Sunday, October 23, 2016
The Stanzas of Dzyan: Now Available!
The Stanzas of Dzyan are a short, purportedly Tibetan work which Helena Blavatsky claimed to have translated near the end of the 19th century from works she encountered in the far East. That it is essentially a short reworking of mundane Buddhist doctrine does not detract from the fact that this, above almost all other occult manuscripts, influenced the entire period of Victorian new agery- as such I decided to edit it, more as a work of historical rather than spiritual significance.
Helena Blavatsky was an interesting person; a chain smoker with the mouth of a sailor who indeed did travel far more widely than even the average socialite Victorian of her era; that she fused systems together into new rites and practices is generally seen as evidence of her being a fraud by most- I see fraud only in her seances and secret letters and relegate the fusion of systems to the most positive abandonment of moral traditionalism and the adaptation of what a hundred years later became the rudiments of the new, rising occult order which at least acknowledges the presence of each spiritual system outside of a vacuum.
26 pages.
Labels:
1800s,
19th century,
anthroposophy,
blavatsky,
blavatsky books,
book of dzyan,
buddhism,
helena blavatsky,
hinduism,
mysticism,
occult,
stanzas of dzyan,
steiner,
theosophy,
tibet,
victorian
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