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Elvis Presley and Oprah Winfrey. Mahatma Gandhi and the Dalai Lama. Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla. Harry Potter and Star Wars.
What do they have in common?
The answer: They all have been directly or indirectly influenced by
Helena Blavatsky — the trailblazing woman who indelibly shaped our world and changed the course of history, “being as much talked about as an emperor” (
The Sun).
Now, Ukrainian-born Madame Blavatsky returns with a
long-hidden book.
She took a
vow of silence not to reveal during her lifetime the place she had visited.
She cleverly hid her
secret story in plain sight by giving it to another writer.
What long-lost,
timeless wisdom did she conceal in her wonderful narrative?
Immersive and engaging, this profound book will provide you with a unique outlook on the deeper side of life, exposing our true nature, interior powers, and ultimate destiny. It explains grand, spiritual ideas more thoroughly and swiftly than any book you’ll ever read.
“Whatever critics may say against Madame Blavatsky, [her] contribution to humanity will always rank high.”
— Mahatma Gandhi
Buy it now to find out what secrets this most mysterious woman — hailed as an icon — couldn’t reveal during her lifetime!
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
The Land of the Gods
The Long-Hidden Story of Visiting the Masters of Wisdom in Shambhala
H. P. Blavatsky
The Land of the Gods was first published anonymously in 1887 as An Adventure Among the Rosicrucians under the pseudonym “A Student of Occultism.” It was republished in 1910 as With the Adepts under the name of Franz Hartmann, who acknowledged that he was not its original author.
Copy-edited by Sandy Draper. Cover and interior illustrations by Kateryna Velcheva. Cover design by Matt Davies.
Illustrations © 2022 by Radiant Books
Glossary © 2022 by Radiant Books
Library of Congress Control Number: 2022945434
Published in 2022 by Radiant Books
radiantbooks.co
ISBN 978-1-63994-025-7 (hardback)
ISBN 978-1-63994-024-0 (paperback)
Publisher’s Note
I. The Beauty of the Mountains
II. Meeting the Lord of Shambhala
III. Unexpected Revelations
IV. The Power of Imagination
V. Three Sisters Reunited
VI. The Alchemical Laboratory
VII. The Secret of Alchemy
VIII. The Wisdom of the Sages
IX. A Magical Journey
X. The End
Glossary
About the Author
This book was originally published anonymously by a mysterious “Student of Occultism” in 1887 under the titleAn Adventure Among the Rosicrucians, yet with copyright in the name of Franz Hartmann. Helena Blavatsky reviewed it, describing it as: “A strange and original little story, charmingly fantastic, but full of poetic feeling and, what is more, of deep philosophical and occult truths, for those who can perceive the ground-work it is built upon.”1
In 1910, Hartmann republished the story titledWith the Adeptsalong with new additions, as well as omissions. However, in his preface, he mentioned that it “has been gathered from notes handed to me by a friend, a writer of considerable repute.”2
Those notes were originally written by H. P. Blavatsky because only she could gain access to the Holy of Holies on the Earth — the secret Abode of the Masters of Wisdom, known as Shambhala. In 1939, Helena Roerich, who continued Blavatsky’s mission in the 20thcentury, also confirmed her authorship: “This account of the inner life of the Brotherhood was undoubtedly recorded by Franz Hartmann from the words of H. P. Blavatsky, conveyed with some changes in literary form.”3
The Chief Stronghold of Shambhala is located in the heart of the Himalayas. However, the network of its Abodes is also spread within other mountainous and remote locations around the world, in the most inaccessible places. The notes that Madame Blavatsky prepared were, in fact, different stories that occurred both in the Himalayas and the Alps at various times, yet were later tied into one single story narrating the secret order of the Rosicrucians.
The publisher hopes that one day it will be permitted to tell more about this book and its characters, as it was originally intended since the discovery of Blavatsky’s work was made in June 2015 — a work that she hid in plain sight long ago.
The new edition, now published for the first time under the name of its true author, is primarily based on the 1887 original yet also contains additions from the 1910 edition. However, several things that Helena Blavatsky allowed Franz Hartmann to add to make her story his have been eliminated, and the chapter titles have been changed. The text has also been edited according to modern linguistic standards to make it more appropriate for 21st-century readers.
