: : : ALSO : : : RELIGIO-PHILOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING HOUSE, 1429 Market St., San Francisco, Cal.
“=The Light of Egypt=;”
—OR—
THE SCIENCE OF THE SOUL AND THE STARS.
FOURTH EDITION.
In Two Parts. Price, Cloth, $2; Paper, $1.
=By an Initiate in Esoteric Masonry.=
FINELY ILLUSTRATED WITH EIGHT FULL-PAGE ENGRAVINGS.
It is claimed that this book is not a mere compilation, but thoroughly original.
It is believed to contain information upon the most
vital points of
Occultism and Theosophy that cannot be obtained elsewhere.
It claims to fully reveal the most recondite mysteries of man upon every plane of his existence, both here and hereafter, in such plain, simple language that a child can almost understand it.
The secrets and Occult mysteries of Astrology are revealed and explained for the first time, it is affirmed, since the days of Egyptian Hieroglyphics.
An effort is made to show that the science of the Soul and the science of the Stars are the twin mysteries which comprise THE ONE GRAND SCIENCE OF LIFE.
The following are among the claims made for the work by its friends.
To the spiritual investigator this book is indispensable.
To the medium it reveals knowledge beyond all earthly price, and will prove in real truth, “a guide, philosopher and friend.”
To the Occultist it will supply the mystic key for which he has been so long earnestly seeking.
To the Astrologer it will become a “divine revelation of Science.”
* * * * *
OPINIONS OF PRESS AND PEOPLE.
“A noble, philosophical and instructive work.”—Mrs. Emma Hardinge Britten.
“A work of remarkable ability and interest.”—Dr J.R. Buchanan
“A remarkably concise, clear and forcibly interesting work. * * * It is more clear and intelligible than any other work on like subjects.”—Mr. J.J. Morse.
“A careful reading of THE LIGHT OF EGYPT discovers the beginning of a new sect in Occultism, which will oppose the grafting on Western Occultists the subtile delusive dogmas of Karma and Re-incarnation.”—New York Times.
“It is a volume likely to attract wide attention from that class of scholars interested in mystical science and occult forces. But it is written in such plain and simple style as to be within the easy comprehension * * * of any cultivated, scholarly reader.” The Chicago Daily Inter-Ocean.
“However recondite his book, the author certainly presents a theory of first causes which is well fitted to challenge the thoughtful readers’ attention and to excite much reflection.”—Hartford Daily Times.
“Considered as an exposition of Occultism, or the philosophy of the Orient from a Western standpoint, this is a remarkable production. * * * The philosophy of the book is, perhaps, as profound as any yet attempted, and so far reaching in its scope as to take in about all that relates to the divine ego-man in its manifold relation to time and eternity—the past, present and future.”—The Daily Tribune, Salt Lake City, Utah.