Light
on the Path - written in 1888 by Mable Collins
COMMENTS I
: "Before the eyes can see they must be incapable of tears."
II: "Before the ear can hear , it must have lost
it's sensitiveness."
III: "Before the voice can speak in the presence
of the masters."
IV: "Before the voice can speak in the presence
of the masters, it must have lost the power to wound."
V: "Before the soul can stand in the presence
of the masters, it's feet must be washed in the blood of
the heart."
I
: "Before the eyes can see they must be incapable of tears."
IT
should be very clearly remembered by all readers of this volume
that it is a book which may appear to have some little philosophy
in it, but very little sense, to those who believe it to be written
in ordinary English. To the many, who read in this manner it
will be -- not caviare so much as olives strong of their salt.
Be warned and read but a little in this way. There
is another way of reading, which is, indeed, the only one of
any use with many authors. It is reading, not between the lines
but within the words. In fact, it is deciphering a profound cipher.
All alchemical works are written in the cipher of which I speak;
it has been used by the great philosophers and poets of all time.
It is used systematically by the adepts in life and knowledge,
who, seemingly giving out their deepest wisdom, hide in the very
words which frame it its actual mystery. They cannot do more.
There is a law of nature which insists that a man shall read
these mysteries for himself. By no other method can he obtain
them. A man who desires to live must eat his food himself: this
is the simple law of nature -- which applies also to the higher
life. A man who would live and act in it cannot be fed like a
babe with a spoon; he must eat for himself.
I
propose to put into new and sometimes plainer language parts
of "Light on the Path"; but whether this effort of mine will
really be any interpretation I cannot say. To a deaf and dumb
man, a truth is made no more intelligible if, in order to make
it so, some misguided linguist translates the words in which
it is couched into every living or dead language, and shouts
these different phrases in his ear. But for those who are not
deaf and dumb one language is generally easier than the rest;
and it is to such as these I address myself.
The
very first aphorisms of "Light on the Path," included under Number
I. have, I know well, remained sealed as to their inner meaning
to many who have otherwise followed the purpose of the book.
There
are four proven and certain truths with regard to the entrance
to occultism. The Gates of Gold bar that threshold; yet there
are some who pass those gates and discover the sublime and illimitable
beyond. In the far spaces of Time all will pass those gates.
But I am one who wish that Time, the great deluder, were not
so over-masterful. To those who know and love him I have no word
to say; but to the others - and there are not so very few as
some may fancy - to whom the passage of Time is as the stroke
of a sledge-hammer, and the sense of Space like the bars of an
iron cage, I will translate and re-translate until they understand
fully.
The
four truths written on the first page of "Light on the Path," refer
to the trial initiation of the would-be occultist. Until he has
passed it, he cannot even reach to the latch of the gate which
admits to knowledge. Knowledge is man's greatest inheritance;
why, then, should he not attempt to reach it by every possible
road? The laboratory is not the only ground for experiment; science, we
must remember, is derived from sciens, present participle
of scire, "to know," - its origin is similar to that
of the word "discern," "to ken." Science does not therefore deal
only with matter, no, not even its subtlest and obscurest forms.
Such an idea is born merely of the idle spirit of the age. Science
is a word which covers all forms of knowledge. It is exceedingly
interesting to hear what chemists discover, and to see them finding
their way through the densities of matter to its finer forms;
but there are other kinds of knowledge than this, and it is not
every one who restricts his (strictly scientific) desire for
knowledge to experiments which are capable of being tested by
the physical senses.
Everyone
who is not a dullard, or a man stupefied by some predominant
vice, has guessed, or even perhaps discovered with some certainty,
that there are subtle senses lying within the physical senses.
There is nothing at all extraordinary in this; if we took the
trouble to call Nature into the witness box we should find that
everything which is perceptible to the ordinary sight, has something
even more important than itself hidden within it; the microscope
has opened a world to us, but within those encasements which
the microscope reveals, lies a mystery which no machinery can
probe.
The
whole world is animated and lit, down to its most material shapes,
by a world within it. This inner world is called Astral by some
people, and it is as good a word as any other, though it merely
means starry; but the stars, as Locke pointed out, are luminous
bodies which give light of themselves. This quality is characteristic
of the life which lies within matter; for those who see it, need
no lamp to see it by. The word star, moreover, is derived from
the Anglo-Saxon "stir-an," to steer, to stir, to move, and undeniably
it is the inner life which is master of the outer, just as a
man's brain guides the movements of his lips. So that although
Astral is no very excellent word in itself, I am content to use
it for my present purpose.
The
whole of "Light on the Path" is written in an astral cipher and
can therefore only be deciphered by one who reads astrally. And
its teaching is chiefly directed towards the cultivation and
development of the astral life. Until the first step has been
taken in this development, the swift knowledge, which is called
intuition with certainty, is impossible to man. And this positive
and certain intuition is the only form of knowledge which enables
a man to work rapidly or reach his true and high estate, within
the limit of his conscious effort. To obtain knowledge by experiment
is too tedious a method for those who aspire to accomplish real
work; he who gets it by certain intuition, lays hands on its
various forms with supreme rapidity, by fierce effort of will;
as a determined workman grasps his tools, indifferent to their
weight or any other difficulty which may stand in his way. He
does not stay for each to be tested - he uses such as he sees
are fittest.
All
the rules contained in "Light on the Path," are written for all
disciples, but only for disciples - those who "take knowledge." To
none else but the student in this school are its laws of any
use or interest.
To
all who are interested seriously in Occultism, I say first -
take knowledge. To him who hath shall be given. It is useless
to wait for it. The womb of Time will close before you, and in
later days you will remain unborn, without power. I therefore
say to those who have any hunger or thirst for knowledge, attend
to these rules.
They
are none of my handicraft or invention. They are merely the phrasing
of laws in super-nature, the putting into words truths as absolute
in their own sphere, as those laws which govern the conduct of
the earth and its atmosphere.
