Cardiff Theosophical Archive
The Theosophical Society,
Cardiff Lodge, 206 Newport Road, Cardiff CF24 – 1DL
Writings of Ernest Egerton
Wood
Ernest
Egerton Wood
First Published December 1930
PAGE
PREFACE
PART I
Life and Its PurposeThe
Greatness of Life
The Value of Experience
The Great Active Principle
The Human Life-Cycle
The Function of Desire
The Goal of Life
The Way to the Goal
Bondage and Freedom
Progress and People
Brothers and Friends
Masters and Men
PART II
Happenings by The Way
The Meaning of Theosophy
Life After Death
Reincarnation
The Real Meaning of Karma
The Ego
Progress and Initiation
Gurus and Teachers
Religion
Are there Two Theosophies?
A friend, having looked over the proofs of
this volume, cried out, “Good heavens! Why have you put the word theosophy on
this beautiful book?” He did not see why any label should be attached to the
views expressed herein. They could be held by anybody, he said, without his
belonging to any sect; Emerson, for example, had this outlook. “Precisely”, I agreed,but this understanding of life should have a name
which indicates the opposite of every kind of materialism, both scientific and
religious, and theosophy is the old word for that, honored by centuries of
use”. It indicates the direct study of the status and source of life, without
any acceptance of dogma or tradition. Emerson experimented with the word
“transcendentalist”; “theosophist” would have been a more comprehensive term.
This book is divided into
two parts. It brings together the material of The New Theosophy, a small volume
published in
(1) Reincarnation, or rebirth on earth.
(2) Karma, or the repayment in such rebirth of all good and ill; and
(3) Evolution, or the progress of the soul through experience in the
course of these rebirths.
(1) That a man is not his body, which is only an instrument; that he
survives death unchanged, and lives on in finer forms or “higher planes”
between death and rebirth.
(2) That a man reaps as he sows; there is nothing gained without
effort, but nothing once gained can be lost or taken away.
(3) That the world is a school for man, wherein he can develop to
his perfection, on the attainment of
which he need reincarnate no more; nevertheless, there are some who have
reached this liberation who do reincarnate in order to help others, and these
are Adepts or Masters.
There are very sound
arguments in support of all these ideas. They may be found in many books.
Coupling with these the great amount of solid evidence that exists in favor of
belief in subtle bodies, higher planes, clairvoyant powers, and Adepts, this
outlook upon life has unquestionably great weight of both reason and testimony
on its side. See such books as Clairvoyance and Materialization by G Geley, The Occult World by A P Sinnett, Old Diary Leaves by H S Olcott, Some New
Evidence of Human Survival by Drayton Thomas, Psychic Structures by J Crawford.
In addition it provides the scope that men feel that they need — relieving the
mind of the bondage of chance, the heart of the pains of separation, and the
will of the incubus of servitude to circumstances or to a superior will.
Yet these ideas are
often held materialistically, and thus they miss the real point and the virtue
of theosophy. Theosophy is the deeper belief that we are all in touch directly
with the heart of life. It is the antithesis to materialism, whether in science
or in religion. Theosophy is not a religion, or if it is, it is the one
religion in the world. In it every man is his own priest, and intermediaries
between him and God are impossible.
This is easy to prove, for if we ask a true Christian, or Buddhist, or Hindu,
whether he would follow Christ, or Buddha, or
I have called the new
theosophy that which makes clear at every point that all forms are in the life
and are less than the life, and that never is the life held or supported or
carried in or by the forms. In the light of this essential truth, so often
neglected, reincarnation, karma and evolution take on an entirely new
appearance, and knowledge of their true effects in our lives invests us with
new power and freedom.
This is what may be
called metaphysical or beyond form, but that is what life is. It is not a
material condition that we are considering, but life lived as such in the midst of forms which
are less, not more, than itself. Madame
Blavatsky expressed the need of this outlook when she wrote in The Secret
Doctrine (.), referring to the doctrine of the evolution of the monads and the
worlds: “Unfortunately, there are few who are inclined to handle these
doctrines only metaphysically. Even the best of the Western writers upon our
doctrine declares in his work, when speaking of the evolution of the monads,
that on pure metaphysics of that sort we are not now engaged. And in such case,
as the Teacher remarks in a letter to him: Why this preaching of our doctrines,
all this up-hill work and swimming in adversum flumen ? Why should the West ..........learn.........from
the East............that which can never meet the requirements of the special
tastes of the aesthetics ? And he draws his correspondent’s attention ‘to the
formidable difficulties encountered by us (the Adepts) in every attempt we make
to explain our metaphysics to the Western mind’.
“And well he may; for
outside of metaphysics, no occult philosophy, no esotericism is possible. It is
like trying to explain the aspirations and affections, love and hatred, the
most private and sacred workings in the soul and mind of a living man, by an
anatomical description of the thorax and brain of his dead body.”
Ernest Wood - Adyar
Nov
ONCE upon a time it may
have been that most people took it for granted that the earth was flat, and that
the sun got up in the morning and went to bed at night very much like a human
being. After a time, no doubt, thinking persons wondered why he did not get up
in the place where he went to sleep, and then some of them said that the
obvious thing was that he must have crept through a tunnel under the earth.
Some more advanced theorists propounded the idea that perhaps a new sun was
born every morning and died every evening!
How simple and obvious to
those ignorant people, the majority, who assumed without thought that things
are what they seem! And what difficulty those few people who were open-minded
must have had, to make the idea that the earth is a spinning ball a living
reality in their own minds ! They would have had to use reason to convince themselves, and then
imagination to familiarize themselves with the fact presented by reason.
An ounce of accurate or
scrupulously honest observation and a pound of reasoning were the ingredients
necessary for the attainment of this item of true knowledge.
This preamble is not
unnecessary. Things are still not what they seem. Common opinion, resulting
from a pound of careless observation and scarcely an ounce of reasoning
declares that life is little and the world is great, that we are tiny specks or
sparks of life in the midst of a vast material existence.
By this guileless
assumption every discussion as to the nature and destiny of man, as to the
relation between mind and matter, as to whether men and animals and plants have
or have not souls, and as to a hundred other questions, is poisoned at the
beginning.
When we opened our eyes to
this material light each one of us found himself surrounded by a vast variety
of things. As we grew up we imbibed the theory that all these things were made
out of some substance called matter - just as a house is made with brick,
cement, or other materials. And so people say that there is a material
world.
But whatever this material
may be, it is not the world we know. It cannot be seen, heard, tasted, smelt,
or felt. What we do hear, see, feel, taste, or smell are forms, what some of
the ancients used to call appearances or phenomena. It is necessary to
distinguish between matter and forms, and to realize that matter has no
sensible qualities or properties.
This is no mere academic
discussion, for although we may not know the origin and nature of matter, we do
know the origin of forms. Let us consider in this connection the environment of
the average modern human being, the many objects which are modifying his
character all the time. It consists mainly of man-made things — houses and
furniture, clothing and prepared foods, streets and automobiles, books and
musical instruments, and a thousand other things which have less relation to
the matter in which they are formed than a brick house has to the clay taken
out of the brickfield. Even the human body is a gradually produced instrument
of mind.
Of course, not all forms
are man-made. Some are animal-made, some are plant-made, and we are justified
in saying, in the light of the latest
knowledge, some are made by mineral life.
The forms with which we are
surrounded are not material. They represent, on the contrary, a little of the
life, because people make forms according to what they themselves are. As a bad
carpenter makes a bad table and a good carpenter a good table, so are all these
man-made objects portraits of the life that made them. The world of forms in which we are living is
really a world of life. Every man has made the whole of his life or world,
through direct action or in relation or combination with others.
So, in all this world, the
life is everything. What have we to do with matter ? We have to do with forms, and we know these
forms. They belong to the life that is living everywhere, not to any matter of
which we have any conception. We are in a world consisting solely of
expressions of life. See then, the importance of life. The life is everything
and everywhere; the matter is nothing or at least no thing. Understanding this,
we shall not make the mistake of thinking of life as an abstraction, which
could be only part of reality — that, without this. Life contains more, not less than what we
see.
Life in this world — what is
usually called incarnation or embodiment — is essentially a mind-process, in
which concentration and meditation alternate, like the contraction and
expansion of a heart, Imagine yourself coming to a great city and wishing to
understand its life. You could not do so all at once. You would first concentrate, or narrow the
field of your attention. You might say: “Let me see first the post-office, then
the shops, then the hospital” — and so on. You would limit yourself to one part
of it at a time, within the measure of your present capacity. When you had
fixed your attention upon one such object, and thus marked out the boundaries
of your present activity, you would proceed to “meditate” upon it, by which I
mean to say that you would observe it carefully and give your full flow of
thought to the understanding of everything within that boundary drawn by your
act of concentration.
That is what we are doing
when we “incarnate”. It is a kind of active or practical meditation. There are
always three steps in a complete act of meditation — first concentration then
meditation, which goes on until we have
known the thing concentrated upon as fully as we can with our present ability,
and then contemplation of that full thing. It is the meditation that gives
knowledge, which is power, and contemplation causes us to reject the object and
take away the power for use elsewhere, like the bee that takes the honey from a
flower.
All our life is thus
meditation. We are seeing our own thoughts. But it is a very real meditation,
in which thoughts become things, in contact with which our capacity constantly
increases.
There is a character of
unity about all this collection of mind-made things, so that it presents
apparent order and system, but that is because there is a fundamental unity of
the life. Just as the five fingertips, if moved into different positions on a
sheet of paper, will always make groups of little circular marks which have
some constant relation to one another, because they are rooted in one hand and
are energized from that source, so the collection of mind-made things presents
a coherent world because there is one life. The world is one world, and its parts are not
flying about disconnectedly, simply because the lives which are the makers of
its forms are parts of one life. Human beings acknowledge that unity when they
take the thoughts and feelings and the happiness of others into consideration.
All the objects or forms or things which are evident to sense are expressions
of the life, and the more its unity is recognized the more harmony will be
observed among those expressions.
Now consider the
expressions of life of any one man. He has great capacity. He can do many
things. At any given time he may be digging in; the garden, playing the piano,
writing a letter, or doing any one of, shall we say, a thousand things which
are within his power. He is then expressing only a thousandth part of himself.
When he is digging one cannot tell by looking at that expression that he is
also able to play the piano.
If any one being thus makes
forms which show only a small part of himself, and this is true of all beings,
it follows that the entire world, which is only a collection of such temporary
expressions is a very much smaller thing than the world of the life which gives
rise to it.
Therefore it is the life
which is the big thing and the world which is the small thing, and the world is
in the life, not the life in the world. As Shri
Krishna says in the Gita: “All beings are rooted in me, not I in them.” So the
popular conception that the world is a big place in which tiny specks or sparks
of life are moving about is contrary to fact, just as the appearance of the
earth as flat is not the truth.
And as to relative reality.
If the world of expressed forms has such vivid reality, and it is only in a
sense a dream world, a temporary mind-creation, what must be the quality of
reality in the world of life, whence alone these lesser realities are derived
?
IN the fact that all forms
are in the life we see the reply to the question why a man should dig in a
garden, or write a letter, or play the piano, if he belongs to the world of
full life. It is because he wants to awaken himself to a full recognition of it
all. In the same way, if we play a simple melody there is a succession of
notes. But suppose each note died away from our consciousness (as it mostly
dies out of the air and the ear) before the next was sounded, there would be no
music. The melody is in the life, not in the world. Similarly, in a book there
are many words, sentences, and pages. We read one page after another to get the
clear idea; but that meaning is in the mind, not in the book. If we have it fully and clearly in mind, we do
not need the book any more; it would only be a boredom to read it again.
As there is no evolution in
a piece of music, but the whole of it reveals itself, so that to him who has musical
capacity, or “an ear for music”, there is no superfluous note, so for the life
in each one of us the whole will ultimately reveal its music, its integrity.
The past will not then be something that we have outgrown and left behind, but
will still play its necessary part in the music. One reads that a great
composer heard a grand oratorio in one moment, and then laboriously worked it
out into a material composition, He had the capacity.
So there is no material
evolution, I prefer the word “evolution” to “progress”, because it more clearly
implies the unfoldment of our own powers, like a bud opening into flower, while
“progress” suggests a movement forward towards something which is not already
in seed within us but only the unfolding of capacity, as a bud opens into
flower. And that puts an end to the question why a “monad” should “leave the
perfection of the one life and come down to this world, only to return at last
whence he came”. There is evolution, but it is not a sequence. The monad by its
own concentration makes its time limitation. The time is of the material world;
it is made with the form and shares its impermanence.
I remember to have heard an
interesting story about a painter, which happens to illustrate the purpose of
all experience. When he was still young he went one day to a woodland with his
teacher, arid when asked what he would paint indicated a certain tree. “But”,
said the elder, “you have painted that tree twenty times already; are you not
tired of it?”. “No”, said the young man, “I have not got it right yet’.’ When
he did “get it right” he would not want to paint it any more. What it could
teach him he would have absorbed, and he would now become interested in
something else, which would be interesting because it would awaken some part of
his life which had not yet awakened. What a bore when a person persists in
repeating to us the same joke or story or experience; however good it may have
seemed when we first heard it!
Thus we are all painters
living in the gallery of the paintings we have already done, but which we have
not yet set entirely aside, because we have not yet “got them right”, and
obtained the internal satisfaction which comes from the feeling of unfoldment
or expansion of some part of our life.
Once more we see that the
life is everything, because the forms are all experimental. There is no world
of material form, having a system, a plan, an order of its own, which stands
there in its own strength, awaiting us, to teach us lessons from the outside.
We are not explorers in a foreign land. All these forms, with their qualities
or properties, are the expressions of our life within the delimitation of our
acts of concentration. In other words, all experience is experimental. We have
made these things, and we are looking at them and seeing what they are like.
We are discovering their unsatisfactoriness, their inadequacy, their inequality to
the intent of our being.
The rich clearness of
reality with which they stand before us makes us eager to have that rich
clearness of reality in the full extent of the life which we have not yet
expressed to ourselves in full strength and clearness. It is all experiment —
like that of a man who has made a motor-car and now tries it out on the road,
and finds many ways in which it is incomplete and unsatisfactory, It rattles,
it smokes, it runs crooked, it is too slow. Such are the things that we are constantly saying
to ourselves. The wise man, learning through experience, does not separate
himself from the world, but says to himself; “I rattle, I smoke, I run crooked,
I am too slow”.
This is the essential
meaning of what in India has so long been called karma. Many people all over the world say that they
believe in karma. They mean that a man cannot reap as he has not sown, that
nothing can happen to any one of us of pleasure or of pain except as he has
caused it to happen to himself by his own actions in the past, distant or
immediate.
In connection with this
there is often too much thought about the pleasure and the pain, and about what
is sometimes called the opportunity and the lack of opportunity which these
things give. The fact is that at every moment there is the very fullness of
opportunity, because we have made our own environment.
The painter painted a picture
yesterday. Is not that picture, whatever it may
be, his opportunity for today
? Will he not look at it this morning and see some
of its imperfections, which
are his own imperfections that he would
never have felt or seen if he
had not painted that picture yesterday ? And now,
when he tries again, setting
aside those imperfections, will he not paint a
better picture today, because
he has had before him his work of yesterday ? He
must be a better painter at
the end of a piece of work than he was at the
beginning of it, because
his powers have grown in the process. So the picture helps him to develop his
capacity and to enlarge or improve his vision at the same time [ All the world
is eager to do creative work. As opportunities of education, leisure and
freedom from set forms in every department of life increase, the life so freed
burgeons delightedly into creative activity of innumerable kinds. There are
thousands of students and inventors where there were tens, and probably
thousands also of good writers, singers, speakers, painters, etc, where there
were tens. This does not reduce the audience or the market, as might at first
appear, because capacity to receive is increasing at the same time. But in any
case an audience of one is sufficient for the unselfish man. Not only man shows
this inner law — no two horses, no two flowers, no two atoms are alike, as they
would be if they were stamped from the die of another’s thought. “The dead king
may next see the light in a cooly’s tent” - by his
own doing. But that will be his opportunity for experience that he needs, not a
punishment, nor a delay.
Our world is our work; it
is nothing else. It calls us to new self-expression, which is greater realization
of ourselves. It is not more than we are, but less. This is a world of life engaged in building
forms, not a world of forms which become vehicles of life. You cannot put life
inside a form as you can put water in a cup. Water rests in the cup because it
is of the same nature as the cup. But
the relation between the life and the form is that the life handles the form as
a gardener handles a spade. While he is handling the spade he cannot very well
write a letter with a pen. He concentrates upon one thing at a time, but in
each case it is the life that is everything. The garden does not compel him to
dig; the letter does not compel him to write.
Because life is everything,
and even the forms are life (though they are only a bit of the life) he who
would travel swiftly along the road of life must understand that living is the
traveling of that road. This means that you do what you can with what you have
— that you do not wait for anything, that you do not imagine that you need
opportunity, or that any karmas can stand in your way. The literal
meaning of the word karma is work, and it is to be taken in the way in
which a carpenter would use it if he said; “This table is my work; this chair
is my work”. These objects which we call our environment, our world, are our
work. This world is the world of karmas, of things that persist while the life
is interested in them. It is also the world of maya,
which means not directly illusion, but creation. The illusion comes in when
this world is mistaken for the world of basic reality, and is not taken for
what it really is — a temporary creation.
There can be no injustice
in a world of such forms. There cannot be the dreadful injustice of stark
retribution, an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. But there is the
marvellous justice that we live in our own world, and so learn. If, for
example, I have been cruel in the past, that expresses my character, with such
completeness as it has, and also with such incompleteness — in this case with
some completeness of power but great incompleteness of love. And now I meet
with cruelty. It is my own cruelty facing myself and it shows me the unsatisfactoriness of a life of cruelty. It helps to awaken
my understanding and sympathy.
There is immeasurable
benefit to be drawn from our experiences, whatever they may be. A good example
of this truth was given to me many years ago by an old paradeshi
of South India. This gentleman was blind and also penniless. Sometimes he lived
in a very primitive cottage, which had been put up for him by some friendly
villagers, and where a very old woman would cook a little food for him, but
more often he wandered from village to village over a considerable area. This man was by no means ignorant or
unintelligent, but could converse lucidly on a great variety of subjects. He
was also a master of certain psychic powers, and showed me again and again that
when he chose to do so he could see what was happening at a distance, although
he was totally blind.
He told me one day that in
addition to his “clairvoyant” powers he had the capacity to look back in memory
into past lives, and thereby he explained to me the cause of his blindness and
poverty. It was due, he said, to the fact that when he had been living some eight
hundred years before as a rich man, in the neighbourhood
of Delhi, he had been cruel and vindictive. His present troubles were the
outcome come of that, but he did not
regret them in the least, because in the course of his helpless wanderings he
had made many kind friends, and he said that the human affection which he now
gave and received contained happiness such as he had not known before and would
never have known had he continued in his old condition of wealth and power. But
of course he would not have the same experience again, because with his newly
developed character, along the line of love, he could not himself perform the
old cruelties any more, even though he might again become a rich man.
So this world is worthy of
all respect, because our experience is peculiarly appropriate to our
development of character, having been formed for ourselves by ourselves, and
also because it displays to us the nature of reality, which is not vague or
abstract, but concrete. As a lamp which casts only a dim light all around, on
all the objects in a room, could vividly illuminate one object in that room, if
it were surrounded by suitable reflectors, so is our consciousness made aware
of the full quality of its own reality by the concentrative process of form-making,
which is called karma and reincarnation.
But we are living lamps.
What is achieved is not lost. The notes
of life that, we sound one after another have perpetuity in our being. We are
gaining the power to grasp the whole music, the full song of life. And when
that music is heard, fully and clearly, we shall no longer want to play the
separate notes, to limit ourselves to the temporary forms. We shall have
finished our schooling, and shall live in the world of life, which is nothing
but the being of life itself, knowing its own full reality.
IT is impossible to define
life. But then it is also impossible to define “green”. We can only refer to our
experience. Only the living can know life, and even then only as living, for it
cannot resemble any static or dynamic form.
By life I mean what we all
mean when we say, “I am alive”. This cannot be taken a priori as the function
of the brain. That would be to assume the natural development of a function
performing no useful act, but churning out in materially fruitless varieties
many forms of the idea “I am alive”. The useful function of the brain is to
move the body. If it can thus perform all that is required for bodily
adjustment and adaptation to circumstances, why should it bring in
consciousness as an unnatural and useless by-product ? Or if this mechanism has
two simultaneous functions, one useful,
the other merely conscious, why should not the flame of a burning candle be
also conscious, as well as a giver of light and heat ?
We are coming to know life
better and better as we experience the consequences of its activities in
relation to objects. All these objects are resistances or obstacles; for
example, objects seen are obstacles to our vision, and the earth resists the
rotary movement of our leg-system. When there is no resistance we move
unconsciously; in this manner we are traveling with the earth round the sun at
the rate of eighteen and a half miles per second, and at the same time whirling
round with it at anything up to a thousand miles an hour. Were objects not
resistances our life would be nothing but a futile dream, for we should merely
create a shadow-world according to our whims, containing nothing but our
fleeting pleasure.
We know something about
life in activity in relation to these forms or resistances. It has six
distinguishable activities, in three-pairs. The first three are will (purpose),
love (interest) and thought (method or planning). These are expressive, form-building in their
effects. In thought, for example, we have
action, for what we do with our hands we do with our thought, since our
thought moves our hands. The second three are receptive forms of knowledge,
mind-building in their effects. They are knowledge of self (the essence of all
will), knowledge of life (the source of love) and knowledge of objects.
Forms are of two kinds —
those which are made from outside, and those made from inside. A tree grows and
takes its form from the power in the seed. Not all the earth, water, air,
sunshine and gardeners’ care in the world can produce it. That form is made from within. It is a living
form. All human and animal bodies are also of this kind. A house, a motorcar, a
cloud-castle — these are non-living forms, because made from the outside. The
nonliving forms, are, again, of two classes, as being produced either
intentionally or casually, like, for instance, (I) a chair and () an ant-hill,
a heap of stones, a cloud-form, or a dead body.
Many attempts have been
made to distinguish between living and non-living objects or forms. Probably
the best is that which declares that every living being shows the instinct of
self-preservation. This is no doubt true as far as it goes, but
self-preservation implies something more — namely, the enjoyment of life, and the instinct of self-expansion, the
desire for more life.
This fact is seen very
clearly in human life, where those are accounted the best who show most the
tendency and the capacity to increase human interests and knowledge and power.
There is no one who does not strive for more enjoyment of life in some form. We
do not wait for an external stimulus to awaken us, but with thought and will
and through affectionate relationships we constantly aim at increased life.
It has been thought that
among inferior creatures we might find one which awakens or comes to life only
when acted upon by an external stimulus, but this missing link between the
positive living being and the passive nonliving form has not been discovered.
On the contrary, among the more elementary forms of life we often see
intelligence and adaptiveness which might put many
men to shame.
As an example of the positivity of life, let us consider for a moment the
amoeba. For the benefit of those who have not yet had occasion to learn
anything about the amoeba, I may
briefly state that it is one of the very simplest of the protozoa, or
unicellular living beings, and when at rest is a tiny globular mass living in
sea or pond water, or in the blood or body fluid of higher animals. It changes
shape so as to engulf or ingest any nutrient matter which may come in its
vicinity, digests what it can of this, and then ejects or egests the waste matter.
Because these operations are all performed without special organs, it has been
taken as an example of the principle that “function precedes organ” in the
evolution of living forms.
If such function were
awakened and exercised always in the same way, or if the presence of nutrient
matter always produced the same effect in the amoeba, it might be argued that
the life was aroused by some obscure chemical properties of its mass. But this
is not so, as was well shown in the case of the relations between two of these
small creatures observed by a distinguished scientist.
It happened that these two
— one very small, the other larger — came near together. The larger apparently
thought: “Here is nutrient matter”, and immediately went towards the smaller.
Now, on exactly the same grounds one would have expected the smaller to run towards the larger, for who
ever heard of a mouse being afraid of a piece of cheese because it was twice as
big as himself ? However, the small amoeba, instead of responding to the call
of nutrient matter, represented by the larger one, simply fled for its life,
with the larger in hot pursuit. It was captured, struggled, and escaped, was
captured again, and finally engulfed.
As a result of such
observations, many and varied, Mr. Jennings, perhaps the greatest authority in
this field, wrote: “If amoeba were a large animal, so as to come within
everyday experience of human beings, its behaviour
would at once call forth the attribution to it of states of pleasure and pain,
of hunger, desire and the like, on precisely the same basis as we attribute
these things to a dog.”[Behaviour of the Lower
Organisms by Jennings.
