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Was Blavatsky a Plagiarist?

From Chapter 12 (Was She a Plagiarist?) of HPB: The Extraordinary Life and Influence of Helena
Blavatsky by Sylvia Cranston

In 1890, when the Sun published Coues professed exposure of HPB, another assault on her character
was being silently prepared by a man named William Emmette Coleman, who was soon to spread far
and wide the accusation that in all her writings Blavatsky plagiarized on a grand scale. It is impossible
to calculate how many people have refused to read Blavatskys writings as a result of this charge.
Incidentally, it seems rather amazing that we now have another Co to add to Coulomb, Coues, and
Collins!
Coleman was involved in both the Coulomb and the Coues-Collins cases. It was he who journeyed
from the United States to London to obtain from the Scottish missionary Patterson the purportedly
original HPB-Coulomb letters that Coues had hoped to use in defending himself in HPBs libel suit; it
was also he who supplied Coues with the information circulated in a Sun interview that HPBs
supposed illegitimate child was fathered by Wittgenstein. Colemans letter on this subject, dated March
31 1889, is in the Coues collection.
Why did Coleman thus involve himself? And why did he circulate the charges of plagiarism? Was he a
disinterested person in pursuit of truth? One might think so when reading his credentials provided in a
footnote to his research paper on the source of HPBs writings. Yet where was this paper printed? Of all
places, it appeared as Appendix C in Solovyovs A Modern Priestess of Isis, published in 1895 on
behalf of the Society for Psychical Research; (Chapter 2 of the present section). In Solovyovs book, it
achieved an immortality it was not otherwise likely to receive. Colemans credentials in the footnote
include memberships in the American Oriental Society, the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and

Ireland, the Pali Text Society, and the Egyptian Exploration Fund. One would hardly imagine he was a
clerk in the Quartermaster Department of the U.S. Army, first at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas and later
in San Francisco. But more importantly, what the SPR carefully concealed which ever since HPBs
detractors have refrained from mentioning is that Coleman was a leading spiritualist of his day who
wrote scathing denunciations of Theosophy and HPB in the spiritualists journals.
Nothing can be clearer on this than what Coleman himself wrote to Coues on July 8, 1890, on the
letterhead of the Chief Quartermaster office: I emphatically denounced and ridiculed the theory of
occultism, of elementary spirits, etc., before the Theosophical Society was organized [in 1875], and
from that time to this I have strenuously opposed Theosophy all the time.
HPBs article My Books speaks of the libelous matter emanating from America and that it has all
come from one and the same source, well known to all Theosophists, a person [Coleman] most
indefatigable in attacking me personally for the last twelve years.
As to the plagiarism charges, it should be understood that as applied to HPB, Colemans use of the term
extends far beyond its dictionary definition: To steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as
ones own. This Blavatsky did not do. [When Ralston Skinner gave HPB, as a gift, his manuscript of
Part Three of Source of Measures, he said she could use it as her own work. She refused, saying, How
can I quote without quotation marks? How can I quote and let out your name? (Feb. 17, 1886,
Ralston Collection, Andover-Harvard Theological Library, Harvard University.)] But surely she must
have been guilty of something dreadful, for reading Colemans opening paragraph in his paper of
August, 1893, we find
During the past three years I have made a more or less exhaustive analysis of the contents of the
writings of Madame H.P. Blavatsky; and I have traced the sources whence she derived and mostly
without credit being given nearly the whole of their subject matter.
HPBs so-called plagiarism is a practice followed by practically every author who publishes the fruits
of his research even by Coleman himself. To understand the foregoing, one must be able to
distinguish between primary sources and secondary sources. If you were to quote from an Emerson
essay, for example, that essay would be your primary source. If, however, you quote Emerson quoting
Shakespeare, that portion of Emersons essay would be called your secondary source. In Colemans
view, you must credit right then and there in a footnote or endnote not only Shakespeare, but the
secondary plagiarism, for you are misleading your readers into thinking you yourself found the
reference in the works of Shakespeare. However, citing only primary sources is a legitimate practice
that most authors of scholarship follow all the time. In Isis Unveiled, HPB frequently gave credit to the
original author but not to the secondary source.
Writers today acknowledge indebtedness to secondary sources indirectly by including in their
bibliographies the names of books they drew upon in their research. To list all would be unwise, for
among the numerous volumes researched only a few may be considered worthy of mentioning. If
Coleman were to apply to these hundreds of thousands of authors the rules he demanded HPB to abide
by, he would call them all plagiarists.

