LETTER XXXV
THE BEAUTIFUL BEING
YES, I have seen angels, if by angels
you mean spiritual beings who have never dwelt as men upon the earth.
As a man is to a rock, so is an angel
to a man in vividness of
life. If we ever experienced that state of etheric joy, we have lost it
through long association with
matter. Can we ever regain it? Perhaps. The event is in our hand.
Shall I tell you of one whom I call
the Beautiful Being? If it has
a name in heaven, I have not heard
it. Is the Beautiful Being man or woman? Sometimes it seems to be one,
sometimes the other. There is a mystery here which I cannot fathom.
One night I seemed to be reclining
upon a moonbeam, which means that the poet which dwells in all men was
awake in me. I seemed to be reclining upon a moonbeam, and ecstasy
filled my heart. For the moment I had escaped
the clutches of Time, and was living
in that etheric quietude which
is merely the activity of rapture
raised to the last degree. I must have been enjoying a foretaste of that
paradoxical state which the wise ones of the East call Nirvana.
I was vividly conscious of the
moonbeam and of myself, and in myself seemed to be everything else in
the universe. It was the nearest I ever came to a realisation of that
supreme declaration, "I am."
The past and the future seemed
equally present in the moment. Had a voice whispered that it was
yesterday, I should have acquiesced in the assertion; had I been told
that it was a million years hence, I should have been also assentive.
But whether it was really yesterday or a million years hence mattered
not in the least. Perhaps the Beautiful Being only comes to those for
whom the moment and eternity are one. I heard a voice say:
"Brother, it is I."
There was no question in my mind as
to who had spoken. "It is I" can only be uttered in such a voice by one
whose individuality is so vast as to be almost universal, one who has
dipped in the ocean of the All, yet who knows the minute by reason of
its own inclusiveness.
Standing before me was the Beautiful
Being, radiant in its own
light. Had it been less lovely I might have gasped with wonder; but
the very perfection of its
form and presence diffused an atmosphere of calm. I marvelled not,
because the state of my consciousness was marvel. I was lifted so far
above the commonplace that I had no standard by which to measure the
experience of that moment.
Imagine youth immortalised, the
fleeting made eternal. Imagine the bloom of a child's face and the eyes
of the ages of knowledge. Imagine the brilliancy of a thousand lives
concentrated in those eyes, and the smile upon the lips of a love so
pure that it asks no answering love from those it smiles upon.
But the language of earth cannot
describe the unearthly, nor could the understanding of man grasp in a
moment those joys which the Beautiful Being revealed to me in that hour
of supreme life. For the possibilities of existence have been widened
for me, the meanings of the soul have deepened. Those who behold the
Beautiful Being are never the same again as they were before. They may
forget for a time, and lose in the business of living the magic of that
presence; but when ever they do remember, they are
caught up again on the wings of the former rapture.
It may happen to one who is living
upon the earth; it may happen to one in the spaces between the stars;
but the experience must be the same when it comes to all; for only to
one in the state in which it
dwells could the Beautiful Being reveal itself at all.
A SONG OF THE BEAUTIFUL BEING
When you hear a rustling in the air,
listen again: there may, be something there.
When you feel a warmth mysterious and
lovely in the heart, there may be something there, something sent to you
from a warm and lovely source.
When a joy unknown fills your being,
and your soul goes out, out … toward some loved mystery, you know not
where, know that the mystery itself is reaching toward you with warm and
loving, though invisible, arms.
We who live in the invisible are not
invisible to each other.
There are tender colours here and
exquisite forms, and the eye gloats on beauty never seen upon the earth.
Oh the joy of simple life to be, and
to sing in your soul all day as the bird sings to its mate!
For you are singing to your mate
whenever your soul sings.
Did you fancy it was only the
spring-time that thrilled you and moved you to listen to the rustling of
wings?
The spring-time of the heart is all
time, and the autumn may never come.
Listen! When the lark sings, he sings
to you. When the waters sing,
they sing to you.
