She was born of Russian nobility and later became the secretary of the Theosophical Society.
Also, she was referred to as HPB. She did much to spread Eastern religious, philosophical and
occult concepts throughout the Western world.
Her father Peter von Hahn was in the Russian army. Shortly after he married Helena Andreyevna he
was called into war and his wife returned to her parent's home when their daughter Helena was born.
Helena Andreyevna wrote novels concerning restricted Russian women and was called the George Sand
of Russia.
She died when Helena was twelve, but later Helena would say that her mother had died when she was
a baby. The question is why did Helena Blavatsky deny the existence of her mother in her childhood.
It is true that she grew from a sickly baby into a problem child subjected to hysteria and
convulsions. When dying her mother observed sadly, "Ah well, perhaps it is best that I am dying,
so at least I shall be spared seeing what befalls Helena. Of one thing I am certain, her life
will not be that of other women, and she will have much to suffer."
This statement that her mother died when she was a baby seems to suggest that there was strife
between the mother and daughter. It indicates a conflict between the wills. That Helen resented
her mother's long absences, her intimate friendships in the bohemian world of letters, and felt
it as a desertion of the home and herself. Her mother seemed to have hurt her pride.
Helena's childhood was not the usual one. She displayed neurotic behavior from almost infancy by
walking and talking in her sleep at four, exhibiting morbid tendencies, and loving the weird and
fantastic. One of her earliest recollections was macabre in nature. At Ekaterinoslav, the
countryside was said to be haunted with russalkas, green-haired nymphs living in willow trees
along the river banks. Whenever her nurses crossed her Helena threaten to have the russalkas
tickle them to death. One day when Helena was four she was walking by the river bank with one
of her nurses while a serf-boy of fourteen followed them and annoyed Helena by pulling her
perambulator. She then imitated one of her father's roars threatening to have the russalkas tickle
the boy to death. The boy being scared, took to his heels over the river bank. He was not seen
again until fishermen discovered his dead body weeks later. Helena's family supposed he had
accidentally stepped into a sand-pit whirlpool. But the household serfs knew otherwise; they knew
that the four-year-old girl had withdrawn her protection from the boy and delivered him over to
the russalkas. It is significant that HPB should later accuse herself of homicide at the age of
four, and the victim a boy ten years her senior.
Her memory of this incident is not surprising when viewed in perspective with other incidents of her
childhood. Those who took care of her, besides her parents, were serfs and women who had learned
and believed in superstitions. At the time Old Russia was a hothouse for superstitions. It was
alive with tales of wolves, monsters, ghosts, leeches, brownies and goblins which were thought to
manipulate human lives. Even though the educated people accepted Russian Orthodoxy, along with
its icons filling every room, priests and sacraments, their serfs still kept alive the Empire's
pagan religion among themselves. The nurses of Helena, or Lelinka as they affectionately called
her, believed these superstitions. Furthermore, Lelinka, being born in the seventh month of the
year, was called a sedmitchka, a word that is difficult to translate but is connected with the
number seven.
According to legend it was believed that supernatural beings could be placated or even controlled
by people like Helena. On the night of her birthday the servants would carry the little girl
around the house and stables while sprinkling holy water and repeating magical incantations to
appease the domovoy, a goblin in the form of an old man who lived behind the stove and played
tricks whenever displeased. Some thought each household had one. Supposedly such activities were
not known by her mother or grandparents. If they did know about them, initially they refused to
assign any importance to them until later.
It was not that the household servants thought that Helena was special, she showed it. She threw
temper tantrums whenever she did not get her way. Finally, as she later recalled, the family
members noticed her abnormalities and she was exorcised many times, but the rituals proved to no
avail. Even scolding and punishments failed to change her outrageous unacceptable behavior. She
failed to change as a child because, it seems, after the servant boy drowned, plus the attention she
was receiving, she felt she was powerful and invulnerable, and increasingly believed that mighty
forces would carry out her wishes. A belief that seemed to permeate her life.
Her only happy childhood memories seem to be between six and twelve in her father's army camps.
She was petted and spoiled as the enfant du regiment. She tyrannized over her father's orderlies
whom she preferred to her female nurses and governesses. While being pampered she managed to
pickup a smattering of knowledge about shamans and magic which she put to good use later in life.
