Azoth, August 1919
Azoth, August 1919
Azoth, August 1919
TO OUR READERS
A Monthly Magazine
An Inspirational, Helpful, Philosophical and Progressive Magazine
of Constructive Thought
M IC H A E L W H IT T Y , Editor
Assisted by Hereward Carrington, Psychical Research
----- Gertrude de Bielska, Symbolism
Eugene Del Mar, Higher Thought
Frank C. Higgins, Masonry
Howard Underhill, Astrology
Herman S. Whitcomb, Occultism
Vol. 5. A U G U S T , 1919
Ctritoriate
Occult Science and the Practice of Medicine
There is no more practical field for the application of Occult
Science to our every-day life than that of using the knowledge
first, for purposes o f relieving human suffering, and, second,
in the prevention of many ills and ailments which attack the
human mind and body.
Without intending any aspersions upon the Christian Science
or New Thought mental healer, it can be stated with truth
that this field is at the present time almost entirely neglected;
and yet many occult students realize what an immense terrain
it is and what great and beneficial results would come from its
cultivation.
In ancient days, the days of the high tide of the civilization
of India, Chaldea and Egypt, Science, Philosophy and Religion
were but aspects of the knowledge and wisdom gained there
from, of Nature’s laws seen and unseen, held as a sacred pos
session by the priesthood whose temples were the universities,
laboratories and libraries of those times. There is much to
induce us to believe that these men o f old knew far more about
the functions o f the organs of the physical body, the psychology
of man, the unseen forces causing health and sickness— the power
of the mind over matter, the right use o f drugs and means o f
correct diagnosis, than has been approached by modern medical
.
68 A Z O T H
and said he was not “ entirely against the belief in God,” and then
went into a discussion o f the belief in the evolution of the soul.
This is good enough Occult doctrine, but believed in by itself
without the complementary teaching that whatsoever we sow
we shall surely reap is, as can readily be seen, highly dangerous
both to the individual and to society.
It cannot be too strongly impressed upon the minds of all
who realize that the doctrine o f reincarnation offers the most
satisfactory and reasonable explanation of life’s phenomena, that
the periodic return of the soul to mortal life is the method only
by which that soul is enabled to gather experience and so evolve,
but that the Law o f that growth is that o f unerring reaction to
action of certain inescapable effect from Cause, o f inflexible jus
tice in all three planes o f matter, morals and mentality, and that
in consequence every man “ suffers from himself,” and that every
action, desire, and thought done in one life not only affects the
condition o f the life after death but the future lives on earth, as
well as the character o f the individual.
If this teaching be properly understood, a crime such as this
man has committed would be well-nigh impossible; and the results
— far from being a matter of indifference— would be anticipated
with a horror and remorse far more dreadful than any punish
ment man can inflict.
P R A Y E R FOR A LE AG U E OF N ATIO N S
(Issued by the League to Enforce Peace)
TH E V O R TEX
Everywhere the world over these seven movements were
manifesting themselves, both in the Orient and the Occident.
They were transforming the life of the peoples in all directions.
Slowly they were growing stronger. By studying their mani
festations I was led to the conclusion that they were in reality
“ the seven spirits of God sent forth into all the world,” and that
by the intensification o f the life forces of humanity all along the
AZOTH 73
line the way was being paved for the inauguration of a new world
order, based on the culmination or co-ordination of all the move
ments indicated into one grand synthetic whole. It appeared to
me that this process o f intensification began about the year 1881,
and that it would end in the new dispensation being fully estab
lished somewhere near the year 1934. I also realized that
towards the centre o f those two periods conditions would be so
intensified that a world conflict, a struggle between the reac
tionary and the revolutionary forces, would become inevitable.
That conflict, it appeared to me, seemed inevitable after half the
period between 1881 and 1934 had been traversed, which brought
the world to the year 1908. At that period these movements
had grown to great dimensions, and were everywhere threatening
the old order of things.
T H E SEVEN “ SPIR IT S” A T W O R K
The intellectual world was being moved by intellectual
reforms of many kinds, especially in the direction of education.
The religious world was being shaken to its foundations, firstly,
by the growth of Modernism in the Roman Catholic Church, and,
secondly, by the growth of innumerable advanced cults in the
Protestant firmament, such as Theosophy, Spiritualism, New
Thought, Christian Science, Bahaism, and the New Theology,
making as it were a sevenfold division of the Moral ray or spirit.
There were innumerable aesthetical movements springing up in
all directions and receiving great impetus as time went on, such
as the Garden City movement, the Housing of the Workers, the
Forestry, the Town Planning, and many allied movements, all
devoted to a better life from an aesthetic standpoint. Emotional
movements were innumerable but were mainly allied to other
societies having diversified objects. The effervescence of the
emotional spirit through all the other movements was tremendous;
propaganda was at its height, demonstrations were the order of
the day in all directions. Jericho was in danger of toppling to
pieces by the innumerable shouts from untold myriads of re
formers in all directions, intent upon their own reforms and dis
satisfied with conditions as they then were. In the economic
world reformers were legion, and the movements were numer
ous. From Socialism to Anarchy, from Communism to Trades
Unionism, from Syndicalism to the General Strike, from Herve-
ism to Mutual Aid, from Labourism to Social Democracy, from
Bando Mataram to Bolshevism, the whole world was one seething
mass of industrial unrest, threatening the very foundations o f the
74 AZO TH
from the ordinary standpoint, the world conflict has been precipi
tated owing to the desire for power and dominion on the part
of the world’s rulers. They feared that the new movements,
especially the economic and political ones, would sweep away the
dominating emperors and ruling classes. Desire for power and
fear of Socialism may be regarded as a fairly satisfactory diag
nosis o f the disease from which the German ruling classes (among
others) were suffering, and the fever produced therefrom is now
running its course throughout the western world, while in the
East the same causes produced the Chinese Civil War. Women’s
suffrage societies produced anti-feminist societies, the reaction
from Socialism produced anti-socialist societies, and Modernism
produced the anti-modernist crusade of the Catholic Hierarchy.
All the advanced movements have produced their reactions, and
the struggle of these forces for and against constitutes “ in globo”
the world crisis.
