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ENCOUNTER OF BLAVATSKY’S SISTER WITH MASTER MORYA




Because Blavatsky was in very bad health, the doctors recommended her to stay away for a while from the tropical Indian climate, and that is why she accompanied Colonel Olcott on his travel to Europe, and when Blavatsky was in Paris, his sister took the opportunity to visit her and she narrates that on that occasion she perceived Master Morya for a few seconds.

In this regard, she said the following:


« When, about the middle of May 1884, we [I and my aunt] arrived in Paris to visit my sister, we found her surrounded by a regular staff of members of their Society who had gathered at Paris, coming from Germany, Russia, and even America, to see her after her five years' absence in India; and by a crowd of the curious who had heard of the thaumaturgic atmosphere always around her, and were anxious to become eye-witnesses to her occult powers. Truth compels me to say that H. P. Blavatsky was very reluctant to satisfy idle curiosity.

She has her own way of looking very contemptuously at any physical phenomena, hates to waste her powers in a profitless manner, and was, moreover, at the time quite ill. Every phenomenon produced at her will invariably costs her several days of sickness.

I say “at her will,” for phenomena, independent of her, took place far more frequently in their midst than those produced by herself. She attributes them to that mysterious being whom they all call their “Master.”

Such manifestations of forces (to us) unknown leave her unhurt. Every time that an accord or arpeggio of some invisible chords resounded in the air, wherever she was, and with whatever occupied, she used to hasten to her room, from whence she emerged with some order or news. Most of the “secretaries” of the Society received very often such summons quite independently of her.
. . .
I will cite an example of that:

We were four of us at Rue Notre Dame des Champs, 46 — Mme. N. A. de Fadeyev [my aunt], Mme. Blavatsky, the eminent Russian author M. Solovyov, and I — having tea at the same table of the little drawing-room, about 11 pm.

Mme. Blavatsky was asked to narrate something of her “Master,” and how she had acquired from him her occult talents. While telling us many things, she offered us to see a portrait of his in a gold medallion she wore on a chain round her neck, and opened it. It is a perfectly flat locket, made to contain but one miniature, and no more. It passed from hand to hand, and we all saw the handsome Hindu face in it, painted in India.

Suddenly our little party felt disturbed by something very strange, a sensation which it is hardly possible to describe. It was as though the air had suddenly changed, was rarefied — the atmosphere became positively oppressive, and we three could hardly breathe.

Blavatsky covered her eyes with her hand, and whispered:

-       "I feel that something is going to happen. Some phenomenon. He is preparing to do it."

She meant by “He,” her guru-master, whom she considers so powerful.

At that moment Mr. Solovyov fixed his eyes on a corner of the room, saying that he saw something like a ball of fire, of oval form, looking like a radiant golden and bluish egg.

He had hardly pronounced these words when we heard, coming from the farthest end of the corridor, a long melodious harp — a melody far fuller and more definite than any of the musical sounds we had previously heard. Once more the clear notes were repeated, and then died away. Silence reigned again in the rooms.

I left my seat and went into the passage hall, brightly lighted with a lamp. Useless to say that all was quiet, and that it was empty.

When I returned to the drawing room I found H. P. Blavatsky sitting quietly as before at the table between Mme. de Fadeyev and Mr. Solovyov. At the same time, I saw as distinctly as can be, the figure of a man, grayish, yet quite clear form, standing near my sister, and who, upon my looking at him, receded from her, paled, and disappeared in the opposite wall.

This man (or perhaps, his astral form) was of a slight build, and of middle size, wrapped in a kind of mantle, and with a white turban on his head. The vision did not last more than a few seconds, but I had all the time to examine it, and to tell every one what I distinctly saw, though, as soon as it had disappeared, I felt terribly frightened and nervous.

Hardly come back to our senses, we were startled with another wonder, this one palpable and objective. Blavatsky suddenly opened her locket, and instead of one portrait of a Master, there were two — her own facing his! »

(This testimony was mentioned by the journalist Alfred Sinnett in his book: “Incidents in the Life of Madame Blavatsky,” chapter 10, p.264-269)




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