At the Feet of the Master | |
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Author(s) | Alcyone (Jiddu Krishnamurti) |
Country | India |
Language | English |
Subject(s) | Theosophy, Religious text |
Publisher | Theosophist Office |
Publication date | December 1910 (1st edition) |
Media type | Print (cloth) |
Pages | 84 pp. |
OCLC Number | 465903996 |
At the Feet of the Master is a book attributed to Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895–1986), authored when he was fourteen years old. Written under the name Alcyone, it was first published in 1910.[1] It has since gone through dozens of editions, and has been translated in many languages.[2]
Contents |
The identity of the author has been the subject of debate.[3] It has been proposed that Charles Webster Leadbeater, one of Krishnamurti's mentors, was the actual producer of the work; Leadbeater had assigned him the pseudonym (Alcyone).[4] Krishnamurti's statements on the matter of authorship have been changeable and open to interpretation; his final position (decades after the original publication) was that he had no memory of writing it, although he did not discount the possibility.[5]
The following is stated in the book's "Foreword": "These are not my words; they are the words of the Master who taught me."[6] This statement is apparently related to Leadbeater's claim that the so-called Master Kuthumi, a postulated embodied spiritual entity, was "releasing" (through a mystical process) the spiritual instruction that makes up the work to young Krishnamurti while the latter was asleep.[7] Upon waking, Krishnamurti "with great laboriousness" put the instructions into notes; these were spell-and-grammar-checked, and then arranged and typed by Leadbeater.[8]
The original notes by Krishnamurti are missing; the extent of any differences with the typescript and the original published edition is not clear.[9] The debate regarding the role of Krishnamurti in the production and promotion of this work persisted, a century after its original publication.[10]
The original edition, featuring a then-recent photograph of "Alcyone" in its frontispiece, was bound in blue cloth, with a limited number of copies bound in blue leather.[1] The book includes a "Preface" by Krishnamurti mentor and legal guardian Annie Besant (then–President of the Theosophical Society), and the previously mentioned "Foreword" by Alcyone. The work is then laid out in four parts, corresponding to its proclaimed requirements for disciples on the spiritual path:[11]
The book is considered a theosophical classic, and as of 2010[update] it had never been out of print. As of the same year, early editions of the work were in the public domain within several jurisdictions.[12]
Later editions may be listed as co-authored, or solely authored, by Jiddu Krishnamurti.