Prior to the great war all these advanced movements were
fighting an uphill fight against heavy odds, endeavouring to blaze
a track through the pathless wilderness of fossilized and petrified
human thought. The pioneers fought and struggled and sacri
ficed themselves to find standing room and breathing space for
the movements with which they were entrusted. Then came the
great war, and all things were thrown into the melting pot o f the
world conflict, the pivotal axis of the world-crisis. To-day the
balance has been reached, and from henceforth all the advanced
movements, and the movements making for the new age, will be
placed on a constructive footing. Every one o f them will, almost
on the establishment of peace, begin its great constructive work
for the world. The growth of adherents, and the cumulative
effect of reform on all lines the world over, will have a world
changing effect on all conditions o f life, o f thought, and o f action.
Ultimately there will commence a great co-ordinating process,
which will gradually unite all these various forces into one mighty
system of society, in which all things will be unified and solidified,
and this crystallization o f all reforms into one world brotherhood
will constitute the new age, the new dispensation, the Millennium,
or whatever name the adherents of any particular group prefer
to call that auspicious and beneficent system. The religious folk
will prefer to refer to it in terms of Scripture, the philosophers
will call it by a name which will mean the rule of the philosophers,
and the Socialists will call it the Socialist Commonwealth. But
the great central fact will remain, that by the co-ordination and
unification of all reform movements into one grand symphony
the new age will burst upon the world in all its glory, and humanity
will arise and sing in the sunlight of the New Renaissance.
AZOTH 77
will have to work for a living, and have only one wife or ‘house
keeper.’ ” Therefore the sublime philosophies o f the past are
placed on the same shelves as the idolatries o f man-eating
Polynesians.
The natural history, the verisimilitude and the logical neces
sity o f the Edenic snake are all left to the powers o f analytical
imagination. It must have existed, because the writer has seen
representations of it on very old monuments, sometimes con
nected with the god Vishnu o f India, again with Anu and Anattu
of Chaldea, Erakles and Athena (Hercules and Minerva) of
Greece, and the gods and goddesses of ancient Egypt.
Irreligious modern research might associate this serpent of
Eden with the universal myth of Alpha Draconis, the pole star,
once deemed the brooding spirit o f Evil, a great dragon or ser
pent, fixing the earth with its malevolent glance, but the Church
needs the snake, even though it be stuffed with straw and have
glass eyes, to frighten the bad children o f Original Sin into desire
o f “ absolution.” But we cannot bask in the humor o f a serious
situation at the expense of its vital side.
The doctrine o f “ Original Sin” is the pivotal fact of the
Christian Church. I will not say “ Christianity,” for there are
some few who perceive that there are elements in the church
which are remote from Christianity, as a practice. The neces
sity of the Christian Avatar, the descent and mission of a
divine “ Redeemer,” was not to save mankind from the conse
quences o f innumerable injurious acts, proceeding from the pre
cise nature of his being, but from the curses of “ death” and “ sin”
entailed by the little indiscretion of our first parents, the snake
and the convenient apple.
I merely wish to call attention to the logic of this entire
transaction in its far-reaching influence over the world, subse
quent to its adoption as a theory of why man follows the prompt
ings o f his animal nature more readily than those o f his spiritual
nature. In the true sense of this allegory, it is a remarkable
illustration o f the fall of Spirit into Matter, which must be con
sidered in connection with planes of existence transcending our
own; but in its false and forced sense, it deals with characters
alleged to be as real and tangible as Nero and Mrs. Eddy.
The perverted sense of the “ Original Sin” myth is to con
stitute man the self-confessed slave of the vices, greeds and con-
cupisences which he finds so wedded to his animal nature that
he cannot, without an important intellectual struggle, shake them
off. Now it just so happens that these very vices, greeds and
concupiscences are integrally and irrevocably associated with
AZOTH 81
T H E EAGLE OF JUSTICE
One of the oldest symbols, the eagle, was used always for
national emblems as well as also to express and veil mysteries of
the Doctrine. The old philosophers regarded it as the bird and
special symbol o f Zens pater, the all-pervading generative energy
of the Universal Mind. In the symbolism of the churches it
represents the Saviour, but sometimes, by opposition, the
daemon.* Kabbalists associate the eagle with the second He,
the fourth letter o f the Tetragram, which, according to Christian
interpreters, represents the human nature o f the Christ. His
divine nature being expressed by the first He. Others say that
the eagle means the Shechinah.**
In esoteric masonic symbolism the eagle seems to be a sign
expressing higher consciousness (single-headed eagle) or con
sciousness on two planes, or double, spiritual and temporal power
(double-headed eagle). At the same time it remains the repre
sentative of Zeus pater; i. e., one of the meanings o f the holy G.
But neither of these interpretations could be directly applied to
the eagle on the Seal because to this some special demands are
attached. Barton, who presented the eagle already on his first
submitted design wrote in the explanation : “ The eagle displayed
is the Symbol o f Supreme Power and Authority, and signifies
Congress.” The law says that it should be the “ American Eagle,”
expressing thus evidently the intention that it should signify
something especially American. Furthermore, the explanation
shall also harmonise, like all the other parts do, with the funda
mental idea of the Seal, viz. : “ E pluribus unum.” Consequently
it is necessary to look around for an eagle which can be regarded
as a symbol o f Congress and at the same time suggests something
especially American, also is a unity composed of many.
Esoteric symbolism is universal, therefore the task of finding
an eagle, at the same time symbolic but also answering these
special demands, seems to be a difficult one. Fortunately the
* Histoire et théorie du sym bolism religieuse, par l’abbé Auber.
Paris, 1889.
** “ Schechinah ex parte throni vocatur aquila,” and is also “ simili-
tudo hominis.” Kabbala denudata of Rosenroth, ed. Sulzbach, 1667.
84 AZOTH
When the Spirit “ moves” it pushes out from the center the
latent life from within and as it does so the Mother Principle
within the circle enfolds it into Being, until it expresses a limita
tion and becomes manifested. This is the mystery of creation
and manifestation that is shown throughout Nature in her al
chemical processes for expression.
In the symbol of the Sun we have the essence of Creative
Force illustrating the involution and evolution o f Life through
Motion. Its attribute, Insight, is a spiritual gift from the Sun.
The symbol of the Sun is likened unto the Rose, for in no
form of Nature— unless in the sacred Lotus o f the Hindoos—
is the mystery of Creation and transmutation so wonderfully
demonstrated as in this queen of flowers.
