Rosicrucian Digest, March 1956
Rosicrucian Digest, March 1956
Rosicrucian Digest, March 1956
1956
MARCH
30c per copy
DI GEST
Apostle of the
Atlanteans
A new light on
the red race.
V A V
Tower of
Silence
Parsees and their
sacred dead.
V A V
Key to
Happiness
What is it?
V A V
0? e a t c e iu t y :
Mysticism
Science
The A rts
V A V
T te x t
Bible Miracles
V A V
Ancient Culture
r 1
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ri i
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n
1 1
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Neferti ti
I n Color Seven inches high,
lifelike, colors as on the original.
Price includes mailing charges.
Only
$5.25
each
(,1/17/6 sterling)
"\TEFER I I I I, renowned as the most beautiful queen of Egypt.
Her very name means, "Beautys Arrival. She was the wife
of Pharaoh Amenhotep IV ancl over 5300 years ago posed daily
for the king's chiel artist. The sculptor took great pains to do
justice to her overwhelming beauty. The bust statue he made ol
the queen was found some years ago and has been declared by
leading artists and sculptors as being expressive of the ideal form
of feminine beauty and also as representing an exquisite mystical
grace . . . she was truly an idol of love.
An exact reproduction of the magnificent original is on display
at the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose. Now. beautiful
home-size replicas, in colors, ol this masterful work have been
made in quantities for low-cost distribution.
An Inspiration for Home and Sanctum
Own one of these lovely replicas. Lifelike, colored after the
original. More than just a gracious statue or pleasing adornment,
the Nelertiti art piece will seem to bestow a consoling presence in
any room it occupies. Place it anywhere . . . on the mantel, book
case. dresser, or better still, in your private sanctum. You will prize
it highly and come to regard it as a reminder of past glory.
ROSICRUCIAN SUPPLY BUREAU
SA N J OSE. CALI FORNI A. U .S.A .
( EA CH MONT H T H I S P A GE I S D EV O T ED TO T H E EX H I BI T I O N O r ST U D E N T SU P P L I E S. )
The
Love
Idol
(From a Painting by H. Spencer Lewis)
" a
T EMPLE OF FL OWERS
But a few miles from Cuernavaca, Mexico, on a mountain overlooking a magnificent panorama of
tropical beauty, is a stepped pyramidlike structure. Known as Xochicalo or the Temple of Flowers, it still
remains an archaeological mystery. Above are shown, from left to right, Frater Carlos Nunez, of Mexico,
Grand Councilor of AMORC, and I mperator Ralph M. Lewis, studying the bas-relief inscriptions of the
ancient monument. I t is believed to have been erected by the Toltec civilization about 1000 A.D. The
inscriptions are principally of an undulatory design of a feathered serpent. There are also symbols which
closely resemble an Egyptian crux ansata.
(Photo by AMORC)
Has the Greatest Manuscript
Ever Lost, Been Found?
I buried manuscript unseen in a vault. I t is in a
monument. I n imitation of mummies I wrapped im
portant comic, tragic, philosophic and mathematic
writings in paper, in a bag, in sycamore wood. I f I
am dead, do not discover it, until a century is past;
reburie it.
So wrote Francis Bacon, renowned mystic and un
known author of Shakespeares plays, in a cryptic
code over three hundred years ago. Haunted every
hour of his life for the secret of his uncanny power
to probe the mysteries of life and his strange ability
to accomplish miracles, the world now seeks his long-
lost manuscript.
From what strange source came his wisdom? Had
he received the great knowledge of the ancients as a
heritage? While eerie cemeteries and ghastly church
yards are being scoured by the curious, thousands of
men and women, in the privacy of their homes, in
every nook and corner of the world, are sharing
quietly the tremendous advantages of his concealed
wisdom. Not in crypts or vaults did they find these
rare truths of nature he taught, but by sharing the
teachings of the secret brotherhood with which he had
long been associated. No map or code is needed to
find this knowledge. I f you have the worthy desire to
master life, to develop a confidence that comes from
understanding, and to acquire a dominant power by
which to overcome adverse circumstances and rise
above your environment, then this great heritage of
wisdom may become yours.
A ccept this G i f t Book
Thousands have been led by it to a
greater mastery of life
For centuries the Rosicrucians (NOT a religious or
ganization) have perpetuated the teachings which
Bacon privately taught. Today, as in his time, the
worthy and sincere may receive them. Use the coupon
below and receive the free, inspiring book of full
explanation, The Mastery of Life.
he ROSICRUCIANS
( A M O R C )
- ------------USE THIS COUPON - ~ ^___-
Scribe S. P. C., The Rosicrucians, AMORC,
San Jose, California
I am sincerely interested in knowing more about these
helpful teachings which can be used in acquiring the
fullness and happiness of life. Please send me, without
obligation, the book, The Mastery of Life, which I will
read as directed.
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ROSICRUCIAN DIGEST
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THE OF F I C I A L I NT ERNA T I ON A L ROSI C RUC I A N M A G A
ZI NE OF T HE WO R L D - WI D E ROSI C RUC I A N ORDER
Vol. XXXIV M A RCH , 1956
Temple of Flowers (Frontispiece).................................. .
Thought of the Month: The Alchemy of Living
Medicine in India.................... .........
Art and the Mystic ...............
The Life Pattern............. ...................... ........
Key to Happiness ...........................
One World of Children................................... ...............
Apostle of the Atlanteans................ .......
Temple Echoes ....................................................................
Cathedral Contacts: The Extent of your Environment
Tower of Silence ...................
Questions ............
Andean Sanctuary (Illustration) ... ...........
Subscription to the Rosicrucian Digest, $3.00 (1/ 1/ 5 sterling) per year.
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Entered as Second- Class Matter at the Post Office of San Jose, Cal i
fornia, under Section 1103 of the U. S. Postal A ct of Oct. 3, 1917.
Changes of address must reach us by the first of the month preceding
date of issue.
Statements made in this publication are not the official expression of
the organization or its officers unless stated to be official communications.
Published Monthly by the Supreme Council of
T HE RO SI C RUC I A N ORDER A M O RC
ROSICRUCIAN PARK SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
EDITOR: Frances Vejtasa
Copyright, 1956, by the Supreme Grand Lodge of AMORC, Inc. All rights reserved.
h a t e v e r the mind cannot
conceive as being orderly,
it cannot comprehend.
Disorder is the inability
of the human mind to
perceive the relationship
which exists between
things. Disorder causes
man to have the notion of
chaos. It. robs man of confidence, for he
is denied the idea of progression; that
is, he no longer is able to conceive the
probable beginning and end of things
or conditions. Wherever there appears
to be a lack of order, there also appears
diversity. Where there is a multiplicity
of things without understandable con
nections, the human being feels lost.
Man is then precipitated into a state
of helplessness. Each thing he experi
ences seems determined after its own
end. Everything seems indifferent to all
else. Such a state is not conducive to a
sense of security.
It was a sense of insecurity which
prompted the early thinkers to try to
find some common bond between the
various phenomena of nature. The
heavens, the sea, the mountains, and
the elements of nature were too vast
for man to subdue. He was continually
trembling in fear of their might. Per
haps, the primitive mind thought that
these forces were dependent upon some
greater power. If there were a greater
efficacy, then man could turn to it for
his own welfare. If a unity existed, if
. . there were a true universe, then the
Kostcructan t|irea(j 0f tliiS unity would become the
Digest key to a tremendous power.
March Xhe ancient alchemists were among
1956 the first who sought this key to cosmic
The
unity. Aristotle had taught that there
is one prima materia or primordial
matter. He associated with this first mat
ter four essential qualities. These quali
ties were heat, cold, wetness, and dry
ness. It was later thought that a change
into different substances could be ac
complished by merely varying the
amounts of these qualities of heat, cold,
and so forth. In fact, even the colors
of substances were thought to be an
important quality. The Alexandrine
alchemists believed that a base metal
which had the color of gold had been
changed into gold because the color
was the same.
The later Arabian alchemists sought
to transmute a variety of base metals
into gold. They further sought to dis
cover an elixir for the prolongation and
even the creation of life. These later
alchemists no longer thought that the
nature of matter was to be found just
in its qualities. It was believed, however,
that the fundamental principles of pri
mordial matter were sulphur or fire,
mercury or the liquid or solid state.
Then there was also the search for what
is known as the philosopher s stone.
This philosophers stone was conceived
as being the primary essence in each
substance and it would have the power
to transmute all things. Whoever con
trolled this essence would have the vital
power in his hands to change all matter
at will.
Another prominent alchemical term
was the quintessence or the fifth es
sence of matter. Paracelsus, physician,
Rosicrucian and alchemist, pointed out
that actually there is not a fifth essence
but rather that there is a nucleus of all
things. To him this nucleus was the
divine virtue, the divine intention by
which everything had existence. By di
recting this divine virtue, man then
held the key to all natural manifesta
tions. What man wanted most by all
these researches was volitional change.
In other words he wanted to be the di
recting, the motivating, force of his own
life. As man looked about him, reality
appeared either inert, arrested, or capri
cious. Things were, so it seemed, eitiier
unmoving or they were changing with
out mans volition and sometimes to his
detriment. Whatever did happen seemed
to occur without human ends or pur
poses in view. Therefore, the volitional
change that man sought was the direc
tion of these forces by his own will. He
desired the intentional transformation
and development of things.
Value* as Motlvea
Another definition for this volitional
change is mastership. What is master
ship? For a moment let us forget the
hyperbolic, romantic, poetic conception
of mastership and approach it from the
logical and rational point of view. A
master is one who has both the power
of application and of discretion. One
who has tremendous power at his dis
posal, no matter what the nature of
that power, is not necessarily a master.
For example, there is a prominent dis
tinction between a tyrant and a true
master and yet both have power. A ty
rant is one who applies his power with
out any concern for the interests and
welfare of others. A master, on the
other hand, is one who applies his pow
er, whether it be knowledge or might,
with intelligent discretion. This discre
tion means that a master will not dissi
pate his power nor will he destroy with
it unless he replaces what he destroys
with something finer or nobler.
To transmute the elements of his ex
istence, man must have some motive for
doing so. The agency of force which
man first applies is his own mind. It
is the mind which makes changes in
things, but the mind makes changes or
transmutations in accordance with cer
tain values. Values, then, are always
mans motive in acting upon the reali
ties, in seeking to change the conditions
of his life or his environment. Now
these values of man are always related
to self. Every intentional effort ex
pended by man is for the purpose of
creating a personal satisfaction of some
kind.
We may rightly say that man is al
ways dissatisfied. He is never quite
satisfied with life as he experiences it.
This is because man is a Being of ebul
lient or burning desires. These desires
in part consist of urges or inclinations
of the psychic or soul qualities of him
self. Others of his inclinations are in
tellectual or of purely a sensual or
physical nature. Certain religions and
philosophies have generally inveighed
against desires in their literature and
teachings. They have claimed, as the
Buddhists, that desire is the root of all
evil. But such unqualified criticism of
desires is unreasonable. It is not justi
fied. It would be, for example, like the
criticism of experience merely because
at times experience affords pain. On
the other hand, we know that experi
ence likewise has its enjoyable, its
pleasurable, moments. So, too, desires
within bounds are essential to the
changes which men wish to bring about
in their world and in themselves.
Life is quite indifferent to man's de
sires and to the motives that follow
from them. It must be realized that life
is not the chosen handmaiden of man
kind. It was not intended to be the
servant or by-product of mans personal
interest. Man is but one of lifes mul
titudinous products. Nevertheless of his
own initiative, man is ever setting ends
for, or values upon, his experiences. He
wants to make life serve him in some
way. As a consequence, he re-creates
his environment, his surroundings, his
associations, and the vicissitudes of life
to satisfy the consuming desires of self.
Mans world, therefore, is one of his
own construction. Let us use an analogy
to make this point more comprehensi
ble. A collection of trees is not a house.
Nature did not intend the forest or
timberland to be used for the construc
tion of homes. A house is an end that
man conceives as a necessity for his
own world. He thereupon sets about
to build the house from trees to satisfy
himself. The kind of house which man
conceives or builds is his own responsi
bility. If, subsequently, the house
crashes down upon him or is faulty in
T he
R osi cr uci an
D i gest
M ar ch
1956
some respect, nature has not neglected
him nor has she defaulted.
It is wrong to refer to nature as being
the great alchemist. The term is often
used in occult literature but it is errone
ous. From a philosophical point of view,
nature is not constantly striving to
change or transform all things. Admit
tedly everything is in a constant flux,
it is mobile or changing, as Heraclitus
said centuries ago. True, there is no
stability and no thing is. Everything,
rather, is becoming. However, in nature
there is no hierarchy or gradation of
values toward which she is striving.
Nothing is less or more important than
anything else. There is no possessive
urge in nature. All things are already
a part of her. As Spinoza said, nature
seeks to attain no ideal; she has no
end in view, as does man. In nature
nothing is intentionally restrained, held
back or kept within certain limits.
Nothing also takes on the quality of
permanence or a final end in nature.
Therefore, though nature is changing,
she changes not for a purpose. On the
other hand, the art of alchemy is and
must be an intentional transmutation.
It has as its purpose the change of one
thing into another that is desired and
which is thought of as having a more
important value for the moment at
least. Now all such motives as value,
as we have said, are human and not
cosmic. Consequently, it is man who
makes the intentional changes. It is
man who is the great alchemist, not
nature. Man himself is forever under
going change. Therefore, the rare met
als he seeks to create, that is, personal
values, also change with the growth of
himself mentally and spiritually.
Time has proved that some of these
values have more duration than others.
It is perhaps because they have pro
vided man with a deeper satisfaction
and that is why they endure. The pur
pose of the Rosicrucian philosophy is to
provide a transcendental or mystical
alchemy of living for mankind. It in
tends to reveal to the individual those
permanent values which man has estab
lished throughout the centuries because
of the greater satisfaction they provide.
Of these values which endure, and
which provide deep satisfaction, is the
one that conceives God in the collective
sense. To think of God otherwisethat
is, as being a mind or intelligence that
is quite apart from the universe, and
in some remote placecreates doubt
and fear. Man is forever shuffling in
his mind, turning over and over, the
realities which he is experiencing. He
is continually trying to determine which
of these experiences have a closer affini
ty or relationship to himself and to the
cosmic. Most men are constantly afraid
that they are appraising wrongly one
thing as good when perhaps it is evil
or another as evil which may be good.
They fear to resign themselves to the
course of nature. They believe that, if
they do, they may be surrendering their
potential mastership and power of di
rection. Every favorable event they
conceive as being Gods blessing be
stowed upon them. Unfavorable hap
penings are too frequently thought by
man to be the deitys infliction of pun
ishment upon mortals. The idea of
God as standing apart from things cre
ates these false notions. It leads even
to the belief that there is an intentional
hostility in some aspects of nature which
man must combat.
The Indestructible
The true alchemy of living conceives
God as being cosmic mind and this con
ception has a true value, because it is
both inspiring and gratifying to mortals.
This conception expounds that every
thing, regardless of its nature, plays a
art in the universe, not by purpose but
y necessity because it is of the whole.
Everything is an essential part of the
infinite one. The good of each thing,
then, is its true function, the part that
it plays by necessity. In this cosmic
whole, there is nothing to be denied,
there is nothing to be suppressed. All
things are to be known. Nothing is to
be kept from man. The cosmic is al
ways at mans finger tips. Man never
doubts the cosmic or the divine when
he comes to realize that it is a part of
every immediate experience, that it is
related to everything he sees, feels and
hears, and that the divine cause is not
isolated in remote space. Dissatisfaction
with lifes experiences does not imply
that the individual is being forsaken by
the cosmic. It does imply the necessity
for man to reorient himself, to readjust
his consciousness to his surroundings. A
thunderstorm can be a fearful phenom
enon, an awesome omen, but that same
phenomenon can likewise be realized, if
we have the understanding of it, as a
wonderful display of useful natural
forces. It depends upon the way we un
derstand natural and cosmic forces and
wish to accept them.
