FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
MYSTICAL,
PHILOSOPHICAL,
THEOSOPHICAL, HISTORICAL AND SCIENTIFIC
ESSAYS
Selected from “The Theosophist”
A FACSIMILE OF
THE
ORIGINAL EDITION OF
LONDON :
REEVES AND TURNER
196 STRAND, W.C.
1885
THE THEOSOPHY
COMPANY
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.
1980
CONTENTS.
MYSTICAL
PAGE
THE “ELIXIR OF’ LIFE” . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .1
IS TILE DESIRE TO “LIVE ” SELFISH?. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . 33
CONTEMPLATION . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . 40
CHELAS AND LAY CHELAS. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . 50
ANCIENT OPINIONS UPON PSYCHIC BODIES . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .61
THE NILGIRI SANNYASIS . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..72
WITCHCRAFT ON THE NILGIRIS . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .76
SHAMANISM AND WITCHCRAFT AMONGST THE KOLARIAN TRIBES. . . .. . . .. . . . 82
MAHATMAS AND CHELAS. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . 92
THE BRAHMANICAL THREAD . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..96
READING IN A SEALED ENVELOPE . . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .99
THE TWELVE SIGNS OF’ THE ZODIAC. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .103
THE SISHAL AND BHUKAILAS YOGIS ...... . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. 119
PHILOSOPHICAL.
TRUE AND FALSE
PERSONALITY. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . . 122
CHASTITY. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .139
ZOROASTRIANISM ON THE SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF MAN . . . .. . . .. . . .. .144
BRAHMANISM ON THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .153
THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE IN ESOTERICISM. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . 187
PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .198
PRAKRITI AND PARUSHA . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .210
MORALITY AND PANTHEISM . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .212
OCCULT STUDY. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . 221
SOME INQUIRIES SUGGESTED BY MR. SINNETT'S “ESOTERIC
BUDDHISM. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . 230
SAKYA MUNI’S PLACE IN HISTORY. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .365
INSCRIPTIONS DISCOVERED BY GENERAL A. CUNNINGHAM. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . 389
DISCRIMINATION OF SPIRIT AND NOT-SPIRIT . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. .394
WAS WRITING KNOWN BEFORE PANINI? . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . .408
THEOSOPHICAL.
WHAT IS THEOSOPHY?. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . 429
H0W A “CHELA” FOUND HIS “GURU” . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. 443
THE SAGES OF THE HIMAVAT . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .455
THE HIMALAYAN BROTHERS—DO THEY EXIST ?
. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .459
INTERVIEW WITH A MAHATMA . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .470
THE SECRET DOCTRINE. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . 473
HISTORICAL.
THE PURANAS ON THE DYNASTY OF THE MORYAS AND ON
KOOTHOOMI . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..482
THE THEORY OF CYCLES. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. .
. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. 485
SCIENTIFIC.
ODORIGEN AND JIVA. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . .
.. . . ..496
INTROVERS10N OF MENTAL VISION . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..
. . .. . . .. . . .. . . ..514
“PRECIPITATION” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 518
“HOW SHALL WE SLEEP?” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .522
TRANSMIGRAT1ON OF THE LIFE ATOMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 531
“OM” AND ITS PRACTICAL, SIGNIFICANCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540
THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE”
-----====ooo000ooo====-----
From a Chela’s* Diary. by G— M—, F.T.S.
And Enoch walked
with the Elohim, and the Elohim took him.”—GENESIS.
INTRODUCTION.
The curious information—for
whatsoever else the world may think of it, it will doubtless be acknowledged to
be that—contained in the article that follows, merits a few words of
introduction. The details given in it on the subject of what has always been
considered as one of the darkest and most strictly guarded of the mysteries of
the initiation into occultism—from the days of the Rishis until those of the
Theosophical Society—came to the knowledge of the author in a way that would
seem to the ordinary run of Europeans strange and supernatural. He himself,
however, we may assure the reader, is a most thorough disbeliever in the
————————————————————
*
A. Chela is the
pupil and disciple of an initiated Guru or Master.—ED.
2 ——————————————————
FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Supernatural, though he has learned too much to limit
the capabilities of the natural as some do. Further, he has to make the
following confession of his own belief. It will be apparent, from a careful
perusal of the facts, that if the matter be really as stated therein, the author
cannot himself be an adept of high grade, as the article in such a case would
never have been written. Nor does he pretend to be one. He is, or rather
was, for a few years an humble Chela. Hence, the converse must
consequently be also true, that as regards the higher stages of the mystery he
can have no personal experience, but speaks of it only as a close observer left
to his own surmises—and no more. He may, therefore, boldly state that during,
and notwithstanding, his unfortunately rather too short stay with some adepts,
he has by actual experiment and observation verified some of the less
transcendental or incipient parts of the “Course.” And, though it will be
impossible for him to give positive testimony as to what lies beyond, he may yet
mention that all his own course of study, training and experience, long, severe
and dangerous as it has often been, leads him to the conviction that everything
is really as stated, save some details purposely veiled. For causes which
cannot be explained to the public, he himself may he unable or unwilling to use
the secret he has gained access to. Still he is permitted by one to whom all his
reverential affection and gratitude are due—his last guru—to divulge for
the benefit of Science and Man, and specially for the good of those who are
courageous enough to personally make the experiment, the following astounding
particulars of the occult methods for prolonging life to a period far beyond the
common—G. M.]
PROBABLY
one of the first
considerations which move the worldly-minded at present to solicit initiation
into Theosophy is the belief, or hope, that, immediately on joining, some
extraordinary advantage over the rest of mankind will be conferred upon the
candidate. Some even think that the ultimate
3 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
result of their initiation will
perhaps be exemption from that dissolution which is called the common lot of
mankind. The traditions of the “Elixir of Life,” said to be in the possession of
Kabalists and Alchemists, are still cherished by students of Medieval
Occultism—in Europe. The allegory of the Ab-è Hyat
or Water of Life,
is still credited as a fact by the degraded remnants of the
Asiatic esoteric sects ignorant of the real
GREAT SECRET. The “pungent and fiery
Essence,” by which Zanoni renewed his existence, still fires the imagination of
modern visionaries as a possible scientific discovery of the future.
Theosophically, though the fact is distinctly declared to be true, the
above-named conceptions of the mode of procedure leading to the realization of
the fact, are known to be
false. The reader may or may not believe it; but as a matter of fact,
Theosophical Occultists claim to have communication with (living) Intelligences
possessing an infinitely wider range of observation than is contemplated even by
the loftiest aspirations of modern science, all the present “Adepts” of Europe
and America—dabblers in the Kabala—notwithstanding. But far even as those
superior Intelligences have investigated (or, if preferred, are alleged to have
investigated), and remotely as they may have searched by the help of inference
and analogy, even They have
failed to discover in the Infinity anything permanent but—
SPACE, ALL IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
Reflection, therefore, will easily suggest to the reader the further logical
inference that in a Universe which is essentially impermanent in its conditions,
nothing can
4 ——————————————————
FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
confer permanency. Therefore, no possible substance, even if drawn from the
depths of Infinity; no imaginable combination of drugs, whether of our earth or
any other, though compounded by even the Highest Intelligence; no system of life
or discipline though directed by the sternest determination and skill, could
possibly produce Immutability. For in the universe of solar systems, wherever
and however investigated, Immutability necessitates “Non-Being” in the physical
sense given it by the Theists—Non-Being which is nothing in the narrow
conceptions of Western Religionists—a reductio
ad absurdum. This is a gratuitous insult even when
applied to the pseudo-Christian or ecclesiastical Jehovite idea of God.
Consequently, it will be seen that the common ideal conception of “Immortality”
is not only essentially wrong, but a physical and metaphysical impossibility.
The idea, whether cherished by Theosophists or non-Theosophists, by Christians
or Spiritualists, by Materialists or Idealists, is a chimerical illusion. But
the actual prolongation of human life is possible for a time so long as to
appear miraculous and incredible to those who regard our span of existence as
necessarily limited to at most a couple of hundred years. We may break, as it
were, the shock of Death, and instead of dying, change a sudden plunge into
darkness to a transition into a brighter light. And this may be made so gradual
that the passage from one state of existence to another shall have its friction minimised, so as to be practically imperceptible. This is a very different
matter, and quite within the
5 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE:
reach of Occult Science. In this,
as in all other cases, means properly directed will gain their ends, and causes
produce effects. Of course, the only question is, what are these causes, and
how, in their turn, are they to be produced. To lift, as far as may be allowed,
the veil from this aspect of Occultism, is the object of the present paper.
We must premise by reminding the reader of two Theosophic doctrines, constantly
inculcated in Isis” and in other mystic works—namely, (a) that ultimately
the Kosmos is One—one under infinite variations and manifestations, and (b)
that the so-called man is a “compound being “—composite not only in
the exoteric scientific sense of being a congeries of living so-called material
Units, but also in the esoteric sense of being a succession of seven forms or
parts of itself, interblended with each other. To put it more clearly we might
say that the more ethereal forms are but duplicates of the same aspect,—each
finer one lying within the inter-atomic spaces of the next grosser. We would
have the reader understand that these are no subtleties, no “spiritualities “ at
all in the Christo-Spiritualistic sense. In the actual man reflected in your mirror are really several men,
or several parts of one composite man; each the exact counterpart of the other,
but the “atomic conditions” (for want of a better word) of each of which are so
arranged that its atoms interpenetrate those of the next “grosser” form. It does
not, for our present purpose, matter how the Theosophists, Spiritualists,
Buddhists, Kabalists, or Vedantists, count, separate, classify, arrange or name
these, as that war of terms may be
6 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
postponed to another occasion.
Neither does it matter what relation each of these men has to the various
“elements” of the Kosmos of which he forms a part. This knowledge, though of
vital importance in other respects, need not be explained or discussed now. Nor
does it much more concern us that the Scientists deny the existence of such an
arrangement, because their instruments are inadequate to make their senses
perceive it. We will simply reply—” get better instruments and keener senses,
and eventually you will.”
All we have to say is that if you are anxious to drink of the “Elixir of Life,”
and live a thousand years or so, you must take our word for the matter at
present, and proceed on the assumption. For esoteric science does not give the
faintest possible hope that the desired end will ever be attained by any other
way; while modern, or so-called exact science—laughs at it.
So, then, we have arrived at the point where we have determined—literally,
not metaphorically—to crack
the outer shell known as the mortal coil or body, and hatch out of it, clothed
in our next. This “next” is not spiritual, but only a more ethereal form.
Having by a long training and preparation adapted it for a life in this
atmosphere, during which time we have gradually made the outward shell to die
off through a certain process (hints of which will be found further on) we have
to prepare for this physiological transformation.
How are we to do it? In the first place we have the actual, visible, material
body—Man, so called; though, in fact, but his outer shell—to deal
7 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
with. Let us bear in mind that
science teaches us that in about every seven years we
change skin as effectually as any serpent; and this so
gradually and imperceptibly that, had not science after years of unremitting
study and observation assured us of it, no one would have had the slightest
suspicion of the fact.
We see, moreover, that in process of time any cut or lesion upon the body,
however deep, has a tendency to repair the loss and reunite; a piece of lost
skin is very soon replaced by another. Hence, if a man, partially flayed alive,
may sometimes survive and be covered with a new skin, so our astral, vital
body—the fourth of the seven
(having attracted and assimilated to itself the second) and which is so much
more ethereal than the physical one—may be made to harden its particles to the
atmospheric changes. The whole secret is to succeed in evolving it out, and
separating it from the visible; and while its generally invisible atoms proceed
to concrete themselves into a compact mass, to gradually get rid of the old
particles of our visible frame so as to make them die and disappear before the
new set has had time to evolve and replace them We can say no more. The
Magdalene is not the only one who could be accused of having “seven spirits“ in her, though men who
have a lesser number of spirits (what a misnomer that word !) in them, are not
few or exceptional; they are the frequent failures of nature—the incomplete men
and women.*
————————————————————
*
This is not to be taken as meaning that such persons are
thoroughly destitute of some one or several of the seven principles a
man born without an arm has still its ethereal counterpart; but that they are so
latent that they cannot be developed, and consequently are to be considered as
non-existing.—ED.
Theos.
8 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Each of these has in turn to
survive the preceding and more dense one, and then die.
The exception is the sixth when absorbed into and
blended with the seventh. The “Phatu” * of the old Hindu physiologist had
a dual meaning, the esoteric side of which corresponds with the Tibetan “Zung”
(seven principles of the body).
We Asiatics, have a proverb, probably handed down to us, and by the Hindus
repeated ignorantly as to its esoteric meaning. It has been known ever since the
old Rishis mingled familiarly with the simple and noble people they taught and
led
on. The Devas had whispered into every man’s ear—Thou
only—if thou wilt—art “immortal.” Combine with this
the saying of a Western author that if any man could just realize for an
instant, that he had to die some day, he would die that instant. The
Illuminated ‘will perceive that between
these two sayings, rightly understood, stands revealed the whole secret of
Longevity. We only die when our will ceases to be strong enough to make us live.
In the majority of cases, death comes when the torture and vital exhaustion
accompanying a rapid change in our physical conditions becomes so intense as to
weaken, for one single instant, our “ clutch on life,” or the tenacity of the
will to exist. Till then, however severe may be the disease, however sharp the
pang, we are only sick or wounded, as the case may be.
————————————————————
* Dhatu—the seven principal substances of the human
body—chyle, flesh, blood, fat, hones, marrow, semen.
9 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
This explains the cases of sudden
deaths from joy, fright, pain, grief or such other causes. The sense of a
life-task consummated, of the worthlessness of one’s existence, if
strongly realized, produced death as
surely as poison or a rifle-bullet. On the other hand, a stern determination to
continue to live, has, in fact, carried many through the crises of the most
severe diseases, in perfect safety.
First, then, must be the determination—the Will—the conviction of certainty, to
survive and continue.* ‘Without that, all else is useless. And to be efficient
for the purpose, it must be, not only a passing resolution of the moment, a
single fierce desire of short duration, but a settled
and continued strain, as nearly as can be continued and concen-
————————————————————
* Col. Olcott has epigrammatically explained the creative or rather the re-creative power of the Will, in his “Buddhist Catechism.” He there shows—of
course, speaking on behalf of the Southern Buddhists—that this Will to live, if
not extinguished in the present life, leaps over the chasm of bodily death, and
recombines the Skandhas, or
groups of qualities that made up the individual into a new personality. Man is,
therefore, reborn as the result of his own unsatisfied yearning for objective
existence. Col. Olcott puts it in this way :
Q. 123 What is that, in man, which gives him the impression
of having a permanent individuality?
A. Tanha,
or the unsatisfied desire for existence. The being having done
that for which he must be rewarded or punished in future,
and having
Tanha, will have a rebirth through the
influence of Karma.
Q. 124. What is it that is
reborn?
A. A new aggregation of Skandhas, or individuality,
caused by the last earning of the dying person.
Q. 128.
To what cause must we attribute the differences in the combination
of the Five Skandhas has which makes every individual
different from every other
individual?
A. To the Karma
of the individual in the next preceding birth.
Q. 129.
What is the force or energy that is at work, under the ,guidance
of Karma, to produce the new being ?
A. Tanha—the “Will to Live.”
10 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
trated without one single moment’s relaxation. In a word, the would-be “ Immortal” must be on his watch night and day, guarding self against—himself. To live—to live—to live—must be his unswerving resolve. He must as little as possible allow himself to be turned aside from it. It may be said that this is the most concentrated form of selfishness,—that it is utterly opposed to our Theosophic professions of benevolence, and disinterestedness, and regard for the good of humanity. Well, viewed in a short-sighted way, it is so. But to do good, as in everything else, a man must have time and materials to work with, and this is a necessary means to the acquirement of powers by which infinitely more good can be done than with—out them. When these are once mastered, the opportunities to use them will arrive, for there comes a moment when further watch and exertion are no longer needed :—the moment when the turning-point is safely passed. For the present as we deal with aspirants and not with advanced chelas, in the first stage a determined, dogged resolution, and an enlightened concentration of self on self, are all that is absolutely necessary. It must not, however, be considered that the candidate is required to be unhuman or brutal in his negligence of others. Such a recklessly selfish course would be as injurious to him as the contrary one of expending his vital energy on the gratification of his physical desires. All that is required from him is a purely negative attitude. Until the turning-point is reached, he must not “ lay out” his energy in lavish or fiery devotion to any cause,
11 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
however noble, however “good,”
however elevated.* Such, we can solemnly assure the reader, would bring its
reward in many ways—perhaps in another life, perhaps in this world, but it would
tend to shorten the existence it is desired to preserve, as surely as
self-indulgence and profligacy. That is why very few of the truly great men of
the world (of course, the unprincipled adventurers who have applied great powers
to bad uses are out of the question)—the martyrs, the heroes, the founders of
religions, the liberators of nations, the leaders of reforms—ever became members
of the long-lived “Brotherhood of Adepts” who were by some and for long years
accused of selfishness. (And
that is also why the Yogis, and the Fakirs of modern India—most of whom are
acting now but on the dead-letter
tradition, are required if they would be considered living up to
the principles of their profession—to appear entirely
dead to every inward feeling or emotion.)
Notwithstanding the purity of their hearts, the greatness of their aspirations,
the disinterestedness of their self-sacrifice, they
could not live for they had missed the hour. They may
at times have exercised powers which the world called miraculous; they may have
electrified
————————————————————
* On page 151
of Mr.
Sinnett’s “Occult World,” the author’s much abused, and still more doubted
correspondent assures him that none yet of his “degree are like the stern hero
of Bulwer’s” Zanoni .
“the heartless morally dried up mummies some would fancy us to be” and
adds that few of them “would care to play the part in life of a desiccated pansy
between the leaves of a volume of solemn poetry.” But our adept omits saying
that one or two degrees higher,
and he will have to submit for a period of years to such a mummifying process unless, indeed, he would voluntarily give up a
life-long labour and—Die—Ed.
12 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
man and subdued
Nature by fiery and self-devoted Will; they may have been possessed of a
so-called superhuman intelligence; they may have even had knowledge of, and
communion with, members of our own occult Brotherhood; but, having deliberately
resolved to devote their vital energy to the welfare of others, rather than to
themselves, they have surrendered life; and, when perishing on the cross or the
scaffold, or falling, sword in hand, upon the battle-field, or sinking exhausted
after a successful consummation of the life-object, on death-beds in their
chambers, they have all alike had to cry out at last : “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani
!”
So far so good. But, given the will to live,
however powerful, we have seen that, in the ordinary course of mundane life, the
throes of dissolution cannot be checked. The desperate, and again and again
renewed struggle of the Kosmic elements to proceed with a career of change
despite the will that is checking them, like a pair of runaway horses struggling
against the determined driver holding them in, are so cumulatively powerful,
that the utmost efforts of the untrained
human will acting within an unprepared
body become ultimately useless. The highest
intrepidity of the bravest soldier; the interest desire of the yearning lover;
the hungry greed of the unsatisfied miser; the most undoubting faith of the
sternest fanatic; the practised insensibility to pain of the hardiest red Indian
brave or half-trained Hindu Yogi; the most deliberate philosophy of the calmest
thinker—all alike fail at last. Indeed, sceptics will
13 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
allege in opposition to the verities of this article that, as a matter of experience, it is often observed that the mildest and most irresolute of minds and the weakest of physical frames are often seen to resist “Death” longer than the powerful will of the high-spirited and obstinately-egotistic man, and the iron frame of the labourer, the warrior and the athlete. In reality, however, the key to the secret of these apparently contradictory phenomena is the true conception of the very thing we have already said. If the physical development of the gross “outer shell” proceeds on parallel lines and at an equal rate with that of the will, it stands to reason that no advantage for the purpose of overcoming it, is attained by the latter. The acquisition of improved breechloaders by one modern army confers no absolute superiority if the enemy also becomes possessed of them. Consequently it will be at once apparent, to those who think on the subject, that much of the training by which what is known as “a powerful and determined nature,” perfects itself for its own purpose on the stage of the visible world, necessitating and being useless without a parallel development of the “gross” and so-called animal frame, is, in short, neutralized, for the purpose at present treated of, by the fact that its own action has armed the enemy with weapons equal to its own. The force of the impulse to dissolution is rendered equal to the will to oppose it; and being cumulative, subdues the will-power and triumphs at last. On the other hand, it may happen that an apparently weak and vacillating will-power residing in a weak and
14 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
undeveloped physical frame, may
be so reinforced by some
unsatisfied desire—the Ichcha (wish)—as
it is called by the Indian Occultists (for instance, a mother’s
heart-yearning to remain and support her fatherless children)—as to keep down
and vanquish, for a short time, the physical throes of a body to which it has
become temporarily superior.
The whole rationale then, of
the first condition of continued existence in this world, is (a) the development
of a Will so powerful as to overcome the hereditary (in a Darwinian sense)
tendencies of the atoms composing the “gross” and palpable animal frame, to
hurry on at a particular period in a certain course of Kosmic change; and
(b) to so weaken the concrete action
of that animal frame as to make it more amenable to the power of the Will. To
defeat an army, you must demoralize and throw it into
disorder.
To do this then, is the real object of all the rites,
ceremonies, fasts, “prayers,” meditations, initiations and procedures of
self-discipline enjoined by various esoteric Eastern sects, from that course of
pure and elevated aspiration which leads to the higher phases of Adeptism Real,
down to the fearful and disgusting ordeals which the adherent of the
“Left-hand-Road” has to pass through, all the time maintaining his equilibrium.
The procedures have their merits and their demerits, their separate uses and
abuses, their essential and non-essential parts, their various veils, mummeries,
and labyrinths. But in all, the result aimed at is reached, if by different
processes. The Will is strengthened, encouraged and directed, and the
15 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
elements Opposing its action arc
demoralized Now, to any one who has thought out and connected the various
evolution theories, as taken, not from any occult source, but from the
ordinary scientific manual accessible to all—from the hypothesis of the latest
variation in the habits of species—say, the acquisition of carnivorous habits
by the New Zealand parrot, for instance—to the farthest glimpses backwards into
Space and Eternity afforded by the “Fire Mist” doctrine, it will be
apparent that they all rest on one basis. That basis is, that the impulse once
given to a hypothetical Unit has a tendency to continue; and consequently, that
anything “done” by something at a certain time and certain place tends to repeat
itself at other times and places.
Such is the admitted rationale of heredity and atavism. That the
same things apply to our ordinary conduct is apparent from the notorious ease
with which “habits,”—bad or good, as the case may be—are acquired, and it will
not be questioned that this applies, as a rule, as much to the moral and
intellectual, as to the physical world.
Furthermore, History and Science teach us plainly that certain physical habits
conduce to certain moral and intellectual results. There never yet was a
conquering nation of vegetarians. Even in the old Aryan times, we do not learn
that the very Rishis, from whose lore and practice we gain the knowledge of
Occultism, ever interdicted the Kshetriya (military) caste from hunting
or a carnivorous diet. Filling, as they did, a certain place in the body politic
in the actual condition of the world, the
16 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Rishis as little thought of
interfering with them, as of restraining the tigers of the jungle from their
habits. That did not affect what the Rishis did themselves.
The aspirant to longevity then must be on his guard against
two dangers. He must beware especially
of impure and animal * thoughts. For Science shows that thought is dynamic, and
the thought-force evolved by nervous action expanding outwardly, must affect the
molecular relations of the physical man. The inner men,†
however sublimated their organism may be, are still
composed of actual, not hypothetical,
particles, and are still subject to the law that an “action” has
a tendency to repeat itself; a tendency to set up analogous action in the
grosser “shell” they are in contact with, and concealed within.
And, on the other hand, certain actions have a tendency to produce actual
physical conditions unfavourable to pure thoughts, hence to the state required
for developing the supremacy of the inner man.
To return to the practical process. A normally healthy mind, in a normally
healthy body, is a good starting-point. Though exceptionally powerful and
self-devoted natures may sometimes recover the ground lost by mental degradation
or physical misuse, by employing proper means, under the direction of unswerving
resolution, yet often things may have gone so far that there is no longer
————————————————————
* In other words, the thought tends to provoke the deed.—G. M.
† We use the word in the plural, reminding the reader that, according to
our doctrine, man is septenary.—G. M.
17 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
stamina enough to sustain the
conflict sufficiently long to perpetuate this life; though what in Eastern
parlance is called the “merit” of the effort will help to ameliorate conditions
and improve matters in another.
However this may be, the prescribed course of self-discipline commences here. It
may be stated briefly that its essence is a course of moral, mental, and
physical development, carried on in parallel lines—one being useless without
the other. The physical man must be rendered more ethereal and sensitive; the
mental man more penetrating and profound; the moral man more self-denying and
philosophical. And it may be mentioned that all sense of restraint—even if
self-imposed—is useless. Not only is all “goodness” that results from the
compulsion of physical force, threats, or bribes whether of a physical or
so-called “spiritual’ nature) absolutely useless to the person who exhibits it,
its hypocrisy tending to poison the moral atmosphere of the world, but the
desire to be “good” or “pure,” to be efficacious must be spontaneous It must be
a self-impulse from within, a real preference for something higher, not an
abstention from vice because of fear of the law:
not a chastity enforced by the dread of Public Opinion; not a benevolence
exercised through love of praise or dread of consequences in a hypothetical
Future Life.*
It will be seen now in
connection with the
————————————————————
*
Col. Olcott clearly and succinctly explains the Buddhist;
doctrine of
Merit or
Karma, in his” Buddhist Catechism “ (Question
83).—G. M.
18 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
doctrine of the tendency to the renewal of action, before discussed, that the course of self-discipline recommended as the only road to Longevity by Occultism is not a “visionary” theory dealing with vague “ideas,” but actually a scientifically devised system of drill. It is a system by which each particle of the several men composing the septenary individual receives an impulse, and a habit of doing what is necessary for certain purposes of its own free-will and with “pleasure.” Every one must be practised and perfect in a thing to do it with pleasure. This rule especially applies to the case of the development of Man. “Virtue” may be very good in its way—it may lead to the grandest results. But to become efficacious it has to be practised cheerfully not with reluctance or pain. As a consequence of the above consideration the candidate for Longevity at the commencement of his career must begin to eschew his physical desires, not from any sentimental theory of right or wrong, but for the following good reason. As, according to a well-known and now established scientific theory, his visible material frame is always renewing its particles; he will, while abstaining from the gratification of his desires, reach the end of a certain period during which those particles which composed the man of vice, and which were given a bad predisposition, will have departed. At the same time, the disuse of such functions will tend to obstruct the entry, in place of the old particles, of new particles having a tendency to repeat the said acts. And while this is the particular result as regards certain “ vices)” the general result of an
19 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
abstention from “gross” acts will
be (by a modification of the well-known Darwinian law of atrophy by non-usage)
to diminish what we may call the “relative” density and coherence of the outer
shell (as a result of its less-used molecules); while the diminution in the
quantity of its actual constituents will he “made up” (if tried by scales and
weights) by the increased admission of more ethereal particles.
What physical desires are to be abandoned and in what order? First and foremost,
he must give up alcohol in all forms; for while it supplies no nourishment, nor
any direct pleasure (beyond such sweetness or fragrance as may be gained in the
taste of wine, &c., to which alcohol, in itself, is non-essential) to even the
grossest elements of the “physical” frame, it induces a violence of action, a
rush so to speak, of life, the stress of which can only be sustained by very
dull, gross, and dense elements, and which, by the operation of the well-known
law of Re-action (in commercial phrase, “supply and demand”) tends to summon
them from the surrounding universe, and therefore directly counteracts the
object we have in view.
Next comes meat-eating, and for the very same reason, in a minor degree. It
increases the rapidity of life, the energy of action, the violence of passions.
It may be good for a hero who has to fight and die, but not for a would-be sage
who has to exist and . . .
Next in order come the sexual desires; for these, in addition to the great
diversion of energy (vital force) into other channels, in many different
20 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
ways, beyond the primary one (as,
for instance, the waste of energy in expectation, jealousy, &c.), are direct
attractions to a certain gross quality of the original matter of the Universe,
simply because the most pleasurable physical sensations are only possible at
that stage of density. Alongside with and extending beyond all these and other
gratifications of the senses (which include not only those things usually known
as “vicious,” but all those which, though ordinarily regarded as “innocent,”
have yet the disqualification of ministering to the pleasures of the body—the
most harmless to others and the least “gross” being the criterion for those to
be last abandoned in each case)—must be carried on the moral purification.
Nor must it be imagined that “ austerities” as commonly understood can, in the
majority of cases, avail much to hasten the “etherealizing” process. That is the
rock on which many of the Eastern esoteric sects have foundered, and the reason
why they have degenerated into degrading superstitions. The Western monks and
the Eastern Yogees, who think they will reach the apex of powers by
concentrating their thought on their navel, or by standing on one leg, are
practising exercises which serve no other purpose than to strengthen the
willpower, which is sometimes applied to the basest purposes. These are examples
of this one-sided and dwarf development. It is no use to fast as long as you
require food. The ceasing of desire for food without impairment of health is
the sign which indicates that it should be taken in lesser and ever decreasing
quantities until the extreme
21 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
limit compatible ‘with life is
reached. A stage will be finally attained where only water will be required.
Nor is it of any use for this particular purpose of longevity to abstain from
immorality so long as you are craving for it in your heart; and so on with all
other unsatisfied inward cravings. To get rid of the inward desire is the
essential thing, and to mimic the real thing without it is barefaced hypocrisy
and useless slavery.
So it must be with the moral purification of the heart. The “basest”
inclinations must go first— then the others. First avarice, then fear, then
envy, worldly pride, uncharitableness, hatred ; last of all ambition and
curiosity must be abandoned successively. The strengthening of the more ethereal
and so-called “spiritual” parts of the man must go on at the same time.
Reasoning from the known to the unknown, meditation must be practised and
encouraged. Meditation is the inexpressible yearning of the inner Man to “go out
towards the infinite,” which in the olden time was the real meaning of
adoration, but which has now no synonym in the European languages, because the
thing no longer exists in the West, and its name has been vulgarized to the
make-believe shams known as prayer, glorification, and repentance. Through all
stages of training the equilibrium of the consciousness—the assurance that all
must be right in the Kosmos, and therefore with you a portion of
it—must be retained. The process of life must not be hurried but retarded, if
possible; to do otherwise may do good to others—perhaps even to your-
22 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
self in other spheres, but it
will hasten your dissolution in this.
Nor must the externals be neglected in this first stage. Remember that an adept,
though “existing” so as to convey to ordinary minds the idea of his being
immortal, is not also invulnerable to agencies from without. The training to
prolong life does not, in itself, secure one from accidents. As far as any
physical preparation goes, the sword may still cut, the disease enter, the
poison disarrange. This case is very clearly and beautifully put in “Zanoni,”
and it is correctly put and must be so, unless all “adeptism” is a baseless lie.
The adept may be more secure from ordinary dangers than the common mortal, but
he is so by virtue of the superior knowledge, calmness, coolness and penetration
‘which his lengthened existence and its necessary concomitants have enabled him
to acquire; not by virtue of any preservative power in the process itself. He is
secure as a man armed with a rifle is more secure than a naked baboon; not
secure in the sense in which the deva (god) was supposed to be securer than a
man.
If this is so in the case of the high adept, how much more necessary is it that
the neophyte should be not only protected but that he himself should use all
possible means to ensure for himself the necessary duration of life to complete
the process of mastering the phenomena we call death ! It may be said, why do
not the higher adepts protect him? Perhaps they do to some extent, but
the child must learn to walk alone; to make him independent of his own efforts
in respect to safety,
23 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
would be destroying one element
necessary to his development—the sense of responsibility. What courage or
conduct would be called for in a man sent to fight when armed with irresistible
weapons and clothed in impenetrable armour? Hence the neophyte should endeavour,
as far as possible, to fulfill every true canon of sanitary law as laid down by
modern scientists. Pure air, pure water, pure food, gentle exercise, regular
hours, pleasant occupations and surroundings, are all, if not indispensable, at
least serviceable to his progress. It is to secure these, at least as much as
silence and solitude, that the Gods, Sages, Occultists of all ages have retired
as much as possible to the quiet of the country, the cool cave, the depths of
the forest, the expanse of the desert, or the heights of the mountains. Is it
not suggestive that the Gods have always loved the “high places”; and that in
the present day the highest section of the Occult Brotherhood on earth inhabits
the highest mountain plateaux of the earth ?*
Nor must the beginner disdain the assistance of medicine and good medical
regimen. He is still an ordinary mortal, and he requires the aid of an ordinary
mortal.
“Suppose, however, all the conditions required,
————————————————————
* The stern prohibition to the Jews to
serve
“their gods upon
the high mountains and upon
the hills” is traced back to the unwillingness of their ancient
elders to allow people in most cases unfit for adeptship to choose a life of
celibacy and asceticism, or in other word,, to pursue adeptship. This
prohibition had an esoteric meaning before it became the prohibition,
incomprehensible in its dead-letter sense: for it is not India alone whose sons
accorded divine honours to the Wise Ones, but all nations regarded their adepts
and initiates as divine.—G.M.
24 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
or which will be understood as
required (for the details and varieties of treatment requisite, are too numerous
to be detailed here), are fulfilled, what is the next step ?” the reader will
ask. Well if there have been no backslidings or remissness in the procedure
indicated, the following physical results will follow:—
First the neophyte will take more pleasure in things spiritual and pure.
Gradually gross and material occupations will become not only uncraved for or
forbidden, but simply and literally repulsive to him. He will take more pleasure
in the simple sensations of Nature—the sort of feeling one can remember to have
experienced as a child. He will feel more light-hearted, confident, happy. Let
him take care the sensation of renewed youth does not mislead, or he will yet
risk a fall into his old baser life and even lower depths. “Action and Re-action
are equal.”
Now the desire for food will begin to cease. Let it be left off gradually—no
fasting is required. Take what you feel you require. The food craved for will be
the most innocent and simple. Fruit and milk will usually be the best. Then as
till now, you have been simplifying the quality of your food, gradually—very
gradually—as you feel capable of it diminish the quantity. You will ask: “Can a
man exist without food?” No, but before you mock, consider the character of the
process alluded to. It is a notorious fact that many of the lowest and simplest
organisms have no excretions. The common guinea-worm is a very good instance. It
has rather a complicated organism, but it has no
25 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
ejaculatory duct. All it
consumes—the poorest essences of the human body—is applied to its growth and
propagation. Living as it does in human tissue, it passes no digested food away.
The human neophyte, at a certain stage of his development, is in a somewhat
analogous condition, with this difference or differences, that he
doer excrete, but it is through the
pores of his skin, and by those too enter other etherealized particles of matter
to contribute towards his support.* Otherwise, all the food and drink is
sufficient only to keep in equilibrium those “gross” parts of his physical body
which still remain to repair their cuticle-waste through the medium of the
blood. Later on, the process of cell-development in his frame will undergo a
change; a change for the better, the opposite of that in disease for the worse—he will become all living
and sensitive, and will derive nourishment from the Ether (Akas). But that epoch
for our neophyte is yet far distant.
