Writings of H P Blavatsky
Cardiff
Theosophical Society in Wales
206 Newport Road, Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24 -1DL
Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky (1831 – 1891)
The Founder of
Modern Theosophy
Have Animals
Souls
By
H P Blavatsky
Continually soaked with blood, the whole earth is but an immense altar
upon which all that lives has to be immolated--endlessly, incessantly. . . .
--COMTE JOSEPH DE MAISTRE (
MANY are the "antiquated religious superstitions" of the East
which Western nations often and unwisely deride: but none is so laughed at and
practically set at defiance as the great respect of Oriental people for animal
life. Flesh-eaters cannot sympathize with total abstainers from meat. We
Europeans are nations of civilized barbarians with but a few millenniums
between ourselves and our cave-dwelling forefathers who sucked the blood and
marrow from uncooked bones. Thus, it is only natural that those who hold human
life so cheaply in their frequent and often iniquitous wars, should entirely
disregard the death-agonies of the brute creation, and daily sacrifice millions
of innocent, harmless lives; for we are too epicurean to devour tiger steaks or
crocodile cutlets, but must have tender lambs and golden feathered pheasants.
All this is only as it should be in our era of Krupp cannons and scientific
vivisectors. Nor is it a matter of great wonder that the hardy European should
laugh at the mild Hindu, who shudders at the bare thought of killing a cow, or
that he should refuse to sympathize with the Buddhist and Jain, in their
respect for the life of every sentient creature--from the elephant to the gnat.
But, if meat-eating has indeed become a vital necessity--"the
tyrant's plea!"--among Western nations; if hosts of victims in every city,
borough and village of the civilized world must needs be daily slaughtered in
temples dedicated to the deity, denounced by St. Paul and worshipped by men
"whose God is their belly":--if all this and much more cannot be
avoided in our "age of Iron," who can urge the same excuse for sport?
Fishing, shooting, and hunting, the most fascinating of all the
"amusements" of civilized life--are certainly the most objectionable from
the standpoint of occult philosophy, the most sinful in the eyes of the
followers of these religious systems which are the direct outcome of the
Esoteric Doctrine--Hinduism and Buddhism. Is it altogether without any good
reason that the adherents of these two religions, now the oldest in the world,
regard the animal world--from the huge quadruped down to the infinitesimally
small insect--as their "younger brothers," however ludicrous the idea
to a European? This question shall receive due consideration further on.
Nevertheless, exaggerated as the notion may seem, it is certain that few
of us are able to picture to ourselves without shuddering the scenes which take
place early every morning in the innumerable shambles of the so-called
civilized world, or even those daily enacted during the "shooting
season." The first sun-beam has not yet awakened slumbering nature, when
from all points of the compass myriads of hecatombs are being prepared--to
salute the rising luminary. Never was heathen Moloch gladdened by such a cry of
agony from his victims as the pitiful wail that in all Christian countries
rings like a long hymn of suffering throughout nature, all day and every day
from morning until evening. In ancient
A wretched lot is that of poor brute creatures, hardened as it is into
implacable fatality by the hand of man. The rational soul of the human being
seems born to become the murderer of the irrational soul of the animal--in the
full sense of the word, since the Christian doctrine teaches that the soul of
the animal dies with its body. Might not the legend of Cain and Abel have had a
dual signification? Look at that other disgrace of our cultured age--the
scientific slaughter-houses called "vivisection rooms." Enter one of
those halls in
"Vivisection"--he says--"is a specialty in which torture,
scientifically economised by our butcher-academicians, is applied during whole
days, weeks, and even months to the fibres and muscles of one and the same
victim. It (torture) makes use of every and any kind of weapon, performs its
analysis before a pitiless audience, divides the task every morning between ten
apprentices at once, of whom one works on the eye, another one on the leg, the
third on the brain, a fourth on the marrow; and whose inexperienced hands
succeed, nevertheless, towards night after a hard day's work, in laying bare
the whole of the living carcass they had been ordered to chisel out, and that
in the evening, is carefully stored away in the cellar, in order that early
next morning it may be worked upon again if only there is a breath of life and
sensibility left in the victim! We know that the trustees of the Grammont law
(loi) have tried to rebel against this abomination; but Pans showed herself
more inexorable than
And yet these gentlemen boast of the grand object pursued, and of the
grand secrets discovered by them. "Horror and lies!"--exclaims the
same author. "In the matter of secrets--a few localizations of faculties
and cerebral motions excepted--we know but of one secret that belongs to them
by rights: it is the secret of torture eternalized, beside which the terrible
natural law of autophagy (mutual manducation), the horrors of war, the merry
massacres of sport, and the sufferings of the animal under the butcher's
knife--are as nothing! Glory to our men of science! They have surpassed every
former kind of torture, and remain now and for ever, without any possible
contestation, the kings of artificial anguish and despair!"2
The usual plea for butchering, killing, and even for legally torturing
animals--as in vivisection--is a verse or two in the Bible, and its
ill-digested meaning, disfigured by the so-called scholasticism represented by
Thomas Aquinas. Even De Mirville, that ardent defender of the rights of the
church, calls such texts--"Biblical tolerances, forced from God after the
deluge, as so many others, and based upon the decadence of our strength."
