First Principles of Theosophy - Jinarasadasa

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The

First Principles of Theosophy


By Curuppumullage Jinarajadasa

First published in 1921


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INTRODUCTION

Theosophy is the wisdom arising from the study of the evolution of life and
form. This wisdom already exists, because the study has been pursued for long
ages by properly equipped investigators into nature’s mysteries. The
investigators, who are called the Masters of the Wisdom, are those souls who in
the evolutionary process have passed beyond the stage of man to the next higher,
that of the “Adept”. As man evolves to Adept, he gains knowledge by
investigation and experiment. The knowledge so far gained by an unbroken line
of Adepts is Theosophy, the Ancient Wisdom.

As man becomes Adept, he ceases to be merely an item in the evolutionary


process, and appears as a master and director of that process, under the
supervision of a great Consciousness called in Theosophy the Logos. He is
enabled, as a cooperator with the Logos, to see nature from His standpoint, and
to some extent survey her, not as her helpless tool, but with the vision of her
Creator. Such a survey is Theosophy today.

These Masters of the Wisdom, the agents of the Logos, direct the
evolutionary process in all its phases, each supervising a particular department in
the evolution of life and form. They form a body known as the Great Hierarchy
or the Great White Brotherhood. They guide the building and unbuilding of
forms on sea and land; they direct the rise and fall of nations, giving to each just
so much of the Ancient Wisdom as is needed for its welfare, and can be
assimilated by it.
Sometimes that Wisdom is given indirectly, through workers in quest of
knowledge, by inspiring them all unseen towards discoveries; sometimes it is
given directly, as a revelation. Both these ways are observable now in the
twentieth century. The Masters of the Wisdom, who are in charge of the
evolution of all that lives, are giving the Wisdom—the science of facts—
indirectly, through the invisible guidance and inspiration of scientific workers;
directly, they have given it in a body of knowledge known by the term
Theosophy.
Theosophy is then, in a sense, a revelation, but it is the revelation of a
knowledge by those who have discovered it, to those who have not yet done so.
It cannot but be a hypothesis at first to whomsoever it is offered; it can become
one’s own personal knowledge only by experiment and experience.

In Theosophy today we have not the fullness of knowledge of all facts. Only a
few main facts and laws have been told us, sufficient to spur us on to study and
discovery; but innumerable gaps remain to be filled in. They are being filled in
by individual workers in our midst, but what we have of knowledge is as a drop
in the ocean to what lies undiscovered or unrevealed. Nevertheless, the little we
have is of wonderful fascination, and it reveals new inspiration and beauty
everywhere. Theosophy today, in the modern Theosophical literature, will be
found to be concerned mostly with the evolution of life. But the knowledge
concerning the evolution of form, now gathered in every department of modern
science, is equally a part of the Ancient Wisdom. In both, there are gaps to be
filled in; but when both are correctly viewed, each is seen to supplement the
other.

In this exposition of Theosophy, as in every manual of science, there are bound


to be two elements. A writer will expound what has been accepted as fact by all,
or by a majority of scientific investigators, but at the same time he may include
the result of the work of a few or of himself only, which may require
corroboration or revision. As he proceeds, he may not separate, unconsciously or
through lack of true scientific training, these two elements. Similarly, while the
leading ideas of this work may be considered “Theosophical”, and as a fairly
correct exposition of the knowledge revealed by the Masters of the Wisdom,
there will be parts that will not deserve that dignity. But as Truth is after all a
matter of discovery by each for himself, what others can do is merely to point
out the way. Scientifically established truths, and what may be but personal or
erroneous views, must all be tested by the same standard.

Though in its fundamental ideas Theosophy is a revelation, yet there is no


authority in it to an individual, unless he himself assents to it. Nevertheless, as a
man must be ready to stand or fall by the noblest hypothesis of life which his
heart and mind can conceive, this work is written to show that such a hypothesis
exists in Theosophy.
CHAPTER I
THE EVOLUTION OF LIFE AND FORM

There is no better preparation for a clear comprehension of Theosophy than a


broad, general, knowledge of modern science. For science deals with facts,
tabulating them and discovering laws; Theosophy deals with the same facts, and
though they may be tabulated differently, the conclusions are in the main the
same. Where they differ, it is not because Theosophy questions the facts of the
scientist, but simply because, before coming to conclusions, it takes into account
additional facts which modern science either ignores or has not as yet
discovered. There is but one Science, so long as facts remain the same; what is
strictly scientific is Theosophical, as what is truly Theosophical is entirely in
harmony with all the facts, and therefore in the highest degree scientific.

