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(p.109)
CHAPTER IV
THE 
ANTAGONISATION
EVEN had we been disposed, which happily we were not, to 
exalt ourselves on the strength of the loftiness of our mission, the constant 
proofs afforded us of the paucity of our knowledge in comparison with what 
remained to be known, would have effectually restrained us. But as it was, we 
were from the first penetrated by the conviction that only in so far as we 
succeeded in subordinating the individual to the universal, the personal to the 
divine, could the work be successfully accomplished. The man must make himself 
nothing that the God may be all. This was the burden of the injunctions enforced 
on us throughout; the failures of others through self-exaltation being adduced 
in illustration. For, as we were plainly given to understand, "many are called 
but few are chosen"; the weak point in their system, the "Judas" by whom they 
are betrayed and fail, being generally vanity. They are as instruments which 
mistake themselves for the mind and hand which wield them.
Humility and Love, the violet and the red, these are the two extremes of the prism which comprise between them all the Seven Spirits of God. Blended, they make the royal purple; but the hue of that purple depends on the spiritual states of the individuals themselves whose tinctures they are. They were, we were told, the tinctures of our own souls as indicated by the colours of our
(p. 110)
respective auras. "Mary's" was the "blood-red ray of the 
innermost sphere," the sphere of the "first of the Gods," wherein "love and 
wisdom are one." "For the Hebrews Uriel, for the Greeks Phoibos, the Bright One 
of God." Mine was the violet of the outermost sphere, that of the "last of the 
Gods," the "Spirit of the Fear of the Lord," and therein of Reverence and 
Humility; for the Greeks Saturn, and for the Hebrews Satan, the "Angel unfallen 
of the outermost sphere." Only when man is built up of all the Gods, and bears 
upon him the seal of each God, having climbed the ladder of his regeneration 
from circumference to centre, from "Saturn" to the "Sun," is the "week" of his 
new and spiritual creation accomplished. Similarly the co-operation of all these 
divine potencies was indispensable to our work. And we were emphatically warned 
of the dangers both to it and to ourselves, that would come of the lack of the 
divine presence in respect of any of them. Hence the necessity of maintaining 
the necessary conditions in ourselves, and the caution addressed to us by 
"Hermes," in view of the liability of mortals to appropriate to themselves the 
importance appertaining to their mission when this transcends the ordinary. To 
this end, in the following Exhortation, he disclosed to us the heights yet to be 
ascended, saying –
He whose adversaries fight with 
weapons of steel, must himself be armed in like manner, if he would not be 
ignominiously slain or save himself by flight.
And not only so, but forasmuch as 
his adversaries may be many, while he is only one; it is even necessary that the 
steel he carries be of purer temper and of more subtle point and contrivance 
than theirs.
(p. 111)
I, Hermes, would arm you with such, 
that bearing a blade with a double edge, ye may be able to withstand in the evil 
hour.
For it is written that the tree of 
life is guarded by a sword which turneth every way.
Therefore I would have you armed 
both with a perfect philosophy and with the power of the divine life.
And first the knowledge; that you 
and they who hear you may know the reason of the faith which is in you.
But knowledge cannot prevail alone, 
and ye are not yet perfected.
When the fulness of the time shall 
come, I will add unto you the power of the divine life.
It is the life of contemplation, of 
fasting, of obedience, and of resistance.
And afterwards the chrism, the 
power, and the glory. But these are not yet.
Meanwhile remain together and 
perfect your philosophy.
Boast not, and be not lifted up; for 
all things are God's, and ye are in God, and God in you.
But when the word shall come to you, 
be ready to obey.
There is but one way to power, and 
it is the way of obedience.
Call no man your master or king upon 
the earth, lest ye forsake the spirit for the form and become idolaters.
He who is indeed spiritual, and 
transformed into the divine image, desires a spiritual king.
Purify your bodies, and eat no dead 
thing that has looked with living eyes upon the light of Heaven.
For the eye is the symbol of 
brotherhood among you. Sight is the mystical sense.
Let no man take the life of his 
brother to feed withal his own.
But slay only such as are evil; in 
the name of the Lord.
They are miserably deceived who 
expect eternal life, and restrain not their hands from blood and death.
(p. 112)
They are miserably deceived who look 
for wives from on high, and have not yet attained their manhood.
Despise not the gift of knowledge; 
and make not spiritual eunuchs of yourselves.
For Adam was first formed, then Eve.
Ye are twain, the man with the 
woman, and she with him, neither man nor woman, but one creature.
And the 
The 
knowledge of the "Seven Spirits" whereby Deity operates in the universe, has 
been completely dropped out of sight by the Christian world. It is necessary, 
therefore, if only in vindication of the importance attached to them by our 
illuminators, to recite the instruction received by us concerning them, which is 
as follows. It is a chapter from the recovered Gnosis (2): 
–
"In the bosom of the Eternal were all the 
Gods comprehended, as the seven spirits of the prism, contained in the Invisible Light.
*         
*         
*         
*         
*
By the Word of Elohim were the Seven Elohim 
manifest:
(p. 113)
even, the Seven Spirits of God in the order 
of their precedence:
The Spirit of Wisdom, the Spirit of 
Understanding, the Spirit of Counsel, the Spirit of Power, the Spirit of 
Knowledge, the Spirit of Righteousness, and the Spirit of Divine Awfulness.
All these are coequal and coeternal.
Each has the nature of the whole in 
itself: and each is a perfect entity.
And the brightness of their 
manifestation shineth forth from the midst of each, as wheel within wheel, 
encircling the White Throne of the Invisible Trinity in Unity.
