Universal Brotherhood Vol 12 - Tingley
Universal Brotherhood Vol 12 - Tingley
Universal Brotherhood Vol 12 - Tingley
Ever the discouraged, resolute, struggling soul of man (have former armies failed?
Then we send fresh armies - and fresh again). Ever the grappled mystery of all earth's
ages, old or new; ever the eager eyes: hurrahs: the welcome clapping hands: the loud
applause: ever the soul dissatisfied, curious, unconvinced at last; struggling today the
same - battling the same. - Whitman.
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD
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Vol. XII November, 1897 No. 8
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THE SEARCHLIGHT
by Katherine A. Tingley
"While there is one blind soul still held in the toil of drink or drugs, while there is
hopeless poverty amongst us, while our laws are hissed, prejudiced and unjust, while the
horrors of the old torture chambers are still practiced in our laboratories, the occultist has
work to do here, - for he cannot separate himself from any of these things; the meanest
animal that utters a cry of pain or terror is himself. It is his duty to convert that pain into
pleasure, that fear into faith - and so to destroy the evil which causes it."
The Change.
With this issue Universal Brotherhood takes the place of Theosophy on the title
page. The change is significant. The Path represented the preparatory stage, leading
naturally to Theosophy, and the sphere now entered upon is the practical outcome of the
two preceding steps. When Mr. Judge started The Path he stood alone, looking forward
with hope, seeing the possibilities of the future. From small beginnings great things are
born in the fullness of time. The work he commenced has had its result. It is ours to carry
forward that work inspired by his wonderful example.
The difficulties in the way of obtaining an unprejudiced consideration for the truths
of Theosophy must be removed one by one. The word itself must not be regarded as
sacred when it makes more difficult the task we have undertaken. New methods must be
adopted as conditions change. We are called to be pioneers in one of the greatest
humanitarian movements of the age. Personal limitations must not obscure the possibilities
of the hour, and the criticism of the cynic should not be allowed to paralyze our efforts. To
be in a position to do even the most insignificant thing to raise the veil which hides the
divine from the vision of men should be regarded as an inestimable privilege. We should
not for one moment overlook the fact that only as we are true to ourselves can we be true
to our trust.
New Energy
A new energy is being liberated from the centre of life. This stream of force, for such
it is, is felt at first as a mighty Niagara, rushing forward with such rapidity that it threatens
to engulf everything, but as it approaches a climax it spreads out in every direction; its
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currents circulate over the whole earth, and its influence pervades all things. Nothing can
rest still; all things are pushed forward by the great solar energy now being set free. Care
should be taken that it is not misdirected and all personal barriers should be removed
before they are ground to powder. This force acts everywhere; the gods are its
ministrants. There is no need to retire to the woods for the inspiration which it gives, for
where the needs of humanity are greatest the presence of the Helpers can be felt most.
Heroic Ideals.
The hero of today must be a hero of heroes. The idealist must no longer be remote
from life, but made divinely human, close and intimate as of old. Now is the day of
resurrection; man looking up will see the old ideals raised, and seeing live. The son of God
is the son of Man.
A New Hope.
A new hope is dawning on humanity as the new century approaches. This hope is
the mainspring of progression and the evidence of it can be seen everywhere; the great
heart of nature pulsates with joy, as it did in the days preceding the dawn of the dark age.
Men and women who have so long borne the heavy burden of life, whose hearts have been
well-nigh broken by the weight of many sorrows feel the new joy awakened by the great
symphonies of harmony which are now being sounded. It is felt in the heart of man and
gives rise to a constant aspiration; it is the quality which makes him great. The golden light
is shining; the herald of the morning proclaims the message of love anew; the ripples of
the waves on the sea shore lisp the glad song; the breeze bears it on its bosom; the tints
of the flowers convey it; it shines forth from the stars in their sparkling brilliance; the great
blue dome above suggests it; the birds warble it forth from every tree; the new born babe
is a complete revelation of it; the eyes of the loved ones passing into the great beyond,
impart the strength and courage of that great hope and point to a future day when they
shall return again to carry on their work, for hope incarnates from age to age and where
hope dwells beauty and love abide for ever.
The law is immutable, and love is eternal.
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THIS ideal when first approached from an intellectual standpoint presents no great
encouragement for the realization of its truth; its consideration must be accompanied by
the receptive faculty which lies in the heart, that feeling of natural unrestrained sympathy
which arises out of the inner nature of man when not tainted by selfish motives. Even a
superficial investigation, however, leads us into a labyrinth of thought in which there is no
logical escape from the conclusion that somehow a unity exists between all human beings.
If we once begin to analyze the feelings we experience in our daily contact with our
fellow-men; and take into consideration the natural promptings of the heart, we find
ourselves possessed of much brotherly sympathy with the welfare of others. A scene of
affliction instantly quickens the tender fellow-feeling; see how people rush to the
assistance of a falling child; how they shudder at an accident; the unfailing pity - deep
down - with the diseased; why, who would say the world is so depraved as not to
recognize this? Only the rush for personal joys and pleasures causes us to forget it.
Let us wait. When the new religion of "Brotherhood" shall have taken root, then we
will not fail in our duty and forget; the same energy which is now active in competition and
strife will be directed instead to mutual helpfulness.
Poor fools, who do not yet know that to do the most good is productive of the
greatest amount of happiness. No settled belief exists in the immutability of natural law or
the unity underlying boundless Nature, hence the unphilosophic mind does not concern
itself with the possible relation which it bears to all existing things. The Unity of all things
is no empty phrase. It pervades all departments of nature. Even in the material world
scientific research has led to the conclusion that matter is homogeneous as Substance.
Elements are found to he compounds, greater differentiation is discovered step by step and
it is seen that by changing the molecular arrangement, one form of matter is transformable
into another. This shows the underlying synthetic union in the invisible essence of matter.
The separateness of mankind is analogous to this, division is apparent but not real, its
union is also contained in one invisible essence - God - or the great Self which is the
synthesis of all.
In the process of evolution humanity has differentiated from the great homogeneous
ocean of consciousness in order that the soul may gain experience in matter; being now
on the outer circle of manifestation, it appears to be apart, but it is destined in its natural
course to return to the primal unity from whence it came. The thread which has spun itself
out from unity into differentiation connects each individual with the parent source, and
through it with all else; and the innate qualities of the soul - Love, Sympathy and Charity -
are the manifestations thereof in man; these reside in the Heart.
According to the Esoteric Philosophy, the race has fortunately reached
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the outermost stage of realization of separateness, the time is at hand for the ascent on the
return arc, the pendulum is swinging back and will bring with it an awakening towards
spirituality. A psychic wave has already begun to sweep over the globe; in its course it will
rouse the latent spiritual faculties of mankind and develop intuition to a degree that will
cause great changes in the Social Economy and produce a realization of our birthright,
"The Universal Brotherhood of Man."
Neither Science nor Religion, with their present-day dogmatic methods, will greatly
help in the evolution of tins new faculty; a more potent and convincing agent has to be
called into service to educe a revelation of the truth which is spread upon the wings of time.
This agent is the power of direct perception of Truth from within, where all knowledge and
wisdom reside. Its first fruits will be born from the blossoms of "love of mankind"; its
second; from independence of thought and the courage to rely on one's own intuitions;
these will remove the shackles of preconceived notions and the veils which we have
gathered and surrounded ourselves with on our journey through matter during many lives.
The psychic force, active now, has touched millions of people; the spiritual fires are
being lit all over the earth, and presently the soul of man will breathe freedom from its
fetters and each man or woman will become conscious of his or her spiritual equality with
the best of the living.
Every man is a potential God! This is not believed by many, nor is the nobility of
their calling known to them or even suspected; cowed into subjection by custom and
conventionality, they think themselves slaves still, who must obey that self-created master,
or perish. How different would be the conditions of men if they had no fear of their
neighbor's opinion. Fear has no place in the religion of Brotherhood; its doctrine is
founded on supreme universal justice, where every man works out his own destiny and
gets his deserts according as he himself has earned them. In this there is nothing and no
one to fear, certainly not our fellow-traveler, who is one with ourselves and bent upon the
homeward journey towards union with the all.
The divine nature of man is obscured at the present stage of evolution by his
material rind, and though it may be difficult to comprehend why the "Divine Self" should
have surrounded itself with such apparently unappropriate vehicles of expression as we
meet with sometimes in human garb, yet the knowledge of the spiritual thread which binds
us to all should enable us to regard the outward appearances as only part of what the soul
really is. It will be admitted that our standard of judgment is only our own state of
enlightenment. As we are so do we see others. We have no faculty at present with which
to see and judge the real man, the soul; we may sense it when our intuitions are active,
but were we to see the real man and know him with all his past and realize our own spiritual
inseparability from him, our opinion would be changed regarding him.
To have even a slight grasp of the subject of Spiritual Unity of all mankind induces
broader views, and a more philosophic attitude towards social and individual problems; it
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opens up the latent but natural resources of the heart-consciousness from which flows
universal compassion - the most potent of beneficent forces harmonizing within and
without; it not only promotes a wider sweep of moral influence but also furnishes the key
to conduct and duty: it leads to a knowledge of universal laws and problems and to
wisdom; for, within the heart is the corresponding centre of all Life and Light.
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IT is easy enough to define Theosophy etymologically and to state that the word is
made up of two Greek words Theos-God, Sophia-wisdom, and hence say that Theosophy
is god-wisdom or divine wisdom. But if the matter is allowed to rest with this definition and
we then put forward a number of ideas and teachings which with many pass current for
"Theosophy," such as astral bodies, psychic powers, the earth chain of globes,
manvantaras and maha-manvantaras, saying: "This is Theosophy, this is Divine Wisdom,"
we shall I think commit at least an error in judgment, if not one of fact and show our lack
of common human, let alone divine, wisdom. The materialist, the agnostic, and the atheist
do not recognize or acknowledge God or the divine. How may one speak of Theosophy
to them? And yet we say Theosophy is for all men. The fact of the matter is we need to
exercise more discrimination. We may strive to be Theosophists as far as lies in our power
and may realize the privilege that is ours to be active members in the Society and to help
forward the Theosophical Movement, but we do not have to loudly proclaim "I am a
Theosophist, I am a seeker after divine wisdom." Nor do we need to live in the clouds and
talk of astral bodies and transcendental metaphysics. Divine wisdom concerns itself as
much with the common duties of life as with meditation upon the Supreme, and, indeed if
rightly understood, the latter cannot be attained to if the former are neglected. Friction has
sometimes arisen in a family because of one member joining the Theosophical Society, but
I venture to say that in nine cases out of ten this has been due to a lack of knowledge of
the simple meaning of the word Theosophy, no matter how much may have been read
about reincarnation or devachan. Universal Brotherhood is spoken of but it must be
"universal," and so much attention is given to the "universal" that the particular members
of one's family are lost in the "ocean of infinitude." The house may need cleaning and
scrubbing. Some one may be hungry for a kind word or pleasant greeting, but how can one
give time and energy to such trifling matters that belong only to the material plane when
there is the weighty problem of how to escape Devachan or renounce Nirvana? We are
still living in a physical and material world and still have duties connected therewith. And
even if you are a member of the Theosophical Society and esteem Theosophy above
everything else, though your husband or wife or parent or
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child may hate the very word, does not he or she esteem the Good, the Beautiful and the
True? If your friend be a materialist or an agnostic or an atheist, has he no thought for the
good and happiness of others? Are not the Good, the Beautiful, the True, - Theosophy?
There is not a single person in the world with whom you may not talk Theosophy and study
Theosophy and yet never quarrel. Theosophy is not narrow nor bigoted, it is not composed
of strange, unpronounceable names nor of fantastic doctrines. It is plain common sense,
and to use common sense, to recognize it in others, and to fulfil one's common little duties
in a common sense way is truly theosophical, and is true wisdom.
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PRAYER.
by AE
Turn the lamp down low and draw the curtain wide,
So the greyness of the starlight bathes the room;
Let us see the giant face of night outside,
Though vague as a moth's wing is the gloom.
Shut the eyes that flame and hush the heart that burns:
In quiet we may hear the old primeval cry:
God gives wisdom to the spirit that upturns:
Let us adore now, you and I.
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[[Illustration]]
IT has been my dream for many years that I might at some time dwell in a cabin on
the hillside in this clear and living land of ours, and there attempt some innocent and
unambitious magic, if I could do it without harm to myself or others, in a spot not too much
infested by the shades. Perhaps "magic" is too great a word to use. The magician is a god
whom I think of as armed with the lightnings and moving in a sphere of awful beauty;
whereas I would lay my head in the lap of a serener nature, and be on friendly terms with
the winds and mountains who hold enough of unexplored mystery and infinitude to engage
me at present. I would not dwell too far from men, for above an enchanted valley only a
morning's walk from the city is the mountain of my dream. Here, between heaven and
earth and my brothers, there might come on me some foretaste of the destiny which the
great powers are shaping for us in this isle, the mingling of God and nature and man in a
being, one, yet infinite in number. Old tradition has it that there was in our mysterious past
such a union, a sympathy between man and the elements so complete, that at every great
deed of hero or king the three swelling waves of Fohla responded, the wave of Toth, the
wave of Rury, and the long, slow, white, foaming wave of Cleena. O mysterious kinsmen,
would that today some deed great enough could call forth the thunder of your response
once again! But perhaps he is now rocked in his cradle who will hereafter rock you into
joyous foam.
The mountain which I praise has not hitherto been considered as one of the sacred
places in Eire, no glittering tradition hangs about it as a lure, and indeed I would not have
it considered as one in any special sense apart from its companions; but I take it here as
a type of what any high place in nature may become for us if well loved, a haunt of deep
peace, a spot where the Mother lays aside veil after veil, until at last the great Spirit seems
in brooding gentleness to be in the boundless fields alone. I am not inspired by that
brotherhood which does not overflow with love into the being of the elements, nor hail in
them the same spirit as that which calls us with so many pathetic and loving voices from
the lives of men. So I build my dream cabin in hope of this wider intimacy: -
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And when the sun sets dimmed in eye and purple fills the air,
I think the sacred hazel tree is dropping berries there
From starry fruitage waved aloft where Connla's well o'erflows:
For sure the immortal waters pour through every wind that blows.
And when the night towers up aloft and shakes the trembling dew,
I think that every burning thought that thrills my spirit through
Is but a shining berry dropped adown through the dim air,
And from the magic tree of life the fruit falls everywhere.
The sacred hazel was the Celtic branch of the tree of life; its scarlet nuts gave
wisdom and inspiration; and fed on this ethereal fruitage, the ancient Gael grew to
greatness. Though today none eats of the fruit, or drinks the purple flood welling from
Connla's fountain, I think that the strange fire which still kindles the Celtic races was flashed
into their blood in that magical time and is our heritage from the Druidic past. It is still here,
the magic and mystery, it lingers in the heart of an enchanted people to whom their
neighbors of another world are frequent visitors and a matter of course, with their own
rights and place.
"What else could she expect! What else could she expect! It's agin all nature: it's
agin all reason!" I heard a farmer cry when told of the death of a woman who had refused
to let one of the "Others" turn her churn a few days before. It was the discourtesy which
moved so much wrath in him, and not fear. I hardly ever hear of fear being shown, and
indeed there is no reason, for the "Other " are not beings who bring terror. They mantle
themselves in an ancient beauty. I gave to a friend in the west a sketch of a faery queen
draped in vaporous green and purple, with long fair hair, crowned with out-raying gold. He
showed it to a man who continually sees the faeries. "Yes! yes!" he said, getting excited,
"That is one of their queens and that is her crown," and he persisted that he knew her: he
knew many of these transcendent forms and spoke of many crowns.
The earth here remembers her past and to bring about its renewal she whispers with
honeyed entreaty and lures with bewitching glamour. At this mountain I speak of it was that
our greatest poet, the last and most beautiful voice of Eire, first found freedom in song, so
he tells me: and it was the pleading for a return to herself that this mysterious nature first
fluted through his lips:
Away! yes, yes; to wander on and on under star-rich skies, ever getting deeper into
the net, the love that will not let us rest, the peace above the desire of love. The village
lights in heaven and earth, each with its own peculiar hint of home, draw us hither and
thither, where it matters not, so the voice calls and the heart-light burns. Some it leads to
the crowded ways: some it draws apart: and the Light knows, and not any other, the need
and the way.
If you ask me what has the mountain to do with these inspirations and whether the
singer would not anywhere out of his own soul have made
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an equal song, I answer to the latter, I think not. In these lofty places the barriers between
the sphere of light and the sphere of darkness are fragile, and the continual ecstasy of the
high air communicates itself, and I have also heard from others many tales of things seen
and heard here which show that the races of the Sidhe are often present. Some have seen
below the mountain a blazing heart of light, others have heard the musical beating of a
heart, or faery bells, or aerial clashings, and the heart-beings have also spoken; so it has
gathered around itself its own traditions of spiritual romance and adventures of the soul.
Let no one call us dreamers when the mind is awake. If we grew forgetful and felt
no more the bitter human struggle - yes. But if we bring to it the hope and courage of those
who are assured of the nearby presence and encircling love of the great powers? I would
hale to my mountain the weary spirits who are obscured in the fetid city where life decays
into rottenness; and call thither those who are in doubt, the pitiful and trembling hearts who
are sceptic of any hope, and place them where the dusky vapors of their thought might
dissolve in the inner light, and their doubts vanish on the mountain top when the earth-
breath streams away to the vast, when the night glows like a seraph, and the spirit is beset
by the evidence of a million of suns to the grandeur of the nature wherein it lives and whose
destiny must be its also.
After all is not this longing but a search for ourselves, and where shall we find
ourselves at last? Not in this land nor wrapped in these garments of an hour, but wearing
the robes of space whither these voices out of the illimitable allure us, now with love, and
anon with beauty or power. In our past the mighty ones came glittering across the foam
of the mystic waters and brought their warriors away.
Perhaps, and this also is my hope, they may again return, Manannan, on his ocean-
sweeping boat, a living creature, diamond winged, or Lu, bright as the dawn, on his fiery
steed, maned with tumultuous flame, or some hitherto unknown divinity may stand
suddenly by me on the hill, and hold out the Silver Branch with white blossoms from the
Land of Youth, and stay me ere I depart with the sung call as of old -
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Art thou not now, bright one, all sorrow past, elation?
Filled with wild joy, grown brother-hearted with the vast,
Whither thy spirit wending flits the dim stars past
Unto the Light of Lights in burning adoration.
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THE distinction is due to Porphyry of having been the most able and consistent
champion and exponent of the Alexandrian School. He was a native of Tyre, of Semitic
extraction, and was born in the year 233, in the reign of the Emperor Alexander Severus.
He was placed at an early age under the tutelage of Origen, the celebrated Christian
philosopher, who had himself been a pupil of Ammonios Sakkas. Afterward he became a
student of Longinus at Athens, who had opened a school of rhetoric, literature and
philosophy. Longinus had also been a disciple of Ammonios, and was distinguished as the
Scholar of the Age. He was often called a "Living Library," and the "Walking School of
Philosophy." He afterward became the counselor of Queen Zenobia of Palmyra, an honor
that finally cost him his life. Longinus foresaw the promise of his pupil, and according to
a custom of the time, changed his Semitic name of Melech (king) to Porphyrios, or wearer
of the purple.
In his thirtieth year, Porphyry bade farewell to his teachers in Greece and became
a student in the school of Plotinos at Rome. Here he remained six years. Plotinos greatly
esteemed him and often employed him to instruct the younger pupils, and to answer the
questions of objectors. On one of the occasions, when the anniversary of Plato's Birthday
was celebrated (the seventh of May), Porphyry recited a poem entitled The Sacred
Marriage. Many of the sentiments in it were mystic and occult, which led one of the
company to declare him crazed. Plotinos, however, was of another mind, and exclaimed
in delight: "You have truly shown yourself to be at once a Poet, a Philosopher, and a
Hierophant."
That Porphyry was an enthusiast and liable to go to extremes was to be expected.
He acquired an abhorrence of the body, with its appetites and conditions, and finally began
to entertain an intention to commit suicide. This, he says, "Plotinos wonderfully perceived,
and as I was walking alone, he stood before me and said: 'Your present design,
Porphyrios, is by no means the dictate of a sound mind, but rather of a Soul raging with the
furor of melancholia.'"
Accordingly, at his direction, Porphyry left Rome and became a resident at
Lilybaeum in Sicily. There he presently recovered a normal state of mind and health. He
never again saw his venerated instructor. Plotinos, however, kept up a correspondence
with him, sending him manuscripts to correct and put in good form, and encouraging him
to engage in authorship on his own account.
After the death of Plotinos, he returned to Rome and became himself a teacher.
With a temperament more active and practical than that of Plotinos, with more various
ability and far more facility in adaptation, with an erudition equal to his fidelity, blameless
in his life, preeminent in the loftiness and purity of his ethics, he was well fitted to do all that
could be done toward drawing for the doctrines he had espoused that reputation and that
wider influence to which Plotinos was so indifferent.'' [R. A. Vaughan.] It was his aim to
exalt worship to its higher
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ideal, casting off superstitious notions and giving a spiritual sense and conception to the
Pantheon, the rites and the mythologic legends. What is vulgarly denominated idolatry,
paganism and polytheism, had little countenance in his works, except as thus expounded.
He emulated Plotinos, who on being asked why he did not go to the temple and take part
in the worship of the gods, replied: "It is for the gods to conic to me."
When he lived, the new Christian religion was gaining a foothold, particularly among
the Greek-speaking peoples, and its teachers appear to have been intolerant even to the
extreme of bigotry. The departure from established customs was so flagrant as to awaken
in the Imperial Court vivid apprehensions of treasonable purposes. Similar apprehensions
had led the Roman Senate to suppress the Bacchic Nocturnal Rites; and energetic
measures had also been employed in the case of the flagitious enormities in the secret
worship of the Venus of Kotytto. The nightly meetings of the Christians were represented
to be of a similar character. This led to vigorous efforts for their suppression. Porphyry,
though broad in his liberality, was strenuous in his opposition to their doctrines, and wrote
fifteen treatises against them. These were afterward destroyed in the proscription by
Theodosios, without any attempt to answer them.
He was equally suspicious of the Theurgic doctrines and magic rites. The sacrifice
of men and animals, for sacrifice and divination, was resolutely discountenanced as
attracting evil demons. "A right opinion of the gods and of things themselves," he declared,
"is the most acceptable sacrifice."
"Very properly," said he, "will the philosopher who is also the priest of the God that
is above all, abstain from all animal food, in consequence of earnestly endeavoring to
approach through himself alone to the alone God, without being disturbed by anything
about him."
This was the very core of the Neo-Platonic doctrine. "This," says Plotinos, "this is
the life of the Gods, and of divine and blessed human beings - a liberation from earthly
concerns, a life unaccompanied by human delights, and a flight of the alone to the Alone."
"He who is truly a philosopher," adds Porphyry, "is an observer and skilled in many
things; he understands the works of nature, is sagacious, temperate and modest, and is
in every respect the savior and preserver of himself."
"Neither vocal language nor is internal speech adapted to the Most High God, when
it is defiled by any passion of the soul; but we should venerate him in silence with a pure
soul, and with pure conceptions about him."
"It is only requisite to depart from evil, and to know what is most honorable in the
whole of things, and then everything in the universe is good, friendly and in alliance with
us."
"Nature, being herself a spiritual essence, initiates those through the superior Mind
(noos) who venerate her." Although himself believing in divination and communion with
spiritual essences, Porphyry distrusted the endeavor to blend philosophic contemplation
with magic arts, or orgiastic observances. This is manifest in his Letter to Anebo the
Egyptian prophet in which he demands full explanations respecting the arts of evoking the
gods and demons, divining by the stars and other agencies, the Egyptian belief respecting
the Supreme Being, and what was the true path to Blessedness.
Although we read of no formal schism, there appear to have been two distinct
parties - that of the Theurgists represented by Iamblichos, Proklos and their followers, and
the disciples of Porphyry, Hypatia, and other teachers, who inculcated that there is an
intuitive perception cognate in the soul, and that there may be a union and communion with
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Water was styled numphe as significant of generation. In short the Cave of the Nymphs,
with the olive-tree, typified the world with souls descending from the celestial region to be
born into it, in an order established by Divine Wisdom itself.
Thus we may see that the ancient Rites, and Notions, now stigmatized as idolatrous,
were but eidola or visible representations of arcane and spiritual concepts. As they were
once observed with pure reverence, it becomes us to regard them with respect. What is
accounted holy can not be altogether impure.
The treatise on Animal Food covers a very broad field which space forbids the
traversing. The point in view is of course, that a philosopher, a person in quest of a higher
life and higher wisdom, should live simply, circumspectly, and religiously forbear to deprive
his fellow-animals of life for his food. Even for sacrifice he regards the immolating of men
or animals repugnant to the nature of Gods, and attractive only to lower races of spiritual
beings.
He, however, leaves those engaged in laborious callings entirely out. His discourse,
he declares, "is not directed to those who are occupied in sordid mechanical arts, nor to
those engaged in athletic exercises; neither to soldiers, nor sailors, nor rhetoricians, nor
to those who lead an active life, but I write to the man who considers what he is, whence
he came, and whither he ought to tend."
"The end with us is to obtain the contemplation of Real Being [the essence that
really is]; the attainment of it procuring, as much as is possible for us, a union of the
person contemplating with the object of contemplation. The re-ascent of the soul is not to
anything else than to True Being itself. Mind [noos] is truly-existing being; so that the end
is, to live a life of mind."
Hence purification and felicity (endaimonia) are not attained by a multitude of
discussions and disciplines, nor do they consist in literary attainments but on the other hand
we should divest ourselves of everything of a mortal nature which we assumed by coming
from the eternal region into the mundane condition, and likewise of a tenacious affection
for it, and should excite and call forth our recollection of that blessed and eternal essence
from which we issued forth.
"Animal food does not contribute to temperance and frugality, or to the piety which
especially gives completion to the contemplative life, but is rather hostile to it." Abstinence
neither diminishes our life nor occasions living unhappily. The Pythagoreans made lenity
toward beasts to be an exercise of philanthropy and commiseration. The Egyptian priests
generally employed a slender diet, generally abstaining from all animals, some even
refusing to eat eggs, and "they lived free from disease." So, Hesiod described the men of
the Golden Age.
The essay on Intelligible or Spiritual Natures is in the form of aphorisms, and gives
the cream of the Later Platonism. We can select only a few of the sentiments. Every body
is in place; but things essentially incorporeal are not present with bodies by personality and
essence. They, however, impart a certain power to bodies through verging towards them.
The soul is an entity between indivisible essence, and the essence about bodies. The mind
or spirit is indivisible, or whole. The soul is bound to the body through the corporeal
passions and is liberated by becoming impassive. Nature bound the body to the soul; but
the soul binds itself to the body. Hence there are two forms of death: one that of the
separating of soul and body, and that of the philosopher, the liberating of the soul from the
body. This is the death which Sokrates describes in the Phaedo.
The knowing faculties are sense, imagination, and mind or spirit. Sense is of the
body, imagination of the soul, but
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In this life we may obtain the purifying virtues which free us from body and conjoin us to the
heavens. But we are addicted to the pleasures and pains of sensible things, in conjunction
with a promptitude to them, from which disposition it is requisite to be purified. "This will
be effected by admitting necessary pleasures and the sensations of them, merely as
remedies or as a liberation from pain, in order that the higher nature may not be impeded
in its operations." In short, the doctrines of Porphyry, like those of the older philosophers,
teach that we are originally of heaven, but temporarily become inhabitants of the earth;
and that the end of the true philosophic life, is to put off the earthly proclivities, that we may
return to our primal condition.
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HARMONIES
by R. Machell
THERE is a lake that I have seen in a land of the gods, and it is quite small, though
it has a long name; its waters are just wavering ripples of liquid light, although the little lake
is shallow now and full of great moss. The white lilies float on its surface like stars in the
night, sweet promises of the dawn of a golden age that shall blossom again from those old
roots buried in antiquity. And on the shores of this mountain lake the very rocks are radiant
with the magic life that fills the atmosphere, lending fresh lustre to the blended hues of
purple, green and gold, of heather-bloom and gorse and marvelous moss and lichens
wrapping the rocks in soft luxuriance. And when the sun shines there, one feels the
unseen hosts hovering around in the tremulous air; their songs are the hymn of life welling
up from the depths of ether, where the gods live and work. All up the sides of those
precipitous mountains, on every ledge of rock, in every cleft, trees, heather and mosses
cling and cluster till the rock seems bursting into songs of joy and love; so rich the spirit
of life is there. And high above are marvelous caves with groves of fairy dwarfing trees at
every entrance, where none but birds and those who come in dreams, or after death,
floating adown the valley in their bodies of light, can enter.
Here is the resting place for weary souls. This is fairy land, and yet it is on earth and
in the 19th century.
There is another lake in a land that has fallen asleep. The sun of its glory went down
in a blood-red glare of stormy hate and the hand of a fierce, wild spirit of war seems to have
gripped the land and held it bound choked in the clutch of the dead Past. For around on
the mountain slopes and rocky precipices no single tree or shrub is seen, but only the
mosses, lichens and heather toiling bravely to redeem the curse of barrenness that has
fallen on the land, and here and there dwarf clumps of gorse make golden lights amid the
purple gloom, and when the sun shines there a sense of awe and stillness seems to
pervade the place and the deep shadows of the mountain gorges are like the shades of
destiny lingering round the battlegrounds of man 's iniquities; and yet the very gloom and
barrenness and the dark shuddering surface of the lake are themes of wondrous melody
chanted by Nature in a voiceless harmony. The song of battle rings among the mountains
and the throbbing of the harps still pulses through the air that rushes by so fitfully; while
ever from the depths of those forbidding mountains comes a deep-toned echo of the
ancient hymn of Love and Life and utter peacefulness. That was the song of Nature in a
golden age long past and sleeping deep within the
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bosom of the Eternal Mother, till here again the dawn shall break and here again the
singing of the Bards reborn shall reawaken the slumbering heart of Love in this forgotten
home of Mystery. I sat thinking of these places I had visited and weaving their memories
into strange fantastic schemes of color and form when an old friend came to see me, trying
to sell me some Eastern embroideries; that was his trade and he knew the salesman's art
and could tell wonderful Arab and Persian tales in his broken English to beguile the buyer
into a suitable frame of mind for the purchase of some piece of work. I looked with interest
at his stock of old embroideries till one stray piece of Japanese work caught my eye, and
as he held it up there sparkled from it all the fresh, bright joy of life and breath of nature,
that was lingering in the memory of the little mountain lake I spoke of first. I hardly saw the
pattern or the method of the work; certainly there were figures, flowers, and birds or
dragons, I forget, but all the robe was just one harmony of rippling color and form that
seemed to my delighted fancy to be accompanied by strange music and a perfume of
sweet heather in bloom, and then I understood that in that robe I saw a truer rendering of
that phase of nature, mirrored in my memory of a mountain lake, than a picture painted on
the spot by any realistic landscape painter could have given. And I began to talk of that
first visit to the lake, and all my thoughts and dreams of the great gods, and he in turn told
me strange stories of his wanderings and of his Sheik, his master and his mystic dreams
and visions, for he hailed me as a brother dervish reverencing the Supreme as Unity in all
this world's diversity. So we talked on until the daylight faded and the evening glow came
through the low-arched western window of the great rambling chamber in the roof that
served me for a studio, and the dark eyes of my old Arab friend glistened with tears of love
and sorrow as he told how he had wandered from the Master's path, but ever seeking to
return, looked forward to the great reunion of all lovers of the One Beloved and to the
promised dawn that is to come after the terrible night of storm of massacre is past. These
things his Sheik had prophesied to him even in his youth, and he himself in visions of the
night had seen the coming of the evil days and of the promised dawn. So in the deepening
shadow of the place we parted, counting ourselves the richer in our poverty for words of
wisdom and each other's sympathy.
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THE possession of power in man is manifested by certain unerring signs that fit to
any occasion whether of action or repose, and make both action and restraint, speech or
silence fitting and sufficient. We say of such, "he is the man for the time, or the place." If
we notice the signs of power only on great occasions, and if they are suddenly revealed in
one in whom their existence had been unsuspected, the problem is not altered.
Circumstances can only serve to bring into action that which already existed within.
Circumstances never create heroism; though they may give opportunity for its
manifestation.
That man or woman who knows how to do the right thing, at the right time and place,
and in the right way, is possessed of real power. Knowledge of the proper time for action,
and the ability to act at that time, and in the most appropriate manner, with sufficient force
and no more, pre-supposes also the ability to restrain action until that time, and to measure
the energy required at that time with exactness. Will, power, judgment and self-restraint
enter into all wise and efficient action.
In this measure of power, silence and inaction often manifest will-power in the
highest degree, and the ability to wait patiently and serenely the appointed hour springs
only from real knowledge.
To be able at any time to exercise or to subordinate the centres of action to the
judgment and the will is the secret of power, and this is the result of self-discipline, or
cultivation.
It is true that certain individuals seemingly possess this secret of power as a natural
endowment, independent of cultivation, and that it is supposed to be the result of heredity
and not of self-discipline. This, however, is altogether an illusion. That power should in
one instance be demonstrably the result of painstaking endeavor and severe self-discipline
requiring a lifetime for its development, and that in another case it should be a gift
altogether gratuitous would be so contradictory and so manifestly unjust as to be absolutely
untenable.
When, however, reincarnation is admitted as a factor in all human development it
can at once be seen that self-conquest applies in every case, and that in any case power
is only so won, while heredity is given not only its full value in individual development, but
it is readily understood why like egos belong to the same group, and why exceptions in
hereditary traits also occur. Heredity fails to explain the secret of power, because of the
many exceptions which prove the contrary. Reincarnation explains the secret of power and
explains heredity also.
If, therefore, power is seen to be due to self-discipline in the growth of an individual
in the present life, we are justified in concluding that where it appears seemingly
spontaneous in one who has not been schooled in self-restraint it is the result of evolution
in a former existence. In other words, if power depends upon self-restraint and is only so
derived through the years of experience we are justified in concluding that it never comes
in any other way, and it is far more logical to assume previous experience than to annul the
law so clearly demonstrated and so universally operative as far as observation and
experience go.
Now what is the meaning of self-discipline that broadens knowledge, deepens
intelligence, quickens the perceptions, strengthens the will and is, therefore, the secret of
power? How may one proceed who desires to possess power?
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The point of attack is the emotions and feelings. The perturbations produced by the
emotions and feelings in the field of consciousness are like the waves produced by the
wind on the surface of a clear lake. Instead of one broad clear expanse reflecting like a
mirror all objects above and around in its clear depths, the lake is in constant motion and
its surface is broken by a thousand waves with divergent planes reflecting only broken and
distorted images.
The consciousness of man is like the lake; the passions are the winds that blow;
the emotions and feelings are the waves, and the broken and distorted images are the
illusions of sense and time, that crowd out the permanent and the true.
In order to act with judgment and discrimination, or to withhold action wisely, one
must see things as they are, and must be able to entirely eliminate the personal equation.
He must be able to look events and circumstances squarely in the face and, for the time,
dissociate them from himself entirely. He will thus approach the "thing in itself," and be
able to estimate it at its true value.
Such a course of self-discipline is difficult to maintain, but it has not only to be
persisted in, it must become automatic or habitual. It is achieved only by the few, because
the many either do not think it desirable, or are unwilling to pay the price of freedom and
power, wisdom and nobility of character.
It is so easy for most people to talk when they have nothing to say. It is so easy to
act from impulse or excitement when we have no motive for action, just as easy as for the
clear surface of the lake to be broken into ripples by any wind that blows, or into howling
waves by a tornado. It is so easy to comment on the actions of others, to criticize their
motives and assail their character when the whole subject is really none of our business,
and we really know little or nothing about it. It is thus that we weaken and deprave our own
character, and injure others for lack of a little self-restraint and sincere honesty. It is thus
that our words and actions lose all power for good, and fail to carry weight or manifest
power, except for mischief and evil.
All such conduct is, in the first place, uncharitable; such as we do not like to have
others exercise towards us. In one word, it is unbrotherly. The foundation of the building
of character is ethical. It is the motive that determines action. If we really desire not only
not to injure others but really to benefit them all we can, we shall find here a sufficient
motive for self-restraint and discipline. This is the reason so much stress is laid on the
principle of Brotherhood in the T. S. It is the solid rock upon which all ethics rest, the one
true and everlasting test of conduct, and while it benefits the world and elevates humanity
as nothing else can, it is, at the same time, the only means of progress, and the final test
of power with every individual.
This basis of ethics is, in the first place, a matter of sentiment born in the realm of
feeling, the fruit of human sympathy. It is wise, therefore, to create a universal sentiment
of Brotherhood, for only so can the attention of the thoughtless, the indifferent, and the
selfish be challenged, and held. But let no one imagine that Brotherhood is merely a
sentiment. A great deal is gained when the sentiment becomes habitual, and even where
the practice of the individual contradicts the sentiment, such an individual is not worse, but
better for the sentiment. He who admires the sentiment and tries, however feebly, to act
upon it, is bettered by just so much endeavor, though he fail in living up to it habitually.
Beyond the sentimental and the purely ethical basis of self-discipline, there is the
metaphysical, the philosophical, and finally the scientific.
In conquering the passions and learn-
--- 19
ing to control the emotions and feelings, there occur certain physical and physiological
changes in the human organism on the well-known principle that structure and function
develop pari-passu by exercise. Hence, the restraint, or nonuse of an organ or a function
tends to atrophy. The emotional realm (the sensory ganglia), dominant in the animal and
in animal man will lose control and be replaced by the higher function of judgment,
intelligence and will. No longer the slave of the passions and emotions, man by self-
discipline will become their master.
Now by referring to the illustration of the clear and placid lake as representing the
consciousness of man when undisturbed by the waves of passion, we may contrast the
ripple, the dash, and the roar of waves with the utter silence of the placid lake when
undisturbed. In one case the lake itself is noisy, in the other silence reigns. Here is a
complete change of vibration. It is the action of the wind upon the lake that makes the
noise. When there is no wind the lake is noiseless, and remember it is the passions,
feelings and emotions that represent the wind. Now, clear the consciousness of man from
these, that is, lay them to rest and this consciousness becomes a mirror for reflecting
faithfully real images, and at the same time a sounding board for all outer vibrations. One
can easily test this by the echoes so readily heard on the clear lake and inaudible when the
lake is disturbed.
When, therefore, the consciousness of man is habitually held calm and serene, only
true reflections are presented to the ego, and these can be examined leisurely and
dispassionately. These being true and taken as the basis of knowledge and action, such
action will be powerful and far-reaching.
The law of use and development as applied to individual organs so long familiar to
physiologists is sure to govern in broader areas of development, and to apply equally to the
organism as a whole in its relation to the ego.
Self-discipline, self-development, and final mastery of man over his own organism,
functions, faculties, and environment, may thus be seen to rest on well-ascertained laws
of physics and physiology, and the achievement of power is the higher evolution of man.
Many persons make the mistake of supposing that self-mastery as herein outlined
would kill out all feeling, sentiment and emotion, and convert man into an intellectual
automaton. Is there then no difference between controlling and killing? Cannot one be
pleased or amused without giving vent to roaring laughter like a clown or an imbecile?
Cannot one appreciate beauty or loveliness without an insane frenzy to devour or to
destroy? Self-mastery teaches one how to appreciate both beauty and ugliness, loveliness
and deformity, virtue and vice, at their true value. It also teaches one to discern beneath
the less perfect and the more perfect alike, the one life, the one intelligence, the one love
that pervade the universe. It is the ability to discern this, and the action that is based upon
it that is the secret of power.
The motive of all effort and the aim of evolution is to constitute man a self-conscious
centre of power and a co-worker for the uplifting of humanity. If the foregoing
considerations seem lacking in force or clearness we have only to consider the effect of
allowing the passions, feelings and emotions to have full sway, to run riot, and dominate
the individual. Hysteria, melancholia, or "emotional insanity", is the result, and there are
in every community many such individuals who are practically insane, and who, barely
escape the madhouse. Many more are weak almost to imbecility, and to these must be
added the criminal classes,
The lower nature must be dominated by intelligence and the moral sense, and self-
restraint must be supplemented by
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right action in order to develop real power, and this means control of the emotions,
subjugation of the passions, and elevation of the aims of the individual. This is
synonymous with the higher evolution of man, and the end is human perfection.
If every child were taught self-restraint and habitual kindness to others from infancy,
thus rooting out selfishness, it would be of far more value than anything else that so-called
"education" could bestow, and we might presently see a near solution of all social
problems, and a race of not only powerful, but humane men and women.
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PERHAPS it may not be many years now before the idea of a Self in nature begins
to gain a hold in the minds of men, but that time is certainly not yet. I want, however, to
deal with some points in the evolution of man with reference to that view. Without it, the
facts of nature may easily seem to suggest a universal automatism, at any rate up to man
and including man so far as a large part of his consciousness is concerned. But with it,
many facts become intelligible, and we can conceive that what is automatism for an
unselfconscious individual is an expression of the will of that great Life which actuates (in
entering and passing out of) the individual; and also that to acquire Egoism, to become
self-aware, is to become self-directive, to become a spark of self-knowing will, free as the
whole.
When the amoeba, a protoplasmic speck of ponds, is touched by a particle of food,
it feels the touch, and answers by a movement that enfolds the particle into its centre. This
is scientifically called a "reflex action," a term covertly but not overtly implying that it is
unattended with consciousness; nevertheless when it has become much more complex,
it is regarded as the objective basis of conscious mind, information not being forthcoming
as to the date of the accession of consciousness. Similarly the ameba feels the light and
warmth when the sun shines, moving then more actively. We may suppose that in its dim
way it has a consciousness like our own of light and warmth, and of the need for and
presence of food. As we pass higher up the animal scale, this dim feeling becomes
brighter and approaches mentality. The feeling and therefore the reaction differ according
to whether the touching particle is or is not food. Here is the germ of reason. The creature
begins to have memory of the kind of touch that a particle of food inflicts. It compares this
memory of a feeling with the present feeling of being touched, deciding that as they are not
alike the present touch is from something that is not food and should be left alone. The
reaction of an amoeba to any touch is comparable to the crystallizing reaction of a
supersaturated solution of a salt on being touched, but no such solution could be so
educated as to learn to crystallize when touched by a flaxen thread and not to do so when
touched by a silken. The protoplasmic particle of which we are speaking has learned to
reason. Reasoning is, radically, the comparison of two sensations. It is the more or less
immediate deciding that something we now see or cognize or have in memory is like or
unlike something also present or in memory. It seems to be the coexistence of three states
of consciousness, and to set at naught the unproved dictum that only one state can exist
at one time. But there seems no more reason for asserting that Egoism is necessary to the
more complex process
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than that it is necessary to the simple process of cognition. But whereas we can conceive
of a physical basis to a sensation and its resulting reflex action, and even to a memory of
a sensation, we can conceive of no physical basis to the comparing process. The bare
juxtaposition of two sensations, one or both memorized, is conceivable as having a physical
basis; the act of comparison is a process only of consciousness, not necessarily Egoistic.
An Ego is a consciousness that is aware of itself, and that subhuman consciousness that
can compare two states of itself in a third state need not have yet evolved the power of self-
recognition. In what way should we conceive the physical basis of reasoning to exist? In
a lowly organized life, every sensation probably gives immediate use to a movement. The
end of a spider's leg touches a hot needle. The nerve-wave goes up the leg to the ganglia
that constitutes his brain, a sort of telegraph station, and is thence reflected off down other
nerves to the appropriate muscles whose contractions move the leg. All this could
conceivably be imitated by a machine so constructed that a hot touch to one of its wire legs
would rise as a heat-wave to a central station within and be there changed into an
equivalent quantity of electricity or other force made to operate in moving the machine
away by means of the necessary mechanical apparatus. This is already the feat of a
locomotive engine, which moves upon contact with a sufficient amount of heat. Is the
spider then a machine? In the locomotive a certain quantity of heat force, represented in
the spider by the wave of nerve-sensation from the hot needle which he touches, becomes
changed within the engine into an equivalent quantity of mechanical force which moves the
engine, represented in the spider by the descending nerve current which moves his
muscles. It seems true then that the spider is a machine, and that what he does can be
computed and described in mechanical phrases. If that be so, it would not be correct to
speak of him as having self-will or freewill; through him shines the will of nature, the forces
of nature flow through him, but he does not as a unit exercise upon those forces any
directive power, he does not seize as it were a portion of the will of nature and make it his
own free-will. And similarly it may be true that the amount of force a man takes in, in his
life, in the form of food and such other nature-energies as light, heat, etc., are equal to
those he puts forth as action while life remains to him. The spider is therefore a machine,
and yet also he is something more. In our supposed machine the ascending current of
heat is, at the centre, at once transformed into the descending electric current.
Both heat and electricity are motion of matter, like all manifested force. But in the
spider, the current that ascends to his brain along the nerves of the leg does not at once
descend from the brain along the nerves that go to the leg. It halts a minute in that little
brain before it is transformed into the equal amount of force or motion which manifests as
the descending nerve-current. We must suppose a moment in which this force, having
reached the brain, is no longer motion in matter, and is become motion in consciousness,
and this transforming motion in consciousness transforms or modifies the consciousness
in the way that we call cognition or sensation. It is motion on a plane of the spider's being
that is above his physical body, the movement of consciousness from state to state, for
motion is the root of real being. Then retransformed, it again becomes physical motion in
the brain and so down the nerves to the muscles. The spider therefore appears to differ
from the machine, in that, half-way along the physical circuit, physical motion is temporarily
transformed into, and then back from, motion of consciousness. The vague feeling of
materialism with
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which this statement inspires us is due to the fact that we figure to ourselves the whole
process in terms of sensuous consciousness, and it would disappear if we learned to
represent it in terms of immediate subjectivity. Thus conceived, all motion would be
primarily regarded as motion in consciousness (of the world-self) reflected into our objective
consciousness if of the objective planes, and motion in itself would be known as the
unmanifested deity when considered apart from the thing moved. It seems, therefore an
error to depict an interval of time (and even of space) as occurring in the transit from the
platform of bodily matter to that of consciousness. The real philosophies would begin their
conception of the universe above, and take it downward, having thus no difficulty in
conceiving of continuous conscious life from top to bottom; the materialist begins from
below, and groping in the objective with a consciousness trained only to deal with that,
conceives of unconscious matter from bottom to top. Describing therefore our spider in the
terms of the latter, but with an addition, we shall say that the spider is a machine, though
part of the machine is conscious, and that so far as his little self is concerned he has no
free will, being grasped body and soul by the will of nature. The consciousness of animals
forms one of the necessitated links (to speak in terms of time) in physical chains of forces.
There is no free-will. A physiological wave of nerve-motion rises along the nerves of his
limbs or of the senses, reaches and becomes motion in his cerebral particles, "ascends"
further and becomes that motion in his consciousness that is thought, memory, sensation,
emotion, "then" is reconverted into nerve motion and lastly muscular motion. Of course at
various steps in its progress it may unlock comparatively latent motion previously stored
up. But (at any rate up to the mammalia) there may be no will so far as the animal is
individually concerned; the force flows of itself; by it he is made to feel and think; by it he
moves. There may be no more will than in the terminal clock-face of an electric wire.
Suppose that this clock-face had a consciousness and that the current ran up into this
before returning to affect the needle, and you have an animal. It takes equal force to move
the needle from the perpendicular to either side, and if you imagine that the consciousness
of the plate, having absorbed the current for a moment could determine to which direction
the emergent current should move the needle, you would have man, the willer; for man can
direct the mode or direction of the current as it emerges from his consciousness to his
brain, causing it to traverse one or another channel and effect one or another motion. This,
without creating any new force; and while it is within his consciousness, he can direct it this
way or that, resulting in this or that train of thought or feeling, thus deflecting or transmuting
if he will an animal emotion into a better.
It would seem then that the process of pure reasoning is a reflex act or set of acts,
not requiring the cooperation of the Ego. It is a chain whose unvarying links are
comparable to the chain of physical phenomena. Though the data with which it is occupied
may be given from the noetic consciousness, it is in no way noetic in essence; it is
essentially determined and involuntary, and man, if he had never received any noetic or
Egoistic illumination, might nevertheless have become as perfect a reasoner as he is now.
The phantom "charged with animal consciousness of a superior kind" of which man once
consisted, according to the Secret Doctrine, was capable by virtue of that consciousness
alone (a determined, reflex, sensuous consciousness) of evolving the power of perfect
reasoning, though the data upon which all reasoning would then have been founded would
have come only from the psychic,
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sensuous, cognitions. These would have led only to a line of reasoned entire selfishness
of action, for a rudimentary sensation with a resulting determined reflex is on its conscious
side the rudiment of an act of reasoning. Neither free will nor Ego has any essential
relation to it. If consciousness is furnished with the data that two sides of a certain triangle
are equal, it is a necessitated chain of reasoning that delivers the conclusion that the
angles at the base are also equal. When the amoeba has a touch from a speck of food and
at once catches hold of it, there is a sensation and an elementary act of reasoning, like that
of the spider with the hot needle, like that of the man who sees a cab coming rapidly upon
down the street, like that of the astronomer who predicts an eclipse. This is an ascending
scale, no freewill is involved, self-consciousness is not necessary though consciousness
is. All reasoning is a necessitated chain, of which each link must follow the preceding, the
links being parts of a complicated machine, the psychic mind. Certain categories, and the
forms of space and time, involved in the process, belong to the essence of the mind in
nature, and are more or less active forms in the essence of every conscious unit that
differentiates itself out of nature. Animals reason, they have the psychic mind, and in a
degree the reasoning consciousness, but the animal has not yet got to the thought of itself
as an Ego, and until that stage is reached there is no will. Therefore the animal is a psychic
machine, bound to necessity, a thinking automaton, an expression of the will for him of
nature, part of a pattern, not a pattern for himself. He is as man was in early history, bound
to nature, part of nature, of the same stuff as nature, all in the chain of matter-
consciousness of natural events, in the flow of automatic natural forces.
According to the Secret Doctrine the flood of astral lunar monads arrived upon this
chain of worlds for their cycles thereon. It may be roughly said that they had two planes
of consciousness, quite unconnected. They were lives in the ocean of Life, and as
composing that Life they had one common divine consciousness. They had also on a very
low plane an individualized consciousness. They were globules of astral nature, and nature
was as etherial as they. Therefore the nature-forces flowed into and out of them, as water
flows through a floating tree-trunk, and they had neither will nor Ego. These forces flowed
from nature into their consciousness, becoming therein sensation; then out again into
nature as the motions of their forms. Consciousness was one of the links of transit, and
originated none of it. They were germs of psychic mind, astral germs, for the psychic mind
(now kama rupa) is on its material side an astral nucleus of substance. It is so now, and
astral clairvoyance is simply the conscious possession and use of that community of
substance of the psychic substance and the astral light. This psychic stuff of ours on the
planes of the astral light is our reasoning mind, for we saw that sensation is the germ of
and begets reasoning. And sensation starts, therefore, on the astral plane and is of the
astral, not physical body. We, as Egos, are unconscious of physical sensation till from the
physical it has mounted to the place where we sit, namely, the astral sheaths. If it does not
reach that, we remain unconscious of it, though the body may give forth reflex action, as
where the spinal cord is injured at the neck, for example. A touch on the soles of the feet
may then produce a kick of which the patient may know nothing, though his spinal cord
does. The primordial astral lunar germs are therefore what are now our minds, psychic,
astral, reasoning. Only there is now present therein what was not there at first, namely, the
consciousness of Ego, and the rudiment of a noetic element. This noetic ray renders mem-
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ory an active power. Hence the psychic sensations, memorized as a long train, produce
that evolved Egoism in the psychic nature that is the reflection of the noetic Ego and
constitutes the personal man. The psychic germ is an expression of the will of nature; and
that will is expressed in the psychic consciousness as cognition and as desire, a desire
leading to outward action as the means of development of points of contact between nature
and itself. This desire is the parent of the organs of sense and of action. But, not realizing
itself as a self, not therefore being an Ego, it cannot will, but is willed by nature.
We are come upon the old question of Freewill in man. Will, as distinct from desire,
is of the Ego, and differs in that from desire. For desire is of the kamic, psychic nature,
essentially unconnected with self-knowledge; will is of the noetic, and is in proportion to
the degree of self-consciousness. The confusion of the question seems to be due to
defective definition of freewill. There is no external compulsion needed to make a rocket
ascend. To ascend when lit is the realization of its own nature, and it does not follow
because we know the nature and can predict the ascent that we compel the ascent. We
avail ourselves of the nature that we know to exist. There is nothing external to ourselves
that can prevent us realizing our own nature once we become conscious of it. Those who
doubt freewill do so because they do not understand the meaning of the word. Freewill is
the necessity of realizing our nature; it accompanies consciousness of that nature, or self-
consciousness; it is that self-consciousness, and from it flows action. What we are within,
we act outwardly; if we know what we are within, the acts are voluntary. They are not
necessitated by our nature, for we cannot necessitate ourselves. Self-consciousness and
freewill are identical. But, it may be said, then the animal has freewill, for in every outward
act it out-realizes its own inward animal nature; the rocket has freewill, for in its act,
ascension, it realizes its internal potency. But if, as I am maintaining, the animal is no less
an automaton than a rocket and equally devoid of self-awareness, only differing therefrom
in being a conscious automaton, it is not the animal who by self-directed energy realizes
himself, but the world-life which through him realizes itself to the extent of animalism. The
world-soul is the life of nature, and through the ascending kingdoms of nature out-realizes
more and more of its latent qualities, which are infinite. In the animal it realizes its aspect
as animal consciousness. But the animal, like the early human psychic germ, is only a part
of the web of nature, and whatever forces of nature flow about the strands of the web flow
through the animal and are not directed by him. But in man as he is now, the automatically
acting consciousness of the animal has begun to reach the conception of itself as an Ego,
and forthwith the Ego proceeds to direct his own operations. This has only begun, for
ordinarily we are acted through by desire. The Ego has begun to be an adult, and the
nature-forces still flow through it, awaking cognition, desire, and conscious reflex response;
these we are beginning to direct, so that when they emerge from us they express our
internal condition rather than their own nature-quality. The world-life has the will to realize
itself, but when it has got so far as to realize itself in the Egos of men, those Egos forthwith
take upon themselves the future work. The one life does not impose anything upon them,
for they are it, each an aspect, and in all they do they are only carrying out their nature.
Reasoning would never give nor reveal self-consciousness; it is only the product of
memorized sensations, fitted upon a framework. For the attainment by yoga of full self-
consciousness, psychic sensation and reasoning must both be sus-
--- 25
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------------
THE tendency of thinking, especially in recent times, has been more and more in the
direction of freedom from established forms. Some advance has thus been made, although
real knowledge is still to a great degree unattained by the world at large. Intellectual
development ought to be as gradual as physical, and if, as science admits, the world of
matter has taken millions of years to reach its present standard, then the mind of Man
should have acquired its limited capacity only through equally vast ages of experience. It
may be admitted that Mind, as we understand it, came into existence long after material
forms were organized, and is therefore in a cruder stage of development than the latter, but
this is only additional testimony to the truth of the grand principle of evolution. Darwin
showed how the same emotions which animate human beings were expressed, though less
perfectly, in the lower animals, and argued from this our descent or ascent from the brute
creation. But he proved herein more than he intended; he proved the evolution of Mind
as well as of Matter.
If there were no restraining forces in the world of thought we might see a progress
so rapid as to be unhealthy or even destructive. But there is, first of all, a conservative
element in the makeup of most men which induces them to cling to recognized beliefs, to
reject or even to ridicule or oppose novel theories and facts. Men of scientific acumen and
learning have been known not only to condemn hastily the greatest scientific discoveries,
but even to refuse them an investigation. In the field of religion this conservatism is still
more strongly marked. Leaving out of consideration the masses, - the millions of
unthinking, unreading, blind followers of creeds and cults, - it is truly remarkable how many
educated and intellectual people are in religious matters mere passive tools, clinging
without question to the most absurd and childish beliefs.
Another important hindrance to the evolution of Mind has been the decadence of
races and nations with their accumulated civilizations. Ancient Egypt had stored up in its
priesthood many esoteric truths which failed of transmission to a later age. The resurrected
library of Sargon shows but dimly the high state of culture prevailing in Chaldea six
thousand years ago. In India the seventh school of philosophy, the Occult, is a dead-letter,
except as it is preserved in a fragmentary condition by a few rare hermits in cavern and
forest. Yet as evolution is not by any means a steady growth, but meets with all kinds of
interruptions and setbacks, and is generally thought to proceed in cyclic fashion, owing to
the frequent recurrence of old ideas, we can trace throughout all the ages the evolution of
the World-Mind, in spite of human weakness and error, superstition and folly, the death of
individuals and the decline of civilizations.
One of the most essential features of a rational theory of evolution is time - long time
- periods that can hardly be measured by years. This is conceded by Darwin and all other
writers who have adopted his principle relating to the physical development of the globe.
A hundred million years are not regarded by physicists as too long a period for the atoms
of the earth to arrange themselves into their present infinite variations of form. As this is
a mere guess, however, it would be just as easy to estimate the time required at two
hundred millions or a thousand billions of years. The only sensible method of estimating
is to give no figures, but only to say that the pro-
--- 28
cess of evolution must have consumed tremendous, measureless, ages. Neither Darwin
nor any other recognized authority has dared to name the number of years that have
elapsed since the first and lowest man evolved out of the highest type of the lower animal.
It should be borne in mind that at that distant date even the animals could not have been
developed to anywhere near their present stage, none having then been domesticated;
consequently the first man must have been of the most primitive and savage kind - a mere
freak or "sport" of Nature. Science now admits the existence of Man in the tertiary epoch
of geology, which could not have been less than 250,000, and more probably was 850,000
years ago. But that admission is made with extreme reluctance, and is still regarded by
many as a tentative theory. Likewise the presumption that color in races is due to climate
has been fiercely combated by the more conservative writers, who see that to admit its
probability would be to raise afresh the question of long chronology. To change the color
of a whole race from black to white without miscegenation would require thousands or
hundreds of thousands of years. Yet if all prejudice were banished, and the question
calmly considered, it must be seen that, given a common ancestry, the variations of color
in human races can only be due to differences in climate, notwithstanding Darwin's
argument in favor of sexual selection.
While it is true that we have no historical records dating back of five or six thousand
years B.C. we do have a knowledge of the existence of civilized society at that time, with
a high cultivation of the arts, to achieve which from a savage state would have required
vast stretches of time. Geology points to hundreds of thousand of years. Is it not probable
that during that period of gradual evolution races were born, grew into civilized
communities, and passed away; that continents rose up out of the deep, were peopled,
and again sank out of sight; that mountain chains were forced up by the billows of internal
fire, and were anon transformed by earthquakes into valleys and fertile lands, - and, that,
through it all, though history might be lost in the obscuring mist of time, the great law never
failed to work, slowly and painfully, upon the mind and soul of Man?
Materialistic writers of the present day regard mind as a mere property of the
physical brain, a thought being thus considered as a vibration of the brain atoms.
Regarding this inadequate theory Dr. Paul Carus, the learned editor of the Monist, says:
"So long as we regard our bodies as our true existence, and mind as a mere function of the
body, we cannot reach a satisfactory view of the world, and shall be unable to explain our
deepest and holiest aspirations. Our body is transient; it is doomed to die; indeed its very
life is a continuous death, a constant decay, and an incessant burning away. Yet the soul,
the so-called function, is permanent. As we inherited our soul from the past, so we shall
transmit it to the future. The sacred torch of mental life is handed down from generation
to generation, and the spiritual treasures increase more and more with the immortalized
results of our labors." This explanation, though not as precise as desirable, may be
allowed to stand for the present; mind, soul and spirit, far from being identical, as is so
often thoughtlessly declared, in reality may be regarded as expressing different and
advancing stages in human evolution. The mind, representing the mere intellect or
accumulated book knowledge of the ages, becomes soul when it has developed intuitive
or original wisdom. This real wisdom is the bridge which unites the mind with the spirit, and
leads up to the latter in the natural course of evolution.
--- 29
Thus we find that thought is not the actual vibration of physical brain atoms, but is
the message of the inner self or soul to the physical atoms, setting up therein the vibrations
which produce the so-called thought-forms of recent occult science.
But in order to arrive at a clear understanding of this metaphysical subject, it is better
to trace the existence of mind downward or backward to its lowliest origin. Darwin has
amply proven that mental faculties as well as emotions are plainly observable in all
domestic animals and in many that are untamed. Love, gratitude, terror, courage, - these
and many more such emotions are found even in the lower animals, while in the lowest
organisms is displayed an instinct which may be recognized as incipient mind. The beaver,
the ant, the dog and the horse, as well as many other animals, undoubtedly exercise
reason and judgment, and the instinct of the migratory birds is unquestioned.
It is difficult to draw the line betwixt intelligence and instinct. Up to a comparatively
recent period the former was thought to be peculiar to man and the latter to the lower
animals. This was, generally speaking, the attitude of the Church. The science of today,
however, places the dawn of intelligence far down in the scale of animal development.
Such animals as are guided only by instinct belong to the lowest forms; in fact, it may be
observed that no creature stands so low in the scale of evolution as to be without this
inward impulse by which it is directed to do what is necessary for the continuation of the
individual and of the species. Thus the primitive instinct of self-preservation, as seen in the
cuttlefish when endeavoring to escape from an enemy, gradually develops into the sexual
selection of the butterfly, and thence onward through inheritance, acquired habit, imitation,
and association, to the expression of the emotions, and thus on through vast ages of
minute variation to the evolution of mind. Intellect is no more than the accumulated
knowledge derived from experience. It would not be difficult to cite a vast number of
instances, resulting from actual observation in the past, to illustrate the gradations of
mental growth in the animal world, up from the indications of instinct in the feeblest insect
to the self-conscious reasoning of the human being. These facts which have been
scientifically proven, together with many others which can be verified by analogy, leave us
in a deplorable position if we accept the ordinary theory of birth, life and death. But taken
in connection with reincarnation, they give us a complete philosophy, - complete and
satisfactory. It is not even necessary to cite the argument of justice, or the doctrine of
karma. I believe in reincarnation on account of all these familiar reasons, but I also believe
that the scientific facts as above outlined are alone sufficient to convince us not only of the
truth of reincarnation, but of its absolute necessity.
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--- 31
AMONG the Mystics, who, during the 18th century, were active in endeavoring to
form a Universal Brotherhood League for the help of suffering humanity, none was more
widely known or more justly celebrated than the Count Saint Germain. Like all true
reformers he was misunderstood and reviled by the many, and only partially appreciated
or understood by the few. Accused of being a spy, for which even his most bitter
opponents admit there was not the slightest proof, he lived for many years the friend and
counselor of kings, to finally apparently die at the court of the Landgrave Charles of Hesse.
The literature of his time and the memoirs of his contemporaries are filled with
allusions to this wonderful man and his extraordinary gifts. He spoke all languages with
equal facility, and related, as if he had been an eye-witness of them, scenes and
conversations which had occurred centuries before. He described people most minutely,
as if he had known them personally. He understood the secrets of nature as only those do
who walk hand in hand with her. To the doubting and materialistic age in which he came
he gave many a sign, which they, not understanding, set down to sorcery or charlatanism.
They were forced to admit the fact, however, that he understood how to remove stains from
diamonds, and to perform other seeming miracles in the eyes of even the most skilled
chemists. In the life of the Landgrave Prince Charles of Hesse, who was a deep student
of occultism, the following statement is made:
"The Count of Saint Germain was simply a man of science who reasonably enough
might have been burned for a wizard or magician in the dark ages; and was mistaken for
a conjurer by the countrymen and contemporaries of Voltaire. He was especially learned
in chemistry, botany, and metallurgy and understood to perfection the art of polishing
precious stones. There was hardly anything in nature that he did not know how to improve
and utilize. He communicated to me almost all knowledge of this kind, but only the
elements, making me investigate for myself by experiments the means of success, and
rejoiced extremely at my progress." Again he says: "He was thoroughly acquainted with
the properties of plants and herbs, and had invented medicines by which he preserved his
health and prolonged his life. I have still all his prescriptions, but the doctors vehemently
denounced his science after his death."
Madame de Hausset, Baron Gleichen and the Count of Casanova all allege the fact
that he never ate at any table, nor invited anyone to eat with him, alleging that his food
would not suit them. He so entranced people with his conversation that in their turn they
forgot to taste the viands placed before them. His famed Elixir of Life he did not pretend
would renew youth, but that it would prolong life. At various periods of his life, separated
often by a score or more of years, he always seemed to be about 45 or 50 years old. He
is described as being of middle height and powerfully built.
In Lascelles Wraxall, occurs the following: "Differing from other char-
--- 32
latans, he never offered to sell governments the art of making gold, but pointed out to them
the means of enriching themselves by the employment of all sorts of economical receipts
as well as great financial operations."
He is said to have played an important part in the revolution which placed Catherine
II. on the throne of Russia, and Baron Gleichen cites the fact that the Orloffs paid particular
attention to him at Leghorn in 1770.
Another historical fact is that, in 1777, Count St. Germain induced General Von
Steuben to come over to America and offer his sword to General Washington.
He went to Germany in 1762, where, according to the Memoires Authentiques of
Cagliostro, he initiated the latter into Freemasonry. After frequenting several of the
German courts he finally took up his residence in Schleswig-Holstein, where he and the
Landgrave Charles of Hesse pursued together the study of the secret sciences. He died
at Schleswig in 1780.
There can be little doubt, however, that the alleged death of the Count St. Germain
at the court of the Landgrave of Hesse Cassel did not take place as reported. The grave
was afterwards opened and no body found in it.
--------------
FRAGMENTS
"Calming thoughts of all, that coursing on, whate'er men's speculations, amid the
changing schools, theologies, philosophies, amid the bawling presentations new and old,
the round earth's silent vital laws, facts, modes, continue."
"If it shall ever happen to thee to be turned to outward things, in the desire to please
some person, know that thou hast lost thy way of life. Let it be enough for thee in all things
to be a philosopher. But if thou desire also to seem one, then seem so to thyself, - for this
thou canst."
"If thou wouldst advance, be content to let people think thee senseless and foolish
as regards external things. Wish not ever to seem wise, and if ever thou shalt find thyself
accounted to be somebody, then mistrust thyself. For know that it is not easy to make a
choice that shall agree both with outward things and with Nature, but it must needs be that
he who is careful of the one shall neglect the other."
"Open yourself to the pain and pleasure of the world; laugh with the children, listen
to the birds, learn from music and all beautiful things. Go to the bedsides of those who die
in hospitals, - go into the dark alleys of the city, and do not merely give, but get to know
what poverty means; go into the laboratories of vivisectors, and into the places where
animals are killed for food, and realize that the torture of the innocent is an actual fact; face
it all and feel it all, and recognize that the sin and shame of it are yours unless you fight
against them ceaselessly."
------------
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IN answer to a question, William Q. Judge once said to the writer that comparatively
few women had found their power, that although all women had it and used it, it was more
or less unconsciously and that "if a woman could find her power and use it consciously she
would become a tremendous force in the world." That power he defined as "the holding,
binding force."
This idea of the holding power of woman is not entirely a new one; yet, as given by
Mr. Judge, it took on a broader, deeper aspect as a factor potent for the good of humanity.
We are accustomed to thinking of the woman as the binding influence in the family. Yet
as this influence has usually been exercised to bind the family together to the exclusion of
all not of the same blood we have, not strangely, failed to see that this power which is
especially woman's may be exercised not only in the midst and for the help of her own
immediate circle, but in the service of all humanity, and surely the great human family
stands in sorer need of being bound together than ever did a group of beings joined by ties
of blood.
In the "Letters" Mr. Judge, speaking briefly of the question of sex, says that the
"female principle" - which he carefully distinguishes from the souls using it - represents
matter and tends to the established order. It is this quality which makes of the average
woman a conservative, trying to hold things as they are, thus forming a necessary balance
to man's tendency to change. This same quality, which now so often degenerates into
intolerance, because it rules in the woman, would, if ruled by her, become the "holding,
binding force" and capable of use for all mankind. The woman who is already convinced
of her responsibility in this direction can most surely help on the desired end by working
with other women and by giving active sympathy to women of all classes. For this force,
which is hers and which rules the personality of most women so strongly, can never be
conquered and harnessed to the service of humanity but by the heart.
Perhaps this broader use of woman's force has not always been possible; but surely
it is so today. It is possible, for every mother, through the love her own children have
drawn out in her, to learn to love and help childhood wherever she meets it; it is possible
for every sister to realize that the needs of her own brothers and sisters are the needs of
all those other brothers and sisters who go to make up the world. But, more than this, it is
possible for her, and therefore her special service to humanity, to help to bind together not
merely individuals but classes.
The greatest problem of today is not so much the wiping out of poverty and its
attendant miseries, though that problem is hard enough and pressing enough; nor the
obliteration of class distinctions, for these also have their lessons and uses; but the blotting
out of the feelings of bitterness and contemptuous antagonism which exist between these
classes.
--- 34
In this work every woman can engage, no matter what her other duties. To do this
she need not lecture, nor write, nor go out into the public world - though if she have leisure
and talent and opportunity in those directions she can do great good there - for it is in the
home that the greatest and most far reaching part of the work can be accomplished. To
do this the woman has only to enlarge the work she is already doing. She now gives to her
children - born and unborn, by act and word, but still more by the continual silent influence
of her own conviction, a sense of love for each other and of responsibility for each other's
welfare, and the sensitive minds and hearts of these little ones can as readily be given the
same feelings of love and responsibility for all mankind. Though they may never have to
work themselves they can be taught to recognize the dignity of labor and to see in the
"lower classes'' souls like their own temporarily in a different environment and working
bravely, even though unconsciously so, for the welfare of others.
This work among children is of immeasurable importance because of the vast
difference it will make in the thought of the next generation. And there are many others,
no longer children, to whom these lessons can be given by word and act and still more by
the subtle power of strong conviction.
Our present modes of thought, from which it is so hard to free mankind, are the
result of continued thinking in the direction of separateness, and can, therefore, best be
corrected by continued thought in an opposite direction. This quiet steady working towards
the binding together of humanity, towards the holding of all men in one common bond of
brotherhood, though it may not show results in a day, or in years, must surely do so in time.
The greater freedom now accorded to woman, her, so-called, larger duties as a
human being are liable to make her underrate this work which lies most especially within
her province and neglect her very special opportunity as a woman, thus bringing greater
injury to herself and loss to humanity than can readily be measured.
Theosophy, showing us as it does, the human soul passing (how frequently is not
to the present point) from one sex to another, also points out the corollary fact that each
sex has a use and duty in the evolution of mankind and that the human being who fails to
make the most of the special opportunities given by the special sex of any incarnation
neglects the chief privilege of that lifetime.
---------------
BUDDHA'S RENUNCIATION
Being an original translation from the Sanskrit of Ashvagosha's Buddha-Charita.
by Charles Johnston, M.R.A.S., F.T.S.
III.
AND certain nights he remained there, bright as the lord of night, observing well their
penances. Then considering the penances as vain, and leaving them, he set forth from the
region of that place of penances. Then the folk of the hermitage set forth after him, their
thoughts gone out to the splendor of his beauty; they went forth as the great masters do,
following the departing law, when the land is overrun by baser men.
And he beheld them, astir with their hair bound up in top-knots, as is the wont of
devotees, and clothed in the bark of trees; and meditating on their penances, he stood
there, hard by a great, wide-spreading forest tree. And all the men of the hermitage,
coming up, gathered around that most excellent of men, and stood there, near him. And
their elder, paying all courtesy and honor, spake thus to him with voice modulated as in the
holy chant:
"When thou earnest, this hermitage became as though filled and completed; but if
thou goest, it will be empty indeed. Therefore graciously refuse to leave it, lingering like
the well-loved life in the body of one who longs to live. For close by is Mount Shailas, of
the Himalay, where dwell masters of priestly birth, masters of royal birth, and masters of
birth divine; and from their nearness, the penances of our devotees are multiplied. And
there are holy refuges around us, that are very stairways to the doors of heaven. And there
dwell masters divine and mighty masters, whose spirits are at one with the law, who are
full of the spirit. And moreover this northern country is most fit for worship, since the law
dwells here in its excellence. For it is not fitting for one who is awakened, to take even one
step hence, toward the south.
"But if, in this wood of penance, thou hast beheld any remiss in holy rites, or falling
short of the law, or failed from purity, and if therefore thou hast set thy mind to depart, then
tell it, that thy dwelling-place may be made according to thy desire. For those who dwell
here earnestly desire such a one as thee, for companion in their penances, since thou hast
such a wealth of holiness. For to dwell with thee, who art like the king of the gods, will
surely bring us a sunrise of godlike wisdom."
Then he, who was the chiefest in wisdom, thus addressed by the chief of the men
of the hermitage, and standing in the midst of the devotees, - he who had promised to
make an end of birth and death, spoke thus his hidden thought:
"Through these kindly affectionate thoughts of righteous men, fulfillers of the law,
and saints, desiring to shew me hospitality, as to one of themselves, a great love and
friendship is born in me; I am, as it were, washed clean altogether by these loving words,
that find their way to my heart. My passion has faded altogether away, though I have but
newly sought the
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law; and it grieves me that I must leave you, after ye have thus dealt with me, giving me
shelter, and shewing me such strong affection; it grieves me, as though I had to leave my
kinsmen, and men of my own blood.
"But this law of yours makes for heaven, while my longing desire is for the ceasing
of birth and death. And I do not desire to dwell in this wood, for that the law of ceasing is
apart from the activities of these penances. Yet it is from no lack of love, nor from any
haughtiness towards others, that I go forth hence, from the forest; for ye all are like the
mighty masters, standing firm in the law that has come down from the days of old."
Hearing the prince's word, very kindly, of firm purpose, very gentle, and luminous,
and full of dignity, the men of the hermitage honored him with signal honor. And a certain
man among them, who had passed through the rites of second birth, who was smeared
with ashes, of great fervor, his locks bound in a topknot, his dress made of the bark of
trees, fiery-eyed, keen-nosed, and holding a water-pot in his hand, spoke to him this word:
"Sage, this resolve of thine is noble, in that, being still young, thou hast seen the evil
of life. For, judging between heaven and liberation, he whose mind is set on liberation is
truly wise. For it is through passion that they seek the way to heaven, through penances,
and sacrifices, and religious rites; but fighting passion as the chiefest foe, they who follow
peace seek the way to freedom.
"Then if thy mind be set as thou hast said, let my lord go without delay to the refuge
among the Vindhya mountains; for there dwells the Saint Aradas, who has gained the
intuition of the better way of freedom from desire. From him shalt thou hear the way of
truth, and shalt even enter on it, if so be thy will. But as I see, this thought of thine will enter
his mind also, stirring it with a great commotion. For beholding thy face, with nose well-
formed, as of a well-born steed; with large, long eyes; full red lower lip; teeth keen and
white, - this month of thine, and thy red tongue will drink up the ocean of the knowable,
altogether. And that matchless profundity of thine, and thy brightness, and all thy well-
marked gifts, will gain for thee a place as teacher of the world, such as was held by the
masters, in the ages that are gone."
So the King's son made answer once more to the sages assembled there, and took
leave of them, in gentle courtesy. And the men of the hermitage returned again to the
forest of penances.
Meanwhile Chhanda, the guardian of the prince' s steed, very despondent that his
master had renounced all to dwell in the forest, strove greatly, along the way, to contain his
grief, yet his tears fell, and ceased not. And the way that he had gone at the command of
the prince, in a single night, with the self-same steed, he now retraced slowly, thinking all
the while of his master's loss, - the self-same way, in eight full days. And yet the horse
went swiftly, but there was no fire in him, and his heart was heavy; and for all that he was
decked with bright adornments, he was as though shorn of his glory, when his prince was
gone.
And turning his face back towards the wood of penances, he neighed pitifully, again
and again; and though hunger was heavy on him, he tasted neither grass nor water as of
old, along
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the way, nor found any pleasure in them. So they two made their way towards the city of
Kapilavastu, robbed now of that mighty-souled well-wisher of the world; slowly they came
towards the city, as though it were empty, like the sky robbed of the lord of day.
And the self-same garden of the palace, even though it shone with lotuses, and was
adorned with fair waters and trees laden with flowers, was yet no fairer than the wilderness,
for the glory was gone from the grass. And hindered, as it were, by the people of the city
wandering in their way, with miserable minds, the fire gone out of them, their eyes all worn
with tears, they two slowly entered the town, downcast and covered with dust. And seeing
them, worn, and going onward in bodily weariness, because they had left the bull of the
Shakya clan behind, the townspeople shed tears in the path, as when of old the chariot of
Rama came back empty. And they spoke thus to Chhanda, full of grief, and shedding
many tears:
"Where is the King's son, who should make great the glory of his race, stolen away
by thee?" - thus asking-, they followed him.
Thereupon he answered them in their love:
"I abandoned not the son of the lord of men; for weeping I was thrust aside by him,
in the unpeopled wood, and his householder's robe as well.''
Hearing this word of his, the people went away, saying: "Hard, in truth, is this
decision;" nor kept they the grief-born drops within their eyes, and blaming within
themselves their own greed of wealth. "So," said they, "let us too enter the forest whither
has gone the prince's might; for we love not life without him, as the soul loves not the body,
whose vigor is departed. This fair city without him, is a wilderness; and the wilderness,
where he dwells, is a city. The city shines no more for us, now he is gone, as the sky
shines not, when the rain-clouds bind it up in storms."
And the women, gathering round the latticed windows, cried out that the prince had
come back again; but when they saw the riderless horse, they clung to the windows,
weeping.
And at the time of the sacrifice, the lord of the people prayed beside the altar of the
gods, making vows for the recovery of his son, his heart heavy with great grief. And there
he performed whatever rites were deemed of efficacy. And there Chhanda, his eyes
overflowing with bitter tears, taking the horse, entered the palace, downcast and full of
grief, - the palace that was stricken as though its lord had been captured by the foe. And
he went towards the King's apartments, searching for him with eyes full of tears. And the
good steed Kanthaka neighed with a heavy neigh, as though telling the news of evil to the
people.
Thereupon the birds, that dwelt among the houses, and the swift, strong steeds, that
were near, sent forth a cry, echoing to the horse's cry, woe begone at the departure of the
prince. And the people, deceived into too great exultation, hurrying towards the inner
dwelling of the lord of the people, thought, from the neighing of the horse, that the prince
had come again. And from that exultation, they fainted into grief, their eyes longing to
behold the King's son once more. And the women came forth from the houses that
sheltered them,
--- 38
as the lightning flashes forth from an autumn cloud. Their garments drooping, their robes
and vestures stained with dust, their faces pale, their eyes heavy with weeping. They were
faint and colorless, and without lustre, like the stars, at dawning, when the red day comes.
Their feet were stripped of the anklets of red gold; they wore no bracelets; their
earrings were laid aside. Their well-rounded waists were decked with no bright girdles;
their breasts were as though robbed of the pearl-chains that had adorned them. Thus they
look forth at Chhanda and the steed, at Chhanda, desolate, his eyes all worn with tears;
and their faces were pale, and they cried aloud, like kine lowing in the forest, when the
leader of the herd is gone. Then full of lamentation, the monarch's chiefest spouse,
majestic Gautami, who had lost her child, as a buffalo loses its calf, clasping her hands
together, fell, like a gold-stemmed silk-cotton tree, with shivering leaves.
Yet others, their beauty dimmed, their arms and bodies chilled, robbed of all feeling
by their grief, neither cried, nor wept, nor sighed, unconscious, standing like statues. Yet
others, heavy-laden at the loss of their lord, sprinkled their breasts, no longer adorned with
sandal, with the bright drops that fell from their eyes, as the mountain is sprinkled with
opals. Their faces gleamed so with bright tears, that the palace shone with the gleaming
of them, like a lake, at a time of the beginning of the rains, when every red lotus flower is
bright with water drops. And with their fair-fingered hands, no longer hidden under their
adornments, their heads covered in grief, they beat their breasts, with those lotus hands
of theirs, as the climbing plants of the forest beat their stems, with branches moving in the
wind. And striking thus their breasts with their fair hands, they were like streams when the
lotuses that deck them are driven hither and thither by the storm-wind of the forest. And
the blows that their hands inflicted on their breasts, their breasts inflicted equally on their
soft hands. So their gentle hands and breasts pitilessly wounded each other in their pain.
Then indeed Yashodhara, her eyes red with anger, with bitter sobbing and
desolation, her bosom torn with sighs, her tears springing up from unfathomable grief,
spoke thus:
"Where is my beloved gone, O Chhanda, leaving me thus in the night time, asleep
and powerless to hold him? My heart is as vexed by thy coming back thus with the prince's
steed, as it was when all three went away. This act of thine was ignoble, unloving,
unfriendly, O base one; how then canst thou return today with lamentations? Cease from
these tears, for thy heart must be glad, nor do thy tears consort well with such an act as
thine. For through thy means, who art his friend, his follower, his good companion and
helper, his well wisher - is the prince gone forth to return no more. Rejoice, for thou hast
done thy work well! Truly a man's keen enemy is better than a friend, dull, ignorant and
awkward. At thy hands, who hast called thyself a friend, and through thy folly, has our
house suffered dire eclipse. And these women here, how greatly are they to be pitied, that
their bright adornments are set aside, the sockets of their eyes all red with weep-
--- 39
ing, as though widowed, and all their glory lost, though their lord stands firm as the earth
or the Himalayan mountain. And the palaces in their rows seem to utter lamentation, their
dovecotes like arms thrown up, while the doves moan incessantly; losing him, they have
lost all that could console them.
"And Kanthaka, did not even he desire my destruction, since he has carried off my
jewel, while the people slept, like some thief of gold? Kanthaka, brave steed that could
withstand the fierce onslaught of arrows, much more a whip lash, - how could fear of the
whip, then, compel him to rob me of my heart and happiness? Now base and ignoble, he
fills the palace with his mournful neighings; but while he bore away my beloved, this evil
steed was dumb. If he had neighed so that the people were awakened, or the noise of his
hoofs, or the sound of his jaws had alarmed them, then this heavy grief had not fallen upon
me."
Hearing the lamentations of the princess, her words choked by tears and sorrow,
Chhanda made answer thus, his voice broken with tears, his head bent, his hands clasped
in supplication:
"Nay, princess, lay not the blame on Kanthaka, nor put forth thy anger against me! -
for we are indeed free from blame, - for that god amongst men departed like a god. For
though I knew well the word of the King, I was as though compelled by a higher power, and
so brought the swift steed to him quickly, and followed him unwearied on the way. And the
good steed too, as he went, struck not the ground even with the edges of his hoofs, as
though some bore him up, and fate kept close his jaws, so that he made no sound. And
when the prince would leave the city, the gate flew open, of its own accord, and the dark
night was lit up, as by the sun; so we can know of a surety that this was fate. And even
after the king had set thousands of watchful guards in palace and city, deep sleep fell on
them at that very hour, so we may know of a surety that this was fate. And when such a
robe as they should wear, who dwell in hermitages, came down for him out of heaven, and
the muslin head dress, that he cast away, was carried up instead, so we may know of a
surety, that this was fate. Think not then, princess, that we two are guilty, in his departure,
for we acted not freely, but as though compelled to follow a god."
And when the women heard this wondrous tale of how their prince went forth, their
grief changed to marveling; but when they thought of him as dwelling in the forest, they
broke out into lamentation again. And the queen mother Gautami, her eyes sorrow-filled,
grief-torn like an eagle whose young are lost, was stricken with weakness, and cried out,
weeping, thus:
"Those locks of his, beautiful, soft, dark, and firm-rooted, that a royal diadem should
encircle, are not cast on the ground. Can a hero of mighty arms, of lion stride, his eye like
a bull's, his voice like a drum or a storm-cloud, - can such a one become a forest-dweller?
