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'''UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Mahatma Letter of Sinnett to/from KH - 1883-06-09'''<br>
'''UNDER CONSTRUCTION'''<br>
'''UNDER CONSTRUCTION'''<br>
{{Infobox MLbox
'''UNDER CONSTRUCTION'''<br>
| header1 = People involved |
[[File:Gomes_with_medal.png|right|230px|thumb|Michael Gomes with Subba Row Medal, 2025]]
| writtenby        = [[Koot Hoomi]], [[A. P. Sinnett]]
Michael Gomes (1951- ) is a Canadian-American theosophical historian, writer, and researcher. In 2025 the General Council of the [[Theosophical Society (Adyar)|Theosophical Society]] awarded him the '''[[Subba Row Medal]]''' in recognition of his contribution to [[Theosophy|theosophical]] literature. Since 1995 he has been the director of the [[Emily Sellon Memorial Library]] in New York City.
| receivedby        = [[A. P. Sinnett]], [[Koot Hoomi]]
| sentvia          = unknown{{pad|10em}}
| header2 = Dates
| writtendate      = 9 June 1883
| receiveddate      = unknown
| otherdate        = unknown
| header3 = Places
| sentfrom          = unknown
| receivedat        = unknown
| vialocation      = unknown
}} 
This letter has not been published previously. [[A. P. Sinnett]] wrote to [[Mahatma]] [[Koot Hoomi]], who added notes and gave the original to [[H. P. Blavatsky]], with instructions to keep the letter.


== Note to H. P. Blavatsky from K.H. ==
== Early life ==
Gomes was born a British subject on the Crown colony of Trinidad, becoming a Canadian citizen in 1965. He became a member of the Theosophical Society in 1968 at the age of 17, joining through the historic Toronto TS. Since 1973 he has lived in New York City. During the 1970s he was an assistant to the British American designer, Charles James, working in his archives, and after that as a director of publicity for a New York music company. He studied South Asian history and culture at Columbia University and spent three years at the [[Adyar (campus)|International Headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras]], working mainly in the archives. He has travelled widely in India, spending time at the major locations connected with the spread of Theosophy—Bombay, Calcutta, Varanasi, Amritsar, Simla, and, of course, Madras, now Chennai. He was invited by the Theosophical Society in England to deliver their prestigious [[Blavatsky Lectures|Blavatsky Lecture]] on three occasions, an honor shared only with [[Radha Burnier]] and [[Edward L. Gardner|E. L. Gardner]].


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== Beatrice Hastings Collection ==
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'''Note written in blue ink across the top of page 1:'''<br>


Keep<br>
Michael Gomes began his career as a theosophical researcher in the early 1970s by cataloguing the collection of books, papers, typescripts and correspondence of the English theosophical historian, '''[[Beatrice Hastings]]''' (1879-1943). Mrs. Hastings published her defining studies on the case for [[H. P. Blavatsky]], including the only analysis of [[Emma Coulomb|Emma Coulomb’s]] accusatory pamphlet, in England in 1937-38. Before writing about Blavatsky, Hasting had been an editor of one of England’s most noted literary magazines and had later moved to Paris and served as a muse for the Italian painter, Amodeo Modigliani, who did several paintings of her. After her death, her papers were sent to [[Albert E. S. Smythe |A. E. S. Smythe]], General Secretary of the Canadian Section of the TS, who deposited them at the [[H. P. B. Library |HPB Library]] in British Columbia. Having access to Hastings’ material and cataloguing her vast correspondence provided Gomes with valuable skills in the years to come. A tireless researcher, he travelled to Worthing, England, to meet the executor of Hastings’ estate, who knew her personally. Some of the results of his research are cited in Stephen Gray’s comprehensive biography ''Beatrice Hastings: A Literary Life''<ref>Viking/Penguin, South Africa, 2004.</ref>, and his own “Beatrice Hastings and ‘The Defence of Madame Blavatsky.’” Assessing her contribution, he concludes that “Beatrice Hastings brought a new impetus to the field of theosophical research, and in the decades following her death, her insistence on thorough documentation proved a marked influence on other writers.”<ref>Gomes, “Beatrice Hastings and ‘The Defence of Madame Blavatsky.’” Introduction to the Edmonton T.S. 1988 edition of Beatrice Hastings’ ''Solovyoff’s Fraud''.</ref> Hastings’ rigorous standards proved a marked influence on those who took up the case after her, the late K.F. Vania of Bombay, and [[Walter A. Carrithers, Jr.|Walter A. Carrithers]] of Fresno, California.


