Introduction
"And Enoch walked with the Elohim,
and the Elohim took him."—GenesisThe 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
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.
————-* A. Chela is the pupil and disciple of an initiated Guru
orMaster.—Ed.————-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 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-e 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 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 minimized, so as to be practically
imperceptible. This is a very different matter, and quite within
the 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 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 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. —————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, bones, marrow, semen.
—————-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 concentrated 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 without them.
————— * 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 yearning 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." —————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, 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.
———— * 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.
—————They may at times have exercised powers which the world
called miraculous; they may have electrified 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 practiced
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
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 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 elements opposing
its action are 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 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.
————— * 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. —————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 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.*
—————* Col. Olcott clearly and succinctly explains the Buddhist
doctrine ofMerit or Karma, in his "Buddhist Catechism."(Question 83).—G.M.—————It will be seen now in connection with the 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 practiced 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 practiced 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
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 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 practicing 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 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 practiced 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
yourself 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, 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?*
————- * 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 words, 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. ————-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, 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 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 does 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.
————- * He is in a state similar to the physical state of a
fetus before birth into the world.—G.M. ————-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 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 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 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.*
—————- * 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 be 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 practice 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. ——————-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 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
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?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
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 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 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 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 last
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 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 self-denying 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 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 be
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 himself 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.(—H.P. Blavatsky)ContemplationA 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
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 he
discontinued his "contemplation." This happened as long as seven
years ago; and, although since then he 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:— Reasoning from the known to the unknown meditation must be
practiced 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 the 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.