THEOSOPHIC
CORRESPONDENCE :
Saint-Martin and Kirchberger
Section 2: Letters 8 - 18
LETTER IX. -- (From K.)
7th Sept. 1792.
I SEE with much pleasure, Sir, by your letter of 25th ult., that the same
day I was thinking of you, you were thinking of me.
The same causes which have given you trouble, have also prevented my reading
much of our friend Boehme. The little I have read entirely confirms your
judgment, and the comparison you make between his writings and Madame Guyon's.
I find in him a steadiness, a precision, and a solidity which cannot be
moved. You see I adopt your judgment, your whole judgment, and nothing but
your judgment. This man, destitute of learning, and without study, would,
without the light from above, be incomprehensible. . . . You have rightly
conjectured the questions I thought of putting to you on the 'Tableau Naturel';
but as I am obliged to concentrate my faculties on one point only, the one
only essential, the great mystery which St. Paul made known to the Colossians
(chap. i. 26), I reserve my inquiries for another time. Meanwhile, I am
truly obliged to you for your explanations on your two nomenclatures, and
I foresee that I shall have many questions to ask you on comparing that
of our friend with that of your school.
I believe in free communications, but what comes of such as are forced is
repugnant to me; I mean such as are not a natural and spontaneous result
of the state of our souls when they have attained to the higher degrees;
and then, if we thirst for the fountain, we scarcely think of stopping in
the pleasant paths which seem to lead to it, to say nothing of the dangers
for our inner being which may accompany this sort of communications, dangers
which you have very well described in 'Ecce Homo,' p. 24.
What an interesting work might be composed, giving it a historical form,
that it might be read eagerly by all men of desire -- the life of a lover
of truth, whom we might make to pass through the labyrinth of all the modern
errors arising from false freemasonry and unbelief, before introducing him
to a respectable chosen one who should lead him in the right way. We would
put into the mouth of this elect one the quintessence of your works and
those of our friend B., which are, actually, as little known among the learned,
and amongst people of the world, as though they had been written in the
centre of Arabia four thousand years ago! The Baron Homeds, the Schroepfers,
the Gregomas, the Gabrielis, the Sarpellis, the Cagliostros, as these jugglers
are called, would serve as rubble for the false masonry; the Nicolais, Biesters,
Gedikes, Voltaires, and Boulangers for the false ideas of religion and philosophy;
and we would so lead our hero till he was devoured with hunger and thirst
for the truth. Then our elect would show him the way of the centre without
a turning and with all its advantages. By such means an essential work might
be put into the hands of many who would not readily open a theosophical
book. This, no doubt, is an idea susceptible of many modifications, according
to the aim that may be had in view. . . .
When I am less ignorant than I am now, I shall beg you to show me your discovery
on numbers. . . .
Your remark on Madame Guyon, as to her expression propriete, is of importance;
she has not been careful to render this main idea clear enough for her readers,
which will probably account for her being profitable to so few. In this
sense, we can never have too much light. When I mentioned, in mine of 25th
July, certain lights which did not seem essential to our work, I alluded
to manifestations, physical proceedings, and communications which came under
the outward senses; and I agree with you that Madame Guyon is neither decided
nor clear enough as to the propriete we should cherish, and that which we
should resist.
References to our friend B., and explanations on the spirit of the world
and the astral region, I shall greatly prize. I know a French work which
speaks a good deal about the astral spirit, without ever being able to find
out where the author, who does not know German, got this astral spirit.
It seems that there are many people, in nearly every country, who hold similar
ideas.
You have a claim, Sir, not only to my good will, but to my gratitude, both
which sentiments I feel for you most sincerely. I owe you more than I can
say, and I cease not to pray our Great Benefactor to reward you.
&c. &c.
LETTER X. -- (From S. M.)
Petit Bourg, 6th Sept. 1792.
You will probably expect a second letter from me, Sir, before you write;
I therefore take up my pen again to answer yours of 25th August.
Nothing can be more correct than your chemical remark on the alteration
of proportions; all nature, organised and unorganised, acts by this law.
We cannot doubt that the same also rules in what is spiritual; we may make
the experiment on ourselves, whether for the amelioration of our moral affections,
or for the acquisition of light; in either of which orders we have to separate
the things which are contrary, and bring nearer those which are favourable
and analogous to our object, in order to strengthen such of our faculties
as are entangled in obstacles and darkness. Friend B. will say so much to
you on this point, when he speaks of your regeneration, and the incarnation
of the Saviour, that I may safely leave it to him.
I have read the passage you quote from him, Letter XLVI., sec. 37, 38. When
you read the 'Three Principles' you will meet with many more wonderful things
on this subject; you will there see clearly what he calls wisdom or Sophia,
and you will not agree with Pordage, wherein he says she is the precursor
of Jesus Christ in the soul, seeing that they can only come both together,
that in her he was clothed for his incorporation in the pure element, thence
to descend into the region of mixed corruptible elements, the womb of Mary,
that he might afterwards, through this death which we carry with us, raise
up with himself the human soul purified and regenerated in his divine life.
