Theosophical Society,
A Review of
The Secret Doctrine
By
William Quan Judge
Return to Secret Doctrine Outline
The Secret Doctrine, by H P Blavatsky, is a work
whose aim is stated as follows: "To show that Nature is not a fortuitous
concurrence of atoms, and to assign to man his rightful place in the scheme of
the Universe; to rescue from degradation the archaic truths which are the basis
of all religions; and to uncover, to some extent, the fundamental unity from
which they all spring; finally, to show that the occult side of Nature has
never been approached by the Science of modern civilization."
This is a high aim, a great
claim to advance. Whether both are fully sustained must be left, not alone to
the judgment of individual readers, but to that large verdict of "humanity
and the future generations," to which the author appeals. Meantime, the
just critic recognizes that these claims are ably put forth, in a work of great
erudition and power. The publication of a book like this has, in itself, an
emphatic significance. The attention of thinkers has in late years been
directed to the evolution of thought, its laws and its results. Of these last
The Secret Doctrine is a tremendous one. It marks the acme of the theosophical
movement; that movement which urges a search after truth in every department of
life, while predicting the final and essential unity of the whole. It shows the
most advanced phase of religious development and points out its future course;
not alone concerned with the beliefs of the present; refusing indeed to
recognize that present as a separate fact, but showing past and future
interwoven into one eternal now, and all religions, all sciences, proceeding
from one primeval belief, which afterwards became differentiated, along the
path of evolutionary progress, into forms which are various facets of the one
truth. The writing of this work is sufficient evidence for a demand for it, and
however we may take issue with some of its teachings, we must recognize the
breadth and beauty of its aim; also three facts concerning it:
First, it is a great event in
literature per se.
Second, it is not the outcome
of the mental or other experience of any one person. No human brain could singly
conceive a scheme so vast, so complex in details, so simple of base. It is
evidently an aggregation beginning far back in archaic times.
Third, it is thrown into the
arena where science and religion, where matter versus spirit, are warring, as
the sceptre of the king was thrown into the lists to
bid contention cease. It logically reconciles the combatants in proving their
basic unity, in saying to the materialist: All issues from the one substance
which is eternal, -- and to the [believers in] spirit: That one substance is
vivified by the co-eternal undetermined potency called Spirit, of which our
word "will" is the nearest expression.
A work which can do us this
service in a rational manner, while bringing the testimony of all recorded time
to sustain its teachings, certainly deserves careful attention. The need of
unity is the great tendency of our time. It is displayed in art, literature,
religion, mechanics, industrial enterprise and international law, by efforts
towards co-operation, arbitration, in a word -- unity.
To find this need met in the
religious field without empiricism or dogmatism, without attempt at scientific
limitations or theological form, attacks our innate sense of justice, and
inclines us to weigh before we reject.
The basis of this remarkable
work is the "Book of Dzyan," an archaic Ms. unknown
to the western world and secretly preserved in the
The stanzas are weird,
magnificent. They have the grand calm of classics, joined to that subtle,
soul-stirring quality which is of all time and conveys the aroma of the orientalist, to the student, from their own inherent
literary quality, quite apart from that deeper interest with which their
teachings invest them for the bold explorer into the mysteries of Being. Altogether the book is a fascinating one. The style
is abrupt and full of variations which show the work of different minds and
sustain the author's claim to the aid of Tibetan adepts. For all these reasons
it is sure to be much read, much abused and hotly defended.
First
Published 1889
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