The Writings of Alfred Percy Sinnett
Alfred
Percy Sinnett
1840
-1921
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Esoteric Buddhism
Chapter 8
The
Progress of Humanity
THE course of Nature provides, as the reader will now have seen,
for the indefinite progress towards higher phases of existence of all human
entities. But no less will it have been seen that by endowing these entities,
as they advance with ever-increasing faculties and by constantly enlarging the
scope of their activity. Nature also furnishes each human entity with more and
more decisive opportunities of choosing between good and evil. In the earlier
rounds of humanity this privilege of selection is not fully developed, and
responsibility of action is correspondingly incomplete. The earlier rounds of
humanity, in fact, do not invest the Ego with spiritual responsibility at all
in the larger sense of the term which we are now approaching. The Devachanic
periods which follow each objective existence in turn, dispose fully of its
merits and demerits, and the most deplorable personality which the ego during
the first half of its evolution can possible develop, is merely dropped out of
the account as regards the larger undertaking, while the erring personality
itself pays its relatively brief penalty, and troubles Nature no more. But the
second half of the great evolutionary period is carried on on different
principles. The phases of existence which are now coming into view, cannot be
entered upon by the ego without positive merits of its own appropriate to the
new developments in prospect; it is not enough that the now fully responsible
and highly gifted being which man becomes at the great turning-point in his
career, should float idly on the stream of progress; he must begin to swim, if
he wishes to push his way forward.
Debarred by the complexity of the subject from dealing with all
its features simultaneously, our survey of Nature has so far contemplated the
seven rounds of human development, which constitute the whole planetary
undertaking with which we are concerned, as a continuous series, throughout
which it is the natural destiny of humanity in general to pass. But it will be
remembered that humanity in the sixth round has been spoken of as so highly
developed that the sublime attributes and faculties of the highest adeptship
are the common appanage of all; while in the seventh round the race has almost
emerged from humanity into divinity. Now every human being in this state of
development will still be identified by an uninterrupted connection with all
the personalities which have been strung upon that thread of life from the
beginning of the great evolutionary process. Is it conceivable that the
character of such personalities is of no consequence in the long-run, and that
two God-like beings might stand side by side in the seventh round, developed,
the one from a long series of blameless and serviceable existences, the other
from an equally long series of evil and grovelling lives? That surely could not
come to pass, and we have to ask now, how do we find the congruities of Nature
preserved compatibly with the appointed evolution of humanity to the higher
forms of existence which crown the edifice?
Just as childhood is irresponsible for its acts, the earlier races
of humanity are irresponsible for theirs; but there comes the period of full
growth, when the complete development of the faculties which enable the individual
man to choose between good and evil, in the single life with which he is for
the moment concerned, enable the continuous ego also to make its final
selection. That period - that enormous period, for Nature is in no hurry to
catch its creatures in a trap in such a matter as this - is barely yet
beginning, and a complete round period around the seven worlds will have to be
gone through before it is over. Until the middle of the fifth period is passed
on this earth, the great question - to be or not to be for the future - is not
irrevocably settled. We are coming now into the possession of the faculties
which render man a fully responsible being, but we have yet to employ those
faculties during the maturity of our ego-hood in the manner which shall determine
the vast consequences hereafter.
It is during the first half of the fifth round that the struggle
principally takes place. Till then, the ordinary course of life may be a good
or a bad preparation for the struggle, but cannot fairly be described as the
struggle itself. And now we have to examine the nature of the struggle, so far
merely spoken of as the selection between good and evil. That is in no way an
inaccurate, but it is an incomplete, definition.
The ever-recurring and ever-threatened conflict between intellect
and spirituality, is the phenomenon to be now examined. The commonplace
conceptions which these two words denote, must of course be expanded to some
extent before the occult conception is realized; for European habits of
thinking are rather apt to set up in the mind an ignoble image of spirituality,
as an attribute rather of the character than of the mind itself, - a pale
goody-goodiness, born of an attachment to religious ceremonial and of devout
aspirations, no matter to what whimsical notions of Heaven and Divinity in
which the “spiritually-minded” person may have been brought up. Spirituality,
in the occult sense, has little or nothing to do with feeling devout; it has to
do with the capacity of the mind for assimilating knowledge at the
fountain-head of knowledge itself - of absolute knowledge - instead of by the
circuitous and labourious process of ratiocination.
