re "Crosbie's Pledge and Recognition of Katherine Tingley"
May 24, 2003 08:22 PM
by Mauri
Excerpt from Daniels post of May 18:
<<... on May 22, 1897, Mr Crosbie and a few other E.S.
members took pledges of "unquestioning loyalty,
devotion and obedience" to Mrs Tingley. Did Mr
Crosbie take such a momentous oath to a person about
whom he knew so very little (as he later claimed)?
The pledge reads----
"I . . . recognizing the person called Purple [Mrs
Tingley] as being the agent of the Master I serve . . . do
hereby unreservedly pledge myself, by my Higher Self,
to unquestioning loyalty, devotion and obedience to
her and to her support and defence as such agent, under
any and all circumstances and conditions to the extent
of my available means, utmost exertion, and with my
life if need be. . . .
So Help me my Higher Self. (Signed) Robert
Crosbie
Witness my hand, this 22d day of May, Eighteen
hundred and Ninety-seven.">>
The wording: << do hereby unreservedly pledge myself,
by my Higher Self>> in connection with <<agent of the
Master I serve>> seems rather curious to me in the sense
that, if the Mahatmas KH and M had ended their
communications with all of the followers of HPB at her
passing, as per the statements in their letters and the
writings of A.L. Cleather and others ... Here's some
excerpts from ALC's "H.P. Blavatsky As I Knew Her",
between <<>> (watch out for OCR typos, the "--" are
represented by ".", and the paragraphs and Chapters
here are not all consecutive):
<<CHAPTER V.
Causes of Degeneration in the T. S.
IN the spring of 1891 our beloved Teacher contracted a
* very severe form of influenza, and on May 8 her Soul
was released from the suffering body. She was
undoubtedly " recalled," as I see it now, because we
had all failed her ; even we, her own personal pupils ; I
do not hesitate to assert it—we could not " watch, even
for one hour." We failed, too, on the most obvious and
elementary point—the practice of brotherhood, for there
were jealousies and dissensions even in the I. G. For H.
P. B. it must have been heart-breaking. Time and again
had she striven to form an inner body which would
provide the one and only essential for the reception of
the esoteric teachings she was commissioned to give
out. As she wrote of just such a body as the I. G. :
Unless the greatest harmony reigns among the learners,
no success is possible." And we proved quite unable to
provide that one indispensable condition. The E. S. T.
came first, then its higher degrees, and finally the I. G.
But all was of no avail; the material was bad, and so the
Temple could not be reared; neither could the Corner
Stone be found. In the preface to her first great work,
Isis Unveiled, H. P. B. expressly declares it to be a
direct challenge to all forms of ecclesiastical dogmatism,
and " especially to the Vatican ..." Yet, in the face of
this, we find Mrs. Besant proclaiming a new
dispensation on what is
practically a Roman Catholic basis, and steering the
whole movement under her control towards Rome, i.e.,
the very antithesis of all that H. P. B. taught and
worked for. The means used is an anomalous body
called the Liberal Catholic Church, with Mr. C. W.
Leadbeater and others as its " Bishops " ; and dogmas
like the Apostolic Succession are upheld, which H. P.
B. denounced. The moral character of these " Bishops "
is so notorious that I need not sully these memories by
any but the barest mention. I shall deal more fully, later,
and in a separate publication with this matter,1 which
constitutes an indelible stain on Mrs. Besant's Society
in recent years. Some twenty years ago, or more, I came
to the conclusion that H. P. B.'s passing sounded also
the death-knell of the Theosophical Society, as such.
But from a personal and interior point of view, it was
even more tragic. For I am absolutely convinced that,
WHEN H. P. B. LEFT US, THERE WAS NO
LONGER ANY POSSIBILITY OF DIRECT
COMMUNICATION WITH THE GREAT LODGE
OF MASTERS, except of course, for individuals who
were capable of rising to Their plane by interior effort
and aspiration. If this be not so, why—after her death—do
we find Mr. Judge and Mrs. Besant, apparently unable
to rely on interior guidance, turning to supposed chelas,
psychics, and clairvoyants in their efforts to re-establish
communication with the Masters ? The answer is plain
to anyone who has carefully studied what the Masters
Themselves have written on the subject. In the long
letter of rebuke to Colonel Olcott for his attitude
towards H. P. B., received during his voyage to England
in 1888, the Master K. H. writes :—" Since 1885, I have
not written, or caused to be written, save through her
[H. P. B.'s] agency, direct or remote, a letter or line to
anybody in Europe or America, nor communicated
orally with, or through any third party . . . With occult
matters she has everything to do. We have not
abandoned her. She is not given over to chelas.
