AZOTH Volume 1 Number 10 October 1917
AZOTH Volume 1 Number 10 October 1917
AZOTH Volume 1 Number 10 October 1917
00 per Y ear
. 1 No. 10 O C T O B E R . 1917 25c per Copy
US
ASTROLOGY
Judgment T akes F irst R a n k in the P hysical W orld, A strol
ogers I nsist , and A re E xpected to be I nfallible H . C. H o d g e s 618
T he H eavens R eveal A lli e B. H a z a r d ............................................................ 61 9
P ractical L essons N o . X . H o w a r d U n d e r h i l l ...................................... 621
R E N T S IN T H E VEI L
A n U nusual S pirit P hotograph G. Edwin Freeborn 625
R e v ie w s ............................................................................................ 6 27
o &uv Heaber
... T h e Editor will be glad to consider for publication all contributions
likely to be of interest to our readers.
Readers of A Z O T H w ho encounter interesting articles in any
American or foreign publication will confer a favor upon the editor by
a vising im, giving place and date where such articles appeared.
Readers are invited to discuss or criticize the subject matter of
any articles or statements appearing in A Z O T H , or any topics of
interest, provided no personalities or discourtesies are indulged in.
These discussions will appear under the caption The Caldron.
T he Editor of the Psychical Research Department would like to
receive accounts of unusual psychical experiences; the names of any
remarkable psychics or mediums who are willing to submit to scientific
tests; inform ation o f any reputed haunted houses; any so-called spirit
photographs ; or anything else o f interest in his department
cm 3 9 6 2 7 2 /
OCT - 6 1317 '
AZOTHA M O N T H L Y M AG AZINE
Devoted to
Philosophy, T heosophy, M ysticism , Psychical Research,
H igher Thought, A strology and Occultism
M ICH AEL W H IT T Y , Editor
Assisted by Hereward Carrington (Psychical Research)
Eugene Del Mar (Higher Thought) E. Daniell Lockwood (Occultism)
Published by
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C O P Y R I G H T E D BY AZ O T H P U B L I S H I N G CO.
Voi. 1 O C T O B E R , 1917 N o. 10
Editorials
Mental Armor Against Death and Wounds
In the September Nautilus is given an account of a number
of cases of making soldiers bullet proof. The magician who is
said to do this is a Doctor Frederick Rawson, a Christian Scien
tist. He declares his method is the Practical ultilization of the
processes of God by right thinking. His procedure is said to be
as follows: Fixing his gaze, as though looking into space, he
apparently became absorbed in deep contemplation and said aloud:
There is no danger; man is surrounded by Divine love; there is
no matter; all is Spirit and the manifestation of Spirit.
The article states that Dr. Rawson has two hundred cases a
week and over one hundred assistants. The most amazing in
stances are given o f immunity to wounds and death by those who
have been treated and marvelous recoveries from mortal wounds
o f those who waited so long before taking the treatment.
Troops who had to cross five hundred yards o f no mans land
were treated by a Captain for an hour before they started and
not a man was knocked out.
This Captain is said to have had a hullet fired at him from
only five yards, which hit him over the chest. It tore his shirt and
went out at the shoulder, but never penetrated his chest.
A whole regiment is said to have been eight weeks under shell
fire without a man being touched, while all the other regiments
were losing men daily.
567
568 AZOTH
free will and destiny, real and ideal, objective and subjective,
phenomenon and numenon, matter and spirit, reason and intui
tion. The same dualism prevails in art and literature, poetry and
drama, painting and music, architecture and sculpture, showing
all kinds o f differences and contrasts, light and shade, beauty and
deformity, harmony and discord, all necessary for acquiring a
clear perception and knowledge.
Even in our daily round of life we come across these Twins
tat o f Zoroaster in their manifold aspects of the rich and the poor,
the strong and the weak, hope and fear, joy and sorrow, love and
hatred, pleasure and pain, victory and defeat, labor and thought,
work and play. Both are indispensable, and we could not get
rid of the one without at the same time getting rid o f the
other. Nature is like a mighty balance holding in its scales an
absolutely equal quantity o f the two opposite states o f things. It
emphasizes that in all seeming evil there is partial good. The
toad, ugly and venomous, wears yet a precious jewel in its head.
Evil is absolutely necessary that the good may be known and felt,
just as darkness is needed that the light may be seen, or silence
that the sound may be heard. The nature of evil may be partially
explained by the nature of shadows in a picture, as shadows have
no reality nor any use apart from the lighted objects of which
they are the shadows, so evil may have no reality nor any use
apart from the good of which it is only a shadow. Doemon est
Deus inversus was the favorite axiom of the Kabalists of
old, the devil or evil is the shadow of God or good. This fact of
the non-reality o f the shadow apart from the light, or to put it in
simpler terms, the dependence o f shadow for its very existence on
the lighted object, must be borne in mind, for it seems to explain
by way of analogy what Zoroaster meant by Akem Mano, which
though literally meaning evil mind, was used by him as a philo
sophical term to designate his principle of non-existence, non
reality, which is the cause of all evil. Nay, paradoxical as it may
sound, all our highest realities of life spring from the prevalence
of evil. But what a task was it, says Goethe, not only to be
patient with the earth, and let it lie beneath us, we appealing to a
higher birthplace' but also to recognize humility and poverty,
mockery and despite, disgrace and wretchedness, suffering and
death, to recognize these things as divine; nay, even on sin and
crime not as hindrances, but to honor and love them as fur
therances of what is holy. Hence the so-called evil is not
really evil as most of us understand it; that it can never be de
stroyed any more than we can permanently dispel darkness; that
the frightful golden age of Saturn and Yima, when evil was un-
576 AZOTH
known, and the world was one unending scene o f brightness and
heavenly bliss, can never return and ought never to return, for if
it did, that instant would see the death o f all that is highest and
noblest in man. And we are perfectly assured o f the other fact
that It is merely the tool in the hands o f the Highest, performing
its appointed task in the ultimate furtherances o f the Divine
Purpose.