The development of pure intellect, the ratiocinative faculty, has
been the business of European nations for so long, and in this department of
human progress they have achieved such magnificent triumphs, that nothing in
occult philosophy will be less acceptable to Europeans themselves at first, and
while the ideas at stake are imperfectly grasped, than the first aspect of the
occult theory concerning intellect and spirituality; but this does not arise so
much from the undue tendency of occult science to depreciate intellect, as from
the undue tendency of modern Western speculation to depreciate spirituality.
Broadly speaking, so far Western philosophy has had no opportunity of
appreciating spirituality; it has not been made acquainted with the range of
the inner faculties of man; it has merely groped blindly in the direction of a
belief that such inner faculties existed; and Kant himself, the greatest modern
exponent of that idea, does little more than contend that there is such a
faculty as intuition - if we only knew how to work with it.
The process of working with it, is occult science in its highest
aspect, the cultivation of spirituality. The cultivation of mere power over the
forces of Nature, the investigation of some of her subtler secrets as regards
the inner principles controlling physical results, is occult science in its
lowest aspect, and into that lower region of its activity mere physical science
may, or even must, gradually run up. But the acquisition by mere intellect -
physical science in exelsis - of privileges which are the proper
appanage of spirituality, - is one of the dangers of that struggle which decides
the ultimate destiny of the human ego. For there is one thing which
intellectual processes do not help mankind to realize, and that is the nature
and supreme excellence of spiritual existence. On the contrary, intellect
arises out of physical causes - the perfection of the physical brain - and
tends only to physical results, the perfection of material welfare. Although,
as a concession to “weak brethren” and “religion” on which it looks with
good-humoured contempt, modern intellect does not condemn spirituality, it
certainly treats the physical human life as the only serious business with
which grave men, or even earnest philanthropists, can concern themselves. But
obviously, if spiritual existence, vivid subjective consciousness, really does
go on for periods greater than the periods of intellectual physical existence
in the ratio, as we have seen in discussing the Devachanic condition, of 80 to
1 at least, then surely man’s subjective existence is more important than his
physical existence, and intellect is in error when all its efforts are bent on
the amelioration of the physical existence.
These considerations show how the choice between good and evil -
which has been made by the human ego in the course of the great struggle
between intellect and spirituality - is not a mere choice between ideas so
plainly contrasted as wickedness and virtue. It is not so rough a question as
that - whether man be wicked or virtuous - which must really at the final
critical turning-point decide whether he shall continue to live and develop
into higher phases of existence, or cease to live altogether. The truth of the
matter is (if it is not imprudent at this stage of our progress to brush the
surface of a new mystery) that the question, to be or not to be, is not settled
by reference to the question whether a man be wicked or virtuous at all.
It will plainly be seen eventually that there must be evil spirituality as well
as good spirituality. So that the great question of continued existence turns
altogether and of necessity on the question of spirituality, as compared with
physicality. The point is not so much “shall a man live, is he good
enough to be permitted to live any longer?” as “can the man live any
longer in the higher levels of existence into which humanity must at last
evolve? Has he qualified himself to live by the cultivation of the durable
portion of his nature? If not, he has got to the end of his tether.
It need not be hurriedly supposed that occult philosophy considers
vice and virtue of no consequence to human spiritual destinies, because it does
not discover in Nature that these characteristics determine ultimate progress
in evolution. No system is so pitilessly inflexible in its morality as the
system which occult philosophy explores and expounds. But that which vice and
virtue of themselves determine, is happiness and misery, not the final problem
of continued existence, beyond that immeasurably distant period, when in the
progress of evolution man has got to begin being something more than man, and cannot
go on along the path of progress with the help only of the relatively lower
human attributes. It is true again that one can hardly imagine virtue in any
decided degree to fail in engendering, in due time, the required higher
attributes, but we should not be scientifically accurate in speaking of it as
the cause of progress, in ultimate stages of elevation, though it may provoke
the development of that which is the cause of progress.