But you will agree with Pordage, when he represents this wisdom as not an
angel, but an angelic Virtue higher than all spirits of men or angels. Thus
I cannot consider it to be the spirit of the Repairer spoken of by Paul,
Rom. viii. 9, for this spirit of the Repairer is God, like the Repairer
himself; in short, It is the divine light which illumines all the wonders
of the divine immensity, whilst wisdom is only its vapour or reflection;
she allows passage through her of all these wonders, and is properly the
preserver of all the forms of spirits, as the air is of all material forms;
she dwells always with God, and when we possess her, or rather when she
possesses us, God possesses us also, for they are inseparable in their union,
though distinct in their character.
Let us turn to 'Ecce Homo.'
Page 54. "In this spirit" means in this sense, or intention.
Page 68. "The witness of the Spirit" here signifies the particular
spirits, of angels or men, already entered into the region of the other
life. Page 78, id.; page 79, id.
Page 65. "Zealous writers." I had in view Mr. Dutoit in his work
on 'The Abuse and Origin of Reason in Religions and Superstitions': the
title I may give incorrectly, but it will suffice to direct you. This work
has astonished me in many places, but has not convinced me in all; far from
it, -- to say nothing of the harshness of its style. "The judges,"
p. 129, will be the divine justice itself, as proclaimed in the Gospel,
at the last judgment; and as for the "judgments," we cannot doubt
that they will be clear enough for us to hear them, when they are passed
upon us, as our works themselves will take the place of our ears.
Pages 20, 61, 109, 110, 154. On inward travail and the means of our self-stripping
and advancement. I might in vain write volumes to make these things more
clear, for they can be made clear only in the activity of our desire, and
the experience of our personal progress. I have said enough to you on this
subject, in my foregoing letters, to make it unnecessary to revert to it;
besides, friend B. will give you such excellent hints thereon, that I may
trust it to him.
Page 56. "Spiritual denudation," or stripping, is the lively sentiment
of our divine privation here below, combined, 1st, with a sincere desire
to return to our country; 2ndly, with the inward reflections, which the
divine sun sometimes favours us by sending, in the depths of our souls;
3rdly, with the pain we experience when, after feeling some of these consolatory
reflections, we again fall into darkness, there to continue our expiation.
Thus, I do not pretend to say that we can give ourselves this wholesome
affection, but we can ask for it by our conduct and our desires, and God
is ever waiting to pour it into our souls.
Page 110. You ask, "May not man have the sentiment of his defects without
being able to deliver himself from them?" Certainly, if he do not continually
ask for help; but the same band which sent him this feeling of want, can
easily, also, if he ask, send him the remedy.
Your 7th question about M. de Hauterive obliges me to say, that there is
an exaggeration in what you have heard of him. He does not put off his corporeal
envelope, any more than others who, like him, have enjoyed, more or less,
the same favours, put off theirs. The soul leaves the body only at death;
but, during life, the faculties may extend beyond it, and communicate with
their exterior correspondents without ceasing to be united to their centre,
as our bodily eyes and all our organs correspond with surrounding objects,
without ceasing to be connected with their animal principle, the focus of
all our physical operations. It is not, however, the less true, that if
this experience of M. de Hauterive is of the secondary order, it is only
figurative of the great work which occupies us; and if it is of the higher
order, it is the great work itself. Now this is a question which I shall
not solve, especially as it would be of no profit to you. I think I shall
be doing you a better service in directing your attention to principles,
rather than in stopping at details of the doings of others.
As for 'Le Nouvel Homme,' I beg you will excuse me the task of pointing
out the additions or alterations I might have made in it after reading Boehme.
You will do this easily for yourself, as you advance in our dear B., who
is not to be thoroughly known in so short a time, or with a cursory reading.
It would be beyond my power to do it. I have sat long enough at my desk;
I must not again bury myself in that sort of work, and, henceforward, I
should wish to write only from my substance; I, therefore, at present, give
rest to my pen, in the way of work for publication. Moreover, the work in
question is rather an exhortation, a sermon, than a work of instruction,
although something of this may be got from it here and there. I wrote it
at the request of one who wished something from me in the way of exhortation.
I did it in haste; it has been printed from the first draft, and I am glad
to have it off my hands. It ought to be ready, but the affairs of my country
have stopped everything of this sort; and I know not when you will see it.
Farewell, Sir; I congratulate you that you live where there is political
quiet. Although it is far otherwise with me, I submit, and try to praise
God for all He sends, whether pleasant or the contrary. I pray for grace
to use everything that happens to me as may be most right and profitable
for my advancement.
LETTER XI. -- (From S. M.)
Amboise, 28th Sept. 1792.
A DIFFERENT address again, Sir. Since my letter of the beginning of this
month, in which I replied to yours of 25th August, I have been called, by
my father, to this my native country; I know not how long I may remain in
it. I am in a complete destitution; but friend Boehme, and our Holy Scriptures,
are my consolation and support.