The fact is that as a dog
jumps with delight at the prospect of being taken for a walk, with all the
varied experience and movement, or increase of life, involved in that, so the
amoeba is not merely a responsive chemical mass, but a positive living being,
full of adaptiveness. It comes within Professor
McDougall’s description: “The activity of an animal is aroused by a stimulus,
is directed towards an end, and does
not cease until either the end has been attained or the animal is exhausted. If
the end cannot be gained by one means, the animal will attempt to gain it by
another.”
I will give two more
examples, out of the thousands possible — one from my own experience, the other
from Fabre the great observer of insect life. In my
travels I had picked up in Barbados a large piece of white “brain coral”, so
called because its external form resembles the shape and convolutions of the
human brain. In it some other creatures had bored several deep cylindrical
holes about the thickness of a thin lead pencil. I took this with me to Adyar,
on the other side of the world, where such things do not grow, and it remains
on my desk as a paper-weight.
One day, while I was
writing, a wasp came, inspected the coral, selected one of the cylindrical
holes, proceeded to prepare it for its young by lining it with brown clay and
tiny bits of leaves, and finally put in some eggs and some paralyzed caterpillars,
and stopped up the entrance with the same kind of brown clay. After all this
was done she went away for a time, but at length returned with some white
substance of a limy character, with which she painted over the brown clay
entrance, making it exactly the same
color as the rest of the coral. And finally she engraved on that white surface
corrugations similar to those of the coral! It was a striking case of adaptiveness.
My second example, taken
from Fabre, shows that though the more lowly creatures,
like men, are willing to follow an example or a leader, and so save themselves
some trouble of adaptation, the time comes when they are thrown back upon
themselves, and then individual initiative appears. The scientist was observing
a procession of caterpillars of a certain kind (which I have also frequently
watched in Australia) which follow one another head to tail. He induced the
front one to proceed along the rim of a large palm vase. Round and round they
went until thoroughly tired out, when they went to sleep, still in
formation. The next day, and indeed for
seven days, they resumed their fruitless journey, no doubt getting hungrier and
hungrier. Now and then some of them straggled a little, showing their
dissatisfaction, but returned to the fold, until on the eighth day they broke
their ranks, and very soon each one had separately found its way to the nest.
Now a question arises:
“Does environmental selection produce this capacity for adaptation, and the
mind that goes with it ?” Modern evidence shows that certainly that is not the
case. But first let me describe environmental or “natural” selection, so that
the reader who has not yet carefully informed himself on the point may have its
meaning clearly in view.
In a family or herd of
zebras or antelope, some will be born with less capacity for speed or for
endurance than others. As lions, which chase these herds, always take the
weakest or the slowest, the others, which are superior in those qualities,
survive and tend to propagate their kind. So the qualities of speed and
endurance are “selected” and “preserved” by the environment (that is, the
lions), and they tend to “develop” or increase because the unfavorable
varieties are destroyed, if the same process goes on, on account of the
continuance of similar experience or environment.
Another example that I may
take is the gannet, a sea bird which lives on fish.
By flying at a height of
fifty or sixty feet above the. water, it can see into
the depths and observe the fish, which it then catches by the
simple
process of dropping like a
stone into the water. Thus it differs from the
sea-gull, which scoops its
fish from the surface. Now, the gannet cannot see the
fish in a storm. Therefore
in stormy weather it must fly away to a calmer region, sometimes many miles
distant. In this case, the weaker die on the way.
Thus natural selection
operates to specialize some natural instinct to strive to enjoy or increase
life, which natural selection could never implant. No environment will affect a
being that is not interested. Further, the intelligent adaptations are very
often transmitted from generation to generation, and qualities or
characteristics thus have origin in the intelligence, not in the environment.
Such transmission was in
doubt for some years (following Weismann’s theory
that acquired characters are not inherited) but has now been proved beyond
question. For example, Prof. Pavlov’s
experiments with white mice showed that they handed on the capacity to understand.
He fed some of these animals daily, after ringing a bell. After three hundred
times, they realized a connection between the bell and the food. He bred them
together, and the next generation learned the same lesson in one hundred trials. The third generation
learned it in thirty lessons, and the fourth required only five. Thus life
does, through its own efforts, mould the forms it inhabits.
In further proof of this
instinct of self-expansion or capacity to strive, there are many cases of the
possession of qualities which could not be developed by natural selection. For
example, there is a blister-beetle that lays its eggs near the burrows of
certain mining-bees, and then dies. The little one comes out of the ground,
finds its way onto a flower, and from there hops to a bee’s back, where it
lives until the bee has provided her cell with honey and pollen. But as soon as
the bee has laid her eggs there, this little creature jumps off her back onto
one of them, and later eats it and grows into a blister-beetle. That one leap
from the bee to the egg is not a character that could be gradually encouraged
by the slow process of natural selection. Some enterprising blister-beetle must
have invented the idea and passed it on to her descendants.
Not only is the life in all
beings a positive form-building cause, but it is immensely powerful Consider a little seed planted in the
ground. How small, this, that may grow into a mighty tree! We know that the
material of the tree is taken from the air, and water, and a little from the
ground, and that the sunshine has played its part in making possible that
growth; but it is the life in the seed which has taken hold of the materials
and forces outside itself, and built them up into that splendid and powerful
form. Even the detailed form of the leaf of an oak tree is determined from
within that seed. It sets up the unknown machinery which can lift great volumes
of water to the top of a tall tree.
It is of great significance
that such an eminent biologist as Sir Arthur Keith has recently emphasized the
fact that the embryo does not merely run over the history of the race to which
it belongs, as is usually supposed. The new idea is that the embryo reproduces
only those characters which are needed as scaffolding for the new form, and
that there are apparently purposeful modifications in preparation for
variations in form even at that early stage.[ “There is a recapitulation of
ancestral history as the human embryo passes through its ripening stages, but
this recapitulation is masked by the display of characters which are wholly of
recent origin. Nor need this surprise us. What should we think of a builder who
in the erection of a palace insisted on ‘recapitulating’ all the evolutionary
stages which lie between a hut and a palace? In the development of the human
body, as of that of every other living thing, we find a strict observance of
the principle of economy. If an ancient feature is reproduced, it is because it
is a necessary part of the scaffolding for the new.” Concerning Man’s Origin,
by Professor Sir Arthur Keith, page
There is one general
principle to be remembered in connection with all these forms. We are viewing
time-realities. The static moment is an unknown thing, an imaginary figment of
erroneous thought. Everything is dynamic, kinetic; its properties are
teleological. The cause and effect which are implied in the qualities or
properties with which one form acts upon another simply show that they are all
matters of mind, that mind is the great active principle which whirls the torch
that looks like a ring of fire, which finds melody in a succession of notes
which do not themselves combine to form that melody, since each dies away
before most of the others are born, or is born after they are dead.
Round us are life and the
evidences of life. Matter has no form.
I HAVE already explained
that all living is essentially of the nature of meditation, which consists of
three stages — concentration, meditation and contemplation. This psychological
process reflects itself into the world of forms and produces cyclic changes —
wheels within wheels — in individual and collective life. Thus we have first
childhood, in which there is much searching about among the forms, so that
presently among them a selection may be made for the life’s activity; then
there is manhood or womanhood, with its special work in each individual case,
and thirdly there is ripe age, with its tendency to contemplate the experience
already garnered and to let the forms go. The child has finished with his
particular toys. He has filled himself to present capacity with feelings and
thoughts about them.
Tradition and occult
research both lend support to the theory that after the death of the body the
life cycle continues in quite a natural and rational way. The after-death life is almost always
described as the immediate outcome of the feelings and thoughts stored in the
mind. As the Vana Parva of
the Mahâbhârata puts it: “This is the world of
actions, and that is the world of their effects. In ‘ heaven’ the results of actions already
done are enjoyed, and these must be carried out completely, but no other
actions can be performed.”
Among Christians also the
same idea obtains, that purgatory and heaven result from the desires and
thoughts of a man, which must be dealt with in those conditions. Even death-bed
repentance, if absolutely honest, is held to produce new conditions, in
accordance with the character which the man now has, The two successive parts
of the after-death life consist firstly in getting rid of the unintelligent
attachment to the forms no longer needed, and secondly in confirming and
perfecting the good qualities of character which have already been partially
developed.
So the form or world is a
temporary self-created obstruction, by means of which the wandering mind is
arrested and caused to pay attention to what it would otherwise avoid. At death
that is removed. No longer will things from outside force themselves upon our
attention. We can now follow out our own immediate thoughts, go where we
please, do what we please, have what we please.
These traditions and
observations are very rational. They suggest a natural sequence, because we
came into the world to learn, and we leave it without having completed that
work. We have gathered much material for thought, but when we die we have still
to do most of our thinking. That may well take place in the relatively
subjective planes of the subtle bodies, where thoughts are things and each man
furnishes and peoples his own “heaven”.
I will discuss this subject
in . Here I want only to show how
natural and logical such a state would be, completing the cyclic method of a
life. Afterwards, the impulse of feeling
and idea being exhausted, the subjective period comes to an end, and the life
cycle begins again with a new incarnation, with reference to other experience
which the man still needs, varieties of experience incompatible with the former, and a removal of old
prejudices and fears.
The same cyclic law will be
seen in the case of nations. These groups of people take to themselves certain
group ideas, which cast a color over all the activities of the group, but when
the idea has been lived by those who need it the race weakens and dies away. It
applies also to animal, vegetable and mineral forms, to atoms, globes and
systems. Everywhere is the same cyclic change, produced by the same
psychological cause.
The apparent system of
races, etc., is due to the fact that the monads evolve in a certain way, not
that this scheme is fixed for them by someone else. It the “Third Logos”
planned the worlds in which we live, we planned them. The Logos is not other
than the collectivity of monads, which is the unity of monads.[As indicated in
The Secret Doctrine, Stanza i , “Universal mind was
not, for there were no Ah-hi to contain it. So there is no Being working upon
us externally, that is, through forms which he has made and we have not made. A
scheme made for us by somebody else
would destroy our freedom (and thus negate the fundamental postulate of
theosophy as to the positivity of life) as
effectually as would interference with our wills, if that were possible.
So in the course of a
lifetime (or rather a body time) a man makes and uses his forms, as though a
pianist should make his piano, play upon it, wear it out and cast it aside. It
is only a matter of time before even that which is called death will be seen to
have a psychological cause. Even now no scientist can tell us what is the cause
of death or when comes the moment of death. That is because the moment of death
is decided not physiologically but psychologically, by the man or by the life,
which can leave the body when it determines, at various stages of its
decrepitude. Animals die easily, but men die with difficulty, or reluctantly,
because they have more purpose.
Once I was sitting with a
friend who had been lying abed at death’s door for many days, suffering from an
incurable disease. There was present a man who was somewhat clairvoyant or
thought himself to be so. He said that
he could see our sick friend standing outside his body, looking at it very
dolefully. Our friend had been greatly unwilling to die. There was some eager
desire of his which was unfulfilled, and though it was quite clear to the rest
of us that that body was so far broken that even if it got better he would
never be able to do with it what he wanted to do, he was still hanging on to it
in suffering and sorrow.
Then I said: “Let us reason
with him. Let us advise him to break the link from his side and let the body
go.” The advice was given to the man standing outside his body. He accepted it,
and within two or three minutes the body was dead. And then the man who was, or
thought he was, clairvoyant saw an amused smile come over the face of the man
who was “dead”, as he said; “Listen here, Wood, and I’ll tell you something.
Death is nothing, just nothing at all”.
This passing away of forms
will not trouble those who understand the fundamentally of life. On the
contrary, it will be seen that death has its uses. The form ought to be temporary. A poet may
use pencil and paper to help himself to form his poem, but when it is finished
he has it by heart and can throw his writing
away. A musical composer forms a piece of music in his mind, and then
clarifies and perfects it by playing it to himself on the piano. The form is a
means to aid the concentration of his mind on the part of his life which that
music represents. A painter painted a picture yesterday. Today he looks at it
studiously and sees its imperfections, that is, its inadequacy to the fulfilment of his life. So today he tries again. The goal
of life is never in the form, but only in the full awakening of life itself.
I have spoken of the past
and the present — now the future. We see that it is the creative attitude that
marks out our life, and when that is clearly seen our purpose in life becomes
rational. We are interested in the unfoldment of our powers, the development of
our capacity, through the exercise of our thought, love and will.
It is only such efforts
that make for progress. Obviously, then, the road is long in proportion to our
failure to make such efforts. I am not proposing that anyone should live in a
state of strain. There is a certain wise
degree of effort which each of us can find if he measures his own
strength. The question is; “Are we quietly turning our attention to the goal of
life and to the meaning of experience in the light of that goal, or are we
instead passing our time, or even our “spare time”, in the indulgence of idle,
sensual, or selfish thought ? It must be one or the other. There is no question
of strain, but there is a question as to which way our faces are turned.
Let us suppose that a
waking week consists of a hundred hours. Are we spending ninety nine hours each
week in idleness, selfishness or carelessness, and only one hour with our faces
turned towards the goal ? If that is so, is it not obvious that we are making
future time for ourselves, that we are carrying forward to another week those
ninety nine ill-spent hours ?
Let me put this in terms of
reincarnation. Some of my friends have an idea that many people require about
seven hundred and seventy seven lives in which to complete their human
evolution, from start to finish. This implies that if they had not on the
average spent seven hundred and seventy six out of every seven hundred and
seventy seven minutes of the day in non-essentials, that is, with their faces not turned towards the goal, but had
made full use of every minute, they would have completed the task in one life!
Most people have probably already had many more than seven hundred and seventy
seven lives, and still they go on learning with ninety nine per cent, of
experience and one per cent, of thought, instead of one per cent, of experience
and ninety nine per cent, of thought. What is required is more wisdom, and less
trial and error. Ultimately each one
must reach the goal in one life.
Time ill-spent is time
created for the future, for the living which might be done now is simply being
put off into the future. In such ways men are making a long, long road for
themselves, and dooming themselves to wander in comparative misery for many
incarnations. Our future incarnations are not a necessity, but they mark our
failure.[ Reincarnation is the perfect opposite of the hell-fire theory. Many
who hold that view state that we deserve to be punished for not taking the
opportunity put before us by Christ! The Orientals are kinder, because the
hells they propose are temporary, and are very literal punishments for
particular sins, as when the lascivious man is doomed to embrace a red-hot
statue of a woman, or a dealer in meat is pecked by crows with iron beaks. But
reincarnation is a kind theory, for it announces that men will have their
opportunity again and again, until at last they take it. There is, however, no need to worry about waste of
time, for we can make all that we want.
One should go on living, without thinking about time or death. There
will come a time when we shall live one life without turning our faces away
from the goal. It will be a very perfect
life on earth. Though it may deal with vary little things, as the world counts
littleness, in those things we shall never be shaken from understanding, love
and purpose, all of which spring from the vision of the goal.
Evolution is traveling the
road to the goal of life. It is the unfoldment of the powers of the life. There
is no material evolution. If it appears to be so, that is only because the life
is producing in some particulars a better form today than it produced
yesterday. If we were to keep a gallery of the pictures painted by an artist,
all arranged in chronological order, we should see quite clearly that number
one had not evolved into number two, or number two into number three. There is
an evolution of the pictures, but only because there is an evolution of the
painter.
There is not even material
causality among the forms. They are
merely objects in space, defined by their dimensions in space, and they have no
power to step out of the space in which they are. The changes that occur in
time are brought about by a superior reality, which is the power of the life
expressing itself in these forms.
There is then only one
royal road to the fullness of life. It is the natural road of positive living.
Men are busy making it long, because they are afraid of life. We are familiar
with the simile of a broad road winding round a mountain and rising spirally to
the top, and the idea that on this the millions toil, while but a few take a
steep path which goes straight up the mountain side. But the straight path is
the natural path. The winding path is the unnatural, for men make messes of
their lives, just as they make messes of their food. We have man-made health,
which is disease, man-made clothing, which is ugly, uncomfortable and
unhygienic, man-made religion, which separates us from the good or God. This is
so because men are afraid to trust themselves to the wings of life, and cling
too closely to the forms by the wayside. But this is not in itself their
natural life, which could be simple, true, beautiful, and strong.
DESIRE is the manifestation
in consciousness of the instinct of self-expansion. In man it knows no limits. All men want to be
God, that is to say, they want to have omnipotence, omnipresence and
omniscience. How often have I wished that I could be in two places at once, and
if that desire were granted I should want to be in a hundred! It may appear for
some little time that a man is contented with smaller things, such as a home
and happy wife and children. But that is only a smooth harbor following a
troubled voyage, and very soon dissatisfaction (I do not like the word
discontent) will raise its head, and he will yearn — not for storms, as some
believers in the “old Adam” seem to think, but for something a little nearer to
omnipotence, omniscience and omnipresence. And ever and anon new fuel is added
to the fire of his dissatisfaction
whenever he thinks of power or knowledge or ubiquity greater than his
own.
Consider this and you will
see that desire is expression in feeling of the instinct of self-expansion, and
is therefore the mainspring of our evolution.
Necessity may be the mother of invention, but desire is the mother of
our necessities. The world, would make no impression on a man who had no desire
to seek pleasures or to avoid pains. Therefore desire is something to be
cherished, to be encouraged, but at the same time to be studied and understood.
It is the opposite of sleep, and its degree marks the presence of life.
Study the effects of desire
in your own character and environment, and you will find that it is constantly
introducing us to new experience.
All human desires, good and
bad, have the same essential nature and always refer
to the man himself. He may
say “I want to possess money, jewels, friends”, but he means “I want to be rich
and popular”. Many men feel themselves expanded by the addition of these
things. Others live for the sake of sensations — to heighten these is to
increase their sense of being. Others seek learning and knowledge — for the
same reason. And others again work for
the welfare of mankind. ln the last case it is in no
way derogatory to the man or his work that he cannot leave himself out. It is
surely an additional merit that ha takes pleasure in doing good.
Fundamentally, all desires
are good. They lead to the experience which the man specifically needs, and
from which he will obtain a part of his evolution. And because a man always
acts according to his strongest desire, he obtains first the experience which
he needs most.
All experiences bring in a
painful element, as soon as the limitation is felt. As long as there is the feeling of expansion
— in body, emotions or thought — there is pleasure, but when that piece of
expansion is gained the limitation is felt, and then there is pain. Whenever
the instinct of expansion is thwarted there is pain. Life has made pain, along
with the body. There is no need to chafe against it, for it is always a warning
friend, without which we should be dead within a week. When there is pain we
know that there is something wrong with us. What a mistake to live to avoid
pains and for pleasure, when all pleasures, if taken over and over again, find
their end in pain! Better the joy of life, like a bird on the wing.
But learning through desire
and experience may be less or more intelligent. The more intelligence there is,
the less is the need for repetition of experience.
This is the chief value of
thought, or rather “meditation”, which needs no
ritual of posture and
prescription, but is best done in immediate association or
alternation with actual
experience. I may look at my watch a thousand times and
not know the form of its
numerals, but if I think about it I shall soon know,
The world is drenched with
beauty and meaning which few people see, for lack of
meditation, or concentrated
thought,
Therefore some evolve
quickly and others slowly, according as their desire is intelligent or
unintelligent.
In addition to intelligence
there must be the will. The will is the whole of the self turning its attention
to a part of itself. It is a superior knowledge — not about things, but about
what things concern us at any given time. It operates to unfold or evolve that
part or quality of our being which is still asleep, and so determines our
interest, when that is not spoiled from the outside by fear or pride
We have our individual
predilections — marking our desires. In college one student takes to geology,
another to mathematics, another to zoology and natural history, and a fourth to
history and philosophy. I knew one man who for no visible reason took a great
interest in human beings and minerals. In college he took to geology,
mathematics, physics and chemistry, with philosophy as a hobby by the way, and
had decidedly less interest in animals, and still less in plant life.
A man cannot do everything.
Indeed, he ought not to wish to do so, since the world is mainly a collection
of other people’s experiments. What have I to do with a knowledge of all the
streets in Philadelphia ? That is somebody else’s business. I must find my own.
It is possible for a man to
learn to feel quickly within himself for the root of his immediate desires.
Putting his trust in that quiet inward admonition (and not permitting pride and
fear to sway him about) he soon finds the greatest possible guide in his
outward life — which is the intuition of the will. [For a full discussion of
this subject, see my Intuition of the Will.
Intelligence is spoiled by
fear, and the will by pride. On account
of fear and pride, people do not live fully, but entrench themselves like
soldiers hiding from the enemy’s fire. The man of fear does not face the
adventure of life, when he lets fear affect his desires. Fear should be a
purely mental thing with us, an intelligent watchfulness. On account of pride a
man goes on displaying what he has already gained, and carries it on far beyond
what is necessary for the learning of the lesson of experience, He thus
prevents the ground from being cleared by intelligence for the operation of the
will, so that it may make that self-change which is necessary for starting a
new section of experience. Pride should be only in the will, the dignity of
life true to itself. That is why worldly greatness sometimes shows that a man
has kept at one job too long. It is artificial and unnecessary, like the biceps
of a professional athlete, or immense learning, which are not required for the
reaching of our goal. Our greatness lies not here; the mouse is as wonderful as
the elephant, the grass as the tree.
It ought not to be too much
trouble to dwell in moments of leisure upon the
meaning and use of desire.
I know that many people will say “It is difficult,
and our stupid minds see nothing”. But go on trying, and not
caring
whether you succeed or not,
and within a week you will see the nature of your desire and whither it is
tending. And you will see also that knowledge of this fact is the first step on
a swifter road of evolution, that with this knowledge you can save yourself
from wandering miserably in the old paths, from carrying the dark part of your
past into what ought to be a brighter future. It makes the difference between
rowing a boat and putting up a sail.
Desire awakens thought,
which is its handmaiden. It is therefore of two kinds, according as it is with
or without vision. Thus there are desires for the goal and desires by the
wayside. And desires by the wayside are of two kinds — attractions and
aversions. For example, a man lives in a country place, and he wants to go
quickly to a distant city in his car, because that city holds for him the fulfilment of his desire. As he proceeds on his journey
there will be two kinds of desires in his mind — desire for the city, to have
all that it holds for him, to be all that it can stimulate him into being, but
at the same time he wants to avoid as
much as possible the deep ruts, the potholes and the thorns with which the road
is strewn.
From his desires-to-avoid
are born by revulsion temporary forms of contentment, which are the desires by
the wayside. He will say (I) “Let me enjoy some sensations, that life may pass
tolerably”, or () “Let me have possessions, so that I may feel some power”, or
() “Let me have the entertainment and support of friends, for there is gaiety,
if nothing else.” But nobody really wants these things, that is, nobody wants
them for ever.
None of the objects of the wayside
are attractive as compared with what the goal has to offer. But many of them
appear so to a man harassed by the roughness of the way. So, after much
complaining about the rough condition of the road, the traveler will often
settle for a while in the peaceful harbor of a wayside hostelry, and say,
“There is pleasure here”.“ I will be satisfied with this.”
But that satisfaction is
only apparent, not real. It is born of his desire-to-avoid. The man still wants
the city, but he does not want it more than he fears the road, All pleasure
by-the-way is therefore short-lived. As soon as it has been fully tasted, its
incapacity to satisfy is known. It is
inevitably compared with the vision of the goal, so, though fear and pride may
cause serious delay, there is always some progress on the road of life.
Our dissatisfaction is a
precious thing. It is caused by our vision of the goal, however dim that may
be. Therefore it is a first point of wisdom to be content to be dissatisfied.
The vision of the goal gives happiness that runs along with the
dissatisfaction, and entirely changes the taste of it.
Even the best of the
desires by the wayside is an aversion. All personal desires, for the excitement
or the comfort of sensation, mild or strong, or for possessions and friends,
are only refuges. They are sought out and clung to through fear of the open
road, as Hamlet preferred the ills he had to others that he knew not of but
feared.
I see then two kinds of
people about me — those who have the vision of the goal and those who have not.
Or rather, as this is a relative matter, those who have a great vision of the
goal and those who have so little that they do not know that they have any at
all. All these people look to me like the
contents of a great limestone cave hollowed out by carbonized water — there are
many stalactites hanging from the ceiling, and many stalagmites standing upon
the floor. Some people have their broad base above, others their broad base
below. Of those who perceive only the things by the wayside the desires become
attached to those things, and their divine energy (for there is no other
energy) builds a kind of stalagmite, which, however, cannot help but rise
upwards even from that base.
Thousands of people try to
get to heaven keeping their feet on the earth. But the man who is stalactitic is he who is broad-based in his vision of the
goal, and puts down from above his finger of consciousness, concentrated,
purposeful, vigorous, clear-sighted, to deal with this thing or that thing in
the light of his vision of the goal. He has to do with many things, but they
are all linked together by his one purpose. Think, for example, of an artist,
who is filled with the desire to paint a beautiful picture — many things have
something to do with that one purpose. He rests at night — in order to paint
that picture. He gets up in the morning — in order to paint that picture. He
washes, dresses, eats his breakfast ,
buys pencils and colors and canvas, and goes to the forest — all in order to
paint that picture.