We harness the untamed fury of the horse, or check the wild
career of the rushing waterfall, and use the energy thus har
nessed for various purposes; so also can we do with evil. W e can
harness its wild self-destructive power, and change it into har
monious energy for the furtherance o f what is good and desirable.
In such harnessing have the great minds o f old solved the problem
of evil. The Rod of Righteousness, the Nav-gireh or nine-
jointed staff, which Zoroaster holds in his hand in the famous
rock-sculpture of Tacht-i-Bostan, is partly a weapon o f defence
against the demons, but mainly it is a symbol o f the power he
possessed of curbing, subjugating or smiting evil, but never of
destroying it.
There is then this conflict between the two opposing powers.
A great cleft runs through the entire world, dividing it into two
realms, the two controlling powers counter-balancing each other.
Yet this dualism is neither absolute nor eternal. Rather is it an
episode in the existence o f Ormuzd, for He is the supreme and
only God; omnipresent, omniscient, but not yet omnipotent, be
cause coeval with Him, though not coeternal, is Ahriman. In
other words, Zoroasters dualism is temporary. According to
Zoroaster then the world is a battlefield on which every human
being is a soldier, fighting on the side o f Ahura Mazda and his
archangels and angels, or on the side o f Angro-Mainyus and his
archdemons and demons. The weapons used by the good soldiers
are not swords but ploughshares; not guns, but good thoughts,
good words and good deeds.
Now, therefore, we can safely maintain the proposition
with which we started that the Twins o f Zoroaster prevail not
only throughout the inorganic matter, but also throughout the
organic world of life. They are present in the highest manifes
tation o f human life and character, as well as in the noblest
products o f its evolution in religion, art and philosophy. In
short, for some reasons unknown to us, they are the essential
conditions of all existence within the sphere of human thought
and human knowledge, and that what is behind and beyond is the
great, mysterious Un----------Who dares to name Him? Oh, the
depth o f the riches both of wisdom and knowledge of God ? How
unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out!
AZOTH 577
PROTECTING D IV IN IT Y : R a m e s s e u m = T h e God
dess APT, Human-headed and crowned
with the " t e s h r or Crown of Lower
EGYPTIAN Egypt. She is a well-known local Deity of A. D. 1917.
DATE. Thebes. DATE.
EPIIPHI. T e m p le o f E d f o u = A Hawk-headed God MAY.
dess, APET the praised or blessed. 30th.
1st. Probably the Festival in honour of APIS, the Sacred
Bull, which lasted several Days. APIS, also called
EPAPHUS, is a young bull, whose mother can have
no other offspring, and who is reported by the Egyptians
to conceive from Lightning sent from Heaven, and thus
to produce the God APIS. He is known by certain
marks; his hair is black; on his forehead is a white
triangular spot, on back an eagle or hawk, and the mark
of a beetle under his tongue and the hair of his tail
is double. Plutarch says that Apis is considered as
being the animated image of OSIRIS, and he is con
ceived when a generative light falls strongly from the MAY.
Moon and touches a Cow that is in heat; for which
cause many of the decorations of APIS resemble the
appearances of the Moon; for he blackens over his
shining parts with dusky robes. For it is on the New
Moon of the Month PHAMENOTH that they hold the
Festival called The Entrance of Osiris into the Moon,
being the Commencement of Spring. Thus do they
place the power of OSIRIS within the Moon, and say
2nd that ISIS, being cause of his birth is also His Consort.
31st.
JU N E .
3rd. 1st.
4th. Festival of the First Sacrifice offered by HORUS, Son 2nd.
of ISIS.
AZOTH 579
5th. 3rd.
6th. 4th.
7th Full Moon in Sagittarius. 5th.
8th. 6th.
9th. 7th.
10th. 8th.
11th. 9th.
12th. 10th.
13th. 11th.
14th. 12th.
15th. About this date the Etesian Winds begin. 13th.
16th. 14th.
17th. From the 17th to the 20th of June, the tears of Isis for 15th.
18th. Osiris initiate the Inundation. Also they call the Star 16th
19th. Sirius, The Water-Carrier of Isis. 17th.
20th. 18th.
21st. New Moon in extreme end of Gemini. 19th.
22nd. 20th.
23rd. Summer Solstice. 21st.
24th. Entry of the Sun into Cancer. 22nd.
25th. 23rd.
26th. 24th.
27th. 25th.
28th. 26th.
29th. Plutarch observes: Truly in the Sacred Hymns of 27th.
OSIRIS, they invocate Him Who is borne in the Arms
of the Sun.
30th. The Feast of the Birthday of the Two Eyes of 28th.
HORUS, when the Sun and Moon are in one straight
Line. For not only do they consider the Moon but
also the Sun as the Eyes of HORUS.
MESORI. JUNE.
1st. Feast of the SUN, especially celebrated at Heliopolis, or 29th.
