Helena Petrovna 
von Hahn, 
more popularly known 
as Madame Blavatsky 
or H.P.B., came from a 
noble family in Ukraine. 
Her father, 
Peter von Hahn 
was a descendant 
of German nobility; 
while her mother, Helena 
Andreyevna Hahn, 
came from one 
of the oldest families of 
Russian nobility and was 
also a celebrated novelist. 
As a child she would 
often have visions and 
displayed clairvoyance 
as well as other 
metaphysical phenomena. 
Years later,
she traveled 
through Europe and 
the Middle East studying 
under various teachers 
and Sufi saints. 
She met her teacher, 
an Indian yogi named 
Master Morya, in London 
who later directed her 
to go to New York 
in the United States. 
Once there, she founded 
the Theosophical Society. 
In 1885, 
she started to write 
“The Secret Doctrine” 
which was finally 
published 
three years later in 1888.
“The Secret Doctrine”
has been acknowledged
by many as one of 
the most remarkable
books in the world. 
It is considered to be 
the Bible of Theosophy, 
a sourcebook of 
the esoteric tradition 
that outlines 
the fundamental tenets 
of the secret doctrine 
of the past ages.
Published 
as two volumes
during her lifetime – 
“The Cosmogenesis” 
and “Anthropogenesis” 
- “The Secret Doctrine”
explains the origin and 
evolution of the universe
and of humanity
through an account of 
"Root Races" dating back
millions of years. 
Although the writer 
of “The Secret Doctrine,”
Madame Blavatsky often
expressed that she was
only the compiler
of ancient wisdom 
that was passed on to her.
The true authors of the
work were her teachers,
the Mahatmas, 
or Great Souls, 
who were the guardians
of the Secret Wisdom 
of the ages. 
Today on Between
Master and Disciples,
we invite you to listen to
excerpts of 
Madame Blavatksy’s book, 
“Gems from the East: 
A Birthday Book 
of Precepts and Axioms.” 
We thank you 
for your kind presence 
for today’s episode of
Between Master 
and Disciples. 
Join us again
next Thursday for
part 2 of excerpts from
Madame Blavatsky’s book,
“Gems from the East: 
A Birthday Book 
of Precepts and Axioms.”
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to Supreme Master
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We wish you
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every day.
GEMS FROM THE EAST
A Birthday Book 
of Precepts and Axioms
JANUARY
"Uttishat! – Rise! Awake!
Seek the great Teachers, 
and attend! 
The road
Is narrow as a knife-edge! 
Hard to tread!"
"But whoso once 
perceiveth Him that IS; --
Without a name, Unseen, 
Impalpable, Bodiless, 
Undiminished, Unenlarged,
To senses undeclared, 
without an end,
Without beginning, 
Timeless, 
Higher than height,
Deeper than depth! Lo! 
Such an one is saved!
Death hath not power 
upon him!" 
– The Secret of Death 
(from The Katha 
Upanishad)
The first duty 
taught in Theosophy, 
is to do one's duty 
unflinchingly by 
every duty. 
The heart which follows 
the rambling senses 
leads away his judgment 
as the wind leads a boat 
astray upon the waters. 
He who casts off 
all desires, living free 
from attachments, 
and free from egoism, 
obtains bliss. 
To every man that is born, 
an axe is born 
in his mouth, by which 
the fool cuts himself, when 
speaking bad language. 
As all earthen vessels 
made by the potter 
end in being broken, 
so is the life of mortals. 
Wise men are 
light-bringers. 
A just life, a religious life, 
this is the best gem. 
Having tasted 
the sweetness of illusion 
and tranquility, one 
becomes free from fear, 
and free from sin, 
drinking in the sweetness 
of Dhamma (law). 
False friendship is 
like a parasitic plant, 
it kills the tree it embraces. 
Cut out the love of self, 
like an autumn lotus, 
with thy hand! 
Cherish the road of peace. 
As the bee collects nectar, 
and departs without 
injuring the flower, 
or its color or scent, 
so let a Sage 
dwell in his village. 
As rain does not 
break through 
a well-thatched house, 
passion will not 
break through 
a well-reflecting mind. 
He who hath 
too many friends, 
hath as many candidates 
for enemies. 