My father's age will hardly permit my leaving him again. Our political doings
do not invite an early return to the capital. Thus, Sir, please address
your letters henceforward to Amboise, Departement Indre-et-Loire, being
careful to add fils to my name, lest your letters should go to my father.
It is a favour of Providence that I have known Boehme before coming to this
exile; without it, I could have expected nothing but spiritual ruin for
myself, in a little place like this, where minds are a thousand miles away
from the matter which engages us.
You do right to dwell upon the mystery given to the Colossians, i. 26. That
is the "one thing needful." In regard to your idea of a work to
make the sight of truth more easy to the eyes of the world, I think well
of it, and it is well conceived. But I am not in a favourable position to
undertake it; and if I employed what little power I still may have, of this
nature, I should employ it in something else; either in something new, the
germs of which may be found in notes I have collected, daily, ever since
I learned to think, or in translating some of Boehme's works which are unknown
to my nation. But, on this head, I do not disquiet myself; I wait, on the
one hand, to see more distinctly the course of things, before I apply myself
to my own productions, and, on the other, I wait till I have read B. all
through, that I may be more familiar with his doctrine. . . . The discovery
I mentioned to you, on numbers, would require preliminary verbal explanations;
letters would hardly suffice for the purpose. Of this you may judge by the
elements on which the discovery rests. They are: first, our particular doctrine
on the final causes of the existence of things; secondly, this same doctrine
demonstrated by the science of numbers; thirdly, a knowledge of, at least,
the first principles of elementary geometry; 4thly, a more full and profound
acquaintance with spiritual geometry. These are the ingredients of the opening
I have had. You know that Pythagoras sacrificed one hundred oxen for his
discovery of the hypotenuse; I assure you, Sir, he would have sacrificed
more than a thousand if he had drawn from this hypotenuse all that it has
given to me. But we will leave this to some future time; mountains do not
go to meet each other; but men are not mountains, and perhaps, some day,
the star of peace and justice will rise on my country and on my life. Then
-- I will not say what I will do; but my heart knows it, and you may repose
upon it.
I do not know the French work you mention, about the astral spirit, unless
it be that of M. Dutoit to which I alluded in my last letter from Petit
Bourg. I know, in fact, that in nearly every country there are many people
occupied with these ideas. There certainly is a spiritual fermentation which
must lead to an explosion; but what it will be I know not. I need not refer
you to pages of friend B. for this astral spirit; you will meet with it
all along. But take the second Index, at the end of the 10th vol. (of the
edit. 1682); look for Ghost, Stars, Seal, &c.; and they will each direct
you to a passage of the author which will satisfy your desire.
You are right, Sir, in having formed a good opinion of my late hostess (Duchess
of Bourbon). None can surpass her in the virtues of piety and the desire
of all that is good; she is truly a pattern, especially for one in her rank.
Nevertheless, I thought our friend Boehme too strong a nourishment for her
mind, especially on account of the inclination she had towards wonders of
a lower order, somnambulists, [Trance-mediums of modern nomenclature. --
Tr.] and prophets of the day. So I left her where she was, after having
done what I thought my duty in warning her, and 'Ecce Homo' had her partly
in view, with some others who were of the same proclivities.
Farewell, Sir; I thank you for your prayers to the great Recompenser in
my behalf, which I sincerely reciprocate.
I have not yet asked you to whom I am indebted for the favour of your correspondence.
I should like well to know something of how it happened that we have thus
been drawn together.
LETTER XII. -- (From K.)
Tuesday, 16th October, 1792.
YOUR two letters of 6th and 27th September arrived in due course, and were
received with all the pleasure your letters always give me. I should have
before replied to the former, if I had not been drowned in a deluge of business
brought upon us by your nation, altogether, as I hope, from a misunderstanding.
. . . We want neutrality, and nothing but neutrality. But all Switzerland
rises, to the last man, to defend itself if attacked. . . . . Forgive this
explosion on politics; my mind was full of it, and required relief.
In your first letter you give me a hope for the future which is well calculated
to lighten my cares. At the present time no Frenchman, of any party, or
of no party at all, would find our country agreeable. But, if it please
God, these political, clouds will disperse and allow us to give ourselves
up to the sweets of study and the charms of friendship. The moment, which
you give me a hope for, when I shall have the happiness to see you, would
be one of the happiest of my life.
I thank you for your explanations on 'Ecce Homo.' I know M. Dutoit's work;
I formed the same judgment of it as yourself. What you say also of M. de
Hauterive is equally in accordance with my own ideas. That separation of
the soul from the body, doubtless, is not real; we may easily, in a dream,
see our own body without motion. You say, if M. de Hauterive's facts are
of the superior order, they are the great work itself. This, beyond doubt,
is a great truth; it is the the ----- of the ancients; and such a fact,
well authenticated, is like a principle. Tell me, if you may, without indiscretion,
whether you know, for a certainty, of any one having arrived at that high
degree. At the same time, no doubt, principles are more profitable for me
than the doings of others.