The
senses spoken of in these four statements are the astral, or
inner senses.
No
man desires to see that light which illumines the spaceless soul
until pain and sorrow and despair have driven him away from the
life of ordinary humanity. First he wears out pleasure; then
he wears out pain - till, at last, his eyes become incapable
of tears.
This
is a truism, although I know perfectly well that it will meet
with a vehement denial from many who are in sympathy with thoughts
which spring from the inner life. To see with the astral
sense of sight is a form of activity which it is difficult for
us to understand immediately. The scientist knows very well what
a miracle is achieved by each child that is born into the world,
when it first conquers its eyesight and compels it to obey its
brain. An equal miracle is performed with each sense certainly,
but this ordering of sight is perhaps the most stupendous effort.
Yet the child does it almost unconsciously, by force of the powerful
heredity of habit. No one now is aware that he has ever done
it at all; just as we cannot recollect the individual movements
which enabled us to walk up a hill a year ago. This arises from
the fact that we move and live and have our being in matter.
Our knowledge of it has become intuitive.
With
our astral life it is very much otherwise. For long ages past,
man has paid very little attention to it -- so little, that he
has practically lost the use of his senses. It is true, that
in every civilization the star arises, and man confesses, with
more or less of folly and confusion, that he knows himself to
be. But most often he denies it, and in being a materialist becomes
that strange thing, a being which cannot see its own light, a
thing of life which will not live, an astral animal which has
eyes, and ears, and speech, and power, yet will use none of these
gifts. This is the case, and the habit of ignorance has become
so confirmed, that now none will see with the inner vision till
agony has made the physical eyes not only unseeing, but without
tears -- the moisture of life. To be incapable of tears is to
have faced and conquered the simple human nature, and to have
attained an equilibrium which cannot be shaken by personal emotions.
It does not imply any hardness of heart, or any indifference.
It does not imply the exhaustion of sorrow, when the suffering
soul seems powerless to suffer acutely any longer; it does not
mean the deadness of old age, when emotion is becoming dull because
the strings which vibrate to it are wearing out. None of these
conditions are fit for a disciple, and if any one of them exist
in him it must be overcome before the path can be entered upon.
Hardness of heart belongs to the selfish man, the egotist, to
whom the gate is for ever closed. Indifference belongs to the
fool and the false philosopher; those whose lukewarmness makes
them mere puppets, not strong enough to face the realities of
existence. When pain or sorrow has worn out the keenness of suffering,
the result is a lethargy not unlike that which accompanies old
age, as it is usually experienced by men and women. Such a condition
makes the entrance to the path impossible, because the first
step is one of difficulty and needs a strong man, full of psychic
and physical vigor, to attempt it.
It
is a truth, that, as Edgar Allan Poe said, the eyes are the windows
for the soul, the windows of that haunted palace in which it
dwells. This is the very nearest interpretation into ordinary
language of the meaning of the text. If grief, dismay, disappointment
or pleasure, can shake the soul so that it loses its fixed hold
on the calm spirit which inspires it, and the moisture of life
breaks forth, drowning knowledge in sensation, then all is blurred,
the windows are darkened, the light is useless. This is as literal
a fact as that if a man, at the edge of a precipice, loses his
nerve through some sudden emotion he will certainly fall. The
poise of the body, the balance, must be preserved, not only in
dangerous places, but even on the level ground, and with all
the assistance Nature gives us by the law of gravitation. So
it is with the soul, it is the link between the outer body and
the starry spirit beyond; the divine spark dwells in the still
place where no convulsion of Nature can shake the air; this is
so always. But the soul may lose its hold on that, its knowledge
of it, even though these two are part of one whole; and it is
by emotion, by sensation, that this hold is loosed. To suffer
either pleasure or pain, causes a vivid vibration which is, to
the consciousness of man, life. Now this sensibility does not
lessen when the disciple enters upon his training; it increases.
It is the first test of his strength; he must suffer, must enjoy
or endure, more keenly than other men, while yet he has taken
on him a duty which does not exist for other men, that of not
allowing his suffering to shake him from his fixed purpose. He
has, in fact, at the first step to take himself steadily in hand
and put the bit into his own mouth; no one else can do it for
him.
The
first four aphorisms of "Light on the Path," refer entirely to
astral development. This development must be accomplished to
a certain extent - that is to say it must be fully entered upon
- before the remainder of the book is really intelligible except
to the intellect; in fact, before it can be read as a practical,
not a metaphysical treatise.
In
one of the great mystic Brotherhoods, there are four ceremonies,
that take place early in the year, which practically illustrate
and elucidate these aphorisms. They are ceremonies in which only
novices take part, for they are simply services of the threshold.
But it will show how serious a thing it is to become a disciple,
when it is understood that these are all ceremonies of sacrifice.
The first one is this of which I have been speaking. The keenest
enjoyment, the bitterest pain, the anguish of loss and despair,
are brought to bear on the trembling soul, which has not yet
found light in the darkness, which is helpless as a blind man
is, and until these shocks can be endured without loss of equilibrium
the astral senses must remain sealed. This is the merciful law.
The "medium," or "spiritualist," who rushes into the psychic
world without preparation, is a law-breaker, a breaker of the
laws of super-nature. Those who break Nature's laws lose their
physical health; those who break the laws of the inner life,
lose their psychic health. "Mediums" become mad, suicides, miserable
creatures devoid of moral sense; and often end as unbelievers,
doubters even of that which their own eyes have seen. The disciple
is compelled to become his own master before he adventures on
this perilous path, and attempts to face those beings who live
and work in the astral world, and whom we call masters, because
of their great knowledge and their ability to control not only
themselves but the forces around them.
The
condition of the soul when it lives for the life of sensation
as distinguished from that of knowledge, is vibratory or oscillating,
as distinguished from fixed. That is the nearest literal representation
of the fact; but it is only literal to the intellect, not to
the intuition. For this part of man's consciousness a different
vocabulary is needed. The idea of "fixed" might perhaps be transposed
into that of "at home." In sensation no permanent home can be
found, because change is the law of this vibratory existence.