After the death of their mother, at age 28, Helena with her sister and brother lived with their
maternal grandparents. The grandmother, Helena Palovna de Fadeev, was a princess of the Dolgorkurov
family, and a famous botanist. So from her mother and grandmother HPB inherited her characteristics
of stubbornness, a fiery temper, and a disregard for social norms, all of which she amplified.
Helena's first love affair, at age 16, had been with Prince Alexander Galistin, cousin to the
Viceroy of the Caucasus. At the time her grandfather served as his Imperial Councilor. Her
interest in the Prince was because of his interest in occultism and magic. She later claimed the
affair ended on the Prince's death, but he jilted her.
When 17 she married General Nicephore Blavatsky. There are several stories for this marriage, but
it seems to be that a governess had scolded Helena for her temper tantrums, saying she could not
even get an old man to marry her. To prove the governess wrong, and to divert attention from her
unhappy affair with Prince Galistin she married Blavatsky, who she called old and about seventy
or eighty. Actually he was around forty when they married and outlived her. After three unhappy
months of a honeymoon, HPB managed to escape from the General's bodyguards and return to her
grandfather who was not glad to see her. He quickly shipped her off to her father, now retired
and living near St. Peterburg, in charge of a maid and three men servants, all of whom she escaped.
Her father traveled two thousand miles for nothing to meet her in Odessa. Helena was aboard an
English bark, some say eloping with the skipper, sailing for Constantinople.
The years between 1848-1858 are known as Helena's vagabond years. The actual events are rather
sketchy. The important thing to HPB, at least, was the two years she was in Tibet studying with
the Lama. In 1856, according to her version, while in India she met a Lutheran minister who was
with two mystics. None had passports or proper identification. The mystics did not enter Tibet,
but the minister, although not permitted in the country, did travel a good way with the party to
a mud hut. Helena wore a mysterious disguise supplied by a Tartar shaman. At a hut they met the
Chief Lama who would not allow them admittance until Helena showed him a carnelian talisman given
to her as a child by a high priest of a Calmuck tribe.
Within the hut, which was a great hall, they witnessed a reincarnation ceremony. A four-month-old
baby laid on a carpet in the center of the hall. "Under the influence of the venerable lama, the
baby rose to its feet and walked up and down the strip of carpet, repeating, 'I am Buddha, I am
the old Lama, I am his spirit in a new body.'" The three men accompanying Helena were terrified.
The minister said his blood ran cold because the infant's eyes "seemed to search his very soul."
Some believe that HPB fabricated the reincarnation story because similar descriptions could be
found in Abbe Huc's Recollection's of Travel in Tartary, Tibet and China. Further they reasoned,
her reason for the story was for psychological importance, showing she had traveled in Tibet where
other men could not, and her talisman had admitted them to see the ritual; however, it must be
remembered these were her critics.
When returning to Russia Helena agreed to return to Nicephore Blavatsky on the condition that she
would be required to see him as little as possible, which she did. Also, at this time her
grandfather Andrey Fadeyev was 71 and retiring from the Viceroy's Board of Caucasus. He usually
retired early and Helena's two cousins, both unmarried, came to the Fadeyev home in Taiflis to
entertain while seances were held. At the time the many of the Russian intellectuals were beginning
to be fascinated with the paranormal. Helena made a big impression. Her cousin Sergei Witte wrote,
"My cousin did not confine the demonstrations of her power to table rapping, evocation of spirits,
and similar mediumistic hocus-pocus. On one occasion she caused a closed piano in an adjacent room
to emit sounds as if invisible hands were playing upon it. This was done in my presence, at the
insistence of one of the guests."
It seemed that the lady's activities included more than hold seances. A young baron from Estonia,
Nicholas Meyendorff who was an ardent Spiritualist, found HPB delightful. Meyendorff was a close
friend of D. D. Home, in fact, he considered Home as a brother, so he confided his affair with
HPB to Home. He insisted she divorce Blavatsky and marry him, or so the lady later claimed.
It seems Meyendorff later said Helena was unfaithful. From later correspondence, in 1886, to her
biographer it seems that Meyendorff was correct. About this time unexpectedly Agardi Metrovich
appeared sometime in the early 1860's. He was an opera singer accompanied by a female singer who
it seems was his wife. Metrovich had known Helena and her family previously. It seems he now wanted
her back. He was almost sixty in 1861, and had about begged an engagement from the Italian Opera
of Tiflis which was one of the worst in Europe. He was on a decline in his career.