Such a man does not depend
for his interest on external stimulus or excitement. He has purpose. But the man who has no desire
to understand, but only curiosity (which is desire for sensation), who has no
desire for the largeness of life that shows itself by love, who has no purpose,
has no concentration. All his divine energy has dripped onto the floor.
IT is sometimes thought
that desire is a prolific and misleading impulse, which requires to be checked
and severely pruned by intelligence. On the contrary, desire provides motive,
while thought studies ways and means. But there is such a thing as intelligent
desire, which means not desire restrained by intellect, but desire educated
through experience accompanied by thought.
There is nothing to replace
desire. It will alter with experience, but it should never be diminished, for
that would mean slowing up our evolution, of which it is the mainspring. Less
desire, less living.
Desire points to the goal
of life. Since men want to become “God”, and nothing less than that can
ultimately satisfy them, it means that there is an element of divine vision in
desire, so that man can never be entirely
untrue to himself or to the purpose of his existence. He will become
God. It is the height of intelligence to see that goal, and to learn the
passing nature of mere forms. So when
the goal is seen intelligently desire has its greatest power and most direct
purpose.
Do not say at the outset;
“This goal is too remote for me. This vision is too fantastic. It is concerned
with the whole universe, and I am only a very tiny part.” But consult your
deepest desire. Ask yourself what you want. Do you want that goal or do you not
want it ? If you do want it, you will have it, though it is universal. It is
only ignorance that keeps you from it, and experience with thought will remove
that. Do not let false humility keep you back from your birthright. You are a
king of creation, not a scavenger living on the leavings of others.
Do you not see that there
is a false distinction between the small and the great, the part and the whole,
the finite and the infinite ? For the small things of life are marvellously united with the great whole of life, as the
sun may shine into every drop of water.
If you examine some small
object and study it carefully, with concentrated attention and full thought,
giving your time to it ungrudgingly, you will come to understand it, and soon understanding
will be easy. Or if you do the same thing with regard to a person you will come
to love him, and love will become easy. Or, if you similarly devote yourself to
some work of art, you will become skilled to draw a straight line with your
unguided hand, for nothing else develops the will like art.
You may think, “Yes, these
are the little things with which we have to fill our lives; far removed from
the goal of full freedom or power, and full love and understanding, which you
call omnipotence, omniscience and omnipresence”. What a mistake! By
understanding one little thing you gain the power to understand other things;
by learning to love one person you gain the power to love other people; by
acquiring one accomplishment you develop the will with which you can achieve
other things.
Truly the body is a small
thing, but it is concerned with great things. What is the use of the body? I find that even people who
consider the body to be not themselves nevertheless believe that it enables
them to do things, and that they walk about and see the world with the aid of
this body, that it is a vehicle. But I have seen for many years that on the
contrary it is a limiting instrument. I see with my eyes the contents of a
room, and that vision is limited by the surrounding walls. Suppose that
suddenly my power of sight went through the walls, and extended itself into
every hall and room and street in a big city. The sight would be too much for
me. I should stagger with the immensity and the complexity of it all.
Thanks, then, for the
limitations of the body, which assist me to focus my
attention upon a scene within
the measure of my capacity, my individual
experiment, instead of
leaving me wide open to the world, with all the
indefiniteness of that state.
I cannot pay full attention to many things at once
or in a short time, but I can
bring the full power of my will, my affection and
my thought to hear upon
something small enough for the capacity of my powers of
consciousness. Then that
capacity grows. The will that has learned to hold its own in one thing will
hold it in many things; the love which
has won a triumph of unity between two persons will win the unity of many
persons, and the understanding which has grasped the small things will grasp
great things.
At last the will, the love
and the understanding will no longer need the limitation provided by this body,
but the life of which they are the conscious powers will stand in its own
strength open to the world, to life its own great world-life, in which freedom,
unity and understanding blend in one glorious state of conscious being — or I
think I must call it super conscious being, since the consciousness that we
commonly know is the broken consciousness connected with the sequence of little
things.
Do not, then, tell me that
our goal is a distant thing. My life has the character of the whole even while
it is directed to the part. Many people have a dim vision, which may be called
an intuition, of this fact. I knew a lady who used to travel for months and
sometimes even for years from her home, and when she came back she always said:
“I have a curious feeling that I have been here all the time; I cannot realize
that I have been away”. I told her that I was quite sure that she had not
been entirely away. The same lady when
at a distance would sometimes receive a letter from home, and then say: “I have
that curious feeling again; I cannot realize that all the people there are
going on with their usual activities without me”. The same answer applied, of
course.
So do not be shy of your
vision of the goal. But watch your perception of it, and take care that the
casual perception of things by the wayside does not cause you to forget your
vision of the goal. This is important, because on the road of life this
perception all the time governs the desires, which are the energy of life. As
desires are of two kinds — to achieve and to avoid, so perception is of two
kinds — the casual perception of the things by the wayside, and the reaching
out perception which knows something about the city to which you want to
come. The vision of the city whose
minarets and domes you can see in the distance determines the direction of your
steering, but more than that, and at the same time, it reflects itself into the
present, so that the ruts and pot-holes in the road cannot trouble you as they do those whose vision of the city is
almost lost.
Picture yourself as an
adept life, not an adept form, for forms are only organs, and the function or
power of the life produces the organs. The adept life is the constant seer of
purpose and beauty, the constant feeler of love and unity, the constant understander of the use of things to the permanent life.
Too often “adepts” are thought of as external forms, as though one should see a
beautiful spade digging in a garden and be strangely blind to the existence of
the gardener handling that spade. Picture yourself as life without internal
obstruction or external discontent. Remember that your attainment is a
certainty. What then does it matter what the road to that goal may be; that
which is certain is almost as good as that which even now exists.
There is no other power to
be compared with this perception of the goal. It can fill the present with the
fullest life of which we are now capable. Every moment lived and every action
done in the light of that goal, is the most profitable moment, the most
successful action possible for us. This is a fact that applies to all men, tall
or short, young or old. It is the great awakener. It brings the fullness of all our life to a focus upon the
part of it with which we are at the moment engaged. It vitalizes desire, which
is the energy of life. It is the vision of God [The use of this word is a
concession to popular language. We must
not think of a ruler or master of the world. A source — yes, but that is the
life, which is also our life. I prefer the term “the divine”, because it is
connected with the Sanskrit div, which means “to shine”. The divine is that
which shines with its own power — not light alone, but any power, not by
reflected light or derived power. and our union with God. This is theosophy,
which has rightly been called “an intimate knowledge of divine things”, and “a
direct knowledge of God”. The light of the goal gives new significance to
everything upon the way, and can in fact transform every trouble into a
delight.
The power of this
perception (once we have had it clearly in our minds) is present not only when
we are thinking of the goal. By degrees — and sometimes in a flash — it fills
all the chambers of the subconscious as well as the conscious mind, like the
sunlight which is shining directly outside, but also diffuses itself through even a small window into
every corner of a room. In our delight in the direct sunshine, let us not
forget that it works its magic also in those dark rooms.
Then the perception of the
goal will exert its power at all times, whether we are thinking of it or not.
The forms which surround us are immensely susceptible to its influence, as they
are also even to lesser perceptions. For example, it has frequently been
observed that adopted children grow to resemble their foster parents; thinking
of them has produced this effect. Even the humble flatfish adds its small quota
of testimony to this truth. Lying in the shallow water over the brown sand it
becomes brown, over the grey sand it becomes grey. But if that flatfish happens
to be blind these changes do not occur.
I believe I see the same
effect in communities and nations — that it is some way
of thinking common to the
group, and the constant perception of one another,
which bring about a
similarity among them, counteracting considerably all the
influences of heredity. Many
artists are aware that their work is
nation-building work,
insomuch as it excites the perception and the conscious or
unconscious desire of the
people who see it. One striking case
was
presented by the well-known
American artist, Mr. Clarence Underwood, originator
of the “school-girl
complexion” pictures, who wrote with regard to his own little daughter.
“Many years ago I suddenly
stopped painting the blonde woman who had dominated my work, and began to draw
a girl. People asked me who she was, and I truly could not tell them. She was
certainly not the model that I was using, nor any combination of several
models. She was herself, and to me at least an ideal type.
“My little daughter Valerie
was then six years old and she loved that dark girl intensely. She would come
into the studio and stand behind my chair and watch me paint, until discovered
and dragged protestingly away. For years I drew that
one face with little variation.
“When Valerie was a young
lady, some fifteen years later, she was the living image of that pictured face,
which I had drawn so many years ago. I know that her love and admiration for
those pictures were responsible for it.
“Old friends of mine when
they met my daughter would exclaim at the resemblance,
although at the time I
painted the picture Valerie was nothing but a baby, with no more semblance to the face on the canvas than I
myself had. Her actual looks were changed to conform with a pictured face which
she loved, and ‘this same result may happen to any girl. The American girl of
today is more nearly the result of the artist’s ideal than she herself can
possibly know.”
I believe also that many of
the outside occurrences, opportunities and cataclysms of life are much moved by
our perceptions and by our vision of the goal, as well as are our condition of
health, strength and beauty of body and mind. There are subtle affinities, and
what we seek also seeks us.[For example, the quotation from The Secret Doctrine
which I have given in the preface to this book was hit upon in the following
way. About a week after I had thought out this book and dictated it to a
secretary, and while my thoughts were much upon this view-point, which to my
mind is the essential and the only real theosophy, I was traveling on a ferry
boat, carrying with me a copy of The Secret Doctrine. It occurred to me that it would be
interesting to open it casually and read whatever turned up, I did so, and came
straight upon this passage, in which I was glad to find that Madame Blavatsky
entirely endorses the outlook which I have made my own. Many people would
regard this as mere chance. I do not believe that. Our lives are full of
incidents engineered through, various laws worked by our subconscious minds.
We may, call the goal of
life whatever we like. The Chinese have been very wise in their nomenclature,
having the same word for both God and heaven. The goal is not an objective
region, nor is it a subjective state. It is the fullness of life. It is like a
picture containing all colors. We are looking at that picture in the world, but
in a color-blind way.
If we look at a picture of
many colors and are able to see only, let us say, the red strokes upon the
canvas, it will seem chaotic, but when we come to see the other colors it is at
once all order and meaning, a thing of unity — therefore of beauty, truth and
love, for these are only unity itself, expressed respectively in form, in
thought and in feeling. All our experience has meaning. There is only one life and only one world,
and these two are only one. There is nothing to leave, nothing to lose, but
everything to gain. There is no monotony in unity, like the monotony of a row
of pins, or the monotony of a shoreless and
uninhabited ocean. Uniformity is separateness, but unity implies infinite
diversity. The nirvanic plane is here. What we see is
a part of that.
What must we do about it ?
As I wrote in Concentration twenty years ago [
“If you have said ‘I will’,
then choose what you will have, and the nearer your choice is to the heart of
the Great Law the sooner you will succeed. Give reign to your fancy and picture
to yourself the liberty, and the might, and the love, and the knowledge that
will be yours, Your chariot shall be the lightning flash, and your raiment the
splendor of the sun, and your voice shall be the thunder of the spheres. The divinest knowledge shall be your food, and the ethereal
blue your home. Yours shall be the strength of mountains, the power of the
tempest, the force of the ocean, the beauty of the sunrise, the triumph of the
noonday sun, the liberty of the wind, the gentleness of the flowers, the peace
of the evening twilight, the purity of eternal snow.
“First of all believe in
your own immortality, then realize that the future is full of splendor without
limit, of achievement beyond and beyond, and beyond again, the most avaricious
dreams of imagination, and that that achievement is a matter for your choosing
now. Death is but a trifling episode in our age-long life. Through its portal
we go as one rises from a bed of sickness to go out into the sunshine. If we set our hearts upon the
superhuman things, then we shall achieve. If we fix our ambitions in human
life, these, also, we shall attain in constant rebirth. Believe in your own immortality:
give wings to your imagination, say; ‘This is within my reach; I will achieve,’
and success will come sooner than you expect”.
THE road to the goal of
life is — living. Living is creative work, since we make all our own
experience, through our experiments. Such work may be mental, emotional, or
physically material. This does not mean that a man must be creative or original
in everything, but that there must be some point of personality where he rises out
of the mass — where his own desire is original and his life is felt. In those
matters in which we follow custom we are not living or evolving. That is like
the wooden part of a tree, in which no sap is flowing, but it must be there as
a thing used by the tree as a means of reaching up to the light, and at the
same time living in the moisture brought up from the ground. Such parts of our
own body and mind as have become merely reflex or spontaneous in their
responses are of the same nature, but we live at the point of our individuality, where our original powers
appear.
Some people accept
established customs — in dress, manners, business and even religious forms,
because this leaves them leisure to think, and saves them from the exhaustion
of planning new ways and the conflict of going against the stream of ordinary
life. Others accept traditional ways of thinking, merely because this makes
smooth the path of social intercourse and self-expression in the corner of
society to which they happen to belong, and opens for themselves the door to
the enjoyment of the many pleasures which it contains. But as thinking is for
living and living is for undertaking — not mere sensation, except on the
surface — both these lack the character and benefit of creative work or real
living. Such people go on for their whole life-time making mistakes — the
theorists or spectators losing the corrective of experimental experience and
the butterflies losing the corrective of interested thought.
But thought and action
combine in creative living, and between these two the
emotions become pure and
sweet. Creative living awakens more and more — the ego,
the “I am”, so that each
moment is full of life and growth, The creative
liver may be a statesman, philanthropist, philosopher, interpreter, scientist,
devotee, or artist, with an audience of one or many, with canvas as small as
his own skin or as large as the world, but whatever may be his métier he really
lives, while the imitators, the copyists, the conformists, are relatively dead
all the time — they tread the paths of animal, vegetable or mineral life, not
that of man. It is better to be a man painting on a small canvas than a human
fungus covering the world.
The objects or forms which
surround us on that road are objects to be lived with. Just as an architect
might find himself in a remote South Sea Island, where he would busy himself
building beautiful and useful houses with the materials from the palm trees and
grasses within his reach, or might find himself in a modern city, with steel
girders and electric riveting machines, and cement and iron and glass to his
hand, and there he would build another kind of house, so each man finds himself
among objects with which he can live. The objects do not constitute the life.
The living constitutes the life, for life is dynamic. Perhaps it would be
better if we talked about “my living” instead of “my life”, for living is life.
Life cannot stand still.
Nothing thwarts our
creative life; on the contrary, there is a double conspiracy to promote it.
There is life’s hunger for its own fullness, which we have already considered,
and then there is the world’s law of destruction or perishing. Not that the
world really destroys. It is the life that has made everything that has been
made, and when the life is withdrawn from that which has been made in order to
give its attention to something else, that object begins to decay. [ For
example, certain fishes, having transferred themselves to dark underground
waters, gradually lost their eyes. There was no external cause for this, for
darkness does not positively act upon the eyes to remove or diminish them. Nor
are eyes a disqualification for life in the dark. But life was not entering
them, with its energy, which is desire, so they gradually faded away. For life
is concerned not only with creation, but also with preservation of the forms.
And what we call destruction is a still deeper law of the life, by which it
stimulates itself to new efforts, to greater and more successful expression of
its powers in the building of forms.
If a man builds a house,
that is the result of his thought and energy. Life has built the house. But
when the work is complete and he ceases
building, the house begins to decay. Therefore, even before he has a vision of
the goal and understands the value of full living, and while he is still
attached to the objects by the wayside for their own sake, or for what he
thinks to be the permanent enjoyment of those things, he is still being caused
to employ and exercise the powers of his life and therefore to develop them. He
himself evolves in the process, for though his houses perish one after another,
he remains, a better, wiser, stronger man. So, at last, dying is a part of
living, in which there is destruction of forms as well as preservation and
creation.
Nearly a hundred years ago
a well known American thinker, who was certainly a theosophist in the general
and proper meaning of that term, wrote an essay, which is still widely read,
entitled “Compensation”, in which he pointed out that what is gained in one way
is usually lost in another, and what is lost in one way is usually gained in
another. As told in the old story, the peacock has beauty for the eye, but the
nightingale has beauty for the ear. Of late, we have been reading of medical
men who have been curing rheumatism by
inoculating their patients with malaria, and vice versa. The following old
Oriental verse apposite:
When I sent you my
melons you cried out with scorn, “They ought to be heavy and wrinkled and
yellow.” When I offer’d myself, whom those graces
adorn, You flouted, and call’d me an ugly old fellow.
The whole principle of
compensation lies in the fact that one instrument is good for one thing and
another for another, and it is not possible to have all powers at once, and yet
be the limited creature that we know as man. The Hindus have depicted their
divinities with four arms or six faces in their attempts to conceive the whole
in the part, but do what we will in this world of parts, we can have nothing
that is whole — except the whole.
This is seen in action as
well as in form, A man with his versatile brain and hands may hold a spade, a
pen, the steering wheel of a motor-car or a hundred other things, but he cannot
use them all at once. He may choose which he will, and be free in that choice —
but his power is never equal to his freedom, and therefore the appearance of activity of a
man can never show the full reality of his being. It is the custom of vulgar
minds to judge others with extreme superficiality, and therefore to see their
faults or incapacities, without realizing the tremendous reserves which thus
exist in every human character.
The same principle appears
again in the unfoldment of character from childhood to old age. From beginning
to end the process is one of loss as well as gain. We have not at twenty-one
the sweet simplicity and single-mindedness of early childhood, nor at forty-two
the uncalculating emotions of twenty-one; and at sixty-three we have not that
confidence in the stark logic of the mind which was ours at forty-two. Yet all
these states are admirable. We have great cause also to admire animals and
plants. Taking the special qualities of each, they are splendid subjects for
hero-worship and emulation.
Here appears the weak spot
in the theory of evolution as it is popularly conceived, as a process of
accumulation towards perfection, Some think that we go on adding to our capacities or removing our defects
(according to the “builder” theory and the “sculptor” theory) through a series
of incarnations, until we have accumulated to perfection. But in this way no
perfection is ever reached on the road of life. Every perfection is an
“initiation”, a beginning of something new, within the life of him who attains
it. If a student understands the significance of a point in science or history
it means an awakening in his mind, and it is the beginning of life lived at a
higher level or more richly than before.
The circumstances of a day
or a lifetime are never equal to the man, because he limits himself in
attending to those circumstances, as a gardener limits himself when he is
handling a spade. Roughly speaking, up to the age of about twenty-one we are
giving the physical nature its turn, from then to forty-two we are giving the
emotional nature its fling, and from then till sixty-three it is the mental
which sits in the seat of the mighty. For example, “calf love” is a thing of
physical sensations, [The other day a visitor had called at the house of a
friend, and had nursed the young son of the house on his knee. After he was
gone, the little boy said, “Mother, I like that man.” ‘O” replied the mother,
“why?” The child knew exactly why, and stated his reason without hesitation —
“Because he has hairs in
his nose!” entirely self-centered. The youth
would like to display miracles of courage — for his own gratification.
But the love of the grown man for wife and children is pure and heroic emotion,
with a sensibility that penetrates into the world of life of those other beings
and finds in them a set of divine wonders and glories, a vision of other and
different parts of life itself.[ In a “soda fountain” in New York, I overheard
one young man say to another, with great emphasis and bitterness; “If it wasn’t
for the wife and kiddies I wouldn’t stick it”. This is common enough. Few wives
know what their husbands endure, and vice versa, and mercifully, the children
do not know at all. Only all beings can express the whole of life. Every one of
us would like to be everything at once, but we have to be content with the next
best thing, which is love, the recognition in others of other parts of the
all-embracing divine life, which have not been vouchsafed to us.
In the third stage, after
the age of forty-two, if there is love it has lost some of its bravery, has an
eye on the cupboard, and is largely a comfortable agreement. If there is then a
conflict between love and reason, the latter wins. If the divine fire is not caught in its proper stage, not in this life will
it be known to us in its simplicity and power. The opportunity has gone, for
life is a thing of phases, since the hands which go round the clock do not
carry the numbers with them on their journey.
Why should there be this
loss and gain? Because we are not yet truly born to life. The life that we know
from day to day consists of fragments. We have not our full life, but are
learning to live, and all the objects of the world which are taken up and put
down one after another are like the toys of a little child. Something is gained through them that never
was in them, for they are but a means for concentrating our attention upon each
lesson in turn, as a child develops the mother impulse with the aid of a rag
doll.
We are at school, in
preparation for life, and as a child at school is immured in one classroom
after another, in order to learn, let us say, history, mathematics and music in
turn, so we find ourselves greatly limited by one condition after another, And
as the child will be soonest done with the mere learning of history, mathematics and music who gives
full attention to those subjects each in its proper turn, and does not let his
mind rove to the others, so it is the greatest wisdom in practical life to
fight the battles and learn the lessons that are before us — not to wait for
circumstances to change and other opportunities to present themselves. Whatever
the occasion is, take your opportunity. If you have eyes, look; if you are
blind, feel and hear. It was an observant man who advised us never to do
unwillingly what is our necessity.[ Understanding leads to interest and broad
desires. The trouble generally is that our desires for certain things cause
dislike of other things. Mr. Lilliput likes carrots and lets it be known. He then
complains of the monotony of his table, but when cabbage or cauliflower is
served he grumbles because he does not like them. Or he likes one kind of
weather. Happier the man who can look out of the window in the morning, and
say; “Ha, sunshine today. Splendid!” or
“Ho, nice rain this morning. Fine!” or “Fog! What a long time it seems since we
had a slice of real fog!” or if the house is washed away or burned down, “We
are to have a change. Good!” At the same time, I am not suggesting that he
should be offensively cheerful in his manner on these occasions.
Because we are learning one
lesson at a time we are not engaged in displaying what we have so far gained,
but in gaining what we have not. Therefore we cannot judge ourselves or others by the appearances of the moment.
The child may be excellent at music, but that will not be apparent during the
history lesson. Every one of us is engaged in showing the worst side of himself
to the world, not the best, since we are here to deal with those things which
develop our deficient points.
This principle displays
itself all along the road of life. A man may be very near his goal; still he is
here to reveal to himself some part of what remains of his own incapacity, and
by struggle to convert that weakness into strength. This is a good reason why no man can be
leader to another. All such leading is the blind leading the blind. Every man
has his own problem, and also the key to his problem. If this knowledge disarms
uncritical hero-worship it also destroys purblind criticism.
This knowledge is immensely
encouraging, No man knows when he will break through
the prison-wall and come
out into the open air of free full life. He is painfully conscious of the
obstruction and of the weakness of his own arms. Let him dig away at the walls;
suddenly his pick will go through the last thin section as though it were an eggshell, and he will
find himself free. Achievement is sudden.
One day the schooling is finished. The child walks out into the great world
armed cap-à-pie with all the capacities which it has
laboriously acquired one by one. This is the end of schooling, full
“initiation”, the beginning of life.
People have invented
various heavens for themselves, but they have mostly been afraid to launch
themselves upon the ocean of free life, even in imagination. They would have a land flowing with milk and
honey. When the missionaries went among the Eskimos, and wanted to translate
this point in their teaching into understandable terms, they had to speak and
write of a land flowing with blubber. Some want golf; some want music; some
want rest. Some say we are souls on probation, being tried to see if we are fit
to be kept. Some say we are souls in evolution, accumulating experience and
capacity. But I would say we are developing our capacities one after another in
preparation for the beginning of full unlimited life.
There is no possibility of
missing this end, for all efforts lead towards it. What is not discovered by thought is learned
by experience or, in other words,
mistakes. So all is learnt, sooner or later, and in the deeper sense there are
no mistakes. Theosophy is “knowledge of God”, which means the divine here and
now. In all his affairs every man is “alone with God”. Beauty must meet beauty,
love love, and thought thought,
in those conversations.
How is it that most
righteous persons are not beautiful ? Because they have not thought of beauty,
or if they have, they have not thought beautifully, but have sought it with the
ugliness of care. They persist in dealing with men and things, and not with
God, here and now. Others restlessly seek rest, but peace will never be
attained by rest — only by life, like an eagle swiftly moving on the wing.
There is rest in the power which needs and asks no rest. The world is not
destroyed for us when we attain our goal. It becomes vastly more, but the pain
of time is gone.
I have already explained
that there is no material evolution, but there is the evolution of the powers
of life in every one of us. I have explained also that the unfoldment of these
powers is usually retarded — that men make for themselves a long road of life,
spread out into a long future the attainments which could be gained in a short
present. There is thus no penalty for not taking opportunities. They are
offered even unto seventy times seven. The evolution of the individual depends
entirely upon his answer to the question:
“What do you want ?”
Commonly, people do not examine their desires, but they go on desiring all the
same. In this case the desires may be great, but the use of intelligence is
small, and therefore theirs is a long path in life, confused and almost
purposeless.