KH
== Theosophical History ==


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After exhausting the resources of libraries and archives in North America and England, Gomes spent a year at the Archives at the International Headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras, India, where he would return for another two years. During his stay in 1984-85, he would have the opportunity of perusing the numerous volumes of press scrapbooks put together by Mme. Blavatsky, the handwritten diaries of Col. Olcott, their correspondence and other artifacts relating to the history of the Theosophical Society. While there he arranged and catalogued HPB’s collection of books in the archives.<ref>Gomes, A Catalogue of Books Belonging to H.P. Blavatsky in the Archives of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras, India. Theosophical Research Monographs, No. 1, 1995.</ref> He claims to be the only person known to have gone through the entire card catalog of the Adyar Library. The results of his research appeared in 1987 as The Dawning of the Theosophical Movement, the first full examination of the origins of the movement.


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Supplemental to this, was a seven-part series titled "Studies in Early American Theosophical History." Published in [[The Canadian Theosophist (periodical)|''The Canadian Theosophist'']] from Jan. 1989 to Jan. 1991, it dealt “with those issues which although only slightly mentioned in that book, could have more to say” using in-depth analysis of original documents, such as the Minute Book of the Theosophical Society for 1875/76.


[http://www.theosophy.wiki/mywiki/images/ML/UnpubKH1_1.jpg http://www.theosophy.wiki/mywiki/images/ML/UnpubKH1_1_note_thm.jpg] 
Gomes followed this with a massive bibliography on ''Theosophy in the Nineteenth Century'' in 1994. Providing annotated commentary for over a thousand items related to the subject, it covered not only material about Blavatsky and the movement but also gave the first inventory of theosophical literature published in the nineteenth century. It was the result of a seven-year search through libraries and archives in the U.S., Canada, England and India. The author of a number of studies, articles and monographs, such as The Coulomb Case—1884-1984, (1985, 2005), an examination of the events contributing to this incident and its results; “Nehru’s Theosophical Tutor: F.T. Brooks” (1998), a portrait of the person who introduced the future prime minister of India to Theosophy; “The Making of The Secret Doctrine” (1988) written for the centenary of the book’s publication, and translated into French, Dutch, Swedish and Italian; and the entry on “H.P. Blavatsky and Theosophy” in The Cambridge Handbook of Western Mysticism and Esotericism (2016), his writings have brought increased recognition to the subject outside of the theosophical movement.


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== The Blavatsky Writings Project ==


'''NOTES:'''
Commemorating the centenary of HPB’s passing in 1991, the [[Theosophical Publishing House (Adyar)|Theosophical Publishing House at Adyar]] issued ''HPB Teaches'', a one volume anthology of Mme. Blavatsky’s vast magazine and newspaper output compiled by Gomes. This began a project that would oversee the production of six volumes of HPB’s writings. In 1997 Quest Books in the U.S. released his abridgement of Blavatsky’s two volume ''Isis Unveiled''. Removing some 1,200 pages, the abridgement brought into sharp relief the basic assumptions that the book was trying to argue for. His abridgement of ''The Secret Doctrine'' released by Tarcher/Penguin in 2009 provided the first critical edition of the famous stanzas that form the book, based on the various readings of the text. The next year, his transcription of Blavatsky’s comments on The Secret Doctrine from stenographic reports of the 1889 meetings of the Blavatsky Lodge in London, was issued in The Hague in the Netherlands. A bibliography put together by him of the numerous studies about ''The Secret Doctrine'' was published in the December 2013 Theosophist.<ref>Gomes, “The Secret Doctrine: Book of Books,” The Theosophist 135 (December 2013): 6-14.</ref> In 2015 his edition of HPB’s Esoteric Instructions, featuring the original color and black and white folding plates, was released by TPH Adyar, making this material more available. The publication in 2025 of the H. P. Blavatsky Collected Writings Russian Serials volume edited by Gomes, which also concluded the series, brought the first English translations of Blavatsky’s writings about life in America during her stay in the 1870s and personal insights about her views on life in India. His editions have helped make H. P. Blavatsky’s voluminous writings more approachable and accessible.
*


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[[File:Librarians_June_2000.jpg|right|300px|thumb|Elisabeth Trumpler, Michael Gomes, and Lakshmi Narayanaswami in June, 2000]]
== Library and archives work ==
'''UNDER CONSTRUCTION'''<br>
'''UNDER CONSTRUCTION'''<br>
In 1995, Michael Gomes became director of the [[Emily Sellon Memorial Library]], housed in the New York Theosophical Society's building in Manhattan.