ON. In this Month are the Celebrations relating to the
Rise of the Nile. Kircher, quoting earlier authorities,
says: But not only the Nile, but all humidity simply,
they call the Efflux of OSIRIS, and in the Pomps and
Processions there ever goeth before the Sacred Things
the Water-Vase in honour of the God.
30th.
2nd. JULY.
3rd. 1st.
4th. 2nd.
5th. 3rd.
6th. Full Moon in Capricorn. 4th.
7th. 5th.
8th. The Festival of HARPOCRATES celebrated with vege 6th.
tables and fruits. Also the Festival of the God of the
Tongue when different kinds of Pulse were served up,
and the assistants chanted: The Tongue is Fortune;
the Tongue (i.e. Articulate Speech) is a Deity. And
580 AZOTH
26th. 24th.
27th. 25th.
28th. 26th.
29th. "A r m o u th m aymean Foster-Mother of H o r u s = B o u t o , 27th.
so very probably the Goddess of the Month Pharmouthi
is B o u t o , in which case the festival would be=March
1st, 1917, though perhaps the Festival of BOUTO men
tioned by Herodotus, was celebrated about this date.
30th. Festival erf the Lesser Year of 360 Days. 28th.
1st. The day of the BIRTU OF OSIRIS. (The Sun being 29th.
near the fixed star REGULUS, called the King Star of
the Sign of the Lion.) And it is said that at the Birth
of OSIRIS a Great Voice pealed forth crying, THE
LORD OF ALL THINGS COMETH FORTH INTO
THE LIGHT. And again that Voice cried aloud and
said, THE GREAT KING, OSIRIS THE BENEFI-
C1ENT, IS NOW BORN, and they say that Pamyle,
as she was drawing Water in the Temple of AMOUN
at Thebes, heard this Voice. And the Festival of the
Pamylia was celebrated in her honour as the Foster-
Mjother of Orisis, in the month of PHAMENOTH,
which see.
(T o be Continued)
3nbta lopal to (great Britain
By E lean o r M addock
made, with no lack o f proof to support it, that India does not, nor
did she ever, want Home Rule. By this I mean the real Indians
o f India, those of the pure Aryan Hindu blood as represented by
the ruling Chiefs and Princes o f the various native states in the
North, and in the vast territory o f Central India.
In these days of intercommunication India is no longer re
garded as a terra incognita where millions cry for light under
a blazing orb, o f mysterious harems and wicked crocodiles, par
tial to a human infant diet, but rather a land where the very soil,
in which lie cities buried one above the other, is steeped in the an
cient wisdom o f a civilization that was old when America was
virgin forest, and the British Isles overrun with naked bar
barians. A land where western ideas o f democracy will never
take root at least not in their present form the people do not
understand such a style o f government, they cling tenaciously to
the traditions o f royalty handed down to them by their ancestors,
and their instinctive desire is to be ruled by an aristocratic power
that is not responsible to an inferior. Great Britain has realized
this, and is encouraging a policy o f self-government in the native
states where the ruling chief is practically king of his own domain.
A policy that is exercising a notably stimulating influence towards
awakening in the sons o f India a desire for the restoration o f her
ancient ideals.
But the people o f the Province o f Bengal seem to be the
fly in the ointment, for, not belonging to the pure Aryan-Hindu
civilization they have no sympathy with its traditions. History
records that when the Aryan, or white race, migrated from the
North o f India down to the moist jungles o f Bengal, they found
them inhabited by a dark race o f negroid type, with whom in
process o f time some o f them intermarried, thus a new race
was segregated known to-day as the Bengali. Numbers o f their
original prototypes are still to be found in the sweltering coal
mine region o f the Santhal Purgunnas. Among the Bengalis
are a few poets, musicians, authors, students and professional
men whose talents no doubt are inherited from their Aryan-
Hindu ancestors, yet, the wild strain o f negroid blood, the herit
age from their jungle forebears manifests itself in a love of
political intrigue that makes them rebel against any form o f
government, be it imperial or democratic. These, then, are the
people who are clamoring for Home Rule with whom Mrs. Besant
has allied herself.
Young Bengali students who have access to the womens
clubs and occult societies in America, tell harrowing tales of
Indias abject slavery, o f how millions die from disease and
584 AZOTH
A L A N LEO
It is with great regret, that, as we go to press, we learn o f the death of
Mr. Alan Leo, which occurred somewhat suddenly on the 30th o f August.
Mr. Leo has been recently prosecuted in London for telling fortunes
with intent to deceive, which is considered a heinous offence in England
as it is in this country. Mr. Leo was convicted and fined because a modern
Justice Shallow refused to believe that Astrology could be anything else but
fraud and bunkum.
It was clearly shown by Mr. Leos counsel that the whole case turned
on this point o f intent to deceive and equally clearly proved, that Mr. Leo,
having given thirty years o f his life to the study and practice o f Astrology
with but little financial return, was thoroughly sincere in his faith in its truth
and had therefore no intent to deceive.
However, the alderman thought he knew better, knowing nothing, and
so found Mr. Leo guilty, and then made a bigger fool o f himself than is
customary with such gentry, by consenting to accept evidence as to the
character o f a man who he had first decided could not be anything but a
fraud and a cheat.
Mr. Leo was one of the most sincere and earnest students o f the day.
He strove to place his loved science on the dignified level to which he knew
it really belonged. No one has done more for Astrology than he, in arousing
the interest o f intelligent, educated people in this ancient occult art. His
passing away from us is a loss to both the art and its devotees.