I have a particular request to make to you, the granting of which may even
help you with our friend Boehme: it is, that you will run a parallel between
the nomenclature of your school and the terminology of Boehme. What is the
meaning, for instance, which you attach to the word "lance composed
of four metals"? ('Des Erreurs et de la Verite, p. 35.) What is B.'s
term corresponding with this lance? And in what passage, in Boehme, is there
a correspondence with what you say in 'Des Erreurs et de la Verite,' p.
28? "Man was lost in going from 4 to 9, and he can never recover himself
but by going from 9 to 4. This is a dreadful law, I know, but it is nothing
compared with the law of the number fifty-six, a frightful law, frightful
for those who expose themselves to it, for they cannot arrive at 64, till
they have undergone it in all its rigour."
You ask me what led to our correspondence: it was the sentiments of benevolence
throughout your works, to which it is impossible to remain a stranger, when
one has chords in one's own soul pitched to the same key, which drew me
to you. Your name was no mystery to me, for you enjoy a well-merited reputation
amongst true thinkers in all Germany. Your work 'Des Erreurs et de la Verite'
is not only known and appreciated, but it has also been commented upon by
an anonymous savant, in company with the 'Tableau Naturel.' . . . . If you
like I will send it you. Moreover, I have, at the court of Munich, a friend
who tells me he has read the 'Tableau Naturel' more than twenty times, &c.
Within these few days Providence has led me to the discovery, in the middle
of my native city, of an old ecclesiastic who leads an obscure and retired
life, who, unknown to all the world, has been busy reading our friend Boehme
these forty-three years. It is through him I have just obtained 'The Three
Principles' and the 'Aurora,' and he will try to procure for me the remaining
few treatises I still want.
I also have daily to notice the great goodness and care with which Providence
leads me in both my private and my public life. I have just had such marked
proofs of it that I could not refrain from telling you so, for the glory
of our great Benefactor, before whom I prostrate myself in my nothingness.
LETTER XIII. -- (From S. M.)
Amboise, 6 Nov. 1792.
IF my nation were as peaceful as myself, Sir, it would leave yours in repose;
besides, I have only to read friend B., chap. xii. No. 40, of 'The Threefold
Life,' to prevent my loving war. But I hope, with you, that matters will
be arranged. I congratulate you heartily on the discovery you have made.
Tell me, I beg of you, in your next, if your good ecclesiastic knows French
as well as you, and, especially, if he speaks it, as no doubt you do; for
it is difficult to write it like you without having well rubbed it in speaking.
You may judge how this incident revives my ideas and projects which I have
barely hinted to you; but, independently of the difficulties your country
may, for the present, oppose to a Frenchman, I have at this moment others
of a melancholy nature. My father has, within these few days, had a violent
attack of paralysis, which, though it may not immediately threaten his life,
leaves us at least no hope of his recovery, at his advanced age. My life
is consequently now to be devoted to my filial duties, and those cares which
my father's state necessarily requires. In the midst of my sad occupations
I shall reply to all the items of your letter as well as I can.
I have had the honour to tell you that I did not doubt that there have been,
and still are, some privileged men who have had, and still have, perceptions
of the great work. I do not doubt that my first teacher, and several of
his disciples, enjoyed some of these favours. But to assert this will not
help you much. Yet how are we to make such facts evident to a third person,
and authenticate them to him? The story which we might relate might excite
his curiosity for a while, without convincing him. I return therefore to
principles, which I prefer, advising you to dive into them till you are
surprised, not that such facts are sometimes, but rather that they are not
universal, such being the rights and elements of our nature. There are,
however, innumerable degrees in the distribution of these favours; those
I have known enjoyed them only partially, as the fruit of their own labours.
The elect of another order enjoy by the gratuitous voluntary action of that
Wisdom which is above; you must be sensible of the difference. In short,
Sir, if you want full details on these subjects, open our Holy Scriptures;
they are nothing but a collection of the works of the Spirit on the elect;
and these works or communications will there be seen in all shades and colours,
without fear of the alloys which are so commonly found with the elect of
a lower order. Observe what was recommended to Boehme at the time of his
election: it was that he should carefully read the Scriptures.
The parallel you ask for between his nomenclature and ours would be too
long to write; I shall restrict myself to the example you quote. The "lance,
composed of four metals," is nothing else than the great name of God
composed of four letters. The extract of this name constitutes the essence
of man; it is thus we are made in the image and likeness of God, and this
quaternion which we have in us, and which distinguishes us so clearly from
all the creatures of nature, is the organ and imprint of that famous cross
in which friend Boehme so magnificently describes to us the eternal divine
generation, and the natural generation of everything that takes life, in
this world or the next.
"Lost in going from 4 to 9," signifies in going from spirit to
matter, which, in dissolution, according to numbers, gives 9. Boehme gives
another signification to 9, when he considers it as the first after 10.
Nor is he wrong, any more than we are; he presents this number in the divine
order, and we in the elementary, and all these aspects are acceptable to
our intelligence, knowing that each number is universal. This is a certain
truth, but it requires a great calmness of conception to apprehend it, and
would take volumes to elucidate.