This land, indeed, is unworthy of this high doer of noble deeds, for he has left it; for the
people's worthiness brings forth the King. And how can those soft feet of his, the toes well
joined, the ankles hidden, soft as a blue lotus, a circle
--- 40
marked on either sole, how can they tread the stony forest ground? And his body, befitting
well a palace, with its costly robes, sandal, and perfumes, how can that fair form withstand,
in the forest, the force of frost and heat and rain? He who was gifted in birth, in virtue, and
power, and force, and learning, in youth and beauty, - he who gave ever, nor asked again, -
how can he now beg alms from others? He who, resting on a bright couch of gold, heard
through the night the symphony of sweet music, how will he now rest on the bare earth,
with but a cloth to guard him?"
And the women, hearing this sorrowful lamentation, linking their arms together, let
their tears flow afresh, as the climbing plants, shaken by the wind, distill honey from their
blossoms. Then Yashodhara fell to the earth, like a swan robbed of her mate, and, given
over altogether to sorrow, spoke thus, her voice choked with sobs:
"If he desires now to follow a life of holiness, leaving me his consort, as a widow,
what holiness is that, in which his spouse is left behind? Has he not heard of the great
kings of old, his own forefathers, Mahasudarsha and others, how they went to the forest,
taking their wives, too, that he thus seeks holiness, abandoning me? Can he not see that
husband and wife are together consecrated in the sacrifice, that the Vedic rites purify both,
that both are to reap the same holy fruit, - that robs me of my part in his holy work? Surely
it must be that this devotee of holiness, thinking that I was set against him in my heart, has
fearlessly left me sorrowing, hoping thus to win the heavenly beauties of the gods. Yet
what foolish thought is this of mine? For these women here have every beauty's charm, -
yet through them he has gone to the forest, leaving behind his kingdom and my love. I long
not so greatly for the joy of heaven, nor is that a hard task even for common men, who are
resolved; but this one thing I desire, - that my beloved may not leave me here, or in the
other world. But if I am not worthy to look on the face of my lord, shall our child Rahula
never rest on his father's knee? Cruel, indeed, is that hero' s heart for all his gentle beauty;
for who with a heart could leave a prattling child, who would win the love even of an
enemy? But my heart, too, must be hard as his, hard as stone or iron, that it breaks not
now, when my lord has gone to the forest, shorn and orphaned of his royal glory, instead
of the happiness that should be ins lot.''
So the princess, weak and wailing, wept and thought and wept again; and though
of nature queenlike, yet now she forgot her pride and felt no shame. And seeing
Yashodhara thus distraught with sorrow, and hearing her wild grief, as she cast herself on
the earth, all her attendants wept too, their faces gleaming like rain-beaten lotuses.
------------
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"NO one," said Wm. Q. Judge, was ever converted to Theosophy. Each one who
really comes into it does so because it is only an extension of previous belief.''
All real growth is from within, and the person who appeals to us is he who tells us
what we already know. He may tell us much beside that is equally true, but it does not
touch us, for the simple reason that we have not already found it out for ourselves, or we
cannot relate it, in any fashion to what we do know.
A reason for the acceptance of any truth is always concerned, more or less closely
with a reason for the rejection of something else. One person may reject the popular
conception of religion because of its entire divorcement from a scientific basis, and yet not
be a materialist. Another may reject materialism because of an interior asseveration of
immortality on the part of his own higher nature, and yet scorn equally both emotionalism,
and creed or dogma.
To either of these, Theosophy presents a philosophy which is both scientific and
religious, and being both is always reasonable.
The widely diversified points of view of the persons to whom Theosophy appeals,
prove its many-sided character. The fact is, there is no possible line of thought which is
wholly unrelated to Theosophy - none which does not find its extension in Theosophy:
hence there can be no one who would not be influenced by its teachings, could these but
be presented to his consideration in the right way. And the right way is the common sense
way - the method we would adopt were we trying to convince some one of the wisdom of
a given course - say in business. We would not expect, in an endeavor to effect a certain
business association, to convert another person at once to our own view. We must
necessarily first convince him that we are familiar with his position, before we can hope to
show him the superiority of our own.
Two conditions then, are desirable in the equipment of one who essays the
advocacy of the Wisdom-Religion; - first: a common-sense knowledge of Theosophy;
second: a common-sense knowledge of himself.
For without the realization that Theosophy is always common-sense, one can make
no appeal to the reason: and without a knowledge of man's real nature, one cannot
inerrantly discern the point of contact (which also marks the line of extension) between the
view of another and that of oneself. Lacking this knowledge, effort to benefit humanity must
be directed in hit-or-miss fashion. That so much can be accomplished, apparently without
it, proves the force of Theosophy itself. Allow this force to flow through an intelligent
conscious instrument, and there is no possible limit to its influence.
What is common-sense knowledge of oneself? It is knowledge, the truth of which
is affirmed by the higher nature, and attested by the reason. It is knowledge of one's real
self, mental - psychic - spiritual: knowledge of the laws by which it is governed - not simply
tabulation of phenomena. Any one not hopelessly im-
--- 42
bedded in preconceived notions of truth, must admit the fact of phenomena not to be
accounted for by the operation of so-called physical law, nor apprehended by the physical
senses.
But if there are phenomena, they must be governed by laws just as orderly and just
as inflexible as the laws governing physical nature. Admit the principle of Unity and it is at
once clear that there is no plane of consciousness in the Universe to which man is
unrelated. He must then possess faculties (potentially, if not actually) which will enable him
to perceive all that exists.
Granted the existence of phenomena of the inner planes, what good will it do us to
understand the laws governing them?
Reflection shows us that by far the greater part of our troubles exist in the mind. We
suffer because we desire and cannot obtain, because we overestimate this, or
underestimate that, because we have certain preconceived ideas with which the
circumstances of our life and environment do not harmonize. It is of no use for some one
to tell us we are mistaken or deluded. We know that he is the one who is mistaken.
But suppose some one comes to us who, understanding fully the operations of the
mind and the laws that govern thought, can teach us to establish causes which result in
removing from our mental vision the illusions that give us so much unhappiness. We then
see that that which appeared to us deplorable, is opportunity for growth - for working with
the Law instead of against it - for developing harmony instead of friction. And that person
will have given us something far better, and far more valuable and lasting than any material
aid or change of environment, for he will have shown us how to attain tranquility of mind.
We will have learned that we shall find happiness only when we are willing to relinquish our
selfishness and that it comes not to us through others, nor from anything outside, but exists
within ourselves.
It would be quite worth while to so thoroughly understand one's own nature and that
of others, as to be able always to help them to that which is really desirable and best; to
have the insight to comprehend the mental condition and the mental poverty - the mental
darkness and the mental suffering of others, and to know how always to do the right thing
for them - in short, to make no mistakes. A study of external nature alone will never lead
to this.
Theosophy is profoundly religious. Postulating first, Unity, there follows necessarily
the Divinity of Man. True religion, then, is the tracing of the link between man and Deity.
It is knowledge, through interior conscious experience, of the Christ that is within each of
us. And this is not only religion, but is also occultism.
The first moment of true religious experience in the life of any one, occurs when he
realizes that he is something more than a wayward, physical body when he becomes
conscious of that which the Quakers call the "inner light." And this light is much nearer than
we have realized. If there is the soul, and also the personality, there must exist some
present relation between the two. Who can or ought to know more of the soul than the
personality which it informs? Dare I take the word of any one else concerning my real Self?
--- 43
The question, then, is how to proceed, if we really desire to know more of our interior
nature. If, for the guidance of the personality, we have the personal mind, and if this mind,
imperfect and uncertain as it seems to be in its operation, is really (as undoubtedly it is) our
highest personal aspect, then it follows that only by its cultivation and better understanding
will we be able to attain to a knowledge of that which is still more interior. By "knowledge''
is meant inner consciousness; not imagination or speculation, but actual experience. If we
believe fully that the light of the soul is within, and that the reason why that light is obscured
is because of the density of the personality, our first effort must be to render the personal
mind more porous to light - more pervious to the Higher Thought. We must clear away the
rubbish of the personality, and we are connected with all this personal rubbish by thought.
So long as thought is colored by Desire, is prompted and vitalized only by physical
experience, it is clear that it cannot lift us away from the plane of material consciousness -
cannot unveil to us anything that is within the personal life. For the personal life, we must
remember, is an effect, the cause of which lies within.
If we really want to know more of the inner life, if we want our thought to be illumined
by the light of the soul itself - we must think more about the soul, for we always know most
concerning that of which we think most. "The soul becomes that which it dwells upon." If
we are to find out our relations to inner planes, material interests must be relegated to their
rightful place, for "no man can serve two masters."
It is only thus that the attainment of pure thought is possible, and by "pure" is meant
uncolored by personal interest. Thought that has no taint of the personality must be
spiritual in its nature; must bear an intimate relation to the inner life - the life of the soul.
And when one is consciously the soul, "the eyes see intelligently and regard the world with
a new insight."
Simplified, this means that one may learn to let the mind use the body. It does not
require the operation of the Higher Mind - the soul - to keep house or to sell merchandise,
or to practice a profession, yet it is only by the use of the Higher Mind that one can really
know himself. When, through self-study and concentrated thought, we shall cut asunder
the personal bondage, shall clear away from the brain-mind the terrestrial dust with which
we are so familiar that we do not even notice it, we will have made it possible for the real
mind to shine through, and then we will have found that the real mind is an aspect of the
Soul itself.
There can then be no limit to one's power for good. The Kingdom of Heaven once
found within oneself, the secret of helping others is discovered.
A complete understanding of self - a knowledge, through compassion, of the needs
of others - an instant recognition through "soul-wisdom" of another's point of view, and of
the means by which he can be led to higher levels - this is the religion of Theosophy.
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[[photo of ceremony]]
--- 45
CEREMONY
THE LAYING OF THE CORNER STONE S. R. L. M. A.
by the Founder-directress, Katherine A. Tingley, at Point Loma, San
Diego, California, February 23, 1897, assisted by Mr. E.T. Hargrove, Mr. F.M. Pierce, and
others
SYNOPSIS OF REPORT.
AFTER a selection of music Mr. Hargrove said: "We have met today to take part in
the ceremony of laying the corner-stone of the Temple for the Revival of the Lost Mysteries
of Antiquity. I simply wish to point out the solemnity of an occasion which in former ages
brought people together from the ends of the earth. I would incidentally remark to the
people of San Diego that it seems strange perhaps that Mrs. Katherine A. Tingley, the
Founder-Directress of this school, should have selected this spot, never having visited the
west coast of America; should have pointed out the exact location where the building was
to be erected, and should have come herself only after all the preliminary arrangements
had been made under her direction. It should be clearly understood that this school is
under her direct supervision; she is the Founder-Directress, and those of you who get to
know her better will soon appreciate why this is so, and why she meets with such hearty
support. I need simply say in conclusion, that this spot, beautiful, as it is, as a picture of
nature, will be made still more beautiful when this building is erected - a building which will
be worthy of the objects of the school and worthy of its neighboring city, San Diego."
The Foundress approached the stone, which had been raised, and placed a purple-
covered box in the opening underneath; then laying the cement with a silver trowel, she
said, while soft music was being played:
I dedicate this stone, a perfect square, a fitting emblem of the perfect work that will
be done in this temple for the benefit of humanity and to the glory of the ancient sages.
The sacred word was sounded as the stone was slowly lowered into place.
Assistants then brought corn, wine and oil, in silver vessels, to Mrs. Tingley who
scattered the corn and poured the wine and oil over the newly laid stone. Other assistants
brought forward symbols of the four elements, which she in turn cast upon the stone,
saying:
Earth, the emblem of man's body; air, the emblem of man's breath; water, the
emblem of man's inner self; fire, the emblem of man's spiritual power.
Fire was lighted upon the stone by Mr. Hargrove, who repeated:
May these fires be lighted and may they burn forevermore.
The Beatitudes from the New Testament were then read by Rev. W. Williams,
following which Mr. Hargrove read the following passage from the Bhagavad Gita:
"Those who are wise in spiritual things grieve neither for the dead nor for the living.
I myself never was not, nor thou, nor all the princes of the earth; nor shall we ever
hereafter cease to be. As the lord of this mortal frame experienceth therein
--- 46
infancy, youth, and old age, so in future incarnations will it meet the same. One who is
confirmed in this belief is not disturbed by anything that may come to pass. The senses,
moving toward their appropriate objects, are producers of heat and cold, pleasure and pain,
which come and go and are brief and changeable; these do thou endure, O son of
Bharata! For the wise man, whom these disturb not, and to whom pain and pleasure are
the same, is fitted for immortality. Learn that He by whom all things were formed is
incorruptible, and that no one is able to effect the destruction of that Divine Spirit which is
everlasting."
Quotations from the Sacred Scriptures of the World were then read by various
assistants.
Proclus declares: "As the lesser mysteries are to be delivered before the greater,
so also discipline must precede philosophy."
Hermes said: "As is the outer, so is the inner; as is the great, so is the small. There
is but one eternal law, and he that worketh is one. Nothing is great, nothing is small in the
divine economy."
St. Paul said: "Know ye not that ye are the temple of the living God, and that the
spirit of God dwelleth in you."
In the Upanishads we read: "There is one eternal thinker thinking non-eternal
thoughts. He though one, fulfills the desires of many. The wise who perceive him within
their Self, to them belongs eternal joy, eternal peace."
In the Bible we read: "To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna;
I will give to him a white stone, and in that stone a new name written, which no man
knoweth saving he that receiveth it."
In the Hebrew Scriptures we read: "Mark the perfect man and behold the upright,
for the end of that man is peace."
A Chinese sage has said: "Never will I seek nor receive individual salvation; never
will I enter into final peace alone; but forever and everywhere will I live and strive for the
universal redemption of every creature throughout the universe."
In the Orphic Mysteries it was said that "When the eyes that are below are closed
then the eyes that are above are opened."
The Chinese scriptures say: "Conquer your foe by force and you increase his
enmity; conquer by love and you reap no after sorrow."
Confucius said: "I only hand on, I cannot create new things; I believe in the
ancients, and therefore I love them."
In the Indian Scriptures we read: "There is no other object higher than the
attainment of the knowledge of the Self."
Montanus says: "The soul is like a lyre and breaks into sweet music when swept by
the breath of the Holy Spirit."
Zuni prayer: "This day we have a Father, who from his ancient seat watches over
us, holding us fast that we stumble not in the paths of our lives. If all goes well we shall
meet, and the light of his face makes ours glad."
Emerson said: "The law of nature is to do the thing, and you shall have the power;
they who do not the thing have not the power."
A noted teacher has said: "Scrupulously avoid all wicked actions,
--- 47
reverently perform all virtuous ones. This is the doctrine of all the teachers."
In the ancient Scriptures of Persia we read: "Profess good thoughts, good words
and good deeds, and reject evil thoughts, evil words and evil deeds."
The Bible enjoins us to "mark the perfect man and behold him that is upright, for the
end of that man is peace."
The Buddhist scriptures say: "Attack not the religions of other men, but seeking
whatever may be beautiful in those religions, add that truth and that beauty to thine own,
to the glory of thine own life, to the glory of thine own religion."
Miss Anne Bryce then read. "Preserve harmony in your own soul and it will flow out
to all others, for its effects are more powerful than you understand, and more far-reaching.
Sink all thought of self, all personal ambition, the small jealousies and suspicions which mar
the heart's melodies, in love of the work and devotion to the cause. Listen to the great
song of love, compassion, tenderness; and losing yourself in that, forget these passing
shadows. United, harmonious, your power is limitless; without these you can do nothing.
See to it then that your tone in the great instrument be pure and clear, else discord will
result. Behind all sin and suffering - shadows, these - lie the divine harmonies of reality.
These seek and finding lose not."
Mrs. C. F. Wright. - "The divine harmony of the World-Soul surges through our
hearts in mighty waves will we but listen. In hours of meditation seek it, listen to it, it fadeth
never, and a power and peace will be yours unspeakable, divine. From this knowledge
rises knowledge of things spiritual, the gift of tongues and the healing fire. This is the song
of life in which all nature joins, for reaching the heart of nature we reach the heart of all and
read therein the most sacred mysteries of the ancients. Fail not nor falter in the endeavor
to hear those harmonies. Remember that the cries of suffering and pain which so plainly
reach our ears are but the discords which make the music finer, discords only to the
untrained ear, and some day the whole grand symphony will be yours, to listen to, hearing
it first in your own heart and then in the heart of the whole world. O suffering, struggling
humanity, whose eyes know only tears, whose ears hear only discord, dying and death,
awake and listen! The inner voice echoes a harmony sublime. Cease your conflict for an
instant's space and you will hear a promise of salvation. Peace and power are yours,
peace divine and power all powerful, so your deliverance has come; the light shines out,
the hour is at hand, nature calls aloud with all her voices: Humanity shall sweat and toil no
more in vain, man's feet shall be set upon that path which leads to final liberation."
The Foundress then said: "You have witnessed the laying of the corner stone of the
School for the Revival of Lost Mysteries of Antiquity. The objects of the school will later be
described to you, and it remains for me to turn the thoughts of those present toward the
future of the human race. Few can realize the vast significance of what has been done
here today. In ancient times the founding of a temple was looked upon as of world-wide
impor-
--- 48
tance. Kings and princes from far-distant countries attended the ceremonies of the
foundation. Sages gathered from all parts of the world to lend their presence at such a
time; for the building of a temple was rightly regarded as a benefit conferred upon all
humanity.
"The future of this school will be closely associated with the future of the great
American republic. While the school will be international in character, America will be its
centre. This school will be a temple of living light, and illumine the dark places of the earth.
And I appeal to all present to remember this day as one of great promise, for this new age
must bring a blessing to all.
"Through this school and its branches the children of the race will be taught the laws
of spiritual life, and the laws of physical, moral and mental development. They will learn
to live in harmony with nature. They will become compassionate lovers of all that breathes.
They will grow strong in an understanding of themselves, and as they attain strength they
will learn to use it for the good of the whole world. Rejoice with me, then, and may you all
share in the blessings of this hour, and in the brightness of the future which contains so
much of joy for all humanity.''
At this point a chant was sung by those taking part in the ceremonies. Then a tone
upon a bell was sounded, answered by others.
After the ceremony the American flag was unfurled to the breeze, and was shortly
afterwards replaced by the purple and gold flag of the school. While this was being done
exquisite music was played.
Mrs. Tingley and the Crusaders then took their seats upon the platform and further
addresses were made by Mr. E. B. Rambo, of San Francisco, Mr. James Pryse, Mr. H. T.
Patterson, President Hargrove, Mrs. Alice Cleather, of London, Rev. W. Williams, of
Bradford, England, Dr. Wood, of Westerly, R. I., and Colonel Blackmer, of San Diego. As
Colonel Blackmer's speech deals with the influence of the School on San Diego, we give
it in full:
"In estimating the influence that will come to our city and its people from the
establishment of a school such as this in our midst we must look for it along three lines -
the material, the intellectual and the spiritual. And first, what influence will it have upon the
advancement and prosperity of our city? We may reasonably expect that it will bring to us
an increase of population that will be in every way desirable.
"These beautiful locations lying all about us, where nature has done so much to
please the eye and where genial soil and balmy skies are so well adapted to supply our
material wants, will in the not distant future be occupied as homes for a broad-minded,
intelligent and progressive class of citizens whose influence in the material prosperity of our
city will be both active and beneficent. They will be interested in all that pertains to our
growth and prosperity, and add materially to our advancement in innumerable ways.
"Furthermore, Point Loma and San Diego will be heralded from ocean to ocean by
the cable under the sea with the message as it flies to other shores, until in every land and
in every tongue the name and fame of our fair city shall be the shibboleth that will become
a
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[[photo]]
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[[photos of grounds]]
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IN DREAM OR WAKING?
by Vera Petrovna Jelihovsky
NOT so many years ago a party of Russian lads and girls flocked together, from all
the four corners of Paris, in order to "see in," as is the custom of their country, the real New
Year, that is the thirteenth of January. Most of them were far from rich, working in the great
city, for their daily bread, besides attending to their various studies. So no dancing was
expected, no great spread of any kind. Simply, the hostess, a motherly old lady, and her
husband - the "would be magnate" he was ironically nicknamed in indication of
disappointments his bureaucratic career had suffered, years ago, before he had retired to
Paris to grumble at his case and make the most of his scanty pension - had heartily bidden
any lonely Russian youth to spend New Year's eve with them.
All present were unanimous in wishing to spend the evening in the most Russian
way. They all were preparing to write down on a slip of paper and burn it to the last
particle, too, all whilst the clock was still striking midnight, the wish their hearts most
desired. But in the meantime, fortune-telling and forfeit games were tried and did not
succeed. Most probably, because of the absence of real child element, though the ages
of all the guests put together would hardly amount to two hundred. So the pastimes
degenerated into talk.
"I wonder," a young fellow said, "why the looking-glass oracles should be so utterly
forgotten by our generation? And the setting of the supper table for the midnight
apparitions of future brides and lovers, and the best of all, the bridge oracle.* In the midst
-----------
* On the eves of certain days girls place a saucerful of water in their bedrooms, with
a chip or a stick laid across it. This is expected to bring about dreams with a bridge placing
an important part in them. If there appears a man on the bridge, his features will be those
of the girl's future husband; if none turns up, she will have to go through life single.
-----------
of all the present crazes and fads, when people are ever ready both to believe and to
disbelieve anything, the world-old oracles of antique Russia ought to have a place of honor,
if only there was such a thing as consistency in this world."
"Well to my mind, it only means that Russia has still preserved some common
sense," suggested another.
"Shows how much you know about the present state of affairs at home," exclaimed
a future lady-doctor, a violent blush spreading all over her baby face.
"Why! I can assure you that amongst the upper classes, in any city, there are more
spiritualists, mediums, clairvoyants and such like bosh, than anywhere else.''
"Oh, it's not this sort of thing I mean,'' persisted the first speaker. "I have no interest
in hysterical anomalies. But take the example of our great great grandmothers and of all
sorts of Palashkas and Malashkas, their faithful handmaids. Who more healthy, more
normal than they? And yet what girl, in their times, did not stop nights in abandoned bath-
houses and barns, where, in winter, frost reigned supreme, and all to call forth the
apparition of the future lord of her days."
And at this he came to a sudden stop, his neighbor having given him a severe kick
under the table.
"Why! What is the matter?" the poor fellow asked. utterly abashed.
"The matter is that Lila is present and so it is prohibited, under the penalty of law,
to speak of bridges, looking-glasses and would be husbands, likewise."
"Oh, Anna! You need not speak like that. True, last year, when the impression was
still so very vivid, I was so foolish as to go into a crying fit. I am ashamed of it. But, you
know, that
now...."
--- 52
And Lila Rianoff, whose diminutive person was extremely attractive and pretty,
stammered, evidently at a loss for a word. Anna Karssoff, the energetic young person who
had so unceremoniously interrupted the first speaker, came to her rescue.
"That now you are satisfied there will be no he coming after you and likewise no
destruction of bridges?"
"Yes, may be," answered Lila, with a reticent smile, but there was no assurance in
her voice. The general hum of many other voices soon drowned hers. The uninformed
asked questions as to her adventure, the informed hastened to satisfy their curiosity, for
the most part, speaking all at once and spoiling each other's effects.
After a while everybody present had heard all about it. Exactly a year ago Lila made
up her mind it would be good fun to pry into the secrets of destiny by the means of two
large mirrors facing each other, and two very bright lights, right and left of her, which
repeatedly reflected in the glasses formed a perfect avenue of fire, lost in the distance.
Gazing in one of the mirrors, Lila met with an adventure so horrible, that either talking or
thinking of it made her very unhappy ever since.
"It was only a dream," the girl timidly observed, in the vain hope of averting the
general attention from her unlucky pretty little self.
"A dream indeed! Who ever heard of a girl falling regularly sick on the strength of
a foolish dream?"
"Also, who ever heard of a girl smashing expensive mirrors all on the strength of a
dream?"
My smashing the looking glass is a pure fancy of Anna's," said Lila, "that would be
altogether too sad for my finances. In my fright I merely upset the table, that's all.
However, the desire, on one side, to hear and, on the other, to narrate grew so
clamorous, that Lila's remonstrances and timid little attempts to turn the talk into some
other channel were soon hushed up. She had to subside, but she firmly refused to speak
herself. So the second-hand narrative, constantly interrupted and commented upon, went
on the best it could.
The two rows of fire into which the girl gazed, soon began to fascinate her, attracting
her as if drawing her in. At times. she felt she was becoming merely a part of the wondrous
space that shone and blazed before her weary eyes. At last, she forgot it was only the
repeated reflection of two candles; she forgot the very existence of the mirrors. The fiery
path, without beginning nor end, stretching far away into unknown worlds had absorbed
her, had sucked her in.
Lila advanced on this path slowly and listlessly, like a conscious but powerless
automaton. As she advanced the lights on the sides of her path grew dimmer and scarcer,
and soon disappeared completely. She found herself in darkness, surrounded by a cold
waste of snow, her heart shrinking with anguish, fear, and, at the same time intense
expectation. She knew she had to get on; that there, far away, behind the veil of cold
mists there lay a goal, a longed for object of her lonely wanderings.
She plunged deeper and deeper in the snowy desert, but, strange to say, not a limb
of her body moved. She understood she was carried by some power far greater than her
own will, a power she could neither control nor resist. But she did not wish to resist it. She
knew somehow, that the power acted in accordance with an aim of greatest gravity, of life
importance.
At last, she found herself on some promontory or mound, and at the foot of it she
saw the rushing waters of some stream, trying to break from under the heavy coat of ice
and snow. There also was a building there. But was it a mill, or a chapel, or a living
house? She did not realize. Her eyes were riveted to
--- 53
the heavy arch of a stone bridge, and to a lonely figure of a man standing on it. That was
all.
But the instant Lila caught sight of the man, she recognized it was for him and for
him alone she had crossed the long weary desert. In her heart was joy and rapture, for that
man was no stranger. In the days gone by she had suffered for him, she had loved him,
she had looked to him for guidance and help. She knew all that well now, and yet how was
it she never gave him a thought for even so long? How was it they were separated such
endless ages full of loneliness and sadness?
The eyes of the man were turned towards Lila, with an expression of such warm
affection, of such loyal devotion, that her whole being went out to him and she ran to the
bridge where he stood. Not passively or inertly this time, but with a conscious effort of all
her will, with the power of woman's trust and love.
Lila already reached the bottom of the hillock, she stepped on the bridge. The man
stretched his arms toward her. One second more and she would reach safety and
happiness, protected by one stronger, wiser, better than she.
But what is this terrible noise, the clinking of swords and armor, and the clatter of
horses' hoofs? Mounted men canter to the bridge, they tear the girl from the arms of the
one she loves. Did the bridge cave in under the weight of the fighting, shouting, angry
people? or was she pushed off it? For a moment she hung in the space, catching to
something hard and stable, then her arms grew too weak to hold on any longer, her grip
relaxed, the cold air whistled in her ears, and she abandoned herself to her fate.
"Needless to say," laughingly said Lila, trying to look altogether unconcerned and
composed, "it was not the balustrade of a bridge I caught hold of, but my own dressing
table. And, please, do dismiss the subject. The whole business was a dream and perfect
nonsense. But I do not like to recall its sensations. It was horrible, unspeakably horrible,
to be sucked in by this road of fire. I imagine a man sinking in quick-sands must
experience something similar."
A group of medical students of both sexes went, at this, into a discussion about the
reality of sensations produced by unreal things. The names of Charcot and Richet were
pronounced, experiments over hysterical subjects at the Salpetriere were described.
But the youngest of the party, a delicate looking little girl, with dreamy eyes,
persisted in clinging to the previous subject.
"Lila, do tell me," she said, what was he like, this handsome stranger of yours? Did
he also fall into the river? Do you think you would recognize him, were you to meet him in
real life?"
"Meet him in real life? God forbid! Was such a calamity to befall me? I don't know
what I should do. I would hate the man, I would run away from him, I would hide myself
somewhere," half seriously, half in jest, answered the elder girl.
"Why, how inconsistent you are. Did not you wish to see your husband when
starting the whole business?"
"Honestly I did not. I did it all for sport, intending to make fun of the credulity of
others. But I tell you seriously, dear, were I to meet a man in the least reminding me of my
dream, I would consider it pure deviltry. And nothing on earth would induce me to make
a husband of such a man."
Both girls laughed. But Lila's nerves were so shaken with either the too vivid
recollections, or with all the chaffing and laughter, of which she was the object for the last
half hour, that she nearly jumped when a loud ring resounded in the ante-chamber.
(To be continued.)
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STUDENTS' COLUMN
Conducted by J.H. Fussell
RIGHT SPEECH.
Although words are one of the chief means for the communication of thought and
the interchange of ideas, they are at the same time often the greatest barriers between
people. The right use of words is a very important matter and one cannot be too careful
in using them, but, after all, words are only a channel or means of expression of the ideas
that lie behind. I do not think we understand sufficiently the distinction between the letter
which killeth, and the spirit which giveth life. Often in our conversations and discussions
we will stick over the meaning of a word and knowingly and wilfully refuse to understand
another because of a single word. Yet if we think a moment we know that nearly everyone
is in the habit of speaking more or less loosely and a word will sometimes be used with
different meanings almost in the same sentence. As students we ought to consider these
matters, and I think we have it in our power to overcome the fault in ourselves, learning to
express ourselves more clearly and at the same time to understand others better. It is
largely a matter of simple attention; not merely an intellectual attention, however, which
concerns itself with forms, and is critical and analytical, but the attention of the heart with
the larger tolerance and sympathetic hearing which regard the spirit rather than the letter.
The soul has other ways of expressing itself besides speech or any of the powers of the
outer man. But the finer vibrations will not be recognized nor will the spiritual
understanding be opened unless the attention of the heart be given and we are able to
detach ourselves from the outer form. I think that one of the necessary steps in this
direction is simplicity and sincerity in speech. These are certainly not characteristic of the
speech of today. I think we talk too much and allow ourselves but little opportunity to
develop that silent speech of the heart which needs no words and which concerns itself
with realities and not appearances.
OPPOSITION.
Dear Brother: - I have often been much perplexed to find an explanation for the
opposition which is invariably raised by some against any new plan of work that may be
proposed. This has occurred so often in our branch that I sometimes wonder it ever we
shall be able to attain to our ideal of Universal Brotherhood. There is nearly always some
one who almost glories in raising objections to every new idea put forward, and who will not
even give the matter a fair trial but condemns it immediately.
- President, Branch, T. S. A.
The above is not an experience peculiar to any one Branch of the Society, but is
common to many, and indeed, has been the experience of the Society as a whole since it
was founded in 1875 by H. P. Blavatsky, W.Q. Judge, and others. I think the root of the
whole matter is selfishness and vanity. Very often opposition to a new idea or plan is
merely a cloak for opposition to the person who originates it. In fact, in nearly every case
it arises from personal feeling and not from principle. This earth, and especially in this Kali
Yug, or Iron Age, is the battle ground for the opposing
--- 55
forces of light and darkness. Every effort made towards a higher and nobler life arouses
the opposing evil forces which may be dormant in our own natures and in the natures of
those around us. Not until we have called forth the very highest powers in ourselves shall
we be able to conquer our own lower selves and when we begin to work with Nature and
take that higher step to become one with her, we shall have to face the greater opposition
of all the evil powers seen and unseen.
Universal Brotherhood may seem far off, but a fuller realization of it is much nearer
than is generally thought. The opposition we meet with should not discourage us, for it is
often the index of the intensity of our own efforts towards good.
This is a time of fighting, and we cannot expect to find peace and calm on the battle
field, but these exist always within our own hearts and we may find them there if we will but
look for them.
Much of the opposition we have to meet is not wilful, but is rather the expression of
an ungoverned personality and comes from those who have not learned to discriminate.
They, however, will have to suffer for their ignorance. But it is sad to think of the Karma of
those who wilfully and knowingly oppose the work, whether through personal ambition or
from any other motive. The true way to meet opposition is to follow principle and duty and
to keep our highest ideals ever before us. No opposition can stop the Theosophical
Movement, and we can but look with pity upon those who, in their folly and conceit, pit their
puny selves against the irresistible power that guides the Movement forward to a successful
issue.
The above letter raises several questions of interest and value to students, and for
that reason is printed in the Students' Column. Perhaps the most important question is the
particular one in regard to the after state and future environment of the "Vivisector," and
this may properly be considered first. Have we sufficient
--- 56
knowledge to enable us to state what will be the future environment in any given case, or
what will be the particular result of any given act? I do not think so. Our lives are not
simple but complex. What is apparently a simple act done with a single motive is almost
without exception the result not of one simple cause, but a whole chain of causes, and if
the motive be analyzed it will almost certainly be found to be very complex, with a host of
modifying factors. This is a matter that can be tested every day by anyone. Let anyone,
for instance, consider his desires which in most cases govern his motives, even where they
are not entirely mistaken for them. He will find that his desires are not one, but many,
pulling in many different directions, now one predominating, now another.
An illustration will perhaps make the matter clear. Consider a river, the destination
of whose waters is the ocean. Speaking generally, we might say that a stick floating down
the river would also ultimately reach the ocean, but we do not know into how many currents
and eddies it might be drawn, or whether it might not even become stranded on the bank.
Every eddy, every breeze - and these changing all the time - every turn in the river would
have to be taken into account, in order to know the exact course and destination.
The illustration may not be a complete one, but it serves to show how the thousand
and one eddies and strong currents of desire turn us from the broad stream of life which
the soul would have us keep, and which would at last bring us into the ocean of infinitude.
A more complete illustration is afforded by the proposition known in Mechanics as
the "polygon of forces," viz., that if any number of forces act on a particle, the resultant
force may be determined, if the direction and intensity of all the forces be known. But
unless all the forces be known the resultant cannot be determined, and it must be borne
in mind that in the problem of life we have to deal with living and ever changing forces.
It must not be forgotten that the soul is dual in its nature, that while on the one hand
it contacts matter and is involved in the material and sensuous world, it is still in essence
divine, and so long as the divine nature is not wholly obscured, i.e., so long as there
remains one aspiration, or one spark of unselfishness or kindliness, just so long will there
be promptings, however much misunderstood or even unnoticed, towards a higher and
nobler life. This power of the soul, in which resides free-will, is the most important factor
in life, and while we may unqualifiedly condemn vivisection, yet I do not think we are in a
position to say that those who practice it are wholly depraved. Consequently, if the state
after death be the outcome of the thoughts of the present life, it will - in the case of the
vivisector - reflect not simply those thoughts connected with vivisection, but also whatever
thoughts may have been good and noble. It was taught by the ancients that the soul
passes through several states after death, some of which reflect the evil side of life, and
others the good side. This will be discussed later.
Since in our present state of knowledge it is impossible for us to know all the factors
that influence any one life, we cannot say that any particular
--- 57
environment will be the result of any given act or acts, but granting the general proposition
that for every cause there is an equivalent effect, we may rest assured that every act and,
in a greater degree, every motive, avowed or concealed, of the vivisector as of everyone
else, will have its due result and become one of the modifying factors in succeeding lives,
until complete harmony be attained. In the case of some the soul may be drawn back to
almost identical surroundings; in the case of others the soul may have learned its lesson,
and therefore will enter into a new environment. But, in any case, the soul is drawn to and
enters just that environment which is the outcome of its past, and also provides the most
favorable conditions for its future progress.
-----------
KARMA
Who is wise
Tears from his soul this Trishna, feeds his sense
No longer on false shows, files his firm mind
To seek not, strive not, wrong not; bearing meek
All ills which flow from foregone wrongfulness,
And so constraining passions that they die
Famished; till all the sum of ended life -
The Karma - all that total of a soul
Which is the things it did, the thoughts it had,
The "Self" it wove - the woof of viewless time,
Crossed on the warp invincible of acts -
The outcome of him on the Universe,
Grows pure and sinless; either never more
Needing to find a body and a place,
Or so informing what fresh frame it takes
In new existence that the new toils prove
Lighter and lighter not to be at all,
Thus "finishing the Path;" free from Earth's cheats;
Released from all the skandhas of the flesh;
Broken from ties - from Upadanas - saved
From whirling on the wheel; aroused and sane
As is a man wakened from hateful dreams.
Until - greater than kings, than gods more glad! -
The aching craze to live ends, and life glides -
Lifeless - to nameless quiet, nameless joy,
Blessed Nirvana - sinless, stirless rest -
That change which never changes
- Light of Asia
---------------
REVIEWS
The Philosophy of Plotinos.* - Too great praise could hardly be bestowed upon this
scholarly contribution to Platonic literature. It is not only scholarly but keenly sympathetic,
and the style is so admirably condensed and clear that although there are less than sixty
pages of the text it gives a luminous exposition of Platonism, Aristotelianism, Stoicism, and
the teachings of Hermes, as well as of the Philosophy of Plotinos, "the last great light of
Greece.'' Unpretentious as the work is, it is the result of ripe scholarship; and students will
find it of great value, while to those who are unacquainted with the philosophy of pagan
Greece it will read like a revelation. Those students of Neo-theosophy especially who have
for years been dallying with the elusive classifications found in Eastern writings will find
many vexed problems solved by the lucid teachings of the great Greek Master, Ammonios
Sakkas, as preserved in the writings of Plotinos, his favorite disciple.
A decided improvement could have been made, for the benefit of readers
unacquainted with Greek, by transferring the Greek words from the text to the bottom of
each page as foot-notes; but this is of small moment, as the author almost invariably
translates the Greek terms used. On page 23, a misprint renders Eidolon Psuches "image
of the body'' instead of "image of the soul."
The author gives the following analysis of the psychology of Plotinos:
"Every human soul is the unity of the following seven elements:
(1.) Ho Theos, The God.
(2.) Nous Koinos, Universal Mind.
(3.) Nous Idios, Individual Mind.
(4.) Logos, Dianoia, Reason.
(5.) To Aisthetikou Meros, The psycho-physical mechanism of sensation.
(6.) To Phutikon Meros, Vegetable life.
(7.) To Soma, the form, body, matter.
"In presenting this scheme of psychology, we must remember that nowhere does
Plotinos give us a complete exposition of it; but it may be proved satisfactorily that he holds
it, since he always speaks of these particular faculties in a consistent manner. . . . We
epitomize the universe, when incarnate, by having organs by which we can come into
communication with every one of the Seven Realms of which the world consists. Therefore
man is Panta, all; he is a Kosmos noetos, an intelligible world. The soul is not an
aggregate, like a house, but a unity revolving around a centre into which it can draw itself
inwards. The soul ascends to the highest heights not by addition, or adding itself to God,
but by immanent union with him. ... In order to show forth the relation of the small universe
to the large one, we must premise that each separate faculty of man, while bound by an
indissoluble tie to the other faculties, exists in a universe of its own. The physical body
dwells in a realm of dead matter; the vegetable soul in a realm of organic life in which
organic life is possible, and so on."
The author then devotes a chapter to each of the Seven Realms; and treats of
Reincarnation, Ethics, and Aesthetics in separate chapters. Although detached quotations
fail to do justice to the work, which should be studied as a whole to be appreciated, the
following will illustrate its admirable clearness of statement:
"The World-Soul pities us in our sorrows, and during the intervals between the
incarnations the human souls are protected by her, rising to the height that is appropriate
to their development in goodness. While incarnate, human souls can attain to be as
blessed and powerful as the World-Soul, averting
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* Order from Theosophical Publishing Co. Price, 50 cts.
------------
--- 59
or minimizing the blows of fortune, and becoming the World-Soul's colleague in ruling her
body. Thus the World-Soul and all human souls are equal, inasmuch as they are only
different manners of working of the Universal Mind; different revelations of the same life -
just as one light streams in many directions."
"The human soul is not an aggregate; it is an organic unity of which God is the
highest phase. We develop by simplification of soul. To enter into oneself, is to enter into
God. Only with the presupposition of such a psychology can the true meaning of the
famous maxim ["know thyself"] appear. Plotinos claimed to have received the conception
from tradition that was secret. Philo Judaeus claimed the same origin for many of his
dogmas. Thus, by the purification of virtue, we rise and are delivered from the bondage of
the flesh and of the world and ascend to the life of god-like men and Gods, when in beatific
vision we shall see God, Phuge monou pros monon, the flight of the Single to the Single,
face to face."
Students of Theosophy will do well to procure the book and read it closely.
The Grail for Aug.-Sept. - This number is almost wholly filled by the report of the
Third Annual Meeting of the T. S. in E. (England). None of the short articles it contains call
for special comment. This is the last number of the Grail that will appear, as it is to be
merged with the Irish Theosophist under the name of The Internationalist, with George W.
Russell and Herbert Coryn as editors. There is a mild sort of humor in the name of the new
conjoint magazine, seeing it is to be issued from Ireland; but if the Nemesis of misnomers
has pursued the Grail from start to finish, let us hope that the new magazine will be
recompensed for the incongruity by inheriting the good karma of the Irish Theosophist as
to literary finish and readableness. - Aretas
Brotherhood - Nature's Law; by Burcham Harding.* - This work is based upon Lotus
Circle Manual No. 1, the outlines of the latter being filled out and elaborated; each of the
twelve chapters is followed by a series of questions. Theosophists will find the book
extremely useful for beginners' classes, for which it is especially adapted, filling a want long
felt by workers. As it is free from all technical Theosophical terms, and contains nothing
that would irritate sectarian Christians, however orthodox, it is therefore excellent
propaganda material, and answers to the non-sectarian character of the Lotus Groups. It
is of convenient size, containing about 120 pages, sold at a low price; and will prove a
boon to workers everywhere.
Theosophia, the organ of the Swedish Theosophical Society, devotes the whole of
its August number to a report of the European Convention held in Stockholm.
The Irish Theosophist for September. - With this number the "I. T." closes its fifth
year and its existence "as such," since it is hereafter to appear in a more cosmopolitan
character as the Internationalist. I t has "gone a-grailing," and we have a nervous dread lest
its new cover, under the influence of the late Isis-Grail, may display the Greek-Egyptian
Goddess aneu tou peplou or a nightmare of snakes, Egyptian tumble-bugs, and other
symbolical "varmints." But as the I.T. had its own sad experiences with such title-cover
vagaries in its early days, the new dress it is to don will probably be free from such
eccentricities.
In "The Fountains of Youth" AE mingles prose and verse after the style of the old
Keltic bards, reviving many legends of the fire-fountains of semi-Atlantean Eire. "The
Founding of Emain Macha" is concluded, as also the study of Robert Browning, and a
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* Published by the author, 144 Madison Ave., New York; price, 20 CIS.
------------
--- 60
The Arena for October is a strong number, but devoted mainly to political and
economic subjects. The article on "Hypnotism in its Scientific and Forensic Aspects," by
Marion L. Dawson, is merely an example of a certain sort of twaddle that passes for
"science" in these days. It is superficial to the last degree, basing inconsequent theories
upon mistaken notions. Nearly every statement it makes about mesmeric phenomena is
either inaccurate or untrue. "Suicide: Is It Worth While" by Charles B. Newcomb, is a
vigorous, cheery presentation of sound philosophy, showing how each man is master of
his own destiny, and that all suffering comes from within, proceeding from the inharmonious
condition of one's own soul. Says the writer: "The supreme folly of the suicide is in the
delusion that by breaking the slate he can solve his problem or escape it. He may for a
time attempt the role of truant from life's school, but, like the schoolboy, he only delays his
task and complicates it." - Aretas
The Pacific Theosophist for September - This number is not up to the usual
standard, containing no articles that show originality of thought or treatment; yet it is
interesting as light "reading matter" "Theosophy in the First and Nineteenth Centuries," by
Rev. W. E. Copeland, is fluently written, and puts forward good ideas, but it is rather too
sketchy for so important a subject, and many will question the statement that "neither the
devout Jew nor the philosophic Greek could accept Theosophy in the first century . . . yet
the Christians became learned, and Greek philosophy was replaced by Christian
theosophy." Rather it was that the philosophers among both Jews and Greeks were
Theosophists, while the ignorant mob pushed to the fore with their anthropomorphism and
sarcolatry, and secured aeonian reign of superstition and bigotry. The brief sketch of
"Theosophy and Christianity," by C. in the same number, is more convincing, but equally
unsatisfactory from an historical standpoint. The "Branch Reports'' show a creditable
amount of activity on the Pacific Coast. - Aretas
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* London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co.; paper, 35 cents; cloth, 50
cents.
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MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
AUSTRALIA. - The Society in Sydney, N.S.W., has suffered a severe loss through
the death of an old comrade and an earliest and devoted worker for Theosophy. Mrs.
Elizabeth Minchen died suddenly on Sunday, August 15th. She had not been ill long and
her death was quite unexpected by her friends. Mrs. Minchen was one of the oldest
members in Australia and has worked year in and year out for Theosophy ever since the
T. S. was inaugurated in Sydney. She will be greatly missed by many to whom she had
endeared herself through her warm hearted sympathy and kindness.
Since moving into new headquarters there has been a great increase of interest in
Theosophy on the part of the public with a larger attendance at all meetings, the open
discussions on Sunday evenings being a great attraction. The Daily Press gives good
reports of meetings.
NEW ZEALAND. The centre of Theosophic activity is at AUCKLAND. The work of
the Waitemata Centre has aroused much interest and meetings are well attended. A
Taraniki paper has recently published a long article contributed by Mrs. St. Clair on the
"Laying of the Foundation Stone of S. R. L. M. A. at Point Loma," and has asked for further
articles on Theosophical activities in America. The Theosophical monthlies, and weekly
paper, are kept on file in the Free Public Libraries at Auckland and at Devonport. The two
Thames Centres are working well and harmoniously, the Lotus Groups especially doing
excellent work. Rev. S. J. Neill's lectures are well attended.
ARYAN T. S., New York, has resumed active work for the coming season under
most favorable auspices. Mr. E. A. Neresheimer, as President, is the right man in the right
place. He has proved himself to be a great unifying force and has discovered much good
material, among the members, for speakers and workers, that had not been utilized before.
The Branch meetings on Tuesday evenings are now held exclusively for T. S. A. members
and every member is expected to take some part in the proceedings. This plan is meeting
with great success. Public meetings are held on Sunday evenings, the opening meeting
of the season being on September 19th; D. N. Dunlop lectured to a well-filled hall upon
"Elementary Theosophy" and was followed briefly by H. Crooke and H. T. Patterson. The
Branch has already taken preliminary steps toward the holding of a Brotherhood Bazaar
as outlined in a circular recently sent to all Branches.
As stated previously arrangements have been made for two TiHEOSOPHISTS'
DAYS at the NASHVILLE CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION. The dates assigned to Theosophy
are October 17th and 18th and it is expected that Mrs. Tingley, E. A. Neresheimer, E. T.
Hargrove, H. T. Patterson, D. N. Dunlop, Mrs. Mayer and Rev. W. Williams will be present
from New York; Dr. J. D. Buck from Cincinnati, and A. B. Griggs, from Providence, besides
many other speakers and members from other cities.
AUGUSTA T. S., Ga., has recently lost one of its most active members, Mr. P.
Desrochers who now expects
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to reside near New York. Mr. Desrochers has been lately making a tour in the States and
wherever possible visited the Branches and members, everywhere receiving a cordial
welcome,
MANASA T. S. (Toledo, Ohio) moved on October 1st into larger headquarters at
Room 61, Currier Hall, Madison Street. The first meeting in the new room was held
October 5th. On the afternoon of Sunday, August 22d, Dr. J. D. Buck visited Toledo and
spoke in the open air at Golden Rule Park upon the subject of Brotherhood. A large crowd
gathered around him and listened attentively for an hour. In the evening he spoke to a
large audience at the Unitarian Church upon "A Practical Philosophy."
Many of the Branches of the T. S. A. passed resolutions on the death of Edward B.
Rambo expressing appreciation of his devotion and work in the service of humanity.
New Branches have recently been formed in Savannah, Georgia; Florence, Mass.;
Ann Harbor, Mich. Mrs. A. S. Heath of Seattle, is visiting Nelson, B. C., and through her
efforts has interested a number of people there.
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COMMUNICATION
To the Editors:
A circular letter headed "Sanskrit Revival," dated Oct. 13, 1897, has been sent to
members T. S. in A. to which was attached a notice without date signed on the front page
with my name.
I beg to state that the part over my name was originally issued on February 13,
1897, when I was requested by the author of the circular to introduce him to some of our
American members.
Since then letters from different parts of the country have reached me to the effect
that members thought the study of Sanskrit was a part of the Theosophical Society
activities at Headquarters, and in consequence they have sacrificed other duties.
I was consulted recently as to the use of my name in connection with the circular of
October 13, 1897, and I then declined this with the explanation that it was contrary to my
duty to call attention to, or appeal to the members of the T. S. in A. on behalf of any
enterprise of a personal nature.
The use of my name therefore on the notice which accompanied the circular dated
October 13, 1897, was not authorized by me.
Respectfully,
E. A. Neresheimer,
President T. S. in A.
144 Madison Ave.,
New York, Oct. 21, 1897.
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AUM
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD
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Vol. XII December, 1897 No. 9
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THE SEARCH-LIGHT
"Life is built up by the sacrifice of the individual to the whole. Each cell in the living
body must sacrifice itself to the perfection of the whole; when it is otherwise, disease and
death enforce the lesson."
IN the ranks of the workers for humanity there are many true hearts, many devoted
souls, who through their very excess of devotion, misapplied, become unwise and work
serious harm. Thus, in their zealousness for the cause and their desire to convince as
many as possible of the truths of their position, they unconsciously make statements which
are not only unauthorized, but have no foundation whatever.
We have all come across these brothers and sisters, and some of us have listened
in pain at meetings in public places, to glib sentences about the work, from the lips of
speakers who were quite unconscious that they were making statements not based on fact
or any authority.
An example of this may be found in the statements which have been made
concerning the S. R. L. M. A. Some persons have even gone so far as to say specifically
what studies were to be pursued there; who the teachers would be, and what the
requirements for admission would be, etc. Now, it is sad to have to chronicle that there are
a few people who have been advertising the School in a manner which is the last thing in
the world its Founder desires. And it may here be authoritatively stated, that the Founder
of the School for the Revival of the Lost Mysteries of Antiquity has given to no one
information of any consequence. Those, therefore, who hear statements made concerning
the School will know that they are without foundation and that, as its very name would
indicate, knowledge about it will not be made public.
The overzealousness of the few sometimes works disaster on the many. In the past
history of the theosophical movement good work has more than once been retarded or
entirely prevented by the unguarded utterances of ill advised members. "Ignorance of the
Law excused no one," and the harm which is unknowingly done, is harm, nevertheless.
Now, we cannot deny that there is a class of people who revel in going about with only one
mission in life, which is to disturb and destroy everything they cannot control. They seek
to besmirch the good work and restrict the influence of those who are working unselfishly
for the good of humanity.
Another class who would not wilfully destroy but who should be guarded against are
those, who appearing indifferent to consequences, utilize at every opportunity the ideas of
others in order to bring themselves into prominence and air the great knowledge they think
they possess.
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The very fact that there are such people, and that they will persist in getting in our
way, makes it all the more imperative that we should work steadily and persistently,
endeavoring to inspire others with a firm conviction, that as they work unselfishly they
evoke the helpful force and the real energy that can be utilized for the uplifting of humanity.
The world needs more impersonal men and women who will bend all their efforts to
restore the divine ideals, so that out of the present disorder and unrest, perfect order and
peace shall result.
Everything, no matter how small, counts when it is carried on in the right spirit and
with pure motives. Let us not get into the habit of regarding things from the standpoint of
expediency and compromise, nor feel we are bound to use one moment of our precious
time in apologizing for being born. The world cannot be measured with a yard-stick, nor
the minds of men with a tape measure.
What is our real mission in life? Are we to hug our philosophy and grudgingly deal
out according to our whims small teaspoonsful at a time? We raise the question, having
incidentally heard that recently in this city, a lecturer publicly declared "that it would fare
badly with Christianity had its apostles left the word of God to serve tables." Think of it! at
the end of this nineteenth century. With all the misery, despair, suffering and hopelessness
that exist around us, that one presuming to teach Brotherhood should adopt such an
attitude.
Has it fared so well with Christianity?
Did not the gentle, compassionate Nazarene, the founder of Christianity "serve
tables," heal the sick, comfort the oppressed and wash the feet of his disciples?
Is it not true if it had not been for the comparative few who did "serve tables"
Christianity would probably have disappeared from the world long ago. Let us look around
us, and out all over the world and see the great battle that is raging. Are not the wounded
lying on every side? Should they not be cared for with loving and merciful hands? Are not
their sufferings ours? And should we not exhaust every means in our power to help them?
Is this not the spirit of real Brotherhood? We might take time to reason about the
cause of the battle and endeavor to avert calamities that might arise in the next century,
but in the meantime the weak and wounded are dying without hope, and the suffering are
enduring agonies untold. May we be delivered from becoming so absorbed in new
theories, that we forget how to be natural and true in the highest sense. Can we wonder
that under such circumstances people receive new theories with distrust?
Anyone with a grain of common sense who possesses a real love for his fellow men
cannot fail to realize how important it is that we should be well equipped for our work, with
our philosophy in one hand and philanthropy in the other. When the real spirit of the
philosophy pulsates in unison with the hearts of men they cannot stand still, they must go
out into the great broad world for their cause is the cause of Humanity. And so in time they
will move into closer touch with the great hearts of compassion.
- Katherine A. Tingley
----------------
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THE high tide of civilization of this 19th century is only the prelude of an early twilight
to the approaching day. Few are the real workers and only they have acquired a
momentum of motion, while the masses, who benefitted by the results are yet at a
standstill. They are not able to look ahead till they start to move themselves. And they
imagine vainly that the time for enjoying the fruits of progress has come; that nature is
conquered; the wide spaces are spanned by railroads and telegraphs, steam and
electricity are set to work; the secrets of nature are investigated and society is in a perfect
state. It is they who call the new pioneers dreamers and acquiesce in rest. Yet they have
little reason to apply the term of dreamer to the Founder of the I. B. L.
No thin vapory dreams and no bare intellectuality are shaping this movement. No
indistinct and personal emotionality is propelling it. The propelling force is the force of the
heart which every child knows and every hero. For as a child obeys the first primeval
forces of its soul and grows in bright harmony with the sunshine of the skies, and with the
sunshine of its home, the hero is the same child healthily grown to manhood. He finds his
sunshine in that harmony which pervades the totality of life, and the emotions which always
run in some particular direction do only interfere with his work. His pulse beats exultantly
with the pulse of the great shoreless divine life surrounding him everywhere. His interests
are so wide that they touch and include the interests of all he loves, - and his love is as
wide and quick as the lightning flashing from east to west.
If this is a dream, it is a dream of the Universal Life.
If it is a dream, it is a dream about very real things, for it includes every man, woman
and child upon this suffering earth; it is a dream which every minute proves itself true in
happy smiles, in rising hopes, in serene brightness of the mind and in the satisfaction of the
heart.
And if there are any metaphysics in it they are only the threads between the one and
all, the flashing rays of brotherhood, as it comes down as a white dove to spread its wings
above the whole earth.
As the light of the sun is never visible till it strikes the surface of the air, or water, or
this sweet earth, which it makes to blossom, so the metaphysics of the heart are never set
at rest until they beam from human faces with that soul-radiance which makes civilizations
grow. Nay instead of running to the clouds, and some secluded places, they spread like
glory of the daylight and penetrate into the deepest well and every corner of the human life
and thought, and are as powerful as the Great Life itself.
Therefore, those who will help in this great work will live in open air and warmth of
that great Sun of Life and those who'll play in harmony with the great music, will learn to
understand it.
It is not a work of charity. It is the work of love. If you can not rejoice helping the
meanest thing upon its upward path, your light is not upon it. Let your body do work among
the bodies, and your soul among the souls. Thus all the vestures of the Self will be its
channels. And remember that the Heart cannot receive any reward from the outside. The
greater love and light and life, these are the rewards of the heart. It grows and unfolds its
petals as a lotus flower, from its own germ divine, from that ocean of immortality, which is
in every drop of life.
Therefore, for a compassionate heart every sufferer is a part of itself, and by no
means outside. On the mirror of the
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lower person the images may come and fight among themselves, rejoice and suffer like
some foreign pictures, like outward friends or enemies. But when the Heartlight touches
the scene, it takes all pictures to itself, and they all weep or rejoice there, as in one great
lucid diamond, as the integral parts of itself. Nothing outer then can be, reward.
You might call it the philosophy of children, or you might call it the philosophy of
sages, but you see, the real, singing radiant life is here, so that if you wish to live and tear
the gloomy veil of death which now oppresses human kind, though they foolishly look for
it in the future, here is the chance to do it and grow in action.
The action will start at the beginning through the seven objects of the I. B. L. They
are like the seven nerve centres appearing in the jelly-like substance of an embryo of the
new cycle, which is dawning - and no matter how insignificant they may appear at the
beginning, they are perfectly necessary to give an ever-growing instrument for the already
existing heart and soul of humanity to manifest itself in the world.
Now let us discuss the objects one by one. (1) To help workingmen to realize the
nobility of their calling and their true position in life.
In order to do that, those dark clouds hanging above the modern age, should be as
much as possible gradually removed and dispersed. The theological original sin has made
just as much evil as the blighting materialistic beliefs. The masses are oppressed mentally
even more than physically. This gloom should be removed. Light removes darkness.
Now, what is light? We can touch people by mind, but we can make them see and feel only
by the heart. For the hearts of people are suffering even still more. No! no amount of
philosophy will ever be accepted generally if there is no heart beyond it.
The heart gives the ultimate sanction. Therefore we should learn to love people.
Is it so difficult? More shall we help them, more shall we love them. They will become part
of ourselves, part of our thought, so to say. Let us look ahead into that future, and it would
be easy to love them even now, if we are not able to discern a divine spark, which
condescended to burn in such primeval vehicles. Who then are we that we should shrink?
This is the beginning and foundation - the sine qua non. We shall be then the first
touch of heaven to the unfortunate, and thus the hope shall be given, the first gloom
dispersed and the first light brought in. Then the people will understand, that their salvation
and their future are in their own hands.
Next, all theories discussed should start from this same radiant centre. Every
question should be a ray of heart. Hope - a divine ray in time; brotherhood - a divine ray
in space; justice - a divine ray in motion. To renounce them is to renounce life and to
plunge into despair. And yet in the imagination of many these things are very indefinite and
dreamy. Why is it so? Because people do not dare to live and do not dare to love
eternally. Only eternal things we can love eternally and be serious about them. That
means that we ourselves become self-conscious souls when we love souls.
Men should be awakened to the fact that they are souls, and their true dwelling place
is the ideal and eternal world of Truth. Then only will, hope, brotherhood and justice be of
any value.
The heart should be shown as a power which is perfectly satisfied in the excellency
of these things by such direct perception, that it even may rule the mind. And this is true
nobility, which it is not difficult for the American mind to understand. When we have
awakened to the reality of these things so far, and received so much happiness and light,
it would be foolish not to proceed. People
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should be taught that only by experience can we learn that the heart is real. Theory may
run ahead, but the experimental knowledge is the only true one.
After people understand that life is not an endless mockery, but something serious
and real, they begin to rise on their feet. Life becomes worth living. And energy will be
given to change the conditions to better.
Some people object to broad teachings and require details. They wonder what it will
be, Capitalism, Socialism or even Anarchy. That shows a ridiculous and superficial
understanding of the subject. The idea of brotherhood and tolerance is a good deal more
important than any of the sociological isms. And an example of it is that this idea will stop
all fighting between those isms. It is impossible to give to any of these isms a preference.
They have to develop side by side without fighting and the political fanaticism desirous of
reforming by force of one part of humanity by another is a form of narrow-mindedness.
Just as well to go and reform by force Dahomey or China. Evolution works best when it is
free and unhampered. The vote of the majority is lawful, as Herbert Spencer has proven,
only in those things which concern everybody, as war, tariff, monetary systems, etc. The
American Constitution provides for that. But other things are local, not only geographically,
but even sociologically. Every large society with its own self-government and by-laws is
an example. It may spread over many states, but it is local in the sense of its peculiarities,
which are perfectly unsuitable to other people. Many isms could exist as such societies.
But no! they generally desire to make a political party and impose their ideas upon others,
perfectly forgetting that their ideas do not concern everybody, and that only a very limited
number of ideas can do so. This is as ridiculous as if somebody would propose to establish
a state religion, because a majority wants it. But brotherhood and tolerance are happily
guardians of freedom. They only can regulate the healthy growth of the modern nations,
who are passing through a dangerous point in their evolution. And that is why we should
leave all isms to themselves, but influence them to such a degree, that they would treat one
another just as fraternally as individuals do. And this broad question is at present the most
urgent one from the standpoint of true citizenship, which means less politics, and more
private enterprise, tolerance and fraternal cooperation and help. The I. B. L. would have
a very short existence if it engulfed itself in any political party. It was meant to have a
brighter future, to stand as a messenger of light who is sent to work and move actively
among those lost in a social whirl; but its movements will be angelic. No passion will touch
it, no bitterness, no ambition, no desire of physical rule. This Angel will be in the world but
not of the world. As says a poet: "Proceed O thou, an Angel with the radiant face! In thy
hands there is no dagger crowned with the garlands of the mob, which pierced the breast
of an enemy. There is a flash of another weapon. The Spirit conquers here only by a
divinely-human deed! Thou art divine and above this earth, for thou hast gathered all
sorrows of the world unto thee, for thou art divine love.
"And now thou dost return with the good message.
"Evil foams around thee, but thou dost not heed; thou throwest one more handful
of light, and again it is brighter in the world; till thou wilt circle all lands and with the two-
edged sword of light chase away from them the darkness of the death. Thus thou earnest
again!"
2. To educate children of all nations on the broadest lines of the Universal
Brotherhood and to prepare destitute and homeless children to become workers for
humanity.
This object seems easier to accomplish.
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Who does not like children? The breeze of the fresh primeval forces of nature
seems to blow through them from some far off diviner source. To see them playing in a
group one would forget, which are his children and which are not. All are his children at
such a moment, all are sunny bright beams of the same kind, some divine progeny, some
rays of the eternal youth, from which the grown up people have wandered far away, driven
by the relentless hand of the fate they had themselves created. And yet in their inner
nature they feel this radiance themselves though they cannot manifest it with their
darkened vehicles. But helping it in children and seeing it sparkling there they can enjoy
it mentally by sympathy through their observation. O what wonderful chances nature gives
even to a savage!
Now what makes out of a group of children a rosy garland, is that fraternal spirit they
feel one to another. They do not care about the differences of creed, caste, sex, nation and
color of skin. And to educate them on the broadest lines of the Universal Brotherhood is
simply to keep their fires burning. Truly sometimes children show lots of the smoke, too,
but it is faint and can be easily dispersed. Yet it is generally increased by trying to
overcome smoke by smoke, by speaking to them too much about their faults and by
refusing to give response to their sunshine, or giving a hypocritical response, while children
have such sharp sense that they simply cannot be cheated on their own radiant plane,
though they can not express their astonishment at those cold forms, to which so much is
sacrificed. Now this second object of the League not only changes the old system, by
renouncing the dead forms of the past and calling out to action the Spirit of Unity, but it
prepares new workers for humanity and never will stop till all humanity is embraced.
Helping the children we also help ourselves, for we actually sometimes learn more from
them than we can teach them, though that can not be always expressed in words. We
have here an illustration of a direct reward, which can be easily understood. Let this be as
an illustration that this reward exists in the fields of the unselfish actions, and that if we see
it in one place we can expect it in another, and that by profiting others we profit ourselves.
Let those for whom it is difficult to love humanity at large start to love children, so in future
they will learn easier to recognize the bright response in others. The bright dawn must
come, but every ray of it must he conquered by ourselves, and let us hope that the bright,
loving faces of the children will help us to begin it. Let us then give them a chance to help
us; they are as many millions of ages old as we are, but because they remember it better,
therefore our pride can just as well give itself up. By teaching us they become also the
excellent workers in the grand total of forces striving to reach Unity and Brotherhood.
3. To ameliorate the condition of unfortunate women and assist them to a higher life.
Let us call them unfortunate sisters of ours, for when every bit of selfish passion is
torn away, every woman is a sister. The name of the maiden is in Slavonic languages
deva, - the same word as Sanscrit deva, and means radiant. It is of the same root as the
word day. As men represent active part of life, so women do the shining part. Not because
those two are separate, but because of the predominance of either. The law of cycles suits
here also, for at one time an Ego needs to conquer and manifest new experiences, and at
another time to weave them together into a shining robe of life. Therefore the life of woman
is more inner and restful and harmonious and even nearer to spirit. Therefore it is no
wonder that it smites every feeling heart with pain to see our sisters dragged
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to the outer edges of rough material experiences by the hard conditions and brutality of the
age. To see those whose light made cheerful every corner of their home, whose silvery
laugh was as if coming from some distant stars, whose fragrance was like incense before
the Angel of eternal youth, - to see them cheated in their childish trust, to see them thought
as the lowest servants of passion, to be ever kept under the lash of that worst slavery in
the world, to see them driven down and down into poverty and degradation, with none to
lift, with none even to send a helping thought, to see all this and not to help, and not to
suffer with the insulted nature and its angels, and stand still with supreme contentment of
the superiority of the miserable self, - to do all this is never to know what true love to this
poor suffering humanity ever can be.
No! The Buddhas of compassion did not forget this point. Jesus did not forget
Magdalene, neither did Gotama nor any other Messenger of the Fire-Mist. Let us then join
in this great work in a right spirit.
4. To assist those who are or have been in prisons to establish themselves in
honorable positions of life.
When day has come its light is searching for every nook and corner, and tries to
reach even the deepest well. When a wave of life strikes a planet at a manvantaric dawn,
it dives even to the bottom of the seas, it surges even through the hardest stone. And the
radiance of Brotherhood, the glory of the One Light, appears in the soul of men, it weaves
itself in halos of a thousand garlands, it flashes in a thousand rays, till it fills all with its soft,
suffused tender glow. Naught are before its penetration the prisons of the forms of custom,
and naught are the prisons of the flesh and stone, and those worse prisons of human
passions, hates and doubting darkness self-imposed. Through all this a heart will listen to
the Heart, and it will not fail, when all else fails. For says a poet: "O you do not know, you
sick, you poor, you ignorant, where is that divine lightning, the weapon of your future
victory! It lives in your breast and is called Love, and it alone dissolves the mazes of the
fate." The cowards say: The world is yet dark, the masses ignorant, the laws deficient,
nothing could be done for the improvement of such depths. What a small experience! And
thus the mazes of Karma grow, the unredeemed depths strike back, surge under feet, and
many times tear the victory out of the hands. But there are a few who speak less by words,
more by compassion, whose hearts are not directed to get reward, or to advance, but to
help, to help, to help, - to help for the sake of Love, who know that in that Love their growth
and their reward abide and nowhere else, who have lost themselves to find themselves in
every brother, be he even a criminal without hope. These will do a real work, these will
succeed, for the smallest words upon their lips will have a meaning and a most fleeting
glance will be as a glance of the Eternal Mother.
5. To endeavor to abolish capital punishment.
This is so self-evident, that no explanation seems to be necessary. Truly to say,
there is no punishment beside self-punishment. That is the way the universal justice works.
The wretch goes to drown himself in the water, the water comes not to drown the wretch.
Once the wretch is in the water, the waves come and go, of course, and close over his
head, but that self-conscious part of him which suffers, always descends wilfully, though
not always remembers it after submersion. Even in cases of accidents, floods,
earthquakes, if we suffer at all, we suffer because we thought of it. Mr. Judge wrote that
all catastrophes are connected directly with mankind, and the Secret Doctrine says that we
make bad Karma, whether we do evil or simply
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brood over mischief in our thoughts. They are certain to return and often in a very material
shape. This being the case, the punishment by law is also the expression of uncharitable
and hard feelings of the sufferer himself coming back to him. The judges and lawmakers
are the channels of the force generated by evil-doers. They do it quite unconsciously, too,
and as if propelled by some invisible hand, working through the customs of the country.
Neither judges nor lawmakers feel any special revenge, though they may talk about the
revenge of society, nor is there a very great necessity to protect the community by death
of a culprit, other means being available. This illogical talk shows the great power of the
fatal force working unflinchingly through unconscious channels, whose lack of
discriminative power makes them easy tools. But once men will understand the ways of
the Great Law, they will refuse to be channels of such bad Karma and will turn their labors
into more worthy directions, perhaps into giving spiritual help to those whom they now
suppose to kill, but in reality with whom they never will part through many a rebirth.
More merciful is Nature than the most ideal Gods created by human imagination,
and more just is she. Her purposes run through eternities, and her ways and patterns are
magnificently wide and liberal, even so much that there is left enough space for our own
mistakes and foolishness, which in her wonderful hand she turns into our lessons. She is
the magician which succeeds to make a truth out of a thousand lies, which makes beauty
out of a thousand imperfections. Nothing is wasted in her hands, for she is the Great
Mother, and out of her Unity the Universe was created, not by or from a something new,
but directly out of her great substance by numberless divisions and reflections in those
dividing films, so that every imperfection is a limited perfection and every lie is a limited
Truth. All is her part and all will return to her, the just and the unjust, each in his own way.
For nothing is evil by its essence, only by its limitations. Would then those limitations be
increased by the shadow of death between us and those whose sin and whose shame is
ours, and whose Karma is inextricably interwoven with our Karma. Thus, omitting quite a
grave aspect, that the liberated phantom of the soul of the criminal may prove more
dangerous after death, and omitting the circumstance that mistakes are often made and
innocent people killed, and that in the hands of political or fanatical persecutors frightful red
excesses are committed, - the fact alone that we have cold sympathy excludes the
possibilities of our divine essence to meet bravely our Karma throughout the world and by
destruction of our limitations to return to the Universal Life.
6. To bring about a better understanding between so-called savage and civilized
races by promoting a closer and more sympathetic relationship.
And well Americans might do it, who are a mixture of so many races. But the
confusion of national ideas in other countries has not yet passed. The great improvement
was made in Europe in this century, which can be called a century of awakening of the
nations. France is liberated, Italy united, Germany consolidated, Greece, Servia, Bulgaria,
Roumania freed, Hungary raising its head, Ireland awakening to the great culture of its
past, Poland to the great ideals born of suffering, - Russia opening her eyes like a baby-
giant, smiling brightly to the morning, - and how much friendship was born from mutual aid
and sympathy! International fairs and congresses led to international societies; the nations
started to work together, first in science, then made feeble attempts at political concerts,
then in social questions.
The time when a nation regarded every
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other nation as a savage one is securely past, although the old feeling yet atavistically
smoulders, and can be taken advantage of by political adventurers in moments of passion.
Yet the Angel of international thought and intelligence seems to punish quickly any narrow
jingoism, if not by actual force, then by just criticism. The light of the West is even so
strong that it reacts on India, till she will also awaken. The movement went even as far as
Japan and even China, in its outer form. And even so-called primitive races, which are in
reality remnants of the grand old races, are being reached and their mental growth is
regarded with sympathy. Attempts are made to protect the African races from slavery, and
in America it was done at a great sacrifice. The good forces are at work already, the I. B.
L gathers them into one centre, gives them ever moving life, gives them mind and constant
care. The undertaking is stupendous, and who knows how much literature, poetry and art
will win by the taking up of new ideals. Only those ideals will live which dare to claim a real
life, - and medieval romanticism which deserted the orphan earth and went to live in idle
dreams, will return as something else, as an awakened hero of bones and blood, who, as
a knight in a fable will free from the chains of sleep and dreaming the princess of the
human force, the force of heart, whence only a true awakening can arise.
There are colors which only can be got by combining all other colors, and there are
the glories which can be obtained only by the joined light of the glories of the civilization of
every nation of this earth. For every nation has a spiritual mission to perform, a new
understanding of life to develop, a new idea, a new color, a new psychic essence. And for
whom is all this? Not for themselves, but to share with all humanity.
Every notion is a revelation in itself for those who sympathize with it. It seems as
if a new space was opened, new truth learnt, a new tone sounded, and some old unknown
longing of the heart is now known anew and satisfied. Who knows how many ages of the
past blow their fragrant wind of reminiscence to the wondering soul, who loved so much,
who did so much? If that is so, why should we care, that old shadows may be also brought
by breezes, - and why should we not awake ourselves so much as to regard them like
something of the nature of the theatrical curtains, beyond which are they who charm our
soul, that it weeps or smiles for joy? And so it looks, when so many wars, oppressions,
jealousies are forgotten and forgiven in the blue distance of history, and the ancient charm
remains and smites the heart through the blue air with pain, reminding of home-sickness,
and with the joy of hope immortal that the true essence is never dead, for it descended and
will descend again from that eternal generation, where none is born - "gens aeterna, in qua
nemo nascitur."
7. To relieve human suffering resulting from flood, famine, war, and other calamities;
and generally to extend aid, help and comfort to suffering humanity throughout the world.
This object has to do with occasional chronic cases, which, nevertheless happen so
often in the world at large, that they require nearly constant care.
And the care shall be given by those who understand what Universal Brotherhood
means, and that it does not exclude a single human being in its scope. The previous six
objects include a good deal, but this one rounds all. It includes alike rich and poor, old and
young, men and women, virtuous and vicious, friends and enemies, cultured and savages.
The humanity of earth has to prepare to be a vehicle of Celestial Humanity, which is
mystically One. Therefore its vehicle should learn to be an organism. Now a normal
organism has no dead or neglected parts, - and it is connected
--- 72
------------
CHRISTMAS GREETINGS
From a Northern Star-Group to a Southern.
-------------
--- 73
"In the Kingdom of Harmony there is no beginning and no end; just as the objectless
and self-devouring fervor of the soul, all ignorant of its source, is nothing but itself, nothing
but longing, yearning, tossing, pining - and dying out, i.e., dying without having assuaged
itself in any 'object'; thus dying without death, and therefore everlasting falling back upon
itself." - Wagner's Artwork of the Future, 1849
IN a drama concerned so much with soul-events as this we have but little to do with
Time and Space. We therefore find here no definite lapse of time indicated between Acts
I and II. From subsequent events it is evident that Isolde is resting after the voyage prior
to the celebration of the nuptials with King Marke. Since that memorable landing she and
Tristan have been apart; but Isolde has never departed from her resolve to win Tristan
from the Day and "take him hence to the Night'' of the inner life, and so she seizes the
opportunity for a meeting when the royal party are absent on a night hunt.
The scene is in the garden outside her apartments and the Act is divided into three
parts: Isolde's expectancy; the great scene between Isolde and Tristan; and the surprise
by Marke and his hunting-party.
The wonderful music of the first scene has been sufficiently described by Mr.
Neresheimer in the August number of Theosophy, and therefore I will only call attention to
the theme which breaks like a shrill and menacing cry on the shimmering silence of the
summer evening. It is the motive of that terrible Day, from the torment and illusion of which
the soul is yearning to flee.
But the soul that aspires to the higher life always has an enemy in the shape of its
own lower nature, which arises at the portal and seeks to bar its progress. In Tristan's case
this foe is Melot, a fellow-knight, who pretends to be his friend but is really jealous of him.
While Isolde is waiting for Tristan, Braugaene warns her of this danger: "Thinkest thou,''
she urges, "because thou art blind the world has no eyes for thee?" She knows that Isolde
is not of this world and does not see with its eyes, and so she tries to show her that Melot
planned the night-hunt, whose faint horn-echoes can be heard, in order to entrap them
unawares.
But Isolde, with wider vision, knows that this seeming enemy will prove a friend by
hastening their final release. She hints to Braugaene of a greater power behind these
works of friend and foe which molds them all in the end for good:
--- 74
This "Frau Minne" is the great Love-Spirit of the Universe herself, the Universal
Mother, in whom now Isolde declares her absolute faith and trust.
The signal for Tristan is to be the extinguishing of a torch, the symbol of ''daylight's
glare," which stands at the gate; and, telling Braugaene to depart and keep watch, Isolde
puts it out with the words:
Have we not heard of this "laughter" before in the Ring of the Nibelung associated
with "love" and "death" when Brynhild greets Siegfried on her awaking?
Tristan quickly answers to the signal and the first words of greeting tell us - if we
need the assurance - that they have not met since Day tore them asunder on the ship:
"Dare I to dream it? . . . Is it no trick? Is it no tale?" But the first joyful transports over they
speedily soar into higher realms of consciousness where their speech is that of the
Mysteries:
And then together they review the mistakes of the past. Isolde tells Tristan it was
"the Day that lied in him" when he came to Erin to woo her for Marke and "doom his true-
love to death." For death indeed it would be to her to be chained to the Day of Marke; and
Tristan truly answers: "In the Day's bedazzling shine, how were Isolde mine?" Then he
goes on to tell of the inner vision which had come to him in the midst of earthly fame:
It was "Day's false glare," as Isolde shows him, which blinded his inner vision then;
but now he is being gently led by her, step by step, as "head" is led by "heart." It is the
central scene of an allegory of initiation where the innermost mysteries are being gradually
unfolded to the soul's gaze. The supreme moment is close at hand as Tristan proclaims
that,
A motive is now heard which seems to be expressive of the throwing off of all earthly
desire, and the supreme bliss of Union with the All. This motive appears again with
magnificent effect later in this Act and also at the end of the drama, in Isolde's
transfiguration, to her last words: "In the World's yet one all swallowing Soul - to drown -
go down - to nameless Night - last delight!" Its entry, therefore, at this point, should be
noted:
--- 75
Immediately there follows the first great climax with the perception of this truth - the
first glimpse of the Unity of Being: -
[[score: Sleep-motive]]
[[score: Death-motive]]
hidden in her watch-tower, is heard warning them that ''Night is now at speed." Isolde
hears her, and gently whispers "List beloved," while a motive of great peace and
restfulness appears. It is derived front the motive of Death-defiance and is followed by a
new form of the Death-motive to Tristan's answer, "Leave me lifeless!"
Finding Tristan is still firm in his death-resolve, Isolde leads him yet a step further.
He has felt his oneness with all humanity and now he must understand the mystery of his
own new birth, as something higher than his present self, through this mystical love-death.
"But our love," she asks, "is not its name Tristan and Isolde?" Did Tristan go alone
to death that bond would be disturbed. So the second truth flashes on him: they will "die
to live, to love, ever united" in a "nameless" (nomenlos) state in which they will be
surrendered wholly each to each."
As Tristan makes this further advance the motive of the Death-song appears in
which Isolde presently joins:
Again conies the warning voice, "Already Night gives way to Day"; but the soul is
now past all fear of illusion, and with imposing mien Isolde's fiat goes forth: "Henceforth
ever let Night protect us." The second climax is reached and together they burst forth with
the song:
[[score: Death-Song]]
--- 76
And the music! How can it be described? Once more the theme of the Death-song
appears combined with a soaring theme of ecstasy, and the whole is worked up with ever
more superhuman power until the supreme height is reached with the re-entry of the all
embracing World-Union motive to the words, "Ceaseless, whole, and single Soul."
On the last word of the song a shriek is heard from Braugaene and Kurvenal rushes
in with drawn sword, crying: "Save thyself, Tristan." He is followed by Marke, Melot and
others. How Tristan now regards them is seen by his ejaculation: "The barren Day, for the
last time!" Morning is dawning as the echoes of the great song of bliss die away and Melot
triumphantly asks Marke if he has not accused Tristan truly. Now comes the greatest pain
for Tristan and he sees how deep a wrong he did to Marke in winning Isolde for him. The
good and noble-hearted King is torn with grief at the faithlessness of his friend, which he
cannot understand: "Oh, where shall truth be found, now Tristan is untrue?" And as, in
broken voice, he tells how, left widowed and childless, he loved Tristan so that never more
he wished to wed, the unhappy knight sinks his head in greater and greater grief. Marke's
words about the princess whom Tristan would fain woo for him are significant:*
------------
* These words of Marke's are clear evidence that Isolde is still to him an object of
distant veneration, nor is there a word in his speech of rebuke to her. I accentuate this
point here and elsewhere because it is commonly stated by critics that Isolde is already
wedded to Marke. Only those who have studied all the versions can realize how Wagner
has purified the story from the objectionable and unnecessary incidents introduced by other
poets, and has brought out the true occult meaning of the legend.
------------
Her, my desire ne'er dared approach,
Before whom passion awestruck sank.
Who, so noble, fair and holy,
Bathed my soul in hallowed calm . . .
But what comes out most strongly is the pathos of his inability to fathom "the
undiscovered, dark and dread mysterious cause" of it all. Upright and noble, this royal
figure is yet but the expression of the best that the outer world of Day can offer. The
Mysteries are a closed book to him. All this finds a concrete expression in the Marke-
motive:
[[score: Marke-motive]]
How thoroughly everyone who has entered at all into the realm of Occultism can
sympathize both with Marke and Tristan! How well they know the truth of Tristan's words
as he raises his eyes with sympathy to his heartbroken friend:
But the music tells us, for it sounds the first Tristan-Isolde motive, which passes into
the peaceful Slumber-motive as Tristan turns to Isolde and asks her if she will now follow
him to the land where the sun never shines. Isolde replies:
The World-Union motive sounds again as Tristan bends down and kisses her softly
on the forehead. Melot starts forward in fury and Tristan, drawing Ins sword, reproaches
Melot for his treachery, and then attacks him. As Melot points his sword at him, Tristan lets
his own guard fall and sinks wounded into his faithful Kurvenal's arms, while Marke
--- 77
PHILOSOPHIC MORALITY
by Professor Alexander Wilder, M.D.
--- 78
will not be found set forth in a code. Good men, says Emerson, will not obey the laws too
well. Indeed, nothing tends more to bring confusion and death into arts and morals, than
this blind imposing upon one period or individual soul, the experience of another person or
former age. We may, perhaps, do very well with general notions, but certainly not with
specific personal conclusions. The snail that entered the shell of the oyster found it a
wretched dwelling, though it possessed a precious pearl; and the swallow gathering food
for the winter after the example of the provident ant was the reverse of wise.
The right-thinking person will be the law for himself. Our varied experiences have
for their end the developing of this condition in us. The ancient sages taught accordingly
that manners or ethics are certain qualities or principles which long habit and practice have
impressed upon what they denominate the sensuous and irrational part of the mental
nature. Moral virtue does not consist in the uprooting or suppressing of the passions and
affections. This is not possible or even desirable. Indeed if they should really be rooted
up from our being, the understanding itself would lose its vigor, become torpid, and perhaps
even perish outright. It is their province, like that of the fire in the furnace, to impart energy
to the whole mental machinery. Meanwhile the understanding takes note, and acting by
the inspiration of the superior intellect, directs how that energy shall be employed. Human
beings act according to their impulses, and the true morality consists in the bringing of
these into good order and the disposing of them to laudable purposes.
Casuists have affirmed that our first sense of duty was derived from the conception
of what is due to ourselves. This is instinctive in every living being. Even the ethics of the
New Testament are founded upon this precept: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself,"
it is likewise declared that "he that loves another has fulfilled all law." We are able to define
what is just to others by our apperception of what is right for ourselves.
These premises, it will be apprehended, will establish selfishness as the measure
of moral virtue, and even as its basis. This is by no means so unreasonable as it may
seem. Selfishness in its proper place and function is necessary and orderly. It is the first
of our natural propensities. The babe that we admire and often praise as the emblem of
innocence, is hardly less than absolutely selfish. It regards everything around it as its own
by right, and every person as its servant. It knows no higher motive than its own
enjoyment.