These are the Divine fires which 
burn before the presence of God: which proceed from the Spirit, and are one with 
the Spirit.
He is divided, yet not diminished: 
He is All, and He is One.
For the Spirit of God is a flame of 
fire which the Word of God divideth into many: yet the original flame is not 
decreased, nor the power thereof nor the brightness thereof lessened.
Thou mayest light many lamps from 
the flame of one; yet thou dost in nothing diminish that first flame.
Now the Spirit of God is expressed 
by the Word of God, which is Adonai.
For without the Word the Will could 
have had no utterance.
Thus the Divine Will divided the 
Spirit of God, and the seven fires went forth from the bosom of God and became 
seven spiritual entities.
They went forth into the Divine 
Substance, which is the substance of all that is."
As already stated, 
Hermes is the Greek name for the Second of the creative Elohim above enumerated. 
Hence his special relation to the New Gospel of Interpretation, the appeal of 
which is to the Understanding.
(p. 114)
Being shown 
one day in vision the path we had to traverse for the accomplishment of our 
work, "Mary" exclaimed: –
"What a dreadfully difficult thing 
it is to steer one's way amidst such numbers of influences! I see a fine, 
bright-shining thread. It is our own path, and it is a pathway of light. But, 
oh! so narrow, so narrow, and all around are spirits trying to lure us from it. 
Here is Hermes, shining like a silver light. My Genius says that the way to get 
the utmost vitality on the spiritual plane is to abandon the plane of the body, 
and keep it quite low, by not indulging it. The time for bodily indulgence is 
passed with us. Abstinence, we have been told, and watchfulness and fasting are 
needful. And the time for the first of these has come. Nothing is gained without 
labour or won without suffering. Fasting and Watching and Abstinence, these are 
Beads and Rosary. It is a hard way and a long way, and it makes one wishful to 
turn back. We are not to be misled by the story, so much dwelt on to you by the 
Astrals, of Moses and Aaron (1). They both were failures, who entered not into the 
So far as I 
was concerned, there was yet another rule that was made absolute: this was the 
rule of Poverty. Desiring at one time to mitigate the rigour of my enforced 
economies by working with a commercial intent, and to that end endeavouring to 
finish a tale some time before commenced, I found myself baffled by a complete 
withdrawal of power. I was well aware that no romance I could
(p. 115)
devise would compare with 
the romance I was living, and that any incidents I could invent would be tame 
before those of my actual life; but it was not this that withheld me. It was 
made clear to me that there was now only one direction and one plane in which I 
was accessible to ideas and in which therefore I could work, and this a 
direction and plane altogether incompatible with mundane ends. But I had not 
fully reconciled myself to the loss of my earning power, or resolved to refrain 
from further efforts in that behalf, when I received the following experience.
            I had gone to bed, but not to sleep, for thinking over the 
matter, when I became aware of the presence of a group of spiritual influences, 
one of whom, speaking for them all, said to me, in tones audible only to the 
inner hearing, but distinct, measured and authoritative –
"We whom you know as the Gods – 
Zeus, Phoibos, Hermes, and the rest – are actual celestial personalities, who 
are appointed to represent to mortals the principles and potencies called the 
Seven Spirits of God. We have chosen you for our instrument, and have tried you 
and proved you and instructed you; and you belong to us to do our work and not 
your own, save in so far as you make it your own. Only in such measure as you do 
this will you have any success. For you can do nothing without us now: and it is 
useless for you to attempt to do anything without our help."
By this and 
manifold other experiences, we had practical demonstration of the existence of a 
celestial hierarchy consisting of souls perfected and divinised, divided into 
orders corresponding to the "Seven Spirits of God," and having for their 
function the illumination of those souls of men
(p. 116)
still on earth who are 
accessible by them; and to whom they manifest themselves in the forms recognised 
in the mysteries in which such persons have formerly been initiated.
            We 
had also manifold proofs of their power to arrest utterance before persons unfit 
to be entrusted with the mysteries. The first instance occurred to myself, and 
was in this wise. I was reading some passages in illustration of our work to an 
old clerical friend who came to see me in 
Not thinking 
that "Mary" was liable to err in the same way, or caring to tell her of my 
trespass, I kept silence respecting this experience. But a few weeks later it 
was repeated for her. She was speaking of our work to a spiritualist friend with 
whom we were spending the evening, and, in her eagerness, got upon topics which 
I recognised as forbidden. But before I had time to remind her, she suddenly 
stopped short and rose from her seat, gasping and dazed, and insisted on 
returning home forthwith, to our hostess's great amazement and disappointment. 
Divining what had occurred, I refrained from questioning her until we were 
outside and alone, when in reply to me she described
(p. 117)
exactly what had happened 
to me, using the words, "I did not want to be choked!" There were other 
occasions on which I was cut short under like circumstances, by having all that 
I meant to say suddenly and completely obliterated from my mind.
Being 
desirous to know more of the adverse influences against which we had been 
warned, and from which we suffered, "Mary" consulted her illuminator respecting 
their origin and nature, when the following colloquy ensued: –
"They are," he said, "the powers 
which affect and influence Sensitives. They do not control, for they have no 
force. (...) They are Reflects. They have no real entity in themselves. They 
resemble mists which arise from the damp earth of low-lying lands, and which the 
heat of the sun disperses. Again, they are like vapours in high altitudes, upon 
which, if a man's shadow falls, he beholds himself as a giant. For these spirits 
invariably flatter and magnify a man to himself. And this is a sign whereby you 
may know them. They tell one that he is a king; another, that he is a Christ; 
another, that he is the wisest of mortals, and the like. For, being born of the 
fluids of the body, they are unspiritual and live 
of the body."