As to the law 56, I have not, so far, found numerically, any trace of it
in Boehme; and I confess it was a light given to me personally, under the
instructions I received at Lyons twenty years ago. It depends on the knowledge
of the properties and progressions of the number 8, which I do not think
it would be profitable to you for me to speak of before you have made yourself
familiar with our numerical language, and this can hardly be accomplished
by letter. So we will leave this subject to a more favourable time, which
I dare hope for in the future. But if Boehme does not speak of it numerically,
he speaks of it very clearly in his doctrine. For of what does he not speak?
And when he represents the wicked one, and those who are like him, plunged
for ever, after this world, in the horrors of the fire of the first principle
which is kindled by the criminals themselves, he shows me, in nature, the
state of this number 56, in which the criminal will remain, whilst the just
and purified will attain to 64, or unity.
I dare not accept the German book you are good enough to offer me, unless
on the condition of paying for it. . . . My pecuniary means are ample, therefore
do not spare me. I rejoice with you, Sir, on the favours you tell me you
receive continually. May Providence still increase them for you, is my earnest
prayer.
I beg you will ascertain from your ecclesiastic, whether he is full enough
of Boehme's system on the generation of the souls of men to have no doubts
about it. I see Boehme distinguishes well enough, between the animal soul
and the divine soul, as to their nature; but I do not see that he distinguishes
very clearly their generations. Now, we possess, on this subject, a certain
grand foundation, which makes me rather careful; this is the only point
on which I find it necessary to watch this divine writer; on all other points
of his doctrine I am at his feet.
Farewell, Sir: let me partake in your prayers.
LETTER XIV. -- (From K.)
Morat, 26th Nov. 1792.
YOUR interesting letter of 6th has given me all the more pleasure, that
I feared mine of 16th October was lost. You inquire whether my ecclesiastic,
who has given up his calling long ago, in consequence of the enmity of his
brethren, speaks French. He does not. In this capital, French is the language
of the world and of society; German that of reading, business, and government.
As for myself, I speak French habitually.
You are in trouble for your father; I am for my daughter, who is sometimes
brought by her disorder to the brink of the grave. I have frequently been
obliged to leave her for weeks together, to attend the meetings of our Grand
Council in the capital; a sacrifice the more costly because all her confidence
is in me.
I return to your letter, and thank you for the present of the "lance
composed of four metals," and for your grand idea of the universality
of each number. The thought that every number is universal had struck me,
and I will give you the train of reflections which have occurred to my mind
on the subject. It is not only probable, but even beyond doubt, that the
Supreme Wisdom has disposed all things in measure, number, and weight. Wis.
xi. 21.
It is not only possible, but, according to our poor reason, very likely,
that everything constituting one class or genus, of greater or less extent,
has, in itself, a sign, a common character, by which the Sovereign Wisdom
has thought right to make them distinguishable to intelligent beings, as
belonging to a common class. Again, say I, it is possible this sign, common
to a whole class, may be a number. In this hypothesis, each number may perhaps
designate a general idea; that is, an idea including all those of the same
class. This hypothesis has an imposing title in its favour, the successive
testimony of the good and learned of every age for at least two thousand
four hundred years. But it is yet for me only an hypothesis, till I have
stronger proofs than mere tradition. We must try a key ourselves, before
we can be sure that it will open all the doors.
To know whether the ancients possessed such a key, I open the 'Golden Verses'
of Pythagoras; I find there, that he swears by the sacred quaternion. I
open his commentator, Hierocles, and find that Pythagoras, having learned
in Egypt the name of names, called it Tetractys, the quaternion, which signified,
Fountain of nature, ever flowing. What more was needed to put me on the
way? With the aid of a little silence and meditation, I find that the number
4 might well be applied to everything coming from this source; I apply my
hypothesis, and find the Redeemer, who appeared on the earth after four
times a thousand years. Four evangelists, and, what no one seems before
to have remarked, 22 epistles of the Apostles, including the Apocalypse,
two and two is four. Prophets, 22 books in the Old Testament. I apply my
hypothesis to the most ingenious of inventions, I find 22 letters in our
alphabet, and the ten numerals reduce themselves to 1, 2, 3, 4.
I have not read sufficiently of Boehme. I am ignorant of his nomenclature
of numbers. The old ecclesiastic has not spoken to me of numbers, either.
In answer to your question, he has given me a hypothesis too long to speak
of at present. Through his assistance I am now in possession of a complete
copy of our friend B.; and from Germany I have received an interesting commentary,
in 4to., on this author.
Farewell, Sir: believe in my friendship and my thankfulness as you believe
in yourself. Do not write me till you hear from me again, as your letter
might miss me.
LETTER XV. -- (From K.)
Morat, 14th Dec. 1792.
JUST returned from a journey, and near my daughter's chamber, who is very
ill, I continue my letter of 28th ult., which I was obliged to leave off
suddenly.