By no art of reasoning can we show this to be immoral. It is not necessary for any
one to plead that it is right, because the child was born so. We can perceive it easily
enough by considering it intelligently. The highest good that a person can accomplish is
to be measured by the highest usefulness of which he is capable. In the case of the babe,
its utility, so far as others are concerned, is only possible and in prospect. All that it can
perform well is summed up in eating and growing. This is really the state which is usually
denominated "selfish" and yet we perceive that it is necessary to the ulterior purpose of
becoming useful.
Perhaps we ought to give a philosophic definition to evil itself. We may have been
too prone to restrict our concepts of the operations of the universe to the limits of our own
backyard. What seems like an infringing of order in our brief vision may be a perfect
harmony in the purview of the higher wisdom. In the objectifying of the world of nature as
the work or projected outcome from the Divine, it must of necessity be distinct, imperfect,
limited and inferior. We apprehend this to be true of every created
--- 79
being. If it could be otherwise, then mankind and all the universe would be, not simply
divine in origin and relative quality, but they would also be very God, and coordinate Deity.
Hence, therefore, imperfection and evil are unavoidable in all derived existence. Yet
they are full of utility. They certainly enable us to obtain the necessary experience and
discipline for becoming more worthy. In this way they are beneficial, and a part of the
Divine purpose. The child that never stumbled never learned to walk. The errors of the
man of business are his monitors to direct him in the way of prosperity. Our own sins and
misdoings are essential in an analogous way to our correction and future good conduct.
The individual, however, who chooses to continue in these faults and evil conditions,
thereby thwarts their beneficial objects. His shortcomings become turpitude. All such,
turning their back to the Right, will be certain to "eat the fruit of their own way, and be filled
with their own devices."
The sense of individual right which is commonly designated as selfish, will be found
capable of exaltation and expansion till it shall attain the rank and dimension of the widest
benevolence. From the consciousness of what is due or belonging to ourselves proceeds
the intelligent apprehending of what is proper and right for another. The child, when he
comes into contact with playmates will soon learn that every one of them has personal
rights with which others may not interfere. It may be only an imperfect conception,
nevertheless it is a discipline and will exalt his view of things above the altitude of unmixed
selfishness. When in riper years the attraction of sex is superadded, the field and
opportunity are afforded for completer and nobler development. It may be objected that the
individual too generally aspires to possess the object of regard without due consideration
of the wishes and well being of the other. In this view, the new emotion will be but a new
form of the radical selfish impulse.
Indeed, it is not possible or even desirable that the earlier nature should be
superseded. However high the head may reach toward the sky, the feet of necessity must
rest upon the earth. Even the eagle must come down from its loftiest flights to solace its
wants. The noblest human soul has like need of earthly repose and aliment, without which
it will cease its aspirations to the higher life and thought. Eros, the ancient sages affirm,
drew forth the divine order from chaos. The attraction of the sexes inspires a desire of
pleasing, which is in itself a tendency toward self-abnegation. In due time the relations of
household, neighborhood and society proceed from this root and perform their office of
extending individual aims to universal ends. Selfishness must then be relegated to the
background, or it will become manifested as a monster of arrested growth and deformity.
In its primary office as impelling us to maintain ourselves in normal health it is
permissible, and in the helpless and immature it is entirely laudable. But the person of
adult years who shall remain in this rudimentary moral condition, whether living in a
wilderness or among the most cultured, is for all that, only a savage. Civilization in its
genuine sense, is the art of living together; and it is vitally dependent upon the just regard
of every individual for the rights of the others. Whoever promulgates and lives by the
maxim that "everyone must shift for himself," has not yet passed beyond the confines of
uncivilized life. However rich, cultured or scholarly, he has yet to learn the simple alphabet
of morality.
Perhaps we shall find the Pauline ethics, as set forth in the New Testament, our best
exposition of moral virtue. It is an indispensable condition of a morality that is to be
efficient, says
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Jacobi, that one shall believe in a higher order of things of which the common and visible
is an heterogeneous part that must assimilate itself to the higher: both to constitute but a
single realm. Paul has declared all superior virtue to consist in charity, or paternal love for
the neighbor, and utterly ignores self-seeking. "No one of us lives for himself," he declares;
"and no one dies for himself, but does so for God." Writing to his Corinthian disciples, he
extols the various spiritual attainments, and then having included them in one summary,
he avers that charity infinitely surpasses them all. He then depicts in glowing terms its
superior quality:
Thus with true philosophic ken, he mentions the various spiritual endowments as
incident to the lower grades of development, and cast into the dark by charity. "When I was
a babe," he says, "I prattled, thought and reasoned as one; but when I became man, I set
the things of babyhood aside." Whoever seeks the general good, the best interests of
others, with all his heart, making all advantage to himself a subordinate matter, has passed
the term of childhood, and is adult man in full measure and development.
It will he perceived that philosophic morality is not a creature of codes, books or
teachers. It is always inseparable from personal freedom. It is character and substantial
worth as distinguished from factitious reputation and artificial propriety of conduct. The
person who keeps all the precepts of the law is not complete till he yields himself and his
great possessions to his brethren. The cross of the life eternal may not be taken and borne
in the hand while one grasps eagerly the sublunary good.
We thus trace the moral quality in our nature from its incipient manifestation as a
duty which we owe, to its culmination as a principle by which we are to live. It fades from
view as a system enforced by rules and maxims, from being lost in the greater light of its
apotheosis as an emanation from a diviner source. We are taught by our experience of
results to shun evil and wrong-doing as certain to involve us in peril; and now the higher
illumination reveals them as a turning aside from the right way, and sinning against the
Divine. Our highest duty is to perfect ourselves in every department of our nature by the
living of a perfect life - or as Plato expresses it, becoming like God as far as this is possible
- holy, just and wise.
Such is the aim of all philosophy, and it is attained by whomever in earnestness and
sincerity pursues the way of justice and fraternal charity.
---------------
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IT is probably well known to the outside world as well as to members of the Mystic
Craft, that the Mysteries of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons are based on the
building of King Solomon's Temple. In the published lectures much is said of this Temple,
its dimensions, plans and the process of building. As the name Masons indicated the order
is one of builders, but what they propose to build is not so generally known. We are taught
that the most wonderful building ever erected in ancient times was the temple at Jerusalem,
built under the direction of Solomon, king of Israel.
The name Sol-Om-On is very suggestive, being a combination of three names for
Deity taken from the Latin, the Hindu, and the Egyptian languages, or rather a combination
of three names for the Sun, which to all the early races was the visible representation of
the invisible God, and this combination suggests the thought that reference is made to a
mythical personage representing that Great Light of Masonry which once sufficed to
illumine the mind of the faithful craftsmen, making all things plain. We may then have some
doubts as to whether King Solomon of the Mysteries is the same as the wise monarch of
Israel.
Many Masonic writers claim that the Order of Free Masons had its origin during the
Middle Ages among the operative Masons and that the change was from operative to
speculative masonry; indeed we have been given the place and the time when the change
was made, the place being a certain tavern in London. We know that during the Middle
Ages, the various handicrafts were organized into Guilds, into which, in some cases, there
was a regular initiation service. That these Guilds had a large membership and were
possessed of great wealth, the magnificent Guild Halls in England and on the continent
bear witness. And among these Guilds or leagues of workingmen including masters,
journeymen and apprentices, the Masons were certainly not the least important. In the
intervals between the incessant wars and even during the wars, stone castles, palaces and
cathedrals were erected, requiring the labor of skilled Masons, so that the guild of Masons
became one of the most powerful, their work being so important and in such demand, that
the secrets of the craft would be most carefully guarded.
I do not agree with this theory of the origin of Free Masonry for I find much in the
symbols and glyphs of the order, which makes me certain that speculative preceded
operative Masonry and that long before the age when Operative Masons were formed into
a Guild, there were large and powerful fraternities of Speculative Builders. The order of
evolution is from within without, from the one absolute point the centre of all things to the
periphery where manifestation begins, from the thought in the Divine Mind to that
crystallization of the Divine thought which we call the Universe. The grand mistake of
modern times is to suppose that out of nothing something can be made, that from matter
spirit can be evolved more than was first involved, that no spiritual builders exist. To be
sure spirit is nothing and precedes matter which is something, but this is not the sense in
which the word nothing is used; that means as commonly accepted absolute emptiness,
which cannot be for we have been told truly by Science that Nature abhors a vacuum.
But granting that Masons were first an operative Guild, we have to go farther back
than to the Middle Ages. The beautiful temples of Greece, the solemn and
--- 82
impressive buildings of India and Egypt require a guild of builders as well as the cathedrals
of Europe. And we are told that Atlantis, buried long ago beneath the Atlantic Ocean,
rejoiced in costly and grand temples of most elaborate architecture, surpassing anything
ever seen in modern times.
Masonic Tradition and Masonic teaching dates the beginning of Free Masonry from
the building of King Solomon's temple. In Jewish history this was an important event, and
as Christianity is an outgrowth of Judaism, it has become to Christendom also very
important. To make of this temple one of the wonders of the world, we are told that
strangers from Tyre were introduced among the Jewish workmen, who were entirely
incompetent to carry out the plan supposed to be revealed to Solomon by Jehovah, the
details of which he drew on a trestle board and gave to the master in charge of the work,
that this workman Hiram Abiff might prepare working plans for the craft. Several reasons
make this seem unlikely, the most important being that the Jewish temple supposed to
have been built by Solomon according to the dimensions given either in the Bible or
Masonic tradition was no wonder as compared with the temples of Greece, Egypt and
India. Should it be built today, 103 feet long, 206 feet high and 35 or 50 feet wide (the
dimensions given in the Bible) it would attract attention only for its awkwardness and lack
of symmetry.
Further studying the details of the Egyptian temples, of those built by the prehistoric
people of America, so much alike as to demand an Atlantis from which colonies could have
gone both east and west, their cyclopean and symmetrical structure required a far greater
knowledge of mechanics than the temple at Jerusalem. Studying the temples of Greece,
the beauty and harmony of design is far greater than is displayed in Solomon's temple.
One, on examining the Cathedral of Cologne might almost believe that a supernatural
architect had been employed, which supposition is by no means needed to account for the
temple fabled to have been built by King Solomon and which was indeed much inferior to
that built at Jerusalem by King Herod.
Then there is much in the ceremonies connected with Free Masonry which takes us
back to very ancient times. Of this much can be spoken of among the brethren but enough
is known to the public to warrant the assertion that Masonry reaches hack to prehistoric
times.
In a Lodge Room properly built the most elevated platform is in the East, the next
in the West, the next in the South and none in the North. Sun worshipers always looked
on the North as the abode of evil, where darkness prevailed. There is much in the initiation
service which plainly refers to sun worship and to the motion of the earth round the Sun,
a motion known to the wise men of the East and to dwellers on the American continent long
before the time of Solomon.
The search for the Master's Word of which we hear so much, takes us back to a very
remote period and to certain teachings once very carefully concealed. Sound in the form
of words was always conceived to be of the greatest importance.
In the book of Genesis we read as the first act of Manifestation or Evolution, "The
Elohim" said "Let there be light and there was light." Silence was broken by a divine sound
followed by that vibration which we call "light." Among the people of the Orient great power
has always been supposed to reside in spoken words, and certain combinations of words
or mantrams are believed to possess magical power, as the famous sentence "Om Mani
padme hum," and the pater noster as given by Jesus to his disciples. In the New
Testament, as well as in other sacred books, we hear much of the Word of God, not
referring to the Bible
--- 83
but to certain divine sounds. Jesus said that he worked wonders by the name of his father
and the Apostles did the same by the name of Jesus. Once in the year the High Priest
entered the Holy of Holies at Jerusalem and pronounced at low breath the true name of
God (Jahveh, male, female potency) never used by the Jews. All of these allusions to the
word refer to the sacred Omnific Word whispered by the Hierophant or Master of
Ceremonies in the ear of the candidate, who after a sleep of three days was brought to life
and light.
Another indication of the great antiquity of Free Masonry is the frequent recurrence
of the number seven, not referring to the seven days of the week, but to the ancient
doctrine of the sevenfold nature of man, because of which we have a week of seven days.
Seven seems to be the number which belongs to this age of manifestation. We read of
seven colors in the rainbow, the imperial standard of the Incas of Peru, seven notes in the
scale, seven labors of magic, seven upper spheres, seven orifices in the head, seven
layers of the skin, seven divisions to the eye, seven ancient Rishi's, seven branches to the
candlestick in the temple, seven Archangels, the Greek poet sings "Seven sounding letters
sing the praise of me, The Immortal God, The Almighty Deity," seven fires burned before
the altar of Mithra. In man are seven kingdoms joined: mineral, vegetable, intellectual,
Astral. Spiritual and Celestial.
Seven steps in masonry enter the Holy of Holies in groups of three and five. In the
centre of the Lodge Room stands an altar four square with three lights, the Masonic Apron
is four square with a triangular bib, referring to the square of the animal man, the first Adam
and the triangle of the Spiritual or second Adam, of which the Pyramid found in all parts of
the world is an enduring symbol, appearing (the Pyramid) long before the time of Solomon
in Egypt, India and America, dating back to the time when Atlantis was a great continent,
on which dwelt many skilled builders.
What means the circle with the point in the centre used by Astrology as symbol for
the sun? This figure, found on all Masonic Charts is also found on the temples of India,
Egypt and America, and always means the same thing, the finite coming forth from the
infinite, the first stirring of life in the Universe. The first sound which breaks the silence
before there is either motion or form. This most sacred symbol referring to the Supreme
One, to the Great Architect of the Universe is found in all the mysteries and especially
refers to the circle of manifestation which is the visible Universe proceeding from the
Absolute or unmanifested God. Another emblem of this grand evolution is the compasses
worn by every Mason, and being the instrument used to describe the circle, represents
Cosmic Evolution or the manifestation of Deity.
One of the most ancient of symbols long antedating Christianity is the cross, which
tells of the great mystery of manifestation, for the cross is the cube unfolded, the altar
represents the cube or unmanifested God, the cross the manifestation of God, which is
always a sacrifice of the higher to raise the lower; or the descent of spirit into matter, to
redeem it and then lift it on high, thus teaching the divinity and necessarily the immortality
of man. This cross appears in many forms, now as the Latin, then as the Greek, now as
the letter T, then as the Swastica; among masons it is the carpenter's square. The square
and compasses, then, are a compound symbol expressing the whole mystery of the
Universe, teaching that man really is both animal and God, teaching the union of spirit and
matter and the final divinizing of matter, when man has finally been seated in the chair of
King Solomon.
The Cable Tow figured on Masonic
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charts and of such importance to the brothers reminds of the famous triple cord of Brahmin
Sanyasi's, the string on which certain Lamas place their Vy stone with which they would not
part for all the fabled wealth of King Solomon; it also reminds of the Sutratma or thread on
which the Orientals teach, that the various lives of man are strung and which through many
changing personalities ever preserves the individuality.
All brothers will remember the peculiar way in which the substitute for the missing
word was given, but probably few know that in very ancient times the seal word was
communicated in precisely the same way, taking us back to a time when in the Great
Pyramid at Ghizeh the candidate for a knowledge of the mysteries was conducted through
the chambers and galleries so peculiarly constructed, or through more confusing passages
in underground temples, and then after having slept for three days and three nights in the
Sarcophagus was raised from a dead level to a living perpendicular.
Masonry is found in all parts of the world among nations professing many religions,
and only among Jews, Christians and Mohammedans do we hear anything about King
Solomon's temple, yet everywhere the ritual is similar to that in Christian countries, so that
a Mason can make himself known in any part of the world. Indeed that great light in
Masonry, the Hebrew Bible, is replaced in other lands by the book held sacred in those
countries.
From the earliest times in all religions, early Christianity among the rest, there have
been secret societies which initiated the worthy into the Mysteries, using much the same
symbolism which prevails among Masons. Of some we have only vague rumors, of others
a complete knowledge. For the purpose of such initiation it is now believed by careful
students that some of the pyramids were constructed symbolizing as they do that most
sacred part of the mysteries, the seven-fold nature of man, rising toward God and implying
the final divinizing of the whole man when God should rule through all the kingdoms and
man should be raised to the true life - at one with God.
The purpose of all these mysteries was the same, to build a perfect character. This
was the temple of Solomon, not that erected at Jerusalem, but to be built by every one
deemed worthy to receive the knowledge which should correctly guide him. The building
of the Temple of King Solomon is the symbolical representation of the gradual attainment
of divine wisdom; the development of the spiritual from the earthly; the manifestation of
the power and splendor of the spirit in the physical world, through the wisdom and genius
of the builder, who, when he has become fully possessed of this secret wisdom, is a
mightier than King Solomon himself. "He who is Lord of Self is Lord of all the world." When
the ideal character is developed, then is the temple builded, without the sound of hammer
or any tool of iron being heard in the house while it is in the process of building.
Freedom, Fraternity, and Equality are the corner stones of Free Masonry, because
of which Masons have been hated the world over by kings and priests, because of which
they have done much for humanity. In the Masonic Lodge as in the Christian Ecclesia of
the first centuries, noble and peasant, rich and poor, educated and uneducated, sit side by
side, even the Master being on a level with his brothers except when presiding over his
lodge.
Rightness is the most important factor in house building, and, righteousness of most
importance in character building. The plumb is used by the Operative Mason to test the
rightness of the walls which he is erecting, and the speculative Mason must also try his life
to see whether he is building plumb, so
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that he can endure all tests whether from the sun of prosperity or the storms of adversity.
His character must be builded square, and he must ever stand erect, facing the rising sun
of truth.
Perhaps nothing is more necessary in character building than the due restraint of
the passions and appetites and the general habit of doing all things in moderation.
Masonry ever teaches its members to circumscribe their appetites and passions within due
bounds, so that instead of being a promoter of licentiousness, Masonry teaches its
members to practice virtue and seeks the reformation of those brothers who yield to their
lower nature.
Belief in God, not in Jehovah or a God of any name, not in this God or that God, but
in a supreme power making for righteousness; in an holy one, superior to man, whose
wisdom, order and beauty is visible on every side, is necessary to a perfect character, and
every Masonic Lodge gives plain evidence of such belief.
The one thing for which people are everywhere seeking is some knowledge of a
future life. Perhaps the Mason now, no more than others, has any knowledge, though the
Great Lodge of Masters, from whose teachings Masonry originated did possess such
knowledge, and in due time in this country, with the true word, it shall be given again. But
even in the Lodges of today the brothers symbolically, have died to the earth and the lower
man, have been regenerated and raised from a dead level to a living perpendicular. More
important than a life beyond the grave is a raising from the animal sensual life now, for that
higher life once realized on the earth, the divine man made ruler, the Christ principle, or
Christos, elected master; "the light which lighteth every man, who cometh into the world"
made to burn brightly, come what will, the union with Strength, Wisdom and beauty, the
true God, can never be lost. The Master's word received, the divine sonship
acknowledged, and man walks a God on earth. Masonry attempts the same grand work,
then, which was done in the ancient lodges long before history was written and it long
antedates King Solomon.
Masonry by its tolerance of all creeds, by its vigorous battle for civil and religious
freedom, by its exalted morality, by its brotherhood exemplified even on the battle field, by
its symbolic teaching of immortality, has been a strong aid in diffusing light and opposing
materialism. It deserves well of all men for it demands of its members that they build these
temples of Solomon, so that when called upon they may meet the Supreme Inspector at
the East Gate of the Temple with their feet forming the angle of a perfect square, and their
bodies erect, facing the Sun of Righteousness, which, rising in the Holy of Holies, sheds
its glorious light into the dark cavern, illumining the whole man, and flooding him with
unspeakable strength, wisdom and beauty.
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CHAPTER I.
The Christian religion or the Teachings of Jesus indebted to the ancient philosophy
for its contents. How to prepare the mind for a new phase of truth.
My object is to reach the enlightened among those who call themselves Christians,
or in other words, the followers of Christ. They erroneously believe that Theosophy is
opposed to Christianity. Theosophy is opposed to bigotry, or materialistic priestcraft, that
is a blot upon the real teachings of Jesus. There is abundance of evidence, if one is
sufficiently interested to search therefor, that the teachings of Jesus and early Christians
were indebted to the Esoteric Philosophy, or the very ancient, original Wisdom Religion.
The development of Greek Philosophy culminated in Plato, and declined with the
Macedonian conquest, was again revived with Ptolemy at Alexandria. By their writings,
Plato and many of the neo-Platonists prove themselves to have been initiated in the Secret
Doctrine, or Wisdom Religion, or Theosophy, which are at all times and everywhere the
same. Here is a statement by none less than the illustrious St. Augustine, one of the early
Church Fathers: "What is now called the Christian Religion existed among the ancients,
and was not absent from the human race until Christ came; but the true religion which
already existed, began to be called "Christian." So at the outset the reader must not let
prejudice, early habits of thought, egotism or indifference bar the way to a broader, riper
and later-day concept of truth.
If the farmer intends to plant, he prepares his soil by plowing the old ground; weeds
and rubbish are uprooted, the soil enriched, and then conies the planting of seed. So if we
desire a richer crop of Truth, we must put the mind soil in a receptive condition, freeing it
likewise from the weeds and rubbish of egotism, the selfish thought that we know all that
is worth knowing. This uprooting of old egotism makes room for new ideas, and these
ideas must first be sown ere we can realize the blossom or the fruit. So this mental plowing
is necessary before listening to new forms of truth, then we will not be so ready to condemn
that which appears new; and simply because it is new to us label it absurd, preposterous
or untrue. Let us not put ourselves in the position of the man, who was so bigoted and
dense, that the judge who examined him, as a witness, remarked: "You are entitled to
great credit, sir; you must have taken infinite pains with yourself, for no man could naturally
be so stupid!" This, however, must be understood - that these teachings do not condemn
any religious system of thought; the aim is to point out the truths underlying all religions,
and to help the reader to a better understanding of his own.
Surely every one who has a mind above the brute should wish to know something
of his origin, his life and future destiny in a way that appeals to his reason and to justice.
Is he satisfied with the irrational or barren teachings of the general church, where fear
dominates the ignorant on one side; and, on the other, instead of a religion of deeds, there
is a jealous defence of theological dogma, and a perfunctory profession of creeds and
performance of rites. Such bask in lazy indifference, for if they know more concerning the
mysteries of Being, more will be required of them, and they complacently tell you that they
do not con-
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cern themselves about such things, for it will come out all right, if Evolution is true, we must
evolve somehow, and there's all eternity to work in. True, every word; but how is evolution
to be carried on unless we, the objects of evolution, also become the subjects' or in other
words, evolution is only possible as each individual makes personal effort. We cannot by
some wholesale process become passively evolved; each individual must work with the
definite aim to begin with himself, to push himself, if ever so little, upward and onward. So
only is humanity uplifted. What is it in man that seems to take for granted that somehow
we will evolve, that we must progress, and yet, in mockery, keeps him chained to old habits
of thought, old vices and tedious sins? thinking perchance that somehow he will get out
of ignorance into knowledge, as though some outside force could push him along. It is the
lower mind of man which in a vague and general sense catches the knowledge from its own
higher mind, which is endeavoring to impress this truth upon the brain mind. This higher
mind principle overshadows the lower, and the lower perforce must reach out, or upward,
as a taper to a gas jet. that it in turn may light up the obscure chamber of the human soul.
It is the voice of the lower mind that speaks to us in the selfish, indifferent way, and cheats
us into the belief that somehow we will come out all right, and finally strangles the Divine
voice within, that is ever pleading to be heard.
It is certain that many most devout and earliest men remain within the pale of the
Church, because they cannot see what it is to be put in its place; so they are compelled
to preach that doctrine of compromise which is the chief cornerstone of all Churches, for
they are well aware that any attempt to preach social reform upon the lines of Christ's moral
teachings, would be to undermine the foundations of society from which the Church draws
its sustenance. Theosophy is not resurrected Buddhism; it is not opposed to the inner
teachings of the Bible; it does not ask you to leave your Church, it asks you to take new
life into your Church; it asks you to pledge yourself in the service of humanity
against human wrongs, against oppression. It asks you to pledge yourself to certain
responsibilities, and to do this in belief of the Christ principle within ourselves, that it may
become active in us and in all humanity. Theosophy favors no particular cult, ology or ism;
but it endeavors to kindle within the souls of men the eternal living-fire of Truth and Love,
and to keep it blazing on the hearth-stone of Universal Brotherhood.
CHAPTER II.
The seven principles in man, nature, and the universe - Is this an arbitrary number?
We have all been taught that man is composed of body, soul and spirit. So far we
are in perfect harmony with the Wisdom Religion but if we pursue our study a little further
we shall learn what is the body, soul, and something concerning spirit.
The English word "principles" was chosen because it best expresses the meaning
in the original teaching. We say a tree is composed of so many elements, root, trunk, bark,
twig, branch and leaf. The word element does not express all that is needed to define man.
Principle best expresses the idea to be conveyed. Why is the number seven proclaimed?
First, we see in nature the number seven expressed in the seven colors of the prism the
seven notes in the musical scale; the snowflake looked at under a microscope shows six
points, and its centre makes seven; science says the whole body of man is changed in its
atoms every seven years; the child is held irresponsible for wrong doing until the age of
seven; the foetus is
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fully formed at seven months; and there are chemical experiments where the substance
or matter combining always forms three, four, or seven; man has seven senses, (five of
which only are active on the physical plane - the others are to be developed), and there are
still other reasons, but which need not be touched upon in this elementary work.
The earnest student will find all that he desires in the way of study, if he cares to
pursue this subject further, in more advanced works. The number three, or the trinity figure
in all religions - the three in one or one in three - is symbolically expressed in the Wisdom
Religion, by the triangle, which corresponds to the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, or to Spirit,
Matter, and Mind, the connecting link between the two. Matter on the four lower planes,
both in man and nature is symbolically expressed by the Square or four; and the three and
four make the seven. At the dawn of life on our earth, the intelligent forces in nature are
brought into being in seven classes, on seven planes of consciousness, and each plane
has again its seven aspects or grades. "The various forces ruling these planes are the
builders, and correspond to the Principalities, Powers, or Heavenly hosts" of the Bible.
Divine Thought impresses at the outset the whole plan of Evolution for all the Kingdoms
throughout Nature and then is withdrawn into Darkness or Silence. This is the "Brooding
o'er the Deep" again of the Bible. The details of the vast scheme is worked out through the
ages by the slow processes of involution and evolution. All things exist in the Divine Idea,
and are worked out or expanded from plane to plane, and when we see on the objective
plane the seven expressed, so on the subjective planes the seven must also exist. "As it
is above, so below" is an axiom of this Doctrine, and as we see a tree, a man or a mountain
with our physical sense, so also could we see these on other planes were our inner senses
developed or opened, and it is the object of Evolution that man shall develop these latent
senses, so as to become conscious on these various planes, and thus learn to know the
causes as well as the effects throughout nature. A plane is simply a state of the mind, a
condition. Man is a complex being; necessarily so, having come up through a long line of
experience through the ages, and within man himself lies the possibility to develop his inner
nature which corresponds to the various planes in the world around him. In dreams our
consciousness, or mind, functions on other planes objects appear as real to us then as
when we are awake and functioning on the physical plane; and when a person is absent
minded, or abstracted, what is this but that the mind is absent front the physical plane?
This will suffice to show that a man does live on these various planes, and that that he
should study and analyze himself to learn to know himself.
The trinity may also correspond to Intelligence, Will, and Desire. These three
principles combined and active are the cause of all manifestation or Life. This trinity,
however, is not the Absolute, or God as understood by Christians. That power is forever
concealed and mysterious, and which no man can comprehend. It is the desire principle
in man which brings him into the material world, the desire for life or experience. Man is
here to educate matter: to refine and spiritualize matter; to make it subservient to his will;
to regenerate matter. How can he do this unless he knows matter thoroughly every grade
of it. Man has through the course of evolution already learned to govern matter to a great
degree. He sees, hears, smells, feels, talks and thinks through his house of matter: or, in
other words, he controls his body thus far. Does he for a moment suppose his work is
finished? Only one half of his task is accomplished until the full septenary, or perfect man
is developed.
All religions teach that man is a spark of the Divine Life; but Theosophy teaches that
this spark has to win for itself immortality. Nothing can be lost in the Universe; that is, the
essence of all things is immortal; but if there is no recognition of this fact by the thing itself
there can he no immortality for it. That does not mean that when John Smith dies there is
no immortality for the ego or Higher thinking principle representing John Smith; but if this
mind principle has not been able to impress the instrument, John Smith, with this truth there
can be no immortality for the personality called John Smith. Or to put it in another form, if
the three higher principles in man, his trinity, has failed to illuminate or enlighten the four
lower principles which compose the animal or natural man, and consists of the gross
physical body, the astral body, the desire principle, and the life principle or vitality, the force
which holds these lower principles together - there can be no immortality for that
personality, for it is this lower portion which dies or changes; like a man putting off his
garments at night when he goes to sleep, so likewise does the higher portion of man, his
trinity, put off the lower principles when all the experience that can be had through them is
accomplished; the ego then withdraws into a period of rest until again attracted to earth
life, and as the man upon awakening from his last night's rest takes up his life and
continues therein, so does the ego after its period of rest is ended, seek the old haunts,
finds the place and family which is most congenial to its tastes, and is born again into the
environment which is best adapted to its needs; the same desires which actuated it in the
previous life dominate it now, each earth life giving fresh opportunity to gain experience,
and to convert that experience into wisdom if it will.
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THE Law of cycles has been often noted and frequently commented on in
Theosophical literature. It is embodied in the second of the three fundamental postulates
of the Secret Doctrine. Without a knowledge of this law the fluctuating tides of time and the
ever changing panorama of events are without coherence or sequence; nature is at cross-
purposes with herself; and both progress and decay, evolution and atavism, mere
fortuitous impulses reducible to no order, apprehensible under no known law. As is a single
day in the life of an individual, so is an epoch in the life of humanity. It matters not how
barren or how eventful the day or the epoch maybe, it is but a part of the connected whole,
and can never be correctly measured by itself. All history, whether of nations, or of epochs,
and even all geological changes in the transformation of the earth must be thus considered,
and it is from observations of such changes, extending over long periods of time, that the
law of cycles has been deduced.
There is thus to be observed not only continual changes and unending diversity, but
order and law governing all changes and a sequence not otherwise discerned. We are apt
to look upon present conditions as indicative of a final consummation, and thus to predicate
triumph or pending catastrophe as the inevitable result. The pathway of progress, or the
signs of degeneracy, seem, to the short-sighted observer, to lead unfailingly to a cul-de-
sac, from which there is no path of exit. Events are thus either magnified or dwarfed out
of all
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proportion to their real significance; their lesson and meaning lost, and all human conduct
being thus influenced, judgment biased, and knowledge obscured, confusion and
bewilderment must result. To correctly apprehend passing events in the light of the past,
is to furnish a sure foundation for forecasting the future. It is thus that the prophetic spirit
is born and nourished by knowledge derived by observation and reflection.
The present epoch is unique in the history of man, simply because written history
is so meagre and so unreliable. If, however we regard its characteristics and events, its
nature and manifest tendencies as part of a connected whole, a few links in a measureless
chain, and as in no sense a culmination tending to catastrophe or consummation of any
sort we may be able to understand and to utilize its lessons and its opportunities.
What Max Nordau designates as the "fin de siecle" and "the Dusk of the Nations,"
and probes so mercilessly, and generally so unerringly with the practiced hand of the
pathologist, is the hyperaesthesia resulting from the sudden rush of invention, and the
change of pace in the mental activity of the world. He substantiates his diagnosis beyond
all controversy; hysteria, and almost universal emotionalism as the result of exhaustion.
As to "degeneracy" being an adequate term by which to designate the ego-mania and
moral insanity which he so clearly depicts as the result of exhaustion, opinions may differ.
The Mysticism, Symbolism, Naturalism, etc.. which he so critically examines and describes
are indisputably pathological states, generally recognized by physicians for the demented
and the insane. Vital exhaustion, giving rise to emotional and moral insanity, is clearly
discerned, and the prognosis, and treatment recommended by Nordau, are in every way
commendable. He has put the stigma of leprosy upon the ego-mania and eroto-mania of
certain writers of recent times, who have unblushingly paraded their own diseases under
the pseudonyms of their heroes and heroines, and divested these writers of all pretense
to motive other than the insane impulse of parading, their moral turpitude in print. The
service which Nordau has thus so faithfully and courageously rendered to society will long
be remembered and more and more appreciated as time passes. The unwholesome
tendencies which Nordau discerns; in their origin, nature and results, belong, it is true, to
the present age, and in a marked degree. But the reason lies far deeper than he has
pointed out. Nordau is here a physician investigating disease, rather than a philosopher
concerned with the broad sweep of human evolution, and he necessarily confines himself
to the legitimate sphere of his subject. The breadth of information evinced in his work and
the canons of criticism in literature and in art which he lays down will not easily be ignored
or turned aside.
There is, however, a further meaning to the emotionalism of the present epoch, and
while its diseased and irrational forms threaten to engulf society in a reign of licentiousness
and madness, debauchery and crime, there is also a healthier and more rational side to the
whole problem. Just as there could be no counterfeit without true coin, so the normal organ
and function underlies and pre-exists before any pathological manifestation can arise. In
other words, pathology always presupposes physiology. Nordau may seem to condemn
"mysticism, "symbolism," "egoism" and "naturalism" in toto, because of such glaring
abuses as it is his function to lay hare; and it might be better to leave them untouched,
were it possible, than to risk the misuse and misinterpretation which his treatment renders
inevitable. And this brings us back to the meaning of the cycle, the epoch in which we live.
The immense increase in general activity already referred to, and the mental
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These principles have all been traversed and defined in theosophical literature. The
meaning of concentration and its normal relation to the emotional life of man has often
been pointed out, on the basis of the science of psychology, so that the normal growth and
higher evolution of the individual might occur simultaneously with the highest offices
performed by the individual for the whole of humanity. It has been clearly shown that the
evolution of the individual to higher planes of consciousness is possible in no other way.
The present epoch has, moreover, been clearly characterized in its philosophical
and cyclic relations to the whole trend of human evolution, and it has been shown that with
the opening spiritual perceptions of the present generation and the needs of a guiding light
in shaping its course, there has come the inspiration and peace of higher intelligences
untrammeled by the dangerous and often degrading obsessions of the seance room on the
one hand, and dogmatic domination on the other.
That the great majority even amongst intelligent persons, neither recognize as yet
the spirit of the age nor the forces that are shaping it toward future results, need not be
matters of surprise. As the need of such aid becomes more and more apparent the
recognition is sure to follow.
With the mad rush of emotionalism and the spread of licentiousness and insanity on
the one hand, there is the steady awakening of serene compassion, and the exercise of
devotion on the other; and these may in the long run be found to be, at least with the
thoughtful and sincere as "contagious'' as disease. Much that Nordau regards as
"degeneracy" may eventually be found to be retarded evolution, or lack of development.
The higher faculties in man are the last to develop; and modern science has hardly yet
discerned that there are spiritual faculties latent in man as much above the intellect as the
intellect and judgment are above the emotions. Health implies the subordination of the
lower to the higher, according to an orderly sequence. The order of evolution is determined
by natural law. The conquest of the lower, and the achievement of dominion falls to man's
share. It is the conquest and sovereignty of his individual kingdom. This kingdom won
from nature by conquest of self can only permanently endure when its behests are for the
good of all, and when it is synchronous with universal life and at one with universal nature.
The final consummation may be in the far distant future, but as an ideal and aim, giving
meaning to life, it may be brought within the apprehension of a child, and the educational
systems of the future will be based upon it.
- J.D. Buck
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"The disciple who undertakes the task, secretly hoping for fame or success, to
appear as a teacher and apostle before the world, fails even before his task is attempted,
and his hidden hypocrisy poisons his own soul and the souls of those he teaches."
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HENRY GEORGE
PERHAPS never before in the known history of the human race has there been so
much attention paid to the imperative necessity of seeking a solution to the problems of life.
On all sides theories were advanced which, it is claimed by their supporters, if carried out
would prove a panacea for all the ills to which flesh is heir.
Whether it be true or not that a solution is to be attained through legislation and the
change of outer conditions - as advocated by most of these theories or whether it will be
reached only through the realization of Brotherhood in the heart and life of the individual
in spite of outer conditions need not be discussed here. But it will be generally conceded
that the touchstone of all these theories is the extent to which they tend to a realization of
Brotherhood without any distinctions whatever.
There have been in all times those who have worked for Brotherhood, who have felt
in their hearts the unity and solidarity of the human race and sought to realize it in their
relations with their fellow men. Henry George's theories may or may not be feasible, they
may or may not contain a solution of the economic problem, but be that as it may, the name
of Henry George stands high among those who in this 19th century have sought the
betterment of the race and the amelioration of the wrongs and injustices of life.
A few days after Henry George's death I was conversing with a friend, a
Theosophist, who said: "The last time I had a talk with Henry George was in '94 on the
train from Hamilton, Canada, to Albany. N. Y. He was, as always, ready to talk on the
single tax as a panacea of all the ills of humanity, such he believed it. He seemed to have
reached a conclusion that all other theories than those he advocated were theories only,
not reducible to practice. He so regarded Theosophy, of which he had read something and
expressed impatience with what he called its visionary ideas, especially that of
Reincarnation. However he asked me to give him a fuller explanation of Reincarnation and
listened most attentively and sympathetically and finally said: 'Yes, there seems to be a
great worth there but it is too late in life for me to advocate it even if so disposed. I have
devoted my life to an attempt to give men a practical solution of their economic errors.' To
this I replied: 'But, Mr. George, you do not expect to see their realization during your life
and you are therefore working for those unborn, though if reincarnation be true you will yet
see the fruition of your labors.' He then said: 'No, my ideas will not be established in my
day, although I once hoped so, I am working as you say for posterity.'
"Just before we reached Albany, where we separated, he said with a sort of regret
that if only he could come to look upon reincarnation as a tenable theory, how much it
would help in the Work of reform.
"I also met Mr. George in '93, when he was invited to attend the dinner of a club of
prominent New England manufacturers and capitalists. This he declined at first; and on
renewal of the invitation he expressed himself in no measured terms that nothing would
induce him to furnish entertainment for the after-dinner hour of well-fed landlords. However
on a further representation that he would have a really interested audience he accepted
and the sequel was that his clear and logical presentation of his views aroused these
conservative men to put to him serious and interested queries, his replies to which swept
away many grave misunderstandings. I have often reflected since that
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could Henry George have had such audiences throughout the country he would very
quickly have disarmed the prejudice of the so-called conservative property owners and so
hastened the day when we should have had intelligent legislation based upon his theories."
Henry George was a lover of humanity, he saw the miseries and the injustices of life
and he concentrated all his energy and intellect to the cause of economic justice and right.
The strong undercurrent of his life and the ideal which he pictured for humanity is best told
in the following remarkable passage in "Progress and Poverty," in which his recognition of
the undying soul finds such lofty and beautiful expression
"Passing into higher forms of desire, that which slumbered in the plant and fitfully
stirred in the beast awakes in the man. The eyes of the mind are opened and he longs to
know. He braves the scorching heat of the desert and the icy blasts of the polar sea, but
not for food; he watches all night, but it is to trace the circling of the eternal stars. He adds
toil to toil to gratify a hunger no animal has felt, to assuage a thirst no beast can know.
"Out upon nature, in upon himself, back through the mists that shroud the past,
forward into the darkness that overhangs the future, turns the restless desire that arises
when the animal wants slumber in satisfaction. Beneath things he seeks the law; he would
know how the globe was forged and the stars were hung, and traces to their sources the
springs of life. And then, as the man develops his noble nature, there arises the desire
higher yet - the passion of passions, the hope of hopes - the desire that he, even he, may
somehow aid in making life better and brighter, in destroying want and sin, sorrow and
shame. He masters and curbs the animal; he turns his back upon the feast and renounces
the place of power; he leaves it to others to accumulate wealth, to gratify pleasant tastes,
to bask themselves in the warm sunshine of the brief day. He works for those he never
saw and never can see. . . . He toils in the advance, where it is cold, and there is little cheer
from men, and the stones are sharp and the brambles thick. Amid the scoffs of the present
and the sneers that stab like knives, he builds for the future; he cuts the trail that
progressive humanity may hereafter broaden into a railroad. Into higher, grander spheres
desire mounts and beckons, and a star that rises in the east leads him on. Lo! the pulses
of the man throb with the yearnings of the god, - he would aid in the process of the suns."
- J. H. F.
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Grand is the Seen - the light, to me - grand are the sky and stars,
Grand is the earth, and grand are lasting time and space,
And grand their laws, so multiform, puzzling, evolutionary;
But grander far the unseen soul of me, comprehending, endowing all those,
Lighting the light, the sky and stars, delving the earth, sailing the sea,
(What were all those, indeed, without thee, unseen soul? of what amount without
thee?)
More evolutionary, vast, puzzling, O my soul!
More multiform far - more thou than they.
- Walt Whitman.
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ALL nature, physical, spiritual and mental, is subject to the great law of evolution.
It is an eternal law of the universe. Being eternal, with ages of past and ages of future, its
action is not hurried, and seen from the finite standpoint of our brief day it scents to move
not at all, except when some great crisis, the close of some greater or lesser cycle, comes
under our notice. Then, seeing not the cause but noting the effect, we stand spellbound,
feeling that such a crisis surely never came before. We tremble for results and torture
ourselves with anxious fears, while underneath all this ferment and strife the steady wheel
of law moves on with never swerving justice.
It seems to many of us that the present is a critical time for womanhood. A period
in the evolution of the female portion of humanity fraught with grave dangers and beset with
nameless fears. Such times of awakening and transition must come to all. It lies with us
to use their opportunities for good, to hasten our own evolution and make ourselves strong
to bear our part nobly in the greater crises which come to humanity as a whole, or to cling
to past traditions and habits until the force of evolution tears us away and flings us out, all
unprepared, upon untried seas to be driven with every wind of thought, a helpless wreck.
Through all the ages of the past, woman as a whole, has grown as the flower grows,
has learned as the child learns. Her whole thought has been centred in her home. Her
whole courage and strength drawn from the creeds her priest has taught her. Her whole
dependence placed upon the men of her household. Beauty and purity of body and
character; loyalty to husband and to home and loving self-sacrifice for her children, these,
the foundation stones still of every good woman's character, these in the ages past, made
up the sum of virtues and the end of all aims for a good woman's life. And in the ages past
that was enough and she who accomplished it filled up the even measure of all her duties.
I could stand with uncovered head and reverent eyes bent down and worship, with Lord
Buddha, she who could truly say with Sujata:
"My heart
Is little, and a little rain will fill
The lily's cup, which hardly moists the fields.
It is enough for me to feel Life's sun
Shine in my Lord's grace and my baby's smile,
Making the loving summer of our home.
Pleasant my days pass, filled with household cares
From sunrise when I wake to praise the Gods
And give forth grain, and trim the pulsi plant,
And set my handmaids to their task: till noon
When my Lord lays his head upon my lap
Lulled by soft songs and wavings of the fan:
And so to supper time, at quiet eve,
When by his side I stand and serve the cakes.
......But for me,
What good I see, I humbly seek to do,
And live obedient to the law, in trust
That what will come, and must come, shall come well."
Thus, in Sujata's life, are we given a glimpse of perfect womanhood in that state of
woman's evolution. A woman who knew that doing all her duties of the present, she could
trust the future to "come well." As such I reverence her. But, what will come and must
come for the womanhood of the ages past, has come, and it lies with us to prove by our
lives that it "Shall come well."
Truly, Lord Buddha spoke wisdom when he said:
Through all the long morning of our existence we have grown as tender plants,
sheltered from the too fierce sun, gathering with increasing experience, increasing strength
for that time when womanhood should spread broad leaves in other suns and lift in later
lives crowned heads to the sky.
The law of evolution and the unerring wheel of Karmic justice has brought that time
to us and laid the choice before us. Shall we spread broad leaves as stately lilies, filled
with Heaven's dew, breathing fragrance and purity, or as noxious thistles, gaudy to look
upon but stinging all who touch? Will we make our crown our glory or our shame? The
choice is ours, Sisters, and it must be made. Have we brought from the ages past the
strength, purity and wisdom of a Sujata, or have we come with empty heart and brain, to
give back but a meaningless, sounding rattle, under the stress and force of a mighty crisis?
There is a strong, deep meaning in the unrest and disquiet of the womanhood of our
race. It is no freak, no fancy, but the inevitable result of the growth that must come to all
humanity. The heart that once was little has grown larger with the ages, and has learned
to look beyond the household to the wide world and feel, in some measure, the brotherhood
of man. But we have learned our lessons ill, and made but false show of growth, if in
looking to these larger lessons, we must forget those old sweet lessons of the long ago.
It is only as we learn to "do our whole duty by every duty" that we truly grow. The throwing
aside of one set of duties to take up another which pleases our fancy better, or looks in our
eyes larger, is but mere childish restlessness. It is a sign of weakness not a sign of
strength. The crown of womanhood, the end and aim of all our evolution is that our view
of life may be broadened and our knowledge of opportunities for good deeds enlarged, and
that, seeing much of good, we should still "humbly seek to do."
The fierce heat of knowledge, the breaking up of familiar habits and the passing of
old creeds sets up a turmoil in our lives from which some froth and scum must rise and as
a result we have the term of scorn "the new woman" and the oft just condemnation of her
way.
My Sisters, the new woman is but the evolution of the old. All this ridicule and all this
censure comes from the actions of those of us who in the stress of trial have swung beyond
the mark. Those of us, who having learned the lessons of the past imperfectly could not
clearly see the import of the present time nor measure with true judgment the influence of
today's deeds upon tomorrow's opportunities. They are in grave error, who, having seen
a little light, go forth and cry, "Behold, I will show you the way. Woman shall be free, she
will tread in her brother's Path." My Sisters, no one was ever bound, save in chains of their
own forging. Life by life we have set up causes that have brought us back again and again
to womanhood that we might learn its lessons well. It is no inferior state. The violet is as
welcome and fills as well its place as does the lordly oak. It is true that, filling well our
place, we shall grow to continually widening uses. But it is a process of growth and only
comes from well-done duty. Each one's duty in its place is best. The glory of our life
consists in living it with high purpose, not in living the life of some one else, be it man, angel
or God.
They also are in error who turn with lack of charity from those who, having a little
knowledge, in self-pride, or excess of zeal, put it to had use. Perhaps in their pride of
independence they need a strong, sure, sisterly hand of help, more than does the timid
sister who fears to step an inch outside the path her mother trod and sees an evil lurking
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in the shadow of each new advance toward knowledge and equality of the sexes. Rightly
used this new awakening may be made a mighty power for purity and good. It is our duty
to keep some little spots, of clear, strong womanhood, kindly, true and tranquil, shining out
like gems in all the froth and ferment of change to cheer those wise, brave, clear-eyed
sisters whose silver voice sounds through all the rattle and din of changing conditions,
calling ever to a higher life of purity and purpose and striving to lead us to such wealth of
knowledge and strength that we may realize the true dignity of womanhood. That holding
in our hands the balance of power in the coming social crisis, we may see clearly to use
it well; may know that from the homes of a nation comes its moral strengths or weakness,
as from the heart the mouth speaketh.
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[[illustration: flag flying of School for the Revival of the Los Mysteries of Antiquity
at Point Loma]]
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--- 99
--- 100
or the Vision had been given her as being one of those creatures of light and loveliness
beheld only in visions. One night in a dream she saw a brilliant star falling from heaven,
which descending upon her, entered into her body on the right side. Suddenly awakening
out of her sleep, she at once informed her husband of the vision, who somewhat alarmed
and unable to divine what it foreboded, summoned at once all the court sages, soothsayers
and astrologers, as also his Brahman priests, and demanded from them the meaning of a
portent so strange and extraordinary. After due and serious deliberation, they declared that
it signified that the queen would give birth to a child of supernatural wisdom and who would
become an universal monarch. Great preparations were made against the arrival into the
world of the young prince.
In one of the royal pleasure gardens to the northeast of Kapilavastu and under a
satin tree exhaling exquisite perfumes, Maya was delivered of her firstborn, who was at
once submitted to the inspection of the wise men and priests. These all declared that on
his body were found all the marks characteristic of a great sovereign, and predicted for him
a glorious future. No sooner was he born than the arrival was announced of a sage and
holy hermit renowned for his piety and severe austerities. Warned of the Prince's birth
through a dream, he proceeded at once to leave his hermitage and on arriving where he
lay, took him up in his arms, as the aged Simeon did the young child Jesus, and gazing in
wonderment and ecstasy declared: "This child is destined to become a mighty monarch
whose sovereignty shall extend throughout the world; but if he shall chance to behold an
old man, a lifeless corpse or a Bikshu or religious mendicant, nothing will prevent him
renouncing earthly splendor and renown and becoming a Buddha, a Saviour of mankind."
Seven days after Gotama's birth, Maya, his mother, died, and the young prince was
confided to Prajapati his aunt, who watched over and took the greatest care of the infant
prince. As he grew up to boyhood, the most learned and famous men in the realm were
chosen as his teachers. The child grew up a most beautiful and accomplished boy, and
by docility in learning and attention to his studies, soon manifested evidences of an
erudition and knowledge that greatly surprised his masters. He was always asking the
most curious and abstruse questions, and when he saw them puzzled and perplexed,
would himself give them the answer. It is stated that one of them named Vismavitra,
renowned for his wisdom and extensive learning, declared that the boy already knew more
than what he himself had acquired through a long life of study. He was in fact a puzzle and
an enigma they could not solve or explain. The truth was that the boy's higher Self, even
at that early period of his life, had begun to operate within him. The intuitive faculty had
already commenced to unfold itself by which he was able at times to read the great book
of Nature and decipher her secret writing. At fitful moments dim gleamings and flashings
of a higher realm of knowledge unknown to his teachers, illumined his mind. The past with
all its stores of wisdom and learning, became revealed to his wondering gaze. Anon he
stood in the presence of great sages, or sat at the feet of beings of noble mien and majestic
intelligence, those sceptred sovereigns of the mind whose names though unknown and
their works buried in oblivion, yet have their lofty ideas and teachings floated down on
Time's stream and now form part of the ocean of human life and thought. Under such
teachings his childhood passed away, and as he grew in years he increased like his
Hebrew after-type, in wisdom and in favor of all men, who regarded and respected him as
a paragon of all princely virtues. In him
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the poor, the suffering and unfortunate found a gracious friend, whose purse and help was
always available, whilst by his words of kindness and sympathy he excited towards himself
feelings amounting almost to reverence. By his agreeable and pleasing manner, he won
the hearts of the noble and wealthy; and proud of him as their leader, there was not a
common soldier who would not for his sake have faced death with ready willingness. Yet
for all this popularity, amidst such circumstances tending to excite within him exalted
notions of self; though placed on the pinnacle of earthly grandeur, Gotama lost not that
mental balance so essential in the preservation of character. With that clear, keen intellect
which read human nature like a book, this truth did not escape him: that all was not gold
that glitters and that things were not what they seemed.
Gorgeous robes of nobles and emblazoned coronets of stately courtiers could not
hide from his piercing gaze, the feelings of bitter animosity and selfish ambition that filled
their minds, causing them to plot and counterplot against each other for positions of
eminence. Seeing all this, knowing all this, many a time, weary at heart and pained at
witnessing such wretched exhibitions of human weakness, he would leave the gaiety and
festivities of court life and betake himself to the lone solitudes of the neighboring forests,
subject to thoughts and feelings he could neither express in words nor define. There for
hours, he would sit in lonely musing and lost in revery, meditating upon the great problems
of life and death and the mysteries of Being. In this manner, far from the madding crowd,
remote from the din and noise and turmoil of city life and the wild revelries and excitement
of the court, Gotama began to be conscious of a blank within, the absence, the yearning
after an indefinable something without which, he felt that life must become a burden. At
times he felt vibrating within himself the still, sad music of humanity thrilling his soul with
a feeling of ineffable compassion. Now he felt
At other times he caught the accents of a speech he could not comprehend, and
heard tones of a language he could not understand. At rare moments his spirit seemed to
go forth roaming the illimitable universe in quest of a something he knew not what and
returned filled with the agonizing sense of a great want. All these, the first dawnings, the
dim flashings forth, the fitful shadowings forth of a higher and more spiritual life
endeavoring to overcome and break down his lower nature, he could not understand and
therefore filled with unrest and sadness he gave up himself to a life of revery, so much so,
as to run the risk of becoming a confirmed recluse, a visionary dreamer. His father
expostulated with him again and again, endeavoring to impress upon him a sense of his
princely duties and the folly of sacrificing the solid realities and pleasures of a kingdom, for
the unsubstantialities and airy nothings of a hermit's imagination. All, however, was of no
avail. The prince listened in respectful silence and lived on as usual a lone student. Well
for him, had there been some sympathetic friend, one who knew, who could have initiated
him in the philosophy of the higher life, who could have guided him and raised him out of
the Slough of Despond and mel-
--- 102
lancholy into which he had fallen. It would have saved him after years of mental anguish
and suffering; but there was no one to look to as a teacher and therefore he had to drag
on an existence of gloom and sadness. Becoming really alarmed, his father consulted the
courtiers as to the best expedient to reclaim him from his hermit life. Many were suggested
and tried but they failed to produce any effect, until some one more worldly wise than the
rest, at last proposed marriage should be tried. It was he thought, just the thing to bring
back the young prince to his senses and excite within him, an interest in the pleasures and
enjoyments of life. The monarch hastened at once to the prince's apartment and broached
the subject to him, who consented to the project rather than cause his father pain by
refusing.
Search was at once made amongst neighboring courts for a suitable princess, one
who should be worthy of the prince. The choice fell upon Gopa, the daughter of
Dandapana, one of his royal neighbors. Gopa was a maiden, possessed of rare personal
beauty, and a charm which won for her the admiration of everyone; she was what the
French term, highly spirituelle in mind and character. Wherever she went she was a centre
of light and joy to those around her. Her words, nay, the very tones of her voice, attracted
all hearts towards her as she moved in her father's court a creature of radiant light and
beauty. It was an auspicious day, when amidst the plaudits and blessings of untold
thousands of spectators, the young couple were united together in marriage. General
feasting and entertainments were the order of the day. Both high and low, the rich and
poor alike throughout the realm rejoiced together over their young prince's nuptials. As
Gopa in all her incomparable beauty which needed not the adornment and splendor of
jewels to add to her charms, stood for the first time in presence of her future lord, she
recognized in him her ideal of a prince. She felt herself impressed with the greatness of
his majestic intellect. She saw and divined at once what no one else had discovered, the
existence of that great blank, of that chasm of unrest and sadness, and she mentally
resolved that she would fill it with her own light and life; and Gotama, as he gazed upon
that face so fair and beautiful, and looked into those eyes of light and love wherein were
reflected the rays of a pure soul, seemed to recognize what was necessary to his future
happiness. He felt he had at last found his Sandalphon or twin soul, and starting as one
awaking out of a dream, or like a soul called back again to life from out of the shadowy halls
of Death, he felt a thrill of joyous delight to which he had long been a stranger, and,
embracing the Princess on that morning, two souls, the complement of each other, became
blended together for weal or woe, to form one joyous and harmonious existence. The
change in Gotama was wonderful and gratifying to everyone, especially to his aged father,
who loaded him with honors and presented him with three sumptuous palaces with
magnificent parks and gardens, filled with leafy bowers and shady groves, resonant with
the songs of birds of every clime. Once more he became the darling of the nation, and as
years rolled by, the birth of a son added a deeper fringe of happiness to his life. And there,
as he stands on the marble terrace of his palace along with Gopa by his side watching his
boy's playful gambols and listening to the music of his prattling voice, the horizon of the
future lies stretching out before him bright and radiant, with no dark speck and undimmed
even with the smallest shadow of a cloud. There we must leave him for the present, but
ere doing so, we would gather up as a commentary upon this sketch of Gotama's early life,
some of the lessons arising out of it, and which we trust will be received with kindly
acceptance and appreciation.
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The great spirit of the universe, the over-soul, the Higher Self, call it by whatever
name we will, has, if we only knew it, spoken and will continue to speak unto us all, telling
us as it did Gotama, "That things are not what they seem," that the shows and pageantries
of the world are fleeting and evanescent illusions in which it is unwise to trust for happiness.
If we ignore it, disregarding its counsel, we put back the clock of our Destiny and protract
and lengthen out for centuries, it may be, life's pilgrimage; but giving heed to its tones, it
will impart knowledge not to be found in books and endow us with a wisdom more priceless
than rubies - a wisdom which raising us above the things of time and sense, will cause us
to look not so much at the things that are seen, as at the things unseen; and listening to
this still small voice within us, the time will at last come when it shall speak "Let There be
Light," and then will dawn within us the light of a higher and diviner existence, which,
bringing with it a peace and calm that all the tempests and storms of earthlife cannot ruffle
nor disturb, toning down every passionate feeling, banishing and driving out of our natures
all selfishness; restraining and holding back the hard unkind word, filling us with a Love
that beareth all things, suffereth all things, shall cause us to become living centres and
founts of joy to wife and children and friends who will learn to love us not for what we may
have, but for what we are in ourselves, and thus become better able to discharge our
allotted part in the regeneration and upraising of Humanity.
(To be continued)
--------------
II.
THE factors so far considered, in the previous article, were (1) the essential divine
nature of man and the importance of awakening the soul as the first step in true education,
and (2) that the soul is immortal and lives many lives on earth. This latter neglected factor
of itself shows the futility of all education which has not as its object the awakening of the
soul and the calling forth of the soul's powers, for manifestly that which is the soul's
heritage from life to life is character and not the mental ability and scholarship in the arts
and sciences which pass current for education today. Surely this needs no argument, for
we have only to consider in what, in our final analysis of any man, we place our confidence
and trust; it is not in his "culture" but in his character, which is the expression of the man
himself, and which he cannot escape from or go behind; whereas culture and scholarship
are no more than the cut of his mental habiliments. We have neglected the essentials for
the sake of the appearances until the modern world is little more than one vast sham. We
do indeed need to study the "Philosophy of Clothes" and meditate upon the Eternal Yea
and Everlasting Nay. The problem of education is paramount; we can expect no
amelioration of the troubles of life until we have solved this problem, which is the key to all
others. And although we consider the problem of education with especial reference to the
young, yet it will be clear that it concerns ourselves also, and perhaps in a much greater
degree than may be ordinarily understood, and for this reason that according to the
conditions which we, men and women of today, furnish for the coming generation do we
help or retard the enfoldment of the powers of those souls re-born into this world.
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The present state of the economic and social world today shows the necessity of our
facing this problem of education and of our applying it each to himself individually. In the
previous article I referred to life as the great educator, and life and nature are both long-
suffering and patient, and mankind, collectively and individually, is given opportunity after
opportunity to enter upon this true education and learn the difference between the outer
show and the eternal verity. There is however a breaking point in nature and in the social
organism as well as in the individual life, and if the comparatively gentle hints are not
heeded, the more forcible and soul-compelling methods of nature must be endured. There
is a deep lesson to be learned from all the social revolutions of the past and from nature's
cataclysmic throes which overwhelm nations and continents. The lesson is this: That man
must learn to face himself, he must learn what is his true self, what are its needs and what
its relations to life and nature. If he persistently refuse to learn from the everyday
experiences of life, spread over many lives it may be, nature will one day take things as it
were in her own hands and stripping him naked force him to see himself as he is.
Today we stand face to face with conditions more strained, more ominous, than ever
before known in history. If the storm breaks and if, as indeed may be, Nature's bounds are
passed, adding natural convulsions to social, then indeed the test of a man will be
character, self-knowledge, reliance on self - the divine inner self. In the face of Nature and
in time of revolution form, conventionality, scholarship, are all swept aside; that which
stands is the soul, clad in its one vesture, the outcome of all its lives - character.
Need more be said as to the true purpose of education than that it is to know one's
inmost self and to unfold the powers of that self, not to dress that self in gay apparel of
accomplishment and scholarship but to be as one really is in essence, - to be divine?
But let us return to the children, though not forgetting that we are children too. How
may we help them to come to a knowledge of themselves?
Perhaps the first and the most important step to he taken is to teach children
something of their moral make-up, of far greater importance than any study of physiology.
I do not mean that psychology as ordinarily understood is to be taught - a psychology with
the psyche left out - but the basis of true psychology, the recognition of the higher and the
lower nature.
This is not a difficult matter if approached in the right way. Young children very
quickly grasp the idea of their real selves being good, noble and kind, and that when they
are naughty and unkind it is because their real selves have gone away for a time.
Furthermore, they very quickly understand that their real selves ought not to have gone
away, but should have stayed to take care of their voice, and hands, and feet, and so they
learn the first great lesson of responsibility and self-reliance. We need only to look around
us today to see that there is a woeful lack of the sense of responsibility to self. Today the
greatest of all the commandments, the cornerstone of modern ethics - as practiced in the
world, all the preaching to the contrary notwithstanding - is "thou shalt not be found out,"
and the standard of right is that which seems right in our neighbor's eyes. Why is this? No
clearer evidence is needed of the neglect of one of the essentials of education.
It is not responsibility to God, nor to a teacher, but to one's higher self that we need
to realize. It cannot be understood, however, without the knowledge of the dual nature of
man, the higher and the lower, the higher being the real inner man, the soul; the lower,
with its
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passions and desires and all the physical powers, being the instrument and, properly, the
servant of the higher. This can be taught, it can be inculcated in the minds of the young
and by appealing to and awakening the soul in this way the inner perception of right and
wrong - the so-called conscience - is awakened, the intuitive faculty is called into action and
the whole life irradiated. The intuitive faculty is a natural one to the child state; all that is
needed is that it shall he fostered and called into action. Can you not imagine how the
whole nature of a child would glow when he discovers that he can appeal to himself, to his
own higher nature, for guidance; when he finds that there is this something, the intuition,
which is knowledge. What a re-discovery it must be to a child when he comes to realize
this! What a discovery it has been to many an older child, to grown men and women, to
realize, however dimly, the divinity of man! How a boy delights to use his strength which
he feels in his muscles! How much more wonderful is the revelation of himself to himself
when he feels the awe of the divine within his own heart!
The awakening of the intuition removes the barriers from the mind, it takes away all
fear, all lack of confidence. The child, young or old, finds a foothold, his eyes are opened,
he sees a way before him and enters upon life, whether in school or out in the world, with
a hope, nay, a certainty, that overcomes all obstacles. The intuition becomes as the voice
of another self than this every-day personality, it is indeed the voice of that inner self, the
soul in whom resides the "knowing" faculty, - that knowledge which Plato says is
"recollection" - and who has been so many times over the pathway of life. Ah, if but the
lower personal self would lean upon that inner self, the lessons of life would soon be
learned and possibilities of future progress would open out surpassing our most vivid
imagination.
It may be the opinion of some that this would result in priggishness and goody-
goodyness, but that is because we, with how few exceptions, are insincere in our own lives,
and those who have felt the inner life of the soul hide it and fear to show their hearts to
another. But true holiness of life is not a forced condition, it is natural; indeed, unless it is
natural and spontaneous, it cannot be "holiness" in the highest and deepest sense. The
influence of music is well known to all, and many a child, shy and retiring, afraid to express
itself in any way, has under the influence of music burst into singing, forgetting all save the
joy which the music has called forth in the heart. A child may not be able to sing by
himself, but will forget all fear and bashfulness in a class of happy children singing in
chorus. This is all because children instinctively lean on their inner natures, and the music
stealing into their hearts and awakening them on a higher plane gives strength and
confidence.
How easy it would be to help the children, and to educate along the right lines if once
the right atmosphere were provided. For it is the mental and more especially the moral
atmosphere which, like the music, draws forth the powers of the soul. Children are more
influenced by the hidden and unexpressed thought of their parents and teachers than by
the spoken word. A teacher whose mind may be well-trained, stored with knowledge (or
is it only information?) whose outer life may appear irreproachable, but whose inner nature
has not been awakened, will fail in the true purpose of education. And however able he
may be mentally, however brilliant his achievements as a scholar, yet should his inner life
be not moral he will not only fail to educate, but his inner life will affect the inner life of all
the children with whom he comes in contact.
Teachers, as a class, deserve high and just commendation for their work and
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the uprightness of their lives, but the fact just stated must be faced. It is one of the greatest
obstacles to be encountered. It is so easy in these days of conventionality and the worship
paid to the god of appearances, to conceal the motive and the inner desires and there is
no way of overcoming this save through the efforts of parents, teachers, and the whole
community, individually purifying each his own life, and recognizing the divine promptings
of the higher self endeavoring to express these in act.
(To be continued.)
-----------------
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heart, the more required of him. The Lost Prodigal Son in the Christian Bible received the
Father's love as well as the so-called favorite son; for, had he not been in the shadow, and
now brought to the resplendent light of his presence. He found from bitter experience while
wandering from Him in doubt and unbelief that the Light still shines, hidden though it may
be by our wilful gropings. The self-seeker will be reclaimed. It is but a misty step on Life's
Path which has befogged his mind in his earthly pilgrimage. He will be united to the Father
at last, when he cries and energizes in the depths of his soul, "Father, Father, Help my
unbelief, and give me Light from Heaven, which alone can lead me to the higher realms
near Thy self."
Thus by conscious withdrawal of man to the citadel of his strength, his inner fount,
the Divinity, he can partake of all states of consciousness or life, for they interpenetrate,
and he becomes the Master or Great Soul.
Evil is but transient, a passing shadow through which the Light of Truth is revealed
more or less from the hidden depths of the Great Unknown, Dark Fire of Truth, which feeds
the Flame, and can never be reached by the seeker till he is absorbed by the Flame. As
has been truly said of old: "It is beyond you because when you reach it, you have lost
yourself. It is unattainable, because it forever recedes. You will enter the Light, but you
will never touch the Flame (because then you have lost yourself)."
Now, let us apply this philosophy to what is called practical life at the present time.
The mass of people can feel and not express clearly. They are overshadowed by
the veil of illusion; hence need a prophet for their mouthpiece. Who shall this prophet be?
Who shall competently express their silent aspirations? I answer, the man of heart, and
he is a man of genius. Why? Because he does not voice alone his past deeds, but listens
to and obeys the Voice of the Silence, by uniting the sensitiveness of the personality or
apparent "I" or self with the potent energy of the life-giving force, the True Self or "I" which
blesses all life by its strength and true compassion. In such a genius contradictions of
consciousness unite. He is the accepted hero of all ages and races, because in him the
races recognize themselves. Such a seer loves the masses blinded and betrayed so often
by their leaders. He does not despise their blind gropings and stammering words, eager
questionings and bitter complaints. He does not withhold his sympathy and loving thought
because his efforts fall unheeded, amid apparent ruin and destruction. He knows the end
will be accomplished; that eternal justice, love and liberty will be the goal, though long and
dreary the road may appear, if the eyes are persistently cast down instead of uplifted to the
everlasting hope.
Such a genius or seer can accomplish what is called sudden changes, can create
such an atmosphere of etheric pressure as to burst the bonds of matter or its sheaths and
elevate in a mass whole races of people from the slough of despair; not by relieving
specially their terrestrial condition, but by so infusing their lot with the Universal, electrifying
power of Divine compassion and Brotherly kindness, that no sheath can be insensible to
its effects, and peace will gradually settle upon the disturbed vehicle, that it will vibrate in
harmony to the Divine influx. This it is to be in touch with the Supreme. "Consecrate then
all thy deeds to the Supreme"; says an ancient sage.
The collective masses of the people represent the soil, ever responsive to the genius
of Divine Love. They represent the innocence and simplicity of the race. The spirit of self-
sacrifice is more pre-
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valent there than in the developed self conscious individual, the cultivated egotist, because
they have the combined aspects more diffusive. They are nearer conscious Nature. The
feuds among common people have their origin in the needs of existence. The same
instinct which impels the seeking for life and failing to obtain the material sustenance, is
ever impelling to another form of life, which causes restlessness and constant motion, the
constant play of the forces which awakens intuition on higher planes unconsciously and
brings about the desired result without recognizing the unknown cause. "To the
unenlightened is revealed the mysteries as well as to the enlightened," said Buddha. The
eternal recompense comes in to every one for the unsatisfied desire. "Still the outward
agitation, and listen to the Voice of the Silence," is the advice to those who can read the
mysteries. This is the stuff of which come believers, teachers, martyrs. Its most dangerous
enemy is that crystallized organization, whether church, sect, party or society, which, in
formulating the beliefs of the few, read into its interpretations, the theoretical errors of mind,
thus dogmatizing or imposing upon all, the crystallized beliefs of the few, adapted to the
present comfort of the few. The light of conscience, the divine right of judgment is within
each, and can never be imposed upon another. The Light of the Inner man must unite to
the Light in each in a spirit of toleration as diffusive as the sun, in order that the race may
progress, even if the atoms composing that race suffer and enjoy. Mutual suffering, mutual
joy comes to each alike as he is capacitated to receive. "Open wide the windows and let
the Light stream in and out to all!" The seer or initiate understands and is free, careless of
so-called past or future; acts in the ever present. To lead the life of the Light in its fullness
is to enjoy the present surroundings whatever they maybe. Not to accentuate physical,
moral or intellectual development by despising either channel. Have free access to all, but
be absorbed in neither, else you die or choke the avenues of communication and the
synthesis of life on this terrestrial globe is checked. This communication with all that lives
will enhance the possibilities of a true form of life which never ceases, whatever the
environment, and blesses all within its radii.
This gospel is hard to accept and practice. It is easier grasped by the masses than
by the classes, because it is the instinctive law of being unpolluted by any vehicle of
limitation. It is conscious law and is active in the people or race though not self-conscious
of it. When self-consciousness is aroused in the people by intense desire unifying them
in one central idea on any plane of thought, then self-propagation will be manifest, and a
breath will destroy the present order like the dynamo. This is where the value of heeding
the masses becomes significant. Occasionally a genius flashes from out their ranks who
overturns dynasties, as it were in a moment. If these masses then were affected so intently
by the God within as to universally manifest in one direction, viz., to burst the bonds of
matter or limitation, then pralaya would be the result. All are changed in the twinkling of an
eye. Query. Do such pralayas come to a universe on a large scale as come to lesser
ones? If so, none can predict the cycle of pralaya to his particular universe within the
knowledge imparted by the universal source of all universes, which comes like flashes of
electricity to illuminate the earth and break up the sheaths constantly crystallizing on its
surface. This constant upheaval and scattering is Heaven's law of eternal vibration in order
to bring forth infinite manifestation, for all forms are transient. Why cling, then, so
persistently to it, fair mortal? It is but the Immortal Spirit
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that uses the form and throws it aside when it wills. Death is dissolution of form, but the
immortal soul continues to live and is again enclosed in form or vesture according to its
character. Dissolution or disintegration of form and rebirth or reappearance of a new form
is life. This does not imply an annihilation of character or personality, but an ever-
increasing illumination of personality by an abandonment of that which separates it from
all that lives. It is the passing of ignorance or latent partial truth into the full vision of truth
resplendent, which constitutes Life Eternal.
It behooves us, then, to heed the cry of the infant mass, our brothers in distress.
The intuitive power latent in the people is already recognized by well informed thinkers. As
thought becomes powerful in action among the people who imbibe mental nourishment
through the pores, the inevitable action will follow in due time. What shall be the nature of
this action which we all anticipate at present, for the signs are in the air, it is difficult to
prognosticate. Let us be as patient as possible, the seeds are sown, the fruit will be
gathered, and what shall the harvest be? Hold yourselves in readiness to await the result
with calmness and resignation.
In all convulsions of nations, it has been observed there follows a tendency to
mysticism. The patriotic fever of a nation, while seeking to preserve its own from the
encroachments of the foreign invader, must not deteriorate into the class system as set
over against the mass. The people have ever been lovers of home and country till driven
by internal dissensions to seek an outlet for this force. Now, a storm is brewing at present,
that threatens an upheaval of present social conditions. It is a transitional period, evidently.
The domination of wealth or capital is felt more and more by the laboring classes so-called.
The so-called advantages to the masses claimed by the capitalists in the increase of
railroads and facilities for comfort in the homes of the working classes, and the freedom of
education and schools, longer hours for rest, etc., are offset by the argument of contrast
perpetually presented by the ever fluctuating conditions of the people dependent upon
material power. The increase of taxes, so much greater in proportion to the labor in
physical directions to labor in mental manipulation of forces, makes the advantages offset
the disadvantages and the unskillful gradually are falling behind; hence, a class system.
The misery is increasing. Then the hatred of present uncomfortable conditions, whatever
the cause, makes the masses desire a change, brought about by the ideal uppermost.
Some doggedly submit, some resort to duplicity, or even open warfare, and others
withdraw from the strife to their inner selves and seek consolation in mysticism or in
sectarianism.
This mysticism has its hold upon the people in awakening a desire for a better form
of life than the present, which is evanescent. Here is the dawn of a new order, which
comes only when outward transient pleasure is unattainable by ordinary means. Seers are
developed to aid the masses in their upward striving, and, in proportion to the misery, hope
in the future is awakened and the fear of calamities so woefully anticipated is lulled into
peacefulness and the uncomfortableness of the present vanishes to make way for the
dawn of the new dispensation. Thus history repeats itself in all nations. The period of rise
in material progress is at the expense of the Inner Light. The waning of material progress
is accompanied by increasing spiritual energy. The rise in material civilization is always
accompanied by a corresponding withdrawal of energy from interior planes, and is the
intense manifestation of intuition caused by training it in the material direction, and
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held by invisible hands and attuned to the Divine Harmony of Life Immortal. Eternal
Vibration is the Life of the Soul. Prayer or aspiration is but the "Soul's form of energizing,
thereby reaching higher realms of Life Eternal."
As has been said by one of old: "Live then, in the Eternal, for you are Eternal, the
Invisible, Silent, Deathless Pilgrim, ever in the Present. No Past, no Future, to crush or
anticipate, but the Everlasting Now is yours.''
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FREEDOM
It is not only true that most people misunderstand freedom, but I sometimes think
I have not yet met one person who rightly understood it. The whole universe is absolute
Law.
Freedom only opens entire activity and license under the law.
To the degraded and undeveloped and even to too many others - the thought of
freedom is a thought of escape from law - which, of course, is impossible. More precious
than all worldly riches is Freedom - freedom from the painful constipation and poor
narrowness of ecclesiasticism - freedom in manners, habiliments, furniture, from the
silliness and tyranny of local fashions - entire freedom from party rings and mere
conventions in politics - and better than all, a general freedom of one's-self from the
tyrannic domination of vices, habits, appetites, under which nearly every man of us (often
the greatest brawler for freedom) is enslaved.
Can we attain such enfranchisement - the true Democracy, and the height of it?
While we are from birth to death the subjects of irresistible law, enclosing every movement
and minute, we yet escape, by a paradox, into true free will. Strange as it may seem, we
only attain to freedom by a knowledge of, and implicit obedience to, Law. Great -
unspeakably great - is the Will; the free Soul of man; at its greatest, understanding and
obeying the laws, it can then, and then only, maintain true liberty. For there is to the
highest that law as absolute as any - more absolute than any - the Law of Liberty.
The shallow, as intimated, consider liberty a release from all law, from every
constraint. The wise see in it, on the contrary, the potent Law of Laws, namely, the fusion
and combination of the conscious will or partial individual with those universal, eternal,
unconscious ones, which run through all Time, pervade history, prove immortality, give
moral purpose to the entire objective world, and the last dignity to human life.
- Walt Whitman
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THE close of another year is soon at hand, and with it we are approaching the end
of the century when an important cycle terminates. Balance sheets are struck on such
occasions year after year and from them we glean the results of our endeavors.
It gives me pleasure to recount some of the magnificent results achieved by the
Theosophical Society in America during the past year for the information of members who
may have lost sight of one or the other of the activities the aggregate of which has
determined its present position as a great factor in the regenerative efforts to uplift
humanity to its true dignity.
The aspect which the T. S. presents today to the public mind is vastly different than
what it was when those heroes, H. P. Blavatsky and William Q. Judge, twenty-two years
ago, first presented the truths of humanities inheritance and possible developments to the
world. The position is changed from that of obscurity to that of marked prominence. The
ideas permeate literature, the pulpit and educational institutions to such a large extent that
the source of them is almost lost sight of. The invaluable gain in the advancement of the
thought of the day in this direction is undoubtedly due to the underlying truths of these
ideas, and to the wise administration of the organization and the untiring efforts of its
members.
The liberal and respectful treatment by the press is evidence of the widespread
interest which the movement commands.
The increase in membership during the last year was greater than in any other year
in the history of the Society, likewise the number of branches have increased and their
individual organization is vastly more efficient than heretofore.
The greatest and most far-reaching effort ever put forward by the Society was the
Crusade of American Theosophists around the world, which was headed by Katherine A.
Tingley, the successor to H. P. Blavatsky and William Q. Judge, and successfully and
grandly completed in February of this year. The marvelous increase in membership and
number of Branches which was the most visible result of the Crusade is - strange to say -
the least important as compared with the far-reaching connection which was made with
foreign nations, obscure tribes and organizations with whom was found a point of contact
which had long waited for the touch of a masterhand to bind them together on the very
ideals of human Brotherhood. Thus a beginning has been made by creating international
ties, a cable tow of spiritual force has been spread abroad the strength of which will outlast
the ages.
Closely following the return of the Crusade to America was the laying of the
foundation of the corner-stone, and accompanying ceremony, of the School for the Revival
of the Lost Mysteries of Antiquity at Point Loma, California. One hundred and ninety-six
acres of land had been purchased on a magnificent site overlooking the ocean. The sacred
mysteries of antiquity will be revived under the guidance of the Founder at that school and
moral and spiritual education will be given to fitted pupils by instructing them in an
understanding of the laws of universal nature and justice and particularly the laws
governing their own being.
The greatest convention of the Society was held at Madison Square Garden,
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New York City, on April 26, 1897, with many delegates present from foreign countries and
audiences by thousands.
The work of the children which is now so promising received its impetus there. Mrs.
Elizabeth C. Mayer, a lady who is eminently fitted for that highly important position was
appointed by Mrs. Tingley superintendent of that work. A very great increase in numbers
and in interest can be recorded which fills us with hope for the future.
In September the International Brotherhood League was founded by Mrs. Tingley
with the broadest possible objects. This work was eagerly taken up by all the Branches
throughout the world as it was immediately recognized as affording an opportunity for the
practical application of the teachings of Universal Brotherhood. Many students realized at
once that here was a chance to sow seeds broadcast of the philosophic basis which they
had imbibed during the period in which the Theosophical Society went through its cycle of
development.
During the Summer a home for tenement house children was established in the
vicinity of New York, there a large number of children were cared for and some of the
broadest teachings of right living were inculcated. At the end of the season a drama was
performed by the children which was a forerunner to the performances to be presented in
the course of time to the public which shall teach some of the purest and grandest truths
of their own lives.
Before closing this brief review I should mention that the Theosophical Society in
America has not been without its enemies near and far.
As the movement advances it attracts many individuals who soon get hold of the
grandest truths they have ever known, and then they attempt to pose as teachers of the
philosophy by word or silence or by letter or otherwise. This is a fascinating game which
those who do not work sincerely for humanity love to play and often devoted members
become temporary victims to them. These little Gurus use subtle means to affect others;
they indulge in insidious and crafty means to draw members away from their work for their
own personal interests.
The Theosophical Society in America is now an influential and powerful organization.
Therefore the temptation is very great for selfish and ambitious persons to creep in and
endeavor to become possessed of some of its advantages utterly regardless of results.
Many know and many do not that to enter upon the work for humanity in earnest is
to work with cosmic forces and that the personality has to give way in order to succeed.
The personality being only the limited reflection of the Great Self comes into
confusion when it presumes to represent the universal source or essence; it can never
prevail. It must go or it dashes itself to pieces finally on the rock of truth. Thus some step
aside and are heard of no more.
Theosophists can become very strong and self-centred and impregnable to the
subtle influence of inimical forces if they will hold strictly to the Spirit of the philosophy.
The prospect for the future of our movement is grand. By cooperation and solidarity
only can we prosper and carry the message into the next century and beyond.
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THE house I live in is not very much of a house. It is old, very dilapidated, and sadly
in need of repairs. Nevertheless, it is the best house I ever lived in. Perhaps it would be
well to begin by telling you something about some of the houses I lived in long before I
occupied this house that I live in today.
When I first began to understand that I must have a habitation and a name, I found
that I must build my house myself, and the first thought that came to me in regard to the
plan was this: "I shall have a straight, high roof and broad windows wide apart."
Well, when I thought I was ready to build, I found there were several others whom
I would have to consult in regard to the plan of my house. These others were somehow
connected with me in such a way that they could not be got rid of. Indeed, I found later on
that they were intended to be my servants - they were certainly "Hangers on" and I had to
consult them. I know now, it was my own fault that I had to consult them, but I did not know
it then, and as they were many and very strong, they made me believe they had the right,
and to save trouble I consented.
So the house was begun and finished before I realized that I had very little to do with
the plan of it. I was very much disappointed when I found the roof so low and so slanting
that there was very little room for the wide windows I had hoped to have. They were what
the builders called windows, but they were so narrow that they were merely slits, and so
close together that they almost touched each other.
Looking back to that far-away time and remembering that house and those poor,
little, narrow windows, makes me shiver even now. We had shutters over them, but the
shutters drooped in such a way as to nearly cover them all the time, just as if they were
ashamed of the windows they were expected to screen and tried to cover them up.
But the house was finished and we moved in. We were seven of a family all told -
master and servants. But as the master had been overpowered in planning his house and
building it by those who were inferior to him, he now found they were determined to
continue to hold him in subjection. These inferiors were indeed the masters, and he
seemed to be powerless to assert his rights, and was obliged to submit.
It was very foolish of him, I own, but when you understand how he was placed you
will be willing to admit that he could not very well have done otherwise. When he got fairly
settled in his new house he found he would have to live right in with his servants, for there
was no nice, light room he could call parlor. The roof slanted too much to allow of such a
room, and even if there had been a room under the roof, the windows were of no account
for lighting such a room as he had in his mind. So he settled down to live as best he could.
It was settling down indeed, for the house was mostly under ground, having been planned
and built without any reference to his needs or comfort.
He was a social sort of a fellow and liked company and as these dependents of his
were lively and gay, he soon forgot in their company to long for a better house. They had
gotten the upper hand of him and they kept it. They led him where they pleased and their
pleasure was from one folly to another, from one wicked-
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ness to another. Sometimes, indeed, many times, he would pause and consider, and there
would come to his mind a thought that he was very foolish to be led thus from folly to folly -
that he ought to turn over a new leaf and lead a better and purer life.
Then he remembered he had no place to go to get away from these whom he ought
to subdue, and he would be very sad and sorrowful and say to himself: "Oh, if only I had
not been so weak as to allow these base creatures to control me when I had such a nice
plan to build my house. If only I could have carried out the plan I would have had a nice
upper room, well lighted, where I could sometimes retire and be at peace."
Then coming under the influence of those lower creatures, he would fall once more
from his high and noble aspirations, and in their company would return again to the
indulgence of all sorts of unmanly folly, till at last the house began to go to pieces. When
the occupants saw the house would not hold together much longer, they were alarmed and
they all moved out. The house soon sank into the ground, and no wonder, being built
nearly under ground it soon rotted away.
So here was I once more without a habitation and a name; the six who had lived
with me seemed to have left me to myself. I was ashamed and tired of the life I had lived,
and I determined to build no more houses. I said: "Why should I try to build a house, I
cannot have it as I wish. If only I could have a straight high roof, and nice wide windows,
I believe I could live a better and a purer life. I am sure it would have been different if I had
not given up to those whom I know are inferior to me, but I do not see how I can ever build
such a house as long as I have those six followers to contend with." And while I was thus
cogitating I fell asleep. I have no idea how long I slept; it seemed only a few minutes, but
I know now it was a long time.
