceased is "resplendent in the Egg of the land of mysteries" (xxii.,
1). For, this is "the Egg to which is given life among the gods" (xlii.,
11). "It is the Egg of the great clucking Hen, the Egg of Seb, who
issues from it like a hawk" (lxiv., 1, 2, 3; lxxvii., 1).
With the Greeks the Orphic Egg is described by Aristophanes, and was
part of the Dionysiac and other mysteries, during which
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 360 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
the Mundane Egg was consecrated and its significance explained;
Porphyry showing it a representation of the world, [[Ermenenei de to
oon kosmon]]. Faber and Bryant have tried to show that the egg
typified the ark of Noah, which, unless the latter is accepted as purely
allegorical and symbolical, is a wild belief. It can have typified the
ark only as a synonym of the moon, the argha which carries the
universal seed of life; but had surely nothing to do with the ark of the
Bible. Anyhow, the belief that the universe existed in the beginning in
the shape of an egg was general. And as Wilson has it: "A similar
account of the first aggregation of the elements in the form of an egg
is given in all the (Indian) Puranas, with the usual epithet Haima or
Hiranya, 'golden' as it occurs in Manu." Hiranya, however, means
"resplendent," "shining," rather than "golden," as proven by the great
Indian scholar, the late Swami Dayanand Sarasvati, in his unpublished
polemics with Professor Max Muller. As said in the Vishnu Purana:
"Intellect (Mahat) . . . the (unmanifested) gross elements inclusive,
formed an egg . . . and the lord of the Universe himself abided in it,
in the character of Brahma. In that egg, O Brahman, were the continents,
and seas and mountains, the planets and divisions of the universe, the
gods, the demons and mankind." (Book i., ch. 2.)
Both in Greece and in India the first visible male being, who
united in himself the nature of either sex, abode in the egg and issued
from it. This "first born of the world" was Dionysius, with some Greeks;
the god who sprang from the mundane egg, and from whom the mortals and
immortals were derived. The god Ra is shown in the Ritual (Book
of the Dead, xvii., 50) beaming in his egg (the Sun), and he starts off
as soon as the god Shoo (the Solar energy) awakens and gives
him the impulse. "He is in the Solar egg, the egg to which is given life
among the gods" (Ibid., xlii., 13). The Solar
god exclaims: "I am the creative soul of the celestial abyss. None sees
my nest, none can break my egg, I am the Lord!" (Ibid.,
LXXXV.).
In view of this circular form, the "|" issuing from the "
,"
or the egg, or the male from the female in the androgyne, it is strange
to find a scholar saying -- on the ground that the most ancient Indian
MSS. show no trace of it -- that the ancient Aryans were ignorant
of the decimal notation. The 10, being the sacred number of the
universe, was secret and esoteric, both as the unit and cipher, or
zero, the circle. Moreover, Professor Max Muller says that
"the two words cipher and zero, which are but
one, are sufficient to prove that our figures are borrowed from the
Arabs.* Cipher is the Arabic "cifron," and means
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* See Max Muller's "Our Figures."
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 361 WHENCE OUR FIGURES?
empty, a translation of the Sanscrit name of nought
"sunya," he says.* The Arabs had their figures from Hindustan, and never
claimed the discovery for themselves.** As to the Pythagoreans, we need
but turn to the ancient manuscripts of Boethius's Geometry,
composed in the sixth century, to find among the Pythagorean
numerals*** the 1 and the nought, as the first and
final ciphers. And Porphyry, who quotes from the Pythagorean
Moderatus,**** says that the numerals of Pythagoras were
"hieroglyphical symbols, by means whereof he explained ideas concerning
the nature of things," or the origin of the universe.