Probably, long before that period has arrived, other results, no less surprising
than incredible to the uninitiated will have ensued to give our neophyte courage
and consolation in his difficult task. It would be but a truism to repeat what
has been again alleged (in ignorance of its real
rationale) by hundreds and hundreds of writers as to
the happiness and content conferred by a life of innocence and purity. But often
at the very commencement of the process some real physical result, unexpected
and unthought of by the neophyte, occurs. Some
————————————————————
* He is in a state similar to the physical state of a fœtus before birth into
the world.—G. M.
26 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
lingering disease, hitherto
deemed hopeless, may take a favourable turn; or he may develop healing mesmeric
powers himself; or some hitherto unknown sharpening of his senses may delight
him. The rationale of these things is, as we have said, neither
miraculous nor difficult of comprehension. In the first place, the sudden change
in the direction of the vital energy (which, whatever view we take of it and its
origin, is acknowledged by all schools of philosophy as most recondite, and as
the motive power) must produce results of some kind. In the second, Theosophy
shows, as we said before, that a man consists of several men pervading each
other, and on this view (although it is very difficult to express the idea in
language) it is but natural that the progressive etherealization of the densest
and most gross of all should leave the others literally more at liberty. A troop
of horses may be blocked by a mob and have much difficulty in fighting its way
through; but if every one of the mob could be changed suddenly into a ghost,
there would be little to retard it. And as each interior entity is more rare,
active, and volatile than the outer and as each has relation with different
elements, spaces, and properties of the Kosmos which are treated of in other
articles on Occultism, the mind of the reader may conceive—though the pen of the
writer could not express it in a dozen volumes—the magnificent possibilities
gradually unfolded to the neophyte.
Many of the opportunities thus suggested may be taken advantage of by the
neophyte for his own safety, amusement, and the good of those around
27 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
him; but the way in which
he does this is one adapted to his fitness—a part of the ordeal he has to pass
through, and misuse of these powers will certainly entail the loss of them as a
natural result. The Itchcha (or desire) evoked anew by the vistas they
open up will retard or throw back his progress.
But there is another portion of the Great Secret to which we must allude, and
which is now, for the first, in a long series of ages, allowed to be
given out to the world, as the hour for it is come.
The educated reader need not be reminded again that one of the great discoveries
which has immortalized the name of Darwin is the law that an organism has always
a tendency to repeat, at an analogous period in its life, the action of its
progenitors, the more surely and completely in proportion to their proximity in
the scale of life. One result of this is, that, in general, organized beings
usually die at a period (on an average) the same as that of their progenitors.
It is true that there is a great difference between the actual ages at
which individuals of any species die. Disease, accidents and famine are the main
agents in causing this. But there is, in each species, a well-known limit within
which the Race-life lies, and none are known to survive beyond it. This applies
to the human species as well as any other. Now, supposing that every possible
sanitary condition had been complied with, and every accident and disease
avoided by a man of ordinary frame, in some particular case there would still,
as is known to medical men, come a time when the
28 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
particles of the body would feel
the hereditary tendency to do that which leads inevitably to dissolution,
and would obey it. It must be
obvious to any reflecting man that, if by any procedure
this critical climacteric could be once thoroughly
passed over, the subsequent danger of “Death” would be proportionally less as
the years progressed. Now this, which no ordinary and unprepared mind and body
can do, is possible sometimes for the will and the frame of one who has been
specially prepared. There are fewer of the grosser particles present to feel the
hereditary bias—there is the assistance of the reinforced “interior men” (whose
normal duration is always greater even in natural death) to the visible outer
shell, and there is the drilled and indomitable Will to direct and wield the
whole. *
From that time forward the course of the aspirant is clearer. He has
conquered “the Dweller of the Threshold”—the hereditary enemy of his race, and,
though still exposed to ever-new dangers in his progress towards Nirvana, he is
flushed with victory, and with new confidence and
————————————————————
*
In
this connection we may
as well show what modern science, and especially physiology has to say as
to the power of the human will. “The force of will is a potent element in
determining longevity. This single point must he granted without argument, that
of two men every way alike and similarly circumstanced, the one who has the
greater courage and grit will be longer-lived. One does not need to practise
medicine long to learn that men die who might just as well live if they resolved
to live, and that myriads who are invalids could become strong if they had the
native or acquired will to vow they would do so. Those who have no other
quality favourable to life, whose bodily organs are nearly all diseased, to whom
each day is a day of pain, who are beset by life-shortening influences, yet do
live by will alone.”—Dr George M. Beard.
29 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
new powers to second it, can
press onwards to perfection.
For, it must be remembered, that nature everywhere acts by Law, and that the
process of purification we have been describing in the visible material body,
also takes place in those which are interior, and not visible to the scientist
by modifications of the same process. All is on the change, and the
metamorphoses of the more ethereal bodies imitate, though in successively
multiplied duration, the career of the grosser, gaining an increasing wider
range of relations with the surrounding kosmos, till in Nirvana the most
rarefied Individuality is merged at last into the INFINITE TOTALITY.
From the above description of the process, it will be inferred why it is that “
Adepts “ are so seldom seen in ordinary life; for, pari passu, with the etherealization of their bodies and
the development of their power, grows an increasing distaste, and a so-to-speak,
“contempt “ for the things of our ordinary mundane existence. Like the fugitive
who successively casts away in his flight those articles which incommode his
progress, beginning with the heaviest, so the aspirant eluding “Death” abandons
all on which the latter can take hold. In the progress of Negation everything
got rid of is a help. As we said before, the adept does not become “immortal “
as the word is ordinarily understood. By or about the time when the Death-limit
of his race is passed he is actually dead,
in the ordinary sense, that is to say, he has relieved himself of
all or nearly all such material particles as would have
30 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
necessitated in disruption the
agony of dying. He has been dying gradually during the whole period of his
Initiation. The catastrophe cannot happen twice over. He has only spread over a
number of years the mild process of dissolution which others endure from a brief
moment to a few hours. The highest Adept is, in fact, dead to, and absolutely
unconscious of, the world; he is oblivious of its pleasures, careless of its
miseries, in so far as sentimentalism goes, for the stern sense of
DUTY never leaves him blind to its very
existence. For the new ethereal senses opening to wider spheres are to ours much
in the relation of ours to the Infinitely Little. New desires and enjoyments,
new dangers and new hindrances arise, with new sensations and new perceptions;
and far away down in the mist—both literally and metaphorically—is our dirty
little earth left below by those who have virtually “gone to join the gods.”
And from this account too, it will be perceptible how foolish it is for people
to ask the Theosophist to “procure for them communication with the highest
Adepts.” It is with the utmost difficulty that one or two can be induced, even
by the throes of a world, to injure their own progress by meddling with mundane
affairs. The ordinary reader will say: “This is not
god-like. This is the acme of selfishness.” . . . .
But let him realize that a very high Adept, undertaking to reform the world,
would necessarily have to once more submit to Incarnation. And is the result of
all that have gone before in that line sufficiently encouraging to prompt a
renewal of the attempt?
31 ————————————————————THE “ELIXIR OF LIFE.”
A deep consideration of all that
we have written, will also give the Theosophists an idea of what they demand
when they ask to be put in the way of gaining
practically “ higher powers.” Well, there, as plainly
as words can put it, is the PATH
can they tread it ?
Nor must it be disguised that what to the ordinary mortal are unexpected
dangers, temptations and enemies also beset the way of the neophyte. And that
for no fanciful cause, but the simple reason that he is, in fact, acquiring new
senses, has yet no practice in their use, and has
never before seen the things he sees. A man born blind
suddenly endowed with vision would not at once master the meaning of
perspective, but would, like a baby, imagine in one case, the moon to be within
his reach, and, in the other, grasp a live coal with the most reckless
confidence.
And what, it may be asked, is to recompense this abnegation of all the pleasures
of life, this cold surrender of all mundane interests, this stretching forward
to an unknown goal which seems ever more unattainable? For, unlike some of the
anthropomorphic creeds, Occultism offers to its votaries no eternally permanent
heaven of material pleasure, to be gained at once by one quick dash through the
grave. As has, in fact, often been the case many would be prepared willingly to
die now for the sake of the
paradise hereafter. But Occultism gives no such prospect of cheaply and
immediately gained infinitude of pleasure, wisdom and existence. It only
promises extensions of these, stretching in successive arches
32 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
obscured by successive veils, in an unbroken series up the long vista which leads to NIRVANA. And this too, qualified by the necessity that new powers entail new responsibilities, and that the capacity of increased pleasure entails the capacity of increased sensibility to pain. To this, the only answer that can be given is two-fold: (1st) the consciousness of Power is itself the most exquisite of pleasures, and is unceasingly gratified in the progress onwards with new means for its exercise and (2ndly) as has been already said—THIS is the only road by which there is the faintest scientific likelihood that “ Death” can be avoided, perpetual memory secured, infinite wisdom attained, and hence an immense helping of mankind made possible, once that the adept has safely crossed the turning-point. Physical as well as metaphysical logic requires and endorses the fact that only by gradual absorption into infinity can the Part become acquainted with the Whole, and that that which is now something can only feel, know, and enjoy EVERYTHING when lost in Absolute Totality in the vortex of that Unalterable Circle wherein our Knowledge becomes Ignorance, and the Everything itself is identified with the NOTHING.
IS THE DESIRE TO
“LIVE” SELFISH?
THE
passage “ to live, to live, to live must be the unswerving resolve,” occurring
in the article on the
Elixir of Life, is often quoted by
superficial and unsympathetic readers as an argument that the teachings of
occultism are the most concentrated form of selfishness. In order to determine
whether the critics are right or wrong, the meaning of the word “selfishness”
must first be ascertained.
According to an established authority, selfishness is that “ exclusive regard to
one’s own interest or happiness ; that supreme self-love or
self-preference which leads a person to direct his purposes to the advancement
of his own interest, power, or happiness, without regarding those of others.”
In short, an absolutely selfish individual is one who cares for himself and none
else, or, in other words, one who is so strongly imbued with a sense of the
importance of his own personality that to him it is the crown of all thoughts,
desires, and aspirations, and beyond which lies the perfect blank. Now, can an
occultist be then said to be “selfish when he desires to live in the
sense in which that word is used by the writer of the article on the Elixir
of Life? It has been said over and over again that the ultimate end of every
aspirant after
34 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
occult knowledge is Nirvana or Mukti, when the individual, freed from all Mayavic Upadhi, becomes one with Paramatma, or the Son identifies himself with the Father in Christian phraseology. For that purpose, every veil of illusion which creates a sense of personal isolation, a feeling of separateness from THE ALL, must be torn asunder, or, in other words, the aspirant must gradually discard all sense of selfishness with which we are all more or less affected. A study of the Law of Kosmic Evolution teaches us that the higher the evolution, the more does it tend towards Unity. In fact, Unity is the ultimate possibility of Nature, and those who through vanity and selfishness go against her purposes, cannot but incur the punishment of annihilation. The occultist thus recognizes that unselfishness and a feeling of universal philanthropy are the inherent laws of our being, and all he does is to attempt to destroy the chains of selfishness forged upon us all by Maya. The struggle then between Good and Evil, God and Satan, Suras and Asuras, Devas and Daityas, which is mentioned in the sacred books of all the nations and races, symbolizes the battle between unselfish and selfish impulses, which takes place in a man, who tries to follow the higher purposes of Nature, until the lower animal tendencies, created by selfishness, are completely conquered, and the enemy thoroughly routed and annihilated. It has also been often put forth in various Theosophical and other occult writings that the only difference between an ordinary man who works along with Nature during the course of Kosmic evolution and
35 ————————————————— IS THE DESIRE TO “LIVE’ SELFISH?
an occultist, is that the latter, by his superior knowledge, adopts such methods of training and discipline as will hurry on that process of evolution, and he thus reaches in a comparatively short time the apex which the ordinary individual will take perhaps billions of years to reach. In short, in a few thousand years he approaches that type of evolution which ordinary humanity attains in the sixth or seventh Round of the Manvantara, i.e., cyclic progression. It is evident that an average man cannot become a MAHATMA in one life, or rather in one incarnation. Now those, who have studied the occult teachings concerning Devachan and our after-states, will remember that between two incarnations there is a considerable period of subjective existence. The greater the number of such Devachanic periods, the greater is the number of years over which this evolution is extended. The chief aim of the occultist is therefore to so control himself as to be able to regulate his future states, and thereby gradually shorten the duration of his Devachanic existence between two incarnations. In the course of his progress, there comes a time when, between one physical death and his next rebirth, there is no Devachan but a kind of spiritual sleep, the shock of death, having, so to say, stunned him into a state of unconsciousness from which he gradually recovers to find himself reborn, to continue his purpose. The period of this sleep may vary from twenty-five to two hundred years, depending upon the degree of his advancement. But even this period may be said to be a waste of time, and hence all his exertions are directed to
36 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
shorten its duration so as to
gradually come to a point when the passage from one state of existence into
another is almost imperceptible. This is his last incarnation, as it were, for
the shock of death no more stuns him. This is the idea the writer of the article
on the Elixir of Life means
to convey when he says :
By or about the time when the Death-limit of his race is passed he is actually
dead, in the
ordinary sense, that is to say, he has relieved himself of all or nearly all
such material particles as would have necessitated in disruption the agony of
dying. He has been dying gradually during the whole period of his Initiation.
The catastrophe cannot happen twice over, he has only spread over a number of
years the mild process of dissolution which others endure from a brief moment to
a few hours. The highest Adept is, in fact, dead to, and absolutely unconscious
of, the World he is oblivious of its pleasures, careless of its miseries, in so
far as sentimentalism goes, for the stern sense of Duty never leaves him blind
to its very existence.
The process of the emission and attraction of atoms, which the occultist
controls, has been discussed at length in that article and in other writings. It
is by these means that he gets rid gradually of all the old gross particles of
his body, substituting for’ them finer and more ethereal ones, till at inst the
former sthula sarira is
completely dead and disintegrated, and he lives in a body entirely of his own
creation, suited to his work. That body is essential to his purposes; as the
Elixir of Life says :—
To do good, as in every thing else, a man most have
time and materials to Work with, and this is a
necessary
37 ————————————————— IS THE DESIRE TO “LIVE” SELFISH?
means to the acquirement of
powers by which infinitely more good can be done than without them. When these
are once mastered, the opportunities to use them will arrive
Giving the practical instructions for that purpose, the same paper continues :—
The physical man must be rendered more ethereal and
sensitive; the mental man more penetrating and profound; the moral man more
selfdenying and philosophical.
Losing sight of the above important considerations, the following passage is
entirely misunderstood :—
And from this account too, it will be perceptible how foolish
it is for people to ask the Theosophist “to procure for them communication with
the highest Adepts.” It is with the utmost difficulty that one or two can be
induced, even by the throes of a world, to injure their own progress by meddling
with mundane affairs. The ordinary reader will say: “This is not God-like.
This is the acme of selfishness.”
But let him realize that a very high Adept, undertaking to reform the world,
would necessarily have to once more submit to Incarnation. And is the result of
all that have gone before in that line sufficiently encouraging to prompt a
renewal of the attempt?
Now, in condemning the above passage as inculcating selfishness, superficial
critics neglect many profound truths. In. the first place, they forget the other
extracts already quoted which impose self-denial
as a necessary condition of success, and which say
that, with progress, new senses and new powers are acquired with which
infinitely more good can be done than without them. The more spiritual the Adept
becomes the less can he meddle with mundane gross
affairs and the more he has to confine himself to
spiritual work. It has been repeated, times out
38 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
of number, that the work on the spiritual plane is as superior to the work on the intellectual plane as the latter is superior to that on the physical plane. The very high Adepts, therefore, do help humanity, but only spiritually: they are constitutionally incapable of meddling with worldly affairs. But this applies only to very high Adepts. There are various degrees of Adept-ship, and those of each degree work for humanity on the planes to which they may have risen. It is only the chelas that can live in the world, until they rise to a certain degree. And it is because the Adepts do care for the world that they make their chelas live in and work for it, as many of those who study the subject are aware. Each cycle produces its own occultists capable of working for the humanity of the time on all the different planes; but when the Adepts foresee that at a particular period humanity will he incapable of producing occultists for work on particular planes, for such occasions they do provide by either voluntarily giving up their further progress and waiting until humanity reaches that period, or by refusing to enter into Nirvana and submitting to re-incarnation so as to he ready for work when the time comes. And although the world may not be aware of the fact, yet there are even now certain Adepts who have preferred to remain in statu quo and refuse to take the higher degrees, for the benefit of the future generations of humanity. In short, as the Adepts work harmoniously, since unity is the fundamental law of their being, they have, as it were, made a division of labour, according to which each works on the plane appropriate to him-
39 —————————————————
IS THE DESIRE TO “LIVE” SELFISH?
self for the spiritual elevation of us all—and the
process of longevity mentioned in the Elixir
of Life is
only the means to the end which, far from being selfish, is the most unselfish
purpose for which a human being can labour.
CONTEMPLATION
A
GENERAL
misconception on this subject seems to
prevail. One confines oneself for some time in a room, and passively gazes at
one’s nose, a spot on the wall, or, perhaps, a crystal, under the impression
that such is the true form of
contemplation enjoined by Raj
Yoga. Many fail to realize that true occultism requires a
physical, mental, moral and spiritual development to run on parallel lines, and
injure themselves, physically and spiritually, by practice of what they falsely
believe to be Dhyan. A few instances may be mentioned here with advantage, as a
warning to over-zealous students.
At Bareilly the writer met a member of the Theosophical Society from
Farrukhabad, who narrated his experiences and shed bitter tears of repentance
for his past follies—as he termed them. It appears from his account that fifteen
or twenty years ago having read about contemplation in the
Bhagavad Gita, he undertook the
practice of it, without a proper comprehension of its esoteric meaning and
carried it on for several years. At first he experienced a sense of pleasure,
but simultaneously he found he was gradually losing self-control; until after a
few years he discovered, to his great bewilderment and sorrow, that
he was no
41 ————————————————————CONTEMPLATION.
longer his own master.
He felt his heart actually growing heavy, as though a load
had been placed on it. He had no control over his sensations the communication
between the brain and the heart had become as though interrupted. As matters
grew worse, in disgust lie discontinued his “contemplation.” This happened as
long as seven years ago ; and, although since then lie has not felt
worse, yet he could never regain his original healthy state of mind and body.
Another case came under the writer’s observation at Jubbulpore. The gentleman
concerned, after reading Patanjali and such other works, began to sit for
“contemplation.” After a short time he commenced seeing abnormal sights and
hearing musical bells, but neither over these phenomena nor over his own
sensations could he exercise any control. He could not produce these results at
will, nor could he stop them when they were occurring. Numerous such examples
may be cited. While penning these lines, the writer has on his table two letters
upon this subject, one from Moradabad and the other from Trichinopoly. In short,
all this mischief is due to a misunderstanding of the significance of
contemplation as enjoined upon students by all the schools of Occult Philosophy.
With a view to afford a glimpse of the Reality through the dense veil that
enshrouds the mysteries of this Science of Sciences, an article, the
Elixir of Life, was written.
Unfortunately, in too many instances, the seed seems to have fallen upon barren
ground. Some of its readers pin their faith to the following clause in that
paper :—
42 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Reasoning from the known to the
unknown meditation must be practised and encouraged.
But, alas! their preconceptions have prevented them from comprehending what is
meant by meditation. They forget that the meditation spoken of “is the
inexpressible yearning of the inner Man to ‘go out towards the infinite,’ which
in the olden time was the real meaning of adoration “—as the next sentence
shows. A good deal of light would be thrown upon this subject if the reader were
to turn to an earlier part of the same paper, and peruse attentively the
following paragraphs :—
So, then, we have arrived at the point where we have determined—literally, not
metaphorically—to crack tho outer shell known as the mortal coil or body, and
hatch out of it, clothed in our next. This ‘next’ is not a spiritual, but only a
more ethereal form. Having by a long training and preparation adapted it for a
life in the atmosphere, during which time we have gradually made the outward
shell to die off through a certain process . . . . we have to prepare for this
physiological transformation.
How are we to do it ? In the
first place we have the actual, visible, material body—Man, so called, though,
in fact, but his outer shell—to deal with. Let us bear in mind that Science
teaches us that in about every seven years we change shin as effectually
as any serpent; and this so gradually and imperceptibly that, had not science
after years of unremitting study and observation assured us of it, no one would
have had the slightest suspicion of the fact Hence, if a man, partially flayed
alive, may sometimes survive and be covered with a new skin, so our astral,
vital body . . . . maybe made to harden its particles to the atmospheric
changes. The whole secret is to succeed in evolving it out, and separating it
from the visible; and while its generally invisible atoms proceed to concrete
themselves into
43 ————————————————————CONTEMPLATION.
a compact mass, to gradually get
rid of the old particles of our visible frame so as to make them die and
disappear before the new set has had time to evolve and replace them We can say
no more.
A correct comprehension of the above scientific process will give a clue to the
esoteric meaning of meditation or contemplation. Science teaches us that man
changes his physical body continually, and this change is so gradual that it is
almost imperceptible. Why then should the case be otherwise with the
inner man? The latter too is
developing and changing atoms at every moment. And the attraction of these new
sets of atoms depends upon the Law of Affinity—the desires of the man drawing to
his bodily tenement only such particles as are necessary to give them
expression.
For Science shows that thought is dynamic, and the thought-force evolved by
nervous action expanding itself outwardly, must affect the molecular relations
of the physical man. The inner men, however sublimated their organism may
be, are still composed of actual, not hypothetical, particles, and are
still subject to the law that an “action” has a tendency to repeat itself; a
tendency to set up analogous action in the grosser “shell” they are in contact
with, and concealed within.—The Elixir of Life.
What is it the aspirant of Yog Vidya
strives after if not to gain Mukti
by transferring himself gradually from the grosser to
the next less gross body, until all the veils of Maya
being successively removed his
Atma becomes one with
Paramatma? Does he suppose that this
grand result can be achieved by a two or four hours’ contemplation? For the
remaining twenty or twenty-two hours
44 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
that the devotee does not shut
himself up in his room for meditation is the process of the emission of atoms
and their replacement by others stopped? If not, then how does he mean to
attract all this time only those suited to his end? From the above remarks it is
evident that just as the physical body requires incessant attention to prevent
the entrance of a disease, so also the inner man
requires an unremitting watch, so that no conscious or
unconscious thought may attract atoms unsuited to its progress. This is the real
meaning of contemplation. The prime factor in the guidance of the thought is
Will.
Without that, all else is useless. And, to be efficient for the purpose, it must
be, not only a passing resolution of the moment, a single fierce desire of short
duration, but a settled and continued strain, as nearly as can be continued
and concentrated without one single moment’s remission.
The student would do well to take note of the italicized clause in the above
quotation. He should also have it indelibly impressed upon his mind that
It is no use to fast as long as one requires food To get rid of the
inward desire is the essential thing, and to mimic the real thing without it is
barefaced hypocrisy and useless slavery.
Without realizing the significance of this most important fact, any one who for
a moment finds cause of disagreement with any one of his family, or has his
vanity wounded, or for a sentimental flash of the moment, or for a selfish
desire to utilize the Divine power for gross purposes—at once
45 ———————————————————— CONTEMPLATION.
rushes into contemplation and dashes himself to pieces on the rock dividing the known from the known. Wallowing in the mire of exotericism, he knows not what it is to live in the world and yet be not of the world; in other words, to guard self against self is an almost incomprehensible axiom for the profane. The Hindu ought to know better from the life of Janaka, who, although a reigning monarch, was yet styled Rajarshi and is said to have attained Nirvana. hearing of his widespread fame, a few sectarian bigots went to his court to test his Yoga-power. As soon as they entered the court-room, the king having read their thoughts—a power which every chela attains at a certain stage—gave secret instructions to his officials to have a particular street in the city lined on both sides by dancing girls singing the must voluptuous songs. He then had some gharas (pots) filled with water up to the brim so that the least shake would be likely to spill their contents. The wiseacres, each with a full ghara (pot) on his head, were ordered to pass along the street, surrounded by soldiers with drawn swords to he used against them if even so much as a drop of water were allowed to run over. The poor fellows having returned to the palace after successfully passing the test, were asked by the King-Adept what they had met with in the street they were made to go through. With great indignation they replied that the threat of being cut to pieces had so much worked upon their minds that they thought of nothing but the water on their heads, and the intensity of their attention did not permit them to
46 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
take cognizance of what was going
on around them. Then Janaka told them that on the same principle they could
easily understand that, although being outwardly engaged in managing the affairs
of his State, he could, at the same time, be an Occultist. He too, while in
the world, was not of the world. In other words, his inward
aspirations had been leading him on continually to the goal in which his whole
inner self was concentrated.
Raj Yoga encourages no sham, requires no physical postures. It has to
deal with the inner man whose sphere lies in the world of thought. To have the
highest ideal placed before oneself and strive incessantly to rise up to it, is
the only true concentration recognized by Esoteric Philosophy which deals with
the inner world of noumena, not the outer shell of phenomena.
The first requisite for it is thorough purity of heart. Well might the
student of Occultism say with Zoroaster, that purity of thought, purity of word,
and purity of deed,—these are the essentials of one who would rise above the
ordinary level and join the “gods.” A cultivation of the feeling of unselfish
philanthropy is the path which has to be traversed for that purpose. For it is
that alone which will lead to Universal Love, the realization of which
constitutes the progress towards deliverance from the chains forged by Maya
(illusion) around the Ego. No student will attain this at once, but as our
Venerated Mahatma says in the Occult World” :—
The greater the progress towards deliverance, the less this will be the case,
until, to crown all, human and purely
47 ———————————————————— CONTEMPLATION.
individual personal feelings,
blood-ties arid friendship, patriotism and race predilection, will all give way
to become blended into one universal feeling, the only true and holy, the only
unselfish and eternal one, Love, an Immense Love for Humanity as a whole.
In short, the individual is blended with the
ALL.
Of course, contemplation, as usually understood, is not without its minor
advantages. It develops one set of physical faculties as gymnastics does the
muscles. For the purposes of physical mesmerism it is good enough; but it can in
no way help the development of the psychological faculties, as the thoughtful
reader will perceive. At the same time, even for ordinary purposes, the practice
can never be too well guarded. If, as some suppose, they have to be entirely
passive and lose themselves in the object before them, they should remember
that, by thus encouraging passivity, they, in fact, allow the development of
mediumistic faculties in themselves. As was repeatedly stated—the Adept and the
Medium are the two Poles : while the former is intensely active and thus able to
control the elemental forces, the latter is intensely passive and thus incurs
the risk of falling a prey to the caprice and malice of mischievous embryos of
human beings, and the elementaries.
It will be evident from the above that true meditation consists in the
“reasoning from the known to the unknown.” The “known” is the phenomenal world,
cognizable by our five senses. And all that we see in this manifested world are
the effects, the causes of which are to be sought after in the
48 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY
noumenal, the unmanifested, the “unknown world : ” this is to
be accomplished by meditation, i.e.,
continued attention to the subject. Occultism does not depend
upon one method, but employs both the deductive and
the inductive. The student must first learn the
general axioms, which have sufficiently been laid down in the
Elixir of Life and other occult
writings. What the student has first to do is to
comprehend these axioms and, by employing the
deductive method, to proceed from universals to particulars. He has then to
reason from the “known to the unknown,” and see if the inductive method of
proceeding from particulars to universals supports those axioms. This process
forms the primary stage of true contemplation. The student must first grasp the
subject intellectually before he can hope to realize his aspirations. When this
is accomplished, then comes the next stage of meditation, which is “the
inexpressible yearning of the inner man to ‘go out towards the infinite.’”
Before any such yearning can be properly directed, the goal must first be
determined. The higher stage, in fact, consists in practically realizing what
the first steps have placed within one’s comprehension. In short, contemplation,
in its true sense, is to recognize the truth of Eliphas Levi’s saying :—
To believe without knowing is weakness; to believe, because one knows, is power.
The Elixir of Life not only
gives the preliminary steps in the ladder of
contemplation but also tells the reader how to
realize the higher stages. It
traces, by the process of contem-
49 ———————————————————— CONTEMPLATION.
plation as it were, the relation
of man, “the known,” the manifested, the phenomenon, to “the unknown,” the
unmanifested, the noumenon. it shows the student what ideal to contemplate and
how to rise up to it. it places before him the nature of the inner capacities of
man and how to develop them. To a
superficial reader, this may, perhaps, appear as the acme of selfishness.
Reflection will, however, show the contrary to be the case. For it teaches the
student that to comprehend the noumenal, he must identify himself with Nature.
Instead of looking upon himself as an isolated being, he must learn to look upon
himself as a part of the Integral Whole. For, in the unmanifested world, it can
be clearly perceived that all is controlled by the “ Law of Affinity,” the
attraction of the one for the other. There, all is Infinite Love, understood in
its true sense.
It may now not be out of place to recapitulate what has already
been said. The first thing to be done is to study the axioms of Occultism and
work upon them by the deductive and the inductive methods, which is real
contemplation. To turn this to a useful purpose, what is theoretically
comprehended must be practically realized.
DAMODAR K. MAVALAUKAR.
CHELAS AND LAY
CHELAS
A “CHELA” is a person who has offered himself to a master as a pupil to learn practically the “hidden mysteries of Nature and the psychical powers latent in man.” The master who accepts him is called in India a Guru; and the real Guru is always an adept in the Occult Science. A man of profound knowledge, exoteric and esoteric, especially the latter; and one who has brought his carnal nature under the subjection of the WILL; who has developed in himself both the power (Siddhi) to control the forces of Nature, and the capacity to probe her secrets by the help of the formerly latent but now active powers of his being—this is the real Guru. To offer oneself as a candidate for Chelaship is easy enough, to develop into an adept the most difficult task any man could possibly undertake. There are scores of “natural-born” poets, mathematicians, mechanics, statesmen, &e. But a natural-born adept is something practically impossible. For, though we do hear at very rare intervals of one who has an extraordinary innate capacity for the acquisition of occult knowledge and power, yet even he has to pass the self-same tests and probations, and go through the self-same training as any less endowed fellow aspirant. In this matter it is most true that there is no royal road by which favourites may travel.
51 ————————————————————CHELAS AND LAY CHELAS.
For centuries the selection of
Chelas—Outside the hereditary group within the gon-pa
(temple)—has been made by the Himalayan Mahatmas
themselves from among the class—in Tibet, a considerable one as to number—of
natural mystics. The only exceptions have been in the cases of Western men like
Fludd, Thomas Vaughan, Paracelsus, Pico di Mirandolo, Count St. Germain, &c.,
whose temperament affinity to this celestial science, more or less forced the
distant Adepts to come into personal relations with them, and enabled them to
get such small (or large) proportion of the whole truth as was possible under
their social surroundings. From Book IV. of Kui-te, Chapter on “The Laws of
Upasanas,” we learn that the qualifications expected in a Chela were;
1. Perfect physical health;
2.
Absolute mental and
physical purity;
3. Unselfishness of purpose; universal charity; pity for
all animate beings;
4. Truthfulness and unswerving faith in the law of Karma,
independent of the intervention of any power in Nature: a law whose course is
not to be obstructed by any agency, not to be caused to deviate by prayer or
propitiatory exoteric ceremonies;
5. A courage undaunted in every emergency, even by peril to life;
6. An intuitional perception of one’s being the vehicle of the manifested
Avalokiteswara or Divine Atma (Spirit)
7. Calm indifference for, but a just appreciation of, everything that
constitutes the objective and
52 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
transitory world, in its relation
with, and to, the invisible regions.
Such, at the least, must have been the recommendations of one aspiring to
perfect Chelaship. With the sole exception of the first, which in rare
and exceptional cases might have been modified, each
one of these points has been invariably insisted upon,
and all must have been more or less developed in the inner nature by the Chela’s
unhelped exertions, before he could be
actually “put to the test.”
When the self-evolving ascetic—whether in, or outside the active world—has
placed himself, according to his natural capacity, above, hence made himself
master of his (1) Sarira—body ;
(2) Indriya—senses ; (3)
Dosha—faults; (4) Dukkha
—pain; and is ready to become one with his
Manas—mind ; Buddhi—intellection, or spiritual intelligence; and
Atma—highest soul, i.e., spirit when he is ready for this, and, further,
to recognize in Atma the highest ruler in the world of perceptions, and
in the will, the highest executive energy (power), then may he, under the time-honoured rules,
be taken in hand by one of the Initiates. He may then be shown
the mysterious path at whose farther end is obtained the unerring discernment of
Phala, or the fruits of causes produced, and given the means of reaching
Apavarga—emancipation from the misery of repeated births,
pretya-bhâva,
in whose determination the ignorant has no hand.
But since the advent of the Theosophical Society, one of whose arduous tasks it
is to re-awaken in
53 ————————————————————CHELAS AND LAY CHELAS.
the Aryan mind the dormant memory of the existence of this science and of those transcendent human capabilities, the rules of Chela selection have become slightly relaxed in one respect. Many members of the Society who would not have been otherwise called to Chelaship became convinced by practical proof of the above points, and rightly enough thinking that if other men had hitherto reached the goal, they too, if inherently fitted, might reach it by following the same path, importunately pressed to be taken as candidates. And as it would be an interference with Karma to deny them the chance of at least beginning, they were given it. The results have been far from encouraging so far, and it is to show them the cause of their failure as much as to warn others against rushing heedlessly upon a similar fate, that the writing of the present article has been ordered. The candidates in question, though plainly warned against it in advance, began wrong by selfishly looking to the future and losing sight of the past. They forgot that they had done nothing to deserve the rare honour of selection, nothing which warranted their expecting such a privilege; that they could boast of none of the above enumerated merits. As men of the selfish, sensual world, whether married or single, merchants, civilian or military employees, or members of the learned professions, they had been to a school most calculated to assimilate them to the animal nature, least so to develop their spiritual potentialities. Yet each and all had vanity enough to suppose that their case would be made
54 ——————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY
an exception to the law of
countless centuries, as though, indeed, in their person had been born to the
world a new Avatar! All
expected to have hidden things taught, extraordinary powers given them,
because—well, because they had joined the Theosophical Society. Some had
sincerely resolved to amend their lives, and give up their evil courses we must
do them that justice, at all events.