That man alone is wise, 
who keeps the mastery 
of himself. 
Seek refuge in thy soul; 
have there thy Heaven! 
Scorn them that 
follow virtue for her gifts! 
All our dignity 
consists in thought, 
therefore let us contrive 
to think well; for that is 
the principle of morals. 
Flattery is a false coin 
which circulates only 
because of our vanity. 
Narrowness of mind 
causes stubbornness; 
we do not easily believe 
what is beyond 
that which we see. 
The soul ripens in tears. 
This is truth 
the poet sings – 
That a sorrow's crown 
of sorrows 
Is remembering 
happier things. 
Musk is musk because 
of its own fragrance, 
and not from being called 
a perfume by the druggist. 
Not everyone ready 
for a dispute is as quick 
in transacting business. 
It is not every 
graceful form that contains 
as graceful a disposition. 
If every pebble became 
a priceless ruby, then 
pebble and ruby would 
become equal in value. 
Every man thinks 
his own wisdom faultless, 
and every mother 
her own child beautiful. 
If wisdom were 
to vanish suddenly 
from the universe, 
no one yet would 
suspect himself a fool. 
A narrow stomach 
may be filled
to its satisfaction, 
but a narrow mind 
will never be satisfied, 
not even with all the riches 
of the world. 
He who neglects his duty 
to his conscience, 
will neglect to pay his debt 
to his neighbor. 
Mite added to mite 
becomes a great heap; 
the heap in the barn 
consists of small grains. 
He who 
tasteth not thy bread 
during thy lifetime, 
will not mention thy name 
when thou art dead.
FEBRUARY
"Behold, 
we know not anything;
I can but trust 
that good shall fall
At last – far off – 
at last, to all,
And every winter change 
to spring. 
"So runs my dream: 
but what am I?
An infant crying 
in the night:
An infant crying 
for the light:
And with no language 
but a cry." 
– Tennyson (In Memoriam) 
Two things are 
impossible in this world 
of Maya: to enjoy more 
than Karma (retribution) 
hath allotted; 
to die before one's hour 
hath struck. 
A student without 
inclination for work 
is like a squirrel 
on its wheel; 
he makes no progress. 
A traveler 
without observation 
is a bird without wings. 
A learned man 
without pupils, is a tree 
which bears no fruit; 
a devotee 
without good works, is 
a dwelling without a door. 
When Fate overtakes us, 
the eye of Wisdom 
becomes blind. 
Keep thine eyes open, 
or Fate will open them 
for thee. 
He who kisses the hand 
he cannot cut off, 
will have his head cut off 
by the hand he now kisses 
in the next rebirth. 
He who keeps 
to his business, he who 
loves his companions, 
he who does his duty, 
will never be poor. 
A thousand regrets 
will not pay thy debts. 
Fallen flowers do not 
return to their stems, 
nor departed friends 
to their houses. 
To feel one's ignorance 
is to be wise; to feel sure 
of one's wisdom 
is to be a fool. 
One proof is better 
than ten arguments. 
Rain in the morn 
brings the sun after noon. 
He who weeps today, 
may laugh tomorrow. 
The soothsayer for evil 
never knows his own fate. 
Like oil, truth often floats 
on the surface of the lie. 
Like clear water, 
truth often underlies 
the seeming falsehood. 
Every tree hath its shadow, 
every sorrow its joy. 
The fields are 
damaged by weeds, 
mankind by passion. 
Blessed are the patient, 
and the passionless. 
The virtuous man 
who is happy in this life, 
is sure to be still happier 
in his next. 
What ought to be done 
is neglected, what ought 
not to be done is done. 
The sins of the unruly 
are ever increasing. 
Let every man first 
become himself that which 
he teaches others to be. 
He who 
hath subdued himself, 
may hope to subdue others. 
One's own self is the 
most difficult to master. 
Hatred is never quenched 
by hatred; hatred ceases 
by showing love; 
this is an old rule. 
The path of virtue lies 
in the renunciation 
of the seven great sins. 
The best possession 
of the man of clay 
is health; the highest virtue 
of the man of spirit 
is truthfulness. 
Man walks on, 
and Karma (retribution) 
follows him 
along with his shadow. 
