Abrac
I found ten other places where he uses “derived to.” Here are four examples:
When he lapsed from that pure condition he lost this precious deposit, but it was subsequently restored to him in order that he might return towards perfection. It was handed down through Noah to Abraham and thence derived to Moses.—The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah
In the natural order it is the human conception of Deity, to which God condescends and may be said in a sense to verify and even to inform. Conversely, as regarded from above, it is the construction of the Divine Nature, so that its knowledge and its power may be derived to mankind.—The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah
It is a little difficult to summarise within a small space the tradition which has thus been derived to us from Oriental and Spanish Jews, and it is more than difficult to put it into readily intelligible language.—Studies in Mysticism
Now, the Byzantine tradition of Alchemy came down, as it has been seen, in the earlier pages of this study to the Latin writers of the middle ages, but the Latin writers did not derive it immediately from the Greek adepts. On the contrary, it was derived to them immediately through the Syriac and Arabian alchemists.—The Alchemical Papers of A.E. Waite
In the natural order it is the human conception of Deity, to which God condescends and may be said in a sense to verify and even to inform. Conversely, as regarded from above, it is the construction of the Divine Nature, so that its knowledge and its power may be derived to mankind.—The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah
It is a little difficult to summarise within a small space the tradition which has thus been derived to us from Oriental and Spanish Jews, and it is more than difficult to put it into readily intelligible language.—Studies in Mysticism
Now, the Byzantine tradition of Alchemy came down, as it has been seen, in the earlier pages of this study to the Latin writers of the middle ages, but the Latin writers did not derive it immediately from the Greek adepts. On the contrary, it was derived to them immediately through the Syriac and Arabian alchemists.—The Alchemical Papers of A.E. Waite