That fact is the first one which must be learned by the disciple.
It is useless to pause and weep for a scene in a kaleidoscope
which has passed.
It
is a very well-known fact, one with which Bulwer Lytton dealt
with great power, that an intolerable sadness is the very first
experience of the neophyte in Occultism. A sense of blankness
falls upon him which makes the world a waste, and life a vain
exertion. This follows his first serious contemplation of the
abstract. In gazing, or even in attempting to gaze, on the ineffable
mystery of his own higher nature, he himself causes the initial
trial to fall on him. The oscillation between pleasure and pain
ceases for - perhaps an instant of time; but that is enough to
have cut him loose from his fast moorings in the world of sensation.
He has experienced, however briefly, the greater life; and he
goes on with ordinary existence weighted by a sense of unreality,
of blank, of horrid negation. This was the nightmare which visited
Bulwer Lytton's neophyte in "Zanoni"; and even Zanoni himself,
who had learned great truths, and been entrusted with great powers,
had not actually passed the threshold where fear and hope, despair
and joy seem at one moment absolute realities, at the next mere
forms of fancy.
This
initial trial is often brought on us by life itself. For life
is after all, the great teacher. We return to study it, after
we have acquired power over it, just as the master in chemistry
learns more in the laboratory than his pupil does. There are
persons so near the door of knowledge that life itself prepares
them for it, and no individual hand has to invoke the hideous
guardian of the entrance. These must naturally be keen and powerful
organizations, capable of the most vivid pleasure; then pain
comes and fills its great duty. The most intense forms of suffering
fall on such a nature, till at last it arouses from its stupor
of consciousness, and by the force of its internal vitality steps
over the threshold into a place of peace. Then the vibration
of life loses its power of tyranny. The sensitive nature must
suffer still; but the soul has freed itself and stands aloof,
guiding the life towards its greatness. Those who are the subjects
of Time, and go slowly through all his spaces, live on through
a long-drawn series of sensations, and suffer a constant mingling
of pleasure and of pain. They do not dare to take the snake of
self in a steady grasp and conquer it, so becoming divine; but
prefer to go on fretting through divers experiences, suffering
blows from the opposing forces.
When
one of these subjects of Time decides to enter on the path of
Occultism, it is this which is his first task. If life has not
taught it to him, if he is not strong enough to teach himself,
and if he has power enough to demand the help of a master, then
this fearful trial, depicted in Zanoni, is put upon him. The
oscillation in which he lives, is for an instant stilled; and
he has to survive the shock of facing what seems to him at first
sight as the abyss of nothingness. Not till he has learned to
dwell in this abyss, and has found its peace, is it possible
for his eyes to have become incapable of tears.
II: "Before the ear can hear , it must have lost it's sensitiveness."
The
first four rules of "Light on the Path" are, undoubtedly, curious
though the statement may seem, the most important in the whole
book, save one only. Why they are so important is that they contain
the vital law, the very creative essence of the astral man. And
it is only in the astral (or self-illuminated) consciousness
that the rules which follow them have any living meaning. Once
attain to the use of the astral senses and it becomes a matter
of course that one commences to use them; and the later rules
are but guidance in their use. When I speak like this I mean,
naturally, that the first four rules are the ones which are of
importance and interest to those who read them in print upon
a page. When they are engraved on a man's heart and on his life,
unmistakably then the other rules become not merely interesting,
or extraordinary, metaphysical statements, but actual facts in
life which have to be grasped and experienced.
The
four rules stand written in the great chamber of every actual
lodge of a living Brotherhood. Whether the man is about to sell
his soul to the devil, like Faust; whether he is to be worsted
in the battle, like Hamlet; or whether he is to pass on within
the precincts; in any case these words are for him. The man can
choose between virtue and vice, but not until he is a man; a
babe or a wild animal cannot so choose. Thus with the disciple,
he must first become a disciple before he can even see the paths
to choose between. This effort of creating himself as a disciple,
the re-birth, he must do for himself without any teacher. Until
the four rules are learned no teacher can be of any use to him;
and that is why "the Masters" are referred to in the way they
are. No real masters, whether adepts in power, in love, or in
blackness, can affect a man till these four rules are passed.
Tears,
as I have said, may be called the moisture of life. The soul
must have laid aside the emotions of humanity, must have secured
a balance which cannot be shaken by misfortune, before its eyes
can open upon the super-human world.
The
voice of the Masters is always in the world; but only those hear
it whose ears are no longer receptive of the sounds which affect
the personal life. Laughter no longer lightens the heart, anger
may no longer enrage it, tender words bring it no balm. For that
within, to which the ears are as an outer gateway, is an unshaken
place of peace in itself which no person can disturb.
As
the eyes are the windows of the soul, so are the ears its gateways
or doors. Through them comes knowledge of the confusion of the
world. The great ones who have conquered life, who have become
more than disciples, stand at peace and undisturbed amid the
vibration and kaleidoscopic movement of humanity. They hold within
themselves a certain knowledge, as well as a perfect peace; and
thus they are not roused or excited by the partial and erroneous
fragments of information which are brought to their ears by the
changing voices of those around them. When I speak of knowledge,
I mean intuitive knowledge. This certain information can never
be obtained by hard work, or by experiment; for these methods
are only applicable to matter, and matter is in itself a perfectly
uncertain substance, continually affected by change. The most
absolute and universal laws of natural and physical life, as
understood by the scientist, will pass away when the life of
this universe has passed away, and only its soul is left in the
silence. What then will be the value of the knowledge of its
laws acquired by industry and observation? I pray that no reader
or critic will imagine that by what I have said I intend to depreciate
or disparage acquired knowledge, or the work of scientists. On
the contrary, I hold that scientific men are the pioneers of
modern thought. The days of literature and of art, when poets
and sculptors saw the divine light, and put it into their own
great language -- these days lie buried in the long past with
the ante-Phidian sculptors and the pre-Homeric poets. The mysteries
no longer rule the world of thought and beauty; human life is
the governing power, not that which lies beyond it. But the scientific
workers are progressing, not so much by their own will as by
sheer force of circumstances, towards the far line which divides
things interpretable from things uninterpretable. Every fresh
discovery drives them a step onward. Therefore do I very highly
esteem the knowledge obtained by work and experiment.
