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Theosophy:
Helena Blavatsky: Symbolism, Language, and Sound
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THE SECRET DOCTRINE:
THE SYNTHESIS
OF
SCIENCE, RELIGION, AND PHILOSOPHY.
by H. P. BLAVATSKY
BOOK I. -- PART II.
(SECRET DOCTRINE.)
§ I.
SYMBOLISM AND IDEOGRAPHS.
"A symbol is ever, to him who has eyes for it, some dimmer or
clearer revelation of the God-like. Through all there glimmers
something of a divine idea; nay, the highest ensign that men ever
met and embraced under the cross itself, had no meaning, save an
accidental extrinsic one." CARLYLE.
THE study of the hidden meaning in every religious
and profane legend, of whatsoever nation, large or small --
pre-eminently the traditions of the East -- has occupied the greater
portion of the present writer's life. She is one of those who feel
convinced that no mythological story, no traditional event in the
folk-lore of a people has ever been, at any time, pure fiction, but that
every one of such narratives has an actual, historical lining to it. In
this the writer disagrees with those symbologists, however great their
reputation, who find in every myth nothing save additional proofs of the
superstitious bent of mind of the ancients, and believe that all
mythologies sprung from and are built upon solar myths. Such
superficial thinkers were admirably disposed of by Mr. Gerald Massey,
the poet and Egyptologist, in a lecture on "Luniolatry, Ancient and
Modern." His pointed criticism is worthy of reproduction in this part of
this work, as it echoes so well our own feelings, expressed openly so
far back as 1875, when "Isis Unveiled" was written.
"For thirty years past Professor Max Muller has been teaching in his
books and lectures, in the Times and various magazines, from
the platform of the Royal Institution, the pulpit of Westminster
Abbey, and his chair at Oxford, that mythology is a disease of
language, and that the ancient symbolism was a result of something
like a primitive aberration.
"'We know,' says Renouf, echoing Max Muller, in his Hibbert
lectures, 'we know that mythology is the disease which
springs up at a peculiar stage of human culture.' Such is the
shallow explanation of the non-evolutionists, and such explanations
are still accepted by the British public, that gets its think-
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 304 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
ing done by proxy. Professor Max Muller, Cox, Gubernatis, and other
propounders of the Solar Mythos, have portrayed the primitive
myth-maker for us as a sort of Germanised-Hindu metaphysician,
projecting his own shadow on a mental mist, and talking ingeniously
concerning smoke, or, at least, cloud; the sky overhead
becoming like the dome of dreamland, scribbled over with the imagery
of aboriginal nightmares! They conceive the early man in their own
likeness, and look upon him as perversely prone to
self-mystification, or, as Fontenelle has it, 'subject to beholding
things that are not there.' They have misrepresented primitive or
archaic man as having been idiotically misled from the first by an
active but untutored imagination into believing all sorts of
fallacies, which were directly and constantly contradicted by his
own daily experience; a fool of fancy in the midst of those grim
realities that were grinding his experience into him, like the
grinding icebergs making their imprints upon the rocks submerged
beneath the sea. It remains to be said, and will one day be
acknowledged, that these accepted teachers have been no nearer to
the beginnings of mythology and language than Burns' poet Willie had
been near to Pegasus. My reply is, 'Tis but a dream of the
metaphysical theorist that mythology was a disease of language, or
of anything else except his own brain. The origin and meaning of
mythology have been missed altogether by these solarites and
weather-mongers! Mythology was a primitive mode of thinking
the early thought. It was founded on natural facts, and is still
verifiable in phenomena. There is nothing insane, nothing irrational
in it, when considered in the light of evolution, and when its mode
of expression by sign-language is thoroughly understood. The
insanity lies in mistaking it for human history or Divine
Revelation.* Mythology is the repository of man's most ancient
science, and what concerns us chiefly is this -- when truly
interpreted once more, it is destined to be the death of those false
theologies to which it has unwittingly given birth.** In modern
phraseology a statement is sometimes said to be mythical in
proportion to its being untrue; but the ancient mythology was not a
system or mode of falsifying in that sense. Its fables were the
means of conveying facts; they were neither forgeries nor fictions.
. . . For example, when the Egyptians portrayed the moon as a Cat,
they were not ignorant enough to suppose that the moon was a
cat; nor did their wandering fancies see any likeness in the moon to
a cat; nor was a cat-myth any mere expansion of verbal metaphor;
nor had they any intention of making puzzles or riddles. . . .
They had observed the simple fact that the cat saw in the dark, and
that her eyes became full-orbed, and grew most luminous by night.