"Do they, then," I asked, "come from within the man?"
"All things," he replied "come from within. A man's foes are they of his 
own household."
"And how," I asked, "may we discern 
the Astrals from the higher spirits?"
"I have told you of one sign; – they are flattering spirits. Now I will 
tell you of another. They always depreciate Woman. And they do this because 
their deadliest foe is the Intuition. And these, too, are signs. Is there 
anything strong? They will make it weak. Is there anything wise? They will make 
it foolish. Is there anything
(p. 118)
sublime? They will distort and travesty it. 
And this they do because they are exhalations of matter, and have no spiritual nature. Hence they pursue and 
persecute the Woman continually, sending after her a flood of vituperation like 
a torrent to sweep her away. But it shall be in vain. For God shall carry her to 
His throne, and she shall tread on the necks of them.
            
"Therefore the High Gods will give through a woman the Interpretation which 
alone can save the world. A woman shall open the gates of the Kingdom to 
mankind, because Intuition only can redeem. Between the Woman and the Astrals 
there is always enmity; for they seek to destroy her and her office, and to put 
themselves in her place. They are the delusive shapes who tempted the saints of 
old with exceeding beauty and wiles of love, and great show of affection and 
flattery. Oh! Beware of them when they flatter, for they spread a net for thy 
soul."
"Am I, then, in danger from them?" 
I asked. "Am I, too, a Sensitive?'' And he said, –
"No, you are a Poet. And in that is your 
strength and your salvation. Poets are the children of the Sun, and the Sun 
illumines them. No poet can be vain or self-exalted; for he knows that he speaks 
only the words of God. 'I sing,' he says, 'because I must.' Learn a truth which 
is known only to the sons of God. The Spirit within you is divine. It is God. 
When you prophesy and when you sing, it is the Spirit within you which gives you 
utterance. It is the 'New Wine of Dionysos.' By this Spirit your body is 
enlightened, as is a lamp by the flame within it. Now, the flame is not the oil, 
for the oil may be there without the light. Yet the flame cannot be there 
without the oil. Your body, then, is the lamp-case into which the oil is poured. 
And this – the oil – is your soul, a fine and combustible fluid. And the flame 
is the Divine Spirit, which is not born of the oil, but is conveyed to it by the 
hand of God. You may quench this Spirit utterly, and thenceforward you will have 
no immortality; but when the lamp-case breaks, the oil will be spilt on the 
earth, and
(p. 119)
a few fumes will for a time arise from it, and then it 
will expend itself and leave at last no trace. Some oils are finer and more 
spontaneous than others. The finest is that of the soul of the poet. And in such 
a medium the flame of God's Spirit burns more clearly and powerfully; and 
brightly, so that sometimes mortal eyes can hardly endure its brightness. Of 
such an one the soul is filled with holy raptures. He sees as no other man sees, 
and the atmosphere about him is enkindled. His soul becomes transmuted into 
flame; and when the lamp of his body is shattered, his flame mounts and soars, 
and is united to the Divine Fire. Can such an one, think you, be vainglorious or 
self-exalted, and lifted up? Oh no; he is one with God, and knows that without 
God he is nothing. I tell no man that he is a reincarnation of Moses, of Elias, 
or of Christ. But I tell him that he may have the Spirit of these if, like them, 
he be humble and self-abased, and obedient to the Divine Word."
            
So far from our being sufficiently advanced to escape molestation from the 
sources thus indicated, there were times when we suffered much from their 
incursions, even to the hindrance, for the time being, of the work on which our 
whole hearts were set. Knowing that everything depended on our unanimity, they 
sought to make division between us, and what they lacked in force was more than 
made up for by subtlety. (1) Despite all our vigilance, they would insinuate themselves 
like barbed and poisoned arrows between the joints of our armour, there to 
rankle and envenom, so insidious were their suggestions. They did not flatter, 
but
(p. 120)
attacked us. So that it 
was a satisfaction to be assured that they attack those only who are worth 
attacking. The very nature of our work was such as to invite attack from them, 
being what they were.
            
Meanwhile, no experience was withheld that would serve to qualify us for what 
proved to be an essential part of our work, the "discerning of spirits" in the 
sense, not merely of perceiving them, but of distinguishing their nature and 
character. And always was the lesson given in a form which combined with its 
other features that of total unexpectedness. Especially important was it for us 
to be able to distinguish between the spirits of the astral, against 
which we were warned, and spirits in the astral, namely, souls which 
had not yet accomplished their emancipation, but were in course of doing so. But 
while as regarded the former we were left to fight the battle for ourselves, as 
regarded the latter there was a control exercised, and none were permitted to 
approach us save such as had a message of service which would minister to the 
solution of a present problem. Of this the following experience was an instance. 
It helped us to a yet fuller comprehension, both of the reasons which had 
dictated our association, and of the liabilities to be guarded against.
