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ANCIENT MAGIC IN MODERN SCIENCE - H. P. Blavatsky
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H. P. Blavatsky
ANCIENT MAGIC IN MODERN SCIENCE

Paulthier, the French Indianist, may, or may not, be taxed with too much enthusiasm when saying that
India appears before him as the grand and primitive focus of human thought, whose steady flame has
ended by communicating itself to, and setting on fire the whole ancient world1--yet, he is right in his
statement. It is Aryan metaphysics2 that have led the mind to occult knowledge--the oldest and the
mother science of all, since it contains within itself all the other sciences. And it is occultism--the
synthesis of all the discoveries in nature and, chiefly, of the psychic potency within and beyond every
physical atom of matter--that has been the primitive bond that has cemented into one cornerstone the
foundations of all the religions of antiquity.
The primitive spark has set on fire every nation, truly, and Magic underlies now every national faith,
whether old or young. Egypt and Chaldea are foremost in the ranks of those countries that furnish us
with the most evidence upon the subject, helpless as they are to do as India does--to protect their
paleographic relics from desecration. The turbid waters of the canal of Suez carry along to those that
wash the British shores, the magic of the earliest days of Pharaonic Egypt, to fill up with its crumbled
dust the British, French, German and Russian museums. Ancient, historical Magic is thus reflecting itself
upon the scientific records of our own all-denying century. It forces the hand and tires the brain of the
scientist, laughing at his efforts to interpret its meaning in his own materialistic way, yet helps the occultist
better to understand modern Magic, the rickety, weak grandchild of her powerful, archaic grandam.
Hardly a hieratic papyrus exhumed along with the swathed mummy of King or Priest-Hierophant, or a
weather-beaten, indecipherable inscription from the tormented sites of Babylonia or Ninevah, or an
ancient tile-cylinder--that does not furnish new food for thought or some suggestive information to the
student of Occultism. Withal, magic is denied and termed the "superstition" of the ignorant ancient
philosopher.
Thus, magic in every papyrus; magic in all the religious formul?; magic bottled up in hermetically-closed
vials, many thousands of years old; magic in elegantly bound, modern works; magic in the most popular
novels; magic in social gatherings; magic--worse than that, SORCERY--in the very air one breathes in
Europe, America, Australia: the more civilized and cultured a nation, the more formidable and effective
the effluvia of unconscious magic it emits and stores away in the surrounding atmosphere . . .
Tabooed, derided magic would, of course, never be accepted under her legitimate name; yet science
has begun dealing with that ostracised science under modern masks, and very considerably. But what is
in a name? Because a wolf is scientifically defined as an animal of the genus canis, does it make of him
a dog? Men of science may prefer to call the magic inquired into by Porphyry and explained by
Iamblichus hysterical hypnosis, but that does not make it the less magic. The result and outcome of
primitive Revelation to the earlier races by their "Divine Dynasties" the kings-instructors, became
innate knowledge in the Fourth race, that of the Atlanteans; and that knowledge is now called in its rare
cases of "abnormal" genuine manifestations, mediumship. The secret history of the world, preserved
only in far-away, secure retreats, would alone, if told unreservedly, inform the present generations of the
powers that lie latent, and to most unknown, in man and nature. It was the fearful misuse of magic by the
Atlanteans, that led their race to utter destruction, and--to oblivion. The tale of their sorcery and wicked
enchantments has reached us, through classical writers, in fragmentary bits, as legends and childish fairy-
tales, and as fathered on smaller nations. Thence the scorn for necromancy, goetic magic, and theurgy.
The "witches" of Thessaly are not less laughed at in our day than the modern medium or the credulous
Theosophist. This is again due to sorcery, and one should never lack the moral courage to repeat the
term; for it is the fatally abused magic that forced the adepts, "the Sons of Light," to bury it deep, after
its sinful votaries had themselves found a watery grave at the bottom of the ocean; thus placing it beyond
the reach of the profane of the race that succeeded to the Atlanteans. It is, then, to sorcery that the
world is indebted for its present ignorance about it. But who or what class in Europe or America, will
believe the report? With one exception, none; and that exception is found in the Roman Catholics and
their clergy; but even they, while bound by their religious dogmas to credit its existence, attribute to it a
satanic origin. It is this theory which, no doubt, has to this day prevented magic from being dealt with
scientifically.