Another treasure of this alchemy of
living is the lofty notion that man is
permanently divine in essence. If the
divine essence permeates all things as
their dominant quality, as their nucleus,
then things cannot be corrupted. Now
man is one of the things of creation. He
is part of the whole of creation. The
divine universal consciousness is in
fused into man. It cannot be destroyed
in his being. Neither does he need to
regain the divine as a lost soul because
he can never Jose that which is the
nucleus of his own existence. Man can
only fail to realize himself, to lose con
sciousness of his own divine essence
and therefore fail to utilize his own
powers. When he does that, he punishes
himself by the consequence of his own
eventual inharmony with life.
Selt-Extension
Mystical alchemy has made another
very important contribution to mans
satisfactions down through the centu
ries. It has shown that to make the end
in life just a pleasurable sustaining of
ones self is not sufficient. Just to satis
fy our organic being constitutes self
isolation. It is the making of ones own
being a separate point of existence. In
the cosmic, we repeat, there is but the
oneness of being. There is no separation
except in form or appearance. There
fore, when we confine our conscious
ness to our own physical being, to our
own sensual selves, we are setting our
selves apart from all else. We are, in
fact, retreating from the ideal of unity
which, as we have said, man first sought
to realize. It is incumbent upon us to
inquire into the wider extension of self,
into its many ramifications. We should
investigate those parts of ourselves that
tie us fast to reality everywhere. We
are like a dot in the center of a vast
circle. Now there are two wavs in
which we, or this dot, can expand.
One is to introvert, to turn inward,
so that the dot grows to fill a larger
area of the circle. The other way is to
reach out, to draw the circle toward the
dot or the center. The important point
is that we as human beings should
never remain just a dot in the cosmic
whole. We should not remain isolated
in the cosmic circle.
The alchemy of living must concern
itself with society. After all, society is
but the human construction of mans
insight into cosmic oneness. Society is
an attempt by man to unify his own
expressions. The more man realizes
his dependence upon, and his own rela
tionship to, other phenomena, the more
he concedes his dependence upon, and
his obligation to, his fellows. Arrogance
is the misconception of self-power and
of independence. An appreciation of
our cosmic state causes us to have in
stead a sense of humility. We are then
aware of our deficiencies and of the con
tributions made by other human beings
for our welfare. We hear much today
of human rights. It is generally be
lieved that human rights are inherent
attributes for which a demand can jus
tifiably be made. The only thing which
man has that is inherent is the Cosmic
life force which animates him and its
associated facultiesand these are not
mans possessions nor are they really
gifts. They are an essential part of
what man is. Separate man from the
life force, from the attributes of life,
and he does not exist. Consequently, if
man lives, he has no demands to make
upon life for all else is then up to him.
If he does not live, there is no ego, no
self, either to desire or to demand.
In mystical alchemy a right may be
defined as an acquired interest. Your
rights as a member of society consist of
what you establish or create as a result
of your efforts or behavior. These rights,
I repeat, are not inherent but come as
a product of your own activities. They
are the application of your intelligence,
your tolerance, and your personal in
terest in society. These rights, as ac
quired interests, are an extension of
your personal power. What is of you,
you should be able to direct and control.
Therefore, before we, as members of
society at large, are justified in claim
ing individual rights, we should first
give of ourselves. For example, man
has a right to freedom only if he first
defines it in a universal sense. Freedom
must not be construed in terms of a
wholly individual interest. Furthermore,
T he
R osi cr uci an
D i gest
M ar ch
1956
freedom must not be conceived as be
ing some condition or state for a partic
ular group. Man has a right to justice,
if he first concedes it for others also. He
has a right to property which he labors
to achieve. However, such labors must
be in accordance with just social regula
tions. Man has a right to worship only
if he first recognizes the natural in
clinations of others to worship as they
will also. Rights are privileges which
men grant each other in mutual respect
of human dignity.
In the alcnemy of living, men will
try to keep their ideals, as well as their
lives, simple. The complex human life,
like a complex atom, is forever seeking
to disintegrate. Our ideals, however,
should always be progressive. Thus our
< ^ l \ l \ s A i a i Y i E .
o d e r n medical science of
Europe is in many ways
indebted to the Hindu
system of medicine, for
the seeds of many of the
wonderful discoveries of
today, which the West
erners claim with pride
to be original and highly
for human welfare, can
traced to ancient Aryan
Medical Science. In it can be found
marvellous remedies.
Uydropathg
The present-day idea of hydropathy
seems to have come from ancient Hindu
books like Shilodak Shastra and others.
Shilodak is an essential branch of Aryan
medicine. Its original manuscript de
scribing various kinds of mineral waters
in India, their places, their properties,
diseases for which to use tnem, etc.,
is in the Rasashala Granth Bhandar De
partment. It is wonderful to read there
in that particular type of water, when
some kind of leaves and branches fall
in it, becomes converted into stone. On
Mount Gimar, Abu, Osham, and others,
there are springs whose waters possess
charming medicinal properties. They
are fully described in Gimar Mahatmya,
Abu Kalpa, Kedar Kalpa, and other
books. These are considerably prior to
growing consciousness will never be re
stricted by them, nor will we ever need
to look back upon our ideals in shame.
In the dialogue, the Phaedrus, the phi
losopher Socrates offers a simple pray
er. It beautifully expresses a simple
ideal and, as well, the true alchemy of
living:
Beloved Pan, and all ye other gods
who haunt this place, give me beauty
in the inward soul; and may the out
ward and inward man be at one.
May I reckon the wise to be the
wealthy and may I have such a quanti
ty of gold as a temperate man and he
only can bear and carry. Anything
more? The prayer, I think, is enough
for me.
U n Undi d
the use of Vichy and other mineral
waters.
Doctors of today often recommend
certain types of mineral waters to cure
particular diseases. The Indians had in
the past, a good knowledge of this
branch of treatment. Sushruta and
many other works describe at length
the medicinal properties of the waters
of rivers, lakes, wells, and mineral
springs. They also discuss their curative
efficacy for treating various diseases.
Duryodhan, the Chief of the Kurus,
when pierced with arrows, was made
by his surgeons to sit in a tub filled
with medicated water, under which he
was freed from the missiles.
Chemistry
The knowledge of chemistry, pos
sessed by ancient Aryans, was of a high
order. They knew how to prepare sul
phuric, nitric and muriatic acids, oxides
of copper, iron, lead, tin, and zinc, the
sulphate of iron, copper, mercury and
antimony, the sulphate of copper, zinc
and iron, and carbonate of lead and
iron. Preparations of acids are described
in Rudrayamal. Animal, herbal, and
mineral drugs were known. Calcina
tion and distillation are processes in
vented by Hindus.
Reprinted from AyurvedaThe Science of
Li fe (The I ndian Medical Science), by Raj-
vaidya J . K. Shastri. (I n Letters on Ayurveda.
Book I I , September, 1953pp. 97 and 101-103)
instrumental
in main be
Art and the Mystic
By R u t h P h e l p s, F . R . C .
c
3k
V h
1 '
A
i
s God created man in His
image, so man creates in
his own image. He cre
ates out of himself. Ideal
ly, art is the expression
of mans union with God,
of the mutual love be
tween Creator and cre
ated. In more practical
terms, art is the record of mans growth,
the evolution of his inner being toward
that mystical union with the Divine.
As the artist develops, so does his art,
whether it is painting, music, or poetry.
The nine Beethoven symphonies show
a development not only in style, but
also in emotional and spiritual depth.
Mystically, artistic production may
be said to be the record of a mans
unifying himself, his inner and outer
being, for this must precede his union
with the Divine. This process is shown
in his art against a background of his
relation to other people, to the world
in general, and to himself. It includes
all facets of his bein^, the emotional,
the intellectual, the spiritual, as well as
the physical.
In another sense, art is the expres
sion of the joy and pain of the inner
being based on the sense of tragedy
for it is only against the backdrop of
the sense of tragedy that comedy is
meaningful. The fun of comedy is
closely linked with the sorrow of trag
edy, and the one only slightly out
weighs the other. Both must be based
on the dignity of man, and this dignity
consists in the ability, the necessity, to
evolve spiritually through suffering,
which is tragedy. The sense of tragedy
which produced Macbeth lies behind
the comedies of Shakespeare; nor is
Macbeth possible without the feeling
for comedy.
Psychologically, artistic creation is an
attempt to objectify and unify the art
ists inner and outer experiences in
order to further his growth toward
mature individuality. In this way, art
is therapy. A painting or a story may
be produced primarily to help straight
en out tangled emotional problems.
The mere fact of painting or writing
does not guarantee either an artistic
product or a solution to the problem
nor does the use of symbols derived
from psychological studies mean that
the painting involved is great art.
Art is not an end in itself. It is a
means of expressing something, and
by this expressing the artist is helped
to achieve further development. Self-
expression is a sufficient reason for cre
ating even the worst of art in any form.
Without the expression, the inner
growth is inhibited. No matter whether
it is love or fear, humor or tragedy, in
making it objective, in creating it, we
transmute it into something that is
either constructive instead of destruc
tive, or that has added beauty to itself
and to the artist. This is putting ex
perience on a higher plane. It may take
many incarnations to become a mature
artist, yet each person must start at the
beginning in faltering and uneven
work. The aim is the same as that of
the great and the famous.
Creative expression requires a unity
and balance of its intellectual, emotion
al, and spiritual elements. A poem, for
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instance, may stress one of these, but
it must have a balance nonetheless
among all three. If self-expression is
a sufficient reason for artistic produc
tion, then art that does not express the
inner self has no reason for being, ex
cept as a decoration. Art that does not
express and arouse the emotions in both
artist and audience fails in a part of its
purpose. If it denies the inner being,
avoids spiritual and emotional realities,
it denies the reason for existence of the
creative spirit.
Whether art is abstract, symbolic, or
realistic, it must have behind it a work
ing agreement between the intellect and
the emotion and the spiritual nature of
the artist. One must not too far over
balance the others; none must be left
out. If an abstraction is completely
geometric in design, it tends to omit
the heart and the soul in favor of the
mind. If a poem is too sentimental, it
has put into the background the mind.
In either case, it expresses only part
of the human being who has created
it. Consequently, it brings out only a
partial reaction from its audience.
There are three elements in any ar
tistic effort and its results: the artist,
the product, and the audience. Since
all three are necessary, an art work
must be in a form that is communicable
to others, is understandable by others.
Good art must be appreciated, but pop
ular art is not always good art. A
musician may be years ahead of his
time, yet his symphony must be under
standable to tne group of people who
compose his audience, even if it be
small.
There are three steps in artistic cre
ation also. The idea is the beginning,
the seed, the thought or emotion, to be
expressed. The conception, the forma
tion in the mind of the statue or the
sonnet, is the second step. Last is the
actual objectification, the created form,
the final expression. The idea, the con
ception, the expression, form another
triad in creative work.
There are three desires which prompt
painting, composing music, or writing.
The first is the desire for recognition
from others. It is a legitimate drive,
so long as the individual rules the de
sire instead of vice versa. The second
is the need to express oneself creatively.
This includes writing with the purpose
to get it out of your systemor the
use of any art form for therapeutic
purposes. Each man acts and creates
according to his own spiritual evolu
tion; consequently, the desire for self-
expression will manifest according to
the development of the individual. The
third is the wish to give to mankind
whatever the artist may feel he pos
sessesthrough knowledge and inspira
tionthat may help men achieve their
ideals or desires. This too is self-ex
pression, but with a broad purpose.
Roughly, these three desires corre
spond with the functions of art which
are: first, performance; second, self-
expression or creation as such; and
third, propaganda and instruction. The
first is simply communication to an
audience. The second is self-expression
art for the sole purpose of creating
something beautiful. The third implies
not just having an audience but doing
something constructive for the audience,
such as imparting information.
Art is not merely a means of self-
expression, nor a record of the growth
of the artist. It is also a means of
achieving growth, a means even of
achieving union with the Divine. Art
is expression in objective terms, but it
comes through the subjective and sub
conscious. The sources from which it
springs in the subconscious are man
and God. In other words, what the sub
conscious contains is a result of the
mind of man and the Divine Mind.
From this combination of man and
God through the subconscious comes a
third point, the idea. Art is not only an
expression of this union of man and
God, but it is also a means of achieving
it through the creative act.
A work of art may be judged or
analyzed by what it is, what it does
for the artist, and what it does for the
audience; or, it may be criticized by
the value of its purpose, and how it goes
about achieving that purpose and the
success it has. Again, the art piece may
be analyzed by reason, by emotion, or
by mysticism. This is true whether the
artist, the critic, or the public acts as
judge or critic. Better than judging or
analyzing, however, is experiencing,
and here the last triadreason, emo
tion, the mystical actis the founda
tion. A poem must be read, a piece of
music heard, by a unity of all of the
three factors if it is to be experienced
fully.
Likewise the artist in creating his
work must reason and feel. The great
artist is also inspired; he uses the Di
vine Mind through his own subcon
scious. Yet these three must work
together so smoothly that the artist is
not conscious of them, nor should the
audience be overconscious of any one.
A painting which strikes the viewer as
an intellectualization is top-heavy with
reason, just as one which is felt to be
sentimental is too heavily weighted
with emotion. A painting which is
mystical must be based on reason and
feeling. Perhaps only by being his own
audience and critic is an artist able to
achieve balance in this regard, and yet
his being the audience and the critic
must not interfere with the creative
act of his painting.
Artistic creation should be a continual
process of self-discovery and God-dis-
covery. This is another way of saying
that the mystic must be part artist ana
the artist part mystic. In this way, the
understanding of both is increased, and
the wholeness, the goal of the artist, the
mystic, and the psychiatrist, is achieved.
Through the creative process man
creates in his image, and yet through
that same process God creates in His
image man. Therefore, man creates
himself.
V A V
CANADA
Toronto, Ontario:
A M O R C I N I T I A T I O N
Toronto Lodge, 2249 Yonge St. Fi rst Temple Degree, April 15
Part I at 10:00 a.m.; Part I I at 1:30 p.m.
R O S I C R U C I A N R A L L I E S
PI TTSBURGH, PENNSY LV A NI A : The annual spring rally, sponsored by the First
Pennsylvania Lodge of A. M. O. R. C., will be held in Pittsburgh Saturday and Sun
day, April 14 and 15, 1956. The program will include initiations and demonstra
tions. Featured speakers will be Grand Councilors Joseph J . Weed of New York,
Dr. Gisbert L. Bossard of Cleveland, and Harold P. Stevens, of London, Ontario.
Active members are cordially invited to attend. For further information, write to
Charles C. Lambert, Rally Chairman, c/o First Pennsylvania Lodge of A.M.O.R.C.,
615 W. Diamond St., North Side, Pittsburgh 12, Pennsylvania.
PHOENI X, ARI ZONA: The Arizona rally, sponsored by the Phoenix and Tucson
Chapters, will be held on Sunday, March 11, at the Phoenix J ewish Community
Center, 1510 East Camelback Road, Phoenix, Arizona, instead of the address listed
in the February Rosicrucian Digest. Registration starts at 8:00 a.m. Sunday. On
the one-day program will be a temple convocation, bazaar, lectures, motion pic
tures, demonstrations, and social activities, including a noonday luncheon. Guest
speaker will be Frater Cecil A. Poole, Supreme Secretary.