This consideration - that ultimate progress is determined by
spirituality irrespective of its moral colouring, is the great meaning of the
occult doctrine that “to be immortal in good one must identify oneself with
God; to be immortal in evil with Satan. These are the two poles of the world of
souls; between these two poles vegetate and die without remembrance the useless
portion of mankind” [Eliphas Levi]. The enigma, like all occult formulas, has a
lesser application (fitting the microcosm as well as the macrocosm, and in its
lesser significance refers to Devachan or Avitchi, and the blank destiny of
colourless personalities; but in its more important bearing it relates to the
final sorting out of humanity at the middle of the great fifth round, the
annihilation of the utterly unspiritual Egos and the passage onward of the
others to be immortal in good, or immortal in evil. Precisely the same meaning
attaches to the passage in Revelation (iii 15, 16): “I would thou wert cold or
hot; so then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue
thee out of my mouth.”
Spirituality, then, is not devout aspiration; it is the highest
kind of intellection, that which takes cognizance of the workings of Nature by
direct assimilation of the mind and her higher principles. The objection which
physical intelligence will bring against this view is that the mind can cognize
nothing except by observation of phenomena and reasoning thereon. That is the
mistake - it can; and the existence of occult science is the highest proof
thereof. But there are hints pointing in the direction of such proof all around
us if we have but the patience to examine their true bearings. It is idle to
say, in face, merely for one thing, of the phenomena of clairvoyance - crude
and imperfect as those have been which have pushed themselves on the attention
of the world - that there are no other avenues to consciousness but those of
the five senses. Certainly in the ordinary world the clairvoyant faculty is an
exceedingly rare one, but it indicates the existence in man of a potential
faculty, the nature of which, as inferred from its slightest manifestations,
must obviously be capable in its highest development of leading to a direct
assimilation of knowledge independently of observation.
One of the most embarrassing difficulties that beset the present attempt
to translate the esoteric doctrine into plain language, is due really to the
fact, that spiritual perceptiveness, apart from all ordinary processes by which
knowledge is acquired, is a great and grand possibility of human nature. It is
by that method in the regular course of occult training that adepts impart
instruction to their pupils. They awaken the dormant sense in the pupil, and
through this they imbue his mind with a knowledge that such and such a doctrine
is the real truth. The whole scheme of evolution, which the foregoing chapters
have portrayed, infiltrates into the regular chela’s mind by reason of the fact
that he is made to see the process taking place by clairvoyant vision. There
are no words used in his instruction at all. And adepts themselves to whom the
facts and processes of Nature are familiar as our five fingers to us, find it
difficult to explain in a treatise which they cannot illustrate for us, by
producing mental pictures in our dormant sixth sense, the complex anatomy of the
planetary system.
Certainly it is not to be expected that mankind as yet should be
generally conscious of possessing the sixth sense, for the day of its activity
has not yet come. It has been already stated that each round in turn is devoted
to the perfection in man of the corresponding principle in its numerical order,
and to its preparation for assimilation with the next. The earlier rounds have
been described as concerned with man in a shadowy, loosely organized,
unintelligent form. The first principle of all, the body, was developed, but it
was merely growing used to vitality, and was unlike anything we can now picture
to ourselves. The fourth round, in which we are now engaged, is the round in
which the fourth principle, Will, Desire, is fully developed, and in which it
is engaged in assimilating itself with the fifth principle, reason,
intelligence. In the fifth round, the completely developed reason, intellect,
or soul, in which the Ego then resides, must assimilate itself to the sixth
principle, spirituality, or give up the business of existence altogether.
All readers of Buddhist literature are familiar with the constant
references made there to the Arhat’s union of his soul with God. This, in other
words, is the premature development of his sixth principle. He forces himself
right up through all the obstacles which impede such an operation in the case
of a fourth round man, into that stage of evolution which awaits the rest of
humanity - or rather so much of humanity as may reach it in the ordinary course
of Nature - in the latter part of the fifth round. And in doing this it will be
observed he tides himself right over the great period of danger - the middle of
the fifth round. That is the stupendous achievement of the adept as regards his
own personal interests. He has reached the further shore of the sea in which so
many of mankind will perish. He waits there in a contentment which people
cannot even realize without some glimmerings of spirituality - of the sixth
sense - themselves for the arrival there of his future companions. He dos not
wait in his physical body, let me hasten to add to avoid misconstruction, but
when at last privileged to resign this, in a spiritual condition, which
it would be foolish to attempt to describe, while even the Devachanic states of
ordinary humanity are themselves almost beyond the reach of imaginations
untrained in spiritual science.
