[88] One, here means the "life atoms" of a man's body.
[89] The word is here used in a generic sense; in the present work, it would be more precise to replace it by the word Resurrection.
[90] This "triad" comprises the visible matter of the body, the etheric substance, and the life (Prâna) which the human ether absorbs and specialises for the vitalising of the body. See Man and his Bodies, by A. Besant.
[91] H. P. Blavatsky, The Theosophist, Vol. 4, pages 287, 288.
[92] The finer elements invisible to physical eye. Their function is sensation, and by their association with the human mental body incarnated in them, they give birth to the emotions and passions, in a word, to the animal in man.
[93] The Umbra of the Latin races.
[94] The Kâma Rûpa of the Hindus.
[95] The purgatory of Christians, the astral plane of theosophists, and the Kâmaloka of Hindus.
[96] By the fire of purgatory, says the Catholic metaphor.
[97] See A. Besant's masterly work on Reincarnation.