The life or Spirit of the Sun is latent in the bud o f the Rose.
As the Spirit pushes from within, the Mother is there to enfold
it into Being; and what a miracle of beauty and perfection it is!
Each petal expressive of its own life exhaling its perfume, and
having a share in the great accomplishment o f the whole. From
where does the Rose get its rapturous color and its incomparable
perfume— its form of the circle with its seedling in the center?
Oh, mystery of mysteries unfathomable!
When the cycle of the Rose is completed the petals droop
and fall; the Spirit withdraws to the heart to perfect its fruit,
and then into the seed, there to sleep until Divinity calls it forth
to make another Rose. Someone has said, “ God lies slumbering
in the things He has made.” In this simple illustration of the
Rose and the symbol of the Sun there is “ miniature day and
night of Brahm.” May this not reveal some of the secrets of the
Rosicrucian symbol? Now, just as the Rose accumulates out of
the Cosmos the elements to make it a Rose, to give it its color
and fragrance, so does a planet accumulate out of the Cosmos,
in larger degree, the elements that give to it character and form ;
and so does the Sun accumulate out of the Cosmic Fire Dust the
God-given powers of Spirit, Light and Life,and so does the Great
Mother Consciousness fold it into Being, and behold! the mani
fested Universe.
(To be continued)
AZOTH 91
C H A PTE R XI.
The eighteenth major trump, the Moon, symbolizes the
various Kabalistic attributions o f Qopli, tabulated in Chapter 3.
Since Qoph, the number 100, corresponds by reduction to 10— Yod
and 1= A leph , the Moon is analogous to the Hermit and the Fool.
All three cards represent the Path of Manifestation. The Fool
is the Beginning of the W ay; the Hermit is the Goal of the
Journey; and the Moon is the Path of Unfoldment, beginning in
the Water of the Abyss, and ascending gradually to heights far
beyond the Watch-towers o f the Known.
In the eighteenth Key, Spirit is symbolized by the cray-fish;
partly because, after descending into manifestation, Spirit begins
its evolution in various forms o f water life; and partly because
the cray-fish is a symbol analogous to the Egyptian scarabaeus,
Khephra, god o f the rising sun, creator o f all, “ father of the
gods.”
The Path rises from a pool, similar to those of Temperance
and the Star; and as it passes over rolling country, it is a succes
sion of ascents and descents, and not a straight up-grade. This
refers to a psychological law, at work in all evolution, which is of
particular importance to occultists. A modern work on business
psychology 1 explains this law in language so like the symbolism
of the eighteenth Key that one might almost think the author a
Tarot student. He says, describing what happens when one takes
up a new line of work, that great progress is usually made at first,
because the first steps “ are made largely by merely using old
habits and previously acquired skill or knowledge, and reorganiz
ing and adapting them to new uses.” After a time, just when the
first enthusiasm begins to wane, further advance requires the
formation of new habits. “ For a time one seems to make no
advance in skill. He may even become less successful in the
performance. He has reached what is known as a plateau in
habit formation.
“ When a plateau o f arrested progress has been reached, the
faint-hearted become discouraged and quit. However, the knowl
edge that their experience is a normal one should give them
resolution to keep on. When a plateau has been reached, further
progress depends mainly on the ability to hold one’s self to the
task by sheer force o f will, until the new knowledge is assimilated,
the new habits are formed, and the new skill is developed.”
1 P sych ology for Business Efficiency. George R. Eastman, p. 30.
92 AZOTH
from water, for she symbolizes the fluidic and passive Fire, AVB,
Ob. A V B = 1 , 6, 2,=9=7W /t=Strength. This woman rising
from the water is she who tames the lion in the eighth Key.
She corresponds also to the waved rays o f the Sun in the nine
teenth Key.
Opposite her a man rises from the earth. He is the active
and terrestrial Fire, A V D , Od. A V D = 1 , 6, 4 = 1 1 = 2 = B e t h =
the Magician. The man is the dominant figure of the first Key,
and he corresponds to the salient rays of the Sun.
His hands are folded, because in the stage of evolution here
depicted, the objective consciousness which he symbolizes remains
comparatively inactive, for it is fixed in its contemplation of the
Supreme Spirit. While the objective consciousness is thus held
in restraint, so to speak, the subjective consciousness receives the
seven-fold influx o f power direct from its Supernal Source.
The child is the regenerated personality, rising from the
tomb o f material existence. His back is toward us, because he
represents return to the Source o f All. For this Key is the sixth
stage o f the Path, in which personal consciousness is on the verge
of blending with the Universal. At this stage the adept realizes
that his personal existence is nothing but the manifestation of the
relation between the two natures of the Supreme Spirit (the
woman and the man) ; that it has no separate existence in reality.
The light that shines here is beyond that o f the Sun or Moon.
It neither waxes and wanes, nor does it rise and set. It is the
unfailing light of the Fire of Divine Wisdom, which consumes all
falsehood, and purges the whole life of the aspirant.
said, upon the practice and skill o f the student, the only thing
which can be done in a work of this kind is to give the most
important underlying principles.
JUDGING TH E EVEN TS
This part of Name Analyzation, as has been said, is the most
difficult part of the science and requires great care and practice;
nevertheless it more than repays all the labor which may be
bestowed upon it, as when well done it is extremely accurate both
as to past and present as well as future.
In reading the events from the table of letters produced by
the methods described in the last chapter we use principally
those portions of the definitions o f the letters and numbers which
relate to the fortune and circumstances; the general characteris
tics of these also have to be taken into consideration, however,
so it is best to be thoroughly familiar with the action of each
separate letter.
A name containing many of the letter a, such as Amanda,
will always produce an active, generally a very active person.
A , in a table o f events, will always produce activity in all the
other letters which constitute the table. If, therefore, the events
indicated are good ones, the a renders them more active in a
fortunate direction; in the same manner, if evil, the a will assist
in throwing them to the evil side. Its period o f vibration is
one year.
B indicates a spiritual condition of mind and body. It
produces a highly strung period, and therefore, to a certain
extent, physical delicacy during its vibration, which covers two
years. Two of these letters in a table are almost certain to
indicate danger to the health and, sometimes, the brain. It
occurs sometimes in marriage tables, and in such a case indi
cates that the person will marry with rather high ideals.