But, returning to the ordinary course of humanity and the growth
into sixth round people, of men and women who do not become adepts at any
premature stage of their career, it will be observed that this is the
ordinary course of Nature in one sense of the expression, but so also is it the
ordinary course of Nature for every grain of corn that is developed to fall
into appropriate soil, and grow up into an ear of corn itself. All the same a
great many grains do nothing of the sort, and a great many human Egos will
never pass through the trials of the fifth round. The final effort of Nature in
evolving man is to evolve from him a being unmeasurably higher, to be a
conscious agent, and what is ordinarily meant by a creative principle in Nature
herself ultimately. The first achievement is to evolve free-will, and the next
to perpetuate that free-will by inducing it to unite itself with the final
purpose of Nature, which is good. In the course of such an operation it is
inevitable that a great deal of the free-will evolved should turn to evil, and
after producing temporary suffering, be dispersed and annihilated. More than
this, the final purpose can only be achieved by a profuse expenditure of
material, and just as this goes on in the lower stages of evolution, where a
thousand seeds are thrown off by a vegetable, for every one that ultimately
fructifies into a new plant, so are the god-like germs of Will, sown one in
each man’s breast, in abundance like the seeds blown about in the wind. Is the
justice of Nature to be impugned by reason of the fact that many of these germs
will perish? Such an idea could only rise in a mind that will not realize the
room there is in Nature for the growth of every germ which chooses to grow, and
to the extent it chooses to grow, be that extent great or small. If it seems to
any one horrible that an “immortal soul” should perish, under any
circumstances, that impression can only be due to the pernicious habit of
regarding everything as eternity, which is not this microscopic life. There is
room in the subjective spheres, and time in the catenary manvantara, before we
even approach the Dhyân Chohan of God-like period, for more than the ordinary
brain has every yet conceived of immortality. Every good deed and elevated
impulse that every man or woman ever did or felt, must reverberate through æons
of spiritual existence, whether the human entity concerned proves able or not
to expand into the sublime and stupendous development of the seventh round. And
it is out of the causes generated in one of our brief lives on earth, that
exoteric speculation conceives itself capable of constructing eternal results!
Out of such a seven or eight hundredth part of our objective life on earth
during the present stay here of the evolutionary life-wave, we are to expect
Nature to discern sufficient reason for deciding upon our whole subsequent
career. In truth, Nature will make such a large return for a comparatively
small expenditure of human will-power in the right direction, that, extravagant
as the expectation just stated may appear, and extravagant as it is
applied to ordinary lives, one brief existence may sometimes suffice to anticipate
the growth of milliards of years. The adept may in the one earth-life [In
practice, my impression is that this is rarely achieved in one earth-life;
approached rather in two or three artificial incarnations.] achieve so much
advancement that his subsequent growth is certain, and merely a matter of time;
but then the seed germ which produces an adept in our life, must be very
perfect to begin with, and the early conditions of its growth favourable, and
withal the effort on the part of the man himself, life-long and far more
concentrated, more intense, more arduous, than it is possible for the
uninitiated outsider to realize. In ordinary cases, the life which is divided
between material enjoyment and spiritual aspiration - however sincere and
beautiful the latter -can only be productive of a correspondingly duplex
result, of a spiritual reward in Devachan, of a new birth on earth. The manner
in which the adept gets above the necessity of such a new birth, is perfectly
scientific and simple be it observed, though it sounds like a theological
mystery when expounded in exoteric writings by reference to Karma and Skandhas,
Trishna, and Tanha, and so forth. The next earth-life is as much a consequence
of affinities engendered by the fifth principle, the continuous human soul, as
the Devachanic experiences which come first are the growth of the thoughts and
aspirations of an elevated character, which the person concerned has created
during life. That is to say, the affinities engendered in ordinary cases are
partly material, partly spiritual. Therefore they start the soul on its
entrance into the world of effects with a double set of attractions inhering in
it, one set producing the subjective consequences of its Devachanic life, the
other set asserting themselves at the close of that life, and carrying the soul
back again into re-incarnation. But if the person during his objective life
absolutely develops no affinities for material existence, starts his soul at
death with all its attractions tending one way in the direction of
spirituality, and none at all drawing it back to objective life, it does not
come back; it mounts into a condition of spirituality corresponding to the
intensity of the attractions or affinities in that direction, and the other
thread of connection is cut off.