It is somewhat of a puzzle how Helena managed living with her husband, lover Meyendoroff, and
Metrovich at the same time while holding seances in her grandfather's home. But, the fact is that
she became pregnant and a child was born. The only existence of the child's birth date is on a
passport dated August 23 (Old Style) 1862. It designated him as an infant, leaving speculation
he was born in 1862, or late 1861. His name was Yuri, and he was deformed. He was born in the
settlement of Ozurgety which had a military surgeon. Helena settled there buying a house to escape
the scandal her pregnancy had caused in Tiflis. All men she knew denied fathering the child, but
Blavatsky continued her monthly allowance. Helena referred to him as "the poor crippled child,"
while Meyendorff's relatives said he had a hunchback. Whether the handicap resulted from a birth
defect or an accident caused by the military physician unaccustomed to delivering babies is not
known.
After the birth Helena suffered, or arranged, a nervous breakdown. The significance of which is
that she describes a dual personality: "When awake and myself, I remembered well who I was in my
second capacity, and what I had been and was doing. When someone else, i.e., the personage I
became, I know I had no idea of who was H. P. Blavatsky! I was in another far-off country, a total
different individuality from myself, and had no connection at all with my actual life."
Yuri was about five years when Helena took him to Bologna trying to help him. It is known that
Metrovitch accompanied them. But the journey proved fruitless and the child died. They buried him
in a small town in Southern Russia under Metrovitch's name; the latter saying that "he did not
care."
Even though Helena had reason to detest Russia, she could not bury her son on foreign soil. This
among other things illustrated that she dearly loved the child. It had been difficult for her to
keep the child, and easier for her to have abandoned him as an orphan, but this she did not do.
She did everything she could for him. Although later she denied he was her child. When taking him
to visit her father, she wrote that her father suspected her of wrongful sexual conduct and she
produced evidence from two doctors that she was unable to bear children. Perhaps she did this more
for Yuri's sake than her own, because, it is thought, she could not bear for anyone to think ill
of her son. She also claimed Yuri was an illegitimate child of Meyendorff and a friend of hers.
The stories she told got so tangled that her biographer, Alfred Sinnett, omitted Yuri altogether.
However, the child seems an important factor in her life; otherwise, why would she have cared for
him approximately five years? Her career in the paranormal was of great concern to her. Factors
concerning the child outweighed this. Yuri, ironically, resembled the little hunchback invisible
which she had played with in her own childhood. She, herself, described Yuri as "the only being
who made life worth living, a being whom I loved according to the phraseology of Hamlet as
'forty thousand fathers and brothers will never love their children and sisters.'" Later she wrote
to Metrovitch, "I loved one man deeply but still more I love occult science," but the one she
loved "more than anything else in all the world, or anything, was Yuri."
It was later after Yuri's death that Helena confided in writing to her cousin Nadyezha Fadeyev of
her rejection of Christianity, "the Russian Orthodox god had died for her on the day of Yuri's
death." Although, she had never been at peace with Christianity, "there were moments when I
believed deeply that sins can be remitted by the Church, and that the blood of Christ has redeemed
me, together with the whole race of Adam."
Yet it should be noted toward the end of Helena's life, as with so many others, the encroachment
of fragments of an earlier religious experience are seen. Increasingly in her writings she used
words like the Holy Cause, with their ecclesiastical flavor, phrases reminiscent of the childhood
religion which she had rebelled against all of her life. She was humbling her pride to join the
host of other rebel spirits who creep back to the sanctity of the Holy Church. She even admitted
when in Paris she had in secrecy slipped off to the Russian Cathedral. In secrecy was correct,
because even though in her heart toward the end her life her confidence in her Mahatmas and the
occult may have decreased or fallen away, in public her concern was to insure the realty of her
Masters Morya and Koot Hoomi and all the hierarchy for her followers. She apologized for the
mistakes and misrepresentations in her works but not for the Masters who had dictated her books.
The faults of the books she laid on others.
After 1869 both the Fadeyev and Witte families had dwindled. Adey Fadeyev had died at 81. The
families pooled their assets and moved to Odessa where Helena and Metrovitch joined them. It was
tough going for everyone, but Helena, in her flighty manner, tried starting several small
businesses, but in the perilous times they all failed. Metrovitch still trying to make a comeback
got an engagement with the Italian opera of Cairo, so he and Helena sailed for Egypt.