All were refused at first, Col. Olcott the President himself, to begin with: and
he was not formally accepted as a Chela until he had proved by more than a
year’s devoted labours and by a determination which brooked no denial, that he
might safely be tested. Then from all sides came complaints—from Hindus, who
ought to have known better, as well as from Europeans who, of course, were not
in a condition to know anything at all about the rules. ‘The cry was that unless
at least a few Theosophists were given the chance to try, the Society could not
endure. Every other noble and
unselfish feature of our programme was ignored—a man’s duty to
his neighbour, to his country, his duty to help, enlighten, encourage and
elevate those weaker and less favoured than he; all were trampled out of sight
in the insane rush for adeptship. The call for phenomena, phenomena, phenomena,
resounded in every quarter, and the Founders were impeded in their real work and
teased importunately to intercede with the Mahatmas, against whom the real
grievance my, though their poor agents had to take all the buffets. At last, the
word came from the higher authorities that a few of the most urgent candidates
should be
55 ————————————————————CHELAS AND LAY CHELAS.
taken at their word. The result of the experiment would perhaps show better than any amount of preaching what Chelaship meant, and what are the consequences of selfishness and temerity. Each candidate was warned that be must wait for year in any event, before his fitness could be established, and that he must pass through a series of tests that would bring out all there was in him, whether bad or good. They were nearly all married men, and hence were designated “Lay Chelas”—a term new in English, but having long had its equivalent in Asiatic tongues. A Lay Chela is but a man of the world who affirms his desire to become wise in spiritual things. Virtually, every member of the Theosophical Society who subscribes to the second of our three “ Declared Objects” is such; for though not of the number of true Chelas, he has yet the possibility of becoming one, for he has stepped across the boundary—line which separated him from the Mahatmas, and has brought himself, as it were, under their notice. In joining the Society and binding himself to help along its work, he has pledged himself to act in some degree in concert with those Mahatmas, at whose behest the Society was organized, and under whose conditional protection it remains. The joining is then, the introduction; all the rest depends entirely upon the member himself, and he need never expect the most distant approach to the “favour” of one of our Mahatmas or any other Mahatmas in the world—should the latter consent to become known—that has not been fully earned by personal merit. The Mahatmas are the servants, not the arbiters of the Law of Karma.
56 ——————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Lay-Chelaship confers no
privilege upon any one except that of working for merit under the observation of
a Master. And whether that Master be or be not seen by the Chela makes no
difference whatever as to the result: his good thought, words and deeds will
bear their fruits, his evil ones, theirs. To boast of Lay Chelaship or make a
parade of it, is the surest way to reduce the relationship with the Guru to a
mere empty name, for it would be prima facie evidence of vanity and
unfitness for farther progress. And for years we have been teaching everywhere
the maxim “ First deserve, then desire” intimacy with the Mahatmas.
Now there is a terrible law operative in Nature, one which cannot be altered,
and whose operation clears up the apparent mystery of the selection of certain
“Chelas” who have turned out sorry specimens of morality, these few years past.
Does the reader recall the old proverb, “Let sleeping dogs lie ?” There is a
world of occult meaning in it. No man or woman knows his or her moral strength
until it is tried. Thousands
go through life very respectably, because they were never put to the test. This
is a truism doubtless, but it is most pertinent to the present case. One who
undertakes to try for Chelaship by that very act rouses and lashes to
desperation every sleeping passion of his animal nature. For this is the
commencement of a struggle for mastery in which quarter is neither to be given
nor taken. It is, once for all, “To be, or Not to be;” to conquer, means Adept-ship : to fail, an ignoble Martyrdom; for to fall victim to lust, pride,
avarice, vanity, selfishness,
57 ————————————————————CHELAS AND LAY CHELAS.
cowardice, or any other of the lower propensities, is indeed ignoble, if measured by the standard of true manhood. The Chela is not only called to face all the latent evil propensities of his nature, but, in addition, the momentum of maleficent forces accumulated by the community and nation to which he belongs. For he is an integral part of those aggregates, and what affects either the individual man or the group (town or nation), reacts the one upon the other. And in this instance his struggle for goodness jars upon the ‘whole body of badness in his environment, and draws its fury upon him. If he is content to go along ‘with his neighbours and be almost as they are—perhaps a little better or somewhat worse than the average—no one may give him a thought. But let it be known that he has been able to detect the hollow mockery of social life, its hypocrisy, selfishness, sensuality, cupidity and other bad features, and has determined to lift himself up to a higher level, at once he is hated, and every bad, bigotted, or malicious nature sends at him a current of opposing will-power. If he is innately strong he shakes it off, as the powerful swimmer dashes through the current that would bear a weaker one away. But in this moral battle, if the Chela has one single hidden blemish—do what he may, it shall and will be brought to light. The varnish of conventionalities which “civilization” overlays us all with must come off to the last coat, and the inner self, naked and without the slightest veil to conceal its reality, is exposed. The habits of society ‘which hold men to a certain degree under moral restraint, and compel then’ to pay tribute to virtue
58 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
by seeming to be good whether they are so or not—these habits are apt to be all forgotten, these restraints to be all broken through under the strain of Chelaship he is now in an atmosphere of illusions—Maya. Vice puts on its most alluring face, and the tempting passions attract the inexperienced aspirant to the depths of psychic debasement. This is not a case like that depicted by a great artist, where Satan is seen playing a game of chess with a man upon the stake of his soul, while the latter’s good angel stands beside him to counsel and assist. For the strife is in this instance between the Chela’s will and his carnal nature, and Karma forbids that any angel or Guru should interfere until the result is known. With the vividness of poetic fancy Bulwar Lytton has idealized it for us in his “Zanoni,” a work which will ever be prized by the occultist while in his “Strange Story” he has with equal power shown the black side of occult research and its deadly perils. Chelaship was defined, the other day, by a Mahatma as a “psychic resolvent, which eats away all dross and leaves only the pure gold behind.” if the candidate has the latent lust for money, or political chicanery, or materialistic scepticism, or vain display, or false speaking, or cruelty, or sensual gratification of any kind the germ is almost sure to sprout; and so, on the other hand, as regards the noble qualities of human nature. The real man comes out. Is it not the height of folly, then, for any one to leave the smooth path of common-place life to scale the crags of Chelaship without some reasonable feeling of certainty that he has the right stuff in him? Well says the
59 ————————————————————CHELAS AND LAY CHELAS
Bible: “Let him that standeth
take heed lest he fall ”—a text that would-be Chelas should consider well before
they rush headlong into the fray! It would have been well for some of our Lay
Chelas if they had thought twice before defying the tests.
We call to
mind several sad failures within a twelve-month. One
went wrong in the head, recanted noble sentiments uttered but a few weeks
previously, and became a member of a religion he had just scornfully and
unanswerably proven false. A second became a defaulter and absconded with his
employer’s money—the latter also a Theosophist. A third gave himself up to gross
debauchery, and confessed it, with ineffectual sobs and tears, to his chosen
Guru. A fourth got entangled with a person of the other sex and fell out with
his dearest and truest friends. A fifth showed signs of mental aberration and
was brought into Court upon charges of discreditable conduct. A sixth shot
himself to escape the consequences of criminality, on the verge of detection!
And so we might go on and on. All these were apparently sincere searchers after
truth, and passed in the world for respectable persons. Externally, they were
fairly eligible as candidates for Chelaship, as appearances go; but “within all
was rottenness and dead men’s hones.” The world’s varnish was so thick as to
hide the absence of the true gold underneath; and the “resolvent” doing its
work, the candidate proved in each instance but a gilded figure of moral dross,
from circumference to core.
In what precedes we have, of course, dealt but with the failures among Lay
Chelas; there have
60 ———————————————————— FIVE FEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
been partial successes too, and
these are passing gradually through the first stages of their probation. Some
are making themselves useful to the Society and to the world in general by good
example and precept. If they persist, well for them, well for us all: the odds
are fearfully against them, but still
“there is no impossibility to him who Wills.” The difficulties in Chelaship will
never be less until human nature changes and a new order is evolved. St. Paul
(Rom. vii. 18,19) might have had a Chela in mind when he said “to will is
present with me; but how to perform that which is good I find not. For the good
I would I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do.” And in the wise Kirátárjuniyam of Bharavi
it is written :—
The enemies which rise within the body,
hard to be overcome—the evil passions—
Should manfully be fought; who conquers these
Is equal to the
conqueror of worlds. (XI. 32.)
ANCIENT OPINIONS
UPON PSYCHIC
BODIES
IT must be confessed that modern
Spiritualism falls very short of the ideas formerly suggested by the sublime
designation which it has assumed. Chiefly intent upon recognizing and putting
forward the phenomenal proofs of a future existence, it concerns itself little
with speculations on the distinction between matter and spirit, and rather
prides itself on having demolished Materialism without the aid of metaphysics.
Perhaps a Platonist might say that the recognition of a future existence is
consistent with a very practical and even dogmatic materialism, but it is rather
to be feared that such a materialism as this would not greatly disturb the
spiritual or intellectual repose of our modern phenomenalists.* Given the
consciousness with its sensibilities safely housed in the psychic body which
demonstrably survives the physical carcase, and we are like men saved from
shipwreck, who are for the moment thankful and content, not giving thought
whether they are landed on a hospitable shore, or on a barren rock, or on an
———————————————————
*
“I am afraid,” says Thomas
Taylor in his Introduction to the Phædo, “there are scarcely any at the present
day who know that it is one
thing for the soul to be separated from the body, and another for the body to be
separated from the soul, and that the former is by no means a necessary
consequence of the latter.”
62 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
island of cannibals. It is not of
course intended that this “hand to mouth” immortality is sufficient for the
many thoughtful minds whose activity gives life and progress to the movement,
but that it affords the relief which most people feel when in an age of doubt
they make the discovery that they are undoubtedly to live again. To the question
“how are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come?” modern
Spiritualism, with its empirical methods, is not adequate to reply. Yet long
before Paul suggested it, it had the attention of the most celebrated schools of
philosophy, whose speculations on the subject, however little they may seem to
be verified, ought not to be without interest to us, who, after all, are still
in the infancy of a spiritualist revival.
It would not be necessary to premise, but for the frequency with which the
phrase occurs, that
the spiritual body “ is a contradiction in terms. The office of body is to
relate spirit to an objective world. By Platonic writers it is usually termed
okhema—“vehicle.” It is
the medium of action, and also of sensibility. In this philosophy the conception
of Soul was not simply, as with us, the immaterial subject of consciousness.
How warily the interpreter has to tread here, every one knows who has dipped,
even superficially, into the controversies among Platonists themselves. All
admit the distinction between the rational and the irrational part or principle,
the latter including, first, the sensibility, and secondly, the Plastic, or that
lower which in obedience to its sympathies enables the soul to attach itself to,
and to organize into a
63 —————————————————— OPINIONS UPON PSYCHIC BODIES.
suitable body those substances of the universe to which it is most congruous. It is more difficult to determine whether Plato or his principal followers, recognized in the rational soul or nous a distinct and separable entity, that which is sometimes discriminated as “the Spirit.” Dr. Henry More, no mean authority, repudiates this interpretation. “There can be nothing more monstrous,” he says, “than to make two souls in man, the one sensitive, the other rational, really distinct from one another, and to give the name of Astral spirit to the former, when there is in man no Astral spirit beside the Plastic of the soul itself, which is always inseparable from that which is rational. Nor upon any other account can it be called Astral, but as it is liable to that corporeal temperament which proceeds from the stars, or rather from any material causes in general, as not being yet sufficiently united with the divine body—that vehicle of divine virtue or power.” So he maintains that the Kabalistic three souls—Nephesh, Ruach, Neschamah—originate in a misunderstanding of the true Platonic doctrine, which is that of a threefold “vital congruity.” These correspond to the three degrees of bodily existence, or to the three “vehicles,” the terrestrial, the aerial, and the ethereal. The latter is the augoeides—the luciform vehicle of the purified soul whose irrational part has been brought under complete subjection to the rational. The aerial is that in which the great majority of mankind find themselves at the dissolution of the terrestrial body, and in which the incomplete process of purification has to be
64 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
undergone during long ages of
preparation for the soul’s return to its primitive, ethereal state. For it must
be remembered that the preexistence of souls is a distinguishing tenet of this
philosophy as of the Kabala. The soul has “sunk into matter.” From its highest
original state the revolt of its irrational nature has awakened and developed
successively its “vital congruities” with the regions below, passing, by means
of its “Plastic,” first into the aerial and afterwards into the terrestrial
condition. Each of these regions teems also with an appropriate population which
never passes, like the human soul, from one to the other—“gods,” “demons,” and
animals.* As to duration, “the shortest of all is that of the terrestrial
vehicle. In the aerial, the soul may inhabit, as they define, many ages, and in
the ethereal, for ever.” Speaking of the second body, Henry More says “ the soul’s astral vehicle is of that tenuity that itself can as easily pass the
smallest pores of the body as the light does glass, or the lightning the
scabbard of a sword without tearing or scorching of it.” And again, “I shall
make bold to assert that the soul may live in an aerial vehicle as well as in
the ethereal, and that there are very few that arrive to that high happiness as
to acquire a celestial vehicle immediately upon their quitting the terrestrial
one; that heavenly chariot necessarily carrying us in triumph to the greatest
happiness the soul of man is capable of, which would arrive to all men in-
———————————————————
* The allusion here is to those beings of the several kingdoms of
the
elements which we Theosophists, following after the Kabalists, have called the “Elementals.”
They never become men.—ED. Theos.
65 ——————————————————OPINIONS UPON PSYCHIC BODIES.
differently, good or bad, if the
parting with this earthly body would suddenly mount us into the heavenly. When
by a just Nemesis the souls of men that are not heroically virtuous will find
themselves restrained within the compass of this caliginous air, as both Reason
itself suggests, and the Platonists have unanimously determined.” Thus also the
most thorough-going, and probably the most deeply versed in the doctrines of
the master among modern Platonists, Thomas Taylor (Introduction. Phædo) :—“After this our divine philosopher informs that the pure soul will after death
return to pure and eternal natures; but that the impure soul, in consequence of
being imbued with terrene affections, will be drawn down to a kindred nature,
and be invested with a gross vehicle capable of being seen by the corporeal eye.
For while a propensity to body remains in the soul, it causes her to attract a
certain vehicle to herself; either of an aerial nature, or composed from the
spirit and vapours of her terrestrial body, or which is recently collected from
surrounding air ; for according to the arcana of the Platonic philosophy,
between an ethereal body, which is simple and immaterial and is the eternal
connate vehicle of the soul, and a terrene body, which is material and
composite, and of short duration, there is an aerial body, which is material
indeed, but simple and of a more extended duration; and in this body the
unpurified soul dwells for a long time after its exit from hence, till this
pneumatic
————————————————————
* This is the Hindu theory of nearly
every
one of the Aryan philosophies.—Ed. Theos.
66 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
vehicle being dissolved, it is again invested with a composite body; while on the contrary the purified soul immediately ascends into the celestial regions with its ethereal vehicle alone.” Always it is the disposition of the soul that determines the quality of its body. “However the soul be in itself affected,” says Porphyry (translated by Cudworth), “so does it always find a body suitable and agreeable to its present disposition, and therefore to the purged soul does naturally accrue a body that comes next to immateriality, that is, an ethereal one.” And the same author, “The soul is never quite naked of all body, but hath always some body or other joined with it, suitable and agreeable to its present disposition (either a purer or impurer one). But that at its first quitting this gross earthly body, the spirituous body which accompanieth it (as its vehicle) must needs go away fouled and incrassated with the vapours and steams thereof, till the soul afterwards by degrees purging itself, this becometh at length a dry splendour, which hath no misty obscurity nor casteth any shadow.” Here it will be seen, we lose sight of the specific difference of the two future vehicles— the ethereal is regarded as a sublimation of the aerial. This, however, is opposed to the general consensus of Plato’s commentators. Sometimes the ethereal body, or augoeides, is appropriated to the rational soul, or spirit, which must then be considered as a distinct entity, separable from the lower soul. Philoponus, a Christian writer, says, that the Rational Soul, as to its energy, is separable from all body, but the irrational part or life
67 ——————————————————OPINIONS UPON PSYCHIC BODIES.
thereof is separable only from this gross body, and not from all body whatsoever, but hath after death a spirituous or airy body, in which it acteth—this I say is a true opinion which shall afterwards be proved by us....... The irrational life of the soul hath not all its being in this gross earthly body, but remaineth after the soul’s departure out of it, having for its vehicle and subject the spirituous body, which itself is also compounded out of the four elements, but receiveth its denomination from the predominant part, to wit, Air, as this gross body of ours is called earthy from what is most predominant therein.”—Cudworth, “Intell. Syst.” From the same source we extract the following: “Wherefore these ancients say that impure souls after their departure out of this body wander here up and down for a certain space in their spirituous vaporous and airy body, appearing about sepulchres and haunting their former habitation. For which cause there is great reason that we should take care of living well, as also of abstaining from a fouler and grosser diet; these Ancients telling us likewise that this spirituous body of ours being fouled and incrassated by evil diet, is apt to render the soul in this life also more obnoxious to the disturbances of passions. They further add that there is something of the Plantal or Plastic life, also exercised by the soul, in those spirituous or airy bodies after death; they being nourished too, though not after the same manner, as those gross earthy bodies of ours are here, but by vapours, and that not by parts or organs, but throughout the whole of them (as sponges), they imbibing every-
68 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
where those vapours. For which cause they who are wise will in this life also take care of using a thinner and dryer diet, that so that spirituous body (which we have also at this present time within our proper body) may not be clogged and incrassed, but attenuated. Over and above which, those Ancients made use of catharms, or purgations to the same end and purpose also. For as this earthy body is washed by water so is that spirituous body cleansed by cathartic vapours—some of these vapours being nutritive, others purgative. Moreover, these Ancients further declared concerning this spirituous body that it was not organized, but did the whole of it in every part throughout exercise all functions of sense, the soul hearing, seeing and perceiving all sensibles by it everywhere. For which cause Aristotle himself affirmeth in his Metaphysics that there is properly but one sense and one Sensory. He by this one sensory meaneth the spirit, or subtle airy body, in which the sensitive power doth all of it through the whole immediately apprehend all variety of sensibles. And if it be demanded to how it comes to pass that this spirit becomes organized in sepulchres, and most commonly of human form, but sometimes in the forms of other animals, to this those Ancients replied that their appearing so frequently in human form proceeded from their being incrassated with evil diet, and then, as it were, stamped upon with the form of this exterior ambient body in which they are, as crystal is formed and coloured like to those things which it is fastened in, or reflects the image of them. And
69 ———————————————————OPINIONS UPON PSYCHIC BODIES.
that their having sometimes other
different forms proceedeth from the phantastic power of the soul itself, which
can at pleasure transform the spirituous body into any shape. For being airy,
when it is condensed and fixed, it becometh visible, and again invisible and
vanishing out of sight when it is expanded and rarified.” Proem in Arist. de
Anima. And Cudworth says, “Though spirits or ghosts had certain supple bodies
which they could so far condense as to make them sometimes visible to men, yet
is it reasonable enough to think that they could not constipate or fix them into
such a firmness, grossness and solidity, as that of flesh and bone is to
continue therein, or at least not without such difficulty and pain as would
hinder them from attempting the same. Notwithstanding which
it is not denied that they may possibly
sometimes make use of other solid bodies, moving and acting them, as in that
famous story of Phlegons when the body vanished not as other ghosts use to do,
but was left a dead carcase behind.”
In all these speculations the Anima Mundi
plays a conspicuous part. It is the source and principle of
all animal souls, including the irrational soul of man. But in man, who would
otherwise be merely analogous to other terrestrial animals—this soul
participates in a higher principle, which tends to raise and convert it to
itself. To comprehend the nature of this union or hypostasis it would be
necessary to have mastered the whole of Plato’s philosophy as comprised in the
Parmenides and the Timæus; and he would dogmatize rashly who without this arduous
preparation should claim
70 ——————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Plato as the champion of an unconditional immortality. Certainly in the Plædo the dialogue popularly supposed to contain all Plato’s teaching on the subject—the immortality allotted to the impure soul is of a very questionable character, and we should rather infer from the account there given that the human personality, at all events, is lost by successive immersions into “matter.” The following passage from Plutarch (quoted by Madame Blavatsky, “Isis Unveiled,” vol. ii. p. 284) ‘will at least demonstrate the antiquity of notions which have recently been mistaken for fanciful novelties. “Every soul hath some portion of nous, reason, a man cannot be a man without it; but as much of each soul as is mixed with flesh and appetite is changed, and through pain and pleasure becomes irrational. Every soul doth not mix herself after one sort; some plunge themselves into the body, and so in this life their whole frame is corrupted by appetite and passion ; others are mixed as to some part, but the purer part still remains without the body. It is not drawn down into the body, but it swims above, and touches the extremest part of the man’s head; it is like a cord to hold up and direct the subsiding part of the soul, as long as it proves obedient and is not overcome by the appetites of the flesh. The part that is plunged into the body is called soul. But the incorruptible part is called the nous, and the vulgar think it is ‘within them, as they likewise imagine the image reflected from a glass to be in that glass. But the more intelligent, who know it to be without, call it a Dæmon.” And in the same learned work (“Isis Unveiled “) we have two Christian authorities,
71 ——————————————————OPINIONS UPON PSYCHIC BODIES.
Irenæus and Origen, cited for like distinction between spirit and soul in such a manner as to show that the former must necessarily he regarded as separable from the latter. In the distinction itself there is of course no novelty for the most moderately well-informed. It is insisted upon in many modern works, among which may be mentioned Heard’s “ Trichotomy of Man” and Green’s “Spiritual Philosophy”; the. latter being an exposition of Coleridge’s opinion on this and cognate subjects. But the difficulty of regarding the two principles as separable in fact as well as in logic arises from the senses, if it is not the illusion of personal identity. That we are particle, and that one part only is immortal, the non-metaphysical mind rejects with the indignation which is always encountered by a proposition that is at once distasteful and unintelligible. Yet perhaps it is not a greater difficulty (if, indeed, it is not the very same) than that hard saying which troubled Nicodemus, and which has been the key-note of the mystical religious consciousness ever since. This, however, is too extensive and deep a question to be treated in this paper, which has for its object chiefly to call attention to the distinctions introduced by ancient thought into the conception of body as the instrument or “vehicle” of soul. That there is a correspondence between the spiritual condition of man and the medium of his objective activity every spiritualist will admit to be probable, and it may well be that some light is thrown on future states by the possibility or the manner of spirit communication with this one.
C. C. MASSEY.
THE NILGIRI
SANNYASIS
I WAS told that Sannyasis were
sometimes met with on a mountain called Velly Mallai Hills, in the Coimbatore
District, and trying to meet with one, I determined to ascend this mountain. I
travelled up its steep sides and arrived at an opening, narrow and low, into
which I crept on all fours. Going up some twenty yards I reached a cave, into
the opening of which I thrust my head and shoulders. I could see into it
clearly, but felt a cold wind on my face, as if there was some opening or
crevice—so I looked carefully, but could see nothing. The room was about twelve
feet square. I did not go into it. I saw arranged round its sides stones one
cubit long, all placed upright. I was much disappointed at there being no Sannyasi, and came
back as I went, pushing myself backwards as there Was no room
to turn. I was then told Sannyasis had been met with in the dense
sholas (thickets), and as my work lay
often in such places, I determined to prosecute my search, and did so
diligently, without, however, any success.
One clay I contemplated a journey to Coimbatore on my own affairs, and was
walking up the road trying to make a bargain with a handy man whom I desired to
engage to carry me there; but as we could not come to terms, I parted with. him
and turned into the Lovedale Road at 6
P.M.
I had
73 ————————————————————THE NILGIRI SANNYASIS.
not gone far when I met a man dressed like a Sannyasi, who stopped and spoke to me. He observed a ring on my finger and asked me to give it to him. I said he was welcome to it, but inquired what he would give me in return, he said, “I don’t care particularly about it; I would rather have that flour and sugar in the bundle on your back.” “I will give you that with pleasure,” I said, and took down my bundle and gave it to him. “Half is enough for me,” he said; but subsequently changing his mind added, “now let me see what is in your bundle,” pointing to my other parcel. “I can’t give you that.” He said, “Why cannot you give me your swami (family idol)?” I said, “It is my swami, I will not part with it; rather take my life.” On this he pressed me no more, but said, “Now you had better go home.” I said, “I will not leave you.” “Oh you must,” he said, “you will die here of hunger.” “Never mind,” I said, “I can but die once.” “You have no clothes to protect you from the wind and rain; you may meet with tigers,” he said. “I don’t care,” I replied. “It is given to man once to die. What does it signify how he dies?” When I said this he took my hand and embraced me, and immediately I became unconscious. When I returned to consciousness, I found myself with the Sannyasi in a place new to me on a hill, near a large rock and with a big shola near. I saw in the shola right in front of us, that there was a pillar of fire, like a tree almost. I asked the Sannyasi what was that like a high fire. “Oh,” he said, “most likely a tree ignited by some careless wood-cutters.”
74 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
“No,” I said, “it is not like any
common fire—there is no smoke, nor are there flames—and it’s not lurid and red.
I want to go and see it.” “No, you must not do so, you cannot go near that fire
and escape alive.” “Come with me then,” I begged. “No—I cannot,” he said, “if
you wish to approach it, you must go alone and at your own risk ; that
tree is the tree of knowledge and from it flows the milk of life whoever drinks
this never hungers again.” Thereupon I regarded the tree with awe.
I next observed five Sannyasis approaching. They came up and joined the one
with me, entered into talk, and finally pulled out a hookah and began to smoke.
They asked me if I could smoke. I said no. One of them said to me, let us see
the swami in your bundle (here gives a description of the same). I said, “I
cannot, I am not clean enough to do so.” “Why not perform your ablutions in
yonder stream?” they said. “If you sprinkle water on your forehead that will
suffice.” I went to wash my hands and feet, and laved my head, and showed it to
them. Next they disappeared. “As it is very late, it is time you returned home,”
said my first friend. “No,” I said, “now I have found you I will not leave
you.”
“No, no,” he said, “you must go home. You cannot leave the world yet;
you are a father and a husband, and you must not neglect your worldly duties.
Follow the footsteps of your late respected uncle; he did not neglect his
worldly affairs, though he cared for the interests of his soul; you must go,
but I will meet you again
75 ———————————————————— THE NILGIRI SANNYASIS.
when you get your fortnightly
holiday.” On this he embraced me, and I again became unconscious. When I
returned to myself, I found myself at the bottom of Col. Jones’ Coffee
Plantation above Coonor on a path. Here the Sannyasi wished me farewell, and
pointing to the high road below, he said, “Now you will know your way home ;“but
I would not part from him.” I said, “All this will appear a dream to me unless
you will fix a day and
promise to meet me here again.” “I
promise,” he said. “No, promise me
by an oath on the head of my idol.” Again he promised, and touched the head of
my idol. “Be here,” he said, “this day fortnight.” When the day came I anxiously
kept my engagement and went and sat on the stone on the path. I waited a long
time in vain. At last I said to myself, “I am deceived, he is not coming, he
has broken his oath”—and with grief I made a poojah. Hardly had these thoughts
passed my mind, than lo! he stood beside me. “Ah, you doubt me,” he said; “why
this grief.” I fell at his feet and confessed I had doubted him and begged his
forgiveness. He forgave and comforted me, and told me to keep in my good ways
and he would always help me; and he told me and advised me about all my private
affairs without my telling him one word, and he also gave me some medicines for
a sick friend which I had promised to ask for but had forgotten. This medicine
was given to my friend and he is perfectly well now.
A verbatim translation of a Settlement Officer’s statement to
E. H. MORGAN.
WITCHCRAFT ON THE
NILGIRIS
HAVING lived many years (30) On the Nilgiris, employing the various tribes of the Hills on my estates, and speaking their languages, I have had many opportunities of observing their manners and customs and the frequent practice of Demonology and Witchcraft among them. On the slopes of the Nilgiris live several semi-wild people : 1st, the “Curumbers,” who frequently hire themselves out to neighbouring estates, and are first-rate fellers of forest; 2nd, the “Tain” (“ Honey Curumbers”), who collect and live largely on honey and roots, and who do not come into civilized parts; 3rd, the “ Mulu” Curumbers, who are rare on the slopes of the hills, but common in Wynaad lower down the plateau. These use bows and arrows, are fond of hunting, and have frequently been known to kill tigers, rushing in a body on their game and discharging their arrows at a short distance. In their eagerness they frequently fall victims to this animal; but they are supposed to possess a controlling power over all wild animals, especially elephants and tigers; and the natives declare they have the power of assuming the forms of various beasts. Their aid is constantly invoked both by the Curumbers first named, and by the natives generally, when wishing to be revenged on an enemy.
77 ———————————————————WITCHCRAFT ON THE NILGIRIS.
Besides these varieties of
Curumbers there arc various
other wild tribes I do not now mention, as they are not concerned in what I have
to relate.
I had on my estate near Ootacamund a gang of young Badagas, some 30 young men, whom I had had in my
service since they were children, and who had become most useful handy fellows.
From week to week I missed one or another of them, and on inquiry was told they
had been sick and were dead!
One market-day I met the Moneghar of the village to which my gang belonged and
some of his men, returning home laden with their purchases. The moment he saw me
he stopped, and coming up to me, said, “Mother, I am in great sorrow and
trouble, tell me what I can do !”
“Why, what is wrong ?” I asked. “All my young men are dying, and I cannot help them, nor
prevent it ; they are under a
spell of the wicked Curumbers who are killing them, and I am powerless.” “Pray
explain,” I said; “why do the Curumbers behavein this way, and what do they do
to your people ?” “Oh, Madam,
they are vile extortioners, always asking for money; we have given and given
till we have no more to give. I told them we had no more money and then they
said,—All right—as you please; we shall see. Surely as they say this, we
know what will follow—at night when we are all asleep, we wake up suddenly and see a Curumber standing in
our midst, in the middle of the room occupied by the young men.” “Why do you
not close and bolt your doors securely?” I interrupted. “What is the use
of bolts and bars
78 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
to them? they come through stone walls. . . . Our doors
were secure, but nothing can keep
out a Curumber. He points his finger at Mada, at Kurira, at Jogie—he
utters no word, and as we look at him he vanishes! In a few days these three
young men sicken, a low fever consumes them, their stomachs swell, they die.
Eighteen young men, the flower of my village, have died thus this year. These
effects always follow the visit of a Curumber at night.” “Why not complain to
the Government?” I said. “Ah, no use, who will catch them?” “Then give them the
200 rupees they ask this once on a solemn promise that they exact no more.” “I
suppose we must find the money somewhere,” he said, turning sorrowfully away.
A Mr. K— is the owner of a coffee estate near this, and like many other
planters employs Burghers. On one occasion he went down the slopes of the hills
after bison and other large game, taking some seven or eight Burghers with him
as gun carriers (besides other things necessary in jungle- walking—axes to clear the way, knives and
ropes, &c.). He found and severely wounded a fine elephant with
tusks. Wishing to secure these, he proposed following up his quarry, but could
not induce his Burghers to go deeper and further into the forests; they feared
to meet the “Mula Curumbers” who lived thereabouts. For long he argued in vain, at
last by dint of threats and promises he induced them to proceed, and as they met
no one, their fears were allayed and they grew bolder, when suddenly coming on
the elephant lying dead (oh, horror to them !), the beast
was sur-
79 ——————————————————— WITCHCRAFT ON THE NILGIRIS.
rounded by a party of Mulu Curumbers
busily engaged in cutting out the tusks, one of which they had already
disengaged! The aifrighted Burghers fell back, and nothing Mr. K— could do or
say would induce them to approach the elephant, which the Curumbers stoutly
declared was theirs. They had killed him they said. They had very likely met him
staggering under his wound and had finished him off. Mr. K—— was not
likely to give up his game in this fashion. So walking threateningly to the
Curumbers he compelled them to retire, and called to his Burghers at the same
time. The Curumbers only said, “Just you DARE
to touch that elephant,” and retired. Mr. K—— thereupon cut
out the remaining tusk himself, and slinging both on a pole with no little
trouble, made his men carry them. He took all the blame on himself, showed them
that they did not touch them, and finally declared he would stay there
all night rather than lose the tusks. The idea of a night near the Mulu
Curumbers was too much for the fears of the Burghers, and they finally took up
the pole and tusks and walked home. From that day those men, all but one who
probably carried the gun, sickened, walked about like spectres, doomed, pale and
ghastly, and before the month was out all were dead men, with the one exception!
A few months ago, at the village of Ebanaud, a few miles from this, a fearful
tragedy was enacted. The Moneghar or headman’s child was sick unto death. This,
following on several recent deaths, was attributed to the evil influences of a
village of
80 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Curumbers hard by. The Burghers
determined on the destruction of every soul of them. They procured the
assistance of a Toda, as they invariably do on such occasions, as
without one the Curumbers are supposed to be invulnerable. They proceeded to
the Curumber village at night and set their huts on fire, and as the miserable
inmates attempted to escape, flung them back into the flames or knocked them
down with clubs. In the confusion one old woman escaped unobserved into the
adjacent bushes. Next morning she gave notice to the authorities, and identified
seven Burghers, among whom was the Moneghar or headman, and one Toda. As the
murderers of her people they were all brought to trial in the Courts
here,—except the headman, who died before he could be brought in—and were all
sentenced and duly executed, that is, three Burghers and the Toda, who were
proved principals in the murders.
Two years ago an almost identical occurrence took place at Kotaghery, with
exactly similar results, but without the punishment entailed having any
deterrent effect. They pleaded “justification,” as witchcraft had been practised
on them. But our Government ignores all occult dealings and ‘will not believe in
the dread power in the land. They deal very differently with these matters in
Russia, where, in a recent trial of a similar nature, the witchcraft was
admitted as an extenuating circumstance and the culprits who had burnt a witch
were all acquitted. All natives of whatever caste are well aware of these
terrible powers and too often do they avail themselves of them—much oftener
81 ——————————————————— WITCHCRAFT ON THE NILGIRIS.
than any one has an idea of. One
day as I was riding along I came upon a strange and ghastly object—a basket
containing the bloody head of a black sheep, a cocoanut, 10 rupees in money,
some rice and flowers. These smaller items I did not see, not caring to examine
any closer; but I was told by some natives that those articles were to be found
in the basket. The basket was placed at the apex of a triangle formed by three
fine threads tied to three small sticks, so placed that any one approaching from
the roads on either side had to stumble over the threads and receive the full
effects of the deadly “Soonium” as the natives call it. On inquiry I learnt
that it was usual to prepare such a “Soonium” when one lay sick unto death; as
throwing it on another was the only means of rescuing the sick one, and woe to
the unfortunate who broke a thread by stumbling over it!
E. H. MORGAN.
SHAMANISM AND
WITCHCRAFT
AMONGST THE KOLARIAN TRIBES
HAVING resided for some years
amongst the Mimdás and Hós of Singbhoom, and Chutia Nagpur, my attention was
drawn at times to customs differing a good deal in some ways, but having an
evident affinity to those related of the Nilghiri “Curumbers” in Mrs. Morgan’s
article. I do not mean to say that the practices I am about to mention are
confined simply to the Kolarian tribes, as I am aware both Oraons (a Dravidian
tribe), and the different Hindu castes living side by side with the Kóls, count
many noted wizards among their number; but what little I have come to know of
these curious customs, I have learnt among the Mimdás and Hós, some of the most
celebrated practitioners among them being Christian converts. The people
themselves say, that these practices are peculiar to their race, and not learnt
from the Hindu invaders of their plateau; but I am inclined to think that some,
at least, of the operations have a strong savour of the Tantric black magic
about them, though practised by people who are often entirely ignorant of’ any
Hindu language.