As was common in books of her day, HPBs works had no bibliographies. However, her secondary
sources were often referred to in the text when quoting primary material; thus the reader became aware
of the book as a worthy source of information. To illustrate, Coleman accuses HPB of using forty-four
passages he should say quotations from C.W. Kings book The Gnostics and Their Remains in Isis
without acknowledgement. Yet, when using Gnostics as a primary source, she credits it and its author
on thirty-two occasions.
It is interesting to note that the immortal Goethe confessed to obtaining his material in the same way
other writers do, but you would not know this unless you happened to read an obscure reference his
biographer Emil Ludwig discovered:
I owe my achievements to thousands of things and persons outside myself, which constituted my
material and all I had to do was to catch hold of it, and reap what others had sown for me. The
main thing is to have a great desire, and skill and perseverance to accomplish it. My work is that of a
composite being and happens to be signed Goethe.
Coleman himself did not always practice what he preached concerning giving credit to secondary
sources. In his essay Sunday Not Being the Real Sabbath, he borrowed without credit numerous
quotations from a paper on the subject by William Henry Burr. In a sixteen-page pamphlet, Burr,
complaining against Coleman, wrote:
The facts are as follows: W.E.C. has borrowed from my little work all that he has quoted or
summarized from Justin, Irenaeus, Clement, Tertullian, Victorinus, Origen, Eusebius, Jerome, Luther,
Melanchthon, Baxter, Ileylin, Milton, Paley, and Neander. Every reference given by him to the
aforesaid authorities is borrowed from me and he has added nothing from their works which he did not
find in my work. [Burrs publication: 1881, Washington, D.C.]
Nor did Coleman acknowledge that Burrs booklet existed. Burr also cites which parts Coleman had
plagiarized.
~~~
Coleman claims that HPBs purpose in quoting so many authorities of the past and present was to show
herself off as an enormous reader possessed of vast erudition, when actually her ignorance was
profound in all branches of knowledge. One wonders, then, how she could understand the heavy
tomes she researched and select just the right material for her purpose. Beatrice Hastings observes:
[Coleman] took no account of the fact that HPB was engaged precisely in citing authorities to
support her in her quest for the thread of occult science stretching from the most ancient to modern
times. She would quote indifferently from an old book or from a New York newspaper so long as the
matter served her purpose. Mr. Coleman found it very convenient to brush over her constant citation of
names and authorities. The truth is that there is scarcely a page of the book without a name; one is
whirled from authority to authority and left in no doubt whatever that she is compiling and means to
show that she is not inventing her subjects. She could hardly have cited names more often without
wearying the reader. To know where to stop, as she did, requires literary tact. What could be better

done with a vast library of scattered information than to assemble the essentials in one book?
It would be a mistake, however, to imagine that Blavatskys works were largely anthologies. Coleman
would have us believe that Isis, in particular, was little more than borrowings from other peoples
writings. It is easy to prove otherwise: A line-by-line count reveals that only 22 percent is quoted
material and 78 percent, HPB speaking. Furthermore, the quotations are not of primary value, but
merely supportive of her main thesis. Today when her books are quoted it is not her selections from
other authors that are presented, but her own originally worded offerings or, as she would claim, that of
her teachers.
~~~
Thus far Colemans plagiarism hunting as described in his paper has been focused chiefly on Isis
Unveiled. Next he turns to The Secret Doctrine and other works of Helena Blavatsky. Here, it seems, he
overreaches himself and loses all rights to credibility as an honest researcher.
In discussing Isis, Coleman gave the page numbers and books copied from, and sometimes parallel
passages as well; from here onwards he provides no such information. However, he professes that the
detailed proofs and evidence of every assertion will be embodied in full in a work I am preparing for
publication an expose of theosophy as a whole. This promise was reiterated many times in the paper,
as if to assure the readers that all the proofs, without doubt, would soon be forthcoming. However, from
the date of his paper, August 1893, until his death in 1909, sixteen years elapsed without the book
appearing. Coleman provided neither news concerning its publication nor apologies for its delay.
Coleman says that The Secret Doctrine is of a piece with Isis in that it is permeated with
plagiarisms, and is in all its parts a rehash of other books. He lists twenty-one books as some of those
from which HPB plagiarized [did not name secondary sources]. Of these, only five mention the number
of borrowed passages:
Wilsons translation of the Vishnu Purana 130
Professor Alexander Winchells World-Life 70
Dowsons Hindu Classical Dictionary 123
Decharmes Mythologie de la Grece Antique 60
Myerss Qabbala 34
The Secret Doctrine runs to 1,570 pages; the source books, too, are large. How can one locate parallel
passages in this work and the secondary source named, with no pagination given for either? Unless one
were to set up an elaborate computer program, it seems an impossible job. Nevertheless, a test case was
decided upon. Among the five books just listed, Coleman points to two as very largely forming the
basis of The Secret Doctrine: Wilsons translation of the Vishnu Purana, and World-Life by Alexander
Winchell, professor of geology and paleontology at the University of Michigan. The latter work was
chosen because, being on science, it has well-delineated subject matter (such as chapters on the sun and
the moon) and might be checked against the text of The Secret Doctrine, using the huge 396-page index
to the SD in the Blavatsky Collected Writings edition. A research assistant, who modestly requested to
remain anonymous, volunteered to undertake this tedious assignment and spent two to three hours daily