However this may be, such texts are amply contradicted by others in the same
Bible. The meat-eater, the sportsman and even the vivisector--if there are
among the last named those who believe in special creation and the
Bible--generally quote for their justification that verse in Genesis, in which
God gives dual Adam--"dominion over the fish, fowl, cattle, and over every
living thing that moveth upon the earth"--(Ch. I., v. 28); hence--as the
Christian understands it--power of life and death over every animal on the
globe. To this the far more philosophical Brahman and Buddhist might answer;
"Not so. Evolution starts to mould future humanities within the lowest
scales of being. Therefore, by killing an animal, or even an insect, we arrest
the progress of an entity towards its final goal in nature--MAN"; and to
this the student of occult philosophy may say "Amen," and add that it
not only retards the evolution of that entity, but arrests that of the next
succeeding human and more perfect race to come.
Which of the opponents is right, which of them the more logical? The
answer depends mainly, of course, on the personal belief of the intermediary
chosen to decide the questions. If he believes in special
creation--so-called--then in answer to the plain question--"Why should
homicide be viewed as a most ghastly sin against God and nature, and the murder
of millions of living creatures be regarded as mere sport?"--he will
reply:--"Because man is created in God's own image and looks upward to his
Creator and to his birth-place--heaven (os homini sublime dedit); and that the
gaze of the animal is fixed downward on its birth-place--the earth; for God
said--'Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle and
creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind'." (Genesis I, 24.)
Again, "because man is endowed with an immortal soul, and the dumb brute
has no immortality, not even a short survival after death."
Now to this an unsophisticated reasoner might reply that if the Bible is
to be our authority upon this delicate question, there is not the slightest
proof in it that man's birth-place is in heaven anymore than that of the last
of creeping things--quite the contrary; for we find in Genesis that if God
created "man" and blessed "them," (
Were the object of these lines to preach vegetarianism on the authority
of Bible or Veda, it would be a very easy task to do so. For, if it is quite
true that God gave dual Adam--the "male and female" of Chapter I of
Genesis--who has little to do with our henpecked ancestor of Chapter
II--"dominion over every living thing," yet we nowhere find that the
"Lord God" commanded that Adam or the other to devour animal creation
or destroy it for sport. Quite the reverse. For pointing to the vegetable
kingdom and the "fruit of a tree yielding seed"--God says very
plainly: "to you (men) it shall be for meat." (I, 29.)
So keen was the perception of this truth among the early Christians that
during the first centuries they never touched meat. In Octavio Tertullian
writes to Minutius Felix: "we are not permitted either to witness, or even
hear narrated (novere) a homicide, we Christians, who refuse to taste dishes in
which animal blood may have been mixed."
But the writer does not preach vegetarianism, simply defending
"animal rights" and attempting to show the fallacy of disregarding
such rights on Biblical authority. Moreover, to argue with those who would
reason upon the lines of erroneous interpretations would be quite useless. One
who rejects the doctrine of evolution will ever find his way paved with
difficulties; hence, he will never admit that it is far more consistent with
fact and logic to regard physical man merely as the recognized paragon of
animals, and the spiritual Ego that informs him as a principle midway between
the soul of the animal and the deity. It would be vain to tell him that unless
he accepts not only the verses quoted for his justification but the whole Bible
in the light of esoteric philosophy, which reconciles the whole mass of
contradictions and seeming absurdities in it--he will never obtain the key to
the truth;--for he will not believe it. Yet the whole Bible teems with charity
to men and with mercy and love to animals. The original Hebrew text of Chapter
XXIV of Leviticus is full of it. Instead of the verses 17 and 18 as translated
in the Bible: "And he that killeth a beast shall make it good, beast for
beast" in the original it stands:--"life for life," or rather
"soul for soul," nephesh tachat nephesh.3 And if the rigour of the
law did not go to the extent of killing, as in Sparta, a man's "soul"
for a beast's "soul"--still, even though he replaced the slaughtered
soul by a living one, a heavy additional punishment was inflicted on the
culprit.
But this was not all. In Exodus (Ch. XX. 10, and Ch. XXIII. 2 et seq.)
rest on the Sabbath day extended to cattle and every other animal. "The
seventh day is the sabbath . . . thou shalt not do any work, thou nor thy . . .
cattle"; and the Sabbath year . . . "the seventh year thou shalt let
it (the land) rest and lie still . . . that thine ox and thine ass may
rest"--which commandment, if it means anything, shows that even the brute
creation was not excluded by the ancient Hebrews from a participation in the
worship of their deity, and that it was placed upon many occasions on a par
with man himself. The whole question rests upon the misconception that
"soul," nephesh, is entirely distinct from "spirit"--ruach.