It was 
evening (1), and we were occupied in our respective tasks, and so 
entirely engrossed by them as to be disposed to resent any interruption, when 
"Mary" bent across the table, and speaking in a low tone, said to me, "There is 
a spirit in the room who wants to speak to us. Shall I let him?" I
(p. 121)
assented on the condition that he had something 
to tell us really worth hearing. She then became entranced, being magnetised by 
his presence; and after telling me that he spoke with a strong American accent 
and professed to be a "metaphysical doctor" – meaning, she supposed, a doctor in 
metaphysics – repeated the following after him; for I could neither see nor hear 
him: –
"You two have been put together for 
a work which you could not do separately. I have been shown a chart of your past 
histories, containing your characters and your past incarnations. She is of a 
highly active, wilful disposition, and represents the centrifugal force. You, 
Caro, are her opposite, and, being contemplative and concentrated, represent the 
centripetal force. Without her expansive energy you would become altogether 
indrawn and inactive in deed; and without your restraining influence she would 
go forth and become dissipated in expansiveness. So extraordinary is her outward 
tendency that nothing but such an organism as she now has could repress it and 
keep it within bounds. It is for the work she has to do that she has been placed 
in a body of weakness and suffering. She is the man and you the woman-element in 
your joint system. I can see only her female incarnations, but she has been a 
man much oftener than a woman; while you have generally been a woman, and would 
be one now but for the work you have to do. Even as a woman she has always been 
much more man than woman, for her wilfulness and recklessness have led her into 
enterprises of incredible daring. Nothing restrained her when her will prompted 
her. She would wreck any work to follow that, and only by combination with your 
centripetal tendency can she do the present work. As a man she has been 
initiated, once, a long time ago, in 
(p. 122)
do not hold the existence of moral evil. All things are 
allowed for good ends; but this is a difficult truth to express."
Here she 
spoke in her own person, having under his magnetism recovered her own vision and 
recollection, saying –
            
"O Caro! I can see your past. You have been – no, it is all wiped out. I cannot 
see it now. I am not allowed to see it. Why is this? I see my own past. I see 
Here she 
returned to her normal consciousness, our visitor having taken his departure.
Subsequently, in March, 1881, under the influence of a higher illuminative 
power, she found herself as one of a group of initiates making solemn procession 
through the aisles of a vast Egyptian temple, and chanting in chorus the rituals 
which compose the marvellous "Hymn to the 
Planet-God, lacchos". (1) For, long as it is, she
(p. 123)
was able to reproduce it 
afterwards. It was thus, by her recovery of the memory of knowledges acquired in 
past existences, that the divine originals were recovered from which the 
Bible-writers largely derived at once their doctrine and their diction. This is 
not to say that these were mere borrowers and unilluminate. It is to say only 
that they recognised the divinity of a prior revelation, and regarded it as a 
common heritage. The truth is one.
Among the 
uses of the painful experience we were now undergoing (1) was this one. It put 
me on a track of thought of high value in enabling me to determine our 
respective positions in regard to our work. It was clearly the endeavour of the 
astral influences by which we were being assailed – the "haters of the 
mysteries" as our Genii called them (2) – to break down our 
work by destroying that perfect harmony between us which was the first condition 
of it. And all my endeavours failing to discover in myself the weak point which 
rendered us accessible to them, carefully as I sought there for it, I was forced 
to look for it in her, and was disposed to ascribe it to the survival from the 
far past of some defect of the affectional nature. For, as we were now learning, 
man has a dual heredity, that of his physical parentage and that of his 
spiritual selfhood. From the former
(p. 124)
of which he derives his 
outward characteristics; and from the latter his inward character. The 
experience just, recited served to confirm the surmise, but it did something 
else besides. It suggested to me the following explanation of the situation as 
growing out of the exigencies of our work. That work had for its purpose the 
accomplishment of the prophesied downfall of the "world's sacrificial system." 
It meant war to the knife against all the orthodoxies at once, religious, 
social, scientific. It meant a death – "wrestle, not against flesh and blood, 
but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness 
of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places." 
[T.N.: Ephesians 6:12] 
It meant, in short, the destruction foretold by the prophets of "that great 
city," the world's materialistic system in Church, State, and Society, wherein 
the "Lord," the divinity in man, is ever systematically crucified, and its 
replacement by the "Holy City" or system which comes down from the heaven of a 
perfect ideal.
What, then, 
I asked myself, was the foremost moral need for the instruments of such a work? 
Surely it was Courage. But courage subsists under two modes. There is the 
courage which manifests itself in action and aggression, and there is the 
courage which manifests itself in endurance and resistance. The former is its 
masculine mode, the latter its feminine mode. The former connotes Will, the 
latter connotes Love. And these were the parts assigned respectively to us in 
our joint system. Will and Love united had made the world; disunited, they had 
ruined the world; reunited, they would redeem the world. As He and
(p. 125)
She, King and Queen, 
positive and negative, centrifugal and centripetal, they are the dual powers of 
all things, the constituent principles at once of God and of 
The tension 
of feeling induced by the situation had for me reached a pitch at which I had 
cause for serious apprehension lest my organism prove unequal to the strain. 
For, resolute though I myself was to endure to the end, come what might, the 
effort involved had so greatly affected my organic system as nearly to double 
the number of the heart's pulsations, to the imminent risk of a rupture fatal to 
life or reason. Such was the emergency when, longing for light and aid, I 
received at night (1) the following experience, which I reproduce as recorded at 
the time: –
It seemed to me that I was sole spectator in some circus or hippodrome. 
And in the arena were some horses, seven in number, harnessed to a common 
centre, but all facing in different directions like the spokes of a wheel, and 
pulling frantically, so that the vehicle to which they were attached remained 
stationary between them, through their counterbalancing each other; while at the 
same time
(p. 126)
it seemed as if it must presently be dragged asunder 
into pieces. On looking at it more closely, the vehicle seemed to become a 
person who was attempting to drive the horses, but was unable to get them into a 
line; and, strange to say, the driver was one and identical both with the horses 
and the vehicle, so that it was a living person who was in danger of being torn 
asunder by creatures who were in reality himself. While wondering what this 
meant, some one addressed me and said that if I would do any good, I must help 
to control and direct the animals which were thus pulling their owner asunder. 