Dedicated to Sophia,
the Divine Mother of
I am penning these lines in a little village in the Alpine mountains in Southern Bavaria, only a short distance from the Austrian frontier. The impressions I received yesterday are still fresh in my mind; the experiences which caused them were as real to me as any other driven by the events of everyday life. Nevertheless, they were of such an extraordinary character that I can’t persuade myself that they were more than a dream.
Having finished the long and tedious labour of investigating the Rosicrucians’ history and studying old worm-eaten books, mouldy manuscripts hardly legible from age, passing days and parts of night in convent libraries and antiquarian shops, collecting and copying everything that seemed of any value for my object in view, I made up my mind to grant myself a few days’ holiday among the sublime scenery of the Tyrolian Alps.
The mountains were still covered in snow, although the spring had advanced. But I was anxious to escape the city’s turmoil and noise, to breathe once more the pure, exhilarating air of the mountain heights, to see the shining glaciers glistening like vast mirrors in the light of the rising sun, and to share the feeling of the poet Byron when he wrote the following verses:
He who ascends to mountain tops shall find
The loftiest peaks most wrapp’d in clouds and snow;
He who surpasses or subdues mankind
Must look down on the hate of those below;
Though high above the sun of glory glow,
And far beneath the earth and ocean spread,
Round him are icy rocks, and loudly blow
Contending tempests on his naked head,
And thus reward the toils which to these summits led.
Boarding the train at K., I soon arrived at S. Thence, I wandered on foot, highly enjoying the change from the smoky atmosphere of the crowded streets to the fresh air of the country, pregnant with the odour of pines and daisies, the latter appearing where the snow had gone. The road led up through the river valley, and, as I advanced, the valley grew narrower and the sides of the mountain steeper. Here and there were clusters of farmhouses and some rustic cottages clinging to the projecting rocks of the mountains as if seeking protection against the storms which often blow through these valleys. The sun was sinking down below the western horizon and gilded the snowy peaks of the mountains and the brazen cross on the top of the spire of the little village church, from which tolled the curfew, or, as it is here called, theAve Mariawhen I arrived at O., — the starting point for my excursions into the mountains.
Finding a hospitable reception in the village inn, I soon retired and awoke early in the morning, having been aroused from my sleep by the tinkling of little bells hanging around the necks of the goats sent out to their pasturage. I arose and stepped to the window. The night’s shadows were fleeing before the approach of the coming sun; the dawn had begun, and before me in sublime array stood the grand old peaks of the mountains, reminding me of Edwin Arnold’s description of the view from the windows of Prince Siddhartha’s palace, Vishramvan. There the grand mountains stood:
Ranged in white ranks against the blue-untrod
Infinite, wonderful — whose uplands vast,
And lifted universe of crest and crag,
Shoulder and shelf, green slope and icy horn,
Riven ravine and splintered precipice,
Led climbing thought higher and higher, until
It seemed to stand in heaven and speak with gods.
Soon I was on the way and wandered farther up through the valley along the riverbed, but here it was merely a small stream, rushing and dancing wildly over the rocks, while farther down, where it had grown, it flowed in tranquil majesty through the plains. The valley seemed to cut through long mountain ranges, and other valleys opened into this. Some of these valleys were known to me as I had roamed them and explored their mysterious recesses, caves, and forests some twenty years ago. Still, there was one mysterious valley I hadn’t yet explored, which led towards a high, bifurcated mountain peak, whose summit was said to be inaccessible, and upon which the foot of no mortal had ever trod. Towards this valley, I seemed to be attracted by some invisible but irresistible power. I felt as if, in its unexplored depths at the foot of this inaccessible mountain, the secret and undefined longings of my heart were to be satisfied, as if a mystery would be revealed to me whose solution couldn’t be found in books.
The sun hadn’t yet risen, and the dark woods to the right and left were of a uniform colour. As I entered the narrow, mysterious valley, the path rose gradually, leading through a dark forest along the side of a mountain. Slowly and almost imperceptibly, it ascended. At first, it was near the rushing stream, but as I progressed, the torrent’s roar sounded more distant; the foaming stream seemed to sink farther down. At last, the forest became thinner, and the dark woods were now far below me; before me and above the intervening trees rose the naked cliffs of the inaccessible mountain. Still, the path led up higher. Soon the distant noise of a waterfall was heard, and I approached again the bed of the mountain stream, which now seemed to be a mass of rocks, split into pieces by some giant power, lying about in wild confusion, while the white foam of the water danced between the cliffs.