M ichael W h itty .
e |3f)ilosopf)p of ^pmfjoltstn
By G ertrude de B ielska
H E R E D ITY
Heredity is o f the Soul not o f the body!
Heredity is from the Thought, the Motive, and the Act
not from the flesh, or form, or parent.
Heredity is born with the Soul at conception and is the
natural result of the human law the Soul has made for itself,
somewhere in the process o f its evolution.
Heredity registers the law in the body during gestation, then
that body partakes of a form corresponding to the law that has
been made by that soul. Indeed, conditions for that body were
made by the Soul before it passed from earth-life, in its previous
manifestation, so the body is in reality resurrected by the Soul
at the time of conception. When the cycle comes round for a
human Soul to incarnate it is drawn into that environment,
which will enable it to express the character that has been made
by it through its habits o f Thought, Motive and Act o f previous
lives. If it comes into a family o f certain marked features and
characteristics of that family, it is because the Thought, Motive
and Act demand that expression. Therefore a Soul possessing
artistic tastes is drawn to a family of artists, musical talent to a
family of musicians, skillful in medicine to a family o f physicians,
and so on. Its Heredity is its oivn Thought, its own Motive and
its own Act. This Thought, Motive and Act form its char
acter character being the direct result o f former lives. In this
character are registered the degrees of Consciousness which gov
ern the law under which it must incarnate.
As one comes to recognize this law and fully realize its
importance in the process of evolution one is impressed with its
absolute justice. No other Soul is responsible for its being what
it is, nor where it is; it alone is responsible. The choice it has
made as a result o f its character in moments o f crisis or other
wise, has determined its condition, and when, and where, and
how it must work out that law of its own making. So the choice
we make today, determines the conditions for tomorrow and pre
sents a grave responsibility for the future.
But, you may say, where then does parental responsibility
come in? For it is by no means lessened.
Parental responsibility begins before conception takes place,
before the Soul incarnates. According to the habitual Thought
or mental state o f the parents, so is the condition formed for the
reception of the incoming Soul. And again, a fit o f anger or
587
588 A ZO T H
child, because the lines o f Fate are often only more entangled
thereby.
Parents may do very much towards a helpful adjustment o f
character in their child, but it should be through counsel and
guidance, as we have seen and not by force or abuse.
Through the Philosophy of Symbolism, the Science o f A s
trology and the Correspondences they include, there is a won
derful system which reveals the law under which a child is born.
The Moon plays a most important part in this, in that she is always
found at the conception to be rising or setting in the sign o f the
Zodiac that is rising or setting at birth, according as she may be
increasing or decreasing in her light and above or below the
horizon, thereby showing that the conception and physical birth
are closely associated with that law o f attraction and reciprocity
that enables one to determine the special points o f character that
may dominate the life.
Zodiacal and planetary positions at the pre-natal epoch and
physical birth enable a student to determine, not only the char
acter, but to discover the links that bind the Soul to the past, pres
ent and future. The responsibility that the child bears to its
parents is very great. The first twelve years it should be obedi
ence, after twelve years to twenty-one, or to maturity, it should
be love willingness to be guided and instructed with respectful
consideration for their years o f experience, and later in life it
becomes protective.
{T o be continued)
By N ad a
D ies I rae
The air was heavy with incense. Weaving about the central
table or altar in a gliding dance was the Baroness, draped in a
garment of scarlet tissue heavy with crusted embroidery and flash
ing gems; upon her head a scarlet cap, rising to a low, blunt point.
Her voice rose and fell in a crooning chant through which I
caught the oft repeated word, Kali, Kali! Slowly its purport
dawned upon me. Kali, foul and fearsome goddess, served by
the stranglers noose and unspeakable orgies o f which I had heard
whispers during my stay in India. Instinctively I glanced towards
the recess across the room. The crimson hanging was drawn
aside, and there, in all its monstrous enormity, stood the scarlet
figure of Kali herself! Mouth agape with horrid laughter, sin
ister, staring eyes, goggling in bestial, senseless cruelty. Her
necklace of grinning skulls hung to her huge, inflated abdomen,
serpents twined about her arms, and one foot was grotesquely
raised to trample the body o f her murdered husband upon which
she stood; and it was to this hideous and loathsome image the
Baroness made obeisance, as, in her unholy rites, she faced it!
So absorbed was she in her vile worship that she remained
utterly unaware o f my presence, though I expected her to turn at
any moment towards the condemnation o f my eyes.
Now the chant took on a different tone and rhythm. Coming
to an abrupt stand at one side of the altar, with arms extended
and in vibrant, compelling tones, she seemed to command some
thing or someone.
Spellbound, tense, I fixed my eyes upon the quarter towards
which she faced and waited, expecting I knew not what, my
flesh creeping, my throat dry.
Then, from whence or how I could not guess, Cliff Brooks
stood facing her across the room! Deadly pale, the look o f a
sleep walker in his eyes, he seemed to await her next command.
It came, in tones honey sweet yet mocking.
You are becoming proficient, mon brave, in the use o f the
Doppelgnger. Wake now, for we shall talk together presently
yes? '
592
AZOTH 593
i
AZOTH 599
with a grave smile, it ill becomes those who would be strong and
true; it is a leech which sucks the blood o f courage and saps the
essence of self reliance. For him who learns that the broken reeds
o f ignorance become, when grasped with a firm hand, the staunch
staff of experience-grown knowledge on the Path o f Love and
Wisdom, shame has no place.