She is our direct agent." (1 see A GREAT
BETRAYAL, already mentioned.)
Again, in a letter—evidently to Miss Arundale and
written in 1884—-the same Master writes :—" I take the
opportunity, one of the last there are, to write to you
directly, to say a few words. For you know, of course,
that once H. P. B.'s aura in the house is exhausted, you
can have no more letters from me. " (Italics are mine.)
H. P. B. stayed with the Arundales in June and July of
that year, when she came over from Paris on a short
visit to adjust certain troubles in the London Lodge.
But there exists still stronger, direct, evidence as to this.
In a letter to Mrs. Langford (then Mrs. Laura Holloway,
one of the " Two Chelas" who wrote Man) the Master
K. H. writes in 1884. " . . .to help the cause in its
present very complicated situation, we who are
forbidden to use our powers with Europeans can act
but thro' our chelas or one like H. P. B. . . . Where are
the chelas strong enough to help us without the aid of
our own powers " ? Incidentally it should be clear
enough to anyone with a grain of intuition that H. P. B.
was something much more than " a chela." Finally, H.
P. B.'s Master Himself writes in relation to instructions
(for the " Inner Circle " of the London Lodge) which,
He says, " can pass only through the hands of Mr.
Sinnett, as hitherto . . . remains the question, what
means there are to correspond even with Mr. Sinnett ?
H. P. B. will not undertake the sending on and
transmission of the letters ; she has shown her
willingness to self-sacrifice in this direction long
enough . . . Damodar K. M. has the same and even more
unwillingness. —— [name of another chela] has not
reached that stage of physiological development that
enables a chela to send and receive letters. His
evolution has been more upon the intellectual plane . .
.
" (Italics are mine throughout.)
So we here see that a certain stage of"
PHYSIOLOGICAL development" is an essential, and
that only " one like H. P. B." or the Masters' own
personal chelas—like Damodar—are capable of being
intermediaries for " direct communication ": and
Damodar was, in consequence of his advanced "
physiological development," able to go to the Masters,
in Tibet, a year later. It is perfectly clear from these
extracts, in short, that it was only possible for the
Masters to communicate direct through H. P. B.'s
agency, because as Their chosen Messenger she had
been prepared by several years of training and
instruction under Their direct personal guidance and
supervision in Tibet. Through her They could act on
this plane at any distance from her physical presence.
At that time it would not have been easy, or even
possible, for those who found themselves left as leaders
of the Movement—both exoteric and esoteric—to foresee
all the ruin and confusion that would (and did) result
from their taking for granted that, because H. P. B. was
always in direct communication with the Masters,
therefore the same would hold good in their case, bereft
as they were of her guidance and, above all, of her
presence. Mrs. Besant and Mr. Judge were duly
appointed joint Outer Heads of the E. S. T. by the Inner
Council, of which I was a member (Colonel Olcott
never had any connection with the School) ; and as
such felt themselves bound, in this high occult office, to
act in the same way as H. P. B.—as " intermediaries "
between the students and the Masters. Mrs. Besant
looked to Mr. Judge (as intermediary) at first. He, in his
turn, presumably feeling the lack of inspiration since H.
P. B.'s death, committed the fatal error of seeking
communication through mediums, psychics, and
clairvoyants, and giving out these communications as if
they were received direct by himself. This I neither
knew nor realised until after a long and painful
experience of the character of Mrs. Tingley, his last
inspirer, who was clever enough to persuade him to
appoint her his successor. It was she herself who told
me, personally, that she dictated the famous E. S. T.
Circular headed " By Master's Direction," and signed by
Mr. Judge, deposing Mrs. Besant from her position as
joint Outer Head. Mrs. Besant was then in India
engaged, inter alia, in elaborating the charges against
Mr. Judge, under the direction of the Brahmin who was
her latest adviser and guide. Mr. Judge's circular was a
characteristic Tingley counterstroke, and anyone
familiar with her language and methods (as I
subsequently became) can easily recognise it
throughout. Mr. Judge's style was totally
different and quite unmistakable. On the other hand
Mrs. Besant was guilty of the very same thing of which
she accused Mr. Judge—viz., of " giving a misleading
material form to messages from the Master."
Equivocation of this kind was one of the fundamental
causes of the catastrophe which overtook the T. S. in
1895. Working " from within without," the E. S. T.—the
real heart of the Society—was divided by the separation
of the two " Outer Heads," and the disruption of the T.