And as your heart rejoices, there is
always another heart somewhere
that responds; and the soul of the listening heavens
grows glad with the mother joy.
I am glad to be here, I am glad to be
there. There is beauty wherever I go.
Can you guess the reason, children of
earth?
Come out and play with me in the
daisy fields of space. I will wait
for you at the corner where the four winds meet.
You will not lose your way, if you
follow the gleam at the end of the garden of hope.
There is music also beyond the roar
of the earth as it swishes through space:
There is music in keys unknown to
the duller ears of the earth, and
harmonies whose chords are souls
attuned to each other.
Listen…. Do you hear them?
Oh, the ears are made for hearing,
and the eyes are made for
seeing, and the heart is made for loving!
The hours go by and leave no mark,
and the years are as sylphs that dance on the air and leave no
footprints, and the centuries march solemn and slow.
But we smile, for joy is also in the solemn tread of the centuries.
Joy, joy everywhere. It is for you
and for me, and for you as much as for me.
Will you meet me out where the four
winds meet?
LETTER
XXXVI
THE HOLLOW SPHERE
SOME time ago I started to write to
you about certain visits which I had made to the infernal regions; but I
was called away, and the letter was not finished. To-night I will take
up the story again.
You must know that there are many
hells, and they are mostly of
our own making. That is one of those platitudes which are based
upon fact.
Desiring one day to see the
particular kind of hell to which a drunkard would be likely to go, I
sought that part of the hollow sphere around the world which corresponds
to one of those countries where drunkenness is most common. Souls, when
they come out, usually remain in the neighbourhood where they have
lived, unless there is some
strong reason to the contrary.
I had no difficulty in finding a hell
full of drunkards. What do you fancy they were doing? Repenting their
sins? Not at all. They were hovering around those places on earth where
the fumes of alcohol, and the heavier fumes of those who over-indulge in
alcohol, made sickening the atmosphere. It is no wonder that sensitive
people dislike the
neighbourhood of drinking saloons.
You would draw back with disgust and
refuse to write for me should I tell you all that I saw. One or two
instances will suffice.
I placed myself in a sympathetic and
neutral state, so that I could see into both worlds.
A young man with restless eyes and a
troubled face entered one of those "gin palaces" in which gilding and
highly polished imitation mahogany tend to impress the miserable
wayfarer with the idea that he is enjoying the luxury of the "kingdoms
of this world." The young man's clothes were threadbare, and his shoes
had seen much wear. A stubble of beard was on his chin, for the
price of a shave is the price of a
drink, and a man takes that which
he desires most—when he can get it.
He was leaning on the bar, drinking a
glass of some souldestroying compound. And close to him, taller than he
and bending over him, with its repulsive, bloated, ghastly face pressed
close to his, as if to smell
his whisky-tainted breath, was one of the
most horrible astral beings which I have seen in this world since I
came out. The hands of the creature (and I use that word to suggest its
vitality)—the hands of the creature were clutching the young man's form,
one long and naked arm was around his shoulders, the other around his
hips. It was literally sucking
the liquor-soaked life of its victim, absorbing
him, using him, in the successful
attempt to enjoy vicariously the passion which death had intensified.
But was that a creature in hell? you
ask. Yes, for I could look into its mind and see its sufferings. For
ever (the words "for ever" may be used of that which seems endless) this
entity was doomed to crave and crave and never to be satisfied.
There was in it just enough left of
the mind which had made it man—just enough to catch a fitful glimpse now
and then of the horror of its own state. It had no desire to escape, but
the very consciousness of the impossibility of escape was an added
torment. And dread was in the eyes of the thing—dread of the future into
which it could not look, but which it felt waiting to drag it into that
state of even greater suffering than its present,
when the astral particles of its
form, unable longer to hold together
because of the absence of the unifying soul, would begin to
rend and tear what was left of the mind and astral nerves—rending and
tearing asunder, in terror and pain, that shape whose end was at hand.
For only the soul endures, and that
which the soul deserts must perish and disintegrate.