And when I awoke, will you believe me, the first thing I knew I was contemplating
building a house. Strange, was it not? And the next moment I remembered about the high
roof, and the wide windows, when, lo and behold, here came my former six companions.
They too were just as anxious as I to build and move into a house.
I do not know how it happened, but I found I had gained some wisdom and some
new strength. May be it was on account of keeping always before my mind 's eye the idea
of that straight roof and those two broad windows. The idea had been "a hope" - the hope
of a better house. Be that as it may, I certainly had gained something, for when the new
house was completed the roof was straighter, the windows were a little broader, and there
was a little room at the top of the house furnished in a pleasant, cool grey material. I admit
it was not much of a room, and the furniture not much to be proud of, but compared to what
I had been accustomed, it was very satisfactory.
Now, as I really had gotten in some small degree the upper hand of those whom I
ought to have known all along were very much below me in the social scale, you would
think I ought to have kept the upper hand. How surprised you will be when I tell you I still
allowed them to allure me from my nice, light and pleasant little upper room - that I still
joined them in their folly and sin and went from bad to worse. But it will please you to learn
that ever and anon the thoughts would come to me: "Why am I here? Why should I be so
foolish as to give way before these low-lived servants? Oh that I could break away from
their baneful influence."
But all the time I seemed to understand that I could not so break away from them;
that they were tied to me by some mysterious force I could not control. And time went on.
The house became old and rickety and began to fall
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burned them. I also thought I sent them to a place where they would burn forever and ever.
But you know, and I know now, that I only burned the houses they lived in - I had no
power over the occupant of the house. When I set fire to his house, he only moved out,
and all he had to do was to wait until he was ready to build another house. Then, if he were
stronger than me would very likely burn my house, if I refused to believe as he believed.
That is just the way we did. Whoever were the stronger burned those who were the
weaker. (Of course I mean they burned the houses they lived in.)
As it is impossible for every one to believe just the same and also as we were one
and all far from the truth, the burnings went on for a long time, as time goes. But at last
there came a time when there was no more burning with fire. Burning with fire went out of
fashion. But the idea of allowing any one to form his own opinion did not go out with the
fires - more the pity.
You will see now, if not before how all the fault was mine. I think the first dawning
of the truth came to me when I began to call those "hangers on,'' propensities. Then by
beginning to invite them one at a time, to come up and sit with me in my nice pleasant
upper room. There we sat and conversed and compared notes and laid plans for the
future. I must admit I did not know how much I was doing for them when I invited them to
come up and sit with me. When the knowledge came to me that I must train and educate
my propensities, I really had elevated two of them so they could occupy with me that upper
room. And I was then living in the house I occupy today.
Now, you understand why I said, "This is the best house I ever lived in." You must
not suppose for a moment that I am entirely satisfied with my house, or that there will be
no more improvements, having now the assistance of the two elevated and educated
"Hangers on" (I shall call them brothers hereafter), I have succeeded in getting light into my
parlor. By this light I have been enabled to look inward, and I have seen where all the fault
lies. I have determined to go no more down to that basement where the others, the
uneducated ones have their quarters, but I shall bring them up to sit with me and those
others who were formerly their companions.
I shall endeavor with all my heart to elevate myself that I may be better fitted to
educate and raise them, and as we seven have lived together in a great many houses,
before we understood our duty to each other, so we hope to live together in a great many
more, and we shall improve in our building until we have a perfect house. Then, we "shall
go no more out." We have as a permanent possession, a beautiful picture. We have
named it Universal Brotherhood. We shall always keep that. We will take it with us when
we move out and bring it back when we return. We are going to hang it on our parlor wall
where all the bright Light will fall upon it. We will learn to paint it and copy it, and we will
try to have each and all of our neighbors supplied with a copy.
We are not going to bother our neighbors with what we believe or what we do not
believe. We are determined to let our light so shine that they may see our good works. We
are going to follow the advice of one of our divine Teachers who said: "Little children love
one another." We are going to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit the sick, comfort the
prisoner. We shall make feasts of truth and knowledge, and go out into the highways and
byways and compel the ignorant to come in and partake of Wisdom and Knowledge and
Power.
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A GLIMPSE OF YESTERDAY
by Elsie Barker
LITTLE TOMMY JONES, the hunchback, sat on the door-stone crying. Some
younger boys had taunted him with his deformity, had called him "Humpy," made wry faces
at him, because he wouldn't join them in stealing apples from Deacon Thompson's orchard.
As he sat there nursing his grief and shame the boy wondered, as many older and
wiser people have before, whether after all it paid to do right at the expense of ridicule. For
as Tommy had wept more, so he had thought more than other boys.
Thought was a natural consequence of tears.
Though humbly born, a misshapen son of the people, this boy was a dreamer. From
the lurid tales of war told by his grandsire, a grizzled veteran of '63; from the gorgeous
illustrations in the family Bible and the grotesque drawings of Dore in his mother's old copy
of Dante, Tommy had created a dream-world of his own, the only world in which he cared
much to live; for with the cripple's pain he had the cripple's morbid sensitiveness, and life
to him was mostly one vast ache.
But that afternoon as he sat on the door-stone of his lowly home, and saw his young
play-fellows - straight of back and supple of limb - leaping and climbing high, and heard
their jeering laughter flung tauntingly back at him, what wonder that his heart was full of
bitterness? Why was he not like other boys? he asked himself. What had he done that he
alone of all the world should be the sport of nature - too ugly for any love save a mother's
ever to reach down to him.
But though his body was mis-shapen, his eyes were beautiful - large and deep and
liquid, as are always the eyes of a hunchback.
A sound came from within the house, the voice of a woman scolding.
The boy winced as from a blow, and clambering to his feet he limped away.
West of the house was an orchard, and beyond it the downward slope of a hill.
He went past the gnarled old apple trees and threw himself upon the bank, with his
face toward the sunset.
Billows of crimson and gold were piled high in the western sky; while the edges of
dark clouds curled over like the crests of breakers, showing their ragged silvery linings.
Something swept over the boy's soul and he drew a long and tremulous breath.
"How beautiful" he whispered to himself. "The clouds look like great pink feather-
beds all made up for angels to sleep on."
He sat watching the glory till it faded tone by tone into the gray twilight. The insects
hummed drowsily; the boy's tear-wet eyes closed heavily, and he slept.
He slept and dreamed a wonderful dream.
Spread out before his eyes was a great and splendid city, with wide streets and
stately palaces - a city like those in the Bible pictures, only more beautiful. A triumphal arch
spanned a broad thoroughfare, and from every tower and window flags streamed upon the
breeze. The streets were full of people, all in gala dress. Linked together with chains of
flowers, a band of happy children, like a cloud of bright-hued butterflies, flitted gaily along
in the sunshine. From the distance came a sound of martial music, and an army of brave
soldiers, the army of the conqueror, came into sight.
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Tall, erect and magnificent in his triumphal car rode the great hero, with his mounted
officers beside him, and those poor wretches, his prisoners of war, chained to his chariot
wheels. He was brave and high and noble, the pride and darling of his people; but in his
lion heart there was no pity and no mercy; the cries of his captured enemies were sweet
as music to his war-tried ears.
He passed beneath the arch. Beautiful women strewed his path with roses, and the
heart of the conquering hero beat high with pride and joy.
But a change came over the dream.
It was the dreamer who stood in the triumphal car; his were the broad and manly
shoulders from which the purple mantle fell; at his feet were the roses. The conquering
hero was himself - the hunchback, Tommy!
With a start the boy awoke. He sat up and rubbed his heavy eyelids.
The sound of a cow-bell reminded him that it was chore time, and the hero humbly
went and milked the cows.
Did he understand the dream? No, - not then.
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STUDENTS' COLUMN
conducted by J.H. Fussell
RIGHT PERCEPTION
I HAVE often heard W. Q. Judge say that most of the difficulties which arise in the
minds of students are due to a lack of observation. And I think that in order to attain to right
perception and correct observation we need to free our minds from preconceptions and
bias. Too often, instead of taking a statement on its own merits and examining it from first
principles, we all the time have in mind other statements or ideas, more or less defined,
and we look to see if the new statement fits in with these, or in what pigeon-hole of our
minds we can place it. In other words, our attention is divided between old ideas and the
new one, and we pass judgment on the new-comer before giving him a hearing. All this
shows a lack of thoroughness, and finds its expression often in the simplest matters, but
more particularly in superficial reading. We read a book and get a general idea of its
contents, and perhaps the next day or the next week a question arises in our minds in
regard to a statement made in the book, and we become very perplexed. Now what I am
going to say will perhaps appear very improbable to some, but it is true nevertheless.
Instead of referring again to the book to see whether the statement has been understood,
some people, and these not in the minority, will sit down, write out their question, and
weaving in a lot of preconceived ideas, ask some one else to explain it all to them. And
very often a careful reading of the book would have explained the whole matter. Another
case - sometimes in such a simple matter as attending to a request contained in a circular
the request will be neglected and the very opposite be carried out.
Of course these are extreme cases of the lack of observation, and the latter may
seem trivial, looked at with regard to the individual, but a multiplication of such cases would
entail a great deal of unnecessary work on others, and attention even to small matters like
these cannot be unimportant.
There are many other matters in which many of us fail to use our powers of
perception and observation. We think our lives are dull and humdrum, affording us no
opportunity for development and experience, we do not have wonderful experiences like
some others, and it fills our minds with regrets. But surely this is all folly! The life of every
one of us is full of the marvels of life, everywhere we are surrounded by the mysteries of
Nature, and to every one Nature gives hint after hint of the solution thereof. But we do not
notice them, we are blind, we have eyes and see not, ears have we but we hear not. Is not
this true of most of us? We long to know something of that inner life which borders this so
closely, but we do not think of taking note of our dreams. We wish we could have some
proof of reincarnation, and yet we neither analyze our own characters nor seek to
understand those of our fellows. I believe that if we would only observe intelligently and
sympathetically the lives of little children we would find the key to some of life's greatest
secrets.
I will end this, as I began. Time and time again have I heard W. Q. Judge say that
most of the difficulties that arise in the minds of students are due to lack of observation.
Is it not true? And ought we not therefore to remove this obstacle from our path? The
greatest ends are accomplished by the simplest means.
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Usually the terms personality and individuality are used synonymously but distinction
has been made between them in Theosophical literature. The majority of men live only an
outward life, guided mainly by their desires which they are ever seeking to fulfil, and the
mind which should be employed to control their desires is used too often to minister to
them. To such people their whole makeup consists of mind, desires and body and, not
having gone deeper into their own natures, not being able to conceive of anything higher,
they naturally regard these as the real man without which he could not exist. It can very
easily be demonstrated however, that the body, desires and mind are not the real man but
are merely instruments which he uses to express himself in the outer material world.
It will readily be granted by all who have given any thought to the matter that the
physical body is not the real man but merely an instrument which can be used and its
natural tendencies overcome. The desires are also an instrument of man, representing the
driving force which controlled and guided may carry us whither we will, or uncontrolled may
cause us to commit those acts to which our mind and reason in calmer moments would not
consent. So too is the mind an instrument and not the real man, for there is a power back
of the mind which can hold it and direct it. We have then the real man and his instruments
or vehicles of expression. The instruments are all subject to change and growth, the real
man is unchangeable. The instruments are called in Theosophical literature - the
personality. The real man is the individuality.
There is, I think, a great advantage in this use of the terms for it draws attention to
the distinction made between the outer and the inner man and leads us to make a closer
study of ourselves. I think the questioner's view that there cannot be conscious existence
apart from personality would be correct if applied simply to this plane of being, for the real
man cannot contact this plane except by means of a vehicle or instrument which for the
time being gives him a distinctive existence on this plane.
It is personality that makes us appear distinct and separate one from another, it is
the individuality that gives us the realization of the unity of all being. For a further
explanation of the use of these terms the student is referred to the Key to Theosophy by
H. P. Blavatsky.
BELIEF IN CHRIST
Do Theosophists believe that Christ is the son of God?
Some Theosophists do, but it should be clearly understood that the Theosophical
Society does not require from its members any belief or disbelief in any religious system
or doctrine whatever. It requires simply an assent to its first object: To form the nucleus
of a Universal Brotherhood of Humanity without any distinctions whatever."
This is provided for in its constitution as follows:
ARTICLE VII.
Section 1. Any person declaring his sympathy with the first object of the Society
may be admitted to membership as provided in the By-laws.
Section 2. Every member has the
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right to believe or disbelieve in any religious system or philosophy and to declare such
belief or disbelief without affecting his standing as a member of the Society, each being
required to show that tolerance of the opinions of others which he expects for his own.
It will not he surprising to learn then that there are in the Theosophical Society
Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Mohammedans, deists, atheists and agnostics, men and
women of all creeds and of none. The belief held by many is that Christ is the son of God,
but so too, following the teachings of Christ and of all the great teachers of the world, they
say that all men are sons of God, all men are in essence divine, all men are potentially
saviors of humanity, are indeed saviors now to the extent that they work unselfishly for
humanity.
Krishna, Buddha, Christ, all those who stand out as the great teachers of humanity
are those who have realized to the fullest extent their sonship and in whose lives the
divinity shines out.
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REVIEWS
The Internationalist, for October - This new magazine is worthy of the mantle of the
Irish Theosophist which has fallen upon it, being far and away the best of all the
Theosophical periodicals from a purely literary standpoint. It is spontaneous, not forced;
its contributors do not toil at a set task, to fill out a given amount of space, but first evolve
ideas and then express them in appropriate words. The writer of "With the Children of
Twilight " maintains the reality of Fairy-dom; and AE tells, in a sheen of word-coloring, of
"A Dream of Angus Oge." The ink has long been dry on the pen of John Eglinton, and,
therefore, the short essay on "Knowledge" will be hailed all the more joyously by his
admirers. It is full of the quaintly beautiful touches that characterize his work. "The Child
of the Ages," by Paul Gregan is a charming bit of verse. - Aretas
The Colloquy-Conversations about the Order of Things and Final Good. By Josiah
Augustus Seitz.* - The basic problems of philosophy and religion are discussed in this work
in a broad and tolerant spirit, and the archaic philosophy is advocated as alone affording
an
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* G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York; cloth, $1.75
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adequate solution. The book is written in blank verse and rhyme - and though some of the
subjects treated do not lend themselves readily to the poetic form, the versification is
always dignified and smooth. The writer displays deep mystical insight, and many
passages are marked by strong imagination and the power of vivid expression. There is
much true poetry in the volume, and it has the true literary quality throughout. It is well
printed, on good paper, and tastefully bound. - Aretas
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Though all the reviews in last issue were from the same pen, the signature of their
writer appeared upon some and not upon others, owing to the inexplicable caprice of the
proof-reader; and the reviewer was loud in his complaints about other unwarrantable
changes made after the proofs had passed through his hands. The half-tone cuts showed
up badly, for which the printer can hardly be blamed, as the paper used was not sufficiently
heavy for successful half-tone printing.
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THEOSOPHICAL ACTIVITIES
a cure for the Klondike fever to "Why was I born stupid?" with the demand for an immediate
answer.
Arriving at Nashville, we were received by the local members with the true Southern
welcome that makes one glad to be alive and in the sunny South, even when the mercury
is climbing up to the top scale to determine the temperature, as it was on the day we
arrived.
A public lecture was announced for Sunday morning with set speakers and subjects
in the regular cut-and-dried style, but the Crusaders smiled when, arriving in the hall, the
programme was discarded and questions and answers introduced. The wisdom of these
tactics was fully demonstrated on the Crusade, as it is in the nature of a personal talk on
a broad scale, placing the speakers and audience in touch and making the speakers
versatile and ready for anything. This course brings out points covering the whole field of
Theosophic thought. The audience evinced great interest and Judge O'Rourke, of Fort
Wayne; Messrs. Hargrove, Dunlop, Patterson and Harris, of Macon, Ga., gave most
satisfactory answers to the questions. Mrs. Tingley gave a short address on Brotherhood.
The interest excited by the morning session brought a packed audience to the
evening meeting to listen to lectures on Theosophical subjects, interspersed with questions
and answers.
During the afternoon a T. S. meeting was held in the commodious rooms of the
Nashville Society, and was attended by members from Louisville, Macon, Ga.; Tampa,
Fla.; Denison, Texas; Hot Springs, Ark.; St. Louis, Mo.; Memphis, Tenn.; Chicago, Ill.;
Fort Wayne, Ind.; Pittsburgh, Pa., and New York. General branch work and methods were
discussed and the feeling of perfect harmony was fitly expressed in song rendered by Bro.
Neresheimer in his inimitable style.
All felt that a firm, lasting and unbreakable bond had been established between our
leader, - heart of the movement, - headquarters, and the whole South; members were filled
with a new hope, energy and courage to carry the work forward on the broad lines of the
International Brotherhood League. The fact was fully recognized that the League activities
would broaden the work to embrace those heretofore impossible to reach, and that it would
specially benefit the South in reaching the negro under a plan put into effect while at
Nashville by Mrs. Tingley.
On Monday morning and afternoon lectures were given in the Auditorium Building
on the Fairgrounds by Mrs. Tingley taking for her subject "The Hope of the Future;" Mrs.
E. C. Mayer on "Influence of Theosophy on Woman;" Judge O'Rourke, Messrs.
Neresheimer, Dr. Buck, Hargrove and Patterson speaking on various subjects. In the
evening an E. S. T. meeting was held, and many new members were. admitted.
Tuesday morning the party left for New York, Mrs. Mayer and Mr. Patterson stopping
off at Louisville and Pittsburgh for branch work and to lecture.
A marked feature of the work done at Nashville was the effect produced on the
press. Papers which had previously treated Theosophy with indifference, not only gave full
and correct reports of meetings, but kept Mrs. Tingley and Messrs. Neresheimer and
Patterson busy explaining the Philosophy, the International Brotherhood League, its objects
and the various activities being carried on, all of which was published in full, with most
favorable comment. These will be copied throughout by the Southern press and awaken
public interest.
To sum up, through the work done, Theosophy has been lifted from obscurity,
prejudice and misconception swept away, placing it before the public as a broad, ethical
philosophy which finds fitting expression in the right performance of the duties of every-day
life. - F. M. P.
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GREETING:
We, the undersigned officers, members and friends of the Theosophical Society in
Europe, hereby express to you our heartiest greeting and welcome on this occasion of your
return to America, the home of your adoption and the Land of Promise for our entire race.
You have triumphantly executed the mighty purpose with which, on June 13th, 1896,
you started from Boston, U. S. A., on a tour around the World, cheered by the God-speed
of our American Brothers, and bearing a Purple Banner on which was emblazoned the
message of
Truth, Light, Liberation for Discouraged Humanity.
That banner was the outward symbol of your great mission to promote the
realization of the Ideal of Brotherhood, without distinction of Race, Creed, or Sex, among
all peoples of the earth. As you passed from land to land, each state and people has
joyfully unfurled its national flag before that glorious symbol in token of its ready response
to the thoughts of love, sympathy and helpfulness which you have scattered among
nations. These standards often borne by man against his fellow man, as emblems of
national jealousy and distrust, now bear witness before the whole world to that deep
unsatisfied desire of our hearts to dwell more in unity and less in strife.
The Theosophical Movement, which in this century acknowledges Helena P.
Blavatsky as its noble and devoted Founder, and William Q. Judge as its staunch and
unswerving champion has recognized you, Katherine A. Tingley, as the Successor of these
great fore-runners, to whose loving care and skillful guidance is entrusted the work of
building the great School for the Revival of the Lost Mysteries of Antiquity, the foundations
of which you have so recently laid down. Through you has been made manifest that
glorious design "to belt the earth as with a cable-tow" of Love and Brotherhood; and it is
you and these your trusty comrades who have risked the storm and stress of weather on
land and sea, the heat and cold of many climates, faced the fierce opposition of caste and
creed among men, and fanned the flame of innate brotherliness and self-sacrifice.
We rejoice with our comrades in other lands that so great success has attended your
noble and unselfish efforts, and we recognize this success as due to the absolute devotion,
ready self-sacrifice and harmonious cooperation that exists between you all, without which
so great a task could never have been accomplished.
The public meetings of thousands in our European cities, the Brotherhood Suppers
for our poor and outcast brothers, the weekly gatherings of members, the founding of great
national organizations, and the unexampled increase in the number of our branches, are
effectual witnesses to the importance of the external work done in our midst: but none of
us can measure the incalculable effects produced in the minds and hearts of those of our
members, who, from being mere enquirers, have by your exertions been quickened into
active living centres, radiating brotherhood on every hand, and developing those soul-
powers that shall make of a man a god.
And we recognize that the complete success of this First Crusade around the World
is the precursor of other such ideal missions. We are assured that these missions will
hasten and care for the growth of all those seeds of Fraternity which you have planted
amongst the nations of the World. Thus we hail the
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*Signed by all members of the Theosophical Society in Europe and published now
by request, having previously been overlooked.
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lish visitors and to be conversant with the current English Theosophical literature,
translations and interpretations; Friday, Miss Ellen Bergman leads a Secret Doctrine Class,
and Saturday a Theosophic Training class a la American finishes the program of the week.
The first and third Sunday of every month public discourses for large audiences are
given, and the Sundays intervening are lectures given in the districts of the workingmen.
All the lectures are attended by large and appreciative audiences, and in the discourses
ensuing at the end of the lecture the liveliest interest is exhibited. Favorable reports in the
newspapers are given of every lecture.
The lectures in the workingman district owe their success to Congressman M. E.
Nystrom, whose restless and unselfish activity in the theosophic field deserves the highest
credit. While engaged as associate editor in the Theosophic magazine "Theosofia," he still
manages to get time to turn out sheet upon sheet of a splendid translation of the Bhagavad
Gita - mainly guided by W. Q. Judge, and partly by original researches in the Sanscrit
language. His lectures in the workingman district are received by grateful audiences, who
appreciate the sincerity and truly Theosophic spirit of his delivery. The workingmen have
learned to regard him as a brother and a friend and listen to his manly discourses with an
interest born out by an unswerving confidence. But not only Stockholm gets the benefit of
his lectures. Also to the provinces he extends his activity. Assisted by Mr. Axel E. Gibson
he delivered the other day a lecture in the City of Uppsala before an audience of some 3
or 400 persons, mostly college people. For Uppsala is the Oxford of Sweden - the nursery
for the literary-scientific-educational forces of the country. The lecture which treated the
subject of "character moulding of children from a Theosophic and rational point of view,"
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was received with deafening applause and the animated discussion that followed, testified
abundantly to the deep impression it had left in the hearts and minds of the listeners. An
appreciation from such quarters - the stronghold of the dogmatic, scientific, materialistic
school - can without the slightest exaggeration be said to be epoch-making in the religious
and moral life of the nation.
The Theosophical movement of Sweden has fortunately succeeded in drawing within
its fold some of the finest talents - literary and otherwise - of the country. A name that has
become loved and appreciated by every lover of purity, and moral strength as applied to
Swedish literature - is that of Mr. Torsten Hedlund of Gothenburg. Though the head man
of one of the largest book-publishing enterprises in Sweden, he yet finds sufficient time to
make Gothenburg reverberate with Theosophic thought from the one end to the other.
Fearless, keen-sighted, energetic and with an unshaken faith in the power of Theosophy
to fashion the destiny of the world - Mr. Hedlund delivers lectures, writes articles,
translates, organizes and utilizes every opportunity to inoculate the theosophic lymph into
the organism of his community. The sterling integrity connected with his name and public
character, gives to his propaganda work - even to the theosophic unbeliever - an irresistible
sense of confidence and respect.
Another name, not less appreciated by every true admirer of Swedish art and
literature, is the name of Mrs. C. Scholander. Widow of the late professor and jubilee-
doctor S. Scholander, one of the most eminent men - painter - poet-philosopher - that the
country of Sweden ever produced - Mrs. C. Scholander equipped with the rich experiences
of her fortunate position as the life companion of such a genius, devotes all her time and
energy to the service of Theosophy. In her work for Theosophy she is indefatigable. The
translations into the Swedish Theosophic Magazine "Theosofia" from English or American
authors would by themselves fill a volume. In every number of "Theosofia" one is sure to
find some splendid translation undersigned by the well-known initials C. S.
In a coming issue of the "New Century" we shall ask its editor for permission to add
a few other names to the above mentioned - names who have become well known and well
loved to everyone who has Theosophy dear to his heart. As long as the names of Dr. G.
Zander, Dr. F. Kellberg, Dr. Bogren, Major Cederschold, Mrs. Gerda Nystrom and others
give to the theosophic movement the stimulating impulse of a pure, unselfish, ever active,
ever zealous life, the Swedish Theosophist can calmly and confidently work ahead in firm
reliance on the safety and moral excellence of his ideals. - A. E. G.
ENGLAND's HOME CRUSADE - On Friday evening, Oct. 15, a most successful and
harmonious public meeting was held in the Geographical Institute, Newcastle. Many
people interested by the Wagner lecture on the previous Monday were present and seemed
quite satisfied with what was said. On Saturday afternoon Dr. Coryn arrived and all three
workers addressed the Newcastle Branch on methods of work. In the evening came the
second Wagner lecture, when Dr. Coryn interpreted Tannhauser. Some good renderings
of the music were given with the assistance of violin and cello.
Sunday was the hardest day of all with private interviews and a discussion on work
in the morning, a private meeting in the afternoon and a public Branch meeting in the
evening; all at Tyne-mouth. At the evening meeting such a quantity of written questions
were sent up that only about half could be dealt with. Thus concluded a successful week's
work in a district which affords a wide field for spreading Theosophical ideas.
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AUM
"Those men who constantly follow this my doctrine without reviling it, and with a firm
faith, shall be emancipated even by action; but they who revile it and do not follow it are
bewildered in regard to all knowledge, and perish, being devoid of discrimination." -
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter III
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD
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Vol. XII January, 1898 No. 10
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Happy New Year! A Happy New Year to all! How our hearts are thrilled at the
greeting's from one whom we love! How much happiness and brightness they bring! But
there are those in the world who are sad and in want, whose hearts are heavy and their
lives shut in. Shall we not send our greetings to them, shall we not send a ray of light, of
loving sympathy to all lands, to all peoples, to all the little ones of the earth, to all cities, to
the dark places of the earth, the crowded tenements, the prisons, the hospitals.
Yes, we say a Happy New Year, a loving Greeting to you, Americans, Europeans,
Asiatics, Australasians, Africans, to you, civilized nations, and to you savages. To you,
dear children of every race. To you who labor with your hands, to you who are weary and
bowed down, to you who are unfortunate knowing not whither to turn, to you who are in
prison, to you who are sick and diseased.
Shall we greet only those whom we love and who love us - truly we send loving
greetings to them but so too we send loving greetings to those who do not love us, who
may have forgotten what love is, who may be our enemies, perchance enemies to
themselves also.
We will encircle the whole earth with our Greetings, we will exclude no one.
We will send forth the welcome of Brotherhood to all Nature and speak to the heart
of every creature.
How much a single word may mean. Are you poor, dear reader, poor in material
things and in this world's goods? Many a one has these things and yet is not rich. Ah! no
one is so poor that he cannot lighten another's sorrow or give a kind word, a sympathetic
look or a friendly hand-shake and so, it may be, awaken new courage, new hope, new light
in the heart of one of the sad ones of the earth.
No one is so poor that he has not some of the treasures of the heart. You may have
forgotten their existence, they may be covered up with selfishness, pride, ambition, but they
still exist in your heart of hearts. Did you know their value and their power you would bring
them forth. Forget, if but for one brief moment, yourself; send out if but one loving thought
to others; live for one short instant for your fellows.
The years pass ever silently on with their swift tread, never to return. That which we
call the year 1897 has passed, 1898 is here, but how many thousands, millions of years
have rolled over our earth since man was man, and still the goal is far off. Far off and yet
how near, nearer, much nearer than man may think. So near that but the reaching
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* Through the pressure of new business connected with the Movement all over the
world, and the development of plans of work for the new year, Mrs. Tingley was prevented
from writing the usual matter for the Search-Light, but being still anxious that her New
Year's greeting should go forth to all readers of UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD, she
desired me to embody her ideas in connection therewith for that purpose, and I have
endeavored to do so as faithfully as possible. - J.H.F.
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out of the hand is needed to grasp it - a reaching out to grasp the hand of thy Brother man
with the strong grasp of Brotherhood.
Each year glides into the past with its freight of good and ill, each new year comes
from the future with its possibilities and promises. What of the past, what of the future?
Much has been accomplished in the past year. In all lands souls are awakening to their
divine possibilities, in all lands the cry and the welcome of Brotherhood has gone forth. The
great cycle is nearly ended, the century draws to its close. But two years more and the
XXth Century will be born. Will you greet it with your faces turned toward the light, helpers
and workers in humanity's cause, or will you enter upon its threshold seeking what you can
gain for self, ambitious, proud. selfish? Choose, there is no time to delay, choose now;
make your choice and so act.
The work of the past year has been mainly along interior lines; much still remains
to be done in this direction. The inner attitude, the inner purpose and motive is being
brought to the surface, and to each is given the opportunity to face himself, to know himself
as he is, and the opportunity to take the first step to become that which he may be a worker
for humanity - or, the opportunity neglected, a worker for self. Look then not merely at the
external results achieved or to be achieved, but look within, into your own heart, see the
divine possibilities latent within oneself and every man, seek to realize them, let light and
love shine forth in every deed, every word. every thought.
Send with me a loving greeting to all humanity and kind thoughts to all creatures.
A Happy New Year,
- J. H. Fussell
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THE ocean of love, pent up in aggregate Humanity, ever trying to express itself, yet
fails because the wave of Spiritual evolution though manifesting in wondrous ways all
through this materialistic age is still in its cycle of beginning.
Soon however the latent divine faculties will unfold and again permeate the race.
The ideas of duty towards our fellow men are already enlarging day by day; indeed a bond
of sympathy spreads from land to land unperceived by the multitude; it will finally encircle
the whole earth and reveal the law of compassion which is the Law of Laws - Eternal
Harmony.
Platonic love, emotional, animal, even self-love are reflections of the real thing
temporarily misdirected. The time will come when through pains of trial and tribulation
every individual will blossom forth into the grander love, the cosmic ideal, the innate quality
of the soul. The large mass of people including the educated, the pious, the rich, and
others are with few exceptions in utter darkness about their origin and destiny; they have
not yet gotten forward to the stage where they could see beyond the superficial
phenomenal world. Only the experienced souls who, during many lives in human bodies
have learned nature's limits and its laws, know the light of everlasting right and the fitness
of all things, the law of love eternal. Some of these feel the touch of a brotherly hand
reaching across space exchanging sympathy. while others, are yet sound asleep. satisfied
in their complacency and the delusive lulling of repose.
Our earth is built on the same plan as is man. So is the whole universe. It
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too has its beginning and end. From the invisible it is born into the visible; gradually grows,
lives; and decays, returning into the invisible, whence it emerges again and again in
obedience to a plan which is to be rounded out in each succeeding birth on higher and
higher scale without end.
Man having evolved to the point where he is capable of becoming conscious of his
continuous existences and accompanying responsibility will, with the approaching cycle of
spirituality, obtain the faculty of realizing more clearly the bonds that unite the race.
Commensurate with this awakening will come the knowledge of his being an essential part
and factor in the whole progress of evolution.
This teaching which is to be found in all religions systems gives an immense hope
to the wearily groping pilgrim and if it were possible now to remove the veil to the extent
that these truths could be understood it would set aside all fear of death, fear of man or
beast or danger.
An ancient religious book says:
"Thou grievest for those that may not be lamented. Those who are wise in spiritual
things grieve neither for the dead nor for the living. I myself never was not, nor thou, nor
all the princes of the earth; nor shall we hereafter cease to be."
The Spirit is one and indivisible; it manifests periodically in the material Universe;
all souls emanate from "It." During the entire period of evolution the manifested Universe
exists in apparent separateness, that is, so long as it remains involved in matter, out of
which it is destined to evolve, carried on the wave of the cycle.
Each periodical manifestation proceeds on a definite plan into time and space; it has
its birth, youth and decay. Nature forever creates, preserves and destroys (regenerates)
in a circle around the same volume of substance, evolving form after form, higher and
higher; the eternal Monad, the Soul, using the substance as vehicle for its evolution. After
each manifestation follows an equal period of rest.
The plan comprises waves of well-defined duration during which the mass of
humanity called Monad [[sic]] in the early stages is carried from point to point; in the early
periods downward towards matter through the various kingdoms: elemental, mineral,
vegetable, animal, helped by the hosts of Hierarchies from previous periods of
manifestation. But when the middle, the human stage is reached, the quality of free will is
developed and separateness is rampant. Each human being is then to himself the centre
of the Universe. Still the plan and the evolutionary wave goes on and each soul having its
own innate spiritual qualities has the choice to follow or not the cycle of necessity. If one
fails to progress in the order of the Universal plan and his individual consciousness does
not keep up with the stream of evolution, such an entity will then remain in abeyance as
individualized entity until the period of manifestation comes round again when he has the
chance to take up the pilgrimage anew; these periods, measured by our standard of time
are of immense duration, all souls are brought into cognizance by Mother Nature, through
the wheel of rebirth, with all the experiences necessary to teach the limits of the law.
Nature is kind and patient but never still, and the wave moves on and with it humanity must
needs go.
The human beings who during this cycle having risen to a high stage of self
consciousness, come to a point of approximate realization of the homogeneity of all beings
and things, are those who feel and live the principles of Universal Brotherhood following
this ideal from a knowledge of Nature's laws: Compassion absolute!
- E. A. Neresheimer
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The Third Act introduces us to Tristan's ancestral castle in Brittany, whither the
faithful Kurvenal has brought his wounded master out of reach of his enemy. It is
significant that in his setting of this peculiarly Celtic legend Wagner takes us in turn to the
ancient Celtic countries of Ireland, Cornwall, and Brittany.
Tristan lies on a couch in the neglected garden of the Castle with the grief-stricken
Kurvenal watching anxiously for signs of returning consciousness. For, since the blow dealt
by the Dweller on the Threshold, his soul has been wandering in other realms. The
opening theme, in which we recognize the original Yearning-motive in a new form,
impresses us at once with the heavy weight of woe and quenchless yearning which
oppresses and tortures the soul:
[[music score]]
From the battlements the melancholy tune of a herdsman playing on his pipe adds
to the deep pathos of the scene:
[[music score]]
Kurvenal, in utter despair at Tristan's condition, has at last sent to Cornwall for
Isolde, as the only one who can heal him. The ship is expected hourly and the herdsman
is watching for it, but as yet in vain. Presently the strains of the plaintive tune waken the
sufferer and he asks Kurvenal in a hollow voice where he is. Kurvenal tells him how he
carried him down to the ship and brought him home to his own land where he shall soon
get well and strong. Alas! no more than Marke or Brangaene can this devoted man know
aught of the inner life, as Tristan's answer shows:
Here we find expressed the truth upon which in part the principle of Re-birth rests:
that the soul has existed for ever in the past and will endure eternally in the future; for, as
Wagner truly says, "that Future is not thinkable except as stipulated by the Past" (Prose
Works II, 376)
The temporary absence of Tristan from his body bears a close resemblance to the
"descent into the Underworld" which in all ages a would-be initiate has had to undergo.
And when we remember that the Tristan legend is a Solar Myth, Tristan representing the
Sun, the connection becomes more obvious; for Wagner has
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throughout preserved the symbolic contrast between the Day as the World of Appearances
and the Night as the Realm of Realities or the Mysteries.
"Astronomically," says H. P. Blavatsky, "this descent into Hell" symbolized the Sun
during the autumnal equinox when abandoning the higher sidereal regions - there was a
supposed fight between him and the Demon of Darkness who got the best of our luminary.
Then the Sun was imagined to undergo a temporary death and to descend into the infernal
regions. But mystically, it typified the initiatory rites in the crypts of the temple called the
Underworld. . . All such final initiations took place during the night." *
In this journey to the inner world Tristan has found that the "Desire of Life" is not yet
"Isolde is still in the realm of the Sun," and whilst this is so it is a sign that he cannot free
himself from the bonds of the flesh:
Tristan is transported at the news and urges Kurvenal to go and watch for the ship,
which already he sees with the clairvoyant vision of one who is more than half free from the
limitations of
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* Roots of Ritualism in Church and Masonry, Lucifer, Vol. IV., p. 229
-----------
Time and Space. But Kurvenal reports that, "no ship is yet in sight," and as the mournful
strain of the herdsman is resumed Tristan sinks yet deeper in a gloomy meditation which
impresses us with the most profound sadness. It rouses in him the memory of his present
birth in words which recall the sorrow-laden lot of Siegfried's parents:
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It is by no means the least valuable part of the rich heritage that Wagner left to the
world that he has laid bare some of his inner life, and so enabled us to see that the
essential principles of his dramas are distilled from his own soul experience. If this be
egotism, as some narrow critics allege, would that there were more of it in the world!
In the course of Tristan's reverie we come to the point where we learn the
psychological significance of the love-draught which he shared with Isolde and which is still
torturing him with the curse of "Desire that dies not":
The concentrated power of this terrible Desire-Curse here finds expression in the
following theme, many times repeated.
[[music score]]
Overcome once more Tristan sinks back fainting upon his couch. Presently his inner
sense again perceives the nearer approach of Isolde, and soon a joyous strain from the
herdsman is followed by the news that the ship approaches from the North. Kurvenal
reluctantly leaves his master to meet Isolde and help her to shore, and the old impatience
overmasters Tristan again. In a fever of excitement he tears the bandage from his wound
and staggers forward, crying:
He rushes headlong towards Isolde and sinks in her arms to the ground; and as he
raises his dying eyes to hers with the one word "Isolde," we hear the Look-motive for the
last time. Night has indeed come at last for Tristan. But in the right way? No, as we are
reminded by Isolde's lament:
She falls senseless on his body, and now a tumult is heard and the herdsman
announces to Kurvenal the arrival of a second ship, bearing King Marke, Melot, Brangaene,
and others. Kurvenal, eager to avenge Tristan's death, rushes out and furiously attacks
Melot as he comes to the gate, striking him down; then, driven back wounded by Marke
and his men, he staggers to Tristan's body and falls dead beside it with a touching
expression of fidelity.
Gazing mournfully on the solemn scene, King Marke utters these words of sad
reproach:
For, as Brangaene now relates, the King had sought from her the meaning of the
riddle, and, learning of the love-draught, had hastened to repair the wrong which had been
wrought through Tristan's own delusion. To Isolde, now awakening from her swoon, he
speaks and tells her of his noble purpose. But Isolde seems already unconscious of what
is passing around her, and begins softly to whisper in the melting strains of the Death-Song
the revelation of the great truth which was glimpsed by Tristan in the culmination of the
second act. Until now we had felt a fear that the soul had made a fatal mistake in its over
haste; but, as this wondrous song proceeds, we realize that in the transfigured woman who
utters it there is embodied that divine power which shall restore the
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balance and bring peace and rest in Union with the All. Thus the great song rises ever in
power and grandeur until at last the World-Union motive bursts forth like a shout of victory
with the magnificent concluding words:
Then as the great theme gradually dies away, and with the last breath of the
Yearning-motive is dissolved in ethereal harp sounds, Isolde sinks lifeless on Tristan's body
and the Tragedy of the Soul is once more accomplished. But this is no ending of untold
sadness; rather is it one in which we see the soul, purified, free from the shackles of the
body, rise triumphantly on the wings of Love and knowledge into that realm of deathless
consciousness clearly indicated by the great Master as the only possible goal of man's life
struggles. A sense of triumph, of the most utter liberation, is left with us as we close this
page of the Master's works, realizing ever more and more the deep teaching which he
sought to convey: that life is indeed not a cry of agony but a Song of Victory.
Finally let Wagner sum up the whole drama for us in a fragment from his own pen"
"Desire, desire, unquenchable and ever freshly manifested longing, - thirst and yearning.
One only redemption, - Death sinking into oblivion, the sleep from which there is no
awaking! . . . It is the ecstasy of dying, of the giving up of being, of the final redemption into
that wondrous realm from which we wander furthest when we strive to take it by force.
Shall we call this Death? Is it not rather the wonder-world of Night, out of which, so says
the story, the ivy and the vine sprang forth in tight embrace, o'er Tristan and Isolde's
tomb?"
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dreams of a larger world and pastures new, and cattle on a thousand hills, and self the
conquering lord of all. Conquest and happiness, and then alas! but dust and ashes.
Gold slips like grains of sand from the nerveless hand of age and death, and so he
seeks to conquer these, and toils a thousand years for the Elixir of Life, the fountain of
eternal youth, in order that he may renew the quest, and triumph still.
Ambition at its highest tide sighs for more worlds to conquer, and assails the constellations
with impotent rage born of despair.
Fame is such a hollow mockery when the game's played out, and the curtain of
oblivion begins to fall, and soon the monuments of stone and brass lie scattered in broken
fragments o'er the plain, and the antiquarian of another age pieces together a few
fragments that tell the same old story, ever new, of love and pride and death, and perhaps
a name like a piece of driftwood cast on shore from an old wreck, a name which no one can
pronounce - and that is all!
What does it all mean, this tireless quest with disappointment at the end? Is there
no spot of land on which the weary dove may rest? No olive-branch as sign of falling tides
and haven of repose? No conquest for the soul with peace and joy beyond? If he cannot
attain why must he ever try?
Man must evolve his latent powers and touch the earth at many points, yet find no
resting place, for this is not his home. The restless earth, the tides of time, the fleeting
show of life all these he must experience and know, while something in his soul cries "rest"
and something else - ''move on" like the Wandering Jew, till his soul cries "it is finished" and
the conquest sure.
Man's dual nature thus revealed is kin to earth and heaven. In the midst of all the
false, the true: in the midst of the ever-changing, the permanent, the everlasting.
Not all the joys of earth could satisfy his soul, but this he'll ne'er believe, till sorrow
oft, and disappointment sore, have burned away the lust of life, then deep within the
Conqueror is revealed - asleep! Then all his dream of bliss, and paradise regained through
sense, seem such a hollow mockery. Then the soul, long restless in its sleep, awakes.
The body masks the soul, and when the soul awakes the body sleeps with all its lust of life
and running to and fro. Year after year, life after life, the play's kept up till the soul awakes
to claim its heritage divine, and then, only then, does man begin to live at all. Then flooding
back upon the soul comes all that it has loved and lost, and every failure, every sin, is seen
as a stepping stone to sure success - the awakening of the soul, the conquest of the Holy
Grail.
In all man's striving thus for rest and peace and joy he seeks without, he journeys
far, tries every avenue of sense, seeks a resting place on shifting sands, and so evolves
to knowledge of the outer world of sense and time. Then when the soul awakes, the
horizon's clear; no incense rises from the veil of flesh; no smoke of altars built to Baal
obscures the glorious sun of life. Then step by step the conquest comes, for soul and
sense are one. Man's never truly man till then. Ages of toil and pain have not been vain
or lost, but steps by which we climbed to higher things, a lesson learned, a rule of life set
down in black and white, all experience never to be forgotten, a hoarded treasure cheap
at any cost of pain, garnered forever in the citadel of his soul. It is the apparent
uselessness of pain that makes us so rebellious. Why learn to brave and bear, to suffer
without complaint? Why must we reap this bitter harvest, why not an easier road?
Grant that it all comes back in joy, all that we sow in tears, why must
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it be? Desire of life and the awakening of the soul on this lower plane; fruit of the tree of
knowledge of good and ill, and back of all the tree of life, and back of this is peace and
power and wisdom. Ask of the soul if it would relinquish all the joy of living to get rid of all
its pain? The suicide may seem to answer yes, but he is bewildered or insane. Imagine
if you can what life would be bereft of joy and sorrow, pleasure and pain. Life without
sensation or feeling, only peace and power and wisdom, what would there be to desire?
But if the soul had known it all, and turned within and rested in itself, this would be the
awakening of the soul, its conquest over sense and time and fleeting show.
Pleasure and pain are but the "pairs of opposites," the necessary garb of sense, and
each, like light and darkness, impossible without the other; each, to the last scruple, the
measure of the other.
Life's meaning, therefore, lies within itself. It is its own revealer. The quest is all
without: the conquest all within. Just as man conquers sense and self, shall he subdue
the world, and conquest comes by letting go, not holding fast. Nothing that he can gain and
hold in sense and time can last. 'Tis all a passing show, the pleasure as the pain; the evil
as the good; and there remains alone the True. When man has thus begun to live, with
all illusions gone, with self subdued, with all the body's parts and powers as servants of his
will, he is part of all, at one with all, and goeth out no more.
Buddha on the lotus flower, his quest all ended, conqueror now of life and death,
worlds roll around him as a thought Divine, and he is that thought, great Brahm, and all in
all.
Such is the quest to which man is devoted, and if the journey's long, and painful is
the way, the conquest is glorious beyond the thought of man, beyond his wildest dream,
his highest hope.
Imagine not the lotus symbol is inane, or that the conqueror sits and broods over the
dawn and the decay of worlds, indifferent to the woes of men. He touches every sorrow,
every joy, and being lifted up, draws all men to him along the highway he hath trod and
knows so well.
But conquest cometh not all at once. 'Tis not alone restraining evil thought and deed
that wakes the sleeping soul. These are but dead branches on the tree of life. If this were
all, a barren trunk ere long remained with no green branches waving in the wind, or leaves
to drink the sunshine. Repression and restraint go hand in hand with life's renewal. The
deed still done is freed from self, and action ceasing not becomes divine compassion.
Where once it sought to rob, it now restores an hundred fold, and when the debt's all paid,
the awakened soul's now free to live and lift the world "to the lotus feet," the "Master of
Compassion."
Perfection is the goal of man, but not in some far-off heaven, correcting our mistakes
and failures here. Man is at once a child of earth and heaven. Earth has its seed-time and
its harvest, too, no less for souls than sprouting grain, and heaven and hell are here and
now; we make them both. Man's kingdom is within, or hell or heaven. The senses are his
servants. The will is minister of state. Experience is his treasure vault, the currency of his
realm, and sympathy the light around his throne.
When once the soul of man has wakened from the lethargy of the animal plane of
sense, and given exit to the light that is within, then he is like a city set upon a hill, well-
governed, and a light to all the world. He sorrows not, but lifts the veil of sorrow from the
hearts of men. This is the great conquest toward which all quest of man hath tended from
the beginning, while pain and sorrow are but the loosening of the tentacles of time and
sense from the
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already fossilizing experiences of the past, in order that they may be reborn in joy in the
eternal present.
Man is the epitome of nature and hath it all within himself. Seeking that which he
cannot find, yet seeking ever, till at last he looks within and the soul cries: "Here am I,
waiting for the summons of thy magic wand." This is the grand ideal, hidden, like the "jewel
in the lotus," deep within the soul of man. It is older than Time, born in the councils of the
Infinite before Time was, or any world emerged from space. Defying thus all tides and
times, or cataclysms, or clash of worlds, or fossilizing creeds, or craft of church or state -
wherever man may be, whene'er he climbs above the realm of sense, and looks within the
holy place, lo! the sleeper wakes, and holds within his hand the Holy Grail, the cup of Life,
and sleeps no more. When thine eye is single, thy body shall be full of light.
Thus is the conquest won. Thus is man lifted up to his divine inheritance, and then
begins the triumphal journey of the soul, the real mission for which all else was preparation.
Trammeled no more by sense and space and time; Master is he of life and law, because
he has fulfilled them by obedience. He is at one with all. The quest of the soul is for
perfection. Its conquest is over self: this conquest made, man steps upon the plane that
is divine, and as a god, goes on from plane to plane, with perfect knowledge, power, and
compassion Infinite; co-worker with both God and Nature for the uplifting of humanity - the
Brotherhood of all.
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II. - BROWNING
ONE would like to inscribe Shakespeare's name after Dante's in our list, but that
would be hardly fair to a poet whose genius is so essentially dramatic that we are not at
liberty to take any of the opinions uttered by his characters as his own. Moreover, while
Dante was essentially a mystic, and born at a time when that element pervaded both the
prose and poetry of the age, and when its language was frequently used to cover ideas that
the Church would otherwise have smothered at their birth, Shakespeare, on the contrary,
lived in a time of frank materialism, when the worship of the body had succeeded to the
asceticism of the Middle Ages, and life had become full of luxury and the pleasures of the
senses. And while Dante was one of the most subjective of poets, and put himself into
every line of his poetry so that you come to know as a personal friend the man who had
seen the vision of Heaven and Hell, Shakespeare was so intensely objective that we know
little of his personality, of his own idiosyncrasies and convictions. Only in the sonnets does
he become autobiographic, but those unfold a tale of misplaced love and of the treachery
of a friend, and their scope hardly includes the subject matter of religious ideas and beliefs.
That Shakespeare was acquainted with the doctrine of metempsychosis we know
by his reference to it in Twelfth Night, but we have no right to believe that he either rejected
or shared the opinions of Malvolio. When the Clown professes to think Malvolio mad, he
asks him, as a test of Iris lunacy, "What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild-fowl?"
- "That the soul of our grandam might haply inhabit a bird," answers Malvolio. What
thinkest thou of his opinion?" - "I think nobly of the soul and in no way approve his opinion,"
replies the steward, whereupon he is told that he
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shall remain in darkness till he hold the opinion of Pythagoras, and fear to kill a woodcock,
lest he dispossess the soul of his grandmother.
When we come to Browning, however, we find that many of his ideas can really be
called theosophic, there being, in spite of Browning's strongly dramatic faculty, a subjective
quality in all his writings. The mode of thought of all his personages is similar, the
expression of their thought is almost identical, that is, they all use the same turns of speech
that we have learned to call Browningesque. His general tendency is optimistic, and, as
Prof. Dowden once said, the mainspring of his poetry may be said to be Passion, in
contrast to that of Tennyson's, which is Duty. The one thing that Browning cannot pardon
is weakness, and he shows an agreement with the theosophic idea that the thought is more
important than the act, in his poem of The Statue and the Bust,* where his lovers fail to
accomplish their guilty purpose solely through indecision and want of energy. They lost the
counter they had staked as surely as if it had been lawful coin,
says the poet. This is the moral of much of his poetry, and the strength that he exalts he
feels sure is given for noble uses, and not in vain. So in Paracelsus he writes:
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* And in Saul: - "'Tis not what man does which exalts him, but what man Would do!"
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In the poem called Old Pictures in Florence, we have the same note touched, in a
more uncertain way.
And in his Christina, the poet, speaking of the supreme moments of existence when
a sudden flash of intuition seems to show the true meaning and purpose of life, writes:
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its sole end in this life being to unite itself with some kindred soul. Again in his own person,
the poet expresses in the poem called La Saisiaz what he says indeed in many other
places, the conviction that this life alone can in no sense satisfy the demands of man's soul,
that no conception of Infinite Love and Power can stand side by side with a belief in our
mortality.
And over and over again in his poems Browning declares his feeling that no process
of reasoning is required to convince us that "mind" and "soul" are two things. Mind he
compares to an engineer (in the poem called With Charles Avison) laying a bridge stone
by stone with careful measuring and adjustment of each to each. "So works Mind," says
the poet, and with facts, more or less.
All we can really know in this life, he says, are the changes in our own
consciousness, all else is, after all, mere conjecture and surmise, and this knowledge can
never be obtained from without, but must be sought within. This is the teaching of
Paracelsus in Browning's poem of that name, and he saw no reason in after life to abjure
the conviction of his youth.
Taken altogether, this poem of Paracelsus written in the full tide of Browning's poetic
power, and before he had acquired all the mannerisms that make much of his later writing
so difficult, and so repellent, is full of fine passages that will repay the searcher for
theosophic poetry. Such is the magnificent description in Part V of the evolution of the
universe, culminating in man. It is too long to quote here, but how fine are the closing lines
describing man as the seal put on life
- "man once descried, imprints forever,
His presence on all lifeless things. . .
But in completed man begins anew
A tendency to God. Prognostics told
Man's near approach: so in man's self arise
August anticipations, symbols, types
Of a dim splendor ever on before,
In that eternal circle life pursues.
For men . . . begin to grow too great
For narrow creeds of right and wrong, which fade
Before the unmeasured thirst for good: while peace
Rises within them ever more and more.
Such men are even now upon the earth,
Serene amid the half-formed creatures round
Who should be saved by them, and joined with them."
The lines underlined might have been written by a Disciple of the Masters. That
Browning has been in some measure a student of occultism, his many references, not only
to the works of Paracelsus, but to those of Cornelius Agrip-
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pa, and to many another "quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore," amply testify. He
stoutly refused to join in his wife's devotion to spiritualism, and his Sludge the Medium is
a terrific attack upon its professors and their arguments. Nevertheless he wrote a
wonderful poem called Mesmerism, which shows how perfectly he understood the method
of what we now prefer to call hypnotism, and "suggestion," and in his very last book he has
four curious poems called Bad Dreams, which do not amount to much except for this touch:
But after all, putting aside all questions of belief, the best thing about Browning is his
splendid courage, the quality of which stirs other souls like the sound of a silver trumpet,
and rouses all their latent fire. "Do, and nowise dream!" he says, and this resolute bravery
and fortitude was the outcome of what is generally called his optimism, but is really his
absolute trust in the Divine goodness and power. The last poem of his last book, published
on the very day he died, shows the secret of his confident attitude. "It looks most like
bragging to say this," he said to his sister, "when he read her the proof, shortly before his
death, but it's the simple truth, and as it's true it shall stand." So he called himself
"One who never turned his back, but marched breast forward,
Never doubted clouds would break,
Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph,
Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,
Sleep to Wake."
It is this strong conviction of the ultimate victory of good, this heroic defiance of
misfortune and sorrow, together with his warm heart and his love for all mankind that has
so endeared him to the multitude of readers who have known how to sift his precious grains
of wheat from out of the bushels of chaff beneath which it seemed his pleasure in later days
to conceal them. Except in his last book of all, Asolando, where there is more of the lyric
quality than Browning had displayed for many years. But generally speaking, his best
poetry was written before 1869.
This idea of incessant change, ever tending towards the perfecting of man's soul,
is the cornerstone of Browning's religion: "my own hope is," he says,
"Earth changes, but thy soul and God stand sure," he says elsewhere.
Browning was an accomplished musician, and many are the analogies he draws
from the laws of harmony. There
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is nowhere, among all his poems relating to music, any one more beautiful than that called
Abt Vogler. The musician has been extemporizing upon the instrument he himself
invented, and it saddens him at first to think that nothing will remain of the beautiful palace
of music he has reared, and then comes this magnificent outburst, with which I will
conclude this brief sketch of Browning's philosophy of religion.
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KING SHUDDHODANA
And the king of the city was Shuddhodana, of the Solar line, anointed chieftest
monarch of the world; and he adorned the city, ruling over it as the sun adorns a full-blown
lotus. And the king, though ruler of all, yet listened to counsel; though liberal, he was not
lavish; though master, he yet shewed equal justice; though full of graciousness, he was
yet mighty in valor. By his arm had been slain the war-elephants of the enemy, in the field
of battle; their heads all decked with jewels, scattered now, had bowed down before his
might, like worshipers that scatter offerings of flowers.
And he shook the enemy with the fiery might of his valor, as the hot sun shakes off
the darkness of eclipse. And he shone forth over the people, lighting them in all their ways.
Under his rule, though holiness and wealth and pleasure each had its own aim, yet
the outward face of them was the same; and vying against each other, each shone brighter
in their triumphant course. And the king, full of glory, yet drew glory from his noble
counselors; as the moon shines not less brightly for the shining of the stars.
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And she, who was to bring great joy into the world, shone like goddess Fortune in
the family of the king. And though a woman's lot loves best seclusion, yet when that lot fell
on her, it shone more brightly; so night is no longer dark when it falls on the brightly shining
moon.
HOW THE MASTER WAS BORN
"This nether world cannot perceive me, so far above their human sight," thus spoke
the Law Divine, and laying aside his heavenly form, took upon himself a shape visible to
outward eyes. And descending thus from his heavenly dwelling place, lighting up the three
worlds, that Being of Wisdom entered the womb of the queen, - as the king of the Serpents
enters the cave of joy - taking that form whose symbol is the sacred elephant,* white as the
snows of Himalay, six-tusked, and full of well-doing. So he entered the womb of King
Shuddhodana's queen, to take away the sorrows of the world.
And the Sovereigns of the Spheres came down from heaven, to worship him, who
was the one Lord of all the world; so the moonbeams, that shine on all things, yet shine
more brightly on the Holy Mountain. Queen Maya also, perceiving that he had entered her
womb, like a flash of heavenly light, blessing all the world, made the misery of the poor to
cease by a rain of gifts upon the people.
And as she, goddess-like, surrounded by the courtiers of the palace, best among
those that bear children, went once to the garden with the permission of the king, that
Being of Wisdom came forth from her womb, as she was resting on the bough of a tree,
heavily laden with blossoms.
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* The symbol of Esoteric wisdom.
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a son who should bring joy to the world, nor did she suffer sorrow or sickness. As the
morning sun comes forth from the clouds, so he came forth into birth, from his mother's
womb.
And as the sun pours forth its shining rays, that slay the darkness, he filled the world
full of golden light.
And the king of the old-world gods, well pleased, received the new-born child, bright
as a pillar of gold, and from the heavens upon his head descended twin streams of pure
water, with flowers of the scarlet coral-tree.
And held by the chiefest of the heavenly host, he shone back on them, with the
magical rays that came forth from his form, and by his brightness excelled the new moon,
framed in the glory of the twilight clouds.
And new-born he shone as one who had descended from heaven, not passed
through the gates of birth; he who had manifested himself in many an age, already full of
understanding, was not dismayed.
And by his brightness, his firmness and his beauty the boy shone, illumining the
world, thus descending into birth. And he held the eyes of those that looked on him, as the
bright moon does, such was his luminous glory.
For by the brightness of his body he robbed all other lights of their glory, as the sun
does; for he was in color like to fair gold, and illumined all the lands of the earth with his
shining. And taking seven steps, fearless, bright as the moon, firmly planted, full of valor,
and steadfast, shining like the seven stars, he spoke:
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the rays of the moon, flowed down from heaven, soft as falling dew; and they descended
on his moon-like head, for the gladdening of his body, who had no equal.
And as he lay there on a couch, whose feet were of lapis-lazuli, whose body was of
sparkling gold, whose covering was rich and beautiful, the genii of the earth stood round
him as his courtiers, with yellow lotuses in their hands. And at the majesty of him, born
thus of queen Maya, the heavenly dwellers, with heads bowed in reverence, came to him
bearing a snow-white canopy, bringing blessings for him who was thus born for Wisdom.
And great Serpents who had done honor to the Buddhas of ages gone by, drew near
to him through love of the great Law, their eyes full of devotion, and strewed the scarlet
coral-flowers upon him. They rejoiced at the birth of him, who came as the Others had
come, they dwellers in the pure worlds, Beings of purity.
The gods rejoiced, even though their chiefest was gone, descending into birth for
the good of this world sunk in woe; at whose birth the earth trembled, like a ship struck by
the wind, the earth adorned by the king of mountains. And from the cloudless sky fell a rain
of lotus-buds, sandal-scented. And the winds breathed soft, with loving touch, descending
from their dwellings in the sky; and the Sun shone out with exceeding brightness; the fire-
lord flamed with rays of beauty, unconstrained.
And in the neighborhood of his dwelling-place a stream of pure water burst forth, and
the palace was astonished at it, and it became as a shrine for holy acts. And the spring of
water received virtue from the hosts of divine beings who came there, longing for the Law,
and seeking to behold it.
And they shewed joyful reverence, bringing branches of scented flowers. And the
flowering trees blossomed forth of themselves, showering their scented blooms on every
side, full of the murmur of bees, and the scented air was breathed by the assembled
serpents. And on all sides the place was gladdened by the tinkling of women's tabors, and
the soft sounds of the lute, and many-voiced instruments giving forth sweet music
melodious.
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excellent twice-born men, he gave them gifts and shewed them hospitality, saying: "Let
him indeed become king of the earth, as has been declared, and, in old age, let him depart
to the forest."
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my race be without a flower? Are the descendants of my family destined to wither away?
Tell me quickly, Master, for I have no peace; for thou knowest the love of kindred toward
a son."
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We all know that the doctrine held by men and women will color, more or less,
according to the sincerity of their convictions, all their acts. Therefore it is hardly necessary
to argue the necessity for holding right doctrine. That the doctrine is the foundation for
character is recognized here by making it the first step on the road.
The Bible tells us to "Prove all Things." First we find that age proves nothing. Every
day science teaches us that the firm beliefs of ages past were errors. What two hundred
years ago would have been deemed impossible in the realm of science and for the teaching
of which a man would have been in serious danger, is the acknowledged fact of today.
What one hundred years ago would have seemed improbable, if not impossible, in the
world of mechanics, is the commonplace of today. What is true in the realms of material
and mental thought should be true in the line of spiritual thought. By the steady unfolding
of our powers, evolution will bring to us new phases of truth and broaden our understanding
of underlying principles. Our doctrine must grow with us if it is to be a right doctrine for
every stage of our development. Age alone proves little but liability to error.
Custom is equally worthless as a proof of right doctrine. Wherever the power of the
priestcraft is strongest custom is most united in the following of any set religious ceremony.
At the same time there is less spirituality, less individual thought, less intenseness of
conviction in the people. Humanity as a whole is too lazy to think, or as we often say, it is
conservative. This tendency is stronger in woman than in man though she is now being
taught that it is not unwomanly to think for herself. We can all remember when the strong
minded woman, the woman who dared to hold and express an opinion which differed from
that given out by her church was looked upon with horror. With all our broadened views
and enlarged opportunities, it still takes courage for a woman to face the world with a new
idea. Custom has proven nothing, as to the correctness of the doctrine, because it has
been a careless, unreasoning attempt to shirk responsibility and place it on the shoulders
of some one else.
This has been nothing more nor less than an attempt to base doctrine on authority
by people too indolent or too timid to think for themselves. They have forgotten that there
could be no authority for any doctrine save its
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own reasonableness, logic and truth, whether we take the Karmic idea of cause and effect,
or the Christian idea of a divine lawgiver, the argument remains the same. We know that
effect follows cause in exact proportion and with unfailing accuracy and certainty. Neither
can we conceive of a Divine lawgiver making laws which would not represent the
reasonable, logical outcome of conditions. Therefore we are back to our original statement,
that the only authority that can give weight to any doctrine is its own inherent merit. In this
matter Christianity and Theosophy agree; the one teaching 'prove all things' and the other
saying 'accept nothing on authority.'
Let us then examine some of the essentials of right doctrine. It is of prime
importance that it be true. We must be able to give a reason for the faith that is in us and
this we can only do when our faith is based upon law, when we can demonstrate by the
laws of logic, reason or experience that our doctrine is a fact, not merely a pretty or amiable
sentiment. This will give us a stable, firm ground or basis for our ethical doctrine or law of
life, which could never come to a doctrine based upon the caprice or whim of any
supposable personal lawgiver, be it a divine God or human priesthood. Everywhere in
nature the law carries with it the result of its violation, not as a punishment for disobeying
some higher will but the effect of the cause.
The law of the Universe is harmony, the heart of the law is love and the end of the
law is peace. If we break the law the result is discord in our lives, misery and pain. Nor is
this an "inscrutable dispensation of Providence." The law "knows not wrath nor pardon''
but "who thwarts it loses and who serves it gains." Basing then our right doctrine upon law
we find that no one can suffer for us. If we break the law we suffer. If we keep it we gain.
Then again our doctrine must be pure. Pure not only in its outward deeds but pure
also in the thought which prompts the deed. We are too often satisfied with a blameless
life. We regard scrupulously all the rules of action laid down by our creed and neglect the
heart and mind. Too often we read the book in private that we drop under the sewing in
our basket when the friend calls whose good opinion we value most highly. We think the
thought we would not say. We dwell in imagination upon the act we would not commit and
then wonder why, day by day we are obliged to set a more rigid watch upon our lips and
actions. To have the one pure the other must be free from stain.
"Strive with thy thoughts unclean before they overpower thee. Use them as they will
thee, for if thou sparest them and they take root and grow, know well, these thoughts will
overpower and kill thee. Beware Disciple, suffer not e'en though it be their shadow, to
approach. For it will grow, increase in size and power, and then this thing of darkness will
absorb thy being before thou hast well realized the black, foul monster's presence." Again
it is said, "His thoughts become an army and bear him off a captive slave."
When this personal purity of thought and life is taught and lived then we may hope
for social purity. Never, however, will social purity be accomplished until the women
themselves learn the importance of demanding one standard of morality for man and
woman. So long as the fault that ostracizes a woman is condoned in a man; so long as
we open our doors to the man of evil habits and close them to the woman against whom
there is, rightly or wrongly, a breath of suspicion; so long as we make the purity of our
daughters an essential quality and consider the chastity of our sons only desirable; our
doctrine is not right and we shall make small progress for we are not working with the law.
Evil will
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come of evil, always, in every time and place. There is no sex in soul and intellect. The
sin that soils the soul that informs our sister's frame leaves just as deep a stain upon the
soul which uses our brother's body. The great commandment, "Be ye perfect," "The law
which moves to righteousness, which none at last can turn aside or stay" bind all humanity
with equal force.
While true and pure our doctrine must be charitable. Intolerance and self-
righteousness are grave errors. We have no right to be intolerant of the beliefs of others.
Upon no one does the full light of truth shine all at once. We learn Life's lessons page by
page. The memory of our own struggles should teach us kindly patience. Having gained
some light we should try to realize by the darkness still in our own souls how dark and
hopeless and helpless those must be who have seen no light and so, teach the good law
patiently, as the mother teaches the little child. Remember, that while we are right to
condemn sin and impurity our duty does not end there. We must help purity and
righteousness to grow, for the law moves ever in that direction. Showing in our doctrine
the beauty of purity, we must show as well its noble strength to help those souls which are
in profound gloom.
But our doctrine will be useless and without force unless it is practical enough to
meet the demands of humanity as a whole. To accomplish this we must strive to reach a
fuller realization of the brotherhood of man. Being the incarnation in common matter of
rays from the one divine source we are all one. We cannot divide ourselves off into the
good and the bad. The same law rules us all, fitting itself to our various degrees of
advancement. Any doctrine which does not take this fact into consideration fails in so
much. The law is one and the same for all. Knowing this we will work unselfishly for
humanity. The self loses its great importance when we realize the solidarity of humanity.
Our energies are no longer bent to the saving of our own souls alone but to the helping of
all humanity, the spreading of all the light we can get and the bettering of the condition of
the whole race, for personality will be lost in the sense of brotherhood and we will be able
to take as our motto, "All for humanity, nothing for self."
Such a doctrine will be informal and creedless. It will recognize all that is good and
pure in every creed and try to hunt out the golden grain of truth from the chaff of dogmatism
and ritualism. The only ritualism of such a doctrine will be that of good deeds, its only
service that of willing hearts, its only sacrifices those of self-sacrifice for the good of
humanity.
Such would be Right Doctrine, to be lived out by each of us according to our own
circumstances and surroundings, the first good level on the upward path, broad enough for
all humanity.
Having proven the doctrine, hold fast that which is good. Mingle gentle courtesy to
those who see differently with steadfast will and a courageous heart. The path winds uphill.
The human heart is conquered slowly. Perfection is not won in one brief life. We have
often need of the caution, "Beware of fear that spreadeth like the black and soundless
wings of midnight bat between the moonlight of thy soul and thy great goal that loometh in
the distance far away." Still we may take courage and fight bravely on for the law changes
not.
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WHAT is the object of life? Is it merely to pamper the body in its tyrannical demands
for self gratification, to be well fed, well clothed, well housed, basking in the sunshine of
animal contentment, never seeking beyond the material welfare, never knocking at nature's
doors for admission into realms other than the physical?
The soul that lives thus is one in whom the voice of the higher Ego has not yet
sounded. Deafened by the noises and clamorings of the senses it cannot hear the sweet
melody of the higher self that is ever pleading within. The lower nature of man, composed
of the four grosser principles in nature, is symbolized by the square, and is called the lower
quarternary. This it is that must be sent to the grist mill of suffering, its sharp corners must
be ground away by the wheel of experience, until it becomes rounded and whole, the
symbol of the perfect soul. Mother Earth is our nurse, she trains us in this vanishing world
of matter to a maturer existence of spirit.
As the personality has its infancy, its youth, its prime and its old age, so likewise the
soul of man has its seasons of spring, summer, autumn and winter; the innocence of
childhood, the presumption of youth, the pride of manhood and the mellowed richness of
its ripened experience. To the Egos advancing toward this last stage the doctrine of Karma
and Reincarnation is a fact, a truth known to them. How? There are those who have had
glimpses far back into the dim past, they have seen that the one golden thread runs
through the garment that they have been weaving from time immemorial. The soul has
awakened from her long slumber into which she has thrown herself by the narcotics of
sense-life, and rousing from the torpor, declares that from henceforth she will be free. Girt
about with the experience of many lives, fortified by the knowledge of which she has had
glimpses, she makes war upon the other half of her nature, the lower animal self, and
asserts her rights, her powers, and commands where formerly she obeyed. Like a true
Master she guides the old force into new channels, she trains it until it unites with the
higher, nobler nature, thus spiritualizing matter, or turning the baser metal into gold.
Until man has reached this step nature kindly veils from him the pages of the past.
Until he is strong enough to look upon this record, his mistakes, his falterings, his
deficiencies, his wasted opportunities, and even his crimes are hidden from him by a break
between successive earth-lives, the Ego, retiring into the subjective state, to rest after the
labor of the life just closed, and to mold the fruit of this experience into character. For the
shadow of the awful past standing ever beside man would defeat the law of progress and
evolution.
Just as we withhold bad news from the invalid, fearing to put more upon the sick,
sensitive one than can well be borne; so Nature, in her motherly tenderness, shields us
likewise while we are yet feeble and puts no more upon us than we can bear; thus
manifesting her wisdom and forethought for the welfare of her offspring.
Heredity accounts for physical resemblance in form and feature, physical habits,
tricks of manner and so on, but it does not explain the startling differences, in mortal
perception, in mental capacity, in children born from the same parents, living under the
same influences, reared in the same surroundings, yet each child evidencing peculiarities
strictly its own.
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Twins, who are subject to the same parental influence yet exhibit marked differences in
disposition and character. How can this difference be accounted for, if not by the
reasonable explanation that the Egos, having had different experiences in former lives, the
result must also vary? A little child of my acquaintance, said one time to his mother: "You
are the best mother I ever had. Oh, I picked out a good one this time." This is a case in
hand where "out of the mouths of babes comes wisdom."
The Ego, upon entering the new earth-life is attracted by the law of Karma to those
physical parents who will furnish, for its further development, such a body as is adapted to
its needs, wherein it may have opportunity to learn the lessons it has missed; for the Ego
before being clothed in its "new coat of skin," clearly realizes its own necessities, and thus
selects wisely, although to the limited knowledge of the personality it embodies, it may
seem unfair and uncongenial, but we may be sure that it is always according to law. So
when we see a musical genius like "Blind Tom" encased in a body furnished by negro
parents, we only see that the soul having failed in some lesson of life, has been put back
to make good the loss.
Just as we see when a student does not keep up with his class, he is put back and
goes over the ground again to take up what he has missed, if he will, although in one
branch of study he may excel and be beyond his fellow students, as the musical talents of
"Blind Tom" bore witness to the fruits of his industry in that line. If we neglect duty we
break a thread in the loom, and we shall find the flaw when we have forgotten the cause.
That we do not remember our past lives is nothing against the doctrine of reincarnation;
the recollections of childhood and infancy are soon forgotten; yet many a habit formed at
this age is retained for life. The full grown man in the childhood of his larger cycle of life
also forgets the details of his experiences, yet the Ego goes on accumulating the
knowledge gained. The soul has expressed itself through all the kingdoms of nature, finally
as man, and not until the soul becomes conscious of these experiences can she remember
or impress the lower man with the facts of her many existences, but the possibility is latent
within the soul to do so; and the object of reincarnation is to develop the soul, so that she
may become a self-conscious entity, an intelligent co-worker in the Universe; beginning
at the lowest rung of the ladder of knowledge, climbing ever upward towards infinitude. In
Jesus the lower human nature was overcome. The crucifixion of the Son of man was upon
the cross of matter; the atonement was fulfilled when the four lower principles were
transmuted into the three higher; then Jesus said: "I and my Father are one, and he that
hath seen me hath seen Him that sent me." At another time Jesus said, "Call me not good,
there is none good but one." Now these sayings are either contradictory nonsense or they
contain the deepest philosophy. Interpreted by the light of Theosophy the latter is
apparent. When Jesus, the visible man, was spoken to as "Good Master" that portion of
his nature, his four lower principles was completely controlled by his higher nature of trinity;
pride, egotism, vanity and all kindred elements, which belong to the lower nature only,
these in Jesus were uprooted, dead, and when he said, "Call me not good," etc., it was
knowing that the man who addressed him saw only the man Jesus and not the invisible
Deity within him. Among the many voices lifted up to proclaim the hastening of a better day
this earnest word is sent forth not to attack true religion - which teaches the adoration of
one Supreme, unknown Deity by words and acts and not by human dogma - but to
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interpret anew the message of the Christ, and to restore the secret of the true life realized
by him. The Masters of the East tell us that the time is ripe for establishing these higher
truths; but it is left for man in the exercise of his freedom of choice to seize the golden
opportunity or to lose it.
CHAPTER FOURTH.
The time has passed when we can grow as children. From henceforth our progress
must be the work of our own willing hands. We have been sowing from life to life, our
causes of well - or ill - done duty and reaping, as we came, our effects of strength or
weakness. Spiral by spiral we have ascended, till now we stand where we must hear the
law, must know that all life is one, that back of all stands AUM, the absolute, and that we
as rays from that great light - the highest and the lowest - are one, a brotherhood in fact,
a loving brotherhood, if we so will it.
We must know that objective life is not limited for us to this little day, but has run,
and must run, through endless ages. Nor is this a hard doctrine, as some think, who,
seeing the weariness of this little life, would wish to escape all further Earth life. On the
contrary the doctrine is one which should bring hope to every human heart. We toil here
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beset by many hindrances. We earnestly aspire to, but never reach, the goal. We long to
lift the burden from the sad old world and find our hands too weak to lift the load from off
the hearts we love the best. We would be crushed beneath this weight of woe and
ignorance, drowned in the salt tears of our less happy sisters were this brief life our only
chance for work. Then comes the truth of Reincarnation and our hearts are gladdened,
knowing that what we failed to do today we may accomplish tomorrow. Each effort for the
right gives added strength of heart and will. Every failure may be but a stepping-stone to
higher achievements if we but keep our souls pure and our hearts open in loving charity to
all humanity.
And to make assurance doubly sure comes in the grand, eternal law of Karma,
Nature's first law, that effect must follow cause.
"That which ye sow, ye reap.'' It is a law which "knows not wrath nor pardon: Utter
true its measures meet, its faultless balance weighs." We know that "Good must come of
good and ill of evil - surely - unto all - in every place and time." Knowing these laws, we
shall stand indeed, in "the light of Truth 's high noon." Living by these laws we may indeed
"lift crowned heads unto the sky."
Thus, and only thus, may we climb by the Fourfold path, to the mountain tops of
Peace and Wisdom, where man and woman shall stand hand in hand, one in the dignity
of their Divine origin, one in unity of life and purpose, the perfect flower, the gem and crown
of Human Brotherhood.
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FRAGMENTS
THE REAL
by M.A. Opperman
THE real means for us something which we realize, and we realize that which we
experience within ourselves. Thus the real has a variable appearance to each man
according to his inward experience. As the human family as a whole, is very much alike,
experiences of a similar nature are gone through in very much the same way at the same
time by most of the members of humanity. Those whose inner experience differs from the
general trend are either in advance or behind the average. Thus what is generally
conceived as the real is due to the experience of the average humanity. When the latter
occupies its mind with things and phenomena appertaining to matter, then matter is
conceived of as real, and so it comes about, that things outside of earthly matter are
considered by most people as unreal and only as the outcome of fancy, at best of
speculation. One man may reason with another and try to prove by analogy the real
existence of things outside and within matter, but the reasoning imparts no conviction and
makes no man realize anything which he has not experienced as real himself. It seems so
absurd that men should hunt after riches, when they well know that death will surely deprive
them of all wealth, and that death may overtake them the very next day or hour; but this
absurdity can only be explained by the error of man believing material things to be real, and
as long as this belief exists in him, he will try to accumulate wealth. In this lies the reason
why man does not become changed by outside influences however strong they may be;
I mean influences established by man himself, man-made laws, social customs, contrition,
etc. Man only changes from within, and each man has to do that work himself, and
establish within himself the
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conception of that as real which is more real than that which he believed to be so before.
This will help him up; the reverse will drag him down.
The question arises: How can he do this? It cannot be done by reasoning, emotion
is a step when it is pure, art is a step when it is elevated, but that which helps best and
surest is compassion. It seems strange that compassion should be the great teacher of the
real, but it call easily be understood why it is so. When a set of forces in the character of
man tends towards making him believe that this material world is real, then the forces which
go in the opposite direction must have the contrary effect. Concentrating for self, carrying
all back to one's own enjoyments, tend toward making a man believe these to be real.
Selfishness and hardness of heart are thus forces which increase the conception of non-
real as real. Altruism, pity and compassion must therefore have the contrary effect upon
man, and not only soften his heart, but bring him nearer to the real. Thus, real knowledge
is the direct outcome of the practice of brotherhood and no understanding can be obtained
without it.
We are told that the Real in its ultimate aspect is only in the Absolute, but we all
know that we cannot reach this Absolute for a very long time yet. So the only possibility
for us to progress, is to take new aspects of phenomena and new perceptions, such as will
bring us nearer to the Absolute. We are told that gross matter is the lowest of all, and
indeed it seems impossible to imagine anything more gross, heavy, and cumbersome.
Being a clothing of spirit after all, there is beauty in it, in every stone, in every blade of
grass but that beauty, as far as we are concerned, resides more in a conception of it by
ourselves. One man may admire a beautiful sunset, another passes and does not even
look at it, and thus the sunset is beautiful for that man only who contains beauty within
himself.
We are told that the Real is not subject to change, but where is that unchangeable
something, seeing that all things change? Our modes of existence change, our very mode
of thought and appreciation, all is modified in time, and even time is incomprehensible
without admitting a change of something or of things, the succession of which changes
serves for us as a conception and as a measure of time. It then follows that the real must
be outside of time, or more correctly, that time cannot exist in the real. Thus he who
reaches the real knows the beginning and end of things. The real cannot have undergone
any change since the beginning until the end of manifestation, and thus it is not manifested
itself but only surrounded by manifestation, or so to say clothed by it.
When we observe the component parts of a thing and see some parts disappear and
others endure longer, we may say that the latter are more real and more lasting. Acts are
due to causes, last for some time, and then become causes in their turn for new acts.
Thus we may say that while the acts are born and die, the law which makes them,
that is the law of cause and effect, is enduring and real. Even the qualifications which we
give to acts are more enduring than the acts themselves; while virtuous acts pass by,
virtue still exists, but being a conception of the human mind, it cannot be all enduring like
the law of Karma. The more ideal a conception and the further it is away from earthly
matter, the more real it is. Mathematics is a real science, because it is the most ideal one;
but as soon as it is carried out in matter, there is no more absolute correctness in applied
mathematics due to our errors of observation and measurement. What can be less
material than the idea of a point, a line, a surface or even of volume? But a draughtsman
will never make an absolutely correct drawing, a chemist cannot weigh correctly, and no
absolutely true surface can be given to a body, and ob-
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"lf Sun thou canst not be, then be the humble planet."
THE present is a time for work. Not a single member of the Theosophical Society
can afford to be idle, can lie back upon his oars and "float over the summer sea," waiting
for the future to bring renewed life and energy, or to give him greater knowledge by which
his labors may be more effective. There can be no "floating" with the tide; no waiting for
better opportunities. Right here and now the effort is needed. Not one could be in the
Society had not Karma brought him there to do a definite work in helping humanity.
It may seem sometimes as if our ability to do was so limited; our influence so small;
our comprehension of infinite truth so weak, that it were idle to make the attempt to help
others along a path in which our own feet are stumbling. Do you not know that no effort,
however small, is ever lost out of the world of causes? The word spoken in season may
be just what is needed to turn a brother's face in the right direction. The Voice of the
Silence says, "Point out the Way" - however dimly and lost among the host - as does the
evening star to those who tread their path in darkness." That is meant for you and for me,
as well as for those who are far in advance of us on the way to the Divine.
This we are told to do: "Seek out him who knows still less than thou," and then if the
opportunity comes, as come it will if the purpose be strong and true, speak the good word,
plant the good seed and leave the rest to Karma.
There are so many ways to work - there is so much to be done - more at the present
hour than ever before because the promise of results is so much greater. Yet knowing this,
it is also well to remember the words of our Brother and Teacher, W. Q. Judge, concerning
our efforts: "It is not that you must rush out to do, to do. Do what you find to do. Desire
ardently to do it, and even when you shall not have succeeded in carrying anything out but
some small duties, some words of warning, your strong desire will strike like Vulcan upon
other hearts in the world, and suddenly you will find that done which you had longed to be
the doer of. Then rejoice that another had been so fortunate as to make such meritorious
Karma."
You see what is meant. It is the warmth of desire, the strength of purpose that
counts most, so we need not despair if our power of accomplishment seems so small and
worthless. It is only that we must make sure that we are doing what we can.
Last year, around the globe, went some of those in whom our trust was greatest, to
bear the good tidings to other lands, to other people. Perhaps the Master's plan
comprehended, besides this work, the development of the powers of those left behind. It
may have been a test of our earnestness, of the strength of our endeavor to help others to
see the Light which shines for all alike, and a recognition of which will be - must be - the
final redemption of all life. Should our hearts ever fail us, let us remember that over each
and all stands the "Warrior, eternal and sure," ready to give strength and guidance as we
need and deserve.
Work and Wait. That must be our attitude, our effort. If we believe, as we do, that
the Master is directing. and controlling this movement so far as the Karma of the Society
will allow: if we believe that H. P. B. and W. Q. Judge are yet laboring for its success,
surely we
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cannot hesitate in giving all of the time, money. and work that is possible to the promoting
of its growth and prosperity. And let us remember that it is not the outwardly great things
which we do that mean the most. It is the intensity of the motive back of each thought and
deed, however trifling the latter may seem. "If Sun thou canst not be, then be the humble
planet."
Work, WORK is the order of the day.
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HAPPINESS
by Elsie Barker
I HAVE sometimes thought that the pursuit of happiness is very much like the
pursuit of one's own shadow. It always eludes the man who breathlessly runs after it; but
if he turns away and strives for something else, it will follow close behind him.
The condition of happiness is quite as elusive as the shadow: it certainly eludes
analysis, and seems to have as many definitions as it has pursuers.
I have asked several people to tell me what happiness meant to them, and each
gave me a different answer. One man told me that it was getting money; another that it
was having plenty of money to spend; while a dear young friend of mine said that the word
happiness to him suggested a wood-fire and a magazine - infinite leisure in which to study
and dream.
So it seems that happiness to most people means pleasure - contentment, for the
time being at least, with what is theirs.
But all pleasure is not happiness, and the distinction is sometimes more than that
of degree. Mere pleasure is necessarily brief; it comes to an end; but true happiness is
serene; it is abiding and may be eternal. It is not found in the wild scramble after wealth
and amusement which characterizes our civilization. Our people are always striving after
something - something to get a hold of, to possess and to enjoy. Give them the object of
their pursuit and they will not stop to enjoy it, but will immediately start after something else.