S. followed as a matter of course. This evil precedent
had been created by Mr. A. P. Sinnett during H. P. B.'s
lifetime, for he had claimed independent
communication ever since he had enjoyed
the great privilege, through her agency, of the long
correspondence with the Master K. H. which formed
the material for The Occult World and Esoteric
Buddhism. Mr. Sinnett's persistence in the claim of the
continuance of independent, direct communication
with the Master led to the statement He made to
Colonel Olcott which I have already quoted, and which
He reiterated to H. P. B. in 1890. This was in
consequence of her having received a letter from Mr.
Sinnett at that time, containing some rather impertinent
(as from Mr. Sinnett to H. P. B.) statements about this
Master, and again claiming that he was in direct
communication with Him. That ever since 1885 all his
alleged " communications " were received through
crystal-gazing, mediums, and sensitives was told me by
a member of his inner circle of students so far back as
1893. (See post p. 54 et seq.)
This sort of thing maybe perfectly satisfactory to those
who are able to believe that the Masters would employ
such agencies ; but it is quite another and, as I think,
hardly an honest matter to give out information so
"received" as" direct communications." Such an
attitude—the possibility of being able to take such a
point of view —shows a complete ignorance of the laws
of Occultism governing the training of Adepts and the
use of Their powers ; also of the vital distinction (so
often drawn by H. P. B.) between the trained seer and
the more or less irresponsible medium or clairvoyant.
I had a recent confirmation of the very doubtful sources
of Mr. Sinnett's so-called " occult " information from an
English professor of an Indian University. Shortly after
Mr. Sinnett's death in 1921, one of the sensitives whom
he was wont to consult told this professor that on one
occasion he had given Mr. Sinnett some " message "
which he immediately decided came from the Master K.
H.—" He was so pathetically pleased, poor old chap, that
I had not the heart to undeceive him," was the comment
of the medium himself !
Had it not been for H. P. B., it is just possible that I
myself might have figured as one of Mr. Sinnett's
sensitives. I was seeing a good deal of both him and his
wife, before H. P. B. moved into London from Maycot ;
and one day Mr. Sinnett suggested that I should allow
him to make the experiment of trying to " release " my
soul from the body, as I might then have some
interesting experiences. I thought so, too, although I
then knew nothing of the dangers of such irresponsible
practices. As a young girl I had been able to " turn
tables," and to mesmerise people ; but I never took any
real interest in this sort of thing, because the natural
bent of my mind was towards philosophy. However, on
receiving from Mr. Sinnett the assurance that he would
be able to bring my soul safely back again, I consented
to submit to the experiment. His method proved to be
the usual one. He asked me to lie down and close my
eyes, and then proceeded to make mesmeric passes. He
told me that I should soon " go off," and would then
become conscious on " a higher plane." After what
seemed to be about ten minutes, and I was beginning to
wonder when " I " should be " released," Mr. Sinnett
said in a low voice : " Now you can't move your right
arm." Naturally I did so at once, and lifted my forearm,
opening my eyes at the same time to look at him. I have
rarely seen anyone so taken aback; he had evidently
thought I was " off." He seemed also quite annoyed by
the failure of the experiment, but said we would try
again another day. We never did, however, for soon
afterwards H. P. B. moved into London, and I
happened to mention the incident to her. She was really
angry, and absolutely forbade me to permit Mr. Sinnett,
or anyone else, to try such experiments again. Later on,
of course, I came to learn the extreme danger of such
practices, and that in the wrong hands they are forms of
Black Magic.1 I relate these few incidents, out of many
that could be cited, in order to show the very
questionable basis 1 See Addendum : " Dangerous
Hypnotic Practices." on which Mr. Sinnett's claim to "
independent communication " rested. Although he had
the inestimable privilege of association with H. P. B. in
India, and she had put him in direct communication
with the Master K. H., yet when this ceased, rather than
admit it and be content to play a subordinate part, he
declined to cooperate with H. P. B. in England, and
resorted to these methods in a pitiful endeavour to
maintain the high prestige he had acquired, through
her. But his later writings are quite sufficient evidence
that the source of his inspiration had long since ceased.
Among these later writings must undoubtedly be
included what he is pleased to call " A note of warning
against too submissive an acceptance " of H. P. B.'s
explanation [the true Occult one of course] of
spiritualistic phenomena, which he quotes in his
Incidents in the Life of Madame Blavatsky. This " note"
he added to the Edition dated 1913 (see Chap, viii, p.