These remarks must he supplemented by a short sketch of Kól ideas of worship.
They have nothing that I have either seen or heard of in the shape of
83 ————————————————————SHAMANISM AND WITCHCRAFT.
an image, but their periodical
offerings are made to a number of elemental spirits, and they assign a genie to
every rock or tree in the country, whom they do not consider altogether
malignant, but who, if not duly “fed” or propitiated, may become so.
The Singbonga (lit., sun or
light spirit) is the chief; Búrú Bonga (spirit of the hills), and the Ikhir
Bonga (spirit of the deep), come next. After these come the Darha, of which each
family has its own, and they may be considered in the same light as Lares and Penates. But every threshing, flour and oil mill, has its spirit, who must be
duly fed, else evil result may be expected. Their great festival (the Karam) is
in honour of Singbonga and his assistants ; the opening words of the
priests’ speech on that occasion, sufficiently indicate that they consider
Singbonga, the creator of men and things. Múnúre
Singbonga manokoa luekidkoa (In the beginning
Singbonga made men).
Each village has its Sarna or sacred grove, where the hereditary priest from
time to time performs sacrifices, to keep things prosperous; but this only
relates to spirits actually connected with the village, the three greater
spirits mentioned, being considered general, are only fed at intervals of three
or more years, and always on a public road or other public place, and once every
ten years a human being was (and as some will tell you
is sacrified to keep the whole
community of spirits in good train. The Pahans,
or village priests, are regular servants of the spirits, and
the najo, deona and bhagats
are people who in some way are supposed to obtain an influence or
84 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
command over them. The first and lowest grade of these adepts, called najos (which may be translated as practitioners of witchcraft pure and simple), are frequently women. They are accused, like the “Mula Curumbers,” of demanding quantities of grain or loans of money, &c., from people, and when these demands are refused, they go away with a remark to the effect, “that you have lots of cattle and grain just now, but we’ll see what they are like after a month or two.” Then probably the cattle of the bewitched person will get some disease, arid several of them die, or some person of his family will become ill or get hurt in some unaccountable way. Till at last, thoroughly frightened, the afflicted person takes a little uncooked rice and goes to a deona or mati (as he is called in the different vernaculars of the province)—the grade immediately above najo in knowledge—and promising him a reward if he will assist him, requests his aid ; if the deona accedes to the request, the proceedings are as follows. The deona taking the oil brought, lights a small lamp and seats himself beside it with the rice in a surpa (winnower) in his hands. After looking intently at the lamp flame for a few minutes, he begins to sing a sort of chaunt of invocation in which all the spirits are named, and at the name of each spirit a few grains of rice are thrown into the lamp. When the flame at any particular name gives a jump and flares up high, the spirit concerned in the mischief is indicated. Then the deona takes a small portion of the rice wrapped up in a sál (Shorea robusta) leaf and proceeds to the nearest new white-ant nest from which
85 ———————————————————— SHAMAISM AND WITCHCRAFT.
he cuts the top off and lays the
little bundle, half in and half out of the cavity. Having retired, he returns in
about an hour to see if the rice is consumed, and according to the rapidity with
which it is eaten he predicts the sacrifice which will appease the spirit. This
ranges from a fowl to a buffalo, but whatever it may include, the pouring out of
blood is an essential. It must be noted, however, that the mati never
tells who the najo is who has excited the malignity of the spirit.
But the most important and lucrative part of a deona’s
business is the casting out of evil spirits, which
operation is known variously as ashab and langhan. The sign of
obsession is generally some mental alienation accompanied (in bad cases) by a
combined trembling and restlessness of limbs, or an unaccountable swelling up of
the body. Whatever the symptoms may he the mode of cure appears to be much the
same. On such symptoms declaring themselves, the deona is brought to the
house and is in the presence of the sick man and his friends provided with some
rice in a surpa, some oil, a little vermilion, and the deona
produces from his own person a little powdered sulphur and an iron tube about
four inches long and two tiklis.* Before the proceedings begin all the
things mentioned are touched with vermilion, a small quantity of which is also
mixed with the rice. Three or four grains of rice and one of the tikhis
being put into the tube, a lamp is then lighted beside the sick man and the
deona begins his chaunt, throwing
————————————————————
* Tiklis
is a circular piece of gilt paper which is stuck on between the
eyebrows of the women of the Province as ornament.
86 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
grains of rice at each name, and when the flame flares up, a little of the powdered sulphur is thrown into the lamp and a little on the sick man, who thereupon becomes convulsed, is shaken all over and talks deliriously, the deona’s chaunt growing louder all the while. Suddenly the convulsions and the chaunt cease, and the deona carefully takes up a little of the sulphur off the man’s body and puts into the tube, which he then seals with the second tiklis. The deona and one of the man’s friends then leave the hut, taking the iron tube and rice with them, the spirit being now supposed out of the man and bottled up in the iron tube. They hurry across country until they leave the hut some miles behind. Then they go to the edge of some tank or river, to some place they know to be frequented by people for the purposes of bathing, &c., ‘where, after some further ceremony, the iron is stuck into the ground and left there. This is done with the benevolent intention that the spirit may transfer its attentions to the unfortunate person who may happen to touch it while bathing. I am told the spirit in this case usually chooses a young and healthy person. Should the deona think the spirit has not been able to suit itself with a new receptacle, he repairs to where a bazaar is taking place and there (after some ceremony) he mixes with the crowd, and taking a grain of the reddened rice jerks it with his forefinger and thumb in such a way that without attracting attention it falls on the person or clothes of some. This is done several times to make certain. Then the deona declares he has done his work, and is usually treated to the
87 ————————————————————SHAMANISM AND WITCHCRAFT.
best dinner the sick man’s
friends can afford. It is said that the person to whom the spirit by either of
these methods is transferred may not be affected for weeks or even months. But
some fine day while he is at his work, he will suddenly stop, wheel round two or
three times on his heels and fall down more or less convulsed, from that time
forward he will begin to be troubled in the same way as his dis-obsessed
predecessor was.
Having thus given some account of the deona,
we now come to the bhagat,
called by the Hindus sokha
and sivnath.
This is the highest grade of all, and, as I ought to have
mentioned before, the ilm
(knowledge) of both the deona
and bhagat
grades is only to be learned by becoming a regular
chela of a practitioner; but I am given to understand
that the final initiation is much hastened by a seasonable liberality on the
part of the chela. During the
initiation of the sokha
certain ceremonies are performed at night by aid of a human corpse, this is one
of the things which has led me to think that this part at least of these
practices is connected with Tantric black magic.
The bhagat performs two
distinct functions:
(1st), a kind of divination called bhao
(the same in Hindi), and (2nd), a kind of Shamanism called
darasta in Hindi, and
bharotan in Horokaji, which, however,
is resorted to only on very grave occasions—as, for instance, when several
families think they are bewitched at one time and by the same
najo.
The bhao
is performed as follows :—The person having some query to
propound, makes a small dish out of a sàl leaf and puts in it a little
88 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY
uncooked rice and a few pice; he
then proceeds to the bhagat
and lays before him the leaf and its contents, propounding at the same time his
query. The bhagat then
directs him to go out and gather two golaichi
(varieties of Posinia)
flowers (such practitioners usually having a
golaichi tree close to their abodes)
; after the flowers are brought the bhagat
seats himself with the rice close to the inquirer,
and after some consideration selects one of the flowers, and holding it by the
stalk at about a foot from his eyes in his left hand twirls it between his thumb
and fingers, occasionally with his right hand dropping on it a grain or two of
rice.* In a few minutes his eyes close and he begins to talk—usually about things having nothing to do with the question in hand, but after
a few minutes of this, he suddenly yells out an answer to the question, and
without another word retires. The inquirer takes his meaning as he can from the
answer, which, I believe, is always ambiguous.
The bharotan as I have above
remarked is only resorted to when a matter of grave import has to be inquired
about; the bhagat makes a
high charge for a séance of
this description. We will fancy that three or four families in a village
consider themselves bewitched by a najo,
and they resolve to have recourse to a
bhagat to find out who the witch is; with this view a
day is fixed on, and two delegates are procured from each of five neighbouring
villages, who accompany the afflicted people to the house of the
bhagat, taking with them a
dali or offering, consisting of
vegetables, which on arrival
————————————————————
* This is the process by which the bhagat mesmerizes himself.
89 ———————————————————— SHAMANISM AND WITCHCRAFT.
is formally presented to him. Two delegates are posted at each of the four points of the compass, and the other two sent themselves with the afflicted parties to the right of the bhagat, who occupies the centre of the apartment with four or five chelas, a clear space being reserved on the left: One chela then brings a small earthenware-pot full of lighted charcoal, which is set before the bhagat with a pile of mango wood chips and a ball composed of dhunia (resin of Shorea robusta), gur (treacle), and ghee (clarified butter), and possibly other ingredients. The bhagat’s sole attire consists of a scanty lenguti (waist-cloth), a necklace of the large wooden beads such as are usually worn by fakeers, and several garlands of golaichi flowers round his neck, his hair being unusually long and matted. Beside him stuck in the ground is his staff. One chela stands over the firepot with a bamboo-mat fan in his hand, another takes charge of the pile of chips, and a third of the ball of composition, and one or two others seat themselves behind the bhagat, with drums and other musical instruments in their hands. All being in readiness, the afflicted ones are requested to state their grievance. This they do, and pray the bhagat to call before him the najo, who has stirred up the spirits to afflict them, in order that he may be punished. The bhagat then gives a sign to his chelas, those behind him raise a furious din with their instruments, the fire is fed with chips, and a bit of the composition is put on it from time to time, producing a volume of thick greyish-blue smoke; this is carefully fanned over, and towards the bhagat, who, when well wrapped in smoke, closes
90 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
his eyes and quietly swaying his body begins a low chaunt. The chaunt gradually becomes louder and the sway of his body more pronounced, until he works himself into a state of complete frenzy. Then with his body actually quivering, and his head rapidly working about from side to side, he sings in a loud voice how a certain najo (whom he names) had asked money of those people and was refused, and how he stirred up certain spirits (whom he also names) to hurt them, how they killed so and so’s bullocks, some one else’s sheep, and caused another’s child to fall ill. Then he begins to call on the najo to come and answer for his doings, and in doing so rises to his feet—still commanding the najo to appear; meanwhile he reels about; then falls on the ground and is quite still except for an occasional whine, and a muttered, “I see him !” “He is coming !” This state may last for an hour or more till at last the bhagat sits up and announces the nájo has come; as he says so, a man, apparently mad with drink, rushes in and falls with his head towards the bhagat moaning and making a sort of snorting as if half stifled. In this person the bewitched parties often recognize a neighbour and sometimes even a relation, but whoever he may be they have bound themselves to punish him. The bhayat then speaks to him and tells him to confess, at the same time threatening him, in case of refusal, with his staff. He then confesses in a half-stupefied manner, and his confession tallies with what the bhagat has told in his frenzy. The nájo is then dismissed and runs out of the house in the same hurry as he came in.
91 ———————————————————— SHAMANISM AND WITCHCRAFT.
The delegates then hold a council
at which the naijo usually is
sentenced to a fine—often heavy enough to ruin him—and expelled from his
village. Before the British rule the convicted najo
seldom escaped with his life, and during the mutiny
time, when no Englishmen were about, the Singbhoom Hôs paid off a large number of
old scores of this sort. For record of which, see “Statistical Account of
Bengal,” vol. xvii. p. 52.
In conclusion I have merely to add that I have derived
this information from people who have been actually concerned in these
occurrences, and among others a man belonging to a village of my own, who was
convicted and expelled from the village with the loss of all his movable
property, and one of his victims, a relation of his, sat by me when the above
was being written.
E. D. EWEN.
MAHATMAS AND
CHELAS
A MAHATMA is an individual ‘who, by special training and education, has evolved those higher faculties, and has attained that spiritual knowledge, which ordinary humanity will acquire after passing through numberless series of re-incarnations during the process of cosmic evolution, provided, of course, that they do not go, in the meanwhile, against the purposes of Nature and thus bring on their own annihilation. This process of the self-evolution of the MAHATMA extends over a number of “incarnations,” although, comparatively speaking, they are very few. Now, what is it that incarnates? The occult doctrine, so far as it is given out, shows that the first three principles die more or less with what is called the physical death. The fourth principle, together with the lower portions of the fifth, in which reside the animal propensities, has Kama Loka for its abode, where it suffers the throes of disintegration in proportion to the intensity of those lower desires; while it is the higher Manas, the pure man, which is associated with the sixth and seventh principles, that goes into Devachan to enjoy there the effects of its good Karma, and then to be reincarnated as a higher personality. Now an entity that is passing through the occult training in its successive births, gradually has less and less (in each incarnation) of that lower Manas until there
93 ————————————————————MAHATMAS AND CHELAS.
arrives a time when its whole Manas, being of an entirely elevated character, is centred in the individuality, when such a person may be said to have become a MAHATMA. At the time of his physical death, all the lower four principles perish without any suffering, for these are, in fact, to him like a piece of wearing apparel which he puts on and off at will. The real MAHATMA is then not his physical body but that higher Manas which is inseparably linked to the Atma and its vehicle (the sixth principle)—a union effected by him in a comparatively very short period by passing through the process of self-evolution laid down by Occult Philosophy. When therefore, people express a desire to “see a MAHATMA,” they really do not seem to understand what it is they ask for. How can they, with their physical eyes, hope to see that which transcends that sight? Is it the body—a mere shell or mask—they crave or hunt after? And supposing they see the body of a MAHATMA, how can they know that behind that mask is concealed an exalted entity? By what standard are they to judge whether the Maya before them reflects the image of a true MAHATMA or not? And who will say that the physical is not a Maya? Higher things can be perceived only by a sense pertaining to those higher things; whoever therefore wants to see the real MAHATMA, must use his intellectual sight. He must so elevate his Manas that its perception will be clear and all mists created by Maya be dispelled. His vision will then be bright and he will see the MAHATMA wherever he may be, for, being merged into the sixth and the seventh principles,
94 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
which know no distance, the MAHATMA may be said to be everywhere. But, at the same time, just as we may be standing on a mountain top and have within our sight the whole plain, and yet not be cognizant of any particular tree or spot, because from that elevated position all below is nearly identical, and as our attention may be drawn to something which may be dissimilar to its surroundings—in the same manner, although the whole of humanity is within the mental vision of the MAHATMA, he cannot be expected to take special note of every human being, unless that being by his special acts draws particular attention to himself. The highest interest of humanity, as a whole, is the MAHATMA’s special concern, for he has identified himself with that Universal Soul which runs through Humanity; and to draw his attention one must do so through that Soul. This perception of the Manas may be called “faith” which should not be confounded with blind belief. “ Blind faith” is an expression sometimes used to indicate belief without perception or understanding; while the true perception of the Manas is that enlightened belief which is the real meaning of the word “faith.” This belief should at the same time be accompanied by knowledge, i.e., experience, for “true knowledge brings with it faith.” Faith is the perception of the Manas (the fifth principle), while knowledge, in the true sense of the term, is the capacity of the Intellect, i.e., it is spiritual perception. in short, the individuality of man, composed of his higher Manas, the sixth and the seventh principle, should work as a unity, and then only can it obtain “divine wisdom,” for
95 ———————————————————— MAHATMAS AND CHELAS.
divine things can be sensed only
by divine faculties. Thus a chela
should be actuated solely by a desire to understand the
operations of the Law of Cosmic Evolution, so as to be able to work in conscious
and harmonious accord with Nature.
ANON.
THE BRAHMANICAL
THREAD
I. THE
general term for the investiture of this thread is
Upanayana; and the invested is called Upanita, which signifies
brought or drawn near (to one’s Guru), i.e., the thread is the symbol of
the wearer’s condition.
II. One of the names of this thread is Yajna Sutra
Yajna means Brahma, or the Supreme Spirit, and
Sutra the thread, or tie. Collectively, the compound word signifies that
which ties a man to his spirit or god. It consists of three yarns twisted into
one thread, and three of such threads formed and knotted into a circle. Every
Theosophist knows what a circle signifies and it need not be repeated here. He
will easily understand the rest and the relation they have to mystic initiation.
The yarns signify the great principle of “three in one, and one in three,” thus
:—The first trinity consists of Atma
which comprises the three attributes of Manas, Buddhi,
and Ahankara (the mind, the intelligence, and the egotism). The
Manas again, has the three qualities
of Satva, Raja, and Tama (goodness, foulness, and darkness).
Buddhi has the three
attributes of Pratyaksha, Upamiti and Anumiti (perception,
analogy, and inference). Ahankara
also has three attributes, viz., Jnata,
Jneya, and Juan
(the knower, the known, and the knowledge).
97 ————————————————————THE BRAHMANICAL THREAD.
III. Another name of the sacred
thread is Tridandi. Tri means
three, and Danda,
chastisement, correction, or conquest. This reminds the holder of the three
great “corrections” or conquests he has to accomplish. These are
:—(I) the
Vakya Sanyama ;* (2) the
Manas Sanyama; and (3) the Indriya
(or Deha) Sanyama. Vakya is speech,
Manas, mind, and
Deha (literally, body) or
Indriya, is the senses. The three
conquests therefore mean the control over one’s speech, thought, and action.
This thread is also the reminder to the man of his secular duties, and its
material varies, in consequence, according to the occupation of the wearer.
Thus, while the threat of the Brahmans is made of pure cotton, that of the
Kshatriyas (the warriors) is composed of flax—the bow-string material; and that
of Vaishyas (the traders and cattle-breeders), of wool. From this it is not to
be inferred that caste was originally meant to be hereditary. In the ancient
times, it depended on the qualities of the man. Irrespective of the caste of his
parents, a man could, according to his merit or otherwise, raise or lower
himself from one caste to another; and instances are not wanting in which a man
has elevated himself to the position of the highest Brahman (such as Vishvamitra
Rishi, Parasara, Vyasa, Satyakam, and others) from the very lowest of the four
castes. The sayings of Yudhishthira on this subject, in reply to the
questions of the great serpent, in the Arannya Parva
of the Maha-Bharata, and of Manu, on the
same point, are
————————————————————
* Danda
and Sanyama
are synonymous terms—A. S.
98 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
well known and need nothing more
than bare reference. Both Manu
and Maha-Bharata—the
fulcrums of Hinduism—distinctly affirm that a man can translate
himself from one caste to another by his merit, irrespective of his parentage.
The day is fast approaching when the so-called Brahmans will have to show cause,
before the tribunal of the Aryan Rishis, why they should not be divested of the
thread which they do not at all deserve, but are degrading by misuse. Then alone
will the people appreciate the privilege of wearing it.
There are many examples of the highest distinctive insignia being worn by the
unworthy. The aristocracies of Europe and Asia teem with such.
A. SARMAN.
READING IN A
SEALED ENVELOPE
SOME years ago, a Brahman
astrologer named Vencata Narasimla Josi, a native of the village of
Periasamudram in the Mysore Provinces, came to the little town in the Bellary
District where I was then employed. He was a good Sanskrit, Telugu and Canarese
poet, and an excellent master of Vedic rituals; knew the Hindu system of
astronomy, and professed to be an astrologer. Besides all this, he possessed the
power of reading what was contained in any sealed envelope. The process adopted
for this purpose was simply this :—We wrote whatever we chose on a piece of
paper; enclosed it in one, two or three envelopes, each properly gummed and
sealed, and handed the cover to the astrologer. He asked us to name a figure
between I and 9, and on its
being named, he retired with the envelope to some secluded place for some time;
and then he returned with a paper full of figures, and another paper containing
a copy of what was on the sealed paper—exactly, letter for letter and word for
word. I tried him often and many others did the same ; and we were all
satisfied that he was invariably accurate, and that there was no deception
whatsoever in the matter.
About this time, one Mr. Theyagaraja Mudalyar, a supervisor in the Public Works
Department, an English scholar and a good Sanskrit and Telugu
100 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
poet, arrived at our place on his
periodical tour of inspection. Having heard about the aforesaid astrologer, he
wanted to test him in a manner, most satisfactory to himself. One morning
handing to the astrologer a very indifferently gummed envelope, he said, “Here,
Sir, take this letter home with you and come back to me with your copy in the
afternoon.” This loose way of closing the envelope, and the permission given to
the astrologer to take it home for several hours, surprised the Brahman, who
said, “I don’t want to go home. Seal the cover better, and give me the use of
some room here. I shall be ready with my copy very soon.” “No,” said the Mudalyar, “take it as it is, and come back whenever you like. I have the means
of finding out the deception, if any be practised.”
So then the astrologer went with the envelope; and returned to the Mudalyar’s
place in the afternoon. Myself and about twenty others were present there by
appointment. The astrologer then carefully handed the cover to the Mudalyar,
desiring him to see if it was all right. “ Don’t mind that,” the Mudalyar
answered; “I can find out the trick, if there be any. Produce your copy.” The
astrologer thereupon presented to the Mudalyar a paper on which four lines were
written and stated that this was a copy of the paper enclosed in the Mudalyar’s
envelope. Those four lines formed a portion of an antiquated poem.
The Mudalyar read the paper once, then read it over again. Extreme satisfaction
beamed over his countenance, and he sat mute for some seconds seem-
101 —————————————————— READING IN A SEALED ENVELOPE.
ingly in utter astonishment. But
soon after, the expression of his face changing, he opened the envelope and
threw the enclosure down, jocularly saying to the astrologer, “Here, Sir, is the
original of which you have produced the copy.”
The paper lay upon the carpet, and was quite blank! not a word, nor a
letter on its clean surface.
This was a sad disappointment to all his admirers; but to the astrologer
himself, it was a real thunderbolt. He picked up the paper pensively, examined
it on both sides, then dashed it on the ground in a fury; and suddenly arising,
exclaimed, “My Vidya* is a delusion, and I am a liar!” The subsequent
behaviour of the poor man made us fear lest this great disappointment should
drive him to commit some desperate act. In fact he seemed determined to drown
himself in the well, saying that he was dishonoured. While we were trying to
console him, the Mudalyar came forward, caught hold of his hands, and besought
him to sit down and calmly listen to his explanation, assuring him that he was
not a liar, and that his copy was perfectly accurate. But the astrologer
would not be satisfied; he supposed that all this was said simply to console
him; and cursed himself and his fate most horribly. However, in a few minutes
he became calmer and listened to the Mudalyar’s explanation, which was in
substance as follows
The only way for the sceptic to account for this phenomenon, is to suppose that
the astrologer opened the covers dexterously and read their con-
————————————————————
* Secret knowledge, magic.
102 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
tents. “So,” he said, “I wrote
four lines of old poetry on the paper with nitrate of silver, which would be
invisible until exposed to the light; and this would have disclosed the
astrologer’s fraud, if he had tried to find out the contents of the enclosed
paper, by opening the cover, however ingeniously. For, if he opened it and
looked at the paper, he would have seen that it was blank, resealed the cover,
and declared that the paper enveloped therein bore no writing whatever; or if
he had, by design or accident, exposed the paper to light, the writing would
have become black; and he would have produced a copy of it as if it were the
result of his own Vidya; but in either case and the writing remaining, his
deception would have been clear, and it would have been patent to all that he
did open the envelope. But in
the present case, the result proved conclusively that the cover was not opened
at all.”
P. SREENEEVAS Row.
THE TWELVE SIGNS
OF THE ZODIAC
THE division of the Zodiac into different signs dates from immemorial antiquity. It has acquired a world-wide celebrity and is to be found in the astrological systems of several nations. The invention of the Zodiac and its signs has been assigned to different nations by different antiquarians. It is stated by some that, at first, there were only ten signs, that one of these signs was subsequently split up into two separate signs, and that a new sign was added to the number to render the esoteric significance of the division more profound, and at the same time to conceal it more perfectly from the uninitiated public. It is very probable that the real philosophical conception of the division owes its origin to some particular nation, and the names given to the various signs might have been translated into the languages of other nations. The principal object of this article, however, is not to decide which nation had the honour of inventing the signs in question, but to indicate to some extent the real philosophical meaning involved therein, and the way to discover the rest of the meaning which yet remains undisclosed. But from what is herein stated, an inference may fairly be drawn that, like so many other philosophical myths and
104 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
allegories, the invention of the
Zodiac and its signs owes its origin to ancient India.
What then is its real origin, what is the philosophical conception which the
Zodiac and its signs are intended to represent? Do the various signs merely
indicate the shape or configuration of the different constellations included in
the divisions, or, are they simply masks designed to veil some hidden meaning?
The former supposition is altogether untenable for two reasons, viz. :—
I. The Hindus were acquainted with the precession of the equinoxes, as may he
easily seen from their work on Astronomy, and from the almanacs published by
Hindu astronomers. Consequently they were fully aware of the fact that the
constellations in the various Zodiacal divisions were not fixed. They could not,
therefore, have assigned particular shapes to these shifting groups of fixed
stars with reference to the divisions of the Zodiac. But the names indicating
the Zodiacal signs have all along remained unaltered. It is to be inferred,
therefore, that the names given to the various signs have no connection whatever
with the configurations of the constellations included in them.
II. The names assigned to these signs by the ancient Sanskrit writers and their
exoteric or literal meanings are as follows :—
THE NAMES OF THE SIGNS.
THEIR EXOTERIC 0R LITERAL
MEANINGS.
1 Mesha
Ram, or Aries.
2 Rishabha
Bull, or Taurus.
3 Mithunam
Twins, or Gemini (male
and female).
4 Karkataka
Crab, or Cancer.
5 Simha
Lion, or Leo.
105 ——————————————————THE TWELVE SIGNS OF TEE ZODIAC.
6 Kanya
Virgin or Virgo.*
7 Tula
Balance, or Libra.
8 Vrischika
Scorpion, or Scorpio.
9 Dhanus
Archer, or Sagittarius.
10
Makara
The Goat, or Capricornus
(Crocodile, in Sanskrit).
11 Kumbha
Water-bearer, or Aquarius.
12 Meenam
Fishes, or Pisces.
The figures of the constellations included in the
signs at the time the division was first made do not at all resemble the shapes
of the animals, reptiles and other objects denoted by the names given them. The
truth of this assertion can be ascertained by examining the configurations of
the various constellations. Unless the shape of the crocodile †or the
crab is called up by the observer’s imagination, there is very little chance of
the stars themselves suggesting to his idea that figure, upon the blue canopy of
the starry firmament.
If, then, the constellations have nothing to do with the origin of the names by
which the Zodiacal divisions are indicated, we have to seek for some other
source which might have given rise to these appellations. It becomes my object
to unravel a portion of the mystery connected with these Zodiacal signs, as also
to disclose a portion of the sublime conception of the ancient Hindu philosophy
which gave rise to them. The signs of the Zodiac have more than one meaning.
From one
————————————————————
* Virgo-Scorpio, when none but the initiates knew
there were twelve signs. Virgo-Scorpio was then
followed for the profane by Sagittarius.
At the middle or junction-point where now stands
Libra and at the sign now called Virgo,
two mystical signs were
inserted which remained unintelligible to the profane.—En.
Theos.
† This constellation was never called Crocodile
by the ancient Western astronomers, who described it as a horned goat and called
it so— Capricornus.—ED. Theos.
106 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
point of view they represent the
different stages of evolution up to the time the present material universe with
the five elements came into phenomenal existence. As the author of “Isis
Unveiled” has stated in the second volume of her admirable work, “The key should
be turned seven times” to
understand the whole philosophy underlying these signs. But I shall wind it only
once and give the contents of the first chapter
of the History of Evolution. It is very fortunate that the
Sanskrit names assigned to the various divisions by Aryan philosophers contain
within themselves the key to the solution of the problem. Those of my readers
who have studied to some extent the ancient “Mantra” and the “Tantra Sastras”
* of India, would have seen that very often
Sanskrit words are made to convey a certain hidden meaning by means of
well-known pre-arranged methods and a tacit convention, while their literal
significance is something quite different from the implied meaning. The
following are some of the rules which may help an inquirer in ferreting out the
deep significance of ancient Sanskrit nomenclature to be found in the old Aryan
myths and allegories
1. Find out the synonyms of the word used which have other meanings.
2. Find out the numerical value of the letters composing the word according to
the methods given in ancient Tantrika works.
3. Examine the ancient myths or allegories, if there are any, which have any
special connection with the word in question.
————————————————————
* Works on Incantation and
Magic.
107 ——————————————————THE TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC.
4. Permute the different
syllables composing the word and examine the new combinations that will thus be
formed and their meanings, &c. &c.
I shall now apply some of the above given rules to the names of the twelve signs
of the Zodiac.
I. Mesha.—One of the synonyms
of this word is Aja. Now,
Aja literally means that
which has no birth, and is applied to the Eternal Brahma in certain portions of
the Upanishads. So, the first sign is intended to represent Parabrahma, the
self-existent, eternal, self-sufficient cause of all.
II. Rishabham.—This word is
used in several places in the Upanishads and the Veda to mean
Pranava (Aum). Sankaracharya has so
interpreted it in several portions of his commentary.*
III. Mithuna.—As the word
plainly indicates, this sign is intended to represent the first androgyne, the
Ardhanâreeswara,
the bisexual
Sephira-Adam Kadmon.
IV. Karkataka.—When the
syllables are converted into the corresponding numbers, according to the general
mode of transmutation so often alluded to in Mantra Shastra, the word in
question will be represented by ////.
This sign then is evidently intended to represent the sacred
Tetragram; the
Parabrahmadháraka; the Pranava resolved into four separate entities
corresponding to its four Matras; the four Avasthas
indicated by Jágrata (waking) Avastha, Swapna
(dreaming) Avastha, Sushupti (deep sleep) Avastha, and Turiya (the last stage,
i.e., Nirvana) Avastha (as
yet in potentiality); the four states of Brahma
called
————————————————————
* Example, “Rishabhasya—Chandasam
Rishabhasya Pradhanasya Pranavasya.”
108 ————————————————————FIVE
YEARS OF THEOSOPHY
Vaiswanara, Taijasa (or Hiranyagarbha), Pragna, and Iswara, and represented by
Brahma, Vishná, Maheswara, and Sadasiva; the four
aspects of Parabrahma, as Sthula (gross), Sukshma
(subtle), Vija (seed), and Sakshi (witness) ; the four stages or conditions
of the Sacred Word, named Para, Pasyanti, Madhyama and Vaikhari;
Nadam, Bindu, Sakti and Kala. This
sign completes the first quaternary.
V. Simha.—This word contains a world of occult meaning within itself; and it may
not be prudent on my part to disclose the whole of its meaning now. It will be
sufficient for the present purpose to give a general indication of its
significance.
Two of its synonymous terms are Panchásyam
and Hari, and
its number in the order of the Zodiacal divisions (being the fifth sign) points
clearly to the former synonym. This synonym—Panchasyam—shows that the sign is
intended to represent the five Brahmas—viz.,
Isánam, Aghoram, Tatpurusham, Vamadevam, and Sadyojátam:—the five Buddhas. The second synonym shows it to be Narayana, the
Jivátma or Pratyagátma. The Sukarahasy Upanishad will show that the ancient
Aryan philosophers looked upon Narayana as the Jivátma.* The Vaishnavites may
not admit
it. But as an Advaiti, I look upon Jivatma as identical with Paramatma in its
real essence when stripped of its illusory attributes created by Agná-
————————————————————
*
In its lowest or most material state, as the life-principle
which
animates the material bodies of the animal and vegetable
worlds, &c.—Ed.
Theos.
109 ——————————————————
THE TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC.
nam or Avidya—ignorance. The Jivatma is correctly placed in the fifth sign
counting from Mesham, as the fifth sign is the
putrasthanam or the son’s house according to the rules
of Hindu
Astrology. The sign in question represents Jivatma—the son of Paramátma as it
were. (I
may also add that it represents the real Christ, the anointed pure spirit,
though many Christians may frown at this interpretation.)* I will only add here
that unless the nature of this sign is fully comprehended it will be impossible
to understand the real order of the next three signs and their full
significance. The elements or entities that have merely a potential existence in
this sign become distinct separate entities in the next three signs. Their union
into a single entity leads to the destruction of the phenomenal universe, and
the recognition of the pure Spirit and their separation has the contrary effect.
It leads to material earth-bound existence and brings into view the picture
gallery of Avidya (Ignorance)
or Maya (Illusion). If the real orthography of the name by which the sign in
question is indicated is properly understood, it will readily be seen that the
next three signs are not what they ought to be.
————————————————————
* Nevertheless it is a true one. The
Jivatma
in the Microcosm
(man) is the same spiritual essence which animates the
Macrocosm (universe), the differentiation, or specific difference between the two
Jivatmas
presenting itself
but in the two states or conditions of the same and one Force. Hence, “this son
of Paramatma” is an eternal correlation of the
Father-Cause. Purusha manifesting himself as Brahmâ of the “golden egg” and
becoming Viradja—the universe. We are “all born of Aditi from the water”
(Hymns of the Maruts, X. 63,
2), and “Being was born from not-being” (Rig-Veda,
Mandala I, Sukta 166).—Ed.
Theos.
110 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Kanya or Virgo and Vrischika or
Scorpio should form one single sign, and Thula must follow the said sign if’ it
is at all necessary to have a separate sign of that name. But a separation
between Kanya and Vrischika was effected by interposing the sign Tula between
the two. The object of this separation will be understood on examining the
meaning of the three signs.
VI. Kanyd.—Meaus a virgin and represents Sakti or Mahamáya. The sign in
question is the sixth Rási or division, and indicates that there are six primary
forces in Nature. These forces have different sets of names in Sanskrit
philosophy. According to one system of nomenclature, they are called by the
following names :*__(1) Parasakty ; (2) Gnanasakti; (3) Itchasakti
(will-power) ; (4) Kriytisakti; (5) Kundalinisakti; and (6) Matriká-
————————————————————
*
Parasakti :—Literally the
great or supreme force or power. It means and includes
the powers of light and heat.
Gnanasakti :—Literally the power of intellect or the
power of real wisdom or knowledge. It has two aspects.
I. The following are some of its manifestations when
placed under the influence or control of material conditions.
(a) The power of the mind in interpreting our
sensations. (b) Its power in recalling past ideas (memory) and raising
future expectation. (c) Its power as exhibited in what are called by
modern psychologists “the laws of association,” which enables it to form
persisting connections between
various groups of sensations and possibilities of sensations, and thus generate
the notion or idea of an external object. (d)
Its power in connecting our ideas together by the mysterious
link of memory, and thus generating the notion of self or individuality.
II. The following are some of its manifestations when
liberated from the bonds of matter
(a) Clairvoyance. (b)
Pyschometry.
Itchasakti
:—Literally
the power of the will. Its
most ordinary manifestation is the
generation of certain nerve currents which set in motion such muscles as are
required for the accomplishment of the desired object.