And the young man who leaned on the
bar in that gilded palace of gin was filled with a nameless horror and
sought to leave the place; but the arms of the thing that was now his
master clutched him tighter and tighter, the sodden, vaporous cheek was
pressed closer to his, the desire of the vampire creature aroused an
answering desire in its victim, and the young man demanded another
glass.
Verily, earth and hell are
neighbouring states, and the frontier has never been charted.
I have seen hells of lust and hells
of hatred; hells of untruthfulness, where every object which the
wretched dweller tried to
grasp turned into something else which was a denial of the thing
desired, where truth was mocked eternally and nothing was real, but
everything—changing and uncertain as untruthfulness— became its own
antithesis.
I have seen the anguished faces of
those not yet resigned to lies,
have seen their frantic efforts to clutch reality, which melted in
their grasp. For the habit of untruthfulness, when carried into this
world of shifting shapes, surrounds the untruthful person with
ever-changing images which mock him and elude.
Would he see the faces of his loved
ones? The promise is given, and as the faces appear they turn into grinning furies. Would he grasp
in memory the prizes of ambition? They are shown to be but disgrace in
another form, and pride becomes weak shame. Would he clasp the hand of
friendship? The hand is extended—but in its clutch is a knife which
pierces the vitals of the liar without
destroying him, and the futile
attempt begins again, over and over,
until the uneasy conscience is exhausted.
Beware of deathbed repentance and its
after- harvest of morbid memories. It is better to go into eternity with
one's karmic burdens bravely carried upon the back, rather than to slink
through the back door of hell
in the stockinged-feet of a sorry cowardice.
If you have sinned, accept the fact
with courage and resolve to sin no more; but he who dwells upon his sins
in his last hour will live
them over and over again in the state beyond the tomb.
Every act is followed by its inevitable reaction;
every cause is accompanied by its own
effect, which nothing— save the powerful dynamics of Will itself—can
modify; and when Will modifies the effect of an antecedent cause, it is
always by setting up a counteracting and more powerful cause than the
first—a cause so strong that the other is irresistibly carried along
with it, as a great flood can
sweep a trickling stream of water from
an open hose-pipe, carrying the
hose-pipe cause and its trickling
effect along with the rushing torrent
of its own flood.
If you recognise the fact that you
have sinned, set up good actions more powerful than your sins, and reap
the reward for those.
There is much more to be said about
hells, but this is enough for to-night. At another time I may return to the subject.
LETTER
XXXVII
AN EMPTY CHINA CUP
IT is no wonder that children, no
matter how old and experienced
their souls, have to be retaught in
each life the relative values of all
things according to the artificial
standards of the world; for out here those values lose their meaning.
That a soul had houses, lands, and
honours among men does not
increase his value in our eyes. We cannot hope to profit by his
discarded riches. The soul in the "hereafter" builds its own house, and
the materials thereof are free as air. If I use the house which
another has built, I miss the
enjoyment of creating my own.
There is nothing worth stealing out
here, so no one trembles for
fear of burglars in the night. Even bores can be escaped by retiring
to the very centre of oneself,
for a bore is himself too self-centred ever to, pierce to the centre of
anyone else. On earth you value titles, inherited or acquired; here a man's name is not of much
importance even to himself, and a visiting-card would be lost through
the cracks in the floor of heaven. No footman angel would ever deliver
it to his Lord and Master.
One day I met a lady recently
arrived. She had not been here
long enough to have lost her assurance of superiority over ordinary men
and angels. That morning I had on my best Roman toga, for I had been
reliving the past; and the lady, mistaking me for Caesar or some other
ancient aristocrat, asked me to direct her to a place where gentlewomen
congregated.
I was forced to admit that I did not
know of any such resort; but as the visitor seemed lonely and bewildered, I invited her to rest
beside me for a time and to
question me if she wished.
"I have been here several months," I
said, "and have gained considerable experience."