The greatest achievement of modern science is the conception offered to the


thinking mind of the phenomena of existence as factors in a great process called
Evolution. Let us understand in broad outline what evolution means according to
science, and we shall be ready to understand what it means according to
Theosophy.

Let us consider first the great nebula in Orion (Fig. 1).


It is a chaotic mass of matter in an intensely heated condition, millions and
millions of miles in diameter. It is a vague, cloudy mass, full of energy; but, so
far as we can see, it is energy not performing any usefu1 work.

But there are other nebulae which give us an indication of a definite trend in
evolution. The nebula in Canes Venatici (Fig. 2) is not only revolving round a
center, but it also appears to be breaking up into distinct sections or arms. The
material of each arm, while retaining its motion round the centre, will slowly
condense round one or more nuclei. Each nucleus will become a star.
A similar process can be postulated for the next stage in evolution. The material
of each star undergoes a change. Either because of its internal condition, or
because it is affected by a passing star, it will develop subsidiary centers. The
nebular matter will condense round them, and slowly these centers will become
planets circling round the star’s central nucleus. Thus, with regard to our own
star, the Sun, we note what evolution has accomplished; it is today an orderly
solar system, having a central sun and attendant planets circling round it (Fig. 3).
What will be the next stage? By this time, there will have appeared within the
solar system the lighter chemical elements. Hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen,
phosphorus, calcium, iron, and others, will be there; they will enter into certain
combinations, and then will come the first appearance of Life. We shall now
have some of the matter as protoplasm, the first form of Life. What, then, will be
the next stage?

This protoplasm, too, arranges itself in groups and combinations; it takes the
form of organisms, both vegetable and animal. Let us first watch what happens
to it, as it becomes vegetable organisms.

Two activities will be noticeable from the beginning in this living matter: one,
that the organism desires to retain its life as long as possible, by nutrition; the
other, to produce another organism similar to its own. Under the impulse of these
two instincts, it will “evolve”, that is, we shall see the simple organism taking on
a complex structure. This process will continue, stage by stage, till slowly there
will arise a vegetable kingdom on each planet, such as we have on our own (Fig.
4).

Each successive stage will be developed from its predecessor; each will be so
organized as to prolong its existence longer and to give rise to better offspring.
Each will be more “evolved” than what has gone before. From unicellular
organisms, such as bacteria, algae and fungi, spore plants will be developed, able
to disseminate offspring in a new way; later, a better method of propagation will
be evolved, by means of seeds. Later still, there will come the stage of flowering
plants, where the individual organism, with least expenditure of energy, will
retain its own life, while at the same time it gives rise to a large number of off-
spring. Stage by stage, the organism increases in complexity; but that very
complexity enabIes it to “live” more satisfactorily, that is, to give rise to
offspring with the least expenditure of force, to prolong its life, and at the same
time to produce a type of progeny with new and greater potentialities of self-
expression than its parent.

A similar process of evolution takes place in protoplasm, as it gives rise to the


animal kingdom. From protozoa, simple unicellular organisms, we find evolved
step by step the various groups of the invertebrate kingdom (Fig. 5).
From unicellular organisms to multi-cellular organisms with tissues and nervous
and circulatory systems, complexity increases group after group. Then a new
step comes in the building of organisms; the central nerve trunk is sheathed by
vertebrae, and thus we have the vertebrates. From one order of vertebrates, the
reptiles, come the mammals; (only contains Figure 5) among the highest of the
mammals appear the primates. Of this last order of the animal kingdom, the most
highly organized is Man.

The instincts of self-preservation and propagation are seen in the animal


kingdom also. As structure becomes more complex, the organism is better fitted
to adapt itself to the changing environment, better able, with less and less
expenditure of force, to live and produce similar organisms. But a new element
of life appears among the higher vertebrates.

