The Voice of the Silence

The Voice of the Silence is a book by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. It was written in Fontainebleau and first published in 1889.[1] According to Blavatsky, it is a translation of fragments from a sacred book she encountered during her studies in the East, called "The Book of the Golden Precepts".

The Voice of the Silence presented by Blavatsky to Leo Tolstoy

Contents

edit

The book is formed of three parts:

  1. The Voice of the Silence
  2. The Two Paths
  3. The Seven Portals

Reception

edit

A reviewer for D. T. Suzuki's Eastern Buddhist Society commented: "Undoubtedly Madame Blavatsky had in some way been initiated into the deeper side of Mahayana teaching and then gave out what she deemed wise to the Western world..."[2] In the journal of the Buddhist Society, Suzuki commented: "here is the real Mahayana Buddhism".[3]

The 14th Dalai Lama wrote the preface for the centennial edition by Concord Grove Press.[4]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "The Voice of the Silence by H.P. Blavatsky: Online and Printed Sources". blavatskyarchives.com.
  2. ^ Suzuki, Daisetz Teitaro; Suzuki, Beatrice Lane, eds. (July 1931). "The Real H. P. Blavatsky, a Study in Theosophy and a Memoir of a Great Soul, by William Kingslands (review)". The Eastern Buddhist. Old Series. 5 (4): 377.
  3. ^ The Middle Way. 40 (2). The Buddhist Society: 90. August 1965. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[full citation needed]
  4. ^ Gyatso, Tenzin (1989). "Foreword: The Boddhisattva Path". The Voice of the Silence. By Blavatsky, H. P. (Centenary ed.). Oxford: Concord Grove Press. ISBN 9780886950460. Retrieved 2018-09-04 – via theosophy.wiki.
edit