And so on through life. At the end they have nothing worth having, and a whole lifetime has
been wasted in the chase for shadows. Those who follow after happiness in this way will
find it a will-o'-the-wisp.
Why not live in the present? Nothing can take that from you. If you are to suffer
tomorrow, make the most of the peace of today. Do not fear the future. The unpleasant
thing you dread may never come to you. Enjoy yourself now - in the present. All time is
the present. It is always now; it always will be now.
All very young people who are not satisfied with their present surroundings expect
to he happy some day. As they grow older they are not quite so certain that they will be.
They begin to have doubts and to demand less. A woman whose life held much suffering
has said:
This doesn't sound very hopeful; but, like most pessimistic utterances, it holds a
grain of truth.
The trouble with most of us is that we take ourselves altogether too seriously.
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A sense of humor has saved many a man from melancholia. By this I do not mean
that we should indulge in levity and look at life as a joke: rather let us regard it as a great
game, which we can play well or ill, as we choose, and according to our skill. In the great
chess-game of life there are kings and castles and pawns, and knowing the relative value
of each piece is wisdom.
Someone has defined genius as "a disregard for the unimportant"; and there surely
is no more fruitful cause of discontent than a continual fussing over little things. If your
dress is old-fashioned and you have no money to buy another, why fret about it till your
very soul feels old-fashioned too? Forget all about it, and other people will very apt to do
the same - if, indeed, they ever noticed it at all.
Cultivate the larger carelessness. We trouble ourselves too much about what other
people think of us. The chances are that they think very little about us, one way or the
other. I have known a woman of intelligence to make herself miserable for a week, by
reason of some little social mistake, which probably passed unnoticed - save by one or two
people, and by them was quite forgotten in five minutes.
Why grieve over your mistakes? You will make them; we all do. Just profit by the
lesson and put the thought aside.
Emerson has spoken of regrets as "false prayers."
Another cause of unhappiness is that we all ask too much of life. We demand that
all our ideals shall be realized, and because they are not realized we are unhappy. This
feeling of disenchantment grows slowly, year by year, as one by one our hopes die
unfulfilled; as one by one the friends whom we regarded as ideal friends are proven to be
only mortal - and sometimes very weakly mortal; as we are forced to surrender one by one
the fondly-cherished ideals of youth. An ideal dies hard. I believe there is no greater
suffering than having to relinquish an ideal.
But know that your ideal of love, of friendship, of perfection in anything, will never
be realized in this life. I do not say this in a pessimistic spirit, but because I believe it to be
true. In this unpoetic world we do not find poetic realities. We may shut our eyes to the
real facts of life and live in our own little world of dreams, if we want to - and can. There
is always poetry enough there. There we may entertain our ideals to our heart's content.
As for me, I entertain many an ideal which I know can never be realized. I have often
wilfully and knowingly deceived myself, because the deception made me happy. This may
or may not be wise: that is a matter about which there may be a reasonable difference of
opinion.
We say, "There is no religion higher than truth." I suppose we may also say there
is no ideal higher than truth; but there are ideals which are more beautiful than certain
facts, and whether or not it is unwise to cherish them I do not know. I only know that I shall
go on doing so as long as I have I have an ideal left to cherish.
My reason tells me that if I should die, or go away for a long time, most of my friends
would cease thinking often of me; that those whom I love best would soon fill the vacant
place left in their hearts. Shall I let the knowledge make me miserable? Shall I refuse to
believe in the love that is given me because I know a very moderate shock might shatter
it? No, certainly not. It is just as true, so far as it goes, as if it were made of a stronger and
sterner stuff. Do we blame the basswood tree because it is not an oak, or the little stream
because it is not a river? Each has its own work to do in the great plan of creation.
Let us take things as they are, with all their imperfections, and not grieve because
they are less beautiful than we would have them.
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Making the best of circumstances will go as far as any other one thing toward
securing happiness. The man who does this can never be truly miserable; he will always
find the silvery lining to the darkest cloud; and if he has no great and active happiness, he
will always have the passive satisfaction that comes from knowing that things are not as
bad as they might be.
And it is just possible that to be happy is not the greatest concern of this life,
anyway.
If we do, to the best of our ability, such work as is given us to do we shall feel the
blessed consciousness of having done our duty; we shall know the felicity that comes to
the worker at the close of a well-spent day.
And I suppose there is nothing that gives greater and more satisfying happiness than
success in one's chosen work in life. I am one of those who believe in work. It is not an
evil, but a positive good. Work, even uncongenial work, is a great teacher, a great mother.
It strengthens the will and develops fixity of purpose. It takes a strong will to persist year
after year in work which is not congenial, in order to accomplish some desired result;
harder still when the end in view is only that of eking out a bare existence. Yet one may
be moderately happy even under these circumstances.
But if our work is something that we love, like an art or a science, something that we
do for its own sake, without regard to pecuniary gain, then our felicity is very nearly perfect,
especially if we meet with a fair measure of success.
If I remember rightly, Schopenhauer says that the nearest approach to perfect
happiness in this world is that of the creative artist in his work. So they are wise who
worship Art.
In Art one can lose one's self, can get rid of that feeling of separateness from others,
which is desolation. In his moments of inspiration, of creative excitement. the artist feels
himself a part of the great Creator; he is communing with the gods.
A young man once told me that in order to be happy he must become so much
interested in something as to forget himself entirely. He had unconsciously hit upon a great
truth, a great mystery.
There is another question much discussed by philosophers - and others, and that
is the necessity of killing out desire. I think that the person without desire for something
must find life a great bore. Imagine a world in which there is nothing to work for, a
condition in which you desire nothing, in which nothing will give you either pleasure or pain.
I would prefer a good, hard ache to such apathy.
Yet I think these two extreme views may be harmonized.
I suppose that those who talk so much about killing out desire mean simply the
desire for selfish gratification; while those who love life and action, must have some
purpose in living beside mere existence and the gratification of merely selfish desires.
Let us live simply, naturally, without haste and without fear, desiring strongly what
is good for us, casting aside the things which are selfish and unwholesome, and we will be
sure of a healthful
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A feeling of discontent, if humored, will become chronic. I have known people who
truly seemed to hate themselves and everybody else, and they were always miserable.
Happiness is Love, - not only of one or two, but of everybody, a great love of all
created things. A noble genius has given it expression:
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only sighs. Happiness results not from the possession of something, as commonly
supposed, but from the free, full, unimpeded use of the powers in unselfish service."
To vain and selfish men and women this may seem impossible; but I have come to
believe that the happiest man in the world is the true philanthropist, the man whose main
purpose in life is to bring sunshine into other lives. You will remember that the name of
Abouben-Ahdem, who "loved his fellow men," stood on the angel's list above the names
of those who "loved the Lord." The soul of such a man is in harmony with the universal
soul. Such harmony brings happiness. It is the lack of harmony that causes infelicity.
What I wish to say in closing has been so well said by Matthew Arnold, in his lines
on "Self-dependence," that I will quote the poem here.
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II.
THE next morning during breakfast Dr. Roberts was subjected to a good deal of
chaff and anxious enquiries were made as to whether he had been to sleep and if so did
he go to sleep with his eyes open, seeing, smelling, tasting and above all using his reason.
He took it all very good-naturedly as he knew that his last statement the night before had
laid him open to this friendly attack.
Dr. Roberts. - "Well, my friends, I must confess I have never found a satisfactory
explanation of sleep or dream, nor do I know how it happens that sometimes I dream and
sometimes not, that sometimes my dreams are incoherent, fantastic, foolish and at other
rarer times I have seemed to catch a glimpse of higher powers and higher faculties which
in my waking moments my reason and experience cannot endorse as possible. I have
even once or twice had what I suppose some would call prophetic dreams and warnings
concerning what has actually afterward taken place. Heretofore I have called these
coincidences, but the word coincidence does not satisfy me and does not explain them.
Last night, after retiring, several questions occurred to me, growing out of our talk, and
which some time I shall propound to the Professor, but not now as I have already
monopolized too much of the conversation."
All - "Oh, go on, Doctor."
Mr. Berger. - "We have all day before us and I am sure we shall all be glad to hear
your questions and the Professor's replies, but let us go outside on the verandah and
smoke our cigars there."
The verandah overlooked the Hudson river, across were the beautiful palisades.
The scene was inexpressibly lovely; a
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* Begun in the September issue.
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faint breeze just rippled the surface of the water and gently stirred the leaves, tempering
the heat of the sun which slowly mounted the heavens in all the glory of a clear August day.
We sat and smoked for some time in silence; to me it seemed a pity to mar the
peacefulness of the day with words. Surely, thought I, we could learn more if we simply
could get into touch with nature and unite our consciousness with hers; if that could be we
would then learn by becoming far more than by reasoning. It suddenly flashed upon me
that I was simply following out the line of thought which the Professor had suggested to Dr.
Roberts last evening when he said good-night to him. I turned to the Professor and found
him looking at me and I was more than surprised when he answered my thought and said:
The Professor. - "Yes, my friend, the deepest knowledge can be gained only in that
way, but not everyone understands the truth of this and we have to adapt our methods to
the needs of others.''
Rev. Alex Fulsom. - "What is that, Professor? What were you saving? Of course
one has to adapt his manner and speech to the comprehension of a laborer or an
uncultured man when speaking to one, but surely here we all meet on the common ground
of reason and logic. There need be no question of adaptation here. We meet on a
common platform."
A hardly perceptible expression of amusement crossed the Professor's face, but he
merely said:
The Professor. - "Well, Alec, we take that for granted, but we seem to have forgotten
that by common consent we agreed to give the Doctor the floor this morning." (Turning to
the Doctor) "I think, Doctor, you were going to tell us some of your dream experiences,
were you not?"
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Dr. Roberts. - "Not exactly, but simply to discuss the general theory of sleep and
dream. However, I did have a most remarkable dream last night and in connection with
your remarks of last evening, Professor, it did for the moment seem to shake my theories.
Still, although it now seems very different examined in the clear light of waking reason, I
will try to tell you what I remember of the dream and describe to you my sensations.
"I can only remember a fragment though the dream seemed to cover a long period
of time.... Well, I found myself outside what seemed to be a temple more gigantic than I
have ever seen, even than the temple of Karnac. It seemed to be built right into the side
of a huge cliff. Outside were gigantic stone figures; I remember distinctly the figure of an
elephant and that I could hardly reach up to its knee; what the other figures were I don't
remember. The sensations I experienced I can still feel but cannot describe them. There
was a sense of awe and yet of indescribable peace, though now that I relate the matter this
seems rather incongruous with my ordinary nature which, as you know, is pretty well
matter-of-fact. However, that is the way I felt; then there came upon me an intense longing
to enter the temple but something held me back. I seemed to be two people, the one in the
dream, myself and not myself, and the other fellow was myself as I know myself, matter-of-
fact as I have said, wanting to reason out everything, accepting nothing on faith. My
indecision continued for some little time and I finally sat down on one of the temple steps
and put my face in my hands. I said to myself: 'Why may I not go in?' and at that very
instant I felt a hand laid on my head and a voice that seemed to come from a long, long
distance, said:
"'Not now, you are not ready, you may not enter until you have made yourself ready.
Prepare yourself that when you come again you may enter the temple.' A burst of light
seemed to stream from above the great doorway of the temple and all space seemed filled
with music. I turned to see who had spoken to me and awoke to find the sun streaming into
my room and to hear the birds warbling outside my window.
"So much for my dream, which I did not intend to relate and would not have told had
not the Professor suggested it. . . . What caused it I do not know. . . . I remember that
almost my last thought before going to sleep was in regard to the Professor's statement to
the effect that a thing is real to us only in proportion as it is related to our consciousness,
and the question arose in my mind: 'How then is it possible to attain any certain
knowledge, seeing that our mode of consciousness may change?' Perhaps my dream was
a fantastic reflection of my thought; most certainly it was real enough while it lasted,
though after all it was but a chimera. The inexplicable part of it, however, is the sensation
which I experienced in the dream, and which even now I cannot get rid of. Bah! this is
rank foolishness, I must be only half awake."
Mr Berger - "Ah! Doctor, you've convicted yourself. We shall next hear of your
having seen the fairies, though you so strenuously denied their existence last night. You
must acknowledge after all it is only a question of relating your consciousness to their plane
of being,"
Dr. Roberts. - "No, sir, I beg your pardon. I am quite willing to admit the possibility
of dreaming about fairies and seeing them in dream, but I understood you to take the
position that fairies were real beings and that they might be seen in waking moments. That
I cannot accept. So long as I am awake and can correct the evidence of my senses by my
reason I know that such an experience as I had in my dream would be impossible, and also
that to
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see fairies would be impossible. To see them in waking moments would be to me sufficient
evidence that I was temporarily insane."
The Professor. - "But, Doctor, how then do you account for dreams and the
possibility of seeing in dream what has actually no existence - according to your theory, of
course?"
Rev. Alex Fulsom. - "Perhaps the Doctor would have us infer that he was temporarily
insane last night. I hope such attacks happen only at night and not in the day-time,
Doctor."
Dr. Roberts. - "I have always held that the dividing line between sanity and insanity
is very thin, and if insanity is the condition of mind in which the reason has lost control - with
which definition I myself agree - then dreams do indicate a mild form of insanity. I hold that
healthy, normal sleep should be dreamless.''
Rev. Alex Fulsom. - "Hadn't you better prescribe a blue-pill for yourself tonight,
Doctor, to be taken at bedtime, or take one now, if you fear another attack. By the way, I
wish you would give me one, as I ate too much breakfast, and then I think I'll take a nap."
Mr. Berger. - "Well, Alec, get your pill and take a nap if you like.... Doctor, please
go on."
Dr. Roberts. - "My theory in regard to dreams is that in sleep the reason or
intelligence sinks into quiescence, and the only processes that then go on in the body are
automatic or reflex. If the brain has been unduly excited during the day, action will continue
in it, and being uncontrolled by the reason, strange and fantastic pictures may arise in it,
and the mind on waking, catching a faint glimpse of them, expands them into what we call
a dream. Or the action of the brain may be induced by the unhealthy state of the other
organs of the body, especially the digestive organs, as is well known, but the most
interesting dreams do not arise from this latter cause. Probably our friend Alec is now
enjoying some of these dreams."
Mr. Berger. - "Yes, he evidently prefers the actual experience of sleeping and
dreaming to the discussion of these states."
The Professor. - "But do you think, Doctor, that your explanation is an adequate
one? I know you have given only the barest outline of your theory, though I think I
understand your line of argument, but does it fit the facts?"
Dr. Roberts. - "Frankly, Professor, up to yesterday I was sure of it, but this morning, -
perhaps it's the influence of my dream still hanging over me and beclouding my mind. . .
. Yes, Professor, it must fit the facts, it is reasonable, and that is the final test.''
The Professor. - "You will grant, I suppose, that a stream cannot rise higher than its
source. How then do you account for dream experiences sometimes transcending waking
experiences?''
Dr. Roberts. - "What do you mean, Professor?"
The Professor. - "You yourself said, at the breakfast table, that at rare times in your
life you have caught in dreams glimpses of higher powers and higher faculties than you
have deemed possible in waking moments."
Dr. Roberts. - "Quite true, Professor, but I also said that my reason and experience
cannot endorse these as possible, in fact, - the impossible may, of course, in fancy,
transcend the possible, but surely we must rule fancy and imagination out of the argument.''
The Professor. - "Not so fast, not so fast, Doctor. Let me ask you a question? Did
not those rare glimpses have a great effect on your life?"
Dr. Roberts. - "Ah, Professor, what you say is true. They did have a great influence
on my life and it required all the strength of my will and reason to get back into a
wholesome practical way of looking at things. I verily believe
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that at one time I was in great danger of becoming a mystic; but I thank my stars that the
cold, clear light of reason prevailed and brought me back to my senses."
The Professor. - "However you do acknowledge that these dreams influenced your
life."
Dr. Roberts. - "Yes, most certainly, and gave me a hope and a courage to combat
adverse conditions, and I might say, gave me an inspiration, if I believed in such a thing,
that seemed altogether foreign to my surroundings and to the general thought of my family.
The only way I can account for it is that it must have been some ancestral trait striving to
assert itself in my nature; indeed it must have been so for one of my ancestors who lived
about three hundred years ago was a great student of mysticism and alchemy. However,
I am glad to say that I have killed all such foolish notions in myself."
The Professor. - "But the fact remains, Doctor, that these 'foolish notions' were a
hope, a courage and an inspiration to you. Is it not remarkable that such things which have
an existence only in the realm of fancy, as you say, should have a permanent effect upon
one's life and should be able to awaken one's energies and change the whole course of
one's career? Is it not possible that there may be some other explanation of these things
and that they are real after all? Perhaps they have not been studied in the right way. The
reason is a good thing, a useful servant, but most people make of it a master, a god, and
bow down before it. It then becomes a veritable tyrant when it should be only a servant.
Your own experiences, Doctor, both in your dream of last night and in those other dreams
you have mentioned ought to make this clear to you."
After a pause the Professor continued: "Yes, it is necessary sometimes to mortify
one's reason. The higher powers of the soul can never become known so long as we fear
to trust them or so long as we measure them by our limited experience or require them to
fit in with our imperfect methods of reasoning. It is a species of moral cowardice that
prevents a man from receding from a position once taken or a conclusion once formed. He
fears to become a fool either in his own or in other people's eyes and so very often he
rejects the proffered hand of a friend, aye, in one case that I know of, the proffered hand
and counsel of a teacher, a member of the Great Brotherhood, because it would have
meant his receding from the position already taken, although he knew this to be a wrong
one."
The Professor had ceased to speak to Dr. Roberts, and it was evident that he had
in mind not simply the principle but also a particular application or misapplication of it.
Mr. Berger here suggested that we take a stroll through the gardens before lunch.
(To be continued.)
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IN DREAM OR WAKING?
by Vera Petrovna Jelihovsky
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"But, oh, how forgetful of us," the mother interposed, "we forget there are two
parcels for you also."
"Oh, yes! they send you something very big. We can't imagine what it is. Do make
haste and open the parcels. May I cut the strings?"
"Of course, you may, Sasha," answered Lila, too dazzled and shocked for words.
The poor girl tried hard to compose herself and repeated to herself, that, after all,
her prejudice against the Kitaroffs might be unjust. True, both father and son were ever
ready with their unwished for attentions and their repulsive love making. But, after all, it
was only the old man's silly manner, and he, at any rate, meant no harm. And, besides,
it was just possible, that were she to refuse his present, she would show herself a prig and
make a perfectly ridiculous exhibition of herself. He was such an old man, old enough to
he her mother's father and, besides, there actually existed a distant relationship between
them. She would hate to make an exhibition of herself.
"Lila pray, shake off your phlegma, for once in a while," her aunt said, "come and
unlock the box yourself."
Sasha stood before her holding a very ornamental satin box, all covered with laces
and ribbons, and handed her a tiny key.
"Good enough to keep my gloves and veils in," said Lila, cramming into her pocket
a letter she found on the top of the "marrons glaces" - her favorite confection - and touching
the spring of a smaller box which accompanied the letter. "Oh, what a pretty thing!" "I told
you he was a darling!" the mother and the daughter cried in one breath.
Lila looked at the bracelet, all set in with deep blue sapphires and sparkling
diamonds, without any enthusiasm. "I am glad it is not as loud as I anticipated," she said,
"for I wish I could refuse, but I think I had better accept."
"As to being in good taste, I should think it was," her aunt said, "it could not be
otherwise coming from people who can afford to buy of the best makers."
Sasha did not say anything. She thought her big cousin was putting altogether too
much "side" and "showing off" most disgracefully. But she was in too great a hurry to open
the other parcel and did not care to lose many words.
The other parcel contained a jewel case of white plush, which, when opened,
revealed a truly magnificent pearl necklace. "A gift worthy of a king," commented Lila's
aunt.
Sasha shrieked in a perfect ecstasy of joy and admiration.
Lila picked up another calling card, which dropped from among the wrapping papers,
and read: "Andre de Kitaroff. Avec ses respects et ses plus sinceres souhaits de bonheur
et de bonne chance."
And, with these seemingly perfectly respectful words all Lila's unaccountable but
deeply rooted dislike and mistrust of the Kitaroffs, young and old, a dislike and mistrust she
often tried to keep down, but never could get rid of, came back to her, with an
overwhelming rush. The girl nearly staggered under the sway of hatred and repulsion.
She flung the magnificent box away from her, as if it was something unclean. "Back
goes the ugly thing, at the earliest hour!" Lila cried, "nothing would induce me to touch it
again."
Mother and daughter turned speechless with astonishment.
(To be continued.)
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KARMA
by G. A. Marshall
This subject is in itself one of the most simple and intelligible of all those which
constitute the body of Theosophical philosophy. It expresses the thorough-going character
of the law of action and reaction - the rule that effect invariably and inflexibly follows cause.
It is accordingly sometimes called the law of cause and effect - and this is a very correct
version of karmic law. In applying this definition, however, we are exceedingly liable to
stumble at the very start, owing to the indefinite and manifold meaning and use in our
language of the word law. The idea of law as a rule of conduct prescribed by the supreme
authority in the state is so thoroughly ingrained into our modes of thinking, that we can with
difficulty free ourselves from it. We thus habitually think of law as something that may be
evaded in various ways, as for instance by the negligence or ignorance of state officers,
by the fallibility or venality of courts and juries, or by the clemency of the chief magistrate
through the pardoning power. Accustomed from our earliest youth to look upon God as
merely the executive head of the universe, omniscient indeed, but approachable through
appeals for favor. Divine law comes to be regarded as a rule of conduct which is only
enforced through the Divine Will, and hence as a code whose penalties may be evaded by
taking advantage of the Divine clemency, if not even by Divine indifference to trivial
matters. Nay, this notion of the uncertainty of law is carried by us into our conceptions of
the physical world; for we have been taught that by miracles God sets aside the laws of
material nature. Thus the term law does not in any of its applications call up in our minds
the idea of an inflexible sequence between cause and effect.
To this misapprehension of the meaning of law - a misapprehension of which those
who suffer most from it are no doubt unconscious - may be charged much of the confusion
and lack of clearness that prevails in a great deal that is written upon this topic. We read
about "good Karma" and "bad Karma," as if a moral quality could attach to that which is
literally and strictly inevitable. We find Karma discussed as if it were a personal entity that
dispenses rewards and punishments, thus making the word merely a synonym for the
Jehovah of the Jews and the personal God of popular Christianity. All this might not be
objectionable, if it could be kept constantly in mind that the personification is only a literary
device; and that rewards and punishments mean only agreeable or disagreeable
consequences. But the language used does not convey this impression to the average
reader, and there is certainly danger that Karma may become only the name of a new deity
to be feared and cajoled.
Karma is defined by more than one able writer as the law of ethical causation. As
the word in Sanscrit means action, and is taken over into English to denote the law of
action, there is no serious objection to limiting its application to actions which have an
ethical or moral character or quality. The difficulty is that it will not stay limited; language
is a thing of growth, and no man who imports a new word can determine its signification
when used by others than himself; and there is no hard and fast line between actions
which have a moral bearing and those which have not. Still, as a practical question, we are
most concerned with the ethical aspects of karma and karmic law.
Here comes to the surface the old question of fate and free will; if effect inva-
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riably follows cause, we are the result of former causes, and cannot change our nature or
our destiny, says the fatalist. It is not necessary now to thresh over this old straw. We
recognize no such thing as dead matter or blind force. Everything emanates and evolves
from Spirit, and we trace our heredity to this One Life as the source of our being. This
source is beyond our comprehension; we do not know clearly the nature and power of that
faculty of the individual spirit which we call Will; it becomes us therefore to accept as the
basis of our responsibility the practical fact that we seem to ourselves to have ability to
direct our conduct. We learn from the Secret Doctrine that evolution proceeded on
unconscious lines (as we know consciousness), and that the factors and products of
evolution were and are irresponsible and without moral quality, up to the time when Manas
began to be developed in man, when self-consciousness dawned in him, giving the power
of reflection and the power to help or hinder in his subsequent progress. With the dawn of
self-consciousness comes the sense of moral responsibility; the man has eaten of the tree
of knowledge, and discovers that he is naked - that he must use his faculties for his
protection and advancement. He can no longer hide himself among the trees of the garden
- he is no longer, like them, irresponsible. His conscience - the voice of God within him -
tells him what to do and what to avoid. Karma, or the law of cause and effect, has carried
him forward and upward to a plane where he has found himself endowed with a faculty
which to all seeming can originate new causes. He cannot thwart or prevent the working
of forces already set up, but he can apply new forces that shall change their direction. It
is a familiar law in mechanics, that when several forces meet, the resultant force takes a
new direction, which is determined by the combined effect of the strength and direction of
the meeting forces. The number, direction and strength of the forces which enter into and
make up the sum of each individual life are practically infinite; the karmic threads which
unite to determine our position and initial impulse are many and are intricately interwoven.
Manas, the faculty or principle with which the Manasa Putras have endowed us, is an
additional cause, which must be taken into account in determining all subsequent results.
Man can no longer drift; he must exert his newly acquired power or sink into a worse
condition than that from which he has emerged. With its use he can continue more
effectually the upward trend that has brought him to this plane; and by its abuse he can
turn back to the flesh-pots of Egypt, and increase his pleasure in mere animal gratifications.
In this ability to choose lies the conception of Karma as the basis of ethics. By virtue of this
endowment man is invested with divine attributes, and it lies with him to say whether he will
accept his inheritance and enter upon its enjoyment, or will reject it and sink back into the
oblivion from which he has just made his escape.
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investigation by the material methods of modern occidental science, it has been deeply
studied, and much exact knowledge gained concerning it by Oriental philosophers, who
have been able to employ, in their researches, correlative and extraordinary states of
consciousness. They know it as the plane of the atoms. The laws potential in it are akin
to those of our material plane to a limited extent only, but the variations in atomic condition
are as limitless as those we know in molecular arrangement; its forces are more powerful
in their effects, owing to the tenuity of the matter upon which they operate, and it is
inhabited by conscious entities presumably upon the evolutionary path and destined to
eventual corporeal existence. There does not seem to be any violence to probability - to
say the least - in the assumption that the human beings of today have, millions of years
ago, passed through that phase of existence.
This necessarily inadequate epitome of some few relative teachings in a stupendous
philosophic system has seemed desirable, to show the solid foundation for our affirmation
of an astral, or "psychical," plane, as one of the manifestations of the akasic. Some
persons, possessed of a deeply-rooted aversion for the exercise of thinking, assume that
there is no astral plane, other than a sort of imaginary corral for mythical spooks, invented
by the Theosophists, and find it simply funny. Others, of more serious and perhaps pious
tendency, who go so far as to think they think, entertain vague concepts of an "unseen
world," which they people with angels, devils, or spirits of the dead, according to their
individual idiosyncrasies. Both classes are wrong.
The astral plane is quite as real as the material. Its phenomena are subject to laws
like in kind to, but differing in degree from, those obtaining in the realm of gross forms,
because of the infinitely greater tenuity and consequent responsive mobility of its matter.
There are gradations in density and varying modes and velocities of vibration among its
atoms; it is as full of entities, in all possible degrees and states of consciousness, as is the
material plane with which we are familiar; and those entities are clothed in forms
composed from the substance of the plane to which they belong, just as we are made up,
physically, from gross elements that are likewise the components of the animal, the tree
and the rock.
It is an error to suppose that a defined line exists between the material and astral
planes. The imaginary one supposably drawn by visual observation is wholly illusory, for
its location is dependent upon the capacity of the individual. Normal, unaided sight draws
it at one point. The microscope puts it much farther on into the margin of the astral field.
The bacilli belong as much to one plane as to the other. Even untrained psychic
consciousness is an unreliable guide to cognition of the conditions and limits of the
intangible world, for it, too, is dependent upon the capacity of the seer, and its percipience
may be sympathetic with either of widely different conditions, and blind, or illusive, to others
closely allied to or even mingling with them.
In the bell of a gloxinia or upon a petal of an orchid, one sometimes finds a
progressive deepening of color, from absolutely pure white to an excessively dark shade
of crimson, or purple, by such exquisitely delicate increase of tint that not even with the
microscope can a point of change be discerned. To this may be likened the degrees by
which descent is made from pure spirit to the lowest depths of gross matter. In a broad
general way it may be said that the astral plane is semi-material, lowest of the akasa, and
that above it in tenuity is the psychic, and beyond that further refinements needless of
specification here. But, in point of fact, these states
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of refined matter - for convenience denominated planes and sub-planes - mingle, are inter-
dependent and each is susceptible to the vibrations of those approximating to it in tenuity,
above and below. And this obtains even down to the prakritic plane. To illustrate: A
thought impels vibrations on the psychic plane, which stir others at a lower rate in the astral
and the latter translates - or commutates them - to such reduction as is appreciable by and
mandatory upon the gross organs of apprehension and action. In like manner, a sensation
is not perceived by gross nerve matter, but by the astral atoms pervading it; by them is
transmitted at a higher rate of vibrations to the mental - or psychic - atoms and there
becomes realizable by the thinking principle; and it may even be of such a nature as to
transmit vibrations to the higher mental plane, which is spiritual. Without that commutator,
the astral principle, acting between his mind and his gross organs, a man could no more
make his hand move in conformity to his wish, than he could push Jupiter out of his orbit.
Without harmonious reciprocal action between the astral and mental principles of his being,
the man would be mindless. Abnormal excitation of a principle disturbs that harmony of
action which is essential to health of both mind and body, and in this is the chief danger to
rash adventurers upon, the psychical plane. They are subjected to the influence of
vibrations peculiar to a state of matter beyond their powers of justly appreciative perception
and correct cognition. The intensely vivid impressions flashed upon their abnormally
excited consciousness, are distorted by false apprehension and perverted beyond measure
in attempted mental assimilation through inadequacy in responsiveness of the connecting
and transmitting chain to the thinking organ - the brain. Temporary delusions and ultimate
insanity - if the influence is continued - are the inevitable consequences.
Another danger, too real to be ignored or even lightly regarded, is from inimical
entities liable to be encountered on that plane. It is not to be supposed that things devoid
of tangible bodies are necessarily harmless. While vast multitudes of the denizens of the
astral plane possess only collective consciousness and manifest but as forces, either there
or on the material plane; there are others whose evolution has reached attainment of
conscious individuality, with a certain intelligence that may or may not be hostile; and
between these in development are a very numerous class who are capable of employing
powerfully forces of which we, of the material plane, know nothing, and who wield them
blindly as impelled by will force of human origination, to which they are susceptible.
There are several ways in which the majority of persons may, without difficulty,
acquire some degree of perceptivity on the astral plane - which is commonly magnified in
important seeming, by styling it the psychical - and many do so unconsciously, both in
sleep and waking. All self-induced trance states have that result and, not infrequently, the
hypnotee is precipitated into that state of consciousness, either unintentionally, through lack
of proper control on the part of the hypnotizer, or purposely in the course of perilous
investigations into the problem of subliminal consciousness and other fascinatingly
mysterious phenomena of the deeper conditions of trance. The latter is particularly
dangerous, since the subject is not only exposed to the hazards of the plane, as any other
intruder would be, but has the additional risk of betrayal by suggestions from the master-
will, which, under such circumstances, is but a "blind leader of the blind."
There is good reason to believe that one of the evidences of the transition state the
human race is in at the present time, is a notable increase of susceptibility to the higher
rate
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of vibrations from planes above the material. Genius and madness are alike manifestations
of its effects. The time is no doubt coming in which the sixth sense - that of psychical
perceptivity - will be the common property of humanity, but before that can be enjoyed, the
race must experience a great acceleration in the normal rates of vibrations in all its
principles, raising its capacity for correct perception in the atomic states of matter. We can
hasten our progress - but only at great risk.
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THEOSOPHY IN AMERICA.
by Alpheus M. Smith
THE true strength and enormous power of the theosophical movement, is not by
any means apparent in, nor is it limited by the membership of the Theosophical Society.
Its influence is much wider.
The forces at work have been at work for ages. The object sought is the evolution
of mankind, fitting it for the new thought, the new race, the dawn of a new day. That day
is about to dawn, the new race to appear, the new thought which is truly old and truly new
is to be brought home to the minds of men, is soon to be given broadcast to humanity, a
humanity fitted to receive it, a humanity of a new era, who have known these truths and
acted on them in ages past, and will now recognize and accept them.
The limitation of this work has been the limited capacity to receive, to believe, to
comprehend. The basis of the future has been gradually laid, and is shown in the newer
thought, the more generous views, permeating and influencing in the recent years, every
faith and every creed. This has proceeded so gradually and grown so extensively that
today much Theosophy is preached in Christian pulpits. The audience do not know its
source, but they recognize in it the newer, truer thought they want, the church pews are
filled and they come again. The minister perhaps did not mean to preach Theosophy. He
may be progressive and have been reading, the truths sinking deeper than he knew, tinging
and changing somewhat his old ideas. Almost unconsciously and yet with fear he gives
it out, but knowing instinctively, 'tis what the people want.
The newspaper, that pulse of public want, if not of need, is changing too its attitude.
Not many years ago, it refused its columns to our cause, largely because it did not
comprehend, but more because it thought erroneously that the public did not want it. The
Press as well as individuals is learning, and so the good work has been moving, and not
so very slowly, onward. A respect for Theosophy has been established. A general interest
to know more about Theosophy is general, is everywhere apparent. Until it began to be
understood even this could not have happened. Even the members of our Society have
grown so accustomed to this preparatory era, to this basic work which had first to be done,
in preparing the age for Theosophy, to this permeating and initial step of the movement,
that we have not yet awakened to the fact that a new day and greater opportunities are
before us. The slower process was necessary until the ground was made ready and the
philosophy introduced, but it is evident and all signs indicate that the time has now come
for a more vigorous growth, when Theosophy is to be received as well as heard by
multitudes of men and women, as the only salvation for struggling humanity from the
miseries of life. Whence shall the message
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spring? Who shall carry it forth? Look for your answer to its first initial movement, to the
Crusaders who, a year ago, carried the gospel of peace and liberty to the whole World, a
Crusade which meant more I firmly believe than any of us even now have the faintest
conception, - a liberty of knowledge of the Soul's journeyings and destiny, a liberty of
thought, which is the only basis for Unity and Brotherhood, a liberty to others, which is the
chiefest condition of the possibility of brotherhood. From America goes the message to the
world.
America, the land of liberty, known and sung, as the land of the free, for whose
freedom our fathers fought and died, and which is to extend further and be more lasting,
than their fondest hopes ever pictured; a freedom of thought, for which the pilgrim fathers
landed on these shores, and which shall be a freedom greater than their narrow and limited
vision, would have desired.
The Civil War, which maintained the unity of this country, was also of more far-
reaching benefit, than even then appeared, or of the freeing of a race from slavery.
Where shall the new race spring? We have been wont to look to hoary India with
its wealth of ancient lore, its adaptitude to metaphysical thought, its vast heirlooms of
ancient manuscript and mystic learning, but the life impulse of nations sweeps ever onward.
Here, in America, is the life impulse of the day and hour, here the strength of the
warm fresh blood, that comes with the youthful manhood of a young nation. Here the
mixture of all bloods, of differing nationalities, coming to our shores, as to no other land or
clime - a condition most unique, and which cannot be without result, in the formation of the
civilization and the race to follow.
America, the ideal Arcadia, to which all people flock to share the greater privileges
of a free land, what other land, but this, can provide the conditions needed for the growth
of the new race? America, the land of the new race, with its many acres of virgin prairie,
never yet turned by the plow, is yet an old land, and has in many places the signs left
behind of an older and former civilization, showing that parts of it formerly belonged to other
ancient continents, probably long since submerged beneath the ocean.
If we knew the secrets the waves could tell us, if we knew the history of nations,
inhabiting long ages since, this land of ours which we call new, we might guess if this newer
race now to incarnate here, were ever on this soil before, might know if we ourselves were
not that race and were mayhap upon this soil before, when the ancient knowledge and the
sacred lore of mysteries was still known.
And now a School is to be formed, a School for the Revival of the Lost Mysteries of
Antiquity, and where but here, in this new land, which yet is old.
Fortunate land, fortunate race and people, who may foster and acquire a knowledge
of those mysteries and send forth light to the world.
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SOUND EFFECTS.
by Mrs. J.T. Rae
AMID the hurry and bustle of nineteenth century life a great discovery, or re-
discovery may almost pass unnoticed because so many busy people are compelled to be
absorbed in their own concerns. The duty lying nearest is their duty of the hour. Eager
sympathies, high aspirations, longings for scientific knowledge are all there, but are
cramped and stunted through lack of time to bestow upon them. Therefore a large number
of people have never seen Mrs. Watts-Hughes' wonderful Voice-Pictures, and if told of
them, are vaguely skeptical concerning the manner of their production, believing it
impossible for sound to produce form.
There is no trickery about their construction, though it is probable that if Mrs. Watts-
Hughes had displayed her art to medieval England she would have been burnt as a witch!
That which can be seen by the uninitiated today, is a sheet of glass covered by a flat
wash of water-color paint, usually green, and when certain notes are sung near it a
wonderful effect is produced. The whole surface can be seen to become gradually
transformed, until the glass upon which the paint is placed presents the appearance shown
by our window panes after a night of heavy frost, with their beautiful trees and ferns and
flowers, only in these pictures the beauty is enhanced by being green instead of white.
Rich red tints, royal purples and esthetic ochres are sometimes placed upon this
lovely green background, and these form themselves into shell-like flowers, when a certain
note is sung through a particular kind of horn.
The wonderful blendings of color, with their minute gradations, rounded by strong
bold outlines are simply marvelous, and show the magical modulation of voice and the
delicate shades of tone necessary to produce the corresponding delicacy of form.
It is said when Madame Patti sings her highest note, the vocal cords vibrate at the
rate of 2100 vibrations per second. This proves how wonderful a force vibration may be
on the form producing plane and perhaps goes far to explain the Indian belief in
"Mantrams," or "the pronunciation of certain words in such a way as to start vibrations that
would control the minds of men, as well as the external forces of nature." The magic of the
serpent charmer might be understood in the same way,
This voice painting is no new art. The ancient Greeks were well versed in its
intricacies, though for ages the secret was lost. It has been stated that specimens have
been found, in what was once the wonderful city of Pompeii, and the same kind of
experiment has been made in various lands in many ages. Some have proved its truth by
placing sand on drum-heads, and others by some kind of paste on flat surfaces, using a
violin bow to draw out mystical sounds and thus produce form.
Some years ago a celebrated dentist was explaining to a lady patient the use of
some new and very clever inventions in the way of dental instruments and appliances. A
few weeks later he visited Pompeii, and on his return said,
"You remember those new appliances I showed you? Well! Imagine my surprise
when I dug out the very same things at Pompeii, somewhat rough from their long burial, but
there was no mistake about their being the same kind of tools."
There are cases in which sudden revelations flash through the intellect, and one of
these seems this re-discovery, in various minds, of the relation of sound
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to form and color. The poet mind with its inspirations and intuitions sees deeper than those
of a more material cast, and often lights on a fact for which it can give no scientific reason,
though the slower and more plodding step of science may a afterwards confirm its accuracy
and explain the laws which govern it. Wordsworth caught a truth when he said,
"And beauty born of murmuring sound did pass into her face."
It is difficult to fathom the mystical bond existing between Poetry, Music and
Painting. Can it be that the clear stillness of a frosty midnight brings some echo to earth
from the "Music of the Spheres" which causes the white landscapes to grow upon our
window panes? In their higher altitudes, the snowflakes seem to catch heaven's music and
come to us in star-like forms of perfect beauty.
Is it this music which paints the early dawn with its first faint rays of hopefulness,
broadening into delicate beauty and retaining undertones of shadow to make the full
glorious sunlight the most perfect thing on earth?
Perhaps this symphony of form is the symbol of that higher harmony which
earthborn ears are too dull to catch! How much more meaning is thus put into the refulgent
sunset splendor! It is impossible to even imagine the majestic glory of that music whose
wave on wave of sound paints cloud on cloud of form, gold, crimson, grey; flame-tipped
with a light our canvases can never catch and radiating a magnetic calm to still the tumult
of feverish, restless hearts. At such times the over-soul seems nearer, and a wonderful
peace steals into weary hearts.
If the music of the spheres paints many a picture for human eyes to rest upon,
earth's music may also add a note of gladness to resting souls! It may be, that joyous,
happy songs, thanksgivings and laughter, innocent mirth and light-hearted praise, ascend
heavenwards to paint their glowing pictures for the joy of those who gather there! And what
cries of despair, drunkenness, crime, debauchery, go to the regions of weeping and
remorse. How poignant would be the sting of such pictures to one who had led many
astray, on finding his works still following him and making their mark upon his place of
habitation. Panoramic views, of his children, or of those he loved, led through his example,
or neglect, into sin and anguish of soul, flashing vivid effects before his vision when beyond
recall, and he utterly powerless to remedy this gathering of the ills of his own creation.
Sound-produced pictures prove the force of the truth, that not a word uttered or a
deed done ever loses its effect, but goes on with reproducing issues throughout all the
ages.
Some of the old monks appear to have had glimpses of underlying truths; visions
and foreshadowings of the hidden unity existing between poetry, music and painting (song,
sound and form). Music produced in them a mystical yearning, for which they could give
no reason; they felt it had more meaning in it than they could catch, a power and force they
could not grasp, and we are now re-learning one side more of its wonderful harmony
although we are so dense and dull to its many-sided meanings.
And the human voice, how it attracts or repels even against the reason! Is it this
strange power, painting its picture upon the brain and so producing an irresistible
influence?
We see its effects in the expression of the face, causing its muscles to contract or
relax; in the fire which lights the eyes though we cannot see the inner picture painted upon
the brain. Does this in part account for those sudden affinities or aversions felt with
strangers, which upon second thoughts are fought against as unreasonable, perchance
uncharitable?
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How many people have had to sadly admit that the first impression produced, in its
strong, bold outline, with no after smudge or smear to mar it, was the correct one?
Are people at all aware how strongly they are influenced by sound, to take actions
of various kinds?
Was it for this reason that when the ancients formulated laws for their ideal state,
they had martial music played - melodies, stirring and inspiring, such as would lead on to
brave deeds? All softer strains were suppressed, lest they should unman or enervate, and
no voluptuous strains were allowed to weaken their powers of volition.
And music has the same effect in this age. A tramp through our city slums, on a
drizzling, dismal day, is one of the most depressing journeys possible. The poverty around,
the children with bare feet and hunger-pinched faces, squalor and dirt everywhere,
humanity in tatters, send the spirits below zero. But an organ-grinder strikes up an
enlivening march and it is wonderful how men straighten their backs and go forward with
brisker steps, women grow brighter and children begin to dance. The unconscious
influence of sound forces all into action.
Watch a vast crowd swayed by the voice of an orator! Faces light up, emotions
come so near the surface they can be read at a glance, and when the sound of the voice
dies away they gradually return to their stolid every-day expression.
But an abiding picture may have been impressed upon the brain, and the words lie
deeply hidden in the heart, and so be reproduced in the life of the people! And for this
reason it is good to flood the world with good music and encourage orators to teach high
thoughts, so that every action produced by these means may be of such an elevating type,
that humanity shall spring from the dust, and shaking itself free from the bondage of evil
customs, rise to that higher plane where the earthly is dominated by the spiritual.
For it is thus possible for love and blessing to be poured upon all who come within
the influence of spiritual sounds, which in turn will produce noble thoughts and holy deeds.
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It is or seems to be the general notion that the symbols of Masonry are used and
were appropriated or invented as explanations; as a sort of picture writing, intended to
render easy the acquisition of knowledge. Hence the absurd, superficial, and common-
place interpretations of them that make one wonder why they should have been used to
express such trite, tame and ordinary truths or lessons.
But the real fact is that they were used to conceal the truth, as a means, not of
teaching it to, but of hiding it from, the vulgar. It was never meant that they should be
easily interpreted. Like the symbols of the Egyptian Hierophants, everyone is a Sphinx
(half buried in the sand, moreover), that only an Oedipus can interpret. The consequence
is, that the ordinary interpretations of our symbols and ceremonies are simply- absurd." -
Albert Pike.
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STUDENTS' COLUMN
conducted by J.H. Fussell
RIGHT MOTIVE
BOTH right speech and right perception depend on right motive. The essential
characteristics of a true student may be summed up by these three taken in the following
order: Right motive, right perception, right speech. He who would become a student of the
Science of Life, a student of himself in the truest sense, must put away the ordinary views
on the matter of study. In this deeper sense, study means more than mental exercise or
the obtaining an intellectual grasp of the problems of life. There is a deeper knowledge
than that of the mind, it is the knowledge of the heart which touches the soul of things and
enters into that inner realm where the mind of man can never penetrate. Such knowledge
is understanding, it is an interior grasp of things, contrary to which a man can never go, for
it becomes a part of his very being.
I am well aware that in this material age there are many who deny any other
knowledge than that of the mind, and who hold that knowledge may exist without regard
to the uses to which it is put or the means whereby it was attained. Such knowledge is
however but the husk, the mere form of the outer shell. The kernel, the heart of knowledge,
can never be reached in this way. Knowledge is more than information or the classification
of facts and phenomena. Knowledge implies the power to use and is realized only in the
use. This power to use comes from relating the object of knowledge to one's inner
consciousness and life. The means by which this relation is realized is true study. It will
thus be seen that by study, in this sense, is meant more than the poring over books or the
observation of phenomena; it means the assimilation of experiences, a seeking to
understand one's own nature and to relate oneself - mind and heart - to the universe. And
since all parts of man's nature are inter-dependent it follows that true study must have
reference to all planes of his being and hence that the acquirement and use of all
knowledge concerns the moral and ethical, as well as the mental nature of man.
Knowledge concerns not only the mind, but also the heart.
Taking knowledge in this sense makes clear the declaration of Christ: "He that
doeth the will of the Father shall know of the doctrine"; and also that older saying of
Krishna's in the Bhagavad Gita: "Whoso is perfected in devotion findeth spiritual
knowledge springing up spontaneously within himself in the progress of time."
The acquirement of knowledge simply for the sake of power or for any other reward
has been justly condemned; but the substitute - of seeking knowledge for knowledge' sake,
as ordinarily used and understood, is equally to be condemned. On first hearing it sounds
very plausible, but if, as contended above, the value of knowledge lies in its use, the
statement becomes meaningless. "Seek knowledge that thou mayest use it."
Every living person, who is not an idiot, has some measure of true knowledge, some
power to help on the evolution of the race. The only way to increase one's store of
knowledge, the only way to attain to more power is to use what one already has. Mark
well, however, it must be to use, not to abuse; and right motive is inseparable from right
use. The world in general has lost sight of the inner potencies of things. There is a subtle
potency in every being, plant and stone, so too is there a subtle influence or potency in
every action entirely apart from the mechanical effects thereof.
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The same is true of our every thought and the same line of intellectual study pursued by
two students at the same time may in one case irradiate and in the other darken the mind
and life even though it were apparently followed abstractly by both. The legend of King
Midas is verified every day. Everything turns to gold at the touch of some, to lead at the
touch of others; the transmuter is the motive. There is no need for discouragement that
we find our motive not pure, at least we all can endeavor to set our faces toward the light,
we can make the light our aim and goal. We may fail in many particulars, but if we keep
before us the one great purpose and aim of our lives as workers and students, gradually
will the general motive shine out in each particular word and deed.
Add to right motive the vigilance of right perception, the expression of right speech,
all these finding their crown in right action, then will the gateway of true knowledge be
opened and the student shall become one of "those who know."
CREMATION.
"What are, from a theosophical point of view, the reasons for preferring Cremation
to Interment?"
In my opinion the Theosophical reasons are purely sanitary reasons both as regards
the one just dead and the community. That cremation of the dead is better for the well-
being of the community needs no argument. That it is also for the well-being of the
individual just dead may not be so apparent.
Fire is the great purifier and regenerator. It not only acts on the physical
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plane, loosening the bonds of chemical affinity, but also on the magnetic and vital plane,
loosening the magnetic ties which are the counterpart of the passions and desires and the
love of life (physical existence) that bind the soul to the body. The seat of these magnetic
ties is the astral, etheric or magnetic body. In its lowest aspect it is the body of form and
it dissipates pari passu with the physical body. Being the link between the soul and the
body, so long as it persists there will be a magnetic tie between the soul and earth which
will hinder the soul's passing on to other spheres. At death the physical body in itself is
nothing more than a cast-off garment, no longer fit for use, but because of its previous long
use by the soul there has been set up in case of the ordinary man a strong magnetic
connection between the soul and the body via the astral body. Hence simply as a sanitary
matter these magnetic ties should be broken as soon as possible, and the quickest way to
do this is by the use of fire in cremation.
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and it may be that each individual unit will in ages to come attain to the human stage of
evolution and become man on a future earth.
In connection with this subject the third fundamental proposition of the Secret
Doctrine should be studied. See Vol. I., p. 17; new edition, p. 42.
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MILDRED was sitting on a low chair before the fire. She was all alone in the cosy
sitting room. Her long curls drooped over the page she was reading and so absorbed was
she in the fairy tale that she did not hear her big sister Edith enter the room. Edith stole up
softly behind her small sister and bent over to see what she was reading. Then she said,
stroking the bright hair:
"'Sleeping Beauty' is very absorbing, isn't it, dearie?"
Mildred looked up with flushed cheeks and very bright eyes and answered:
"Oh, it's just too lovely! How I wish that I could have seen the forest and the dear
Princess asleep, and then watched when the Prince came and wakened her!"
"So you think the story a true one, do you?"
"Well, sister, it seems as though it might have happened sometime, do not you think
so? It is so beautiful it ought to be true."
"It is true, dearie, but not, perhaps, in the way you suppose. That is, I do not think
that there ever was actually a princess who was charmed to sleep for a hundred years and
then waked by the kiss of a prince."
Mildred's face grew thoughtful as she looked at her elder sister. "Dear Edith, I wish
you would tell me exactly what you mean. How can a story be true and yet not be true?"
"Little sister, do not puzzle your brains so, and I will tell you what I think about the
story of 'Sleeping Beauty.' You have heard of an allegory, have you not?"
"Oh, yes, I know! It's a story within a story."
"That is it, exactly. But it is more. If it is a true allegory it teaches the one who reads
it something wise and beautiful, something that has to be searched for beneath the words.
You might say that the truth in an allegorical story is like the perfume of a red rose. The
outside story is like the rose, beautiful and full of color, while the real truth of the story is like
the perfume of the rose, hidden, yet most lovely of all."
"I believe I understand what you mean, sister; but tell me, do you see allegories in
my fairy book?"
"Yes, especially in the story you have just finished."
"Oh, please tell me, it will make 'Sleeping Beauty' so much more interesting."
"But perhaps you will think my explanation very dry?"
"Indeed, I will not, dear Edith. I would love to learn something true from my stories."
"Well, then, little sister, it seems to me that the story of the Sleeping Beauty is just
a beautiful way of telling us about the soul. That is, the Princess is our Soul, the very inside
of us, you know, dearie, that which is always whispering to us to do the noblest thing.
When the Princess is enchanted it means that the soul is very ignorant, or that it has done
wrong, perhaps because it did not
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know any better, and so it falls asleep. Then it needs a messenger from the Great Soul to
wake it up. Do you understand?"
"I think that I do, Edith. Tell me, who is the messenger?"
"The messenger is the Prince."
"And what does it mean when he wakes the Princess?"
"You remember he wakes her with a kiss. This means Love. Because it is Love that
helps the Soul more than anything else in the world. Very often a poor soul who has been
unhappy and almost helpless is made happy and brave again by a loving word or some
kind action. Did you know that even a little girl can wake the Sleeping Beauty?"
"What do you mean, Edith?"
"Each one of us, even the youngest, can be a messenger from the Great Soul, a
Prince who wakes up the Sleeping Beauty. For everywhere there are beautiful Princesses,
the souls of boys and girls, of men and women, who are fast asleep. They are bound by
the spells of hatred, or selfishness, or ignorance. And the one who wishes to wake such
a soul may do it by the magic power of unselfish love. Sometimes we have to try many,
many times before we succeed in helping another, but if we have patience and keep
persevering, we will surely succeed at last in waking the sleeping soul."
"Thank you, Edith, for telling me about the real Sleeping Beauty. I understand just
what you mean, I think. But do you suppose that even I could find a Princess bound by a
spell and wake her up?"
"Why, of course you can, little sister. Take, for instance, Mary Owens at your own
school. You have often told me of how cross and disagreeable she was and how none of
the girls liked her. Have you ever tried to be friends with her?"
"No, because she has been cross to some of the girls when they tried to be
pleasant. She never plays in our games and she never talks with us. I think she fancies
that the girls look down upon her because she is so very poor, but I am sure I never
thought about it!"
"Yes, but you cannot know how much unkindness may have been shown her by
others. She must have had a very unhappy life to be so shut up and so unfriendly. She
is ugly and awkward you say, and perhaps she feels that she is different from the other girls
and it makes her unhappy."
"I never thought of that!"
"Well, Mildred, I think that Mary Owens is a Sleeping Princess, and I believe that you
may be the one to wake her and make her happy like other girls."
"Oh, dear Edith, I know what you mean, and I will try! Will it not be nice to become
friends with her and to try by being loving and unselfish to wake up the sleeping soul? I am
sure I can do a lot to help her and I am going to think of her as the Sleeping Beauty. Think
of knowing a real Princess! And she will never guess that I am not really just little Mildred
Lawrence, but a grand Prince, come to rescue the Sleeping Beauty!"
Mildred clasped her hands and looked into the bright grate fire as though she saw
in the flames beautiful pictures of brave princes going to the rescue of spellbound
princesses. And the big sister sat beside her saying never a word, but thinking of how
much a little child can do to make the world more beautiful if she will use the magic power
of Love.
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REVIEWS.
The Pacific Theosophist, for November. - An article on "Hypnotism from a
Theosophical Standpoint," by Mrs. J. C. Keightley, fills most of the space in the magazine.
The subject is handled in an original way, and the article is distinguished by accuracy,
orderly arrangement, and clearness of statement. "Buddhi," by Stanley Fitzpatrick, is an
attempt to define spirit, mind, and matter. The philosophy of the article is sound, but the
use of the foreign term is not very clear. The editorial on "Brotherhood Pence" is a ringing
appeal for practical brotherhood on the line indicated by its title; and the "Branch Reports"
make a fine showing of activities - Aretas.
The Artist (London) for November, has as its leading contribution "Mysticism in Art
Pictorial," by R. Machell, R.B.A., illustrated by nine excellent photo reproductions of the
author's splendid allegorical paintings. In explaining the mystical meanings of his pictures,
Mr. Machell writes like a Greek philosopher, displaying intellectual acumen as keen as the
artistic sense revealed in his pictorial work. In refuting the notion that the mere
representation of material things constitutes art, he says:
"I am sometimes inclined to doubt whether much more than half of the things we see
are really seen with the physical eyes at all, so strong is the imaginative faculty, even in the
most wooden-headed materialist who handles painting materials. But seeing is only one
mode of perception, and the physical organ of sight is not the seer. The seer is the inner
man, and one of the faculties of the inner man is called imagination. Now, what is this
imagination if not an inner sight, a faculty which so controls and directs the outer organs
as to enable the inner man to see the outer world by the light of the inner world in which he
really lives? - thus interpreting and explaining to some extent the ordinary material scenes
of this mystery of mysteries, Life." - Aretas
Regeneration - the Gate of Heaven.* - This is a work which will prove of interest and
value to students of occult subjects, but it is of too technical a nature to appeal to the
ordinary reader. It treats of a very difficult subject with sincerity and directness, maintaining
that perfect purity of life, by a standard far higher than that commonly held, can alone lead
to spiritual knowledge. It is a scholarly work, and the English diction is of classical purity.
The examination into certain esoteric passages in the New Testament and in patristic
literature is particularly thorough, but, unfortunately, hoi exo, the exoteric many, will find
these as incomprehensible and will be no more inclined to put them in practice than in the
days when Paulas excoriated the profligate Korinthians. The author says: "The Art of Life
consists in preserving the due proportion between the interest of the present moment and
that of the future destiny, harmonizing the whole with the part. Earthly avocations are, after
all, not ends in themselves; they are but the means by which men become perfected and
become worthy of their divine inheritance. Things are good or bad only according to their
utility, and therefore should be followed as far as useful, and not for themselves. . . . Every
man carries his whole life with him in his hand, and he must so guide the interests of the
moment that he mar not the welfare of the future. This careful self-scrutiny and self-
direction is conduct, intelligent and planned, not emotional and fortuitous." Through the
demonstrated facts of biology and
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* Medford, Mass., Prophetical Pub. Co. (Box 9).
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physiology he shows that perfect purity of life, as an element of right-conduct, is absolutely
essential for one who seeks to gain insight into things spiritual; and he then proves that the
same was taught by the New Testament writers and by the fathers of the Christian church,
as well as by all the great philosophers and religious teachers in every age. The
concluding chapter on the "Great Renunciation" is a masterly analysis of the true object of
religion. - Aretas.
The Internationalist for November. - This number clearly reflects the spirit of the
magazine's title, and is in thorough keeping with the animating principle of the new cycle
of practical work. Indeed it formulates the ideals and hopeful plans for the new order of
things more definitely and vividly than has hitherto been done; and under such headings
as "A Civilization Reborn," "The Hero in Man," "On the March," and "International
Brotherhood," the purposes that inspire the present activities in the Theosophical
movement are given clear and virile expression. A large part of the material in the number
is from the fertile pen of G. W. Russell; but the familiar pen-names and initials of Laon, A.
P. D., Paul Gregan and A. W. D. also appear. - An article, (illustrated) by Charles J. Ryan,
on Newgrange, gives a detailed description of that Initiation-crypt of ancient Ireland. -
Aretas
The Dream Child; by Florence Huntley * - The author of this novel claims to write
"from authority" through her connection with a school of Occultism, and blandly informs her
readers that although she has "been under the continual instruction of a member of that
school" for over ten years, her "education along the line of physical, spiritual and psychical
laws and principles has proceeded slowly." This is only too painfully evident as is also her
lack of
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* Chicago: Rand, McNally & Co.
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education along the line pursued in the public schools. The novel reflects no credit upon
the occult pedagogue or upon his none too modest pupil. As a merely imaginative work
of fiction, it could be passed over as one of the numerous
"shilling shockers" in which hack writers utilize Theosophical ideas by jumbling, together,
in cheerful incongruity, Divine Masters, moon-stricken lovers, astral bodies, and the forlorn
spooks of Summer-land. But as the author claims to be a revealer of occult lore, and,
announcing that she has forsaken the field of romance, threatens to inflict upon the public
"a work which will conform to the rational instead of the poetic method in literature," the
novel is open to severer criticism. The psychology of it is expressed by the equation ½ +
½ = 1. The human soul incarnates as a = and a - ; and Mr. Positive wears trousers and
a silk hat, or their equivalents in whatever country he happens to alight when he makes his
meteor-like advent upon this earth from those celestial regions which our novelist locates
in the depths of space; while Miss Negative rejoices in petticoats and a bonnet, or other
appropriate finery. But sometimes one moiety of the soul arrives on the earth only to find
that its better or worse half has failed to keep the tryst, or has missed the train, or
something of the sort; and the resulting lonesomeness of that fractional being is terrible
to contemplate. And even when these halves strike the earth simultaneously, their
difficulties have only begun. One may be born in the interior of darkest Africa and the other
in the central portions of yellowest China, so that often the prospects for that soul to pull
itself together are small. Then there are so many millions of half-souls that they get
hopelessly shuffled up; and the parsons and justices-of-the-peace, in their well-meant
endeavors to bring harmony out of the chaos, and unify things, sort them out blunderingly
and put together halves
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that don't belong to each other, thus making matters worse. Mr. Positive identifies the
missing half of his immortal soul only to find that she is wedded to a jealous and athletic
individual several sizes larger than himself, and is the mother of a large and interesting
family. But these are only flights of the reviewer's fancy, falling far short of the dreadful
realities taught in "the Dream Child." In that authentic story, the hero, Zanoni, is dispatched
by his master in India to find his other half, presumably because the astute Hindu occultist
did not desire such a half-hearted disciple. Zanoni, despite his name, is an Englishman,
and his quest for his immortal semi-soul only results in his being locked up by his hard-
headed parents in a lunatic asylum, where he pines away and dies, his other half also
perishing soon afterwards from the same sort of sickness in an American hospital for the
insane, to which her mismated husband had consigned her. There is an aroma of lunatic
asylum all through the book, and one naturally falls to wondering if the "occult school"
spoken of by its author were not an institution of that nature, and the "occult teacher" a
sagacious physician who humored his patients in their disordered fancies. - Aretas
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MISCELLANEOUS NEWS
THE most important event of the past month has been the holding of the
Brotherhood Bazaars under the auspices of the International Brotherhood League. These
were held on December 13th all over the country in most of the places where I. B. L.
centres have been formed. At the date of writing only a few of the reports have been
received, but all indicate the great success of the undertaking and the work of the I. B. L.
and the T. S. A. will be much aided thereby.
In New York the Bazaar was held for four days, December 10th, 11th, 13th and 14th,
in Scottish Rite Hall, on Madison Avenue, not far from the T. S. A. headquarters. The
building was in every way most convenient for the purpose. The Bazaar proper was held
in the large banquet room, where booths were fitted up to represent the different nations
as follows: (1) America, (2) England and Scotland, (3) Sweden, (4) Holland, (5) Germany,
(6) Italy, (7) Greece, (8) France, Spain and Japan. There were also a Killarney tent and
a North American Indian tent. The decorations were very artistic. Each booth was draped
with the flags of the nations represented, and the ladies attending were dressed in the
appropriate national costumes. It would be impossible to describe all the booths in detail,
but mention should certainly be made of the American booth decorated with the "Stars and
Stripes," and one of the principal features of which was a beautiful large doll dressed for
"America." The North American Indian tent attracted much attention, and the young Indian
and the young squaw were correctly dressed and painted. A large collection of soapstone
knives, pipes and horseshoes, and moccasins and rare relics made by the Sioux Indians
had been sent to the Bazaar by the Sioux Falls Branch. "Rebecca at the Well," from which
she drew forth refreshing lemonade, was kept very busy every evening. Adjoining the
Bazaar room was the Quaker supper room, the ladies in attendance wearing the old
Quaker costume. Miss Chapin had charge of this, and it was a most successful feature of
the Bazaar. At the top of the stairway leading to the hall was a booth for books,
photographs, etc., and on the other side of the hall, adjoining it, was the Eastern tea room,
the ladies serving tea being dressed in Oriental costume and the room being draped with
rich Oriental
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tapestries and curtains. There were also many beautiful specimens of Benares brass work.
Altogether there were about fifty ladies in costume at the Bazaar, each room presenting a
very pretty and attractive scene.
On the evenings of the 10th, 11th and 13th in the large Hall, Mrs. Richmond-Green
of Easthampton, Mass., gave a mystical interpretation of Shakespeare's "A Winter's Tale,"
illustrated by Tableaux Vivants. At first it was intended to give this on two nights only but
it was so successful and so well attended that it was decided to repeat it on the third
evening, and the attendance on that evening proved to be the largest of all. Signor Operti,
one of the best known artists in New York, had charge of the tableaux and is to be
congratulated on his arrangement of the beautiful pictures. The last picture was particularly
effective where Queen Hermione descends from the pedestal - King Leontes believing her
to be dead and gazing at what he thought to be her statue. Tableaux were also given of
a symbolical representation of the "higher and Lower Self" and one of "Old Egypt," followed
by the March of the Nations.
On the fourth night the unique entertainment of a tour around the world with the
Theosophical Crusaders was presented. The stereopticon lantern slides had been
specially prepared by Mr. W. D. Inslee, one of the best known New York photographers,
from a selection of photographs belonging to Mrs. Tingley's private collection. This was
one of Mrs. Tingley's many personal contributions to the Bazaar. Mr. J. H. Fussell gave an
account of the Crusade and described the pictures as presented, many of which were
entirely new and had never appeared on a screen before. Perhaps the most interesting of
all were the views of many of the rock-cut temples of India and the Pyramids of Egypt. And
of particular interest were the camp at Killarney, the Crusaders in Paris, the Crusaders on
Elephants in the Courtyard of the Palace at the deserted city of Amber, and Mrs. Tingley
at Darjeeling. Characteristic views were also shown of the inhabitants of most of the
countries visited including an Australian aboriginal, Maoris, natives of Samoa, etc.
Altogether this was the most interesting entertainment of the Bazaar. I understand that in
all probability Mrs. Tingley will send these views to be shown in other cities.
Many of the Branches throughout the country sent gifts to the Bazaar. The North
American Indian collection of curios was sent by the Sioux Falls Branch. Beautiful
evergreens, leaves and berries were sent from California and were used to decorate a
stand on which were placed copies of The New Century for sale and presided over by a
little girl dressed as the "New Century." Beautiful shells were sent from Point Loma which
Dr. Partridge had found in the caves there and had polished. Some Spanish hanging moss
was sent from Savannah and cotton flowers from Macon. R. W. Machell, of London, sent
two very fine pictures - a flower piece and a symbolical painting, and J. B. Longman sent
some of his beautiful pictures from Nashville. One was also received from Louisville, and
from Paul R. Goudman of New York. Many other gifts were received which cannot be
enumerated here for lack of space.
Reports have been received from Boston, Providence and Cincinnati - the Bazaars
there being most successful in every way.
During the last week in November the Macon Branch of the T. S. A. held a
Theosophical Jubilee. Mrs. E. C. Mayer and Rev. W. Williams went from New York to
assist at the meetings which were held every day for a week. On Thanksgiving Day a
supper was given by the Branch to over 1000 of the poor people. All the meetings were
crowded and much interest was aroused in the International Brotherhood League in
connection with
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which special meetings were held. Mrs. Mayer addressed a large meeting of ladies,
attended all the influential ladies of Macon. Other special meetings were held and excellent
reports were given by the newspapers. A full report of these meetings has already been
given in The New Century. A large increase in membership has resulted from them.
A new Branch with a large membership has just been formed at Portland, Oregon,
under the name "The New Century Branch."
The Pacific Coast Theosophical Committee have issued their usual monthly report
of Branch Work and other activities showing the splendid work that is being done on the
coast.
We regret to have to record the death of Mrs. B. H. T. Wilson, one of the charter
members and most faithful workers of San Diego T. S.
A donation of Theosophical literature was recently made to the U.S. Prison, McNeil's
Island, Wash.
News reached us too late last month for insertion in our columns that Dr. Archibald
Keightley had resigned from the Presidency of the Theosophical Society in England. Dr.
Keightley had been contemplating this step for some time owing to his increasing medical
practice. This does not, of course, mean that Dr. Keightley has resigned from the
Theosophical Society. He has rendered faithful service to the cause in past years, and it
is with great regret that we have to record his resignation from the office which he filled so
well. No one, however, is more convinced than Dr. Keightley himself, of the necessity for
carrying on the work at all times without regard to changes in personnel.
Readers will have noted that in our last number we published a very faithful picture
of Dr. Keightley and Dr. Coryn. The latter as Director of the Home Crusade work, has been
rendering great service along with Mrs. Cleather and Mr. Crump, and writes cheerfully of
the progress made. They recently paid a visit together to Sweden, and news just received
from there indicates that they achieved a great success. The number of members in
England has trebled during the past year and a half, and the work goes on increasing all
the time, demanding constant attention of all officers of the Society, but especially the
President, and we have no doubt the members will elect some one who will be in a position
to devote as much time to the work of the Theosophical Society in England as its growing
demands necessitate. - J. H. F.
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Note. - We regret that this issue is a few days late in appearance, but the holidays
and extra pressure of work in other directions caused the unavoidable delay.
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AUM
[Death Speaks:] The Great Beyond gleams not for the fool, led away by the
delusion of possessions. "This is the world, there is no other," he thinks: and so falls again
and again under my dominion. - Katha Upanishad
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD
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Vol. XII February, 1898 No. 11
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AWAKE! Arise! dear child! wish only and thy dream is over! I touch thy lips and
eyes and hair with Golden Flowers. I kiss thy heart with singing flame of Hope and Beauty.
Open thy eyes: the Sun of the Eternal Truth is shining. Awake, and find thyself an Angel
among the Angels, and do not dream thyself a mortal. A child of the ages, take thy
hereditary share of endless progress. Thy past went forward to prepare the Way, thy future
is awaiting thee already. The space of endless blue gives thee access to every star of the
Immortal Wisdom. Look! there is no check, no limit - all, all is thine.
The reader may easily see that Humanity is the child and Theosophy is the Angel,
who awakes the child, and that Theosophy is no bare system of ideas, but the living speech
and light and power of our Elder Brothers, those men who have attained to the Angelic
plane, and of that higher plane itself and its innumerable Hosts, who speak through our
inner souls, whether they look inside, or interpret the beauty and meaning of the outer
nature. And when this is known and felt and assimilated, it is no more the outer nature.
If some one tells you that Theosophy is here in this one book, or in the mind of this
one sage or in this society and nowhere else, do not believe him. It is only in your own
heart, and it is because your heart is not your own. Your heart dwells in all things, and all
things dwell in it - the flowers, the birds, the skies, your dear ones, your country and your
God, the hope and joy of all humanity, the brotherhood of all existing. Everywhere it
spreads the same mysterious golden glow, embracing and unifying all for it is an ever
growing reflection of the Unknown which your soul may worship only in silent adoration.
The unbroken diamond Unity of the World's Heart, of which we are the undetached
sparks, is then the reflection of and the outreach to that Infinite, Inscrutable Causeless
Cause, which is so singly One, that there is no Second with which to compare, and know
it more changeless and all embracing than space in which all planets move, more still, than
silence in which all sounds find harmony and rest.
This is the first fundamental proposition of the Secret Doctrine, and with the other
two it gives the framework for its philosophy.*
Now if the reader has studied well and grasped these three propositions, or rather
feels himself in their grasp, if he feels himself a child of a Bright Ray of the Boundless
Unknown, a candidate for the Eternal Progress, an heir of all Perfection, Wisdom and Bliss:
if he keeps his eyes as free from prejudice as they
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* The reader is refer red to the Secret Doctrine by H.P. Blavatsky, Vol. I, pp. 14-47,
new edition, pp. 12-45.
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were free and hopeful in the freshness of his morning, if he keeps his heart aglow, as in the
dawn of his childhood, when the First rays of the Sun kissed him sweetly with an undying
promise, then well for him if he start all his thoughts from this deepest thought, which is no
thought at all, though embracing all thoughts, as space embraces all forms; and starting
from it lose the thread that he may return again free, unbounded and unclouded - a brother
of the Stars of the Eternal Space.
There is a book so ancient, so venerable, the oldest manuscript in the world, known
but to the very few, who have deserved to understand it. A few chapters of it, with
commentaries added, are translated and published by H.P. Blavatsky, in her great work
called "The Secret Doctrine." There the reader may find that these few chapters of the
"Book of Dzyan" elucidate Cosmogony in a most logical manner, and not, as does the
modern science, from a multitude of the innumerable Gods, called the atoms, of whose
origin science, however, is silent, notwithstanding its theory of differentiation from a
homogeneous something. The first two chapters of the Book of Dzyan describe that
Unknown Unity. where Spirit-Consciousness, which is the Father, and Matter, which is the
Mother, and the Universe, which is the Son, were all once more one; where time was not,
for it lay asleep in Indefinite Duration; where the Universe was concealed in the Divine
Thought and in the Divine Bosom. Then follows a description of how this concealed
Universe, the Son - and there are many sons - emerged from this inner condition, its Matter
expanding from within outward, and its Spirit appearing as a ray sent from the Unknowable
Darkness to enlighten that which, being outward, needs its radiance to shine consciously.
Now, first matter is simply objectivity, very spiritual, homogeneous, clear. This spirit
matter is the Logos, the first Atom-Universe. It becomes now manifested Unity and
differentiates into the Seven Lords of Being, which are one in Him, as thoughts are one in
a brain. Matter divides also into seven planes, and then again into 49, from the subtlest
down to the grossest. The Seven Dhyanis, or Lords, radiate new hosts of being, and so
on to Devas. to elementals, even to the smallest mineral atoms, all is branched out and
differentiated from that great Tree whose root is the Logos and which grows in the Eternal
Unknowable. The Tree of the Universe is periodical in its manifestation, and the farther the
branch from the centre the more frequent is its period.
From Mahamanvantaras etc. - 311,040,000,000,000 years, to planetary rounds each
of many million years, then to human race periods, coinciding with geological periods, then
to the tropical years of 25,868 years, to human life and post-mortem rest on the pure mind-
plane, and then life again, then to common years, months, days, to the periods of sound
several thousand times a second, and even to the 700.000.000.000.000 vibrations in a
second in a violet light, all these are expressions of the same law and show that the leaves
and shoots vibrate faster than the branches. Of course the Tree symbol should be
understood mystically. It illustrates at once involution and evolution, immortality and
reincarnation. It shows the Great One Life containing man ("I am the vine, you are the
branches." - Gospel of John), men containing cells, cells containing molecules, molecules
containing atoms. The one plan throughout the Universe. From it follows that, as the
human body restores anew its lost cells in a wound, for instance, so the Planetary Logos
restores again the lives of men on earth. This is reincarnation, the reaching and
withdrawing of tentacles of the higher ideal being, who
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them periodically.
The sixth is this world of phantoms, of pale, lost dreams, of forms of thought,
escaped from the children of the Mind, which were not perfect, dropped from the Unity.
mistakes, as it were, for which the Angels are yet responsible, and must gather them
through the living creatures of the earth and through man, their crown. For in man meet
the two worlds. In his outer nature are creatures of the earth, in his inner depths are
angelic forces and deeper yet the light divine itself, his Christ and Saviour, and through him
the Saviour of all nature.
The seventh is this physical world and our physical body, an outer shell, a hardened
dream, which gives the shape to the molecules of the lowest matter, soaked all through and
through with the cohesive force of desire emanated from man.
(To be continued)
--------------
WHAT IS MIND?
by Dr. B.C. Buchanan
Mr. Herbert Spencer, in his Principles of Psychology (Vol. I, page 145), says that "we
know nothing about it and never can know anything about it.'' Yet, as he himself, in the
same volume, goes on to discuss "the Substance of Mind," "the Composition of Mind," and
"Life and Mind as Correspondence," we need not be quite discouraged. We each of us
have one of our own and we may well exercise it in the study of itself.
It may help us to arrive at a more satisfactory conclusion as to what mind is, by first
considering what it is not. Says Prof. Ladd, in his Physiological Psychology: - "However
our states of consciousness may be related to the states of the brain, the two are certainly
not the same. What is true of all material elements is true of those of the brain: they can
do nothing but move. And so far as we know anything about the molecular activities of the
central nervous system which are most directly connected with the phenomenon of
consciousness, they do not differ essentially from other molecular activities of this system
not thus connected with consciousness.
Suppose it were possible with the microscope to discover the exact chemical
constitution of every molecule of the
substance of the brain, and that by some such process as that described by THE-MAN-
WHO-DID-IT, in Mr. Lloyd's wonder-book, Etidorpha, we could look into the interior of our
own brains, and watch the motion of all the atoms in the phosphorized fats and the hurrying
blood currents, as chemical changes take place, or as waves of nerve commotion in infinite
variety move hither and thither among the countless nerve fibres and nerve cells. We
should then discern but the physical functioning and product of the physical brain, the
molecular activity of material particles. Strive as scientists may, to reason out
consciousness as the product of the brain, they cannot identify the molecular changes
continually taking place, in the work of nutrition and depletion, with the happenings of our
consciousness.
The phenomena of human consciousness must be regarded as activities of some
other form of Real Being than the moving molecules of the cerebrum. That the subject of
the states of consciousness is a Real Being is a conclusion warranted by all the facts.
Mental phenomena show what it is by what it does. The so-called mental "faculties" are
only the modes of the behavior in consciousness of this Real Being. If the complexity of
mental phenomena is bewil-
--- 199
deringly great, so the unity of consciousness is striking and unique. It is the same "I" from
the dawn of self-consciousness through all subsequent changes. All the different mental
phenomena of an individual are but different states of the one consciousness, and the
binding force of memory is dependent on this unity.
It is too late for Science to object to the assumption of the non-material nature of
mind, for the whole fabric of materialism rests and is built upon the hypothetical atom,
which, to say the least, is super-sensible. The best efforts of modern investigation to
describe the nature of atoms is not only incomplete, but often self-contradictory. What an
atom is can only be described by telling what it does; but in telling what it does, we always
find ourselves implying certain relations to other atoms, involving complicated hypotheses
concerning its modes of behavior as caused by the presence and mode of behavior of
some form of being that binds them together and makes them work to it unity of plan. And
we can form no conception of a "plan" which is not a phenomenon of mind, and no
conception of a "unity" that does not depend upon the unifying actus of the mind.
To "be really" and to be the one permanent subject of changing states are but
different ways of expressing the same truth. It is for this reason that modern Physical
Science, which affirms the eternity of matter, regards the atoms as having a permanent
reality which does not belong to composite structures - the things of our experience - into
which the atoms enter. The atoms are supposed to remain with unchanged natures
through all the changes of relation which they may undergo. Their reality depends on their
capacity for being the subject of so-called states. They follow a law, or an idea which
recalls them to the same states when the same circumstances recur. To have a variety of
changing states attributed to it, as the subject of them all - this is to demonstrate in
consciousness a claim to Real Being."
So much for the line of thought carried out by Prof. Ladd, and it is not easy for a
student of occult science to understand how he could reason so far without reaching the
broader philosophy of the chapter on Gods, Monads and Atoms in the first volume of the
Secret Doctrine, positing at the root of each Atom a God of life and intelligence, a god we
call "The monad." Atom is one of the names of Brahma.
"States are changing, they have a transitory and phenomenal being," Ladd goes on
to say. "The soul exists in reality above all other kinds of being, because it alone, so far as
we know on good evidence, knows itself as the subject of its own states. And it arrives at
the state or plane of self-consciousness in the mind, which is its vehicle for acquiring
experience. It is a Real Being which acts, and knows itself as acting: which is acted upon,
and knows itself as affected: which is the subject of states, and itself attributes these states
to itself; which develops" [or evolves], "according to a plan, and so remembers and
comprehends the significance of its past states, that it can recognize the fact of its own
development'' [or evolution].
But evolution is only one-half the equation, and herein lies the weakness of modern
science, it must be balanced by involution. "Out of nothing, nothing comes," and rational
minds can admit the word "creation," only in the sense of making a thing something which
it was not before. In this sense man "creates" a garment, a house, a city; and higher
Intelligences "create" men, worlds, universes. All that evolves in actuality on the objective
plane and is known to us in phenomena, was first involved in potency on the subjective
plane in the necessary correlate of noumena. So that mind and all the at-
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tributes of man are universal principles diffused throughout Kosmos. temporarily focused
and individualized in man. Everything on the subjective plane is an eternal is, as everything
on the objective plane is an "ever becoming"
Involution starts from the highest plane of pure spirit and descends through psychic,
intellectual and animal to the lowest plane of matter, spirit becoming ever more and more
concealed as it is plunged deeper and deeper into
a latent, sleeping nucleus, wrapped in sheath after sheath. We pay this price for our
knowledge of matter in embodiment. It is because of this Divinity which thrills in the heart
of every atom that evolution takes place on the physical plane from the simple and
homogenous up to the complex and heterogeneous. Evolution is an eternal cycle of
becoming and Nature never leaves an atom unused. From the beginning of the Round all
in Nature tends to become man. He is held to be the highest product of the whole system
of evolution and mirrors in himself every power, however wonderful or terrible, of nature;
by the very fact of being such a mirror, he is man. Prof. Agassiz says:
"The progress in the succession of beings consists in an increasing similarity of the
living fauna, and among the vertebrates especially, in the increasing resemblance to man.
Man is the end towards which all animal creation has tended from the first appearance of
the first Paleozoic fishes" - and this tendency is inherent in every atom, says the Secret
Doctrine. The One Law proceeds on the same lines from one eternity to another: the "fall"
of spirit into matter then redeeming it through flesh and liberating it, using for these
purposes the Beings from other and higher planes, men or minds evolved in previous
Manvantaras (periods of unmanifestation) as we are evolving now.
The Oriental teachings say: "The Breath becomes a stone; the stone, a plant; the
plant, an animal; the man, a spirit; and the spirit, a God." In Occult Science, there are no
"missing links," in its unbroken, endless chain; and each of these seven planes of
existence involves and evolves progressively the seven principles which have their
correspondences in the colors of the rainbow, in the primary tones of the musical scale and
everywhere in Nature, including man.
Let us take the plane of the invisible gases. So far as Western Science can detect
with its microscopes and crucibles, they are simply diffused substance, without form, life,
desire or mind as we know them. For the purpose of suggestive illustration (although not
with strict accuracy from the occult point of view) they may be considered to correspond
to the Breath, with only one principle manifest, namely, substance and six latent. Then
when the intelligent vis a tergo which propelled from the noumenal side of Nature that
which manifests on the phenomenal side of Nature as gas, has acquired all the experience
of the plane of gases (an experience which is recorded and preserved in itself) it climbs or
is lifted up to the mineral plane. "The Breath becomes a stone." Here it adds form to
substance, evolving two principles leaving five involved, manifests then the properties of
matter known to science. It enters into metals, gems and earths, learns the secrets of
crystallization and makes the round of the changes possible to the mineral cycle and then
its form is sacrificed, disintegrated by a growing plant, and it is lifted up to the vegetable
kingdom. Substance and form are supplemented by life, three principles evident to our
senses, four yet to evolve. ''The stone becomes a plant.'' It has now the new experiences
of germination, growth, maturity, reproduction and decay with new responsiveness to
sunshine and moonlight, heat and cold, rain and dew. There is a range quite impossible
to anticipate
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from the limited horizon of the mineral plane. Through every variety of texture, color and
odor, again the sacrifice is prepared and vegetable life is transformed into animal life, and
to its three principles the plane of desire adds motive. "The plant becomes an animal" -
four principles manifest, three yet latent. The animal secures food when hungry, and eats
until desire is satisfied, drinks when thirsty, exercises from instinct, provides a home
adapted to its needs, makes defenses, cooperates with others of its kind, for mutual
protection, wages war on enemies, periodically feels the attraction of the sexes, begets its
kind, tenderly rears its young, nourishes, protects and trains them, and becomes attached
to places and things. All these are the purely animal functions. Here is a wide outlook, a
vast range of experience. On such a broad basis a magnificent superstructure can rest.
What shall it be? "The animal becomes a man." How? By sacrifice as before and being
lifted up to the fifth plane, evolving the fifth principle, still leaving two latent. This principle
is mind, the eating of "the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil."
The animal knows neither good nor evil. It satisfies its hunger and thirst regardless
of the hunger and thirst of others or how the strength derived from food is to be expended.
It protects its young, because they are its young, and not another's. It is self-seeking, but
not selfish, because its self-seeking is its highest soul-expression and in it the Universal
Soul works through instinct to lift the planes below it up to the animal. It is actuated by
desire alone, its highest informing principle; hence it is not responsible and makes only
physical Karma. Man reaches a critical point in evolution, a point where he is required to
choose and where he exercises freewill. Choice always involves moral responsibility,
hence moral Karma. In order that he may choose, knowledge is necessary, knowledge
acquired by experience of both good and evil; and this he gains through the instrumentality
of mind. And what is mind? Whence comes it?
The Sanskrit root word "man" means "to think" hence "a thinker." It is from this word
very likely, that sprung the Latin "mens," - mind; the Egyptian "menes" - the "master-mind;"
the Pythagorean "monas" or conscious "thinking unit," and certainly our "manas," the fifth
principle in man.