Daily practical wisdom 
consists of four things: 
To know the root of Truth, 
the branches of Truth, 
the limit of Truth, 
and the opposite of Truth.
MARCH
"Say not 'I am,' 'I was,' 
or 'I shall be,'
Think not ye pass from 
house to house of flesh
Like travelers who 
remember and forget,
Ill-lodged or well-lodged. 
Fresh Issues
upon the universe that sum
Which is the lattermost 
of lives. 
It makes Its habitation
as the worm spins silk
And dwells therein." 
– Light of Asia, Book 8
Four things 
increase by use: 
Health, wealth, 
perseverance, 
and credulity. 
To enjoy the day of plenty, 
you must be patient 
in the day of want. 
Expel avarice 
from your heart, 
so shall you 
loosen the chains from 
off your neck. 
Let a man overcome anger 
by love, evil by good, 
greediness by liberality, 
lie by truth. 
Do not speak harshly 
to anybody; those 
who are so spoken to 
will answer thee 
in the same way. 
This life is 
in the world of work 
and retributive justice; 
the life that follows is 
in the world 
of great reward. 
Excuse is better 
than disputation; delay is 
better than rashness; 
unwillingness of strife is 
better than eagerness 
in seeking it. 
Cut down the whole 
forest of lust, not the tree. 
When thou hast cut down 
every tree and every shrub, 
then thou wilt be free. 
The avaricious 
go not to the world 
of the gods (Devas), 
for the fool commands 
no charity. 
He who holds back 
rising anger 
like a rolling chariot, 
is called a real driver; 
other people are 
but holders of the reins. 
The fool who is angered, 
and who thinks 
to triumph by 
using abusive language, 
is always vanquished 
by him 
whose words are patient. 
The best of medicines 
is death; 
the worst of diseases 
is vain anticipation. 
An easy temper is 
a good counselor, 
and a pleasant tongue is 
an excellent leader. 
A good word in time 
is better than a sweet pie 
after meals. 
Foolish pride is 
an incurable malady; 
a bad wife is 
a chronic disease; and 
a wrathful disposition is 
a lifelong burden. 
Truth is brighter 
than the sun; 
truth is the sunny day 
of Reason, and falsehood 
the mind's dark night. 
All has an end, 
and will away. 
Truth alone is immortal, 
and lives forever. 
The light of all flesh 
is the sun; 
the light of the soul – 
truth everlasting. 
The road to sin 
is a wide highway; 
the way out of it, 
a steep and rugged hill. 
The fault of others 
is easily perceived, 
but that of oneself 
is difficult to perceive. 
Good people 
shine from afar like 
the snowy mountains; 
bad people are not seen, 
like arrows shot at night. 
Where two women meet, 
there a market springs; 
where three congregate, 
a bazaar is opened; 
and where seven talk, 
there begins a fair. 
Extensive knowledge 
and science, 
well-regulated discipline 
and well-spoken speech, 
this is the greatest blessing. 
The subtle self is to be 
known by thought alone; 
for every thought of men 
is interwoven 
with the senses, and 
when thought is purified, 
then the self arises. 
Lead me 
from the unreal to the real! 
Lead me 
from darkness to light! 
Lead me 
from death to immortality! 
The Sage 
who knows Brahman 
moves on; 
on the small, old path 
that stretches far away, 
rests in the heavenly place, 
and thence 
moves higher on. 
Neither by the eyes, 
nor by spirit, 
nor by the sensuous organs, 
nor by austerity, 
nor by sacrifices, 
can we see Brahma. 
Only the pure, 
by the light of 
wisdom and meditation, 
can see the pure Deity. 
By perfection 
in study and meditation 
the Supreme Spirit 
becomes manifest; study 
is one eye to behold it, 
and meditation is the other. 
Alas! We reap 
what seed we sow; 
the hands that smite us 
are our own. 
Thoughts alone cause 
the round of rebirths 
in this world; 
let a man strive 
to purify his thoughts, 
what a man thinks, 
that he is: 
this is the old secret. 
"My sons are mine; 
this wealth is mine": 
with such thoughts 
is a fool tormented. 
He himself does not 
belong to himself, 
much less sons and wealth.