But
intuitive knowledge is an entirely different thing. It is not
acquired in any way, but is, so to speak, a faculty of the soul;
not the animal soul, that which becomes a ghost after death,
when lust or liking or the memory of ill deeds holds it to the
neighborhood of human beings, but the divine soul which animates
all the external forms of the individualized being.
This
is, of course, a faculty which indwells in that soul, which is
inherent. The would-be disciple has to arouse himself to the
consciousness of it by a fierce and resolute and indomitable
effort of will. I use the word indomitable for a special reason.
Only he who is untameable, who cannot be dominated, who knows
he has to play the lord over men, over facts, over all things
save his own divinity, can arouse this faculty. "With faith all
things are possible." The skeptical laugh at faith and pride
themselves on its absence from their own minds. The truth is
that faith is a great engine, an enormous power, which in fact
can accomplish all things. For it is the covenant or engagement
between man's divine part and his lesser self.
The
use of this engine is quite necessary in order to obtain intuitive
knowledge; for unless a man believes such knowledge exists within
himself how can he claim and use it?
Without
it he is more helpless than any driftwood or wreckage on the
great tides of the ocean. They are cast hither and thither indeed;
so may a man be by the chances of fortune. But such adventures
are purely external and of very small account. A slave may be
dragged through the streets in chains, and yet retain the quiet
soul of a philosopher, as was well seen in the person of Epictetus.
A man may have every worldly prize in his possession, and stand
absolute master of his personal fate, to all appearance, and
yet he knows no peace, no certainty, because he is shaken within
himself by every tide of thought that he touches on. And these
changing tides do not merely sweep the man bodily hither and
thither like driftwood on the water; that would be nothing. They
enter into the gateways of his soul, and wash over that soul
and make it blind and blank and void of all permanent intelligence,
so that passing impressions affect it.
To
make my meaning plainer I will use an illustration. Take an author
at his writing, a painter at his canvas, a composer listening
to the melodies that dawn upon his glad imagination; let any
one of these workers pass his daily hours by a wide window looking
on a busy street. The power of the animating life blinds sight
and hearing alike, and the great traffic of the city goes by
like nothing but a passing pageant. But a man whose mind is empty,
whose day is objectless, sitting at that same window, notes the
passers-by and remembers the faces that chance to please or interest
him. So it is with the mind in its relation to eternal truth.
If it no longer transmits its fluctuations, its partial knowledge,
its unreliable information to the soul, then in the inner place
of peace already found when the first rule has been learned -
in that inner place there leaps into flame the light of actual
knowledge. Then the ears begin to hear. Very dimly, very faintly
at first. And, indeed, so faint and tender are these first indications
of the commencement of true actual life, that they are sometimes
pushed aside as mere fancies, mere imaginings.
But
before these are capable of becoming more than mere imaginings,
the abyss of nothingness has to be faced in another form. The
utter silence which can only come by closing the ears to all
transitory sounds comes as a more appalling horror than even
the formless emptiness of space. Our only mental conception of
blank space is, I think, when reduced to its barest element of
thought, that of black darkness. This is a great physical terror
to most persons, and when regarded as an eternal and unchangeable
fact, must mean to the mind the idea of annihilation rather than
anything else. But it is the obliteration of one sense only;
and the sound of a voice may come and bring comfort even in the
profoundest darkness. The disciple, having found his way into
this blackness, which is the fearful abyss, must then so shut
the gates of his soul that no comforter can enter there nor any
enemy. And it is in making this second effort that the fact of
pain and pleasure being but one sensation becomes recognizable
by those who have before been unable to perceive it. For when
the solitude of silence is reached the soul hungers so fiercely
and passionately for some sensation on which to rest, that a
painful one would be as keenly welcomed as a pleasant one. When
this consciousness is reached the courageous man by seizing and
retaining it, may destroy the "sensitiveness" at once. When the
ear no longer discriminates between that which is pleasant or
that which is painful, it will no longer be affected by the voices
of others. And then it is safe and possible to open the doors
of the soul.
"Sight" is
the first effort, and the easiest, because it is accomplished
partly by an intellectual effort. The intellect can conquer the
heart, as is well known in ordinary life. Therefore, this preliminary
step still lies within the dominion of matter. But the second
step allows of no such assistance, nor of any material aid whatever.
Of course, I mean by material aid the action of the brain, or
emotions, or human soul. In compelling the ears to listen only
to the eternal silence, the being we call man becomes something
which is no longer man. A very superficial survey of the thousand
and one influences which are brought to bear on us by others
will show that this must be so. A disciple will fulfil all the
duties of his manhood; but he will fulfil them according to his
own sense of right, and not according to that of any person or
body of persons. This is a very evident result of following the
creed of knowledge instead of any of the blind creeds.
To
obtain the pure silence necessary for the disciple, the heart
and emotions, the brain and its intellectualisms, have to be
put aside. Both are but mechanisms, which will perish with the
span of man's life. It is the essence beyond, that which is the
motive power, and makes man live, that is now compelled to rouse
itself and act. Now is the greatest hour of danger. In the first
trial men go mad with fear; of this first trial Bulwer Lytton
wrote. No novelist has followed to the second trial, though some
of the poets have. Its subtlety and great danger lies in the
fact that in the measure of a man's strength is the measure of
his chance of passing beyond it or coping with it at all. If
he has power enough to awaken that unaccustomed part of himself,
the supreme essence, then has he power to lift the gates of gold,
then is he the true alchemist, in possession of the elixir of
life.