The vocabulary of the English language has grown with the development and
requirements of its people. The history of the English speaking peoples is essentially a
history of conquest and of commerce; hence we have no lack of words for secular and
materialistic nomenclature. But when we enter the realms of metaphysics and the spiritual,
our poverty of terms obliges us either to coin or to borrow from foreign tongues. The
comparatively few Anglo-Saxon words that may apply to these higher concepts have been
so degraded and abused by lax customs that they have lost accuracy as means of
expression. The devout Oriental peoples on the contrary, having a heritage of ages of
contemplation, meditation and devotion, have evolved in their languages, terms conveying
gradations and shades of meaning yet unsensed and unsuspected by Western peoples in
those fields of knowledge which lie just beyond the physical. So that in pursuing the deeper
study of science and philosophy we find it helpful to adopt some of the Sanskrit terms which
have for centuries embodied with clearness a definite meaning.
We must remember clearly that an illustration is never the thing illustrated, but only
a stepping stone toward it. The reality can never be illustrated; it can only be experienced;
but an illustration may help us to analyze, to classify and to understand our experiences.
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The seven principles in man are not circles or rings, nor do they float detached one above
another, but they pervade and interpenetrate each other. Moreover each principle is
gathered up temporarily and continuously from a universal ocean like itself; just as the air
which now produces my voice and is an essential part of my life (Prana), is separated for
the moment from the atmospheric ocean about us. The seven universal planes are not
sharply divided from each other like the zones on a map, nor embraced one in the other,
like a nest of Chinese boxes, although they are specific degrees of differentiation from the
One; they overlap and merge into each other. Strictly speaking, life and consciousness
and desire are universal and all-pervading, and all manifested things depend on an astral
basis for their being; it should not be misleading when, for the purpose of study, we
consider them separately, as we study the anatomical systems of physical man.
While we have been building up by the processes of Nature an animal man, for man
is, at base a perfected animal, through substance, form, vitality and desire, the four
principles of the lower quaternary; from the opposite pole of being, a beam or ray from the
Universal Sun of life and intelligence is focused in the Monad, which is the "God within"
atom and man alike, the Higher Self which we name Atma. It never separates from its
source. It is but a temporary loan of that which has to return to its source. It appropriates
a vehicle or sheath, still spiritual, but a degree nearer the plane of materiality than itself,
and comprising as its essence the highest, the purest and the most beautiful of the
endowments which may be attributed to the character of the Christ, whether we look upon
the Christ as an historical personage or a symbol and type divinely human in its ideal. And
this principle, the sixth, we call Christos or Buddhi, Divine Wisdom. This Buddhi principle
with Atma involved, again assumes a sheath or vehicle to bring it still nearer to the physical
plane and this sheath is akin to it in that both are soul; and is endowed with the power of
thought, - Manas, the Thinker, the Immortal Ego, man's fifth principle.
We now have the higher triad, formed by these three, Atma-Buddhi-Manas,
sometimes called the Real Man, the Eternal Pilgrim, who has made the rounds in latency,
during past Manvantaras, through the planes of substance, form, life and desire, recording
and preserving the experiences of each plane, manifesting of its infinite potentiality on each
plane, just so much as the limitations of matter would permit. Now, it would evolve on the
thought plane, and mind must be its vehicle.
Mind is One - an essential unit - creative, potent and spiritual. It manifests in
different degrees on the different planes of existence, and according to the capacity of the
vehicle through which it manifests. The microscopic cells and molecules of man's physical
body have a mind of their own. This physical mind manifests its intelligence in the organic
function of digestion, in the circulation of the blood, in assimilating from the blood just such
portions as the tissues need, and in setting to work to repair at once any injury done to the
physical body; all of which goes on without our knowing anything about it, except in the
bare demands for food, drink, air and rest. So the physical mind continually creates and
preserves the substance of the body. The mind of the Astral plane, creates and preserves
the form which is its special mission. The mind of the plane of pure life creates and
preserves force, - the connecting link between substance and form. The mind of the Kamic
plane creates and preserves the expression of will through desire unmixed with imagination
or intellect. This fourth principle, Kama, is the balance principle of the whole seven. It
stands in the middle,
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and from it the ways go up and down. It is like the sign Libra in the path of the sun through
the Zodiac; when the sun (who is the real man) reaches that sign, he trembles in the
balance. Should he go back, the worlds would be destroyed; he goes onward and the
whole human race is lifted up to perfection. It is the basis of action and the mover of the
Will.
In man, on the fourth plane, mind wells up as "I am I." Consciousness turns upon
itself and distinguishes from itself everything that is not itself and recognizes its own eternal
identity. It views itself both as subject and object, and analyzes its own attributes and
powers. It is able to blend itself with any of the three planes below it; it is capable of rising
and blending itself with the three planes above it. It creates and preserves self-
consciousness, expanding until "the Universe grows I." How does this endowment of mind
become the property of animal man?
The course of evolution developed the lower quaternary and produced at last the
form of man with a brain of better and deeper capacity than that of any other animal. But
this primeval man in form, was mindless, the Adam of the second chapter of Genesis, who
was born an image of clay and into whom "the Lord God breathed the breath of life," but
not of intellect and discrimination. The Monads which incarnated in those forms remained
without self-consciousness for they were pure spirit and there is no potentiality for creation
or self-consciousness in a pure spirit on this our plane until it is mixed with and
strengthened by an essence already differentiated.
It becomes the task of the Fifth Hierarchy of Dhyan Chohans to bestow the
connecting link between the Divine and the animal, to inform mindless man and make of
him the Rational Man. The aggregate of all Dhyan Chohans constitutes the Universal Mind,
the fifth plane of Cosmos. Those of the Fifth Hierarchy who endowed man with mind, are
called Manasaputra. How did the Manasaputra get mind? Leibnitz conceived of the
Monads as "elementary and indestructible units endowed with the power of giving and
receiving with respect to other units, and thus of determining all spiritual and physical
phenomena." The Manasaputra, countless aeons before they endowed man with mind,
were Monads endowed with the power "of giving and receiving," and during their myriad
incarnations in lower as well as higher worlds, they assimilated all the wisdom therefrom -
becoming the reflection of Mahat, or Universal Mind. They became men as we are now
becoming men and arrived at the perfection towards which we are striving. This was in a
preceding Maha-Manvantara - ages of incalculable duration (about 311,040,000,000,000
years), which had rolled away in the eternity a still more incalculable time ago (a Maha-
Pralaya of equal duration with its twilight and dawn). They then passed into Nirvana and
are at this stage returning Nirvanees. So far then from Nirvana being annihilation, it is said
in the Sacred Slokas:
"The thread of radiance which is imperishable and dissolves only in Nirvana, re-
emerges from it in its integrity on the day when the Great Law calls all things back into
action."
"This thread of radiance," called the Sutratma, is in each of us the golden thread of
continuous life periodically manifesting in active and passive cycles of sensuous existence
on earth and super-sensuous in Devachan. On this luminous thread, like beads the various
personalities are strung. It is the Higher Triad, the Reincarnating Ego, the Eternal Pilgrim.
Those who had assimilated all the wisdom of their Manvantara "re-emerged" when they
were "called." They overshadowed the mindless races, set on fire and expanded the latent
elements of mind involved in man and refined them to the mental plane. This endowing of
man with
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Manas is symbolized in the "Fiat Lux" of Free-Masonry, and also in a religious ceremony
widely observed, by lighting many candles from one. The Manasaputra dropped a spark
from the light they had, which settled and expanded within, and set aflame the unlighted
brain-candles which were in readiness to burn, but could not light themselves. To construct
a Thinking Man, Living Fire was needed, that fire which gives the human mind its self-
perception and self-consciousness, or Manas. So I have pictured in this symbol of Manas,
a flame. But this Higher Manas is yet too refined and too vast to enter wholly into an
organism composed of but the four gross lower principles. So it shoots out a ray from itself
and clothes it with astral matter nearer akin to the Kamic plane as now evolved than is its
pure self. This astral dress, though it makes of Manas an active spiritual entity on this
plane, still brings it into so close contact with matter as to entirely becloud at present its
divine nature and stultify its intuitions. This ray, called the Lower Manas, is reflected
directly into the plane below, Kama, and constitutes with it, Kama-Manas, giving man his
brain-mind. This gives Manas during each incarnation a dual aspect and affinity. On its
upper side it aspires to Atma-Buddhi, clings to it, and at death follows it to Devachan (the
Heaven-World). On its lower side it gravitates to the animal passions. Right here, in
Kama-Manas, is the turning point of evolution, the battle ground of the human soul. Here
the struggle goes on between the higher and lower until one conquers, the choice is made
and the quality and tendency of his ruling desire catalogue a man in the Great Book of Life
as unerringly and as accurately as the ragweed and the fragrant jessamine are catalogued
by the botanist.
Let us see what Lower Manas does for man in acquiring a knowledge of good and
evil. Its function is pure intellection: alone it is colorless, calculating, incapable of affection
or self-sacrifice. It confers the power to reason from premises to conclusions, and to grasp
analogies; gives acuteness, subtlety, rationalized cogitation. It is tainted by each object
presented to it and is altered into its shape and other characteristics. Its four peculiarities
are: 1st., - to naturally fly off from any point; (the student who tries to practice
concentration encounters this); 2d, - to fly to some pleasant idea; 3d, - to fly to an
unpleasant idea (these three are due to memory), and 4th, - to remain passive; normally
in sleep. These peculiar hindrances to the activity of Higher Manas are what it has to light
and conquer. Lower Manas retains all the impressions of a life-time and sometimes
strangely exhibits them in a flash. Higher Manas stores up the essence of all incarnations
and gives to each new one the results of past experience, in its tendencies and inclinations.
The special characteristics of Lower Manas are imagination - the image-making
faculty - and the sense of separateness. The brute has neither. Imagination is a most
potent factor in acquiring a knowledge of evil and equally so of good, when Lower Manas
consummates at-one-ment with its "Father in Heaven," the Higher Manas, and shares its
immortality. But while it is attached to the purely animal functions, it robs them of the
automatic impulse of necessity, and arrays them with protean kaleidoscopic attractiveness,
magnifies their importance, until man comes to feel himself a god in their exercise, while
he is really degrading himself into a demon. God, he is, potentially, and the demon of lust
and selfish greed is, after all, only "the god inverted." In the light of this single Manasic ray,
reflected downward things are not what they seem."
Imagination's magic wand touches the animal craving for food and drink, and they
become in animal man gluttony and
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''We are daily creators of not only our own future, but the future of that humanity of
which we are a part; and just as humanity rises in the scale of being, the lower planes are
lifted toward the human. The sage who said, "My mind to me a kingdom is," might well
have said, "My mind to me a universe is" - the only universe we shall ever know. The form,
the color, the sound, the beauty of Nature are creations of the mind. Two men view a
ripening field of wheat. One sees what distance apart the stalks are on the ground, the size
and fullness of the heads, and estimates the number of bushels the harvest will yield and
how many dollars they will represent. The other sees a theme for verse and tuneful song,
the poetry of its waving billows, the glint of the sunshine on its russet gold, and in all the
expression of the tender and bountiful love of the All-Father. It is the same wheat field.
Why such different views of it? The difference exists in the quality of the two minds.
Vibrations and contacts are all that exist in Nature. Our minds, which are the reality, create
all the rest in sensation and feeling. The mind sees no objects whatsoever, but only their
idea. The ancients held that all things whatsoever existed in fact solely in the idea, and
therefore the practitioner of Yoga was taught and soon discovered that sun, moon and
stars were in himself.
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It is desire (Kama) that leads and propels to creation, - of worlds cosmic children -
as well as their pigmy inhabitants. It is the bond between entity and non-entity. Desire
leads to knowledge; first along paths familiar through the animal instincts, where
imagination leads us ever in a childish quest for the treasure that lies where the rainbow
rests. Desire leads to knowledge and may be directed by mind to higher planes, where
knowledge joined with truth and justice becomes Wisdom, and where creation reaches out
into the Infinite. Job says, "Where shall wisdom be found? and where is the place of
understanding?" xxviii, 12. In another chapter he gives the answer, "With the Ancient is
Wisdom"; (the "Ancient" is man's Higher Ego) "and in the length of days" (that is, in the
number of its re-incarnations) "is understanding." xii, 12. St. James says, "The Wisdom
that is from above" (from Higher Manas) "is first pure, then peaceable, gentle and easy to
be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality and without hypocrisy." iii, 17.
How different from the worldly-wisdom of today!
But this Higher Manas, the source of pure Wisdom, is yet asleep in all of us. Some
of us show the restlessness of sleepers near their awakening, perchance disturbed by
dreams. The sleeping faculties of the mineral realm dream of growth; the vegetable world
swayed by sighing or shrieking winds, dreams of independent locomotion and voluntary
voice; animals tamed by man, who dominates the globe, look wistfully into his eyes and
dream of his wonderful powers. And we too, dream of immortality - the cherished dream
of all mankind; we dream of love which brings completeness, pure, unselfish and free from
passion; we dream of justice and brotherhood and omniscience. Shall not our dreams
come true? When Lower Manas shall project itself up toward Higher Manas, it will form the
Antahkarana, the connecting link between the two, and then genius and prophecy and
spiritual inspiration can flow from their source above down into the brain mind.
Those who have traveled this unknown way send messages back, and this is one
of the messages: "Higher Manas is unconditionally omniscient on its own plane." Think
of it! Omniscience your heritage, and mine, when we have learned to cross this little
bridge; never again to falter through ignorance, never to go astray through delusion. The
very desire to do and to become is the promise and potency of attainment; for desire is the
mover of the Will, and in the realm of thought, the real world, Will rules supreme. The world
of thought is a sphere whose radii proceed from one's self in every direction and extend out
into space, opening up boundless vistas all around - "the centre which is everywhere, the
circumference nowhere."
We hardly know the meaning of the word "Will." It suggests to us the arbitrary or the
despotic, while in fact the highest exercise of Will comes from a knowledge of Nature's laws
and directing our will in harmony with them. Creation is but the result of Will acting on
phenomenal matter, the calling forth out of it the primordial divine Light and Life. All of
man's inventions are created first in the mind and then precipitated into matter. The human
Will, the Will of higher Manas, is all-powerful, and the Imagination stands next to it in power
and is its inseparable ally. When imagination is check-reined, trained and guided, it
becomes the Constructor in the Human workshop, the King faculty. It evolves in the astral
substance an image or form which may then be used in the same way as an iron molder
uses a mold of sand for the molten metal. Will cannot do its work if Imagination be at all
weak or untrained. Matter is held suspended in the
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air all about us. The Adept (one who is at home in Higher Manas) selects a form, and
Imagination photographs it, sharply definite in every line, in a mind picture, and then Will
precipitates from the air the pigment to fall within the limits laid down by the brain, the most
highly evolved organism in the world, "the exhaustless generator of force and form." Or the
Adept disperses the atoms of an object to such a distance from each other as to render the
object invisible, and can then send them along a current formed by his will in the ether to
any distance on the earth. At the desired point, the dispersing force is withdrawn when
immediately cohesion re-asserts itself and the object re-appears intact.
These, and yet more wonderful powers belong to Mind, the recital of which seems
to us enumerating the attributes of Divinity. They will be man's possession in the future.
They are the possession of a chosen few now. They would be ours today were it not for
blind dogmatism, selfishness and materialistic unbelief. When we shall free ourselves from
these and hush the cries of the animal within, then we can hearken to the Voice of Silence
and walk illuminated by the clear, steady brilliance of the Divine Light of Mind.
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ONLY a very few people, if indeed any, can be considered as wholly insusceptible
to the influence of music. But because of its intangible and indefinable properties, the value
of this influence, when considered in its aspect of moral guide and character molder - is
mostly underrated. Music as an instructor is sui generis and employs a method all its own,
differing fundamentally from any other method, through which intelligence can be imparted
to the human understanding. Thus it is not through reflection or ratiocination that the
element of music enters our consciousness, but on the contrary depends for its true
appreciation upon the suspension of these very functions. Evidently there are centres in
the human constitution, that do not require the slow and cumbersome machinery of thinking
and reasoning to transmit impressions into our consciousness. If we read a poem or study
a painting, our profit of the mental and moral wealth contained in these art presentations,
is directly proportionate to the extent our intellectual faculties - our perceptive, reflective and
reasoning faculties have been employed in the process. A poem or a painting, however
exalted its character may be, must be intellectually understood in order to be thoroughly
appreciable, while when listening to music every effort to analyze its technical make-up
unfits us at once to partake of its inner moral sense.
The account which Mozart gives of the mode and method of his musical conceptions
may serve as a case in point for the likelihood of the view here taken. The wonderful
conceptions of his master-genius which he embodied in musical compositions, entered his
consciousness without - as he himself tells us - any assistance of the intellectual faculty.
The several elements of the composition appeared to him before his inner vision as the
flitting scenes in a moving panorama, presenting detail after detail, the one passing out of
his consciousness as the other entered, until the whole totality, full-orbed and rounded out
in all its details emerged from the unknown and invisible, to pass in dramatic order before
his mind. This final review, when the entire composition in its minutest
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details and in all its glory appeared upon the scene, he describes as resembling the
pictorial representations of a strong, fine dream and carrying with it a feeling of the most
absorbing rapture.
Thus music seems to draw its elements from a source far beyond the reach of
intellection, and carries on a direct communication between the human soul and the
Universal soul. The intelligence thus received might be called "direct knowing," attained
to without the agency of the lower, intellectual mind. The painter and poet, notwithstanding
their own intuitions, can reach the consciousness of their fellow men only through reason
and reflection, inasmuch as their genius in order to be intelligible must be clothed in form
or symbol. Descriptive arts such as poetry, painting and sculpture, refer to the estimates
of a weighing and balancing reason, and though the forms and figures assumed by these
arts, may strike us as new and original, in their details they are nevertheless copies
obtained from the phenomenal world. Hence we may hold, that the truths revealed by the
pencil, chisel or word, can reach our consciousness only through individual thought
processes. Thus the word in which the poet finds a vehicle for his ideas, depends for its
more or less true appreciation upon the discerning and judging capacities of the reader's
mind. The musical composer depends upon no forms or verbal limitations when paving his
way to the consciousness of his fellow men; his creations have no patterns in the world of
form, but are the limitless expressions of original spiritual vision, delivering the intuitional
messages without the distorting medium of ratiocination.
The value of music as a moral guide is therefore easily conceived. The moral idea
when reaching us through the instrumentality of intellection becomes more or less colored
by its intermediary channels. But through the agency of music we are ushered directly into
the sanctuary of divinity and receive the moral idea in undefiled purity, serene and holy as
its source. Language fails utterly to describe or even to hint at the thrills of silent bliss that
pierce our being when we listen to the magic of harmonic sounds. An indefinable feeling
of oneness or identity with every unit of existence creeps over the soul; we experience a
sense of boundlessness, and disappear in the universal. Lifted up by the mighty, soul-
stirring waves of rhythm, we feel as if carried through spheres of love and beauty towards
the altar of eternal truth. There, with the stormy bursts of passions and desires silenced,
with the whole sensorium of the mind in a temporary suspension, spiritual verities become
exposed to the gaze of the soul, as we drink from the ever flowing fountain of holy truth the
exhilarating draughts of moral and spiritual regeneration. Through the medium of music
our souls are made to vibrate in unison with the World-soul, and its mighty reservoir of
purity and love pours out on us its riches. We become suddenly filled with a sense of
exalted morality and sympathy for the forces and powers that make for good; feelings of
self and personality, ever attendant on our ordinary life, dissolve in such moments into
compassion and a limitless largeness of heart - like the flitting shadows of night melt away
to a rosy dawn when the sun wells up an ocean of light over an awakening world. The
moral impulses received during such journeyings with deity "are of highest order, and
furnish an ideal guide for human conduct. It is true that these exalted notions do not
always obtain a permanent seat in our ordinary consciousness, but give way to other
influences when the music has ceased to rule us with its melodies; but it is also true that
every repetition of subjecting oneself to such elevating influences, traces deeper and more
defined channels in our mind until finally a direction of
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thought has been established, and the tide of our moral nature turned permanently towards
the good and the ideal.
The influence which music exerts upon the animal creation is another evidence of
its super-intellectual source. For were music an output of intellectual processes, it would
have remained wholly lost to the animal consciousness, especially to those of the less
developed order, as in the latter there can hardly be suspected any elements of thought
and reason. Therefore it must be through the instinct, which is identical in essence, though
not in degree, with the human intuition, that the harmonies of music can find a response
in the animal consciousness. And it is further to be noted that the lower the position the
animal occupies in the natural evolution, and the less it can be suspected of possessing
reflective powers, the more susceptible is it to the influence of music. Thus the snake
charmer has in his pipe or flute a power to which the most dangerous reptile finds itself
compelled to surrender. Rats and mice are extremely fond of music, and may under its
influence expose themselves unconcernedly to impending dangers. The skylark and the
nightingale whose musical presentations are not without technical precision must, in lack
of any other instructor, be supposed to obtain the notes for their musical performances
directly from the great conservatory of "the harmonies of the spheres."
But not only animals are susceptible to music. The movements of the molecules
that constitute what is termed material substances are regulated by the rhythm of sound.
I once heard an old German professor affirm that in the grand organ in one of the European
cathedrals - I think the Strassburger Munster - is to be found, a note, which if sounded
alone would shatter the Temple to dust. This stupendous power of sound has already
entered the region of more or less recognized facts. Already have ordinances been issued
by a number of cities both in the United States and in Europe in which music bands are
prohibited from performing on iron bridges. This universal power of music to introduce
changes in the constitution of things and objects exposed to its influence indicates
irresistibly the interrelation in which all nature's products stand to each other, from the
atoms of a piece of metal up to the highest arch-angel - united through the universal
medium of rhythm.
To the ancient this mighty instrumentality for the play of universal energy was by no
means unknown. Orpheus, we are told, moved the birds in the air and the fishes in the
deep by the melodies from his god-strung lyre. Even trees and rocks yielded to the magic
of his divine overtures and moved in accord with his melodious strains, yes, even the grim
visage of the ferryman on the river Styx relaxed its deadly sternness, when Orpheus upon
his journey to Tartarus, let his instrument vibrate in the dismal regions of the underworld.
In the fabled theatre of Orpheus, where all kinds of beasts of prey assembled to form his
grotesque audience, is likewise indicated the power music exercises over the brute
creation. As long as the performance proceeded, the various instincts and appetites of the
animals were held in check, and species - at other times the most irreconcilable enemies,
fraternized in a spirit of touching brotherhood; but no sooner had the last strain died away
before their native promptings asserted their power, and a warfare of everyone against
everyone set in with all the fury of murderous instincts.
Amphion, another interpreter of Apollo, is credited with having built the walls around
Thebes by causing rocks to move in accord with the tones from his flute and to assume the
shape of symmetrical structures. These and a multitude of kindred traditions seem to
indicate that mankind once were in the possession
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of an insight into the potencies of sound, and of power to manipulate them, but lost these
attainments by their heedless pursuit of the sensuous and purely material, and by their
neglect of the intuitional and divine, as it is only through the activity of the latter that we can
succeed in bringing into play the dormant powers which lie as germs in the mysterious
depths of human nature.
Thus music would seem to serve as a link connecting the visible to the invisible,
being a vehicle or means by which man may obtain knowledge concerning his divine
ancestry, and be guided by it when entering upon self-conscious relations to spiritual
forces. What, then, is the character of this marvelous element - all pervading and all
controlling - i.e., what is the genesis of music?
The manifestation of all life and consciousness, of form and substance, proceeds
through the endless flow of impulse welling out from an unknown and indefinable source.
It is this undifferentiated, ever-moving energy, lying back of and engendering all motion,
that is included in the term monad. The latter can therefore not be thought of as a monad,
but as the monad, as the contemplation of its essence and mode of action conveys to one's
mind the idea of a wave of vital force that moves from shore to shore of universal life - if the
expression be permitted - casting up infinite varieties of form and substance. Each of these
manifestations - be it a pebble, a worm, a man, or angel - expresses in terms of form and
substance the degree of development attained by the monad in its course through universal
evolution. Though in itself invisible and unknown, the monad reveals to us the course and
character of its movement by bringing about conscious relations between its essence and
the available senses of our nature. Thus the monad addresses the physical being through
his fivefold sense-perception, as sound, light, smell, touch, taste, each of these functions
expressing but the different aspects of one and the same original energy.
In sound, however, we find a substratum to all the other elements of sensation. For
as the key to growth and development lies in motion so the character of motion is contained
in the mystery of sound. Thus in sound we find a register of motion - an index, so to speak,
in which the whole sweep of universal motion has an appropriate correspondence. As for
instance, to use a rough explanation, the sound following a bullet whizzing through the air,
describes the course and movement of the bullet, so the monad, moving through Universal
evolution must give rise to what we might conceive of as ideal or undifferentiated sound.
That a force-current however, may be manifested, its course must he disturbed, like a
smoothly flowing body of water reveals it course and strength by the ripples produced by
an obstacle placed in it. Likewise electricity, magnetism, heat, gravity and a number of
other forces become known to us only through disturbances caused by terrene conditions
in the current of some cosmic energy. The sound or rather its abstract conception moves
in mighty waves through the various planes of cosmos, ever registering the course and
character of the monadic movements. To our physical ear this "sound" however is ideal
silence as its currents sweep through our auditory nerve centres without conscious
appreciation by the latter. First through a disturbance of its homogeneous essence set up
by mechanical changes in the medium through which it flows, this "sound" becomes audible
to our hearing apparatus, and from subjectivity passes into objectivity.
From the definite relations always existing between a cause and its effect, it follows
that a given disturbance of the subjective sound wave must elicit a corresponding objective
sound; and a sympathetic arrangement of these disturbing
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causes would naturally give rise to facilities, through which an intelligible interpretation of
this inaudible sound might be brought about. Such a systematic arrangement is found in
our tone-scale, and by striking a series of notes on an appropriate instrument we succeed
in setting up such disturbances in the sound substratum that its reponses address our ears
as music.
If this be so, the influence of music cannot possibly be overestimated. For if we
admit that sound holds in its bosom the method of monadic unfoldment, it must be through
and by music that we possess an instrumentality by means of which we are able to elicit
from old mother nature an answer to the questions of life and death. Thus by setting up
a vibration that could disturb the movement of the life energy at work in fashioning - let us
say - a flower, the consciousness ensouling that flower would be elements of our
knowledge. Similarly with other objects of natural and spiritual evolution. The soul would
be capable under the magic guidance of music, of entering into self-conscious relations
with the numberless lives and essences that surround her.
This is the grand mission of the musical genius: to succeed in arranging such a
system of mechanical agents that the vibrations set up by them may elicit just such
revelations of the World-soul that correspond to and express his ideal conceptions. He
must possess the entirely intuitional power of discerning the relations existing between the
symbol and the idea; between divine thought and material form. Through his intuition, the
composer obtains an idea from the Universal Mind - i.e. - he permits a ray of the eternal
true to reflect itself in his soul. Next he feels the want of imparting this divine message to
his fellowmen. But to refer them to his own source and method of information would be of
little use as only a mind endowed with the same purity and responsive readiness as his
own could enter into a direct relation to the ideal. So the genius proceeds to define his idea
and to trace its silent current in the monadic stream. His art he now applies, and by
skillfully producing a series of mechanical sounds, corresponding to the character of his
spiritual vision, he creates a disturbance in the mystic "silence" and interrupts the current
in which his idea floats. Thus interrupted, the idea manifests in terms of tones and
melodies, and reveals its meaning to listening mortals.
To the extent the composer has succeeded in evoking vibrations that correspond
to his intuitions, to that extent is his composition true; and to the extent his mind has been
pure and holy, to that extent is his composition ethically exalted, as only the morally
developed mind is capable of reflecting the moral idea. And this at once leads us to the
conclusion that as well as music pure and elevating, so there must likewise be music
impure and degrading. Yet as music in itself - in its own eternal essence - must ever be
considered as perfect, ever divine - it follows that all discords and impurities which we meet
in a great number of modern compositions must be attributed to the defective nature of the
composer. If he has a morally exalted nature; if the principles which constitute his moral,
mental and physical make-up are harmoniously developed and capable of giving an
adequate response to the elements or principles potentially inherent in music, his
compositions will be divine, and he a teacher of highest order.
Such is the music of a Wagner and others, whose creations, be they elaborate
symphonies, religious hymnals or popular melodies re-echo in the human heart the infinite
harmonies of pure, untainted Being. Again if the moral nature of the composer is only
partially developed, enabling to catch only disconnected and disproportioned aspects of
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the fullness he attempts to interpret, his productions will reveal only distorted ideals to his
listeners, and in place of being morally elevating, his music becomes morally corrupt. For
evil is but misconstructed or misrepresented good, and an unequal stimulation of the seven
centres or principles in the human constitution disturbs the balance of soul-growth, by
causing an overplus of potency in one principle, and a corresponding atrophy in others.
Music therefore, like all other manifestations of the perfect through the imperfect,
has its two poles of expression, has its pair of opposites, its good and evil sides - guiding
and directing the individual either to heaven or to hell as the case may be. And being thus
exposed to an energy which by its very nature eludes the deliberations of reason and
reflection, the individual finds himself to a large extent at the mercy of his composer. For
through the mighty agency of rhythm the latter can sway the minds of his listeners as
completely as a hvpnotizer can control his subject. According to the character of the music
so will the person subjected to its influence find his several constitutional principles
affected.
If the composer's inspirations are of a wholly kamic order, the evoked vibrations will
solely affect the kamic principle of the listener and arouse its activity in an abnormal
degree. And as no stimulus is given to the remaining principles, the balance of the inner
man is disturbed and the mind plunged into a state of moral chaos. Dormant appetites will
awaken and clamor for gratification, and finally some favorite passion obtaining control of
the victim hurls him headlong into the commission of deeds, which his nature, left in its
ordinary balance, would never have sanctioned.
As such moral convulsions of the individual mind may seriously retard, and even
inhibit the evolution of the soul, it becomes of eternal importance to mankind to avoid all
kinds of impure music. The music furnished by our saloons, variety theatres and even at
times by military bands, by their one-sided pandering to the nurture and growth of some
one or other passion and appetite, at the expense and starvation of nobler promptings add
in a baleful measure to the sum total of human wretchedness. When society as a whole
shall have learned to realize the stupendous power active in music, either for good or for
evil, the moral forces of this world shall become equipped with a new armament in their
crusade against the powers of darkness.
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IT has been said that selfishness is the ruling trait in human nature; that every good
deed, every philanthropy, if traced to its secret motive, will be found to have its root in
selfishness. The rich man builds great institutions of learning or charity to perpetuate his
name. The man in business labors to amass a fortune that he and those he loves may
enjoy the luxuries and culture of life. The unlettered man labors with the same motive, to
bring to himself the fulfillment of his humbler and ruder desires. Even the mother who
sacrifices so much for her child, says MY child, with a love as selfish as it is great.
Our purpose to be Right, must be unselfish, and therefore it must start from the
heart. It is a lesson that we learn slowly. Often its only successful teacher is sorrow. Like
the sorrowing mother who went to Lord Buddha, asking aid for her stricken child, after a
long and painful search for a cure for her sorrow, we are often obliged to say "Ah, sir, I
could not find a single house where there was mustard seed and none had died" and
finding so the "bitter balm" and knowing "that the whole wide world weeps with our woe"
we realize the true brotherhood of man; and by driving out in such measure as we can, the
sense of separateness, we can begin at the root of the matter in our own hearts to foster
right purposes. We must remember that the selfish devotee lives to no purpose.
Having purified our purpose, we must fix it in our hearts. It must not be the sport of
our impulses and emotions, to be pursued with frantic zeal today and half forgotten
tomorrow. It must be in very truth a purpose. It is written, "Ere the golden flame can burn
with steady light the lamp must stand well guarded, in a spot free from all wind. Exposed
to the shifting breeze the jet will flicker and the quivering flame cast shades deceptive, dark
and ever changing on the soul's white shrine." So must we plant the lamp of our Right
Purpose deep in our heart, must fix the pure white light firmly upon the corner stone of the
foundation of our being, that it may not flicker with the winds of passing thought, and by
casting deceptive and ever changing shadows lure us from our great aim.
Based upon the broad foundation of the brotherhood of humanity our Right Purpose
will be far-reaching in its effects. We will in very truth have good will to all that lives, letting
unkindness die, and greed and wrath. To all that lives, to man and beast, to friend and
stranger, Good Will! When Buddha brought the message to the world the earth lay hushed
and peaceful under the mighty magic of the words. Hundreds of years afterwards celestial
beings sang the same song at the coming of another MASTER and all the earth rejoiced.
But in our hearts the discords of life arise and drown the echo of this song of life. And yet,
somewhere in every human heart, this mystic song still rings. Some call it "the cry of life"
but it is a song, the faint and broken echoes of the good will to all sung by all the Masters
of pure heart. To bring out and restore this lost harmony the great "lost chord" of human
brotherhood; "To point out the
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way, however dimly and lost among the host, as does the evening star to those who tread
their path in darkness,'' such is the work before us. Were such a work confined to one brief
life we would indeed be overwhelmed with the sense of its magnitude. As it is we stand
upon the threshold with fear and trembling until we realize that each word and thought must
be a power for good or evil. That each of us is in the place, and the only place for which
he is fitted, that "He who does not go through his appointed work in life has lived in vain,"
and that "it is better to do one's own duty even though it be devoid of excellence, than to
perform another's duty well." "It is better to perish in the performance of one's own duty,
the duty of another is full of danger." Knowing these things we turn bravely to the work
nearest our hand. We are cheered and encouraged by the knowledge that the kindly action
done in the seclusion of our home, the conquering of our impatience in the nursery, the
kind, good thought held firmly over some erring friend, in the silent midnight, while we
watch beside some bed of sickness, are forces as mighty as Nature herself and will bear
their karmic results just as surely as will the conquering of a nation, and are, in their place,
just as important.
Right Purpose must take into consideration all the circumstances surrounding the
individual. What would be a right purpose for the woman without home ties might be a
radically wrong purpose for the woman with a home. The deed that would be a high duty
for the woman without a family of children might be the reverse for her whose heart and
hours were full, caring for the souls in little bodies.
It is safe to say that nothing is a right purpose which calls us from the duty that lies
nearest our hand. Therefore it will be seen that no set rule can be laid down, but each
one's conscience must be the guide.
We stand upon the threshold of our seemingly narrow individual lives and our hearts
are overflowing with the grand thought of good will to all that lives, and we would fain rush
out to do and die, if need be, for this great suffering humanity. We see the greed and
unkindness all around us and we wish to carry this loving message to the world. Our hearts
are on fire. Our impulse is strong. Our imagination is exalted. Our purpose is kindly, and
upon the surface unselfish, for we feel that we would willingly suffer if we might do this
work.
A tiny hand plucks at our skirt. The homely duties of the household call us back to
our every-day life with a shock, that for the time robs us of enthusiasm, and we feel that we
have missed our opportunities. Many of us have known these experiences, have grieved
over them and wondered and sighed, "It might have been."
Dear Sisters, there is the mistake we all make so readily. Those duties we sighed
for were not our duties. Our own comes to us always, without fail. Neither is there
anything great or small. When in the family, if we can be a companion, a true helpmeet for
some honest man, rather than a plaything and a drag, we are accomplishing much indeed.
When we can make the home over which we rule a centre of strength, peace, self-control
and purity, for the members of it who must go out into the warring elements of the world to
fight the battle of life; when we can make it a place to which they can return to regain their
self balance, and get a fresh start, always from the right point, we are doing no mean or
insignificant thing for humanity. Indeed were such homes the rule - instead of the exception
there would belittle outside work necessary.
There too, we may learn and teach the difference between sympathy and
sentimentality and between love and its caricature, animal desire. Lessons that
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must be well learned and lived in our homes before we can hope for true social purity.
And then the children, what a wealth of opportunities they bring. Is it nothing to help
some soul learn the lesson of self-control; to teach the child that your gentle but firm
control of it is but to the end that it may learn to control itself; to watch for its mental health
and comfort while you care for the physical body; to trace with loving finger the page of
Spiritual wisdom, the learning of the soul, at the same time as you help with the gathering
of material knowledge necessary for this life, and so see the spirit, soul and body grow fair
and strong together and so know that you have accelerated the upward progress of one
soul?
Who, realizing the grandeur, the breadth and depth of these duties (which for the
vast majority of women are our duties) can long for larger opportunities and broader fields
of action
Why, Sisters, do you not know that wives and mothers may, if they will, work hand
in hand and heart to heart with Masters for the uplifting of humanity in this and coming
generations?
Only we must learn to do our duty without looking longingly to another's work and
to do our whole duty by every duty.
There are other duties which we all share in common with the women who have no
home ties. These are our duties to our own circle of friends. Here as elsewhere we should
base kindness upon true unselfishness. In the times of sorrow, temptation and wavering
which come to all of us, we should be steady, patient, kind and unchanging, thereby being
truly helpful, a friend indeed, a friend in need. To the friend and to the stranger, we should
give the true courtesy of honest kindness both in judgment and manner.
These are large lessons which can be learned in any walk of life, and which we can
always learn best in the surroundings in which we find ourselves. Every cause has an
effect. In honestly striving to form and firmly hold these right purposes to do our duty well
without selfishly longing to do some other duty that looks larger, for the gratification of the
vanity of the "I" so prominent in us; in learning to truly rejoice when the Karma of some
other brings to her what seems from our standpoint, ripe opportunities for large duty, and
the strength and purity of purpose to perform the task, we are setting up causes that must
result in the higher, broader growth of our own character. By it we are gaining mastery of
ourselves, without which we cannot hope to stand firmly on the upper levels of the path;
without which we will surely lose our balance at some perilous point in the road and topple
headlong into the abyss only to travel all the weary road again with infinite pain and labor.
Aye, truly are they blest, who learn this lesson of self-mastery on the lower levels of the
road. Thus shall we be prepared by our own work for constantly widening fields of labor.
Opportunity comes only to the prepared and we can add with equal certainty, it
never fails to come to the prepared. Nature has no misfits, we are all in the places we are
in because we belong there and nowhere else.
"Take, then, as much as merit has in store for thee, oh, thou of patient heart. Be of
good cheer and rest content with fate. Such is thy Karma, the Karma of the cycle of thy
births, the destiny of those, who in their pain and sorrow are born along with thee, rejoice
and weep from life to life chained to thy previous actions." "Act thou for them today and
they will act for thee tomorrow. 'Tis from the bud of renunciation of the self that springeth
the sweet fruit of final liberation."
Remembering these things and living upon these lines we shall be strong, and
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tender, and courageous. Our lives shall be like sweet airs passing by. We shall sow day
by day, the seed whose Karmic harvest shall be final liberation, for Karma never fails.
"Sweet fruit
Groweth from wholesome roots and bitter things
From poison stocks; yea, seeing too, how spite
Breeds hate, and kindness friends, and patience peace
Even while we live; and when 'tis willed we die
Shall there not be as good a 'then' as 'now'?
Haply much better, since one grain of rice
Shoots a green feather gemmed with fifty pearls
And all the starry champak's white and gold
Lurks in those little naked grey spring buds."
So is each faltering but sincere effort upward of the little naked, grey spring bud
whose sure fulfillment will be the perfect flower of the larger womanhood.
(To be Continued)
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PART II.
WE left Gotama standing on the pinnacle of worldly happiness, the darling and hope
of a great nation, wedded to a princess of incomparable beauty and loveliness of character
and the happy father of a boy whose artless prattle was the joy and music of his life. As
he traversed the marble terraces of his palace in the full enjoyment of all that art and wealth
could invent and procure, or wandered through its gilded corridors, forgotten were the
lessons he had learned amidst the frivolities and unrealities of his father's court. The past
with its gleams and flashes and dim foreshadowings of something higher and more
enduring than earthly and material things; with its fleeting perceptions and intuitions of a
domain of life and light, the heart's true home, the spirit's glorious habitat, all these in the
sunshine and effulgence of pleasing and sensuous delights in which he lived and moved,
all were forgotten, their memory faded away and Gotama like many a pilgrim, with senses
charmed and lulled by the melody of sweet sounds and the sight of some enchanting bower
by the wayside, in a moment of weakness and forgetfulness strayed from the upward and
onward path and lying down, dreamed the happy hours away. But dreams have their
ending; the awakening comes at last and we have to arise and face the stern actualities
of today and realize that we must be up and doing.
Years rolled by with Gotama, and his awakening dawned at last. The same old
thoughts and restless feelings, the same desires and longings and aspirations began once
more to operate within him. He felt again that inward yearning and craving after something
indefinable which eluded his every attempt to grasp and comprehend it and without the
acquisition of which, life must be a blank, and existence but a protracted misery. There
was now this great difference in favor of Gotama. Formerly he had no one to whom he
could unfold and make known without fear of ridicule his inward thoughts and feelings, no
one who could give the key and explain the
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strange mental state in which he then was, but now there was Gopa to whom he could
have recourse in his dark and joyless moments and make known the inward mental unrest
and disquietude of soul which were again agitating and operating within him; and she the
pure-minded spiritual Gopa proved herself to be a true friend and counselor in what was
to be the most important epoch, the great turning point in his life. She divined the nature
and meaning of the great crisis that was at hand; that the throes of a new birth into the
higher life were coming on and knew also what it all meant for her, that the time was
drawing nigh, that the hour was about to strike when that great soul must break away from
all the ties that had bound him, and forsaking kindred and friends, must go forth to the
accomplishment of his high destiny. Gopa had doubtless learned from some aged member
of the court, the wondrous incidents of his birth and the remarkable predictions of his future
greatness as a Buddha destined to bring light to mankind and deliver the world from the
darkness and thraldom of ignorance. Pondering over these things within herself, and ready
sacrifice everything which makes life dear, in order that Gotama might achieve the great
mission awaiting him, it came to pass, that when absorbed in meditation on the great
problems of life and death, wearied with vain and fruitless attempts to resolve them and
indulging in pessimist ideas, Gotama gave expression to his feelings of despondency, it
was Gopa who raised him out of the Slough of Despond into which he was again sinking
and portrayed to him the future in bright and vivid colors, and encouraged him to arouse
and prepare himself for his life's work.
Noble and magnanimous Gopa! It was indeed a dire and terrible sacrifice for her
to make; to part and become separated, how long, she knew not, from one in whom was
centred the hopes of her earthly existence, to forego the joys and endearments of domestic
life, the converse and presence of the one being around whom the tendrils of her
affectionate nature clung, as clings the ivy round the oak, for her the admired, the loved of
all, to become bereaved of husband, to drag out existence and henceforth to roam the
world, its tired, weary denizen. This the fearful prospect before her; but she heeded not
and in making this great renunciation, became enrolled into that great sisterhood of noble
and true-hearted women whose daily sacrifices of self remain so often unnoticed and
unknown. And now the same old thoughts and feelings had again assailed him. The same
vague restless craving after an ideal which eluded all his efforts to give it form and
expression, and that terrible inward vacuity which like an incubus crushed him down, that
feeling of infinite compassion for the misery and suffering afflicting humanity, combined with
a deep yearning to become the means of alleviating the lot of mankind and deliver it from
the heavy burden under which it groaned and grieved, all these caused the life of Gotama
to become a very unhappy one. "Nothing is stable on earth," he used to say, "nothing is
real. Life is like the spark produced by the friction of wood. It is lighted and extinguished
and we know not whence it came or whither it goes. There must be some supreme
Intelligence where we can find rest. If I could attain it, I could bring light to mankind. If I
were free myself I could deliver the world."
"If I were free myself!" In these few words lies enfolded the secret of the
unhappiness Gotama was enduring, the bondage of his higher self to his lower nature with
its strong passions and propensities towards the indulgence of those pleasures of sense,
whose tendency is to obscure and depress the divine within us, until at last, men and
women become metamorphosed, changed into mere ani-
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mated bundles of selfishness, the origin of all the ills and evils which afflict humanity. To
burst the bonds, to break the yoke of this galling servitude of self was now the great
problem that absorbed the attention of Gotama and engrossed all his powers of thought.
And this has been the great problem of all ages. Many have been the expedients tried and
suggestions put forth and systems of philosophy elaborated, specious in their pretensions
but which have proved ignes fatui, deceitful illusions luring benighted mortals to
irremediable failure and disaster and this must ever be so, as long as we are regardful of
self and its gratification, as long as we are attracted and become attached to the
phenomenal, the unreal and untrue, and live content their willing slaves. It is only when self
is conquered and passion subjugated, the feelings curbed and restrained and thought
disciplined, when worldly ambition and inordinate desires for the things of time and sense
are cast away; when the true, the noble and manly become embodied in our words and
actions, then and not till then do we become partakers of the Divine nature, emancipated
and freed from those gross and sensual impediments which bind us to earth and deter us
from entering into the enjoyments of that ideal Kingdom, the domain of light and life, the
great common heritage awaiting us all at the termination of our weary pilgrimage through
time.
For the solution of this great problem, the circumstances in which Gotama was
placed, were unfavorable. Prince and heir of a mighty monarch, the darling and hope of
a whole nation, with the accumulated weight of national, marital and parental duties
devolving upon him, how could he think of shirking their discharge, how divest himself of
the cares of state, how tear himself from kindred and friends and above all forego a love
and affection like that of Gopa, which lighted up and illumined his life with the glow and
sunshine of her own happy nature? These were the great sacrifices, the self-denials which
he erroneously thought must be made ere he could be free. Was it worth the effort - this
inward victory which brought with it no popular applause and excited no acclamations of
admiring multitudes? The question was moreover complicated with considerations which
placed him in a great dilemma. It was not a question of duty and interest, for in his case,
they were welded together and formed an undivided whole, it was one merely of happiness.
Happiness was associated with the discharge of his princely duties as a monarch, a
husband and parent, and happiness was the goal of victory over his lower nature; but
where came in the duty to sacrifice and ignore the former in order to obtain the latter, which
might after all prove illusionary in its character. Gotama long pondered over the matter,
long the question remained undecided, oscillating as in a balance, until at length occurred
an event which gave the necessary momentum in deciding and determining his future
destiny and which is graphically described by a learned French savant, Barthelemy St.
Hilaire in his biography of Gotama.
One day when Gotama with a large retinue was driving through the eastern gate of
the city on the way to one of his parks, he met on the road an old man broken and decrepit
in body. The veins and muscles over the whole of his body were quite visible, his teeth
chattered. He was covered with wrinkles, bald and hardly able to utter hollow and
unmelodious sounds. He was bent on his stick and all his limbs and joints trembled. "Who
is that man?" said the prince to his coachman. "He is small and weak, his muscles stick
to his skin, his flesh and blood are dried up. His beard is white, his teeth chatter, his body
wasted away and leaning on his staff, he is hardly able to walk and stumbles at every step.
Is there any-
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thing peculiar to his family or is this the common lot of all created beings?" "Sir,'' replied
the coachman, "that man is sinking under old age, his senses have become blunted,
suffering has destroyed his strength and he is despised by his relatives. He is without
support and homeless and people have abandoned him like a dead tree in a forest. But
this is not peculiar to his family. In every creature, youth is followed and defeated by old
age. Your father, your mother, all your relations, all your friends will come to the same
state. It is the appointed end of all creatures." "Alas!'' replied Gotama, are creatures so
ignorant, so weak and foolish as to be proud of the youth by which they are intoxicated, not
seeing the old age which awaits there. As for me, I go away. Coachman, turn the chariot
quickly. What have I, the future prey of old age, what have I to do with pleasure?" and
Gotama returned to the city without going to his park.
Another time the prince drove through the southern gate to his pleasure garden
when he perceived on the road a man suffering from illness, parched with fever, his body
wasted, covered with mud, without a friend, homeless, hardly able to breathe and
frightened at the sight of himself and the approach of death. Having questioned his
coachman and received from him the answer he expected, the prince said: "Alas! health
is but the sport of a dream and the fear of suffering must take this frightful form. Where is
the wise man who after having seen what he is, can any longer think of joy and pleasure?"
Then he turned his chariot and went back to the city.
A third time he drove to his pleasure gardens through the western gate, when he
saw a dead body on the road lying on a bier and covered with a cloth. The friends stood
about crying, sobbing and tearing their hair, covering their heads with dust, striking their
breasts and uttering wild cries. On witnessing this painful scene the prince exclaimed, 'Oh!
woe to youth, which must be destroyed by old age! Woe to health which must be
destroyed by so many diseases! Woe to this life where a man remains so short a time! If
there were no old age, no diseases, no death, if these could be made captive forever.''
Then betraying for the first time his intentions, the prince said: "Let us turn back. I must
think how to accomplish deliverance."
The time for decision was now approaching. The choice was soon to be made and
another incident put an end to his hesitation. He drove through the northern gate on the
way to his pleasure gardens when he saw a mendicant who appeared outwardly calm and
subdued, looking downward, wearing with an air of dignity his religious vestment and
carrying an alms bowl. "Who is this man?" asked Gotama. "Sir," replied the coachman,
"this man is one of those who are called Bikshus or mendicants. He has renounced all
pleasures, all desires, and leads a life of austerity. He tries to conquer himself. He has
become a devotee. Without passion, without envy, he walks about asking for alms," "This
is good and well said," replied the prince. "The life of a devotee has always been praised
by the wise. It will be my refuge and the refuge of other creatures. It will lead us to a real
life, to happiness and immortality." With these words the prince turned his chariot and
drove back to the city. The die was cast, the decision made, and life, eternal life was his
choice.
But in resolving henceforth to become a devotee and renouncing worldly grandeur,
an almost insuperable barrier was raised against his carrying it out by the action of his aged
parent, who, remembering the wondrous prophecies uttered at the time of his birth was
now alarmed at the prospect of his son's becoming a devotee. He doubled the prince's
guards and issued strict injunctions they should
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never lose sight of him nor cease watching his every act. Wherever he went, whatever he
did, Gotama felt conscious of the presence of spies who would act up to their instructions
and thwart his endeavors to carry out his design. Gotama, however, bided his time, and
at last seizing a favorable opportunity when his guards, wearied out by continual watching
had fallen asleep, he aroused Tshanda, his faithful groom, and ordered him to saddle his
horse without delay. Ere quitting his room, he turned to take a last fond look at the sleeping
forms of Gopa and his darling boy. A moment and the great deeps of his affectionate
nature welled up, a great wave of mental anguish caused his stalwart form to reel and
bend, as bends the stately oak before the tempest, a moment and it was gone, then
mounting his horse, Gotama rushed forth followed by the groom, away! away! from the
dwellings of careworn men; away from the madding crowd; from the din and noise of
worldly strifes and cares, from the syren charms and illusions of the world, to the calm
tranquility and enduring peace of a hermit's.
(To be continued.)
---------------
THE MEANING OF LIFE
by Katherine H. Bunker
--- 221
manifestation of itself as a plant in stem, branch, leaf and flower in turn and in strict
harmonious sequence before the forces are turned inward to culminate as seed in the
complete fruition of its life. The amount and quality of the seed so produced to give rise to
future plants depends entirely and always upon the perfection of the physical manifestation
- in other words, the external relations. If the gardener or some predatory animal or insect
prevents the growth of branch and leaf, there can be no harvest or seed as the result of
growth. The bare stalk remains as the only evidence of the vital impulses contained within
the original seed. Also should the external manifestation of life show itself in excessive
physical growth by virtue of faulty adjustment of external to internal relations there is an
equally barren harvest, for all the life impulses have been dissipated in the production of
that which perishes. Thus it is seen that without the perfect correspondence between the
life impulse within and the material manifestation without, an equal balancing or
harmonious adjustment of the internal to the external and vice versa. There can be no
completion of the cycle by which alone existence can be measured.
Everything throughout the universe proceeds by virtue of absolute harmony. There
can be no such thing as real isolation either internal or external. All forms of existence are
interdependent.
Each planet has its own cycle, but could not maintain its course independent of the
influence of all the other planets any more than it could apart from the influence of the sun
itself. The absurdity of any planet attempting to start a cycle alone, even under the
influence of the central sun, is manifest.
In man we see the action of the same immutable unswerving law. In his physical
structure we find each cell has its own distinct functions in building up colonies of cells -
each colony has its own work in maintaining the integrity of the separate physical functions
of the body. The body could not grow or even maintain vitality if these relations should
become inharmonious. Nature is always striving to restore perfect adjustment where any
fault exists; she makes the attempt to throw off any cell or colony of cells which is out of
harmony with the whole. Failing in this, the result is disease, decay and death. This
universal law of harmonious adjustment applied to the external physical or evident relations
must be equally applicable to the internal or causative and real relations, and becomes
therefore a necessity for either growth or change, in other words, for life itself.
This necessity for harmonious adjustment of the internal relations to each other, of
the external relations to each other and of the internal to the external being true in all forms
of existence whether vegetable or animal life or the forces of the solar system, how much
more necessary must it be to the race as applied to the relations between man and man.
To say that we can live apart from and independent of each other is not only going in
opposition to every law of nature but is a crime against our brother.
Harmony is perfect law. Discord or lack of harmony is crime. Any attempt of the
individual, whether that individual be the cell, man, or planet, either in the physical or
spiritual aspect to maintain its individuality regardless of the whole of which it is a part, or
to express itself as a unit under the idea that it is or can become a law unto itself must bring
upon itself the same penalty which attends a like effort on the part of the cell in the physical
body.
"To live to benefit mankind is the first step," says the Voice of the Silence.
"Do not fancy you can stand aside from the bad man or the foolish man. They are
yourself though in a less degree than your friend or your master. But if you allow the idea
of separateness
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from any evil thing or person to grow up within you, by so doing you create Karma which
will bind you to that thing or person till your soul recognizes that it cannot be isolated.
Remember that the sin and shame of the world are your sin and shame; for you are a part
of it; your Karma is inextricably interwoven with the great Karma." - (Light on the Path)
--------------
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were mere puppets dancing to the wire strings of fate, let us not forget to look backward
for a glimpse of the truth into the mighty past. Then, too, we must remember the oneness
of all, and how our Karma is interwoven with that of millions of souls. There is the race-
Karma, national Karma, family and individual Karma; what an intricate problem to solve
where the factors are so innumerable. In our limited knowledge of the immeasurable past
we can only generalize, and deduce from great truths and broad principles, and thus obtain
but an elementary outline of the Karma of a soul.
Karma always works in the most needed direction, and when we say it is a person's
Karma that places him thus or so, it is equivalent to saying that the particular phase of
existence or experience in which the soul finds itself, while it is of its own making, is still the
best possible unto it. We may not like it, we may not be in harmony with it, but that gives
us no right to judge a soul, because in the nature of the case we cannot judge correctly "we
would bear false witness against our neighbor," since we know not where a soul truly
stands, nor what is necessary to the further development of that soul, and therefore we
should hold our peace. Let us endeavor to live up to our highest ideal of manhood and
womanhood, and so inspire each other with nobler aims, with broader views, with greater
charity, with diviner love. For after all there is no evil as an opposing absolute principle.
The Absolute is colorless, and what appears in manifestation as good and evil are only
relatively so. Things are only lower or higher in their progressive relation. Any plane
viewed from the altitude of a higher one may seem evil from its relativity rather than
because it is a specific evil. In the evolution of human consciousness the first flickering ray
is feeble, and knowledge of good and evil is limited, and as it expands, the responsibilities
multiply in the proportion to the growth, bringing Karma in its train which the great Souls
who have trodden the path have learned to obliterate on each plane as they have mastered
that plane.
CHAPTER FIFTH
likewise contributes or benefits only upon its own plane; it cannot go higher than its source;
nothing can come out of the sphere of the mind but what has been drawn into it. If the
Astral element in man can be sent into another man, such an Astral element may also be
embedded in metals or other substances, and leave its influence in them; which explains
the efficacy of amulets and the healing power attributed to certain places, the magnetism
or Astral influence sent there by the power of the will remains effective so long as the
influence permeates it.
So we see it is by the will of man that this atmosphere or originally pure Astral light
can become vitiated or polluted. The animal not having developed within it the moral
consciousness of right or wrong doing, cannot pollute the Astral atmosphere. The
character of the Astral Light is determined by man's free will; his thoughts are the food
supplies which build up this atmosphere and from which man again re-absorbs his soul
nourishment or inspiration. As a responsible and progressive being learning from
experience, man, as an individual or as a race, is necessarily liable in the childhood stage
of his career to mistakes, errors, and periods of perverted activity. But as an organic being,
the child also of infinite perfection, he is a God in embryo. Hence, when man identifies
himself with the laws of harmony in the Universe becoming, thereby, himself a part of the
law, the inborn divinity will bloom to perfection.
The Astral Light is composed of magnetic forces which are being continually
modified by man's will; according to the intensity of the will are these currents of force
projected either for good or evil. When man opposes his finite will to the Divine will, or in
other words when man considers himself divided and apart from all, when he caters to self,
believing, himself to be a separate thing from the universe, he dwarfs himself and his
powers and objective phenomena will show the result. Life then becomes poisoned at the
fountain head, with discord and disease at the core and the inner life can but reflect such
conditions to the outer. We are all in our objective state just what we reflect from our Astral
counterpart, and again the Astral World is the mirror of the objective. The psychical body
is necessary to help to build up the spiritual man, as the animal body was necessary to help
build up the human man, every infinitesimal part has its use, and contributes its share to
the great whole. Man should realize this fact and when each shall strive for the best, we
shall have the best as a result; we must not forget that the units make up the whole.
---------------
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IN DREAM OR WAKING?
by Vera Petrovna Jelihovsky
(Continued)
A YEAR had fled by. New Christmas holidays had come, another New Year's Eve
had stealthily crept in, to take the place of the one which was "seen in" by the little
gathering in the house of the hospitable would-be magnate.
The wish Lila Rianoff burned at the stroke of twelve a year ago had found its
fulfilment; her aunt and Anna Karssoff, and a good many more of her Parisian friends now
thought of her as of one absent, for it was long since she was safely reestablished under
the paternal roof, in her beloved Russia.
However, she was not the only defaulter. Many of last year's party were missing.
Out of the few who still were true to their purposes was Anna Karssoff, who was making
brilliant progress at the Conservatoire, and also her especial friend Nicholas Saradsky.
She had only one year more to stay in Paris, but he had two. And yet it was the ardent
desire of both their hearts not to return home otherwise than in each other's company.
Their reasons were plausible enough, for were it in the least bit possible, their way to
Russia would be through the Embassy Church. But neither of them had much more than
brilliant expectations, and so their wedding was postponed until a happier future.
Many of their friends were speculating on the subject, but the only one who knew
exactly how matters stood, was Lila Rianoff, a letter from whom Anna was now reaching,
gaily smiling to herself, almost laughing aloud. The letter was so long, so full of details, of
happy humor and wit, that Anna lingered a long time over it, - such a long time, indeed, that
she was still far from the end, when Nicholas rang at the door. The girl well knew who it
was who rang so energetically, and ran to open the door herself, letter in hand.
"Well," asked the young fellow, "are you ready to start? And is it the opera or the
varieties you have made up your mind for? Oh! I see, you have some good news."
"Very good news, indeed!" exclaimed Anna. "Lila is engaged to be married."
"To be married, and to whom, pray?"
"To Tlyinsky, doubtless."
"So that after all he had turned out to be the man of the bridge?"
The man of the bridge, exactly. In this letter she tries to be as reserved as usual,
but her heart is too full. It's the funniest, the happiest letter you can imagine. She is
evidently perfectly convinced that Tlyinsky is her right fate, as the moment they met they
felt like very old friends indeed, that at first glance they both knew they belonged to each
other, that they loved - oh, more than that, that they always had loved each other, from the
beginning of time, no matter whether they did or did not meet in actual life. So there is no
help for it, they must be married."
"What an imagination the girl must have! It's all this new-fangled doctrine of the
transmigrations of the soul, I suppose. May I have a cigarette?"
"Yes, do. But you are not right with regard to this question of transmigration. It is
no transmigration, no metempsychosis at all, but repeated lives, or rather one continuous
life, which is no more broken by death than by sleep."
--- 226
"So, something like Buddhism, then?'' asked Saradsky not over eagerly, in fact more
interested in the cigarette he was lighting, than in the topic of their conversation.
"Not quite. Lila has lots of fancies and ideas of her own. And she is so set on them,
it's no use contradicting her, or even arguing with her. Some of the Parisian Spiritualists
tried to convert her into their ranks, but without success. She says they differ on too many
points."
"Ah! the whole business is utter bosh!" was Monsieur Nicholas Saradsky's verdict.
"As well share the Persian belief, that Allah always creates husband and wife in one piece,
then divides it in two and sends the halves to search for each other in this big world of ours.
No wonder so many mistakes are committed, so many wrong halves take each other for
the right ones."
"Exactly our case, I believe," stated Anna, in a tone the coldness of which was just
a trifle too marked to be real.
But this statement her fiancé immediately tried to disprove in such a practical way,
that the girl ran from him, and he ran after her until two chairs and a table were upset and
a rug displaced.
This pleasant game was interrupted by the arrival of two future lady doctors, who
had also known and liked Lila and with whom Anna could discuss the news at a greater
length and altogether more satisfactorily than with Nicholas, who, she said, "was only a
man, after all, and so could never show proper feeling."
"And did she actually recognize his face?" eagerly asked one of the girls.
"No, she did not," said Anna. "Lila would not dissemble with me, or with any one
else in such a matter, and she says quite positively his face played no part in the
recognition." . . .
"Of course!" sneered the only man present, "the recognition was purely of the spirit."
At this the girls threatened to go into Anna's room, to read Lila's letter in peace, and
Nicholas held his tongue.
"Well," went on Anna, "the whole business is altogether uncanny. You know what
a sensitive plant Lila is - how she always shuns new acquaintances. Indeed, her manner
is only too cold and reserved even with the people she cares for. And - well, would you
believe it? Three months ago, the very first evening they met, she talked to him as openly
and freely as if they were the oldest of friends. But besides, there are two most wonderful
particulars. Firstly, this Tlyinsky turns out to be a very close relation of the Kitarolls. He is
a nephew of the old man - the son of Kitaroff's own sister. But these two had quarreled
long before Tlyinsky was born, so the nephew and the uncle do not know each other.
"May I ask, is the nephew as rich as his uncle?" asked Saradsky.
"Oh, no! far from it. Lila writes he has nothing but what he earns."
"What a pity," regretfully said one of the visitors. "Were she to marry Kitaroff, would
not she be just rolling in wealth!"
"God forbid! To marry a horrid old ruin like that."
"Oh, no! I mean the son, not the father. Was it not the young fellow who proposed
to her?"
"Mademoiselle, you are utterly misinformed,'' put in Saradsky. You ask Miss Anna
Karssoff here present, she being the only reliable source of information, and moreover one
of the dramatis personae in the Kitaroff Comedy of Errors." Anna did not deign to take any
notice of her fiance's sneering remarks.
"That's the worst of it," she said. "The younger Kitaroff did not propose, at all, but
his father did. Both father and son acted abominably to her, but the old man had some
notions of honor, at least, whereas the other one, this dilapidated young monkey, with
dandi-
--- 227
fied airs, is altogether too used to pay everything with money and deserves to be horse-
whipped for the way he treated Lila."
Anna's guests laughed.
"The loving father and the dutiful son serenading under the same window. That's
fun."
"But you ought to have seen the way Lila disposed of them. At first she was so hurt,
so indignant, that her impulse was to throw Kitaroff's jewelry out of the window and never
to set eyes on the worthy pair again. But when her anger cooled down, she thought she
would have some fun out of the young fool."
"Well done!"
"It was very well done, indeed. She wrote him a very polite little note, asking him to
call on her the same evening, and at the same time sent word to me and to one or two
more friends so that we knew what to expect. Her aunt was also present and was in an
awful fume, saying Lila was a young fool and was going to spoil the greatest chance a girl
may have in life. Well, at the appointed hour, as sure as clock work, Monsieur Andre
Kitaroff puts in an appearance, freshly shaven, dressed, shod and gloved like a fashion
plate. Seeing Lila was not alone, he pulled a long face at first, but after a while Lila put him
in the best of spirits and when his excitement was at the highest, she said: "By the way,
Monsieur Andre, here are the beautiful things you and your kind father sent me, you will
oblige me by taking them back, likewise the note in which your father proposes to me. No
doubt, it was most kind, most thoughtful of you to show me in such a delicate way you
would be glad to have me for a stepmother. But kindness is a little too hasty sometimes.
As to your venerable parent, please, tell him, I have too great a solicitude for his happiness
to marry him, without loving him. So I must thwart your hopes of becoming my step-son.'
And all this with the sweetest smile, in the sweetest tone of voice!" concluded Anna. "Well
I may live to be a hundred but I shall never forget what a pitiful object this unsuccessful
lady-killer looked. And the climax was reached when Lila's little cousin, who was not there
at all but was purposely locked in the next room, began to snigger quite audibly."
Here Nicholas, who heartily enjoyed the story every time he heard it, also sniggered,
the two girls joined him, and the merriment grew general and quite loud.
"Now to the second wonderful circumstance of this affair. Would you believe, that
almost the very first words Tlyinsky ever said to her: 'I can not account for it, but do you
know, Miss Rianoff, we have positively met before. I know you, but where we met before,
puzzles and perplexes me, a sort of recurring thought, one can't drive away.' And a few
days later, in Lila's home, he looked at her, with the same puzzled expression, and again
said: 'As you sat there playing the piano, I positively could not get rid of a picture which
repeatedly rose before my eyes. And is not it strange that a landscape I am not aware of
ever having seen should be so vivid before my mental vision? It is a ravine or may be a
gorge, all buried under deep snow, and a bridge, an old fashioned bridge, with a steep
arch, also some tumbled down building close by. ' . . . In fact, the very surrounding's of
Lila's own dream. Is not it wonderful!"
(To be continued.)
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A COMMERCIAL WARNING
by Thomas Franklin
THE centre of commercial activity for the whole world is the city of London. In its
very heart is an open space, bounded on one side by the Royal Exchange, a massive pile
of architecture. To the left is the Bank of England, filling a whole block, a gloomy stone
structure without a single window to break the monotony of its outlines. On the right is
Lombard Street with its banks which represent the greatest monied interests of the world.
Facing the Royal Exchange is the Mansion House, the residence of the Lord Mayor for his
year of office.
In the open space the throngs of people are incessant, and the traffic unceasing, for
seven important thoroughfares pour in their streams. Every one is hurrying along intent on
his own concerns, unheeding others.
Across the front of the Royal Exchange, under the facade, in bold letters cut into the
stone, plainly to be read at a distance, are the words "The earth is the Lord's, and the
fullness thereof."
Such words in such a place! To the thoughtful person they appear as a warning, a
portent, to remind the over-busy man that strive as he may to gain possessions, he but
courts failure, for the earth and its fullness belong to the Lord.
What a diversity of interpretations would be given to these words by those who daily
pass and repass them. Who is the Lord who claims ownership of the Earth? The Governor
of the Bank of England, if interrogated, would, from a Christian standpoint, give an
"orthodox'' rendering; but call at the Rothschilds' office, across the street, and another
interpretation would be given. Passing to the Sassoons' sanctum, the East Indian's deity
might be presented.
And so on and on, until you might doubt the very existence of a Lord; more
especially if Queen Victoria should graciously inform you that Great Britain claims dominion
over the seas, and over a third part of the earth.
What then belongs to the Lord? It looks as if man had gobbled up the earth and its
fullness.
A stock-holder, hurrying along in front of the Royal Exchange, was asked this
question, and he replied testily "Oh, you are trying to mix up religion and business, and it
won't do," and he passed on.
In the days of ancient Rome's greatest magnificence, returning conquerors were
awarded the proudest of all honors, a triumphal procession. It paraded with all its gorgeous
splendor and rows of captives along the Via Sacra, through the Forum to the Capitol.
Alongside the conqueror in his chariot rode a man repeating aloud the words Memento
necri, to remind the conqueror that he still was mortal. Was it by coincidence that these
words of warning were chiseled into the stone of the Royal Exchange?
When we ponder, it is seen how generation after generation has appeared upon the
scene of this world, and for a brief period has claimed possession of parts of the earth, but
all have passed away, taking nothing with them.
"The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof," is a very comprehensive
statement. It seems to include not merely the surface of the earth, but the whole of nature
with its elements, earth, air, fire and water; also all natural powers and forces, materials
and opportunities, in fact everything supplied by nature. All of these are said to belong to
the Lord. Who is this mighty owner, the Lord? There is a teaching, which
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seems to have been well known to all nations of antiquity, that at first the world was a vast
unity, one great Being. As evolution proceeded, the One became many, by emanating
parts of itself, and so sub-dividing. The First Cause, the great force and energy of nature
sub-divided into innumerable smaller centres of force or souls. These lesser souls, all parts
of the one Being, have since been proceeding with their separate evolution according to
law. Some souls are now occupying the forms of the mineral kingdom; others have
reached vegetables and plants; others are ensouling animals; and the more advanced
have entered human beings.
All natural objects are but the outer expressions in physical matter of the souls which
are within them, and these souls are integral parts of the One Great Being, who is the Lord.
The souls in the lower kingdoms are working upward to the human state, and in some far
distant cycle will enter human forms. Perfected humanity is the flower of evolution, the
highest point attainable in this world. The One Great Being, the Lord, the Universal Soul
of the world, operates through man to raise all parts of Nature to a higher state. Hence it
is that man is given dominion over the lower kingdoms. But responsibility always
accompanies power, therefore man should comprehand and rightly perform his duty of
helping the less progressed.
Since the earth belongs to the Lord, what is man's relation to it?
The ancient teaching said that man is the soul, which emanates from, and is a part
of, the One Great Being, the Lord, and his soul, like all others, assumes a form periodically,
endowing its body with the power of thinking and reasoning. This body during life uses
various things, such as houses, clothes and the productions of nature. But do nature's
products really belong to these bodies? Clearly not, for fire, shipwreck or other disaster
may remove them, and at the death of the body all are relinquished. Man has but a
temporary use of the earth, of nature and of its powers and materials; he is but a steward
or caretaker in charge of them for a time, for truly the Lord is the real and only permanent
possessor.
In the position of steward, man's duty is to make a right use of nature and her
products, not by appropriating them to himself and preventing his fellow beings from
sharing in their enjoyment, but by using them for the general welfare.
There is a law at the very heart of nature which is man's best guide as to duty, the
law of mutual helpfulness or cooperation. Its basis is in the fact that all souls are parts of
the One Great Being, the Lord: and therefore all are brother souls, bound together by the
bonds of love and a desire to help each other.
How clearly nature exemplifies this law!
For a tiny seed to produce a plant, the help of all the elements is necessary, the soil
and water, the air and sunshine; if one of the elements fails to help, no plant can be
perfected. Similarly all the organs of the body must cooperate by performing their functions
for the preservation of health and vigor. The same holds good and is imperative among
human beings if happiness is to be attained. Selfish appropriation of Nature's products
which belong to the Lord, which is an infringement of the law of Brotherhood, is the cause
of misery and suffering.
If man would recognize the soul as his real self, would allow the divinity of his nature
to be his guide, instead of following selfish instincts, he would know and feel the
inseparable link connecting him with all his fellows. The sympathy felt for suffering, the
strong desire to help and relieve others less fortunate than ourselves, are the voice of the
soul, the song of the great heart which beats in all.
"You cannot mix religion with busi-
--- 230
ness," said the stock-broker. It is true that there is a good deal of business which does not
accord with the law of brotherhood, for it does not tend to the general welfare, but rather
to personal ends.
Nature and her products which should be for the use of all, are monopolized to
subserve the interests of the few. Although nature is bountiful in her gifts, producing more
than sufficient for all, yet the majority of mankind are deprived of the necessities, let alone
the comforts of life.
Would we banish this suffering and misery, which are the disgrace of our civilization,
we must introduce into business a knowledge and practice of the laws of nature, which
teach helping and sharing.
"The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof" stands engraved at the centre and
heart of our commercial world, like the warning words which appeared to Belshazzar at the
feast.
Will they be read in their true meaning, and practically applied, or will the history and
downfall of Babylon be repeated?
------------
Criticism, says Dr. Johnson, is a study by which men grow important and formidable
at a very small expense.
The power of invention has been conferred by Nature upon a few, and the labor of
learning these sciences, which may be by mere labor obtained, is too great to be willingly
endured, but every man can exert such judgment as he has upon the works of others, and
he whom nature has made weak, and idleness kept ignorant, may yet support his vanity
by the name of critic.
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HEADQUARTERS OF THE T. S. A.
by J.H. Fussell
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------------
"Unflinching Will and firmness in the Leader, unwavering obedience to him of the
Group. One Will, one Head, one Heart in the man. A many-limbed hydra with one head
as a change to the old myth."
- From the words of a great Teacher
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--- 233
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* "The Voice of the Silence and other Chosen Fragments from the Book of Golden
Precepts for the daily use of lanoos (disciples) translated and annotated by H. P. B."
Published by The Theosophical Publishing Company, 144 Madison Avenue, New York.
** The two schools of Buddha's doctrine, the Esoteric and the Exoteric, are
respectively called the Heart and the Eye Doctrine. The Bodhidharma Wisdom Religion in
China - whence the names reached Tibet - called them the Tsung-men (Esoteric) and Kiau-
men (Exoteric school). The former is so named, because it is the teaching which emanated
from Gautama Buddha's heart, whereas the Eye Doctrine was the work of his head or
brain. The Heart Doctrine is also called the "seal of truth" or the "true seal," a symbol found
on the heading of almost all Esoteric works.
*** The "tree of knowledge" is a title given by the followers of the Bodhidharma to
those who have attained the height of mystic knowledge - Adepts. Nagarjuna, the founder
of the Madhyamika School, was called the "Dragon Tree," Dragon standing as a symbol
of Wisdom and Knowledge. The tree is honored because it is under the Bodhi (wisdom)
Tree that Buddha received his birth and enlightenment, preached his first sermon, and died.
**** "Secret Heart" is the Esoteric Doctrine.
-----------
Alaya, he one with the Great Soul, and that, possessing it, Alaya should so little avail them!
Behold how like the moon, reflected in the tranquil waves. Alaya is reflected by the
small and by the great, is mirrored in the tiniest atoms, yet fails to reach the heart of all.
Alas, that so few men should profit by the gift, the priceless boon of learning truth, the right
perception of existing things, the knowledge of the non-existent!
Saith the pupil:
O Teacher, what shall I do to teach to Wisdom?
O Wise one, what, to gain perfection?
Search for the Paths. But, O Lanoo, be of clean heart before thou startest on thy
journey. Before thou takest thy first step, learn to discern the real from the false, the ever-
fleeting from the everlasting. Learn above all to separate Head-learning from Soul-wisdom,
the "Eye" from the "Heart" doctrine.
Yea, ignorance is like unto a closed and airless vessel; the soul a bird shut up
within. It warbles not, nor can it stir a feather; but the songster mute and torpid sits, and
of exhaustion dies.
But even ignorance is better than Head-learning with no Soul-wisdom to illuminate
and guide it.
The seeds of wisdom cannot sprout and grow in airless space. To live and reap
experience, the mind needs breadth and depth and points to draw it towards the Diamond
Soul.* Seek not those points in Maya's realm: but soar beyond illusions, search the eternal
and the changeless SAT,** mistrusting fancy's false suggestions.
--------------
* "Diamond Soul," Vajrasattva, a title of the supreme Buddha, the "Lord of all
Mysteries," called Vajradhara and Adi-Buddha.
** SAT, the one Eternal and Absolute Reality and Truth, all the rest being illusion.
--------------
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For mind is like a mirror; it gathers dust while it reflects.* It needs the gentle
breezes of Soul-wisdom to brush away the dust of our illusions. Seek, O Beginner, to blend
thy Mind and Soul.
Shun ignorance, and likewise shun illusion. Avert thy face from world deceptions:
mistrust thy senses; they are false. But within thy body - the shrine of thy sensations seek
in the Impersonal for the "Eternal Man";** and having sought him out, look inward: thou
art Buddha.***
Shun praise, O Devotee. Praise leads to self-delusion. Thy body, is not Self, thy
SELF is in itself without a body, and either praise or blame affects it not.
Self-gratulation, O Disciple, is like unto a lofty tower, up which a haughty fool has
climbed. Thereon he sits in prideful solitude and unperceived by any but himself.
False learning is rejected by the Wise, and scattered to the winds by the Good Law.
Its wheel revolves for all, the humble and the proud. The "Doctrine of the Eye" **** is for
the crowd: the "Doctrine of the Heart" for the Elect. The first repeat in pride: "Behold, I
know"; the last, they who in humbleness have garnered, low confess: "Thus have I heard."
+
"Great Sifter" is the name of the "Heart Doctrine," O Disciple.
The wheel of the Good Law moves swiftly on. It grinds by night and day. The
worthless husks it drives from out
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* From Shin-Sien's Doctrine. who teaches that the human mind is like a mirror which
attracts and reflects every atom of dust, and has to be, like that mirror, watched over and
dusted every day. Shin-Sien was the Sixth Patriarch of North China, who taught the
Esoteric Doctrine of Bodhidharma.
** The reincarnating Ego is called by the Northern Buddhists the "true man," who
becomes, in union with his Higher Self, a Buddha.
*** "Buddha" means "Enlightened."
**** See page 233, footnote No. ** The Exoteric Buddhism of the masses.
+ The usual formula that precedes the Buddhist Scriptures, meaning, that that which
follows is what has been recorded by direct oral tradition from Buddha and the Arhats.
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the golden grain, the refuse from the flour. The hand of Karma guides the wheel; the
revolutions mark the beating of the karmic heart.
True knowledge is the flour, false learning is the husk. If thou would'st eat the bread
of Wisdom, thy hour thou hast to knead with Amrita's clear waters.* But if thou kneadest
husks with Maya 's dew, thou canst create but food for the black doves of death, the birds
of birth, decay, and sorrow.
If thou art told that to become Arhan thou hast to cease to love all beings - tell them
they lie.
If thou art told that to gain liberation thou hast to hate thy mother and disregard thy
son; to disavow thy father and call him "householder";** for man and beast all pity to
renounce - tell them their tongue is false.
Thus teach the Tirthikas the unbelievers.***
If thou art taught that sin is born of action and bliss of absolute inaction, then tell
them that they err. Non-permanence of human action, deliverance of mind from thraldom
by the cessation of sin and faults, are not for "Deva Egos."**** Thus saith the "Doctrine of
the Heart."
The Dharma of the "Eye" is the embodiment of the external and the nonexisting.
The Dharma of the "Heart" is the embodiment of Bodhi,+ the Permanent and
Everlasting.
The Lamp burns bright when wick and oil are clean. To make them clean a cleaner
is required. The flame feels not the process of the cleaning. "The branches of a tree are
shaken by the wind; the trunk remains unmoved."
------------
* Immortality.
** Rathapala, the great Arhat, thus addresses his father in the legend called
Rathapala Sutrasanne. But as all such legends are allegorical (e.g., Rathapala's father has
a mansion with seven doors) hence the reproof, to those who accept them literally.
*** Brahman ascetics.
**** The reincarnating Ego.
+ True, divine Wisdom.
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Both action and inaction may find room in thee; thy body agitated, thy mind tranquil,
thy Soul as limpid as a mountain lake.
Would'st thou become a Yogi of "Time's Circle"? Then, O Lanoo:
Believe thou not that sitting in dark forests, in proud seclusion and apart from men;
believe thou not that life on roots and plants, that thirst assuaged with snow from the great
Range - believe thou not, O Devotee, that this will lead thee to the goal of final liberation.
Think not that breaking bone, that rending flesh and muscle, unites thee to thy "silent
Self."* Think not that when the sins of thy gross form are conquered, O Victim of thy
Shadows,** thy duty is accomplished by nature and by man.
The blessed ones have scorned to do so. The Lion of the Law, the Lord of Mercy,***
perceiving the true cause of human woe, immediately forsook the sweet but selfish rest of
quiet wilds. From Aranyaka**** He became the Teacher of mankind. After Julai + entered
the Nirvana, He preached on mount and plain, and held discourses in the cities, to Devas,
men, and Gods.++
Sow kindly acts and thou shalt reap
-----------
*The "Higher Self," the "seventh" principle.
** Our physical bodies are called "shadows" in the mystic schools.
*** Buddha.
**** A forest, a desert. Aranyankas, a hermit who retires to the jungles and lives in
a forest, when becoming a Yogi.
+ Julai is the Chinese name for Tathagata, a title
applied to every Buddha.
++ All the Northern and Southern traditions agree in showing Buddha quitting his
solitude as soon as he had resolved the problem of life - i.e., received the inner
enlightenment - and teaching mankind publicly.
-----------
their fruition. Inaction in a deed of mercy becomes an action in a deadly sin.
Thus saith the Sage:
Shalt thou abstain from action? Not so shall gain thy soul her freedom. To reach
Nirvana one must reach Self-Knowledge, and Self-Knowledge is of loving deeds the child.
Have patience, Candidate, as one who fears no failure, courts no success. Fix thy
Soul's gaze upon the star whose rays thou art,* the flaming star that shines within the
lightless depths of ever-being, the boundless fields of the Unknown.
Have perseverance as one who doth for evermore endure. Thy shadows live and
vanish;** that which in thee shall live for ever, that which in thee knows, for it is
knowledge,*** is not of fleeting life; it is the Man that was, that is, and will be, for whom the
hour shall never strike.
If thou would'st reap sweet peace and rest, Disciple, sow with the seeds of merit the
fields of future harvests. Accept the woes of birth.
Step out from sunlight into shade, to make more room for others. The tears that
water the parched soil of pain and sorrow bring forth the blossoms and the fruits of karmic
retribution. Out of the furnace of man's life and its black smoke, winged flames arise,
flames purified, that soaring onward 'neath the karmic eye, weave in the end the fabric
glorified of the three vestures of the Path.
------------
* Every spiritual Ego is a ray of a "Planetary Spirit," according to Esoteric teaching.
** "Personalities" or physical bodies called "shadows" are evanescent.
*** Mind (Manas) the thinking principle or Ego in man, is referred to "Knowledge"
itself, because the human Egos are called Manasaputra, the sons of (universal) Mind.
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--- 236
IN the dying hours of the old cycle the struggle between the forces of light and
darkness becomes accentuated. This is apparent in every department of life.
By giving place to personal vanity and weakness within ourselves we resist the
beneficent action of the divine powers, furnish a resistance to the spread of truth and block
the way of progress. All are tried to the utmost.
A spirit of aggressiveness is frequently so fostered by some that it leads to a
complete transformation of character and destroys the higher ideals which they profess to
uphold and of which they are the glib exponents.
The following quotations are as useful today as when they were written and it seems
important to reiterate them with still greater emphasis. What is said of the Theosophical
Society and Theosophy is true of all organizations and teachings. When the living spirit is
sacrificed for the outward form, and when personal aims and ambitions are allowed to dim
the strength and beauty of true principle, those who sincerely love truth above every other
consideration will defend its interests and endeavor to work in accordance with its ideals.
Just as we should defend our country from the invasion of enemies seeking its
destruction so we must protect the interests of the Cause which we love; but let us always
strive to do this in the true spirit of brotherly love and avoid agressiveness.
Several years ago Mr. Judge wrote, in answer to a question as to what true and
earnest Theosophists could do against the black age:
"Nothing against it, but a very great deal in it; for it is to be remembered that the
very fact that it is the iron or foundation age gives opportunities to lie obtained in no other.
. . A very slight cause produces gigantic effects. To aspire now ever so little will bring about
greater and more lasting effects for good than at any other time. And similarly, evil intent
has greater powers for evil. These great forces are visibly increased at the close of certain
cycles in the Kali Yuga. The present cycle, which closes November 17th, 1897 - February
18th, 1898, is one of the most important of any that have been. Opportunities for producing
permanent effects for good in themselves and in the World as a whole are given to
Theosophists at the present time, which they may never have again if not taken advantage
of."