And yet it is clearly stated that "God breathed into the nostrils (of man)
the breath of life and man became a living soul," nephesh, neither more or
less than an animal, for the soul of an animal is also called nephesh. It is by
development that the soul becomes spirit, both being the lower and the higher
rungs of one and the same ladder whose basis is the UNIVERSAL SOUL or spirit.
This statement will startle those good men and women who, however much
they may love their cats and dogs, are yet too much devoted to the teachings of
their respective churches ever to admit such a heresy. "The irrational
soul of a dog or a frog divine and immortal as our own souls are?"--they
are sure to exclaim but so they are. It is not the humble writer of the present
article who says so, but no less an authority for every good Christian than
that king of the preachers--
The fact that so many interpreters--Fathers of the Church and
scholastics,--tried to evade the real meaning of St. Paul is no proof against
its inner sense, but rather against the fairness of the theologians whose
inconsistency will be shown in this particular. But some people will support
their propositions, however erroneous, to the last. Others, recognizing their
earlier mistake, will, like Cornelius a Lapide, offer the poor animal amende
honorable. Speculating upon the part assigned by nature to the brute creation
in the great drama of life, he says: "The aim of all creatures is the
service of man. Hence, together with him (their master) they are waiting for
their renovation"--cum homine renovationem suam expectant.4
"Serving" man, surely cannot mean being tortured, killed, uselessly
shot and otherwise misused; while it is almost needless to explain the word
"renovation." Christians understand by it the renovation of bodies
after the second coming of Christ; and limit it to man, to the exclusion of
animals. The students of the Secret Doctrine explain it by the successive
renovation and perfection of forms on the scale of objective and subjective
being, and in a long series of evolutionary transformations from animal to man,
and upward. . . .
This will, of course, be again rejected by Christians with indignation.
We shall be told that it is not thus that the Bible was explained to them, nor
can it ever mean that. It is useless to insist upon it. Many and sad in their
results were the erroneous interpretations of that which people are pleased to
call the "Word of God." The sentence "cursed be
God gave us
only over beast, fish, fowl,
Dominion absolute; that right
we hold
By his donation; but man over
man
He made not lord; such title
to himself
Reserving, human left from
human free
--says
But, like murder, error "will out," and incongruity must
unavoidably occur whenever erroneous conclusions are supported either against
or in favour of a prejudged question. The opponents of Eastern philozoism thus
offer their critics a formidable weapon to upset their ablest arguments by such
incongruity between premises and conclusions, facts postulated and deductions
made.
It is the purpose of the present Essay to throw a ray of light upon this
most serious and interesting subject. Roman Catholic writers in order to
support the genuineness of the many miraculous resurrections of animals
produced by their saints, have made them the subject of endless debates. The
"soul in animals" is, in the opinion of Bossuet, "the most
difficult as the most important of all philosophical questions."
Confronted with the doctrine of the Church that animals, though not
soulless, have no permanent or immortal soul in them, and that the principle
which animates them dies with the body, it becomes interesting to learn how the
school-men and the Church divines reconcile this statement with that other
claim that animals may be and have been frequently and miraculously resurrected
Though but a feeble attempt--one more elaborate would require
volumes--the present Essay, by showing the inconsistency of the scholastic and
theological interpretations of the Bible, aims at convincing people of the
great criminality of taking--especially in sport and vivisection--animal life.
Its object, at any rate, is to show that however absurd the notion that either
man or brute can be resurrected after the life-principle has fled from the body
forever, such resurrections--if they were true--would not be more impossible in
the case of a dumb brute than in that of a man; for either both are endowed by
nature with what is so loosely called by us "soul," or neither the
one nor the other is so endowed.
II
What a chimera is man! what a confused chaos, what a subject of
contradiction! a professed judge of all things, and yet a feeble worm of the
earth! the great depository and guardian of truth, and yet ad mere huddle of
uncertainty! the glory and the scandal of the universe!
--PASCAL
We shall now proceed to see what are the views of the Christian Church
as to the nature of the soul in the brute, to examine how she reconciles the
discrepancy between the resurrection of a dead animal and the assumption that
its soul dies with it, and to notice some miracles in connection with animals.
Before the final and decisive blow is dealt to that selfish doctrine, which has
become so pregnant with cruel and merciless practices toward the poor animal
world, the reader must be made acquainted with the early hesitations of the
Fathers of the Patristic age themselves, as to the right interpretation of the
words spoken with reference to that question by St. Paul.
It is amusing to note how the Karma of two of the most indefatigable
defenders of the Latin Church--Messrs. Des. Mousseaux and De Mirville, in whose
works the record of the few miracles here noted are found--led both of them to
furnish the weapons now used against their own sincere but very erroneous
views.5
The great battle of the Future having to be fought out between the
"Creationists" or the Christians, as all the believers in a special
creation and a personal god, and the Evolutionists or the Hindus, Buddhists,
all the Free-thinkers and last, though not least, most of the men of science, a
recapitulation of their respective positions is advisable.
