Blavatsky's Theosophical Glossary is a great, uneven, unfinished posthumous document,  that is, as always with Blavatsky, enigmatic. Yet there are many pearls of information therein that are utterly unique. The following remarkable comparative overview of the mystical aspects of hair is one of many fascinating entries:
Hair. Occult philosophy considers the hair (whether human or animal) as the natural  receptacle and retainer of the vital essence which often escapes with other  emanations from the body. It is closely connected with many of the brain  functions—for instance memory.
With the ancient Israelites the cutting of the  hair and beard was a sign of defilement, and “the Lord said unto Moses. . . They  shall not make baldness upon their head”, etc. (Lev. XX1., 1-5.) “Baldness”,  whether natural or artificial, was a sign of calamity, punishment, or grief, as  when Isaiah (iii., 24) enumerates, “instead of well-set hair baldness”, among  the evils that are ready to befall the chosen people. And again, “On all their  heads baldness and every beard cut” (Ibid. xv., 2). The Nazarite was ordered to  let his hair and beard grow, and never to permit a razor to touch them. 
With the  Egyptians and Buddhists it was only the initiated priest or ascetic to whom life  is a burden, who shaved. The Egyptian priest was supposed to have become master  of his body, and hence shaved his head for cleanliness; yet the Hierophants wore  their hair long. The Buddhist still shaves his head to this day—as sign of scorn  for life and health. Yet Buddha, after shaving his hair when he first became a  mendicant, let it grow again and is always represented with the top-knot of a  Yogi. The Hindu priests and Brahmins, and almost all the castes, shave the rest  of the head but leave a long lock to grow from the centre of the crown. The  ascetics of India  wear their hair long, and so do the war-like Sikhs, and almost all the Mongolian  peoples. 
At Byzantium and Rhodes the shaving of the beard was prohibited by law,  and in Sparta  the cutting of the beard was a mark of slavery and servitude. Among the  Scandinavians, we are told, it was considered a disgrace, “a mark of infamy”, to  cut off the hair. The whole population of the island  of Ceylon  (the Buddhist Singhalese) wear their hair long. So do the Russian, Greek and  Armenian clergy, and monks. Jesus and the Apostles are always represented with  their hair long, but fashion in Christendom proved stronger than Christianity,  the old ecclesiastical rules (Constit. Apost. lib. I. C. 3) enjoining the  clergy “to wear their hair and beards long” (See  Riddle’s Ecclesiastical Antiquities.)  The ‘Templars were commanded to  wear their beards long. Samson wore his hair long, and the biblical allegory  shows that health and strength and the very life are connected with the length  of the hair. 
If a cat is shaved it will die in nine cases out of ten. A dog  whose coat is not interfered with lives longer and is more intelligent than one  whose coat is shaven. Many old people as they lose their hair lose much of their  memory and become weaker. While the life of the Yogis is proverbially long, the  Buddhist priests (of Ceylon  and elsewhere) are not generally long-lived. Mussulmen shave their heads but  wear their beards; and as their head is always covered, the danger is less.
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