Page:The Golden verses of Pythagoras (IA cu31924026681076).pdf/203

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

united the science of genethlialogy or astrology with the priesthood, and concealed with care the principles of this science within the precincts of the sanctuary.[1] It was a Secret of State among the Etruscans and at Rome,[2] as it still is in China and Japan.[3] The Brahmans did not confide its elements except to those whom they deemed worthy to be initiated.[4] For one need only lay aside an instant the bandage of prejudice to see that an Universal science, linked throughout to what men recognize as the most holy, can not be the product of folly and stupidity, as has been reiterated a hundred times by a host of moralists. All antiquity is certainly neither foolish nor stupid, and the sciences it cultivated were supported by principles which, for us today, being wholly unknown, have none the less existed. Pythagoras, if we give attention here, revealed to us those of genethlialogy and of all the sciences of divination which relate thereunto.

Let us observe this closely. The future is composed of the past—that is to say, that the route that man traverses in time, and that he modifies by means of the power of his will, he has already traversed and modified; in the same manner, using a practical illustration, that the earth describing its annual orbit around the sun, according to the modern system, traverses the same spaces and sees unfold around it almost the same aspects: so that, following anew a route that he has traced for himself, man would be able not only to recognize the imprints of his steps, but to foresee the objects that he is about to encounter, since he has already seen them, if his memory preserved the image, and if this image was not effaced by the necessary consequence of his nature and the providential laws which rule him. Such is

  1. Boulanger, Antiq. dévoil., l. iii., ch. 5, § 3.
  2. Mém. de l'Acad. des Insc., t. i., p. 67; Tit.-Liv., Decad., 1, l. ix.; Aul. Gell., l. vi., c. 9.
  3. Duhald., t. ii., p. 578; t. iii., p. 336, 342; Const. d'Orville, t. i., p. 3.
  4. Philostr., In Vitâ Apoll., l. iii., c. 13.