== Note on A. P. Sinnett letter from K.H. ==
A '''library union catalog''' was first established in June, 2000, with funding from the Sellon family and [[The Kern Foundation|the Kern Foundation]]. A new automated library system was established to support a Web-based catalog at the [[Henry S. Olcott Memorial Library]], shared with the [[Krotona Library]] and the [[Emily Sellon Memorial Library]]. Librarians Elisabeth Trumpler of Olcott, Lakshmi Narayanaswami of the Krotona Institute and Michael Gomes of New York spent a week in training sessions before the system was implemented.


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== Presentations and lectures ==
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'''Note written in blue ink diagonally across the top of page 5:'''<br>


All wrong
Apart from his numerous publications, Michael Gomes has been an active participant in a number of major academic conferences on the subject of Theosophy. He was a presenter at the first academic conference devoted to Theosophy; chaired by James Santucci at the American Academy of Religion Annual Meeting in Chicago, 1994, the panel included Antoine Faivre, Jean-Pierre Laurent and others who had defined esotericism as a field of academic study. He has presented papers at the Legacies of Theosophy Conference at the University of Sydney in 2010, the Enchanted Modernities Conference at Columbia University, 2015, and Theosophy and the Study of Religion Conference at the Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard University, 2019, among others. He has also presented on the subject at non-theosophical conferences, such as the Buddhist Themes in Modern Indian Literature National Seminar held by the Institute of Asian Studies, University of Madras, in 1991, the first all-India conference on the subject.


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Regarded as “one of today’s most respected writers on esoteric movements, as well known to readers of occult and esoteric literature as to students and scholars of modern religion,”<ref>Theosophical Society, Author bio in the 2025 Vancouver World Congress program.</ref> his work helped fuel what has been described as “A Blavatsky Renaissance” in the 1980s and 1990s. [[Joy Mills]] wrote in the 1980s that “Among the best and most careful researchers into theosophical history, both thorough in method and objective in presentation, is Michael Gomes.”<ref>Mills, The Theosophist, February 1988.</ref> In his letter announcing the award of the Subba Row Medal to Gomes in 2025, [[Tim Boyd]], International President of the Theosophical Society, noted that a deciding factor was that “Over the past four decades your contribution to the literature related to Theosophy and the theosophical movement has been substantial.”<ref>Tim Boyd, President, T.S. notification letter to Gomes, 31 Dec 2024.</ref>


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“Aside from accessing the mental world that the people around Blavatsky inhabited, there is the temporal aspect of their lives, the physicality of it, the geography of place,” Gomes wrote in a note to his 2017 [[Blavatsky Lectures|Blavatsky Lecture]], describing his historical process and method. “This is why I have always stressed the value of on-the-ground research. Locating A. O. Hume’s home in Simla, North India, gave a spatial understanding of the events that had occurred when Blavatsky was his guest. In knowing the limitations and extremes of these situations one begins to understand and appreciate the remarkable contribution of those early Theosophists who risked ridicule and scorn so one could enjoy freedom of belief.”<ref>Gomes, A Multitudinous Universe: The Blavatsky Lecture at 100. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2017, 25.</ref>


[http://www.theosophy.wiki/mywiki/images/ML/UnpubKH1_5.jpg http://www.theosophy.wiki/mywiki/images/ML/UnpubKH1_5_note_thm.jpg]
== Writings ==
[[File:Secret_Doctrine_Gomes.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Cover of ''The Secret Doctrine'']]


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=== Articles ===


'''NOTES:'''
The [[Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals]] lists [https://theosophicalsociety.org.au/union_index/entries?q=Gomes&s=author&page=1|over 110 articles by Michael Gomes].
*


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* [https://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/ancient-wisdom-for-a-new-age-theosophical-translations-of-hindu-scriptures?highlight=WyJtaWNoYWVsIiwiZ29tZXMiXQ== Ancient Wisdom for a New Age: Theosophical Translations of Hindu Scriptures]]. ''Quest'' 108 no.4, (Fall, 2020): 19-23.