It was plain to see that she was
puzzled by my remark. She glanced at my classical garment, and I could
feel her thinking that there was something incongruous between it and my
assertion that I had been here only a few months.
"Perhaps you are an actor," she said.
"We are all actors here," I replied.
This seemed to puzzle her more than ever,
and she said that she did not
understand. Poor lady! I felt sorry for
her, and I tried my best to explain
to her the conditions under which we live.
"You must know in the first place," I
said, "that this is the land
of realised ideals. Now a man who has always desired to be a king
can play the part up here if he
wishes to, and no one will laugh at him; for each spirit has some
favourite dream which he acts out to his own satisfaction.
"We have, madam," I continued,
"reacquired the tolerance and
the courtesy of children who never
ridicule one another's play."
"Is heaven merely a play-room?" she
asked, in a shocked tone. "Not at all," I answered; "but you are not in
heaven." Her look of apprehension caused me immediately to add:
"Nor are you in hell, either. What
was your religion upon the earth?"
"Why, I professed the usual religion
of my country and station; but I never gave it much thought."
"Perhaps the idea of purgatory is not
unfamiliar to you."
I am not a papist," she said, with
some warmth.
"Nevertheless, a papist in your
position would conceive himself to be in purgatory."
"I am certainly not happy," she
admitted, "because everything is
so strange."
"Have you no friends here?" I
inquired.
"I must have many acquaintances," she
said; "but I never cared for intimate friendships. I used to entertain a
good deal; my husband's political position demanded it."
"Perhaps there is someone on this
side to whom you were specially kind at some time or other, someone
whose grief you helped to bear, whose poverty you eased."
"I patronised our organised
charities."
"I fear that sort of help is too
impersonal to be remembered here. Have you no children?"
"No."
"No brothers or sisters on this side.
"I quarrelled with my only brother
for marrying beneath him."
"But surely," I said, "you must have
had a mother. Was she not waiting for you when you came over?"
"No."
This surprised me, for I had been
told that all mother spirits who have not gone back
to the world know by a peculiar thrill when a child to which they have given birth is about
to be reborn into the
spiritual world—a sort of sympathetic afterpain,
the final and sweetest reward of motherhood.
"Then she must have reincarnated," I
said.
"Do you hold to that pagan belief?"
the lady inquired, with just a touch of superiority. "I thought that
only queer people, Theosophists and such, believed in reincarnation."
"I was always queer," I admitted.
"But you know, of course,
dear madam, that about three-quarters of the earth's inhabitants are
familiar with that theory in some form or other."
We continued our talk for a little
time, and meanwhile I was puzzling my heart as to what I could do to
help this poor lonely woman, for whom no one was waiting. I passed in
mental review this and that ministering angel of my acquaintance, and
wondered which of them would be considered most correct from the
conventional earthly point of view. The noblest of them was usually at
the side of some newly arrived unfortunate woman—to use a euphemism of
that polite society which my latest protegee
had frequented. The others were
here, there, and everywhere, but
generally with those souls who needed
them most; while the need of my present companion was more real than
urgent. If Lionel had been here, he might have entertained her for a while.
I wished that I had cultivated the
acquaintance of some of those ladies who crochet and gossip in this
world as they crocheted and gossipped in yours. Do not be shocked. Did
you fancy that a lifelong
habit could be laid aside in a moment? As women on earth
dream often of their knitting, so they do here. It is as easy to knit in
this world as it is to dream in yours.
Understand that the world in which I
now live is no more essentially sacred than is the world in which you
live, nor is it any more mysterious to those who dwell in it. To the
serious soul all conditions are sacred—except those that are profane,
and both are found out here as well as on the earth.
But to return to the lonely woman. I
was still wondering what I should do with her when, looking up, I saw
the Teacher approaching. He had with him another woman, as like the
first as one empty china cup is like another empty china cup. Then he
and I went away and left the two together.
"I did not know," I said to the
Teacher, "that you troubled yourself with any souls
but those of considerable development."
He smiled:
"It was your perplexity which I came
to relieve, not that of those poor ladies."