“If we contemplate life at large in its ascending forms, we see that in the lowest
creatures the energies are wholly absorbed in self-sustentation and sustentation
of the race. Each improvement in organization, achieving some economy or
other, makes the maintenance of life easier; so that the energies evolved from a
given quantity of food more than suffice to provide for the individual and for
progeny; some unused energy is left. As we rise to the higher types of creatures
having more developed structures, we see that this surplus energy becomes
greater and greater; and the highest show us long intervals of cessation from the
pursuit of food, during which there is not an infrequent spontaneous expenditure
of unused energy in that pleasurable activity of the faculties we call play. This
general truth has to be recognized as holding of life in its culminating forms—of
human life as well as of other life. The progress of mankind is, under one aspect,
a means of liberating more and more life from mere toil and leaving more and
more life available for relaxation—for pleasurable culture, for aesthetic
gratification; for travel, for games.”1
From the chaotic nebula, once upon a time, to man today, thinking, playing and
loving—this is the process called Evolution. A chaos has become a cosmos, with
orderly events, which the human mind can tabulate as laws; the unstable, “a-
dharma”, has become the stable, “dharma”. We note what are the principles
which nature has followed, as the One becomes the Many, as disorder becomes
order, in the next diagram (Fig. 6).
True, no eye of man saw the beginning of this process, nor has continuously
watched it to the present day, and so can describe from direct observation each
step in evolution, and say that evolution is a fact. We can only reconstruct the
process by observing different kinds of nebulae, by studying the structures of
extinct and living organisms, by piecing together here a tail with there a wing.
None can say that the universe did not arise in all its complexity a few thousand
years ago, just before historical tradition began; and none can say that the
universe will not tomorrow cease to be. But man cannot be satisfied with taking
note only of the few brief moments of the present which his consciousness can
retain; he must construct some, conception of nature, and postulate a past and a
future. Such a past and a future are propounded, largely from analogy, in the
process called evolution. In a sense, evolution is a hypothesis; but it is the most
satisfactory hypothesis so far in the history of mankind, and it is also one which,
when once accepted, shows evolution everywhere, for all to see.
Fascinating as is the survey of the cosmos in the light of evolution as taught by
modern science, there is nevertheless one gloomy element in it, and that is the
insignificant part played by the individual in the timeless drama. Nature at work,
“evolving”, lavishly spends her energies, building form after form. But a terrible
spendthrift she seems, producing far more forms than she provides sustenance
for. Time is of no account, and the individual but of little, only indeed so long as
he lives. During the brief life of the individual, nature smiles on him, caresses
him, as though everything had been planned for his welfare. But after he has
made the move she guides him to make, after he has given rise to offspring, or
has slightly modified the environment for others by his living, death comes and
he is annihilated. That “I am I”, which impels each to live, to struggle, to seek
happiness, ceases to be; for it is not we who are important, but the type—”so
careful of the type she seems, so careless of the single life”. Where today are
Nineveh and Babylon, and “the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was
Rome”?

“Tis all a Checkerboard of Nights and Days Where Destiny with men for Pieces
plays; Hither and thither moves, and mates, and slays, And one by one back in
the closet lays.”

From this aspect, evolution is terrible, a mechanical process, serene in its


omnipotence and ruthlessness. Yet, since it is a process after all, perhaps to bring
in personal considerations whether we like it or not may not be to the point. But
since we are men and women who think and desire, we do bring in the personal
element to our conception of life; and when we look at evolution, the outlook for
us as individuals is not encouraging. We are as bubbles of the sea, arising from
no volition of our own, and we cease to be, following developments in a process
which we cannot control. We are “such stuff as dreams are made of, and our
little life is rounded with a sleep”.

Is there possible any conception of the evolutionary process which can show a
more encouraging outlook? It is that which Theosophy offers in the doctrine of
the Evolution of Life through the evolution of forms.

As the scientist of today examines nature, he notes two inseparable elements,


matter and force; a third, which we know as “life”, he considers to be the effect
of the interaction of the two. He sees in matter the possibilities of both life and
consciousness, and neither of them is considered by him capable of an existence
independent of matter. In the main this conception is true; but, according to
Theosophy, a modification is required, which may be stated as follows.

Just as we see no matter without force, and no force which is not affecting
matter, so, too, there exists a similar relation between life and matter. The two
are inseparable, and neither is the product of the other.