== Page 1 of Sinnett letter transcription, image, and notes ==
=== Books and pamphlets ===


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<br>
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My dear Guardian,


As the London Society, or the [[London Lodge]] of the [[Theosophical Society|T.S.]] as we had decided to call it, &ndash; progresses with its esoteric studies I propose to send you notes concerning the various questions raised which I find myself unable to deal with confidently. The more vigorous and prosperous the undertaking becomes, the more I suppose such questions will multiply, but for the present they are comparatively few as the Society generally has not climbed up even to my own nimble level of occult knowledge.
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
=== Published Blavatsky Lectures ===


Firstly however in regard to general progress [[Anna Bonus Kingsford|Mrs Kingsford’s]] state of mind appears fairly satisfactorily. She has now read my book in proof, and fully recognizes the substantial identity of our teaching and that
* [https://archive.org/details/BL2000GomesCreatingTheNewAgeTheosophySOriginsInTheBritishIsles Creating the New Age: Theosophy's Origins in the British Isles]. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2000. 73 pages, illustrations. The Blavatsky Lecture was delivered at the Summer School of The Theosophical Society in England, The College of Ripon & York St John, Ripon, Yorkshire, Sunday 31 July 2000.


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* [https://archive.org/details/BL2007GomesColonelOlcottAndTheHealingArts Colonel Olcott and the Healing Arts]. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2007. 49 pages, illustrations, portraits. The Blavatsky Lecture was delivered at the Summer School of the Foundation for Theosophical Studies, the University of Leicester, Sunday 5 August 2007.


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* [https://archive.org/details/BL2017GomesAMultitudinousUniverse A Multitudinous Universe]. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2017. 25 pages: illustrations (portraits). The Blavatsky Lecture was delivered at the Summer School of The Foundation for Theosophical Studies Hillscourt, Rose Hill  Rednall, Birmingham B45 8RS on Sunday 6 August 2017.


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== Additional resources ==
 
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'''NOTES:'''
* '''my book''' refers to Sinnett's second book, [[Esoteric Buddhism (book)|''Esoteric Buddhism'']], which was published in 1883.
 
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== Page 2 ==
 
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which she has herself received. Where there are discrepancies she seems willing now to put such difficulties aside for future elucidation at a later stage. She has great working and persuasive power and if she receives instruction from her own guardians or inner spirit or whoever they may be, will no doubt throw herself <u>con</u><u>amore</u> into the [[Theosophy|Theosophical]] propaganda. A very little impulse now would set her to work on public lectures, but my own inclination is rather to wait a little longer and get the [[Theosophical Society|Society]] into a still more rigorous condition internally first &ndash; before urging her to do this.
 
[[Mary Gebhard|Madam Gebhard]] is a person of the most indomitably steadfast nature, but she will have to go back now to Germany. Would you wish her to attempt the establishment of a T.S. lodge at Elberfeld? or is it not worthwhile to multiply branches
 
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'''NOTES:'''
* '''con amore''' is an Italian expression for "with love" or "with tenderness."
 
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== Page 3 ==
 
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with ladies at their head?
 
Can you tell me whether you ever took possession of a letter from Madam Gebhard a year or two ago, and whether you gave her a mental reply as she is inclined to believe though anxious not to encourage impressions to that effect on insufficient grounds.
 
Can you tell me for my own guidance in dealing with such cases, what is the possibility before such women as Madam Gebhard, cool, resolute seekers of occult advancement with all the qualities apparently that aught qualify them for regular chelaship, if sex did not stand in the way? Are they likely to obtain an artificial reincarnation at death in a body better fitted for success?
 
Madam Gebhard seems to us to have the making of a tried [[chela]] in her, more even than Mrs Kingsford, great as the psychic gifts of this latter lady are, at all events to be as well qualified in a different way
 
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'''NOTES:'''
* Mary Gebhard is known to have received at least two letters from K. H. and one from the [[Mahatma]] [[Morya]], and may have had other communications from them.
 
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== Page 4 ==
 
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Now about my questions.
 
If a dead infant may be [[Reincarnation|reincarnated]] on the lines of the old [[Karma|karmic]] affinities almost immediately, may the half grown boy or girl reincarnate at short periods. Say 1500 years is about the shortest interval for an adult, then may there be all the gradations of intervals in the case of young persons dying with imperfectly developed Karma. Common sense seems to indicate thus.
 