<L P attz % n
By T h e a B r i t o n , F . R . C.Stratford'On'Avon, England
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E
v e r y form of life is
a distinct pattern,
in cells or crystals, and
it is the arrangement
of this pattern that dis
tinguishes one form of
life from another. A
certain pattern makes
a leaf, another pattern
a slug, still another a
diamond. In each case
the pattern allows a
variety within itself,
as witness the kinds of
leaves. At the same
time there are limits
beyond which the pat
tern ceases to be a leaf. The same
applies to any form of lifeanimal,
vegetable, or mineralthough the laws
governing patterns of minerals seem to
be more arbitrary; that is, there is less
variation possible in the pattern of a
diamond than in the pattern of a kitten,
for instance. The higher the conscious
ness contained by the pattern, the wider
the variation possible in that pattern.
Man has by far the widest variation of
pattern of any creature.
A pattern means harmony. To make
a pattern, every single bit or part of it
must be satisfied to be in its particular
position in relation to the restthat is,
to be in harmony with the whole.
One can put things or parts together
and surround them with a boundary
and make the pieces stay put. One can
draw a circle or a square and fill it with
shapes and colours, but it need not be
a patternit may be a designsome
thing marked down in that space.
The shapes or colours may clash with
each other and almost struggle to get
away, so that, looking at it, one feels
unrest and uneasinessthat is a design
as distinguished from a pattern. Some
designs in elements can be so far from
harmony that immediately after the
putting together is completed they ex
plode, as in a detonated bomb. That,
again, is design. Some designs look as
if the parts would be
quite willing to ex
plode in order to get
away from each other
but they cannot; they
are marked down
together by a superior
force.
A pattern is differ
ent. Imagine a child
playing in a field with
a big dog, some pup
pies, and a kitten or
two. Then the child
gets drowsy in the hot
sunshine and falls
asleep, leaning against
the large dog, with the kittens and pup
pies curled about him, also asleep. Well,
the sun, the field, the dogs, the kittens
and child make a pattern. Each part
is content and happy to be there and
the whole forms a harmony or pattern.
It seems that the elements of nature
must form a pattern so as to contain
life. Right up from the single cell
amoeba, dividing into two to continue
to live and multiplyto the most com
plicated creatures, forms of life proceed
gradually from simple to complicated
structures or patterns. Each higher
form, when assembled, incorporates a
race memory of all previous forms or
patterns of life.
Each pattern is more complicated
than the last, and directly the combina
tion or pattern of cells is formed capable
of containing the Vital Life Force, then
that combination includes a memory of
all previous forms which have con
tained the Vital Life Force up to that
point.
That race memory is consciousness,
and each added bit of consciousness is
built into the existing structure so that
consciousness at any stage of evolution
(that is, in any particular pattern of
life) includes a memory of all states
previous to the one in question.
A tree, complete with root, trunk and
branches, with or without leaves, is a
pattern and can contain life. A certain
collection of cells in an ordered (not
designed) pattern can make a dragon
fly or a black beetle. Another pattern
can make a horse or a bird or a child.
Each has its pattern and each pattern
must be true within certain well-defined
limits, or life will not remain there. In
that sense life is a sort of harmony and
recognition of harmony.
If the harmony falls below a certain
degree, either through disease or muti
lation, then life departs. This is a
necessary law to maintain the shape of
the various patterns. It is, too, the rea
son why certain types of creatures can
not mate, because the result would be
too great a distortion of the pattern.
Also, that is the real, fundamental rea
son for the distinction between races of
men, as it is between races of animals
and plants and even minerals, because
certain elements will not unite with
each other. In some cases they even
explode when brought together, and
chemists take advantage of these truths
for originating their own designs.
In one sense, man is the most com
plicated pattern of all nature. His pat
tern differs more widely and allows an
infinity of variations while yet remain
ing man; in fact, the more elements
that can be incorporated into a man
in harmonythe finer type of man is
the result. That is what Shakespeare
meant when he said, about Brutus, that
the elements so mixed in him made
him a fine man. Also, Rudyard Kipling
had the same idea in If. If you can
do all these things, he said, and be
all these things (widely diverse as they
were), then you will be a man, my
son.
The point is that whatever constitutes
the pattern, there must be harmony be
tween the parts; otherwise, there is no
whole, and no pattern. Life cannot dwell
in less than a whole. There is life of
V
a sort in an amputated limb or in a
branch of a tree but it is not animate,
and endures only for a short time.
We qualify by the kind of pattern
we make of ourselves for the quality of
consciousness we can entertain. The
more we can refine our pattern, the
higher the rate of consciousness it can
contain. We dwell in the realm of con
sciousness to which our pattern entitles
us, and it is only by altering that pat
tern that we can attain a higher realm
of consciousness. Therefore, we judge
ourselves and sentence or reward our
selves simply by being what we are.
A mans pattern is both formed and
modified by the food and drink he takes,
and excess of any kind tends to distort
the pattern, even the excess of fasting.
It is not good to deprive the physical
body of the elements necessary to keep
it physically fit.
Again, there are vibrations, forces,
flowing always around and through us
active forces, emanations from other
people and things. Space is full of them,
good and bad. But our pattern is sur
rounded by an aura which helps to
protect the self within it. The pattern
is the self, and that which constitutes
the pattern, the whole, also constitutes
the self. The aura is the essence of this
selfthe quintessence rather, which
makes a flaming barrier to protect the
pattern of the self within from un
authorized intrusion from without.
Only those forces to which the pat
tern is attuned can pass the barrier of
the aura. If therefore we try to send
out only constructive and loving
thoughts, we keep our auras bright and
shining, and also strong to keep away
all evil or harmful vibrations. We are
then well on the way to attaining the
highest consciousness which can be con
tained in a mortal pattern, the Christ
Consciousnessthe gateway to unimag
inable horizons.
V
T H E S Y M B O L I C F E A S T
The Hermes Lodge has scheduled the Symbolic New Y ears Feast and installation of
Lodge officers for Sunday, March 25. The Place is Masonic Temple, Corner Pico and
Figueroa. Doors open 12:30 p.m.; ritual begins 1:30 p.m. For AMORC members only.
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Key to Happiness
By Dr. H. S p e n c e r L e w i s , F. R. C.
(From The Mystic Triangle, April 1929)
Since thousands of readers of the Rosicrucian Digest have not read many of the articles by
our late I mperator, Dr. H. Spencer Lewis, we adopted the editorial policy of publishing each
month one of his outstanding articles, so that his thoughts would continue to reside within the
pages of this publication.
and a necessary part to blend into and
make up the oneness of all.
Man, therefore, is not individualized
either in body or soul, for in soul he is
of God, as in body he is of earth, and
earth, in return, is of God also. The
interdependency of man exists because
it is necessary in order that man him
self may exist. Man is not now, nor
has he ever been, entirely independent.
He likes to think of himself as being
such, but when he gets right down into
the heart of the matter he sees his error
and knows that without others he him
self could not possibly be what or where
he is today. Do you suppose, for one
instant, that man could exist were
there not someone else to help things
along? How could a man express his
thoughts, his ideals, and make mani
fest the talents, knowledge, and the
power within him that is ever seeking
an outlet for expression, were there
none besides himself to appreciate all
these things?
interdependency
Mans interdependency may be lik
ened to a huge wireless station. The
wireless operator sits before his key, at
tunes himself with the station he desires
to communicate with, and sends out his
message. Now, by attuning himself with
another station he may send the same,
h e title of this article im
plies that there is a cer
tain, definite key
which, when secured, will
unlock the door leading
to Happiness for us.
That there is just such a
key cannot be doubted by
those who have received
it, and it is only the unenlightened who
are skeptical as to its existence. When
once obtained, this key is yours for all
timeyou cannot lose it, even though
you loan it to others, or attempt to
throw it aside. Once in your possession
it remains with you always.
It is necessary that you come to un
derstand our true relationship to God
and to all mankind, before you may be
given this wonderful key. God made
man, and gave unto him that part of
Himself so that man was made in the
likeness, or image, of God. Made in the
image of God! Perfect, whole, un
changeable, immortal! Possessing all
the qualities of Godbecause God could
not create anything less perfect than
Himself. And when we become fully
conscious of that one big truth, and
know that we are a part of God, mans
so-called individuality fades into insig
nificance, and he sees himself, or recog
nizes himself, only as a humble soul,
closely connected with all other souls
or another, message to that other sta
tion, and so on, until through proper
attunement he is enabled to reach all
other wireless stations. All these wire
less stations, combined, may be likened
to the Cosmic Mind; and man, when
he desires something from that Mind,
must do just the same as the wireless
operatorattune himself with that
Mind and send out his message. Just as
the operator waits to receive his answer,
so man must await his answer from the
Cosmic Mind; and just as the answer
comes to the operator, if he is to receive
an answer, so the answer comes to man,
from the Cosmic, if he is to receive an
answer!
However, the average man, including
the average student of occult sciences,
does not realize that big truth. He thinks
that because he desires something he
should have it, and so makes every at
tempt to get what he wants regardless
of consequencesfor that matter the
consequences do not enter his mind, as
he is wrapped up in his desire to obtain
that one thing he thinks is so necessary
to his happiness. If he would stop for a
moment and give the matter a little
thought, he would soon realize that
some of the things he thinks are so
necessary to his happiness are the very
things which would cause him much
unhappiness were he to receive them.
Look at the little baby; it cries its
heart out for something it sees and
wants. The babys mind is not sufficient
ly developed to tell that a flame would
bum if handled; nothe baby is not
capable of reasoning then as it will be
in later years, and so it cries and cries.
And if it does not receive the thing it
cries for, it will continue to crythat
I grant youuntil its attention is at
tracted to something else. The mother
knows that everything the baby cries
for is not good for it; and she does her
best to teach the child what is good for
it and what is not, until such a time
when the baby may come to know and
decide for itself. So God, in His in
finite Wisdom knows what is good and
what is not good for us. He gives us
just what we need when we need it.
And if the thing we desire is not good
for us, and God knows it, then all our
prayers, all our willing to have it, all
our concentrating upon it, will be of no
avail. Think you that we, with our
definite, limited, finite minds can iudge
what is best for us, and, in so judging,
have only to will to have a thing in
order to obtain it? When we consider
these things we must come to see how
absurd it is to think that we can change
Gods laws and decrees simply through
willing that a thing shall be done!
When will man cease to think that
his will is the only thing to be con
sidered, and remove the resistance he
is constantly placing in the way of
God? Why should man resist the work
ing out of Gods laws and decrees, and
in so resisting them, bring upon himself
much unnecessary unhappiness and
worry? Simply because man has not
yet learned the operation of the Laws
underlying Gods work and Gods great
scheme of all things. Man, in his ex
aggerated egotism, thinks that his will
is all that is necessary to consider, and
that his desires (so long as they are not
immoral or illegal) are, or should be,
always satisfactory to God, and conform
with Gods will and desires! How ego
tistical! Why, if God were not all love,
charity, mercyalways ready to for
give and teachI would be almost
tempted to say that He would have
many a laugh over mans attempt to
fool himself into his importance with
self-conceit, self-flattery and that abom
inable false pride!
At some time or other in everyones
life comes that great realization that
man is not so important as he thought
he was; that he is not so independent
as he liked to think; that he must look
to God for all that he has and all that
he hopes to have; and that of himself
he is nothing, but of God, he is all.
All the unhappiness in this world is
due to mans fighting against the very
things which come to him for the pur
pose of allowing him to gain the ex
periences which are to unfold his soul.
Man must come to realize that it is
useless to fight against these things, be
cause nothing he is able to do can pre
vent their coming to pass, although by
fighting them he is able to put them off
for the time being. But when they have
been put off, they gather in force, and
when they do get the chance to strike,
or pass the barrier he has built up, they
come as a thunderbolt, with renewed
energy and force. If man would but
welcome these things and recognize
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them as necessary for his advancement,
then he would be able to meet and
analyze them, and see where and how
he can best work with them and there
by not allow them to affect him for
other than good, either mentally or
physically.
You cannot fight against natureand
you cannot fight against God. The very
things which come to you, and you are
unable to understand why they come,
are the things you should welcome,
analyze, and seek to understand. If
properly handled, fire cannot burn you.
Nothing can harm you, cause you wor
ry, or bring unhappiness if vou handle
it properly, and in accordance with
Gods laws and principles.
When everything goes dead wrong,
when all you try to do seems useless;
when friends turn against you and life
seems unbearablestop for a moment
and know this: It isnt the world or the
a
le in it who are wrong; it is you.
you are wrong because you are
allowing all these things to affect you,
worry you, influence you. Lift up your
head in such moments; throw your
arms wide open and say: Come, I wel
come you, for I know you are necessary
for the unfoldment of my soul. Then,
take up each condition, examine it, ana
lyze it in minute detail, see how harm
less it is, and then you will be able to
laugh the bugaboo away; for every
bugaboo exists within you and not
around you, as it so seems. Let us see
if we cannot do this with some of the
most general problems that arise to
bring about unhappiness. You seek your
key to happiness and it shall be given
you, so let us take up your problems.
The most important of these prob
lems is that of happiness in the home;
for unless happiness reigns supreme in
the home all other conditions must be
unhappy. As the home is built upon a
foundation of Love, we will first ana
lyze Love and see what we can find.
It is not my intention to go into any
abstract theories or statements regard
ing Love. Instead, I shall discuss it
from an everyday standpoint, and
show the how and wherefore of happi
ness in that relation between human
beings, called Love.
Angry words and quarrels come to
pass, only because there are two people
to allow their expression. One may say:
I shall not quarrel with you, and then
stand back with an indifferent attitude
towards the other. But anger cannot be
quieted by an indifferent attitude. It
must be dealt with in kindly thoughts,
words, and actions which will show the
other that your one desire is to remove
the cause of the anger or quarrel; and
you can only do this by placing your
self upon the same level with the other
person.
Adverse Moods
If your thoughts are all kindness, all
thoughtfulness, and all love for others,
it is impossible for anyone to become
angry with you; and just as impossible
for any thing or condition to affect your
equilibrium, harmony, or peace. But if
you have not reached that stage where
you can instantly eliminate the desire
to return anger for anger, blow for
blow, and treat adverse conditions with
tolerance, etc., then you can make the
first step in advancement towards that
stage, by stopping for a moment, when
ever you are tempted to give way to the
desire to speak angry words in return,
and training yourself to think of and
analyze the others side of the question,
thus learning the cause of the anger or
thoughtlessness.
Something went wrong in the house
during the day. The baby was cross;
the supper did not pan out just right;
some visitor was there who wasnt very
nice in her choice of gossip; something
or other happened to make your wife
cross. Then you come home and start
to read your paper. She asks you to
do something, and you, not suspecting
the trials she has gone through that day,
answer that you will do it as soon as
you finish your paper. She becomes
impatient and asks you again, and you
get up in a way that arouses her an
tagonism. A cross word is spoken. You
reply in like tone. A quarrel results and
both of you retire utterly disgusted with
life, in general, especially yourselves.
Or it may be that something went
wrong in the office. You go home wor
ried, downhearted, and discouraged.
Your supper is not ready, the baby
starts to cry, or Johnny asks some seem
ingly foolish question. You speak a
cross word, kick the dog, and start to
grumble about everything. Perhaps you
think that your wife would not under
stand things if you explained them, so
you keep the bugaboo to yourself. She
makes some remark which you inter-
ret wrongly, and you say something to
er which is unkind, or a little sarcastic.