And that the only way to do this was by so disposing myself that I should be at 
one and the same time in the centre with the driver, to help him to curb and 
direct his steeds, and outside at their heads in order to compel their 
submission. And not only must I be indifferent to their ramping and chafing, I 
must even suffer myself to be struck and wounded and trampled upon to any extent 
without flinching; for only when I was so unconscious of self as to be 
indifferent as to what might happen to me, would they cease to have power 
against me. And the reason why I must be also in the centre was that only there 
could I effectually co-operate with the driver to enable him to do his part in 
directing what in reality wore the forces, as yet unbroken in, of his own 
system, into the road it was necessary for us both to follow. We were destined 
to be fellow-travellers, and our journey was to be made together and with that 
team. It could not be made by one of us without the other, and the failure to 
effect a complete conjunction and co-operation would bring certain ruin to the 
hopes of both of us and of all who looked to us. The owner of the horses, I was 
assured, could not of himself control them, and I could only enable him to do so 
by an absolute surrender of myself.
Applying 
this vision to the situation, the moral was obvious so far as I was concerned, 
and I wondered whether "Mary" would receive anything
(p. 127)
equally suggestive for 
herself. In the morning, after remaining unusually late in her room, she 
silently handed me the following account of an experience which had similarly 
and simultaneously been received by her: –
"I was shown two stars near each 
other, both of them shining with a clear bright light, only that of one the 
light had a purple tinge, and of the other a blood colour; and a great Angel 
stood beside me and bade me look at them attentively. I did so, and saw that the 
stars were not round, but seemed to have a piece cut out of the globe of each of 
them. And I said to the Angel, ‘The stars are not perfect; but instead of being 
round, they are uneven.' He told me to look again; and I did so, and saw that 
each globe was really perfect, but that in each a small portion remained dark so 
as to present the appearance of having a piece out; and I noticed that these 
dark portions of the two stars were turned towards each other. Upon this I 
looked to the Angel for the explanation.
And the Angel said to me, 'These stars derive their light not only from 
the sun but from each other. If there be darkness in one of them, the 
corresponding face of the other will likewise be darkened; and how shall either 
reflect perfectly the image of the sun if it be dark to its companion star? For 
how shall it respond to that which is above all, if it respond not to that which 
is nearest?’
And I said, 'Lord, if the darkness in one of these stars be caused by the 
darkness in its fellow, which of them was first darkened?'
Then he answered me and said, 'These stars are of different tinctures; 
one is of the sapphire, the other of the sardonyx. Of the first the atmosphere 
is cool and equable; of the other it is burning and irregular. The spirit of the 
first is as God towards man; the spirit of the second is as the soul towards 
God. The first loves; the second aspires. And the office of the spirit which 
loves is outwards; while the office of the spirit which aspires is upwards. The 
light
(p. 128)
of the first, which is blue, enfolds, and 
contains, and embraces, and sustains. The light of the second, which is red, is 
as a flame which scorches, and burns, and troubles, and seeks God only, and his 
duty is not to the outward, for it is not given to him to love. God, whom he 
seeks, is love; and therefore 
is he drawn upward to God only. But the spirit of his fellow descends. She 
indraws, and blesses, and confers; and hers is the office which redeems. 
Wherefore if she fail in her love, her failure is greater than his who hath no 
love; and to be perfect she must forgive until the seventy times seven, and be 
great in humility. For the violet, which is the colour of humility, is of the 
blue. And if she seek her own, or yield not in outward things, her nature is not 
perfected, and her light is darkened. Let Love, therefore, think not of herself, 
for she hath no self, but all that she hath is towards others, and only in 
giving and forgiving is she rich. If, on the contrary, she make a self 
withinwards, her light is withdrawn and troubled, and she is not perfect, and if 
she demand of another that which he hath not, then she seeketh her own, and her 
light is darkened. And if she be darkened towards him, he also will darken 
towards her, in respect, that is, of enlightenment. And thus her failure of love 
will break the communion with the Divine, which is through him. He cannot darken 
outwardly first; for love is not of him. If he darken of himself, it must be 
within towards God. But that which he receives of God, he gives not forth 
himself. But he burns centrally and enlightens his fellow, and she gives it 
forth according to her office. And if she darken in any way outwardly, she 
cannot receive enlightenment, but darkens the burning star likewise, and so 
hinders their inter-communion.'
Having thus spoken, the Angel looked upon me and said, 'Ye are the two 
stars, and to one is given the office of the Prophet, and to the other the 
office of the Redeemer. But to be Prophet and Redeemer in one, this is the glory 
of the Christ.'"
(p. 129)
Here again 
was an intimation that on one plane at least of our respective systems she was 
of masculine and I of feminine potency, with functions to correspond. That these 
functions were capable of being described in the terms employed was, we felt, no 
reason for arrogating high places to ourselves. Rather did we consider that 
everything is according to its degree; and that, as for persons, if the Gods 
were to wait until they found perfect instruments, or at least perfect persons 
for their instruments, they would never begin. And this also, that if the world 
were in a condition to produce such persons, it would have no need of 
redemption. Had not even Jesus Himself been "crucified through weakness"?
In view of 
the intensity of the distress undergone in this connection, I found myself 
recalling the remark of Plato, "Many begin the mysteries, but few complete 
them." My only wonder was that any should survive the ordeals, if they 
approached ours in severity. Meanwhile it was said to us by way of 
encouragement, "Be sure there is trouble in store. No man ever got to the 
Promised Land without first going through the wilderness."