He raised his hand in blessing and turned to where the
Baroness still lay in deathlike swoon with Payton-Brown mutter
ing and moaning above her, and spoke in stern command.
Stand forth, Nephis, that these may know you as you are
ere they go upon their chosen ways and you pass to meet that
which awaits you!
Then from that still form there slowly rose a vapor, waver
ing, tenuous at first, but gradually condensing, cohering, taking
shape until there crouched before us, clutching with clawlike
hands her shrunken breast, her evil eyes glittering defiance, her
wide mouth mumbling blasphemies, a hideous, scrawny hag.
What have you to do with me, Master o f Light, she whis
pered hoarsely, rising unsteadily to her feet. I fled you ages
gone. What have you to do with me?
As she stood thus, Payton-Brown recoiled, and, with a
smothered, choking cry, vanished like the flame o f a snuffed
candle. I saw Cliff turn away, and Jessamine, shuddering, hid
her face upon my breast.
Self-doomed Apostate the Masters voice held only com
passion the Law will not be mocked.
The Law? Still do I defy it still will I come again to
work my will------
Peace! Your race is run; you will not come again. Now
is the end."
The end? she cried. You speak the words of
D E A TH you you! Inarticulate with growing fury, she
paused breathless. A h ! she screamed; she robbed me o f my
final triumph she; and I must go alone, alone into the awful
dark! But I am not conquered yet our feud is old, old, old
she shall not live to bask in joy she shall not live, I say! Her
voice rose to shriller scream Shaitan! Shaitan! Strike,
Shaitan!
A long-drawn hiss and the snake lay coiled to spring.
Before I could prevent her, Jessamine had turned to face it and
I saw about her a luminous haze. Came the whirred warning
and the creature shot up and out in that javelin line, only to fall
short of its mark as though it had met in that soft light an impass
able barrier.
600 AZOTH
which shall meet the spring suns kiss. In solitude and darkness
must the heart, too often, work out the mystery o f its birth into
the light. Dear, go your way; I will not hinder, for each must
choose his path as his need directs and none should stay him. You
will wander far, far her voice rose and prophecy was in her
still tones, in her inspired eyes but you will come to me again,
strong, clean and sure, and we shall walk together in the sweet
comradeship of souls.
So I left her. Shall we indeed meet again?
As I write these lines a thrill as o f expectancy is born. Jessa
mine, my Star of Hope, does the promised hour draw near?
My tale is told.
THE END
N O T E :In both black and white magic a class of incorporeal beings known as
elementis arc used as messengers and servants. Of such are the genii and djins
o f oriental tales, the Familiar Dem ons of the mediaeval alchemists. Having no
mentality, they are utterly ignorant of right and w rong; Man is to them, God;
and the magician, through the operation o f his vital will and pow er to fix images,
clothes them in such forms as are in consonance with the service to which he may
assign them. These forms are not physical but o f a finer, more subtle substance
which interpenetrates the physical, known as astral. Upon their own plane these
beings are potent factors in the carrying out o f works of m ercy or affliction,
according to the character o f the W ill directing them. Such was Shaitan, whose
envenomed bite upon the Astral or Syn Lecca was fatal also to the physical
through repercussion (a process now fully recognized by hypnotists). That
wounds upon the Astral do at times bring about the death o f the physical, is a
known and proven fact among occultists. On the other hand, soothing passes,
a gentle readjustment o f nerve centers and many other merciful services rendered
to the Subtile B ody by elementis at the command o f white Magicians, act with
equal force to soothe, strengthen and build up a physical vehicle, by this same
process of repercussion.
T H E G R E A T K E Y T O A L L M Y S T E R Y , A N C IE N T A N D M O D E R N
By H. C. S chwarz
All good things come from within, all evil from without!
Crucify and overcome the Without by the Within
Transmute the base metals into the purest g o ld !
Receive the Philosophers Stone
Then you are born again, Christ within y o u !
You are then the Temple of the Living G o d !
All powers are yours because you have found the Kingdom o f Heaven
within you. Then, and not till then, you will do the same work as Jesus the
Christ, and greater works shall you do.
That is the Great K e y ! Solve it as I did.
$8pcfjical Etstarclj
Ploob: 5t$ <ccult &igmftcante
By H erew ar d C a r r in g t o n
The dancing craze which has swept over this country, and
held it as though in a mesh, is as nothing to the somewhat similar
contagion which raged throughout Europe during the fourteenth
and fifteenth centuries! Now, the dancing is very moderate in
comparison! It is governed, more or less, by the rules o f decorum,
and is only to be found in private homes, hotels, cafs and dancing
establishments. In the case of the dancing mania which swept
over Europe in the middle ages, however, not only were the rules
of decency and common sense abandoned, but the dancing took
place in the streets, in the fields, in public squares, and in fact in
every available place o f public gathering. Whole countries were
found dancing madly, to the point o f utter exhaustion. Some
AZOTH 605
of the dancers became quite wild, tore off their clothes, ran about
the streets naked, went into states of ecstasy, lashed themselves
with whips, and only came back to sober sense when too utterly
worn out and exhausted to dance and behave in this extraordinary
manner any longer!
Curiously enough, this madness afflicted primarily and
chiefly precisely those parts of the world where the fiercest fighting
is now progressing western Germany, Flanders, and eastern
France. By a peculiar coincidence, also, it may be pointed out
that this madness first started in Aix-la-Chapelle for some time
headquarters of the Kaiser, if reports speak true! Does history
repeat itself as so many wise heads have contended?