C is a vivifying force, and therefore tends to produce phys
ically a much healthier condition of body and mind. As, how
ever, it indicates the throat in a bad table, it might produce
trouble in this direction. In the circumstances of the life it is
apt to show difficulty in advancing, and the possibility of' hav
ing to humble one’s self to those beneath one to gain the thing
desired. Its vibration covers three years.
D produces movement of a decided character. One usu
ally indicates travel, generally of a pleasant nature, though this
depends upon the entire table; that is, whether the other letters
are fortunate or otherwise. It further shows that the person
AZOTH 99
great nervous effort and perhaps illness. If the table should read
H
D
D
I
it would indicate generally the death o f a near relative, where
the personal feelings were strongly involved and nervous strain
mentally and physically the result. Its vibratory period is eight
years.
I always indicates the personal feelings; an extremely sensi
tive condition which renders the feelings exaggeratedly sharp and
therefore tends to produce suffering. It often occurs in tables
indicating the death of relatives, also in marriage tables or in
those bringing either suffering or pleasure. It makes the person
either shy or the exact reverse, bold and aggressive, but in either
case sympathetic and intuitive. Its period is nine years.
J will place the person in a position o f leadership, willingly
or unwillingly. If in business, elevation from something lower;
if connected with death, leadership in family affairs. It nearly
always means gain and advantage to the person in some form,
unless in a very bad table; in this case it would show unwilling
leadership under many difficulties. Its period o f vibration is one
year.
K, while it indicates nervousness, it is, nevertheless, a vivify
ing force. It gives strength and endurance, and in a table of
illness nearly always shows recovery. Its most usual meaning,
however, is travel or change. In finance or business, in con
nection with bad letters, such as u, it will be a stronger indica
tion o f loss, as its tendency is to scatter. It will, on the other
hand, in a good table show enlargement of business or plans of
any kind. Success in bold undertakings, though also possible
rashness. Its vibration is two years.
L produces travel, short or long journeys, change and move
ment, but usually much self-sacrifice. Two in a table are not
good; they tend to accidents and possibly violent death. If two
appear in a table, or if the vibration is passing between a double l
— 1 to 1— there is especial danger of falling downstairs. The
author personally knows of three cases where this has occurred.
In two instances the person was killed outright, in the third the
escape was a narrow one. , The vibration of this letter is three
years.
M is another letter o f which more than one is dangerous.
It produces change, therefore one may only indicate travel; but
any violent action or change is never good, as it is always more
AZOTH 101
identified with the planets, and the lesser ones with the fixed
stars.
“ A scheme o f correspondences between phenomena in the
heavens and occurrences on earth was worked out. The con
stantly changing appearance of the Heavens indicated the cease
less activity of the gods, and since whatever happened on earth
was due to divine powers, this activity represented the prepara
tion for terrestrial phenomena and more particularly those affect
ing the fortunes of mankind.
“ It is claimed that the astral-mythological cult o f ancient
Babylonia spread over the entire ancient Orient, and whether
we turn to Egypt or to Palestine, to Hittite districts or to Arabia,
we shall find these various cultures under the spell of this
conception.
“ It furnishes the key to the interpretation o f Homer as well
as of the Bible. In particular, all the Old Testament should be
explained by a series of sidereal myths. The patriarchs are per
sonifications of the Sun and Moon, and the traditions of the
sacred books find their real significance only when translated to
the phenomena in the heavens.
“ How often, for instance, has the theory of the precession
of the equinoxes been brought into the religious cosmology of the
East.
“ But what becomes of all these symbolical explanations if
the fact be established that the Orientals never had a suspicion
of this famous precession before the genius of Hipparchus dis
covered it?”
It is a curious fact, which may not prove to have been with
out a reason, that the famous Babylonian “ era o f Nabonassar”
was adopted in the same year, viz, B. C. 747, which also figures
as that of the foundation of Rome, for the mythical birth of Jesus
is placed in the year of Rome 747, which corresponds to 0 A. D.
The Babylonian record o f eclipses, preserved by Ptolemy,
commenced with the era of the Sargonides, who reigned over
Nineveh from B. C. 722, after which “ the reports made to the
Assyrian Kings, by the official Astrologers, allow us to form a
sufficiently clear idea of the state of their astronomical
knowledge.
“ They had apparently traced the ecliptic and divided it into
four parts, corresponding to the four seasons.
“ In a valuable tablet belonging to the year B. C. 523, we
for the first time find the relative positions of the Sun and Moon
calculated in advance, and noted with their precise dates, the con
junctions of the Moon with the planets, and of the planets with
AZOTH 105
each other, and their situations in the signs of the Zodiac which
here appear definitely established.”
There was also a curious transformation o f the meaning of
the term “ Chaldean,” so frequently applied to the Priest-Astrono
mers of the ancient world.
At first it meant all the inhabitants of lower Mesopotamia,
but from their especial proficiency as astronomers and astrologers,
it became the title designating the members of the Babylonian
priesthood. Finally it became a title o f honor applied to the
Greeks who like Pythagoras, studied in the Babylonian schools.
Of the still later employment of this term, by the mere impostors
and charlatans o f the Middle Ages, wTe need not digress.
Franz Cumont proceeds “ In Oriental civilizations, which are
priestly civilizations, the intimate union of learning and belief
everywhere charac
terizes the develop
ment o f religious
thought. But no
where does this alli
ance appear more
extraordinary than
at Babylon, where
we see a practical
polytheism of a
rather gross charac
ter, combined with
the application of
the exact sciences
and the g o d s of
heaven subjected to
the laws o f mathe
matics.
Ancient Babylonian Zodiac “ This strange as_
sociation is, to us, almost incomprehensible; but it must be
remembered that at Babylon a number was a very different
thing from a figure. Just as in ancient times, and above all
in Egypt, the name had a magic power, and ceremonial words
formed an irresistible incantation; so here the number possesses
an active force, the number is a symbol and its properties are
sacred attributes. Astrology is only a branch of mathematics
which the heavens have revealed to mankind by their periodic
movements.
“ From their main discovery, that o f the invariability o f
106 AZOTH
4)igt)tr Œtjougfit
T H E GOD OF T O M O R R O W
By E u g e n e D el M ar
Man’s development is denoted in his clearer conceptions of
life and his broader interpretations and truer definitions concern
ing it. One’s definitions o f the immaterial indicate his status in
consciousness, and they change progressively as he does. One’s
acceptance o f such a definition as final marks a commencement
of his mental decay.