The 
instruction to "Mary" had not only 
justified my surmise, it also met and corrected her in respect of the chief 
cause of our trouble. This was her disposition, at astral instigation, to 
withhold from me the products of her illuminations, and even to refrain from 
writing them down (1), on the specious pretext that they were meant for her own
(p. 130)
exclusive benefit, and 
were too sacred to be given to the world, or even to me; and she had failed to 
discern the source and motive of these suggestions. So effectually had what were 
really spirits of darkness disguised themselves as angels of light.
The 
importance attached to the occult significance of our "tinctures" received 
illustration in this wise. Permission had been given us to make an exception to 
the rule of secrecy imposed with regard to certain of the Scriptures received by 
us, in favour of a friend who took so warm an interest in our work as to be 
eager to render it material aid in the future should occasion arise. It was her 
mission, she declared, to do so. But when the day appointed for the reading 
came, "Mary" was so ill that her going seemed to be impossible, and the question 
accordingly arose as to whether I might go alone and read them without her. We 
had no sooner begun to consider the point than she became entranced, and was 
shown a large open volume, the book of the Greater Mysteries to which our 
Scriptures belonged, surrounded by an Iris composed of all the colours of the 
rainbow. She was then shown the following lines, which I wrote down as she 
repeated them: –
"The one in Red guards his privileges, and claims to be present whatever 
is read.
For the air is filled with the haters of the Mysteries.
Therefore for your sake the chain must be complete;
And the Light must be refracted round you seven times.
He who is Red stands within the holy circle.
And the Violet guards the outermost.
(p. 131)
For the Word is a Word of Mystery, 
and they who guard it are Seven.
Beware that nothing you hear be told 
unless the circle be perfect.
And this charge we lay upon you 
until the work be accomplished.
Fire and sword and war are against 
you; you walk in the midst of commotion.
And your life is in peril every hour 
until the words be completed."
Up to the 
latest moment of the interval before the appointment it seemed impossible for 
her to go. She then suddenly recovered as by miracle, and was able to attend the 
reading.
The 
liabilities of our position subsequently (1) received this further 
illustration. "Mary" was introduced in sleep, by her Genius, into an apartment 
in the spiritual world which purported to be the laboratory of William Lilly, 
the famous astrologer who had foretold the great plague and fire of 
"You also have these Scriptures !" she exclaimed. "Yes," said he, "but I 
keep them for myself alone."
"And why so," she 
asked, "since, if you have them, they are for the learning of others likewise? 
Will you not rather communicate these saving truths to thirsty souls?"
(p. 132)
"I will communicate 
them," said he, fixing his eyes on her intently, "when I can find Seven Men who 
for forty days have tasted no flesh, whose hands have shed no blood, and whose 
tongues have tasted of none."
"But if you find not Seven?"
"Then, mayhap, I shall find Five."
"And if not Five?"
"Then, maybe, I shall 
meet with Three."
"But even this may be 
hard to find, and if you should not meet with Three, what then will you do?"
"One Neophyte would 
not be able to protect himself."
In 
communicating to her the results of his calculations, he had said that owing to 
the propensities indulged in certain of her former lives, she had made for 
herself a destiny which ensured suffering and failure, except when living in a 
similar manner; doing which she would have a life of unbounded success. "But," 
he continued, "your horoscope has nothing for you but misfortune so long as you 
persist in a virtuous course of life, and, indeed, it is now too late to adopt 
another. I speak herein according to your Fortune, not in regard to your Inner 
life. With that I have no concern. I tell you what is forecast for you on the 
material and actual planisphere of your Nativity. (...) I see nothing but 
misfortune before you. Yea, if you persist in virtue, it is not unlikely that 
you may be stript of all your worldly goods, and of all you possess, and this 
evil fortune will follow your nearest associates."
To her 
enquiry, "Can I never overcome this evil prognostic?" he replied that she could 
do so
(p. 133)
only by outliving the 
time appointed for her natural life in the career indicated, and added this 
advice, "Steel yourself; learn to suffer; become a Stoic; care not. If 
Misfortune be yours, make it your Fortune. Let Poverty become to you Riches. Let 
Loss be Gain. Let Sickness be Health. Let Pain be Pleasure. Let Evil Report be 
Good Report. Yea, let Death be Life. Fortune is in the Imagination. If you 
believe you have all things, they are truly yours.” He concluded with an 
explanation reconciling destiny with free will, and vindicating the divine 
justice, in a manner which removed all our difficulties on those points, and, as 
we later came to learn, was entirely in accordance with the Hindu doctrine of 
"Karma," of which at this time we had never heard. (1)
There was no 
exaggeration in the terms of the warning of danger. We were constantly made 
aware of the presence of the malignant entities above described focusing their 
influences on us to prevent the accomplishment of our work, and requiring the 
utmost vigilance on our part, as well also as on the part of our illuminators, 
to thwart their purpose. And we had good reason to believe that our difficulties 
and dangers were enhanced through "Mary's" attendances at the schools and 
hospitals, owing to the evil nature of the influences there dominant under a 
regimen grossly materialistic, and her liability to be fastened upon and 
accompanied home by them. The outer walls of her spiritual system – it was 
explained to us – were not yet completed, owing to the vastness of
(p. 134)
the circuit of her 
selfhood; and hence her accessibility to the incursion of noxious influences 
from without. The treatment of the patients by men trained in the physiological 
laboratory, and bent upon turning the hospital ward also into a laboratory with 
the patients themselves for the victims of cruel and wanton experimentation, 
would send her home boiling with indignation and wrath, to the destruction of 
the serenity and self-control requisite for our spiritual work.