Be kind enough to tell me, in your first letter, if I am mistaken in my
calculation of 28th Nov. The connection of all truths, the astonishing extent
of some, the possibility of an universal arithmetic, more charming than
that spoken of by Leibnitz; a Novum Organum for the discovery of truth,
better than Chancellor Bacon's: all these, as I view them, seem to me to
have something of a real foundation in the science of natural numbers. But
I confess that, eager for the fountain-head, my heart cares chiefly for
the way that leads to it, and would willingly disregard all the rest. A
reference to the different passages in B., which you have found bearing
most on this subject, would give me a lively pleasure.
On my last journey but one to Berne, the old ecclesiastic, whom I will call
our Abbe, for short, spoke to me of his theory of the origin of the divine
and animal soul of man. He was minute, to the last degree, on the subject;
but I will report to you only the leading features that I can remember.
I hope, some day, you will speak with him yourself; he understands French
a little, although he cannot explain himself in it. I will interpret for
you. His view is that, before the origin of the world, there were three
hierarchies: the first, that of Michael, formed after the properties of
the Father, full of desires, full of fire, devoured with hunger for God,
seeking continually to approach Him more and more.
The second, that of Lucifer, formed after the properties of the Son. The
characteristic of this hierarchy was an imperious inclination to penetrate
into the depths of all the mysteries of Divinity, an unquenchable thirst
for light and knowledge.
The third, that of Uriel, after the properties of the Holy Spirit. Its character
is an insatiable desire to enjoy God, to delight in Him. Lucifer fell because
be wanted to know experimentally, empirically, what fire and darkness was.
All his hierarchy did not wholly fall with him, but all were expelled; and
out of the part which were the least guilty and least degraded, the divine
breath was formed which animated our first father. The incarnation state
was to serve for trial for this order of beings; and if Adam, by obedience,
had stood the trial, he would have ascended to all the splendour which Lucifer
had before. After the fall of Lucifer, a new universe was created, and,
from this universe, Adam received his animate soul; he lost, by his fall,
the divine light, and got the astral spirit or reason, for guide, instead.
It is not for me, in any way, to give my opinion on this hypothesis; my
attention and desires, moreover, being turned in another direction, towards
a mystery of more importance, that which St. Paul committed to the Colossians.
Of all things, the most essential, the most sublime, and perhaps most rare,
is true Christianity; and the way to it, in my terminology, is the great
work. The writings of our friend Boehme, for which I shall for ever be indebted
to you, contain sublime things on this matter. The Holy Scriptures, the
source from which B. drew his treasure, and your writings, besides the principles
of your school, which lean towards the work of physical communications,
contain truths of the greatest importance to my favourite subject. Besides
all these riches, there is nothing else to be desired but a helping hand
to show us the order in which we ought to use and enjoy these materials,
and, above all, to direct us to the order of the integral parts which constitute
the great work, so that we may not fall into a vicious circle, in forming
our ideas of these operations. If you will kindly write to me on this, as
you and I understand each other, one page will suffice.
I hope you have received the little German book I sent you, via Lyons. Please
tell me what you think of the author's intelligence; tell me also the edition
and the page of the 'Lettres Edifiantes' which confirmed your discovery
on the hypothenuse. That square of the hypothenuse once gave me a satisfaction
of the same nature, though not of the same species. When will the happy
time come when we shall work arithmetic together?
Let me always have the benefit of your remembrance before the Divine throne,
and be ever assured of my attachment.
P. S. I have just suffered a great shock: I have lost my daughter. I was
perhaps too much attached to her, and God has taken her from me. She suffered
for years with angelic patience and sweetness.
LETTER XVI. -- (From S. M.)
Amboise, 1st Jan. 1793.
I HAVE received your two letters, Sir, the latter of which has afflicted
me for the affliction that has befallen you. The same grief awaits me from
day to day; there is no hope of my father's recovery; and he has resisted
death so long already only by the strong constitution with which nature
endowed him; in which I am entirely unlike him; for my bodily frame, though
healthy, is as weakly as, on the contrary, his was favoured by our common
mother.
One of my most ardent desires is, certainly, to go to your land, and also
to the banks of the Rhine, where I have some very dear connections; but
I cannot decide upon any of these projects so long as I am tied as I am,
whether by the sacred duties which keep me here, or by the impediments which
our Government puts in the way of our travelling. Let us hope that Providence
will dispose all in His wisdom, and let us commit all into His hand.
What you say about numbers contains much that is true, particularly that
which relates to the universal quaternion; but it also contains something
conventional, and, in this order of things, there ought not to be. Now,
your analogy of the four Evangelists, of the twenty-two epistles of the
Apostles, of the twenty-two letters, &c. -- this is conventional. The
number of Evanvelists recognised might be larger than it is, without the
number 4 thereby losing anything. You know there have been about fifty;
you know that some epistles are in question as to their authenticity; you
know that the number of Hebrew letters has varied, etc. But what is a true
basis, is, the Redeemer's appearing at the epoch of the fourth millennial.
Above all, the reduction of 1, 2, 3, 4, to the denary -- things which whole
volumes would not suffice to develop entirely.