Now, if, on the other hand, the most ancient Indian manuscripts show
as yet no trace of decimal notation in them, and Max Muller states very
clearly that until now he has found but nine letters (the initials of
the Sanscrit numerals) in them; on the other hand, we have records as
ancient to supply the wanted proof. We speak of the sculptures and the
sacred imagery in the most ancient temples of the far East. Pythagoras
derived his knowledge from India; and we find Professor Max Muller
corroborating this statement, at least so far as to allow the Neo-Pythagoreans
to have been the first teachers of "ciphering," among the Greeks and
Romans; that "they at Alexandria, or in Syria, became acquainted with
the Indian figures, and adapted them to the Pythagorean abacus" (our
figures). This cautious admission implies that Pythagoras himself was
acquainted with but nine figures. Thus we might reasonably
answer that, although we possess no certain proof (exoterically)
that the decimal notation was known by Pythagoras, who lived on the
very close of the archaic ages,***** we have yet sufficient evidence to
show that the full numbers, as given by Boethius, were known to the
Pythagoreans, even before Alexandria was built.****** This evidence we
find in Aristotle, who says that "some philosophers hold that ideas and
numbers are of the same nature, and amount to TEN in all."******* This,
we believe, will be sufficient to show that the decimal notation was
known among them at least as early as four centuries B.C., for Aristotle
does not seem to treat the question as an innovation of the
"Neo-Pythagoreans."
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* A Kabalist would be rather inclined to believe that as the Arabic
cifron was taken from the Indian Synya, nought, so the
Jewish Kabalistic Sephiroth (Sephrim) were taken from the word
cipher, not in the sense of emptiness but the reverse -- that of
creation by number and degrees in their evolution. And the Sephiroth are
10 or
.
** See Max Muller's "Our Figures."
*** See King's "Gnostics and their Remains," plate xiii.
**** "Vita Pythag."
***** 608 B.C.
****** This city was built 332 B.C.
******* "Metaph." vii., F.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 362 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
But we know more than that: we know that the
decimal system must have been known to the mankind of the earliest
archaic ages, since the whole astronomical and geometrical portion of
the secret sacerdotal language was built upon the number 10, or the
combination of the male and female principles, and since the Pyramid of
"Cheops" is built upon the measures of this decimal notation, or rather
upon the digits and their combinations with the nought. Of
this, however, sufficient was said in Isis Unveiled,
and it is useless to repeat and return to the same subject.
The symbolism of the Lunar and Solar Deities is so inextricably mixed
up, that it is next to impossible to separate such glyphs as the egg,
the lotus, and the "sacred" animals from each other. The ibis,
for instance, sacred to Isis, who is often represented with the
head of that bird, sacred also to Mercury or Thoth, because that god
assumed its form while escaping from Typhon, -- the ibis was
held in the greatest veneration in Egypt. There were two kinds of
ibises, Herodotus tells us (Lib. II. c. 75 et seq.) in
that country: one quite black, the other black and
white. The former is credited with fighting and exterminating the winged
serpents which came every spring from Arabia and infested the country.
The other was sacred to the moon, because the latter planet is white and
brilliant on her external side, dark and black on that side which she
never turns to the earth. Moreover, the ibis kills land
serpents, and makes the most terrible havoc amongst the eggs of the
crocodile, and thus saves Egypt from having the Nile infested by those
horrible Saurians. The bird is credited with doing so in the moonlight,
and thus being helped by Isis, as the moon, her
sidereal symbol. But the nearer esoteric truth underlying these popular
myths is, that Hermes, as shown by Abenephius (De cultu Egypt.),
watched under the form of that bird over the Egyptians, and taught
them the occult arts and sciences. This means simply that the ibis
religiosa had and has "magical" properties in common with many
other birds, the albatross pre-eminently, and the mythical white swan,
the swan of Eternity or Time, the KALAHANSA.