on the work for six months. Halfway through she complained that it was very discouraging to keep
looking for something you cant find. However, she did find a few unacknowledged borrowings from
secondary sources not Colemans boasted seventy passages, but six. No wonder Coleman never wrote
his book! He calculated well; people would believe his claimed research without the promised proofs.
One discovery Coleman took pride in announcing was that he had located the sources of the Stanzas of
Dzyan, upon which, HPB says, The Secret Doctrine and The Voice of the Silence were based. The
Stanzas, says Coleman, were the work of Madame Blavatsky a compilation in her own language,
from a variety of sources. Colemans evidences were to be given in his promised book, which never
appeared.
Many besides Coleman have claimed to identify the source of the Stanzas. HPBs scholarly secretary,
G.R.S. Mead, once had an exchange of correspondence with Max Muller on this subject. George Mead,
who had received his BA and MA with honors at Cambridge, where he majored in Greek and Latin,
and also studied philosophy at Oxford, later wrote books on gnosticism, hermetic philosophy, and the
origins of Christianity. Meads report of his correspondence with Max Muller appeared in The
Theosophical Review (April 1904, 139-41), of which Mead was editor, and reads as follows:
Some ten years ago or more the late Professor Max Muller, to whom all lovers of the Sacred Books of
the East owe so deep a debt of gratitude, published his most instructive set of Gifford Lectures, entitled
Theosophy or Psychological Religion. These I reviewed in much detail in a series of three articles in
this Review. The aged Professor wrote to me a kindly note on the subject, taking exception to one or
two points, and we exchanged several letters.
He then expressed himself as surprised that I should waste, as he thought, what he was good enough to
call my abilities on Theosophy, when the whole field of Oriental studies lay before me, in which he
was kind enough to think I could do useful work. Above all, he was puzzled to understand why I
treated seriously that charlatan, Mme. Blavatsky, who had done so much harm to the cause of genuine
Oriental studies by her parodies of Buddhism and Vedanta which she had mixed up with Western ideas.
Her whole Theosophy was a rechauffe of misunderstood translations of Sanskrit and Pali texts.
To this I replied that as I had no object to serve but the cause of truth, if he could convince me that
Mme. Blavatskys Theosophy was merely a clever or ignorant manipulation of Sanskrit and Pali texts, I
would do everything in my power to make the facts known to the Theosophic world; I therefore
asked him to be so good as to point out what in his opinion were the original texts in Sanskrit or Pali, or
any other language, on which were based either the Stanzas of Dzyan and their commentaries in The
Secret Doctrine, or any of the three treatises contained in The Voice of the Silence. I had myself for
years been searching for any trace of the originals or of fragments resembling them, and had so far
found nothing. If we could get the originals, we asked nothing better; it was the material we wanted.
To this Professor Max Muller replied in a short note, pointing to two verses in The Voice of the Silence,
which he said were quite Western in thought, and therefore betrayed their ungenuineness.
I answered that I was extremely sorry he had not pointed out the texts on which any sentence of the
Precepts or any stanza of the Book of Dzyan was based; nevertheless, I should like to publish his

criticism, reserving to myself the right of commenting on it.