1. The Christian world postulates its right over animal life: (a) on the
afore-quoted Biblical texts and the later scholastic interpretations; (b) on
the assumed absence of anything like divine or human soul in animals. Man
survives death, the brute does not.
2. The Eastern Evolutionists, basing their deductions upon their great
philosophical systems, maintain it is a sin against nature's work and progress
to kill any living being--for reasons given in the preceding pages.
3. The Western Evolutionists, armed with the latest discoveries of
science, heed neither Christians nor Heathens. Some scientific men believe in
Evolution, others do not. They agree, nevertheless, upon one point: namely,
that physical, exact research offers no grounds for the presumption that man is
endowed with an immortal, divine soul, any more than his dog.
Thus, while the Asiatic Evolutionists behave toward animals consistently
with their scientific and religious views, neither the church nor the
materialistic school of science is logical in the practical applications of
their respective theories. The former, teaching that every living thing is
created singly and specially by God, as any human babe may be, and that it
finds itself from birth to death under the watchful care of a wise and kind
Providence, allows the inferior creation at the same time only a temporary
soul. The latter, regarding both man and animal as the soulless production of
some hitherto undiscovered forces in nature, yet practically creates an abyss
between the two. A man of science, the most determined materialist, one who
proceeds to vivisect a living animal with the utmost coolness, would yet
shudder at the thought of laming--not to speak of torturing to death--his
fellow man. Nor does one find among those great materialists who were religiously
inclined men any who have shown themselves consistent and logical in defining
the true moral status of the animal on this earth and the rights of man over
it.
Some instances must now be brought to prove the charges stated.
Appealing to serious and cultured minds it must be postulated that the views of
the various authorities here cited are not unfamiliar to the reader. It will
suffice therefore simply to give short epitomes of some of the conclusions they
have arrived at--beginning with the Churchmen.
As already stated, the Church exacts belief in the miracles performed by
her great Saints. Among the various prodigies accomplished we shall choose for
the present only those that bear directly upon our subject--namely, the
miraculous resurrections of dead animals. Now one who credits man with an
immortal soul independent of the body it animates can easily believe that by
some divine miracle the soul can be recalled and forced back into the
tabernacle it deserts apparently for ever. But how can one accept the same
possibility in the case of an animal, since his faith teaches him that the
animal has no independent soul, since it is annihilated with the body? For over
two hundred years, ever since Thomas of Aquinas, the Church has authoritatively
taught that the soul of the brute dies with its organism. What then is recalled
back into the clay to reanimate it? It is at this juncture that scholasticism
steps in, and--taking the difficulty in hand--reconciles the irreconcilable.
It premises by saying that the miracles of the Resurrection of animals
are numberless and as well authenticated as "the resurrection of our Lord
Jesus Christ."6 The Bollandists give instances without number. As Father
Burigny, a hagiographer of the 17th century, pleasantly remarks concerning the
bustards resuscitated by St. Remi--"I may be told, no doubt, that I am a
goose myself to give credence to such 'blue bird' tales. I shall answer the
joker, in such a case, by saying that, if he disputes this point, then must he
also strike out from the life of St. Isidore of Spain the statement that he
resuscitated from death his master's horse; from the biography of St. Nicolas
of Tolentino--that he brought back to life a partridge, instead of eating it;
from that of St. Francis--that he recovered from the blazing coals of an oven,
where it was baking, the body of a lamb, which he forthwith resurrected; and
that he also made boiled fishes, which he resuscitated, swim in their sauce;
etc., etc. Above all he, the sceptic, will have to charge more than 100,000
eye-witnesses--among whom at least a few ought to be allowed some common
sense--with being either liars or dupes."
A far higher authority than Father Burigny, namely, Pope Benedict
(Benoit) XIV, corroborates and affirms the above evidence. The names, moreover,
as eye-witnesses to the resurrections, of Saint Sylvestrus, Francois de Paule,
Severin of
Now this looks terribly like one of the mayas of magic. However,
although the difficulty is not absolutely explained, the following is made
clear: the principle, that animated the animal during its life,. and which is
termed soul, being dead or dissipated after the death of the body, another
soul--"a kind of an informal soul"--as the Pope and the Cardinal tell
us--is created for the purpose of miracle by God; a soul, moreover, which is
distinct from that of man, which is "an independent, ethereal and ever
lasting entity."
Besides the natural objection to such a proceeding being called a
"miracle" produced by the saint, for it is simply God behind his back
who "creates" for the purpose of his glorification an entirely new
soul as well as a new body, the whole of the Thomasian doctrine is open to
objection. For, as Descartes very reasonably remarks: "if the soul of the
animal is so distinct (in its immateriality) from its body, we believe it
hardly possible to avoid recognizing it as a spiritual principle, hence--an
intelligent one."