Still, nolens volens, science has to take it in hand. Arch?ology in its most interesting department--
Egyptology and Assyriology--is fatally wedded to it, do what it may. For magic is so mixed up with the
world`s history that, if the latter is ever to be written at all in its completeness, giving the truth and
nothing but the truth, there seems to be no help for it. If Arch?ology counts still-upon discoveries and
reports upon hieratic writings that will be free from the hateful subject, then HISTORY will never be
written, we fear.
One sympathises profoundly with, and can well imagine, the embarrassing position of the various
savants and "F.R.S.`s" of Academicians and Orientalists. Forced to decipher, translate and interpret old
mouldy papyri, inscriptions on steles and Babylonian rhombs, they find themselves at every moment
face to face with MAGIC! Votive offerings, carvings, hieroglyphics, incantations--the whole
paraphernalia of that hateful "superstition"--stare them in the eyes, demand their attention, fill them with
the most disagreeable perplexity. Only think what must be their feelings in the following case in hand. An
evidently precious papyrus is exhumed. It is the post-mortem passport furnished to the osirified soul3 of
a just-translated Prince or even Pharaoh, written in red and black characters by a learned and famous
scribe, say of the IVth Dynasty, under the supervision of an Egyptian Hierophant--a class considered in
all the ages and held by posterity as the most learned of the learned, among the ancient sages and
philosophers. The statements therein were written at the solemn hours of the death and burial of a King-
Hierophant, of a Pharaoh and ruler. The purpose of the paper is the introduction of the "soul" to the
awful region of Amenti, before its judges, there where a lie is said to outweigh every other crime. The
Orientalist carries away the papyrus and devotes to its interpretation days, perhaps weeks, of labour,
only to find in it the following statement: "In the XIIIth year and the second month of Schomoo, in the
28th day of the same, we, the first High-priest of Ammon, the king of the gods, Penotman, the son of
the delegate (or substitute)4 for the High-priest Pion-ki-moan, and the scribe of the temple of Sosser-
soo-khons and of the Necropolis Bootegamonmoo, began to dress the late Prince Oozirmari Pionokha,
etc., etc., preparing him for eternity. When ready, the mummy was pleased to arise and thank his
servants, as also to accept a cover worked for him by the hand of the "lady singer," Nefrelit
Nimutha, gone into eternity the year so and so--"some hundred years before!" The whole in
hieroglyphics.
This may be a mistaken reading. There are dozens of papyri, though, well authenticated and recording
more curious readings and narratives than that corroborated in this, by Sanchoniathon and Manetho, by
Herodotus and Plato, Syncellus and dozens of other writers and philosophers, who mention the subject.
Those papyri note down very often, as seriously as any historical fact needing no special corroboration,
whole dynasties of Kings-manes, viz., of phantoms and ghosts. The same is found in the histories of
other nations.
All claim for their first and earliest dynasties5 of rulers and kings, what the Greeks called Manes and the
Egyptians Ourvagan, "gods," etc. Rossellius has tried to interpret the puzzling statement, but in vain.
"The word manes meaning urvagan," he says, "and that term in its literal sense signifying exterior
image, we may suppose, if it were possible to bring down that dynasty within some historical period--
that the word referred to some form of theocratic government, represented by the images of the
gods and priests"!!
A dynasty of, to all appearance, living, at all events acting and ruling, kings turning out to have been simply mannikins and images, would require, to be
accepted, a far wider stretch of modern credulity than even "kings` phantoms."
Were these Hierophants and Scribes, Pharaohs and King-Initiates all fools or frauds, confederates and liars, to have either believed themselves or tried to
make other people believe in such cock and bull stories, if there were no truth at the foundation? And that for a long series of millenniums, from the first to
the last Dynasty?
Of the divine Dynasty of Manes, the text of the "Secret Doctrine" will treat more fully; but a few such feats may be recorded from genuine papyri and the
discoveries of arch?ology. The Orientalists have found a plank of salvation: though forced to publish the contents of some famous papyri, they now call
them Romances of the days of Pharaoh so-and-so. The device is ingenious, if not absolutely honest. The literary Sadducees may fairly rejoice.