The following is taken from a letter written in H. P. B.'s time:
"The Theosophical Society was chosen as the corner-stone, the foundation of the
future religions of humanity. To achieve the proposed object, a greater, wiser, and
especially a more benevolent intermingling of the high and the low, the alpha and the
omega of society, was determined upon. The white race must be the first to stretch out the
hand of fellowship to the dark nations, . . This prospect may not smile for all, but he is no
Theosophist who objects to this principle.....
"As We find the world now, whether Christian, Mussulman, or Pagan, justice is
disregarded, and honor and mercy are both flung to the winds. . . . If the Theosophists say,
we have nothing to do with all this [the sorrow and crime in the world]; the lower classes
and inferior races (those of India, for instance, in the conception of the British) cannot
concern us, and must manage as they can, what becomes of our fine professions of
benevolence, philanthropy, reform, etc.? Are those professions a mockery? And if a
mockery, can ours be the true path? Shall we devote ourselves to teaching a few
Europeans - fed on the fat of the land, many of them loaded with the gifts of blind fortune -
the rationale of bell-ringing, of cup-growing, of the spiritual telephone, and astral body
formation, and leave the teeming millions of the ignorant to take care of themselves, and
of their hereafter, as
--- 237
best they can? Never! Perish rather the Theosophical Society with both its hapless
Founders, than that we should permit it to become no better than an academy of magic,
and a hall of occultism!" ("An Important Letter," Lucifer, Vol. XVIII, p. 501.)
In a letter to Mr. --- in the early days of the Society we find:
"You have ever discussed, but to put down, the idea of a universal brotherhood,
questioned its usefulness, and advised to remodel the Theosophical Society on the
principle of
college for the special study of occultism." (Occult World, p. 104.)
For to have the Theosophical Society a part of the School of Antiquity would mean
the dissolution of both organizations.
"The mysteries never were, and never can be, put within the reach of the general
public, not, at least, until that longed-for day when our religious philosophy becomes
universal." (Idem.)
Those who seek to advance their own theories often misuse quotations and mislead
the unwary. Those who are interested in the School for the Revival of the Lost Mysteries
of Antiquity will note the importance of not arriving at wrong conclusions as to its meaning,
scope and purpose. When the true philosophy is more universally diffused throughout the
world; when Universal Brotherhood is nearer a visible realization, then will the Mysteries
come within the reach of all, but not till then."
In this connection the following should be especially noted:
"You see, then, that we have weightier matters than small societies to think about;
yet the Theosophical Society must not be neglected. The affair has taken an impulse
which, if not well guided, might beget very evil issues. Recall to mind the avalanches of
your admired Alps, and remember that at first their mass is small, and their momentum
little. A true comparison, you may say, but I cannot think of a better illustration when
viewing the gradual aggregation of trifling events growing into a menacing destiny for the
Theosophical Society." - (Occult World, p. 119.)
All who seek to reverse the true order of things and try to limit the divine philosophy
within channels as narrow as their own conceptions, will ultimately find themselves in a
prison cell of their own making within which their power for retarding the work of brotherly
love will be confined.
The ethical life is the basis of true Occultism; "By their fruits shall ye know them."
- Katherine A. Tingley
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--- 238
DUTY
by E.A. Neresheimer
THEOSOPHISTS have entered upon a path of duty which is broader than the
ordinary line of personal duty; the one is but an extension or rather a better comprehension
of the other.
The faithful performance of the small duties of every-day life are the seeds from
which grow fruitful trees extending beneficent branches in all directions. A higher
conception of the relation of oneself to mankind and the universe is the result of experience
gained in the byways of correct application to principle in small things on our journey
through evolution.
Like an extension of belief from the crude forms of dogma and creed which grows
by successive stages into knowledge that the Universe is governed by divine intelligence
according to law, order and eternal justice, so is the conception of duty which we recognize
as owing to friend and kin enlarged by conscientious attention to small things, into the
broad field where it becomes an all-embracing force harmonizing with the plan of nature.
Self denial and abnegation like the desire to do one's duty spring from love - love
that is not for self, but love which is the reflection of the universal ocean of love, often
unconsciously exercised by man in the small and large acts done for the benefit of some
one else; these acts when done without attachment to result go to increase the world's
welfare and become the property of the race - Universal Karma.
The deep absorption in an act to the extent of making the actor oblivious to the
existence of his personality is an energy employed for the benefit of the world. If this
energy is consciously applied in the direction toward an ideal by the performance of acts
for the betterment of the condition of humanity, then he, who so does, is treading the path
of broader duty which is bound to produce the greatest felicity absorption in the ideal world.
However the path of action is obscure and so is the path of duty. Many are the sins
that have been committed in the name of duty done for principle.
At the first blush of awakening of the mind to a cosmic ideal it inclines sentimentally
to and impetuously relates everything to grand principle. Our artificially built up natures,
the nervously delicate structure which the mind has blinded and woven often lead into error
and leave us on insecure ground. The high conception of the principle which we have
formed is rarely attained to in practice.
Pride of personality in one form or another, subtle but insidious, steps in and
produces failure after failure; principle has to do duty to cover mistakes and hide even
depraved intentions.
It is well therefore to go slow with the broader duties. When one is in doubt let him
wait and if he be in earnest attend scrupulously to smaller duties, until time has brought
around the cycle from obscurity towards the light; we cannot as yet solve the world's
eternal ways.
When enthusiasm lags and the broader duties become mixed in the mind, let him
who is thus befogged abstain from expending his energy on artificially wrought up ideals
but stand firm and remain content with correct performance of every day common sense
duties.
Large beneficent results grow from correct beginnings.
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FACES OF FRIENDS
AS one of our illustrations this month we give the first of a series of groups of faces
of friends, many of whom will be well-known to most of the old members, but we do this
mainly for the new members and our readers. The central sun of the present group all will
recognize as our beloved old pioneer, Dr. J. A. Anderson, the mainstay of the Pacific Coast
and whom we have made prominent and this is interpreted by some at this time as a sign
of great promise for the future work and if he should accept the nomination of Vice-
President of the T. S. A., which many greatly desire, he will still further strengthen the
Society.
Immediately above Dr. Anderson's is the portrait of Mrs. Alice L. Cleather, one of the
staunchest friends and supporters of H. P. Blavatsky and William Q. Judge and a member
of the Crusade around the world. To the left is F. M. Pierce, another Crusader and a
member of the Executive Committee of the T. S. A. and to the right is H. T. Lotter one of
the old members and devoted workers of the Kansas City Branch.
Everyone will recognize the face below Dr. Anderson's as that of H. T. Patterson,
another Crusader, one of Mr. Judge's firmest and closest friends; he is also a member of
the Executive Committee and Vice-President of the Aryan Branch, New York. To his right
is Mrs. Elizabeth C. Mayer, the Superintendent of the children's work and on the left is Mr.
Basil Crump, the Secretary of the T. S. in England and whose mystical interpretations of
Wagner's music dramas - a series of articles running through this magazine - and lectures
thereon have delighted and interested so many. Mr. Crump and Mrs. Cleather have
worked together in this direction and in a recent tour of England aroused the greatest
interest not only in Wagner but through him in Theosophy. We hope to see both of them
at the next Convention.
At the top of the picture appears the face of William Lindsay who although so
youthful in appearance has for many years been one of the staunchest members in
England and more than anyone else helped to hold the fort while the Crusaders were on
their tour. He has recently come to this country and members have become familiar with
his name in connection with the Brotherhood Bazaars.
To his right is the well-known face of Dr. J. D. Buck of Cincinnati and whose work
in the past is well-known to many. Then below comes Mine. Olivia Petersen, a native of
Greece, whose work both in Paris and Boston has greatly helped the Branches in those
cities. Next is Mr. Iverson L. Harris of Macon, Ia., then Mr. C. Sandham of Liverpool. Mrs.
Sarah W. Cape, an old Aryan member, a well-known worker at the Headquarters of the T.
S. A. for many years who has looked after the interests of the entire household with
unflagging zeal. Mrs. Stevens of Buffalo who has done so much in the practical
Brotherhood work of helping destitute and unfortunate women in the "Wayfare." Mr. J. T.
Campbell of England, well known as a vigorous speaker at many meetings of various
societies around London where he never fails to introduce Theosophy in a popular way.
At the bottom of the picture is Dr. Gustaf Zander, President of the T. S. in Sweden;
he may fairly be called the Father of Theosophy in Sweden. Well loved by everyone, he
has cared for the interests of the movement since its inception in that country.
--- 240
Miss B. Wakefield, of Sioux City, Iowa, well known in connection with the work of
Lotus Groups and one of the oldest workers and most devoted in the United States.
Major J. A. Clark, of Baltimore, Md., editor of the Quill, in which have appeared many
interesting articles on Theosophy.
Mr. Alpheus M. Smith, President of Chicago Branch, and who is now devoting all his
energies in making preparations for the Convention in that city.
Mr. Robert Crosbie should not need an introduction. His is one of the most familiar
faces among T. S. members and his splendid work in Boston and in carrying on the
Theosophical News, giving weekly information of the Crusade during its absence around
the world is well known to all.
The next above is Mme. H. de Neufville, of Amsterdam, Holland, an old and faithful
friend of H. P. BIavatsky and William Q. Judge. It has been largely owing to her efforts that
Theosophy has achieved so great success in the Netherlands.
W. S. Wing, of Denver, Col., one of the old members of the T. S. in America, and a
great friend of William Q. Judge.
C. Thurston is another of those who needs no introduction, a trusted friend of
William Q. Judge, and beloved by members throughout the United States and England.
--- 241
[[photos]]
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STUDENTS' COLUMN
conducted by J.H. Fussel
--- 243
tion and enter into the lower kingdoms of animal and insect. Having once passed one
kingdom and entered another, the door is shut behind, the soul goes ever forward, it cannot
go back. Metempshychosis or transmigration of souls in the sense of the soul's return to
lower forms is not upheld, but the contrary is distinctly shown, in Theosophy.
(3) If by creation is meant the making of something out of nothing, then most
certainly this view of creation is not held by Theosophists. Ex nihilo nihil fit is a proposition,
the truth of which cannot be gainsaid. Theosophy is pantheistic in the sense in which the
teachings of St. Paul are pantheistic. When speaking or the Deity, he says: "In whom we
live and move and have our being," and in the sense of the true
meaning of "omnipresence,'' and of Goethe's description of Nature, "At the roaring loom of
time I ply, and weave for God the garment thou seest Him by."
Nature is not God: stones, trees, flowers, animals, even men, planets. suns, are not
God: but all are expressions, manifestations, "garments of the divine, all are in
essence divine and all in their evolution are ever becoming, to use Plato's idea, more
perfect as expressions, as manifestations, showing ever more clearly the divinity which is
at the root of their being. Again let me ask is this contrary to Christianity, or rather let me
say, the teachings of Christ - what other meaning can be given to: "perfect as your father
in heaven is perfect"? How is this possible unless man in essence is already perfect, and
remember that "the kingdom of heaven is within you" and the only place where God can
be found is within.
Christ, Buddha, Lao-Tse, and all the great teachers and saviours of humanity have
taught Theosophy. There is but one Truth and all the great religions are but expressions
of it as the colors of the spectrum are expressions of the one White Light. Students of
Theosophy, i.e., of Divine Wisdom, are searchers after the Truth and recognize these
teachings which we call Theosophy in the teachings of all the Sages of the past and of all
time.
---------
--- 244
as man which is apart from them. They exist in him, and as he lives and thinks so he
impresses on them his thoughts and acts, and as they are leaving him, every moment of
time it follows that a stream of these lives of many grades and sorts is continually being
projected from him into space and forming his own karma. For they are unintelligent and
only act in their own way, just as water acts when it runs down hill. If we regard them as
beings that we are educating we will fall into superstition. But if, on the other hand, we say
they do not exist and have no place in us, as the editor infers, we will never come to right
knowledge of the universe as it is.
"They are matter, in fact, and a certain quantity of it comes into the charge, so to
say, of every man, and every one is therefore responsible for the impressions he gives to
the atoms that make him up, and if he does not live aright he will have to suffer the
consequences sooner or later. For these very elementals are the means whereby karma
operates, for without them - considering atoms its points of sensitiveness - there would be
a break and no way for karma to have effect. If they do not exist, then there is no way to
make the connection between matter and mind and thought and circumstance.
"The conflict between the higher and the lower can be made easy only by the old
rule to look on all parts of the universe as containing spiritual beings, the same in kind and
only differing from each other in degree."
------
How to conquer this lower nature is a problem that perplexes many and has been
the cause of much anxiety and worrying. What a struggle, what a conflict! How can it be
ended and peace attained? I think we are too prone to spend time and energy in thinking
about it and in straining and making desperate efforts to reach the much desired result.
The contemplation of the awful struggle - as we style it - excites self-pity, self-
commiseration, which are really forms of egotism. Then perhaps by a supreme effort the
lower nature is stilled for it time and we think it dead and that we have completely risen
above it; perhaps we are proud of this achievement and congratulate ourselves on our
victory, but - in a little while we fall again, it may be lower than ever before. Why is this?
It is well known that a drunkard who realizing the evil of his condition suddenly
reforms and cuts himself loose from a habit of many years is in the great majority of cases
to return to his old habit. The case is exactly parallel to that of a man who has climbed a
mountain and unaccustomed to the height and the purer atmosphere becomes dizzy if he
looks down. The drunkard or the one who is endeavoring to conquer his lower nature, if
he looks back with horror at his former condition or if he congratulates himself on his
conquest, by that very attitude makes possible, nay almost certain, his downfall again.
It is not by one gigantic effort that this conquest can be attained, but by the slow,
steady and constant and by being content to take one step at a time. It is not by dwelling
on the evil that we have escaped from, nor on the evil which still oppresses us but constant
aspiration and the never relaxing endeavor to do the good, that we may rise to higher
things. The secret of overcoming is to be positive in our attitude, not to say I will not follow
this evil thing, but that I will follow this good thing. If we follow the good, the evil will cease
to find room or to have part in our lives.
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NEAR the city of Los Angeles in California there is a quaint little house surrounded
by a large and beautiful garden filled with flowers and shady trees. Here two little sisters
live with their parents and here one of the two children is passing a childhood which later
will be among the treasured records of genius.
This child is Paloma Schramm, nine years old, a musician from her birth and one of
whom the great German professor, her teacher, says it was she who convinced me of the
truth of reincarnation. How otherwise was to be explained the actions of a child who at the
age of three improvised lovely melodies and baby songs and who, when she was but four,
remembered and repeated correctly all the principal motifs from the opera of "Lohengrin."
She has now been studying the pianoforte for two years. Her musical sense is
marvelously acute and her interpretation of the works of the great masters perfect. Her
professor, with much wisdom, comprehends that his work lies in training and guiding a
musical power which already exists in the child. She is therefore being carefully trained in
composition as well as in technique. Her poetic fancies are well encouraged, but still her
musical compositions are required to be flawless in form before they are pronounced good
by her teacher. Paloma has played a few times before an audience and on each occasion
has plunged all who heard her into a state of amazement that so childish a frame could
contain so mighty a soul of music.
Every sound in nature reflects itself in her little compositions: the flight of butterflies,
the murmur of doves, the sound of the breeze in the wood; the grief of a mother over the
loss of her child; the melancholy sobbing of "Heimweh," all these she expresses with
exquisite feeling..
More than one child who has given promise of genius has had what might have been
a wonderful life for the uplifting of humanity spoiled in youth, by the undue indulgence and
flattery of foolish friends and the artificial atmosphere of the concert hall and stage. From
all these errors Paloma's parents are striving to shield her. It is true that she has appeared
at a public concert in her native city, but this was necessary in order that means might be
furnished for her to continue her musical training, and her parents hope that this may not
have to be repeated.
For the most part Paloma lives a simple child life. She and younger sister spend
many hours in the lovely shady garden. Here they have a large playground and a mimic
theatre, built for them by their father. Whenever the children are taken to hear any opera
great excitement afterward goes on in the little theatre. For all the play is repeated for the
benefit of a large audience of appreciative dolls, that calmly listen to Paloma and her sister
and never are rude enough to look bored.
Each child has a miniature theatre laid out underneath the trees, with tiny lakes and
rivers, waterfalls and bridges and diminutive houses peopled by a colony of dolls. Then
there are the pigeons, the only other inhabitants of this child's paradise. Each pigeon has
its own name and the children keep a daily journal in which is set down the history of their
feathered friends. Dearest of all is a lame wood-pigeon, a "paloma," as the Spaniards call
it. This bird has a strange history, which, however, is vouched for by Paloma's father.
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[[photo of girl]]
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One evening Mr. Schramm was sitting with his children in the garden, reading to
them the libretto of their favorite opera, "Lohengrin." It was in the sweet dusk and the
children were listening with rapt attention. Just as the Dither reached the climax of the
legend, where the swan changes to a dove, a bird fluttered from the trees overhead and
fell on the open book. It was a lame wood-dove, quite tame, and part of one foot had been
shot away. The parents of the children have never discovered from whence the bird came,
but it immediately attached itself to Poloma and has since been her constant companion.
It sleeps beside her pillow at night and follows her all the time she is in the garden. When
she is at the piano it haunts her and remains there, showing every evidence of an
appreciation of the music.
What shall he the future of Paloma cannot yet be told, but the promise is great. At
present she is living the life of a simple and healthy child, and all her beautiful fancies and
natural impulses are being wisely directed. Her parents have been asked as to her
religious views but philosophically answer, "The child will develop her own religion." Would
that every child might be educated with as much wisdom!
Her musical genius has been pronounced by competent critics to be unique in the
world at this present time. Her parents are not very musical, the father being a machinist.
"She must have lived before!" has exclaimed more than one person on listening to her
playing.
- M.S. Lloyd
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MARIE'S VALENTINE
by Elizabeth Whitney
"Girls, are you going to make any Valentines this year?" asked Marie, as the group
were walking home from the gymnasium after basketball practice.
"Oh yes, let's!" said Olive.
"It is a lot more fun than buying them," said Marion.
"Can't we do it together?" asked Edna.
"When?" said Olive.
"Oh come to my house, Wednesday after school. Nothing is going on then. Be sure
to bring your water-colors and paper. I say we rule out all printed pictures and verses and
make it all original," said Marion.
"Oh dear, I can't!" objected Olive.
"See here, Olive Warner," and Marion faced Olive sternly, "if you don't stop this
minute, you'll spoil it all! I'd like to know why it is that we never try to do anything all
together, that some one doesn't object!"
"Of course you can do it, Olive," said gentle Bliss. And if you get stuck, you know
we will all help. We always do have to help each other any way. One person alone never
does very much."
"Here, we are at my house," said Marion. "Good-bye Olive, and don't be foolish.
Girls, do be sure to come just as early as you can." And Marion ran up the steps while the
others sent a chorus of "Good-byes" after her.
Promptly on Wednesday came the laughing group of girls.
"How will we begin, girls?" said Edna.
"Well, of course, we must put a heart somewhere," said Marion.
"Of course," Olive added, in a tone of voice that made Marion exclaim, "For
goodness sake, girls, don't get sentimental."
"Valentines without sentiment would be very funny things, I'm sure," said Olive in all
aggrieved voice.
"Well, sentiment is one thing, and getting sentimental is another," began Marie.
"Hear - Hear!" called out Edna.
"Well, it is," continued Marie. "Sentiment is the love of beautiful pictures, and music,
and fine ideas; the noble things you feel in people and in nature; and getting sentimental
is, - well - it is --"
"Just being dead foolish, that's all," supplemented Marion.
"I guess it's what you think people are thinking about you," said Bliss.
"Specially boys," laughed Edna.
"Humph!" said Marion, who was used to three brothers and their numerous chums,
"I don't see anything to be afraid of in boys! They are just as sentimental as girls anyway.
Wait till you see the valentines they send!"
"Well," said Marie, "mine is going to be 'perfectly peachy.' I'll give you three guesses
where it is going."
"Yale," said Olive and Edna in unison.
"Guess again," said Marie.
"It can't be you've forsaken 'Yale' for 'Princeton,' after all you've said!" exclaimed the
girls,
"Guess again," and Marie held up her valentine in such a tantalizing way, that the
girls clustered eagerly around her, Edna exclaiming, "What on earth are you doing to it,
Marie!"
"Well, in the first place, I'm putting in the sun, to make a kind of 'halo of glory' over
all. It is the kind of thing you always do see in the people you like. Then the heart has a
crown around it. I'm going to put stars over here, and a verse like this:
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Marion, "you wouldn't feel so afraid of boys then, and get so sentimental."
"I tell you, girls," she continued, "boys are the best thing going, if they only have the
right kind of mothers to begin with. You see the right kind of mother is a regular chum.
She understands things. She never scolds, and you know perfectly well that if you told lies
or killed people, she'd be your mother and stand by you, just the same; only she has a way
of making you feel that you wouldn't do such things, no matter how much you want to."
"Three cheers for Marion!" exclaimed Edna.
"Three cheers for our darling mothers!" added Bliss.
"Mine is expecting me at home in ten minutes, girls, I must leave your fascinating
company," said Olive.
"I must go also - wait for me," said Edna.
"Girls, can't we meet again, to finish our valentines together?"
"Oh yes," said Bliss, "come to my house Friday."
"All right - Good-bye Marion, I've had a lovely time - "
"So have I - "
"And I - "
"Thank you so much for the lovely afternoon, Marion - Good-bye - "
"Good-bye, girls!"
"Good-bye" - "Good-bye" - And the merry group was gone.
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- Edmund Gosse
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THE following letter was read to the members of the Inner Council on January 7th,
and would have been sent to all members if time had permitted. As this has not been
possible, I place it in these columns by request.
January 7, 1898
DEAR COMRADES: I take this opportunity at the beginning of the new year, at the
approach of the new cycle, to assure you that I am not unmindful of your needs. At no time
since I stepped publicly into this work have I been able to give as much attention to each
Branch as I desire. The increase in membership, and the wide public interest aroused in
Theosophy have brought increased work with few additions to the number of trained
helpers. The strain, therefore, on myself and those comrades closely associated with me
at the centre, has been very great.
The Branches and centres organized by the Crusade around the world required my
first attention. They had not the opportunities of the older members nor the experience in
connection with the organization during past years, and so it was necessary to give them
personal attention in order that the help given them by the hurried visit of the Crusade
might bear its full harvest of good fruit.
In the midst of all this work I was called to found the New Century, and even then,
when it seemed that I had reached a point that I could undertake no more, I was
importuned by Mr. Neresheimer to take charge of UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD. I
accepted this duty feeling that in so doing I could indirectly help my fellow comrades.
By some of these means I have accomplished but little in comparison to what will
be possible when I am relieved of some of the detail work which I have to undertake at
present. When the time comes that I have more trained helpers around me who can do
this, I can then get closer in touch with all through personal correspondence and otherwise.
Theosophy is no longer obscure. At the beginning of this new cycle we are entering
upon a more glorious field of work. To recall the struggles of H. P. B. in the early days,
when with three or four persons around her she faced the obloquy of the world, and later,
William Q. Judge, left in America almost alone, sowing the seed which made later
developments possible, and then to look at the success today is indeed encouraging and
inspiring. The trust of the members carried through the work of the T. S. when in times of
shadow it was endangered; today, when no permanent harm can befall our work, that
same trust should be maintained. This Movement must go on advancing; it cannot be
retarded; no limitations can hinder it. Above and beyond all boundaries exists the
Universal Theosophical Movement.
Let your minds dwell in unity on such a thought and the beginning of the new cycle,
the 18th of February next, will be a marked day in the history of this Movement. It will be
a pivotal point from which we can, by acting on the broadest lines of brotherly love, enter
the new age with opportunities heretofore undreamt of.
To all members who have helped to uphold my hands in this great work, I send my
most heartfelt thanks and assure them that they have by their faithfulness made greater
work possible for me in the future. Let all keep in line and act, and triumphant victory will
surely follow.
- Katherine A. Tingley
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MISCELLANEOUS NEWS
NEW YORK - The Aryan T. S. is having very successful Sunday evening meetings,
the "Question and Answer" plan proving very attractive to the public and the meetings are
crowded every week. Recently at the closed meetings of the Branch, held every Tuesday,
the objects of the International Brotherhood League have been discussed and it is
proposed to take up, after these have been completed, the Question and Answer plan as
at the Sunday meeting.
There was a very full attendance at the meeting held on the 18th when the delegates
for the Convention were elected; it was a most enthusiastic meeting and several times the
audience rose to their feet and cheered Mrs. Tingley. When Mr. Neresheimer read the
letter dated January 18 in regard to the Convention which he has sent out to all members
the audience rose again and cheered. Mrs. Tingley was present and spoke briefly in
answer to a question stating that she did not approve of adopting political methods in
regard to the Convention and the election of officers. There were also present, Mr. Iverson
L. Harris from Macon, Ga., Mr. Clark Thurston from Providence, R. I., Mr. W. A. Stevens
from Buffalo, N. Y., Dr. L. F. Wood from San Diego, and all spoke. The presence of Mr.
Harris was like a strong fresh breeze from the South as he told of the splendid work the
members are doing in Macon and of their enthusiasm. He said that the whole town was
ready and anxious to hear about Theosophy and that instead of urging members forward
they had rather to restrain their enthusiasm as Mrs. Tingley had stated that the time was
not yet ripe to take full advantage of it. He also said that this great interest and enthusiasm
is all due to something which the three members who attended the Nashville Exposition
took back with them to Macon and which they had not taken with them to Nashville, it was
as though some power which heretofore had lain dormant had been awakened. That
Brotherhood was no longer a theory but a positive demonstrated fact, as was instanced by
the practical work of the International Brotherhood League.
Mr. Thurston also spoke of the I. B. L. work in Providence, that this work had struck
a new keynote and had awakened dormant energies and shown the tremendous
possibilities that lay right at our very hands and that only those who actually began to carry
out the plan of work of the I. B. L. could know the life and power that was in it to reach
humanity, and to demonstrate the higher teachings of true Brotherhood.
W. A. Stevens spoke of the "Wayfare" in Buffalo, started and conducted by
Theosophists, and of the many instances in which help had been given to unfortunate and
destitute women, not only by providing shelter for them but by caring for and helping them
and also by getting them established in positions where they could earn a living. This work
has attracted so much attention that the County Committee have given to the Home a
thousand dollars to aid the work this year.
The Monthly Report of the Pacific Coast Theosophical Committee is as usual a very
interesting 4-page sheet and gives news of all the Branches on the Coast, also of I. B. L.
meetings, the Brotherhood Bazaars and Lotus Groups. The Secretary, Amos J. Johnson,
writes a New Year's Greeting to all the Coast Branches and also the yearly report of the
San Francisco T. S. In the latter he states that "The year 1897 has been a very prosperous
one for Theosophical work - perhaps the most prosperous in
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the history of the society. Perfect unity of action has been manifest, meetings have been
well attended, a large volume of work has been performed and there has been a
considerable gain in membership." He also states that "the movement here was never
stronger than it is today."
"A valuable form of propaganda instituted during the year is the placing of leaflets
on Coast and River steamers. By this means the outlines of Theosophy are presented to
the traveling public, as evidenced by the distribution of 30,000 leaflets during the year." An
account is also given in the Report of the Visit of the Crusade in February of last year and
to the inauguration of the I. B. L., the work of which has been taken up with much
enthusiasm on the Coast.
Caracas T. S., Venezuela, reports great interest being taken in their meetings, and
that much appreciation of their efforts is shown by a large attendance of visitors.
Syllabuses of Discussions for Branch and public meetings have been received from
Fort Wayne, Ind., San Francisco, Cal., and Louisville, Ky., and contain some very
interesting subjects.
The Annual Convention of the T. S. A. has been arranged to take place on February
18th and 19th, in Chicago, Ill. Official notification to Branches was sent out by the
President on January 3d, and quotes from a statement made by Mrs. Tingley, as follows:
"We are now approaching the beginning of a new cycle. The date, February 8th, must
have a great significance to all members. The promise for the future appears before us as
almost a living reality. The record of this day will pass down to posterity as one of the most
important in the history of the movement . . . This convention promises to be stupendous,
one such as we have never had before, and in keeping with the importance of this great
cycle."
Mr. A. M. Smith of Chicago has already arranged for reduced rates of a fare and a
third for the double journey to and from Chicago, and has been making arrangements in
regard to halls, etc. A special feature on Sunday evening, February 20th, will be the
holding of a great Brotherhood Congress which will be of the same character as the great
Crusade Meetings, which were held around the world and for which great preparations are
being made. On Saturday evening a lecture on the Crusade will be given, illustrated by 100
stereopticon views, which were specially made for the New York Brotherhood Bazaar
Entertainment from Mrs. Tingley's private collection of photographs.
Among others who will be present at the Convention are Dr. Anderson, and we hope
others also from the Pacific Coast; Judge O'Rourke, A. A. Puritan and several others from
Fort Wayne; W. T. Hanson and I. L. Harris from Macon, Ga.; W.C. Temple, from Pittsburg,
who will be well remembered by all who attended last convention for his magnificent
speech and the stand he took in regard to our Society and the Movement; R. Crosbie, G.
D. Ayers, Miss Guild from Boston; a large number from New York; C. Thurston from
Providence; W.A. Stevens and Mrs. Stevens and a large delegation from Buffalo; Dr.
Dower and others from Syracuse, and indeed delegates from all over the States.
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the help she has given us carried with deafening cheers, all standing. Membership
increased during the year over 100 percent. ''
As this will be the last report of the work given in the pages of this magazine before
the Convention, it is not out of place to refer to the great increase in interest in Theosophy
all over the world and in the recognition of the Universality of the Theosophical Movement.
Through the Crusade links have been made between the T. S. A. and all parts of the world,
and the closest ties exist between the T. S. A., and members all over the world. The
progress made during the past two years has been simply amazing and the more so
because the T. S. like all other organizations must at one time - when the Crusade was on
its tour around the world have felt the financial depression which affected the whole of this
country.
Letters have been coming from all quarters expressing great trust and confidence
in Mr. Neresheimer and the desire to sustain him in his arduous duties, and at the same
time urging his continuance as President, since Mrs. Tingley, in reply to many requests to
consent to take office declared months ago that she would not take any official position in
the T. S. A., and it goes without saying that Mrs. Tingley does not say nay to the
proposition in regard to Mr. Neresheimer.
January and February are usually the busiest months of the year at Headquarters
when reports come in from all the Branches in the country. This year is no exception to the
rule. Every department in Headquarters is busy and to get through the amount of work
which to some would seem appalling is only possible through the hearty cooperation which
exists between all the members of the staff.
Having been at Headquarters and closely associated with the work for over five
years, first as private Secretary to William Q. Judge in the E. S. T. and then as Secretary
to the President and
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also closely associated with Mrs. Tingley, I have been privileged in being able to watch the
growth of the movement during these years and I can say that the Theosophical Movement
throughout the world and that part of it which we call the T. S. A. have risen to a point of
prominence and great usefulness. Those who have never heard of Theosophy are
beginning to experience what is best described as a hunger for some explanation of their
lives which nothing but Theosophy can satisfy and those who have heard of Theosophy
are, in innumerable instances being compelled, by something within themselves, to seek
for further light. But the greatest evidence of the growth of the movement is in my opinion
to be found in the fact of the practical expression of Theosophy and Brotherhood by
members all over the world. Theosophy has long been a power in the minds of members,
but it is now becoming a living power in their lives and that which more than anything else
has called it forth has been the opportunity for such expression presented by the
International Brotherhood League.
- Joseph H. Fussell
A most interesting article from Dr. Buck which we hoped to have had in this issue
arrived just too late, but we intend to give it to our readers next month. - Editors.
--------
Note. - To the members of the T. S. A. and the subscribers to the magazine I desire
to state that I took up the work of Editorship of the magazine only for a short time at the
urgent request of Mr. Neresheimer and others. I did this with great reluctance. I have
endeavored with the assistance of Mr. Neresheimer to popularize the Magazine and bring
about the changes which were necessary for its advancement. I regret that the limitations
due to other work have prevented my doing all that should he done, but the time was not
ripe for many things. My purpose has always been to keep as close as possible to Mr.
Judge's wishes, and should I in the near future discontinue my editorship I feel sure that
as long as it is carried on to serve principles and not personalities, it will be a success.
I also wish to call the attention of readers of this magazine that I am only responsible
for the opinions expressed in unsigned articles and in the Students' Column and of course
in all articles signed by myself.
- Katherine A. Tingley
----------------------
AUM
"Oh ye men and women, sons of the same Universal Mother as ourselves, ye who
were born as we were born, who must die as we must die, and whose souls like ours
belong to the Eternal, I call upon you to arise from your dream state and to see within
yourselves that a new and brighter day has dawned for the human race....."
"It is only an age of darkness for those who cannot see the light, but the light itself
has never faded and never will. It is yours if you will turn to it and live in it."
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD
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Vol. XII March, 1898 No. 12
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THERE are Seven steps of downward course from the All to One, from One, a
Monad, to its Ray, from Ray. . . here Three are falling into Four.
The Monad sends its messenger, the Ray, upon its cyclic journey to the other shore.
Where has the Ray to journey, if not to the All again? But THAT dwells only in the
darkness of the Unknown.
How is the Ray to win Self-consciousness eternal, so that its Monad may he radiant
throughout?
It is through matter that consciousness appears, it is by limitations that we see the
space, it is by multiplicity that we know the Unit.
It is by the non-self, by having fought with thoughts that are not ours, by being
pressed with flickering flames of passion, which try to blind and quench our inner steady
light; by being lost in the raging ocean of mocking dreams which entice our sunny hopes
into their vortices and eddies but to tear them down; by the hardness and unwieldiness of
our heart and the cruel sea-faring frame of death and negation, that we may affirm our
Higher Self, whose silence speaks when once aroused in our own mysterious depths, and
which rises proudly in its protest, Imperishable, Unconquerable, Divine, "a bright star
dropped from the Heart of Eternity, a beacon of Hope, on whose seven Rays hang the
Seven Worlds of Being." (S.D. I, p. 145, new edition.)
What will the Pilgrim do on these four lower planes, whither he has fallen? Will he
send the thoughts of his heart to meet the thoughts coming from opposite direction, so that
he may know the difference between the inner Eternal Real Life and outer apparitions, or
will he drift taking his enemies for granted. Will he attest the Unity seeing now for the first
time disrupted shadows? Will he be aware that these upside down black reflections mean
negations of the invisible white realities of him, who sees, of his own inner light, which
makes the consciousness of these negations possible. Will he recognize in these dark and
powerful outlines the first appearing edges of the reality more tremendous, vast and
spiritual, than he knew before, or frightened will he shrink into ease again? Will the depths
below awake the heights above? Will the stronger shadow reveal still stronger light, the
outer spaces open inner spaces, so that he may forever live in a more glorious, more self-
conscious light?
Impelled by Karmic Law he dwells on seven globes of these four planes. Not all at
once he gains experience, but very slowly he descends without a shock. Nature is merciful
and gives enough of time.
Seven times he has to journey through
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the seven globes of earth, of which his mortal eyes see only one, as it lies on the lowest
plane of the four. At first he moves his shadows, but in the middle of his journey he
descends himself.
When he begins to see the shadows to last beyond his thoughts, soft is their matter
then, their aspect bright and joyous, their song melodious as that of a morning lark. Longer
and longer do they last, passing through three stages of the elemental essence, and all
seems a sport on the great field of space and time. When the fourth is reached, the
shadows reflect more radiance of the steady thought and become "Sparks of the Lower
Kingdom, that float and thrill with joy in their radiant dwellings." These will not be
extinguished, for they are the great mineral World, and the Great Serpent of Spirit takes
this end of his shadowy tail and makes it sparkle brightly. It is his great knowledge that
makes atoms omniscient in their circular and scintillating flights. The smallest of the small
has found refuge in the greatest of the great, and all angelic hosts are helped. Did not they
deserve it? Have not they obeyed the call to grow, expand and differentiate to the smallest
limits, so that each of them would have a field to help and interpenetrate mutually and to
reach the oneness consciously by harmony of multiplicity
Has not each one of them made this grand work not for himself, but for all the Host
of Hierarchies? Did not they weave this web of Light out of their own hearts, where
Universal Music told them what to do, so that every atom which flashed out is one grand
note of a celestial song?
The First, the Mother, heard and came down and took the singing, fiery things into
her mouth.* Her magic touch gave the hearing powers to the atoms, and sent them back
to the same angels who emanated them, with message from the
-----------
* S. D., I, 310 (new edition). The first is the Mother, .... [the serpent biting its own
tail.]
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Mother. This was the message of Life, the dreams coming back as living beings, the songs
returning as radiant sisters, gifts rich and celestial, as only Divinity can make them. And
the great privilege is given that Egos themselves will help and lead awakened atoms into
the plants, plants into sacred animals, animals into men, and who will dare all hazards of
past Karma and for that great joy, that their dreams came true by mercy of the Great
Mother, that they are now alive, that they can answer back their love, that they now can be
led into the eternal, instead of simply being absorbed by those who thought them out.
It is at this stage of evolution that crystallized and organic life awakes, and centres
form themselves and grow from within. Herbert Spencer calls it integration, combining here
two kinds, one which grows from outside, another from inside, while all the world of
difference is between them. He did not discern the current of evolution rising from below
to meet that descending from above, the new centres ascending in the angelic dreams to
meet their Lords and be one with their thoughts and with their heart. Evolution is not
presented to his mind in the shape of a cross between the upward and the downward
stream. That part of his mind which discussed the subject seems to be dreaming yet.
Besides, this physical outside-inside adjustment is only a skin-deep shadow of the real one,
which is the awakening in Life.
So it is now no more a returning of the shadows. It is Divinity itself, the greatest of
the great, and yet so humble as to enter into the smallest things, it is the great One Life
ascending Jacob's ladder, the stairway of angelic dreams, which descend toward it to give
it form and dress.
Who then awakens now, the Shoreless Life in centres, essences and forms, or
centres, essences and forms in Shoreless Life? Can consciousness exist without these
two?
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(To be continued)
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VIII. PARSIFAL
"Compassion is no attribute. It is the Law of Laws - eternal Harmony, the World-
Soul's SELF: a shore universal essence, the light of everlasting Right, and fitness of all
things, the law of love eternal." - The Voice of the Silence
"Through voluntary suffering and renunciation man's egoism is already practically
upheaved, and he who chooses them, let his object be whatever you please, is thereby
raised already above all notions bound by Time and Space; for no longer can he seek a
happiness that lies in Time and Space, e'en were they figured as eternal as
immeasureable." - Wagner's State and Religion
IN approaching a brief study of this, the crowning drama of the Master's life-work,
one must have the whole cycle of his previous mystical works in mind. Then it will be
perceived that they all represent different phases of the complex struggles undergone by
the human being in the course of its evolution. The last of these struggles was depicted
in Tristan and Isolde where we find the demons of the lower mind finally vanquished and
the soul at peace with itself in conscious union with the World-Soul. In the introductory
remarks on that work I alluded to the Thread-Soul connecting all the dramas, and I showed
from Wagner's writings and correspondence that he was occupied at one and the same
time with the three widely different yet closely allied subjects of the Ring, Tristan and
Parsifal.
But there is now something more significant to add. Wagner tells Liszt that Die
Sieger (the forerunner of Parsifal) could only become intelligible after digesting Tristan,
"especially the third act." Coupling this with the fact that he at first intended to introduce
the figure of Parsifal in this same third act, we get a clue to the Master's meaning. In the
figure of Parsifal we see the product of the struggles depicted in the previous dramas. He
stands alone as a perfect being; there is no female figure on or near his level, because in
him the "head" and "heart,'' the Eternal Manly and the Eternal Womanly, are united as they
there needs must be in one who has attained the power to redeem. Let us recall Wagner's
words on the Ring drama: "Nor is Siegfried taken alone (the male alone), the perfect Man:
only with Brynhild becomes he the redeemer."
The great theme of the Parsifal drama is that of Compassion, the highest aspect of
that love which was the keynote of Wagner's life, and whose sacred power is contained in
the chalice of the Grail. During the composition of Tristan, Wagner wrote to a friend, "In
all my relations to the suffering world I feel led and guided by one thing alone -
Compassion. If only I could give myself thereto without reserve then all my private woes
would he overcome." And there are numberless anecdotes of the greatness of his heart.
Battling ever with unheard of difficulties, suffering as only such a highly strung, sensitive
nature can suffer, he was yet constantly sharing his last shilling, his last crust, with a more
needy brother. It was he, too, who said, "No individual can be happy until we are all happy;
for no individual can be free until all are free." Says M. Kufferath, "He was, himself, all his
life the compassionate being he imagined as the hero of his last work." Herein lies the
secret of Wagner's power; he had lived all his dramas in his own heart and mind.
Besides Die Sieger, the drama in which the Buddha and his philosophy were to be
introduced, Wagner had earlier sketched Jesus of Nazareth. But in both these subjects he
felt the disadvantage
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of dealing with historical figures, and so he blended them in the mythical figure of Parsifal,
making him the hero of a mystery-play in which the essential elements of the great religions
of the Eastern and Western worlds are blended. Thus did he hold up to the world the grand
ideal of a Brotherhood of Religions as well as of Arts and Humanity.
Many have thought that Parsifal is a specifically Christian play, but as a matter of
fact it presents the essential truths of the great World-Religions in a form especially
adapted to the Western world of today where Christianity is the ruling religion. In adopting
this course Wagner showed his wisdom and deep knowledge of human nature for it will
always be found that truths are more readily conveyed to the mind in familiar than in
unfamiliar forms, and that a wall of prejudice is frequently set up at the very
commencement if this method is departed from.
In the short article on the Lohengrin drama I referred very briefly to the legend of the
Holy Grail which is so prominent in the mythology of the European and especially the Celtic
peoples. We have in this legend several important features. First of all there is the
mysterious Monsalvat, or mount of salvation, on which the Castle of the Grail stood. This
mountain is a world-wide symbol for a lofty state of consciousness reached by aspiration,
purity, and altruistic endeavor. Consequently we find its location on earth to be uncertain
and surrounded by mystery, although in some cases this may indicate one of the many
places where mystic communities owed to the highest service of humanity actually exist.
Wagner, following the "Parsival" of Wolfram von Eschenbach, has placed the Grail
Castle on the Northern slope of the Mountains of Gothic Spain, while on the Southern side
in Moorish Spain is the Castle of Perdition raised by the Magician Klingsor to lure the Grail
Knights to destruction. These knights dwell in the Castle as chosen guardians of the Grail,
united in the sacred bonds of Brotherly love and pledged to carry Relief and Truth to their
fellow creatures. This mystic Brotherhood is a living fact in nature with many different
expressions in the outer world, the Masonic Fraternity being perhaps the most widely
spread of these. It is a Lodge governed by the immutable laws of nature which act without
fear or favor. Thus the forces of destruction can never affect it, for each unit has its
appropriate place and the ambitions, the selfish, and the traitorous can never pass its
threshold, although they may imagine that they do so. All belong to it whether they know
it or not who are carrying out its principles in their lives.
The Grand Master of this Lodge we here find in the King of the Knights of the Grail,
and Wagner - a Mason himself - points out that his distinction from the rest of the
Brotherhood lies in "the wight of suffering which none but himself can gauge." Further he
says that this King or Grand Master is the living link between the ideal realm of the Grail
where Divine Compassion resides and the material world where Selfishness reigns. "The
atmosphere essential for his work," continues Wagner, "is found in a body of like-minded
men banded together to serve him unreservedly, pledged fulfillers of his gracious will." This
harmony, whole-hearted trust and absolute obedience to the Head is but little understood
at the present day, and yet there never was and never will be any other road to the Temple
of the Holy Grail.
Next we come to the Sacred Cup itself in which are contained the fruits of suffering
and incarnation in the material world - the Wisdom and Compassion which radiate from the
Christos or Divine Self in Man - the mystic Bread and Wine. And here we can remind
ourselves that the Eucharistic ceremony is of vast antiquity and discoverable in
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all religions and rituals of initiation. Let us take the early Druidical form of the Grail Cup,
itself derived from the Egyptians. The Saga of the great bard Taliesin tells us how Gwion
the dwarf or primitive man helps Koridwen (Nature) to boil in a cauldron or vase the six
magic plants and so prepare the water of Wisdom. The hot liquid splashes on his hand and
raising it to his mouth - as Siegfried did when the hot blood of the slain dragon burnt him -
his inner faculties are awakened and he begins to understand Nature's secrets. Going
through a series of forms in which he battles with nature and masters one by one her
mysteries, he is at length re-born in a new and glorious shape as Taliesin, the initiated
Bard, Master of Sound. The embryo soul of the dwarf has evolved through many births or
changes of form, and by means of many struggles, until it vibrates in sympathy with all that
lives and breathes.
Such a perfected being is called a Companion of the Lodge or of the Vase, and the
name Parsifal in its Gallic form signifies Companion of the Cup or Vase, while the Persian
form adopted by Wagner means the Pure Simple. The character of Parsifal is that of a
stainless, simple youth who passes unscathed through all temptation and learns the
World's pain through Sympathy or Compassion which is the highest aspect of the Will. It
then becomes the power to redeem, and its weapon is the Sacred Lance which should
never be separated from the Grail.
In the drama of Parsifal, Wagner takes these elements and presents to us in a series
of pictures quivering with musical and dramatic life the story of the World's sin and pain, its
cause and cure. The whole conception is characterized by a simplicity and beauty and yet
by an immense grandeur, and solemnity impossible to describe.
In the next article I will pass on to the story of the drama itself to which the following
passage from Wagner's Art and Revolution (Prose Works, I, 34), will form a fitting prelude.
He is speaking of the great Festival Plays in Ancient Greece.
"To see the most pregnant of all tragedies, the Prometheus, came they; in this
Titanic masterpiece to see the image of themselves, to read the riddle of their own actions,
to fuse their own being and their own communion with that of their god . . . For in the
Tragedy the Greek found himself again, - nay found the noblest parts of his own nature
united with the noblest characteristics of the whole nation; and from his inmost soul, as it
there unfolded itself to him, proclaimed the Pythian oracle. At once both God and Priest,
glorious god like man, one with the Universal, the Universal summed up in him; like one
of those thousand fibres which form the plant's united life, his slender form sprang from the
soil into the upper air; there to bring forth the one lovely flower which sheds its fragrant
breath upon eternity."
(To be continued)
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THOMAS PAINE *
by Huldah T. Gunn, M. D.
AMONG the eminent men who labored to secure our country's freedom none stand
higher than Thomas Paine; and, be it to the nation's shame - none are so little known at
the present time. Although the companion and co-worker with Washington, Jefferson,
Franklin, Adams, and Lafayette, no statue of him adorns our public parks and buildings,
and scant mention of him is made in the histories of our country. Higginson, Fisk, Scudder,
Eggleston, and I think Ridpath, ignore him altogether. Johnson gives a few lines, admitting
that Paine's Common Sense turned the scale in favor of separation from England; and
Charming gives him a back-handed mention in the following words: "No one can read the
State papers of the revolutionary period without being impressed with the constitutional
knowledge and literary skill of their authors. Yet it may well be doubted if all put together
exerted so much influence in bringing the people to an acquiescence on the policy of
independence as was exerted by one small pamphlet written by Thomas Paine, called
Common Sense." Then he stabs him by adding: "It is fortunate that our task does not
require a description of Paine's personal character. He came to America and was
recognized as a man of remarkable literary power and was encouraged by Franklin and
Jefferson, who may have been unaware of the moral contamination which lurked in his
neighborhood." Who Edward Charming is I do not know, but I can safely predict that any
man, who in the year 1896, with every opportunity for investigation - if he wished to dissect
Paine's character - can write in such an Iago style, will be forgotten when Thomas Paine's
name will be written in letters of gold;
------------
* Read before the Society for Political Study, October 26th, 1897
------------
for justice, although sometimes tardy, is nevertheless sure, and sooner or later, hand in
hand with truth, she will vindicate those who have been wronged. And no man in this or
any other country has been more maligned, misrepresented and calumniated than Thomas
Paine. Ingratitude and ignominy have been his portion, instead of justice and honor. A
name that should have been exalted has been debased, and for what reason? Because
he was a brave and truthful man, and had the moral courage to give utterance to what he
believed to be the truth.
Thomas Paine was born in Thetford, Norfolk, England, on the 29th of January, 1737,
and died at New Rochelle, New York, June 8th, 1809, "in the land his genius defended, and
under the flag he gave to the skies." He says of himself: "My father being a Quaker it was
my good fortune to have an exceeding good moral education and a tolerable stock of useful
learning. .... I happened when a schoolboy to pick up a pleasing history of Virginia, and my
inclination from that day, of seeing the western side of the Atlantic never left me." That
"inclination" was not gratified till 1774, when he met Benjamin Franklin in London, who,
perceiving in him abilities of no ordinary character, advised him to quit his native country,
where he was surrounded by so many difficulties, and try his fortune in America. He also
gave him a letter of introduction to his son-in-law, Richard Bache, who resided in
Philadelphia. This introduction brought him in contact with the most literary, scientific, and
patriotic men of the age.
In January, 1775, he became editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine. Up to this period
Paine had been a Whig; but from the practical tone of his editorials it is probable he began
to suspect that that
-----------
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"speculative abstraction, British constitutionalism, had exhausted its usefulness in the social
organism; and that human progress could reach a higher plane than that represented by
kings, lords, commons, and church establishment."
These were exciting times in the American colonies. A spirit of discontent was
widespread over the land, owing to a series of oppressive enactments by the parent
government; but the thought of a separation from British control had hardly entered the
mind of any American.
The wish for justice was strong, but the desire for independence was yet unborn.
Paine soon comprehended the situation, and exerted himself to bring about a reconciliation
between parent and child. He wrote an elaborate letter to the British government in which
he endeavored to show the English rulers the injustice of their course to the colonies and
that the true interests of home government would be conserved by a course of leniency.
As we know, he did not succeed in this laudable effort. Alive to justice and equity
he readily espoused the American cause and became thoroughly imbued with American
interests; and under this inspiration he wrote the immortal pamphlet entitled Common
Sense, which was published in January, 1776. The effects produced by this pamphlet were
unparalleled. It astounded some, alarmed others, but created an enthusiasm in the
American heart that could not be quelled. The masses were infused with his spirit, and a
love of liberty was awakened which never again slumbered. Edition after edition of this
brave patriotic pamphlet was printed and scattered all over the land. There was scarcely
a mansion, a farm-house, or a cabin but had a copy of Common Sense.
A general response like a glad shout arose from all parts of the country. It was the
rallying cry that led a young nation to birth and to victory.
"No other pamphlet published during the revolution is comparable with it. Therein
as in a mirror is beheld the almost incredible England against which the colonies
contended. And therein is reflected the moral, even religious enthusiasm which raised the
struggle above the paltriness of a rebellion against taxation, to a great human movement -
a war for an idea." It portrayed in clear language the practicability of an independent
government, and boldly advised a forcible resistance to the unjust exactions of a powerful
and oppressive nation. It ably indicated how a government could be established in which
the control of it could be entirely in the hands of the people governed; where the poor and
the rich could equally share in the rights, duties and benefits pertaining to it; in which there
should be neither prerogatives nor disabilities on account of religious belief. It pointed out
how the trite government of a people was one of equal rights, equal privileges and equal
opportunities for preferment and honor." ..... He was not only the first to suggest American
independence but the first to write the words "The free and independent States of
America." In a letter to Lord Howe, dated January 13th, 1777, he wrote: "United States
of America will sound as pompously to the world, in history, as the Kingdom of Great
Britain." .... Six months after the publication of Common Sense the Declaration of
Independence was signed, which in all probability Paine had a hand in formulating,
although not so recorded in history.
Before it became known who wrote Common Sense, it was by some attributed to
Benjamin Franklin, others insisted that it was from the pen of that elegant writer of English,
John Adams. In refutation of this sentiment, Mr. Adams wrote: - "It has been generally
propagated through the continent that I wrote this pamphlet; I could not have written
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anything in so manly and striking a style." This eulogy was pronounced by one who, says
Randall in his "Life of Thomas Jefferson,'' was so jealous of Paine's credit in the matter of
the Declaration of Independence "that he spares no occasion to underrate Paine's services,
and to assault his opinions and character."
Dr. Franklin disclaimed the authorship in a letter to a lady friend who reproached him
for using such an epithet as ''the royal brute of Britain," in which he said "I did not write the
pamphlet and would never so dishonor the brute creation." Major Gen. Charles Lee, in a
letter to Washington after the appearance of Common Sense, wrote in this wise: - "Have
you seen the pamphlet Common Sense? I never saw such a masterly irresistible
performance. I own myself convinced by the arguments of the necessity of separation."
Afterwards in speaking of Paine he says: "He burst on the world like Jove in thunder. His
writings will answer for his patriotism.'' Samuel Bryan in his estimate of the pamphlet said: -
"This book may be called the Book of Genesis, for it was the beginning; from it sprang the
Declaration of Independence, that not only laid the foundation of liberty in our own country,
but the good of mankind throughout the world." Dr. Benjamin Rush, whose acquaintance
Paine made when he first came to America, said of Common Sense: - "That book burst
forth from the press with an effect that has been rarely produced by types and paper, in any
age or country." Lossing in his Field Book of the Revolution says: "Common Sense was
the earliest and most powerful appeal in behalf of independence, and probably did more
to fix that idea firmly in the public mind than any other instrumentality." Morse in his Annals
of the Revolution says: "The change in the public mind in consequence of Common Sense
is without parallel."
The limitation of my paper precludes me from citing others in laudation of this
remarkable production, but I must not omit George Washington's tribute to Paine's genius.
In a letter to Joseph Reed, dated January 31st, 1776, he writes: "A few more such flaming
arguments as were exhibited at Falmouth and Norfolk, added to the sound doctrine and
unanswerable reasoning contained in the pamphlet Common Sense, will not leave numbers
at a loss to decide on the propriety of a separation."
The Continental Congress issued an order that Common Sense should be read at
the headquarters of the armies; and Washington also gave an order from his headquarters
directing the Captains in service to read it to their companies. We can scarcely appreciate
at this day the marvelous effect these inspiring utterances had upon the army.
Paine realizing that the life of the young nation depended upon the ensuing struggle,
resigned his position as editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine, and marched with his musket
to the front. He enlisted in a Pennsylvania Division of the Flying Camp of 10,000 men, who
were to be sent wherever needed. Later on he was under General Nathanael Greene. The
hardships and deprivations of a soldier's life seemed to stimulate his prolific pen, and
patriotic effusions continued to flow from it.
When Washington was defeated on Long Island, and forced to make a humiliating
retreat across New Jersey, his army reduced and dispirited, and gloom prevailed all over
the country, Paine's first Crisis appeared like an electric spark amid profound darkness.
The half-clad, disheartened soldiers of Washington were called together in groups to listen
to that thrilling exhortation. The opening words alone - "these are the times that lay men's
souls" - were an inspiration that led on to victory. "The summer soldier and the sunshine
patriot, will in this crisis shrink
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from the service of his country; but he that stands it now, deserves the thanks of man and
woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered, yet we have the consolation with us
that the harder the conflict the more glorious the triumph. .... Heaven knows how to put a
proper price upon her goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as
Freedom should not be highly rated."
As they listened to these encouraging words, despair gave place to hope, gloom to
cheerfulness, irresolution to determination, and presently the great commander saw his
dispirited soldiers beaming with hope and bounding to the onset; their watchword - "These
are the times that try men's souls."
The Hessians were captured, Trenton was won, and a new era dawned for America
on the morrow of that Christmas day, 1776. All honor to Thomas Paine!
Conway, in his life of Thomas Paine, in speaking of the effects produced by The
Crisis says - "Not a chord of love, or hope was left untouched. With skillful illustration of
lofty principles, by significant details all summed with simplicity and sympathy, three
miserable weeks as ever endured by men were raised into epical dignity."
After the battle of Trenton Paine continued his place on General Greene 's staff, and
by the wish of all the Generals kept on writing during the entire struggle.
When the outlook was the most cheerless and the spirits of the army and the country
most depressed, then hope and courage would be revived through his never tiring pen.
In January, 1777, he issued his second number of The Crisis. It was addressed to
Lord Howe, ridiculing the proclamation he had issued, commanding "all congress -
committees, etc., to desist and cease their treasonable doings." It was full of invective, the
style, perhaps, being more popular than polished. Doubtless he, himself, realized this,
which prompted the following: "If I have anywhere expressed myself over-warmly 'tis from
a fixed, immovable hatred I have and ever had to cruel men and cruel measures. I have
likewise an aversion to monarchy, as being too debasing to the dignity of man. .... What I
write is pure nature, and my pen and my soul have ever gone together." Further on he
says: "I consider Independence America's right and interest, and I never could see any real
disservice it would be to Britain."
The third number of The Crisis was issued in April, 1777 (the same year Congress
elected him Secretary to the Committee on Foreign Affairs). In it he reviews step by step
the progress of the Revolution, and demonstrates the impossibility of subjugation. His
words are: "As free and Independent States we are willing to make peace with you
tomorrow, but we neither can hear nor reply in any other character." His keen and watchful
eye had at this time discerned the covert enemy within the fold, and pointed out the danger
in the following language: "In the present crisis, we ought to know square by square and
house by house who are in real allegiance with the United Independent States and who are
not." He also discusses quite fully the currency question, and suggests a method of
taxation that would be a test of loyalty to the cause. Right here I wish to say that at one
time when the fortunes of the country were at its lowest ebb, and the army suffering for the
merest necessaries, he started a subscription list, heading it with a donation of $500 - all
the money he had, including the portion of the salary due him. Quite a large sum of money
was thus raised, which was of immense service in tiding the army over.
Paine continued to publish these patriotic papers, a series of sixteen, to the end of
the war, for which he was in no way compensated. He gave them freely
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for the benefit of the cause he so enthusiastically espoused. In the last, which was
published in 1783, he was able to say: "The times that tried men's souls are over, and the
greatest and completest revolution the world ever knew gloriously and happily
accomplished. ... It was the cause of America that made me an author. The force with
which it struck my mind and the dangerous condition the country appeared to be in, by
courting an impossible and unnatural reconciliation with those who were determined to
reduce her, instead of striking out into the only line that could cement and save her - a
Declaration of Independence - made it impossible for me, feeling as I did, to be silent; and
if in the course of more than seven years I have rendered her any service, I have likewise
added something to the reputation of literature by freely and disinterestedly employing it
in the great cause of mankind. .... But as the scenes of war are closed, and every man
preparing for home and happier times, I therefore take my leave of the subject. I have most
sincerely followed it from beginning to end, and through all its turns and windings; and
whatever country I may hereafter be in, I shall always feel an honest pride at the part I have
taken and acted, and a gratitude to nature and Providence for putting it in m power to be
of some use to mankind."
After ably discharging the duties of Secretary to the Committee of Foreign Affairs for
two years Mr. Paine resigned (in 1779), in consequence of a contest which had arisen
connected with Silas Deane, who had, early in the war, been sent to France to obtain
supplies for the army. In a newspaper article entitled Common Sense on Mr. Deane's
Affairs, he, in his usual straightforward style, exposed what he believed to he the fraudulent
conduct of Mr. Deane. This naturally incurred the enmity of Deane's friends in Congress,
and a motion was made for Mr. Paine to appear before Congress to deny or affirm that he
was the author of the article. He admitted the authorship, whereupon he was requested
to withdraw. As soon as he left the house a member arose and made a motion that Mr.
Paine be discharged from the office of Secretary of Foreign Affairs, but the motion was lost
on a division. Mr. Paine then asked that he might be heard in his own defense. Congress
denying him this, he sent in his resignation the next day, in the following characteristic
words, showing his true dignity of character: "As I cannot consistently with my character
as a freeman, submit to be censured unheard; therefore, to preserve that character and
maintain that right, I think it my duty to resign the office of Secretary to the Committee for
Foreign Affairs, and I do hereby resign the same."
Notwithstanding this unpleasant transaction, there was no abatement of Mr. Paine's
patriotism. As I have shown, he continued to publish his pamphlets and freely distributed
them without money and without price.
After his resignation as Secretary he took a position as clerk in an attorney's office
in Philadelphia, as now he had no means of obtaining a livelihood. Soon after this,
however, he was chosen clerk of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, which position he filled
with his accustomed ability. In 1781 Mr. Paine accompanied Colonel Henry Laurens,
president of Congress at that time, to France to negotiate a loan for the benefit of the
United States. Of the success of that mission we all know, that they not only succeeded
in securing the loan, but also received six million livres as a gift, which was of incalculable
advantage to the struggling young nation.
Paine's services had been so illy repaid and his generosity so unprecedented that
at the close of the war he found himself almost entirely without means. He then went back
to Bordentown, N, J., where
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he had a small property. There he spent three months in poverty and gloom. In
September. 1783, the month of the final peace, he sat alone in his little home, living on a
crust; meantime the other war heroes were celebrating their victory by a round of festivities
at Rocky Hill - a mansion which Congress (then in session at Princeton) had prepared for
Washington to receive ambassadors and other dignitaries from all over the world. One day
a ray from this festive splendor shone in his humble abode. The great Commander had not
forgotten his unwearied fellow-soldier, and wrote him the following letter:
Paine's reply to this friendly letter is too long for me to copy in full, but I will give a
few extracts from it. He writes:
"I am made exceedingly happy by the receipt of your friendly letter of the 10th. I
most sincerely thank you for your good wishes and friendship to me, and the kind invitation
you have honored me with, which I shall with much pleasure accept." .... I will omit a large
portion of the letter in which he alludes to Mr. Livingston's and Mr. Morris' letters to him
avowing their friendship and willingness to serve him, but will give the part in which he
expresses his feelings in regard to the neglect Congress was showing him. He says:
"Though I was never at a loss in writing on public matters, I feel exceedingly so in what
respects myself. I am hurt by the neglect of the collective ostensible body of America, in
a way which it is probable they do not perceive my feelings. It has an effect in putting
either my reputation or their generosity at stake, for it cannot fail of suggesting that either
I (notwithstanding the appearance of service) have been undeserving their regard or that
they are remiss toward me. Their silence is to me something like condemnation, and their
neglect must be justified by my loss of reputation, or my reputation supported by their
injury; either of which is alike painful to me. But as I have ever been dumb on anything
which might touch national honor, so I mean ever to continue so. Wishing you sir, the
happy enjoyment of peace and every public and private felicity, I remain, etc.,
"Thomas Paine"
Mr. Paine was urged by many of his friends to appeal to Congress for the
compensation so justly due him for his efficient services during the seven years' war, but
he invariably refused to do so. He was finally induced, however, to write to Mr. Elias
Boudinot, president of Congress. In this letter he said he "neither sought nor received for
his services any stipulated honors, advantages, or emoluments," but he thought "Congress
should inquire into them." I could not find in my reading that Congress took any action in
the matter, but the Legislature of Pennsylvania presented him with five hundred pounds,
and the Legislature of New York conveyed to him a tract of three hundred and fifty acres
of land, confiscated from the estate of Frederic Devoe, a royalist. It was situated near New
Rochelle, Westchester Co., N. Y., where, as I have stated, he ended his days.
America was now a free and independ-
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ent nation, but France was struggling to be free, and when she called for brave men in her
defense, Paine was among the first to lend his services in her behalf. When asked by
Franklin why he should leave America so soon after freedom had been obtained here,
supplementing his inquiry with this remark: "Where liberty is is my home." Paine
characteristically replied: "Ah! where liberty is not is MY home," meaning it was his
pleasure to assist in achieving it.
In April, 1787, he left this country and went to France. As his career there is not
pertinent to this paper, I shall not dwell upon it, but feel it but just to allude briefly to his
imprisonment there during the Reign of Terror. After he had been in prison some weeks
it became evident to all reasonable persons that he was innocent of any crime, and the
American residents in Paris went in a body to the Convention and asked for his release.
Their address to the Convention was as follows: "Citizens! The French nation had invited
the most illustrious of all foreign nations to the honor of representing her. Thomas Paine,
the apostle of liberty in America, a profound and valuable philosopher, a virtuous and
esteemed citizen, came to France and took a seat among you. Particular circumstances
rendered necessary the decree to put under arrest all the English residing in France.
Citizens! Representatives! We come to demand of you Thomas Paine, in the name of the
friends of liberty, and in the name of Americans, your brothers and allies; was there
anything more wanted to obtain our demand we would tell you. Do not give the leagued
despots the pleasure of seeing Paine in irons. We shall inform you that the seals put upon
the papers of Thomas Paine have been taken off, that the committee of general safety
examined them, and far from finding among them any dangerous propositions, they only
found the love of liberty, which characterized him all his lifetime; that eloquence of nature
and philosophy which made him the friend of mankind, and those principles of public
morality which merited the hatred of kings, and the affection of his fellow citizens. In short,
citizens! If you permit us to restore Thomas Paine to the embraces of his fellow citizens,
we offer to pledge ourselves as securities for his conduct during the short time he shall
remain in France." The answer to this petition was that the demand could not be listened
to "in consequence of its not being authorized by the American government."
Exclusive of Mr. Paine's being a citizen of the United States and consequently
entitled to the protection of its government, he had rendered her services which none but
the ungrateful could forget; he, therefore, had no reason to expect that her chief magistrate
would abandon him in ins hour of peril.
Paine felt keenly his cold neglect and alluded to it two years after (1796) in a
published letter to General Washington. The letter related principally to the treaty that had
just been concluded between the United States and Great Britain. In view of the high
opinion that Washington entertained of Paine's invaluable services in our revolution it is
hard to understand why he did not interfere in favor of his release. This negative fault is
certainly a reprehensible one in Washington's record.
After the downfall of Robespierre, Paine was released and again took his seat in the
National Convention. When he left prison he became the guest of James Monroe, who was
then minister to France, where he remained eighteen months, and was thus enabled to
recuperate his health, which was sadly impaired owing to his long imprisonment - eleven
months, I think. Mr. Monroe was his true friend from first to last, and so was Thomas
Jefferson.
One of Jefferson 's first acts when he became President of the United States was
to send a national vessel to convey
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Thomas Paine back to his adopted country. He also proposed to give him one of the first
offices in his gift, which Mr. Paine respectfully declined, feeling no doubt, with his usual
magnanimity, that his acceptance might embarrass the administration, for he had already
realized how deep seated was the prejudice and enmity against him, that had been
engendered mainly through pulpit vituperation. I cannot take leave of the subject without
mentioning the most celebrated of all his political works, his Rights of Man, for which he
was outlawed from England. It was written in 1771 in reply to Burke's Reflections on the
French Revolution. Napoleon Bonaparte, in a letter to Mr. Paine, speaks of it in this wise:
"A statue of gold ought to be erected to you in every city in the Universe. I assure you I
always sleep with The Rights of Man under my pillow. I desire you to honor me with your
correspondence and advice." Andrew Jackson gave his estimate of the value of the work
in these words: "Thomas Paine needs no monument made by hands; he has created
himself a monument in the hearts of all lovers of liberty. The Rights of Man will be more
enduring than all the piles of marble and granite that man can erect."
Thomas Paine was not behind Benjamin Franklin in his denunciation of slavery, as
those who read his works will see, and he was a step in advance of him, in his plea for the
rights of women. In the August, 1775, number of the Pennsylvania Magazine will be found
an article entitled: An occasional letter to the female sex, from which I quote a few
sentences: "If a woman were to defend the cause of her sex she might address man in the
following manner: 'Nature assails us with sorrow, law and custom press us with constraint,
sometimes also the name of citizen demands from us the tribute of fortitude. When you
offer your blood to the State, think that it is ours. In giving it our sons and our husbands,
we give it more than ourselves. You can only die on the field of battle but we have the
misfortune to survive these whom we love the most. Alas! while your ambitious vanity is
unceasingly laboring to cover the earth with statues, with monuments and with inscriptions
to eternize, if possible your names, when this body is no more, why must we be
condemned to live and die unknown. Why not permit our names to be pronounced beyond
the narrow circle in which we live? Be not tyrants and deny us not the public esteem, which
after the esteem of one's self, is the sweetest reward of well doing." This from the pen of
Thomas Paine over a century ago.
His distinguishing characteristic - the trait which constituted his greatness - was his
capability of being ahead of his time. Had his Age of Reason been written a hundred years
later, it would not have called forth the animosity and malignity it did, for the people would
have been prepared to receive it. The marvel is that today any one with ordinary reasoning
powers should call his well meditated theism infidelity or atheism, when he states his
"profession of faith" so clearly: "I believe in one God and no more; and I hope for
happiness beyond the grave; I believe in the equality of man, and I believe that religious
duties consist in doing justice, loving mercy and endeavoring to make our fellow creatures
happy." And he lived up to his creed - his long and useful life was filled with self-sacrificing
deeds for his fellow man. He also said: "The world is my country; to do good my religion."
That he was the great apostle of political and religious freedom, none who read his
works can deny, and yet bigotry and prejudice, have combined to rob our school children
the right of knowing anything about this great and glorious man.
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"THE SHAMROCK"
by Eleanor Dunlop
"I HAVE fasted and prayed for naught. My children wander as stray sheep having
no shepherd." Thus thinking, the old man sighed; a wearied expression born of failure
stole into his eyes which looked beyond the passing show of things into the realities of
being.
Nature was weaving her veil of forgetfulness as she crooned her evening lullaby.
The lakes which had glittered and danced all day in the sparkling sunshine now lay in calm
repose, save where the moonbeams formed a shimmering pathway for the fairies. These
tiny sprites made revel all night long on the quiet waters of Innisfree, whilst "Ben bulben"
watched the sport peeping over the shoulders of "The Twins." The purple shadows were
chasing each other across Killarney's hills when Patrick's deep drawn sigh disturbed the
silence. In a thorn bush a blackbird sang its evensong, its little heart was well-nigh bursting
with the rapturous pain - the joy and mystery of living. Still the old man sat disconsolate.
In the neighboring villages, and indeed all over the Island, Patrick was known and loved for
his wise counsel and kindness of heart. Not yet had the aureole of saintship encircled his
name. A good and holy man, the people flocked to hear him preach - pressed close so as
to touch his threadbare habit. Rumors were afloat of miracles which had been performed.
The evil and loathsome things hated Patrick as they hated the sun. Reptiles, toads and
lizards hid themselves when he passed. Some said he cursed these crawling things,
forbidding them access to his beloved country, altho' of this we don't feel very sure. But
we can readily believe that his deep violet grey eyes shone with the light of wisdom, gained
by childlike deeds of love and kindliness. Round his mouth played a sweet witching smile,
as tho' hidden founts of humor lay within. Thus Patrick, Ireland's favorite saint, appeared
to the simple country folk, who listened to his teachings. Tonight, as we have seen,
depression and doubt were his unwelcome guests. There he sat, on a moss-covered
stone, regardless of the Divine Enchantress who beckoned him to follow her into the land
of forgetfulness. Patrick's thoughts had slain despair and doubt, o'er these fallen enemies
he had passed thro' the Golden Gates, which stand at the entrance to Eternal Life. He
remembered when a God he trod the Plains of Light knowing and possessing all things;
he remembered when on wings of love and sacrifice he descended to uplift and redeem.
Then he thought of these poor ignorant peasants who flocked round him day by day, and
he saw that within each the soul was imprisoned, striving to awaken and redeem. Heroes
and Warriors every one, did they but know it? His Great Soul longed to awaken these
sleepers, but in this task he had failed. Fearing God, they were bribing his son to plead for
them, whilst the Holy Ghost watched their agony.
"How shall I teach them that God and Man are one - that Truth, beauty and love are
but different aspects of the One Eternal Life, manifesting in all things; Creator, Preserver,
Destroyer, Body, Soul and Spirit. Reveal! reveal thyself, Soul of the Soul of Things, Spirit
of Space. Yea, Thou art truly here in this place. Reveal Thyself!" The night wind softly
whispered: "Brother, He is nigh." The blackbird sang: "One Life thrills me and thee," whilst
the stars responded: "Amen."
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Then out stepped Night's stately queen from her cloud embowered chamber and gently
touched with silver finger tips a tuft of emerald green growing by the wayside. The Cross
fell from Patrick 's hand as he rose to worship. At his feet
it lay encircled by a wreath of shamrocks - Truth, beauty and love - the triune God - made
glad the old man's heart. Stooping, he lifted the tiny leaf, then bowed his head in adoration
to this Messenger of the Gods.
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A GENEROUS but eccentric Scotch clergyman, when naming the subjects of prayer
for one Sunday morning, added: "And now, let us pray for the De'il; naebody prays for the
puir De'il."
The character whom we are about to consider is in like predicament, hopelessly
aliened from every one's sympathy. Cain, the reputed first-born son* of Adam, lies under
the reproach of thousands of years as having introduced murder and rapine into the world,
and led the way in the general perverting of mankind. So deeply rooted is this notion that
many would regard the attempt to remove the imputation as almost a sacrilege. Even to
venture to lighten the burden of obloquy which rests upon his name would be accounted
by them as preposterous. Nevertheless this would be feeble as an excuse for neglect to
take a rational, impartial and intelligent view of the matter. There is, for candid and
reasonable persons, a wider field to occupy than the narrow domain of thinking which is
hedged about on every side by prejudice, or servile fear. There may be good reason for
some other judgment.
In fact it is hardly possible to regard the account of Cain as a simple historic
narrative setting forth events literally as they occurred. This would raise questions for
which there is no adequate satisfactory explanation. The Supreme Being himself is
described as having characteristics not consistent with our more enlightened apprehension.
He
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* The Assyrian term here signifies the first-born.
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shows only displeasure, and neither charity nor mercy. We are forcibly reminded of the
bitter sarcasm which Byron has put in the mouth of Faliero in response to the pleading of
his wife:
"Angiolina. - Heaven bids us forgive our enemies.
"Doge. - Doth Heaven forgive her own? Is Satan saved
From wrath eternal?"
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THE KENITES.
We find repeated mentions elsewhere in the Hebrew writings of a tribe or people
whose name and characteristics are strikingly suggestive of affiliation to the personages
of the book of Genesis. The Kenites, or Cainites, as the term correctly would read, are
represented as possessing many characteristics, like Jabal and Jubal, of the progeny of
Cain; dwelling in tents, and being endowed with superior learning and skill. Moses, the
Hebrew lawgiver is recorded as marrying the daughter of Reuel or Jethro, a Kenite priest,
and living with him forty years prior to the exodus front Egypt. It is further declared that
Jethro visited the Israelitish encampment in the Sinaitic peninsula, and celebrated sacrificial
rites with him and with the Elders of Israel. This indicates that there were initiations and
occult observances of a kindred nature on that occasion. It is only stated, however, that
Jethro gave counsel and that Moses "did all that he said." But it is very evident that in this
connection, and indeed in other parts of the Bible, there is much to be "read between the
lines."
The intimate association between the Kenites and Israelites appears to have
continued for several centuries. A son of Jethro is mentioned as being the guide of the
tribes while journeying in the desert, and as residing for a season with
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his clan at Jericho. They afterward removed into the Southern district of the territory of
Judah. They appear to have had a great influence upon the Mosaic institutions. The
Rechabites, or Scribes, who constituted a learned class, belonged to them, and from their
adoption of tent-life and abstinence from wine, the Nazarites would seem to be in some
way related to that people.
A memorandum in the first book of Chronicles seems to afford some light upon
these matters. The writer enumerates the various clans and families of Kirjath-Jearim,
Bethlehem, and "Scribes which dwelt at Jabez," and includes them in the summary:
"These are the Kenites that came of Hemath, the father of the house of Rechab." *
We will here remark by way of digression that during the earlier centuries of the
present era the genesis and character of Cain were themes of much curious speculation.
A party in the Christian world, now generally designated the Gnostics, held the Jewish
Oracles in low esteem, placing higher value on philosophic learning and Oriental wisdom.
One group, the "Cainites," boldly declared that Cain was a personage superior to other
men, and that he was illuminated by the superior knowledge. They found some pretext for
their belief in the declaration of Eve that he was "a man from the Lord," while Seth, who is
represented as superseding him, was begotten after the image and likeness of Adam only,
and significantly bore the name of the Satan or Typhon of Egypt.
It is certain, as has been already shown,
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* This term "Rechab" is probably a title rather than the name of a person. It is
translated "chariot," and evidently denotes the merchaba or vehicle of wisdom. It is applied
by Elisha to Elijah, and by King Joash to Elisha: "the rechab of Israel and its guide or
pharisi. In this connection it may be not amiss to notice also the term pharisi. It would
seem no strained assumption that the Pharisees derived from it their appellation as guides
or interpreters of the law. They were students of occult rabbinical learning. The pun in the
denunciation of Jesus may be readily perceived: "Ye blind guides, who strain out the gnat
but swallow the camel."
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that the compilers of the Hebrew Sacred Writings conceded to Cain and his descendants
all the profounder culture and proficiency in the arts. Why they so generally represent the
younger persons in a family as being superior in moral and physical excellence, and
supplanting the elder, may have been for the sake of assigning honorable rank to their own
people, one of the latest that had appeared among the nations. They were compelled,
however, to acknowledge, however reluctantly, that their Idumaean adversaries excelled
in wisdom, and that the Promethean gifts which had enabled the world to attain its
eminence of culture and enlightenment were derived front the sources which they decried.
----------
** The probability here intimated is greatly assured by this similarity of names. It is
a common practice which has been carried to an extreme, to add letters to Oriental words
when transferring them to a European language. In the case now before us, the term KIN
has been vocalized in the Bible as Cain; and KAYAN is the same word in which this
practice has been carried a little further.
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their number, the Eranians, becoming cultivators of the soil and dwellers in villages, formed
separate communities. All evolutions in human society are primarily religious in character.
A new religious system was accordingly developed in Eran. It appears to have attained a
matured form in the reign of Vistaspa, one of the most illustrious monarchs of the Kayanian
dynasty. Zoroaster, the first who bore the designation, flourished at this period, and with
the approval of the king, succeeded in molding the new Mazdean religion into a concrete
body of forms and dogmas, with a well-defined form of initiation.
After a prolonged period of contention, the "Deva-worshiping" Aryans had made their
way to the Punjab, and the dominion of the Eranians had become extended over Persia
and into Media and beyond. The first chapters of the Hebrew Scriptures appear to relate
to events of this time and it appears plausible and probable that such was the fact. The
story of the Garden of Eden is almost undeniably a contribution from Eastern literature;
and the killing of Abel seems to represent the overthrow of the worship and worshipers of
Bel by the Eranians. The name of Cain would then be derived from the Kayan dynasty that
had given shape to the Persian nationality. It is not necessary in propounding this
hypothesis, to make the other details harmonize literally with historic events. We must
note, however, in this connection, that such names as Silent, Nimrod and Cush, which are
found in the book of Genesis, have their counterparts in this region, - in Khusistan the
country of the Kossaians, the Nimri tribes of Mount Zagros, and Shamas the sun-god.
These verbal resemblances can not well be considered as accidental.
It is by no means wonderful or unusual, that history and personal reputation are
often marred by vilifying writers. Books of history and even of drama are often written with
partisan ends and calumny. Neither Macbeth nor Richard III. deserved the imputations that
have been cast upon them. With every event there is a shade which enables
misrepresentation to seem the true picture.
The Bahman-Yasht is a book of the later Parsism, and contains a compendium of
the trials and conflicts of the "true religion" from the time of Zoroaster to the end. It
delineates the sufferings endured from the Mussulmans, who sought to exterminate the
Mazdean faith by massacre, and finally drove thousands from their country.
The writer of this Apocalypse, following in the wake of other prophets, foretells
deliverance at the last. A prince of the Kayan race will arise, he declares, who having
attained the age of thirty years, the age of man's maturity, will take up arms against the
oppressor of the people of Ahurmazda. All India and China, he affirms, will rally to his
standard as did the Eranians when Gava raised the banner of the blacksmith's apron
against the ferocious serpent-king Zahak. Then the Mazda-yasnian religion - "the pure
thought, pure word and pure deed" - will be triumphant, and a reign of blessedness will be
established.
Whichever theory we may accept, this legend of Cain affords us an interesting
concept of human evolution. Harsh as the necessity appears, the process of development
has always been characterized by conflict, which was often analogous to the slaying of a
brother. We have the picture before us of Conservatism like the easy-going shepherd with
his flocks, idle but ready to slaughter its lambs for sacrifice, and casting aspersions upon
the laborious worker who offers the fruits of his own industry, and pollutes no altar-hearth
with blood. There is no need, however, for fear that the ulterior result will be other than
right. The Divine is divine in so far as it is just.
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"UNCONSIDERED TRIFLES"
by Mary F. Lang
SO much more easy is it to take our beliefs ready-made (upon all subjects, at least,
which have no financial bearing) than to think things out for ourselves, that most of us do
this, even though it obliges us to ignore some trifles otherwise quite apparent - trifles which,
if we allow ourselves to consider them at all, assume an importance not hitherto suspected.
Within the recollection of us all, is a time when much was heard of the conflict between
Science and Religion. In reality there is no such conflict. The conflict is not between true
science and true religion, but between the false conception of each which has gained
currency. The fine distinction between these false ideas of religion and of science, and the
real truths concerning each, is one of the "unconsidered trifles" which claims attention.
There is one mistake quite too frequently made - namely, that of confounding
materialism with science. The two are not often united in one person; yet we more often
than not hear them spoken of as being identical. The true scientist is not a materialist, and
he is quite often an unconscious Theosophist.
Not many years hence scientists will be more willing to acknowledge themselves
Theosophists, for every day science is becoming more and more spiritual. All of the recent
discoveries of science - the photography of sound and of thought - the results obtained by
Prof. Elmer Gates, can be explained satisfactorily and logically only by Theosophy.
The ordinary person, whether he calls himself a materialist or not, lives as though
he were one, and views life wholly in its personal aspect. While he may not say with the
materialist, that the object of life is physical evolution; while he may not declare that all we
can know of life is that which is discoverable by the senses, yet he lives as though the
supreme object of all effort were personal comfort and material advancement.
We constantly hear people declaring that civilization has now reached a higher point
than ever before, and in proof of this they point to rapid transit, to discoveries in
electricities, to those extremely uncertain things we call "modern conveniences," and to the
various methods of displaying wealth and material prosperity. This is avowedly the attitude
of the materialist, who points to present material conditions as proofs of evolution
Turning to the orthodox creeds, we are told that the object of life is the attainment
of universal salvation. That each one of us has a soul, which, if he exercises care and
discretion in the matter of religious belief, he will be able to "save." And this matter of
religious belief about - how - to - save - the - soul is called religion.
When we contrast this evanescent indefiniteness of so-called religion, with the
positive, sensible proof demanded by the materialist, and add to this the fact that
materialism has been confounded with science, we have small wonder that there is conflict
between such an idea of Science and such an idea of Religion.
Theosophy declares the object of life to be the evolution and uplifting of all that
exists. The etymology of the word religion tells us that literally it means "binding back."
This is the binding back of the finite to the Infinite and is only possible because of
fundamental Unity. It is the tracing of the link be-
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tween the personal and the divine the - knowledge of the relation between Man and Deity.
The first steps in the attainment of this knowledge must be physical, and hence, as we
know more of the laws governing matter, we are exactly so much nearer the divine source
of all law. It is unthinkable that this process of "binding back," which at some period of
evolution must means the unfolding of spiritual consciousness, can take place in violation
of any possible law. Every remote corner of the Universe, every possible plane of
consciousness, must be governed by law. Every law that we find operative upon the
physical plane has its physical correspondence; hence, religion, in its highest aspect, must
mean spiritual science.
"I am not going to look into or question any of these things,'' a man once said to me.