The moon was the seer by night in heaven, and the cat was its
equivalent on the earth; and so the familiar cat was adopted as a
representative, a natural sign, a living pictograph of the lunar
orb. . . . And so it followed that the sun which saw down in the
under-world at night could also be called the cat, as it was,
because it also saw in the dark. The name of the
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* As far as divine revelation is concerned, we agree. Not so
with regard to "human history." . . . For there is
"history" in most of the allegories and "myths" of India, and events,
real actual events, are concealed under them.
** When the "false theologies" disappear, then true prehistoric
realities will be found, contained especially in the mythology of the
Aryans -- ancient Hindoos, and even the pre-Homeric Hellenes.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 305 EMBLEM AND SYMBOL DIFFER.
cat in Egyptian is mau, which denotes the seer, from
mau, to see. One writer on mythology asserts that the Egyptians
'imagined a great cat behind the sun, which is the pupil of the
cat's eye.' But this imagining is all modern. It is the Mullerite
stock in trade. The moon as cat was the eye of the sun,
because it reflected the solar light, and because
the eye gives back image in its mirror. In the form of the goddess
Pasht, the cat keeps watch for the sun, with her paw holding down
and bruising the head of the serpent of darkness, called his eternal
enemy. . . ."
This is a very correct exposition of the lunar-mythos from its
astronomical aspect. Selenography, however, is the least esoteric of the
divisions of lunar Symbology. To master thoroughly -- if one is
permitted to coin a new word -- Selenognosis, one must
become proficient in more than its astronomical meaning. The moon (vide
§ VII. Deus Lunus) is intimately related to the Earth,
as shown in Stanza VI. of Book I., and is more directly concerned with
all the mysteries of our globe than is even Venus-Lucifer, the occult
sister and alter-ego of the Earth.
The untiring researches of Western, and especially German,
symbologists, during the last and the present centuries, have brought
every Occultist and most unprejudiced persons to see that without the
help of symbology (with its seven departments, of which the moderns know
nothing) no ancient Scripture can ever be correctly understood.
Symbology must be studied from every one of its aspects, for each nation
had its own peculiar methods of expression. In short, no Egyptian
papyrus, no Indian tolla, no Assyrian tile, or Hebrew scroll, should be
read and accepted literally.
This every scholar now knows. The able lectures of Mr. G. Massey
alone are sufficient in themselves to convince any fair-minded
Christian that to accept the dead-letter of the Bible is equivalent to
falling into a grosser error and superstition than any hitherto evolved
by the brain of the savage South Sea Islander. But the point to which
even the most truth-loving and truth-searching Orientalists -- whether
Aryanists or Egyptologists -- seem to remain blind, is the fact that
every symbol in papyrus or olla is a many-faced diamond, each
of whose facets not merely bears several interpretations, but relates
likewise to several sciences. This is instanced in the just quoted
interpretation of the moon symbolized by the cat -- an example of
sidero-terrestrial imagery; the moon bearing many other meanings besides
this with other nations.
As a learned Mason and Theosophist, the late Mr. Kenneth Mackenzie,
has shown in his Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia, there is a
great difference between emblem and symbol. The former
"comprises a larger series of thoughts than a symbol, which may be said
rather to illustrate some single special idea." Hence, the symbols (say
lunar, or solar) of several countries, each illustrating such a special
idea, or series of ideas, form collectively an esoteric emblem. The
latter is "a concrete visible
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 306 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
picture or sign representing principles, or a series of principles,
recognizable by those who have received certain instructions"
(initiates). To put it still plainer, an emblem is usually a
series of graphic pictures viewed and explained allegorically, and
unfolding an idea in panoramic views, one after the other. Thus the
Puranas are written emblems. So are the Mosaic and Christian Testaments,
or the Bible, and all other exoteric Scriptures. As the same authority
shows: --
"All esoteric Societies have made use of emblems and symbols, such
as the Pythagorean Society, the Eleusinian, the Hermetic Brethren of
Egypt, the Rosicrucians, and the Freemasons. Many of these emblems
it is not proper to divulge to the general eye, and a very minute
difference may make the emblem or symbol differ widely in its
meaning. The magical sigillae, being founded on certain principles
of numbers, partake of this character, and although monstrous or
ridiculous in the eyes of the uninstructed, convey a whole body of
doctrine to those who have been trained to recognise them."