Is there any essential difference as to their spiritual origin between noxious and innocuous animals. Of course the crude idea about the noxious animals representing the relapse into lower forms of criminal egos once having elevated to a higher level, will not work: but there may be some mystery behind this problem susceptible of explanations.
 
The planet behind us in our
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[http://www.theosophy.wiki/mywiki/images/ML/UnpubKH1_4.jpg http://www.theosophy.wiki/mywiki/images/ML/UnpubKH1_4_thm.jpg]
 
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'''NOTES:'''
*
 
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== Page 5 ==
 
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[[Planetary Chain|chain]], Mars, and the one in advance being apparently quite material on the same plane of materiality as the Earth now is and that the planets behind Mars and in advance of Mercury, are quite too ethereal to be perceived by physical observations ? There seems too abrupt a passage here from gross materiality to a high order of ethereality. 
 
[[spiritualism|Spiritualistic]] cases to which such explanations as I can give seem not to apply keep multiplying on my hands.
 
[[William Crookes|Crookes]] stands in the way one direction with [[Katie King]]; fully materialized according to his account time after time always the same highly intelligent and distinct entity.
 
Drayson tells various stories pointing to accurate knowledge of facts by “spirits” quite outside the knowledge of any sitters also of cases in which predictions by spirits are verified afterwards.
 
This matter about
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'''NOTES:'''
* '''Katie King''' was a materialized spirit appearing through many [[Mediumship|mediums]].
* '''Drayson''' refers to General Alfred Wilks Drayson, a member of the [[London Lodge]].
* '''sitters''' refers to mediums.
 
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== Page 6 ==
 
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conveyed either [[spiritualism|spiritualistically]] or by vision perplexes me very much. A few days ago, Mrs Kingsford had a vision of herself in a Hansom cab meeting with a certain accident of no great importance but precise in its nature. The accident only happened in the course of the day just as foreseen; and yet it could only have occurred by the confluence of a hundred different acts by different people each apparently determinedly free will. Mrs K has had many similar experiences.
 
Judged by external signs the Indo-British newspaper company looks as if it were hardly destined to acquire an adult karma; as if it might prove one of the failures of Nature we sometimes talk about. But until I hear from you that the enterprise has
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'''NOTES:'''
*
 
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== Page 7 ==
 
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fallen through, I shall continue to believe that it will ultimately float. Only inasmuch as if it should not float, I shall have to recast my plans in life to some extent, I should be glad to know the worst at the earliest moment by telegraph if you would kindly have word sent to me that way, in the event of the scheme being definitely abandoned by you. Of course I hope I may never [word scratched out] receive any such telegram.
 
Your affectionately as Ever
 
A P Sinnett
 
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'''NOTES:'''
=== Articles ===
*


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The [[Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals]] lists [[https://theosophicalsociety.org.au/union_index/entries?q=Gomes&s=title|at least 58 articles mentioning Michael Gomes]. Many are reviews of his books.


== Context and background ==
* [https://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/a-blavatsky-revival-an-interview-with-michael-gomes A Blavatsky Revival: An Interview with Michael Gomes] by Richard Smoley. Published in ''Quest'' 100 no.3 (Summer 2012): 90-94.


The next known letter from K. H. to Sinnett was [[Mahatma Letter No. 111]] (in chronological numbering system, or No. 59 in the Barker system). That is quite a long letter covering many subjects.
=== Video ===
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6TTWy1scs4 Keynote Address: 150 Years of Theosophy] , followed by presentation to Mr. Gomes of the Subba Row Medal by Tim Boyd at the [[World Congress of the Theosophical Society (Adyar)|Twelfth World Congress]], Vancouver, 2025.


== Physical description of letter ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdCCh3NIARs HPB’s Esoteric Instructions], presented on July 18, 2016. This presentation, given at the 130th Summer National Convention of the Theosophical Society in America, explores the fascinating life and work of H. P. Blavatsky and invites us to discover transformative potentials in our own lives and for the world we live in.


Two sheets of paper were folded and written on both sides. Notations by K.H. are in blue ink. This letter is in a private collection.
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAoD1gIVE-w The Dawning of the Theosophical Age] Presented on February 16, 2012. Twenty-five years ago, Michael Gomes' defining history, "The Dawning of the Theosophical Movement," was published. Celebrating the book's quarter-century in print, Michael Gomes speaks about the function of esoteric history, the use of tradition and lineage, and additional discoveries that he's made about the subject since 1987 when his book was first published.