Now this explanation does not entirely cover the whole position,
because the adept himself, no matter how high, does return to incarnation
eventually, after the rest of mankind have passed across the great dividing
period in the middle of the fifth round. Until the exaltation of Planetary
Spirithood is reached, the highest human soul must have a certain affinity for
earth still, though not the earth-life of physical enjoyments and passions that
we are going through. But the important point to realize in regard to the
spiritual consequences of earthly life is, that in so large a majority of
cases, that the abnormal few need not be talked about, the sense of justice in
regard to the destiny of good men is amply satisfied by the course of Nature
step by step as time advances. The spirit-life is ever at hand to receive,
refresh, and restore the soul after the struggles, achievements, or sufferings
of incarnation. And more than this, reserving the question about eternity,
Nature, in the intercyclic periods at the apex of each round, provides for all
mankind, except those unfortunate failures who have persistently adhered to the
path of evil, great intervals of spiritual blessedness, far longer and more
exalted in their character than the Devachanic periods of each separate life.
Nature, in fact, is inconceivably liberal and patient to each and all her
candidates for the final examination during their long preparation for this.
Nor is one failure to pass even this final examination absolutely fatal. The
failures may try again, if they are not utterly disgraceful failures, but they
must wait for the next opportunity.
A complete explanation of the circumstances under which such
waiting is accomplished, would not come into the scheme of this treatise; but
it must not be supposed that candidates for progress, self-convicted of
unfitness to proceed at the critical period of the fifth round, fall
necessarily into the sphere of annihilation. For that attraction to assert
itself, the Ego must have developed a positive attraction for matter, a
positive repulsion for spirituality, which is overwhelming in its force. In the
absence of such affinities, and in the absence also of such affinities as would
suffice to tide the Ego over the great gulf, the destiny which meets the mere
failures of Nature is, as regards the present planetary manwantara, to
die, as Eliphas Levy puts it, without remembrance. They have lived their life,
and had their share of Heaven, but they are not capable of ascending the
tremendous altitudes of spiritual progress then confronting them. But they are
qualified for further incarnation and life on the planes of existence to which
they are accustomed. They will wait, therefore, in the negative spiritual state
they have attained, till those planes of existence are again in activity in the
next planetary manwantara. The duration of such waiting is, of course,
beyond the reach of imagination altogether, and the precise nature of the
existence which is now contemplated is no less unrealizable; but the broad
pathway through that strange region of dreamy semi-animation must be taken note
if, in order that the symmetry and completeness of the whole evolutionary
scheme may be perceived.
And with this last contingency provided for, the whole scheme does
lie before the reader in its main outlines with tolerable completeness.
We have seen the one life, the spirit, animating matter in its lowest forms
first, and evoking growth by slow degrees into higher forms. Individualizing
itself at last in man, it works up through inferior and irresponsible
incarnations until it has penetrated the higher principles, and evolved a true
human soul, which is thenceforth the master of its own fate, though guarded in
the beginning by natural provisions which debar it from premature shipwreck,
which stimulate and refresh it on its course. But the ultimate destiny offered
to that soul is to develop not only into a being capable of taking care of
itself, but into a being capable of taking care also of others, of presiding
over and directing, within what may be called constitutional limits, the
operations of Nature herself. Clearly before the soul can have earned the right
to that promotion, it must have been tried by having conceded to it full
control over it own affairs. That full control necessarily conveys the power to
shipwreck itself. The safeguards put round the Ego in its youth - its inability
to get into the higher or lower states than those of inter-mundane Devachan and
Avitchi - fall from it in its maturity. It is potent, then, over its own
destinies, not only in regard to the development of transitory joy and
suffering, but in regard to the stupendous opportunities in both directions
which existence opens out before it. It may seize on the higher opportunities
in two ways; it may throw up the struggle in two ways; it may attain sublime
spirituality for good, or sublime spirituality for evil; it may ally itself to
physically for (not evil, but for) utter annihilation; or, on the other hand,
for (not good, but for) the negative result of beginning the educational
processes of incarnation all over again.