There are only four answers
to the question which each should put to himself — what do you want ? (I) Some
want sensations; () some want possessions; () some want friends; and () some
few want capacity for a fuller life. We need not study the detailed psychology
of these four classes of people — and there are no others — but it is well that
we should observe what they are, for if our knowledge is something to be used
it will be our object to leave the first three classes immediately and so take,
quite instantaneously, a great step forward in evolution.
(I) Among the people who live for sensation are those who occupy their
minds with impure and exciting thoughts in their leisure hours. They think
about food and drink and sex appetites and relationships. If there is
conversation, some of them delight in gossip, in the excitement of news and the
even greater excitement of being purveyors of news. If there is reading, they
must have sensational newspapers, sloppy love stories or dreadful detective
tales. If there is traveling, they must rush about in motor-cars at an
unreasonable speed. If there is staying
at home, there must be enormous beds
and kitchens and wallowing in luxury. Or, at least, there must be comfort and
peace.
() Those who live for
possessions desire wealth or fame in some degree. I knew one vigorous old
gentleman who, at the age of eighty-two, while conversing with some of his
sons, aged between fifty and sixty, suddenly burst forth with the remark: “You
boys don’t seem to know what is really worth while in life — it is to watch
your bank balance, and see it increasing every day.” People of this type spare
themselves no labors and shrink from no dangers in order to accumulate the
possessions they desire. This gentleman died worth about a hundred thousand
pounds, and even then he could not bear to break up his fortune, but left it
mainly to one son. It must have cost him many a pang to leave even a small
proportion each to the rest of his children.
There is the same
phantasmal value in the pursuit of fame; its votaries never stop to reflect
that nobody knows them anyhow, just as in connection with possessions there is
usually very little real possession. And these desires appear in small and
unsuccessful lives as well as in the bigger and more successful. We must have a
house, and it must be furnished like
those of our neighbors, and if possible a little better.
() The third group consists of people who desire family or friends.
There must be someone to entertain them in one way or another, to support them
in their beliefs, or before whom they may display their latest point of wisdom
or accomplishment. It may be only one boon companion, or many friends.
These three classes or
groups of people are not getting the most out of life, either in progress or in
happiness. Analyze their private thoughts and feelings and you will find that
the desires which they follow are not natural to them, but they have taken to
them as a refuge. They are the people who are whispering to themselves, however
faintly; “There is no greatness in life for us, therefore let us eat, drink and
be merry.” But they get precious little merriment out of it all. It is only a
refuge, on the principle that half a loaf is better than no bread, but it is
not half of the loaf, nor even a hundredth part of it.
() The fourth class of people are those who care for the capacity to
live, that is to say, for life itself. They
value love and thought and will, and in the use of these powers they find
happiness, with sufficient merriment on the side. I am not proposing that
people should be interested only in what is going on in their own minds, in the
development and exercise of character and power. It is not a material condition that we are
considering, but it is life lived as such in the midst of things.
Shall I enumerate the
objects of desire which appear in this class ? First there is health, then
strength, then beauty. These cannot be acquired like possessions, and they
never come to him who lives for sensation, or who depends upon the
entertainment and benefit of friends. It is by living to capacity that these
things become ours — but let us not talk in the language of possessions, for
these good things are not possessions but are the expression of our life. Let there be indolence, selfishness and
carelessness, [ There are only three real vices — laziness, selfishness and
carelessness — and laziness is easily the first and worst, for it includes both
the others. When it goes, in an individual case, selfishness appears, when
selfishness goes there is still carelessness.
When that goes, the man begins to live as such and he soon enters our
fourth division — those who live for capacity, or life. For a full exposition
of the three fundamental vices, see my Character Building. which are the absence of life, being the absence of will,
love and thought, and see what becomes of health, strength and beauty.
Those who follow the fourth
path, which is voluntary evolution or the unfoldment of life, soon discover the
same fruit in the emotions and in the mind as in the body. Affection is the
health of the emotions; interestedness is their strength; cheerfulness is their
beauty. And of the mind, judging is the health, planning is the strength and
understanding is the beauty. Let these qualities be sought, and all the
material things will be added.
People tell me they are too
feeble to live, that they must fall back on one or other of the three refuges.
But I say their feebleness is only a habit, out of which they will come with a
little effort. They must think, or at least they must try to think. Go by
yourself into a quiet room and shut your eyes, and try for a quarter of an hour
to think of something — anything. Do it day after day. If you do not succeed immediately, you will
do so in a week, or at any rate in a month, though such a length of time will
rarely be necessary, for the life is waiting for its awakening, and it is eager
to break through the shells of habit. A
little thought goes a long way. We have only to dwell upon the life until we want the life,
and when we want it the life will come, and we need not then linger year after
year and life after life amidst the miserable products of unintelligent desire.
What I have now been
talking about as the fourth path or the path of life is what we have sometimes
called the probationary path. It is the release of the mind for the
understanding of life. It begins with the perception that we live under laws of
life, or spiritual laws, which are superior to and enclose the material laws of
the worlds of forms, which are only limitations or partial expressions of life.
I think that theosophists
of all times and countries have always divided mankind into these two classes —
those who live for the delights of the body and those who live for the delights
of life. It is really the difference between the materialists and the
theosophists, considered, not as a matter of theory of life, but from that
supreme test of belief which is desire expressed in practical life. In this
classification, those who desire a bodily heaven, however attenuated or glorified, are materialists.
But the desire to have capacity indicates that we are interested first of all
in the life or living, and that the bodily things are secondary. It indicates
that the affairs of life are now governed from within and not by circumstances,
although they are the same affairs as before.
This understanding of life
establishes a spiritual individuality in the body. I have already explained
that individuality may or may not be selfish. It may go forward to many
triumphs and still be centered in its own interests. But we cannot find our own
life without soon finding the life in others, a discovery which starts us off
on a new course and has therefore been called by many “initiation”. It is, of
course, the beginning of a new life, in which the individuality is as strong as
ever, but its interests reach out far beyond the limits of the body.
I am not suggesting that
all the people who are interested in family or community or country or
humanity, or in any movement connected with these, have therefore begun this
new life. In most cases it is not so, for often they are mere careerists. They
want to be pleased with themselves, and since they have been drilled in the
idea that it is good and right and
noble and advanced and so forth to have these wider activities, they often
labor hard in them, but really they do so in order that they may be pleased
with themselves, or so that they may not be displeased with themselves. There
is much more genuine spiritual quality in the consideration for others which
gives rise to natural courtesy than in many of these much larger efforts.
I must try to make this
point clear, for our understanding of initiation depends upon it. Anyone who
has been living for capacity for some time tends to develop what is commonly
called genius, so that in a given incarnation there will be many things that he
could easily do or many careers he could easily follow. [ Let me give an
instance recorded by Lord Frederick Hamilton: “My youngest brother would, I
think, have made a great name for himself as a cricketer, had not the fairies
endowed him at his birth with a fatal facility for doing everything easily. As
the result of this versatility, his ambitions were continually changing. He
accordingly abandoned cricket for steeplechase riding, at which he
distinguished himself until politics ousted steeplechase riding. After some years, politics gave place to golf
and music, which were in their turn supplanted by photography. He then tried
writing a few novels, and very successful some of them were, until it finally
dawned on him that his real vocation in life was that of a historian.”
So there arises the
question; what shall we do with our lives, when so many different possibilities
are open to us ? The answer comes naturally. We become interested in the larger
life which is going on all round us. It becomes quite naturally our life.
Individuality has gone beyond the boundary or skin of one body, and therefore a
new life is begun. Love finds a motive, where reason failed.
Then the only thing that
holds this new life back, from its perfection can be the impurities belonging
to the old state. When Buddha spoke of these, he listed them as five fetters or
obstacles. I need mention them only briefly, as they have been fully discussed
in my little book, The Intuition of the Will. The first is selfishness, which
we have already considered. The second is doubt or uncertainty. It is better to
live according to a few things of which we are reasonably certain than
according to many things as to most of which we are uncertain. If we act on our
certainties our lives will be strong, and soon they will become rich. The third
is superstition, which is the permitting of external things to direct our
emotions and thoughts. In the fourth and fifth
place come liking and disliking. When there is affection, large
interestedness, the incidents which formerly created a great many likes and
dislikes begin to minister instead to the direct purposes of life itself.
We have frequently used the
word “arhat” in theosophical literature, having
adopted it from Buddhism. It
means literally one who is able or competent — one
who is really living, whose
life is not obscured by circumstances. It thus has
reference to the will. I
am not forgetting that strictly speaking there are no
circumstances, but only the
expressions of our own imperfections, which stand around and jeer at us, so to
speak. The arhat is an artist in life, so these forms
do not trouble him.
He has also come to a further
realization. The many lives around him are not interesting individually, any
more than he is interesting to himself individually, but they constitute one
picture, which he is beginning to see.
There is a certain danger in talking about these things, because persons
hearing about them may want to please themselves by being these things, and the
difficulty is that such desire to be
pleased with oneself stands in the way of the natural unfoldment of this reality.
The last difficulty or
obstacle which the arhat has to overcome has been
briefly described as the superstition of the ego. The common man thinks his
body to be himself. The arhat still thinks his powers
of consciousness to be himself. His individuality has grown until there is no
life in which he is not interested. But
what he fails to realize is that that which he calls his individuality is only
the reflection of the whole in the part. The perfection of man is not an
individual achievement of all perfections, but is the attainment of perfect
harmony, or perfect relations with all others.
Achievement must not be
thought of as ability to make vast quantities of the imperfect pictures which
men are making for their own education, but must be considered in terms of life
itself. It is liberation from the necessity, and at the same time from the
desire, to concentrate in that manner, to make those forms which are so much
less than the reality, and are limitations of the life. No more would the liberated man think of
making such forms than a great sculptor would play at producing statues without
heads.
There is only one one. There is no integrity except in that whole. The
dew-drop must slip into the shining sea. This simile should help us. The drop
of water has two parts — its waterness and its dropness. Its waterness is its
essential nature; its dropness is accidental and
external. If individuality is thought of as the dropness
there is an error. Well, then, when the dew-drop slips into the shining sea it
is the same water that it was before. It is the same life. All the
individuality or character that we ever show is but the reflection in part of
that which alone has individuality — the whole.
It is a very profitable
thing to dwell upon the idea of entering the world of life. In that there will
be all variety but no limitations. In that we shall have returned to our own
true nature in full strength and power, so that our will will
be as wide as the world and the full aroma of reality will be over all. This is
the liberated soul — not one who is full of power and desire to interfere with
the world (which is nothing but a collection of temporary life-expressions),
but one who has entered into life. Such liberation is not the end of life, It
is only the beginning of our true life.
LIVING in the world is a
collective thing, but experience is individual.
Therefore progress or evolution is individual. This paradox is, however,
only superficial, because there is only one I in all of us.[This may sound
dogmatic, but I would appeal to experience resulting from careful observation.
If I am with a circle of friends, I may refer to the bodies (including my own)
respectively as “It, and it, and it”. I speak to those friends as “You, and
you, and you.” My own consciousness, with its collection of habitual ideas and
feelings, is also a “you ”, for I can look at that exactly as I look at the
“you” in others. Then there is no discernible difference in the I’s, for there is only one pure “ I ”, though it speaks
through many “yous”. One life makes one world. Also,
as the “ I” in me does not know itself as different at different ages of the
body, so it should not think itself different in different persons.
First let us observe that
all the elements in this collective living have come through individuals, that
each is making a contribution in his
own sphere of influence. The results also are ultimately individual, because we
cannot develop another man’s capacity by the exercise of our faculties. Evolution is not merely the result of
experience, which one man may put before another, but is deeper than that. A
cat cannot learn from a king, nor a fool from a wise man. Experience does not
give us evolution. It is the use of our powers — our thought, will and love —
upon any experience which produces evolution. Our powers evolve themselves by
exercise, or better still, by exertion.
Evolution is individual. In
theological terms, God is fulfilling himself in each man — otherwise there
would be no point in that man’s existence. But it is not necessary to be
theological in the matter, because we can see what is happening in any country.
You cannot by process and act of parliament invent a dynamo or aeroplane, or discover the electron, or paint the most
beautiful picture. Every original achievement — a little part or a big part of
any discovery or invention, is due to the evolution of the powers of an
individual, which in turn was due to his exertion of those powers.
That country is most
progressive which gives most
opportunity for
individual freedom in the
exercise of those powers, not that which drills its
citizens like common
soldiers, who, though well trained, are notoriously
unintelligent. If today it
can no longer be said with accuracy, as it could in
former times, that the
history of a nation may be written in the biography of a
few individuals, that is
because with the advancement of liberty our nations are
seething with geniuses —
there are too many to mention, so that we do not even
know who is the inventor of
many most useful articles, or who is the originator
of most important elements in
our social code. Can you say who invented or
discovered matches, pins,
rubber, the carburetor, the dynamo or artificial silk
?
If we want further evidence
that experience is not evolution, but that evolution is due to our living or
our treatment of experience, let us consider the bluebottle. I do not know
whether in the privacy of its own apartments it toils or spins, but when it
spends its time among my works of art and science it does not appear to profit
particularly thereby. Similarly, when a
party of tourists is taken to see the great dynamos at Niagara Falls, no doubt
they are much impressed by the mighty power of those revolving drums, and the
whirring, singing sound, but have they in their minds the thousandth fragment
of the picture which would be in Edison’s mind were he standing in that place ?
Not if they stand there filled with the greatest awe and admiration for a
thousand years will they advance one step nearer to it, but the humble student
who uses his intelligence gradually comes to understand. Nor do I think,
turning to another aspect of human activity, that great love can be approached
or realized except through the study and practice of common goodwill. It is no
cheap sentiment.
I knew a scientific man who
was in charge of a large radio station, who was so impressed by a new valve
which had come out that he told me he felt that he could go down on his knees
and worship it. The other people there would have thought those valves to be
only “funny bottles” if they had not been told that they were the means of
sending out messages for many thousands of miles around. There was all the difference in the world
between awe and what he called his worship,
which was admiration due to understanding, which was full of joy,
freedom and power. This is the enthusiastic religion which a thinker of last
century called “the flowering and completion of human culture”, the temples of
which God builds in the heart of man, on the ruins of creeds and of religions.
We have electric light.
What we do with it alone determines our progress, not what it does. To one man
it is a means to self-indulgence and dissipation. Next door a student, who has no
leisure during the day, uses it with knowledge in view. Similarly, the
presence, the light and the help of a teacher can also be used in both these
ways. All light, all experience, belongs to environment, not to evolution,
which is in individual hands.[Co-operation or organization consolidates our
material gains. It does not create, and more often than not it stifles the
genius who would carry the work beyond its standardized forms. The value of
standardized labor in production is that it gives the worker both leisure and
the opportunity to fill that leisure with the materials of self-education.
In some parts of India
where I sometimes live we still use a candle or an oil lamp. The moth makes one
use of my candle, the lizard and the frog another, The moth flies into the
flame. The frog and the lizard run and jump
around and eat the remains. The question is — do we want light, or
sight? Which is it ? The light of life is everywhere; it is the power of sight
that we need to seek.
The same principle applies
in the region of our emotions and our thoughts. We do not need to explain away
our difficulties, but we want to understand them so as to have the power to
dissolve them. If I am indignant when I see injustice done, a theosophical
friend who has missed the point of theosophy takes hold of my waistcoat button
and “reasons” with me. He says, “But do not you see that there is no injustice.
This person is only suffering on account of his own misdeeds in the past. And
no one can suffer without such cause. So be calm, for everything is all right.
If the suffering is your own, suffer in silence, and be comforted with the
thought that the clouds must roll by and a better day will come.”
This is superstition, the
perversion or misapplication of a truth. Karma is what we have made. The
carpenter has made a table. Now let him use it or exchange it for something
else. And if he does not like it, let him alter it. This is the truth and the
value of karma, There are emotional and mental dissipations and idle luxuriousness
as well as physical. Religions are
saturated with such consolations, which create fools’ paradises which last for
a long time, and discourage self-confidence and the exercise of individual
powers.
AN old proverb says that
the worst is the perversion of the best. Man can be more cruel than the tiger.
A motor accident or an airplane crash is worse than the tumble of a running
man. Therefore a superstition, which is perversion, is most dangerous, and the
greater the truth connected with it the more carefully must its application be
studied and watched. This is my preface to a study of human brotherhood in its
three forms, which are (I) our relation to our equals or companions by the way,
() our relation to the unfortunate, the weak and the ignorant, and () our
relation to the superior persons or teachers. Brotherhood is a great truth, but
the idea of it has its danger.
To many it has come to mean
a life of benevolence, or helpfulness,
No one can object to this, if it does not occupy the giver’s time with a mere
repetition of old activities which do not exercise his intelligence and educate
his understanding, or if it does not prevent that best of all brotherhood, the proper
relations between equals, the friendship which is the charity that begins at
home, or if it does not trench upon the individuality of those who are helped.
If people are helped so that afterwards they can help themselves, it is good.
If not, it is bad, and the benevolence is only a mask for the indulgence of
weak vanity. Certainly it was good to help Russia’s millions of starving
children, to carry food to them across thousands of miles of land and sea. It
was intelligent, without blighting common life. It was an act of brotherhood
towards the unfortunate and weak.
All brotherhood in this
class is of temporary utility. We feed the destitute only that they may become
strong enough to feed themselves. And we teach the ignorant so that in future
we shall not need to teach them, because they will teach themselves. These
things are not gifts, but a contribution to the common work. We have received
from mankind; now let us do our share of giving. Those Russian children will owe more to the men who have
taught or will teach the people to live, that is to say, to use their
intelligence, their love and their energy, and use them all together, so that
such a state of desperate need may never occur again.
Similarly in the great
Japanese earthquake of , the Americans instantly conveyed great help to the
stricken people, who were as helpless as the victims of a railway accident, and
could resort only to the virtues of courage, fortitude and endurance. They
helped a lame dog over a stile, but nobody suggests, except in some religious
circles, that the lame dog should be carried all along the road.
There are special times in
which we can help one another, as the expression is, but let us recognize that
this is not normal living, and that those who are being helped are not at the
moment making progress, are not themselves evolving. They are merely being “saved”. There may be
some personal satisfaction, which I would call emotional dissipation, in
carrying a lame dog all along the road, but in that case, there is no progress
either for the carrier or for the dog.
It may be argued that there
is affectionate feeling, and that that involves living and evolution. But people who carry lame dogs
all along the road usually do so to gratify their own feelings, not for real
love. They must have someone to help, or they are at a loss to know what to do
with themselves. But the true test of
the living which is love is in association with those who do not need our help.
It is easy to be kind to the unfortunate, the ignorant, the inferior, because
that at the same time ministers to our pride, but what is much more needed is
kindness or friendliness to equals in ordinary life.
If you have reason to go to
a doctor, he may possibly give two things — pills to modify the indigestion and
wisdom to think about. Quite frequently the latter is forgotten, or I must say,
in justice to the doctors, is not wanted, and would be resented. Our doctors
know quite well that most of our diseases and ill-health are not natural, but
the result of idleness, indulgence, disordered imagination and sensuality — in
other words they are all superstitious, physical, emotional and mental.
Sometimes this is openly recognized, as when a certain little boy went into a
chemist’s shop and piped forth; “Please, sir, mother wants a bottle of
indigestion mixture, because we are going to have crumpets for tea in our
house All help is medicine. If I were a
doctor I should be a poor man, for I would give wisdom with my pills.
It is said that in
civilized lands, as they are called, our doctors have caused more disease than
they have cured, but this must not be misunderstood. It means that people
become less careful about their health because they think that the doctor is
there to cure them, or at least to relieve them of their pain. Let the man
think that he can live without exertion (that is to say, can enjoy sensations
without true living) and it is all up with him. Cannot people recognize that
every step upwards is self-taken, that we can receive help in all outside things,
but not in growth or evolution? The only thing of permanent value that the
doctor can supply is his wisdom, and that cannot be given, it must be received.
All life is like learning a
language. To learn it we must speak it, and badly at first. If someone else
speaks for us until we can speak well we shall never speak well. Every helper
becomes a parasite unless his help is for the moment, and is in the nature of
exchange, or his contribution to the common lot. It is this exchange that
constitutes true brotherhood; it is not gift, except in so far as our
contribution to the common lot of
things is made in the spirit of gift, without thinking of the particular return
or the particular exchange that we shall receive, though we know full well that
it must be received.
We need not make
brotherhood sentimental in order to fill it full of happy goodwill and
affection. It is best based on the theory of exchange, for even exchange is
ensured by the law, anyhow, and it hurts nobody’s feelings, Madame Blavatsky
used to say that people never forgive those whom they have injured, and it is
almost equally difficult to forgive those who have helped us. The old Hindu
theory was that a gift should always be made absolutely freely, as the
Americans would say “without any strings to it”, even in thought or feeling.
The Indian sannyasi will take no gift that is not
absolutely unconditional, and his own services are given free.
If a gift is true, I have no
sense of being a giver. If the help is genuine, I have no thought of being a
helper. It is all too natural for that. And if in India the recipient does not say “Thank you” it is often because he
does not want to offend me with what is practically an accusation of
selfishness. He receives as freely as I give, and in return he will give as
freely as he has received. Though we recognize that brotherhood is based on
even exchange, we need not bargain. It is better to live more universally, and
trade with the cash of love.
The power of brotherhood
depends on individuality. There is no brotherhood in a row of pins. Football is
better education than rowing, because in the latter you simply pull together,
but in the former you use individual intelligence as well. I would not call rowing team work; it is
nearer slavery. Yet there is all the difference in the world between
individuality and selfishness — let us not confuse them. I may be interested in
the welfare of my family, my community, my country. My individuality is all the
greater and all the stronger for that.
Selfishness is the narrow individuality of one who is really interested
in nothing outside his own skin, except in so far as it affects what is inside
that skin. Human individuality can be as strong as cheese and yet as big as the
world. Individualities cross without interference, like rays of light,
They are without bounds. In each a
universal character and impulse shines forth, for each is a center without a
circumference.
Brotherhood leads to organized
work, and what we have of this in the world shows what its power might easily
be. Brotherhood is a sort of divine arithmetic, in which two and two do not
make four, but forty, four hundred and even four thousand. Because we have some
of it in the world the average person can now enjoy the use in a single day of
things which he could not have made for himself, living alone in a separate
world, in ten thousand years.
Brotherhood is the
expression of our inward unity, and is such that the power of many is reflected
in each man’s life. Some day it will be the power of all. How marvellous will
human life be when nearly all men have learned to put their very best talent
into the common stock.
But each man grows by what
he puts into the common stock, not by what he takes
out of it. His effort in
contributing develops his capacity to receive. Without
any capacity you would
sleep blissfully through apparently empty time and space,
where others with capacity
would find varied and busy life,
Individuals share achievements when they are more or less at the same
level, and their capacity to share depends upon their making their own
contribution.
Brotherhood is so great and
so deep a truth that it can never be entirely escaped. Personal likes and
dislikes are both swept into its service. There are no enemies. All human
contacts are beneficial. The man who hurts our feelings or puts obstacles in
the way of our plans, or presents to our vision the ugliness of dissipation or
cruelty, has his high uses. He teaches me very forcibly what not to do, as
others teach me what to do. And if gratitude is owing to the one, it is also
due to the other. I might say: “Thank you, friend, you have done that for me,
so that now I need not do it. You have saved me some of the misery of future
lives.” And if somebody injures me, as the common idea is, I think I might
reasonably go down on my knees and beg his pardon, for if that had not been
coming to me, he could not have found himself in that unhappy state.
It is for this reason that
loyalty to persons is wrong in
principle. I have known some people whom
I would call great, but have found in each case that there was something to learn
from them of what not to do. Like everybody else they are here to learn, and
since all people, even to the very threshold of human perfection, are engaged
in getting rid of their faults, and displaying them in the process, no one is
an objective ideal. Besides, each man has his own talent, his own experience,
his own problem. We are bound to live our own lives, and do the best we know.
Even if it is not the best, it will bring us to that. To silence our own thoughts because others
“know better” leads only to confusion and pointless life. Each has his plot of
ground, though all plots do make a public park.
Edison cannot be the leader
of inventors, because there are other inventors, and many of them have arisen
in places where even he would have least expected them. He may be the greatest inventor — but that is
another matter. He cannot invent everything, and the others will come nearest
to new truths when they are least like sheep.
Let us clearly recognize
the difference between leaders and great people. All men are our friends, but no men are our masters.
We meet in our bodies like leaves upon a tree. The same one life vitalizes all,
and by that we are united, not by any strings tied from one leaf to another.
The tree holds together by its own one life, and needs no veil or net cast over
it to prevent its falling apart.