The above enumerated societies are all comparatively modern, none
dating back earlier than the middle ages. How much more proper, then,
that the students of the oldest Archaic School should be careful not to
divulge secrets of far more importance to humanity (in the sense of
being dangerous in the hands of the latter) than any of the so-called
"Masonic Secrets," which have now become, as the French say, those of
"Polichinelle!" But this restriction can apply only to the psychological
or rather psycho-physiological and Cosmical significance of symbol and
emblem, and even to that only partially. An adept must refuse to impart
the conditions and means that lead to a correlation of elements, whether
psychic or physical, that may produce a hurtful result as well as a
beneficent one. But he is ever ready to impart to the earnest student
the secret of the ancient thought in anything that regards history
concealed under mythological symbolism, and thus to furnish a few more
land-marks towards a retrospective view of the past, as containing
useful information with regard to the origin of man, the evolution of
the races and geognosy; yet it is the crying complaint of to-day, not
only among theosophists, but also among the few profane interested in
the subject. "Why do not the adepts reveal that which they know?" To
this, one might answer, "Why should they, since one knows beforehand
that no man of science will accept, even as an hypothesis, let alone as
a theory or axiom, the facts imparted. Have you so much as accepted or
believed in the A B C of the Occult philosophy contained in the
Theosophist, "Esoteric Buddhism," and other works and
periodicals? Has not even the little which was given, been ridiculed and
derided, and made to face the "animal" and "ape theory" of Huxley --
Haeckel, on one hand, and the rib of Adam and the apple on the other?
Notwithstanding such an unenviable prospect, a mass of facts is given in
the present work. And now the origin of man, the evolution of the globe
and
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 307 MAGIC POTENCY OF SOUND.
the races, human and animal, are as fully treated here as the writer
is able to treat them.
The proofs brought forward in corroboration of the old teachings are
scattered widely throughout the old scriptures of ancient civilizations.
The Puranas, the Zendavesta, and the old classics are full of them; but
no one has ever gone to the trouble of collecting and collating together
those facts. The reason for this is, that all such events were recorded
symbolically; and that the best scholars, the most acute minds, among
our Aryanists and Egyptologists, have been too often darkened by one or
another preconception; still oftener, by one-sided views of the secret
meaning. Yet even a parable is a spoken symbol: a fiction or a fable, as
some think; an allegorical representation, we say, of life-realities,
events, and facts. And, as a moral was ever drawn from a parable, that
moral being an actual truth and fact in human life, so an historical,
real event was deduced -- by those versed in the hieratic sciences --
from certain emblems and symbols recorded in the ancient archives of the
temples. The religious and esoteric history of every nation was embedded
in symbols; it was never expressed in so many words. All the thoughts
and emotions, all the learning and knowledge, revealed and acquired, of
the early races, found their pictorial expression in allegory and
parable. Why? Because the spoken word has a potency unknown to,
unsuspected and disbelieved in, by the modern "sages."
Because sound and rhythm are closely related to the four Elements of the
Ancients; and because such or another vibration in the air is sure to
awaken corresponding powers, union with which produces good or bad
results, as the case may be. No student was ever allowed to recite
historical, religious, or any real events in so many unmistakable words,
lest the powers connected with the event should be once more attracted.
Such events were narrated only during the Initiation, and every student
had to record them in corresponding symbols, drawn out of his own mind
and examined later by his master, before they were finally accepted.
Thus was created in time the Chinese Alphabet, as, before that, the
hieratic symbols were fixed upon in old Egypt. In the Chinese language,
the alphabet of which may be read in any language,* and which is only a
little less ancient than the Egyptian alphabet of Thoth, every word has
its corresponding symbol conveying the word needed in a pictorial form.
The language possesses many thousands of such symbol letters, or
logograms, each meaning a whole word; for letters proper, or an
alphabet, do not exist in the Chinese language any more than they did in
the Egyptian till a far later period.
[[Footnote(s)]] -------------------------------------------------
* Thus, a Japanese who does not understand one word of Chinese,
meeting with a Chinaman who has never heard the language of the former,
will communicate in writing with him, and they will understand each
other perfectly -- because the writing is symbolical.
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 308 THE SECRET DOCTRINE.
The explanation of the chief symbols and emblems is now attempted, as
Book II., which treats of Anthropogenesis, would be most difficult to
understand without a preparatory acquaintance with the metaphysical
symbols at least.