Were it otherwise, indeed, why should all the ancient peoples, who
were no more fools than we are, have had such a superstitious dread of
killing certain birds? In Egypt, he who killed an ibis,
or the golden hawk -- the symbol of the Sun and Osiris -- risked
and could hardly escape death. The veneration of some nations for birds
was such that Zoroaster, in his precepts, forbids their slaughter as a
heinous crime. We laugh in our age at every kind of divination. Yet why
should so many generations have believed in divination by birds, and
even in zoomancy, said by Suidas to have been imparted by Orpheus, who
taught how to perceive in the yoke and white of
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 363 EGG-BORN LOGOI.
the egg, under certain conditions, that which the bird born from it
would have seen around it during its short life. This occult art, which
demanded 3,000 years ago the greatest learning and the most abstruse
mathematical calculations, has now fallen into the depths of
degradation: it is old cooks and fortune-tellers who read their future
to servant-girls in search of husbands, by means of the white of an egg
in a glass.
Nevertheless, even Christians have to this day their sacred birds;
for instance, the dove, the symbol of the Holy Ghost. Nor have they
neglected the sacred animals. The Evangelical zoolatry -- the
Bull, the Eagle, the Lion, and the Angel (in reality the Cherub, or
Seraph, the fiery-winged Serpent), is as much pagan as that of the
Egyptians or the Chaldeans. These four animals are, in reality, the
symbols of the four elements, and of the four lower principles
in man. Nevertheless, they correspond physically and materially to the
four constellations that form, so to speak, the suite or
cortege of the Solar God, and occupy during the winter solstice the
four cardinal points of the zodiacal circle. These four "animals" may be
seen in many of the Roman Catholic New Testaments where the
portraits of the evangelists are given. They are the animals of
Ezekiel's Mercabah.
As truly stated by Ragon, "the ancient Hierophants have combined so
cleverly the dogmas and symbols of their religious philosophies, that
these symbols can be fully explained only by the combination and
knowledge of all the keys." They can be only approximately
interpreted, even if one finds out three out of these seven
systems: the anthropological, the psychic,
and the astronomical. The two chief interpretations, the
highest and the lowest, the spiritual and the physiological, they
preserved in the greatest secrecy until the latter fell into the
dominion of the profane. Thus far, with regard only to the
pre-historic Hierophants, with whom that which has now become
purely (or impurely) phallic, was a science as profound and as
mysterious as biology and physiology are now. This was their exclusive
property, the fruit of their studies and discoveries. The other two were
those which dealt with the creative gods (theogony), and with creative
man, i.e., the ideal and the practical mysteries. These
interpretations were so cleverly veiled and combined, that many were
those who, while arriving at the discovery of one meaning, were baffled
in understanding the significance of the others, and could never
unriddle them sufficiently to commit dangerous indiscretions. The
highest, the first and the fourth -- theogony in relation to
anthropogony -- were almost impossible to fathom. We find the proofs of
this in the Jewish "Holy Writ."
It is owing to the serpent being oviparous, that it became a symbol
of wisdom and an emblem of the Logoi, or the self-born. In the
temple of Philoe in Upper Egypt, an egg was artificially prepared of
clay made of
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 364 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
various incenses, and it was made to hatch by a peculiar process,
when a cerastes (the horned viper) was born. The same was done
in antiquity for the cobra in the Indian temples. The creative
God emerges from the egg that issues from the mouth of Kneph -- as a
winged serpent -- because the Serpent is the symbol of the All-wisdom.
With the Hebrews he is glyphed by the "flying or fiery serpents" of the
Wilderness and Moses, and with the Alexandrian mystics he becomes the
Ophio-Christos, the Logos of the Gnostics. The Protestants try to show
that the allegory of the Brazen Serpent and of the "fiery serpents" has
a direct reference to the mystery of Christ and Crucifixion*; but it has
a far nearer relation, in truth, to the mystery of generation,
when dissociated from the egg with the central germ, or the
circle with its central point. The brazen Serpent had no
such holy meaning as that; nor was it, in fact, glorified above the "fiery
serpents" for the bite of which it was only a natural remedy.