It was clear 
to us that no experience was to be wanting to exhibit the contrast between the 
world's actual and the world's possible. The overthrow of "the world's 
sacrificial system" meant salvation for man and beast. The condition of all 
really redemptive work is a "descent into hell." The following instruction to us 
is a typical one: –
"Teach the doctrine of the Universal 
Soul and the Immortality of all creatures. Knowledge of this is what the world 
most needs, and this is the keynote of your joint mission. On this you must 
build; it is the key-stone of the arch. The perfect life is not attainable for 
man alone. The whole world must be redeemed under the new gospel you are to 
teach."
The 
following "Counsel of Perfection" which was received (1)
by "Mary," is an exquisite expression of the same theme: –
I dreamed that I was in a large room, and there were in it seven persons, 
all men, sitting at one long table; and each of them had before him a scroll, 
some having books also; and all were greyheaded and bent with age save one,
(p. 135)
and this was a youth of about twenty, 
without hair on his face. One of the aged men, who had his finger on a place in 
a book open before him, said:
"This spirit, who is of our order, 
writes in this book, – 'Be ye perfect, therefore, as your Father in heaven is 
perfect.’ How shall we understand this word 'perfection'?" And another of the 
old men, looking up, answered, "It must mean Wisdom, for wisdom is the sum of 
perfection." And another old man said, "That cannot be; for no creature can be 
wise as God is wise. Where is he among us who could attain to such a state? That 
which is part only, cannot comprehend the whole. To bid a creature to be wise as 
God is wise would be mockery."
Then a fourth old man said: – "It 
must be Truth that is intended; for truth only is perfection." But he who sat 
next the last speaker answered, "Truth also is partial; for where is he among us 
who shall be able to see as God sees?"
And the sixth said, "It must surely 
be Justice; for this is the whole of righteousness." And the old man who had 
spoken first, answered him: – "Not so; for justice comprehends vengeance, and it 
is written that vengeance is the Lord's alone."
Then the young man stood up with an 
open book in his hand and said: – "I have here another record of one who 
likewise heard these words. Let us see whether his rendering of them can help us 
to the knowledge we seek." And he found a place in the book and read aloud: – 
"Be ye merciful, even as your Father is merciful." And all of them closed their 
books and fixed their eyes upon me.
That it was 
possible at all for her to study medicine in a school in which vivisection was 
an all prevailing practice, was only because she set her face resolutely against 
it, by refusing to attend any place or occasion where or on which it took place, 
and relying for her own education chiefly on
(p. 136)
private tuition. It was 
an essential part of her plan to prove that such experimentation was not 
necessary for a degree. And this she effectually demonstrated by accomplishing 
her student-course with rare expedition and distinction, despite her many and 
severe illnesses and her frequent change of professors. For one after another 
resigned the office on account of her refusal to allow them to experiment on 
live animals at her lessons. Not until she had secured her diploma did she enter 
a physiological laboratory. And then only in order to qualify herself by 
personal experience to denounce the practice. For herself it was not necessary, 
she declared, to see a murder or a robbery committed to know that it is a crime.
The 
following incident shows how adverse the conditions of modern life were to our 
spiritual work: –
Being in 
"Do not ask me such deep 
questions just now, for I cannot see clearly, and it hurts me to look. The 
atmosphere is thick with the blood shed for the season's festivities. The Astral 
Belt is everywhere dense with blood. My Genius says that if we were in some 
country where the conditions of life are purer, we could live in constant 
communication with the spiritual world. For the earth here whirls round as in a 
cloud of blood like red fire. He says distinctly and emphatically that the 
salvation of the world is impossible while people nourish themselves on blood. 
The whole globe is like one vast
(p. 137)
charnel-house. The 
magnetism is intercepted. The blood strengthens the bonds between the Astrals 
and the Earth. (...) This time, which ought to be the best for spiritual 
communion, is the worst, on account of the horrid mode of living. Pray wake me 
up: I cannot bear looking; for I see the blood and hear the cries of the poor 
slaughtered creatures." Here her distress was so extreme that she wept bitterly, 
and some days passed before she fully recovered her composure.
Our first 
acquaintance with any literature kindred to our special work took place toward 
the close of our sojourn in 
(p. 138)
Neoplatonists, 
Hermetists, Rosicrucians, and other orders of initiates, to Boehme, Swedenborg 
and "Eliphas Levi," and to see what the various spiritualistic schools of the 
present day had to say for themselves.
The 
following recognition of Hermes by one of the greatest of the Neoplatonists, 
Proclus, who lived in the fifth century of our era, was especially gratifying to 
us as proving the continuity of our experiences with those of past ages. Proclus, 
it must be remembered, was so eminent for his wisdom and powers as to be 
regarded by his contemporaries with a veneration approaching to adoration. Says 
Proclus, "Hermes, as the messenger of God, reveals to us His paternal Will, and 
– developing in us the Intuition – imparts to us knowledge. The knowledge which 
descends into the soul from above, excels any that can be attained by the mere 
exercise of the intellect. Intuition is the operation of the soul. The knowledge 
received through it from above, descending into the soul, fills it with the 
perception of the interior causes of things. The Gods announce it by their 
presence, and by illumination, and enable us to discern the universal order." 
Here was exactly the doctrine received by us, and the manner of it, only that 
the Intuition was further disclosed to us as due to interior recollection, as 
declared by Plato, as well as to perception.
The results 
of the investigations thus begun, and afterwards continued in the library of the 
(p. 139)
who had the witness to 
the truth in themselves, and this one and the same truth, it was also made clear 
that whereas others had received it in limitation, and beheld it as "through a 
glass darkly," we were receiving it in plenitude and "face to face," to the 
realisation of the high anticipations of the sages, saints, seers, prophets, 
redeemers, and Christs of all time; and this, too, at the period, in the manner, 
and under the conditions declared by them as to mark and make the "time of the 
end."