APRIL
"The untouched soul,
Greater than all the worlds 
(because the worlds
By it subsist); 
smaller than subtleties
Of things minutest; 
last of ultimates;
Sits in the hollow heart 
of all that lives!
Whoso hath laid 
aside desire and fear,
His senses mastered, 
and his spirit still,
Sees in the quiet light 
of verity
Eternal, safe, majestical – 
HIS SOUL!" 
– The Secret of Death 
(from The Katha 
Upanishad)
He who leaves 
the society of fools, 
cleaves unto the wise. 
The self is hidden 
in all beings, 
and does not shine forth; 
but it is seen 
by subtle seers, 
through their sharp 
and subtle intellect. 
Patience leads to power; 
but eagerness in greed 
leads to loss. 
Three things 
make a poor man rich: 
courtesy, consideration 
for others, and 
the avoidance of suspicion. 
When trust is gone, 
misfortune comes in; 
when confidence is dead, 
revenge is born; and 
when treachery appears, 
all blessings fly away. 
The world exists by cause; 
all things exist by cause; 
and beings are bound 
by cause, even as 
the rolling cart-wheel 
by the pin of an axle-tree. 
The living soul 
is not woman, nor man, 
nor neuter; 
whatever body it takes, 
with that it is joined only. 
He who wishes to 
reach Buddhahood, and 
aspires to the knowledge 
of the Self-born, 
must honor those 
who keep this doctrine. 
As the spider 
moving upward 
by his thread 
gains free space, thus 
also he who undertakes 
moving upward 
by the known word OM, 
gains independence. 
The wheel of sacrifice 
has Love for its nave, 
Action for its tire, and 
Brotherhood for its spokes. 
Man consists of desires. 
And as is his desire, 
so is his will; 
and as is his will, 
so is his deed; and 
whatever deed he does, 
that he will reap. 
A stone becomes a plant; 
a plant a beast; 
the beast a man; 
a man a Spirit; 
and the Spirit – GOD. 
There exists no spot 
on the earth, 
or in the sky, 
or in the sea, 
neither is there any 
in the mountain-clefts, 
where an evil deed 
does not bring trouble 
to the doer. 
Whoever, not being 
a sanctified person, 
pretends to be a Saint, 
he is indeed the lowest 
of all men, 
the thief in all worlds, 
including that of Brahma. 
If a man consorting 
with me (Buddha) 
does not conform his life 
to my commandments, 
what benefit will 
ten thousand precepts 
be to him? 
He who smites 
will be smitten; 
he who shows rancor 
will find rancor; 
so, from reviling 
cometh reviling, and 
to him who is angered 
comes anger. 
"He abused me, 
he reviled me, 
he beat me, 
he subdued me"; he who 
keeps this in mind, and 
who feels resentment, 
will find no peace. 
Like a beautiful flower, 
full of color, 
but without scent, 
are the fine 
but fruitless words of him 
who does not act 
accordingly. 
When your mind shall 
have crossed beyond 
the taint of delusion, 
then will you become 
indifferent to all 
that you have heard 
or will hear. 
The wise guard the home 
of nature's order; 
they assume 
excellent forms in secret. 
If thou losest all, 
and gettest wisdom by it, 
thy loss is thy gain. 
Empty thy mind of evil, 
but fill it with good. 
Great works 
need no great strength, 
but perseverance. 
Sleep is but birth 
into the land of Memory; 
birth but a sleep in 
the oblivion of the Past. 
To forgive 
without forgetting, 
is again to reproach 
the wrongdoer every time 
the act comes back to us. 
Every man contains 
within himself 
the potentiality of 
immortality, equilibrated 
by the power of choice. 
He who lives in 
one color of the rainbow 
is blind to the rest. 
Live in the light diffused 
through the entire arc, 
and you will know it all. 
Every time 
the believer pronounces 
the word OM, 
he renews the allegiance 
to the divine potentiality 
enshrined within the Soul. 
People talk of the Devil. 
Every man has seen him; 
he is in every sinful heart. 
The Higher Self knows 
that highest home 
of Brahman, 
which contains all 
and shines so bright. 
The wise who without 
desiring happiness 
worship that SELF, 
are not born again.
MAY
I'm weary of conjectures – 
this must end 'em.