The symbological meaning of the word "brazen" being the feminine
principle, and that of fiery, or "gold," the male one.**
In the Book of the Dead, as just shown, reference
is often made to the Egg. Ra, the mighty one, remains in his Egg, during
the struggle between the "children of the rebellion" and Shoo
(the Solar Energy and the Dragon of Darkness) (ch. xvii.). The deceased
is resplendent in his
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* And this only because the brazen serpent was lifted on a
pole! It had rather a reference to Mico the Egyptian egg standing
upright supported by the sacred Tau; since the Egg and the Serpent are
inseparable in the old worship and symbology of Egypt, and since both
the Brazen and "fiery" serpents were Saraphs, the
"burning fiery" messengers, or the serpent Gods, the nagas of
India. It was a purely phallic symbol without the egg, while when
associated with it -- it related to cosmic creation.
** "Brass was a metal symbolizing the nether world . . . .
that of the womb where life should be given . . . The word for serpent
was in Hebrew Nakash, but this is the same term for
brass." It is said in Numbers (xxi.) that the Jews
complained of the Wilderness where there was no water (v.
5); after which "the Lord sent fiery serpents" to bite them, when, to
oblige Moses, he gives him as a remedy the brazen serpent on a
pole to look at; after which "any man when he beheld the serpent of
brass . . . . lived" (?). After that the "Lord,"
gathering the people together at the well of Beer, gives them water,
(14-16), and grateful Israel sang this song, "Spring up, O Well," (v.
17). When, after studying symbology, the Christian reader comes to
understand the innermost meaning of these three symbols -- water,
brazen, the serpent, and a few more -- in the
sense given to them in the Holy Bible, he will hardly like
to connect the sacred name of his Saviour with the "Brazen Serpent"
incident. The Seraphim
(fiery
winged serpents) are no doubt connected with, and inseparable from, the
idea "of the serpent of eternity -- God," as explained in Kenealy's
Apocalypse. But the word cherub also meant serpent, in one sense, though
its direct meaning is different; because the Cherubim and the
Persian winged [[gruphes]] "griffins" -- the guardians
of the golden mountain -- are the same, and their compound name shows
their character, as it is formed of
(kr) circle,
and
"aub," or ob -- serpent --
therefore, a "serpent in a circle." And this settles the phallic
character of the Brazen Serpent, and justifies Hezekiah for breaking it.
(See II. Kings, 18, 4). Verbum sat. sapienti.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 365 THE WINGED GLOBE.
Egg when he crosses to the land of mystery (xxii. i.). He is the Egg
of Seb (liv. 1-3). . . . The Egg was the symbol of life in
immortality and eternity; as also the glyph of the generative
matrix; and the tau, associated with it, only of life
and birth in generation. The Mundane Egg was placed in
Khnoom, the "Water of Space," or the feminine
abstract principle (Khnoom becoming, with the fall of
mankind into generation and phallicism, Ammon, the creative
God); and when Phtah, the "fiery god," carries the
Mundane egg in his hand, then the symbolism becomes quite terrestrial
and concrete in its significance. In conjunction with the hawk, the
symbol of Osiris-Sun, the symbol is dual: it relates to both lives --
the mortal and the immortal. In Kircher's OEdipus Egyptiacus
(vol. iii., p. 124) one can see, on the papyrus engraved in it, an egg
floating above the mummy. This is the symbol of hope and the promise of
a second birth for the Osirified dead; his Soul, after
due purification in the Amenti, will gestate in this egg of immortality,
to be reborn from it into a new life on earth. For this Egg, in the
esoteric Doctrine, is the Devachan, the abode of
Bliss; the winged scarabeus being alike a symbol of it. The "winged
globe" is but another form of the egg, and has the same significance as
the scarabeus, the Khopiroo (from the root Khoproo "to
become," "to be reborn,") which relates to the rebirth of man, as well
as to his spiritual regeneration.
In the Theogony of Mochus, we find AEther first, and then the air,
from which Ulom, the intelligible ([[noetos]]) deity
(the visible Universe of Matter) is born out of the Mundane Egg.