It
is at this point of experience that the occultist becomes separated
from all other men and enters on to a life which is his own;
on to the path of individual accomplishment instead of mere obedience
to the genii which rule our earth. This raising of himself into
an individual power does in reality identify him with the nobler
forces of life and make him one with them. For they stand beyond
the powers of this earth and the laws of this universe. Here
lies man's only hope of success in the great effort; to leap
right away from his present standpoint to his next and at once
become an intrinsic part of the divine power as he has been an
intrinsic part of the intellectual power, of the great nature
to which he belongs. He stands always in advance of himself,
if such a contradiction can be understood. It is the men who
adhere to this position, who believe in their innate power of
progress, and that of the whole race, who are the elder brothers,
the pioneers. Each man has to accomplish the great leap for himself
and without aid; yet it is something of a staff to lean on to
know that others have gone on that road. It is possible that
they have been lost in the abyss; no matter, they have had the
courage to enter it. Why I say that it is possible they have
been lost in the abyss is because of this fact, that one who
has passed through is unrecognizable until the other and altogether
new condition is attained by both. It is unnecessary to enter
upon the subject of what that condition is at present.
I
only say this, that in the early state in which man is entering
upon the silence he loses knowledge of his friends, of his lovers,
of all who have been near and dear to him; and also loses sight
of his teachers and of those who have preceded him on his way.
I explain this because scarce one passes through without bitter
complaint. Could but the mind grasp beforehand that the silence
must be complete, surely this complaint need not arise as a hindrance
on the path. Your teacher, or your predecessor may hold your
hand in his, and give you the utmost sympathy the human heart
is capable of. But when the silence and the darkness comes, you
lose all knowledge of him; you are alone and he cannot help you,
not because his power is gone, but because you have invoked your
great enemy.
By
your great enemy, I mean yourself. If you have the power to face
your own soul in the darkness and silence, you will have conquered
the physical or animal self which dwells in sensation only.
This
statement, I feel, will appear involved; but in reality it is
quite simple. Man, when he has reached his fruition, and civilization
is at its height, stands between two fires. Could he but claim
his great inheritance, the encumbrance of the mere animal life
would fall away from him without difficulty. But he does not
do this, and so the races of men flower and then droop and die
and decay off the face of the earth, however splendid the bloom
may have been. And it is left to the individual to make this
great effort; to refuse to be terrified by his greater nature,
to refuse to be drawn back by his lesser or more material self.
Every individual who accomplishes this is a redeemer of the race.
He may not blazon forth his deeds, he may dwell in secret and
silence; but it is a fact that he forms a link between man and
his divine part; between the known and the unknown; between the
stir of the market place and the stillness of the snow-capped
Himalayas. He has not to go about among men in order to form
this link; in the astral he is that link, and this fact
makes him a being of another order from the rest of mankind.
Even so early on the road towards knowledge, when he has but
taken the second step, he finds his footing more certain, and
becomes conscious that he is a recognized part of a whole.
This
is one of the contradictions in life which occur so constantly
that they afford fuel to the fiction writer. The occultist finds
them become much more marked as he endeavors to live the life
he has chosen. As he retreats within himself and becomes self-dependent,
he finds himself more definitely becoming part of a great tide
of definite thought and feeling. When he has learned the first
lesson, conquered the hunger of the heart, and refused to live
on the love of others, he finds himself more capable of inspiring
love. As he flings life away it comes to him in a new form and
with a new meaning. The world has always been a place with many
contradictions in it, to the man; when he becomes a disciple
he finds life is describable as a series of paradoxes. This is
a fact in nature, and the reason for it is intelligible enough.
Man's soul "dwells like a star apart," even that of the vilest
among us; while his consciousness is under the law of vibratory
and sensuous life. This alone is enough to cause those complications
of character which are the material for the novelist; every man
is a mystery, to friend and enemy alike, and to himself. His
motives are often undiscoverable, and he cannot probe to them
or know why he does this or that. The disciple's effort is that
of awakening consciousness in this starry part of himself, where
his power and divinity lie sleeping. As this consciousness becomes
awakened, the contradictions in the man himself become more marked
than ever; and so do the paradoxes which he lives through. For,
of course man creates his own life; and "adventures are to the
adventurous" is one of those wise proverbs which are drawn from
actual fact, and cover the whole area of human experience.
Pressure
on the divine part of man re-acts upon the animal part. As the
silent soul awakes it makes the ordinary life of the man more
purposeful, more vital, more real, and responsible. To keep to
the two instances already mentioned, the occultist who has withdrawn
into his own citadel has found his strength; immediately he becomes
aware of the demands of duty upon him. He does not obtain his
strength by his own right, but because he is a part of the whole;
and as soon as he is safe from the vibration of life and can
stand unshaken, the outer world cries out to him to come and
labor in it. So with the heart. When it no longer wishes to take,
it is called upon to give abundantly.
"Light
on the Path" has been called a book of paradoxes, and very justly;
what else could it be, when it deals with the actual personal
experience of the disciple?
To
have acquired the astral senses of sight and hearing; or in other
words to have attained perception and opened the doors of the
soul, are gigantic tasks and may take the sacrifice of many successive
incarnations. And yet, when the will has reached its strength,
the whole miracle may be worked in a second of time. Then is
the disciple the servant of Time no longer.
These
two first steps are negative; that is to say they imply retreat
from a present condition of things rather than advance towards
another. The two next are active, implying the advance into another
state of being.
III: "Before the voice can speak in the presence of the masters."
Speech
is the power of communication; the moment of entrance into active
life is marked by its attainment.
And
now, before I go any further, let me explain a little the way
in which the rules written down in "Light on the Path" are arranged.
The first seven of those which are numbered are sub-divisions
of the two first unnumbered rules, those with which I have dealt
in the two preceding papers. The numbered rules were simply an
effort of mine to make the unnumbered ones more intelligible. "Eight" to "fifteen" of
these numbered rules belong to this unnumbered rule which is
now my text.