ANNOTATIONS
The condition into which the monads failing to pass the middle of
the fifth round must fall as the tide of evolution sweeps on, leaving them
stranded, so to speak, upon the shores of time, is not described very fully in
this chapter. By a few words only is it indicated that the failures of each
manwantara are not absolutely annihilated when they reach “the end of their
tether,” but are destined after some enormous period of waiting to pass once
more into the current of evolution. Many inferences may be deduced from this
condition of things. The period of waiting which the failures have thus to undergo,
is to begin with, a duration so stupendous as to baffle the imagination. The
latter half of the fifth round, the whole of the sixth and seventh have to be
performed by the successful graduates in spirituality, and the later rounds are
of immensely longer duration than those of the middle period. Then follows the
vast interval of Nirvanic rest, which closes the manwantara, the immeasurable
Night of Brahmâ, the Pralaya of the whole planetary chain. Only when the next
manwantara begins do the failures begin to wake from their awful trance - awful
to the imagination of beings in the full activity of life, though such a
trance, being necessarily all but destitute of consciousness, is possibly no
more tedious than a dreamless night in the memory of profound sleeper. The fate
of the failures may be grievous first of all, rather on account of what they
miss, than on account of what they incur. Secondly, however, it is grievous on
account of that to which it leads, for all the trouble of physical life and
almost endless incarnations must be gone through afresh, when the failures wake
up; whereas the perfected beings, who outstripped them in evolution during that
fifth round in which they become failures, will have grown into the god-like
perfection of Dhyân Chohan-hood during their trance, and will be the
presiding geniuses of the next manwantara, not its helpless subjects.
Apart altogether, meanwhile, from what may be regarded as the
personal interest of the entities concerned, the existence of the failures in
Nature at the beginning of each manwantara is a fact which contributes in a
very important degree to a comprehension of the evolutionary system. When the
planetary chain is first of all evolved out of chaos - if we may use such an
expression as “first of all” in a qualified sense, having regard to the
reflection that “in the beginning” is a mere façon de parler applied to
any period in eternity - there are no failures to deal with. Then the descent
of spirit into matter, through the elemental, mineral, and other kingdoms, goes
on in the way already described in earlier chapters of this book. But from the
second manwantara of a planetary chain, during the activity of the solar
system, which provides for many such manwantaras, the course of events is
somewhat different - easier, if I may again be allowed to use an expression
that is applicable rather in a conversational than severely scientific sense.
At any rate it is quicker, for human entities are already in existence, ready
to enter into incarnation as soon as the world, also already in existence, can
be got ready for them. The truth thus appears to be, that after the first
manwantara of a series - enormously longer in duration than its successors - no
entities, then first evolved from quite the lower kingdoms, do more than attain
the threshold of humanity. The late failures pass into incarnation, and then
eventually the surviving animal entities already differentiated. But, compared
with the passages in the esoteric doctrine which affect the current evolution of
our own race, these considerations, relating to the very early periods of
world-evolution, have little more than an intellectual interest, and cannot as
yet by any contributions of mine be very greatly amplified.
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Guide to
The
Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Terraced Maze of Glastonbury Tor
Glastonbury and Joseph of Arimathea
The
Grave of King Arthur & Guinevere
Views
of Glastonbury High Street
The
Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
__________________________
Classic Introductory Theosophy Text
A Text Book of Theosophy By C
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
An Outstanding
Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of
Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
Try these if you are
looking for a
local Theosophy Group or Centre
UK Listing of
Theosophical Groups
Worldwide
Directory of Theosophical Links
General pages about Wales,
Welsh History
and The History of Theosophy
in Wales
Wales is a
Principality within the United Kingdom
and has an
eastern border with England.
The land area is
just over 8,000 square miles.
Snowdon in North
Wales is the highest mountain at 3,650 feet.
The coastline is
almost 750 miles long.
The population of Wales as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.