The reader need hardly be reminded that Descartes held the living animal
as being simply an automaton, a "well wound up clock-work," according
to Malebranche. One, therefore, who adopts the Cartesian theory about the animal
would do as well to accept at once the views of the modern materialists. For,
since that automaton is capable of feelings, such as love, gratitude, etc., and
is endowed as undeniably with memory, all such attributes must be as
materialism teaches us "properties of matter." But if the animal is
an "automaton," why not Man? Exact science-- anatomy, physiology,
etc.,--finds not the smallest difference between the bodies of the two; and who
knows justly enquires Solomon--whether the spirit of man "goeth upward"
any more than that of the beast? Thus we find metaphysical Descartes as
inconsistent as any one.
But what does
The great Bossuet in his Traité de la Connaissance de Dieu et de soi
même analyses and compares the system of Descartes with that of
This sentence is commented upon and confirmed in the annotation by the
Abbé Drioux, his translator. "No," he remarks--"nothing is
annihilated; it is a principle that has become with modern science a kind of
axiom."
And, if so, why should there be an exception made to this invariable
rule in nature, recognized both by science and theology,--only in the case of
the soul of the animal? Even though it had no intelligence, an assumption from
which every impartial thinker will ever and very strongly demur.
Let us see, however, turning from scholastic philosophy to natural
sciences, what are the naturalist's objections to the animal having an
intelligent and therefore an independent soul in him.
"Whatever that be, which thinks, which understands, which acts, it
is something celestial and divine; and upon that account must necessarily be
eternal," wrote Cicero, nearly two millenniums ago. We should understand
well, Mr. Huxley contradicting the conclusion,--
Really, when such tremendous claims as the said miracles are put forward
and enforced by the Church upon the faithful, her theologians should take more
care that their highest authorities at least should not contradict themselves,
thus showing ignorance upon questions raised nevertheless to a doctrine.
The animal, then, is debarred from progress and immortality, because he
is an automaton. According to Descartes, he has no intelligence, agreeably to
mediæval scholasticism; nothing but instinct, the latter signifying involuntary
impulses, as affirmed by the materialists and denied by the Church.
Both Frederic and George Cuvier have discussed amply, however, on the
intelligence and the instinct in animals.l2 Their ideas upon the subject have
been collected and edited by Flourens, the learned Secretary of the
A more magnificent series of contradictory statements could hardly have
been expected from a great man of science.
The illustrious Cuvier is right therefore in remarking in his turn, that
"this new mechanism of Buffon is still less intelligible than Descartes'
automaton."l3
As remarked by the critic, a line of demarcation ought to be traced
between instinct and intelligence. The construction of beehives by the bees,
the raising of dams by the beaver in the middle of the naturalist's dry floor
as much as in the river, are all the deeds and effects of instinct forever
unmodifiable and changeless, whereas the acts of intelligence are to be found
in actions evidently thought out by the animal, where not instinct but reason
comes into play, such as its education and training calls forth and renders
susceptible of perfection and development. Man is endowed with reason, the
infant with instinct; and the young animal shows more of both than the child.
Indeed, every one of the disputants knows as well as we do that it is
so. If any materialist avoid confessing it, it is through pride. Refusing a
soul to both man and beast, he is unwilling to admit that the latter is endowed
with intelligence as well as himself, even though in an infinitely lesser
degree. In their turn the churchman, the religiously inclined naturalist, the
modern metaphysician, shrink from avowing that man and animal are both endowed
with soul and faculties, if not equal in development and perfection, at least
the same in name and essence. Each of them knows, or ought to know that
instinct and intelligence are two faculties completely opposed in their nature,
two enemies confronting each other in constant conflict; and that, if they will
not admit of two souls or principles, they have to recognize, at any rate, the
presence of two potencies in the soul, each having a different seat in the
brain, the localization of each of which is well known to them, since they can
isolate and temporarily destroy them in turn--according to the organ or part of
the organs they happen to be torturing during their terrible vivisections. What
is it but human pride that prompted Pope to say:
Ask for whose end the
heavenly bodies shine;
Earth for whose use? Pride
answers, 'Tis for mine.
For me kind nature wakes her
genial power,
Suckles each herb, and
spreads out every flower.
****
*
For me the mine a thousand
treasures brings;
For me health gushes from a
thousand springs;
Seas roll to waft me, suns to
light me rise;
My footstool earth, my canopy
the skies!
And it is the same unconscious pride that made Buffon utter his
paradoxical remarks with reference to the difference between man and animal.
That difference consisted in the "absence of reflection, for the
animal," he says, "does not feel that he feels." How does Buffon
know? "It does not think that it thinks," he adds, after having told
the audience that the animal remembered, often deliberated, compared and chose!l4
Who ever pretended that a cow or a dog could be an idealogist? But the animal
may think and know it thinks, the more keenly that it cannot speak, and express
its thoughts. How can Buffon or any one else know? One thing is shown however
by the exact observations of naturalists and that is, that the animal is
endowed with intelligence; and once this is settled, we have but to repeat
Thomas Aquinas' definition of intelligence--the prerogative of man's immortal
soul--to see that the same is due to the animal.
