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Contents

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This book was written in the 1860s, when reliable information about Hinduism was just starting to filter back to the west.
Jacolliot was searching for the roots of western esoteric traditions in the far East.
The high point of this book is the travelogue of his encounters in India with a "fakir", who demonstrates his "siddis" (yogic powers) exuberantly.
There is also an extensive discourse on Kabbalah, and its relationship to Eastern mystical beliefs.
Jacolliot was a diffusionist, and he believed that many western esoteric traditions, specifically Egyptian, Jewish and Christian, had their origin in India.

Jacolliot, the author (1837-1890) was a French lawyer who worked as a judge in India and Tahiti.
He subsequently became a prolific author.
Although he apparently had enough familiarity with Sanskrit to do some desultory translations of the Laws of Manu, Jacolliot was not an academic.
He quotes extensively here from a text called the "Agrouchada-Parikchai,"
which appears to be a pastiche of the Upanishads, Hindu law books, and a bit of Freemasonry.
This text does not seem to exist except in Jacolliot's imagination.
Jacolliot also believed in a lost Pacific continent, and was quoted by Helena Blavatsky in Isis Unveiled in support of Lemuria.
--J.B. Hare, June 21, 2008.


Title Page

Preface

Part I. The Doctrine Of The Pitris


Chapter I. The Initiated at the Ancient Temples

Chapter II. The Brahmins

Chapter III. The Brahmin--From His Birth To His Novitiate--The Ceremony of the Djita Carma

Chapter IV. The Brahmin--From His Novitiate to His Reception Into the First Degree of His Initiation

Chapter V. The First Degree of Initiation

Chapter VI. The First Degree of Initiation.--(Continued.)

Chapter VII. The Second Degree of Initiation

Chapter VIII. The Third Degree of Initiation

Chapter IX. The Grand Council

Chapter X. The Election of the Brahmatma

Chapter XI. The Yoguys

Part Ii. The Philosophical Tenets Of The Indian Initiates


Chapter I. The Degree of Sanctity Which the Initiates Must Have Attained Before Receiving the Sacred Formula and the Fatal Secret

Chapter II. The Superior Guru--The Sacred Decade

Chapter III. The Guru--Evocations

Chapter IV. The Frontal Sign of the Initiates According to the Agrouchada-Parikchai

Chapter V. The Interpretation of the Vedas and Other Works of Sacred Scriptures

Chapter VI. Psychology of the Book of the Pitris

Chapter VII. Reason

Chapter VIII. A Text From the Vedas

Chapter IX. A Few Slocas From Manu

Chapter X. Of the Supreme Being

Chapter XI. Words Spoken by the Priests at Memphis

Chapter XII. The Formulas of Evocation

Chapter XIII. Formulas of Magical Incantation--Vulgar Magic

Part Iii. Compared With The Jewish Cabala, Etc


Chapter I. Origin of the Cabala

Chapter II. How the Sacred Books are to be Interpreted According to the Jewish Cabalists

Chapter III. Initiation Among the Cabalists

Chapter IV. The Divine Essence, According to the Cabalists

Chapter V. The Ten Zephiroth

Chapter VI. The Cabalistic Trinity

Chapter VII. The Belief in Mediating and Inspiring Spirits According to the Jewish Cabalists

Chapter VIII. Points of Resemblance Between the Doctrine of the Pitris and That of the Zend-Avesta of Persia, the Philosophy of Plato, the Alexandrian School, and of Christianity

Part Iv. Exoteric Manifestations And Demonstrations As Shown By The Fakirs


To the Reader

Chapter I. As to Who Are Initiated Into the Different Classes of Occult Power

Chapter II. Agasa

Chapter III. The Performing Fakirs

Chapter IV. The Leaf Dance

Chapter V. The Bronze Vase--Musical Accompaniments

Chapter VI. The Water-Spout--The Magic Stick

Chapter VII. Phenomena of Elevation and Knocking.

Chapter VIII. The Bamboo Stool--Arial Flowers--The Mysterious Punkah

Chapter IX. The Stationary Table--A Shower Of Knocks--The Little Mill--Flying Feathers--The Harmoniflute

Chapter X. Sand Drawing--the Metor and the Bucket of Water--Loss of Voice--Mind Reading--Reading in a Closed Book--Arial Melody--the Flying Palm--Leaf--Elevation of the Fakir

Chapter XI. Spontaneous Vegetation

Apparations


Chapter I. Mysterious Hands--the Production of Flowers, Crowns, etc.--Letters of Fire--The Spectre of a Priest of Brahma--the Phantom Musician

Chapter II. The Phantom of Karli

Conclusion

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