DIREFUL PROPHECIES
THE whole mystic fraternity of Astrologers is now engaged in showing how
the heavens portend great changes on this our earth. They agree with H.P.B.,
who said that her Eastern friends told her of coming cyclic changes now very
near at hand. Beyond doubt there is some truth in all these sayings, although
here and there the astrologers definitely prognosticating are not supported by
fact. Sepharial, for instance, staked his reputation on the death of the Prince
of Wales, which did not come off, and now where is the reputation? Just as good
as ever, for astrologers know that either the judgment of the astrologer may be
at fault from sundry causes, or that the birth-hour may be wrong, or that some
saving aspect of the stars has been overlooked. Great earthquakes like that of
Zante or the one in Kuchan come up, and the astrologers, while they regularly
in those years foresaw earthquakes, did not seem able to locate them for any
spot. They were afraid to say Persia for fear it might be in London. But earth
quakes were foretold. A steady prognostication of disturbance has been indulged
in, and this general outlook would seem right. The disturbances were expected
in the realm of mind, morals, and religion by those true astrologers who seldom
speak, and the increase of crime like that of bomb-throwing justifies each
month the general prediction. Seismic disturbance is the physical sign of
disturbance in the moral, psyhic, and mental fields. This is an old
axiom in the East. In the record of the earthquake said to have taken place
when Jesus died we have the Christian reflection of the same idea.
That earthquakes, floods, and great social changes would go on increasing
has been known to Theosophists since the day Tom Paine saw psychically "a new
order of things for the human race opening in the affairs of America," before
the revolution. And ever since the increment of disaster has been great. The
motto adopted by the makers of the Union - "A new order of ages" - was an echo
from the realm of soul to the ears of men on earth. It marked a point in the
cycle. The record of the disasters during the years since then would be found
appalling. It takes in Asia and Europe, and would show millions of sudden
deaths by violent earth-convulsions. And now in 1894 even Herbert Spencer,
looking at the mental and social fields of human life, says in a magazine
article:
A nation of which the legislators vote as they were bid and of
which the workers surrender their rights of selling their labor where they
please has neither the ideas nor the sentiments needed for the maintenance of
liberty.... We are on the way back to the rule of the strong hand in the shape
of the bureaucratic despotism of a socialistic organization and then of the
military despotism which must follow it; if, indeed, some social crash does
not bring the latter upon us more quickly.
Evidently this deeply philosophical and statistical writer feels the
pressure in the atmosphere of social and material life. There is much
unconscious prophecy in what he says. Earthquakes and deaths from them are
dreadful, but they can be avoided when their probable place is known. But
social earthquakes, moral pestilence, mental change belong to man, go with him
where he goes, and cannot be averted by any alteration of place.
In the Illustrated American a writer on astrology gives definite
prophecy of disaster. He erects a figure of the heavens for noon of November
12, 1894, showing a conjunction of Sun, Uranus, Venus, and Mercury in Scorpio,
with Saturn only fifteen degrees away. Astrologically this is very bad. With
the moon at the full in Taurus - the bull - it is ominous of floods and
earthquakes. But we may add that in the psychic Zodiac it shows floods and
heaving in the moral and social structure of the poor orphan man. Uranus and
Saturn are bad planets anyway; they are erratic and heavy, subtle, dark, and
menacing. This writer predicts ominously, but remains indefinite as to place.
We will add that dying nations like those of Persia and China will feel most
whatever effects shall be due; and in Europe, while there will be physical
disturbance, the greater trouble will be in the social and governmental
structures.
The astrologer then runs forward to December 30, 1901, when he says six
planets will be in one sign and in a line, with a seventh opposite on the same
line projected. This, it is said by such an ancient sage as Berosus, will
bring a flood when it takes place in the zodiacal sign Capricornus, as is to be
the case in 1901.
Many Theosophists believe these prognostications, others deride them. The
former ask what shall we do? Nothing. Stay where you are. If you remove, it is
more than likely you will run into the jaws of a blacker fate. Do your duty
where you find yourself, and if from your goodness you are a favorite of the
gods you will escape, while if you are not their favorite it is better for you
to die and take another chance at bettering your character. Death will come when
it will, and why should we fear, since it is "a necessary end." Theosophists too
often occupy themselves with these woful lookings into the future, to the
detriment of their present work. They should try to discover the fine line of
duty and endeavor, leaving the astrologers of today, who are more at sea than
any other mystics, to con over a zodiac that is out of place and calculate with
tables which delude with the subtle power that figures have to lie when the
basis of calculation is wrong.
William Q. Judge
Path, March, 1894
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