THE theosophical world
seems to be dividing itself on the old question: which is more important for
educative purposes, environment or character? Nobody of any consequence has ever
suggested that character can be implanted by environment. No Theosophist proposes the method of the
builder, which assumes that a man evolves as a house is built, that he is a
vacant site to which you bring various materials and there build them up into a
house. Nor the method of the sculptor, which assumes that human character is
crude stone and someone must from the outside chip away the unwanted portions,
just as a sculptor takes a block of stone and leaves a statue, which in a sense
was in the stone all the time. Thousands
of forms were in that stone; the sculptor chooses one. But every man is a
living being with a character of his own.
By Masters we mean those
men who have realized the goal of human life and are no longer in bondage to
things. They know the world of life. So they regard the temporary creations as
merely a shadow-world. They may remain in that world, using human bodies, but
they are interested as teachers in calling people to enter their world, which
is the world of life.
Those who recognize the
life never become builders or sculptors of men, but may be gardeners or
teachers, who know that every seed will grow according to its kind, that both
the pattern that is to be made and the power with which it is to be built come
from within the seed itself. Therefore no thoughtful writer has ever suggested
that Masters can give life to anybody or can evolve anybody or can help anybody
to evolve themselves. They can give money, and have been known to do so. And
they can give thought-forms. But they cannot give growth or evolution,
understanding or love or power.
The Theosophical Society
has the same function as the Masters. Its purpose is not to attempt to feed the
people, but to call their attention to great truths with which they can feed,
clothe, shelter, amuse and educate themselves
as men, without the suffering which they have been bringing upon
themselves so long, Its first object — brotherhood — is to be understood in
this deep and essential way. Greater than any material gift is the offering of
wisdom.
Consider understanding. It
is one of the powers of our life. It is tested by power, for if I have made a
machine, and it will not work, that tells me that my understanding was wrong,
Let me tell a story about thought-power, which is vouched for by some good and
honorable friends. In a certain city in America there was over a deep gully a
bridge which came popularly to be known as “suicide bridge”, because from it a
number of people threw themselves to destruction every year. A group of friends
who were accustomed to experimenting with thought-power decided to meet once a
week, fix their attention upon that bridge, and think thoughts of cheerfulness,
strength and hope. They told me that since they had begun the practice, which
was about two years before, there had not been a single suicide from that
bridge. I cannot personally vouch for their accuracy, but I can easily believe
in such an occurrence, because I have had other striking experiences of the
power of thought.
What would happen in this
case ? The thought-form acts as one
speaking. It says: “Come now, things are not as bad as they have appeared, and
besides there is a possibility of happy life, which you really want. Please do
not lose your balance, but consider the facts.” Reason prevails, and the
would-be suicide changes his mind. The thought-form reminds him at a critical
moment of ideas which had been obscured in his troubled mind.
This is good work, of
course, in the way of lifting a lame dog over a stile, but now there is life to
be lived and it must live in its own strength. Every teacher recognizes that,
however simple may be the idea which he is putting before his class, no student
will grasp it until he has made some effort of attention and of thought. There
is a moment between the hearing of his words or the seeing of the experiment
that he is doing, and the student’s understanding. In that moment the student thinks, and nobody
can do it for him.
Consider in the same way
the work of an artist. With skill he produces beauty. Beauty is the test of skill, as power is the
test of knowledge, and both these come from inward effort alone. Painting
pictures for a man who has no hands will not make him into a painter — or even
for a man who has hands. Carrying babies
does not teach them to walk. On the contrary, I knew a naughty little boy who
when about four years old would insist upon being carried up hill when out for
a walk. He had been carried too much.
Similarly, the guiding
lines given to us when we are learning to write prevent us from writing
straight, because they teach us to think that they are necessary. Only a few
days ago I was writing a letter on an unruled writing
block. Suddenly I said to myself: “Why, I am writing straight, without lines !”
From that moment my writing became crooked. Such is the power of suggestion.
Crutches are only for
cripples. You do not teach a baby to walk with crutches.
If people think they need a
personal Master, by that thought they destroy their own power and delay their
own progress. If they think they could do better with a personal Master than
without one, it is the same thing. If they could, he would be there. There are
two kinds of persons to whom the Masters cannot communicate their contribution
to the common brotherhood — those who cannot get on with them, and those who cannot get on
without them. But really there is no need to search for a teacher, because when
we start learning he is always there. The entire galaxy of all who have
attained liberation or entered into the world of life is always at hand, for
they are the one life, which is also our essential life. No one can shut that
open door.
The Masters work behind the
scenes, and are not out of touch with any part of life. Some one wrote to Madame
Blavatsky and asked to be put in connection with the Brothers. Her reply was: “
Do you know so little of the laws of their order as not to understand that by
this very act of yours — which was entirely unsolicited and a spontaneous proof
of your loyalty — you have drawn their attention to you already, and that you
have established relations with them yourself ?
“ It is not within our
power to do anything for you more. Occultism is not like Christianity, which
holds out to you the false promise of mediatorial
interference and vicarious merit. Every one of us must work his own way up
towards the Brothers. If you want to see them, act so as to compel them to let
you do so. They are equally with all of us subject to the laws of attraction
and repulsion; those who most deserve
their companionship get it. Take a half hour each morning upon first rising,
and in an undisturbed place free from all noises and bad influences concentrate
your thoughts upon them and upon your own higher self, and will that you shall
become wise, and illuminated and powerful.”
What then does a Master do?
He is a witness to the life beyond all appearances, even his own. As fire tells
us not to burn ourselves, so does the Master tell us not to forget ourselves.
People forget themselves not only in anger sometimes, but in a thousand things
and nearly always.
The Master’s human form is
beautiful because his life is true. Consider the beautiful limbs of a race
horse They have been produced quite naturally by life trying to run. What would
be the use of a small horse worshiping that beauty of limb ? He must run. So
the Master says to us: “ Do not worship me. Know that there is life which can
be fulfilled in full living, and from which all beauty, truth and love will
flow.”
I can realize that the
Masters see benefit wherever people are
trying to express their life, even though there be grave attendant defects. Let
me take a crude and rather painful example — that of the old practice of
foot-binding in China. This was not done, .as some have suggested, to keep
women in subjection to men, but, as Chinese poets have explained, as an
assertion of human superiority to earth, that women might not be gross and
earthly, like men, but delicate as a flower that sways lightly upon its slender
stem. It was an attempt to express beauty and spirituality, somewhat similar to
the old Western custom of tight-lacing the figure. They have now recognized the
folly and harmfulness of these external means, that small and beautiful feet belong
to those who balance themselves and walk well, and that the shapely waist is
produced by healthy activity, so that if we have it not in our age as well as
in our youth it is entirely our own fault.
Yet the main point of all
this, the abiding good of it, is that they show an effort. However ignorant
they were, they were well-meant, and were therefore in their degree expressions
of life. Whenever mankind puts itself to some trouble for an idea, however
stupid, it is good, for there will then be progress. There is no room for ridicule, and little for
interference or correction.
There is great danger in
what is usually called devotion. True devotion is respect for the beautiful,
the good and the true, wherever it may be seen. It is respect for life. But
most devotion implies disrespect for life, inasmuch as it singles out one
expression of life for its fervent admiration, and almost equally despises the
rest. So is God shut away, as people go into caves to worship the sun.
True devotion has nothing
to do with that self-abasement which makes a man think that because he is
inferior to another he must not rely on his own judgment. However evolved or unevolved
he may be, that is exactly what he must do. The man who does not make his own
vision of the goal for himself does not awaken to the full his own life in the
present moment of living, and therefore does not make the most use possible for
him of that moment.
There is always some danger
even when virtues are extolled. Such praise implies or suggests that they are
beyond ordinary life, and the feeling arises; “It would be uncommonly good of
us if we did this. We are not quite expected to do it”. In India I find
when some attainment is mooted, there
will be someone to say; “O, but that is for those who have taken the yellow
robe”.
I have come across some
cases of partial mental paralysis due to misuse of the idea of Masters. I have
heard one say; “This work has failed; that shows that the Masters did not want
it.” It was perfectly clear to me that the cause of the failure was that he had
not used his brains in the work under reference. Then again, when the thought
was habitually turned to the Master as if he were a separate entity, in moments
of difficulty, for example, when there was a blank in conversation, the man
would find himself able to think only of the Master’s name. And also in danger,
or in any crisis, do you pray or do you keep your head ? You cannot do both.
Every occasion is a crisis, did people but recognize it.
But what of Master’s authority
? Does he not know more than we? The Master is a witness of the light, but it
is the light that lighteth every man that cometh into
the world. His form is only an illusion; it is not our goal, but our life,
which is also his life, is our goal. There cannot be a form of a Master. There
is nothing unusual in this. In a chemistry class the professor is not our goal,
but chemistry is our goal. Leaf
whispers to leaf, and tells rejoicingly of the life
it feels, like lovers hand in hand looking at the same moon. It is the power of
love that with it we thus at last come to look with all eyes at all things.
And Master’s work and
orders ? I see no use in them unless they are our own work and orders at the
same time. If a man does his honest best he will be doing what the Master wants
to have done. If our understanding rises to what the Masters call their
mind-plane their ideas become our ideas, we think their thoughts with them, and
there is nothing to be gained by insisting that the ideas or purposes are theirs,
not ours, which is a mode of separation of the Masters and ourselves, and tends
to prevent our union in the one life.
You cannot have this
separation in fact. You cannot have men gradually making their own noses
perfect according to their own thoughts, feelings and actions, and at the same
time the Masters moulding those noses according to
some external plan. Masters’ work and orders are surely a question of our being
attuned to their spirit and their law, which is our own true spirit and law, In
that service (if such it can be called) is perfect freedom, Their teaching is an intuition, but not
usually peculiar and distinguishable from what we call our own thought. There
is no necessity to import into the idea of our relation to Masters the dramatic
and separative characteristics of human domination or
interference by man with man. Masters are masters of life not masters of
men.
HAPPENINGS BY THE WAY
TWENTY-FIVE years ago, when
I was a comparatively young theosophist (that was in the days when young
theosophists were meant to be seen, not heard), I wrote a book dealing with
every aspect of theosophy from a natural point of view. It was some months
before I could induce any elderly theosophist of my acquaintance even to turn
over the pages, but at last one locally revered, if somewhat testy, elder
consented to look through it. After some little time he returned it to me with
slightly disparaging remarks about my presumption — apparently what was new
in it was not true, and
what was true in it was not new, and in the main it erred on the side of not
being true, With the beautiful humility of the young theosophists of those days
I put the visible results of six months’ strenuous thinking into the fire,
though there were also invisible results which remained indelibly stamped upon
my personal brain and character. I have
since realized that my old acquaintance, though very respectably full of
knowledge, was not really a theosophist, and did not even know what theosophy
meant, so after many years I have set myself once more to write upon natural
theosophy.
Let us think to the fullest
possible extent of all the people in the world at
this moment. Some are in
cities, some in the country. Some are on the land, some on the sea, some deep
in the mines, some few flying about in the air. Some are dressed, some
undressed. Some are well-fed and busy with gossip; others are half-starved and
busy with common duties and work. One man does not know how the rest of the
world lives, and even to think of it in imagination comes to him with rather a
shock of surprise. It seems so strange that all those people can be doing all
those things, and can be so completely engrossed by them.
With this picture before
the mind I ask the question: Can it be that all the different things with which
all these people are concerned are of no importance, that God or Nature has
arranged the things of life with such futility that in order to reach what is
really worth while — happiness and perfection — people must put aside all that
life, all those things and the feelings
and thoughts which they engender, and must take to something else, some
particular and special mode of activity or thought ?
Some so-called religious
authorities have said so again and again, and have prescribed out of millions
of possible activities one or two which alone, they declare, can lead to
salvation or happiness, and have denounced the rest as a waste of time, if nothing
worse. But with the picture of the full life of the millions of people in all
their variety before our mental vision we see the absurdity of these narrow
paths, the impossibility of these stupid prescriptions. On the contrary, we see
that all experience is good. All these millions of whirling atoms, making their
ever-changing forms, like pictures in the glowing embers or in the clouds or,
if you like, even in the tea cups, are awakening in the people who experience
them a response to truth or the completeness of life as surely as there is a
meaning in these printed words, which in themselves are only funny marks.
This reverent attitude
towards all experience is the theosophic life.
Thousands of years ago theosophy was declared to be the knowledge that man is
never sundered from God. Theosophy is
the belief that man can know God, and more than that, that man is knowing God.
We cannot lay irreverent hands upon this vast creation, and say: “Away with
you, mocker, tempter, seducer who would imprison our souls and stifle our
lives.” Subjectivism is no theosophy, but is a denial of the divine only one
degree less egregious than that which prevailed in the Dark Ages of Europe,
when it was said that both the world of nature and the mind of man were the
seat of the devil, and the less we had to do with either the better.
We recognize the wisdom of
primal impulses, such as that of the man in the
street who defines his life
(if ever called upon to do so) not as a set of
thoughts and feelings, but as
the interplay on that line of time where his
consciousness meets his
experience. He might say: “ My life ? I drink, and
fight, and fall down and get
up again, and a policeman takes me away.” The
common man is suspicious of
subjectivism — with just cause,
Every development in human
consciousness — of the will or love or thought — calls into real being the
material partner in our life, so that at each step the two fit perfectly, like
a man and a woman dancing together as one being. Suppose that I have done some work, such as
that of designing and building a house. In course of time the house is worn
away or falls down. The work was not lost, because while I was consciously
building the house I was unconsciously building my character, developing my
capacity for thought, feeling and will. But my future life will not consist in
the mere passive enjoyment of these qualities of consciousness. Those qualities
will come forth to meet a new arrangement of the world, which will once more
exercise them according to their new condition, and will provide new
difficulties or problems or tasks which will still further cultivate their
strength. My world grows greater as I grow stronger, and I expect that the
whole world will become my world when I have harmonized my consciousness with
all consciousness. We have no reason to anticipate either perfection or
happiness in separation.
In all the world there is
greater life than that which we already know, and it is ever ready to flow into
us. We cannot contemplate the beauty of a sunset without afterwards being more
harmonious or peaceful, and thereby stronger than before. This is what I mean
by God — the greater life all round us, which is ever at hand to give us its truth, its unity and its
beauty, We do not know the extent or the height of that greatness, but to know
it as ever-present is to rejoice in all experience and drink the very nectar of
life.
The truth of this attitude
is evident even in common things. If a man invents a motorcar according to
principles which he has thought out in his mind, he will learn in what
particulars his thoughts were accurate, and will at least to some extent
correct the erroneous part of them, when he tries the machine out on the road.
Meditation is one part of learning and experience the other, and between these
two our consciousness must constantly pass, like the shuttle in the loom.
It is the sign of a
theosophist that his devotion is complete. He is a knower of God everywhere,
and therefore he accepts all experience willingly, while others prejudge every
item of it according to their pleasure and pain, or the comforts and
discomforts of the body, the emotions and the mind. I knew a man who met with a
serious motor accident which kept him in bed several months; when he was
getting better he told me he was very glad that it had happened, because it had
caused him to learn to love the members of his family more than before. A man thrown into prison might
, say: “ Now I have an opportunity to meditate”.
There is always something
worth while that we can do, and thereby be active, positive, alive. There is
always something to be gained by willingness. Said Epictetus:
“There is only one thing for which God has sent me into the world, namely, to
perfect my own character in all kinds of virtue, and there is nothing in all
the world that I cannot use for that purpose.”
The theosophist should be
free, because no experience happens contrary to his will. He should be free
also because he knows the unity in the life as well as in the form. Thus if I
have no carriage and must walk, and I see another man who has a carriage and
can ride, and is happy in riding, can I not enjoy the fact of his happiness ?
If it is a question of possessions, all things are mine which my brother men
are enjoying for me. This is to be a theosophist. It is not fantastic, but
simple fact, and the only liberation.
No one can narrow down
theosophy into a religion, a creed, or a church, without destroying it in the
process. It is true that many theosophists (not all) believe in reincarnation
and karma as laws of nature, but belief in those laws does not make people
theosophists. It is, knowledge of the
presence of God or the larger life which makes the theosophist, and it is
because we are theosophists first that most of us can easily believe in
reincarnation and karma afterwards. Because we value experience we consider
that there should be more of it.
I doubt if anybody, were he
to search to the bottom of his heart, would acknowledge belief in a religion,
that is to say a special set of actions or thoughts prescribed as leading to
union with God. The basis of religion is intuitive in every one of us. It is
seen in our instinctive response to beauty, to truth and to goodness, which is
goodwill or unity. What do we want more than goodness, truth and beauty, and
will we not accept them everywhere ?
In our consciousness truth
is understanding, goodness or unity is love, and beauty is peace and calm
strength, which is the same as freedom. The world perpetually educates us in
these powers, and when we have them we find that we live more, and in so doing
create goodness, truth and beauty through all our acts. This creation is union
with the one will; therefore in it man finds his unchanging happiness.
It is the part of our reason
to recognize that all things are beneficial; of our love, that all persons are
helpful; and of our will, to rejoice in the adventure of life.
This is natural theosophy.
Within it there is room for all sciences, popular or occult, for all art, religion,
philosophy, and common life. It is for all men, for it is the understanding of
life — theos being life, and sophia
the understanding. This is the theosophy of ancient India and the early
Mediterranean world, and it has also been the theosophy of modern times for
those who have not confused the part with the whole and mistaken some
departments of knowledge for the whole truth, and some limited activities for
life itself.
IF we say that life is for
experience we mean that circumstances enrich consciousness. A scientist learns
by experiment, and while so learning develops his intelligence, so that after a
given investigation he not only knows more, but has also gained in capacity,
and is now able to grasp a larger idea (one containing more, and more varied,
constituent details) than he could before. An artist who is composing a
picture, or a piece of music or poetry, formulates his idea in his mind, but
while he is working it out on paper he is learning by experiment and thus by
experience in exactly the same way as the scientist.
We are all scientists and
artists in some degree, all the time. There are three lines — all human effort
to know is of the nature of science; all human effort to achieve some piece of
work is of the nature of art; all human co-operation, however slight, is of the
nature of love. Science teaches us the unity of the material or external world; co-operation
teaches us the power, and therefore the truth, of the unity of conscious
beings. Art teaches us the still greater unity of consciousness and matter,
that is, of what are sometimes called the subjective and the objective.
We have not stated the
whole of the fact, however, when we have said that life is for experience, or
circumstances enrich consciousness. Consciousness is also for the enrichment of
circumstances. Life does not consist in the subjective contemplation of
possible circumstances. For each one of us life exists on that line of time
where our consciousness meets our world. Without the circumstances
consciousness would not be what it is; without the consciousness circumstances
would not be what they are.
My world is the world as
specifically related to my consciousness. My consciousness is likewise the
consciousness as specifically related to my world. There is thus a twofold education proceeding
through the influence of the world and the consciousness, which are behind my
world and my consciousness. Because of this, there is tuition and intuition —
instruction by experience from the world, and through contemplation from
the consciousness. Surely if this were
even faintly and distantly understood we should hear no more of subjectivism
and the “reflection” theory as theosophical philosophy or explanation of life.
Theosophy is the finding of the infinite in the finite.
Every one of our activities
of consciousness shows the same duality of nature, and in practice the same
shuttle-like action. By thought we perceive and observe, and judge (which is
only a deeper observing) the things of the world and the relations between
them. But thought is also a creative power. Knowledge is power, not simply in
the sense that if we have knowledge we consequently know how to act, but in the
deeper sense that all action is knowledge and nothing more.
When several actions are
considered in consciousness, and the consideration ceases and contemplation of
an action begins, the action takes place. To decide that a glass shall be
lifted is to stop considering whether it shall be lifted or not, and to
contemplate its being lifted, and that alone. Then the hand moves and the glass
is lifted. The hand lifts: the glass, but the thought lifts the hand. And if
there be some actions which are reflex or involuntary in the body, they
represent “lapsed” intelligence, just
as a motor car does, for we have made it and there it is, expressing our
thought at the time of making.
Similarly the twofold
action of love or human feeling is shown in its sympathy, which is perception
of the consciousness of another, and in its active goodwill or love-power. And
once more, the twofold action of the will is to be seen in the concentration of
consciousness which we call decision, and in the concentration of action which
results in skill and therefore produces beauty, that is, in art.
If we have established an
understanding of the double teaching of life, through tuition and intuition,
through experience and contemplation, we shall readily understand the reason
for death and what happens after death. In experience we see what happens; in
contemplation we understand. Let us take the simile of reading a book. I see
the printed letters; a fraction of a second later I understand their meaning.
The understanding is always, at bottom, intuitive, or from the consciousness.
When the consciousness
becomes overloaded with facts and a long period of contemplation is requisite
for the understanding of the facts, death is necessary. Death is the cessation
of the accumulation of experiences. The experiments and observations have ceased; now is the
time for contemplation, for the education of consciousness. The child has
learned some letters; now he shall understand their combination, the meaning of
their unity. As people grow older
objects make less and less impression upon them, because their attention is more
and more taken up with their accumulated experiences, which are incoherent and
confused. Even the most avid enthusiast for crossword puzzles or chess problems
will stop when he has collected a certain quantity of unfinished problems, and
will show irritation if more are thrust upon him. Then, if you ask him for a
word of eleven letters indicating the Queen of Sheba’s little toe ring, he will
say: “Oh, wait a bit; I must clear up some of these others first” — or other
words to that effect.
It is the people who have
most completely thought out their problems as they have traveled the road of
life, and who have thereby kept their minds simple (however full) who enjoy a
keen interest in experience for the longest time. Old age comes late for them;
for even the decay of the physical body and brain are related to the loss of
interest in experience. An illustration showing the influence of mind occurred
in a statement made by the famous
physician, Sir James Crichton-Browne, at his eighty-seventh birthday
party, when he was asked for a recipe for long life, and he said, among other
things: “Those keep going longest who love most.”
We come into the world to
learn. We can say that the world is the scripture of God, or that the world is
God’s school for man, if we remember that the similes are not complete and we
guard against being led into the false but plausible suppositions of
subjectivism. We come to learn, but it must be confessed that at death we go
away without having learned more than a fraction of the lessons contained in
the material that we have gathered, in our accumulation of experiences. There
has been much observation and experiment; now, there must be reflection and
contemplation. The shuttle has been moving to the objective side: now it must
return to the subjective, though these terms objective and subjective must be
understood only relatively, and as meaning nothing more than gathering
experience and thinking it out.
What then, should happen after
death ? The after-death state is the subjective result of the objective
experiences of the life-period (or rather, body-period) just closed. It is
not a state for the meeting of new
facts. The man is no longer sitting at dinner; he is digesting and assimilating
the food which he has taken into his system — that particular food and no
other. He has set going in himself many feelings and thoughts, for his
experience is accumulated in the form of thoughts and feelings about objects
and persons. Now he has to do two things — eliminate the waste and absorb the
nutriment. He is to read a book, and as he grasps the significance of what is
on each page, he tears that page out and throws it away, keeping the
understanding and discarding the book. Thus he gradually becomes a wise man
along the lines of his experience, and develops new capacity for thought and
feeling, or the understanding of life.
The succession of two
stages in the after-death life, which is mentioned so widely, though often with
great crudity, in religious traditions, is perfectly natural. Purgatory and
heaven correspond to elimination and assimilation. If a dead man’s desire is to
sit at his cottage door with a pipe and a mug of beer and a newspaper, he may
very well sit there, as so many clairvoyants and mediums have described him as
doing. But he will not sit there for ever, because it will gradually dawn upon
him that the cottage, the chair, the
pipe, the beer and the newspaper are not what he really wants. Why should I
read an idea in a book, if I have that idea in my own mind and can think it
without the book ? In such a case the book would be a burden. Any experience
would be a burden if we had already assimilated its lesson.
When men die they can do
what they like. But they cannot usually govern their own likes and dislikes or
wishes, unless they have been very much in the habit of doing so while on
earth. In the body “second thoughts” are possible as they are not possible
after death. It is the characteristic of the bodily life that it is
obstructive, Even the brain and body mechanism, though specially adapted to the
transmission of thought and feeling, are to some extent obstructive, so that if
we have a desire or thought, before it passes into action another may come
chasing after it so as to modify or even cancel it. I might desire to strike
somebody, but stop myself in time, that is, before the action takes place. Not
so, however, when released from the body and brain. When a man has lost that
ballast his first feeling or thought will take entire possession of him, and
hurry him away into the action or to
the object with which it is concerned. Therefore, no doubt, we hear that
in the finer grade of matter which is usually called the astral plane, dead men
and women go to the objects of their desire or surround themselves with them.
The desires succeed one another; when one is finished with, another comes out
of memory or habit. Thus the dead gradually set aside their attachment to
objects and establish states of mind and feeling by which they can in future
lives make use of those objects for greater purposes of the life, instead of
being held by them in a kind of bondage or servitude.