It was during their voyage that Metrovitch lost his life in an explosion of gunpowder and
fireworks which the ship was carrying. Helena was one of seventeen passengers out of 400 which
survived. She later said Metrovitch died trying to save her life, although there are other
versions of his death which are not connected with the explosion at all. Anyway Helena thought
that Metrovitch would want her to go on. She went to Alexandria with help of Greek government
funds. It is thought she buried Metrovitch's remains there, and then proceeded to Cairo where she
became a medium by teaming up with another woman. The relationship in Cairo lasted for some time,
then both went back to Odessa. However, Russia did not provide the stimulation which Helena longed
for, and she tired of quarreling with her aunts whom she said did not understand her. She saw
other people and then went to Paris. It was there she heard of the enthusiasm for Spiritualism
that was spreading in the United States. She almost immediately sailed, saying that it was "my
mysterious Hindu" that ordered her "to embark for North America, which I did without protesting."
She did not travel first class though. On the dock at Le Havre she by chance met a German peasant
and her children who had been sold bogus tickets. Helena gave the woman and children her deluxe
passage and traveled herself in steerage because that was all she could then afford. She, like
millions of other poor emigrants, and rebellious aristocrats traveled to America, the land of
opportunity and hope. It was her second chance.
As with thousands of other immigrants Helena's second chance did not come easy, but she was
determined to obtain it. It was July, 1873 when she reached New York. As did other single women,
she first lodged in a home for women that was a tenement house that had been made into a cooperative
by the 65 occupants. The landlord introduced Helena to the owners of a shirt-and-collar factory
where she tried selling elaborate designs to the owners. The designs were good but she was bad at
selling, so it was Odessa all over again.
HPB was penniless but said that she had written home to her relatives for money and expected to
receive it from the Russian Council at anytime. This is how she survived in the home. She managed
to divide the home into two groups, those not liking her and those that did. She entertained the
latter group with stories of her life and by holding seances on Sunday nights. This seemed to work
until a newspaper took a dislike to her and accused her of using hashish and opium.
Soon after this her father died and she received $500 of her modest inheritance which went fast.
She moved into a smart hotel and began to live Bohemian again in a cooperate flat with three
journalists, two men and another woman. Then a new phenomenon appeared. Ordinary photographs left
in a wooden box overnight were found in the morning to be tinted with water colors by spirits.
Although impressive, the other occupants became skeptical of HPB's powers. Then one night they
watched the Madame leave her room in night clothes, carrying paint and brushes to assist the
spirits.
Following this HPB worked whenever she could, one job was in a sweatshop making artificial flowers,
and accepting charity from whomever gave it. This continued until June, 1874 when she met
Clementine Jerebko and her husband who has just arrived from Caucasus. She had known them both in
Russia. The Jerebkos had just bought farmland on Long Island and HPB agreed to join in the
adventure by buying in at $1,000. By the end of the first month all parties knew it was a
disastrous decision. Clementine agreed to return Helena's money after the farm been sold by
auction, but three days later she and her husband disappeared. Helena tried pursuing them by
hiring a creditable law firm which took the case to court.
The next important event in her life occurred ten days after Henry Steele Olcott's first article
on the Eddy seances appeared in New York, on October 14, 1874, when she introduced herself to
Olcott at the remote Chittenden, Vermont farm. Immediately she claimed to be a spiritualist who
had spent fifteen years in the cult, but it soon became apparent that she had come to see Olcott.
During the next ten days Helena exhibited her techniques. Her seances accompanied those of the
Eddy Brothers. Although Olcott was not a Spiritualist, he had a keen interest in the phenomena.
Each night the seance began at ten minutes to seven. The procession of apparitions began drifting
in and out of the Eddy cabinet on the schedule of every one to five minutes. The appearances of
Honto and the Indians were slightly dim compared to Madame Blavatsky's peopled apparitions. "Hassan
Aga," the wealthy merchant wearing a black Astarkhan cap and tasseled hood who said three times he
had a secret to reveal, but never did; "Safer Ali Bak," the man that guarded Helena for Nicephore
Blavatsky in Erivan, now appearing as a Kurd warrior carrying a feathered spear; a Circassian
noukar who bowed, smiled and said, "Tchock yachtchi" (all right); a giant muscular black man in
white-and-gold-horned headdress, a conjurer who she had met in Africa. Also, there were less
exotic phantoms such as an old woman in a babushka, whom Helena said was Vera's nurse; and the
portly man in a black evening suit and frilled white shirt, around whose neck hung a Greek cross
of St. Anne suspended by a red moiré ribbon with two black stripes.