111 ——————————————————THE TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC.
sakti. The six forces are in
their unity represented by the Astral Light.*
VII. Tula.—When represented by numbers according to the method above alluded
to, this word will be converted into 36. This sign, therefore, is evidently
intended to represent the 36 Tatwams. (The number of Tatwams is
different
————————————————————
Kriyasakti :—The mysterious
power of thought which enables it to produce external, perceptible, phenomenal
results by its own inherent energy. The ancients held that any idea will
manifest itself externally if
one’s attention is deeply concentrated upon it. Similarly an intense volition
will be followed by the desired result.
A Yogi generally performs his wonders by means of Itchasakti and Kriyasakti.
Kundalinisakti :—Literally
the power or force which moves in a serpentine or curved path. It is the
universal life-principle which everywhere manifests itself in Nature. This force
includes in itself the two great forces of attraction and repulsion. Electricity
and magnetism are but manifestations of it. This is the power or force which
brings about that “continuous adjustment of internal
relations to external relations” which is the essence
of life according to Herbert Spencer, and that “continuous adjustment of
external relations to internal relations”
which is the basis of transmigration of souls or punarjanmam
(re-birth) according to the doctrines of the ancient Hindu philosophers.
A Yogi must thoroughly subjugate this power or force before he can attain
moksham. This force is, in fact, the great serpent of the Bible.
Matrikasakti :—Literally the force or power of letters or speech or
music. The whole of the ancient Mantra Shastra has this force or power in all
its manifestations for its subject-matter. The power of The Word which Jesus
Christ speaks of is a manifestation of this Sakti. The influence of its music is
one of its ordinary manifestations. The power of the mirific ineffable name is
the crown of this Sakti.
Modern science has but partly investigated the first, second and fifth of the
forces or powers above named, but it is altogether in the dark as regards the
remaining powers.
* Even the very name of Kanya
(Virgin) shows how all the ancient esoteric systems agreed in all
their fundamental doctrines. The Kabalists and the Hermetic philosophers call
the Astral Light the “heavenly or celestial Virgin.” The Astral Light in its
unity is the 7th. Hence the seven principles diffused in every unity or the 6 and one—two triangles and a
crown.—Ed.
Theos.
112 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
according to the views of different philosophers but by
Sakteyas generally and by several of the ancient Rishis, such as Agastya, Dvrasa
and Parasurama, &c., the number of Tatwams has been stated to be 36). Jivatma
differs from Paramatma, or to state the same thing in other words,
“ Baddha”
differs from “ Mukta” in being encased as it were within these 36 Tatwams,
while the other is free. This sign prepares the way to earthly Adam to Nara. As the emblem of Nara it is
properly placed as the seventh sign.
VIII. Vrischika.—It is stated
by ancient philosophers that the sun when located in this Rási or sign is called
by the name of Vishnu (see
the 12th Skandha of Bhagavata).
This sign is intended to represent Vishnu. Vishnu literally means
that which is expanded—expanded as
Viswam or Universe. Properly
speaking, Viswam itself is Vishnu (see Sankaracharya’s commentary on
Vishnusahasranamam). I have already intimated that Vishnu represents the
Swapnavastha or the
Dreaming State. The sign in question
properly signifies the universe in thought or the universe in the divine
conception.
It is properly placed as the sign opposite to Rishabham or Pranava. Analysis
from Pranava downwards leads to the Universe of Thought, and synthesis from the
latter upwards leads to Pranava (Aum). We have now arrived at the ideal state of
the universe previous to its coming into material existence. The expansion of
the Vija or primi-
————————————————————
* As the Infinite differs from the Finite and the
Unconditioned from the Conditioned.—ED. Theos.
113 ——————————————————THE TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC.
tive germ into the universe is only
possible when the 36 “Tatwams” * are interposed
between the Maya and Jivatma. The dreaming state is induced through the
instrumentality of these “Tatwams.” it is the existence of these Tatwams that
brings Hamsa into existence.
The elimination of these Tatwams marks the beginning of the synthesis towards
Pranava and Brahmam and converts Hamsa
into Soham.
As it is intended to represent the different stages of evolution from Brahmam
downwards to the material universe, the three signs Kanya, Tula, and Vrischika
are placed in the order in which they now stand as three separate signs.
IX. Dhanus
(Sagittarius).—When represented in numbers the name is equivalent to 9, and the
division in question is the 9th division counting from Mesha. The sign,
therefore, clearly indicates the 9 Brahmas—the 9
Parajapatis who assisted the Demiurgus in constructing the
material universe.
X. Makara.—There is some
difficulty in interpreting this word; nevertheless it contains within itself the
clue to its correct interpretation. The letter Ma
is equivalent to number 5, and
Kara means hand. Now in Sanskrit
Thribhujam means a triangle, bhujam
or karam (both are synonymous) being understood to mean a side. So, Makaram or
Panchakaram means a Pentagon.†
————————————————————
* 36 is three
times 12, or 9 Tetraktis, or
12 Triads, the most sacred number in
the Kabalistic and Pythagorean numerals.— ED.
Theos..
† The five-pointed star or pentagram
represented the five limbs of man.—Ed. Theos.
114 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Now, Makaram is the tenth sign,
and the term “Dasadisa” is generally used by Sanskrit writers to denote the
faces or sides of the universe. The sign in question is intended to represent
the faces of the universe, and indicates that the figure of the universe is
bounded by Pentagons. If we
take the pentagons as regular pentagons (on the presumption or supposition that
the universe is symmetrically constructed) the figure of the material universe
will, of course, be a Dodecahedron,
the geometrical model imitated by the Demiurgus in constructing
the material universe. If Tula was subsequently invented, and if instead
of the three signs “Kanya,” “Tulá,” and “ Vrischikam,” there had existed
formerly only one sign combining in itself Kanya and Vrischika, the sign now
under consideration was the eighth sign under the old system, and it is a
significant fact that Sanskrit writers generally speak also of “Ashtadisa” or
eight faces bounding space. It is quite possible that the number of disa
might have been altered from 8 to 10 when the formerly existing Virgo-Scorpio
was split up into three separate signs.
Again, Kara may be taken to represent the projecting triangles of the
five-pointed star. This figure may also be called a kind of regular pentagon
(see Todhunter’s “Spherical Trigonometry,” p. 143). If this interpretation is
accepted, the Rasi or sign in question represents the “microcosm.” But the
“microcosm” or the world of thought is really represented by Vrischika.
From an objective point of view the “ microcosm ” is represented by
115 ——————————————————THE
TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC.
the human body. Makaram
may be taken to represent simultaneously both the microcosm and the macrocosm,
as external objects of perception.
In connection with this sign I shall state a few important facts which I beg to
submit for the consideration of those who are interested in examining the
ancient occult sciences of India. It is generally held by the ancient
philosophers that the macrocosm is similar to the microcosm in having a
Shula Sariram and a Suksma
Sariram. The visible universe is the Sthula Sariram of Viswam; the ancient
philosophers held that as a substratum for this visible universe, there is
another universe—perhaps we may call it the universe of Astral Light—the real
universe of Noumena, the soul as it were of this visible universe. It is darkly
hinted in certain passages of the Veda and the Upanishads that this hidden
universe of Astral Light is to be represented by an
Icosahedron. The connection between an Icosahedron and
a Dodecahedron is something very peculiar and interesting, though the figures
seem to be so very dissimilar to each other. The connection may be understood
by the under-mentioned geometrical construction. Describe a Sphere about an
Icosahedron; let perpendiculars be drawn from the centre of the Sphere on its
faces and produced to meet the surface of the Sphere. Now, if the points of
intersection be joined, a Dodecahedron is formed within the Sphere. By a similar
process an Icosahedron may be constructed from a Dodecahedron. (See Todhunter’s
“Spherical Trigonometry,” p. 141, art. 193). The
figure constructed
116 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
as above described will represent
the universe of matter and the universe of Astral Light as they actually exist.
I shall not now, however, proceed to show how the universe of Astral Light may
be considered under the symbol of an Icosahedron. I shall only state that this
conception of the Aryan philosophers is not to be looked upon as mere
“theological twaddle” or as the outcome of wild fancy. The real significance of
the conception in question can, I believe, be explained by reference to the
psychology and the physical science of the ancients. But I must stop here and
proceed to consider the meaning of the remaining two signs.
XI. Kumbha (or
Aquarius).—When represented by
numbers, the word is equivalent to 14.
It can be easily perceived then that the division in question is
intended to represent the “Chaturdasa Bhuvanam,” or the 14
lokas spoken of in Sanskrit
writings.
XII.
Mina (or
Pisces).—This word again is
represented by 5 when written in numbers, and is evidently intended to convey
the idea of Panchamahabhutams
or the 5 elements.
The sign also suggests that water (not the ordinary water, but
the universal solvent of the ancient alchemists) is the most important amongst
the said elements.
I have now finished the task which I have set to myself in this article. My
purpose is not to explain the ancient theory of evolution itself, but to show
the connection between that theory and the Zodiacal divisions. I have herein
brought to light but a very small portion of the philosophy imbedded
117 —————————————————— THE TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC.
in these signs. The veil that was
dexterously thrown over certain portions of the mystery connected with these
signs by the ancient philosophers will never be lifted
up for the amusement or edification of the uninitiated public.
Now to summarize the facts stated in this article, the
contents of the first chapter of the history of this universe are as follows
1.
The self-existent, eternal
Brahmam.
2. Pranava (Aum).
3. The androgyne Brahmá, or the bisexual Sephira-Adam Kadmon.
4. The Sacred Tetragram—the four matras of Pranava—the four avasthas—the four
states of Brahma—the Sacred Dharaka.
5. The five Brahmás—the five Buddhas representing in their totality the Jivatma.
6. The Astral Light—the holy Virgin—the six forces in Nature.
7. The thirty-six Tatwams born of Avidyá.
8. The universe in thought—the Swapna Avastha—the microcosm looked at from a
subjective point of view.
9. The nine Prajapatis—the assistants of the Demiurgus.*
10. The shape of the material universe in the mind of the Demiurgus—the
DODECAHEDRON.
11. The fourteen lokas.
12. The five elements.
————————————————————
* The nine Kabalistic Sephiroths emanated from
Sephira the 10th and the head Sephiroth are identical. Three trinities or triads
with their emanative principle form the Pythagorean mystic
Decad, the sum of
all which represents the whole
Kosmos.—ED. Theos.
118 ————————————————————
FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
The history of creation and of this world from its beginning up to the
present time is composed of seven
chapters. The seventh
chapter is not yet
completed.
T. SUBBA Row.
TRIPLICANE, MADRAS,
September 14, 1881.
THE
SISHAL AND BHUKAILAS YOGIS
We are indebted to the kindness
of the learned President of the Adi Brahmo Samaji for the following accounts of
two Yogis, of whom one performed the extraordinary feats of raising his body by
will power, and keeping it suspended in the air without visible support. The
Yoga posture for meditation or concentration of the mind upon spiritual things
is called Asana. There are various of these modes of sitting, such as Padmasan,
&c. &c. Babu Rajnarain Bose translated this narrative from a very old number of
the Tatwabodhini Patrika, the
Calcutta organ of the Brahmo Samaj. The writer was Babu Akkhaya Kumar Dalta,
then editor of the Patrika, of whom Babu Rajnarain speaks in the following high
terms—” A very truth-loving and painstaking man; very fond of observing strict
accuracy in the details of a description.”
SISHAL YOGI.
A few years ago, a Deccan Yogi, named Sishal, was seen at Madras, by many Hindus
and Englishmen, to raise his Asana, or seat, up into the air. The picture of the
Yogi, showing his mode of seating, and other particulars connected with him, may
be found in the Saturday Magazine
on page 28.
120 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
His whole body seated in air,
only his right hand lightly touched a deer skin, rolled up in the form of a
tube, and attached to a brazen rod which was firmly stuck into a wooden board
resting on four legs. In this position the Yogi used to perform his
japa (mystical meditation), with his
eyes half shut. At the time of his ascending to his aerial seat, and also when
he descended from it, his disciples used to cover him with a blanket. The
Tatwabodhini Patrika,
Chaitra, 1768 Sakabda, corresponding to March 1847.
THE BHUKAILAS YOGI.
The extraordinary character of the holy man who was brought to Bhukailas, in
Kidderpore, about 14 years ago, may still be remembered by many. In the month of
Asar, 1754 Sakabda (1834 A.C.), he was brought to Bhukailas from Shirpur, where he was under the
charge of Hari Singh, the
durwan
(porter) of Mr. Jones. He kept his eyes closed, and went without
food and drink, for three consecutive days, after which a small quantity of milk
was forcibly poured down his throat. he never took any food that was not
forced upon him. He seemed always without external consciousness. To remove this
condition Dr. Graham applied ammonia to his nostrils; but it only produced
tremblings in the body, and did not break his Yoga state. Three days passed
before he could be made to speak. He said that his name was Dulla Nabab, and
when annoyed, he uttered a single word, from which it was inferred that he was
a Punjabi. When he
121 ———————————————————THE SISHAL AND BHUKAILAS YOGIS.
was laid up with gout Dr. Graham
attended him, but he refused to take medicine, either in the form of powder or
mixture. He was cured of the disease only by the application of ointments and
liniments prescribed by the doctor. He died in the month of Chaitra 1755
Sakabda, of a choleric affection.*—The
Tatwabodhini Patrika, Chaitra, 1768
Sakabda, corresponding to March, 1847 A.C.
————————————————————
* The above particulars of this holy man have been
obtained on unexceptionable testimony.—ED. T. B. P.
PHILOSOPHICAL
-----====ooo000ooo====-----
TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY
THE title prefixed to the
following observations may well have suggested a more metaphysical treatment of
the subject than can be attempted on the present occasion. The doctrine of the
trinity, or trichotomy of man, which distinguishes soul from spirit, comes to us
with such weighty, venerable, and even sacred authority, that we may well be
content, for the moment, with confirmations that should be intelligible to all,
forbearing the abstruser
questions which have divided minds of the highest philosophical capacity. We
will not now inquire whether the difference is one of states or of entities;
whether the phenomenal or mind consciousness is merely the external condition of
one indivisible Ego, or has its origin and nature in an altogether different
principle; the Spirit, or immortal part of us, being of Divine birth, while the
senses and understanding, with the consciousness—Ahankara— thereto
appertaining, are from an Anima Mundi, or what in the Sankhya philosophy
is called Prakriti. My utmost expectations will have been exceeded if it should
happen that any considerations here offered should throw even a faint suggestive
light
123 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
upon the bearings of this great
problem. It may be that the mere irreconcilability of all that is characteristic
of the temporal Ego with the conditions of the superior life—if that can he made
apparent—will incline you to regard the latter rather as the Redeemer, that has
indeed to be born within us for our salvation and our immortality, than as the
inmost, central, and inseparable principle of our phenomenal life. It may be
that by the light of such reflections the sense of identity will present no
insuperable difficulty to the conception of its contingency, or to the
recognition that the mere consciousness which fails to attach itself to a higher
principle is no guarantee of an eternal individuality.
It is only by a survey of individuality, regarded as the source of all our
affections, thoughts, and actions, that we can realize its intrinsic
worthlessness; and only when we have brought ourselves to a real and felt
acknowledgment of that fact, can we accept with full understanding those “hard
sayings” of sacred authority which bid us “die to ourselves,” and which proclaim
the necessity of a veritable new birth. This mystic death and birth is the
key-note of all profound religious teaching; and that which distinguishes the
ordinary religious mind from spiritual insight is just the tendency to interpret
these expressions as merely figurative, or, indeed, to overlook them altogether.
Of all the reproaches which modern Spiritualism, with the prospect it is thought
to hold out of an individual temporal immortality, has had to encounter, there
is none that we can less afford to neglect than that which represents it as an
ideal
124 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
essentially egotistical and bornê. True it is that our critics do us injustice through ignorance of the enlarged views as to the progress of the soul in which the speculations of individual Spiritualists coincide with many remarkable spirit teachings. These are, undoubtedly, a great advance upon popular theological opinions, while some of them go far to satisfy the claim of Spiritualism to be regarded as a religion. Nevertheless, that slight estimate of individuality, as we know it, which in one view too easily allies itself to materialism, is also the attitude of spiritual idealism, and is seemingly at variance with the excessive value placed by Spiritualists on the discovery of our mere psychic survival. The idealist may recognise this survival; but, whether he does so or not, he occupies a post of vantage when he tells us that it is of no ultimate importance. For he, like the Spiritualist who proclaims his “proof palpable of immortality,” is thinking of the mere temporal, self-regarding consciousness—its sensibilities, desires, gratifications, and affections—which are unimportant absolutely, that is to say, their importance is relative solely to the individual. There is, indeed, no more characteristic outbirth of materialism than that which makes a teleological centre of the individual. Ideas have become mere abstractions; the only reality is the infinitely little. Thus utilitarianism can see in the State only a collection of individuals whose “greatest happiness,” mutually limited by nice adjustment to the requirements of “the greatest numbers,” becomes the supreme end of government and law. And it cannot, I think, be pretended that Spiritualists in general have advanced beyond
125 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
this substitution of a relative
for an absolute standard. Their “glad tidings of great joy” are not truly
religious. They have regard to the perpetuation in time of that lower
consciousness whose manifestations, delights, and activity are in time, and of
time alone. Their glorious message is not essentially different from that which
we can conceive as brought to us by some great alchemist, who had discovered the
secret of conferring upon us and upon our friends a mundane perpetuity of youth
and health. Its highest religious claim is that it enlarges the horizon of our
opportunities. As such, then, let us hail it with gratitude and relief; but, on
peril of our salvation, if I may not say of our immortality, let us not repose
upon a prospect which is, at best, one of renewed labours, and trials, and
efforts to be free even of that very life whose only value is opportunity.
To estimate the value of individuality, we cannot do better than regard man in
his several mundane relations, supposing that either of these might become the
central, actuating focus of his being—his “ruling love,” as Swedenborg would
call it— displacing his mere egoism, or self-love, thrusting that more to the
circumference, and identifying him, so to speak, with that circle of interests
to which all his energies and affections relate. Outside this substituted Ego we
are to suppose that he has no conscience, no desire, no will. Just as the
entirely selfish man views the whole of life, so far as it can really interest
him solely in relation to his individual well-being, so our supposed man of a
family, of a society, of a Church, or a State, has no eye for any truth or any
interest more abstract
126 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
or more individual than that of which he may be rightly termed the incarnation. History shows approximations to this ideal man. Such a one, for instance, I conceive to have been Loyola; such another, possibly, is Bismarck. Now these men have ceased to be individuals in their own eyes, so far as concerns any value attaching to their own special individualities. They are devotees. A certain “conversion” has been effected, by which from mere individuals they have become “representative” men. And we—the individuals—esteem them precisely in proportion to the remoteness from individualism of the spirit that actuates them. As the circle of interests to which they are “devoted” enlarges—that is to say, as the dross of individualism is purged away—we accord them indulgence, respect, admiration and love. From self to the family, from the family to the sect or society, from the sect or society to the Church (in no denominational sense) and State, there is the ascending scale and widening circle, the successive transitions which make the worth of an individual depend on the more or less complete subversion of his individuality by a more comprehensive soul or spirit. The very modesty which suppresses, as far as possible, the personal pronoun in our addresses to others, testifies to our sense that we are hiding away some utterly insignificant and unworthy thing; a thing that has no business even to be, except in that utter privacy which is rather a sleep and a rest than living. Well, but in the above instances, even those most remote from sordid individuality, we have fallen far short of that ideal in
127 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
which the very conception of the partial, the atomic, is lost in the abstraction of universal being, transfigured in the glory of a Divine personality. You are familiar with Swedenborg’s distinction between discrete and continuous degrees. Hitherto we have seen how man—the individual—may rise continuously by throwing himself heart and soul into the living interests of the world, and lose his own limitations by adoption of a larger mundane spirit. But still he has but ascended nearer to his own mundane source, that soul of the world, or Prakriti, to which, if I must not too literally insist on it, I may still resort as a convenient figure. To transcend it, he must advance by the discrete degree. No simple “bettering” of the ordinary self, which leaves it alive, as the focus—the French word “foyer” is the more expressive—of his thoughts and actions; not even that identification with higher interests in the world’s plane just spoken of, is, or can progressively become, in the least adequate to the realization of his Divine ideal. This “bettering” of our present nature, it alone being recognized as essential, albeit capable of “improvement,” is a commonplace, and to use a now familiar term a “Philistine,” conception. It is the substitution of the continuous for the discrete degree. It is a compromise with our dear old familiar selves. “And Saul and the people spared Agag, and the best of the sheep, and of the oxen, and of the fatlings, and the lambs, and all that was good, and would not utterly destroy them; but everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly.” We know how little acceptable that
128 ———————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
compromise was to the God of
Israel; and no illustration can be more apt than this narrative, which we may
well, as we would fain, believe to be rather typical than historical. Typical of
that indiscriminate and radical sacrifice, or “vastation,”
of our lower nature, which is insisted upon as the one thing needful by all, or
nearly all,* the great religions of the world. No language could seem more
purposely chosen to indicate that it is the individual nature itself, and not
merely its accidental evils, that has to be abandoned and annihilated. It is not
denied that what was spared was good; there is no suggestion of a universal
infection of physical or moral evil; it is simply that what is good and useful
relatively to a lower state of being must perish with it if the latter is to
make way for something better. And the illustration is the more suitable in that
the purpose of this paper is not ethical, but points to a metaphysical
conclusion, though without any attempt at metaphysical exposition. There is no
question here of moral distinctions; they are neither denied nor affirmed.
According to the highest moral standard, 'A' may be a most virtuous and estimable
person. According to the lowest, ' B' may be exactly the reverse. The moral
interval between the two is within what I have called, following Swedenborg, the
“continuous degree.” And perhaps the distinction can be still better expressed
by another reference to that Book which we theosophical students do not less
regard,
————————————————————
*
Of the higher religious
teachings of Mohammedanism I know next to nothing, and therefore cannot say if
it should be excepted from the statement.
129 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
because we are disposed to
protest against all exclusive pretensions of religious systems. The good man who
has, however, not yet attained his “son- ship of God” is “under the law”—that
moral law which is educational and preparatory, “the schoolmaster to bring us
unto Christ,” our own Divine spirit, or higher personality. To conceive the
difference between these two states is to apprehend exactly what is here meant
by the false, temporal, and the true, eternal personality, and the sense in
which the word personality is here intended to be understood. We do not know
whether, when that great change has come over us, when that great work* of our
lives has been accomplished—here or hereafter—we shall or shall not retain a
sense of identity with our past, and forever discarded selves. In philosophical
parlance, the “matter” will have gone, and the very “form” will have been
changed. Our transcendental identity with the 'A' or ' B' that now is † must depend on
that question, already disclaimed in this paper, whether the Divine spirit is
our originally central essential being, or is an hypostasis. Now, being “under
the law” implies that we do not act directly from our own will, but indirectly,
that is, in willing obedience to another
——————————————————
*
The “great work,” so often
mentioned by the hermetic philosophers, and which is exactly typified by the
operation of alchemy, the conversion of the base metals to gold, is now well
understood to refer to the analogous spiritual conversion. There is also good
reason to believe that the material process was a real one.
† A person may have won his immortal life, and remained the same
inner self he was on earth, through
eternity; but this does not imply necessarily that he must either remain the Mr.
Smith or Brown he was on earth, or lose his individuality.”—Isis
Unveiled, vol. 1. p. 316.
130 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
will. The will from which we should naturally act—our own will—is of course to be understood not as mere volition, but as our nature—our ruling love,” which makes such and such things agreeable to us, and others the reverse. As “under the law,” this nature is kept in suspension, and because it is suspended only as to its activity and manifestation, and by no means abrogated, is the law—the substitution of a foreign will—necessary for us. Our own will or nature is still central; that which we obey by effort and resistance to ourselves is more circumferential or hypostatic. Constancy in this obedience and resistance tends to draw the circumferential will more and more to the centre, till there ensues that “explosion,” as St. Martin called it, by which our natural will is for ever dispersed and annihilated by contact with the divine, and the latter henceforth becomes our very own. Thus has “the schoolmaster” brought us unto “Christ,” and if by “ Christ” we understand no historically divine individual, but the logos, word, or manifestation of God in us—then we have, I believe, the essential truth that was taught in the Vedanta, by Kapila, by Buddha, by Confucius, by Plato, and by Jesus. There is another presentation of possibly the same truth, for a reference to which I am indebted to our brother J. W. Farquhar. It is from Swedenborg, in the “Apocalypse Explained,” No. 57 :—“ Every man has an inferior or exterior mind, and a mind superior or interior. These two minds are altogether distinct. By the inferior mind man is in the natural world together with men there; but by the superior mind
131 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
he is in the spiritual world with
the angels there. These two minds are so distinct that man so long as he lives
in the world does not know what is performing within himself in his superior
mind; but when he becomes a spirit, which is immediately after death, he does
not know what is performing in his mind.” The consciousness of the “superior
mind,” as the result of mere separation from the earthly body, certainly does
not suggest that sublime condition which implies separation from so much more
than the outer garment of flesh, but otherwise the distinction between the two
lives, or minds, seems to correspond with that now under consideration.
What is it that strikes us especially about this substitution of the
divine-human for the human-natural personality? Is it not the loss of
individualism? (Individualism, pray observe, not individuality.) There are
certain sayings of Jesus which have probably offended many in their hearts,
though they may not have dared to acknowledge such a feeling to themselves:
“Woman, what have I to do with thee?” and those other disclaimers of special
ties and relationships which mar the perfect sympathy of our reverence. There is
something awful and incomprehensible to us in this repudiation of individualism,
even in its most amiable relations. But it is in the Aryan philosophies that we
see this negation of all that we associate with individual life most
emphatically and explicitly insisted on. It is, indeed, the impossibility of
otherwise than thus negatively characterizing the soul that has attained Moksha
(deliverance from bonds) which has caused the Hindu consummation
132 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
to be regarded as the loss of
individuality and conscious existence. It is just because we cannot easily
dissociate individuality from individualism that we turn from the sublime
conception of primitive philosophy as from what concerns us as little as the
ceaseless activity and germination in other brains of thought once thrown off
and severed from the thinking source, which is the immortality promised by Mr.
Frederick Harrison to the select specimens of humanity whose thoughts have any
reproductive power. It is not a mere preference of nothingness, or unconscious
absorption, to limitation that inspires the intense yearning of the Hindu mind
for Nirvana. Even in the Upanishads there are many evidences of a contrary
belief, while in the Sankhya the aphorisms of Kapila unmistakably vindicate the
individuality of soul (spirit). Individual consciousness is maintained, perhaps
infinitely intensified, but its “matter” is no longer personal. Only try to
realize what “freedom from desire,” the favourite phrase in which individualism
is negated in these systems, implies Even in that form of devotion which
consists in action, the soul is warned in the Bhagavad-Gita that it must be
indifferent to results.
Modern Spiritualism itself testifies to something of the same sort. Thus we are
told by one of its most gifted and experienced champions, “Sometimes the
evidence will come from an impersonal source, from some instructor who has
passed through the plane on which individuality is demonstrable.” (M.A. (Oxon.),
“ Spirit Identity,” p. 7.) Again, “And if he” (the investigator) “penetrates
133 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
far enough, he will find himself in a region for which his present embodied state unfits him: a region in which the very individuality is merged, and the highest and subtlest truths are not locked within one breast, but emanate from representative companies whose spheres of life are interblended.” (Id., p. 15.) By this “interblending” is of course meant only a perfect sympathy and community of thought; and I should doubtless misrepresent the author quoted were I to claim an entire identity of the idea he wishes to convey, and that now under consideration. Yet what, after all, is sympathy but the loosening of that hard “astringent” quality (to use Böhme’s phrase) wherein individualism consists? And just as in true sympathy, the partial suppression of individualism and of what is distinctive, we experience a superior delight and intensity of being, so it may be that in parting with all that shuts us up in the spiritual penthouse of an Ego—all, without exception or reserve—we may for the first time know what true life is, and what are its ineffable privileges. Yet it is not on this ground that acceptance can be hoped for the conception of immortality here crudely and vaguely presented ill contrast to that bourgeois eternity of individualism and the family affections, which is probably the great charm of Spiritualism to the majority of its proselytes. It is doubtful whether the things that “eye hath not seen, nor ear heard,” have ever taken stronghold of the imagination, or reconciled it to the loss of all that is definitely associated with the Joy and movement of living. Not as consummate bliss can the dweller on the
134 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
lower plane presume to command
that transcendent life. At the utmost he can but echo the revelation that came
to the troubled mind in “Sartor Resartus,” “A man may do without happiness, and
instead thereof find blessedness.” It is no sublimation of hope, but the
necessities of thought that compel us to seek the condition of true being and
immortality elsewhere than in the satisfactions of individualism. True
personality can only subsist in consciousness by participation of that of which
we can only say that it is the very negation of individuality in any sense in
which individuality can be conceived by us. What is the content or “matter” of
consciousness we cannot define, save by vaguely calling it ideal. But we can say
that in that region individual interests and concerns will find no place. Nay,
more, we can affirm that only then has the influx of the new life a free channel
when the obstructions of individualism are already removed. Hence the necessity
of the mystic death, which is as truly a death as that which restores our
physical body to the elements. “Neither I am, nor is aught mine, nor do I
exist,” a passage which has been well explained by a Hindu Theosophist (Peary
Chand Mittra), as meaning “that when the spiritual state is arrived at,
I and mine, which
belong to the finite mind, cease, and the soul, living in the
universum and participating in infinity with God, manifests its infinite
state.” I cannot refrain from quoting the following passage from the same
instructive writer :—
Every human being has a soul which, while not separable
from the brain or nerves, is mind or jivatma,
or sentient
135 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY
soul, but when regenerated or
spiritualized by yoga, it is free from bondage and manifests the divine
essence. It rises above all phenomenal states—joy, sorrow, grief, fear, hope,
and in fact all states resulting in pain or pleasure, and becomes blissful,
realizing immortality, infinitude and felicity of wisdom within itself. The
sentient soul is nervous, sensational, emotional, phenomenal, and impressional.
It constitutes the natural life and is finite. The soul and the non-soul are
thus the two landmarks. What is non-soul is prakriti, or created. It is
not the lot of every one to know what soul is, and therefore millions live and
die possessing minds cultivated in intellect and feeling, but not raised to the
soul state. In proportion as one’s soul is emancipated from prakriti
or sensuous bondage, in that
proportion his approximation to the soul state is attained; and it is this that
constitutes disparities in the intellectual, moral, and religious culture of
human beings and their consequent approximation to
God.—Spiritual Stray Leaves, Calcutta, 1879.
He also cites some words of Fichte, which prove that the like conclusion is
reached in the philosophy of Western idealism: “The real spirit which comes to
itself in human consciousness is to be regarded as an impersonal pneuma—universal
reason, nay, as the spirit of God Himself; and the good of man’s whole
development, therefore, can be no other than to substitute the universal for the
individual consciousness.”
That there may be, and are affirmed to be, intermediate stages, states, or
discrete degrees, will, of course, be understood. The aim of this paper has been
to call attention to the abstract condition of the immortalized consciousness;
negatively it is true, but it is on this very account more suggestive of
practical applications. The connection of the Theosophical Society with the
Spiritualist movement is so
136 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
intimately sympathetic, that I hope one of these may he pointed out without offence. It is that immortality cannot he phenomenally demonstrated. What I have called psychic survival can be, and probably is. But immortality is the attainment of a state, and that state the very negation of phenomenal existence. Another consequence refers to the direction our culture should take. We have to compose ourselves to death. Nothing less. We are each of us a complex of desires, passions, interests, modes of thinking and feeling, opinions, prejudices, judgment of others, likings and dislikings, affections, aims public and private. These things, and whatever else constitutes, the recognizable content of our present temporal individuality, are all in derogation of our ideal of impersonal being—saving consciousness, the manifestation of being. In some minute, imperfect, relative, and almost worthless sense we may do right in many of our judgments, and be amiable in many of our sympathies and affections. We cannot be sure even of this. Only people unhabituated to introspection and self-analysis are quite sure of it. These are ever those who are loudest in their censures, and most dogmatic in their opinionative utterances. In some coarse, rude fashion they are useful, it may be indispensable, to the world’s work, which is not ours, save in a transcendental sense and operation. We have to strip ourselves of all that, and to seek perfect passionless tranquillity. Then we may hope to die. Meditation, if it be deep, and long, and frequent enough, will teach even our practical Western mind to understand the
137 ——————————————————TRUE AND FALSE PERSONALITY.
Hindu mind in its yearning for Nirvana. One infinitesimal atom of the great conglomerate of humanity, who enjoys the temporal, sensual life, with its gratifications and excitements, as much as most, will testify with unaffected sincerity that he would rather be annihilated altogether than remain for ever what he knows himself to be, or even recognizably like it. And he is a very average moral specimen. I have heard it said, “The world’s life and business would come to an end, there would be an end to all its healthy activity, an end of commerce, arts, manufactures, social intercourse, government, law, and science, if we were all to devote ourselves to the practice of Yoga, which is pretty much what your ideal comes to.” And the criticism is perfectly just and true. Only I believe it does not go quite far enough. Not only the activities of the world, but the phenomenal world itself, which is upheld in consciousness, would disappear or take new, more interior, more living, and more significant forms, at least for humanity, if the consciousness of humanity was itself raised to a superior state. Readers of St. Martin, and of that impressive book of the late James Hinton, “Man and his Dwelling-place,” especially if they have also by chance been students of the idealistic philosophies, will not think this suggestion extravagant. If all the world were Yogis, the world would have no need of those special activities, the ultimate end and purpose of which, by-the-by, our critic would find it not easy to define. And if only a few withdraw, the world can spare them. Enough of that.
138 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Only let us not talk of this
ideal of impersonal, universal being in individual consciousness as an
unverified dream. Our sense and impatience of limitations are the guarantees
that they are not final and insuperable. Whence is this power of standing
outside myself, of recognizing the worthlessness of the pseudo-judgments, of the
prejudices with their lurid colouring of passion, of the temporal interests, of
the ephemeral appetites, of all the sensibilities of egoism, to which I
nevertheless surrender myself so that they indeed seem myself? Through and
above this troubled atmosphere I see a being, pure, passionless, rightly
measuring the proportions and relations of things, for whom there is, properly
speaking, no present, with its phantasms, falsities, and half-truths; who has
nothing personal in the sense of being opposed to the whole of related
personalities: who sees the truth rather than struggles logically towards it,
and truth of which I can at present form no conception; whose activities are
unimpeded by intellectual doubt, un-perverted by moral depravity, and who is
indifferent to results, because he has not to guide his conduct by calculation
of them, or by any estimate of their value. I look up to him with awe, because
in being passionless he sometimes seems to me to be without love. Yet I know
that this is not so; only that his love is diffused by its range, and elevated
in abstraction beyond my gaze and comprehension. And I see in this being my
ideal, my higher, my only true, in a word, my immortal self.
C. C. MASSEY.
CHASTITY
IDEAL woman is the most
beautiful work of the evolution of forms (in our days she is very often only a
beautiful work of art). A beautiful woman is the most attractive, charming, and
lovely being that a man can imagine. I never saw a male being who could lay any
claims to manly vigour, strength or courage, who was not an admirer of woman.