As
I have said, these rules are written for all disciples, but for
none else; they are not of interest to any other persons. Therefore
I trust no one else will trouble to read these papers any further.
The first two rules, which include the whole of that part of
the effort which necessitates the use of the surgeon's knife,
I will enlarge upon further if I am asked to do so. But the disciple
is expected to deal with the snake, his lower self, unaided;
to suppress his human passions and emotions by the force of his
own will. He can only demand assistance of a master when this
is accomplished, or at all events, partially so. Otherwise the
gates and windows of his soul are blurred, and blinded, and darkened,
and no knowledge can come to him. I am not, in these papers,
purposing to tell a man how to deal with his own soul; I am simply
giving, to the disciple, knowledge. That I am not writing, even
now, so that all who run may read, is owing to the fact that
super-nature prevents this by its own immutable laws.
The
four rules which I have written down for those in the West who
wish to study them, are as I have said, written in the ante-chamber
of every living Brotherhood; I may add more, in the ante-chamber
of every living or dead Brotherhood, or Order yet to be formed.
When I speak of a Brotherhood or an Order, I do not mean an arbitrary
constitution made by scholiasts and intellectualists; I mean
an actual fact in super-nature, a stage of development towards
the absolute God or Good. During this development the disciple
encounters harmony, pure knowledge, pure truth, in different
degrees, and, as he enters these degrees, he finds himself becoming
part of what might be roughly described as a layer of human consciousness.
He encounters his equals, men of his own self-less character,
and with them his association becomes permanent and indissoluble,
because founded on a vital likeness of nature. To them he becomes
pledged by such vows as need no utterance or framework in ordinary
words. This is one aspect of what I mean by a Brotherhood.
If
the first rules are conquered, the disciple finds himself standing
at the threshold. Then if his will is sufficiently resolute his
power speech comes; a two-fold power. For, as he advances now,
he finds himself entering into a state of blossoming, where every
bud that opens throws out its several rays or petals. If he is
to exercise his new gift, he must use it in its two-fold character.
He finds in himself the power to speak in the presence of the
masters; in other words, he has the right to demand contact with
the divinest element of that state of consciousness into which
he has entered. But he finds himself compelled, by the nature
of his position, to act in two ways at the same time. He cannot
send his voice up to the heights where sit the gods till he has
penetrated to the deep places where their light shines not at
all. He has come within the grip of an iron law. If he demands
to become a neophyte, he at once becomes a servant. Yet his service
is sublime, if only from the character of those who share it.
For the masters are also servants; they serve and claim their
reward afterwards. Part of their service is to let their knowledge
touch him; his first act of service is to give some of that knowledge
to those who are not yet fit to stand where he stands. This is
no arbitrary decision, made by any master or teacher or any such
person, however divine. It is a law of that life which the disciple
has entered upon.
Therefore
was it written in the inner doorway of the lodges of the old
Egyptian Brotherhood, "The laborer is worthy of his hire."
"Ask
and ye shall have," sounds like something too easy and simple
to be credible. But the disciple cannot "ask" in the mystic sense
in which the word is used in this scripture until he has attained
the power of helping others.
Why
is this? Has the statement too dogmatic a sound?
Is
it too dogmatic to say that a man must have foothold before he
can spring? The position is the same. If help is given, if work
is done, then there is an actual claim -- not what we call a
personal claim of payment, but the claim of co-nature. The divine
give, they demand that you also shall give before you can be
of their kin.
This
law is discovered as soon as the disciple endeavors to speak.
For speech is a gift which comes only to the disciple of power
and knowledge. The spiritualist enters the psychic-astral world,
but he does not find there any certain speech, unless he at once
claims it and continues to do so. If he is interested in "phenomena," or
the mere circumstance and accident of astral life, then he enters
no direct ray of thought or purpose, he merely exists and amuses
himself in the astral life as he has existed and amused himself
in the physical life. Certainly there are one or two simple lessons
which the psychic-astral can teach him, just as there are simple
lessons which material and intellectual life teach him. And these
lessons have to be learned; the man who proposes to enter upon
the life of the disciple without having learned the early and
simple lessons must always suffer from his ignorance. They are
vital, and have to be studied in a vital manner; experienced
through and through, over and over again, so that each part of
the nature has been penetrated by them.
To
return. In claiming the power of speech, as it is called, the
Neophyte cries out to the Great One who stands foremost in the
ray of knowledge on which he has entered, to give him guidance.
When he does this, his voice is hurled back by the power he has
approached, and echoes down to the deep recesses of human ignorance.
In some confused and blurred manner the news that there is knowledge
and a beneficent power which teaches is carried to as many men
as will listen to it. No disciple can cross the threshold without
communicating this news, and placing it on record in some fashion
or other.
He
stands horror-struck at the imperfect and unprepared manner in
which he has done this; and then comes the desire to do it well,
and with the desire thus to help others comes the power. For
it is a pure desire, this which comes upon him; he can gain no
credit, no glory, no personal reward by fulfiling it. And therefore
he obtains the power to fulfil it.
The
history of the whole past, so far as we can trace it, shows very
plainly that there is neither credit, glory, nor reward to be
gained by this first task which is given to the Neophyte. Mystics
have always been sneered at, and seers disbelieved; those who
have had the added power of intellect have left for posterity
their written record, which to most men appears unmeaning and
visionary, even when the authors have the advantage of speaking
from a far-off past. The disciple who undertakes the task, secretly
hoping for fame or success, to appear as a teacher and apostle
before the world, fails even before his task is attempted, and
his hidden hypocrisy poisons his own soul, and the souls of those
he touches. He is secretly worshiping himself, and this idolatrous
practice must bring its own reward.