One of such is the so-called "Lepsius Papyrus" of the Berlin Museum, now purchased by the latter from the heirs of Richard Lepsius. It is written in
hieratic characters in the archaic Egyptian (old Coptic) tongue, and is considered one of the most important arch?ological discoveries of our age, inasmuch
as it furnishes dates for comparison, and rectifies several mistakes in the order of dynastical successions. Unfortunately its most important fragments are
missing. The learned Egyptologists who had the greatest difficulty in deciphering it have concluded that it was "an historical romance of the XVIth century
B.C., dating back to events that took place during the reign of Pharaoh Cheops, the supposed builder of the pyramid of that name, who flourished in the
XXVIth (?) century before our era." It shows Egyptian life and the state of society at the Court of that great Pharaoh, nearly 900 years before the little
unpleasantness between Joseph and Mrs. Potiphar.
The first scene opens with King Cheops on his throne, surrounded by his sons, whom he commands to entertain him with narratives about hoar antiquity
and the miraculous powers exercised by the celebrated sages and magicians at the Court of his predecessor. Prince Chefren then tells his audience how a
magus during the epoch of Pharaoh Nebkha fabricated a crocodile out of wax and endowed him with life and obedience. Having been placed by a husband
in the room of his faithless spouse, the crocodile snapped at both the wife and her lover, and seizing them carried them both into the sea. Another prince
told a story of his grandfather, the parent of Cheops, Pharaoh SENEFRU. Feeling seedy, he commanded a magician into his presence, who advised him as
a remedy the spectacle of twenty beautiful maidens of the Court sporting in a boat on the lake near by. The maidens obeyed and the heart of the old despot
was "refreshed." But suddenly one of the ladies screamed and began to weep aloud. She had dropped into the water, 120 feet deep in that spot, a rich
necklace. Then a magician pronounced a formula, called the genii of the air and water to his help, and plunging his hand into the waves brought back with
it the necklace. The Pharaoh was greatly struck with the feat. He looked no more at the twenty beauties, "divested of their clothes, covered with nets, and
with twenty oars made of ebony and gold"; but commanded that sacrifices should be made to the manes of those two magicians when they died. To this
Prince Gardadathu remarked that the highest among such magicians never die, and that one of them lived to that day, more than a centenarian, at the town
of Deyd-Snefroo; that his name was Deddy; and that he had the miraculous power of reuniting cut-off heads to their bodies and recalling the whole to life,
as also full authority and sway over the lions of the desert. He, Deddy, knew likewise where to procure the needed expensive materials for the temple of the
god Thoth (the wisdom deity), which edifice Pharaoh Cheops was anxious to raise near his great pyramid. Upon hearing this, the mighty king Cheops
expressed desire to see the old sage at his Court! Thereupon the Prince Gardadathu started on his journey, and brought back with him the great magician.
After long greetings and mutual compliments and obeisance, according to the papyrus, a long conversation ensued between the Pharaoh and the sage,
which goes on briefly thus:--
"I am told, oh sage, that thou art able to reunite heads severed from their bodies to the latter."
"I can do so, great King,"--answered Daddy.
"Let a criminal be brought here, without delay," quoth the Pharaoh.
"Great King, my power does not extend to men. I can resurrect only animals,"--remarked the sage.
A goose was then brought, its head cut off and placed in the east corner of the hall, and its body at the western side. Deddy extended his arm in the two
directions in turn and muttered a magic formula. Forthwith the body of the bird arose and walked to the centre of the hall, and the head rolled up to meet
it. Then the head jumped on the bleeding neck; the two were reunited; and the goose began to walk about, none the worse for the operation of beheading.
The same wonderful feat was repeated by Deddy upon canaries and a bull. After which the Pharaoh desired to be informed with regard to the projected
temple of Thoth.