What you ask, in regard to the 'Lettres Ediflantes,' is in the 26th volume,
12mo., p. 146, Paris edition, 1783. I cannot exactly refer to passages,
in our friend B., on numbers; look, however, in 'The Threefold Life,' iii.,
17, 18, on the ternary, and the six and seven forms in nature; the fourth
chapter on the same subject; the sixth chapter, v. 65, on the quaternion,
or the cross; chapter xvi. 49, on the number 9 and number 10; chapter x.
31, 32, on the two senaries and the number 12; chapter xi. 94, on the Turks,
who attain the number 1000 (a thing which has greatly surprised me, and
which I do not yet sufficiently understand to know whether I ought to believe
it or reject it), &c. In your own reading, you may select many other
similar passages, for he speaks of everything in each of his works, though
more or less in full.
As for the way, you are seeking, for the attainment of what is really the
Great Work, read the twelfth of the 'Forty Questions,' v. 12 to 22 inclusive.
You will there see to whom you must apply, and judge whether it is possible
to show more clearly the end we aim at, the way that leads to it, and the
treasures which await us, if we have courage to renew ourselves sufficiently
to reach it.
What your Abbe tells you about souls is a literal extract of the author's
doctrine in 'The Three Thrones'; but I have nowhere yet seen in this author,
that it was "from the remaining and less guilty" of the fallen
hierarchy that the divine breath was formed which animated our first father.
I copy your words, and they seem to me so far from the spirit of the author,
and from true principle, that I presume you may not have caught what the
Abbe said exactly, which you can verify when you have the opportunity. For
the rest, all you tell me, from him, is no answer to my consultation. I
asked only whether Boehme gave any convincing proofs of his statement as
to the successive generation of human souls, which he derives and engenders
one from another, as is the case in the physical order; for my question
applied to souls spiritual, not animal. I said that this author distinguished
clearly between these two kinds of souls, as to their nature; but I feared
he confounded them as to the law of their generation. This is a point I
have not yet been able to unravel in the doctrine of our beloved author,
the subject being so deep. I looked for help therein from your Abbe, who
has been studying him so long.
You do not say whether you have received 'Le Nouvel Homme.' Do not be afraid
of saying what you think about it; you know what I think of it myself: moreover,
it is always good to lower the conceit of authors.
LETTER XVII. -- (From K.)
Berne, 23rd Jan. 1793.
BUT for a pressure of engagements of all sorts, I should not have delayed
so long, Sir, the acknowledgment of your interesting letter of 1st inst.,
which I received on the 11th, during the meetings of our Grand Council.
I was on two committees, one of high importance; they took up nearly all
my time, monopolized nearly all my powers. My recent loss has been felt
more sensibly here even than at Morat: my daughter's soul was very closely
joined to mine. What, at first, gave me strength to bear the shock, was,
reading some passages of B. Since my return to Berne, I have not had the
same resource to help me to contend against the painful images of my mind;
and if ever in my life I had wished for a certain kind of physical communications,
I certainly should have done so now, after this sad loss; the more so, because
our friend B. believed it possible, though difficult: see a remarkable passage
in the 'Forty Questions,' Q. xxvi. v. 13. The wish to know whether her spirit
still responded to the feelings of my heart, the desire to satisfy myself
as to her present state, &c., would certainly have prevailed; but I
repose in God's will, which is without bounds; and I have tried, in this
matter, as in all others, to sink my own will in His.
The essential part of my perception of natural numbers is the basis, namely,
the thought that Providence may have given a number as a characteristic
sign of all manifestations, all effects, all results from a common cause,
which number would be at the head of this sort of ideas, so that, on seeing
it placed there, not by himself, but by Providence, an attentive man would
recognise the idea as belonging to the class. A word of correction from
you thereon would be very acceptable to me. I coincide with your remarks
as to what was conventional in some of my examples. My thought was, that
the early Church retained four Gospels: did not Providence direct this choice
in so important a matter? &c. I have only one more question to ask on
this subject, viz., whether you allow my method of reckoning; that is, whether
you allow 22 to be equal to 4? which, in our arithmetic, would serve to
make reductions, perhaps discoveries. According to this calculation, 13,
as also 22, 31, 40, 112, 121, 202, 211, 301, 400, 1003, 1111, 1102, 1300,
4000, would all make 4.
Thank you for your information about the 'Lettres Edifiantes': the complete
collection is very scarce here; and I have not yet been able to meet with
vol. xxvi. As for friend B.'s number, as he uses a key of his own, I must
suspend my inquiries on this subject. We must attend, in this life, always
to what is most urgent; and my life, at present, is split into pieces, in
the position I am in.
I thank you, also, heartily, for pointing out sections 12 to 22 of the xii.
of the 'Forty Questions.' The importance of these few verses demands a profound
study. I purpose writing, for my own use, my thoughts on this matter, which
I will submit to your judgment and correction. Meanwhile, I will give you
a first outline of my hypothesis; and I trust you will kindly tell me where
it deviates from the truth, and whether it may, with some corrections, compare
with friend B., who is still so little known to me, whose ideas I have never
been able to grasp comprehensively; I know him only by fragments.