She, not knowing the trials you have
been through that day, makes some re
mark which leads to retaliation on your
part, and a quarrel results. And if
things continue in this way, it isnt long
before a perfectly happy home is broken
up-
Now, consider that if you understood
the why and wherefore of all these
conditions, you would then know how
to cope with them so that they would
never leave a discordant effect upon
you. You would not have resisted them
in the first place, and so refused to let
them grow in power. And, in the un
derstanding, you would always find the
cause for all discords in life, and be
able to remove them without any dif
ficulty whatsoever.
V
To sum it all up the real key to hap
piness, which may be applied for all, is
this: Be always considerate of others in
all your thoughts, actions, and words.
God never intended that man should
be unhappy. Happiness is mans birth
right, and the only thing which is
preventing man from enjoying that
birthright is his own blind egotism. Be
cause we are so wrapped up in ourselves,
we are failing to enjoy the happiness we
should have and hold. We are so proud
of our self-styled independence that we
have built up a wall of pride around us,
through which kindness, joy, considera
tion, and love cannot penetrate; and it
is not until we remove that wall and
know that we are of God, and not of
ourselves, that true happiness will come
to be with us and remain with us now
and forevermore.
Think it over! You have tried to be
happy the other way. Now try this
way!
V
L O N D O N S U P P L Y B U R E A U
To our Friends in the Sterling Area:
We take great pleasure in making the following announcement. Since the establish
ment of the London Supply Bureau, many of our special aids for students have been
made available to members in the British I sles. Through special arrangements, these
supplies are now available to al l members in the Sterling Area. They may be ordered
direct from the London Office, at the following prices:
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o
VVW]
v y y
T he
R osi cr uci an
D i gest
M ar ch
1956
(Dns ojf - dfil[d%.yz
By I p h i gen e B e t t m an
(From New York Times MagazineJ une 19, 1955 I ssue)
J
u s t five years ago an
experiment called
the Childrens Inter
national Summer Vil
lage began, with two
unique aimsto bring
together children from
many lands for a
month so that they
might develop interna
tional friendships be
fore they developed
national prejudices,
and to study their be
havior under these un
usual conditions. Each
ear since, the Village
as flourished in a rus
tic spot near this city,
and other Villages
have been set up in
other parts of the
world.
On a sunny day last month I watched
this years group having fun in the
Villages small lake. As they splashed
and crawled and shouted happily, these
children looked like any gathering in
an American summer camp. But there
was a difference. These forty girls and
boys, all eleven years old, had come to
Cincinnati from ten different nations,
Sweden, Argentina, Brazil, British Hon
duras, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Mexico,
Nicaragua, Venezuela, and the United
States.
The day before, they had stepped off
the train at Cincinnati clinging shyly to
their own group and eyeing their wel
coming hosts uncertainly. But a few
hours later, as ten boys or girls in each
of the cabins unpacked their clothes and
their pictures of their families and their
coins and treasures brought for trad
ing, the common world of children
started to assert itself. In a steady pat
ter, the little roommates settled down
to exchange toys, information and con
fidences, in Swedish, Spanish, English,
Portugueseand sign language.
In the dining room
the next morning,
Swedens Margaretta
and Americas Miriam
already had their stools
drawn close together
and were busy com
paring milk and mjolk,
corn and majs. Two
small round-eyed Cos
ta Rican girls provoked
awe and wonder as
they made it clear
with gestures that
black coffee and not
milk was their basic
drink.
During the rest of
the morning friend
ships ripened on the
ball field, on the
swings, on the lake.
The afternoon brought
quieter diversions, arts, crafts, and na
ture. On this first day the nature-study
counselor chose her subject wisely: It
was the celebrated American vine, poi
son ivy.
After dinner, Margaretta got out her
accordion and gave her audience its
first taste of Swedish tunes. Then every
one tried the English words of the
camp song:
Sow a seed and plant a tree
Beneath whose branches there
may be
All the nations gathered free....
This cheerful, noisy gathering on the
shore of a quiet Ohio lake was the out
come of a dreamand years of hard
work. The dreamers and the workers
were the same: Doris Twitchell Allen,
a psychologist, and her husband, Erastus
S. Allen, a patent lawyer in Cincinnati.
Back in 1946, on a summer Sunday,
Dr. Allen sat on a park bench by the
East River in New York, reading a
newspaper, when her eye was caught
by an article in which Alexander
Meiklejohn proposed an international
university. Too late, thought Dr.
Allen. Prejudices are rooted before
adolescence. Then and there the germ
of the idea of an international mingling
of younger children was planted. Dr.
Allen began at once to sketch a plan.
But it was to take five years of dogged
effort to bring the idea to reality.
The Allens regarded UNESCO as a
natural sponsor. Trips to its meetings
in Washington, Chicago, Mexico City,
and Paris yielded encouragement but
no action. Private citizens listened ap
preciatively but with skepticism. Par
ents, they insisted, would never let
children as young as eleven years trav
el far away from them. Or, if they did,
the children would become homesick
and fail to adjust. Without a common
language, nationals would stay in their
own little groups and no common ex
perience would develop.
Undaunted and certain that, once
started, the plan would carry itself, the
Allens persevered, making up consid
erable lack of funds from their own
bank accounts. In 1951, fifty-live chil
dren from nine countries accompanied
by seventeen adults, arrived at St. Ed
munds Camp at Glendale, near Cin
cinnati. The dream had come true.
As hoped, other villages followed at
St. Colombe, France, in 1952, and at
Lilsved, Sweden, in 1953. Last year
Sweden fathered two camps, one for the
eleven-year-olds at Restenas and in an
experiment with the fourteen to sixteen-
ear-olds, one at Grinda. (It has since
een agreed that eleven is the right
age.) A camp was also organized at
Vienna. This year, in addition to Cin
cinnati, there are Childrens Interna
tional Summer Villages at Helsinki,
Finland; Hamburg, Germany; and
Frostvallen, Sweden.
At the tloota
Each of the Villages is financed in its
own country. Sometimes the childrens
families are able to pay their transpor
tation. More often, because the aim is
to choose superior children regardless of
economic status, money is raised by
friends, schools, or committees.
Although international living is no
new concept, two features of CISV are
unprecedented:
In no other project have foreign chil
dren as young as eleven been systemat
ically brought together.
Nowhere else have continuing psy
chological studies been made of indi
vidual children to determine the effect
of close contact with alien groups.
Childrens Village is, in fact, not only
a breeding ground for international
friendship but also the scene of impor
tant scientific work. Each child, on his
arrival and again just before departure,
is given thorough personality tests by a
trained psychologist who probes into
the childs fears, beliefs, likes, and dis
likes. The tests give an indication of
how a months living among mixed
races, religions, and nationalities has
affected the youngsters.
Through this procedure, the research
program of the CISV seeks to find the
roots of harmonious international feel
ing; to learn what makes for good or ill
will in people living together; and to
deduce principles of international rela
tionships which may be useful to other
organizations as well.
The scientists are not ready to an
nounce sweeping conclusions at this
time. In another five years, which will
be the end of the first ten-year period,
they will feel justified in making their
findings public.
RetMltH Are Evident
In the meantime some results are too
clear to be ignored. In a month, young
children shed the biases they have ac
cumulated during their brief lives in a
truly striking manner. Interview anal
yses show the insidiousness of the
superior race attitude: the Nordic
over the inferior people, the white
over the Negro, the Central and South
American over the Indian. But after a
camp experience a young German an
nounced this discovery: We are not
the only cultured people. Others, too,
have culture and we can be friends.
And this is how an American boy de
clared himself: I always thought Ne
groes are different and not as good as
us. Now Ive lived with them and dont
think any more about who is black and
who is white."
As to thinking in larger, interna
tional terms, how can children help but
do so when each country becomes per
sonalized? When I think of France,
it is Jean. When I think of Germany,
it is Hulda, one little girl said. The
question is often asked in childrens
councils, where adults act only as in
terpreters, Why dont we have chil
dren from China and Russia and all the
countries in the world?
In their enthusiasm over foreign
friends, children make short shift of
language difficulties. Experience shows
that instead of understanding being de-
f
iendent on sharing a language, spoken
anguage becomes easier after under
standing has been developed.
All this proclaims the success of the
Childrens Villages. There remains,
however, a most important question:
Are these childish impressions, enthusi
asms, and resolutions enduring?
Today, on the fifth anniversary of
the CISV, its first alumni are already in
a position to furnish some of the an
swers. They are, after all, no longer
children but, rather, thinking adoles
cents. Do they think it has had a last
ing effect on their beliefs and attitudes?
These questions, put to several vet
erans of the first camp at Cincinnati
years ago who came back this year to
work as junior counselors, evoked sur
prise, even impatience. Of course, I
see things differently, one replied, and
the others echoed his intense feeling in
their similar replies. These young peo
ple demonstrated the genuineness of
their enthusiasm by deeds. Andre Mar
tens scraped up money to cover his trip
from Belgium to America and, arriv
ing early, sought gardening work to
keep going until camp started.
Geraldine Margain came back from
Mexico this year because she felt that,
with her knowledge of English and
Spanish, she was needed as an inter
preter at the camp.
Three junior counselors from Cin
cinnati itself, Peter Martin, Nancy
Stevenson, and Fritz Wuerfel Jr. sur
mounted a major obstacle in coming to
work at the camp. Camp was held dur
ing the last weeks before their school
examinations, and they were aware that
their marks would count vitally toward
college entrance. They put in many
extra hours after the days camp activi
ties to keep up with their studies.
But it was Ingolf Stahl, editor of
CISV News, who summed up the values
and accomplishments of the Childrens
International Summer Village. With
the ageless wisdom of sixteen, he re
marked simply, I feel that I am a
citizen of the world.
V A V
T he
R osi cr uci an
D i gest
M ar ch
1956
A T T E N T I O N , H I E R A R C H Y M E M B E R S
Those who have attained to the Hierarchy and understand the purpose and importance
of these special Contact Periods are invited to participate in, and report on, the following
occasions.
First, mark the dates given below on your calendar. Arrange in advance for a few
uninterrupted minutes at the given hour. While benefiting yourself, you may also aid
the Hierarchy. I n reporting to the I mperator, please indicate your key number and the
last monograph received, as well as your Degree. The I mperator appreciates your
thoughtfulness in not including other subject matter as a part of your Hierarchy report.
Thursday, M ay 17, 1956
8:00 p.m., Pacific Daylight Saving Time
Thursday, August 23, 1956
8:00 p.m., Pacific Daylight Saving Time
ottz oj tfiE c^-fttantzam
B y H a r o l d P r e e c e
rT-,wo great Indians
1 of Atlantean de
scent labored to restore
the broken red tribes
during the formative
years of the American
republic. One was Te-
cumseh whom histori
ans are beginning to
rate correctly as a val
iant soldier and a far-
seeing statesman; the
other was his brother,
T ensk wata waj u s t ly
called i/ie Prophet, al
though many unin
formed writers have
used this title as a
term of derision. Gen
erally, he has been portrayed as a
shrewd, cynical troublemaker directing
a savage and fanatical cult of the toma
hawk. Yet, we of a kindred arcane
tradition must judge him differently.
This devout Magus of the original
Americans was a wise and deeply
learned high priest of the old universal
Atlantean-Celtic religion which the In
dian sacred societies perpetuated and
extended for centuries prior to the ad
vent of Columbus. Through the doc
trines of the Ancient Ones, Tecumseh
sought political redemption for the
tribes. By the same august teachings,
Tenskwatawa sought their moral re
form.
Ignorant white officeholders and their
armies sought to destroy the Prophet
and his movement, with words and
weapons. But significantly one semi
occult Christian sect of his generation
recognized him as an inspired Adept
and urged that he be treated with the
honor and attention due a man of his
stature.
Lalawethika (meaning a rattling in
strument) was the name given this dis
tinguished Teacher when he was bom
in a village of the Shawnee tribe on the
site of present-day Chillicothe, Ohio,
sometime in 1775. As he grew up, he
Tenskwatawa, the Prophet
displayed no skill at
armsand, it seemed,
no keenness of mind.
During his youth, he
lost an eye in an acci
dent so that partial
blindness made him
look something less
than impressive.
The Shawnees pre
dicted that the hand-
some and daring
Tecumseh would grow
up to succeed his fa
ther as chief of the
Kiscopoke or Panther
clan of the tribe. But
Lalawethika they con
sidered to be too stupid
and inept for any tasks except the
menial ones reserved for the slow of
mind.
But how shallow often is the judg
ment by a mans neighbors. For events
roved that what others considered to
e near-idiocy in the young Indian was
actually a deep capacity for reflection,
combined with the natural ability of a
mystic to detach the self from the work
aday world while meditating.
His fellow-Shawnees might worry
about slaying the next deer on their
hunting grounds which were steadily
being converted into corn patches by
the land-hungry white immigrants
swarming into what is today the Amer
ican Midwest. But Lalawethika, whom
his kinsmen scorned, kept wondering
why ruin and disaster had befallen his
folk who had once held the spiritual
leadership of the powerful Algonquin
tribes.
Why, he pondered, had the Shaw
nees been forsaken by Coashellequaa
who was the Master of Life and by
Kohkomhena who was the Mother?
What transgressions of Cosmic Law in
scribed in the Algonquin sacred book,
the Walaam Olum, were condemning
them to the gradual extinction which
could also be witnessed in the clan of
every other tribe?
Why had the inheritance of the Red
Peoples been taken from them and giv
en to these intruding Blond Ones who
cared not for the Indian nor for the
Teachings inherited by his fathers?
These teachings had been brought from
an ancient land located far to the East,
before it sank beneath the Great Water
which the Whites called the Atlantic
Ocean.
Old Truths
From Pengashega, the tribal high
priest, the young Seeker learned the
story of the Deluge contained in the
Walaam 01 umthat little-known In
dian scripture of history and parables,
written in verse, which should be stud
ied by all American occultists. From
that aging seer to whom only a hand
ful still listened, Lalawethika heard also
of the part played by the Shawnees in
settling and spiritualizing this continent
of the West.
Twelve proud clanssince reduced
to fourthey had been during count
less generations which had followed the
migration of their forefathers from At
lantis. With the other Algonquins, the
Shawnees were included in the Eastern
branch of the Atlantean-American fam
ily while the Pueblo-Cliff Dweller stock
constituted the Western segment of the
same great parent stock. (See my two-
part study, The Indians Remember
Atlantis, Rosicrucian Digest, Septem
ber and October 1954.)
As Lalawethika knew, the Shawnee
had given their name in varying forms
to the Suwannee River of Florida and
the Savannah River of Georgia. From
the venerable priest, he heard of mys
terious white men who had come
preaching the old truths with new ap
plications at the time that the tribe was
maintaining its principal settlements in
Florida. We now know that these
Whites were disciples of St. Brendan,
the Irish missionary bishop of the Celtic
Church who visited America during the
6th century A.D. (See my article, The
The Power Behind Columbus, Rosicrucian
R osi cr uci an Digest, October 1955.) Furthermore, the
Celtic Church was derived ultimately
D i gest through the Irish Druidic priesthood
M ar ch from the Hibernian mystery schools of
1956 ancient Atlantisand the refugee
priests from the flooded old continent
gave to Ireland its earlier and sacred
name of Hibernia.
But all this, as Lalawethika realized,
was a glorious, almost forgotten past,
emphasizing by its contrast a sorry-
present and a dubious future for his
people. Dust and scorpions, he was told,
now covered the magnificent temple of
Guaxule which the Shawnees had built
for the religious instruction of other
tribes and whose massive ruins may
still be seen near Cartersville, Georgia.
There Indians no longer came in cease
less pilgrimages to revere the symbol
of the Cross which had been the im
memorial token of life and resurrection
in Atlantis, Hibernia, and America. At
its silent, crumbling altars, no priests
of the worshipping tribes now knelt to
receive the copper Tablets of Law
which had been cast and transcribed by
the anointed ones of the Shawnee.