Then he began to talk to me about
relative values.
"In a sense," he said, "one soul is
as much worth helping as another; in a deeper sense, perhaps it is not. Do not think that I am
indifferent to the sufferings
of the weakest ones because I give my time and attention to the strong.
Like the ministering angels, I go where I am most needed. Only the
strong ones can learn what I have to teach. The weak ones are the
charges of the Messiahs and their followers. But, nevertheless, between
us and the Messiahs there is brotherhood and there is mutual
understanding. Each works in his own field. The Messiahs help the many;
we help the few. Their reward in love is greater than ours; but we do
not work for reward any more than they do. Each follows the law of his
being.
"To be loved by all men a teacher
must be known to all men, and
we reveal ourselves only to a few chosen ones. Why do we not
go the way of the Messiahs? Because
the balance must be, maintained. For every great worker in
the sight of men there is another worker out of sight. Which kind of
teacher is of greater value? The question is out of order. The North and
the South are interdependent,
and there are two poles to every magnet."
LETTER
XXXVIII
WHERE TIME IS NOT
I THINK you now understand from what
I have said that not all the
souls who have passed the airy frontier are either in heaven or
hell. Few reach an extreme, and most
live out their allotted period
here as they lived out their allotted
period on earth, without realising either the possibilities or the
significance of their
condition.
Wisdom is a tree of slow growth; the
rings around its trunk are earthly lives, and the grooves between are
the periods between the lives. Who grieves that an acorn is slow in
becoming an oak? It is equally unphilosophical to feel that the truth
which I have endeavoured to make you understand—the truth of the soul's
great leisure—is necessarily sad. If a man were to become an archangel
in a few years' time, he would suffer terribly from growing-pains.
The Law is implacable, but it
often seems to be kind.
Nevertheless there are many souls in
heaven, and there are many heavens, of which I have seen a few.
But do not fancy that most people go
from place to place and from state to state as I do. The things which I
describe to you are not exceptional; but that one man should be able to
see and describe so many things is exceptional indeed. I owe it largely
to the Teacher. Without his guidance I could not have acquired so rich
an experience.
Yes, there are many heavens. Last
night I felt the yearning for
beauty which sometimes came to me on
earth. One of the strangest
phenomena of this ethereal world is the tremendous attraction by
sympathy—the attraction of events, I mean. Desire a thing intensely
enough, and you are on the way to it. A body of a
feather's weight moves swiftly when
propelled by a free will.
I felt a yearning for beauty, which
is a synonym for heaven. Did I
really move from my place, or did heaven come to me? I cannot say,
space means
so little here. For every
vale without there is a vale within. We desire a place, and we are
there. Perhaps the Teacher
could give you a scientific explanation of this, but I can
not at the moment. And then, I want
to tell you about that heaven where I was last night. It was so
beautiful that the charm of it is over me still.
I saw a double row of dark-topped
trees, like cypresses, and at the end of this long avenue down which I
passed was a softly diffused light. Somewhere I have read of a heaven
lighted by a thousand suns, but my heaven was not like that. The light
as I approached it was softer than moonlight, though clearer. Perhaps
the light of the sun would shine as softly if seen through many veils of
alabaster. Yet this light seemed to come from nowhere. It simply was.
As I approached I saw two beings
walking towards me, hand in hand. There was such a look of happiness on
their faces as one never sees on the faces of earth. Only a spirit
unconscious of time could look like that.
I should say that these two were man
and woman, save that they seemed so different from what you understand by man and woman. They did
not even look at each other as they walked; the touch of the hand seemed
to make them so much one, that the realisation of the eye could have
added nothing to their content.
Like the light which came from
nowhere, they simply were.
A little farther on I saw a group of bright-robed
children dancing among flowers. Hand
in hand in a ring they danced, and their garments, which were like the
petals of flowers, moved with the rhythm of their dancing limbs. A great
joy filled my heart. They, too, were unconscious of time, and might have
been dancing there from eternity, for all I knew. But whether their
gladness was of the moment or of the ages had no significance for me or
for them. Like the light, and like the lovers who had passed me hand in
hand, they were, and that was enough.