But men’s attachments are
of two kinds — to material things, and to their fellow-beings. There is
knowledge, or the understanding of things; there is also love, or the
understanding of living beings. Love in any of its forms (parental, filial,
devotional, brotherly, friendly, etc.), is a greater delight than the fulfilment of any material desire. Therefore it is
essential to any real heaven or truly happy state. Witness the well-known story
in The Mahâbhârata, in which king Yudhishthira
is depicted as going to heaven, but not finding there the brothers whom he
loved. He told the angels that they ought not to expect him to be happy there,
while he had not the company of his
beloved brothers, no matter how excellent the climate, and how
well-furnished the countryside with all that might delight the senses of man. He
would rather go to hell if they were there; to be with them in that state would
be more like heaven than to be in these beautiful gardens and palaces without
them.
If we die without much
understanding, we also die without much love. I have loved my father and
mother, and wife and friend. But how much ? Do we not often rebuke ourselves
for not loving them as they deserve to be loved, and do we not sometimes feel
how much more we would love them if only we could ? We have developed the
possibilities of love rather than love itself. It is therefore natural that
when, during the “purgatorial” period, we have divested our attention of the
material affections which occupied its imagination or field of vision, we
should, by the same subjective process, arrive at the state in which our
love-desires come forth and create their own realities of the subtle world, in
which we may love with an ever-increasing quality of love, until we have
developed in our character a capacity along those specific lines beyond
anything of which we were capable on earth, except in the most fleeting
glimpses in our rarest and best moments
? Have I loved beauty and truth as well as living beings ? How much ? And do
not we cherish these also from seed to bud and from bud to flower in the
“heaven life”?
If, therefore, some clairvoyants
tell us that they see people in heaven enjoying the company of those whom they
have loved on earth, amid, scenes consonant with those with which experience
has filled their minds on earth, we can say: “That is not unnatural; your
testimony is interesting, but we did not really need it, for the process is
eminently logical.”[Referring to this “heaven-life”, the following is written
in the Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett: “Change
there must be, for that dream life is but the fruition, the harvest-time of
those psychic seed-germs dropped from the tree of physical existence in our
moments of dreams and hopes, fancy glimpses of bliss and happiness stifled in
an ungrateful social soil, blooming in the rosy dawn of Devachan, and ripening
under its ever-fructifying sky. No failures there, no disappointments. There,
all unrealized hopes, aspirations, dreams, become fully realized, and the
dreams of the objective become the realities of the subjective existence.”
Another letter says: Many of the subjective spiritual communications — most of
them when the sensitives are pure minded — are real; but it is most difficult
for the uninitiated medium to fix in his mind the true and correct pictures of
what he sees and hears,” The term initiation here refers to the final human
initiation.
“But how interesting to
establish communication with the dead,
and hear their opinions and descriptions of their new state !” No more
interesting at present than chemistry to a musician. Each man will have his
turn. Meantime, it is better generally not to disturb their reflections. “But
can we not have some material evidence for the existence of a man as mind in
regions of subtle matter ?” By all means. If reason does not suffice, there is
no lack of experimental science in this field. Read the researches of Geley, Drayton Thomas, Crawford. Consider the “wax gloves”,
the “ newspaper tests”, the “cross references”, the evidences of sensation
without nerves and action without muscles; and you will soon find perfectly
natural causes to believe in the existence of finer matter and the operation
within it of the peculiar characteristics of the human mind.
IN the last I described the course of a human life as
consisting of two phases — life in the body, and life after death. All this is
really one continuous life. When the hands of a clock have passed the number ,
they begin to go upwards instead of downwards, yet it is all part of one
continuous movement. It is only from a limited point of view, which has no
reality for the clock, that we speak of upward and downward. So also do we
speak of the life before death and the life after death. Life in the body is
more objective, and is used mainly for gathering experience; life after death
in the mind-planes is more subjective, and is used for turning it over,
thinking about it, understanding it, converting it into wisdom.
The mind of a man at the
beginning of the subjective period is like a wilderness where thousands of
plants are growing in a hustling and chaotic manner, with no orderly relation
to one another. At the end of that period it is like a smiling garden, in which there is no
competition between one plant and another, for the weeds have been thrown away
(or rather they have been chopped up and dug into the soil) and the fair plants
have been cultivated to great beauty and in harmonious relation to one another.
In other words, the numerous half-formed feelings and unfinished thoughts are
developed and sorted until the mind has become organic, simple, as a motorcar
is simple because it contains no unrelated or useless or unessential parts. The
diversity or variety may be great, but the unity of harmonious relations is
over all, and therefore there is simplicity. How simple it is to raise an arm,
though in that action some hundreds of adjustments in the body are involved. At
the end of the subjective life the mind becomes simple like that. It acts as
one thing; that is character.
Character is simple, though
it may not be complete, just as a motor-car is simple but is capable of
alterations and additions. When we act from character we do not act from
memory. The body has character, because if we would walk we need not think of
every muscle and tendon that is involved in the movement. A man has character
when his mind is simple and he decides
and thinks from a center that is not confused. Suppose you had a motor-car, and
every time you returned from a journey you disassembled its parts. Every time
you wanted to use it you would have to reassemble them. That is the state of
the average mind. It has many parts
which have never been assembled. It has to be partially assembled every time it
is used, and the assembling is rarely well done. When it has a problem, it must
remember what happened yesterday, last month, and last year in similar
connections. If it had permanently assembled those experiences of yesterday and
last month and last year as they came along it would not need to remember them
now. It could act from its integral character.
Character is the working of
a mind or consciousness of which every part is properly assembled or adjusted
to unity, whether the number of parts be few or many, whether the man has much
or little knowledge. The great powers of consciousness (knowledge, love and
will) are all adjustments to unity: knowledge in the world, love in society,
and the will because it brings new power into the individual and the collective
life. The great ideals of all men — truth, goodness and beauty — are
visions of unity. That is why they are
guiding stars for us through the fields of chaos.
The search for truth which
is science discloses the unity of all the material world, shows that no
particle is loose or disconnected from the rest, but that there is a mantle of
“law” thrown over all things, a mantle of many folds. The principle of truth
expressed in human character also reveals the power of unity as inward law.
Only as the mind is true to the man, true to the truth he already knows, free
from disconnected fancies and faithful to co-ordinated
knowledge, can it grow in mental power. Its sane function gives expression to
the unity within its walls.
Similarly, goodness or
good-will creates unity of feeling, which is the cement of cooperation; and
this unity also discloses its value in the great power that it gives to human
life. This ideal expresses itself in love, which is a declaration in terms of
feeling of the perception of our real unity.
Beauty also is unity. In a
picture, composition, which is unity, is essential to beauty, And the expression
of beauty in human life is also composition, harmony, organic perfection,
skill.
All ideals belong to
character, Truth and thought go
together; also goodness and love; also beauty and the will, which is the
expression of our integrity.
I have mentioned these
ideals at length, because they and they alone are the fruit of experience, of
an incarnation. Thought, love and will are the powers of consciousness. Truth,
goodness and beauty are universal reality, or life itself. Our sensations of the universal also
correspond to these, and are understanding, happiness and freedom.
The objective period in a
human life-cycle is mainly for gathering material; the subjective mainly for
the building of character. This character is life. You cannot make a list of
true facts, good deeds and beautiful things, for circumstances alter cases, as
life is fluid. Not all the precedents in Halsbury’s
Laws of England, if made into commandments, could tell us what to do and what
not to do, but will, love and truth can always declare it. Character is living
law.
To understand reincarnation
one must know what character is, and how it is produced from experience.
When, at the end of the
subjective period, the material gathered in a given lifetime (or rather bodytime) has been fully woven into character, it is time for the man to return
to birth in this world, to make new and further experiments, to gather new
materials of experience, to exercise and confirm his character. It would not be
natural for the man to proceed onward and upward for ever in some spiritual
realm, where the conditions of restraint, of obstacle, are not provided as they
are provided in this material world. As has already been explained, men need
necessity; in conditions of no restraint they will not face that part of life
which they dislike or of which they are even slightly afraid, and also they
will not know a millionth part of the variety of life. A certain great lady
used to say: “ If I knew the future I could not do my work.” Certainly if men could
determine the future (if they could predetermine the result of every experiment
they make) there would be an end to education through experience, for they need
not make the experiment. This world is a necessity for men. Looking round, we
see that it provides for all the varieties of their necessities.
Some are but savages, with
little mind; surely when they have assimilated the lessons of their present
experience they will come back to earth for the kind of experience which we see
all round us being gathered by men in a
more civilized state of development. Surely it is here on earth also
that the mediocre will return when the time comes for them to develop further
the knowledge, the love, the skill which they desire, and on which they have
already moderately embarked. If there were spiritual spheres in which exactly
the same thing could be done as is being done in this material world, this
world would not be a necessity for any one, even for one lifetime. Besides, two
worlds of experience cannot be different and yet the same. Therefore
reincarnation on earth is natural for those who have not reached the goal of
human life. Therefore also men of
spirit, while here, often feel like animals in cages; they pace to and fro,
looking hungrily through the bars into the lands of freedom and understanding
which they call ideals. They must conquer fire and water, earth, wind and sky
by experiment, experience, knowledge, love and power, and so win freedom in
this great cage.
Let me show by a common
simile how character works at the time of reincarnation. I will take the case of Mr. Henry Ford? It is
especially permissible as he is himself convinced of the truth of
reincarnation. Long ago, when he was designing his motor-car, he used to work at it himself in a little shop
behind his house, and now and then the neighbors would see him trying the
machine on the road, and they would look at one another and tap their foreheads
significantly. Consider one of his days, and compare it with one incarnation, a
day of life. In the morning, let us say, he would work on some part of the
machine; in the afternoon he would try it on the road and see what happened
(that is to say, he would experiment and observe); in the evening he would sit
quietly reflecting upon what had happened on the road, until he had considered
the significance of the afternoon’s experience. Then he would come to a
conclusion as to the next day’s work, and he would say: “Well then, tomorrow
morning I will alter such-and-such a point; I will do such-and-such a thing.”
So, the next morning, he would go to his workshop, not to puzzle over anything,
but definitely to carry out the decision made the previous evening. Thus men
come to re-birth with character, with purpose, with hunger for certain kinds of
experiment and experience, and they do not need memory of past lives, which
would be confusing and troublesome, and would delay the present work.
True knowledge is always
power. Knowledge of reincarnation
releases men’s faculties for their fullest use. How many people envy the
abilities of the great, yet do not strive for that which they so much want,
because they think to themselves: “Alas, life is too short; I could not
possibly become a great poet before I die.” But he who knows reincarnation says
to the despondent man, that is, to the average man: “Trust life to find a way
for its fulfilment. Be a middling poet now, but the
best middling poet that you can, or at least make a beginning, and you will
surely in another life become the great poet that you want to become. Do not
think of time nor of death; your present life and power are not yours by
chance, but are the outcome of your past efforts, and your future will be the
result of the present. Thought of the future is only useful if it inspires the
present. Know that you are master of your destiny, and you can make your future
of the kind you choose and as great as you choose. But you must do that now.”
This knowledge removes
inhibitions and releases our power. Even those who do not believe in human
immortality must act as though they did if they would achieve great things;
they must not consider that time is a
great limitation, or dwell upon the idea or belief that chance is full
of power to stand accidentally in the way of achievement. Time is opportunity
to evolve. Those who believe in chance with respect to human life remind me of
some of the Chinese, who are said to believe that harmful demons are lurking
everywhere, and so to thwart them or mislead them they build queer gables and
crooked entrances to their houses and hide inside, fearing the chances of open
life. Similarly, primitive men fear thunder and lightning as the voice and
weapon of an arbitrary god, a deity of chance moods, of unintelligible designs.
When Benjamin Franklin sent up his kites to test the lightning many protested
and said that he should be stopped in his blasphemous action, which would anger
the god and bring his vengeance upon mankind. In republican Rome it was
punishable blasphemy to say that an eclipse of the sun was naturally caused;
for the priests held that the gods were in trouble.
He who believes in
reincarnation is he who regards even human immortality as a natural thing,
subject to no arbitrariness. If we believe in reincarnation we fear nothing
(except possibly our own folly) and all our
powers are released for work which must surely bring its fruit. This
knowledge satisfies the hungry will, and what man’s will is not hungry in some
degree, in what man’s breast does not hope spring anew when opportunity is
seen? Let us never think of reincarnation as a satisfaction of human desire for
immortality, but only as knowledge which is power and opportunity. It is not
for a solace, but to release the will. It is not to “provide time” but to
assure them that nothing will cut them off from success until they have
achieved. Yet reincarnation is not a necessity. It is a sign of our failure to
live a fully human life, to employ in the midst of limitation all the organs of
the soul.
ALL the objects presented
to a man in his world of experience are his own work or karma. The literal
translation of the word karma is “work” rather than “action”. It does not imply
mere action, for which there are other words in common use in Sanskrit, but
action with some purpose, that is to say, work. Each man paints a picture,
which is his expression or work. Looking at it afterwards he is dissatisfied;
he sees his own inadequacy. That is the utility of karma.
Every man’s condition in
life is the picture he has painted, and it represents himself as he was in
character or in development of the powers of consciousness at the time of its
painting — so much cruelty or affection, folly or thoughtfulness, clarity or
confusion, skill or clumsiness. This fact has been represented rather crudely
by the statement than a man causes what happens to himself, but the fact is
that his work is his world, his environment is the expression of his character.
Though all work is
individual it is not all done separately. There is much in which men act together
or in the same way, so that as there is similar and common action there is also
a common and similar world. As much as our bodies are alike our minds are alike
and our worlds are alike. We are in a world which is common to all of us, and
we share the same sky, the same ocean and sometimes the same omnibus. When, for
example, we acquiesce in bad laws or customs, there is our stroke on the
canvas, along with many others.
All these pictures, and the
great picture of which each is a part (though the great picture is chaotic to
the extent to which the separate painters are acting without consideration for
one another, without unity of life) represents our past. A motor-car of last
year’s model may still be an efficient vehicle. We may ride in it for pleasure
or for other business, but as a vehicle it represents our lapsed intelligence,
and sooner or later we shall revolt against this old car and declare its
inadequacy, like a painter who looks at his picture of yesterday and says; “
This is not good enough for me; I ought to be able to do better than
that.“
Individual and social life
and thought are full of last year’s models — instruments, books, clothing,
houses, customs, manners, emotions and even ideas — and the only thing that can
convert them into new models is life itself.
Thought, love, will — these enlarge and renew the world of our personal
experience and power, because they are life. And because life is never lacking,
because man is never entirely sleeping or dead, we all have at least some discontent
with the things of the world as they are. At last nothing but completeness, the
fullness of life, will satisfy. We are most awake, most living, when we
recognize our environment as consisting not of mere things, but of the
expressions of our own past, that is to say of our own incompleteness. When we realize them to be the exterioration of our own inadequacy the wheels of life — of
thought, love and will — begin to turn. This is creative life. It is also
character.
Studying the course of an incarnation
we have seen that it is undertaken for experience, “The world exists for the
education of each man,” We must not be misled by the word experience, so as to
imagine that it is giving us something from the outside. All through the ages
men have worked at the building of
palaces and temples; Nature has kindly reduced these to dust, but there
remains permanently in the men who built them the development of character or
life resulting from their efforts to express themselves. As the Bhagavad Gîtâ says, all works result in wisdom.
It is always the life that
is the positive principle. So experience results in the awakening of parts or
degrees of our life which were dormant before. Thus character, or what makes a
mark upon circumstances, grows. A man who wills, or loves, or thinks, does not
take his color from his circumstances, like a block of glass, which looks green
or red when it is placed on sheets of paper of those colors. He is positive, is
alive, has character. So by the end of a human life cycle the character
resulting from the work has been formed, and the man is ready to face his old
picture, to which he has grown superior while making it, and is ready to use
his new powers for altering it or painting it anew. The important point to
grasp, on account of its bearing on the practical policy of our lives, is that
throughout all the changes in the course of the cycle the life is the positive
thing, and it grows only by unfoldment from within.
This positive use of
circumstances was put in another way by
Emerson when he gave his interpretation of the Beotian
Sphinx, as follows: “Near and proper to us is that old fable of the Sphinx, who
was said to sit in the road-side and put riddles to every passenger. If the man
could not answer, she swallowed him alive. What is our life but an endless
flight of winged facts or events ? In splendid variety these changes come, all
putting questions to the human spirit. Those men who cannot answer by superior
wisdom these facts or questions of time, serve them. Facts encumber them,
tyrannize over them, and make the men of routine, the men of sense, in whom a
literal obedience to facts has extinguished every spark of that light by which
man is truly man. But if the man is true to his better instincts or sentiments,
and refuses the domination of facts, as one that comes of a higher race,
remains fast by the soul and sees the principle, then the facts fall aptly and
supply into their places: they know their master, and the meanest of them
glorifies him.”
The need for karma or
circumstances as a means to the attainment of any particular evolution of
consciousness becomes less as a man evolves. The more evolved or awakened life
can find great significance in things which
seem to the less evolved small and insignificant. One needs a range of
mighty mountains or the vast ocean to inspire him with visions of great beauty
and power, where another can obtain the same from a tiny flower or a grain of
sand.
Many a time when there has
been a house on fire some man who never before showed
any signs of courage has
rushed into danger to save a child or even the family cat. People have then
said that “he rose to the occasion”. Good, but he who rises to the occasion
without the occasion, if I may so put it, rises above circumstances. Then he
really lives with purpose, as a positive character.
Strictly, circumstances are
necessary because we have failed to will, to love or to think. A new
incarnation, with the karma which it contains, represents the extent of our
failure in the last incarnation, and thus expresses to us the inadequacy of our
past willing, thinking and loving. In this way the whole world is in league
with our secret souls, to help them to their flowering and completion. For
every “mistake” leads to experience which awakens some part of our nature, and
so removes the possibility of that mistake for the future. The world punishes
idleness, selfishness and thoughtlessness,
with pain, which should be to us the sign of our own inadequacy. In this
incarnation I may meet the mistakes of the last, and if through experience I
rise superior to those mistakes I shall not need the same lessons again.
If we understand karma in
this way we can no longer regard it as a punishment or a hindrance. We shall
not wait for the clouds to roll by, as though karma were something purely
external to ourselves, but we shall face every bit of it with character and
with rejoicing, delighting in altering the picture of the past. Such a joyous spirit removes the drudgery
from work, fills our efforts with delight and makes them true play. Karma,
properly understood in terms of life, that is, really theosophically
understood, should be a source of perennial joy.
I must perhaps give some
common instance of the way in which character is built
from karma. Suppose I
waylaid a man, knocked him down and robbed him. That piece
of work would represent my
deficiency of character, my lack of universal life, along the lines of sympathy
and love; my violence would be the expression of my crudeness, my insensitiveness.
This violence would appear in the
circumstance of my future life. In my own experience I should be brought face
to face with my misdeed. The violence to which I would then be subjected would
tend to awaken in men, or rather to cause me to awaken in myself, the
sensitiveness in which I had been deficient before, so that on the next
occasion on which I was about to knock a man down I should pause and say to
myself: “It is not a very pleasant thing for the poor fellow”. Karma would
continue its operation on those lines until that action became impossible for
me, because I should have evolved sympathy, or love, which must be mine if I
have the consciousness of the other man’s life.
At the end of a given
incarnation, then, a man has done two things; he has responded with certain
feelings and ideas to the circumstances presented to him in that incarnation,
and he has expressed himself or worked according to his present character. If
he has acted without thought and love; if he has loved without thought and
action; if he has thought without love and action; or if he has acted and
thought without love, or loved and thought without action, or acted and loved
without thought, he will have produced painful condition for somebody. They
will be due to the inadequacy of his
character. These mistakes will await him as his karma; they will exactly suit
his character or deficiencies, and will be the means to his filling up the gaps
in his character.
Life is like a game to be
won. You may go on trying again and again, playing one game after another, each
from the beginning. Some day you will win a game of life (that is you will make
no failures in will, love or thought) and then no further incarnation will be
necessary, because you will now have those faculties at your full command. You
are no longer learning to develop them. You are free from the bondage of
circumstances or the necessity of going to school. It is not expected that the
man shall be ideally perfect to attain this freedom, just as it is not expected
that the body will develop innumerable arms, legs and other organs. But it is
expected that he shall have his spiritual or life powers about him always, just
as a serviceable body would have its regulation number of fingers, teeth and
other parts, functioning in good order.
Therefore karma is a
liberator, insomuch as it forcibly or emphatically places before each man the
picture with which he is dissatisfied. It helps him to define his goal, or to come nearer in each incarnation to a conception
of full and adequate life. It is not easy for most people to think with great
clearness. They give birth vaguely to a small thought, and then see it clearly
by acting it out on the stage of experience. But later, when they have grown
stronger in thought, they will be able to make much even of a slight
experience; the mental life will become clear and full. There will be
understanding of life. But through all the process it is the life itself that
expands and grows; no addition can be made to it from the outside; karma at
every point only provides the tuition which intuition or the power of the man’s
own direct thought fails to give.
One striking piece of karma
is the formation of the body. When certain activities have been established for
constant use, the function lapses but the form remains as an organ. Therefore
the body is “lapsed intelligence”. This does not mean that intelligence is not
going on, but with respect to that particular activity it is not. The knees
bend one way. We have quite settled that matter, although in the amoeba they
may be said to bend in any way. The body is the result of the lapsing of will,
love and thought in certain
matters. We carry our houses
about with us as truly as does any crustacean.
Similarly, the mind is
lapsed intelligence in the form of knowledge, or settled habits of thought
(ideas), and feelings or emotions (affections). It is not difficult to trace
out the formation and development of mind, from childhood onwards. True
knowledge and false are here jumbled together in a conglomerate of which the
basis is mental inertia. When we have settled upon an idea or, as we call it,
attained a belief, we cease thinking anew upon it, even though we may use it in
more elaborate schemes of thought, as, for example, when we use the theory of
equations for the binomial theorem, and later the binomial theorem for the
calculus. It then becomes a knee-joint in the mind.
We could regard body and
mind as two bundles of prejudices — good and bad, or true and untrue — one as
to activity, the other as to knowledge. Then, in practical life, the important
matter is not to live in our prejudices, for that would be a living death. We
must live not in our vehicles but through them. They must be mere tools in our
hands — with serious limitations, of course, but still tools. ‘There is no
objection to this. Even Buddha’s knees
bent only one way; but he was sensible enough to use those knees to make his
peregrinations in the valley of the Gagnes.
Such living forms are
natural, by which I mean that they are nothing but a portion, a limitation or
incomplete expression of the reality of the life itself. That is behind the
idea of archetypes of natural forms, which are sui generis, and not to be questioned. Life essays a certain
activity in relation to its environment, and that form naturally results. The
horse strives to run well — hence its legs. The grasshopper jumps — hence its
legs. Of course, we may trace the running and jumping to the instinct of
self-preservation in a given environment. There is, however, not mere
self-preservation, but the instinct of self-expansion.
The function produces the
form, not the reverse. No status will come to life. No Frankenstein’s monster
will acquire an independent will, and haunt its originator. Though
thought-power can mould forms, it cannot give them function. Beauty acquired for appearances, and morality
through copy-book maxims, are only skin deep. Not so the living laws of the
Self — thought, love and will — which can make of every form a window into the
infinite, and transform a dung-heap
into a garden of delightful flowers.
To teach a child to walk we
need not tell it all about the joints, muscles, tendons, nerves, etc. of its
legs. Why trouble it with that lapsed intelligence? If the life does what it really wants to do,
the form can take care of itself. If
not, we shall begin again, like a person who rewrites an essay. How stupid he
who will not write at all for fear of using up his paper and pencil!
In
It is a sad thing to build
into our personality any “ lapsed unintelligence”,
which shows itself as disease
of body or mind. Persistent neglect of our own
reason, love interest, or
individual purpose can always produce this. External
working upon our own vehicles
is a very radical way of denying the power of life
itself in the government of
form. The desire for it implies past error and
present sleepiness, otherwise
will, love and thought would fill the day with
their eager life,
I can illustrate this,
though a little crudely; by a reference to Monsieur Coué’s
famous formula: “Every day in every way I am getting better and better”. He told his people to say this very quickly,
so as to leave no time for thought between the end of one utterance and the beginning
of the next. Otherwise the man could not stop himself from saying: “I am
getting better and better — I wonder if I am — I am getting better and better —
I wonder if I am”, and so on. And if you
were to think, for example, of the heart, you simply must not picture your
heart as functioning well. If you did, your imperfect knowledge of it would
cause your thought-power to do more harm than
good. Let the life be intent upon health — that is all. And even that is
a poor idea, for if the life is true to itself there will be no disease. Even
for curing, external methods are not fundamentally good.
One great difference
between the natural and the artificial form is that you need not know how the
former works. But in a motorcar you must know the works, and put them right now
and then, so that it will go, for running it will not perfect the machine.
How, then, can there be
channels or forms made from the outside for the life ?