Pengashegas temple was but a tepee.
His congregations were the dwindling
groups of older people plus those like
Lalawethika whom the tribe regarded
as simpletons. Sick with sorrow, Lala
wethika for a long period abandoned
himself to drink and dissipation. Then
abruptly, he decided that he wanted no
more of vice. Debauchery could no
longer be an escape from responsibility.
For him and for all red men, there
must be a Deliverance and a Way of
finding it.
But he could not learn the Way by
listening to the sermons of the Christian
missionaries operating in this frontier
domain from which the Long Knives
(Americans) were brutally exiling its
original Indian inhabitants. With the
ethical and moral principles of Chris
tianity, Lalawethika had no quarrel.
But how reconcile those noble teachings
of its preachers with the shabby con
duct of its white followers toward their
fellow men of a darker race?
illumination in a Tepee
The Seeker was thirty years of age
on that memorable day in 1805 when
he sat in his tepee reflectively smoking
his pipe. Suddenly the pipe dropped;
its owner fell unconscious on the dirt
floor of the tent. For long hours, he lay
there motionless till finally the Shaw
nees gathered around him to perform
the tribal funeral rites.
While they were preparing him for
burial, he revived and began preaching
to his startled listeners. After quieting
their alarm, he announced that he had
been conducted during his trance to
the spirit world. While thus sojourn
ing, he had been permitted to lift the
veil from the past and futurehad seen
the misery of evildoers and the happi
ness that awaited those who followed
the Precepts
Similar experiences have been re
corded by such Christian mystics as St.
Paul ana Emanuel Swedenborg. After
the example of those two, Lalawethika
announced himself as a Messenger con
secrated by God to bring fresh inter
pretations of forgotten truths to his
fellow men.
This Indian mystic declared that he
had been ordained as the Bearer of a
new revelation from the Master of
Life. He changed his name to Ten-
skwatawa meaning the Open Dooror
entrance to salvation. His wigwam he
converted into a shrine. Then he set
about organizing a religious society to
spread his teachings.
Disciples were few at the outset.
Many Shawnees still regarded Ten-
skwatawa as being mentally unbalanced
and declared that his visions were proof
of his madness. But the ranks of his
followers began to increase when his
brother Tecumseh, whose sanity nobody
doubted, publicly embraced the Pre
cepts. Proselytes were also added from
the Seneca, Delaware, Wyandotte, and
Pottawatomie tribes. Soon many In
dians were hearing reverently of the
New Messenger, and many Whites lis
tened scornfully.
During this period, Pengashega the
high priest passed through transition.
Though Tenskwatawa was not of the
traditional priestly clan of the Me-
quachke, he was chosen by the majority
of the Shawnees to fill the sacred office.
Scoffing white men thereupon nick
named him, the Prophet. It was a title
that the Indians were quick to adopt for
their Magus as one of honor. By now
the little Shawnee village was unable
to accommodate the crowds coming from
all tribes to hear the preaching of
Tenskwatawa. So he found it necessary
to establish new headquarters in a sec
tion whose name was a variation of his.
That area was the Tawa region bor
dering the Auglaize River of north
western Ohio. Tawa, as an Algonquin
geographical term, can be translated
not only as a door but as a place where
Truth is revealed. We may note its
similarity to Tarathe name of the
ancient Irish city which served as the
World See of the sublime Atlantean-
Celtic Magi who sent their missionaries
to the Shawnees and to other tribes of
North and South America. (See my ar
ticle, Druids in the Americas, (Rosi
crucian Digest, April 1954.)
In the towns of Tawawhich is Tara
with the Algonquin w sound substi
tuted for the Celtic rTenskwatawa
the Prophet delivered these command
ments:
Witchcraft practices and medicine
juggleries were forever to cease. In
dians must have faith only in Coashelle-
quaa the Great Father and Kohkomhena
the Great Mother.
Tribal lands must be held in com
mon, according to the ancient law of
the ancestors. For only thus would
the Indians be able to hold the pitiful
remnants of their domains from the
ever-encroaching Whites.
Indianslike the followers of the
Moslem prophet, Mohammedwere to
abstain from drinking alcoholic hquors.
For the firewater of the Whites was
poisoned and accursed. Thus the In
dian prophet was giving impressive
moral support to tribal chiefs who were
constantly petitioning Congress to curb
the whisky vendors.
The young must cherish and respect
the aged and infirm. This teaching
was in the spirit of Moses command
ment to Honor thy father and thy
mother.
Indians must adhere to native dress
and customs. No red man might wear
the clothes of the white man or build
a fire by his method of flint and steel.
Every tool and every custom derived
from the Whites must be put away.
Here, we may say, Tenskwatawa went
too far.
Indian must not slay Indian, for the
Creator had made them all brothers.
Disputes between tribes must be settled
in peaceful council according to the
ethics of the Ancient Religion.
Indians and Whites should remain
at peaceeach living by their own cus
toms and creeds. But the white man
must respect the dignity and humanity
of his dark-skinned neighbors.
Indians must not take sides in the
wars of the Whitesnor with the Red
Coats, the Britishnor the Long Knives,
the Americans.
Indians were forbidden to intermarry
with Whites. For extinction by blood
assimilation was to be resisted as stanch-
ly as extinction by military conquest.
In keeping with this policy, Indian
women and ciiildren were to be treated
with love and understanding by their
husbands and fathers. Since his time,
women have often sat as respected coun
cilors in tribes originally influenced by
Tenskwatawa.
Polygamy, which degraded Indian
women and cheapened their reputations
among Whites, was to be abolished. Set
ting the example, Tenskwatawa and
Tecumseh each married only one wife.
After Tenskwatawa had proclaimed
his Gospel, the Indian tribes experienced
one of the most remarkable religious
and ethical awakenings ever known
among any people on any continent.
Native preachers ordained by the
Prophet, traveled from the Alleghenies
to tne Rockies expounding the reincar
nated Atlantean faith with its Way of
Life and Redemption for those recent
sons of Atlantis who were the Indians.
Tribe after tribe cast out its native
sorcerers and white liquor merchants.
Tomahawks were lowered between war
ring groups and peace pacts concluded.
Thieving gangs were either reformed or
were outlawed; polygamous harems
were dissolved.
Among the Ojibways, writes Tanner
who personally witnessed the Indian
Reformation, the beating of women and
children ceased for as long as the tribe
lived by the teachings of Tenskwatawa.
Drunkenness, testifies this white au
thor, was much less frequent than
formerly; war was less thought of
and the entire aspect of affairs . . . was
* . . somewhat changed by the influence of
R osi cr uci an 0ne man.
*es[ In fact, Tanner himself was one of
M ar ch several Whites who became partial fol-
1956 lowers of the Indian dynamic religious
movement. Under the influence of an
Ojibway, messenger of revelation
named Manito-o-gheezkik or Servant
of Manito, he laid aside his medicine
bag which he had acquired from Indian
fetish worshippers and in many par
ticulars complied with the new doc
trines . . .
No Indian priest since the Magi of
Guaxule had attracted so many fervent
disciples as Tenskwatawa the Prophet.
He spoke with authority, as did those
native apostles who had been trained
1200 years before by the white-robed
Teachers crossing the Atlantic from
Tara to the New World. He served in
the spirit of Ahldain, Legate of the
Great White Brotherhood, who visited
these shores to strengthen and broaden
the Old Faith a century in advance of
Columbus.
To the Indian tribes in general,
Tenskwatawa restored racial pride and
a sense of their importance in the Cos
mic plan for man. To the Shawnees in
particular, he imparted a fresh con
sciousness of their ancient role as a
priestly group roughly paralleling the
Aaronic Order of ancient Israel. One
would therefore naturally think that
the leading Whites of his era would
have encouraged the Indian Magus in
his mission and seen in him a welcome
force for changing the whole low moral
character of frontier America.
Today for instance, Christian minis
ters often cooperate with Jewish spirit
ual leaders in interfaith organizations
that broaden the total religious founda
tion of our national culture. Protestants
and Catholics work together for com
mon aims that better the whole country.
Such undertakings demonstrate a cen
tral Rosicrucian principle of the essen
tia] unity of all revelation in all its
racial and creedal forms.
But bigotry equated with conquest in
that loose epoch of blood and lust which
was the early 19th century. And what
good musket-packing, empire-minded
white American gave a hoot about any
thing that a heathen Indian might
have to say.
Yet scoffing turned to fear, and anger
was directed at Tecumseh and the
Prophet after they had grown into the
political and spiritual leadership of the
(Continued on page 114)
h e Building Fund of the
Auckland, New Zealand,
Chapter has reached a
sizable amount according
to reports at the year's
end. The goal is a per
manent home for the Or
der in Auckland which
_______ __ will serve the area as a
center of Rosicrucian activity. It will
be more than just a meeting place for
local members. Such a project is worthy
of wide support and Aucklanders are
giving time, thought, and money to
make a Rosicrucian Temple a fact as
well as a dream.
* * *
In Calgary, Alberta, Canada, educa
tion has been the theme with Rosicru
cian Chapter members during the past
few months. Members have prepared
discourses on various aspects of Rosi-
crucianism including ritual and temple
decorum. Through discourse and dem
onstration they are determined to be
informed and proficient.
* * *
Loja Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, South
America, not long ago published a bul
letin especially honoring the Imperator,
Ralph M. Lewis. An ink portrait of
him filled the cover; a letter to him
in both English and Portuguese formed
the introduction, and a brief biography
followed. A splendid and warm-hearted
gesture from these fratres and sorores
of Brasil.
* * *
According to latest information from
Frater Tjia Von Tjan, Grand Master
of the Grand Lodge of Indonesia, Rosi
crucian activities there are moving for
ward in encouraging fashion. For one
thing, its official publication modeled
after the Rosicrucian Digest has become
a fact. For the second issue, the Im
perator contributed a special word of
greeting.
V A V
Sometimes Class Masters receive re
warding correspondence. After weeks
of puzzled reports, one comes indicating
that light and understanding have
dawned in the expanding consciousness
of the member. Samples are here given:
I have begun to see a relationship
in all things and at the bottom ana
through all things there is one basic
principle at work. It is practically in
describable and certainly not nameable.
It is a synthesis resulting from the ac
tion of one thing upon another. In
turn, this synthesis becomes another
active force acting upon another pas
sive entity. The whole of nature is
made up of this thing so that if traced
it goes back to one primary active force
that in turn is broken down into an
infinite number of these trinities. There
is no end to it.F.M.D.
For there is but one God and He
is the central hub of the universe. He
is the prime motivatorthe beginning
and the end.
Evidence of Him is everywhere.
Nature is perfectionnature is God.
All things manifest themselves through
a Divine plan. There are no miracles,
only a miraculous plan.
The Earth, the entire system, and
all the Life dependent upon itall
plants and animals, were created with
a purpose and a cunning that Man, in
his feeble attempts at self-mastery, can
not comprehend.
We, who dwell here in the radiance
of His goodness, have a mission before
us; we shall not be called back to His
side until that mission has been ful
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filled, and should we stray from the
path and denjr Him, we but deprive
ourselves of a rightful heritage.R.M.
* * *
We fail first in thought and only
afterwards in action. It is not every
mans duty to guide nations and rule
peoples. It is every mans duty, how
ever, to guide his personal life and rule
his turbulent mind and rebellious spirit
to win not only for himself but for all
humanity, for no man lives unto him
self. For every living thing is bound
by cords to otner living thingswhat
the State can never give him nor un
told wealth buy him.
Peace profound, true comfort and
wisdom dwell in the divine depths of
the self. The practice of turning in
wards, of self-examination through
meditation whenever the need arises is
essential to make the ego the servant
and not the ruler. When we give our
selves ungrudgingly to the Cosmic, the
Cosmic will give Itself ungrudgingly to
us, and incidentally to the whole hu
man race. And it is what we give to
the universe that we build into our
selves and truly possess, and it is only
what we give that we have.J.H.T.
* * *
I have performed experiment num
ber fourteen as instructed. The most
wonderful feeling came over methe
same feeling of ecstasy that I felt when
I first held my newborn babies. I felt
the meaning of a pattern of life. And
as I held my baby it seemed as though
I felt the arm of my own mother around
me and her mothers mother like a
chain of perfection with divine blend
ing. It seemed that a key to the source
of love was shown to me.Mrs. J.L.T.
* * *
I wish to state the following ex
perience: On May 30, 1954,1 was given
six months to livemy glands were not
functioning properly, causing excess fat
that blocked my heart. I read or rather
re-read my lessons until I found the
proper exercisesand today, I could
not be in better health and my physical
body is perfectly healed, and of the
proper weight.M.W.P.
V A V
The Rosicrucian Egyptian, Oriental
Museum continues to offer outstanding
exhibits in its modem gallery. Recent
ly, an especially popular one was the
joint enterprise of two Bay Area artists,
Archibald Fairbaim and Othello Mi-
chetti. Both are recognized water
colorists. Mr. Fairbaim, a South-African
by birth, is on the faculty of the Art
League of California. His work easily
justifies his artistic credo that the art
ists job is to make his subject matter
recognizable for what it is. The work
exhibited clearly indicates a concern
with whatever of life is a picture, be
it an Indian artist at work, boats that
find a quiet harbor, ladies at golf.
Mr. Michetti, Italian-born, has been
in the States for fifty years. He is art
director for the Strecher-Traung Litho
graph Corporation of San Francisco.
Having painted in California, Arizona,
and Mexico, Mr. Michettis offerings
include work from those places. Espe
cially attractive was his Fountain-San
Miguel, Allende, although more poetic
perhaps was his Sedona, Arizona. Mr.
Fairbaim, however, contributed a can
vas that raised both eyebrows and ques
tions: It was titled In Memoriam Le-
muriensis. These artists hang agreeably
together being at many points one in
their composition and color values.
V A V
At a public installation ceremony re
cently in San Jose, AMORCs Grand
Secretary, Harvey A. Miles, assumed
the post of Eminent Commander of San
Jose Commandery No. 10, Knights
Templar. Fra ter Miles, in addition to
his Rosicrucian activities, has been a
staunch supporter of Freemasonry and
has devoted himself untiringly to the
promotion of the York Rite in Cali
fornia. A large number of his Rosi
crucian fratres and sorores witnessed
the installation of Frater Miles into this
high office.
V A V
About this time last year, as a slight
diversion after struggling with income
tax forms, this department began sort
ing through the accumulation of odd
ments in its files. It was repeated this
year with the following results: Work
ing from photographic plates made by
Robert Cameron, Mrs. Beryl Potter of
Indiana University discovered a new
asteroid in 1950 and named it Indi
ana. (This department loves I. U. as
an alma mater and knew Mrs. Potter
when she was a bride.) * * * Whooping
cranes (now numbering possibly 21
adults and 6 youngstersnone person
ally known to this department) come
down every year from somewhere in
Northwest Territory of Canada to mild
er Matagorda Island near Galveston,
Texas, in the United States. The United
States Army Engineer Corps had in
tended to extend their bombing experi
ments to within half a mile of this
whooping-crane refuge. Next friends
to the cranes have suggested that bombs
dropped every twenty minutes through
out die night might shatter the mental
peace of these rapidly vanishing birds
and the Engineers are left with no place
to drop their bombs. * * * Experts con
tinue to interest themselves in deter
mining the IQs of lower vertebrates.
Answers are being sought to the ques
tion, Can Primates be taught to speak?
Two University of Chicago psychologists
have been running a series of tests on
Kid, the female Labrador-Airedale
dog belonging to a retired farmer, Mr.