140), and for sheer effrontery, and baseless assertions
about her, it would be hard to beat. It may seem that
much of the foregoing is in the nature of a digression,
not germane to the subject of my memories of H. P. B.
My answer is that I have to deal with those who—with
the notable exception of Mr. Judge—drinking from the
well of her wisdom ; using her name, her powers, and
gifts, to forward their own ambitions and desires, yet
think it no shame to spurn " the hand that fed them,"
and " deny " the source of their inspiration. In my view,
therefore, anything I can do in adducing testimony to
prove how unfounded, disloyal, and ungrateful are the
claims of such people, is well done. For they have
shamefully misrepresented H. P. B. and her teachings ;
and, inasmuch as they were articulate and conformed to
certain conventions, they have obtained the hearing
denied to her by the world she came to enlighten—and
perchance to " save," had it not rejected her Message.
I must explain the insertion, here, of a reproduction of
the Diploma which H. P. B. insisted on having specially
drawn, by hand, and presenting to Colonel Cleather.
She always had the highest regard for him (and,
incidentally, rolled him innumerable cigarettes!) ; while
he, in his turn, never wavered in his affection for and
belief in her, in spite of all the slanders which he had
heard in India about her—though he would never join
the T. S. The first time I took him up to Lansdowne
Road to present him to H. P. B., I shall never forget
how, on leaving the house—after a wonderful talk—he
brought his clenched fist down on the open palm of his
other hand with an emphatic bang, ejaculating :—" Well
! I'll take my oath that woman never drank in her life ! "
I should add that one of the cruellest and most
persistent of the Simla slanders which he had heard,
was that she " drank like a fish." I give this
reproduction of the diploma because I believe it to be
unique and therefore of interest.
CHAPTER III.
Formation of the Esoteric School.
PASSING on to the time when the " Esoteric School of
Theosophy " was formed in the autumn of 1888, I find
the name of Mrs. Chowne immediately coming into my
mind ; for she was intimately bound up with the
circumstances and events attending my admission into
that body. She and her husband, Colonel Chowne,
were personal friends of H. P. B., who had stayed with
them in India, where he was stationed when she was
there (from '79 to '85) ; and she had no more loyal or
staunch adherents and supporters. I had met Mrs.
Chowne when I first joined the T. S., and we became
friends immediately. Indeed, I stayed with them more
than once in their London house after Colonel
Chowne had retired from the service.
In Lucifer for October, 1888, a notice had appeared to
the effect that an " Esoteric Section of the
Theosophical Society" was to be formed under H. P. B.,
and that those who wished to join and abide by its
Rules should send in their names. Mrs. Chowne and I,
also Colonel Chowne, if I remember rightly, at once
responded ; but for some time we heard nothing. Then,
one day, Mrs. Chowne came down to Harrow to see
me—I was ill at the time—bringing the E. S. T. Pledge from
H. P. B. for me to write out and sign. She said that H. P.
B. had told her that, on our sending in our signed
Pledges, each one would be " tested " (i.e., " examined
for fitness ") on inner planes, by the Master. Mrs.
Chowne's exact words were, " taken out and tested. "
Our past lives would be called up, and upon what was
there seen and known of our real selves, would depend
whether or not we were accepted as candidates. She
told me later that when she handed our signed Pledges
to H. P. B. she had looked very seriously—almost
solemnly—at her, and said :— " It is a great trust that you
have given me." So we waited ; days, even weeks
passed, and nothing occurred. I had almost forgotten
what Mrs. Chowne had warned me might happen, until,
one Tuesday night, (it was Full Moon, I remember) I
had the most wonderful experience, save one, that had
ever happened to me. I knew I was myself, lying half
awake, half asleep, in my own room at home. Yet I was
also in an Egyptian Temple of extraordinary grandeur,
and going through things quite unspeakable and most
solemn. This experience began soon after 10 P.M., and
almost exactly as a neighbouring church clock struck
midnight I lost consciousness in an overpowering and
almost terrible blaze of light, which seemed completely
to envelope me. The next morning I recorded all I could
remember in my diary, and on Thursday went up to
Lansdowne Road as usual for the Lodge meeting. I was
a little early, but H. P. B. at work in the inner room
must have known who had arrived, for she called me in,
and turning round, said most seriously : " Master told
me last night that you are accepted." Nothing more; but
I at once realised vividly that my experience the
previous Tuesday night had indeed been my " testing."