I had left the avenue of cypresses
and stood in a wide plain, encircled by a forest of blossoming trees.
The odours of spring were on the air, and birds sang. In the centre of
the plain a great circular fountain played with the waters, tossing them
in the air, whence they descended in feathery spray. An atmosphere of
inexpressible charm was over everything. Here and there in this circular
flower-scented heaven walked angelic beings, many or
most of whom must some time have
been human. Two by two they walked, or in groups, smiling to themselves or at one another.
On earth you often use the word
"peace"; but compared with the
peace of that place the greatest
peace of earth is only turmoil. I realised
that I was in one of the fairest heavens, but that I was alone there.
No sooner had this thought of
solitude found lodgment in my heart than I saw standing before me the
Beautiful Being about whom I
wrote you a little time ago. It smiled, and said to me:
"He who is sadly conscious of his
solitude is no longer in heaven. So I have come to hold you here yet a little while."
"Is this the particular heaven where
you dwell?" I asked.
"Oh, I dwell nowhere and everywhere,"
the Beautiful Being answered. "I am one of the voluntary wanderers, who
find the charm of home in
every heavenly or earthly place."
"So you sometimes visit earth?"
"Yes, even the remotest hells I go
to, but I never stay there long.
My purpose is to know all things,
and yet to remain unattached."
"And do you love the earth?"
"The earth is one of my playgrounds.
I sing to the children of earth sometimes; and when I sing to the poets,
they believe that their muse
is with them. Here is a song which I sang one night to a
soul which dwells among men:
"My sister, I am often with you when
you realise it not.
For me a poet soul is a well of water
in whose deeps I can see myself reflected.
I live in a glamour of light and
colour, which you mortal poets vainly try to express in magic words.
I am in the sunset and in the star;
I watched the moon grow old and
you grow young.
In childhood you sought for me in the
swiftly moving cloud; in maturity you fancied you had caught me in the
gleam of a lover's eye; but I am the eluder of men.
I beckon and I fly, and the touch of
my feet does not press down the heads of the blossoming daisies.
You can find me and lose me again,
for mortal cannot hold me.
I am nearest to those who seek
beauty—whether in thought or in form; I fly from those who seek to
imprison me.
You can come each day to the region
where I dwell.
Sometimes you will meet me, sometimes
not; for my will is the wind's will, and I answer no beckoning finger:
But when I beckon, the souls come
flying from the four corners of heaven.
Your soul comes flying, too; for you
are one of those I have called
by the spell of my magic.
I have use for you, and you have
meaning for me; I like to see your
soul in its hours of dream and
ecstasy.
Whenever one of my own dreams a dream
of Paradise, the light grows brighter for me, to whom all things are bright.
Oh, forget not the charm of the
moment, forget not the lure of the mood!
For the mood is wiser than all the
magi of earth, and the treasures of the moment are richer and rarer than
the hoarded wealth of the ages.
The moment is real, while the age is
only a delusion, a memory, and a shadow.
Be sure that each moment is all, and
the moment is more than time.
Time carries an hour-glass, and his
step is slow; his hair is white
with the rime of years, and his
scythe is dull with unwearied
mowing;
But he never yet has caught the
moment in its flight. He has grown
old in casting nets for it.
Ah, the magic of life and of the
endless combination of living things!
I was young when the sun was formed,
and I shall be young when the
moon falls dead in the arms of her daughter the earth.
Will you not be young with me? The
dust is as nothing: the soul is
all.
Like a crescent moon on the surface
of a lake of water is the moment of love's awakening;
Like a faded flower in the lap of the
tired world is the moment of love's death.
But there is love and Love, and the
love of the light for its radiance
is the love of souls for each other.
There is no death where the inner
light shines, irradiating the fields
of the within—the beyond—the unattainable attainment.
You know where to find me."
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