H. S. Gatchell. Whatever the tests
prove, Mr. Gatchell will be only mod
erately concerned. He learned to talk
with dogs when he was a child and
has found them agreeable companions
ever since. * * * By 1975 there will be
192 million people in the United States
to feed, clothe, house, and transport,
according to Dr. H. F. Miller of Gen
eral Electric Company. Because, he
says, we have not added to the list of
major food animals since 3000 B.C.,
new sources of food must be found
protein food, especially. Algae and yeast
are possible sources if they can be pro
duced in sufficient quantity and made
alatable. * * * Something is being
one, too, to see that we are not being
cheated on what we are getting now.
The U. S. Armys Quartermaster Sub
sistence Testing Laboratory has turned
its electric eye on egg noodles to see
just whether the eggs are there and in
what quantity. The index is lipoid
phosphoric acid: A large amount means
noodles have high egg content. * * *
The late Dr. Einstein placed significant
emphasis on intuition in his defini
tion of philosophy. The logic of facts
in his experience was only half the re
quirement for a successful scientist;
the other halfintuition. * * * Samuel
Caldwell of Canterbury, England, has
been in charge of the Cathedral win
dows since he was twenty-one. At nine
ty-one he laid out a twenty-year job
for himself that no one else can do
that of replacing the glass (removed as
a safety measure during World War II)
in the Cathedral windows. There are
10,000 pieces to be set and Mr. Cald
well is the only one who knows where
they go. It isnt written down; its in
his head.
V A V
I was rejoicing in my peace and tranquillity when Thou didst draw me forth,
showing me Thy Light, and I became even as the moth that is drawn to the light
and burns its wings. Oh Lord, my wings of contemplation are burnt. I have
embarked on a stormy sea, I am assailed on all sides by contrary winds. . . .
I would fain reach the port, but cannot find the way. I would fain be at rest
and repose, but can find no resting place. I would fain remain still and silent,
but this I cannot do, for the Word of God is as a fire in my heart, and if I do
not give it vent it will consume the marrow of my bones. Arise, oh Lord, and
help me, since Thou wouldest have me pass through this deep sea, and let Thy
Will be done.
S a v o n a r o l a , 1452-1498
[107]
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%
i
1
1
1
The Cathedral of the Soul is a Cosmic meeting place for all minds of the
most highly developed and spiritually advanced members and workers of the
Rosicrucian fraternity. I t is the focal point of Cosmic radiations and thought
waves from which radiate vibrations of health, peace, happiness, and inner
awakening. Various periods of the day are set aside when many thousands
of minds are attuned with the Cathedral of the Soul, and others attuning with
the Cathedral at the time will receive the benefit of the vibrations. Those who
are not members of the organization may share in the unusual benefits as well
as those who are members. The book called Liber 777 describes the periods
for various contacts with the Cathedral. Copies will be sent to persons who
are not members if they address their requests for this book to Scribe S. P. C.,
care of AMORC Temple, San Jose, California, enclosing three cents in postage
stamps. (Please state whether member or notthis is important.)
THE EXTENT OF YOUR ENVIRONMENT
By C e c i l A. P o o l e , Supreme Secretary
f e w w e e k s a g o I sat in
the comfort of my own
home and through the
medium of television
watched a football game
taking place in a city al
most three thousand miles
away. Such a statement
would have been consid
ered a description of a miracle as re
cently as fifty years ago. Today, it is
a commonplace event. The average
family thinks nothing of devoting some
time, and in some cases too much time,
to entertainment that comes through
the medium of this modern appliance.
Sound and sights from a distance
have ceased to be a novelty; they do
not cause us to marvel at the great pos
sibilities or potentialities that moaem
technology offers us. During the time
that I was watching this particular
event, I thought of other things besides
the event itself. What impressed me
most was that not only was there a
marvelous principle in operation that
brought me enjoyment, entertainment,
and could be an important factor for
the conveyance of knowledge if it were
used for that purpose, but that I had
also expanded my environment. Un
known to themselves the participants in
the football stadium in the distant city
had also expanded their environment.
I did not know personally any of the
participants in the game; and to the
best of my knowledge there was no one
I knew among the spectators in the
great stadium where the game took
place, but during the period of this
athletic event, I began to recognize the
individuals who were taking part in
the event. I could designate them by
name and by number; I followed with
interest their activities as they partic
ipated in an athletic event which I en
joyed. Gradually, I began to realize
that the players liad come into my en
vironment. The game was no longer
merely a report in a newspaper of an
event, for here were individuals, whom
I watched and in whose activities I be
came interested. I became concerned
with the results of their actions and
shared their enthusiasm or their disap
pointments. They, too, might have
thought, although I dont know whether
they did or not, that their participating
in a game was being seen by many in
dividuals, that it was going out over
wires and by wireless beams to receiv
ing sets all over this continent. Conse
quently, their environment had also
grown; as my environment had grown
to take in these individuals in a distant
place, so their environment had grown
to take me in as a witness to the event
in which they participated.
I was again impressed with the small
significance of time and spacethat
while man lives to a certain extent a
slave of the restrictions of the environ
ment which is his immediate surround
ings, he needs but a little imagination
or prompting to expand his environ
ment to take in more than what is
apparent. In this sense, man is able to
expand his environment just as far as
his senses will reach. The modern com
munication methods that have been per
fected, many within the lifetimes of
living individuals, have of course great
ly enlarged this capacity, but the reali
zation of the expansion of our mental
horizons is still within the greatest of
all the things which we use, our own
consciousness. Consciousness is the abil
ity, or rather the attribute of the indi
vidual to extend himself beyond the
limitations which might otherwise be
established for him. Man is able, if he
is properly motivated, and has the help
of various devices, such as the television
to which I referred, to reach out and
bring into his life new things, new
experiences, and, as a result, new ideas.
It would seem then that man with
his modern concept of communication
should extend his consciousness and
knowledge more extensively than at
any period in the past; and, to a cer
tain extent, he is doing so. But he
should also realize that the privilege to
extend his consciousness and his envi
ronment carries with it a responsibility
to make the use of that expansion prof
itable and beneficial to himself and to
those that are about him. Therefore,
modern devices should not be used ex
clusively for entertainment or as a
means of escaping the realities of day-
to-day existence, but should be so de
vised and so used as to give man a
channel of expression, a way to reach
out of himself and bring into his en
vironment new horizons and new vistas
which will inspire him to do better and
greater things.
Furthermore, if man realizes that
through physical media, he can reach
out and grasp conditions and circum
stances that exist beyond the limits of
his physical senses, he should also real
ize that by using his own mental power
and his own creative ability he can
expand his consciousness to become
aware of impressions that exist about
him but are not ordinarily perceptible.
Man has in him the spark of life, the
element of being that is a part of his
Creator. With it he has a means to
increase his conscious realization to be
come better aware of that life force
within him, and to expand his con
sciousness to that channel toward the
ultimate realization of the final pur
poses and ends of being. This is mans
challenge to place himself properly in
his environment, and then to expand
that environment and his realization of
it until he encompasses the entire uni
verse of being, until he becomes one
with the elements that made this uni
verse to be. Only through the medium
of mans consciousness will he become
aware of God or the Supreme Intelli
gence behind all and motivating all
manifestation.
^J o o j ez oj- <J bi[zncz
FUNERAL CUSTOMS OF THE PARSEES
By D h a n j i s h a w D. P a t e l l , F. R. C.Bombay, India
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h e Tower of Silence
where the dead bodies of
Parsees are exposed to
the Sun and to the flesh-
eating birds (vultures) is
generally built on a hill.
Some isolated spot, away
from human dwellings,
becomes the chosen place
or the Toweran open round massive
structure built usually of stone. A few
steps from the ground lead to an iron
door which opens on a circular plat
form of stone having a circular pit in
the centre (see sketch).
The foundation of this tower is laid
amidst religious ceremonies. Priests re
cite the prayers invoking Angel Sraosha,
the Guardian Angel guiding the souls
of the deceased, while the ground re
quired for the tower is being dug.
When the whole of the plot of ground
is excavated, two priests perform the
ceremony for laying the Talisman
ground-plan for the Tower. A very fine
thread is used for marking out the in
tricate tracings of the Tower, according
to a prescribed plan, fixed with nails
into the ground.
The Tower of Silence ceremony re
minds one of a somewhat similar
foundation-ceremony of the ancient
Egyptian Temples. The foundation of
an Egyptian Temple was associated
with a series of ceremonies which are
repeatedly described very minutely.
(The Dawn of Astronomy, by Norman
Lockyer, p. 173) The old Egyptian cere
monial which consisted of stretching a
thread in the direction of a star was
considered to be of great importance.
Priests have to fix into the ground 301
nails of different prescribed sizes and
weights. After finishing the nailing, the
priests commence passing the thread
through the nails. They first begin with
the nail on the southeast quarter. The
long thread passes from nail to nail,
r n o 3
always moving to the right. The fin
ished design is geometrically beautiful.
The two priests finish with the recital
of prayers. This finishes the founda-
tion-ceremony. The winding design is
a kind of ring-pass-not or a Charm.
Thousands of Parsee visitors come to
witness this ceremony. All the visitors
throw into the excavations their cash
contribution towards the sacred work
of building the Tower of Silence. The
sum thus collected at these ceremonies
is taken towards the maintenance of the
Tower.
The Towers of Silence (seven), on
the top of the Malabar Hill, Bombay,
are the last abode of the remains of all
the Zoroastrians (Parsees). Here the
bodies of rich and poor, men, women,
and children are laid on a circular plat
form (see sketch). In a few minutes
nothing remains of them except the
skeleton. This is the most economical
and hygienic process of disposing of
dead bodies, according to the Zoroas-
trian tenets.
The Zoroastrian religion requires that
earth, fire, and water be kept pure,
since these elements are very useful to
mankind. It is strictly forbidden to
bury or even cremate a corpse.
Exposing the dead bodies to the Sun,
leaves no smell behind, and minimises
the chances of spreading other epidem-
TAil &IAJJLC. TcrusVi. Sitc^UL.
ics. By this rapid process, putrification
with all its evils is most effectually
prevented. Thus, the Tower of Silence
has proved that it is harmless to the
Citys population.
funeral Ceremonies
The Parsee (Zoroastrian) custom of
disposing of the dead bodies is harmless
to the living beings. The ancient Zoro
astrian ideas of sanitation, purification,
and cleanliness as expressed in the Ven-
didad are observed in this method. Only
professional bearers come into contact
with dead bodies.
The body of the deceased, before its
removal to the Tower, is washed clean
with water. The shroud with which it
is to be covered is also washed prior
to use. This shroud-dress is white and
is made of cotton. The Kusti or the
Sacred Thread is then put round the
body by some relation with the recital
of certain prayers. The body is then
given over to the charge of two persons
who are generally trained for this type
of work. They place the body on the
ground on a clean white sheet of cloth
and put the shroud over it. The whole
of the body except the face is covered
with cloth. The hands are folded upon
the chest crosswise. Then the body is
placed on a stone slab in a position
which would usually point towards any
direction except the North. (The an
cient Egyptians, while mummifying the
dead bodies, pointed the head towards
the SouthMasperos Egypt and As
syria.)
Sometimes special houses are pro
vided where parties take their dead and
perform the funeral ceremonies before
removing them to the Tower of Silence.
But the funeral can start from the
house.
In one of the ceremonies, a dog, called
a four-eyed one (having a spot above
each eyeand perhaps being endowed
with clairvoyance) is brought to look
at the corpse. Some say that the dog
has the characteristic of detecting
whether life in the body is extinct or
not. Perhaps the correct meaning may
have been lost. The reason given in
the Scriptures is that the dogs gaze
prevents the magnetic defilement from
spreading to the living.
Near the corpse, before its removal
to the Tower of Silence, a fire is kept
burning in a censer with fragrant san
dalwood and frankincense.
The priests and all other persons are
enjoined to sit at a distance of at least
three paces (81 inches) from the
corpse. One priest sits before the fire
and recites prayers till the time of the
removal of the corpse to the Tower.
The corpse may be removed to the
Tower in the daytime only, since it
has to be exposed to the rays of the Sun.
An hour before the time fixed for the
removal of the body to the Tower, the
corpse-bearers, fully clothed in perfect
white and with gloves on their hands,
enter the house carrying an iron bier
for the body. They place the bier by
the side of the corpse and then recite
certain prayers. After that, they sit
silently beside the body.
Next the two priests, standing at the
door at some distance from the body,
recite seven cantos of the Ahunavaiti
Gatha. After reciting half of the hymns,
they stop for about a minute. The
corpse-bearers now lift the body from
the slab of stone and place it over the
iron bier. Thereafter the dog is shown
the corpse once again. Then two priests
recite the remaining part of the Gathas.
When this is finished, the dog is in
duced to see the corpse. The relatives
and friends pay their last homage.
When all have paid their salutation, tne
corpse-bearers cover the face of the de
ceased with a piece of white cloth and
secure the body to the bier.
When the bier leaves the house, all
the male relatives and friends of the
family, dressed in white, follow the
funeral procession to the Tower of Si
lence. They arrange themselves in
pairs, holding a white handkerchief be
tween them in token of sympathetic
grief, and silently march to the Tower.
The procession is headed by priests.
When the bier reaches the Tower,
it is placed on the ground outside; the
bearers now uncover the face of the
body. Those who have accompanied the
funeral have once again an opportunity
to pay homage to the departed one. The
gate of the Tower which is kept locked
is then opened. They lift up the bier
and carry it into the Tower. They re
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1956
move the body from the bier and place
it on one of the niches on the platform
of the Tower (see sketch). They then
remove the shroud and leave the body
to the flesh-eating birds.
The bearers completing their work in
the Tower come out and lock the Tow
er again. All those who have accom
panied the funeral procession, and have
taken their seat at some distance from
the Tower, now get up from their seats
and recite prayers. They then wash
their faces and hands, and they untie
and regirdle the Kusti with prescribed
prayers.
All return home and generally take
a bath before following their ordinary
vocations.
Fire is kept burning for three days
at the spot where the body was placed
before removal; also, a lamp is kept
burning for a period of ten or more
days if the home is used. For three
days after death, the family abstains
from meat diet. The abstinence is ob
served as a sign of mourning and sym
pathy for the life of living animals.
The number three is a sacred number,
because it reminds one of the three
principal precepts of the Zoroastrian
religion: that is, good thoughts, good
words, and good deeds will be our sav
iours here and in the next world.
For three days and nights a soul is
believed to be under the special protec
tion of Sraosha, the Guardian Angel
protecting the souls of men. The Yasna
says: 0 beautiful, holy Sraosha! pro
tect us here in these two worlds, in this
world which is material, and in that
which is spiritual. (Yasna LVII, 25)
As Sraosha is the protector of the soul
in this world, the daily prayer of a
Zoroastrian begins with a Sraosh-baj,
which is a prayer for invoking Sraosha.
Generally, a Parsee recites Sraosh-Yasht
at night before going to bed, to pray
that his soul may be under the protec
tion of the angel when he is asleep.
Some of these prayers and ceremo
nies are offered for three days and
nights at the house of the deceased. On
the third day, a ceremony is performed
which is called the Oothamna. The
friends and relatives of the deceased
meet. The prayers are recited by the
priests, wherein the name of the de-
(Continued on next page)
2 c c e 4 t c a * t 4
The questions in this column are two of
many submitted by readers. They have been
chosen as of sufficient general interest to
warrant inclusion here.
Question: Who was Bacchus and what were
his deeds?
Answer: According to tradition, Bacchus or
Dionysus, as he is also called, was born at
Thebes which was originally the local cen
ter of his worship in Greece. He was the
son of Zeus, the fertilizing rain-god, and
Semele, the daughter of Cadmus, a personi
fication of the earth. As soon as Dionysus
was grown up, he started on a journey
through the world, to teach the cultivation
of the vine and to spread his worship
among men. While so engaged he met with
opposition, even in his own country, to the
introduction of the mystic rites, in places
where an established religion already ex
isted. On the other hand, where the god was
received hospitably, he repaid the kindness
by the gift of the vine.