Make a chair. It will not
follow you about like a dog, waiting to be sat upon. Produce a family of growing children. You
will soon find out whether they are willing to be channels for your superior
life. They have their own life. An iron pipe will conduct water if you arrange
for the water to flow in. But life ? Life is not even thoughts, but thought,
not even emotions, but love, not even will, but being. Another may put an idea
before me, but my thinking makes it mine, or rather by my thinking I expand to
include it — I “understand” it. Forces on every plane are the common factors of
our collective manifestation. All karma, all creation, is negative.
THERE is great danger of
misunderstanding in the expression “the ego”. While there is a use in technical
terms there is also a danger. A familiar example of this is the word
“heredity”. In answer to the question why children resemble their parents,
people often say: “ Because of heredity, of course !” And then, when asked what
heredity is, they reply: “The fact that children resemble their parents.” Thus
a word passes for knowledge, and the questioning mind is silenced. What do
words matter, when we want to find out how children come to resemble their
parents, to make a science of heredity? Thus terminology degenerates into
jargon.
The danger in the
expression “the ego” lies in the effect of the little word
the. Ego has the force of
“I am”, which is a subjective statement, but as soon
as we use the expression
“the ego”, we have given it an objective flavor and
have materialized what is
in itself life. In nine cases out of
ten the enquirer who is told about the ego is thereby debarred from a knowledge
of the life which he is. The unfortunate person begins to think of a kind of
balloon on higher planes which is somehow attached to him. If he calls it an
aura, he thinks that aura has a skin, like a bladder of lard, But the ego is to
be known only by the experience “I am.” It is the positive life that we are, at
any time, on any plane.
Everyone knows Descartes’
famous saying; “ I think, therefore I am”. We might equally say, “I love, or I
will, therefore I am”. But it would be still more in consonance with our
conscious experience to say: “I am, therefore I think, I love, I will.”
Thinking, loving and willing are the activities of the life that we are, and
these express themselves in our work of all kinds in daily life. It is
dangerous even to say: “ I am the life.” It is safer to say “I live”.
This living of ours is
fundamental, and produces all the forms and experiences round us. Thinking,
loving and willing are powers; they are positive. Those powers flicker like
candle flames in a draught while they are in course of evolution and not yet
fully strong. Then we have present thinking obscured by past ideas (which
should have become inadequate), present
loving stifled by past attachments, and present willing destroyed by the
worship of external things. When men worship or fear external things their own
will is gone, and they forget that all things without exception are for our use
— the material things for our thinking and understanding, the living beings for
our loving and understanding. To wish that something might be different is to
abrogate our will, which should be employed always with those things which are
in our power. To wish is ignorance and it results in waiting. To will is
knowledge of the life that we are. To want is vision of the fuller life.
The powers of life are
all-unifying. Great thought is understanding; it stands under and holds, as it
were, many facts at once, and sees their relationships or sees them as one
whole. Every idea is single, though it may be as big as the world and contain
everything in the world, and it corresponds to a single fact, though there may
be great diversity within the unity of that fact. At bottom the whole universe
expresses one single idea. Great love also is understanding, but it is the
understanding of life instead of material things, so that love is but the
manifestation of the perception. of the
unity of all lives. And willing also is unifying, for it co-ordinates all the
expressions of our individual life.
The ego is the one idea for
the body. It has made fingers and toes and all other organs in course of time,
and these are unified under one dominion. I have expressed the matter badly. I
should say, not that the ego is the one idea and that the ego has done this,
but that I am the miller, the lover and the thinker, and my unity must appear
in this which is my work. When I have mastered my environment it will be as
organic as my body.
Personality is my
expression at any given time, not only in the body and its habitual ideas and
habitual feelings, but in dress, manners, residence and its furnishings,
business, etc. Personality is expression. If a man digs in the garden with a
spade, there is personality, If he writes in his library with a fountain pen,
there is personality. But if the man’s life is so clotted with ignorance that
he cannot put down the spade and take up the pen, or put down the pen and take
up the spade, you have what has been called “self-personality”, which is only
in degree removed from the condition of the insane, who think themselves to be
teapots, north poles and Queen Elizabeths. Fear and pride produce self-personality. A man
must have a pose, a manner, a calling, a name, a title, in order to be
comfortable in society, to have a place, an identity, a self in the social
order, and to this he clings at all times in public pose and even in private
thought, because there is little thought, love and will in him, and this absurd
fear and pride, or timidity and conceit, will not let them grow.
Seated in such self-made
prisons, men nevertheless do sometimes have a gleam of real life, and then they
say: “The ego has come down”. One friend used to amuse me occasionally, though
quite unintentionally, when, in the course of conversation, he would say,
putting his finger to his head: “Wait a moment, while I consult my higher
self”. There was, of course, something in it; he was obtaining a slight ray of
light, but it is better to stand in the sunshine. Whenever I think or love or will, I am; that
is the ego. Whenever we rise superior to circumstances, using them, this is the
case. This does not refer only to great occasions; any thought, any love, any willing
is egoic.
“The ego” is commonly
considered to have a great quantity of stored magnificence, accumulated through many lives.
Unquestionably, at any given time, I am greater than my expression. If I am a
carpenter I can turn over in my mind in the morning all the possible things
that I may make. I can think of chairs, tables, bookcases, wardrobes, etc. I
may decide to engage myself in the making of a stool. I shall then be occupied
with that, and I hope I shall be trying to make my stool better than any stool
I have made before. In my memory and in my subconscious mind are all the ideas
of other things that I may have made or may think of making. But fundamentally
my desire is to learn, that is, to expand my powers, and therefore I shall
engage myself with the stool.
It is not the business of
my life to entertain myself by repeating perpetually the things which I have
already learnt to do. We are not here to express ourselves in that sense. We
are at school, and therefore life is a thing of phases for us. The picture
which we have painted in the past is spread out like one of those old-fashioned
panoramic views of pre-cinematographic days, in which the picture gradually
rolled off one roller on to another. Thus we have phases such as childhood,
youth, maturity, etc, each having its own talents or virtues, and its own obscurations or
weaknesses.
The giving of attention to
one thing at a time is concentration, an expression of will, which in its
perfection would be the attention of the whole given to a part of itself. It is
the will that divides the mind into the conscious and subconscious, and
constantly in a different place.
It cannot be said that “the
ego” resides on a particular material plane. At all times he is doing the same
thing on all planes, but when the higher planes, as they are called, are
invested in imagination with the characteristics of the physical plane, an
artificial and unnatural quality is at once given to them.
The physical plane has great
clarity, solidity, because it is the expression in
work or karma of our greatest
concentration. When we have so perfected the power
of our thought and love that
we do not need this narrowness or concentration to
give that clearness or
substantiality, then the planes of the ego, as they are
called, will have this
character of reality. To put it in another way, the carpenter will be able to
make all his chairs, tables, etc., at once. Such an attainment will mean that
the process of schooling has come to an end
because the powers of the ego have reached their full strength. The ego
will then be free, without the necessity for the concentration process which we
sometimes call the physical plane, fancying that it is something in itself,
instead of a mere expression of life.
The “I am” of which I have
been writing, which is three-in-one in its expression, has long been indicated
by the use of the three Sanskrit words âtmâ, buddhi and manas, often
translated as the spiritual will, intuitional love and active intelligence.
Each of these powers is again dual; for example, perception and observation are
the more receptive aspects of thought, while judgment and planning are the more
positive, and similarly sympathy and goodwill are the receptive and active
forms of love. Each of the three is a form of cognition; by manas
we get to know things, by buddhi we get to know
lives, by âtmâ (a confusion of terms — strictly ahamkâra, “ I-making”) we get to know the one life. Then
our expressions along these lines are respectively thinking, loving and
willing. Atmâ, buddhi and manas are not objects sitting on high planes, like the
deities in an upper corner of an Egyptian papyrus.
Even in a particular
incarnation nothing essential is lost;
there is what has been called conditional immortality. In one of the Mahâtmâ, letters to Mr. Sinnett
it was said: “The personality hardly survives.” But what does survive is
immortal, because it is ego. Only in so far as personality expresses life can
personality survive. Really there is no survival about the matter; it is life
which never dies, which cannot die. We may put it that at the end of an
incarnation, when experience becomes character, the additional character is the
unfoldment of “the ego” as the result of that incarnation. So true personality
is the new part of “the ego” that is being evolved. To put it crudely, the pure
part of the personality has become one with “the ego”, has obtained
immortality, and therefore the condition of the personality’s immortality is
its purity from the egoic point of view. That does not
then in particular reincarnate. Therefore those who do not believe in
reincarnation have some truth on their side or in their argument, as well as
those who do. “The ego” once more starts on a new concentration, which makes an
entirely new personality. So “the ego” reincarnates, but the personality does
not.
THERE is no such thing as
material evolution or progress. Certainly there is a succession of forms, and
the later are very often more complicated organisms than the earlier; but it
cannot be said that the earlier has evolved into the later form.
The definition of
evolution, so excellently given by Herbert Spencer, clearly shows the
characteristic effect of life working upon matter. He said that evolution is a
progressive change from a state of incoherent homogeneity to a state of
coherent heterogeneity of structure and function. Let me give illustrations to
explain these terms. Incoherent homogeneity may be represented by a quantity of
pins, all of the same size, thrown loosely upon a tray; they are homogeneous
because they are alike, and they are incoherent because they do not combine.
Incoherent heterogeneity might be represented by a workshop in which all the
various parts of a motor-car are lying
about on the floor, on shelves and on tables; there is heterogeneity
because the parts are all different from one another, and there is still
incoherence. Coherent heterogeneity is shown when all those parts are fully
assembled and the motor-car is there. And when the motorcar is running you have
coherent heterogeneity in both structure and function. The motor-car is an
expression of life; so is the human body; so is a piece of music; so is a
house. And the greater the life that is expressing itself the greater will be
the heterogeneity, and the greater the coherence.
The same thing happens in
human minds. The man who understands is he whose knowledge is greatly
heterogeneous, but at the same time coherent. “Variety in unity” seems to be
the motto of life, The body is one because it is the expression of one life,
one power; one great; hand stretches out and grasps a handful of the world, and
instantly it shows the unity.
Thus when a man comes into
incarnation, as the expression is, he gathers in his net a quantity of things
which then express him or constitute his personality. The tiny child is busy gathering; he finds
out what he can do and what he cannot do; he listens to what people say about
him, and so he forms opinions, develops
habitual emotions, and sets up bodily habits and poses, so that from the
standpoint of common opinion by the age of about twenty-one there is a fully
formed personality. It cannot be said that this is a reincarnation of a
previous personality. The successive personalities are like successive roses on
a bush, or like successive pictures painted by an artist.
If the personality is
really an instrument, like a spade in the hand of a gardener or a pencil in the
hand of a painter, the power of the life will soon manifest itself by producing
coherent heterogeneity in the environment as well. This is the true sign of progress, that one’s
environment does not remain unorganized and one’s life-story a succession of
casual and unrelated incidents, but the power of the life sweeps everything
into one stream, one purpose, one idea. Life is simple because it is coherent.
The expression is like a train of camels, which can be led by one man.
There is no material
evolution, or influence of the past upon the present and the present upon the
future. The process is more like that of a cinematographic picture in which
there is a black space thrown upon the screen between one picture and the next.
A personality is not the
reincarnation of a previous
personality, but it is a new effort on the part of the ego to paint a more
perfect picture than before, or, to take another simile, to play a game of
chess and to win. If there is any power outside us, it is to be regarded like
an opponent in a game of chess rather than as some one guiding the painter’s
hand while he paints his picture, The champion chess player of a certain
country told me regretfully that he could not improve his game because he could
not find better players against whom he might contend. In the game of our
personal life there is not this disability. God, playing on the other side of
the board, gets us down every time. But every game that is well played makes us
stronger and is therefore a success, even though it may be lost, so I look
forward to the day when I shall win my game, and show this God that I am just
as good as he. What I am trying to say is that progress is not to be measured
by success, triumph, pleasure and other such things. Those may be the rewards
and desires of the life that is nearly asleep, that needs to be stirred into
activity by the vibrations that pleasantly excite the body, the emotions and
the mind. But he who knows the thrill of thinking, loving and willing, of the
great unifying powers of life itself,
is suspicious of success, for it seems to indicate that he has not aimed as
high as he might have done.
In each game it is character
or power that counts, not memory. This is
sufficient explanation of the
puzzle why we do not remember our past lives. A
life governed by the
recollection of previous experiences would always be
dependent — indeed the
conception is a paradox. But a life full of living power
knows what to do, and
violates no law of love, thought or decision. Ten
commandments have proved a
poor guide to humanity; ten million commandments even
could not advise us for all
occasions. But three simple spiritual laws — never to fail in will, love and
thought — govern every possibility of expression or experience.
Because it is character
that matters, the unfoldment of life, all evolution is from within. Every man
must use his own conscience, and there cannot possibly be such a thing as was
suggested by a certain Archbishop — “ the conscience of a fool.” The fool is he
who tries to guide his life by the conscience of another; he is as foolish as
one who would ask another to eat his breakfast for him or to learn Greek for
him, Each of us is what he is. He has
evolved to a certain point, and if he would go further he must start
from that point, making use of all persons and things in his own plan.
Initiation means starting,
and in this case it means to establish ourselves firmly in the life of “the
ego”. The first stage is to recognize spiritual laws, or laws of the life, as
above material laws, or the dominion of forms. All this has been put very well
in the Bhagavad-Gîtâ, which describes three kinds of
men in the world. First comes the sluggish man, who eats and sleeps; second,
the aggressive, who is full of personal desires and ambitions. The first
suffers from indolence, the second from greed. In very modern psychological
terms, the first is the slave, the second the careerist. Thirdly comes the
thoughtful man, who observes and considers the laws of nature and of health,
and lives according to those laws. But Shrî Krishna,
the teacher, told Arjuna, the pupil, to rise above
all these three conditions and establish himself in a deeper understanding — in
other words, to have the intuitional thought, which is the perception of the
ever-present life which we are, and therefore to follow the egoic
or spiritual laws primarily, to have egoic motives
and purposes.
The application of the word
initiation to any state, or rather states, is often somewhat arbitrary. In
theosophical circles what has been called the first great initiation applies to
the further awakening at which the man realizes himself not merely as the life,
but as not different or separate in interests from the life expressing itself
through other bodies. The true initiate recognizes all other living beings as
other fingers on the same hand.
This recognition is the
foundation of ethics. It is natural for us to love others, because we are not a
different life and no one is sufficient unto himself. This initiation might be
expressed in other terms by saying that when the thinking principle, manas, bows before the loving principle, buddhi, and says: “Henceforward I am your servant, and I
shall work for you in the external world which is my sphere”, there is the
beginning of a new and greater life. In all activities there is some thought,
some love and some will, but in this joint stock company the principle of love
has now become the chairman of the board of directors. Initiation is the
beginning of the life of love — not love which is pumped up or flogged into
activity or awakened by others, but love which naturally overflows the
boundaries of personality, and
associates with the life expressing itself through other forms.
It is not necessary that
this attainment of what is sometimes called the buddhic
consciousness should be marked by external events in the personality or in the
planes of matter. When that is the case it resembles the conferring of a degree
in a university. The candidate has to pass his own examinations, make his own
attainments, and even then he can receive his degree in absentia. Or he may
have been what is usually called a private student. Who can tell in how many
different ways people achieve initiation, and in how many different ways they
interpret that change of life, or realization of life, when they seek to invest
the personality with a conception of its new obedience and dignity, as with cap
and gown ?
In the letters to Mr Sinnett there is an occasional reference to initiated
adepts and initiates. The initiate there described is he who has really begun
his life. While “the-ego” is working with these personalities or incarnations
one after another, however far he may have gone in the unfolding of his powers
he is still a child at school, is still concentrating upon one thing at a time,
and therefore is, not living a full and
free life. But when a boy or a girl leaves school or college and goes forth
into the world to mingle on an equal footing with the men and women of his
time, he uses all his acquirements (history, music, mathematics and everything
else) simultaneously, or rather just when they are needed in the business of
that life. Then the true life really begins, for which all this painting of
pictures was only a practice and a preparation.
No one can describe that
expanded life in the terms of concentrated life, that full reality in terms of
limited expression. Even the powers of the life in expression — thinking,
loving and willing — cannot characterize that fullness or fulfilment
of life. It is not even enough to say that it sees everywhere without eyes,
hears everywhere without ears, works everywhere without hands, for those organs
belong to the time-process or egoic expression. They
are only the powers with which that time-process conquers the space-limitation
of the material expression. Even the time-process is conquered by him who has
found the whole.
“The dewdrop slips into the
shining sea.” “The river has found the ocean.” Consider the drop and the ocean.
What made the drop water — the watery
substance of it, or the non-watery externals that kept it away from the other
drops ? When we find our watery substance we shall not fear the “shining sea”.
It is the same drop in the ocean as it was out of it. Think then of a world of
life in which the very sands of the seashore and the grains of dust of the
streets are glorious gods or buddhas, of whom the
most material integument is a singing ecstasy of beauty and understanding, the
“Dhyan-chohanic” world in which the least and lowest
is free from the need of thought or love or will.
THE “goal of human life is
perfection; not in the sense that we shall be able to manage or govern all
things (which would merely constitute a great interference with other people’s
experiments), nor that we should know all the facts and laws of Nature (for the
so-called facts are only fleeting forms, and the so-called laws are only their
general qualities or properties), but that we shall not be carried away by
circumstances, but always act from our own true center. Such finding of the
center of our own being, and action from that center, imply that under any
circumstances will, love and thought never fail, but rather they become free of
effort — like the speech of a practiced orator, or the touch of an expert
pianist — so that all eccentricity is at an end.
Various names have been
used to indicate such a state — the Hindu philosophers call it jivanmukti or “freedom while living”, theosophists often
speak of “the adept”, and think of
human perfection as being characterized by considerable psychic power, such as
clairvoyance and traveling in the subtle body, the prominence of this idea
being due to the influence of modern materialism, which accepts the world as an
important thing. Buddha spoke of the stages of the arhat
(the man who is “ready” or “competent”), and the asekha
(one who has no more to learn from the world), who is also buddha
(wise or illuminated).
The perfect man is the man
who has found his own true life, and does not need to make any more material
forms or experiments, (reincarnations), but enters the world of life.
Picture, then, a world of
life in which there is no matter (that is to say, no outside restriction)
though there is all the reality and all the infinite variety which we think of in
connection with the material world, but originated in the life. The world of
life is more, not less, than the world of matter, for the world of matter is
only a limitation of the world of life, or rather a concentration in it. So
that, if we may use the simile, the very grains of sand on the shores of the
ocean of life are awakened monads, glorious buddhas,
What we call the world of matter is still there, but to these glorious beings
it is part of the world of life, and
presents no obstacles, any more than the school in a town presents an obstacle
to the graduates who have left it. All space-forms and all time-forms are
there, but they present no restrictions. This is the meaning of nirvana. Let me
explain it in terms of planes, though that method is liable to be crude. The
reality is here and now. The physical plane is the nirvanic
plane, but with a screen or grating before it which shuts out almost all the
reality.
As a grown-up person may
enter the nursery, so may a liberated man mingle in personal form in the
“material” world; but this is abnormal; they are liable to muddle the children.
All liberated lives are one, and not separated from us, so that all beauty,
truth and love in the world are from that high source. The Master is in the
beauty of the rose.
When a liberated man speaks
of the life he knows, he is called Master, Teacher, or guru. His object is not
to interfere with any experiments, but to remind us of our true, free state. He
cannot give life to the aspirant, who must grow by the exercise of his own
powers. Since the guru is not an ordinary man, but is an awakened monad or free
life, his appearance is only his instrument for a limited purpose, though he uses it freely.
Therefore the being who is seen by the pupil, the beautiful man, with hair and
eyes and mein about which a poetic pupil might rave,
is not the Master himself, who wants men to come out of their world of forms
into his world of true life. He tells us that full life is to be won by effort
(of will, love and thought). He may exhibit a rare expression in human form of
the creative powers of life, but so doing he shows merely the work, and not the
life. He wants the pupil to find the life.
The message always is,
“Come out of your world into ours” not “Call us, and we will come out of our
world into yours”. Since all our activities are the play of children, it would
be rather ridiculous for liberated men to come out of their world into ours in
order to improve our mud pies or to build better sand castles than ours all
along the beach. Forms are the things men play with. Their life also is behind
the scenes. It is the attitude towards the forms that is creative, and unfolds
or awakens the power of the life.
The Master’s world is the
world of life. The flawless music of a Master’s life is the expression of his
mastery, but we cannot know the Master by his music. The limbs of a racehorse are beautiful; they have become so because
the life trying to run in the form of that animal has produced an expression of
itself. Another horse could not develop such limbs for itself merely by
admiring the exquisite limbs of a racehorse, but only by developing the life in
the desire to run. And if the other horse, went to the racehorse and said;
“Please teach me, so that I may have beautiful legs like yours”. the racer
might well reply, “You had better forget the loveliness of legs, and put your
whole heart into the desire and the effort to run well; beauty will come of
itself, for it is only the expression of life”.
Life unifies and
co-ordinates wherever its touch falls: it is unity in diversity. Order opens
our eyes to the vision of life, which is itself beauty. So Masters want no praise or personal
devotion or obedience, except obedience to their never-failing advice that we
seek to express the fullness of our life through our will, love and thought. As
one of them wrote to Mr. Sinnett: “The fact is that
to the last and supreme initiation every chela is
left to his own devices and counsel. We have to fight our own battles, and the
familiar adage “the Adept becomes, he is not made is true to the letter”.
If one loves the guru first
and the life afterwards, one misses the
reality, for he in a human form, even in an egoic
form, is not an ideal, but may easily be made into an illusion.
Each one of us is exactly
what he is, and it is from that point that he must
evolve, and only in freedom
can this be. If the goal is freedom, then each step towards it must be a little
freedom. Therefore, as a philosopher once wrote, all imitation is suicide. We
have to do our work, even if it is the work of children. Sometimes when people
ask why the Masters do not interfere when things go wrong, even when their
names are dragged in, the answer is; because these are the entertainments and
education of children. Conditions may often be trying for some of us; all the
more reason for us to exercise understanding and love, all the more opportunity
for the expression of our strength.
That is one reason why
Masters do not show themselves more in personal form. Secondly, such showing is dangerous, and the
chief danger is perhaps that of mistaken external devotion. Probably the next
danger is that people, seeing the Masters, would make less effort, for two
reasons — they would be discouraged by the sense of their own inferiority, and
they would be satisfied without
knowledge and achievement, saying, “The Masters know that everything is
all right, so we need not worry. All is well with the world while they exist”.
It is not well for mankind to come too near to genius and glory — even
spiritual genius. He who speaks too well silences many. It is one of the
disadvantages of the facility of modern travel that the genius imposes himself
upon the world, and destroys the middle sort of talent; our pianist from Vienna
or Poland makes music in the home ridiculous, and our printing presses have
slain the village poets.
In one of the Mahâtmâ Letters to Mr. Sinnett,
the writer said that they would never give satisfactory proof of their
existence. If they did so, most people would cease to strive. It can only be
given to those few who have already awakened themselves to such an extent, and
have already had such a vision of the importance of the life in themselves and
others, that nothing can check their efforts. To them the Master may be known
as a man, as a wise and helpful friend, even as an instructor or teacher. But
even in this the relationship has mostly an impersonal character, although the
pupil may personalize his memory of such contacts.
If much personal
intercourse were established and certain people were announced as authorised to act as mediums or mediators for them, that
would soon set up a standard of our proper relation to the Masters’ world, and
then the Open Door would soon be forgotten or despised.
Inseparate from our life, though not mingling in our forms, they
called and call us to that world of theirs, to which every human, heart is a
door. Those who “reject the Masters” are not they who do not wish to follow a
particular and limited manifestation, but those whose conception of them is
limited to their appearances “outside the precincts “. They tacitly reject
their great power and presence, beating inwardly at all our hearts.
Another proof that the Open
Door is the general policy of the Masters, and that external intercourse is
abnormal for them, is that they are limited by the human body, and cannot
through it associate with many persons. In the letters to Mr.
Sinnett the Master stated that he was very busy, and
sometimes. had to keep his
correspondent waiting for
days for a reply. Also one of them wrote, ”I care very
little for objective
intercourse”,
But just as externally we
may add to our power by making machines
which associate us with the forces of Nature, so internally we can enter the “mind-plane”
of the Masters, and think their thoughts with them.
There is a collective or
brotherhood principle in knowledge and ideas, as there is to a large extent in
material things. If two people happen to have the same idea it is the same
idea, not two ideas which are the same. A person who has so purified his life
that it is not in a state of perpetual response to gross stimuli, and has so
developed his understanding that he can grasp big ideas, is thereby more in
tune than others are with the Masters. In connection with this principle, the
Master K.H. wrote: “For a clearer comprehension of the extremely abstruse and
at first incomprehensible theories of our occult doctrine, never allow the
serenity of your mind to be disturbed during your hours of literary labors, nor
before you set to work. It is upon the serene and placid surface of the
unruffled mind that the visions gathered from the invisible find a
representation in the visible world. Otherwise you would vainly seek those
visions, those flashes of sudden light which have already helped to solve so
many of the minor problems and which alone can bring the truth before the eye of the soul. It is with
jealous care that we have to guard our mind-plane from all the averse
influences which daily arise in our passage through earth-life.”