But in justice to real Christian philosophy, we are able to show that
primitive Christianity has never preached such atrocious doctrines--the true
cause of the falling off of so many of the best men as of the highest
intellects from the teachings of Christ and his disciples.
III
O Philosophy, thou guide of life, and discoverer of virtue!
--
Philosophy is a modest profession, it is all reality and plain dealing;
I hate solemnity and pretence, with nothing but pride at the bottom.
--PLINY
THE destiny of man--of the most brutal, animal-like, as well as of the
most saintly--being immortality, according to theological teaching; what is the
future destiny of the countless hosts of the animal kingdom? We are told by
various Roman Catholic writers--Cardinal Ventura, Count de Maistre and many
others--that "animal soul is a Force."
"It is well established that the soul of the animal," says
their echo De Mirville,--"was produced by the earth, for this is Biblical.
All the living and moving souls (nephesh or life principle) come from the
earth; but, let me be understood, not solely from the dust, of which their
bodies as well as our own were made, but from the power or potency of the
earth; i.e., from its immaterial force, as all forces are . . . those of the
sea, of the air, etc., all of which are those Elementary Principalities
(principautés élementaires) of which we have spoken elsewhere."l5
What the Marquis de Mirville understands by the term is, that every
"Element" in nature is a domain filled and governed by its respective
invisible spirits. The Western Kabalists and the Rosicrucians named them
Sylphs, Undines, Salamanders and Gnomes; christian mystics, like De Mirville,
give them Hebrew names and class each among the various kinds of Demons under
the sway of Satan--with God's permission, of course.
He too rebels against the decision of
He had just called it an immaterial force, and now it is named by him
"the most substantial thing on earth."l7
But what is this Force? George Cuvier and Flourens the academician tell
us its secret.
"The form or the force of the bodies," (form means soul in
this case, let us remember,) the former writes,--"is far more essential to
them than matter is, as (without being destroyed in its essence) the latter
changes constantly, whereas the form prevails eternally.' To this Flourens
observes: "In everything that has life, the form is more persistent than
matter; for, that which constitutes the BEING of the living body, its identity
and its sameness, is its form."l8
"Being," as De Mirville remarks in his turn, "a
magisterial principle. a philosophical pledge of our immortality,"l9 it
must be inferred that soul--human and animal--is meant under this misleading
term. It is rather what we call the ONE LIFE I suspect.
However this may be, philosophy, both profane and religious,
corroborates this statement that the two "souls" are identical in man
and beast. Leibnitz, the philosopher beloved by Bossuet, appeared to credit
"Animal Resurrection" to a certain extent. Death being for him
"simply the temporary enveloping of the personality" he likens it to
the preservation of ideas in sleep, or to the butterfly within its caterpillar.
"For him," says De Mirville, "resurrection20 is a general law in
nature, which becomes a grand miracle, when performed by a thaumaturgist, only
in virtue of its prematurity, of the surrounding circumstances, and of the mode
in which he operates." In this Leibnitz is a true Occultist without suspecting
it. The growth and blossoming of a flower or a plant in five minutes instead of
several days and weeks, the forced germination and development of plant, animal
or man, are facts preserved in the records of the Occultists. They are only
seeming miracles; the natural productive forces hurried and a thousand-fold
intensified by the induced conditions under occult laws known to the Initiate.
The abnormally rapid growth is effected by the forces of nature, whether blind
or attached to minor intelligences subjected to man's occult power, being
brought to bear collectively on the development of the thing to be called forth
out of its chaotic elements. But why call one a divine miracle, the other a
satanic subterfuge or simply a fraudulent performance?
Still as a true philosopher Leibnitz finds himself forced, even in this
dangerous question of the resurrection of the dead, to include in it the whole
of the animal kingdom in its great synthesis, and to say: "I believe that
the souls of the animals are imperishable, . . . and I find that nothing is
better fitted to prove our own immortal nature."2l
Supporting Leibnitz, Dean, the Vicar of Middleton, published in 1748 two
small volumes upon this subject. To sum up his ideas, he says that "the
holy scriptures hint in various passages that the brutes shall live in a future
life. This doctrine has been supported by several Fathers of the Church. Reason
teaching us that the animals have a soul, teaches us at the same time that they
shall exist in a future state. The system of those who believe that God
annihilates the soul of the animal is nowhere supported, and has no solid
foundation to it," etc. etc.22
Many of the men of science of the last century defended Dean's
hypothesis, declaring it extremely probable, one of them especially--the
learned Protestant theologian Charles Bonnet of
"The animals," he writes, "are admirable books, in which
the creator gathered the most striking features of his sovereign intelligence.