Dionysus possessed the gift of prophecy, and
his oracle at Delphi was as important as
that of Apollo.
Question: Where can one get information
on numbers or the number system as de
veloped by Pythagoras?
Answer: The real source of Pythagorean
numbers is Aristotle, but a good general
summary may be found in the Britannica.
The Pythagorean system of numbers is by
no means as simple to understand as one
may imagine. I ts principles are imbedded
in his philosophy, since from it he derived
both a system of geometry and a philosophy
of numbers. Above all, it is not a system of
numerology in the popular sense of the
word. Numbers were a part of his secret
philosophic teachings, and that is the reason
why his followers were the only ones who
made statements regarding his theories.
The central thesis of Pythagoras is that
everything is number, or that every idea is
number. One, Unity, is the formal principle
and the cause of all things, but the dissolu
tion of the one into many is the cause of
the breaking up of the one unit.
ceased is commemorated and the pro
tection of Sraosha is implored for him.
On the dawn after the fourth day, the
soul of the deceased is supposed to go
to the other world. The soul passes over
a bridge known as Chinvat, according
to the Scriptures of Zoroastrian Re
ligion.
This Chinvat Bridge is guarded by
the angels Mithra and Rashne. The
Vendidad says: the Angel of Justice
(Meher Davar) appears and judges a
mans actions done in this life. There
fore, the ceremony at the dawn of the
fourth day is considered to be very im
portant as a solemn occasion for the
performance of religious ceremonies for
the soul of the deceased.
According to Zoroastrian belief, the
relation between a pious deceased and
his surviving relatives does not alto
gether cease after death. After the
fourth-day ceremony, there are others
on the 10th day, the 30th day, and un
til the year is completed; and then the
annual ceremonies are performed for
the advancement of the soul of the de
ceased to higher Spheres of Heaven.
We read in Yasna (Ha XVI, 7), We
praise the brilliant deeds of piety in
which the souls of the deceased de
light.
It appears, from the above descrip
tion, that the Funeral Ceremonies are
solemnised by the thought that death
levels everybody, and that one should
always be prepared for death which
may overtake him at any moment, and
that our devotion and love can still
make contact on mental planes.
V A V
R A R E S C A R A B R I N G S
Beautiful carved rings, mounted with the enigmatic sacred
beetle of the ancient Pharaohs. These striking rings
tell a fascinating story of life and resurrection.
The use of the beetle as a sacred emblem was derived
from the observation of the Egyptian dung beetle, laying
its eggs in a ball of dung and burying it in the warm
desert sand. The creature when hatched seemed to
emerge alive out of the desert. To the ancient Egyptians
it may have seemed that the beetle had the power of
raising itself from the dead; thus it came to be re
garded as the emblem of resurrection and immortality.
The ornamental rings contain a wealth of history and significance in their strange
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c^-f-fioitH e oj- tf i s czrf- t[antza.n
(Continued from page 104)
T he
R osi cr uci an
D i gest
M ar ch
1956
majority of Indians living under the
American flag. White land-speculators
began to find the tribes less gullible
about signing away their rich acres for
cheap mirrors and jackknives. Rum
runners could expect but few customers
and less hospitality in the encamp
ments that they visited with their for
bidden wares. Christian missionaries
who sincerely opposed the thieving
racketeers preying on Indians never
theless failed to understand the pro
found moral content of Tenskwatawas
teachings and joined with less worthy
Anglo-Saxons in denouncing him.
White officials, representing the na
tional government in Washington, first
tried to undermine the authority of the
Prophet by buying off leaders of tribes
who had accepted his teachings. A few
venal chiefs accepted payments of mon
ey and merchandiseonly to find
themselves deposed by their peoples and
sent into permanent exile.
Force was invoked when corruption
failed. Though freedom of worship is
guaranteed to all by the American con
stitution, legions of Federal soldiers
were rushed into the Midwest with the
eventual aim of crushing the Indian
religious movement and driving its ad
herents from their remaining lands.
Men of Peace
Basically men of peace, Tenskwatawa
and Tecumseh used all their tact and
diplomacy to keep either race from pre
cipitating hostilities. They conferred
patiently with Indian chiefs around
campfires and with white political lead
ers in offices. No Indian bands were
marshaled in threatening military for
mation although there were occasional
skirmishes with white soldiers along
scattered stretches of the frontier. No
substantial proof can be found that the
Prophets itinerant missionaries were
recruiting agents for an intertribal
army as incorrect history books have
charged. Instead, they persuaded the
chiefs to heed neither the American nor
the British military agents, who were
already lining up allies for the looming
War of 1812.
Thereby the native preachers were
following the explicit instructions of
Tenskwatawa who was hopeful that
white men would lay down their rifles
now that Indians had all but renounced
their bows. By example, the Indian
tribes were trying to insure peace on a
continent which had been wracked too
long by war.
But litanies of peace are often muted
by the drums of slaughter. The two
white nations of America and Britain
continued to mold cartridges and to as
semble battalions for the coming affair-
at-arms. To our national shame, the
Americans became panicky and trigger-
mad after Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa
had announced their grand plan for
the Indian peoples.
Briefly stated, the inspired brothers
meant to unite all the tribes from the
Great Lakes to the Rockies in a peace
ful, spiritually motivated confederation
of Indians. Just such a league had
been instituted by the enlightened Iro
quois peoples of the American North
east during the early 17th century.
Their organization had kept peace and
encouraged commerce between the
tribes from New York to Tennessee till
the beginning of the American Revolu
tion, almost 200 years later.
Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa felt that
the Iroquois had erected a structure
which they could duplicate for the bene
fit of the Western tribes. On the basis
of the common Atlantean religious heri
tage, their confederacy would maintain
the cordial fraternity which Tenskwa
tawas teachings had promoted between
the tribes and which would also assure
the continued development of the red
man within the framework of his tradi
tional economy and culture.
Their projected league of Indian na
tions would be a great community of
righteousness as ancient Israel had
been under the rule of its early patri
archs and judges. Its government would
be based on the tenets of the Walaam
Olum in the same manner that the
Whites claimed their political one to
have been founded on the principles
enunciated by the Christian Bible.
As the Celts had established a com
bined capital city and a central religious
shrine at Tara and the Israelites at
Jerusalem, so the Indians set about
building one to serve them on Ameri
can soil. Tippecanoe, their city, was
constructed near a river of the same
name in Indiana Territory.
Its 4000 inhabitants numbered devout
men and women from many tribes.
Some had come to study for the revived
Atlantean priesthood under the Su
preme Magus of the red tribes, Ten
skwatawa. Others were peaceful artisans
and farmers. None were professional
warriors. None ever harmed any Whites
who ever visited the town.
Yet what followed is a lasting blot
on the honor of the American republic.
Governor William Henry Harrisona
genius as a soldier and a ninny as a
statesmanmade repeated demands up
on the Indians to abandon their city.
As well might have the Roman rulers
asked the Jews to desert Jerusalem.
Politely but firmly Tenskwatawa and
Tecumseh answered no.
Once at a conference, General Har
rison offered Tenskwatawa and an In
dian delegation a case of whisky. In
this tricky fashion, he hoped to emulate
other white negotiators who first made
Indians drunk and then induced them
to sign agreements which robbed them
of their birthrights.
It is recorded that Tenskwatawa
looked contemptuously at the man des
tined to become president of the United
States. We live by the good ways of
our red fathersnot the bad ways of
our white brothers, spoke Tenskwa
tawa. Come to our city, white chief
and we shall give you cooling water,
not poison that burns your tongue.
By command of General Harrison,
more and more soldiers began assem
bling in the vicinity of Tippecanoe.
Reluctantly Tecumseh, always the
statesman first and the warrior second,
began taking measures that proved in
adequate for the defense of his capital.
Wild rumors began to be circulated
among the naive white settlers by Har
risons political allies. These lying war
mongers asserted that the British were
behind the plan to unite all tribes under
one central authority.
But from what we know of the two
great Shawnees, they would have prob
ably worked out some lasting policy of
amity and cooperation between Indians
and Whites in that huge domain, with
so much room for all lying between
the Great Lakes and the Rockies.
Yet, by the will of unscrupulous
white leaders, peace was not to be until
the very last Indians were conquered
and penned up on reservations. Only
one white group asked consideration for
the people of Tippecanoethe occult-
influenced Shakers who believed with
Tenskwatawa that the Deity expresses
both the male and the female aspect of
the Cosmosor, in other words, the
same doctrine of polarity taught by the
Rosicrucians as transmitted through the
mystery schools of Egypt, Atlantis, and
Hibernia.
A Shaker elder, after interviewing
Tenskwatawa, declared him to be of
the rank of magister. This gentle Chris
tian mystic also declared that the Shak
ers were in agreement with all of the
Prophets teachings except the one
which permitted marriagefor the
members of this sect are traditionally
celibate.
Nobody listened favorably to this hu
mane sect which most frontier parsons
damned as being odd and heretical. In
deed the Shakers came under suspicion
for their fraternal and kindly relation
with a fellow occultist. November 8,
1811 (and let the date be remembered
as one of infamy in our national his
tory) was the day when General Har
rison marched into Tippecanoe at the
head of 800 Indiana and Kentucky
militiamen hungering for Indian lands.
Under the pretense of looking for al
leged fugitives from White justice, the
soldiers entered the townand the
shambles began.
Dead children lay on the dirt thor
oughfares of Tippecanoe after two hours
of the massacre. Chiefs, bearing white
flags of truce, were shot down in their
tracks as they sought to negotiate with
the attackers. Disarmed Indianspris
oners of war under formal military law
were ripped to pieces with bayonets
after they had surrendered and were
begging their captors for mercy. Arson,
added to murder, completed the destruc
tion. Torch and brand immolated the
shrines of the Old Faith that had been
so reverently erected in that sacred city
of the red man. Pillars of flame en
gulfed the altars and cremated the bod
ies of the Indian priests who had fallen
defending them.
Tippecanoeplanned to be greater
than Guaxulewas now but a rubble
of burning flesh and scorching ashes.
Tecumseh the chief, Tenskwatawa the
ious, and a remnant of their followers
ad no other choice but to flee from
American swords toward the British
domain of Canada.
The last public center of the vener
able Atlantean religion was no more.
Judgment falls upon Harrison in the
same measure as it does upon Cortez
who burnt the temples of the same
ancient cultus in Mexico City, or upon
Pizarro who razed kindred shrines of
Peru. And after the burning of Tippe
canoe, it seemed that the Old Faith
had forever been stamped out in this
hemisphere of the Westthat the pro
fane had triumphed crushingly over
the sacred. Yet not quite.
Commemorated in Kltual
After Tenskwatawa there would come
Wivoka of the Piutes and the Almighty
Voice of the Sioux. Their descent and
their doctrines would be derived, as was
his, from the Mother Continent. Their
creed and their Atlantean-Celtic cere
monies survive to this day from the
Iroquois reservations of New York to
the Pueblo towns of New Mexico.
Until he left the mortal plane, Ten
skwatawa was faithful to the traditions
of the ancestral Magi. So everlasting
is the Shawnee remnant, now living in
Oklahoma.
Tenskwatawa was 62 when he ex
perienced transition on a Shawnee res
ervation near what is now Kansas City,
Kansas, in 1837. Some years prior, the
famous American artist, George Catlin,
had found him there after a long search
and painted his picture.
His health was then declining rapid
ly because of so much flight from one
temporary refuge to another. But still
the aging hands of the Prophet clutched
Atlantean religious emblems. Still he
was beseeching the Divinity to grant
happy incarnations for his brother, Te
cumseh, slain while serving as a briga
dier-general in the British army, at the
battle of the Thames on October 5,
1813.
Even today the Shawnees commemo
rate Atlantis, as well as those two un
forgettable heirs of the Atlanteans, at
their sacred dances held annually in
hidden groves of the Oklahoma forests.
One dance symbolizes the Deluge which
sent their fathers voyaging toward that
unknown realm of tne West, later
called America. Another ceremony rev
erences Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa.
All Shawnees may watch this ritual.
But its participants must be descendants
of that illustrious pair of Atlantean-
Americansof the Sachem and the
Magus.
V A V
T he
R osi cr uci an
D i gest
M ar ch
1956
I N A P P R E C I A T I O N
I wish to express my appreciation for the many well wishes and greetings received
from members throughout the world on the occasion of my birthday, February 14. I re
gret that it i s not possible to acknowledge al l of the kind thoughts personally, and am
asking you to kindly accept this means as evidence of my sincere thanks.
RA LPH M. LEW I S
I mperator
A NDEA N S A NCT UA RY
High in the Andes not far from Cuzco, once capital of the I ncas, is this sacred site of a forgotten
people. Known as Kenko. it is partially carved from native rock. There are subterranean caves in which
the mummified remains of its high priests were formerly preserved. On one side is an open amphitheatre
in the center of which appears a great monolith in the shape of an animal. The huge stone suggests the
practice of zoomorphism and the sacrifice to animal deities.
(Photo by AMORC)
Y.
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Rose-Croix University the acquirement of knowledge is made a
pleasure. The interesting presentation of practical information
by unique methods of demonstration and student participation makes a three-
week course here equal to longer periods at other institutions of learning.
Go to school the Rosicrucian waywhere facts are fun, learning is a
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THE PURPOSE OF
T H E R O S I C R U C I A N O R D E R
The Rosicrucian Order, existing in all civilized lands, is a nonsectarian fraternal body of men
and women devoted to the investigation, study, and practical application of natural and spiritual
laws. The purpose of the organization is to enable all to live in harmony with the creative, con
structive Cosmic forces for the attainment of health, happiness, and peace. The Order is inter
nationally known as "AMORC" (an abbreviation), and the A.M.O.R.C. in America and all other
lands constitutes the only form of Rosicrucian activities united in one body. The A.M.O.R.C. does
not sell its teachings. It gives them freely to affiliated members together with many other benefits.
For complete information about the benefits and advantages of Rosicrucian association write a
letter to the address below, and ask for the free book The Mastery of Life. Address Scribe
S. P. C., in care of
AMO R C TEMPLE R osicrucian Park, S an Jose, C alifornia, U .S .A . (C able A ddress: A3I O R C O ")
S upreme Executive for the I nternational Jurisdiction of N orth. C entral, and S outh A merica, British
C ommonwealth and Empire, France, S witzerland, S weden, and A frica: R alph M. Lewis, F.R .C .I niperator
DI RECTORY
AMER I C AN LO DGES . C HA PTER S , A N D PR O N A O I O F THE A. M. O . R . C.
The following are chartered Rosicrucian Lodges. Chapters, and Pronaoi in the United States. The I nter
national Directory listing Lodges, Chapters, and Pronaoi in other countries will appear in the next issue of
the R osicrucian Digest. The American and the International directories alternate monthly.
ALASKA
A nchorage: Anchorage Pronaos. G. B. Harlan,
Master, P. O. Box 1081.
AR I ZO NA
I* hoc nix: Phoenix Chapter, 1738 W. Van Buren
St. Cassie M. Potirala, Master. P. O. Box 5272.
Tucson: Dr. Charles L. Tomlin Chapter, Knights
of Pythias Hull, Albert W. Prince, Master, R. 3,
Box 501.
C A LI FO R N I A
Bakersfield: Bakersfield Pronaos. Charles B.
Watts Master, 711 Watts Drive.
Desert Hot S prings: Desert Pronaos. Gilbert N.