Only a profligate, a coward or a sneak would hate women; a hero and a
man admires woman, and is admired by
her.
Women’s love belongs to a complete man. Then she smiles on him his human nature
becomes aroused, his animal desires like little children begin to clamour for
bread, they do not want to be starved, they want to satisfy their hunger. His
whole soul flies towards the lovely being, which attracts him with almost
irresistible force, and if his higher principles, his divine spirit, is not
powerful enough to restrain him, his soul follows the temptations of his
physical body. Once again the animal nature has subdued the divine. Woman
rejoices in her victory, and man is ashamed of his weakness; and instead of
being a representation of strength, he becomes an object of pity.
To be truly powerful a man must retain his power and never for a moment lose it.
To lose it is to surrender his divine nature to his animal nature; to restrain
his desires and retain his
140 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
power, is to assert his divine
right, and to become more than a man—a god.
Eliphas Levi says: “To be an object of attraction for all women, you must desire
none ;” and every one who has
had a little experience of his own
must know that he is right. Woman wants what she cannot get, and
what she can get she does not want. Perhaps it is to the man endowed with
spiritual power, that the Bible refers, when it says : “To him who has much,
more shall be given, and from him who has little, that little shall be taken
away.”
To become perfect it is not required that we should be born without any animal
desires. Such a person would not be much above an idiot; he would be rightly
despised and laughed at by every true man and woman; but we must obtain the
power to control our desires, instead of being controlled by them; and here lies
the true philosophy of temptation.
If a man has no higher aim in life than to eat aid drink and propagate his
species; if all his aspirations and desires are centred in a wish of living a
happy life in the bosom of his family; there can be no wrong if he follows the
dictates of his nature and is satisfied with his lot. When he dies, his family
will mourn, his friends will say he was a good fellow; they will give him a
first-class funeral, and they will perhaps write on ins tombstone something like
what I once saw in a certain churchyard:
Here is the grave of John McBride,
He lived, got married, and died.
141 ——————————————————————CHASTITY.
And that will be the end of Mr.
John McBride, until in another incarnation he will wake up again perhaps as Mr.
John Smith, or Ramchandra Row, or Patrick O’Flannegan, to find himself on much
the same level as he was before.
But if a man has higher aims and objects in life, if he wants to avoid an
endless cycle of re-incarnations, if he wants to become a master of his destiny,
then must he first become a master of himself. How can he expect to be able to
control the external forces of Nature, if he cannot control the few little
natural forces that reside within his own insignificant body?
To do this, it is not necessary that a man should run away from his wife and
family, and leave them uncared for. Such a man would commence his spiritual
career with an act of injustice,—an act that like Banquo’s ghost would always
haunt him and hinder him in his further progress. If a man has taken upon
himself responsibilities, he is bound to fulfill them, and an act of cowardice
would be a bad beginning for a work that requires courage.
A celibate, who has no temptation and who has no one to care for but himself,
has undoubtedly superior advantages for meditation and study. Being away from
all irritating influences, he can lead what may be called a selfish life;
because he looks out only for his own spiritual interest; but he has little
opportunity to develop his will-power by resisting temptations of every kind. But
the man who is surrounded by the latter, and is every day and every hour under
the necessity of exercising his will-power to resist their surging violence,
142 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
will, if he rightly uses these
powers, become strong; he may not have as much opportunity for study as the
celibate, being more engrossed in material cares; but when he rises up to a
higher state in his next incarnation, his will-power will be more developed, and
he will be in the possession of the password, which is CONTINENCE.
A slave cannot become a commander, until after he
becomes free. A man who is subject to his own animal desires, cannot command the
animal nature of others. A muscle becomes developed by its use, an instinct or
habit is strengthened in proportion as it is permitted to rule, a mental power
becomes developed by practice, and the principle of will grows strong by
exercise; and this is the use of temptations. To have strong passions and to
overcome them, makes man a hero. The sexual instinct is the strongest of all,
and he who vanquishes it, becomes a god.
The human soul admires a beautiful form, and is therefore an idolater.
The human spirit adores a principle, and is the true worshipper.
Marriage is the union of the male spirit with the female soul for the purpose of
propagating the species; but if in its place there is only a union of a male and
a female body, then marriage becomes merely a brutal act, which lowers man and
woman, not to the level of animals but below them; because animals are
restricted to certain seasons for the exercise of their procreative powers;
while man, being a reasonable being, has it in his power to use or abuse them at
all times.
143 ———————————————————————CHASTITY.
But how many marriages do we find
that are really spiritual and not based on beauty of form or other
considerations? How soon after the wedding-day do they become disgusted with
each other? What is the cause of this? A man and a woman may marry and their
characters may differ widely. They may have different tastes, different opinions
and different inclinations. All those differences may disappear, and will
probably disappear; because by living together they become accustomed to each
other, and become equalized in time. Each influences the other, and as a man may
grow fond of a pet snake, whose presence at first horrified him, so a man may
put up with a disagreeable partner and become fond of her in course of time.
But if the man allows full liberty to his animal passions, and exercises his
“legal rights” without restraint, these animal cravings which first called so
piteously for gratification, will soon be gorged, and flying away laugh at the
poor fool who nursed them in his breast. The wife will come to know that her
husband is a coward, because she sees him squirm under the lash of his animal
passions; and as woman loves strength and power, so in proportion as he loses
his love, will she lose her confidence. He will look upon her as a burden, and
she will look upon him in disgust as a brute. Conjugal happiness will have
departed, and misery, divorce or death will be the end.
The remedy for all these evils is continence, and it has been our object to show
its necessity, for it was the object of this article.
F. HARTMANN.
ZOROASTRIANISM ON THE SEPTENARY
CONSTITUTION OF MAN
MANY of the esoteric doctrines given out through the Theosophical Society reveal
a spirit akin to that of the older religions of the East, especially the Vedic
and the Zendic. Leaving aside the former, I propose to point out by a few
instances the close resemblance which the doctrines of the old Zendic
Scriptures, as far as they are now preserved, bear to these recent teachings.
Any ordinary Parsi, while reciting his daily Niyashes, Gehs and
Yashts, provided he yields to the
curiosity of looking into the meanings of what he recites, will, with a little
exertion, perceive how the same ideas, only clothed in a more intelligible and
comprehensive garb, are reflected in these teachings. The description of the
septenary constitution of man found in the 54th chapter of the Yasna, one
of the most authoritative books of the Mazdiasnian religion, shows the identity
of the doctrines of Avesta and the esoteric philosophy, indeed, as a Mazdiasnian, I felt quite ashamed that, having such undeniable and unmistakable evidence
before their eyes, the Zoroastrians of the present day should not avail
themselves of the opportunity offered of throwing light upon their now entirely
misunderstood and misinterpreted Scriptures by the assistance and under the
guidance of the Theosophical
145 ————————————————————SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF MAN.
Society. If Zend scholars and
students of Avesta would only care to study and search for themselves, they
would, perhaps, find to assist them, men who are in possession of the right and
only key to the true esoteric wisdom; men, who would be willing to guide and
help them to reach the true and hidden meaning, and to supply them with the
missing links that have resulted in such painful gaps as to leave the meaning
meaningless, and to create in the mind of the perplexed student doubts that
finally culminate in a thorough unbelief in his own religion. Who knows but they
may find some of their own co-religionists, who, aloof from the world, have to
this day preserved the glorious truths of their once mighty religion, and who,
hidden in the recesses of solitary mountains and unknown silent caves, are still
in possession of; and exercising, mighty powers, the heirloom of the ancient
Magi. Our Scriptures say that ancient Mobeds were Yogis, who had the
power of making themselves simultaneously visible at different places, even
though hundreds of miles apart, and also that they could heal the sick and work
that which would now appear to us miraculous. All this was considered facts
but two or three centuries back, as no reader of old books (mostly Persian)
is unacquainted with, or will disbelieve a priori
unless his mind is irretrievably biassed by modern
secular education. The story about the Mobed and Emperor Akbar and of the
latter’s conversion, is a well-known historical fact, requiring no proof.
I will first of all quote side by side the two
146 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY
passages referring to the
septenary nature of man as I find them in our Scriptures and the THEOSOPHIST—
|
Sub-divisions of septenary man according to the Occultists.
5. The animal or Physical
intelligence or Consciousness or Ego, |
Sub-divisions of septenary man
according to Yasna (chap. 54, para. I). 1. Tanwas—i.e., body (the self ) that consists of bones—grossest form of matter. 2. Ushtanas —Vital heat (or force). 3. Keherpas Aerial form, the airy mould, (Per. Kaleb). 4. Tevishis—Will, or where sentient consciousness is formed, also fore-knowledge. 5. Baodhas (in Sanskrit, Buddhi)—Body of physical consciousness, perception by |
147 ————————————————————SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF MAN.
|
proportionally higher in the
senses or the animal degree than the |
the senses or animal soul.
7. Frawashem or
Farohar |
The above is given in the Avesta
as follows—
"We declare and positively make known this (that) we offer (our) entire property
(which is) the body (the self
consisting of) bones (tanwas),
vital heat (ushtanas),
aerial form (keherpas),
knowledge (tevishis), consciousness (baodhas),
soul (urwanem),
and spirit frawashem),
to the prosperous, truth-coherent (and) pure Gathas
(prayers).”
The ordinary Gujarathi translation differs from Spiegel’s, and this latter
differs very slightly from
what is here given. Yet in the present translation there has been made no
addition to, or omission from, the original wording of the Zend text. The
grammatical construction also has been preserved
148 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
intact. The only difference,
therefore, between the current translations and the one here given is that
ours is in accordance with
the modern corrections of philological research which make it more intelligible,
and the idea perfectly clear to the reader.
The word translated “aerial form” has come down to us without undergoing any
change in the meaning. It is the modern Persian word
kaleb, which means a mould, a shape into which a thing
is cast, to take a certain form and features. The next word is one about which
there is a great difference of opinion. It is by some called strength,
durability, i.e., that power
which gives tenacity to and sustains the nerves. Others explain it as that
quality in a man of rank and position which makes him perceive the result of
certain events (causes), and thus helps him in being prepared to meet them. This
meaning is suggestive, though we translate it as knowledge, or foreknowledge
rather, with the greatest diffidence. The eighth word is quite clear. That
inward feeling which tells a man that he knows this or that, that he has or can
do certain things—is perception and consciousness. It is the inner conviction,
knowledge and its possession. The ninth word is again one which has retained its
meaning and has been in use up to the present day. The reader will at once
recognize that it is the origin of tile modern word
Rawan. It is (metaphorically) the king, the
conscious motor or agent in man. It is that something which depends upon and
is benefited or injured by the foregoing attributes. We say depends upon,
because its progress entirely consists
149 ————————————————————SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF MAN.
in the development of those
attributes. If they are neglected, it becomes weak and degenerated, and
disappears. If they ascend on the moral and spiritual scale, it gains strength
and vigour and becomes more blended than ever to the Divine essence—the seventh
principle. But how does it become attracted toward its monad? The tenth word
answers the question. This is the Divine essence in man. But this is only the
irresponsible minister (this completes the metaphor). The real master is the
king, the spiritual soul. It must have the willingness and power to see and
follow the course pointed out by the pure spirit. The vizir’s business is only
to represent a point of attraction, towards which the king should turn. It is
for the king to see and act accordingly for the glory of his own self. The
minister or spirit can neither compel nor constrain. It inspires and electrifies
into action; but to benefit by the inspiration, to take advantage of it, is left
to the option of the spiritual soul.
If, then, the Avesta contains such a passage, it must fairly be admitted
that its writers knew the whole doctrine concerning spiritual man. We cannot
suppose that the ancient Mazdiasnians, the Magi, wrote this short
passage, without inferring from it, at the same time, that they were thoroughly
conversant with the whole of the occult theory about man. And it looks very
strange indeed, that modern Theosophists should now preach to us the very same
doctrines that must have been known and taught thousands of years ago by
the Mazdiasnians,—the passage is quoted from one of their oldest writings. And
since they propound the
150 ————————————————————FIVE
YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
very same ideas, the meaning of
which has well-nigh been lost even to our most learned Mobeds, they ought to be
credited at least with some possession of a knowledge, the key to which has been
revealed to them, and lost to us, and which opens the door to the meaning of
those hitherto inexplicable sentences and doctrines in our old writings, about
which we are still, and will go on, groping in. the dark, unless we listen to
what they have to tell us about them.
To show that the above is riot a solitary instance, but that the Avesta
contains this idea in many other
places, I will give another paragraph which contains the same doctrine, though
in a more condensed form than the one just given. Let tile Parsi reader turn to
Yàsaa, chapter 26, and read the sixth paragraph, which runs as follows
We praise the life (a/um), knowledge (daenam), consciousness (baodhas),
soul (urwanem), and spirit (frawashem) of the first in
religion, the first teachers and hearers (learners), the holy men and holy women
who were the protectors of purity here (in this world).
Here the whole man is spoken of as composed of five parts, as under
1. The Physical Body.
1.
Ahum Existence, Life. it includes
2 The Vital
Principle.
3. The Astral Body.
2.
Daenam—Knowledge. 4. The Astral
shape or
body of
desire.
3. Baodhas—Consciousness.
5. The Animal or physical intelligence
or consciousness or Ego.
151————————————————————SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF MAN.
4.
Urwanem—Soul.
6. The Higher or Spiritual intelligence or
consciousness, or
Spiritual Ego.
5. Frawashem—Spirit. 7.
The
Spirit.
In this description the first triple group—viz., the bones (or the gross
matter), the vital force which keeps them together, and the ethereal body, arc
included in one and called Existence, Life. Tile second part stands for the
fourth principle of the
septenary man, as denoting the configuration of his knowledge or desires.* Then
the three, consciousness (or animal soul), (spiritual) soul, and the pure Spirit
are the same as in the first quoted passage. Why are these four mentioned as
distinct from each other and not consolidated like the first part? The sacred
writings explain this by saying that on death the first of these five parts
disappears and perishes sooner or later in the earth’s atmosphere. The gross
elementary matter (the shell) has to run within the earth’s attraction
; so the ahum separates from
the higher portions and is lost. The second (i.e.,
the fourth
of the septenary group) remains, but not with the spiritual soul.
It continues to hold its place in the vast storehouse of the universe. And it is
this
————————————————————
* Modern science also teaches
that certain characteristics of features indicate the possession of certain
qualities in a man. The whole science of physiognomy is founded on it. One can
predict the disposition of a man from his features,—i.e., the features develop
in accordance with the idiosyncrasies, qualities and vices, knowledge or the
ignorance of man.
152 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
second daenam which stands
before the (spiritual) soul in the form of a beautiful maiden or an ugly hag.
That which brings this daenam within the sight of the (spiritual) soul is
the third part (i.e., the fifth of the septenary group), the
baodhas. Or in other words, the (spiritual) soul has with it, or in it, the
true consciousness by which it can view the experiences of its physical career.
So this consciousness, this power or faculty which brings the recollection, is
always with, in other words, is a part and parcel of, the soul itself; hence,
its not mixing with any other part, and hence its existence after the physical
death of man.
A PARSI F.T.S.
————————————————————
* Our Brother has but to look
into the oldest sacred hooks of China—namely, the YI KING. or Book of
Changes (translated by James Legge) written 1,200 B.C., to find that same
Septenary division of man mentioned in that system of Divination. Zhing,
which is translated correctly enough “essence,” is the more subtle and pure
part of matter—the grosser form of the elementary ether; Khi, or
spirit,” is the breath, still material but purer than the zhing, and is
made of’ the finer and more active form of ether. In the hwun, or soul
(animus) the Khi predominates and the zhing (or zing)
in the pho or animal soul. At death the
hwun (Or spiritual soul)
wanders away, ascending, and the pho (the root of the Tibetan word
Pho-hat) descends and is changed into a ghostly shade (the shell). Dr.
Medhurst thinks that “the Kwei Shans
” (see “Theology of the Chinese,” pp.
10—12) are “the expanding and contracting principles
of human life! “The Kwei Shans” are brought about by the dissolution of
the human frame—and consist of the expanding and ascending Shan which
rambles about in space, and of the contracted and shrivelled Kwei, which
reverts to earth and nonentity. Therefore, the Kwei is the physical
body; the Shan is the vital principle the Kwei ,Shan the
linga-sariram, or the vital soul; Zhing the fourth
principle or kama Rupa, the essence of will; pho, the animal soul;
Khi, the spiritual soul
; and Hwun the pure
spirit—the seven principles of our occult doctrine !—ED.
Theos.
BRAHMANISM ON THE SEVENFOLD
PRINCIPLE IN MAN
IT is now very difficult to say what was the real ancient Aryan doctrine. If an
inquirer were to attempt to answer it by an analysis and comparison of all the
various systems of esotericism prevailing in India, he will soon be lost in a
maze of obscurity and uncertainty. No comparison between our real Brahmanical
and the Tibetan esoteric doctrines will be possible unless one ascertains the
teachings of that so-called “Aryan doctrine,” and fully comprehends the
whole range of the ancient Aryan
philosophy. Kapila’s “Sankhya,” Patanjali’s “Yog philosophy,” the different
systems of “Saktaya” philosophy, the various Agamas
and Tantras
are but branches of it. There is a doctrine, though, which is
their real foundation, and which is sufficient to explain the secrets of these
various systems of philosophy and harmonize their teachings. It probably existed
long before the Vedas were compiled, and it was studied by our ancient Rishis in
connection with the Hindu scriptures. It is attributed to one mysterious
personage called Maha.*
The Upanishads and such
portions of the Vedas
————————————————————
* The very title of the present
chief of the esoteric Himalayan
Brotherhood.—ED. Theos.
154 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
as are
not chiefly devoted to the public ceremonials of the
ancient Aryans are hardly intelligible without some knowledge of that
doctrine. Even the real significance of the grand ceremonials referred to in
the Vedas will not be perfectly apprehended without its light being throw upon
them. The Vedas were perhaps compiled mainly for the use of the priests assisting
at public ceremonies, but the grandest conclusions of our real secret doctrine
are therein mentioned. I am informed by persons competent to judge of the
matter, that the Vedas have a distinct dual meaning—one expressed by the literal
sense of the words, the other indicated by the metre and the swara (intonation),
which are, as it were the life of the Vedas. Learned Pundits and philologists of
course deny that swara has anything to do with philosophy or ancient
esoteric doctrines ; but the mysterious connection between swara and
light is one of its most profound secrets.
Now, it is extremely difficult to show whether the Tibetans derived their
doctrine from the ancient Rishis of India, or the ancient Brahmans learned
their occult science from the adepts of Tibet; or, again, whether the adepts of
both countries professed originally the same doctrine and derived it from a
common source.* If you were to go to the Sramana Balagula, and question some
of the Jain Pundits there about the authorship of the Vedas
and the origin of the Brahmanical esoteric doctrine, they would probably tell
you that the Vedas were composed by Rakshasas † or Daityas, and
that the Brahmans had derived their secret
————————————————————
*
See Appendix, Note I.
†A kind of demons—devil.
155 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
knowledge from them.* Do these
assertions mean that the Vedas and the Brahmanical esoteric teachings had their
origin in the lost Atlantis—the continent that once occupied a considerable
portion of the expanse of the Southern and the Pacific oceans? The assertion in
“Isis Unveiled,” that Sanskrit was the language of the inhabitants of the said
continent, may induce one to suppose that the Vedas had probably their origin
there, wherever else might be the birthplace of the Aryan esotericism.† but
the real esoteric doctrine, as well as the mystic allegorical philosophy of the
Vedas, were derived from another source again, whatever that may be—perchance
from the divine inhabitants (gods) of the sacred island which once existed in
the sea that covered in days of old the sandy tract now called Gobi Desert.
However that may be, the knowledge of the occult powers
of Nature possessed by the inhabitants of the lost
Atlantis was learnt by the ancient adepts of India, and was appended by them to
the esoteric doctrine taught by the residents of the sacred island.‡ The
————————————————————
*
And so would the Christian
padris. But they would never admit that their “fallen angels” were borrowed
from the Rakshasas; that
their “devil” is the illegitimate son of Dewel,
the Sinhalese female demon ; or that the “war in heaven” of
the Apocalypse—the foundation of the Christian dogma of the
“Fallen Angels”
was copied from the Hindu story about Siva hurling the
Tarakasura who rebelled against the gods into
Andhahkara, the abode of
Darkness, according to Brahmanical, Shastras.
† Not necessarily. (See Appendix, Note II.) It is
generally held by Occultists that Sanskrit has been spoken in Java and adjacent
islands from remote antiquity—ED.
Theos.
‡ A
locality which is
spoken of to this day by the Tibetans, and called by them “Scham-bha-la,” the
Happy Land. (See Appendix, Note III.)
156 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Tibetan adepts, however, have not
accepted this addition to their esoteric doctrine ; and it is in this
respect that one should expect to find a difference between the two doctrines.*
The Brahmanical occult doctrine probably contains everything that was taught
about the powers of Nature and their laws, either in the mysterious
island of the North or in the equally mysterious continent of the South. And if
you mean to compare the Aryan and the Tibetan doctrines as regards their
teachings about the occult powers of Nature, you must beforehand examine all the
classifications of these powers, their laws and manifestations, and the real
connotations of the various names assigned to them in the Aryan doctrine. Here
are some of the classifications contained in the Brahmanical system :
I. As appertaining to Parabrahmam
and existing in the MACROCOSM.
II. As appertaining to man and existing in the
MICROCOSM.
III. For the purposes of d Taraka Yog
or Pranava Yog.
IV. For the purposes of
Sankhya Yog (where they are, as it were, the inherent
attributes of Prakriti).
V. For the purposes of Hata
Yog.
VI. For the purposes of Koula Agama.
VII. For the purposes of
Sakta Agama.
VIII. For the purposes of
Siva Aqama.
IX. For the purposes of Sreechakram
(the
————————————————————
* To comprehend this passage fully, the reader must turn
to vol. i. pp. 589—594 of “Isis Unveiled.”
157 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN
Sreechakram
referred to in “Isis Unveiled” is not
the real esoteric Sreechakram of the ancient adepts
of Aryavarta).*
X. In Atharvena Veda, &c.
In all these classifications subdivisions have been multiplied indefinitely by
conceiving new combinations of the Primary Powers in different proportions. But
I must now drop this subject, and proceed to consider the “Fragments of Occult
Truth” (since embodied in “Esoteric Buddhism”).
I have carefully examined it, and find that the results
arrived at (in the Buddhist doctrine) do not differ much from the conclusions of
our Aryan philosophy, though our mode of stating the arguments may differ in
form. I shall now discuss the question from my own standpoint, though,
following, for facility of comparison and convenience of discussion, the
sequence of classification of the sevenfold entities or principles
constituting man which is adopted in the “Fragments.” The questions raised for
discussion are (1) whether the disembodied spirits of human beings (as
they are called by Spiritualists) appear in the séance-rooms and elsewhere; and
(2) whether the manifestations taking place are produced wholly or partly
through their agency.
It is hardly possible to answer these two questions satisfactorily unless the
meaning intended to be conveyed by the expression “disembodied spirits of human
beings” be accurately defined. The words spiritualism
and spirit are very misleading. Unless English
writers in general, and Spiritualists
————————————————————
* Very true. But who would be
allowed to give out the “real esoteric one ” ?—Ed.
Theos.
158 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
in particular, first ascertain
clearly the connotation they
mean to assign to the word spirit,
there will be no end of confusion, and the real nature of these
so-called spiritualistic phenomena and their modus
occurrendi can never be clearly defined. Christian
writers generally speak of only two entities in man—the body, and the soul or
spirit (both seeming to mean
the same thing to them). European philosophers generally speak of
body and mind,
and argue that soul or spirit cannot be anything else
than mind. They are of opinion that any belief in
lingasariram* is entirely unphilosophical. These views
are certainly incorrect, and are based on unwarranted assumptions as to the
possibilities of Nature, and on an imperfect understanding of its laws. I shall
now examine (from the standpoint of the Brahmanical esoteric doctrine) the
spiritual constitution of man, the various entities or principles existing in
him, and ascertain whether either of those entities entering into his
composition can appear on
earth after his death, and if so, what it is that so
appears.
Professor Tyndall in his excellent papers on what he
calls the “Germ Theory,” comes to the following conclusions as the result of a
series of well-planned experiments :—Even in a very small volume of space there
are myriads of protoplasmic germs floating in ether. If, for instance, say water
(clear water) is exposed to them, and if they fall into it, some form of life or
other will be evolved out of them. Now, what are the agencies for the bringing
of this life into existence? Evidently—
————————————————————
* The astral body, so called.
159 ————————————————— THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
I. The
water, which is the field, so to say, for the growth
of life.
II. The protoplasmic germ,
out of which life or a living organism is to be evolved or developed. And
lastly—
III. The power, energy, force, or tendency which springs into activity at the
touch or combination of the protoplasmic germ and the water, and which evolves
or develops life and its natural attributes.
Similarly, there are three primary causes which bring the human being into
existence. I shall call them, for the purpose of discussion, by the following
names
(1) Parabrahmam, the
Universal Spirit.
(2) Sakti, the crown of the
astral light, combining in itself all the powers of Nature.
(3) Prakriti, which in its
original or primary shape is represented by Akasa.
(Really every form of matter is finally reducible to
Akasa.)*
It is ordinarily stated that
Prakriti or Akasa
is the Kshetram,
or the basis which corresponds to water in the example we have
taken Brahmam the
germ, and
Sakti, the power or energy that comes into existence
at their union or contact.†
————————————————————
* The Tibetan esoteric
Buddhist doctrine teaches that Prakriti is cosmic matter, out of which
all visible forms are produced; and Akasa,
that same cosmic matter, but still more subjective—its
spirit, as it were. Prakriti being the body or substance, and
Akasa Sakti its soul or energy.
† Or, in other words, “Prakriti, Swabhavat, or
Akasa, is SPACE, as the Tibetans have it; Space
filled with whatsoever substance or no substance at all—i.e., with substance so
imperceptible as to be only metaphysically conceivable. Brahman, then,
would be the germ thrown into
the soil of that field, and Sakti, that mysterious energy or force which
develops it, and which is called by the Buddhist Arahat of Tibet, Fohat. That
which we call form
(rupa) is not different from that which we call
space (sunyata)
Space is not different from form. Form is the same as space
space is the same as form. And so with the other skandhas, whether vedana, or
sanjna, or sanskara, or vijnana, they are each the same as their opposite.”
(Book of Sin-king, or the “Heart Sutra.” Chinese translation of the “Maha-Prajna-Paramita-Hridaya-Sutra,” chapter on the “Avalokiteshwara,” or the
manifested Buddha.) So that the Aryan and Tibetan or
Arhat doctrines agree perfectly in substance, differing but in names given and
the way of putting it.
160 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
But this is not the view which
the Upanishads take of the question. According to them, Brahamam*
is the Kshetram or basis, Akasa or Prakriti, the germ
or seed, and Sakti, the power evolved by their union or contact. And this
is the real scientific, philosophical mode of stating the case.
Now, according to the adepts of ancient Aryavarta, seven principles are
evolved out of these three primary entities. Algebra teaches us that the number
of combinations of n
things, taken one at a time, two
at a time, three at a time, and so
forth=2n- 1.
Applying this formula to the present case, the number of entities evolved from
different combinations of these three primary causes amounts to
23- 1 = 8-1 = 7.
As a general rule, whenever seven entities are
mentioned in the ancient occult science of India, in any connection whatsoever,
you must suppose that those seven entities came into existence from three
primary entities; and that these three entities, again, are evolved out of a
single entity or MONAD. To take a familiar example, the seven
coloured rays in the solar ray are evolved out of three primary
————————————————————
* See Appendix, Note IV.
161 —————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
coloured
rays; and the three primary colours coexist with the four
secondary colours in the solar rays. Similarly, the three primary entities which
brought man into existence co-exist in him with the four secondary
entities which arose from different combinations of the three primary entities.
Now these seven entities, which in their totality constitute man, are as
follows. I shall enumerate them in the order adopted in the “Fragments,” as far
as the two orders (the Brahmanical and the Tibetan) coincide :—
Corresponding names
in Esoteric
Buddhism.
I.
Prakriti.
Sthulasariram (Physical Body).
II. The entity evolved
out of the combination
}
Sukshmasariram or Lingasariram
of
Prakriti and
Sakti.
(Astral Body).
III. Sakti. Kamarupa
(the
Perispirit).
IV. The entity evolved out
of the combination of Brahmam,
}
Jiva (Life-Soul).
Sakti and Prakriti.
V. The entity evolved out
of the combination of Brahmam
} Physical Intelligence (or animal soul).
and Prakriti.
VI. The entity evolved
out of the combination of
}
Spiritual Intelligence (or Soul).
Brahmam and Sakti.
VII. Brahmam.
}
The emanation from the
ABSOLUTE, &c. (or pure spirit.)
Before proceeding to examine these
nature of these seven entities, a few general explanations are indispensably
necessary.
162 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
I. The secondary principles
arising out of the combination of primary principles are quite different in
their nature from the entities out of whose combination they came into
existence. The combinations in question are not of the nature of mere mechanical
juxtapositions, as it were. They do not even correspond to chemical
combinations. Consequently no valid inferences as regards the nature of the
combinations in question can
be drawn by analogy from the nature [variety?] of these combinations.
II. The general proposition, that when once a cause is removed its effect
vanishes, is not universally applicable. Take, for instance, the following
example :—If you once communicate a certain amount of momentum to a ball,
velocity of a particular degree in a particular direction is the result. Now,
the cause of this motion ceases to exist when the instantaneous sudden impact or
blow which conveyed the momentum is completed; but according to Newton’s
first law of motion, the ball will
continue to move on for ever and ever, with undiminished velocity in the same
direction, unless the said motion is altered, diminished, neutralized, or
counteracted by extraneous causes. Thus, if the ball stops, it will not be on
account of the absence of the cause of its motion, but in consequence of the
existence of extraneous causes which produce the said result.
Again, take the instance of subjective phenomena.
Now the presence of this ink-bottle before me is
producing in me, or in my mind, a mental representation of its form, volume,
colour and so forth.
163 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
The bottle in question may be
removed, but still its mental picture may continue to exist. here, again, you
see, the effect survives the cause. Moreover, the effect may at any subsequent
time be called into conscious existence, whether the original cause be present
or not.
Now, in the ease of the filth principle above mentioned—the entity that came
into existence by the combination of Brahmam
and Prakriti—if
the general proposition (in the “Fragments of Occult Truth”) is
correct, this principle, which corresponds to the
physical intelligence, must cease to exist whenever
the Brahmam or the seventh
Principle should cease to exist for the particular individual; but the fact is
certainly otherwise. The general proposition under consideration is adduced in
the “Fragments” in support of the assertion that when—ever the seventh
principle ceases to exist for any particular individual, the sixth principle
also ceases to exist for him. The assertion is undoubtedly true, though the mode
of stating it and the reasons assigned for it, are to my mind objectionable.
It is said that in cases where tendencies of a man’s mind are entirely material,
and all spiritual aspirations and thoughts were altogether absent from his mind,
the seventh principle leaves him either before or at the time of death, and the
sixth principle disappears with it. Here, the very proposition that the
tendencies of the particular individual’s mind are
entirely material, involves the assertion that there
is no spiritual intelligence or spiritual Ego
in him, it should then have been said that, whenever
spiritual intelligence ceases to
164 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
exist in any particular
individual, the seventh principle ceases to exist for that particular individual
for all purposes. Of course, it does not fly off anywhere. There can never be
any thing like a change of position in the case of Brahmam.* The assertion
merely means that when there is no recognition whatever of
Brahmam, or spirit, or spiritual life,
or spiritual consciousness, the seventh
principle has ceased to exercise any influence or control over the individual’s
destinies.
I shall now state what is meant (in the Aryan doctrine) by the seven principles
above enumerated.
I. Prakriti.
This is the basis of Sthulasariram, and represents it in the
above-mentioned classification.
II. Prakriti and.
Sakti. This is the
Lingasariram, or astral body.
III. Sakti.
This principle corresponds to your
Kamarupa. This power or force is placed by ancient occultists in the Nabhichakram.
This power can gather akasa
or prakriti,
and mould it into any desired shape. It has very great sympathy with the fifth
principle, and can be made to act by its influence or control.
IV. Brahmam
and Sakti,
and Prakriti.
This again corresponds to your second principle,
Jiva.
————————————————————
* True—from the
standpoint of Aryan Exotericism
and the Upanishads, not quite so in the case of the
Arahat or Tibetan esoteric doctrine;
and it is only on this one solitary point that the two teachings disagree, as far
as we know, The
difference is very trifling, though, resting as it does solely upon the
two various methods of
viewing the one and the same thing from two different aspects. (See Appendix,
Note IV.)
165 ———————————————————— THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
This power represents the
universal life-principle which exists in Nature. Its seat is the
Anahatachakram (heart). It is a force or power which constitutes what is
called Jiva, or life. It is, as you say, indestructible, and its activity
is merely transferred at the time of death to another set of atoms, to form
another organism.
V. Brahma and Prakriti. This, in our Aryan philosophy,
corresponds to your fifth principle, called the physical intelligence.
According to our philosophers, this is the entity in which what is called
mind has its seat or basis. This is the most difficult principle of all to
explain, and the present discussion entirely turns upon the view we take of it.
Now, what is mind? It is a mysterious something, which is considered to be the
seat of consciousness—of sensations, emotions, volitions, and thoughts.
Psychological analysis shows it to be apparently a congeries of mental states,
and possibilities of mental states, connected by what is called memory, and
considered to have a distinct existence apart from any of its particular states
or ideas. Now in what entity has this mysterious something its potential or
actual existence? Memory and
expectation, which form, as it were, the real foundation of what is
called individuality, or
Ahankaram, must have their seat of existence somewhere. Modern
psychologists of Europe generally say that the material substance of
brain is the seat of mind; and that
past subjective experiences,
which can be recalled by
memory, and which in their totality constitute what is called
166 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
individuality,
exist therein in the shape of certain unintelligible mysterious
impressions and changes in the nerves and nerve-centres of the cerebral
hemispheres. Consequently, they say, the mind—the individual mind—is destroyed
when the body is destroyed ;
so there is no possible existence after death.
But there are a few facts among those admitted by these philosophers which are
sufficient for us to demolish their theory. In every portion of the human body a
constant change goes on without intermission. Every tissue, every muscular fibre
and nerve-tube, and every ganglionic centre in the brain, is undergoing an
incessant change. In the course of a man’s lifetime there may be a series of
complete transformations of
the substance of his brain.
Nevertheless, the memory of his past mental states remains unaltered. There may
be additions of new subjective experiences and some mental states may be
altogether forgotten, but no
individual mental state is altered. The person’s
sense of personal identity remains the
same throughout these constant alterations in the brain substance. *
It is able to survive all these
changes, and it can survive also the complete destruction of the material
substance of the brain.