(Mover's Phoinizer, p. 282.)
In the Orphic Hymns, the Eros-Phanes evolves from the divine
Egg, which the AEthereal Winds impregnate, wind being "the
Spirit of the unknown Darkness" -- "the spirit of God" (as explains K.
O. Muller, 236); the divine "Idea," says Plato, "who is said to move
AEther."
In the Hindu Katakopanishad, Purusha, the divine
spirit, already stands before the original matter, "from whose union
springs the great soul of the world," Maha-Atma, Brahma, the Spirit of
Life,* etc., etc.** Besides this there are many charming allegories on
this subject scattered through the sacred books of the Brahmins. In one
place it is the female creator who is first a germ, then a drop of
heavenly dew, a pearl, and then an egg. In such cases -- of which there
are too many to enumerate them separately -- the Egg gives birth to the
four elements within the fifth, Ether, and is covered with seven
coverings, which become later on the seven upper and the seven lower
worlds. Breaking in two, the shell becomes the heaven, and the meat in
the egg the earth, the white forming the terres-
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* The latter appellations are all identical with Anima Mundi,
or the "Universal Soul," the astral light of the Kabalist and the
Occultist, or the "Egg of Darkness."
** Weber, "Akad Vorles," pp. 213, 214 et seq.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 366 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
trial waters. Then again, it is Vishnu who emerges from within the
egg with a lotus in his hand. Vinata, a daughter of Daksha and wife of
Kasyapa ("the Self-born sprung from Time," one of the seven "creators"
of our world), brought forth an egg from which was born Garuda, the
vehicle of Vishnu, the latter allegory having a relation to our Earth
only, as Garuda is the Great Cycle.
The egg was sacred to Isis; the priests of Egypt never ate eggs on
that account.*
Diodorus Siculus states that Osiris was born from an Egg, like
Brahma. From Leda's Egg Apollo and Latona were born, as also Castor and
Pollux -- the bright Gemini. And though the Buddhists do not attribute
the same origin to their Founder, yet, no more than the ancient
Egyptians or the modern Brahmins, do they eat eggs, lest they should
destroy the germ of life latent in them, and commit thereby Sin. The
Chinese believe that their first man was born from an egg, which
Tien, a god, dropped down from heaven to earth into the
waters.** This symbol is still regarded by some as representing the idea
of the origin of life, which is a scientific truth, though the human
ovum is invisible to the naked eye. Therefore we see respect shown
to it from the remotest past, by the Greeks, Phoenicians, Romans, the
Japanese, and the Siamese, the North and South American tribes, and even
the savages of the remotest islands.
With the Egyptians, the concealed god was Ammon (Mon). All
their gods were dual: the scientific reality for the Sanctuary;
its double, the fabulous and mythical Entity, for the masses. For
instance, as observed in "Chaos, Theos, Kosmos," the older Horus was the
Idea of the world remaining in the demiurgic mind "born in
Darkness before the creation of the world;" the second Horus***
was the same Idea going forth from the Logos,
becoming clothed with matter and assuming an actual existence. (Compare
Mover's "Phoinizer," p. 268.) The
same with Khnoum and Ammon;**** both are represented
ram-headed, and both often confused, though their functions are
different. Khnoum is "the modeller of men," fashioning men and things
out of the Mundane Egg on a potter's wheel;
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* Isis is almost always represented holding a lotus in one hand and
in the other a circle and the Cross (crux ansata), the
Egg being sacred to her.
** The Chinese seem to have thus anticipated Sir William Thomson's
theory that the first living germ had dropped to the Earth from some
passing comet. Query! why should this be called scientific and
the Chinese idea a superstitious, foolish theory?