"Are you my father?" she asked, confessing later that she was trembling.
The apparition approached her and stopped, "Djadja," he answered reproachfully.
HPB knew that Olcott was enthused with her performance, although his articles about her would not
be published for several weeks, she decided much could be achieved in the meantime. She with
another medium rushed back to New York. When Olcott mentioned putting his collection of articles
that appeared in the Graphic into a book she volunteered to translate them into Russian for the
Psychisen Studien or some other Russian journal. Olcott was thrilled with the idea.
She did like Olcott, but still considered him childish and gullible. She knew, even though she had
warned him that William Eddy's spooks were not necessarily proof of spirit entities, that Olcott
was "in love with the spirits," as she put it. Nevertheless, they continued working together. HPB
had feelings for Olcott, but they were not mutually shared at first. Olcott considered her
androgynous. He just did not see her as an attractive sexual person, even though she was in her
earthly, sensual manner.
It was at this time that she engaged in a confrontation with a New York neuropathologist, Dr.
George Beard, who claimed in the Daily Graphic that the Eddy brothers were frauds and that Colonel
Olcott had been blinded by a handful of bad magicians' tricks. HPB had two reasons to be upset by
the article. First, her first real success in Spiritualism might be thwarted; and secondly, the
article questioned Olcott's integrity as a serious investigator. If this went unchallenged it
would dash any hopes of selling any translations of his articles. This episode became a fight
between Beard and Helena, but took an unexpected turn when she was recognized by both the Spiritual
Scientist and Daily Graphic. The editor of the former said he would publish all she could write.
In an interview with the Graphic she gained so much publicity that Helena Blavatsky was known
throughout the New York area.
But, as usual, her troubles were not over. She had tried to sell the Russian translation of
Olcott's articles through Andrew Jackson Davis who admired her as a medium, a friend of Alexander
Aksakov who could get the articles in the Psychisen Studien. In his reply to Davis, Aksakov said
that he had heard of Madame Blavatsky, and she was a powerful medium, but her communications show
moral flaws. Toward Davis Helena appeared casual, and Davis thought his friend didn't know her
as well as he did. However, Helena suspected Aksakov had heard rumors and hastily sent a letter
to him pleading with him not to expose everything to Davis. It is later noted that Alsakov did
receive some of the translations, but he never printed them, nor did any other publication.
Fearing that Aksakov revelations would come down upon her at any time Helena was in a desperate
period. She still conducted seances, hoping for the best. She still needed financial support. The
man, Henry Olcott, she wanted was unavailable to her. Olcott was supporting an estranged wife and
two children, also his law practice had been neglected during his Spiritualism investigations.
Michael Betanelly was available and wanted to marry her to look after her, he said he would expect
no marital privileges of her. Betanelly was friend to both Helena and Olcott. It was Betanelly who
had written a letter to Olcott, on Helena's behalf, verifying the Georgian that materialized
during a seance at Chittenden. The letter was to serve to disprove Dr. Beard's accusations aimed
at Olcott and also give Olcott more credibility. The truth was that Betanelly knew nothing about
Spiritualism when writing the letter.
Helena and Betanelly were married on April 3, 1875. They had not told Olcott, when he heard of the
marriage he called it "a freak of madness." He later said he had ridiculed her for marrying a man
so much younger than herself and unequal to her mental capacity. However, Helena already had her
defense planned: she said, "their fates were linked by karma, and the marriage was her punishment
for 'awful pride and combativeness.'" She added that Betanelly had threatened suicide if she did not
marry him. Helena assured Olcott the marriage would not be consummated; although her reason was not
clear, it would seem she did so because of her interest in Olcott. Olcott believed her. It may
have been a non-sexual marriage, but it is doubtful her entire relationship with Betanelly was
non-physical.