Hollow'ay, Sr., Master. P. O. Box 304.
Fresno: Jacob Boehme Chapter, Ponderosa Ma
sonic Temple, 11 San Pablo Ave. Roy F. Morgan,
Master, 3274 W. Jensen.
Long I Jeach :* Abdiel Lodge, 2455 Atlantic Ave.
Aleck N. Edwards, Master, 9-17 Pine Ave.
Los A ngeles :* Hermes Lodge, 148 N. Gramercy
PI.. Tel. Hollywood 5-1230. John H. Hill, Master,
3517 Madera Ave.
O akland:* Oakland Lodge. 263 12th St. Albert A.
Fink, Master. 134 Montecito Cr.. Walnut Creek.
Pasadena:* Akhnaton Lodge, 20 N. Raymond Ave.
Herbert A. Thomas, Master, 634 Russell Dr.,
Glendale.
Sacramento: Clement B. Le Brun Chapter. I.O.O.F.
Bldg. Dinshaw S. Gharda. Master. 814 23rd St.
San Diego: San Diego Chapter. 4567 301 h St.
Glenn II. Berg, Master, Rt. 2, Box 912, Riverview
Ave., Lakeside, Calif.
S an Francisco:* Francis Bacon Lodge, 1957 Chest
nut St., Tel. WEst 1-4778. Beulah E. France,
Master, 1701 Larkin St., Apt. 2.
San Mateo: San Mateo Pronaos. Norman A.
Jenne, Master, 722 Folkstone Ave.
S anta Cruz: Santa Cruz Pronaos. E. J. Walters,
Master, P. O. Box 705, Soquel. Calif.
Santa R osa: Santa Rosa Pronaos. Ann C. Laugier,
Master, 543 Shortt Rd.
Stockton: Stockton Chapter, 1345 N. Madison St.
John Fraga, Master, 746 Wright Ave.
Van Nuys: Van Nuys Chapter. 14312 Friar St.
Cedric A. Hickman, Master, 13716 Wyandotte St.
Whittier: Whittier Chapter, 8315 S. Greenleaf
Ave. J. Donald Atkins, Master, 4918 Landis Ave.,
Baldwin Park.
C O LO R ADO
Denver: Rocky Mountain Chapter. 1512 Gaylord
St. Ruth Warner, Master, 402 S. Humboldt.
C O NNEC TI C UT
Hartford: Hartford Pronaos. Art Webber, Master,
R.F.D. 2, Rockville.
DI S TR I C T O F C O LUMBI A
Washington: Geo. Washington Carver Chapter,
I.O.O.F. Hall, 9th & T Sts., N. W. Robert W.
Reed, Master, Apt. 804, 1009 11th St., N. W.
Thomas Jefferson Chapter, 1322 Vermont Ave.,
N. W. Ruth Evelyn Parkhurst, Master, Apt. 201,
2810 Shipley Terrace, S. E.
FLO R I DA
Miami: Miami Chapter, Biscayne Temple, 120
N. W. 15th Ave. Lottie Parks, Master, 3421 S. W.
25th Terrace.
St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg Pronaos. Austin
M. Huff, Master, 7417 Boca Ciega Dr.
Tampa: Aquarian Chapter. 1051-. Zack St. Lucile
M. Howell, Master, 2501 N. 'A' St.
HA WA I I
Honolulu: Honolulu Pronaos. V. F. Davies. Mas
ter, 226 Kaha St., Laniko, Kailua. Honolulu.
I DAHO
Boise: Boise Pronaos. George H. Harbaugh. Mas
ter, 2315 Heran.
I LLI N O I S
C hicago:* Nefertiti Lodge, 2539 N. Kedzie Ave.,
Tel. Everglade 4-8627. Eileen Ahlborn, Master,
2539 N. Kedzie Ave.
S pringfield: Springfield Pronaos. Albert J. Pay-
son. Master, 2023 S. Douglas.
I N DI A N A
Evansville: Evansville Pronaos. Oscar G. Brandt,
Master, 1419 Cumberland.
I ndianapolis: Indianapolis Chapter, I.O.O.F.
Bldg.. 5 N. Hamilton Ave. Dallas H. Lien, Mas
ter. 2641 Sutherland Ave.
S outh Bend: May Banks-Stacey Chapter, 519 S.
St. Joseph St. Neal W. Corey, Master, 515>/2 S.
William St.
I O WA
Davenport: Davenport Pronaos. Mrs. Ora B.
Helm, Secretary. 2107 17th St.. Rock Island. 111.
Des Moines: Des Moines Pronaos. Willard D.
Brown, Master. 1280 34th St.
KANS AS
Wichita: Wichita Pronaos. Ken Laurence, Mas
ter. 729 S. Bluff.
KEN TU C KY
Louisville: St. Germain Chapter, 226 W. Walnut
St. A. L. Dye, Master, 4616 Brewster Ave.
MAR YLAND
Baltimore:* John O'Donnell Lodge, 225 W. Sara
toga St. Richard R. Burgan, Master, 4309 Ford-
liam Rd.
(Directory Continued on Next Page)
MASS AC HUS ETTS
Boston:* Johannes Kelpius Lodge. Hotel Bruns
wick, 520 Boylston St. Preston S. Lincoln,
Master, Hotel Brunswick.
Springfield: Springfipld Pronaos. Arthur H. Pratt,
Master, P. O. Box 528. 34 Brookhaven Dr., Lud
low, Mass.
MI C HI GAN
Detroit:* Thebes Lodge. 616 W. Hancock Ave.
Paul J. Larsen. Master, 14287 Robson.
Flint: Moria El Chapter. 1433 Mable Ave. Evan
James Pugh. Master. 818 Begole St.
Lansing: Leonardo da Vinci Chapter,J?f)3 S. Wash
ington. Harry W. Pierce, Master, 1201 Wieland
St.
.11IX XKSOTA
Minneapolis: Essene Chapter, Francis Drake Ho
tel, lOtfi St. & 5th Ave.. South. Ralph K. Malm-
berg. Master. 1100 W. 86th St.
MI SS O UR I
Kansas City: Kansas City Chapter. American
Legion Memorial Bldg.. Linwood & Paseo Blvd.
Lester C. Lucieer, Master, 3401 Charlotte.
Saint Louis: Saint Louis Chapter. Roosevelt Ho
tel, Delm.'ir & Euclid Aves. Thomas H. I. Johnson,
Master, 1024 N. Curran Ave., Kirkwood 22. Mo.
MO NTANA
Killings: Billings Pronaos. Wm. T. Collins,
Master. 131 Broadwater Ave.
NEVADA
I .as Vegas: Las Vegas Pronaos. William B. De
Long, Master. Box 214.
R eno: Reno Pronaos. Edna M. Luichinger, Mas
ter, 601 University Ave.
N EW JER S EY
Newark: H. Spencer Lewis Chapter. 84 Clinton
Ave. Dan Alfred De Simone. Master. P. O. Box
29. Metuchen, N. J.
N EW MEXI C O
A lbuquerque: Albuquerque Chapter. 1231&Broad
way. S. E. De Wayne F. Clark, Master, 606 San
Clemente, N. W.
N EW YO R K
Buffalo: Rama Chapter. 34 Elam PI. Luise M.
Hawk. Master. 141 Center St., Holland, N. Y,
Elmira: Elmira Pronaos. William Albert Broder,
Master, Box 152, Odessa, N. Y.
I.oiik Island: Sunrise Chapter, Masonic Temple.
Hicksville. Harold W. De Myer, Master. 168 W.
Cypress Lane. Westbury.
N ew R ochelle: Thomas Paine Chapter. Masonic
Temple, LeCount PI. Nora Pepper Palmer, Mas
ter, Apt. 3. 194 Seaton Rd., Stamford, Conn.
New York:* New York City Lodge, 250 W. 57th
St. John H. Runge, Master. 2252 Valentine Ave.,
Bronx.
R ochester: Rochester Chapter. Hotel Seneca.
Doris Rabjohns, Master, 1499 Ililton-Parma Cor
ners Rd.. Spencerport. N. Y.
Syracuse: Syracuse Pronaos. Julius Maier, Mas
ter, 230 Kimber Ave.
O HI O
C anton: Canton Pronaos. Virgil Shelton, Master.
1428 31st N. E.
Cincinnati: Cincinnati Chapter. 148 W. 5th St.
Phillip J. Huber. Master, Mayo Circle & Ken
tucky Dr., Newport. Ky.
C leveland: Cleveland Chapter. Masonic Temple,
36th & Euclid Ave. Walter W. Hirscb, Master,
10602 Harvard Ave.
C olumbus: Helios Chapter. 697 S. High St. Ruth
Wallar Linn, Master. Apt. 16, 1427 Parsons Ave.
Dayton: Elbert Hubbard Chapter. 15 S. Jefferson
St. Katherine McPeck. Master. 1663 Gummer Ave.
Youngstown: Youngstown Chapter. 301 E. Wood
St. Phyllis Cassetto, Master, 428 Richards Dr.
O KLAHO MA
O klahoma City: Amenhotep Chapter, R m. 318,
Y.W.C.A. Bldg. Helen Laspe. Master. 835 N. E.
Drive, Apt. 8.
Tulsa: Tulsa Chapter. 15 W. 13th St. Obert T.
Cox. Master. 2604 E. Oklahoma St.
OREGON
Eugene: Eugene Pronaos. Austin H. Seward.
Master, 1026 7th St.
Portland:* Enneadic Star Lodge. 2712 S. E. Sal
mon. Kathleen Duthie. Master. 2767 S. W. Talbot
Rd.
S alem: Salem Pronaos. Mrs. George A. Kisler,
Master, Independence. Ore.
PEN N S YLVA N I A
A llentown: Allentown Chapter, Masonic Temple,
1524 Linden St. W. R . Fritzinger, Master. 1146
Tilghman St.
Lancaster: Lancaster Pronaos. Russell J. E. Cam-
plain, Master. 223 S. Lancaster St., Annville, Pa.
Philadelphia :* Benjamin Franklin Lodge, 1303
W. Girard Ave. Catherine Sears, Master, 3150
St. Vincent St.
Pittsburgh:* First Pennsylvania Lodge. 615 W.
Diamond St.. N. S. James M. Schroder, Master,
1100 Chelton Ave.
PU ER TO R I C O
Ponce: Ponce Chapter. 65 Hostos Ave. E. Huertas
Zayas, Master. CaJJe BertoJy 3.
San Juan: Lux. de AMORC Chapter, Ponce de
Leon Ave. 1658. Stop 24, Santurce. Manuel Sam-
payo Casalduc. Master, Box 8716, Fdez. Juncos
Sta., Santurce.
R HO DE I S LA N D
Providence: Roger Williams Chapter, Sheraton-
Biltmore Hotel. Michele Falcone, Master, 21
Hazel St.
TEXA S
A marillo: Amarillo Pronaos. Mrs. T. J. Wright,
Master, Box 176, Pampa.
Dallas: Triangle Chapter, 1921 ^ Greenville Ave.
Achilles Taliaferro, Master, 3600 Lovers Lane.
El Paso: El Paso Pronaos. Penwood Rountree,
Master. 8820 Sheridan Dr.
Fort Worth: Fort Worth Pronaos. Roy L. Bal
lard. Master, 2736 Westbrook.
Houston: Houston Chapter. Y.W.C.A. Bldg.
Kathryn Pyburn, Master, Rt. 2, Box 411.
Wichita Falls: Wichita Falls Pronaos. Mrs. W. R .
Williams, Master. P. O. Box 818.
UTAH
Salt Lake City: Salt Lake City Chapter. 23 E.
1st., South. William D. Nuttall, Master, 1544
Kappa St., Apt. 8.
WA S HI N GTO N
Kennewick: Tri-Cities Pronaos. Thomas M. Hall.
Master, 120 S. Fillmore.
S eattle:* Michael Maier Lodee. Wintonia Hotel.
Mrs. M. E. Helm. Master. 1822 N. 85th.
Spokane: Spokane Chapter. Box 43, Opportunity,
Wash. Mrs. Peter J. Young, Master, E. 1211
Columbia Ave., Spokane.
Tacoma: Takhoma Chapter. 508 6th Ave. Stanley
J. Walker. Master, 717 S. 59th St.
Yakima: Yakima Pronaos. Kenneth Goin, Master,
3305 Lincoln Ave.
WI S C O N S I N
Milwaukee: Karnak Chapter. 427 W. National
Ave. Edward J. Hartmann, Master, 2014 N. 11th
Lane.
WYO MI NG
Casper: Casper Pronaos. Clarence Harbaugh,
Master, 114 Glen Garden Drjve.
(* I nitiations are performed.)
Latin-American Division
A rmando Font De La Jara, F. R . C., Deputy Grand Master
Direct inquiries regarding this division to the Latin-American Division. Rosicrucian Park. San Jose,
California, U. S. A.
P R I N T E D I N U . S . A . T H E RO SI C RU C I A N P R E SS. L T D ,
Strange Happenings
You have had iteveryone has . . . that unexplain
able feeling of an invisible presence, that someone unseen
was near or standing behind you. You have become
suddenly conscious of your name being calledand yet
no sound was outwardly audible. These and innumer
able other strange experiences cannot be brushed aside
as imagination or fancy. These occurrences are just as
much established phenomenamanifestations of nature
and Cosmic lawas the coming of day and night.
EARTH-
BOUND
IS THERE a strange, ethereal mental
cord that binds the consciousness of
those departed from this world with
those that remain? Do the experi
ments of the seance room spell
trickery and fraudor are they the
result of earth-bound entities seeking
freedom from the confining interests
of this world? Is the human con
sciousness suspended for an indefinite
period between the spiritual and
earthly realms? Is psychic communi
cation, with minds gone on, a farce
or a fact?
Accept This Free Manuscript
These age- old questions, with their in
triguing answers, are contained in the
manuscript, Earthbound. Merely sub
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The interesting issues of the magazine,
ROS ICRUCIA N DIGEST , together with
this discourse, will provide you with many
hours of reading enjoyment.
7^ ROSICRUCIAN DIGEST t San J ose, California, U. S. A.
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MENTAL P O I S O N I N G By H. Spencer Lewis, Ph. D.
Do poisoned thoughts. like mysterious rays, reach through the
ethereal realms to claim innocent victims? Can the thoughts of
some enslave us? Postpaid, $1.95 (13/11 sterling).
BEHOLD THE S I G N By Ralph M. Lewis, F. R. C.
A collection of important M Y STI CA L and OCCULT SY MBOLS
used to perpetuate eternal truths. Fully illustrated. Learn the
meaning of cryptic signs used by the avatars and great teachers
for centuries. Price, postpaid, $1.45 (10/4 sterling).
GLANDS O u r Invisible Guardians
By M. W. Kapp, M. D.
Do you realize that minute organic substancesglandsoften
cause your weaknesses and your strong points? They fashion
your character and influence your personality. Each glandular
excess or deficiency produces a glandular typea distinct kind
of personality. Learn what your glandular personality is. I llus
trated. Postpaid, $1.80 (12/10 sterling).
THE SECRET DOCTRINES OF JESUS
By H. Spencer Lewis, Ph. D.
The secret teachings of the Master J esus, for manj' ages private
ly preserved in unknown archives, are herein brought to light.
This beautifully bound book is illustrated with photographs of
sacred sites, including the garden tomb of J esus, as filmed by
AMORC Camera Expedition. Price, postpaid, $2.75 (19/8
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O F G O DS A N D MIRACLES
By Ulrich Steindorff Carrington
Wondrous tales of the ancient Egyptians taken from
walls of tombs and withered rolls of papyri. Authentic
translations. I llustrated. Price $2.60 (18/7 sterling),
postpaid.
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