For in the 
illuminations vouchsafed to us the key had been restored which unlocked the 
meaning of the symbols in which the doctrines of all the churches, pre-Christian 
as well as Christian, had been at once concealed and revealed, to the 
elucidation of all the problems which have so sorely perplexed the world, and 
the verification, by actual experience, of the truth contained in them. No 
longer now was there for us any doubt as to the meaning of allegories such as 
the Fall, the Deluge, the Exodus, and others were now shown us to be; or of 
prophecies such as those of the crushing of the serpent's head by the Woman and 
her seed; the return of Astrea with her progeny of divine sons; the fall from 
heaven of Lucifer and Satan; the Return of the Gods; the reign of Michael, "that 
great prince who standeth for the children of God's people"; the breaking of the 
seals, and opening of the books; the recognition of the abomination of 
desolation standing in the holy place; the budding of the fig-tree, and the end 
of that "adulterous generation"; the revelation of "that wicked one, the mystery 
of iniquity and son of perdition, whom the Lord, at His coming in the clouds of
(p. 140)
heaven with power and 
great glory, shall consume with the spirit of His mouth, and destroy with the 
brightness of His coming"; the two Witnesses, their resurrection from the dead, 
and their ascent into heaven; the drying up of the great river Euphrates, and 
the coming of the kings of the East by the way thus prepared; the binding of 
Satan, and the acceptable year of the Lord to follow; the exaltation to heaven, 
and clothing with the sun, of the mystic "Woman" of the Apocalypse; the advent 
of the angel flying in mid-heaven, having an eternal gospel to proclaim unto 
every nation, and tribe, and tongue, and people; the coming of many from the 
East, and the West, and the North, and the South, to sit down with Abraham, 
Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven; and the battle of Armageddon, and 
the end of the world. To all these, and other sacred enigmas of like nature, the 
key had been given us. And they one and all proved to be prophecies of one and 
the same event, the restoration of the faculty of inward understanding, and of 
the divine knowledges which only through it are possible. And whereas this was 
the faculty, the corruption and loss of which had made the Fall, which was that 
of the original Church, so was it the faculty, the purification and restoration 
of which was to reverse the Fall, accomplishing the Redemption. For by it man 
will regain his mental balance, in virtue of which he was "made upright," and 
become again sound, whole, and sane, and be by condition that which he has been divinely declared from the 
first to be by constitution, – an 
instrument of understanding, competent for the comprehension of all truth. For 
only thus is he really
(p. 141)
man, and made in the 
divine image; seeing that he is not really man, but infant only, until he 
attains his spiritual majority and is able to understand. And that which thus 
makes him man on the plane mental and spiritual, is that which makes him man on 
the plane physical. It is his recognition and appropriation of the "Woman" of 
that plane, the mystic "Woman" of Holy Writ, the mind's feminine mode, the 
Intuition. It is of her first identification by us, as the key to the whole 
mystery of the Bible, that the manner will now be recounted.
FOOTNOTES
(112:1) The occasion of the 
receipt by A.K. and E.M. of the above was one of peculiar interest. It was given 
in reference to a visit from the late Laurence Oliphant, an account of which 
will be found in Life A.K. It will suffice to say here that, having heard of their work, 
Oliphant came to them as an emissary from his chief in 
(112:2) See note p. 70.
(114:1) The above reference is 
to an experience of mine which does not call for relation here. E.M.
(119:1) Says E.M. in Life 
A.K – "The subtlety with which my most sensitive places were searched 
out, and the mercilessness with which they were probed by the influences which 
had now obtained access to us, seemed to me to belong altogether to the 
infernal." (Life A.K. Vol. I. p. 318.) S.H.H.
(120:1) The date was 27th March, 
1880. S.H.H.
(122:1) The Hymn 
to the Planet-God has been referred to on p. 79. It is given in full in the
P.W.
pp. 341-349: a portion of it concerning the passage of the Soul, and concerning 
the Mystic Exodus, are given on pp. 169-173 
post. The method of the recovery by A.K. of this most important Hymn “was 
such as to constitute it a proof positive of the great doctrine set forth in it, 
the doctrine of Reincarnation; for it was as one of a band of initiates, making 
solemn procession through the aisles of a vast Egyptian temple, chanting it in 
chorus, that 'Mary,' being asleep, recollected it." (Life A.K. Vol. I. p. 456.) 
S.H.H.
(123:1) That is, the "strained 
conditions" under which their association was then maintained and their work 
carried on. (Life A.K. Vol. I. p. 374.) S.H.H.
(123:2) See p. 130.
(125:1) On the night of the 23rd 
June, 1880. This vision was received by E.M. as he pondered and while he was 
awake. (Life A.K. Vol. I. pp. 376-377.) S.H.H.
(129:1) Some of A.K.'s 
illuminations have thus been lost to the world. (Life A.K. Vol. I. p. 374.) 
S.H.H.
(130:1) Lady 
(131:1) On the 13th-14th 
January, 1881. (Life A.K. Vol. I. p. 435.) S.H.H.
(133:1) A full account of this 
interview with William Lily is given in Life A.K. Vol. I. pp. 435-441.
(134:1) On the 9th April, 
(136:1) Christmas Day, 1880. (Life 
A.K. Vol. I. p. 430.)
(137:1)
the time referred to was September, 1878. Life A.K. Vol. I. pp. 285-385.
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