Helena's main concern seemed to always lie in Olcott. To her he was always essential to the
Spiritualist movement. Later many would say she broke up his marriage, even though the
Spiritualists eventually denied it, it is a fact they met shortly before his divorce. But it
seemed they just collaborated, with HPB being dominant, at first, intimacy would come later. HPB
dictated Olcott's writings and where to send them. Before the establishment of the Theosophical
Society there was the founding of the Miracle Club. This was a club where members were admitted
to seances conducted by the club medium David Dana, brother of Charles Dana editor of the New York
Sun, and suggested by HPB. Members were forbidden to disclose their experiences or the address of
the meeting place. The club only lasted a few weeks because David wanted to be paid, which HPB did
not agree to.
The failure of the Miracle Club, however, sparked the founding of the Theosophical Society. The
membership itself, with the enthusiasm of HPB, did not disperse. In striving to find a common
purpose Olcott scribbled a hasty note asking, "Would it not be a good thing to form a society for
this kind of study?" The phrase this kind of study referred to subjects such as the Egyptian
mysteries and the kabbalah which had been discussed in a lecture previously given to an informal
group by J. H. Felt, an architect and engineer. He had said, "the dog-and hawk-headed figures of
Egyptian hieroglyphics were accurate pictures of elementals, the spirits who convey messages at
seances."
The infant society was eagerly formed in September1875. It was co-founded by Olcott along with
William Q. Judge. Its name was furnished by Charles Sotheran who was of independent means, a high
Mason, a Rosicrucian, and a student of the kabbalah. Sotheran thought the name of the Miracle
Club was too cheap; he considered Egyptological Society, too limited; looking through a dictionary,
he found the word theosophy, a word that was unanimously agreed on at the next meeting because it
seemed to express esoteric truth as well as covering the aspects of occult scientific research,
both of which were goals of the Society. Because of Olcott's love for red tape and Helena's
ritualism the Society included all of the pomp originally planned for the Miracle Club. There was
the policy of secrecy, each member wrote F.T.S (Fellow, Theosophical Society) after their name,
and recognized each other by secret signs, most of which were borrowed from Egyptian occultism and
the Grand Lodge of Cairo.
After its establishment the Theosophical Society expounded the esoteric tradition of Buddhism
aiming to form an universal brotherhood of man, studying and making known the ancient religions,
philosophies and sciences, and investigating the laws of nature and divine powers latent in man.
The direction of the society was claimed to be directed by the secret Mahatmas or Masters of
Wisdom.
After reading the evidence of the letters supposedly written from these Mahatmas many concluded
that they were written by friends of HPB, or by HPB herself. The letters conveyed her ideas. These
conclusions were drawn after earnest men and women lavished an aggregate of several lifetimes of
study and research on the Mahatma letters. Several books and monographs, pro and con, were
written. Who Wrote the Mahatmas Letters, a book by the Hare brothers, one a disillusioned
Theosophist, was a well researched work.
Although there is not any certain evidence of these Mahatmas or Masters of Wisdom, Helena's first
book Isis Unveiled, 1877, outlined the basic precepts and the secret knowledge which they
protected. In the book's preface HPB inserted `a plea for the recognition of the Hermetic
philosophy, the ancient universal wisdom. The success of the book was greater than that of the
society, which by 1878 almost collapsed.
In July 1878 Helena P. Blavatsky became the first Russian woman to acquire United States
citizenship. Some say she did so not to have the English in India think she was a Russian spy.
She and Olcott went to India in December of that year in order to revive the society's study of
Hindu and Buddha religions.
It was in India that HPB and the society gained much support. Newly acquired supporters included
Sinnett, the statesman Allen O. Hume, and various high-caste Indians and English officials. At
this time HPB aided Sinnett and Hume in corresponding with the Masters Koot Hoomi and Morya. From
this the first suspicions of the Masters occurred, when their handwriting closely resembled that of
HPB. However, nothing was every proven conclusively.
In 1882 the headquarters of the society was moved to an estate in Adyar, near Madras. There HPB
had a shrine room constructed for the Mahatmas where they could directly manifest their
communications. A former colleague of HPB, Emma Cutting Coulomb and her husband managed the
household. They were later discharged for dishonest practices.
In 1884 HPB and Olcott toured Europe while in the United State the Coulomb's published letters
which they claimed to be written by HPB containing instructions for the Masters' manifestations
and for the operation of the shrine through secret black panels. Apparently, the panels were
constructed by Coulomb during HPB's absence to destroy her reputation. During December 1884, Richard
Hodgson of the Psychical Research Society (PRS) in London went to Adyar to investigate the
activity there. In the following spring he released a scathing report alleging fraud and trickery
by HPB and her associates. To HPB and the Theosophical Society the report was controversial for
over one hundred years. It put a tarnish upon the name of HPB and the Society. In 1986 the PRS
published an article in its Journal calling the report prejudiced, saying that Hodgson had
ignored all evidence favorable to HPB, and, that an apology was due.