The
disciple who has the power of entrance, and is strong enough
to pass each barrier, will, when the divine message comes to
his spirit, forget himself utterly in the new consciousness which
falls on him. If this lofty contact can really rouse him, he
becomes as one of the divine in his desire to give rather than
to take, in his wish to help rather than be helped, in his resolution
to feed the hungry rather than take manna from Heaven himself.
His nature is transformed, and the selfishness which prompts
men's actions in ordinary life suddenly deserts him.
IV: "Before the voice can speak in the presence of the masters, it must have
lost the power to wound."
Those
who give a merely passing and superficial attention to the subject
of occultism - and their name is Legion -- constantly inquire
why, if adepts in life exist, they do not appear in the world
and show their power. That the chief body of these wise ones
should be understood to dwell beyond the fastnesses of the Himalayas,
appears to be a sufficient proof that they are only figures of
straw. Otherwise, why place them so far off?
Unfortunately,
Nature has done this and not personal choice or arrangement.
There are certain spots on the earth where the advance of "civilization" is
unfelt, and the nineteenth century fever is kept at bay. In these
favored places there is always time, always opportunity, for
the realities of life; they are not crowded out by the doings
of an inchoate, money-loving, pleasure seeking society. While
there are adepts upon the earth, the earth must preserve to them
places of seclusion. This is a fact in nature which is only an
external expression of a profound fact in super-nature.
The
demand of the neophyte remains unheard until the voice in which
it is uttered has lost the power to wound. This is because the
divine-astral life* is a place in which order reigns, just as
it does in natural life. There is, of course, always the center
and the circumference as there is in nature. Close to the central
heart of life, on any plane, there is knowledge, there order
reigns completely; and chaos makes dim and confused the outer
margin of the circle. In fact, life in every form bears a more
or less strong resemblance to a philosophic school. There are
always the devotees of knowledge who forget their own lives in
their pursuit of it; there are always the flippant crowd who
come and go -- of such, Epictetus said that it was as easy to
teach them philosophy as to eat custard with a fork. The same
state exists in the super-astral life; and the adept has an even
deeper and more profound seclusion there in which to dwell. This
place of retreat is so safe, so sheltered, that no sound which
has discord in it can reach his ears. Why should this be, will
be asked at once, if he is a being of such great powers as those
say who believe in his existence? The answer seems very apparent.
He serves humanity and identifies himself with the whole world;
he is ready to make vicarious sacrifice for it at any moment
-- by living not by dying for it. Why should he not
die for it? Because he is part of the great whole, and one of
the most valuable parts of it. Because he lives under laws of
order which he does not desire to break. His life is not his
own, but that of the forces which work behind him. He is the
flower of humanity, the bloom which contains the divine seed.
He is, in his own person, a treasure of the universal nature,
which is guarded and made safe in order that the fruition shall
be perfected. It is only at definite periods of the world's history
that he is allowed to go among the herd of men as their redeemer.
But for those who have the power to separate themselves from
this herd he is always at hand. And for those who are strong
enough to conquer the vices of the personal human nature, as
set forth in these four rules, he is consciously at hand, easily
recognized, ready to answer.
*Of
course every occultist knows by reading Eliphas Levi and other
authors that the "astral" plane is a plane of unequalized forces,
and that a state of confusion necessarily prevails. But this
does not apply to the "divine astral" plane, which is a plane
where wisdom, and therefore order, prevails.
But
this conquering of self implies a destruction of qualities which
most men regard as not only indestructible but desirable. The "power
to wound" includes much that men value, not only in themselves,
but in others. The instinct of self-defense and of self-preservation
is part of it; the idea that one has any right or rights, either
as citizen, or man, or individual, the pleasant consciousness
of self-respect and of virtue. These are hard sayings to many;
yet they are true. For these words that I am writing now, and
those which I have written on this subject, are not in any sense
my own. They are drawn from the traditions of the lodge of the
Great Brotherhood, which was once the secret splendor of Egypt.
The rules written in its ante-chamber were the same as those
now written in the ante-chamber of existing schools. Through
all time the wise men have lived apart from the mass. And even
when some temporary purpose or object induces one of them to
come into the midst of human life, his seclusion and safety is
preserved as completely as ever. It is part of his inheritance,
part of his position, he has an actual title to it, and can no
more put it aside than the Duke of Westminster can say he does
not choose to be the Duke of Westminster. In the various great
cities of the world an adept lives for a while from time to time,
or perhaps only passes through; but all are occasionally aided
by the actual power and presence of one of these men. Here in
London, as in Paris and St. Petersburgh, there are men high in
development. But they are only known as mystics by those who
have the power to recognize; the power given by the conquering
of self. Otherwise how could they exist, even for an hour, in
such a mental and psychic atmosphere as is created by the confusion
and disorder of a city? Unless protected and made safe their
own growth would be interfered with, their work injured. And
the neophyte may meet an adept in the flesh, may live in the
same house with him, and yet be unable to recognize him, and
unable to make his own voice heard by him. For no nearness in
space, no closeness of relations, no daily intimacy, can do away
with the inexorable laws which give the adept his seclusion.
No voice penetrates to his inner hearing till it has become a
divine voice, a voice which gives no utterance to the cries of
self. Any lesser appeal would be as useless, as much a waste
of energy and power, as for mere children who are learning their
alphabet to be taught it by a professor of philology. Until a
man has become, in heart and spirit, a disciple, he has no existence
for those who are teachers of disciples. And he becomes this
by one method only -- the surrender of his personal humanity.