There is but One Truth, and it never changes. If it were
truth of itself that set us free, then immortal and eternal truth
would have freed mankind eons ago. It is the individual’s con
sciousness o f truth alone that sets him free, and that is a matter
of growth along defined lines, being the mental expression of one’s
spiritual realization.
The popular conceptions of the God o f Today embody the
spiritual realizations of the race, as defined by humanity’s con
sciousness, and racial growth is extremely slow as compared with
that of its more progressive elements. The race looks almost
entirely to outward experience as its teacher. Although experi
ence is slow, painful and unreliable, it is the sole guide for the
mass of humanity.
While learning from experience is usually a very slow proc
ess, there are times when experiences come thick and fast, and
are so vital in character as to be quickly convincing. The Great
W ar has been a wonderful teacher in its rapid demonstrations
of human ignorance and folly.
The veneers of convention and tradition have been torn away
rudely, and with the destruction of these protecting scaffoldings
have been exposed the misshapen and tottering frameworks of
present human institutions. In the light of higher conceptions of
truth, the institutions that served to clothe the lesser conceptions
are now being rebuilt along more humanistic lines.
The rate o f growth and decay in human institutions is deter
mined by the degree o f rapidity with which they may be influ
enced by physical or mental agencies. Those most amenable to
outside influence are the more quickly re-formed, and the quicker
rate o f changes in political, economic and religious institutions
is in the order named. Profound experiences and fundamental
changes in human consciousness are the prerequisites of any great
religious reformation.
The Great W ar has opened the eyes of humanity to the exist-
AZOTH 111
k
1 14 AZOTH
®o rfjt Aspirant
By T h e T orch B earer
T h e T orch Bearer will answer privately any questions asked from a
sincere desire for the light o f Truth as applied to personal problems.
$&!>ti)tcal &eseard)
T H E BESIN N ET SEANCES
By A G leaner
Mr. and Mrs. Murray C. Moore have long resided in Toledo,
Ohio. Mr. Moore is clerk in one of the common pleas courts, a
capable, industrious, courteous public servant, popular and trust
worthy. Mrs. Moore’s mother was a psychic, who practiced
metaphysical healing.
Miss Ada Besinnet is an adopted daughter. After Mrs.
Moore had adopted her, she found that she had more than usual
psychic power, and induced her to cultivate it.
After a while Mrs. Moore requested Dr. John S. Pyle, their
family physician, to investigate and explain, if possible, the phe
nomena which were occurring.
Dr. Pyle says that for about seventeen years he had followed
the work of mediums, and in all that time, with a single excep
tion, he never saw or experienced anything of a phenomenal char
acter that could not be traced directly to the fraudulent opera
tions of the medium or o f confederates.
He found that phenomena occurred in the presence of Miss
Besinnet which he could not explain, nor regard as fraudulent,
and he asked his friend Dr. Hamilton to assist him.
The latter was well qualified for such an investigation, being
a prominent specialist, and keeping abreast o f the thought of the
day in his reading and interest, and having a knowledge of the
fraudulent methods o f many mediums, and also being versed in
legerdemain.
Their first séance when working together under test condi
tions was held June 1, 1908. Now take notice as to the thorough
ness with which they investigated.
“ W e examined the room, floor, ceilings, walls, possible en
trances and exits, and the furnishings. W e found the room to
be the family dining room. It had a hardwood floor, two doors
and two windows. A swinging door led to the kitchen and slid
ing door to the main room, which looked upon the street. The
windows had full-length screens, lockable on the inside.
“ W e locked the screens, drove a wedge under the kitchen
door, closed the sliding doors, and sealed each entrance with
wafers bearing our signatures inscribed with an indelible
pencil.”
Now, under such conditions, how could any one enter the
room without opening a door or window? Each entrance was
116 AZOTH
would have to turn her chair away from the table and reach
up to it. She could not turn around, nor stand up, nor reach up
without removing her hand from Dr. Pyle’s grasp.
He held both o f her hands in his right hand. Even if she
could slip one hand out without detection, she could not touch
the phonograph unless she turned around in her chair. Even if
she turned around in her chair and could reach the phonograph,
she could not, with one hand, change the records.
It is absurd to think that she had anything to do with it, and
there could not possibly have been confederates,
equally absurd to believe that either Mr. Moore or Miss Besinnet
could have manipulated the phonograph under such conditions.
Remember this was in Dr. Pyle’s private laboratory, where
How can the singing and whistling which occurred be
accounted for? A handkerchief was over Miss B.’s mouth, which
she could not have removed without withdrawing her hand from
Dr. H. If she could have removed the handkerchief with one
hand, she could not have replaced it; but if she could, there would
be so much motion as to lead to detection.
For years these phenomena have been occurring at the home
of the Moore’s, and hundreds o f persons have witnessed them.
At first no charge was made— there was no public exhibition, but
friends were entertained in that way.
The Toledo News-Bee requested one o f their reporters to
attend and write up a large number o f these séances, and as a
result of this a book is soon to be published, containing a great
deal that is very interesting and remarkable.
Miss Besinnet has gradually developed into a wonderful
medium. At her séances there is singing by several voices, and
talking through the trumpet and the appearance o f lights and
faces, these lights appearing by the side o f the faces and illu
minating them. Sometimes these faces are recognized by some
one present. They are generally seen but a few seconds at a time.
Mr. Roche, the reporter who wrote the articles for the News-Bee,
succeeded in his efforts to get one o f them to appear to him sev
eral times in succession. It came with the eyes closed, several
times, but finally, at Mr. Roche’s request, with eyes wide open
and an annoyed expression.
One o f the regular “ invisibles” present at these séances
is a young American soldier who was killed in the Cuban war.
He is known as “ Dan,” and he seems to have a desire that some
good shall come to those who attend these séances. At one time
he gave a series o f talks, which were taken down by a stenog
rapher, and will appear in the book.