I figure to myself, that there is in our souls, in the most secret place
of our understanding, a sanctuary, a mirror, which alone receives the rays
of heavenly light which lightens every man that comes into the world. This
heavenly light, this sun, shines always without interruption; it is the
word, logos, which, in its time, incarnated itself for the purpose of making
itself more manifest to us poor mortals. In the mirror which receives its
rays, we see everything, even external objects, which are transmitted to
us by our senses. It is not that we need the senses in order to see external
objects in this mirror, experience proves the contrary; but in our ordinary
waking state, the senses -- weakened or destroyed -- prevent external impressions
from reaching the mirror. As long as we see external things in this glass
only, and regulate the preservation of our temporal life and our body by
this view, all goes well, and the mirror remains pure; but, when our will
lays hold of those images in the mirror, desires them, -- wants to unite
itself with them -- and considers them its sovereign good, or is frightened
by them, -- then our imagination fixes them, corporifies them, so to speak,
because it is of the same temper as the mirror. This corporification covers
the glass with clouds, just as if an impure breath had passed over it; and,
although the sun still shines upon it, the mirror, being obscured and spotted,
can only reflect the gross things of sense. It is only by looking away from
these images, and fixing our attention on such parts of the mirror as are
not tarnished, and ardently desiring to get to the word which shines there,
that the traces of the impure breath gradually disappear; and by our strong
will, our desire for unity, the rays of the sun become fixed, just as images
of external sensible objects are fixed by our desire. Then, these rays,
having become substantial, unite with and nourish our souls, and gradually
enlighten them, not by this mirror only, but immediately, directly, and
in all fulness.
My hypothesis, on which your remarks will be very acceptable, has a distant
likeness to the system of Malebranche, in his 'Recherche de la Verite"
and his 'Meditations Chretiennes.' The passages in St. Paul, 1 Cor, xiii.
12; 2 Cor. iii. 18, seem to confirm my ideas on these subjects. In Exodus
xxxiii. 20, the Lord says to Moses, "There shall no man see me and
live." "When we fear God, and desire him only, ardently, we are
no more alive to the world; and if the glass in our hearts is pure, we may
hope for that blessedness." Matt. v. 8. Farewell. &c.
LETTER XVIII. -- (From S. M.)
Amboise, 13th Feb. 1793.
I HAVE not been in a hurry to write to you, Sir, believing I should shortly
hear from you again, to thank me for a present I sent you in the person
of Count Divonne. This young man is more advanced than I am in inward Divine
favours, for he is more worthy than I, and deserves better treatment. I
will not give you his history, he will have done it himself. I am impatient
to know if you have met: meanwhile, I reply to your letter of 23rd January.
I sympathise with you in your mournful bereavement. Providence has likewise
afflicted me in taking from me a most kind and respected father. I lost
him last month; since when, I am overhead in business, and I know not when
I shall be out of it; I will not trouble you with all my embarrassments.
If I were free, my inclination would soon take me to Berne, as Divonne can
tell you; but our home difficulties about certificates and passports are
in the way. Moreover, I know not whether we Frenchmen, who have not emigrated,
can expect to be well received abroad, after what has passed at home. Remember
what you said to me two or three months ago; and please to tell me frankly
what you would advise me to do, or not to do, under the circumstances.
Providence cannot have attached numbers to creatures for signs. It has given
properties to each, and these properties are manifested by numbers, which,
as you see, are their fruit; their internal and natural language, instead
of only their seal; otherwise, numbers would be something external and dead.
It is possible Providence presided at the selection of the 4 evangelists,
as it is unquestionable it presides over all things; but I do not think
it was directly; and I still make no account of this analogy. Your reduction
of the numbers 22, 31, &c., is right in principle; but we must be careful
not to confound the results, for their elements are different. Thus, I well
enough see that 4 rules in the series you give me, but I see it rule everywhere
with a different character; this is a point it is indispensable we should
attend to, if we would not change the nature of things. All things are like,
nothing equal; this is a fundamental axiom. Your ideas of the soul's mirror
seem to me very sound; they will be still more so when they have been wire-drawn
in the process of regeneration. Read the first part of the 'Incarnation,'
xiii. 1, and you will see from whence we ought to derive our instructions.
Indeed, ever since I have read our delightful Boehme, I look upon all that
I have written as mere child's-play in wisdom, although I am fifty; and
I purpose, in future, to walk more circumspectly. . . . Talking of books,
if you will look into Arnold's 'Ecclesiastical History,' vol. ii., part
iii., chap. xxvi. 556, 558, 559, you will find what will surprise you, relating
to events that have just taken place with us, particularly the overthrow
of our royal dynasty. Joachim Greulich foresaw it in 1653, and it has been
in print nearly a century. You who are fond of such instances of communications
will be pleased with this which is so striking.
Farewell, Sir: may Providence grant me the means of going to you; I shall
consider it a great mark of His goodness. My compliments to Count Divonne.
Letter of Kirchberger of -- February, missing.