For
the voice to have lost the power to wound, a man must have reached
that point where he sees himself only as one of the vast multitudes
that live; one of the sands washed hither and thither by the
sea of vibratory existence. It is said that every grain of sand
in the ocean bed does, in its turn, get washed up on to the shore
and lie for a moment in the sunshine. So with human beings, they
are driven hither and thither by a great force, and each, in
his turn, finds the sunrays on him. When a man is able to regard
his own life as part of a whole like this he will no longer struggle
in order to obtain anything for himself. This is the surrender
of personal rights. The ordinary man expects, not to take equal
fortunes with the rest of the world, but in some points, about
which he cares, to fare better than the others. The disciple
does not expect this. Therefore, though he be, like Epictetus,
a chained slave, he has no word to say about it. He knows that
the wheel of life turns ceaselessly. Burne Jones has shown it
in his marvelous picture - the wheel turns, and on it are bound
the rich and the poor, the great and the small - each has his
moment of good fortune when the wheel brings him uppermost -
the King rises and falls, the poet is feted and forgotten,
the slave is happy and afterwards discarded. Each in his turn
is crushed as the wheel turns on. The disciple knows that this
is so, and though it is his duty to make the utmost of the life
that is his, he neither complains of it nor is elated by it,
nor does he complain against the better fortune of others. All
alike, as he well knows, are but learning a lesson; and he smiles
at the socialist and the reformer who endeavor by sheer force
to re-arrange circumstances which arise out of the forces of
human nature itself. This is but kicking against the pricks;
a waste of life and energy.
In
realizing this a man surrenders his imagined individual rights,
of whatever sort. That takes away one keen sting which is common
to all ordinary men.
When
the disciple has fully recognized that the very thought of individual
rights is only the outcome of the venomous quality in himself,
that it is the hiss of the snake of self which poisons with its
sting his own life and the lives of those about him, then he
is ready to take part in a yearly ceremony which is open to all
neophytes who are prepared for it. All weapons of defense and
offense are given up; all weapons of mind and heart, and brain,
and spirit. Never again can another man be regarded as a person
who can be criticized or condemned; never again can the neophyte
raise his voice in self-defense or excuse. From that ceremony
he returns into the world as helpless, as unprotected, as a new-born
child. That, indeed, is what he is. He has begun to be born again
on to the higher plane of life, that breezy and well-lit plateau
from whence the eyes see intelligently and regard the world with
a new insight.
I
have said, a little way back, that after parting with the sense
of individual rights, the disciple must part also with the sense
of self-respect and of virtue. This may sound a terrible doctrine,
yet all occultists know well that it is not a doctrine, but a
fact. He who thinks himself holier than another, he who has any
pride in his own exemption from vice or folly, he who believes
himself wise, or in any way superior to his fellow men, is incapable
of discipleship. A man must become as a little child before he
can enter into the kingdom of heaven.
Virtue
and wisdom are sublime things; but if they create pride and a
consciousness of separateness from the rest of humanity in the
mind of a man, then they are only the snakes of self re-appearing
in a finer form. At any moment he may put on his grosser shape
and sting as fiercely as when he inspired the actions of a murderer
who kills for gain or hatred, or a politician who sacrifices
the mass for his own or his party's interests.
In
fact, to have lost the power to wound, implies that the snake
is not only scotched, but killed. When it is merely stupefied
or lulled to sleep it awakes again and the disciple uses his
knowledge and his power for his own ends, and is a pupil of the
many masters of the black art, for the road to destruction is
very broad and easy, and the way can be found blindfold. That
it is the way to destruction is evident, for when a man begins
to live for self he narrows his horizon steadily till at last
the fierce driving inwards leaves him but the space of a pin's-head
to dwell in. We have all seen this phenomenon occur in ordinary
life. A man who becomes selfish isolates himself, grows less
interesting and less agreeable to others. The sight is an awful
one, and people shrink from a very selfish person at last, as
from a beast of prey. How much more awful is it when it occurs
on the more advanced plane of life, with the added powers of
knowledge, and through the greater sweep of successive incarnations!
Therefore
I say, pause and think well upon the threshold. For if the demand
of the neophyte is made without the complete purification, it
will not penetrate the seclusion of the divine adept, but will
evoke the terrible forces which attend upon the black side of
our human nature.
V: "Before the soul can stand in the presence of the masters, it's feet must
be washed in the blood of the heart."
The
word soul, as used here, means the divine soul, or "starry spirit."
"To
be able to stand is to have confidence"; and to have confidence
means that the disciple is sure of himself, that he has surrendered
his emotions, his very self, even his humanity; that he is incapable
of fear and unconscious of pain; that his whole consciousness
is centered in the divine life, which is expressed symbolically
by the term "the Masters"; that he has neither eyes, nor ears,
nor speech, nor power, save in and for the divine ray on which
his highest sense has touched. Then is he fearless, free from
suffering, free from anxiety or dismay; his soul stands without
shrinking or desire of postponement, in the full blaze of the
divine light which penetrates through and through his being.
Then he has come into his inheritance and can claim his kinship
with the teachers of men; he is upright, he has raised his head,
he breathes the same air that they do.
But
before it is in any way possible for him to do this, the feet
of the soul must be washed in the blood of the heart.
The
sacrifice, or surrender of the heart of man, and its emotions,
is the first of the rules; it involves the "attaining of an equilibrium
which cannot be shaken by personal emotion." This is done by
the stoic philosopher; he, too, stands aside and looks equably
upon his own sufferings, as well as on those of others.
In
the same way that "tears" in the language of occultists expresses
the soul of emotion, not its material appearance, so blood expresses,
not that blood which is an essential of physical life, but the
vital creative principle in man's nature, which drives him into
human life in order to experience pain and pleasure, joy and
sorrow. When he has let the blood flow from the heart he stands
before the Masters as a pure spirit which no longer wishes to
incarnate for the sake of emotion and experience. Through great
cycles of time successive incarnations in gross matter may yet
be his lot; but he no longer desires them, the crude wish to
live has departed from him. When he takes upon him man's form
in the flesh he does it in the pursuit of a divine object, to
accomplish the work of "the Masters," and for no other end. He
looks neither for pleasure nor pain, asks for no heaven, and
fears no hell; yet he has entered upon a great inheritance which
is not so much a compensation for these things surrendered, as
a state which simply blots out the memory of them. He lives now
not in the world, but with it; his horizon has extended itself
to the width of the whole universe.
| Authors
Details: Mable Collins |
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