118 AZOTH
®beosopfncal &alfcg
By A seka
No. 7
The greatest Menace to the intellectual development of man
kind; the greatest Blight (in historical times, at least) that
Humanity has ever had to contend with; the greatest Curse that
has ever been visited on the sons o f men; the greatest Power for
Evil and Retrogression that history records since the time of
Ahknaton, the Egyptian preacher of Monotheism; reaching out
its slimy tentacles, stealthily, cunningly, always with the same
end in view (viz., to crush and throttle the ever-expanding soul-
life and intellectual progress of man) is once again trying the
method used so many times before— unfortunately with success—
to nullify and thwart the work o f the Helpers and Guides of the
great “ orphan” — Humanity— who endeavor to promulgate the
Ancient Wisdom and make it known throughout the world.
That there may be some of our readers who are still dream
ing day-dreams, and who are still unconscious o f the peril of
this powerful Menace, should not be wondered at, seeing that
a Senator in our national Senate in Washington only a few days
ago, when uttering a warning to his fellow Senators that the
activities o f this Menace should be heeded, and that the power
wielded by this Blight should be curtailed if not put an end
to, was listened to with amazement and amusement. So said the
daily press, commenting on the incident.
When we, in the course o f these articles, shall refer to the
Roman Catholic Church, it must be borne in mind that we mean
the political hierarchy o f which the Anti-Christ— the Pope— is
the head, and o f which the Cardinals, Archbishops, Bishops,
Priests, Brothers and Nuns are the satraps and willing instru
ments. W e do not refer to the devout worshippers of a creed
which ought to have been relegated to the dust-bin centuries ago,
and which in these days is anachronistic, for one’s religious belief
is the concern o f the individual.
The Roman Catholic Hierarchy has held its position in the
minds o f mankind through its misuse o f that which appeals to
the most sacred of human emotions: Religion.
In the case o f the R. C. Hierarchy, religion is merely camou
flage to cloak their schemes for a wholesale dominance of
Humanity.
One of their Cardinals (Cardinal Ireland, if my memory is
correct; it does not particularly matter, for the same statement
120 AZOTH
OPEN P R E -O B L I G A T I O N A L
—o--
IN S T R U C T IO N ON THE P R IN C IP L E OF SECRECY
— o —
Sgtrnlogp
THE MOON IN T H E PROGRESSED HOROSCOPE
By H ow ard U n d e r h il l
1918.
July 22. 15 ~ 09 A P.
August 22. 16 “ 08 A M. C. P.
September 22. 17 “ 08 * 3 N.
October 22. 18 “ 08
November 22. 19 “ 08 A T? N.
December 22. 20 “ 08 A 1? P.
1919.
January 22. 21 “ 07
February 22. 22 “ 07 8 O P.
March 22. 23 “ 07 * Asc. P.
April 22. 24 “ 07 A Vr N.
May 22. 25 “ 07
June 22. 26 “ 07 A $ N.
In this case we note by the ephemeris for the 24 hours
between August 15th and 16th that the Moon moves 11° 58'.
This, you see, lacks only 2' of an average motion per month of
1°. So we add 1° a month, excepting for the first addition on
August 22nd, when we add 59', and also for January 22nd we
add 59', which gives us a total motion o f 11° 58' for the year.
ASPECTS IN T H E PROGRESSED CHART
The progressive movements of the planets from day to day
124 A Z O T H
form the aspects which control or modify the life o f the native.
These aspects are o f four kinds. The progressed planets to the
Ascendant; the progressed planets to the Mid-heaven; the pro
gressed planets to the Natal positions o f the planets, and the
aspects of the progressed planets to each other. The house
influence of the planets by progression into other natal houses
than those occupied in the Natal chart, should be considered.
The Moon’s influence in this respect is quite marked and brings
many changes into the life. Mercury, Venus, the Sun and Mars
also change natal houses during the average life, but Jupiter,
Saturn, Uranus and Neptune but seldom, unless near a cusp of
the next house toward which they are moving. The influence of
the progressed houses does not often seem very effective, but it
is well to compute them. Progressive aspects either to natal
places, or to those formed by progression, do not often produce
results without being stimulated by transits o f the Moon or other
planets.
Transits are the constant regular daily movements of the
planets through the Zodiac, and are noted in the ephemeris for
the present year of the life. The Moon transits or moves over
her natal place once every 27 days, 7 hours and 43 minutes, and
in that time makes an aspect with all the other planets and sen
sitive points. The Sun passes over his natal place once each
year, approximately on the birthday. The other planets in longer
or shorter periods of time according to their motion. When a
planet transits over the Natal or Progressed place of another
planet or sensitive point, like the Ascendant or Mid Cusp, an
influence is established, strong or weak according to conditions.
When a transit affects both a progressive and natal place at the
same time the effect is well marked. The direct transits of
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and, if strong in the radix, the planet
which rules the ascendant, are o f more importance than the
transits o f the Moon, Mercury, Venus, or even those o f the Sun
as a rule. The transit aspects of Saturn or Uranus often have
much effect on progressive chart aspects of other planets, either
for good or ill. Consider well their strength and character in the
natal chart. Otherwise the aspects o f transiting planets with
each other are of little or no consequence.
Eclipses should always be noted, especially if they come in
near conjunction with the natal ascendant, natal mid-heaven, the
Sun or the Moon, or in bad aspect to those points.
A conjunction or parallel often falls in the same house, thus
bringing a strong influence from that house, or if on a cusp will
receive a double house influence. In separated aspects the house
A Z O T H 125
126 A Z O T H
&t)t ©racle
Q U E S T IO N S A N D A N SW E R S
O n t h i n k i n g “ W h a t is a n d W h y ” I h a v e a r r iv e d a t a n e w m e a n in g
to th e p h r a s e , “ N o w is a ll t h e t i m e t h e r e i s .” W h a t w e e n j o y o r t h in k
o r r e a liz e o r e x p e r i e n c e in a g i v e n m o m e n t — t h a t is R e a l ; p a s t o r f u t u r e
is n o t— b u t o n l y n o w i s .
Then w h a t o f e v o lu tio n ? A re we to c o n s id e r th e tim e con su m ed
in t h e f o r m a t i o n o f a m o u n t a i n o r t h e g r o w t h o f a f o r e s t a s i l l u s t r a t i n g
th e t im e n e e d e d f o r S o u l G r o w t h ? D o e s it n o t s e e m h o p e le s s — o r w h a t
o f a ll t h e s e i s m s ? A r e t h e y a ll s i d e - t r a c k e d ? I s it t r u e t h e r e a r e s c a r c e l y
m ore th a n th ir te e n illu m in a t e d s o u ls liv in g o n th is p la n e t t o d a y ? W hat
o f t h e r e g a l p r o m i s e — “ A s k a n d y e s h a l l r e c e i v e .” H a v e w e not a sk ed ?
