The Herald of Coming Good

The Herald of Coming Good is the first book published by G. I. Gurdjieff.[1] The book was privately published in Paris in 1933. The book was published with the help of Charles Stanley Nott a student of Gurdjieff.

Structure

In addition to the main body of the text, the book contains the following sections:[2]

  • A message from The Author
  • My First Practical Counsel
  • Circular Letter
  • A Supplementary Announcement
  • A number of Registration Blanks

Contents

Gurdjieff refers to The Herald of Coming Good Book as "... this first of my writings intended to head the list of my publications ...".

The book contains an outline of all his other writings, All and Everything, consisting of "ten books in three series".

gollark: I will forever miss its tinted glasses, though. I had one with thorns and stuff, and they have no durability and look extremely cool. I got an enchanted book with the enchants on it, but it's just... not the same.
gollark: They are not universally unique between servers etc.
gollark: > as in, each installation has a different UUID?yeß
gollark: Oh yes, right, it crashed when you tried to use plethora with its cookie jars.
gollark: <@270035320894914560> Also, potatOS includes per-computer UUIDs now!

References

  1. The Harmonious Circle, James Webb, G P Putnam's Sons, New York, 1980, pp 426-430
  2. The Herald of Coming Good: First Appeal to Contemporary Humanity, Paris - Angers: privately published 1933



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.