This individuality arising from mental consciousness has its seat of existence,
according to our philosophers, in an occult power or
force, which keeps a registry, as it were, of all our
mental impressions. The power itself is indestructible,
————————————————————
*
This is also sound Buddhist
philosophy, the transformation in question being known as the change
of the
skandhas.—ED. Theos.
167 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
though by the operation of
certain antagonistic causes its impressions may in course of time be effaced, in
part or wholly.
I may mention in this
connection that our
philosophers have associated seven occult
powers with the seven principles or entities above-mentioned.
These seven occult powers in the microcosm correspond with, or are the
counterparts of, the occult powers in the macrocosm. The mental and spiritual
consciousness of the individual becomes the general consciousness of
Brahmam, when the barrier of
individuality is wholly removed, and when the seven powers in the microcosm are
placed en rapport with the seven powers in the macrocosm.
There is nothing very strange in a power, or force, or sakti, carrying
with it impressions of sensations, ideas, thoughts, or other subjective
experiences. It is now a well-known fact, that an electric or magnetic current
can convey in some
mysterious manner impressions of sound or speech, with all their individual
peculiarities ; similarly, I can convey my thoughts to you by a
transmission of energy or power.
Now, this fifth principle represents in our philosophy
the mind, or, to speak more correctly,
the power or force above described, the impressions of the mental states
therein, and the notion of self-identity or Ahankaram generated by
their collective operation. This principle is called merely
physical intelligence in the
“Fragments.” I do not know what is really meant by this expression. It may be
taken to mean that intelligence which exists in a very
168 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
low state of development in the
lower animals. Mind may exist
in different stages of development, from the very lowest forms of organic life,
where the signs of its existence or operation can hardly be distinctly realized,
up to man, in whom it reaches its highest state of development.
In fact, from the first appearance of life *
up to Tureeya Avastha,
or the state of Nirvana, the progress is, as it were,
continuous. We ascend from that principle up to the seventh by almost
imperceptible gradations. But four stages are recognized in the progress where
the change is of a peculiar kind, and is such as to arrest an observer’s
attention. These four stages are as follows :—
(1)
Where life (fourth
principle) make its appearance.
(2) Where the existence of mind becomes perceptible in conjunction with life.
(3) Where the highest state of mental abstraction ends, and
spiritual consciousness commences.
(4) Where spiritual consciousness disappears, leaving the seventh principle in a
complete state of Nirvana, or
nakedness.
According to our philosophers, the fifth principle under consideration is
intended to represent the mind in every
possible state of development, from the second stage up to the
third stage.
IV Brahmam
and Sakti.
This principle corresponds to your “spiritual intelligence.” It is, in fact,
Buddhi (I use the word
Buddhi not in the
————————————————————
* In the Aryan doctrine,
which blends Brahmam, Sakti, and Prakriti
in one, it is the fourth principle then, in the Buddhist
esotericisms the second in combination with the first.
169 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
ordinary sense, but in the sense
in which it is used by our ancient philosophers) ; in other words, it is the
seat of Bodha or Atmabodha.
One who has Atmabodha
in its completeness is a Buddha. Buddhists know very well
what this term signifies. This principle is described in the “Fragments” as
an entity coming into existence by the combination of Brahmam and Prakriti.
I do not again know in what particular sense the word Prakriti is
used in this connection. According to our philosophers it is an entity arising
from the union of’ Brahmam and Sakti. I have already explained
the connotation attached by our philosophers to the words Prakriti and
Sakti.
I stated that Prakriti in its primary state is Akasa.*
If Akasa be considered to be Sakti or
power †
then my statement as regards the
ultimate state of Prakriti is likely to give rise to confusion and
misapprehension unless I explain the distinction between Akasa and
Sakti. Akasa is
————————————————————
*
According to the Buddhists, in Akasa lies that
eternal, potential
energy whose function it is to evolve all visible things out of itself — Ed.
Theos.
†
It was never so considered, as we have shown it. But as the
“Fragments” are written in
English,
a language lacking such an
abundance of metaphysical terms to express ever minute change of form,
substance and state as are found in the Sanskrit, it was deemed useless to
confuse the Western reader, untrained in the methods of Eastern expression, more than is
necessary, with a too nice distinctions of
proper technical terms. As “Prakriti in its primary state is Akasa,”
and Sakti “
is an attribute AKASA,” it becomes evident that for the uninitiated it is all one. Indeed, to speak of the union of Brahmam and
Prakriti” instead of “Brahmam and Sakti ”
is no worse than for a theist to write that “That man
has come into existence by
the combination of spirit and matter,” whereas, his word, framed
in an orthodox shape, ought to read “man is a living soul was created by the
power (or breath) of God over matter.”
170 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
not, properly speaking, the
crown of the astral light,
nor does it by itself
constitute any of the six primary forces.
But, generally speaking, whenever any
phenomenal result is produced,
Sakti acts in
conjunction with Akasa. And, moreover,
Akasa serves as a basis or
Adhishthanum for the transmission of
force currents and for the formation or generation of force or power
correlations.*
In Mantrasastra the letter
Ha represents
Akasa, and you will find that this
syllable enters into most of the sacred formulæ intended to be used in
producing phenomenal results. But by itself it does not represent any
Sakti. You may, if you please, call
Sakti an attribute of
Akasa.
I do not think that, as regards the nature of this
principle, there can in reality exist any difference of opinion between the
Buddhist and Brahmanical philosophers.
Buddhist and Brahmanical initiates know very well that mysterious circular
mirror composed of two hemispheres which reflects as it were the rays emanating
from the “burning bush ” and
the blazing star—the spiritual sun Shining in CHIDAKASAM.
The spiritual impressions constituting this principle have their existence in
an occult power associated with the entity in question. The successive
incarnations of Buddha, in fact, mean the successive transfers of this
mysterious power, or the impressions thereof. The transfer is only possible when
the Mahatma † who transfers it has com-
————————————————————
* That is to say, the Aryan Akasa
is another word for Buddhist SPACE (in its metaphysical meaning).—Ed.
Theos.
† The highest adept.
171 ———————————————————— THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
pletely identified himself with
his seventh principle, has annihilated his Ahankaram,
and reduced it to ashes in CHIDAGNIKUNDUM, and has
succeeded in making his thoughts correspond with the eternal laws of Nature and
in becoming a co-worker with Nature. Or, to put the same thing in other words,
when he has attained the state of Nirvana, the
condition of final negation, negation of
individual, or separate existence.*
VII. Atma.—The
emanation from the absolute, corresponding to the seventh
principle. As regards this entity there exists positively no real difference of
opinion between the Tibetan Buddhist adepts and our ancient Rishis.
We must now consider which of these entities can appear after the individual’s
death in séance-rooms and produce the so-called spiritualistic
phenomena.
Now, the assertion of the Spiritualists, that the “disembodied spirits” of
particular human beings appear in séance-rooms, necessarily implies that the
entity that so appears bears the stamp of some particular personality.
So, we have to ascertain beforehand in what entity or entities personality has
its seat of existence. Apparently it exists in the person’s particular formation
of body, and in his subjective experiences (called his mind in their totality).
On the death of the individual his body is destroyed his
lingasariram being decomposed, the
power
————————————————————
* In the words of Agatha in the “Maha-pari-Nirvana Sutra,”
“We reach a condition of rest
Beyond the limit of any human knowledge”—Ed.
Theos.
172 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
associated with it becomes
mingled in the current of the corresponding power in the macrocosm. Similarly,
the third and fourth principles are mingled with their corresponding powers.
These entities may again enter into the composition of other organisms. As these
entities bear no impression of personality, the Spiritualists have no right to
say that the disembodied spirit of the human being has appeared in the
séance-room whenever any of these entities may appear there. In fact, they have
no means of ascertaining that they belonged to any particular individual.
Therefore, we must only consider whether any of the last three entities appear
in séance-rooms to amuse or to instruct Spiritualists. Let us take three
particular examples of individuals, and see what becomes of these three
principles after death.
I. One in whom spiritual attachments have greater force than terrestrial
attachments.
II. One in whom spiritual aspirations do exist, but are merely of secondary
importance to him, his terrestrial interests occupying the greater share of his
attention.
III. One in whom there exists no spiritual aspirations whatsoever, one whose
spiritual Ego is dead or non-existent to his apprehension.
We need not consider the case of a complete adept in this connection. In
the first two cases, according to our supposition, spiritual and mental
experiences exist together ; when spiritual consciousness exists, the
existence of the seventh principle being recognized, it maintains its connection
with the fifth and sixth principles. But the existence of
173 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
terrestrial attachments creates
the necessity of Punarjanmam
(re-birth), the latter signifying the evolution of a new set of
objective and subjective experiences, constituting a new combination of
surrounding circumstances, or, in other words, a new world. The period between
death and the next subsequent birth is occupied with the preparation required
for the evolution of these new experiences. During the period of incubation, as
you call it, the spirit will never of its own accord appear in this world,
nor can
it so appear.
There is a great law in this universe which consists
in the reduction of subjective experiences to objective phenomena, and the
evolution of the former from the latter. This is otherwise called “cyclic
necessity.” Man is subjected to this law if he do not check and counterbalance
the usual destiny or fate, and he can only escape its control by subduing all
his terrestrial attachments completely. The new combination of
circumstances under which he will then be placed may be better or worse than
the terrestrial conditions under which he lived; but in his progress to a new
world, you may be sure he will never turn around to have a look at his
spiritualistic friends.
In the third of the above three cases there is, by our supposition, no
recognition of spiritual consciousness or of spirits; so they are non-existing
so far as he is concerned. The case is similar to that of an organ or faculty
which remains unused for a long time. It then practically ceases to exist.
These entities, as it were, remain his, or in his possession, when they are
stamped with the stamp
174 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
of recognition. When such is not
the ease, the whole of his individuality is centred in his fifth
principle. And after death this fifth principle is the only representative
of the individual in question.
By itself it cannot evolve for itself a new set of objective experiences, or, to
say the same thing in other words, it has no punarjanmam. It is such an
entity that can appear in séance-rooms; but it is absurd to call it a
disembodied spirit.* It is merely a
power or force retaining the impressions of the thoughts or ideas of the
individual into whose composition it originally entered. It sometimes summons to
its aid the Kamarupa power, and creates for itself some particular
ethereal form (not necessarily human).
Its tendencies of action will be similar to those of the individual’s mind when
he was living. This entity maintains its existence so long as the impressions on
the power associated with the fifth principle remain intact. In course of time
they are effaced, and the power in question is then mixed up in the current of
its corresponding power in the MACROCOSM, as the river loses itself in the sea.
Entities like these may afford signs of there having been considerable
intellectual power in the individuals to which they belonged; because very high
intellectual power may co-exist with utter absence of spiritual consciousness.
But from this circumstance it cannot be argued that either the
————————————————————
*
It is especially on this
point that the Aryan and Arahat doctrines quite agree. The teaching and argument
that follow are in every respect those of the Buddhist Himalayan Brotherhood.— ED. Theos.
175 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
spirits or the spiritual Egos of
deceased individuals appear in séance-rooms.
There are some people in India who have thoroughly studied the nature of such
entities (called Pisacham). I do not know much about them
experimentally, as I have never meddled with this disgusting, profitless, and
dangerous branch of investigation.
The Spiritualists do not know what they are really doing. Their investigations
are likely to result in course of time either in wicked sorcery or in the utter
spiritual ruin of thousands of men and women.*
The views I have herein expressed have been often illustrated by our ancient
writers by Comparing the course of a man’s life or existence to the orbital
motion of a planet round the sun. Centripetal force is spiritual attraction,
and centrifugal terrestrial attraction. As the centripetal force increases in
magnitude in comparison with the centrifugal force, the planet approaches the
sun—the individual reaches a higher plane of existence. If, on the other hand,
the centrifugal force becomes greater than the centripetal force, the planet is
removed to a greater distance from the sun, and moves in a new orbit at that
distance—the individual comes to a lower level of existence. These are
illustrated in the first two instances I have noticed above.
We have only to consider the two extreme cases.
When the planet in its approach to the sun passes over the line where the
centripetal and
————————————————————
* We share entirely in this idea.—ED. Theos.
176 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
centrifugal force completely
neutralize each other, and is only acted on by the centripetal force, it rushes
towards the sun with a gradually increasing velocity, and is finally mixed up
with the mass of the sun’s body. This is the case of a complete
adept.
Again, when the planet in its
retreat from the sun reaches a point
where the centrifugal force becomes all-powerful, it flies off in a tangential
direction from its orbit, and goes into the depths of void space. When it ceases
to be under the control of
the sun, it gradually gives up its generative heat, and the creative energy that
it originally derived from the sun, and remains a cold mass of material
particles wandering through space until the mass is completely decomposed into
atoms. This cold mass is compared to the fifth principle under the conditions
above noticed, and the heat, light, and energy that left it are compared to the
sixth and seventh principles.
Either after assuming a new orbit or in its course of deviation from the old
orbit to the new, the planet can never go back to any point in its old orbit,
as the various orbits lying in different planes never intersect each other.
This figurative representation correctly explains the ancient Brahmanical theory
on the subject. It is merely a branch of what is called the Great Law of the
Universe by the ancient mystics.
T. SUBBA Row.
177 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
APPENDIX
NOTE I.
IN this connection it will be well to draw the reader’s attention to the fact that the country called “Si-dzang” by the Chinese, and Tibet by Western geographers, is mentioned in the oldest books preserved in the province of Fo-kien (the headquarters of the aborigines of China) as the great seat of occult learning in the archaic ages. According to these records, it was inhabited by the “Teachers of Light,” the “Sons of Wisdom” and the “Brothers of the Sun.” The Emperor Yu the “Great” (2207 B.C.), a pious mystic, is credited with having obtained his occult wisdom and the system of theocracy established by him—for he was the first one to unite in China ecclesiastical power with temporal authority—from Si-dzang. That system was the same as with the old Egyptians and the Chaldees ; that which we know to have existed in the Brahmanical period in India, and to exist now in Tibet—namely, all the learning, power, the temporal as well as the secret wisdom were concentrated within the hierachy of the priests and limited to their caste. Who were the aborigines of Tibet is a question which no ethnographer is able to answer correctly at present. They practise the Bhon religion, their sect is a pre- and anti- Buddhistic one, and they are to be found mostly in the province of Kam. That is all that is known of them. But even that would justify the supposition that they are the greatly degenerated descendants
178 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
of mighty and wise forefathers. Their ethnical type shows that they are not pure Turanians, and their rites—now those of sorcery, incantations, and Nature-worship—remind one far more of the popular rites of the Babylonians, as found in the records preserved on the excavated cylinders, than of the religious practices of the Chinese sect of Tao-sse (a religion based upon pure reason and spirituality), as alleged by some. Generally, little or no difference is made, even by the Kyelang missionaries, who mix greatly with these people on the borders of British Lahoul and ought to know better, between the Bhons and the two rival Buddhist sects, the Yellow Caps and the Red Caps. The latter of these have opposed the reform of Tzong-ka-pa from the first, and have always adhered to old Buddhism, so greatly mixed up now with the practices of the Bhons. Were our Orientalists to know more of them, and compare the ancient Babylonian Bel or Baal worship with the rites of the Bhons. they would find an undeniable connection between the two. To begin an argument here, proving the origin of the aborigines of Tibet as connected with one of the three great races which superseded each other in Babylonia, whether we call them the Akkadians (a name invented by F. Lenormant), or the primitive Turanians, Chaldees, and Assyrians, is out of the question. Be it as it may, there is reason to call the trans-Himalayan esoteric doctrine Chaldeo-Tibetan. And when we remember that the Vedas came, agreeably to all traditions, from the Mansarawara Lake in Tibet, and the Brahmins themselves from the far North, we are justified in
179 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
looking on the esoteric doctrines of every people who once had or still has it, as having proceeded from one and the same source; and to thus call it the “Aryan-Chaldeo-Tibetan” doctrine, or Universal Wisdom-Religion. “Seek for the Lost Word among the hierophants of Tartary, China, and Tibet,” was the advice of Swedenborg the seer.
NOTE II.
Not necessarily, we say. The Vedas, Brahmanism, and along with these, Sanskrit, were importations into what we now regard as India. They were never indigenous to its soil. There was a time when the ancient nations of the West included under the generic name of India many of the countries of Asia now classified under other names. There was an Upper, a Lower, and a Western India, even during the comparatively late period of Alexander; and Persia (Iran) is called Western India in some ancient classics. The countries now named Tibet, Mongolia, and Great Tartary were considered by them as forming part of India. When we say, therefore, that India has civilized the world, and was the Alma Mater of the civilizations, arts, and sciences of all other nations (Babylonia, and perhaps even Egypt, included) we mean archaic, pre-historic India, India of the time when the great Gobi was a sea, and the lost “Atlantis” formed part of an unbroken continent which began at the Himalayas and ran down over Southern India, Ceylon, and Java, to far-away Tasmania.
180 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
NOTE III.
To ascertain such disputed questions, one has to look into and study well the Chinese sacred and historical records—a people whose era begins nearly 4,600 years back (2697 B.C.). A people so accurate, and by whom some of the most important inventions of modern Europe and its so much boasted modern science were anticipated—such as the compass, gunpowder, porcelain, paper, printing, &c.—known and practised thousands of years before these were rediscovered by the Europeans, ought to receive some trust for their records. And from Lao-tze down to Hiouen-Thsang their literature is filled with allusions and references to that island and the wisdom of the Himalayan adepts. In the “Catena of Buddhist Scriptures from the Chinese,” by the Rev. Samuel Beal, there is a chapter “On the TIAN-TA’I School of Buddhism” (pp. 244—258) which our opponents ought to read. Translating the rules of that most celebrated and holy school and sect in China founded by Chiu-che-K’hae, called Che-chay (the Wise One), in the year 575 of our era, when coming to the sentence which reads “That which relates to the one garment (seamless) worn by the GREAT TEACHERS or THE SNOWY MOUNTAINS, the school of the Haimavatas” (p. 256), the European translator places after the last sentence a sign of interrogation, as well he may. The statistics of the school of the “Haimavatas,” or of our Himalayan Brotherhood, are not to be found in the general census records of India. Further, Mr. Beal translates a rule
181 ————————————————————THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
relating to “the great
professors of the higher order who live in mountain depths remote from men,” the
Aranyakas, or hermits.
So, with respect to the traditions concerning this island, and apart from the
(to them) historical records
of this preserved in the Chinese and Tibetan sacred books, the legend is alive
to this day among the people of Tibet. The fair island is no more, but the
country where it once bloomed remains there still, and the spot is well known to
some of the “great teachers of the Snowy Mountains,” however much convulsed and
changed its topography by the awful cataclysm. Every
seventh year these teachers are believed to assemble
in SCHAM-BHA-LA, the “Happy
Land.” According to the general belief it is situated in the north-west of
Tibet. Some place it within the unexplored central regions, inaccessible even to
the fearless nomadic tribes; others hem it in between the range of the Gangdisri
Mountains and the northern edge of the Gobi desert, south and north, and the
more populated regions of Khoondooz and Kashmir, of the
Gya-Pheling (British India), and China,
west and east, which affords to the curious mind a pretty large latitude to
locate it in. Others still place it between Namur Nur and the Kuen-Lun
Mountains, but one and all firmly believe in Scham-bha-la, and speak of it as a
fertile fairy-like land once an island, now an oasis of incomparable beauty, the
place of meeting of the inheritors of the esoteric wisdom of the god-like
inhabitants of the legendary island.
In connection with the archaic legend of the
182 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
Asian Sea and the Atlantic Continent, is it not profitable to note a fact known to all modern geologists—that the Himalayan slopes afford geological proof that the substance of those lofty peaks was once a part of an ocean floor?
NOTE IV.
We have already pointed out that, in our opinion, the whole difference between Buddhistic and Vedantic philosophies was that the former was a kind of Rationalistic Vedantism, while the latter might be regarded as transcendental Buddhism. If the Aryan esotericism applies the term jivatma to the seventh principle—the pure and per se unconscious spirit—it is because the Vedanta, postulating three kinds of existence— (1) the paramarthika (the true, the only real one), (2) the vyavaharika (the practical), and (3) the pratibhasika (the apparent or illusory life)—makes the first life or jiva, the only truly existent one. Brahma, or the ONE’S SELF, is its only representative in the universe, as it is the universal Life in toto, while the other two are but its “phenomenal appearances,” imagined and created by ignorance, and complete illusions suggested to us by our blind senses. The Buddhists, on the other hand, deny either subjective or objective reality even to that one Self-Existence. Buddha declares that there is neither Creator nor an Absolute Being. Buddhist rationalism was ever too alive to the insuperable difficulty of admitting one absolute consciousness, as in the words of Flint, “wherever there is consciousness there is
183———————————————————— THE SEVENFOLD PRINCIPLE IN MAN.
relation, and wherever there is relation there is dualism.” The ONE LIFE is either “MUKTA” (absolute and unconditioned), and can have no relation to anything nor to any one; or it is “BADDHA” (bound and conditioned), and then it cannot be called the absolute; the limitation, moreover, necessitating another deity as powerful as the first to account for all the evil in this world. Hence, the Arahat secret doctrine on cosmogony admits but of one absolute, indestructible, eternal, and uncreated UNCONSCIOUSNESS (so to translate) of an element (the word being used for want of a better term) absolutely independent of everything else in the universe; a something ever present or ubiquitous, a Presence which ever was, is, and will be, whether there is a God, gods, or none, whether there is a universe, or no universe, existing during the eternal cycles of Maha Yugs, during the Pralayas as during the periods of Manvantara, and this is SPACE, the field for the operation of the eternal Forces and natural Law, the basis (as Mr. Subba Row rightly calls it) upon which take place the eternal intercorrelations of Akása-Prakriti; guided by the unconscious regular pulsations of Sakti, the breath or power of a conscious deity, the theists would say; the eternal energy of an eternal, unconscious Law, say the Buddhists. Space, then, or “Fan, Bar-nang” (Mâha Sunyatâ) or, as it is called by Lao-tze, the “ Emptiness,” is the nature of the Buddhist Absolute. (See Confucius’ “ Praise of the Abyss.”) The word jiva, then, could never be applied by the Arahats to the Seventh Principle, since it is only through its cor-
184 ———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
relation or contact with matter that Fo-hat (the Buddhist active energy) can develop active conscious life; and that to the question “how can unconsciousness generate consciousness?” the answer would be: “Was the seed which generated a Bacon or a Newton self-conscious?”
NOTE V.
To our European readers, deceived by the phonetic similarity, it must not be thought that the name “Brahman” is identical in this connection with Brahma or Iswara, the personal God. The Upanishads—the Vedanta Scriptures—mention no such God, and one would vainly seek in them any allusions to a conscious deity. The Brahman, or Parabrahm, the absolute of the Vedantins, is neuter and unconscious, and has no connection with the masculine Brahmâ of the Hindu Triad, or Trimurti. Some Orientalists rightly believe the name derived from the verb “Brih,” to grow or increase, and to be in this sense the universal expansive force of Nature, the vivifying and spiritual principle or power spread throughout the universe, and which, in its collectivity, is the one Absoluteness, the one Life and the only Reality.
H. P. BLAVATSKY.
SEPTENARY DIVISION IN DIFFERENT
INDIAN SYSTEMS
We give below in a tabular form the classifications, adopted by Buddhist and by
Vedantic teachers, of the principles in man :—
Classification in Esoteric Vedantic Classification.
Classification in
Buddhism. Târaka Raja
Yoga.
|
(1.) (7.) |
|
Annamaya kosa. |
} Sthulopadhi.
Karanopadhi. |
From the foregoing table it will be seen that the third principle in the Buddhist classification is not separately mentioned in the Vedantic division as it is merely the vehicle of prána. It will also be seen that the fourth principle is included in the third kosa (sheath), as the said principle is but the vehicle of will-power, which is but an energy of the mind. It must also be noticed that the Vignanamayakosa is considered to be distinct from the Manomayakosa, as a division is made after death between the lower part
186 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
of the mind, as it were, which has a closer
affinity with the fourth principle than with the sixth and its higher part,
which attaches itself to the latter, and which is, in fact, the basis for the
higher spiritual individuality of man.
We may also here point out to our readers that the classification mentioned in
the last column is for all practical purposes connected with Raja Yoga, the best
and simplest. Though their are seven principles in man, there are but three
distinct Upadhis (bases), in each of which his Atma may work
independently of the rest. These three Upadhis can be separated by an adept
without killing himself. He cannot separate the seven principles from each other
without destroying his constitution.
T. S.
THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE IN
ESOTERICISM
SINCE the exposition of the Arhat esoteric doctrine was begun, many who
had not acquainted themselves with the occult basis of Hindu philosophy have
imagined that the two were in conflict. Some of the more bigoted have openly
charged the Occultists of the Theosophical Society with propagating rank
Buddhistic heresy; and have even gone to the length of affirming that the whole
Theosophic movement was but a masked Buddhistic
propaganda. We were taunted by ignorant Brahmins and learned Europeans that our septenary divisions of Nature and everything in it, including man, are arbitrary
and not endorsed by the oldest religious systems of the East. It is now proposed
to throw a cursory glance at the Vedas, the Upanishads, the Law-Books of Manu,
and especially the Vedanta, and show that they too support our position. Even in
their crude exotericism their affirmation of the sevenfold divison is apparent.
Passage after passage may be cited in proof. And not only can the mysterious
number be found traced on every page of the oldest Aryan Sacred Scriptures, but
in the oldest books of Zoroastrianism as well; in the rescued cylindrical
188———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
tile records of old Babylonia and Chaldea, in
the Book of the Dead” and the Ritualism of
ancient Egypt, and even in the Mosaic books— without mentioning the secret
Jewish works, such as the Kabala.
The limited space at command forces us to allow a few brief quotations to stand
as landmarks and not even attempt long explanations. It is no exaggeration to
say that upon each of the few hints now given in the cited Slokas a thick volume
might be written.
From the well-known hymn To Time, in the Atharva-Veda (xix. 53)—
“Time, like a brilliant steed with seven rays,
Full of fecundity, bears all things onward.
*
* * * *
*
Time, like a seven-wheeled, seven-naved car moves on,
His rolling
wheels are all the worlds, his axle
Is immortality . . . ”
—down to Manu, “the first and the seventh man,” the Vedas, the
Upanishads, and all the later systems of philosophy teem with allusions to this
number. Who was Manu, the son of Swayambhuva? The secret doctrine tells us that
this Manu was no man, but the representation of the first human races
evolved with the help of the Dhyan-Chohans (Devas) at the beginning of
the first Round. But we are told in his Laws (Book i. 80) that there are
fourteen Manus for every Kalpa or “interval from creation to creation “ (read
interval from one minor “Pralaya” to another) and that “in the
present divine age there have been as yet seven Manus.” Those who know
that
189————————————————————THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE.
there are seven Rounds, of which we have passed
three, and are now in the fourth; and who are taught that there are seven dawns
and seven twilights, or fourteen Manvantaras; that at the beginning of
every Round and at the end, and on and between the
planets, there is “an awakening to illusive life,“and an awakening to
real life,” and that, moreover, there are “root-Manus,” and what we have
to clumsily translate as the “seed-Manus”—the seeds for the human races of
the forthcoming Round (a mystery
divulged but to those who have passed the 3rd degree in initiation); those who
have learned all that, will be better prepared to understand the meaning of the
following. We are told in the Sacred Hindu Scriptures that “the first Manu
produced six other Manus (seven primary Manus in all), and these
produced in their turn each seven other Manus” (Bhrigu i. 61-63),* the
production of the latter standing in the occult treatises as 7 x 7. Thus it
becomes clear that Manu—the last one, the progenitor of our Fourth Round
Humanity—must be the seventh, since we are on our fourth Round, and that there is
a root-Manu on globe A and a seed-Manu on globe G. Just as each
planetary Round commences with the appearance of a “Root-Manu” (Dhyan-Chohan)
and closes with a “Seed-Manu,” so a root- and a seed-Manu appear
respectively at the beginning and the termination
————————————————————
* The fact that Manu himself is made to declare that
he was created by
Viraj and then produced the ten Prajapatis, who again produced seven
Menus, who in their turn gave birth to seven other Manus (Manu, i.
33-36), relates to other still earlier mysteries, and is at the same time a
blind with regard to the doctrine of the Septenary chain.
190 ————————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
of the human period on any particular planet. It
will be easily seen from the foregoing statement that a Manu-antaric
period means, as the term implies, the time between the appearance of two
Manus or Dhyan-Chohans: and hence a minor Manu-antara is the duration of
the seven races on any particular planet, and a major Manu-antara is the
period of one human round along the planetary chain. Moreover, that, as it is
said that each of the seven Manus creates 7 x 7 Manus, and that there are
49 root-races on the seven planets during each Round, then every root-race has
its Manu. The present seventh Manu is called “Vaivasvata,” and stands in the
exoteric texts for that Manu who represents in India the Babylonian Xisusthrus
and the Jewish Noah. But in the esoteric books we are told that Manu Vaivasvata,
the progenitor of our fifth race—who saved it from the flood that nearly
exterminated the fourth (Atlantean)—is not the seventh Manu, mentioned in the
nomenclature of the Root, or primitive Manus, but one of the 49 “emanated from
this ‘root ‘-Manu.”
For clearer comprehension we here give the names of the 14 Manus in their
respective order and relation to each Round :—
1st 1st (Root) Manu on Planet A.—Swayambhuva.
Round. 1st (Seed) Manu on Planet G.—Swarochi (or)Swarotisha.
2nd 2nd (R.) M. on Planet A.—Uttama.
Round
2nd (S.) M. ,, ,,
G.—Thamasa.
3rd 3rd (R.) M. ,, ,, A.—Raivata.
Round
3rd (S.) M. ,, ,,
G.—Chackchuska.
4th 4th (R.) M. ,, ,, A.—Vaivasvata (our pro-
Round 4th (S.) M. ,, ,, G.—Savarni.
[genitor).
5th 5th (R.) M. ,, ,, A.—Daksha Savarni.
Round
5th (S.) M. ,, ,, G.—Brahma Savarni.
191————————————————————THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE.
6th 6th
(R.) M. on Planet A.—Dharma Savarni.
Round 6th (S.) M. ,, ,,
G.—Rudra Savarni.
7th 7th (R.) M. ,, ,,
A.—Rouchya.
Round 7th (S.) M. ,, ,,
G.—Bhoutya.
Vaivasvata thus, though
seventh in the order given, is the primitive Root-Mann of our fourth Human Wave [the reader must
always remember that Manu is not a man but collective humanity], while our
Vaivasvata was but one of the seven Minor Manus who are made to preside over
the seven races of this our planet. Each of these has to become the witness of
one of the periodical and ever-recurring cataclysms (by fire and water in turn)
that close the cycle of every root-race. And it is this Vaivasvata—the Hindu
ideal embodiment called respectively Xisusthrus, Deukalion, Noah, and by other
names—who is the allegorical man who rescued our race when nearly the whole
population of one hemisphere perished by water, while the other hemisphere was
awakening from its temporary obscuration.
The number seven stands prominently conspicuous in even a cursory
comparison of the 11th Tablet of the Izdhubar Legends of the Chaldean account
of the Deluge and the so-called Mosaic books. In both the number seven plays a
most
prominent part. The clean beasts are taken by sevens, the fowls by sevens
also ; in seven days, it is promised Noah, to rain upon the earth
; thus he stays “yet other seven days,” and again seven days;
while in the Chaldean. account of the Deluge, on the seventh day the
rain abated. On the seventh day the dove is sent out ; by sevens,
Xisusthrus
192———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
takes “jugs of wine” for the altar, &c. Why such
coincidence? And yet we are told by, and bound to believe in, the European
Orientalists, when passing judgment alike upon the Babylonian and Aryan
chronology they call them “extravagant and fanciful !” Nevertheless, while they
give us no explanation of, nor have they ever noticed, as far as we know, the
strange identity in the totals of the Semitic, Chaldean, and Aryan
Hindu chronology, the students of Occult Philosophy find the following fact
extremely suggestive. While the period of the reign of the 10 Babylonian antediluvian kings is given as 432,000 years,* the duration of the postdiluvian
Kali-yug is also given as 432,000, while the four ages or the divine Maha-yug,
yield in their totality 4,320,000 years. Why should they, if fanciful and
“extravagant,” give the identical figures, when neither the Aryans nor the
Babylonians have surely borrowed anything from each other ! We invite the
attention of our occultists to the three figures given—4 standing for the
perfect square, 3 for the triad (the seven universal and the seven individual
principles), and 2 the symbol of our illusionary world, a figure ignored and
rejected by Pythagoras.
It is in the Upanishads and the Vedanta though, that we have to
look for the best corroborations of the occult teachings. In the mystical
doctrine the Rahasya, or the Upanishads—” the only Veda of all
thoughtful Hindus in the present day,” as
————————————————————
* See “Babylonia,” by George Smith, p. 36. Here again, as with the Manus
and 10 Prajapatis and the 10 Sephiroths in the Book of
Numbers—they dwindle down to seven!
193———————————————————— THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE.
Monier Williams is made to confess, every word,
as its very name implies,* has a secret meaning underlying it. This meaning can
be fully realized only by him who has a full knowledge of Prana, the ONE
LIFE, “the nave to which are attached the seven spokes of the Universal
Wheel.” (Hymn to Prana, Atharva-Veda, XI. 4.)
Even European Orientalists agree that all the systems in India assign to the
human body: (a) an exterior or gross body (sthula-sarira); (b) an
inner or shadowy body (sukshma), or linga-sarira (the vehicle),
the two cemented with—c, life (jiv or Karana sarira, “causal
body”).† These the occult system or esotericism divides into seven, farther
adding to these—kama, manas, buddhi and atman. The Nyaya
philosophy when treating of Prameyas (by which the objects and subjects
of Praman are to be correctly understood) includes among the 12 the seven
“root principles.” (see ixth Sutra), which are 1, soul (atman), and
2 its superior spirit Jivatman; 3, body (sarira); 4, senses (indriya);
5, activity or will (pravritti); 6, mind (manas); 7,
Intellection (Buddhi). The seven Padarthas (inquiries or
predicates of existing things) of Kanada in the Vaise-
————————————————————
* Upanishad means,
according to Brahminical authority, “to conquer ignorance by revealing the
secret spiritual knowledge.” According to Monier Williams, the title is
derived from the root sad with the prepositions upa and ni,
and implies “something mystical that underlies or is beneath the surface.”
† This Karana-sarira is often mistaken by the uninitiated for
Linga-sarira, and since it is described as the inner rudimentary or latent
embryo of the body, confounded with it. But the Occultists regard it as the
life (body) or Jiv, which disappears at death is withdrawn—leaving
the 1st and 3rd principles to disintegrate and return to their elements.