The sage-magician knew all about the old remains of the temple, hidden in a certain house at Heliopolis: but he had no right to reveal it to the king. The
revelation had to come from the eldest of the three triplets of Rad-Dedtoo. The latter is the wife of the priest of the Sun, at the city of Saheboo. She will
conceive the triplet-sons from the sun-god, and these children will play an important part in the history of the land of Khemi (Egypt), inasmuch as they
will be called to rule it. The eldest, before he becomes a Pharaoh, will be High-priest of the Sun at the city of Heliopolis.
"Upon hearing this, Pharaoh Cheops rent his clothes in grief: his dynasty would thus be overthrown by the son of the deity to whom he was actually
raising a temple!"
Here the papyrus is torn; and a large portion of it being missing, posterity is denied the possibility of learning what Pharaoh Cheops undertook in this
emergency.
The fragment that follows apprizes us of that which is evidently the chief subject of the archaic record--the birth of the three sons of the sun-god. As soon as
Rad-Dedtoo felt the pangs of childbirth, the great sun-god called the goddesses Isis, Nephthys, Mesehentoo, and Hekhtoo, and sent them to help the
priestess, saying: "She is in labour with my three sons who will, one day, be the rulers of this land. Help her, and they will raise temples for you, will
make innumerable libations of wine and sacrifices." The goddesses did as they were asked, and three boys, each one yard long and with very long arms,8
were born. Isis gave them their names and Nephthys blessed them, while the two other goddesses confirmed on them their glorious future. The three young
men became eventually kings of the Vth Dynasty, their names being Ouserkath, Sagoorey and Kakay. After the goddesses had returned to their celestial
mansions some great miracles occurred. The corn given the mother-goddesses returned of itself into the corn-bin in an out-house of the High-priest, and the
servants reported that voices of invisibles were singing in it the hymns sung at the birth of hereditary princes, and the sounds of music, and dances
belonging to that rite were distinctly heard. This phenomenon endangered, later on, the lives of the future kings--the triplets.
A female slave having been punished once by the High priestess, the former ran away from the house, and spoke thus to the assembled crowds: "How dare
she punish me, that woman who gave birth to three kings? I will go and notify it to Pharaoh Cheops, our lord."
At this interesting place, the papyrus is again torn; and the reader left once more in ignorance of what resulted from the denunciation, and how the three
boy-pretenders avoided the persecution of the paramount ruler.9
Another magical feat is given by Mariette Bey (Mon. Dir. pl. 9, Persian epoch) from a tablet in the Bulak Museum, concerning the Ethiopian kingdom
founded by the descendants of the High-priests of Ammon, wherein flourished absolute theocracy. It was the god himself, it appears, who selected the kings
at his fancy, and "the stele 114 which is an official statement about the election of Aspalout, shows how such events took place." (Gebel-Barkal.) The army
gathered near the Holy Mountain at Napata, choosing six officers who had to join other delegates of state, proposed to proceed to the election of a king.
"Come," reads the inscribed legend, "come, let us choose a master who would be like an irresistible young bull." And the army began lamenting, saying--
"Our master is with us, and we know him not!" And others remarked, "Aye, but we can know him, though till now no one save Ra (the god) does so:
may the great God protect him from harm wherever he be" . . . . Forthwith the whole army cried out--"But there is that god Ammon-Ra, in the Holy
Mountain, and he is the god of Ethiopia! Let us to him; do not speak in ignorance of him, for the word spoken in ignorance of him is not good. Let him
choose, that god, who is the god of the kingdom of Ethiopia, since the days of Ra . . . . He will guide us, as the Ethiopian kings are all his handiwork,
and he gives the kingdom to the son whom he loves." "This is what the entire army saith: `It is an excellent speech, in truth . . . a million of times`."
Then the narrative shows the delegates duly purified, proceeding to the temple and prostrating themselves before the huge statue of Ammon-Ra, while
framing their request. "The Ethiopic priests are mighty ones. They know how to fabricate miraculous images and statues, capable of motion and speech, to
serve as vehicles for the gods; it is an art they hold from their Egyptian ancestors."
All the members of the Royal family pass in procession before the statue of Ammon-Ra--still it moveth not. But as soon as Aspalout approaches it, the
huge statue seizes him with both arms, and loudly exclaims--"This is your king! This is your Master who will make you live!": and the army chiefs greet
the new Pharaoh. He enters into the sanctuary and is crowned by the god, personally, and with his own hands; then joins his army. The festival ends with
the distribution of bread and beer." (Gebel-Barkal.)
