Ancient Egyptian Magic by H P Blavatsky

Ancient Egyptian Magic

H P Blavatsky
42 pages
‎Kessinger Publishing
Dec 2005
Paperback
Religion & Spirituality WSBN
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Ancient Egyptian Magic written by H.P. Blavatsky. Paulthiee, 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 metaphysics3 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 corner-stone 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 PriestHierophant, or a weather-beaten, indecipherable inscription from the tormented sites of Babylonia or Nineveh, 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.

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