The
following text is an article that appeared in the newspaper The Sun of New York on December 19,
1878, p.1:
SILENCE IN
THE LAMASERY
Madame Blavatsky and
the Hierophant [Olcott] off for India.
Eager to See her Dear
Heathen Again, and to Have a Little Tiger Shooting – Greetings by Phonograph – The
Theosophical Cat.
On
last Sunday night a farewell reception was given to the friends and the members
of the Theosophical Society, by the famous heathen of Eighth avenue, Madame H.
P. Blavatsky, who, together with Col. H. S. Olcott and another Theosophist,
sailed yesterday for Liverpool, en route for Bombay.
The
spacious rooms of the Lamasery were denuded of furniture, even the carpets
having been torn up and sold, and the guests sat on two or three chairs hardly
worth selling, and upon boxes and trunks corded and marked for transportation.
The
usual refreshments were provided in the usual plenty. Tea was served in
rotation, only three teacups being left from the sale, but every guest had
either a pipe or a cigarette. The long series of "Sunday nights at
home" was ending, and there was an unusual number of unusually subdued
Theosophists present.
There
was much talk of the probable future of the Theosophical Society, which, now
that it is in coalition with the Arya Samaj of Aryawari, is expected to become
a powerful factor in the development of the mental and religious freedom of the
world. But, as was natural, there was far more talk of personal memories and
anticipations. Madame Blavatsky carried fully her share of the conversation.
Her memories of the years she has passed in America were far from cheerful.
"I
hate the civilization you boast of," she said, emphatically.
But
her anticipations were rose colored.
"I
shall go to Bombay, and be with my dear heathen," she said, "who are
free from the yokes of Christianity at least. I shall only stop for a day or
two in England to visit our branch society, and then on to India. When I get
there, the first thing I shall do will be to go tiger shooting. I shall go into
the jungles with one friend, and no guides, and we will not come back till we
get each of us a tiger skin."
"But
it is not for that I go to India," she continued. "It is to work for
the Arya Samaj. I promise you you will hear of it before long."
Presently
a man came in with a phonograph which had been procured for the purpose of
carrying greetings to India, without the possibility of any mistake in their
delivery. A tall sculptor was dislodged from a barrel on which he sat, and the
phonograph was put in position, after which the greetings were shouted into the
paper funnel, and a song in pigeon Hindustanee was sung into it by a jolly
English artist. Charles, a huge theosophical cat, was then induced to purr at
the machine, and the various records were carefully put away.
Long
after midnight the talk was kept up, and from the writings of the Church in the
second century to the latest English attack on the Arya Samaj, religious themes
were discussed. On Monday and Tuesday the packing was finished, and on Tuesday
night the little party gathered in the Canada’s saloon.
Charles,
in the mean time, had been sent to a good Theosophist’s house, but had
disappeared from the basket in transitu, and has not been seen since. "I
don’t know where he is," said the Hierophant, "but I presume we will
find him in Bombay when we get there."
Yesterday
morning a few of the most intimate friends of the travellers went to the
steamer to bid them farewell. The Hierophant wrote dozens of last despatches on
the cabin table, sending messenger after messenger away on various errands, and
giving all sorts of instructions as to the future management of the society to
the newly chosen officers.
Madame
Blavatsky held high court in her stateroom, when the inevitable cigarettes were
consumed in great numbers, and when a few of her most faithful disciples were
telling her of their grief at her departure.
"I
am glad to go, but I am sorry to leave the few good friends I have found
here," she said, and one by one they bade her what was probably their last
farewell on earth.
OBSERVATIONS
The Lamasery was the
nickname given to the apartment where Blavatsky and Olcott lived in New York from
June 1876 to December 1878.
I don't know if
Blavatsky really said she was going to hunt tigers or if the journalist made that
up, but she didn't really do it.
The collaboration with
the Arya Samaj organization soon cooled.
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