There is a number of papyri and old inscriptions proving beyond the slightest doubt that for thousands of years High-priests, magicians and Pharaohs
believed--as well as the masses--in magic, besides practising it; the latter being liable to be referred to clever jugglery. The statues had to be fabricated; for,
unless they were made of certain elements and stones, and were prepared under certain constellations, in accordance with the conditions prescribed by magic
art, the divine (or infernal, if some will so have it) powers, or FORCES, that were expected to animate such statues and images, could not be made to act
therein. A galvanic-battery has to be prepared of specific metals and materials, not made at random, if one would have it produce its magical effects. A
photograph has to be obtained under specific conditions of darkness and certain chemicals, before it can result in a given purpose.
Some twenty years ago, arch?ology was enriched with a very curious Egyptian document giving the views of that ancient religion upon the subject of
ghosts (manes) and magic in general. It is called the "Harris papyrus on Magic" (Papyrus Magique). It is extremely curious in its bearing upon the esoteric
teachings of Occult Theosophy, and is very suggestive. It is left for our next article--on Magic.

H.P. BLAVATSKY
OSTENDE, July, 1886
Theosophist, October, 1886
1ESSAY. PREFACE by Colebrooke.
back to text
2 It is only through Mr. Barthelemy St. Hilaire that the world has learned that with regard to metaphysics, the Hindu genius has ever remained in a kind of
infantile under-development"!!
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3 The reader need not be told that every soul newly-born into its cycle of 8000 years after the death of the body it animated, became, in Egypt, an "Osiris,"
was osirified, viz., the personality became reduced to its higher principles, a spirit.
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4 "Substitute" was the name given to the father of the "Son" adopted by the High-priest Hierophant; a class of these remaining unmarried, and adopting
"Sons" for purposes of transmission of power and succession.
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5 The Secret Doctrine teaches that those dynasties were composed of divine beings, "the ethereal images of human creatures," in reality, "gods," in their
luminous astral bodies; the Sishta of preceding manvantaras.
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6 Rossellius (vol. i, "Storia degli Monumenti dell Egitto," (p. 8). He adds that Manetho and the old Chronicles agree in translating the word manes by
nekhues. In the Chronicles of Eusebius Pamphilius, discovered at Milan and annotated by Cardinal Mai, the word nekhues is also translated urvagan, "the
exterior shadow" or "ethereal image of men"; in short, the astral body.
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7 Suppositiously--during the XVIIIth Dynasty of kings, agreeably to Manetho`s Synchronistic Tables, disfigured out of recognition by the able Eusebius,
the too clever Bishop of C?sarea.
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8 Long arms in Egypt meant as now in India, a sign of mahatmaship, or adeptship.
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9 This is the more to be regretted--says the translator of the papyrus--that "legendary details, notwithstanding the contents of the Lepsius papyrus are
evidently based upon the most ancient traditions; and as a matter of fact emanate from eye-witnesses and first-hand evidence." The data in the papyrus are
absolutely coincident with facts known, and agree with the discoveries made by Egyptology and the undeniable information obtained concerning the
history and far away events of that "1and of mystery and riddle," as Hegel called it. Therefore we have no cause whatever to doubt the authenticity of the
general narrative contained in our papyrus. It reveals to us, likewise, entirely new historical facts. Thus, we learn, first of all, that (Kefren) or Chephren was
the son of Cheops; that the Vth Dynasty originated in the town of Saheboo; that its first three Pharaohs were three brothers--and that the elder of the triplets
had been a solar High-priest at Heliopolis before ascending to the throne. Meagre as the details appear, they become quite important in the history of events
removed from us by more than forty centuries. Finally, the Lepsius papyrus is an extremely ancient document, written in the old Egyptian tongue, while
the events narrated therein may, for their originality (magic?), be placed on a par with the best Egyptian narratives translated and published by the famous
Egyptologist and Arch?ologist, Mr. Maspero, in his work called "Contes de l`ancienne Egypte." /.../

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