It was in the year 1374 that this mania first became accentu
ated. The effects o f the Black Death, which had devastated
Europe, had scarcely subsided and the graves o f millions o f its
victims had scarcely closed, when this singular delusion swept
over the country. Convulsions of the most extraordinary charac
ter were seen to seize the person so affected causing him to leap
and prance about, often foaming at the mouth, and screaming and
shrieking like one possessed. This dance came to be called the
dance of St. John or St. Vitus (not to be confused with our present
disease, known as St. Vitus Dance) on account of the Bacchantic
leaps which the dancer made. Those who saw one so possessed
would soon be afflicted likewise, and soon whole communities could
be found holding hands and dancing round and round with irre-
sistable fury, shouting and twitching; or single individuals could
be found in corners, shrieking and foaming at the mouth as they
had seen others do a day or so before. In church and out this
singular performance was kept up. Attempts to relieve their
ravings almost invariably failed; and the dance was only
brought to a conclusion by the depression and physical exhaustion
which terminated the orgy. Extreme debility for some days
usually followed these attacks.
Many of those thus afflicted beheld visions in their abnormal
condition. Spirits appeared to them, and called them by name.
Or the heavens would open and the Virgin Mary, Christ, or God
himself appear to the frenzied dancer. Thousands saw such
sights. One paroxysm followed another sometimes for hours
until all were too exhausted to dance longer.
This remarkable delusion was not limited to one town or to
one locality as many might think but soon spread all over
Europe. From Aix-la-Chapelle, it spread to Lige, Utrecht,
Tongres and many other cities in Flanders and the Netherlands.
In Lige the priests had recourse to exorcisms, and endeavored, by
606 AZOTH
shortly afterward, other nuns also began to mew. At last all the
nuns mewed together every day at a certain time for several hours
together. The whole surrounding Christian neighborhood heard,
with equal chagrin and astonishment, this daily cat-concert, which
did not cease until the nuns were informed that a company of
soldiers had been placed by the police before the entrance of the
convent, that they were provided with rods, and would continue
whipping them if it occurred again, until they promised not to
mew any more!
Another convent-epidemic was one which occurred in the
fifteenth century, in a German nunnery. A nun fell to biting her
companions. In the course o f a short time, all the nuns of this
convent were biting each other! The news o f this infatuation
among the nuns soon spread, and it passed from convent to con
vent through the greater part o f Germany, principally Saxony
and Brandenburg. It afterward visited the nunneries o f Holland,
and at last the nuns had the biting mania even as far as Rome.
These sympathetic manias did not end with the period under
review. W e need only remind the reader o f the Shakers, the
Convulsionaries o f France, the fanatical Dervishes, the
Jumpers, many o f the early spiritualists, the revivalists, to
see enacted again before us some o f these peculiar mental abnor
malities to which crowds are liable. Even in our own day, we
see such exhibitions, on a lesser and more subdued scale. Every
religious and emotional performance is, in a sense, a demonstra
tion of this spirit the psychology o f the crowd. Here we may
still observe the workings o f the mind o f the populace may see
the sympathetic contagion which thus affects whole areas of
humanity when once the spark has been ignited which sets the
conflagration afire. To be sure, our modern civilization and cul
ture have enabled us to retain a greater control over our natures
than formerly; and particularly is this the case with women. Still,
at many a revivalist meeting, the first elements o f the dancing
mania may be seen revived. W e might also go so far as to
say that fashion, in all its forms, is a sign o f this delusion the
fad for copying others, o f drifting with the multitude. Each new
fad and fashion is a sign o f it. Thus, we see the modern dancing
mania revived in our own day in less accentuated form more
than 500 years after its predecessor! Fortunately, however, the
modern dance is tempered with the civilization o f our times, so
that, instead o f being a mania, it has become a graceful expres
sion o f youthful health and strength; the modern dancing craze
has been removed from the field o f the morbid into that o f the
normal. Yet it had a predecessor, as we have seen! Surely*
there is nothing new under the sun!
JHgfjer l)ougf)t
LO V E AN D F A ITH
By E u g e n e D el M ar
burdens also his own, but this merely enlarges the area o f the
consciousness o f burden.
Each must pay the price o f what he thinks and does; from
this there is no possible escape. Whether one calls it penalty or
terms it reward, whether one conforms to principle readily or op
poses it strenuously, whether this tendency be conscious or un
conscious; under all circumstances the thought one thinks and the
thought one acts must carry with it inevitable results.
If one desires and looks for good he will find it, and finding
it he attracts it and is attracted by it. When one affiliates himself
with the good he grows more and more to express goodness, and
to an increased ability to appropriate it. The recognition of and
the expectation o f finding good in others induces love, and love
carries with it an increasing power o f consciousness and realiza
tion. It is the path to the cultivation of higher and higher ideals.
The ideal that one attributes to another will, at first unconsciously
and afterward consciously, bring home to him the conviction that
he embodies the same ideal within himself. When he is convinced
that he does embody the ideal he has faith, and to the degree of
faith that he then consciously rises does he actually embody and
express his ideal.
As it is love that induces faith, to the extent that one is cap
able of love has he the ability to manifest faith. When one sends
forth the vibration o f love he is met with a response from all
chords similarly attuned, and he receives the increased power that
number and union can impart the sense o f sympathy, o f com
radeship, o f collective strength.
