A Message of Light
from Mahatma K.H.
Letter 48. Received Allahabad,
3 march 1882.
“To the truly wise those breaks of grey may suggest an
allegory full of meaning, such as the streaks of twilight upon the Eastern sky
at morning’s early dawn, after a night of intense darkness; the aurora of a
more “spiritually intellectual cycle. And who knows how many of those, who, undismayed
by its unprepossessing appearance, the hideous intricacies of its style, and
the other many failures of the unpopular ‘magazine’, will keep on tearing its
pages, who may find themselves rewarded some day for their perseverance!
Illuminated sentences may gleam out of them, at some time or other, shedding a
bright light upon some old puzzling problems. Yourself , some fine morning,
while poring over its crooked columns with a well rested brain, peering into
what you view now as hazy, impalpable speculations, having only the consistency
of vapour.—yourself you may perchance, perceive in them the unexpected solution
of an old, blurred, forgotten “dream” of yours, which once ‘recalled’ will
impress itself in an indelible image upon your outer from your inner memory, to
never fade out from it again. All this is possible and may happen; for our ways
are the ways of “Madmen”. . …
……”Indeed when you complain of being unable to understand the
meaning of Eliphas Levi, it is only because you fail like many other readers to
find the key to their way of writing. On close observation, you will find that
it was never the intention of the Occultists really to conceal really what they
had been writing from the earnest determined students, but rather to lock up
their information for safety-sake, in a secure safe-box, the key to which is—intuition.
The degree of diligence and zeal with which the hidden meaning is sought by the
student, is generally the test—how far he is entitled to the possession of so
buried treasure. And certainly if you are able to make out that which was
concealed under the red ink of M.—you need despair of nothing. …..And now need
I remind you that this letter is strictly private?”
Yours, whatever may come of it,
K.H.
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