Thereupon I related the whole thing to H. P. B., who
only nodded several times, but made no remark
whatever about it.
Mrs. Chowne told me afterwards that she and her
husband had had similar experiences, adding that only
a few of the first applicants were so " tested "; that it
did not, in fact, apply generally. Certainly I never heard
from anyone else that they had been told what Mrs.
Chowne told me. Members of the E. S. T. were all
known by numbers (the uneven ones), and the
Chownes and myself, and two others, since dead (as is
Colonel Chowne also), received the first five single
numbers. It may or may not have been a "
coincidence," but it is a curious fact that the school
numbers of both my boys (one of whom died
comparatively young) were multiples of the number H.
P. B. herself gave me when she wrote out and handed
me my E. S. certificate. One of the clauses of the
original E. S. T. Pledge ran thus:—"I pledge myself to
support before the world the Theosophical Movement,
its leaders and its members ....." Not long after the
School was formed, I made one of a number of the
House inmates and workers at Lansdowne Road who
were gathered together one evening in the den of the
Secretary (then Mr. Bertram Keightley) upstairs; there
may have been six or eight of us. It was late (I was
staying the night) and we were discussing an attack on
H. P. B. in the Westminster Gazette, an evening paper,
which had just come in. [It was this paper which in
1894 published the elaborate attack based on
information furnished by Mr. W. R. Old (a member of
the Inner Group) against Mr. Judge and his methods,
which led to the disruption of the T. S. a year later.]
Suddenly H. P. B.'s bell rang somewhat violently, and
Mr. Keightley jumped up with some semi-jocular
remark and ran downstairs to her room. I must confess
that it had not occurred to any of us even to suggest
replying to this attack, which, so far as I remember, was
a scurrilous one. While Mr. Keightley was downstairs
we just went on with our desultory talk; after a few
minutes he returned with a very long face and serious
manner. He said we were under severe reproof by the
Master, who (unseen, of course) had been in the room
while we were so light-heartedly discussing the
newspaper attack on our " Outer Head." He had
descended immediately to H. P. B. in great
displeasure, telling her to inform us that if this was our
conception of keeping our newly-taken pledge we had
better all resign at once. We—at least I can speak for
myself—were terribly ashamed, and all with one accord
sat down at once and wrote as good a defence and
indignant protest as in us lay. I do not remember the
sequel, but certainly one, if not more, of those letters
were inserted.
This incident was the seed of what later became the
Press Bureau, formed for the express purpose of
keeping track of such attacks and criticisms on H. P. B.
and the work generally, and of seeing that they were
promptly and suitably dealt with. It became a most
successful institution, and the various Press Cutting
Agencies provided ample material and saved an
enormous amount of search work. Mrs. Cooper-Oakley
was in charge of the bureau, and sent out the cuttings to
members most able to deal with them. I was one of the
staff of writers ; and later, under Mr. Judge, I had entire
charge of the European Press Bureau. During this work
I made a valuable collection of cuttings, including all
the obituary notices of H. P. B.
Many a proof did I have- of H. P. B.'s power of "
hearing " and " seeing " at a distance ; things mostly
too personal to relate and usually connected with
reproof or instruction. Countess Wachtmeister bears
witness in her Reminiscences to these same powers in
H. P. B. One day, not very long before she moved away
from Lansdowne Road, Mr. George Mead and I were
with her in her little sanctum (the inner drawing-room).
The Voice of the Silence—one of the most wonderful
mystical works of this or any other time—had just been
published, and she was looking at one of the first
copies. Suddenly handing it to us (it may have been
one each ; I do not remember) she said something to the
effect of How did we like it ? or, What did we think of
it ? I forget the exact words. She was her most serious
self. I opened the little book, haphazard, and read one
or two verses, and the tears started involuntarily to my
eyes, such was the beauty and pathos of the words I
had read. I looked up at H. P. B., and was almost
certain I saw the glimmer of a tear in hers ; but she
abruptly changed the subject, and jumped down my
throat about something or other. As I see it now, it was
because to allow mere sentimental emotionalism to
become linked with a theme too solemn and too deep
for tears was dangerous. Too dangerous, I mean, for us
Western people, with our " sensuous development of
brain and nerves " (as she once wrote) ; and unworthy
of the exalted nature of the subject-matter dealt with in
the book. But I shall always believe I did see tears in
her eyes at that moment—always.
Almost the last—in fact it was the very last— incident I
recollect of the Lansdowne Road days is, to me, the
most touching and tragic of all my memories of H. P. B.