*** Horus -- the "older," or Haroiri, is an ancient
aspect of the solar god, contemporary with Ra and Shoo;
Haroiri is often mistaken for Hor (Horsusi), Son of Osiris and
Isis. The Egyptians very often represented the rising Sun under the form
of Hor the older, rising from a full-blown lotus, the Universe, when the
solar disc is always found on the hawk-head of that god. Haroiri is
Khnoum.
**** Ammon or Mon, the "hidden," the Supreme
Spirit.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 367 THE SCANDINAVIAN LOGOS.
Ammon-Ra, the generator, is the secondary aspect of the concealed
deity. Khnoum was adored at Elephanta and Philoe,* Ammon at Thebes. But
it is Emepht, the One, Supreme Planetary principle, who blows
the egg out of his mouth, and who is, therefore, Brahma. The shadow of
the deity, Kosmic and universal, of that which broods over and permeates
the egg with its vivifying Spirit until the germ contained in it is
ripe, was the mystery god whose name was unpronounceable. It is
Phtah, however, "he who opens," the opener of life and Death,** who
proceeds from the egg of the world to begin his dual work. (Book of
Numbers.)
According to the Greeks, the phantom form of the Chemis (Chemi,
ancient Egypt) which floats on the ethereal waves of the Empyrean
Sphere, was called into being by Horus-Apollo, the Sun god, who caused
it to evolve out of the Mundane egg.***
In the Scandinavian Cosmogony -- placed by Professor Max Muller, in
point of time, as "far anterior to the Vedas" in the poem of Voluspa
(the song of the prophetess), the Mundane egg is again discovered in the
phantom-germ of the Universe, which is represented as lying in the
Ginnungagap -- the cup of illusion (Maya)
the boundless and void abyss. In this world's matrix, formerly a
region of night and desolation, Nebelheim (the mist-place, the
nebular as it is called now, in the astral light) dropped a
ray of cold light which overflowed this cup and froze in it. Then
the Invisible blew a scorching wind which dissolved the frozen
waters and cleared the mist. These waters (chaos), called the streams of
Elivagar, distilling in vivifying drops, fell down and
created the earth and the giant Ymir, who only had
"the semblance of man" (the Heavenly man), and the cow, Audhumla
(the "mother" or astral light, Cosmic Soul) from whose udder flowed
four streams of milk (the four cardinal points: the four heads
of the four rivers of Eden, etc., etc.) and which "four" allegorically
are symbolized by the cube in all its various and mystical
meanings.
The Christians -- especially the Greek and Latin Churches -- have
fully adopted the symbol, and see in it a commemoration of life eternal,
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* His triadic goddesses are Sati and Anouki.
** Phtah was originally the god of death, of destruction,
like Siva. He is a solar god only by virtue of
the sun's fire killing as well as vivifying. He was the national god of
Memphis, the radiant and "fair-faced God." (See Saqquarah Bronzes,
Saitic Epoch.)
*** The Brahmanda Purana contains the mystery about Brahma's
golden egg fully; and this is why, perhaps, it is inaccessible to the
Orientalists, who say that this Purana, like the Skanda, is "no longer
procurable in a collective body," but "is represented by a variety of
Khandas and Mahatmyas professing to be derived from it." The "Brahmanda
Purana" is described as "that which is declared in 12,200 verses, the
magnificence of the egg of Brahma, and in which an account of the future
Kalpas is contained as revealed by Brahma." Quite so, and much more,
perchance.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 368 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
of salvation and of resurrection. This is found in and corroborated
by the time-honoured custom of exchanging "Easter Eggs." From the
anguinum, the "Egg" of the "pagan" Druid, whose name alone
made Rome tremble with fear, to the red Easter Egg of the Slavonian
peasant, a cycle has passed. And yet, whether in civilized Europe, or
among the abject savages of Central America, we find the same archaic,
primitive thought; if we only search for it and do not disfigure -- in
the haughtiness of our fancied mental and physical superiority -- the
original idea of the symbol.
--------------
from
The Secret Doctrine,
by H. P. Blavatsky
**
**
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