O r “ S e e k , a n d y e s h a l l f i n d .” S u r e ly w e h a v e s o u g h t s in c e th e d a y s o f
E m e r s o n b y t h e l i g h t h e l i g h t e d , a n d y e t — w h a t is it t h a t is t h e o b j e c t
o f o u r u n s a tia te d d e s ir e ?
W hen I becam e aw akened and began th e q u e st, I c a lle d it G od;
now I n a m e it T h e G n o sis. H ow stra n g e no one can p o in t th e w ay.
C o n s id e r t h e w r i t e r s , e v e n o n e ’ s f a v o r i t e s . Is it b e c a u s e t h e y w r i t e t o
th e m a s s a n d k n o w n o t th e h u n g e r w ith in u s , o r is i t t h e y d o u b t i f a n y
a re f u r t h e r a d v a n c e d t h a n t h e y s e e k t o e n l i g h t e n .
M a b e l C o llin s ’ b o o k s seem to b e te a c h in g s fo r th o se in w h o m th e
p s y c h ic s e n s e s a r e a w a k e n e d . O t h e r th a n th is o n e a u t h o r w e h a v e o n ly
fo u n d m e th o d s of c o n c e n tr a tio n , etc. Is it tru e , as M m e. B. says,
“ O n e can o n ly g r o w s p ir itu a lly i f o n e h a s th e t im e a n d le is u r e ” ?
It h as b een s a id : “To fin d i t , o n e m u s t l i v e i t .” And a ls o q u o t e d :
“ D o t h e b e s t y o u c a n ; t h i s is a ll t h a t is r e q u i r e d .”
T h is d o es n o t s a tis fy m e. S tr ip m e ! B reak m e ! B u t I k n o w th e r e
is a h i g h e r p l a n e t h a t I c a n l i v e o n (h e re a n d n o w ) w h e r e m y v i s i o n is
c le a r a n d w h ere k n o w le d g e is u n d e r s ta n d in g — w h e r e a ll is H arm on y,
J u s t ic e a n d L o v e .
I can reason it o u t, b u t to fe e l it and m ake it R eal is one step
b e y o n d m y p re se n t. W hy d o n o t th e I llu m in a ti d is c lo s e th e ir s e c r e t to
u s? I s it t r u e th a t each o n e m u st G row u n til h e c a n r e c e iv e h is o w n
a n sw er?
A S ubscriber.
I n a n s w e r t o t h e a b o v e , it is t r u e t h a t in a s e n s e , “ N o w is a ll t h e
t im e t h e r e i s ,” in s o f a r t h a t w e a r e l i v i n g in t h e i m m e d i a t e p r e s e n t , w h i c h
a m o m e n t b e f o r e w a s t h e f u t u r e , a n d in a m o m e n t i s t h e p a s t ; b u t t h is
o n l y a p p l ie s t o t h e a c t u a l m o m e n t a r y s t a t e o f t h e p e r s o n a l c o n s c i o u s n e s s ;
or, ta k en a s illu s tr a tin g C o sm ic c o n s c io u s n e s s , e x p r e s s e s th e id e a t h a t
P a s t a n d F u t u r e a r e a ll t h e p r e s e n t in t h a t c o n s c i o u s n e s s .
O u r c o r r e s p o n d e n t, h o w e v e r , ta k e s th e id e a t o o lit e r a lly . I f th e r e
w a s n o c o n t i n u i t y o f c o n s c i o u s n e s s , i. e ., m e m o r y , w e w o u l d n o t, c o u ld
n o t, b e e v o lv in g b e in g s ; and if th ere w as no m in d , w h ic h d ig e stin g
e x p e r ie n c e in to k n o w le d g e fo r e s e e s fu tu r e r e s u lts of a c tio n , th e n we
w o u ld b e e n tir e ly ir r e s p o n s ib le c r e a t u r e s , a k in to c o n g e n ita l id io ts . It
is t h e m i n d w h i c h i n c l u d e s r e m e m b r a n c e , r e m i n i s c e n c e a n d r e c o l l e c t i o n ,
b e sid e s th e p o w e r to r e la te , com p are and c o lla t e ; w h ic h d is tin g u is h e s
u s a s c o n s c io u s im m o r t a l b e in g s , lim it e d b y th e illu s io n o f t i m e ; w h ic h
128 A Z O T H
is m e r e l y a c r e a t i o n d u e t o t h e r e s t r i c t i o n s o f o u r c o n s c i o u s n e s s , b y the
m a te r ia l e a r th ly e n v e lo p e .
O u r q u e s t i o n e r is i m p a t i e n t a t t h e a p p a r e n t l y s l o w p r o c e s s o f soul
e v o lu tio n . I f h e o r s h e w ill c o m p a r e a n a v e r a g e , fa ir ly w e ll-d e v e lo p e d
h u m a n s o ld w ith t h e c o n s c i o u s n e s s in a n a to m o f q u a r t z , a n d consider
th a t th e se m ark th e p o le s of g ro w th , an d th a t such g ro w th h a s been
a t t a i n e d o n l y b y g a i n i n g e x p e r i e n c e , t h e l e n g t h o f t i m e r e q u ir e d w ill be
a p p a re n t as so im m e n s e th a t o u r m in d c a n sc a r c e ly g r a s p i t ; a n d if he
o r s h e w ill r e a so n th a t th e a v e r a g e m a n is y e t a t a c o m p a r a t i v e l y low
s t a g e o f e v o l u t i o n , a n d t h a t h i s g o a l is a b o u t a s f a r a w a y f r o m h im as
h e is f r o m t h e m i n e r a l a t o m , t h e l e n g t h o f t i m e r e q u i r e d f o r t h is g ro w th
w ill b e o b v io u s .