Because of the controversy, Olcott sent HPB to Europe in 1885, where she toured different
countries finally settling in Germany due to deteriorating health. By then the French-born
Swedish Countess Constance Wachrmeister had moved in with HPB and helped her with her work,
especially her second book, The Secret Doctrine (1888), which is said to be her greatest work.
The Secret Doctrine outlined a scheme of evolution relating to the universe (cosmogenesis) and
humankind (anthropogenesis), and is based on three premises: (1) Ultimate Reality, as an
omnipresent, transcendent principle beyond the reach of thought; (2) the universality law of
cycles throughout nature; and (3) the identity of all souls with the Universal Oversoul and their
journey through many degrees of intelligence by means if reincarnation, in accordance with "Cyclic
and Karmic law."
The Secret Doctrine is claimed to have been largely based on the archaic manuscript of The Book of
Dzyan, which HPB interpreted. She claimed the Mahatmas communicated parts of The Secret Doctrine
to her, claiming they impressed thoughts in her mind which she put to paper. Critics say she
copied her thoughts from various existing works.
During 1889 HPB finished two more books: The Key to Theosophy an introduction to theosophical
thought and philosophy; and, The Voice of the Silence, a mystical and poetic work on the path of
enlightenment.
The work of the Theosophical Society was continued by activist Annie Wood Besant, a reviewer of
The Secret Doctrine and a convert to Theosophy. Besant's home in London became the headquarters
of the Society. She actively supported progressive causes, bringing another generation of liberal
intellectuals into the society, and became president following Olcott's death in 1907.
In all respects it is not difficult to believe that HPB possessed genuine occult inspiration and
powers for she exerted enormous influence over some of the most talented individuals of her time.
Touched by her were persons like Horace Greeley, the Honorable John L. O'Sullivan, ex-Ambassador
to Portugal; P. B. Randolph, leading American Rosicrucian; Prince Wittgenstein.
Also among those influenced by her are W. B. Yeats, the Irish poet, and "AE" (George W. Russell).
She was influential in the development of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn by promoting the
translations of Hindu scriptures and philosophical works.
HPB died in her home on May 8, 1891. She became unable to walk and suffered from various diseases.
She was cremated with a third of her ashes remaining in Europe, and a third going to America and
India each. Theosophists commemorate her death on May 8, called White Lotus Day.
It would not be a mere understatement to say Madame's Blavatsky's life was different, because it
was very different. There seems to be no single reason for this difference; one cannot say it was
just her childhood, her adolescence, her adult life; the loss of her son, or the child she dearly
loved; or her love of occult science. One is forced to say that is was several or all of these
factors which made her different and who she was. Over a hundred years following her death people
are still fascinated by the name of Madame Helena Blavatsky.
One presumes this fascination is generated by the unique pursuit of Madame Blavatsky's life itself.
One never could say she allowed life to pass her by; if anything, she propelled life. Divine
revelations appealed to her for she was mystical by nature. Yori resembled her invisible playmate
in early childhood. She did not share Christian visions because of her violent rebellion against
the church. A heaven containing thousands of angelic creatures was not for her. She was too earthy.
Her life was with people. Her saints were the Mahatmas or Masters of Wisdom, modeled on Buddhist
and Christian monks, who resided in the inaccessible portion of the earth. They were the "old
souls" who had completed their rounds of incarnations on earth, but frequently returned to help
members of humankind who deserved it: the Theosophists.
Even though many have been and are skeptical of HPB, and it must be said they have cause to be,
it cannot be believed she deliberately intended to hurt people. Although some of her ways were
suspicious, it is doubtful that she intentionally exploited people with her glimpses of the truth.
This seems contradictory to the nature of a woman who gave her deluxe accommodations to a peasant
family and came to America in steerage. She seemed to possess a strange and uncanny power, even in
youth, to hurl defiance in the face of polite society, and then force it to take her seriously.
Perhaps this is the charm and complexity of Madame Blavatsky which even today compels some
individuals to try and follow her.
A.G.H. [? ~ author unknown]