== Publication history ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JJCLTfKff The Secret of the Secret Doctrine Part 1] presented Dec 28, 2023 at the European School of Theosophy.


This letter has never been published before.  
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNSx9xslVYw The Secret of the Secret Doctrine Part 3] presented Dec 28, 2023 at the European School of Theosophy.


== Commentary about this letter ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwCbiK30FyQ The Secret of the Secret Doctrine Part 4] presented Dec 28, 2023 at the European School of Theosophy.


The chief significance of this letter is that it is a rare example of Sinnett's side of his correspondence with the Mahatmas, and that [[H. P. Blavatsky|Madame Blavatsky]] was instructed to preserve it.
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aArPJidVsLw Who Was HPB?] Presented on July 16, 2016 at the 130th Summer National Convention of the Theosophical Society in America.


== Additional resources ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWln6HMR5x8 Upon this Foundation is Wisdom Established] presented Dec 27, 2014 at international convention in Adyar.


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
<references/>
<references/>


[[Category:ML from Koot Hoomi]]  
[[Category:Lecturers|Gomes, Michael]]
[[Category:ML to A. P. Sinnett]]
[[Category:TS Adyar|Gomes, Michael]]
[[Category:ML with images]]
[[Category:Nationality Canadian|Gomes, Michael]]
[[Category:Writers|Gomes, Michael]]
[[Category:Librarians|Gomes, Michael]]
[[Category:People|Gomes, Michael]]

Latest revision as of 19:22, 27 January 2026

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UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Michael Gomes with Subba Row Medal, 2025

Michael Gomes (1951- ) is a Canadian-American theosophical historian, writer, and researcher. In 2025 the General Council of the Theosophical Society awarded him the Subba Row Medal in recognition of his contribution to theosophical literature. Since 1995 he has been the director of the Emily Sellon Memorial Library in New York City.

Early life

Gomes was born a British subject on the Crown colony of Trinidad, becoming a Canadian citizen in 1965. He became a member of the Theosophical Society in 1968 at the age of 17, joining through the historic Toronto TS. Since 1973 he has lived in New York City. During the 1970s he was an assistant to the British American designer, Charles James, working in his archives, and after that as a director of publicity for a New York music company. He studied South Asian history and culture at Columbia University and spent three years at the International Headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras, working mainly in the archives. He has travelled widely in India, spending time at the major locations connected with the spread of Theosophy—Bombay, Calcutta, Varanasi, Amritsar, Simla, and, of course, Madras, now Chennai. He was invited by the Theosophical Society in England to deliver their prestigious Blavatsky Lecture on three occasions, an honor shared only with Radha Burnier and E. L. Gardner.

Beatrice Hastings Collection

Michael Gomes began his career as a theosophical researcher in the early 1970s by cataloguing the collection of books, papers, typescripts and correspondence of the English theosophical historian, Beatrice Hastings (1879-1943). Mrs. Hastings published her defining studies on the case for H. P. Blavatsky, including the only analysis of Emma Coulomb’s accusatory pamphlet, in England in 1937-38. Before writing about Blavatsky, Hasting had been an editor of one of England’s most noted literary magazines and had later moved to Paris and served as a muse for the Italian painter, Amodeo Modigliani, who did several paintings of her. After her death, her papers were sent to A. E. S. Smythe, General Secretary of the Canadian Section of the TS, who deposited them at the HPB Library in British Columbia. Having access to Hastings’ material and cataloguing her vast correspondence provided Gomes with valuable skills in the years to come. A tireless researcher, he travelled to Worthing, England, to meet the executor of Hastings’ estate, who knew her personally. Some of the results of his research are cited in Stephen Gray’s comprehensive biography Beatrice Hastings: A Literary Life[1], and his own “Beatrice Hastings and ‘The Defence of Madame Blavatsky.’” Assessing her contribution, he concludes that “Beatrice Hastings brought a new impetus to the field of theosophical research, and in the decades following her death, her insistence on thorough documentation proved a marked influence on other writers.”[2] Hastings’ rigorous standards proved a marked influence on those who took up the case after her, the late K.F. Vania of Bombay, and Walter A. Carrithers of Fresno, California.