"I am going to stick to my father's belief. He was a Presbyterian, and what was good
enough for him will do for me." "How about his business methods?" I asked, "Will they do
for you too?" But that, he assured me, was different. He said he had to enlarge on
business lines to "Keep up with the procession." He couldn't take any chances in business!
There are so many people like this friend of mine, who have time for everything except
these unimportant trifles of the mystery of life itself. It is going to be so long before they
"realize" anything on the soul - so to speak - that it seems quite safe to take chances
But the more one ponders the matter, the more certain he becomes that it is
unreasonable to say that he has a soul! He knows that whatever the soul may be -
whatever any one else may tell him about the soul - he is immortal. There is something
within which declares that time never was when he was not.
So much for the inherent declaration of immortality on the part of the soul itself!
The reincarnating Ego, has, in past experience, become individualized upon the
inner planes of being. It is familiar with the planes of mind and of soul, and is now engaged
in the struggle with physical matter. To its experience upon the inner planes, it must add
physical experience, and the process is toilsome and slow. It has had to work first with
what the materialist calls "primitive man," - a body, and a physical brain that was so crude,
and so far from pliable, that results are slowly gained.
But the process of evolution is twofold - and as the reincarnating Ego gains its
experience from matter - from the use of a physical body as an instrument - it also
impresses itself upon matter, with the result that physical evolution also takes place, and
slowly but surely, in the eternal process, - physical man becomes more and more perfect -
the instrument is one through which the soul can better and better do its work, and the
struggle, and suffering, which are an inevitable result of its association with physical life,
add to its strength, its force, and best of all, to its individuality. We speak of the evolution
of Humanity, but we do not always bear in mind what that includes.
It includes every person who has ever existed - every Ego that has ever incarnated -
every particle of physical matter that has been used in the expression of soul.
We cannot conceive, really, of a beginning in evolution, but let us - so to speak -
break in upon this cyclic process at some one period of time. There are, at this given
period, a certain number of Egos in incarnation, and another certain number not in
incarnation. Ages roll by, and there comes another time when those Egos, which at the
period before mentioned, were not incarnated, are now incarnated, and vice-versa.
Between these times of incarnation, there has been a change in matter, as well as in mind,
and an Ego which has netted a certain result in the past, finds itself,
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now, with a physical instrument that enables it to make more rapid progress, for there is
momentum upon the inner as well as upon the outer planes.
If evolution includes the whole of humanity - and of course it can mean no less than
this - then it is only through reincarnation that that which we have called "primitive man,"
has any chance. But given this broad scheme of physical and spiritual evolution - the
uplifting of matter, and the gaining of greater individuality by overcoming - and we find that
strict justice is the law, and ultimate perfection must be the result.
But, some one may say this is all very vague, and ask what is the change that
actually takes place as evolution goes on. We know the results in outward manifestation,
but cannot we get a clearer, more tangible idea of the interior result? I think we can.
We know that back of all manifestation, and in itself the cause of manifestation, is
that force or energy, which is most difficult to describe, (because any description is
limitation, and we know that it is limitless) - but which, for lack of a better name, we call
Spirit or Consciousness. Now this consciousness, which is in everything, and which, in
fact, is everything, may be focused in the senses, and then it is physical consciousness,
as we see it manifested in the lower kingdoms of nature; or it may be focused in one of the
higher principles. If focussed in the mind, there must be a good brain instrument which can
translate the mental consciousness into clear thought. Wherever this consciousness is
focused, there is the real life of the person.
But as evolution is two-fold, the body must furnish the favorable condition, or the
Ego cannot find adequate expression therein,
H. P. Blavatsky tells us in the Secret Doctrine, that there are seven states of
consciousness possible of attainment, and that in each of these states, a different portion
of the mind comes into action or use, i.e., know that the brain is entirely separate and
distinct from the mind; that it is a physical structure, through which the mind finds
expression, just as the violin may be an instrument through which the natural musician -
the composer - may express feeling. We know that this physical brain is made up of many
millions of brain cells, and that medical science is at a loss to account for the presence of
most of these. Reasoning upon these facts in connection with the statement just quoted,
we are logically obliged to infer, that as evolution proceeds, as the soul overcomes more
and more of the resistance of matter, - as matter becomes more and more pliable - yielding
to the influence of soul - as we become, as Emerson says - "porous to thought - bibulous
to the sea of light" - these brain cells for which we now cannot ascertain a use, will become
responsive and receptive, and can be utilized by other portions of the mind - which is, as
we know, an aspect of the reincarnating Ego. Other states - more interior states of
consciousness, must then become possible.
What less than this is Evolution? Its ultimate result must be the building of a temple
worthy the Soul. It means access to and at-one-ment with the inner planes of being. It
means that we have no longer a belief but finally a knowledge, through interior conscious
experience, that each one of us is a soul.
A philosophy so material as to ignore spiritual growth, is unscientific; one which
makes evolution a matter of personal salvation, is irreligious.
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A LITTLE DINNER
by W.A. Miller
YES; little dinners are costly. Nature seems a trifle prodigal herself in some of the
little dinners she gives, does she not? Think what a dainty and costly dinner a cat or a
snake has when it dines on some beautiful bird. Beauty, "God-like speed of beautiful
wings," exquisite song. It looks like reckless extravagance, supplying so much for a
snake's or a cat's dinner; and it costs the bird all it has in the world. Somehow one is not
so much shocked at the bird's own dinner although it is, you know, a costly affair for the
worm, and the pretty moths, and other tiny winged creatures he dines on. It costs them all
they have in this world. When we consider all the little dinners occurring all over the world
daily, the sum total is appalling and ghastly. Let us go into some dining-room and look on
through one of our own little dinners and see what we do daily in the way of dining. While
the ladies are removing from their hands the skins of what was erstwhile a warm,
palpitating little creature, full of young life and securing his own dinner from the soft, warm,
generous teats of his mother, a neat little waitress in clean white cap and apron places
before the host a prettily garnished dish of crabs, each in his little shell and "deviled" up
deliciously, ready for the dainty lips of the refined diners. If pain can purify and ennoble a
creature, as some good people believe, the crab has been made worthy of his place at the
little dinner by his agonized death; being boiled alive may perhaps atone for the unpleasant
habit he had of dining on the swollen, bloated, purple dead body of some unfortunate man
or woman who had found a resting place (?) in the sea. When one considers all that the
crab had been guilty of in the way of dining, his horrible death seems almost necessary to
make him fit for the palates of creatures who might think; when the appetizing variety of
dead matter contained in the crab has been disposed of by the dainty diners, the neat little
waitress removes the empty shells, and places before the genial smiling host another long
dish, also prettily garnished with parsley or nasturtium or water cresses, in the midst of
which lies a fish, a shad, or red snapper, or any fish suitable to the time and place of the
little dinner. The fish's dead baked or boiled eyes, and half opened mouth, stare in a most
ghastly manner, from among the pretty water cresses; if he is a shad, or any other
vegetarian fish his fate seems an undeservedly cruel one, and his poor baked mouth
seems to gasp "Why am I being devoured in this (nice) way? I haven't eaten any other little
fishes or any dead man; I have not been dining indiscriminately on my neighbors." But this
little dinner party is deaf and blind, and not squeamish, so the fish follows the crab, and the
waitress removes the bones. Then she brings in another platter on which rests a portion
of the emblem of innocence and purity - a leg of a lamb; - a little leg that had a few short
days before frisked so happily and awkwardly about, or rested as its little owner slept
peacefully beside its pleased and proud mother, with its little head nestled against her soft,
warm woolly sides - a happy innocent mother and child, without a thought, let us hope of
the little dinner at which they were so soon to assist. And the odor of the mint that grew
perhaps along the stream that runs through their pasture, not suggestive of the gruesome
and time-honored uses it might serve. The little leg is stark and stiff enough now, and if we
wanted to be funny in a time-honored way, we might say something about a
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caper not being left in the little leg except such as is supplied by the cook; but with the
thought of the love we have seen in the meek eyes of the mother as they watched the little
legs frisking around them, we cannot be funny. When each of the diners has eaten his or
her share of the so lately frisking little leg, the waitress removes the "remains," and brings
in veal croquettes, or may be cutlets, - small, choice portions of the remains of a pretty
young creature whose "Feast of Life" was short; only a few short, beautiful sunny days in
the meadow among the fragrant grasses he had beside his mother - a mother whose heart
throbbed with the same love that the thought of another young creature, left in its dainty
cradle among the warm blankets and fragrant laces, may arouse in the hearts of some of
the guests at this dainty little dinner; when a man came and dragged him terrified from her
side, and tied his trembling little legs with a cruel rope, and plunged him into a cart, as
ruthlessly as if he had been a sack of potatoes instead of a living creature with the same
heart action as his own, and a brain and nerves, and jolted him down to the railway station
where a snorting, hissing monster awaited him to take him to the city. Imagine what must
be the terror of a little calf or lamb taken suddenly from its quiet pasture and protecting
mother, and hurled into all the unknown and frightful sights and sounds of a railroad depot
and a crowded city market place. Whilst one mother dines on the pathetic little choice bits,
the other mother runs wildly about her desolate home, rending the air with her agonized
cries; all through the long nights she bellows forth her grief to unheeding ears, and when
the first sharp pain is past the soft pitiful moo's show that the strong mother love endures.
If any respectable man or woman has ever seen a cow when her calf is being taken to the
butcher, seen her running wildly along the fence which separates her pasture from the
road, watching with startling agonized mother eyes her young lying tied in the cart
disappearing down the road and bleating piteously to her; watching and running wildly
along the fence, until a turn in the country road hides it from her sight, he or she will surely
say that a veal cutlet is a costly bit; the agony of terror and thirst of the young creature, the
outraged mother love, the bloody hand of the butcher. Ah, well, a tigress would feed with
equal complacency and relish on the dainty bit of humanity upstairs in the cradle; would
snatch it quite as ruthlessly from its pretty warm nest, and before its mother's eyes. It is
comforting amid all the horrors of the "vast scene of carnage, death, agony, decay," to think
of the dumb mothers who do not dine on the young of their neighbors. And what a
prolonged little dinner the vile worm has on all the mothers and all the babies.
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and unwarranted speculation to identify any of these aspects of the Causeless Cause with
the Causeless Cause itself, or to say that any of them is real or unreal. They exist, and it
is with the existing (out-from) universe that the human mind must deal.
A non-recognition of these three basic aspects of the One Reality concealed behind
them, is directly at the root of most Western philosophic disagreement. Differing minds
have seized upon a differing aspect, and, while either ignoring entirely, or assigning a
secondary importance to, the others, have erected systems of philosophy which have
necessarily erred. Thus materialism, now happily almost extinct as a philosophy, makes
of the material aspect of the Causeless Cause its fetich, while Idealism can perceive no
reality but thought in the universe. No one will question that all form is the result of thought
expressed in matter. By the power of thought a house is built of bricks; but the bricks are
not actual thoughts, which is practically the Idealistic claim.
Again, nothing can exist in the manifested universe without its umanifested base;
or, to state it axiomatically, there can be no effect without its antecedent cause. Therefore,
if we find in this universe that which when compared with consciousness appears material,
we cannot ignore it out of existence; but must trace it to its ultimate cause, though this lead
us to a substance which to ether is as the latter is to granite in its fineness and tenuity. And
this involves no wild search after an indivisible atom, but simply a rational examination of
something unquestionably within space, and which is the polar opposite of consciousness,
or the "matter" of our every-day experience. Being thus traced, substance, or that which
Hindu philosophers term "mulaprakriti,'' the "root of matter," is plainly recognizable as one
of the triad of aspects which the Causeless Cause presents to our finite comprehension.
Western philosophy and metaphysics break down at the very point where Eastern
philosopher really begins. No Western philosophy has reasoned out the relation of these
aspects, consciousness, matter, and force, to the Absolute, nor the relation of the Absolute
to the Causeless Cause or Unknowable. Spinoza has tried to picture the Causeless
Cause, which he, in common with most Western philosophers confuses with the Absolute,
as Infinite Substance; with Hegel it became Infinite Thought; while Schelling labels it
Infinite Mind; and so on, down through a series of philosophers until the very apotheosis
of spiritual blindness is reached in Buchner and his materialistic confreres. Each of these
has looked at but one aspect of the many sided Causeless Cause, and has either ignored
all others, or has classed them as "properties" of his particular idol. Fancy the madness
of materialism in classing consciousness as a "property" of matter! Eastern philosophers
have always recognized the unreality of both matter and spirit (consciousness) as viewed
from a finite standpoint, yet it is also out of their attempts to transcend the limits of finite
investigation that most of their sectarian differences have arisen. For India, in the endeavor
to avoid the Scylla of materialism, has fallen, in these latter days, hopelessly into the
Charybdis of metaphysical Idealism. Thus the nature of the Causeless Cause - a subject
utterly transcending the power of finite analysis - is the field of conflict between the great
Adwaiti and Visishtadwaiti schools of philosophy - not to speak of minor schools. The
Visishtadwaiti school declares that the Causeless Cause, which in India is often confused
with and termed the Absolute, can have no attributes, for attributes necessitate limitation,
and limitation negatives Absoluteness. This school therefore argues that as these
attributes unquestionably exist, they have existed from, and will exist
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throughout, eternity, apart from, although undoubtedly resting upon, the Causeless Cause.
The Adwaiti school, on the other hand, teaches Absolute Unity, with which Pantheism quite
agrees. Both the dualistic and non-dualistic schools recognize "matter" in an infinite
number of states, and declare that the matter of this plane of the cosmos is unreal only in
the sense that finite beings are unable to perceive the ultimate reality which lies at its base.
Real or unreal, there is, as has been said, something in the universe evidently the opposite
of consciousness, which limits although always associated with this, and it is only plain
logic to reason that this opposite something will and does appear upon more interior planes
as finer states of "matter" until it finally loses itself in the Causeless Cause, of which it is as
truly an aspect as is consciousness itself.
Nor can we say that mind is more real than matter. It is superior to matter in that the
latter is molded into form by it, and hence as man is a thinking being, and molds both his
form and character by thought, the lesson is that man should learn the nature and correct
use of this most powerful agent, thus placed at his disposal. Mind, being the conscious
aspect of the Causeless Cause in a state of active manifestation, is of infinitely more
importance to man than matter, in which consciousness is in such different states that it
seems to his active, thinking mind to be absent. But a half truth is often more dangerous
than its entire perversion, and it is exactly this half truth which Idealists in India and
elsewhere utter when they declare that "mind alone is real." In the introduction to the
Mundaka Upanishad* published by Mr. Tookaram Tatya, F. T. S., the introduction for which
was written by Prof. Dvivedi, the question is asked, "Is mind then a final cause? Far from
it; for mind is also finite, and shows its dependence upon something else by the
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* Twelve Principal Upanishads, p. 645.
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fact that in deep sleep the mind is without manifestation, etc." It is plainly to be seen that
while mind is unquestionably superior to matter, in no respect is it more real, and the
Idealistic assertion that it alone is real is untenable. To be real a thing must be changeless,
and a changeless mind is an absurdity. The mind changes from the cradle to the grave,
with even more facility than matter; the real something - from our finite viewpoint only - is
the consciousness which roots in an aspect of the Causeless Cause, (Visishtadwaiti
Vedantins declare it is the Absolute, placing the Unknowable behind this still) and which is
always associated in the manifested universe with a material form, and with that finite
modification of Absolute motion (force) which is the cause of that form. That
consciousness seems, and no doubt is, the superior of all aspects of the Causeless Cause,
may be freely granted but that it alone is real, no Pantheist will admit; and, further, he who
confuses consciousness with its attribute, thought, or ideation, is but a shallow
metaphysician.
In the manifested Universe, consciousness is everywhere, potent or latent
(perceivable or unperceived); so also is matter everywhere. Mulaprakriti, the "Veil of
Parabraham," of the Adwaiti School, is coexistent with Space itself. Theoretically, it is
declared to precede spirit (consciousness) when the Absolute projects the manifested
universe. Therefore, it metaphysically precedes consciousness and might be held superior
to this, if one were to wander into the opposite absurdity of Idealism, or Materialism. Mind,
then, must not be identified with consciousness, except to recognize the latter as its basic
source. It is an active, manifesting phase of consciousness, and from the standpoint of the
Causeless Cause is as unreal, in the sense of impermanency as is form which is but a
passing phenomenon of its aspect, matter.
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Again, who can define consciousness, force or matter? All elude analysis; the mind
draws back confounded in its attempt to conceive the reality lying behind either of them,
for it is in the presence of an infinite problem. Therefore the old idealistic argument that
there can be no world without a mind to perceive it, is as childish as, and similar in
character to, the old religious notion that the sun, moon, and stars were mere appendages
to the earth, and created solely for its benefit. Worlds can and do exist in the pantheistic
conception of the universe without being perceived by any thinking entity. Idealists
apparently recognize but one mode of consciousness - that of externalizing objects. This
position is necessitated when one confuses mind and consciousness as they do. Let the
world cease to be externalized, in the manner in which man projects in space the things he
interiorly perceives, and it must they argue, cease to be. What superficial reasoning! Let
every perceiving mind now upon earth be destroyed, and it will continue to exist in the
divine consciousness. Has the moon ceased to be a real object in the heavens since it
became no longer habitable, and will it instantly disappear into nothingness when
externalizing minds no longer perceive it? Absurd! These aspects of the Absolute which
produce form, and a consciousness which recognizes that form, are entirely independent
of the fact as to whether or not they are perceived by a class of externalizing entities. This
world is until other laws than those of mere mental perception cause it to grow old and fade
away, and it will continue to exist although millions of Idealists die, and so lose their
external perception of it.
Besides, what warrant has any one for assuming that there are no material worlds
other than this? Analogy, logic and philosophy point to opposite conclusions. And the
teaching of Pantheism is that the universe is embodied consciousness, and that he who
"dies" to the world in this state of matter simply transfers his consciousness to this world
in another state of matter for the world, as well as man, roots in and penetrates to the
Causeless Cause itself. Whether man will externalize, or project, the matter in the next
state depends upon whether or not he has acquired self-consciousness under those
conditions - which opens up a field of investigation into which we will not now enter.
A reasonable object of evolution would seem to be to enable consciousness to
become self-consciousness. Yet this apparently involves the absurdity of supposing the
greater to desire to become the lesser - the Infinite become the Finite in order to become
conscious of itself. But whether this be true or not, it is but childish folly for any finite mind
to declare that it has solved the problem of life - has answered the riddle of the Sphinx.
Only let us avoid the capital error of isolating man from Nature, whose creation and child
he is, for this is to despoil him of his divine birthright - to achieve one day, out of his
manhood, godhood.
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"A strong light surrounded by darkness, though reaching far, making clear the night,
will attract the things that dwell in darkness - .''
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NOT long since a pamphlet bearing this title was sent me from the West, with a
request to pass it on where it might do good, as the mass of mankind was apparently still
in such condition of savagery as to need the lessons it contained. This pamphlet was
written some time ago by an eastern physician, who, putting aside the questionable gain
to science from vivisection and kindred experimental atrocities by leading specialists,
deprecated the consequences of amateur attempts along those lines. He bade parents
and teachers beware how they risk awakening the demon of cruelty in the hearts of the
young, by experiments upon living animals which involve the taking of life, the causation
of pain or even the flow of blood. He gives as reason for this warning, that "the sight of a
living, bleeding, quivering organism, undoubtedly acts in a particular way upon that lower
nature which man possesses in common with the carnivora."
Reading this I said, "Yes, this is all true and right, but surely we have outgrown this
stage long since." The very next daily paper that I saw, contained a detailed account of a
teacher in a nearby village who had chloroformed and dissected a cat, before a class of
children, many of whom had been made ill by the cruel and disgusting spectacle.
Impressed by the seeming coincidence, studying and brooding over the matter, I concluded
I had found a flying strand of clue that followed far enough might lead one to the very root
of all the miseries that do affect the world." Is it not true that cruelty has been taught as an
Art for ages - been taught both by precept and example, consciously and unconsciously -
by Church and State, teacher and parent? From tenderest infancy on, the mass of children
see flies massacred, mice trapped and poisoned, kittens stoned and drowned and
sometimes vivisected, dogs kicked and beaten and starved, horses docked and gagged
and choked and overworked - all this as a matter of necessity. They are nourished on the
bloody sacrifice of other harmless, timid animals because good health and appetite
demand. They see the pretty feathered flying things, song bird and fowl alike, slaughtered
by men for "sport," or that their shining plumes may ornament a hat. Then when the
children come to read, their mental feast is a recurring series of murder, suicide and
shame, an endless story of the inhuman cruelty of man to man and beast. At about six
years of age these children are sentenced to a sort of penal institute, they call a school.
Here, through long hours of all the shining days, while birds sing and soft grass invites the
little feet and sweetens all the air, while trees wave messages of greeting from every leafy
bough, while all the creatures of the lower kingdoms rejoice in freedom and give voice to
that rejoicing, these hapless little prisoners undergo "training of the mind." Evidently there
is a fixed idea that a child's mind is a sort of aching void, a vacuum that must be filled up
to its limit, at any cost, with small delay as possible. So all the hard dry facts, demonstrated
or only guessed at, concerning the visible, temporal, physical Universe are crowded in solid
masses into this vacuum. Science, Art, Literature, Languages living and dead follow each
other in hot haste until the process ends and the prisoner is set free, an educated man.
During this process of mental training certain time-honored precepts have been thoroughly
impressed upon him. "There's always room at
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the top." "Honesty is the best policy." "The world owes every man a living." "Self-
preservation is the first law of Nature." "Might makes right." "To the victor belong the
spoils," and others equally true and valuable.
Thus equipped and armed at all points he enters life's arena and throws himself into
the sordid struggle for existence. His whole training, at home, at school, on the play
grounds, on the streets, has tended to arouse in him Ambition, Emulation, Envy, Pride,
Greed and a desire to know, not for love of knowing, but for the advantage and the power
it gives over his fellow men. This man with all his learning, and he may have much, has
never touched the trailing fringe of wisdom's robe. He is a sort of human monster, over
developed in his brain and over strengthened in that "Lower Nature which he has in
common with the carnivora," but with his heart well-nigh if not quite atrophied. He has no
ear to catch the world's cry nor to hear the chant of praise that Nature voices. He has no
understanding either of chant or cry. He understands only the survival of the fittest and that
he must fight his way or die. He is the cruel outgrowth of a cruel system.
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do," would be a fit prayer to offer
in such case did we not know that sins must be expiated before pardon, and that ignorance,
under certain circumstances, is a crime itself.
Ignorance is the noxious root from which springs all the innumerable ills of life.
Ignorance of the Laws of Being, profound ignorance as to what man is - what life is - what
its real purpose - what its goal.
This ignorance no school or college course can lighten, no surface teaching touches
it. But since man's need is great and Justice forever rules, there is a Fountain of Primeval
Wisdom from which by quiet ways flow irrigating streams that make oases in the dreary
desert of man's ignorance. Of these, one is the Nucleus of Universal Brotherhood formed
by the pure devotion of those who love their fellow men and know the truth about them.
This Nucleus is spreading fast and through it will go forth a power to draw men to the
healing streams that make their channels through the hearts of men. A new day is dawning
on the world - a day of Love and Heavenly Peace. In its light men will know what
Brotherhood means and children will be taught that not a creature either of Earth or Air or
Sea is man's to torture or destroy but that all alike are children of the one Great Mother and
only younger brothers of their own. All cruelty will vanish even from memory and Humanity
at length purified and healed by wisdom, its anguished cry changed to a song triumphant,
will march on grandly to its goal.
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BROTHERHOOD
by James Pryse
THE consciousness of material life depends upon the alternation of agreeable and
disagreeable sensations. If a man were to become absolutely happy, he would no longer
be conscious of existence. Perfect misery would be equivalent to annihilation. That
theologian was philosopher in his way who taught that the Devil provided a certain amount
of pleasure for the damned, so that they might feel the full measure of their sufferings. But
it is equally true that without an occasional visitation of sorrow the dwellers in heaven would
have no appreciation of happiness. Heaven and Hell represent the opposite extremes of
sensation. Some men take comfort in their belief that there is a Heaven, but no Hell. Such
are not philosophers. They believe in the zenith, but not in the nadir. It is Hell that makes
Heaven possible, and man is the container of both, yet superior to them. For they are but
concomitants of objective existence, and in True Being there is neither Hell nor Heaven.
Man can attain to the Heavens only by extending his range of sensation; but this range is
downward as well as upward, so that to the same extent that he can ascend into the
supernal he is capable of descending into the infernal. The wise man, becoming indifferent
alike to pleasure and to pain, seeks only the sphere of True Being.
So long as man is ignorant of the actualities of life, and does not understand his own
real needs, he is unable to conceive of a right state of existence for himself, here or
hereafter. His notions of future worlds will be as fantastic as his life here on earth is
purposeless and ill-governed. He is incapable even of forming sensible notions as to what
should he the true state of society for mankind. It is easy to talk about universal
brotherhood in the abstract; it is not so easy to picture mentally the exact conditions that
would prevail if universal brotherhood were established, or to designate specifically the
methods by which those conditions could be brought about. Would it be practicable to have
liberty, equality, and fraternity, throughout the whole world. Not unqualifiedly. Fraternity
limits liberty; brotherhood implies obligations. Human beings are interdependent, not
independent. If all men were equal in every respect they would have to be labeled to
distinguish them one from another, and even the labels would destroy their equality. The
heavenly bodies are not equal, and not even the comets are free. Yet the heavenly bodies
constitute the cosmos, while humanity is only a chaos at present. In that fact lies the clue
to this problem of brotherhood. True brotherhood is lacking because men cling to a false
and chaotic freedom.
It may be that "whatever is, is right"; but surface appearances would seem rather
to warrant the opposite conclusion, that whatever is, is wrong. It may be possible "to justify
the ways of God to man"; but it would seem more difficult to justify the ways of men to their
fellows. Man does not seem to fit in with things as they are on the surface of this planet.
Eden, the pleasure-park which God originally laid out for him, was doubtless a more
suitable environment than are the regions he now inhabits. All the religions agree that in
the remote past man went wrong somehow, and that he is now a creature out of place.
The scientific theory seems plausible, that the appearance of man on the earth was a mere
accident, and that probably nowhere else in the
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universe is there a being exactly like him. His entire existence is a protracted struggle
against the unfriendly elements. The extremes of heat and cold, the tempest, the
thunderbolt, wild beasts, and venomous reptiles, are all inimical to him; he maintains his
upright attitude only by pitting his will power and vitality against the attraction of the earth,
which seeks to draw him down. He subsists by killing and devouring lower forms of life.
Among the few eatable things offered him by the vegetable kingdom, Nature has artfully
introduced many poisonous ones difficult to be distinguished from the others. At all times
recorded in history man's energies have been chiefly devoted to war, and the "God of
battles" has ever had a prominent place in his pantheon. The savage, as he dipped his
arrow-tips in deadliest poison, prayed fervently to his war-god; while the civilized man, less
consistently, directs his petitions to the God of Peace while preparing hundred-ton rifles for
the wholesale slaughter of his fellow-men. Yet where war has slain its thousands, a false
industrial system, based on selfishness and greed, has slain its tens of thousands. And
individual man is himself a battlefield; the animal instincts, passions, and longings waging
war against all that is truly human and divine in his nature.
To assert that whatever is, is right, is merely to fall back to the cowardly position of
Fatalism, to excuse one's hopelessness, disbelief in man's innate divinity, and
unwillingness to aid in the righting of wrongs, by a pretense of faith in God or in Nature.
It may be a consistent belief for those who claim that material Nature is but plastic clay in
the hands of an Over-lord whose slave man is, or for those who regard the Universe as
soulless; but it is not reconcilable with the teaching that man is a free moral agent and the
arbiter of his own destiny. When things are indeed right, it is because man has made them
so; when they are wrong, it is because he himself has brought about the wrong. Yet rather
than blame themselves for the ills they suffer, men seek to evade their responsibility by
attributing the results of their own actions to Providence, Chance, the Deity or the Devil.
Out of this same desire to find some cause or causes outside of man's own nature which
advance or retard him, has sprung the modern notion of evolution. No being, from Anueba
to man, "evolves" except through its own efforts; each has the power of going forward or
backward. The scientists have failed to find the "missing link," but have discovered the
"degenerate." The latter is simply a being who is going backward, and in this sense
humanity collectively is a "degenerate." The potency of generating carries with it the
possibility both of degeneration and of regeneration. Earth is the sphere of generation,
Heaven is the abode of regenerate souls, and Hell is the nether region of degenerate ones.
Man goes, after death, to that state - whether Hell or Heaven which he has made for
himself during life; and in reality his consciousness is always in the one state or the other,
quite irrespective of whether he is in the body or out of it. He cannot enter any after-death
state for which his earth-life has demonstrated his unfitness.
Before men will make a serious attempt to realize brotherhood they must be
convinced that they have placed themselves in their present evil plight, and that they must
be their own saviours, not relying upon, or expecting aid from, any power outside of
themselves. They will never be convinced of this until they have recognized the fact of
reincarnation. Individual reformation must precede collective social redemption. Until
individual man has harmonized the warring elements of his own nature, he is incapable of
right conduct toward his fellows, and of holding a place in a higher social order. An attempt
to found an Utopia
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by organizing undeveloped men on the principle of an arbitrary social and economic system
is as futile as the plan of the builders of the tower of Babel, who thought to pierce Heaven
by carrying up a structure of sun-burnt bricks.
The only true Builders are the souls of men. It is misleading to say that man is a
soul. He is a compound of soul and animality. His real self is indeed one of the host of the
Light of the Logos, but his outer self has been formed from the indigesta moles of Chaos,
in which all things evil inhere as do malarial germs in the slime in tropical regions. Only
when this self of matter is purified can the soul shine forth. This labor of purification each
man must perform for himself, and having accomplished it, he becomes part of that nucleus
of an Universal Brotherhood which is the centre, heart, and soul of humanity. It may be
hard to give up the notion that one can steal into a Heaven he does not merit, or that
humanity can enjoy good external conditions while evil exists within themselves; but
hypocritical hopes lead only to despair, and the futility of making clean the outside of the
platter is obvious. Man becomes truly a Brother only when his nature is attuned to the
inner harmony; and mankind can constitute a Brotherhood only by cherishing spiritual
aspirations. It is idle to surmise what would be the material conditions if true Brotherhood
were attained; doubtless Earth and Heaven would vanish, and a new Heaven and a new
Earth appear. The Seer of Patmos was a most practical socialist, and he set no limits to
human progress. Men as happy and well-fed animals, with cooperative industries and a
paternal government, may be seen in the vision of a dim but not distant future; but he, the
Seer, looked beyond the Darkness, beholding a regenerated humanity in that time when
"night will be no more, and there will be no need of lamp or light of sun, for the Master-God
will illumine them, and they will reign throughout the aeons of the aeons."
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"For the pure men of old, life had no attractions and death no terror. Living, they
experienced no elation; dying, offered no resistance." - Chuang-tzu.
"How can we know that to die here is not to be born elsewhere. How can we tell
whether in their eager rush for life men are not under a delusion. How can I tell whether
if I die today my lot may not prove far preferable to what it was when I was originally born."
- Lich-tzu.
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vidual life brought it to you. That portion which is most precious to you may not be the
phase most needed by her soul. So much for our own doctrine. What shall we say of the
doctrine of others? Nothing. That is a place where silence is golden.
As about difference of opinion on doctrine so about difference of opinion on other
subjects. Unless it be a matter of principle, the less said the better. How many hearts have
been estranged and lives darkened by useless controversy over difference of opinion on
very unimportant subjects. There is so much, so very many points upon which all of us
who are striving for better things can agree, why weaken our force by limiting for the
disagreements? One of the greatest needs of woman is this tolerance and union of feeling.
What shall we say of our neighbors? Nothing, unless it be good. To discuss the
little circumstances of their lives which of necessity come under our notice is beneath the
dignity of any true woman. To repeat any bit of gossip or scandal that we may have heard,
even though we do not do so with the intent to hurt them, is criminal carelessness. To
speak of anything, which in the heat of anger or the stress of sorrow, they may have told
us concerning their lives, is not only contemptible, but dishonest. What shall we say of our
neighbors? Oh, sisters, nothing, nothing, here is a wonderful chance for golden silence.
How many young hearts have been crushed, how many homes have been ruined, out of
how many lives has the sunshine been taken, and on how many lips has the song been
hushed by the careless or malicious neighborhood gossip. Guard the lips, yes, double
guard and bar them that no word can, in any careless moment creep out that shall put a
thorn or stumbling block in the path of any neighbor?
When shall we speak?
Speak to the sister who is in sorrow. Let her know some heart sees and feels for
her. Just a word may be the sunbeam that shall break the cloud that seemed all blackness.
Speak to the sister who is discouraged, upon whom the burdens of life rest so heavy that
the soul seems never to get a moment in which to rise from its material surroundings. We
can never know how hungry such hearts get for just one word of comfort. Speak to the
sister who is joyful. Rejoice with her and let the sunshine of two smiling faces and the
music of two laughing voices cheer this sad old world in place of one. And what shall we
say when one is angry? Nothing, unless we have the strength to give the soft answer that
turneth away wrath. Unless we have so guarded our lips that we know all our words will
be "tranquil and fair and courteous."
And above all dear sisters, speak while the friend is still in this life. If you have a
good thought, a loving word, a little sympathy and help, do not delay giving it until you
awake some morning to know that your friend has gone, and then engrave it on the marble
that marks the resting place of the worn-out casket or tell it, through tears, to the ones it
can not help. Now is the time to speak the gentle helpful word. Do not wait for a more
convenient season or to gather a little more grace of expression. The past is gone, the
future we never reach, the present is all we have. Only by practice in saying kindly words
shall we obtain more grace and freedom in their expression.
How shall we speak?
Plainly, Not harshly nor bluntly but clearly and kindly, saying the things we mean in
such a manner that our meaning cannot be misunderstood. We should be loyal to friend
and loyal to our highest convictions of truth, fearless and loving. Let us not mistake
indifference as to how our words may hurt another for plainness, loyalty and fearlessness.
The two are widely different. The one arises from selfishness and intolerance and the other
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tion is perverted, evil is manifested, not by the direct will of God, but by man's perverted
will. Were man not permitted to exercise his free will over his own destiny, he must either
have been created an idiot or a machine. It is time that man should know that he himself
holds the chisel in his own hands wherewith to carve his own destiny, and that he alone is
responsible whether he uses it with discretion and forethought for the good of all, or
whether he will use it, for his own selfish desires and aims. Whether he will become a
blessing and a white magician, or a demon and a black magician.
It is time that minds were waking up, declaring on which side they will be; will they
contribute with high, pure thoughts and pure lives, and ascend into regions of clearer light,
where they may again draw in purer and diviner thought substance, and then again project
it? If we elevate mankind, our earth will become a heaven, but before such things become,
the concentrations of vile and wicked auras must pass away from earth, and that can only
be done by the elevating and refining influence of man's spiritualized thoughts. No human
being ever projects into the Astral light the dynamic force of a perverted will in thought or
act who does not set up an Astral current contrary to well-being; he destroys the health
conditions of his own soul and body, and also that of others. By repeated action and
thought of evil, the atmosphere becomes charged with unhealthful and death-dealing
currents that are readily absorbed by weak souls, who become saturated as it were with
this evil magnetism and they in turn poison all who come within the radius of their influence.
A positive will, pure thoughts, a clean life are the only means of protection against this
contagion.
It is time that man should learn how to cultivate his spiritual powers, that he should
know that by yielding to spiritual thought he lifts up his faculties to higher planes, and
unfolds the secret power within himself. This power is God's will expressed in our
consciousness through the medium of our human will. Jesus said, "I will that God's will be
done through me." Man cannot make much headway if he continues in ignorance of this
truth, that he alone limits his advancement.
So long as he looks outside of himself for someone, somebody or something to
better his condition; so long as he believes some outside influence determines his fate, he
cannot advance, and by projecting into the Astral Light such ignorant thought, it becomes
crystalized into deception which helps to deceive his brother man, and so keeps the race
in ignorance and darkness. The masses are blinded by the power of traditional prejudice,
which lives in the Astral light and thus remain the blind followers of the blind, and leaders
and followers alike stumble and fall by the way. How shall we gain knowledge and know
more of the truth?
There is something to be done, knowledge is not thrust upon us, nor is it fed to us
from a silver spoon. We must work for it, we must take time, and go apart for a season,
withdraw into ourselves and discover the evolutions of our own thought; we must direct our
thinking powers into new channels; we have been thinking in ruts; how much money can
we make, what shall we eat, drink, and wear, how can we get the most enjoyment out of
life; we have been thinking of the needs of the lower self only, ignoring the higher. "First
seek the kingdom of Heaven, and all things shall be added unto you," are not mere words,
but a living truth that will stand the test. When we look about us in the world we observe
that the selfish mode of thinking by the greater number of mankind, has enveloped the race
in such a dense suffocating atmosphere, that man is in danger of asphyxiation. The few
who have labored unselfishly, who have
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striven to enlighten the race, who have had their "Gethsemane," such have ever been
nailed to the cross, crucified but not destroyed. The purity of such lives and thoughts are
the helpful and life giving currents in the Astral Light, but for which mankind must have
perished, body and soul, in the foul gases generated by his own evil thoughts. When we
know that thought is the child of the intellect, should we not guard our thoughts, should we
not endeavor to people the invisible world with the beings of light rather than darkness, of
beauty rather than deformity, of love rather that hate. These winged creatures are seeds
seeking congenial soil, we must irrigate the soil of the soul with pure desires, for the soul
receives that to which it is affinitized, good or evil, happiness or misery. All good thoughts
bring us into closer relationship with spiritualized forms, or in the company of "angels and
saints" in theologic parlance. The aura generated by such beings man inspires, and again
respires upon his own plane of consciousness for the uplifting of Humanity, but man must
first aspire to such beings, which he can only do by pure thoughts, before he can inspire.
Mankind is entangled in the web of the senses from which spirituality alone can free him;
he is hindered but not prevented from liberating himself, and he may like an eagle wing his
way to the whitest light. The prevailing characteristic of the present time is reaction, one
of the most palpable proofs of mental and spiritual progress. Everywhere man is beginning
to recognize that the crust of materiality has spread itself over the whole world, and to
pierce this dense mass reactionary will-forces have set in, in whirls and eddies until they
sweep into one torrent myriads of wills whose combined influence makes itself felt in the
shape of re-forms, banding together united by a common sympathy, forming a powerful
odic atmosphere, a very Samson in its strength, it must succeed in breaking away these
vast layers of evil. Man begins to realize that by unity, by cooperation, by the spirit of
brotherhood, by recognizing the oneness of humanity, the grandest lesson of spiritual
evolution is learned. To evolve from extreme self-love to complete self-sacrifice is the
object of life. The Christ principle latent in us all lies entombed within the cerements of
human selfishness. When shall we bid it come forth, and cast aside its grave clothes; the
impulse to help, to uplift, the spirit of true Brotherhood, when shall it walk in the garden, in
the dawn of a new Easter morn? When?
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tic, as one fallen again under the subjection of sensual passions, left him with expressions
of disgust and scorn,
Unmoved and undisturbed by their desertion and animated with determination to
give more heed to the development of the inward light which now seemed to be rising
within him, Gotama roamed amidst the solitudes of the forest, lost in self-meditation. He
had at last grasped and laid hold of the great law of spiritual life, that all enlightenment must
come from within and as time rolled by, loftier and clearer ideas dawned upon him, which
daily became brighter and more luminous and by which he recognized the great mistake
he had made: the egregious error into which he had fallen in thinking that by asceticism,
by self-inflicted tortures, a mortal can force the gate and storm the portals of the higher life.
He also recognized that inward self-restraint was of greater efficacy than the maiming of
the body, in the redemption of the soul from the influence and servitude of the sensual
world and that the charity which suffereth all things, beareth all things, is of greater worth,
than the acquisition of mere intellectual knowledge, in qualifying human nature and
adapting it for the reception of Divine life and light, without which it is doomed to wander,
lost in the labyrinth of ignorance and spiritual darkness. He also recognized the inutility,
the folly of deserting wife and kindred, of casting aside and ignoring the domestic and social
duties of life and the thinking that their devolution would enable him by a nearer and shorter
route to attain unto Buddhahood. Reflecting on all these, he gave himself up to the
consideration of the great cause of all human misery, why human life was so often a huge
and ghastly failure, an interlude of existence beginning with hope and terminating in gloom
and despair; what the primal origin of those evil passions and vicious propensities which
play havoc with human nature, and the conclusion at which he arrived was, that ignorance
with his offspring selfishness was the fount and source of all the woes and ills which afflict
humanity. But the great problem was, how to raise mankind out of this fatal ignorance.
This became now the sole object of his study.
As Gotama's mind dwelt upon and pondered over the complexities and difficulties
in which it was involved, he perceived clearly that if any good was to be wrought, if
humanity was to be raised out of the slough of despond and lethargy into which it had
fallen, it must be through the influence of some divinely illuminated teacher whose
teachings, backed by deep and catholic sympathy for the fallen and suffering, would inspire
hope and excite to action the erring and sinful. Then arose within Gotama a desire he had
never felt before, a willingness to place his life, his future all, as a sacrifice upon the altar
of humanity, and which, becoming stronger and increasing in intensity, he became at last
conscious of a great inward change coming over him, a silent transformation of thought and
feeling, in which there was not a shadow of self. A great influx of light seemed now to
pervade his whole being, attended with a spiritual exaltation, an expansion of soul he had
never felt before or experienced. It was as though he had become permeated and unified
with the Soul of the Universe, and in a moment, the eyes of his spiritual understanding
becoming opened, a new world of life and light stood revealed in all its glory and dazzling
radiancy to his enraptured gaze. The great secrets of the Universe; the dark enigmas of
life and death, the mighty mysteries of human destiny, the universal law of natural and
moral causation; the origin of physical and moral evil, with the means of escape therefrom
- all these stood revealed before him, and in that moment Gotama stepped out of the region
of darkness into the domain, the realm of light, and became a Buddha,
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an enlightened one.
And now occurred a remarkable incident in the life of Gotama which to the ordinary
student is fraught with mystery, viz., the temptation or trial he had to undergo, and which
finds its analogue in the life of the great prophet of Nazareth and the vigil of arms in
medieval ages.
On the first entry of Gotama into the new and higher life, he became conscious of
strange and subtle forces operating on the lower manasic and kama rupic planes of his
nature. It was the great struggle and final conflict between his higher and lower self, upon
the issue of which depended whether he would prove himself worthy of the high vocation
of the Buddha of the world. It seemed as though all the animal instincts and passions
which in the past had arisen within him, now became objectified and personified in various
forms under the leadership of a mighty chief, a great tempter, and arrayed themselves
together in order to dispute his entrance in the new world of life and being which had
dawned and opened up before him. Forms of transcendent beauty and loveliness,
displaying their bewitching and seductive charms, endeavored to woo him back again to
the indulgence of those pleasures and joys which constitute the sensualist's heaven. To
these succeeded magnificent visions of earthly grandeur, appealing powerfully to his
ambition and desires of regal majesty, of universal monarchy, of rule over conquered
nations, all these passed before him like a gorgeous panorama, but Gotama heeded them
not, and waving his hand, bade them depart.
And now Mara the tempter, for so he was named, left alone with the Buddha,
prostrated himself before him and thus addressed him: "Holy one!" said he, "thou hast
triumphed and got the victory over self and the world; take now possession of eternal
peace and rest. Now that thine is the truth, what canst thou do on this earth? Humanity
is the sport and plaything of its own vile instincts. Never will it be able to raise itself to
understand the immutable law of the universe and contemplate the relations of cause and
effect. Never will man listen or give heed to the law that inculcates the subjugation of
passion, the extirpation of desire, the abolition of selfishness. Essay not, Holy one, the task
of preaching this doctrine. Spare thyself and enter at once into Nirvana." The temptation
was most subtle and artful, but Gotama was proof against it, as in unfaltering tones he
exclaimed: "Tempter, get thee behind me. Nirvana shall never be mine until I have
preached and made known to mankind the gospel of deliverance and freedom from self
and opened the door or gateway of salvation to all the world," and ere the words had
escaped his lips, the Tempter disappeared. At that moment two rich merchants passed by
with a large caravan. Regarding with wonder and admiration the luminous halo irradiating
the form of Gotama, they prostrated themselves and after hearing his discourse, accepted
his teachings and became his first disciples and converts.
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ON the face of things the world is filled with injustice. Who will attempt to deny it?
On every hand virtue remains unrewarded while vice goes unpunished; honesty starves
while corruption gains the prizes for which civilization struggles; modesty is pushed to the
wall while effrontery wins fame and applause, or what is valued higher, money. Is it not so?
How seldom it is that the honest become wealthy! how often the unscrupulous
amass millions! These are facts, stern, apparent facts that stare in the face even those
who read no weightier literature than the newspaper.
Yet men live on, many smile, some are happy for awhile, and all are heedless for
a time. Then an avalanche of woe falls. Suddenly the world is transformed from Paradise
to Hell, and the stricken soul cries aloud, stung with a sense of bitter injustice.
Why does this man prosper at the expense of others? Why are the small sins of this
one visited so heavily upon him, while the greater sins of another go unavenged? Why is
every step this man makes a failure, and every step of that man a success? Why was this
man born a cripple, and this man strong and fair? Why was my lot cast in poverty and
obscurity, while he was born a prince and ruler? Oh, the injustice of poverty! I must work
and toil to gain but a scant living; I who would become a god in wisdom were not all my
energies demanded by society in return but for food and clothing! While he has wealth and
leisure to squander, and never a care for the morrow! I with the soul of a poet, burning to
write, or to paint, or to sing, longing for books and culture and art and knowledge - am
doomed to the grindstone of poverty! He who has riches only to waste in idle pleasures or
sinful dissipations; time for the pursuit of only things that gratify the lower nature!
What a gulf there is between us! what a world of injustice! And this is life. What a
spectacle it is for either the man that thinks or the man that suffers.
With the limited ideas that men and women of today have continually before them,
and the narrow, surface view of things their religions and their philosophies of life give
them, the wonder is, not that they sometimes rebel against fate or "take up arms against
a sea of troubles and by opposing" seek to "end them." The wonder is, indeed, that the
thousands suffer and endure with as little of rebellion as there is.
Here, in truth, is a serious study for the student of human nature: Why do men
suffer so tamely all these "arrows" and injustices of what to them must be a purposeless
life at best with absolute surety of ignominious failure for millions at the end of it all?
Perhaps it is that at night when our bodies are resting, or perhaps in some quiet
moments of deep reflection, our Real Selves stamp upon the atoms of our bodies a sort of
sub-consciousness of the ancient and eternal truth that the world is just, that there can be
nothing unjust, that justice and law rule supreme in every corner of the universe, or, shall
we not say, that Karma is unfailing?
Those who study Theosophy only a little know that this is true; know it consciously
and in their waking hours - and, believe me, the knowledge takes much of the bitterness
out of life, takes it all out for those who are willing to have it so.
At the outset I said that, upon "the
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face of things, the world was unjust. Let me scratch the surface just a little and look
beneath it. Nothing is real and true from a surface view alone. Perspective is as necessary
to science and philosophy and common sense as it is to art.
Let us stand aside for a moment from our own sorrows and troubles and look at life
in all the kingdoms below man. See how the grass grows - always the same under the
same conditions. Is there not always a sure reason why the grass does not grow when the
earth is barren? Is there not always a certain cause for every effect we see in nature?
Certain soils will grow certain plants. Certain foods will fatten the cattle. If a tree is stunted
we do not call it chance, but we search for the reason. Sometimes the reason, or the
cause, is a little difficult to find, but we know that there was a cause, for we have seen the
result, and we know that every result must have had a cause.
Look into nature as deeply as you can and tell me if you find anything there that is
not under the operation of law. Look to the heavens; the planets and the stars move in
their orbits, every one of their countless number according to definite, fixed law. If you put
your hand in the fire can you escape the pain? And if an exception to any ordinary rule is
noted, do we not at once seek confidently for the cause, knowing well that nothing can
happen without a cause
We can neither lift a finger nor think a thought without the operation of this eternal
law of cause and effect.
Theosophy calls it Karma, and that is a better name for it, because it is simpler and
at the same time more comprehensive. Now this law of Karma, as we have seen, and as
no one will care to deny, I take it, operates throughout the universe, the seen and the
unseen universes alike. Given a cause, whenever and wherever, on whatever plane we
like, an effect always follows, says science and common sense alike. If there was no cause
there can be no effect. If there is an effect, there must have been a cause.
This is quite a common sense proposition - or it is nothing. Still if we halted here and
sought not to know just a little of the operations of this law outside the realm of physical
things, we would be little better off than before. While we could not deny Karma, yet the
mysteries of its workings, when viewed only by the common knowledge of today, would
leave us doubting still at times. For it is often difficult to trace the effect back to the cause,
impossible for us in many cases. Even with Karma for a guide, how can we believe that
the world is just?
We do not require to see the cause. We only demand to know how and wherein
there could be causes in justice and common sense for such apparent discrepancies. Even
in physics we do not always trace back to the first cause, except in reason. But we have
come to view reason as the highest of proof, and we are satisfied when we can trace a
reasonable connection, say between the brain and the stomach, or between the tiny seed
and the giant tree.
But where shall we look for any reasonable cause for the riches and ease and
comfort that come to this idle and sinful man; or for the years of suffering and toil that fall
to the lot of those who have not sinned, or who have sinned, perhaps, but lightly and whose
fate or punishment seems to be out of all proportion with that dealt out to other men? what
modern philosophy will answer this problem?
But suppose we have lived in other human bodies before we inhabited these?
Suppose we must return to earth again and again, until we have reaped all experiences,
aye, until we have righted all wrongs and harvested all the good we have sown? what then?
Suppose life is not made up of seventy years on earth and eternity somewhere
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else? How could there be justice in such an arrangement? Is it reasonable to suppose that
in this just universe of cause and effect man should suffer an eternity for the causes set up
in one life; or enjoy eternally for the virtues of so brief a span as seventy years? Suppose
that a man suffers in this life for the things left undone, or for the sins committed, in a
previous life; or that he enjoys as but the natural effect of causes set up in lives that have
gone before.
We are, indeed, what we have made ourselves, and we are even now making the
conditions and environments of our succeeding physical existence. Upon such a
hypothesis it is not so difficult to see the justice of things.
Everyday experience shows us that there is often the lapse of years between the
cause and the effect. We see many causes, the effects of which are not reaped for long
years to come. So we are not unwilling to seek deeply for the probable or possible cause,
if we only know the direction in which to seek. Seek in Karma and Reincarnation for the
meaning of life.
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WE did not all meet together again until the evening and after dinner Dr. Roberts
said that if it was agreeable to the wishes of the others of the party he would like to have
the Professor's explanation of the dream state.
Dr. Roberts. - Professor, since you drew from me, this morning, my views in regard
to dreams, I think it only fair that you should present yours, for it is evident that you do not
agree with the ordinary physiological and psychological views held by modern scientists.
The Professor. - So far as I am concerned I shall be most happy to give you my
views, but I think we ought to take advantage of the presence of our friend, Mr. Rama, who
so well played the part of a listener this morning, but who can give us the ancient Eastern
philosophy in regard to dreams. What do you say to this proposition, Doctor?
Dr. Roberts. - I shall be more than delighted. (To Mr. Rama) I hope, sir, you will
favor us by taking part in this discussion, for from what the Professor said this morning it
has already become of intense interest to me.
Mr. Rama. - For or my part I should have preferred to have listened to the Professor,
for although a native of the East and having been familiar with the ancient philosophy of
India from my early days, yet, until I met him, many of the most beautiful ideas were sealed
books to me, so that I have now come to regard him as my Teacher. However, since I see
you wish it, I shall be glad to take part in the conversation.
Mr. Berger. - Referring to what you said last night, Mr. Rama, do you then hold that
the dream state is a higher one than the waking?
Mr. Rama. - Not necessarily, but certainly what you Westerners would call the dream
state is often much higher and more real than what you call the waking state, but then we
might not agree as to the meaning and application of the terms waking and dreaming.
Rev. Alex. Folsom. - You surely would not have us reverse our conceptions in regard
to them, or treat fantastic dreams as of more importance than the calm deliberations of the
waking state. My experience at least does not go to
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show that. The mere idea of such a position is absurd. We may as well return to the
superstitions of the middle ages.
Mr. Rama. - My dear sir, I am afraid you are prejudiced and that you are not willing
to admit the possibility of another's experience as different from your own.
Mr. Berger. - And yet, Alec, you would be the very first to draw the line between
yourself and one whom you would call a common illiterate fellow who does not appreciate
your fine periods, or your, shall I say, delicate wit.
The Professor. - Come, come, gentlemen, Alec takes it all in good part, but don't let
us get side-tracked.
Rev. Alex Fulsom. - Wait a moment! I had a dream once -
All. - No! you're joking! - Really, you don't mean to say you dreamed! Impossible!
Rev. Alex Fulsom. - Yes, once, at least. When I was at the theological school I had
a dream that was so vivid and made such an impression on my memory, that even today
I can recall all the incidents of it and the accompanying sensations perfectly, yet is was
pure nonsense with neither rhyme nor reason in it, incomparably foolish, fantastically
absurd. How any one can pretend to learn anything from dreams is beyond my
comprehension. I never learnt anything from them, and certainly not from that, the most
vivid dream in my life.
The Professor. - Didn't you learn anything from it Alec?
Rev. Alex Fulsom. - Absolutely nothing, what could I learn from it?
The Professor. - Well, Alec, you dreamed, didn't you? So at least you learned the
possibility of dreaming - eh, old man? Perhaps not such a useless lesson after all if you
could awake to its significance.
Mr. Rama. - The mere fact and the possibility of dreaming ought to give man a clue
to the understanding of his nature and enable him to unravel some at least of the mysteries
of life. Too long has science contented herself with the study of force and matter and
neglected the most important factor of existence, - consciousness. The ancient sages
taught that the study that most concerned man was the states of consciousness. One of
the old philosophers said that the whole universe existed for the sake of the soul alone, and
if we pause to think we cannot fail to see that the relation of the soul to the universe can
be expressed only in terms of consciousness.
Dr. Roberts. - That is what puzzles me, you have got on to the same tack as you
were on the other day, but don't let me interrupt - please continue.
Mr. Rama. - One has only to watch himself and he will quickly discover that he
passes through several states of consciousness even while he is awake - in the ordinary
sense of the word. At one time when he is hungry or has bodily pain he lives wholly on the
physical plane or state of consciousness. Then under the influence of anger or the
excitement of some strong passion he may forget all about physical things and live in
entirely another state of consciousness. Such, for instance, is the case of a soldier on the
battlefield who under the fierce excitement of war does not know he is wounded and feels
no pain so long as the excitement lasts. He is in another and totally different state of
consciousness. Then take another instance, a student when thinking intensely will become
oblivious of the physical world and will not feel hunger nor hear the sounds that are going
on around him. He is in the mental state of consciousness.
Dr. Roberts. - All that is clear enough, and easily understood. These different states
are due simply to the direction of the mind.
Mr. Rama. - All will acknowledge the existence of these states or changes of
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consciousness, because all to some extent realize them, and it seems to me to be the most
natural thing in the world to assume that still other states are possible. Looked at from this
standpoint sleep is then seen to have a possible value as a state of consciousness, and -
Dr. Roberts. - But I should call sleep a cessation or rather suspension, not a state,
of consciousness, and dream but a temporary and partial return to consciousness. In true
sleep the brain ceases to act and hence there is this suspension of consciousness - the
vital processes of the body continuing automatically.
Mr. Rama. - There I think you are mistaken, Doctor. I will grant that the state of
consciousness called sleep is a terra incognita to most people, but it is a state of
consciousness nevertheless. Let me call your attention to the comparatively rare
occurrence, though one well authenticated and known to the medical profession, of a
person's losing as it were the thread and memory of his past life for a time, his past
becoming a perfect blank to him, losing his identity so to say, recognizing neither places
nor people among whom he had lived. T his has happened as you know and is brought
about usually as the result of illness or accident. Then, in many cases the old
consciousness and identity return, perhaps as suddenly as they were lost and the
intervening period becomes a blank. Now here you have a succession of states of
consciousness actually witnessed and vouched for which to the mind of the subject are not
at all related. This shows at least the possibility of passing from one phase of
consciousness into another without carrying over any memory or knowledge. The analogy
is not a complete one, I am fully aware, but I used it because probably you yourself know
of such cases, and whether you can explain them or not, you grant their possibility and
actual existence, do you not?
Dr. Roberts. - Certainly.
Mr. Rama. - Very well, then, you can follow my meaning when I assert that sleep and
waking are simply two phases of existence or states of consciousness which in the case
of the ordinary man are unrelated and between which there seems to be no bridge of
conscious memory
Dr. Roberts. - But in the case you referred to just now of loss of identity, the subject
passes from one state to an exactly similar one - the only thing that has happened to him
being that he has lost his bearings, so to say; whereas in the case of sleep he passes into
what must be a totally different state of consciousness, if so it can be called.
Rama. - I said the analogy was not a complete one, but its very incompleteness
makes my statement all the stronger. If there is a possibility of loss of memory in passing
from one state into an exactly similar one, how much more likely is it that there should be
no memory when passing from one to another of dissimilar states.
Dr. Roberts. - Then again, the case you cited is one of disease, and sleep is a
healthy, normal function.
Rama. - Quite true, but the failure to bridge the gap between the two states is not
healthy or normal to the fully developed man, and the fact of such failure in the case of the
vast majority of men is but an indication that they are very far from being perfectly
developed. For the perfect man there exists no gaps in consciousness.
Dr. Roberts. - Well, Mr. Rama, that may be so, but I am not prepared to go that far
with you. I can reason only from my experience. But where do the dreams come in; do
they indicate still other states of consciousness besides that of dreamless sleep.
Mr. Rama. - No, I would not call dream an actual state of consciousness; it is rather
the recollection of a state, the momentary impression of a picture on
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the brain brought from the state that has been experienced; it is not so much an actual
state as the transition between two states, and that accounts for the -
Rev. Alex FoIsom. - Do you mean to say that a state of consciousness makes a
picture on the brain? I always thought that consciousness was immaterial. I should very
much like to see what a state of consciousness looks like, very much indeed. Ha, ha.
The Professor. - Have you never seen the picture that fear or anger or anxiety paints
on a man's face? That surely should be evidence enough of the material, if not altogether
artistic, effects of a state of consciousness. As Mr. Rama said, there are three essential
characteristics of being, nature manifests in three aspects: matter, force and
consciousness. Not one of these can be divorced from the other two; but I fear I am
anticipating Mr. Rama's line of argument.
Dr. Roberts. - I am glad you mentioned that point, Professor, for I had in mind to ask
Mr. Rama for his explanation of the scenery of dreams and the apparent actual
performance of deeds; in fact, what might be called the objective side of dreams. For
instance, in the dream I related this morning, the building seemed real enough and I
remember I admired the beauty of the marble, my body seemed to be there, I performed
acts, moving about and sitting down, yet I know I never left my room or got out of bed.
Mr. Rama. - Certainly your body did not leave your bed, i.e., your physical body, but
you know, Doctor, that according to the ancient philosophy, man is not his physical body
but merely uses it as a temporary instrument. All this fits in with the statement made just
now by the Professor of the correlation between matter, force and consciousness. The
ancient philosophers all taught that each of the planes of manifested being was threefold,
and that even the so-called formless planes, the higher three planes on which man might
function, were formless only from his present standpoint.
Professor. - Please explain that a little more fully, Mr. Rama. I fear the Doctor does
not see the drift of your remarks.
Mr. Rama. - Well, to express it in another way, every state of consciousness has its
corresponding state of matter and its corresponding force or mode of motion - to use a
modern scientific phrase. To gain experience on the physical plane, a physical body is
needed which is subject to the forces of that plane. To gain experience on the mental
plane a mental body is required, and this is subject to the forces of the mental plane and
so for each of the seven planes. This accounts for the phenomena that occur in the dream
state, and for the possibility of performing acts in that state. Man has in fact a dream
"body," and to that dream body the dream world is just as objective as is the physical world
to the physical body.
Dr. Roberts. - But by force of will one can dispel the illusions of dreams, one can
sometimes recognize that he is dreaming and awake. Does not this show that your
analogy between the states of waking and dreaming is incorrect?
Mr. Rama. - No; I have said that the ordinary dream state is not so much a true
state as a transition between two states of consciousness. It is exactly analogous to the
critical state of matter between solid and liquid; the slightest impulse either way will carry
it over completely into one state or the other, and so it is that by the force of will we may
pass from the state of so-called dreaming into that of waking, or fall back into deep sleep.
Dr. Roberts. - But you will grant that the dream state is mainly an illusory one, will
you not, Mr. Rama? The physical world is after all the only one we are sure of.
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Mr. Rama. - The dream state appears so illusory because of its being a critical state,
as I have said, but the true sleep state, which is sleep only so far as physical man is
concerned, is far less illusory than the so-called waking state, and were it not for the interior
spiritual strength which the soul gains from this inner state of consciousness it could not
continue to exist in the physical world it is.
The Professor. - If any state of consciousness can be truly called dreaming in the
ordinary meaning of the word, it is this waking state. The physical plane is the most illusory
of all, it is the plane of shadows, and man has so long been a prey to the allurement of the
senses, that at last he has come to look upon the shadows as the reality, and has forgotten
his true nature and his divine heritage. What we call dreams, those higher bright visions
that come now and again in a man's lifetime and lift him into realms of perfect harmony and
peace are flashes from the truer, higher world we have lost sight of and are guideposts that
point the way to the inner world of reality.
Mr. Berger. - But, if all this be so, there must be some way by following which we
can learn to know the true place and relation of physical existence, and of dream and sleep.
How may we set about it!
The Professor. - Yes, and the way lies through meditation, and by never losing sight
of the essential divinity of our nature. Here is advice given by the greatest sages and
adepts: "On going to sleep and on waking and as often as you can, think, think, think, that
you are not the physical body, nor the astral dream body, nor the passions and desires, nor
yet the mind, but that you are the soul, a spark of the Divine." Thus you will gradually learn
to distinguish between the true and the false, between the illusionary and the real.
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THE following "Notes" were published in The New Century, December 4th, 1897,
and have been here reprinted by request. They will probably be better understood by some
now than when they were written.
NOTES.
"He whose mind is free from the illusion of self, will stand and not fall in the battle
of life."
It is not in the nature of an honest man to live for himself and be satisfied; when one
arrives at that point where he says - "Lo! I am satisfied, I am sufficient unto myself. Behold
I need neither helper or teacher - Karma must take its course" - then you may be sure that
that one is either a weakling, a fool, or a caricature.
Possibly he may be a hypocrite of an ambitious mind, seeking to create a little world
of his own wherein he may hold sway, and pose before men as the light of the coming
ages.
Such as he may even cry freedom, liberty, distinctive independence, from the house-
tops, the by-ways, and the highways; or he may be one of a more subtle kind, standing
apart from the "common herd'' and in the society of "well groomed men and women" writing
and talking, in whispers of warning of the coming dangers that await those who do not seek
independence and follow him into his self-made kingdom of liberty. How much we have
to learn when we see appearances like these, and realize the condition of the present time,
and the battle that lies before us on the material and spiritual plane.
Are there not in our civilization today signs that mark a unique barbarism among us,
showing an immense danger of retrogression? Can we not see in spite of all the good
there is in the world, that the very blood of some of our brothers is teeming with a heartless
cruelty, a subtle viciousness, and a monstrous selfishness and hypocrisy? Is not the world
brimful of unrest, unhappiness, injustice, and despair; and are we not on the very edge of
a condition which, if not improved, must sweep away the bright prospects of our present
civilization?
Viewing the present striking aspects can we for one moment be satisfied to live
contentedly and selfishly in the shadow of darkness and unrest? Is it possible for anyone
having one grain of human pity in his heart, or love of truth and justice, to do aught but
work, work, all the time unflinchingly, and unselfishly for his brother man and all creatures, -
not apart, but among them, with a courage and devotion that obscures all thought of self -
on a line of simple justice and in the spirit of true peace.
"We need not fear excessive influence. . . . A more generous trust is permitted.
Stick at no humiliation. Grudge no office thou canst render. Be the limb of their body, the
breath of their mouth. Compromise thy egotism. Who cares for that, so thou gain aught
wider and nobler? never mind the taunt of Boswellism: the devotion may easily be greater
than the wretched pride which is guarding its own skirts."
The recognition of the divinity in us all, is necessary to comprehend the foundation
of brotherhood. The paths we have trodden in learning Nature's laws should enable us to
extend invaluable assistance to our fellow men.
Dr. Minot J. Savage is giving a series of lectures in this city on the subject of
"Unitarianism." In the first sermon of the course, preached last Sunday, he made the
statement that liberality of thought might belong to any people of any country and be
accepted by them as expressing their innate religion. Dr. Savage said: "We have
discovered the
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unity of thought, and we have learned to know that there is just one thought in the universe.
Should we not believe in the unity of God when we see one eternal changeless order?
There is a unity of love, of man, of ethics, righteousness. There is but one religion. All of
us are the children of God. There is but one destiny. Some day every soul, however
stained, however small, however distorted, will rise."
- Katherine A. Tingley
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FROM "FAND"
by W. Larminie
[Selected]
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--- 309
THE momentous tide of the new cycle which gave birth to a grand organization on
the 18th day of February last is a complete vindication of all that had been told and
promised in this direction; yea, all was foreshadowed by wave upon wave of growing
sensibilities in the hearts of a nucleus of earnest souls who have held fast to the torch of
truth which was handed down by the Gods for the enlightenment of mankind. This beacon
light will now blaze forth brilliant and bright so that all who walk the earth may see; it is the
message of man's liberation, freedom from bondage. This newly-born organization
declares that Brotherhood is a fact in nature; its principal purpose is to teach brotherhood,
demonstrate that it is a fact in nature and make it a living power in the life of Humanity.
The superb literature which was produced by the Theosophical movement from the
keynote given by the first messenger, H. P. Blavatsky, has brought to the world a sound
philosophy of the life and destiny of mankind as well as a basis for conduct of individual
existence. The principal feature of this philosophy, that brotherhood is a fact in nature and
that it can be proved, is now sufficiently grounded in the hearts and minds of a large
contingent of students who have endeavored to make it a part of their lives to enable them
to effectually interpret and promulgate these truths for the benefit of the people of the earth
and all creatures.
Thanks also to the undying efforts of our chief, Wm. Q. Judge, who guided the
movement successfully through the period of preservation and assimilation as the second
stage of the evolution of this all-embracing ideal, though the tide of materialistic activity was
strong and the public ear apparently deaf to the divine message, the teachings have
nevertheless penetrated subtly but permanently the minds of millions of men and women.
The large extent to which this has been accomplished has made it possible to launch the
movement forward before the world at the termination of the first cycle of 5000 years of the
Kali-Yuga that it may now become the hope of the future for the ultimate welfare within the
appointed time of the whole human race on this globe.
As the ideal precedes the practical in all things so has it been in this great
movement; but, after the first two stages of inception and preservation, there remained yet
to be done the master-stroke to make it practical so that it might reach the masses and
become a lasting light among them.
The living-torch-bearer at the present time, Katherine A. Tingley, who has taken
upon herself the responsibility, and burden of guiding this spiritual movement forward into
the ages to come has already touched the keynote to the third stage which shall be the
most lasting pillar of the temple; Practical application of the philosophy!
Already magnificent expositions in simple form by heretofore obscure students have
come forward under this touch, the power and wisdom which has been stored up all this
time during the existence of the Theosophical Society is now to come to the surface and
spread its light among the hungrily seeking multitude of despairing souls. Then, practical
philanthropic work backed by this philosophy of hope which as already outlined and
inaugurated by this leader is not the palliative-like casual or promiscuous application of
benevolence, shall go to the root by simul-
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STUDENTS' COLUMN
Conducted by J. H. Fussell
"If the savage acts according to his conscience in killing and eating his enemies, and
so, too, those who persecute others for religion's sake, is not this evidence that conscience
is simply a matter of education? If not, what is its source? how may one recognize the
voice of conscience?"
A similar question was asked in the Theosophical Forum, and to it Mr. Judge gave
the following reply:
"Conscience seems to be a faculty which may be stilled or made active. In my
opinion its source is in the Higher Self, and as it comes down through plane after plane it
loses its force or retains power according to the life and education of the being on earth.
The conscience of the savage is limited by his education, just as were the consciences of
the New Englander to the European religionists who destroyed men for the sake of God
and Christ. We cannot assert that the men who indulged in religious persecution were not
going according to what they called their conscience. By this I do not mean that
conscience is a matter of education, but that the power of its utterances will be limited by
our education, and consequently if we have a bigoted religion or a non-philosophical
system, we are likely to prevent ourselves from hearing our conscience. And in these
cases where men are doing wrong according to what they call their conscience, it must be
that they have so warped their intuition as not to understand the voice of the inward
monitor."
-------
Conscience is inherent. It is the voice of the divine nature, seeking ever to make
itself heard in the turmoil of our life. That the dictates of conscience are not the same to
all alike is simply evidence of the varying limitations which men have built up around
themselves.
The sun shines for all, yet the powers of seeing vary. Some are blind, some can see
but dimly, and some, though keen of sight, catch none of the glories of nature, of landscape
and sea and sky. So, too, the voice of conscience speaks to all, though unheard,
unheeded by some, and though the interpretations of its divine message be many.
All men come into the world with certain limitations, - their Karma brought over front
the past. Some of these find expression in the circumstances and surroundings of birth,
whether as a savage or in a thought-sphere of religious dogmatism, but besides these
limitations, too often men wilfully blind themselves and build up new limitations in the
present; too often men hear the voice of conscience and heed it not, and then fool
themselves by substituting for this divine voice some brain-mind reasonable (!) conclusion
which subserves their vanity or ambition. So easy is it to deceive ourselves with ideas of
false independence - "false when it is used to support any one for a selfish purpose," wrote
Mrs. Tingley a short time ago - which "often tends to affect the minds of well-meaning
people and through them disrupt organizations like our own which are based on
interdependence and unity." One may know the voice of conscience in that it never speaks
to gratify the personal self, but that its promptings are ever towards a wider service, a
deeper trust, a fuller recognition of the divine in all. Like the sunlight it lays bare the
cobwebs and the dark places of the heart, it reveals the chains which man has forged
around himself, but thus it is that man may see to break these chains and to step out of the
limitations that hedge him in, into the wider, purer life of the soul.
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LOTUS PETALS
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--- 313
REVIEWS
The Internationalist for January has for its editorial "'Theosophy, the Theosophical
Society and the Theosophical Movement," which only repeats an oft-told tale. "Apostolic
Succession," by John Eglinton, is a fine study of the real law of progress. The writer points
out that discoveries do not grow out of one another, but that whenever genius gives
utterance to some fragment of truth, a host of imitators arise who create base semblances
and counterparts of it, seeking to perfect it, and to constitute themselves into an intellectual
aristocracy. Yet, as he says, "Nature abhors perfection. Things perfect in their way,
whether manners, poetry, painting, scientific methods, philosophical systems, architecture,
ritual, are only so by getting into some backwater or shoal out of the eternal currents, where
life has ceased to circulate. The course of time is fringed with perfections but bears them
not on its bosom." The other articles contained in this number are also well-written and
readable. - J. M. P.
The Pacific Theosophist for January contains "The Scales of Justice," by Dr.
Anderson, the usual editorial matter, branch reports, and reprints. The articles are
vigorous, bold, and perhaps a little war-like, though good-naturedly so. - J. M. P.
Birds for February. This magazine gives its readers each month eight lifelike colored
plates of birds, with short scientific monographs and charming stories for children. It is a
distinct factor in the "Theosophical Movement'' in its advocacy of Brotherhood for the
feathered tribe, the necessity for their protection, and the prevention of their being
"transformed into millinery.'' As the editor truly says, "public ignorance regarding the value
of birds in the economy of nature and especially to human life is so great as to be almost
incomprehensible." Theosophists will do well to place this magazine in the hands of their
children. - J. M. P.
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MISCELLANEOUS NEWS
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--- 316
to add to their number. The Committee then retired and after a short time invited others
to join them thus making a Committee of 41 of the most prominent and representative
members of the T. S. A. When the Committee reported, all the members thereof ascended
the platform and remained standing while the Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Iverson L.
Harris, read the following and also the Constitution of the Universal Brotherhood and the
Constitution of the Theosophical Society in America.
PROCLAMATION
To the Members of the Theosophical Society in America, in Convention Assembled
February 18,1898
At the beginning of this new cycle, an important epoch in the history of our
Movement, I take the opportunity of presenting to you the outline of the plan in connection
with our future work.
Before I became publicly identified with the Theosophical Movement, the plan which
I now bring before you was well defined in conversation with Mr. Judge.
Those who have the real interest of humanity at heart, and who have been behind
this Movement from its inception, protecting its interests, have plans well outlined in
connection therewith, for years to come. In this great scheme of work, each one chosen
to carry it on in the world, has certain definite things to do in furthering its interests, during
his or her lifetime. The complete development of such plans, however, is limited by the
attitude of the members. Every time anyone is unfaithful and the whole Society
consequently disturbed, and shocked, the work is correspondingly retarded. Every day it
has become more apparent that for the best interests of this work we require an
organization which shall stand as an invincible stronghold against the storms which
constantly beat around it. No one will question the fact that our experience in the past
emphasizes the need of this step being taken.
According to an eminent authority, "the noblest title of the Theosophical Society is
the BROTHERHOOD of HUMANITY." If members fail to realize this, then, to quote the
words of the same authority, "they need not undertake the task" of trying to make
practicable a Universal Brotherhood. In an "Important Letter " published in Lucifer, words
emanating from the same source as those quoted above, are worthy of attention in this
same connection. "Perish rather the Theosophical Society . . . than that we should permit
it to become no better than an Academy of Magic and a Hall of Occultism." I would also
draw particular attention to the following words"
"The truths and mysteries of Occultism constitute, indeed, a body of the highest
spiritual importance, at once profound and practical for the world at large. . . They have to
prove both destructive and constructive .... constructions of new institutions of a genuine,
practical Brotherhood of Humanity, where all will become co-workers of Nature, will work
for the good of mankind, with and through the planetary spirits, the only spirits we believe
in. Phenomenal elements previously unthought of, undreamed of, will soon begin
manifesting themselves day by day with constantly augumented force and disclose at last
the secrets of their mysterious workings."
The work of each messenger necessarily differs in many respects. H. P. B. attracted
the attention of the world to the philosophy. W.Q.J. simplified the teaching and solidified
the organization which she founded.
And now it is my privilege and duty in carrying on that work so ably begun, to furnish
an organization which shall be ''the well-made tool" by which the work can be carried
forward into the next century on a grander scale than ever before, and adapted to the
needs of the time - an organization which shall be free, as far as possible, from the
limitations hitherto existing, and which shall unify all branches of this great work"
I have, therefore, to announce that there has been established by me an
organization called,
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD,
or
THE BROTHERHOOD OF HUMANITY.
Through this organization, the Theosophical philosophy will Be taught on the
broadest possible basis. Students will be prepared to expound and illustrate the teachings,
(hitherto understood and applied to a very large
--- 317
extent in a limited and metaphysical aspect only) in a way that they will be acceptable to
the mass of the people and without raising prejudices which experience has shown to exist
with regard to the many technical terms employed. Lecturers will be educated and
familiarized with all subjects which tend to the advancement of the human race in every
direction. In fact there will be no limit to the possibilities in future unless the limitations exist
in our minds. In this organization the true interests of the work and the workers are
safeguarded.
I would also direct you attention to these words: "We have weightier matters than
small societies to think about, yet the T.S. must not be neglected." In this plan which I am
now presenting to you, these words have not been overlooked: "The T.S. has not been
neglected." The Theosophical Society in America will form one of the most important
departments of the UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD. Through it will be disseminated all
literatures regarding the Theosophical philosophy. Books, giving detailed and definite
knowledge for the student; pamphlets and leaflets, giving in a simple and readily
understood form, the true philosophy of life to those who are thirsting and hungering for it.
This work will be properly organized and given the attention which its importance deserves.
A literary staff will be appointed, including all the able writers at present in the society, and
some outside of it. Through their efforts as much as possible of our present literature will
be amplified, and made more suitable for general distribution, and, indeed, all literature of
any value or importance in this great work for UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD will also be
introduced and distributed through the Theosophical Society in America. On this matter
I have already formed some definite plans which I will submit later.
From what I have said, it can easily be seen that the importance of our future work
cannot be overestimated.
By this means the Theosophical Society shall be known throughout the world, as the
great channel through which may be obtained the necessary information on the subjects
which the lecturers and exponents of the UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD shall arouse
interest in. In this way those who have freed their minds from prejudice and wish to pursue
closer study of the subjects treated of, will know where to turn for the information they
desire.
This plan, as I have said, has been known to me for some time, but not until now
could I give it out. This will explain why it is that the International Brotherhood League has
been kept so long in a temporary form of organization. It now takes its fitting place as a
department of practical humanitarian work in the UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD. Many
of the existing temporary committees have achieved great success along the lines laid
down, and are able to testify to the importance of such work. Plans have been made for
extending the work on a more permanent basis and on a more extensive scale.
It will be seen from all that I have said, that the great plan is complete in every
respect. An opportunity is placed before all true in the Cause of Brotherhood to unite in
accepting and cooperating with me for the furtherance of our great Cause along the lines
I have sketched. Each department - the Theosophical Society in America, and the
International Brotherhood League - shall have its own officers, Executive Committee, and
its own by-laws, by which its affairs shall be regulated and conducted, all under the
Constitution of the Universal Brotherhood.
Students will remember that it was given out long ago that the public general
exposition of Theosophy, along the lines hitherto followed, would cease. So that in laying
these matters before you I am simply carrying out the scheme as it was from the beginning.
If each department of the work is entered upon in the true spirit, and carried out on the lines
suggested, it will be established on a more permanent basis than ever and go on increasing
from year to year. If I could only show each one of you the living picture of our future work
as it presents itself to me, its wonderful scope, immensity and purpose, I know it would
evoke in each one of you unbounded enthusiasm. As it is, I think all will respond in their
hearts and at least catch the fragrance of the true spirit which underlies all I have said. I
might say here that some eminent Sanscrit scholars, with whom I came in contact while in
India, will be ready to give their services and furnish to the West much that is of value in
Eastern literature and
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- Katherine A. Tingley
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RESOLUTIONS
--- 319
AND THE ADOPTION of this constitution the difficulties and dangers existing at this
time, and all future times, will be largely overcome, and tend to make our organization an
invincible stronghold against future attacks from within and from without.
AND THIS PLAN having been originated by Katherine A. Tingley, and being in
conformity with the idea expressed by her illustrious predecessors, H.P. Blavatsky and
William Q. Judge, the convention would be failing in its duty if it does not unhesitatingly
adopt this plan.
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, that we, the delegates and representatives of all branches of the
Theosophical Society in America, now in convention assembled, and having full power to
act on their [?] hereby declare that we fully ....[?] adopt and accept the plan hereby
presented by the recognized Leader of the Theosophical movement, and the Outer Head
of the Esoteric School, Katherine A. Tingley, as being necessary to unify at the beginning
of this great cycle all departments of Theosophical work in one organization and under the
direction of one Leader and Official Head, Katherine A. Tingley.
Resolved, That the administration of the affairs of the Theosophical Society in
America shall in future be under the constitution of Universal Brotherhood, which it hereby
accepts and adopts. It also accepts as its Leader and Official Head, Katherine A. Tingley
and her duly appointed successors.
Resolved, That new charters and diplomas shall be issued to all branches and
members of the Theosophical Society in America, as provided in the Constitution of
Universal Brotherhood.
Resolved, That all books of record, records, archives and property, excepting money
belonging to us as the Theosophical Society in America, be and are hereby turned over to
and declared to belong to UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD, their custodian to be Katherine
A. Tingley.
Resolved, That all moneys and funds now in hand, belonging to the Theosophical
Society in America, shall continue to belong to it as the Literary Department of UNIVERSAL
BROTHERHOOD.
--------
The reading of these important documents was frequently interrupted by the most
enthusiastic applause, and time and time again the whole Convention arose and cheered
Mrs. Tingley.
The resolutions were immediately adopted by Convention and an adjournment was
made until the next morning at 9 o'clock.
On Friday evening a reception was given by the Loyalty Branch and other local
members at the Chicago Headquarters in the Masonic Temple. On the reassembling of
the Convention on Saturday morning the reports of President and Treasurer were read.
Both of these were very gratifying in every way, and showed the splendid condition of the
whole Society. The Treasurer reported a clear balance of $897.13 and no debts ahead.
He stated that the T.S. had not been in so good a condition financially for many years. The
President reported that the great success of the Work and the great strides which it had
made had been almost entirely due to the following of Mrs. Tingley's advice and
suggestions. By the special request of Mrs. Tingley, the Chairman called on Dr. Buck to
address the meeting. This request was received with much applause, and Dr. Buck briefly
spoke.
Letters of greeting to the Convention were received from all the National Branches
of the T.S. in Europe, all expressing loyalty to Mrs. Tingley and confidence in any plans she
might suggest for the furtherance of the Work. One such letter was received signed by all
the Presidents of the National Divisions of the T.S.E.
On Thursday evening in Steinway Hall were shown to a large and very appreciative
audience 100 stereoptician views of the Crusade Around the World. Mr. B. Harding giving
an account of the Crusade and a description of the views.
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In the same hall on Saturday evening Mrs. A. L. Cleather and Mr. Basil Crump, of
London, England, gave one of their delightful lectures on Wagner, illustrated by selections
on the organ and piano.
A great "Brotherhood Congress convened to further the common interests of
Humanity and all creatures," was held in the Central Music Hall on Sunday evening,
February 20th. The audience was a very large and fine one. It was said by many that it
was the grandest public meeting at any Convention ever held by the society. Addresses
were given by Mrs. Katherine A. Tingley, Mrs. Alice L. Cleather, Judge O'Rourke, Mr.
Iverson L. Harris, Rev. W. Williams, Dr. J. A. Anderson, Mr. Basil Crump, and Mr. D. N.
Dunlop. Dr. Bogren, of Sweden, who attended the Convention as special delegate, was
also introduced to the audience.
The press gave good and most considerate and impartial notices of the Convention
and public meetings, and many reports were received that the people of Chicago were
impressed and greatly interested in the grand work and in the promise of the future.
The tone of the Convention was throughout one of joy, the password was a smile.
It was a convention of action; the efforts and struggles of twenty-two years found their
expression in one voice, in one grand note of harmony which ushered in the New Cycle and
which shall be the keynote throughout coming ages Universal Brotherhood.
"Peace, Peace, Peace to all beings."
After the Convention Mrs. Alice L. Cleather and Mr. Basil Crump accompanied Dr.
Anderson to the Pacific Coast and will deliver their lectures on Wagner in many of the coast
cities. Mr.B. Harding is also en route to the coast, staying on his way at Kansas City,
Denver and Salt Lake City and will lecture on the Crusade illustrated by the stereopticion
views which were shown in Chicago. Mr. Iverson L. Harris of Macon, Ga., is visiting the
Central States on his way home. One familiar face was missed at Convention, that of Mr.
Wm. C. Temple of Pittsburg, who will be remembered for his splendid speech at the
Convention in New York, 1897. He had intended to be present in Chicago but the serious
illness of his wife prevented this. He is now with Mrs. Temple at Dr. Wood's house on the
grounds adjoining the S. R. L. M. A. site. A letter which he sent to Convention will be
printed in the official report.
- J.H. Fussell
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In this issue we give views of the Offices at Headquarters, a description of which
was given in last issue, and in our next will be given a view of the General Office of The
Universal Brotherhood and The Theosophical Society in America.
--------------------------------