Thus am I doubly armed: 
my death and life,
My bane and antidote, 
are both before me:
This in a moment 
brings me to an end;
But this informs me 
I shall never die.
The Soul, 
secured in her existence, 
smiles
At the drawn dagger, 
and defies its point.
The stars shall fade away, 
the sun himself
Grow dim with age, 
and nature sink in years;
But thou shalt flourish 
in immortal youth,
Unhurt amidst the war 
of elements,
The wrecks of matter, 
and the crush of worlds. 
– Addison
The eternal Spirit 
is everywhere. 
It stands encompassing 
the whole world. 
He who feeds the hungry 
before he has assuaged 
his own hunger, prepares 
for himself eternal food. 
He who renounces that food 
for the sake 
of a weaker brother is – 
a god. 
The altar on which 
the sacrifice is offered 
is Man; 
the fuel is speech itself, 
the smoke the breath, 
the light the tongue, 
the coals the eye, 
the sparks the ear. 
One moment in eternity 
is as important 
as another moment, 
for eternity changeth not, 
neither is one part 
better than another part. 
Better it would be 
that a man should eat 
a lump of flaming iron 
than that one should 
break his vows. 
Even a good man 
sees evil days, 
as long as his good deeds 
have not ripened; but 
when they have ripened, 
then does the good man 
see happy days. 
By oneself the evil is done, 
by oneself one suffers; 
by oneself 
the evil is left undone, 
by oneself one is purified. 
Purity and impurity 
belong to oneself; 
no one can purify another. 
Self is the lord of Self: 
who else could be the lord! 
With self well subdued, 
a man finds a master 
such as few can find. 
If one man conquer 
in battle a thousand times 
a thousand men, and 
if another conquer himself, 
he is the greater 
of the two conquerors. 
Who is the great man? 
He who is strongest 
in patience. 
He who patiently endures 
injury, and maintains 
a blameless life – 
he is a man indeed! 
If thou hast done 
evil deeds, or 
if thou wouldst do them, 
thou mayest arise and run 
where'er thou wilt, but 
thou canst not free thyself 
of thy suffering. 
There is a road 
that leads to Wealth; 
there is another road 
that leads to Nirvana 
(the highest paradise). 
An evil deed 
does not turn on a sudden; 
it is like fire 
smoldering in the ashes, 
which burns the fool. 
An evil deed 
kills not instantly, 
as does a sword, but 
it follows the evil-doer 
into his next 
and still next rebirth. 
The calumniator 
is like one 
who flings dirt at another 
when the wind is contrary, 
the dirt does but return 
on him who threw it. 
The virtuous man 
cannot be hurt, 
the misery that 
his enemy would inflict 
comes back on himself. 
If a man understands 
the self saying "I am He," 
what could he 
wish or desire 
that he should pine 
after the body? 
That word which 
all the Vedas record, which 
all penances proclaim, 
which men desire 
when they live 
as religious disciples, 
that word I tell thee briefly, 
it is OM. 
As a person having 
seen one in a dream, 
recognizes him afterwards; 
so does one who 
has achieved proper 
concentration of mind 
perceive the SELF. 
It is better 
to do one's own duty, 
even though imperfectly, 
than to perform 
another's duty well. 
The wise who knows 
the Self as bodiless 
within the bodies, 
as unchanging 
among changing things, 
as great and omnipresent, 
does never grieve. 
The path of virtue lies 
in the renunciation 
of arrogance and pride. 
He who wrongs 
another unjustly 
will regret it, though 
men may applaud him; 
but he who is wronged 
is safe from regret, 
though the world 
may blame him. 
There is more courage 
in facing the world 
with undisguised truth, 
than in descending 
into a wild beast's den. 
True clemency is 
in foregoing revenge, 
when it is in one's power; 
true patience is 
in bearing up 
against disappointments. 
The happy man 
must prepare ere 
the evil day comes; 
and when it does, 
let the thought that 
every good and great man 
has been made to suffer 
at some time console him. 
Wealth in the hands 
of one who thinks not of 
helping mankind with it, 
is sure to turn one day 
into dry leaves. 
Like as the night 
follows the day, 
so misfortune is 
the shadow of joy; 
Karma (retribution) 
bestowing her lots 
with both hands.