To this Professor Max Muller hastily rejoined that he begged I would not do so, but that I would return
his letter at once, as he wished to write something more worthy of the [Theosophical] Review. I, of
course, returned his letter, but I have been waiting from that day to this for the promised proof that
HPB was in these marvelous literary creations nothing but a sorry centonist who out of rags of
misunderstood translations patched together a fantastic motley for fools to wear. And I may add the
offer is still open for any and every Orientalist who desires to make good the, to me, ludicrous
contention of the late Nestor of Orientalism.
I advisedly call these passages enshrined in her works marvelous literary creations, not from the point
of view of an enthusiast who knows nothing of Oriental literature, or the great cosmogonical systems of
the past, or the Theosophy of the world faiths, but as the mature judgment of one who has been for
some twenty years studying just such subjects.
The Stanzas [of Dzyan in The Secret Doctrine] set forth a cosmogenesis and anthropogenesis which in
their sweep and detail leave far behind any existing record of such things from the past; they cannot be
explained as the clever piecing together of the disconnected archaic fragments still preserved in sacred
books and classical authors; they have an individuality of their own and yet they bear the hall mark of
an antiquity and the warrant of an economy which the Western world thinks to have long passed away.
Further, they are set in an atmosphere of commentary apparently translated or paraphrased from Far
Eastern tongues, producing a general impression of genuineness that is difficult for a scholar who has
sufficiently overcome his initial prejudices to study them, to withstand.
In the introduction to The Secret Doctrine (1:xlv), HPB speaks of those who would discredit her
writings on grounds of their being plagiarized from such writers as Eliphas Levi and Paracelsus, and
from Buddhism and Brahmanism. She replies:
As well charge Renan with having stolen his Vie de Jesus from the Gospels, and Max Muller his
Sacred Books of the East from the philosophies of the Brahmins and Gautama, the Buddha. But to
the public in general and the readers of the Secret Doctrine I may repeat what I have stated all along,
and which I now clothe in the words of Montaigne:
I HAVE HERE MADE ONLY A NOSEGAY OF CULLED FLOWERS, AND HAVE BROUGHT
NOTHING OF MY OWN BUT THE STRING THAT TIES THEM.
In her last article, My Books, HPB repeats Montaignes words and asks whether anyone can say that
she has not paid the full price for the string.
As to the source of the Stanzas of Dzyan, startling news was published in 1983 that the mystery is
now solved by Tibetologist David Reigle. He writes in his seventy-page booklet The Books of Kiu-te
(Wizards Bookshelf, San Diego, CA, 1983):
The Books of Kiu-te are described in H.P. Blavatskys monumental work, The Secret Doctrine, as a
series of highly occult works, some of which are public, and others secret. The former are said to be
found in the possession of any Tibetan Gelugpa monastery. The latter include the Book of Dzyan, from

which a number of stanzas were translated to form the nucleus of The Secret Doctrine. The Book of
Dzyan is said to be the first volume of the commentaries on the secret Books of Kiu-te, and at the same
time a glossary of the public Books of Kiu-te.
Although the above information was made known at the end of last century, until now the actual
identity of the public Books of Kiu-te has remained a mystery. Neither learned Tibetans nor Western
scholars knew of any books by that name. They were therefore labeled as figments of H.P. Blavatskys
imagination, along with everything else in The Secret Doctrine. But by simply tracing the reference she
gave when referring to these books, they have now been positively identified. As she said, they are
indeed found in the library of any Tibetan Gelugpa monastery, as also in those of the other sects
(Kargyudpa, Nyingmapa, and Sakyapa), and they are indeed highly occult works, being regarded by the
entire Tibetan Buddhist tradition as embodying the Buddhas secret teachings. As will be seen, only the
spelling of the term foiled previous attempts to identify them.
HPB at times spelled the books Kiu-te, as used by the Capuchin monk Horace della Penna in the
early 1700s. Today the public Books of Kiu-te are known as one of the main sections of the Kanjur, a
major portion of the Tibetan Canon. Reigles persistent research has led to further discoveries which he
reports in his book.
* The above is an excerpt from the book HPB: The Extraordinary Life and Influence of Helena
Blavatsky by Sylvia Cranston.

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