The anatomist has to study them with respect, and, if in the least endowed with
that delicate and reasoning feeling that characterises the moral man, he will
never imagine, while turning over the pages, that he is handling slates or
breaking pebbles. He will never forget that all that lives and feels is
entitled to his mercy and pity. Man would run the risk of compromising his
ethical feeling were he to become familiarised with the suffering and the blood
of animals. This truth is so evident that Governments should never lose sight
of it. . . . as to the hypothesis of automatism I should feel inclined to
regard it as a philosophical heresy, very dangerousfor society, if it did not
so strongly violate good sense and feeling as to become harmless, for it can
never be generally adopted."
"As to the destiny of the animal, if my hypothesis be right,
Providence holds in reserve for them the greatest compensations in future
states.25 . . . And for me, their resurrection is the consequence of that soul
or form we are necessarily obliged to allow them, for a soul being a simple
substance, can neither be divided, nor decomposed, nor yet annihilated. One
cannot escape such an inference without falling back into Descartes'
automatism; and then from animal automatism one would soon and forcibly arrive
at that of man" . . .
Our modern school of biologists has arrived at the theory of
"automaton-man," but its disciples may be left to their own devices
and conclusions. That with which I am at present concerned, is the final and
absolute proof that neither the Bible, nor its most philosophical
interpreters--however much they may have lacked a clearer insight into other
questions--have ever denied, on Biblical authority, an immortal soul to any
animal, more than they have found in it conclusive evidence as to the existence
of such a soul in man--in the old Testament. One has but to read certain verses
in Job and the Ecclesiastes (iii. 17 et seq. 22) to arrive at this conclusion.
The truth of the matter is, that the future state of neither of the two is
therein referred to by one single word. But if, on the other hand, only
negative evidence is found in the Old Testament concerning the immortal soul in
animals, in the New it is as plainly asserted as that of man himself, and it is
for the benefit of those who deride Hindu philozoism, who assert their right to
kill animals at their will and pleasure, and deny them an immortal soul, that a
final and definite proof is now being given.
The apostle premises by saying (Romans viii. 16, 17) that "The
spirit itself" (Paramatma) "beareth witness with our spirit"
(atman) "that we are the children of God," and "if children,
then heirs"--heirs of course to the eternity and indestructibility of the
eternal or divine essence in us. Then he tells us that:
"The sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared
with the glory which shall be revealed." (v. 18.)
The "glory" we maintain, is no "new Jerusalem," the
symbolical representation of the future in St. John's kabalistical
Revelations--but the Devachanic periods and the series of births in the
succeeding races when, after every new incarnation we shall find ourselves
higher and more perfect, physically as well as spiritually; and when finally we
shall all become truly the "sons" and "the children of God"
at the "last Resurrection"--whether people call it Christian,
Nirvanic or Parabrahmic; as all these are one and the same. For truly--
"The earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the
manifestation of the sons of God." (v. 19.)
By creature, animal is here meant, as will be shown further on upon the
authority of
"The creature itself (ipsa) also shall be delivered from the
bondage of corruption," which is to say that the seed or the indestructible
animal soul, which does not reach Devachan while in its elementary or animal
state, will get into a higher form and go on, together with man, progressing
into still higher states and forms, to end, animal as well as man, "in the
glorious liberty of the children of God" (v. 21).
And this "glorious liberty" can be reached only through the
evolution or the Karmic progress of all creatures. The dumb brute having
evoluted from the half sentient plant, is itself transformed by degrees into
man, spirit, God--et seq. and ad infinitum! For says
"We know ("we," the Initiates) that the whole creation,
(omnis creatura or creature, in the Vulgate) groaneth and travaileth (in
child-birth) in pain until now."29 (v. 22.)
This is plainly saying that man and animal are on a par on earth, as to
suffering, in their evolutionary efforts toward the goal and in accordance with
Karmic law. By "until now," is meant up to the fifth race. To make it
still plainer, the great Christian Initiate explains by saying:
"Not only they (the animals) but ourselves also, which have the
first-fruits of the Spirit, we groan within ourselves, waiting for the
adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body." (v. 23.) Yes, it is we,
men, who have the "first-fruits of the Spirit," or the direct
Parabrahmic light, our Atma or seventh principle, owing to the perfection of
our fifth principle (Manas), which is far less developed in the animal. As a
compensation, however, their Karma is far less heavy than ours. But that is no
reason why they too should not reach one day that perfection that gives the
fully evoluted man the Dhyanchohanic form.
Nothing could be clearer--even to a profane, non-initiated critic--than
those words of the great Apostle, whether we interpret them by the light of
esoteric philosophy, or that of mediæval scholasticism. The hope of redemption,
or, of the survival of the spiritual entity, delivered "from the bondage
of corruption," or the series of temporary material forms, is for all
living creatures, not for man alone.
But the "paragon" of animals, proverbially unfair even to his
fellow-beings, could not be expected to give easy consent to sharing his
expectations with his cattle and domestic poultry. The famous Bible
commentator, Cornelius a Lapide, was the first to point out and charge his
predecessors with the conscious and deliberate intention of doing all they
could to avoid the application of the word creatura to the inferior creatures
of this world. We learn from him that St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Origen and St.
