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Левая колонка: | |||
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conditional of limitation in time and space, and the All is | |||
illimitable, or, as the English metaphysician has phrased it | |||
unconditioned. Likewise, with die minor integers of the All ; | |||
—of them neither create nor uncreate can be predicated. | |||
Their experiences are from chaos unto their re-association | |||
with the Divine. Until, therefore, the solemn moment of | |||
apotheosistic concomitance, the passage of the soul through | |||
the ever-changing vale of circumstance goes on. So that the | |||
Rosicrucian may exclaim, in the words of the stern Roman | |||
general, | |||
“ Through what variety of untried being, | |||
Through what new scenes and changes, must we pass !” | |||
To the mage, each leaf rustling in the breeze, each blossom | |||
perfuming the sunlight, each fish swimming beneath the wave, | |||
each reptile crawling in the marsh, each animal in the forest, | |||
each bird in the air, share with us the pulsations of the | |||
Unknown, which men call Life, and is with us the microcosm | |||
emanating from the macrocosm. | |||
This sacred truth led the Nilotic Rosicrucians to express | |||
the emanations and the spheres in. the sacred tree, bird, bull | |||
and serpent, and to create a hieroglyphic geometry, whose | |||
grandeur and meaning have baffled all time, appearing and | |||
reappearing in Etruscan jewelry, Greek architecture, Roman | |||
astrology, Gothic and Saracen art, Mediaeval witchcraft, and | |||
modern Free-Masonry. | |||
O ! preachers and teachers of Christianity, who rail at | |||
Egypt, and call their colossal doctrines animal-worship ; who | |||
pass imbecile jokes upon the Buddhist and Brahman sages ; | |||
who laugh to scorn the Assyrian and Chaldean philosophers, | |||
—know ye not that your own little learning was proclaimed | |||
by us when you, sunk in obscene barbarism, were torturing | |||
and slaying our own elect?—that your own semi-Semitic faith | |||
was one-half taken from the Nilotic universities by many | |||
men, whom ye ignorantly condense into one being, Moses, | |||
and the other half a poetic repetition of the principles of the | |||
Rosy Cross, the growth of fifty centuries ? | |||
To the novice and adept, alike, one principle applies. | |||
“The Rosicrucian becomes and is not made.” The lesson of | |||
the Rosy Cross is not to be learned by the ignorant or lust- | |||
ful, the grasping or the ambitious. “To him who seeks the | |||
truth, the truth will come.” | |||
The possession of truth is not knowledge, but wisdom, and | |||
wisdom is neither bought nor sold, nor gained by instruction | |||
nor lost by time. The lesson of the Rosy Cross may contair | |||
facts, and these facts may be learned in the school-room or | |||
the midnight-study; but these facts are no more Rosicru- | |||
cianism, than are so many bricks and stones the facade of a | |||
mighty cathedral. The scholar must glean from history and | |||
literature, and, above all, from the sciences, the truths, one | |||
by one, which, together, will make him an elect. Therefore it | |||
was that, unlike any sector institution the world has ever seen, | |||
the brethren of the Rosy Cross neither made nor attempted | |||
to make any converts. Contented that their lore must remain a | |||
sealed book until distant generations, when ignorance and | |||
pride, bigotry and lust should become evanescent and dis- | |||
appear ; satisfied that the individual must become, and not be | |||
guided into, the real man ; knowing that their mysteries, if | |||
divulged, would produce mere confusion and death ; and | |||
seeing, above all, that, | |||
“God is still God. | |||
And his love will not fail us.” | |||
— they toiled on in their labors, and left the world alone, | |||
to ripen on in nature’s lengthy course toward the happy age. | |||
But, to re-assure the yearning and wistful seeker after | |||
truth, they chiseled in everlasting rock the symbolisms of | |||
their faith, and left, for coming years to wonder at and study, | |||
the monoliths of Stonehenge, the giant-pillars of France and | |||
the Mediterranean, the fire-towers of Assyria, and highest of | |||
all, the pyramids of Egypt. These they bequeathed to all the | |||
future, not alone as pregnant with wisdom, but more as tokens | |||
of truth and love for the unborn children of man. | |||
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Правая колонка: | |||
Недостающие буквы обозначены […] – часть отрезанного листа справа (первые 5 строк) в правой колонке. | |||
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[From the New York Evening Post, 3d.] | |||
ROBERT DALE OWEN. | |||
MR. ROBERT DALE OWEN’S many friends in this city ar[…] | |||
aware that he went a few weeks ago to a water-cur[…] | |||
called the Home on the Hillside, at DanSville, in Weste[...] | |||
New York, where he put himself under the charge of t[...] | |||
superintendent, Dr. James C. Jackson, for purely physic[...] | |||
ailments, which had been troubling him for two or three years | |||
past, and manifested themselves chiefly by indigestion. They | |||
will be startled by a letter which appeared in the Rochester | |||
Express last evening, and announces that he has been taken | |||
to his home in Indiana as insane. We are reluctant to be- | |||
