Mabel Collins
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Mabel Collins (9 September 1851 – 31 March 1927) was a theosophist and author of over 46 books.
Contents
Life
Mabel Collins was born in St Peter Port, Guernsey. She was a writer of popular occult novels, a fashion writer and an anti-vivisection campaigner. According to Vittoria Cremers, as related by Aleister Crowley, Collins was at one time being romantically pursued by both Cremers and alleged occultist Robert D'Onston Stephenson. Cremers claimed that during this time she found five blood-soaked ties in a trunk under Stephenson's bed, corresponding to the five murders committed in Whitechapel by Jack the Ripper. Stephenson is no longer a candidate as being Jack the Ripper due to the efforts of competent, modern researchers. However, Stephenson was a rival with Cremers for Collins' affections, and this account cannot be independently confirmed.[1]
Works
- Light on the Path (1885)
- The Prettiest Woman in Warsaw (1885)
- Through the Gates of Gold (1887)
- The Blossom and the Fruit (1887)
- The Idyll of the White Lotus (1890)
- Morial the Mahatma (1892)
- Suggestion (1892)
- Juliet’s Lovers (1893)
- The Story of the Year (1895)
- The Star Sapphire (1896)
- A Cry From Afar (1905)
- Loves Chaplet (1905)
- Fragments of Thought and Life (1908)
- When the Sun Moves Northward (1912)
- The Story of Sensa (1913)
- As the Flower Grows (1915)
References
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External links
- Mabel Collins biography
- Mabel Collins' theosophical works
- Mabel Collins on the Mystical Site www.mysticism.nl
- Works by Mabel Collins at Project Gutenberg
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- Works by Mabel Collins at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
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- ↑ "Do What Thou Wilt: A life of Aleister Crowley", Lawrence Sutin, p. 228