It was the day before she left for 19, Avenue Road,
Regent's Park, N.W., and as it was a lovely warm
afternoon the Countess had taken her for a drive in
Hyde Park, in the fashionable hour. Never shall I forget
her return from that drive ; Mrs. Cooper-Oakley and I
were in the double drawing-room when she entered,
followed by the Countess, in what seemed to be almost
a passion ; but it was a passion of grief. She walked up
and down the room, the tears streaming down her face,
ejaculating from time to time :—" Not a Soul among
them—not one! " It was a heart-cry of grief, a poignant
illustration—and my first sight—of that " helpless pity for
the men of Karmic sorrow " (of which I had only just
read in The Voice of the Silence) felt by those Great
Ones who through countless lives have worked for the
redemption of humanity.
A trained Occultist, like H. P. B., can see more and far
deeper than the mere semi-material aura visible to most
clairvoyants, with its ever-changing colours and
thought-images. Such an one sees whether the aura
reveals the presence of a Soul. This is seen and known,
also by colour—or vibration—but vibration on a far higher
plane of consciousness than those reachable by
ordinary psychic vision. We commonly take for
granted that each person must " have " a soul. Yet our
Teachers tell us in unmistakable terms that such is not
the case. " We elbow soulless men and women at
every step in life," writes H. P. B. in Isis Unveiled (II, p.
369) ; and her Master tells us that " He who defendetk
not the persecuted and the helpless, who giveth not of
his food to the starving, nor draweth water from his well
for the thirsty, hath been born too soon in human
shape." This is clear beyond a shadow of
misunderstanding, and explains the nature of the grief
felt by H. P. B.--grief called forth by pity and
compassion for those helpless, soulless beings, " born
too soon in human shape," whom she had that
afternoon seen in their hundreds, in Hyde Park. It
was something entirely above and beyond my
comprehension; but it was divine--if ever anything
was. It was Buddha-like.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR. UNIFORM WITH THIS
VOLUME.
H. P. Blavatsky : Her Life and Work for Humanity.
A Vindication, and an Exposition of her Mission and
Teachings. The main tenets of The Secret Doctrine are
clearly summarized, the legal unsoundness of the
charges formulated by the Society for Psychical
Research in 1885 is conclusively demonstrated, and
many new and important facts are given concerning the
Theosophical Movement.
" It is a wonderful record, and I, who have had the
priceless privilege of knowing most of those who were
in touch with H. P. B., and are still alive, can find few
words to express my gratitude for the book. It is written
with the blood of the heart; it is aflame with the high
inspiration that was aroused by the Teacher in the
pupil's heart, and which has never grown less in the
years and the disappointments that have followed the
Teacher's passing ... I shall love and prize this volume
because it has made me new-hearted in my defence of
H. P. B."--Mr. John M. Prentice, in Dawn.
" This book, like Mrs. Cleather's talks, illuminates, and
is illuminated by H. P. B., who becomes more than ever
a "vision splendid," and the chapter which summerizes
the leading conceptions of The Secret Doctrine can
only be regarded by students as one of the finest things
in our Theosophical literature."--From an Editorial
account of Mrs. Cleather's visit to Australia, in Dawn,
March, 1923.
H. P. Blavatsky: A Great Betrayal. A Protest against
the policy of the Theosophical Society, as developed
since H. P. Blavatsky's death in 1891, giving important
inside information based on Mrs. Cleather's personal
knowledge and experience as a pupil of H. P. B. since
1887, and original documents in her possession. An
exposure of the methods and doctrines of so-called "
Neo-Theosophy."
" It is to be hoped that every member of the T. S.
throughout the world will read Mrs. Cleather's two
books. The Great Betrayal is for the day only ; it is a
reformer's manual as much as anything, and on fighting
lines. H. P. B.--Her Life and, Work for Humanity,
will take its place as a classic . . . Mrs. Cleather has
promised to write some introductory books on
Theosophical subjects, and it is safe to say that these
will be of great value in the future."--Dawn.
" A notable publication ... It purports to show that the
present leaders of the ' Theosophical Society ' have
departed more and more from H. P. Blavatsky's
teachings, and that they are ' now their direct
antithesis,
particularly on the fundamental question of sex
morality.' ... It will assuredly create a sensation in
theosophical circles. . . A note of sincerity--almost
passionate sincerity--seems to ring through it from
cover
to cover. Assuredly no Theosophist can afford to
neglect its perusal, which has keenly interested us,
though a layman where Theosophism is
concerned."--Bangalore Post.>>
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