One does not nor can he add to or subtract from himself or
others. Each is a magnet, an entity complete in itself although
related to all others, possessing all power and manifesting it to
the extent o f the development o f his consciousness. The vibra
tory chord that one awakens interiorly in another by means o f
love promotes a consciousness o f power, while the information is
conveyed so pleasantly and so harmoniously as to impress a belief
in its truth and desirability.
When one believes that all is good, acts all is good and lives
all is good, he will come to an ever-widening sense o f goodness
in and love for others. He will attain a constantly growing de
gree of consciousness o f greater and higher ideals in others.
When one believes that all is One, that what others are he is, and
that what he is others are, he promotes an ever-increasing sense
of goodness in and love for the Self. He comes to a growing
consciousness o f greater and higher ideals in the Self. Through
love he reaches faith, and through faith he embodies his ideals.
612 AZOTH
where one has to believe in the infallibility of the Pope, his divine
power; the absolution o f sins by the priests, and the hell-everlast
ing idea not counting the worship of the Virgin, the immaculate
conception, and other things.
To be strictly honest with him or herself, a Theosophist,
once convinced that the fundamental teachings o f Theosophy are
true, must break all affiliations with any Church. While in sym
pathy with all, recognizing their place, he cannot consistently be
long to any. He has outgrown them, has broken the shackles o f
dogma and has reached a freer atmosphere.
Democracy
Making the world safe for democracy is a phrase con
stantly before us. Democracy is the star to which all men have
hitched their wagon, to which all governments are inclining.
Probably the best definition of the word, as generally under
stood, is Abraham Lincolns phrase Government of the people,
for the people, by the people; but the term is somewhat loosely
used and in the minds of many includes ideas o f equality, non
existence of class or caste. It is the alternative to autocracy and,
as that scheme has been tried and found sadly wanting, the hopes
of men are turning to the other.
As this is a talk on Theosophy and not Sociology, let us con
sider how the teachings o f Theosophy bear upon the subject.
From the Theosophic point o f view God the Solar Logos
has brought this solar system into being let us say in our vanity
mainly for our benefit, for our growth and development.
Although we may well presume that He is wholly concerned
with our welfare and that we (humanity) are His chief consider
ation, He is an Autocrat of Autrocrats, despotic in the extreme,
none may disobey or appeal from His laws. In this great system
are many lesser beings each, we may say without irreverence, ad
ministering a department of its government. These beings are
of many different stages o f development such as the archangels,
angels, etc., o f the Church. So far as we know they are appoint
ed by the Logos; we have nothing to do but obey them. They
are responsible to Him only or their superior.
W e must presume that this is the wisest or most perfect plan.
Why should we not model our system o f government o f our
smaller globe, or the individual nation, upon it?
If we want to be victorious in war, to succeed in whipping
the enemy, we organize an army exactly upon this divine plan.
We give despotic authority to the commander-in-chief and under
him we have many gradations o f officers until we reach the en-
616 AZOTH
TRUTH
By H. C. H odges
the world to awaken to this fact before those who are striving to
enlighten the present race retire in disgust at their apathy and
ignorance.
In no other department o f life is the practitioner expected
to be infallible. A physician is allowed to make mistakes, even
to the extent o f losing lives. Lawyers and judges may commit
errors o f judgment so far as depriving citizens o f their liberty,
but astrologers must and are expected to be infallible. Too much
attention is given to triviality; even should one go so far as to
predict an event it is termed a remarkable coincidence. This
only goes to demontsrate to the world where they stand and those
who are striving to benefit the race. But the censure o f public
opinion is the price they must pay who would elevate and help
mankind. To be sure this is a deplorable condition, so far as the
majority are concerned, for we rank as fools on the one hand and
knaves on the other, and before predictions can be made clearly
nearly a life time in this physical expression must be spent in
mastering all its ins and outs, for the reason that each individual
must reach the goal through a personal efiiort, and will finally
attain those conditions that will permit o f beneficial results to
earths children. Compiled and copyrighted.
By A llie B. H azard
LESSON NO. 10
The gems in affinity with the sign are Jasper and Onyx.
The ruling planet is Mercury.
S A G IT T A R Y ( The A rcher)
This is a fiery, mutable, masculine sign and covers the 240th
to the 270th degrees o f the ecliptic and approximately the 17th
and 18th hours o f Sidereal Time. The temperament is active,
both mental and physical, frank, candid, generous, charitable,
affectionate, impulsive, quick to comprehend; very social, but
often too quick to speak or act, thus making trouble for them
selves. They like travel, out-door sports, hunting and fishing;
fond o f freedom, they chafe under restraint. Some are studious
and become proficient in law, medicine, theology, literature,
science and philosophy. They are good friends and fair foes,
neat, clean, orderly, and have good taste in clothing and decor
ation. They are lucky in money matters, but are not so well
adapted in business for themselves as for others; they rarely make
mistakes if they follow their own intuitions. They are very
humane, cannot bear to see suffering and will relieve it if at all
possible; but it often happens their good offices are not appre
ciated. The Sagittary native is not easy to know, for he may ex
press two distinctly different characters; one free, bold and dar
ing, and the other tender, sensitive and sympathetic. They like
to have their sympathetic efforts appreciated, but if their feelings
are hurt they are silent or very brusque and abrupt in speech.
While they forgive an injury they never forget it. Many are re
ligious and spiritually-minded and a few are gifted with the
spirit o f prophecy.