Cyril (the one, most likely, who refused to see a human creature in Hypatia,
and dealt with her as though she were a wild animal) insisted that the word
creatura, in the verses above quoted, was applied by the Apostle simply to the
angels! But, as remarks Cornelius, who appeals to
Unfortunately for the holy speculators and scholastics, and very
fortunately for the animals--if these are ever to profit by polemics--they are
over-ruled by a still greater authority than themselves. It is St. John
Chrysostomus, already mentioned, whom the Roman Catholic Church, on the
testimony given by Bishop Proclus, at one time his secretary, holds in the
highest veneration. In fact
"We must always groan about the delay made for our
emigration(death); for if, as saith the Apostle, the creature deprived of
reason (mente, not anima, "Soul")--and speech (nam si hæc creatura
mente et verbo carens) groans and expects, the more the shame that we ourselves
should fail to do so."3l
Unfortunately we do, and fail most ingloriously in this desire for
"emigration" to countries unknown. Were people to study the
scriptures of all nations and interpret their meaning by the light of esoteric
philosophy, no one would fail to become, if not anxious to die, at least
indifferent to death. We should then make profitable use of the time we pass on
this earth by quietly preparing in each birth for the next by accumulating good
Karma. But man is a sophist by nature. And, even after reading this opinion of
St. John Chrysostom--one that settles the question of the immortal soul in
animals forever, or ought to do so at any rate, in the mind of every Christian,--we
fear the poor dumb brutes may not benefit much by the lesson after all. Indeed,
the subtle casuist, condemned out of his own mouth, might tell us, that
whatever the nature of the soul in the animal, he is still doing it a favour,
and himself a meritorious action, by killing the poor brute, as thus he puts an
end to its "groans about the delay made for its emigration" into
eternal glory.
The writer is not simple enough to imagine, that a whole
H.P. BLAVATSKY
Theosophist, January, February,
and March, 1886
l De la Resurrection et du Miracle. E. de Mirville.
2 De la Resurrection et du Miracle. E. de Mirville.
3 Compare also the difference between the translation of the same verse
in the Vulgata, and the texts of Luther and De Wette.
4 Commen. Apocal., ch. v. 137.
5 It is but justice to acknowledge here that De Mirville is the first to
recognize the error of the Church in this particular, and to defend animal
life, as far as he dares do so.
6 De Beatificatione, etc., by Pope Benedict XIV.
7 In scholastic philosophy, the word "form" applies to the
immaterial principle which informs or animates the body.
8 De Beautificatione. etc. I, IV, c. Xl, Art. 6.
9 Quoted by Cardinal de Ventura in his Philosophie Chretienne, Vol. 11,
p. 386. See also De Mirville, Résurrections animales.
10 Summa--Drioux edition in 8 vols.
11 St. Patrick, it is claimed, has Christianized "the most
Satanized country of the globe--Ireland, ignorant in all save magic"--into
the "Island of Saints," by resurrecting "sixty men dead years
before." Suscitavit sexaginta mortuos (
12 More recently Dr. Romanes and Dr. Butler have thrown great light upon
the subject.
13 Biographie Universelle, Art. by Cuvier on Buffon's Life.
14 Discours sur la nature des Animaux.
15 Esprits, 2m. mem. Ch. XII, Cosmolatrie.
16 Ibid.
17 Esprits--p. 158.
18 Longevity, pp. 49 and 52.
19 Resurrections. p. 621.
20 The occultists call it "transformation" during a series of
lives and the final, nirvanic Resurrection.
2l Leibnitz. Opera philos., etc.
22 See vol. XXIX of the Bibliothéque des sciences, 1st Trimester of the
year 1768.
23 From two Greek words--to be born and reborn again.
24 See Vol. II Palingenesis. Also, De Mirville's Resurrections.
25 We too believe in "future states" for the animal from the
highest down to the infusoria--but in a series of rebirths, each in a higher
form, up to man and then beyond --in short, we believe in evolution in the
fullest sense of the word.
26 See
27 What was really meant by the "sons of God" in antiquity is
now demonstrated fully in the SECRET DOCTRINE in its Part I (on the Archaic
Period)--now nearly ready.
28 This is the orthodox Hindu as much as the esoteric version. In his
This is the orthodox version. The secret one speaks of seven Initiates
having attained Dhyanchohanship toward the end of the seventh Race on this
earth, who are left on earth during its "obscuration" with the seed
of every mineral, plant, and animal that had not time to evolute into man for
the next Round or world-period. See Esoteric Buddhism, by A. P. Sinnett, Fifth
Edition, Annotations, pp. 146, 147.
29 . . . ingemiscit et parturit usque adhuc in the original Latin
translation.
30 Cornelius, edit. Pelagaud, I. IX, p.114.
31 Homélie XIV. Sur l'Epitre aux Romains.
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