Theosophical History

After exhausting the resources of libraries and archives in North America and England, Gomes spent a year at the Archives at the International Headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras, India, where he would return for another two years. During his stay in 1984-85, he would have the opportunity of perusing the numerous volumes of press scrapbooks put together by Mme. Blavatsky, the handwritten diaries of Col. Olcott, their correspondence and other artifacts relating to the history of the Theosophical Society. While there he arranged and catalogued HPB’s collection of books in the archives.[3] He claims to be the only person known to have gone through the entire card catalog of the Adyar Library. The results of his research appeared in 1987 as The Dawning of the Theosophical Movement, the first full examination of the origins of the movement.

Supplemental to this, was a seven-part series titled "Studies in Early American Theosophical History." Published in The Canadian Theosophist from Jan. 1989 to Jan. 1991, it dealt “with those issues which although only slightly mentioned in that book, could have more to say” using in-depth analysis of original documents, such as the Minute Book of the Theosophical Society for 1875/76.

Gomes followed this with a massive bibliography on Theosophy in the Nineteenth Century in 1994. Providing annotated commentary for over a thousand items related to the subject, it covered not only material about Blavatsky and the movement but also gave the first inventory of theosophical literature published in the nineteenth century. It was the result of a seven-year search through libraries and archives in the U.S., Canada, England and India. The author of a number of studies, articles and monographs, such as The Coulomb Case—1884-1984, (1985, 2005), an examination of the events contributing to this incident and its results; “Nehru’s Theosophical Tutor: F.T. Brooks” (1998), a portrait of the person who introduced the future prime minister of India to Theosophy; “The Making of The Secret Doctrine” (1988) written for the centenary of the book’s publication, and translated into French, Dutch, Swedish and Italian; and the entry on “H.P. Blavatsky and Theosophy” in The Cambridge Handbook of Western Mysticism and Esotericism (2016), his writings have brought increased recognition to the subject outside of the theosophical movement.

The Blavatsky Writings Project

Commemorating the centenary of HPB’s passing in 1991, the Theosophical Publishing House at Adyar issued HPB Teaches, a one volume anthology of Mme. Blavatsky’s vast magazine and newspaper output compiled by Gomes. This began a project that would oversee the production of six volumes of HPB’s writings. In 1997 Quest Books in the U.S. released his abridgement of Blavatsky’s two volume Isis Unveiled. Removing some 1,200 pages, the abridgement brought into sharp relief the basic assumptions that the book was trying to argue for. His abridgement of The Secret Doctrine released by Tarcher/Penguin in 2009 provided the first critical edition of the famous stanzas that form the book, based on the various readings of the text. The next year, his transcription of Blavatsky’s comments on The Secret Doctrine from stenographic reports of the 1889 meetings of the Blavatsky Lodge in London, was issued in The Hague in the Netherlands. A bibliography put together by him of the numerous studies about The Secret Doctrine was published in the December 2013 Theosophist.[4] In 2015 his edition of HPB’s Esoteric Instructions, featuring the original color and black and white folding plates, was released by TPH Adyar, making this material more available. The publication in 2025 of the H. P. Blavatsky Collected Writings Russian Serials volume edited by Gomes, which also concluded the series, brought the first English translations of Blavatsky’s writings about life in America during her stay in the 1870s and personal insights about her views on life in India. His editions have helped make H. P. Blavatsky’s voluminous writings more approachable and accessible.

Elisabeth Trumpler, Michael Gomes, and Lakshmi Narayanaswami in June, 2000

Library and archives work

UNDER CONSTRUCTION
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
In 1995, Michael Gomes became director of the Emily Sellon Memorial Library, housed in the New York Theosophical Society's building in Manhattan.

A library union catalog was first established in June, 2000, with funding from the Sellon family and the Kern Foundation. A new automated library system was established to support a Web-based catalog at the Henry S. Olcott Memorial Library, shared with the Krotona Library and the Emily Sellon Memorial Library. Librarians Elisabeth Trumpler of Olcott, Lakshmi Narayanaswami of the Krotona Institute and Michael Gomes of New York spent a week in training sessions before the system was implemented.