Here and there were little islands of soil covered with green vegetation. They stood like isolated tables amid the wilderness; for the combined action of water and air had decomposed and eaten away a great part of their foundations, and they looked like plates of soil resting upon small pedestals; hard as they are, their final tumble is merely a question of time, for their foundations were slowly crumbling away.
My path took me upwards, sometimes nearing the riverbed, sometimes receding from it, sometimes over steep rocks, and again descending to the bottom of ravines formed by the melting snow. Thus I entered deep into the mysterious valley when the first signs of sunrise appeared upon the cliffs above my head. One of these towering peaks was crowned with a halo of light, while beyond it, the full sunlight streamed into the valley below. A mild breeze swept through the treetops, and the foliage of the birch trees, with which the pine forest was sprinkled, trembled in the morning air. No sound could now be heard, except occasionally the note of a titmouse, and more rarely the cry of a hawk which rose in long-drawn, spiral motions high up into the air to begin its day’s work.
Now the ash-grey walls and cliffs began to assume a pale silvery hue, while in the rents and crags of the rock, the dark blue shade seemed to resist the influence of the light. Looking backwards, I saw how the valley widened, and, far down, the stream could be seen wandering towards the plains. Obtaining more room as it advanced, it spread and formed ponds and tanks and little lakes among the meadows. On the opposite side of the valley, the tops of high mountains rose far into the sky, and between the interstices of the summits, still more summits arose. The foot of the range was covered with dark vegetation, but the mountainsides exhibited a great variety of colours, from the almost black appearance of the rocks below to the ethereal white of the farthest peaks, whose delicate hues seemed to blend with the pale blue sky. Here and there, the surface was already covered with spots of light from the rising sun, falling through the rents of the rocks and through the branches of trees, foreboding the near arrival of the orb of day. Thus the higher peaks enjoyed the warm sunlight long before it shone into the valley below, but while it shone in its full brightness upon the mountaintops, the dark shadows in the deep valley became thinner and began to disappear.
At last, the solemn moment arrived, and the sun rose in sublime majesty over the mountaintops, becoming visible to all. The shadows fled, and a flood of light penetrated the valley, lighting up the dark pine forest and illuminating the rock caves. Shining upon the fields of snow and the glaciers, its light was reflected as in a mirror and produced a blinding effect, but upon the rocky surface, it softened, giving it the appearance of a thousand various hues.
The road turned round a projecting part of the mountain height, and suddenly I stood in full view of the inaccessible mountain. Between where I stood and the base of the mountain, there was a well-nigh treeless plain, and the soil was almost without vegetation. Everywhere the ground was covered with stones and rocks, many of which seemed to have fallen down from the mysterious mountain and broken in the fall. Here and there was a small spot covered with moss or thin vegetation, sending fantastically shaped green branches upwards along the sides of the inaccessible mountain towards the bare grey walls of the summit, where giant sentinels of a forbidding mien stood eternal and immovable, and seemed to defend their strongholds against the aggressive vegetation, crowding the latter back into the valley. Thus the everlasting combat raging for untold ages still continued, but the frontlines of the contending armies changed from year to year. Everlasting, like the eternal truths, stand the bare grey rocks upon the summits; here and there, the vegetation invades their kingdom, like illusions approaching the realm of the real; death is victorious; the green spots are buried each year under the descending rocks; but again life is the victor, for those rocks decay, and a new life appears upon their withered faces.