Nor would it be just to enter upon an esoteric reading of symbolism
without giving due honour to one who has rendered it the greatest
service in this century, by discovering the chief key to ancient Hebrew
symbology, interwoven strongly with metrology, one of the keys to the
once universal mystery language. Mr. Ralston Skinner, of Cincinnati, the
author of "The Hebrew-Egyptian Mystery and the Source of Measures" has
our thanks. A mystic and a Kabalist by nature, he has laboured for many
years in this direction, and his efforts were certainly crowned with
great success. In his own words: --
"The writer is quite certain that there was an ancient language
which modernly and up to this time appears to have been lost, the
vestiges of which, however, abundantly exist. . . . The author
discovered that this (integral ratio in numbers of diameter to
circumference of a circle) geometrical ratio was the very ancient,
and probably the divine origin of linear measures. . . . It appears
almost proven that the same system of geometry, numbers, ratio, and
measures were known and made use of on the continent of North
America, even prior to the knowledge of the same by the descending
Semites. . . . ."
"The peculiarity of this language was that it could be contained in
another, concealed and not to be perceived, save through the help of
special instruction; letters and syllabic signs possessing at the
same time the powers or meaning of numbers, of geometrical shapes,
pictures, or ideographs and symbols, the designed scope of which
would be determinatively helped out by parables in the shape of
narratives or parts of narratives; while also it could be set forth
separately, independently, and variously, by pictures, in stone
work, or in earth construction."
"To clear up an ambiguity as to the term language: Primarily the
word means the expression of ideas by human speech; but,
secondarily, it may mean the expression of ideas by any other
instrumentality. This old language is so composed in the Hebrew
text, that by the use of the written characters, which will be the
language first defined, a distinctly separated series of ideas may
be intentionally communicated, other than those ideas expressed by
the reading of the sound signs. This secondary language sets forth,
under a veil, series of ideas, copies in imagination of things
sensible, which may be pictured, and of things which may be classed
as real without being sensible; as, for instance, the number 9 may
be taken as a reality, though it has no sensible existence, so also
a revolution of the moon, as separate from the moon itself by which
that revolution has been made, may be taken as giving rise to, or
causing a real idea, though such a revolution has no substance. This
idea-language may consist of symbols restricted to arbitrary terms
and signs, having a very limited range of conceptions, and quite
valueless, or it may be a reading of nature in some of her
manifestations of a value almost immeasurable, as regards human
civilization. A picture of something natural may give rise to ideas
of co-ordina-
[[Helena Blavatsky, Vol. 1, Page]] 309 MYSTERY LANGUAGE.
tive subject-matter, radiating out in various and even opposing
directions, like the spokes of a wheel, and producing natural
realities in departments very foreign to the apparent tendency of
the reading of the first or starting picture. Notion may give rise
to connected notion, but if it does, then, however apparently
incongruous, all resulting ideas must spring from the original
picture and be harmonically connected, or related. . . . Thus with a
pictured idea radical enough, the imagination of the Cosmos itself
even in its details of construction might result. Such a use of
ordinary language is now obsolete, but it has become a question with
the writer whether at one time, far back in the past, it, or such,
was not the language of the world and of universal use, possessed,
however, as it became more and more moulded into its arcane forms,
by a select class or caste. By this I mean that the popular tongue
or vernacular commenced even in its origin to be made use of as the
vehicle of this peculiar mode of conveying ideas. Of this the
evidences are very strong; and, indeed, it would seem that in the
history of the human race there happened, from causes which at
present, at any rate, we cannot trace, a lapse or loss from an
original perfect language and a perfect system of science -- shall
we say perfect because they were of divine origin and importation?"
"Divine origin" does not mean here a revelation from an
anthropomorphic god on a mount amidst thunder and lightning; but, as we
understand it, a language and a system of science imparted to the early
mankind by a more advanced mankind, so much higher as
to be divine in the sight of that infant humanity. By a
"mankind," in short, from other spheres; an idea which contains nothing
supernatural in it, but the acceptance or rejection of which depends
upon the degree of conceit and arrogance in the mind of him to whom it
is stated. For, if the professors of modern knowledge would only confess
that, though they know nothing of the future of the disembodied man --
or rather will accept nothing -- yet this future may be pregnant with
surprises and unexpected revelations to them, once their Egos are rid of
their gross bodies -- then materialistic unbelief would have fewer
chances than it has. Who of them knows, or can tell, what may happen
when once the life cycle of this globe is run down and our mother earth
herself falls into her last sleep? Who is bold enough to say that the
divine Egos of our mankind -- at least the elect out
of the multitudes passing on to other spheres -- will not become in
their turn the "divine" instructors of a new mankind generated by
them on a new globe, called to life and activity by the disembodied
"principles" of our Earth? (See Stanza VI., Book I., Part 1.) All this
may have been the experience of the PAST, and these strange
records lie embedded in the "Mystery language" of the prehistoric ages,
the language now called SYMBOLISM.
--------------
from
The Secret Doctrine,
by H. P. Blavatsky
**
**
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