194———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
shikas, refer in the occult doctrine to
the seven qualities or attributes of the seven principles. Thus: 1, substance
(dravya) refers to body or sthula-sarira, 2, quality or
property (guna) to the life principle, jiv; 3, action or act (karman)
to the Linga-sarira; 4, Community or commingling of properties (Samanya)
to Kamarupa; 5, personality or conscious individuality ( Visesha)
to Manas; 6, co-inherence or perpetual intimate relation (Samuvuya)
to Buddhi, the inseparable vehicle of Atman; 7, non-existence
or non-being in the sense of, and as separate from, objectivity or
substance (abhava)—to the highest monad or Atman.
Thus, whether we view the ONE as the Vedic Purusha or Brahman (neuter) the
“all-expanding essence;” or as the universal spirit, the “light of lights” (jyotisham
jyotih) the TOTAL independent of all relation, of the Upanishads; or
as the Paramatman of the Vedanta; or again as Kanada’s Adrishta, “the
unseen Force,” or divine atom; or as Prakriti, the “eternally existing
essence,” of Kapila—we find in all these impersonal universal Principles
the latent capability of evolving out of themselves “six rays” (the evolver
being the seventh). The third aphorism of the Sankhya-Karika,
which says of Prakriti that it is the “root and substance of all things,” and
no production, but itself a producer of “seven things, which produced by
it, become also producers,” has a purely occult meaning.
What are the “producers” evoluted from this universal root-principle,
Mula-prakriti or undifferentiated primeval cosmic matter, which
evolves out
195 ————————————————————THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE.
of itself consciousness and mind, and is generally called “Prakriti ” and amulam mulam, “ the rootless root,” and Aryakta, the “unevolved evolver,” &c.? This primordial tattwa or “eternally existing ‘that,’”the unknown essence, is said to produce as a first producer, 1, Buddhi—“intellect”— whether we apply the latter to the 6th macrocosmic or microcosmic principle. This first produced produces in its turn (or is the source of) Ahankara, “self- consciousness” and manas “mind.” The reader will please always remember that the Mahat or great source of these two internal faculties, “Buddhi” per se, can have neither self-consciousness nor mind; viz., the 6th principle in man can preserve an essence of personal self-consciousness or “personal individuality” only by absorbing within itself its own waters, which have run through that finite faculty; for Ahankara, that is the perception of “I,” or the sense of one’s personal individuality, justly represented by the term “Ego-ism,” belongs to the second, or rather the third, production out of the seven, viz., to the 5th principle, or Manas. It is the latter which draws “as the web issues from the spider” along the thread of Prakriti, the “root principle,” the four following subtle elementary principles or particles—Tanmatras, out of which “third class,” the Mahabhutas or the gross elementary principles, or rather sarira and rupas, are evolved—the kama, linga, Jiva and sthula-sarira. The three gun as of Prakriti “—the Sattwa, Rajas and Tamas (purity, passionate activity, and ignorance or darkness)— spun into a triple-stranded cord or “rope,” pass through the seven, or rather six, human principles.
196———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
It depends on the 5th—Manas or Ahankara,
the “I ”—to thin the guna, “rope,” into one thread— the sattwa; and thus
by becoming one with the “unevolved evolver,” win immortality or eternal
conscious existence. Otherwise it will be again resolved into its Mahabhautic
essence; so long as the triple-stranded rope is left unstranded, the spirit
(the divine monad) is bound by the presence of the gunas in the principles “like
an animal” (purusha pasu). The spirit, atman or jivatman (the 7th
and 6th principles), whether of the macro- or microcosm, though
bound by these gunas during the objective manifestation of universe or man, is
yet nirguna—i.e., entirely free from them. Out of the three producers or
evolvers, Prakriti, Buddhi and Ahankara, it is but the latter
that can be caught (when man is concerned) and destroyed when personal.
The “divine monad” is aguna (devoid of qualities), while Prakriti, once
that from passive Mula-prakriti it has become avyakta (an active
evolver) is gunavat—endowed with qualities. With the latter, Purusha or Atman
can have nought to do (of course being unable to perceive it in its gunuvatic
state); with the former—or Mula-prakriti or undifferentiated cosmic
essence— it has, since it is one with it and identical.
The Atma Bodha, or “knowledge of soul,” a tract written by the great
Sankaracharya, speaks distinctly of the seven principles in man (see 14th
verse). They are called therein the five sheaths (panchakosa) in which is
enclosed the divine monad—the Atman, and Buddhi, the 7th and 6th
principles, or the individuated soul when made distinct (through avidya, maya
and the gunas) from the supreme soul—
197———————————————————— THE SEPTENARY PRINCIPLE.
Parabrahm. The 1st sheath, called
Ananda-maya—the “illusion of supreme bliss”—is the manas or
fifth principle of the occultists, when united with Buddhi; the 2nd
sheath is Vjnana-maya-kosa, the case or “envelope of self-delusion,” the
in manas when self-deluded into the belief of the personal “I,”or
ego, with its vehicle. The 3rd, the Mano-maya sheath, composed of
“illusionary mind” associated with the organs of action and will, is the
Kamarupa and Linga-sarira combined, producing an illusive “I” or
Mayavi-rupa. The 4th sheath is called Prana-maya, illusionary life,”
our second life principle or jiv, wherein resides life, the
“breathing” sheath. The 5th kosa is called Anna-maya, or the sheath
supported by food—our gross material body. All these
sheaths produce other smaller sheaths, or six attributes or qualities each, the
seventh being always the root sheath; and the Atman or spirit passing
through all these subtle ethereal bodies like a thread, is called the “thread-soul” or sutratman.
We may conclude with the above demonstration. Verily the Esoteric doctrine
may well be called in its turn the “thread-doctrine,” since, like Sutratman
or Pranatman, it passes through and strings together all the ancient
philosophical religious systems, and, what is more, reconciles and explains
them. For though seeming so unlike externally, they have but one foundation, and
of that the extent, depth, breadth and nature are known to those who have
become, like the “Wise Men of the East,” adepts in Occult Science.
H. P. BLAVATSKY.
PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD
AT the outset I shall request my readers (such of them at least as are not acquainted with the Cosmological theories of the Idealistic thinkers of Europe) to examine John Stuart Mill’s Cosmological speculations as contained in his examination of Sir William Hamilton’s philosophy, before attempting to understand the Adwaita doctrine; and I beg to inform them beforehand that in explaining the main principles of the said doctrine, I am going to use, as far as it is convenient to do so, the phraseology adopted by English psychologists of the Idealistic school of thought. In dealing with the phenomena of our present plane of existence John Stuart Mill ultimately came to the conclusion that matter, or the so-called external phenomena, are but the creation of our mind; they are the mere appearances of a particular phase of our subjective self, and of our thoughts, volitions, sensations and emotions which in their totality constitute the basis of that Ego. Matter then is the permanent possibility of sensations, and the so-called Laws of matter are, properly speaking, the Laws which govern the succession and coexistence of our states of consciousness. Mill further holds that properly speaking there is no
199————————————————————PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD
noumenal Ego. The very idea of a mind existing
separately as an entity, distinct from the states of consciousness which are
supposed to inhere in it, is in his opinion illusory, as the idea of an external
object, which is supposed to be perceived by our senses.
Thus the ideas of mind and matter, of subject and object, of the Ego and
external world, are really evolved from the aggregation of our mental states
which are the only realities so far as we are concerned.
The chain of our mental states or states of consciousness is “a double
headed-monster,” according to Professor Bain, which has two distinct aspects,
one objective and the other subjective. Mr. Mill has paused here, confessing
that psychological analysis did not go any further; the mysterious link which
connects together the train of our states of consciousness and gives rise to our
Ahankaram in this condition of existence, still remains au incomprehensible
mystery to Western psychologists, though its existence is but dimly perceived in
the subjective phenomena of memory and expectation.
On the other hand, the great physicists of Europe are gradually coming to the
conclusion* that mind is the product of matter, or that it is one of the
attributes of matter in some of its conditions. It would appear, therefore, from
the speculations of Western psychologists that matter is evolved from mind and
that mind is evolved from matter. These two propositions are apparently
irreconcil-
————————————————————
* See Tyndall’s Belfast Address.—S. R.
200———————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
able. Mill and Tyndall have admitted that Western science is yet unable to go deeper into the question. Nor is it likely to solve the mystery hereafter, unless it calls Eastern occult science to its aid and takes a more comprehensive view of the capabilities of the real subjective self of man and the various aspects of the great objective universe. The great Adwaitee philosophers of ancient Aryavarta have examined the relationship between subject and object in every condition of existence in this solar system in which this differentiation is presented. Just as a human being is composed of seven principles, differentiated matter in the solar system exists in seven different conditions. These different states of matter do not all come within the range of our present objective consciousness. But they can be objectively perceived by the spiritual Ego in man. To the liberated spiritual monad of man, or to the Dhyan Chohans, every thing that is material in every condition of matter is an object of perception. Further, Pragna or the capacity of perception exists in seven different aspects corresponding to the seven conditions of matter. Strictly speaking, there are but six states of matter, the so-called seventh state being the aspect of cosmic matter in its original undifferentiated condition. Similarly there are six states of differentiated Pragna, the seventh state being a condition of perfect unconsciousness. By differentiated Pragna, I mean the condition in which Pragna is split up into various states of consciousness. Thus we have six states of consciousness, either objective or subjective for the time being, as
201—————————————————— PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD.
the case may be, and a perfect state of unconsciousness, which is the beginning and the end of all conceivable states of consciousness, corresponding to the states of differentiated matter and its original undifferentiated basis which is the beginning and the end of all cosmic evolutions. It will be easily seen that the existence of consciousness is necessary for the differentiation between subject and object. Hence these two phases are presented in six different conditions, and in the last state there being no consciousness as above stated, the differentiation in question ceases to exist. The number of these various conditions is different in different systems of philosophy. But whatever may be the number of divisions, they all lie between perfect unconsciousness at one end of the line and our present state of consciousness or Bahirpragna at the other end. To understand the real nature of these different states of consciousness, I shall request my readers to compare the consciousness of the ordinary man with the consciousness of the astral man, and again compare the latter with the consciousness of the spiritual Ego in man. In these three conditions the objective universe is not the same. But the difference between the Ego and the non-Ego is common to all these conditions. Consequently, admitting the correctness of Mill’s reasoning as regards the subject and object of our present plane of consciousness, the great Adwaitee thinkers of India have extended the same reasoning to other states of consciousness, and came to the conclusion that the various conditions of the Ego and the non-Ego
202 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
were but the appearances of one and the same
entity—the ultimate state of unconsciousness. This entity is neither matter nor
spirit; it is neither Ego nor non-Ego; and it is neither object nor subject. In
the language of Hindu philosophers it is the original and eternal combination
of Purusha and Prakriti. As the Adwaitees hold that an external object is merely
the product of our mental states, Prakriti is nothing more than illusion, and
Purush is the only reality ; it is the one existence which remains
eternal in this universe of Ideas. This entity then is the Parabrahmam of the
Adwaitees. Even if there were to be a personal God with anything like a material
Upadhi (physical basis of whatever form), from the standpoint of an
Adwaitee there will he as much reason to doubt his noumenal existence as there
would be in the case of any other object. In their opinion, a conscious God
cannot be the origin of the universe, as his Ego would be the effect of a
previous cause, if the word conscious conveys but its ordinary meaning. They
cannot admit that the grand total of all the states of consciousness in the
universe is their deity, as these states are constantly changing and as cosmic
idealism ceases during Pralaya. There is only one permanent condition in the
universe which is the state of perfect unconciousness, bare Chidakasam
(field of consciousness) in fact.
When my readers once realize the fact that this grand universe is in reality but
a huge aggregation of various states of consciousness, they will not be
surprised to find that the ultimate state of
203 —————————————————PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD.
unconsciousness is considered as Parabrahmam by
the Adwaitees.
The idea of a God, Deity, Iswar, or an impersonal God (if consciousness is one
of his attributes) involves the idea of Ego or non-Ego in some shape or other,
and as every conceivable Ego or non-Ego is evolved from this primitive element
(I use this word for want of a better one) the existence of an extra-cosmic god
possessing such. attributes prior to this condition is absolutely inconceivable.
Though I have been speaking of this element as the condition of unconsciousness,
it is, properly speaking, the Chidakasam or Chnmatra of the Hindu
philosophers which contains within itself the potentiality of every condition of
“Pragna,” and which results as consciousness on the one hand and the objective
universe on the other, by the operation of its latent Chichakti (the
power which generates thought).
Before proceeding to discuss the nature of Parabrahmam. It is to be
stated that in the opinion of Adwaitees, the Upanishads and the
Brahmasutras fully support their views on the subject. It is distinctly
affirmed in the Upanishads that Parabrahmam, which is but the
bare potentiality of Pragna,* is not an aspect of Pragna or Ego
in any shape, and that it has neither life nor consciousness. The reader will be
able to ascertain that such is really the case on examining the Mundaka
and Mandukya Upanishads. The language used here and there in the
Upanishads is apt to mislead one into the belief that such
—————————————————
* The power or the capacity that gives rise to
perception.
204 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
language points to the existence of a conscious
Iswar. But the necessity for such language will perhaps be rendered clear from
the following considerations.
From a close examination of Mill’s cosmological theory the difficulty will be
clearly seen referred to above, of satisfactorily accounting for the generation
of conscious states in any human being from the stand-point of the said theory.
It is generally stated that sensations arise in us from the action of the
external objects around us : they are the effects of impressions made on our
senses by the objective world in which we exist. This is simple enough to an
ordinary mind, however difficult it may be to account for the transformation of
a cerebral nerve-current into a state of consciousness.
But from the stand-point of Mill’s theory we have no proof of the existence of
any external object; even the objective existence of our own senses is not a
matter of certainty to us. How, then, are we to account for and explain the
origin of our mental states, if they are the only entities existing in this
world? No explanation is really given by saying that one mental state gives rise
to another mental state, to a certain extent at all events, under the operation
of the so-called psychological “Laws of Association.” Western psychology
honestly admits that its analysis has not gone any further. It may be inferred,
however, from the said theory that there would be no reason for saying that a
material upadhi (basis) is necessary for the existence of mind or states
of consciousness.
As is already indicated, the Aryan psychologists
205—————————————————PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD.
have traced this current of mental states to its
source—the eternal Chinmatra existing everywhere. When the time for
evolution comes this germ of Pragna unfolds itself and results ultimately
as Cosmic ideation. Cosmic ideas are the conceptions of all the
conditions of existence in the Cosmos existing in what may be called the
universal mind (the demiurgic mind of the Western Kabalists).
This Chinmatra exists as it were at every geometrical point of the
infinite Chidakasam. This principle then has two general aspects.
Considered as something objective it is the eternal Asath— Mulaprakriti
or Undifferentiated Cosmic matter. From a subjective point of view it may
be looked upon in two ways. It is Chidakasam when considered as the
field of Cosmic ideation; and it is Chinmatra when considered as the
germ of Cosmic ideation. These three aspects constitute the highest Trinity of
the Aryan Adwaitee philosophers. It will be readily seen that the last-mentioned
aspect of the principle in question is far more important to us than the other
two aspects ; for, when looked upon in this aspect the principle under
consideration seems to embody within itself the great Law of Cosmic Evolution,
And therefore the Adwaitee philosophers have chiefly considered it in this
light, and explained their cosmogony from a subjective point of view. In doing
so, however, they cannot avoid the necessity of speaking of a universal mind
(and this is Brahma, the Creator) and its ideation. But it ought not to
be inferred therefrom that this universal mind necessarily belongs to an
Omnipresent living conscious Creator, simply because in
206 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
ordinary parlance a mind is always spoken of in
connection with a particular living being. It cannot be contended that a
material Uphadi is indispensable for the existence of mind or mental
states when the objective universe itself is, so far as we are concerned, the
result of our states of consciousness. Expressions implying the existence of a
conscious Iswar which arc to be found here and there in the
Upanishads should not therefore be literally construed.
It now remains to be seen how Adwaitees account for the origin of mental states
in a particular individual. Apparently the mind of a particular human being is not
the universal mind. Nevertheless Cosmic ideation is the real source of the
states of consciousness in every individual. Cosmic ideation exists everywhere;
but when placed under restrictions by a material Upadhi it results as the
consciousness of the individual inhering in such Upadhi. Strictly
speaking, an Adwaitee will not admit the objective existence of this material
Upadhi. From his stand-point it is Maya or illusion which exists as a
necessary condition of Pragna. But to avoid confusion, I shall use
the ordinary language; and to enable my readers to grasp my meaning clearly the
following simile may be adopted. Suppose a bright light is placed in the centre
with a curtain around it. The nature of the light that penetrates through the
curtain and becomes visible to a person standing outside depends upon the nature
of the curtain. If several such curtains are thus successively placed around the
light, it will have to penetrate
207 —————————————————PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD.
through all of them; and a person standing
outside will only perceive as much light as is not intercepted by all the
curtains. The central light becomes dimmer and dimmer as curtain after curtain
is placed before the observer; and as curtain after curtain is removed the light
becomes brighter and brighter until it reaches its natural brilliancy.
Similarly, universal mind or Cosmic ideation becomes more and more limited and
modified by the various Upadhis of which a human being is composed ;
and when the action or influence of these various Upadhis is
successively controlled, the mind of the individual human being is placed en
rapport with the universal mind and his ideation is lost in Cosmic ideation.
As I have already said, these Upadhis are strictly speaking the
conditions of the gradual development or evolution of Bahipragna—or
consciousness in the present plane of our existence—from the original and
eternal Chinmatra, which is the seventh principle in man, and the
Parabrahmam of the Adwaitees.
This then is the purport of the Adwaitce philosophy on the subject under
consideration, and it is, in my humble opinion, in harmony with the Arhat
doctrine relating to the same subject. The latter doctrine postulates the
existence of Cosmic matter in an undifferentiated condition throughout the
infinite expanse of space. Space and time are but its aspects, and Purush,
the seventh principle of the universe, has its latent life in this ocean of
Cosmic matter. The doctrine in question explains Cosmogony from an objective
point of view.
208 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
When the period of activity arrives, portions of the who’s differentiate according to the latent law. When this differentiation has commenced, the concealed wisdom or latent Chichakti acts in the universal mind, and Cosmic energy or Fohat forms the manifested universe in accordance with the conceptions generated in the universal mind out of the differentiated principles of Cosmic matter. This manifested universe constitutes a solar system. When the period of Pralaya comes, the process of differentiation stops and Cosmic ideation ceases to exist; and at the time of Brahmapralaya or Mahapralaya the particles of matter lose all differentiation, and the matter that exists in the solar system returns to its original undifferentiated condition. The latent design exists in the one unborn eternal atom, the centre which exists everywhere and nowhere; and this is the one life that exists everywhere. Now, it will be easily seen that the undifferentiated Cosmic matter, Purush, and the ONE LIFE of the Arhat philosophers, are the Mulaprakriti, Chidakasam, and Chinmatra of the Adwaitee philosophers. As regards Cosmogony, the Arhat stand-point is objective, and the Adwaitee standpoint is subjective. The Arhal Cosmogony accounts for the evolution of the manifested solar system from undifferentiated Cosmic matter, and Adwaitee Cosmogony accounts for the evolution of Bahipragna from the original Chinmatra. As the different conditions of differentiated Cosmic matter are but the different aspects of the various conditions of Pragna, the Adwaitee Cosmogony is but the complement of the Arhat Cosmogony. The
209 ————————————————— PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL GOD.
eternal principle is precisely the same in both
the systems, and they agree in denying the existence of an extra-Cosmic God.
The Arhats call themselves Atheists, and they are justified in
doing so if theism inculcates the existence of a conscious God governing
the universe by his will-power. Under such circumstance the Adwaitee will come
under the same denomination. Atheism and theism are words of doubtful import,
and until their meaning is definitely ascertained it would be better not to use
them in connection with any system of philosophy.
T. SUBBA ROW.
PRAKRITI AND PARUSHA
PRAKRITI may be looked upon either as Maya when considered as the
Upadhi of Parabrahmam or as Avidya when considered as the
Upadhi of Jivatma (7th principle in man).* Avidya is ignorance or
illusion arising from Maya. The term Maya, though sometimes used as a synonym
for Avidya, is, properly speaking, applicable to Prakriti only. There is no
difference between Prakriti, Maya and Sakti; and the ancient Hindu philosophers
made no distinction whatsoever between Matter and Force. In support of these
assertions I may refer the learned hermit to “Swetaswatara Upanishad” and its
commentary by Sankaracharya. In case we adopt the fourfold division of the
Adwaitee philosophers, it will be clearly seen that Jagrata, † Swapna
‡ and
Sushupti Avasthas § are the results of Avidya, and that Vyswanara || Hiranyagarbha
¶
and Sutratma** are
——————————————————
* Upadhi—vehicle.
† Jagrata—waking state, or a condition of external perception.
‡ Swapna—dreamy state, or a condition of clairvoyance in the astral plane.
§ Sushupti—a state of extasis; and Avastas—states or conditions of
Pragna.
|| Vyswanara_the magnetic fire that pervades the manifested solar system— the
roost objective aspect of the ONE LIFE.
¶ Hiranyagarbha—the one life as manifested in the plane of astral Light.
** Sutratma—the Eternal germ of the manifested universe existing in the
field of Mulaprakriti.
211 —————————————————— PRAKRITI AND PARUSHA.
the manifestations of Parabrahmam in Maya or
Prakriti. In drawing a distinction between Avidya and Prakriti, I am merely
following the authority of all the great Adwaitee philosophers of Aryavarta. It
will be sufficient for me to refer to the first chapter of the celebrated Vidantic treatise, the Panchadasi.
In truth, Prakriti and Purusha are but the two aspects of the same ONE
REALITY.
As our great Sankaracharya truly observes at the close of his
commentary on the 23rd Sutra of the first chapter of the Brahma sutras, “Parabrahmam is Karta (Purush), as there is no other
Adhishtatha,* and
Parabrahmam is Prakriti, there being no other Upadanam.” This sentence clearly
indicates the relation between “the One Life” and “the One Element” of the Arha-philosophers.
This will elucidate the meaning of the statement so often quoted by Adwaitees—“Sarvam
Khalvitham Brahma’ ?† and also of what is meant by saying that Brahmam
is the Upadanakarnam (material cause) of the Universe.
T. SUBBA ROW.
——————————————————
* Adishtatha—that which inheres in another principle—the active
agent working in Prakriti.
† Everything in the universe is Brahms.
MORALITY AND PANTHEISM
QUESTIONS have been raised in several quarters as to the inefficiency of
Pantheism (which term is intended to include Esoteric Buddhism, Adwaitee
Vedantism, and other similar religious systems) to supply a sound basis of
morality.
The philosophical assimilation of meum and teum, it is urged, must
of necessity be followed by their practical confusion, resulting in the sanction
of cruelty, robbery, &c. This line of argument points, however, most
unmistakably to the co-existence of the objection with an all but utter
ignorance of the systems objected to, in the critic’s mind, as we shall show
by-and-by. The ultimate sanction of morality, as is well known, is derived from
a desire for the attainment of happiness and escape from misery. But schools
differ in their estimate of happiness. Exoteric religions base their morality on
the hope of reward and fear of punishment at the hands of an Omnipotent Ruler of
the Universe by following the rules he has at his pleasure laid down for the
obedience of his helpless subjects ; in some cases, however, religions of later
growth have made morality to depend on the sentiment of gratitude to that Ruler
for benefits received. The worthlessness, not to speak of the mischievousness,
of
213 —————————————————— MORALITY AND PANTHEISM.
such systems of morality is almost self-evident.
As a type of morality founded on hope and fear, we shall take an instance from
the Christian Bible:
“He that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord.” The duty of supporting the
poor is here made to depend upon prudential motives of laying by for a time when
the “giver to the poor” will be incapable of taking care of himself. But the
Mahabharata says that “He that desireth a return for his good deeds loseth
all merit; he is like a merchant bartering his goods.” The true springs of
morality lose their elasticity under the pressure of such criminal selfishness;
all pure and unselfish natures will fly away from it in disgust.
To avoid such consequences attempts have been made by some recent reformers of
religion to establish morality upon the sentiment of gratitude to the Lord. But
it requires no deep consideration to find that, in their endeavours to shift the
basis of morality, these reformers have rendered morality entirely baseless. A
man has to do what is represented to be a thing “dear unto the Lord” out of
gratitude for the many blessings He has heaped upon him. But as a matter of fact
he finds that the Lord has heaped upon him curses as well as blessings. A
helpless orphan is expected to be grateful to him for having removed the props
of his life, his parents, because he is told in consolation that such a
calamity is but apparently an evil, but in reality the All-Merciful has
underneath it hidden the greatest possible good. With equal reason might a
preacher of the Avenging Ahriman exhort men to believe that under the
apparent
214 ——————————————————FIVE YEAR’S OF THEOSOPHY.
blessings of the “Merciful” Father there lurks
the serpent of evil.
The modern Utilitarians, though the range of their vision is so
narrow, have sterner logic in their teachings. That which tends to a man’s
happiness is good, and must be followed, and the contrary shunned as evil. So
far so good. But the practical application of the doctrine is fraught with
mischief. Cribbed, cabined, and confined, by rank Materialism, within the short
space between birth and death, the Utilitarians’ scheme of happiness is merely a
deformed torso, which cannot certainly be considered as the fair goddess of our
devotion.
The only scientific basis of morality is to be sought for in the soul-consoling
doctrines of Lord Buddha or Sri Sankaracharya. The starting-point of the
“pantheistic” (we use the word for want of a better one) system of morality is a
clear perception of the unity of the one energy operating in the manifested
Cosmos, the grand result which it is incessantly striving to produce, and the
affinity of the immortal human spirit and its latent powers with that energy,
and its capacity to cooperate with the one life in achieving its mighty object.
Now knowledge or jnanam is divided into two classes by Adwaitee
philosophers—Paroksha and Aparoksha. The former kind of knowledge
consists in intellectual assent to a stated proposition, the latter in the
actual realization of it. The object which a Buddhist or Adwaitee Yogi sets
before himself is the realization of the oneness of exist-
215 —————————————————— MORALITY AND PANTHEISM.
ence, and the practice of morality is the most powerful means to that end, as we proceed to show. The principal obstacle to the realization of this oneness is the inborn habit of man of always placing himself at the centre of the Universe. Whatever a man might act, think, or feel, the irrepressible personality is sure to be the central figure. This, as will appear on reflection, is that which prevents every individual from filling his proper sphere in existence, where he only is exactly in place and no other individual is. The realization of this harmony is the practical or objective aspect of the GRAND PROBLEM. And the practice of morality is the effort to find out this sphere; morality, indeed, is the Ariadne’s clue in the Cretan labyrinth in which man is placed. From the study of the sacred philosophy preached by Lord Buddha or Sri Sankara paroksha knowledge (or shall we say belief?), in the unity of existence is derived, but without the practice of morality that knowledge cannot be converted into the highest kind of knowledge, or aproksha jnanam, and thus lead to the attainment of mukti. It availeth naught to intellectually grasp the notion of your being everything and Brahma, if it is not realized in practical acts of life. To confuse meum and teum in the vulgar sense is but to destroy the harmony of existence by a false assertion of “ I,” and is as foolish as the anxiety to nourish the legs at the expense of the arms. You cannot be one with all, unless all your acts, thoughts, and feelings synchronize with the onward march of Nature. What is meant by the Brahmâjnani being beyond the reach of Karma,
216 ——————————————————FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
can be fully realized only by a man who has
found out his exact position in harmony with the One Life in Nature; that man
sees how a Brahmajnani can act only in unison with Nature, and never in
discord with it: to use the phraseology of ancient writers on Occultism, a
Brahmajnani is a real “co-worker with Nature.” Not only European
Sanskritists, but also exoteric Yogis, fall into the grievous mistake of
supposing that, in the opinion of our sacred writers, a human being can escape
the operation of the law of Karma by adopting a condition of masterly
inactivity, entirely losing sight of the fact that even a rigid abstinence from
physical acts does not produce inactivity on the higher astral and spiritual
planes. Sri Sankara has very conclusively proved, in his commentaries on the
Bhagavad Gita, that such a supposition is nothing short of a delusion. The
great teacher shows there that forcibly repressing the physical body from
working does not free one from vasana or vritti—the inherent
inclination of the mind to work. There is a tendency, in every department of
Nature, for an act to repeat itself; the Karma acquired in the last preceding
birth is always trying to forge fresh links in the chain, and thereby lead to
continued material existence ;—and this tendency can only be counteracted by
unselfishly performing all the duties appertaining to the sphere in which a
person is born; such a course alone can produce chitta suddhi,
(purification of the mind), without which the capacity of perceiving spiritual
truths can never be acquired.
A few words must here be said about the
217 —————————————————MORALITY AND PANTHEISM.
physical inactivity of the Yogi or the Mahatma.
Inactivity of the physical body (sthula sarira) does not indicate a
condition of inactivity either on the astral or the spiritual plane of action.
The human spirit is in its highest state of activity in samadhi, (highest
trance) and not, as is generally supposed, in a dormant, quiescent condition.
And, moreover, it will be easily seen, by any one who examines the nature of
occult dynamics, that a given amount of energy expended on the spiritual or
astral plane is productive of far greater results than the same amount expended
on the physical objective plane of existence. When an Adept has placed himself
en rapport with the universal mind he becomes a real power in Nature.
Even on the objective plane of existence the difference between brain and
muscular energy, in their capacity of producing widespread and far-reaching
results, can he very easily perceived. The amount of physical energy expended by
the discoverer of the steam-engine might not have been more than that expended
by a hardworking day-labourer. But the practical results of the labourer’s work
can never be compared with the results achieved by the discovery of the steam-engine. Similarly, the ultimate effects of spiritual energy are infinitely
greater than those of intellectual energy.
From the above considerations it is abundantly clear that the initiatory
training of a true Vedantin Raj Yogi must be the nourishing of a sleepless and
ardent desire of doing all in his power for the good of mankind on the ordinary
physical plane, his activity being transferred, however, to the higher
218 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
astral and spiritual planes as his development
proceeds. in course of time, as the Truth becomes realized, the situation is
rendered quite clear to the Yogi, and he is placed beyond the criticism of any
ordinary man. The Mahanirvan Tantra says :—
Charanti trigunatite ko vidhir ko
ishedhava.
“For one, walking beyond the three gunas—Satva (feeling of
gratification), Rajas (passional activity) and Tamas (inertness)—what
injunction or what restriction is there? “—in the consideration of men, walled
in on all sides by the objective plane of existence. This does not mean that a
Mahatma can or will ever neglect the laws of morality, but that he, having
unified his individual nature with Great Nature herself, is constitutionally
incapable of violating any one of the laws of nature, and no man can constitute
himself a judge of the conduct of the Great one without knowing the laws of all
the planes of Nature’s activity. (As honest men are honest without the least
consideration of the) criminal law, so a Mahatma is moral without reference to
the laws of morality.
These are, however, sublime topics : we shall before conclusion notice some
other considerations which lead the ordinary “pantheist” to the true foundation
of morality. Happiness has been defined by John Stuart Mill as the state of
absence of opposition. Manu gives the definition in more forcible terms
Sarvam paravasam duhkham
Sarva matmavasam sukham
Idam jnayo samasena
Lakshanam sukhaduhkhayo.
219 —————————————————— MORALITY AND PANTHEISM.
“Every kind of subjugation to another is pain, and subjugation to one’s self is happiness : in brief, this is to be known as the characteristic marks of the two.” Now, it is universally admitted that the whole system of Nature is moving in a particular direction, and this direction, we are taught, is determined by the composition of two forces—namely, the one acting from that pole of existence ordinarily called “matter” towards the other pole called “spirit,” and the other in the opposite direction. The very fact that Nature is moving shows that these two forces are not equal in magnitude. The plane on which the activity of the first force predominates is called in occult treatises the “ascending arc,” and the corresponding plane of the activity of the other force is styled the “descending arc.” A little reflection will show that the work of evolution begins on the descending arc and works its way upwards through the ascending arc. From this it follows that the force directed towards spirit is the one which must, though not without hard struggle, ultimately prevail. This is the great directing energy of Nature, and, although disturbed by the operation of the antagonistic force, it is this that gives the law to her; the other is merely its negative aspect, for convenience regarded as a separate agent. If an individual attempts to move in a direction other than that in which Nature is moving, that individual is sure to be crushed, sooner or later, by the enormous pressure of the opposing force. We need not say that such a result would be the very reverse of pleasurable. The only way, therefore, in which happiness might
220 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
be attained is by merging one’s nature in great
Mother Nature, and following the direction in which she herself is moving: this
again can only be accomplished by assimilating men’s individual conduct with the
triumphant force of Nature, the other force being always overcome with terrific
catastrophs. The effort to assimilate the individual with the universal law is
popularly known as the practice of morality. Obedience to this universal law,
after ascertaining it, is true religion, which has been defined by Lord Buddha
“as the realization of the True.”
An example will serve to illustrate the position. Can a
practical pantheist, or, in other words, an occultist, utter a falsehood? Now, it will be readily
admitted that life manifests itself by the power of acquiring sensation,
temporary dormancy of that power being suspended animation. If a man receives a
particular series of sensations and pretends they are other than they really
are, the result is that he exercises his will-power in opposition to a law
of Nature on which, as we have shown, life depends, and thereby becomes suicide
on a minor scale. Space prevents further discussion, but all the ten deadly sins
mentioned by Manu and Buddha can be satisfactorily dealt with in the light
sought to be focussed here.
M0HINI M. CHATTERJI.
OCCULT STUDY
THE practical bearing of occult teaching on ordinary life is very variously interpreted by different students of the subject. For many Western readers of recent books on the esoteric doctrine, it even seems doubtful whether the teaching has any bearing on practical life at all. The proposal which it is supposed sometimes to convey, that all earnest inquirers should put themselves under the severe ascetic regimen followed by its regular Oriental disciples, is felt to embody a strain on the habits of modern civilization which only a few enthusiasts will be prepared to encounter. The mere intellectual charm of an intricate philosophy may indeed be enough to recommend the study to some minds, but a scheme of teaching that offers itself as a substitute for religious faith of the usual kind will be expected to yield some tangible results in regard to the future spiritual well-being of those who adopt it. Has occult philosophy nothing to give except to those who are in a position and willing to make a sacrifice in its behalf of all other objects in life? In that case it would indeed be useless to bring it out into the world. In reality the esoteric doctrine affords an almost infinite variety of opportunities for spiritual development, and no greater mistake could be made in connec-
222 —————————————————— FIVE YEARS OF THEOSOPHY.
tion with the present movement than to suppose
the teaching of the Adepts merely addressed to persons capable of heroic
self-devotion. Assuredly it does not discourage efforts in the direction of the
highest achievement of occult progress, if any Western occultists may feel
disposed to make them; but it is important for us all to keep clearly in view
the lower range of possibilities connected with humbler aspirations.
I believe it to be absolutely true that even the slightest attention seriously
paid to the instructions now emanating from the Indian Adepts will
generate results within the spiritual principles of those who render it—causes
capable of producing appreciable consequences in a future state of existence.
Any one who has sufficiently examined the doctrine of Devachan will readily
follow the idea, for the nature of the spir