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{{Style P-HPB SB. Title continued |Rosicrucianism|3-239}}
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{{Style P-No indent|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,}}
 
{{Style P-Poem|poem=“ 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 lustful, 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 contain facts, and these facts may be learned in the school-room or the midnight-study; but these facts are no more Rosicrucianism, 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 disappear ; 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,
 
{{Style P-Poem|poem=“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.  


{{Style S-HPB SB. HPB note|(See answer to Hiraf {{Style S-Lost|}} next pag.)|center}}
{{Style S-HPB SB. HPB note|(See answer to Hiraf {{Style S-Lost|}} next pag.)|center}}
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  | notes = From New York Evening Post
  | notes = From New York Evening Post
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...
<center>[From the New York Evening Post, 3d.]</center>
 


{{HPB-SB-footer-footnotes}}
{{Style S-Small capitals|Mr. Robert Dale Owen's}} many friends in this city are aware that he went a few weeks ago to a water-cure called the Home on the Hillside, at DanSville, in Western New York, where he put himself under the charge of the superintendent, Dr. James C. Jackson, for purely physical 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 believe 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 impression of the authenticity of the “ Katy King ” manifestation, 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 : 


Страница содержит скрытый текст для редакторов.
{{Style P-Quote|“ 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 Spiritualism and a writer of acknowledged merit, his society was sought after, and his conversations were coherent and instructive. 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 time considered him insane, they failed to give others the benefit of their judgment. During the past week, however, his eccentricities increased to such an alarming 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 immediately. He reached here Sunday night, and on Tuesday morning started for his home in Indiana with Mr. Owen.  


The page contains hidden text for editors.
“ 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 supporter of Spiritualism the severest strictures have been placed, and there seems something of plausibility in the report now current that the loss of faith in his religion consequent 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 unfortunate condition, he fell into a belief in Spiritualism, and in its doctrines his whole mind and soul became engrossed. Together 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 explanations 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 faithfully advocated and defended’ and was thereby chiefly instrumental 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 years ”}}


<!--


!Текст распознан, но не вычитан!


----
{{HPB-SB-footer-footnotes}}
Левая колонка:
----
 
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.
 
----
Правая колонка:
 
Недостающие буквы обозначены […] – часть отрезанного листа справа (первые 5 строк) в правой колонке.
 
----
 
[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 ”
 
-->

Revision as of 11:57, 6 July 2023

vol. 3, p. 240
from Adyar archives of the International Theosophical Society
vol. 3 (1875-1878)

Legend

  • HPB note
  • HPB highlighted
  • HPB underlined
  • HPB crossed out
  • <Editors note>
  • <Archivist note>
  • Lost or unclear
  • Restored

<<     >>
engрус


< Rosicrucianism (continued from page 3-239) >

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 lustful, 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 contain facts, and these facts may be learned in the school-room or the midnight-study; but these facts are no more Rosicrucianism, 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 disappear ; 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.

(See answer to Hiraf ... next pag.)


Robert Dale Owen

[From the New York Evening Post, 3d.]

Mr. Robert Dale Owen's many friends in this city are aware that he went a few weeks ago to a water-cure called the Home on the Hillside, at DanSville, in Western New York, where he put himself under the charge of the superintendent, Dr. James C. Jackson, for purely physical 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 believe 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 impression of the authenticity of the “ Katy King ” manifestation, 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 Spiritualism and a writer of acknowledged merit, his society was sought after, and his conversations were coherent and instructive. 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 time considered him insane, they failed to give others the benefit of their judgment. During the past week, however, his eccentricities increased to such an alarming 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 immediately. He reached here Sunday night, and on Tuesday morning 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 supporter of Spiritualism the severest strictures have been placed, and there seems something of plausibility in the report now current that the loss of faith in his religion consequent 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 unfortunate condition, he fell into a belief in Spiritualism, and in its doctrines his whole mind and soul became engrossed. Together 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 explanations 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 faithfully advocated and defended’ and was thereby chiefly instrumental 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 years ”



Editor's notes

  1. Robert Dale Owen by unknown author. From New York Evening Post