lieve that the inferences of the writer are correct as to the | |||
cause of Mr. Owen’s mental disturbance, if the allegations of | |||
insanity are indeed well founded. We have conversed with | |||
him personally, within a few weeks, concerning the “ Katy | |||
King business,” and the imposture which was practised on | |||
him with regard to it, and no one possibly could have talked | |||
with greater simplicity and candor of the error of another^ | |||
than he of his own deficient observation in his experiments | |||
in Philadelphia, and of his earnest desire to correct the im- | |||
pression of the authenticity of the “ Katy King ” manifesta- | |||
tion, so far as he had been the cause of its acceptance by | |||
anybody. But at the same time he earnestly avowed that his | |||
faith in the doctrines of Spiritualism was not impaired by his | |||
own error. Nor was his self-depreciation excessive. It was | |||
frank, but moderate and reasonable and was consistent with | |||
the devout tenor of his character. With these few words | |||
we print the letter, which bears date at Dansville, Juue 30 : | |||
“ For some time Dansville has been the stopping place of | |||
a distinguished visitor, Robert Dale Owen, the well-known | |||
writer and Spiritualist. He came here hoping by freedom | |||
from care and trouble to recuperate and repair his shattered | |||
energies, and to enable him to continue his literary labors. | |||
Occupying his time mainly with recreation, for a time nothing | |||
unusual was observed in his conduct, and he was pointed out | |||
as a rather eccentric old gentleman. An upholder of Spirit- | |||
ualism and a writer of acknowledged merit, his society was | |||
sought after, and his conversations were coherent and instruc- | |||
tive. Invitations to lecture were occasionally accepted, and | |||
some of your readers will, no doubt, remember the lecture on | |||
‘ Spiritualism,’ delivered by him not long since in your city. | |||
If any one at that ttme considered him insane, they failed to | |||
give others the benefit of their judgment. During the past | |||
week, however, his eccentricities increased to such an alarm- | |||
iug extent that it became painfully evident to those that knew | |||
him that the great mind of Robert Dale Owen had lost its | |||
reason. His wild, excited actions on Friday last at the | |||
grounds of the Dansville Driving Park Association were | |||
clearly those of an insane person. Driving furiously among | |||
a crowd of carriages, accosting strangers and gesticulating | |||
violently, he was a source of annoyance to his friends and a | |||
surprise to strangers. His son was telegraphed for immedi- | |||
ately. He reached here Sunday night, and on Tuesday morn- | |||
ing started for his home in Indiana with Mr. Owen. | |||
“ Mr. Owen is a man over seventy years of age, apparently | |||
strong and healthy, being especially active for a man of his | |||
years. As to the immediate cause of his insanity we can | |||
only conjecture. His life has been one of toil, ana any one | |||
who read his chapters of autobiography published from time | |||
to time in the Atlantic Monthly, though they are remarkably | |||
free from offensive individuality and egotism, will plainly see | |||
that his life has not been void of results. On him as a sup- | |||
porter of Spiritualism the severest strictures have been | |||
placed, and there seems something of plausibility in the re- | |||
port now current that the loss of faith in his religion conse- | |||
quent upon the Katie King ‘expose’ was the immediate cause | |||
of his insanity, and this theory is supported by facts from his | |||
life. Prior to his embracing spiritualistic doctrines, he was | |||
an atheist, and, as every atheist must, became dissatisfied | |||
with himself and his position. As a relief from this unfortu- | |||
nate condition, he fell into a belief in Spiritualism, and in its | |||
doctrines his whole mind and soul became engrossed. To- | |||
gether with Judge Edmonds, he has for years been pointed | |||
out as the great decider of Spiritualism in this country. | |||
Though his position was often assailed, yet he defended his | |||
cause nobly, and to the time of Katie King had answered | |||
every objection in a manner satisfactory to himself, if not to | |||
the great mass of the reading public; and his success may | |||
be judged of by the rapid increase of Spiritualism in this coun | |||
try. But his unfortunate statements were not so easily ex | |||
plained, and it was perfectly apparent that his own explana- | |||
tions never satisfied himself; he tried in vain, and could see | |||
no way out of his difficulty. Robert Dale Owen was a man | |||
who believed in reasoning, and what he could explain to his | |||
own satisfaction by reasoning, that he believed in implicitly; | |||
and it is fair to suppose that it was a great blow which caused | |||
him to lose faith in the belief which he had so long and faith- | |||
fully advocated and defended’ and was thereby chiefly instru- | |||
mental in dethroning reason in his great mind: but however | |||
that may be, and whatever may have been his religious belief, | |||
the world will lose in him a strong mind, an able reasoner, | |||
and the purest writer of the English language which she has | |||
seen for vears ” | |||
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