Presentations and lectures

Apart from his numerous publications, Michael Gomes has been an active participant in a number of major academic conferences on the subject of Theosophy. He was a presenter at the first academic conference devoted to Theosophy; chaired by James Santucci at the American Academy of Religion Annual Meeting in Chicago, 1994, the panel included Antoine Faivre, Jean-Pierre Laurent and others who had defined esotericism as a field of academic study. He has presented papers at the Legacies of Theosophy Conference at the University of Sydney in 2010, the Enchanted Modernities Conference at Columbia University, 2015, and Theosophy and the Study of Religion Conference at the Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard University, 2019, among others. He has also presented on the subject at non-theosophical conferences, such as the Buddhist Themes in Modern Indian Literature National Seminar held by the Institute of Asian Studies, University of Madras, in 1991, the first all-India conference on the subject.

Regarded as “one of today’s most respected writers on esoteric movements, as well known to readers of occult and esoteric literature as to students and scholars of modern religion,”[5] his work helped fuel what has been described as “A Blavatsky Renaissance” in the 1980s and 1990s. Joy Mills wrote in the 1980s that “Among the best and most careful researchers into theosophical history, both thorough in method and objective in presentation, is Michael Gomes.”[6] In his letter announcing the award of the Subba Row Medal to Gomes in 2025, Tim Boyd, International President of the Theosophical Society, noted that a deciding factor was that “Over the past four decades your contribution to the literature related to Theosophy and the theosophical movement has been substantial.”[7]

“Aside from accessing the mental world that the people around Blavatsky inhabited, there is the temporal aspect of their lives, the physicality of it, the geography of place,” Gomes wrote in a note to his 2017 Blavatsky Lecture, describing his historical process and method. “This is why I have always stressed the value of on-the-ground research. Locating A. O. Hume’s home in Simla, North India, gave a spatial understanding of the events that had occurred when Blavatsky was his guest. In knowing the limitations and extremes of these situations one begins to understand and appreciate the remarkable contribution of those early Theosophists who risked ridicule and scorn so one could enjoy freedom of belief.”[8]

Writings

Cover of The Secret Doctrine

Articles

The Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals lists 110 articles by Michael Gomes.

Books and pamphlets











Published Blavatsky Lectures

  • Colonel Olcott and the Healing Arts. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2007. 49 pages, illustrations, portraits. The Blavatsky Lecture was delivered at the Summer School of the Foundation for Theosophical Studies, the University of Leicester, Sunday 5 August 2007.
  • A Multitudinous Universe. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2017. 25 pages: illustrations (portraits). The Blavatsky Lecture was delivered at the Summer School of The Foundation for Theosophical Studies Hillscourt, Rose Hill Rednall, Birmingham B45 8RS on Sunday 6 August 2017.

Additional resources

Articles

The Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals lists [least 58 articles mentioning Michael Gomes. Many are reviews of his books.

Video

  • HPB’s Esoteric Instructions, presented on July 18, 2016. This presentation, given at the 130th Summer National Convention of the Theosophical Society in America, explores the fascinating life and work of H. P. Blavatsky and invites us to discover transformative potentials in our own lives and for the world we live in.
  • The Dawning of the Theosophical Age Presented on February 16, 2012. Twenty-five years ago, Michael Gomes' defining history, "The Dawning of the Theosophical Movement," was published. Celebrating the book's quarter-century in print, Michael Gomes speaks about the function of esoteric history, the use of tradition and lineage, and additional discoveries that he's made about the subject since 1987 when his book was first published.
  • Who Was HPB? Presented on July 16, 2016 at the 130th Summer National Convention of the Theosophical Society in America.

Notes

  1. Viking/Penguin, South Africa, 2004.
  2. Gomes, “Beatrice Hastings and ‘The Defence of Madame Blavatsky.’” Introduction to the Edmonton T.S. 1988 edition of Beatrice Hastings’ Solovyoff’s Fraud.
  3. Gomes, A Catalogue of Books Belonging to H.P. Blavatsky in the Archives of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras, India. Theosophical Research Monographs, No. 1, 1995.
  4. Gomes, “The Secret Doctrine: Book of Books,” The Theosophist 135 (December 2013): 6-14.
  5. Theosophical Society, Author bio in the 2025 Vancouver World Congress program.
  6. Mills, The Theosophist, February 1988.
  7. Tim Boyd, President, T.S. notification letter to Gomes, 31 Dec 2024.
  8. Gomes, A Multitudinous Universe: The Blavatsky Lecture at 100. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 2017, 25.