There are often two marriages and but few children, and the
second marriage may not be harmonious. Frequently a reversal
o f fortune occurs about the 30th year, which is liable to affect
the health. Generally, aside from accidents, Sagittary gives long
life. There is liability to fevers, lung, stomach and liver troubles,
also tendency to sciatica, poor circulation, varicose veins and
nervous affections. Deep breathing and exercise in the open air
are very beneficial to Sagittary people.
In stature they are above medium height, some very tall,
strong, wiry, well-formed, though some stoop forward. Long
oval face, good complexion, sharp expressive eyes; hair light
brown to dark brown, early inclined to baldness in front.
The gems in affinity with Sagittary are the Carbuncle and
the Turquoise.
The ruling planet is Jupiter.
{T o be continued)
ftents in tfje l
AN UN USU AL SPIR IT PH OTOGRAPH
By G. E dw in F reeborn, M. D.
this I was showing the same picture to his wife and she said
That is the most perfect likness o f Mr. Hull that I have ever
seen. He never had an exposure made like it while he was liv
ing. She is still living and married, her name is Mrs. Mattie
Hull Marvin, at Morris Pratt Institute, White Water, Wisconsin.
A faithful reproduction o f the photograph is given here.
W H O SE D E V ILS W E R E T H E SE ?
By C. H. A. B jerregaard
Hetrietos
Astrosophic Principles, by John H azelrigg. Antique paper, cloth 8vo.,
$2.00. Hermetic Publishing Company, New York.
Mr. Hazelrigg has written some very learned and interesting books on
the deeper and metaphyical side o f Astrology, but we doubt if he has ever
yet given those interested in this much maligned arcane interpertation o f
the verities a book o f greater value than this last one published.
His thesis is to show that the wisdom o f the stars is a science founded
on definite basic principles, and that in Astrology, we find the real under
standing o f God and man. Mr. Hazelrigg succeeds admirably and has
given the Astrologer a text book to which he will often have occasion to
re fe r; and any one else who may read it will have most convincing evidence
that Astrology is far from being the superstition he may have thought it
was.
The author discusses and gives valuable information on many problems,
such as why certain angles or aspects should be important and others unim
portant. All students would do well to make themselves familiar with Mr.
Hazelriggs elucidation o f the doctrine or rationale o f aspects.
Part o f the book is given to Astrology and Medicine, and the author
shows the close relation between the planets, herbs and parts of the body,
etc., and the very great value a knowledge o f this ancient science would be
to the medical practitioner. W e cannot refrain from quoting one passage
here: Saturn if suitably conditioned in the celestial organism at the
birth o f an individual, may induce either to consumption or cancer, which a
proper introduction o f the Mars or energizing activities may neutralize
and cure. The modern medico, in his pleasure hunts for gerrymandering
germs and baffling bacilli, does not perceive this, for in searching "with unsee
ing eyes he never thinks to inquire as to their divine cause, nor realize that
parasitical growth is but coincident as an effect zuith the disease itself.
W ords o f wisdom if only our vivisectors had ears to hear.
Many valuable hints are given in this section which should be of prac
tical value to Astrologers in the cure o f disease. W e do not suppose that
628 AZOTH
many doctors will read this book, but if they would we think they would
see a great light.
The book closes with An Enquiry Concerning Our Nations Nativity,
in which the author traverses the conclusions o f previous writers and gives
his reasons and corroborative evidence for the hour o f 0.20 p.m., July 4,
1776. This part of the book is by no means the least interesting.
Mr. Hazelrigg has done both Astrology and Astrologers a distinct
service, and we cordially recommend his work and trust that, for the benefit
o f the science, Astrosophic Principles will have a large sale.
M. W .
to exist, in these various fields, are briefly stated, and in each case one or
more authoritative references given; the mathematical formula is also gen
erally given. Thus, if one wants to know what Newtons laws o f motion
were, Ohms law, the laws of vapor pressure, or the reflection o f light, he
will find them in this book; and hundreds o f others, both well- and little-
known. W ell worth possessing by any scientific student.
H. C.
W h a t Every Man and W om an Should Know About the Bible, by
Sidney C. Tapp, Kansas City, Mo. 303 pp. $2.00.
Mr. Tapp is the author o f several other books about the Bible and
sexual matters, and he seems to have a fixed idea that everything connected
with the propagation o f the species is vile and evil.
The words o f the Bible are turned and twisted to suit this thesis, state
ments are made as fact which are merely the opinion o f the author who has
much to learn o f the matter o f which he treats.
Mr. Tapp is no doubt animated by the best of motives but totally mis
understands his sub jet.
It is a book written by a crank with the usual cranks obliquity o f vision
and exaggeration.
A. U.
Signs in the Heavens of a Great W orld Teacher, by Gertrude de Bielska
Paper Booklet, 35 cents. Goodyear Book Concern, New York City,
N. Y.
This Booklet was read with delight. Not only is it bound very daintily
in white paper and printed artistically, but its contents are as a fresh breath
in these days o f bewildering discussions o f coming Christs.
Occult truths well known to students are treated from the Astrological
standpoint, in a simple and convincing manner, easily comprehended by those
unacquainted with Astrology.
The author furnishes a foundation for the conclusions reached by
quickly summing up the past history o f the world, comparing the present
entering o f a new cycle with similar well marked world changes in the past.
She predicts that the Second Coming of Christ is at hand the Christ
Consciousness, not the man Jesus, and she predicts many teachers helping
to attain this supreme gift.
This little book will help everyone to a better understanding o f the
meaning o f true Brotherhood and Universal Peace.
V. S. T.