The thoughts of a Master
might look very much like orders to those who are predisposed to regard them in
that way, and who do not stop to reflect that understanding is not separate
from the will, that clear knowledge impels action. An interesting instance of mind-plane contact
with the Master was given by Dr. Besant.
She remarked recently that her Master sent her into Indian politics in . That
was about twelve years before she had any belief in Masters. Retrospectively she recognized the
relationship which existed before she knew of it. There must be many more who
have it, and do not directly know the fact.
It must not be assumed, of
course, that Dr. Besant took the work up merely because told to do so; the
heart and the will leaped forth in harmony with the idea. There can be no
objection to the brotherhood of all life, as a source of our intuitions. If the
intuition of our own will is not the spring of our action, the life is shut off
or deadened down, and as our evolution is proportional to the amount of life in activity, orders from another are
deadening. This puts contact with Gurus on a reasonable basis — each man must
decide for himself what to do on all occasions, how to employ his time, where
to give his sympathy, his money and his energy. If his decisions come out of
the Masters’ mind-plane they are still his own, though they contain fruits of
divine friendship; and if they are from “governors of the world”, he is of the
“governors”. Whether his mind is pure enough for that is entirely the matter of
his own effort, but it must be remembered that health, not strength, of mind is
required to see the meaning of life.
One cannot separate Master
and pupil into two entities, one of whom is directing the other; that is why it
used so often to be said that one’s own higher self was the Master. I do not
like the expression “ higher self”, but it can certainly be said that anyone
who can be his own higher self is thereby in contact with the Master, All true
intuitions have to do with Masters, and conversely association with a Master in
his appearance or body on any plane on the part of anyone who was not yet
himself his own higher self would be no contact with the Master, because he
would not understand the Master, but would be somewhat in the position of a cat or a dog in the Master’s
house.
There is only one way to
associate with a Master as a Master, and that is from “within” by our own
living power. I know a man who has been conscious of a Master (or thinks he has)
for many years, who said that some time ago the Master had made himself
specially clear as to visible form, and then reproached him, saying: “You must
not make this distinction between us; what you do I do.” That Master had been a
teacher to him. Their way of teaching is to help the pupil to grow into his
subject, but this friend had wrongly fallen into the idea of regarding it as
instruction from the outside.
As regards outside
instruction, the world is not lacking in literature which tells how man may
reach perfection. The records of Christ, Buddha, Shankara
and others are with us, and the truth peeps out in a thousand other places.
Some weak persons desire a teacher to tell them what is true, what they should
believe and do. But their attitude is absurd for it is only by facing their own
problem that they can awaken themselves to fuller living,, and enter the
Masters’ world.
The Gurus are like the sun,
We need not worship the sun or request
it to shine more and more, but we need to make use of the sunshine. That is the
greatest worship, In all this the example of children is an excellent guide,
for they are not content to watch and admire their elders, but must at once
start in and do for themselves that which has caught their imagination. They have
not the psychology of a crowd which watches a football match or reads novels as
a substitute for life. The orthodox Guru is too external a thing, like the
orthodox God.
IN the material world there
is a supreme superior, something that differs entirely from every thing, and
yet of it all things are parts. One thing is dependent on another, but there is
something upon which all are at last dependent. A table stands upon the floor.
It is dependent upon that support for its position in space. The floor in its
turn rests upon beams, and those upon walls, and those upon the foundations of
the building and the earth. It is a commonplace of modern science that the
earth also is where it is in space because of the various forces which connect
it with the sun, and the sun in its turn leans upon other celestial bodies.
Ultimately it is only the entirety of things which is self-sustaining. This
shows us that somehow all the parts depend upon the whole — the world is not
made up of a great quantity of particulars which are somehow independent and
have merely come together by chance or caprice. It is one thing and that unity is the foundation and support
of all the parts.
In human consciousness we
find a similar truth. The body acts as an organized unit because there is an “
I” or a will in that body. After death all the parts of the body go their
respective ways, and there is decay and dissolution, but while there is life
there is unity. Many years ago Professor Thomas Huxley spoke of this, though in
a slightly different connection. He told his audience that though it might
appear to them that while lecturing he was exhibiting a good deal of life, what
they were witnessing was a process of dying, because with every word that he
uttered he was wearing away the cells of his body. Then, in his always humorous
way, he begged them not to be alarmed, for he would not permit the process to
go too far, but would go home, have recourse to the substance called mutton,
and stretch his protoplasm back to its original size, The point is that
Professor Huxley would take steps to repair his body because he himself was a
life governing that body.
If we study ourselves
psychologically, we find there is something coordinating all; and that even our
thoughts and feelings come under that. The will might be defined as that
faculty by which we govern our own
thoughts and feelings. In itself it seems to be the principle of unity and
order. We have thus seen that whatever power it is which is the support of all
material things, it is of exactly the same nature as that which we find in
ourselves as the will.
Therefore many religious
philosophers have declared that because there is one world and one law from
which nothing can escape, there must be one first cause which is the source of
all. That supreme source of all also shows itself in man in the principle of
order, so that men know “God” by expressing more and more of that ultimate
reality in themselves.
The word religion is connected
with other familiar words, such as ligament, or ligature, something that holds
or binds, and it may therefore be taken that religion consists of any means
which may be used to bind a man into that service, to make him true to his best
and inmost self. Such a man will try to understand experience, and such
understanding shows the principle of unity, because taking into account many
things at once and seeing them as parts of one system is understanding. Such a
man. will also express the principle of love, which also unites, shows interest
beyond the limits of one personality,
and binds many together in one united group.
It is impossible to think
of God as any particular form, however big. Only the whole can represent to us
that self-dependence. But somehow that whole is reflected in each one of us,
and we find it as the will or principle of unity. Some dictionaries tell us that theosophy is
an intimate knowledge of divine things. That does not mean a special knowledge,
attainable by the development of some peculiar and unusual faculty, but simply
recognition of this principle of unity in us, which is the will and the life.
Because he was a theosophist, Jacob Boehme could say,
“ In some sense, love is greater than God”.
The same idea is seen in
the paradoxical argument about God’s inability to create a man. It is said that
there are some things which God could not do; he could not make a square circle
or a tall dwarf, and similarly he could not make a dependent will. If there is
any creation in this matter it is within, and we are he creating us. There can
thus be no mediators between man and God, since they are not separate things,
but the whole reflecting in the part.
Also there can be no
outside authorities to tell a man what
to do to increase or perfect this union. That process is best taking place when
the man himself is developing his knowledge of the world through understanding,
and his knowledge of life through love, in obedience to the principle of will
in himself, which is always working for greater order or unity. If there is any
outside authority, then everything is an authority, even a mosquito, because it
causes us to resort to various methods of self-defense, and in thinking out
those devices we are using and developing our intelligence and understanding.
If there is an external God he is explicit, not implicit, in everything.
All religions, if carefully
understood, show the same principle at the bottom. Christianity, for example, cannot be confined
to the acts and things of which Christ spoke, but must include all in which He
acquiesced. This is taken so in practice, for our modern civilization has
inherited much from the thought and the beauty of Greece, and yet men call it a
Christian civilization. The idea is perfectly consistent, and it is not
difficult to trace the full movement.
In the early days of what
is technically the white race we find that very much attention was given to
abstract philosophic and religious
thought. Those thinkers were discovering
that there is a “soul” working through the body, much as a child gradually
learns the same thing and in consequence acquires when grown up a sense of
responsibility and purpose, instead of continuing life as a succession of
casual adventures and incidents. The child very gradually finds the unitary or
organizing principle, and the man applies it. The race does exactly the same
thing on a larger scale. By the time that the early Greek philosophers had thus
made the perception of the “soul” quite clear the season was ripe for the
expression of that “soul” in action, and we find men beginning to turn its
powers consciously and deliberately to creative art and the management of
external things. Beauty is the expression of that order in work, and it spread
from Greece not only westwards but also eastwards into the Hindu and Buddhist
worlds.
Philosophers found that
human life is ordered because there is one life working through the body, and
when they began to observe that the world was also an ordered whole, they asked
themselves whether there was not a similar principle governing and uniting all
things. In the world they found,
according to their predilections, the expression of the different
faculties of the soul or life. Thus we have an Anaxagoras, putting the
relations of things down to the workings of divine or universal nous or reason. If man’s life becomes orderly through
reason which he exercises, the same, it could be argued, must be true of the
world. Empedocles ascribed the relations of material bodies to principles of love
and hate, that is to say, to universal feelings. But Pythagoras seems to have
seen most deeply, for he said that in human life both reason and emotion are
but subordinate and assistant to a principle of order, number or unity.
Out of those Greek times there
has come down to us the practical religion of truth, goodness, and beauty.
Truth is thought governed by unity; goodness or love is feeling governed by
unity, and beauty is the result of work, which is action governed by unity —
for all great skill in action produces beauty both in the object that is made
and in the limb or organ with which it is made. Truth, goodness and beauty are
living religion, because, they are the reflection of the one life or order, in
each of our lives.
The Greeks were not so
successful in manifesting goodness as
they were in expressing truth and beauty, and I think we might ascribe to the
fact that the Greeks could not hold together, and love one another, the
necessity for Christ’s special emphasis upon goodness. Certainly he did not
object to truth and beauty, and they are therefore part of his religion, but it
was necessary to strengthen especially the weak link in the chain.
Thus religion is thus not a
special set of activities, different from ordinary life. It is that life
properly lived.
The world of our experience
cannot be left out of consideration; it is not a senseless, cruel place; the
God in us is stamping its nature upon it, bringing it into order and developing
our own powers in the process.
Life properly lived is life
with a great goal in view, life lived with understanding of the principle of
unity. Every thought, feeling and action should take place in the light of that
purpose, and then it will make the most or fullest use of every moment and
occasion. When a man is using his own intelligence, his own best feelings, or
love, and his own will, he is doing his best, because his faculties will then
grow. There is no need to fear mistakes if we are using our best thought, love
and will, But there is great reason to
fear fear itself, which postpones life. The man who
never made a mistake, it is said, never made anything at all. It is reasonable
to listen to advice, and to follow it if one’s own judgment pronounces it the
best thing, but merely to follow the direction of another because he or she is
supposed to be superior in judgment, is to stifle our own life and prevent its
growth. Men cannot be uplifted from the outside. The common soldier may be well
drilled, but the result is he is unintelligent and lacking in initiative. We
may paint many pictures for a friend, but that will not make him into an
artist, even if he holds the pencils and we guide his hand by holding it with
ours.
The average man is living
in the stream of things. He is attracted and repelled. He does not know himself. His personality is
a piece of music bound together only by a repeating motive. He is a commuter,
so that even when he travels he takes with him that criterion which will
prevent him from being lost in the varied flow of new experience; just as an
old lady travels with her parrot, and when she wakes up in the morning and sees
her parrot she remembers who she is.
Sooner or later comes to him a message “Be a man !” This was the Buddha’s message and also the
Christ’s. The Buddha’s was philosophical or metaphysical; he directed the
people away from the events to the man. Find yourselves. He was talking to
children. They were to become householders — the household being the body, into
the life of which they were to bring coordination, or unity and power.
Most of the organized
religions have failed badly. They have mistrusted both man and the world, and
so have partially destroyed those very experiences and activities which make
him more like God. In religious circles there are many “guiding lines”, and
fixed ceremonials, and models for devotion and imitation. They play a great part in hiding the
essential nature and the vitality of religion.
Errors go very far and very
high. I have heard of people who love their fellow-men, but who could say about
certain religious ideas, “ Yes, I know they are probably false, but they do
good; they make people gentle and kind”. Such persons do not take into account
the fact that truth, goodness and beauty cannot be separated — that the lack of
any one of these places a shutter in front of the corresponding aspect of life.
They are the foot-binders of the moral realm.
I do not know to what
extent guiding lines help a child to write straight; I think on the whole that
if he tried from the beginning without them he would be doing best. As it is
many people seem to think that there is no correct writing except that which is
between these ancient lines; they think that God is nearer to them in church
and on Sundays than in the office, or the home, or the street on week days. It
may be that people are so weak that they cannot remember to open their hearts
and minds on all occasions, and must therefore have these special reminders or
pick-me-ups; but I cannot see that they will have begun to be religious until
they can bring some power from within themselves without the necessity for such
stimulants.
It would be poor economy on
the part of a being who wanted to give his best help or stimulus to mankind to
arrange that it should flow only on certain occasions, and those attended often
with great inconvenience and surrounded by great expense. In other words,
divine “grace” presented only on special occasions, when special words are
recited, when special clothes are worn, and through special persons, would be a
disgrace. Indeed, many of the best minds have rejected the idea of God because it is sometimes surrounded by
these appliances.
Most of us agree that
collective human thought is powerful, and that it may be further supplemented
with that of Masters and other beings. But at the same time it is logical to
believe that the principle works everywhere, that all Nature is trans-substantiable, so that to go out into the forest or under
the stars on a quiet night and feel the thrill of Nature’s beauty, or to
respond to the life in other human beings, is equally to excite the divine
grace or flow of the forces of unity. Surely all true life is sacramental.
It has been a common
mistake of religions to miss the goal or purpose of our existence. Many have
held the vehicle theory instead of the instrument theory, and have in
consequence obstructed the life in their adherents, instead of awakening it.
Most of them have advocated supplication and hope instead of a courageous life.
Most have taught consolation in the rewards and happiness of a future life, and
have thereby denied the paramount utility of present experience. Most of them
have preferred darkness to light, and would go into a cave with a candle to
worship the sun. In the main they have ignorantly formulated external laws, and ultimately used them to
counteract the best impulses of the human mind and heart, as for example when
only a short time ago a priest of a narrow though large sect, when called upon
to give evidence relating to excessive cruelty in a vivisection case, declared
that though the cruelty was repugnant to human feelings, no one should set up
human feelings against the divine law announced in the Bible, which fully
authorized these things. Though the world punishes thoughtlessness, the
religions have often encouraged blind belief, and have resisted the natural
tendency in man to give ever fuller expression to the life within himself
through the powers of will, love, and thought.
All such activities are
contrary to the principle of theosophy, which is the antithesis of materialism,
and declares that all things are divine because they belong to the life, and
that true living alone can be religious or a cause of realization of unity or
the one life. The theosophist is one who so fully realizes the omnipresence of
the divine that he is willing to put his trust in all life. For him, God is out
in the open and need not be sought in boxes, and all the world is a beautiful
lawn across which all can walk without the need of a beaten path.
ARE THERE TWO THEOSOPHIES ?
THEOSOPHY is a dignified
old word, honored by seventeen centuries of consistent use. Yet, strange to
say, today, and even in the Theosophical Society, the question is still raised:
what is theosophy ? The Greek theosophia, from which
our word is derived, is a compound, composed of theos.
and sophia, which may be translated respectively God
and wisdom. In practice, the term knowledge has generally been used, rather
than wisdom, but this is not a point about which for our present purpose we
need be punctilious.
The combination of theos and sophia can be read in
two quite different ways, according as we take the first term to have the sense
of a noun or that of an adjective. We thus find that theosophy means either
“knowledge of the divine” or “divine knowledge”. There can be no question but
that the former is the fundamental and historical meaning. It is also in entire agreement with the Sanskrit
term Brahma-vidyâ, to which it has frequently been
compared, for that means “ knowledge of Brahma ”.
Some of the dictionaries
make its meaning “knowledge or wisdom concerning God or the divine”, but the
weakness of this view lies in the fact that there is no knowledge with which
the divine is not concerned. If that definition were true all theology would be
theosophy, and all science also, since knowledge of astronomy or of
crystallography improves a man’s conception of deity. Similarly it cannot be
taken as “an explication of God’s ways or God’s plan”, because there is nothing
which is not his way or his plan; as stated in the Gîtâ,
he is not only the splendor of splendid things, but also the gambling of the
cheat.
The interpretation of
theosophy as “divine wisdom” making it a collection of statements about the way
in which the machinery of life works, including reincarnation, karma, etc, has
come very much to the front during the last thirty years, because of the
influence of fundamental and popular concepts of modern science, especially the
wrong idea that there are natural laws and qualities of materials which belong
to some substance which all the same
has not in itself the creative power with which we are familiar by direct
experience in ourselves. Science has shown that man and the mineral are
“brothers”, or of one nature. From this a wrong inference has been drawn,
namely, that man is only a more complex mineral. It should on the contrary be
said that since man and the mineral are brothers, the mineral is a little man. We all know what man is.
It is an easy step from the
definition of theosophy as “divine wisdom” to the wrong conception that
theosophy is “a body of truths” which are in the special custody of groups of
people who have a vision of higher planes of nature. I am not, of course,
decrying such knowledge, but am simply pointing out that that is not what is
meant by theosophy, but belongs to the same department of human activity as
physics, chemistry, physiology and astronomy. I have had too much to do with
occult researches not to know something of their value, but I would point out
that we can regard superphysical research and
information either theosophically or
materialistically, just as we may make use of the physical sciences in either
of those two ways.
Some of the dictionaries
make it out that the knowledge of God
which is understood as theosophy is obtained by shooting upwards, as it were,
into some fine region and finding God there, and thus acquiring special
“knowledge obtained by direct intercourse with God and superior spirits”. I may
digress to the extent of remarking that as to such a view the famous Sir Henry
More wrote in : “This disease many of our chymists
and several theosophists, in my judgment, seem very obnoxious to, who dictate
their own conceits and fancies so magisterially and imperiously, as if they
were indeed, authentic messengers from God Almighty”. This may be one of the
diseases or superstitions which are liable to attach themselves to any
theosophical movement, but obviously that is not knowledge of God or the
divine, which is to be found just as much on the physical plane as on any other
plane.
The danger arises when the
materialistic idea creeps in. Then a horizontal dividing line is made, and what
is above it is considered to be spiritual, while what is below is regarded as
material. But the fact is that the dividing line should be drawn vertically
through all planes, not horizontally at all, because the spirit or life exists
everywhere in its own right and not on
the sufferance of any forms. It makes the forms.
I can make this point clear
by saying that on every plane or collection of expressions of a state of
consciousness there are always both consciousness and form, and in all the
cases of coherent form-building that we know there is evidence of the power of
consciousness at work. Where there is life there is initiative in
form-building, which at the same time is a display of the unification or
integration of otherwise incoherent matter. In modern science we never meet
mere energy or force as a form-builder. Gravity, for example, is a force used
by the engineer, just as wood and stone are used by him. Similarly, a tree
raises an immense amount of water. The tendency of natural energies is, on the
contrary, towards dissipation in space, and the production of uniformity or
homogeneity in matter, The casual forms of clouds or of mountains are
exhibiting decay or dissipation, not organization.
The main point of theosophy
is that we regard our power as fundamental, and therefore to us small things
and particular things are just as spiritual as big things. On one side of the
vertical line there is the material,
and on the other the divine. It is knowledge of this divine which is
theosophy, and it is acting according to this divine which is the theosophic life in the world, and this may be achieved on
any plane.
For the sake of
illustration I will explain how a human being is more divine than a conger-eel.
The conger-eel gives birth to about ,, young at a time. It might be argued that
it must be superior to man, who generally gives birth to only one at a time.
The young eels are perfectly good ones, but they are nothing new. They are just
the same or almost the same as what have gone before. But the human being who
tries to make improved conditions for even one child is really showing creative
power far more than the conger-eel, that easily produces millions.
You can never judge
progress by the quantity of work done, but only by the quality. Therefore a
human being having a very small and humble position in the world, who puts into
that position the new efforts which are involved in thought and love, is
generally far more advanced than other persons who may be making a great
success in the world. I may conclude this portion of my argument with the
statement that while science deals with the
form side only, theosophy takes into account also the life side of every
plane.
I think we can better
understand the relations between life and form on any plane by observing that
the plane is not something existing on its own account, but is merely the
effect of a mood of the former. In other words, a plane expresses a state of
consciousness, and all the forms existing on that plane are nothing but
expressions of consciousness acting in that state. So the fundamental thing
about a plane is that it is essentially a state of consciousness. The
collection of material forms is subordinate and secondary.
The forms by themselves
mean nothing, just as the print on this page by itself means nothing. But since
the forms made by consciousness in a certain state represent that consciousness
(just as when a painter paints a picture he represents himself, or as our own
calligraphy represent us individually), when the form is understood the state
of consciousness which produced it is realized, just as when the page of
printing is understood the ideas which gave rise to it are realized. So-called
facts are very evanescent, but the development of capacities, of consciousness
is conterminous with time itself, Because theosophy studies the states of consciousness it is
not empiric. Though it may be found that, let us say, affection produces a rosy
color in the aura of a person on the astral plane, you cannot develop affection
in an astral personality by painting him red with the colors from your astral
palette. All the color equivalents of the emotions form merely a kind of astral
phrenology, in which the success of the professor depends upon the accuracy of
his color-sense, and education in color-variety.
Forms are utterly helpless.
Words are only used to indicate experiences — they cannot record fact or life,
which must be lived to be known. How Christ must have despaired of words when
he said: “To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world,
that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every one that is of the truth heareth my voice”. You can calculate on things, but not on
human beings. Out of that incalculable comes invention. And out of invention
comes new experience and new power to the consciousness. All this incalculable
life is divine; therefore every individual is sacred. Edison may be the
greatest of inventors, but he could not predict Marconi. No theosophist can
treat another as if he were a mere form.
Nearly all those
dictionaries which have tried to define theosophy as “knowledge of the divine”
have made the mistake of regarding it as introspective, as interested in the
life and notin the form, and have therefore
considered the theosophic life as involving at least
mental and emotional retirement or aloofness from the world. But this cannot be
so, since all forms express life.
Because they express it they are not mere forms. They are not finite
things, to be abandoned as foreign to our nature and poisonous to us. On the
contrary, the theosophic life consists in the finding
of the infinite in the finite every time. For example, it cannot be my business
to meet all the mothers in the world, and love them as mothers should be loved.
I do not lose anything at all by not being able to meet all those mothers. The
important point is that if in the course of my experience I have come to love
my own mother, then I have the capacity to love all mothers whom I meet. In
that case, I have found the infinite in the finite. There are no circumstances
at all in which we cannot find the infinite in the finite, for thought, love or
will applied to any experience soon reveals its divine value.
The special virtue of love
in the matter is that it is a living
recognition of the unity of life, and therefore adds the experience of others
to our own. If I have no motor-car, but my friend has one, and I love my
friend, that is just as good as if I have the motor-car. So love liberates me
from personal limitations, not through indifference or renunciation, but through
their very opposite. That is freedom. It is life.
The theosophic
life stands for whatever promotes understanding, love and
freedom. It is not subject
to the blinding effects of materialism. It distinguishes very clearly between
freedom and the exercise of power. I do not want to make or to control in any
way the millions of forms with which other people are experimenting. I do not
want to paint their pictures for them, while they sit for ever in
swaddling-clothes. I have no desire whatever to give birth to ,, little
conger-eels every season. If we have freedom, it is not because we can do
everything, but because we do not want to do everything, but to be true to
ourselves. That is why I particularly like a sentiment expressed in a letter
from the Master M. to Frau Mary Gebhard in . “ You
have offered yourself for the Red Cross; but, sister, there are sicknesses and
wounds of the soul that no surgeon’s
art can cure. Shall you help us to teach mankind that the soul-sick must heal
themselves ? Your action will be your response”.
I hope I have been able to
show that there are not two theosophies, but only
one; that the term means, as
I found it very well put in one dictionary, “an
intimate knowledge of divine
things”. Although some, translating it “the divine
wisdom” have made it simply
“a body of truths”, and of these some would go so far as to say exactly which
truths are theosophy and which are not, they have
missed the point. All that is
simply Science, and it has its normal place in the
study of that collection of
impermanences which is popularly called the world.
That is truth, in the sense
of fact, while it lasts, but is not the same thing as that eternal truth which
governs the relation of the life to these things, whatever they may be, and howsoever
they may change their forms.
Each man is busy with his
own karma and his own life. Science, whether ordinary or occult, is a study of
the karmas or works or creations alone but, theosophy is a study of the lives
which are being lived with the aid of those karmas. This is easy to understand
if we do not start by taking it for
granted that there is a world which exists in its own strength, and that we are
small things which must somehow climb up to the tops of the mountain of that
world. But if this popular supposition
creeps in the whole argument will be spoiled.
History
of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical Society Cardiff
Lodge
Cardiff Theosophical Archive
The Theosophical Society,
Cardiff Lodge, 206 Newport Road, Cardiff CF24 – 1DL