The Aryan Path

[6] In its first edition, a writer named "Shravaka" emphasised that so much "original" writing is done today, so much "self-expression" is indulged in that, in the glamour that is raised, the chants of the Gods remain unheard.

[8] The journal contained a variety of articles on Hindu and Buddhist spiritual traditions, as well as essays on English literature, Ruskinian socialism, aesthetics and science.

[9] The journal's contributors included C. E. M. Joad, John Middleton Murry, A. E. Waite,[10] Ramananda Chatterjee, Edmond Holmes, Max Plowman,[11] J. D. Beresford, Hugh I'Anson Fausset, Hugh de Sélincourt, Humbert Wolfe[12] and Gertrude Emerson Sen.[13] The March 1930 issue carried an essay on reincarnation by Algernon Blackwood.

[14] The March 1932 issue carried the article "Goethe and the East" by Otto Schrader, described by The Spectator magazine as "timely and interesting".

[17] In 1952 The Aryan Path ran a series of articles on the Bon religion of Tibet by René de Nebesky-Wojkowitz.