In the limestone formation of the Alpine ranges, the rocks decomposed by wind and rain often assume the most fantastic shapes, which suggest the names given to the mountains. Very little imagination is required to behold the shape in the summits of the Wilden Kaiser mountain, the figure of the Emperor Barbarossa, with his long red beard, crown and sceptre, lying in state, unaffected by the cold of the winter or the summer’s heat, waiting to be resurrected; or we may see in the shape of the Hochvogel the form of an eagle spreading its wings; in the Widder-horn, the shape of the horns of a ram, etc. At the base of the mountains and valleys, the soil is covered with small loose rocks and piles of sand, in the midst of which coltsfoot spreads its large green leaves, and the blue bell-shaped flowers of monkshood wave their heads. In some secluded spots grows the celebrated edelweiss, resembling in size those which grow on the Popocatepetl in Mexico and the Cordilleras of South America. There may also be found the mountain gentian, the Alpine rose, the mandrake, mountain arnica, the mysterious St. John’s wort, and other curious plants full of healing powers and strange virtues. Wherever a sufficient quantity of soil has accumulated to enable a tree to grow, a larger kind of vegetation appears. Still, the little crust of earth isn’t deep enough to afford a solid footing for large trees. They may grow to a certain height, but someday a storm will arise and sweep down the mountainsides, and then the work of destruction begins. Grand old tree corpses, whose roots have been torn from the soil, lie about, their barkless, bleached branches like so many skeleton arms stretched up towards heaven as if they had been calling for help in the hour of their death, but no help had arrived. Smaller growths of dwarf trees surround them and cover the ground or feed like parasites upon the substance of the dead.
The spring had advanced, but among these mountains, the seasons are interlaced with each other. The red and yellow leaves painted by autumn are seen among the green foliage of the stunted pines. The moss clinging to the steep precipices shows the reddish colour of autumn, and in many clefts and caverns linger the snow and ice of the past winter. Still, above the red and green and the pure white snow, the grey masses of the summits rise in a succession of pillars and points, with domes and spires and pinnacles, like a city built by the gods, while in the background spreads the grey or blue canopy of heaven. Thin streams of water run down from these heights over the precipices, and as they splash over the projecting rocks, they are reduced to vapour before reaching the ground below. The rocks themselves have been hollowed out, forming large caves, indicating how powerful those little veins of water may become if swelled by the floods from the melting snows of the summits.
After enjoying the sublime scenery for a few minutes, I continued on my way and approached a little stream from a waterfall in the distance. I wandered along its border; the water was deep but so clear that even the smallest pebble could be distinctly seen at the bottom. Sometimes it appeared as motionless as if it were liquid crystal penetrated by the sun’s rays, and again, meeting obstacles in its way, it foamed in its rocky bed as if in a sudden fit of rage. While in other places, the water tumbled in little cascades over pretty pebbles and stones, forming miniature cataracts which exhibited various colours.
In this solitude, there is nothing to remind one of humanity’s existence except the occasional sawn-off tree trunk, showing the destructive influence of human activity. Rainwater collected in some old, rotten, hollow trunks sparkled in the sun like little mirrors, such as may be used by water nymphs. Around their edges, little mushrooms are growing, which our imagination transforms into chairs, tables, and baldachinos for fairies and elves.
Where I stood, the ground was covered with moss, with the occasional great, white thistle, whose sharp-pointed leaves sparkled in the sunlight. At a short distance, I saw a small grove of pines, looking like an island in the desert, and to that grove, I directed my steps. There I resolved to rest and enjoy the beauty of Nature. I laid myself down upon the moss in a place overshadowed by a mighty pine. The music of the mountain stream was heard at a distance, and opposite to where I rested, there was a waterfall, spreading into a vapour as it fell over the rocks, and in the haze appeared the colours of the rainbow. The mist fell into a basin formed of rock, and from a rent in this basin, overgrown with moss, the water foamed and rushed, hastening down towards the valley to become united with the main body of the river.
For a long time, I watched the water play, and the longer I watched, the more it became alive with forms of the most singular shape. Supermundane beings of great beauty seemed to dance in the spray, shaking their heads in the sunshine and throwing showers of liquid silver from their streaming curls and waving locks. Their laughter sounded like that of the falls of Minnehaha, and from the rock crevices peeped the ugly faces of gnomes and kobolds slyly watching the fairies dance. Above the fall, the current seemed to hesitate before throwing itself over the precipice; but below, where it left the basin, it appeared to be irritated by the impediments in its way and impatient to leave its home; while far down in the valley, where it became united to its brother, the river, it sounded as if the latter was welcoming it back to its bosom, and as if both were exulting over their final union in a glad jubilee.