A s , h o w e v e r , t im e is b u t a n illu s io n o f th e m a t e r i a l w o r l d , a n d as
t h e r e is p r a c t i c a l l y a n i n f i n i t y o f it e v e n in t h i s w o r l d , t h e r e is s u r e ly no
n e e d to b e im p a tie n t. Such im p a tie n c e is u s u a l l y a r e s u l t o f a la c k of
a p p r e c ia tio n of w h a t has to be a c c o m p lis h e d . The g o a l o f m an is to
e x p r e s s fu lly on e a r th h is d iv in e n a tu r e , w h ic h m e a n s th e c o n q u e s t of
a ll m a t t e r , a n d o f t h e p e r s o n a l a n d i n d i v i d u a l s e l f . L e t o u r correspon
d e n t , in s e l f - e x a m i n a t i o n , d i s c o v e r h o w f a r t h i s h a s b e e n a c c o m p lis h e d .
A s t h e u n i v e r s e is o n e w i t h o u t b e g i n n i n g , n e v e r e n d i n g , b u t a lw a y s
b e c o m i n g , it is a l o g i c a l n e c e s s i t y t h a t i n n u m e r a b l e h o s t s h a v e rea ch e d
th e g o a l. T h e r e f o r e , s t r i v e a n d a s p i r e ; t h e r a p id it y o f a c c o m p lis h m e n t
depends s o le ly o n y o u r o w n e ffo r ts . A s ye ask y e s u r e ly r e c e iv e . As
ye knock th e door is s u r e ly opened; but th e w ay is b a r r e d by m any,
m a n y d o o r s , a n d y e m u s t b e e lig ib le b e fo r e y e c a n k n o c k . I t is a b su rd
to th in k th a t it r e q u ir e s tim e and l e is u r e to grow s p ir itu a lly . The
B hagavad G ita , th a t w o n d e r o f b o o k s , s a y s : “ W h a tso e v e r th o u d o e st,
w h a t s o e v e r t h o u e a t e s t , w h a t s o e v e r t h o u o f f e r e s t , w h a t s o e v e r t h o u d o e st
o f a u s te r ity , O K a u n te y a , d o th o u th a t as an o ffe r in g to M e.
“Thus s h a lt th o u be lib e r a te d fr o m th e bonds of a c t i o n , y ie ld in g
good and e v il f r u i t s ; t h y s e lf h a r m o n iz e d by th e Y o g a of r e n u n c ia t io n ,
th o u s h a lt c o m e u n to M e w hen s e t f r e e .”
W h ic h m e a n s th a t if w e d e d ic a te o u r s e lv e s to th e C h r i s t p r in c ip le
in u s , o u r w o r k in t h e w o r l d w i l l a f f o r d u s o p p o r t u n i t y f o r g r o w t h , and
w ill fo r m th e ste p p in g s to n e s b y w h ic h we m ay e v e n tu a lly “ C r o s s th e
S t r e a m .”
M ic h a e l W h itty .
ttf )t Calbron
Editor A zo t h :
A fte r r e a d in g your e d ito r ia l in J u ly A z o t h , w h ic h is of g re a t
s p ir itu a l d e p th , I fe e l c o n s tr a in e d to ta k e e x c e p tio n s to som e p o in ts in
it . That is y o u r c r itic is m o f C a th e r in e T i n g l e y , in w h ic h it seem s to
m e y o u a re w r o n g . I w ill q u o te fr o m M r s . T in g le y . She says: “ Let
us sen d a m essage of fe llo w s h ip , even to G erm an y, in th e sp ir it of
b r o t h e r ly lo v e . W e s h o u ld c lo s e th e d o o r o f th e p a s t a n d s h o w th a t w e
are d iv in e in n a tu re. T h is is th e new d u ty th a t lie s b e fo r e u s .” It
se e m s to me s h e is r i g h t h e r e , a n d h a s p r o p h e tic v is io n . T h is is o u r
real d u ty tod ay . N ow I w ill q u o te M rs. T in g le y a b it fa r th e r . She
AZOTH 129
says, “The people o f Germ any are G od’s creatures, just as we are.” A re
they not, brother? Surely they are, ju st the same as ourselves. From
what I have read along Theosophic lines, I have been led to believe
that Theosophy meant broth erh ood ; real brotherhood. That is, U n i
versal Brotherhood; therefore, if it be true, we are what?— brothers to
all the world. A n d as Germ any is part of the world, the Germans are
really our b roth ers; whether we will, or no. T h e y certainly are God’s
children, and it don’t seem ju st to separate our love and good-will
from them.
I really expect to meet some o f these German boys who fell in
the war, in Devachan. D o n ’t you, brother? Indeed, it would be strange
if we did not.
I remain, as ever, yours for L ove, Truth and Justice.
Respectfully,
C. F. W aters.
fcebietos
Spiritual E volu tion or Regeneration. B y R. C. D ou glass. Fourth
ed ition ; rev ised ; d o t h ; 350 pp. Boston, Lothrop, L ee & Shepard Co.
M r. D ou glass has long been favorably know n as an exponent of the
“ N ew T h o u g h t,” the first edition of this work having been published
in 1903. Its purpose is to present “ T h e L a w and Process for Unfolding
the Christian Consciousness,” and to this task the author brings an
intimate know ledge of the Bible and a rare ability for spiritual inter
pretation.
Part I. of the book is devoted to the Genesis S ym bo lo g y, and each
day of creation as therein depicted is treated as a sym bol o f the consecu
tive activities and expressions of the soul o f man. Part I I. treats of the
Christ sym bology, and the seven steps taken b y man in his spiritual
developm ent are well described and illustrated.
Taken as a whole, the work evinces a highly developed spiritual
understanding; its style is clear and convincing, and it is recommended
heartily to all who are interested in the spiritual aspect o f the Higher
T hou gh t.
E. D.
which the number is increasing) which will make it possible for timid,
creed-laden minds to cross the tide-flats of formalism and gain the high
ground of vivid spiritual comprehension. Once there, further advance
is inevitable. In this view, the author is doing a valuable work for
mankind. T h e book is a series of statem ents from a spirit who frankly
sets forth the contrast between his former earthly conceptions and his
present clear spiritual vision. H is predications are covered by liberal
scriptural foot-notes and references which will have a tendency to com
fortingly reassure the devout reader. T h e Christ is constantly upheld,
yet in a new relation, strange to the formal religionist, but familiar to
the Higher Philosophers. T he book is a bridge of religious transition.
T . R.
ik