[117] Reincarnation.
[118] Vol. 3, p. 124.
[119] The causal body illumined by the divine Essence, which theosophy names Âtmâ-Buddhi.
[120] He calls him "the prince of lying fathers and dishonest writers." (Egypt, vol. 1, p. 200).
[121] Eusebius even confesses this himself: "I have set forth whatever is calculated to enhance the glory of our religion, and kept back everything likely to cast a stain upon it." (Prœparatio Evangelica. Book 12, chap. 31).
[122] Namae-Sat Vakhshûr-i-Mahabad, also in the fourth "Journey" in chap. 4 of Jam-i-Kaikhoshru (see The Theosophist, p. 333, vol. 21).
[123] See Bardic Triads, by E. Williams. Translated from the original Welsh.
[124] "'Abred' is the circle of the migrations through which every animated being proceeds from death: man has passed through it." Triad 13.
"Transmigration is in 'Abred.'" Triad 14.
"There are three primitive calamities in 'Abred': the necessity of evolution (of rebirths), the absence of memory (of past incarnations) and death (followed by rebirth)." Triad 18 (the words in parentheses are our own).