There are in the universe types of matter finer than those recognized by our
senses, or ponderable by the most delicate of instruments. Many forms of energy,
too, exist, of which but a few have as yet been discovered by man. One form of
energy, which acts in conjunction with certain types of ultra-physical matter, is
called Life. This life evolves; that is, it is slowly becoming more and more
complex in its manifestations.

The complexity of the life-activities is brought about by building organisms in


such matter as we know by our senses. (There are other modes of life-activities,
but for the moment we shall confine our attention to those activities which our
senses can perceive.) It is this life which holds a group of chemical compounds
during a certain period as a living organism. While so holding it, that life gains a
complexity by means of the experiences received through its receptacle. What
we note as the death of the organism is the withdrawal of its life, in order to exist
for a while dissociated from the lowest or physical forms of matter. It is,
however, still linked to ultra-physical matter. In withdrawing from the organism
at death, such experiences as were received through it are retained as habits
learned by the life; they are transmuted into new capacities for form-building,
and they will be utilized with its next effort to build a new organism.

If we look at Fig. 7, we shall be able to grasp clearly the Theosophical


conception of the Evolution of Life.
When we consider structures only, we are looking at but one side of evolution.
For behind each structure is a life. Though a plant dies, the life which makes it
living, and propels it to react to environment, does not die. When a rose withers
and dies and disappears in dust, we know that none of its matter is destroyed;
every particle of it still exists, for matter cannot be annihilated. So, too, is it with
the life which out of chemical elements makes a rose. It merely withdraws for a
time, to reappear later building another rose. The experiences of sunshine and
storm, of the struggle for existence, gained through the first rose, are slowly
utilized to build a second (Contains only Fig. 19.) rose which shall be better
adapted to live and propagate its kind.
Just as an individual organism is one unit in a larger group, so also is the life
within each organism a unit in a larger group called a “group-soul”. Behind the
organisms of the vegetable kingdom as a whole is the vegetable group-soul, an
indestructible reservoir of those life-forces which are attaining complexity by
building vegetable forms. Each unit of life within that group-soul, as it appears
on earth anew in an organism, comes there endowed with the sum total of the
experiences of the dead organisms built by the group-soul; each unit, as it returns
to the group-soul at death, contributes to the group what it has gained in power
of new ways of reacting to environment. The same is true of the animal
kingdom; each species, genus and family has its own compartment in the general
animal group-soul.

With man, too, the principle is the same, except that man has passed the stage of
belonging to a group-soul. Each man is an individual life and, though he is
linked in mystic ways to all his fellows in a Brotherhood of Man, he treads his
own path, and carves out his own future. He retains his experiences, gained by
him life after life, and does not share them with others, unless he shares them of
his own volition.

There is no such thing as death in nature, in the sense of a resolution into


nothing. The life withdraws into its ultra-physical environment for a while,
retaining there the experiences which it has gained as new modes of form-
building. Though form after form comes and goes, their successive lives are but
the entrances and exits of the same lite in the evolutionary drama. Not a fraction
of experience is lost, as not a particle of matter is destroyed.
Furthermore, this life evolves, as already mentioned. The method of its evolution
is through growth in forms. The aim of a given part of the group-soul’s life is to
manifest through such forms as shall dominate, through the greatest adaptability
to environment, all other forms, while at the same time they shall be capable of
the most delicate response to the inner promptings of the life itself. Each part of
a group-soul, each type of life, each group and class and order, has this aim; and
hence ensues the fierce warfare in nature. She is “red in tooth and claw with
ravin”, but the struggle for existence is not the wasteful work it seems. Forms are
destroyed, but only to be built up into new forms. The life comes and goes, but
step by step it comes nearer to the form which it seeks. No life is lost; the waste
is but a seeming, and the ruthless struggle is the way to determine the best forms
in an ever-changing environment.
When the fittest forms, for a given environment have been evolved, then that
particular part of the group-soul pours its life through them with a fullness and
richness which mark an epoch by its domination; and as the environment again
changes, once more the quest is resumed for the next fitter forms. So all parts of
the group-souls of the vegetable and animal kingdoms are at war, in a struggle
for a survival of the fittest. Yet in that struggle not a single unit of life is
annihilated; the victory achieved by one type is not for itself, but for the totality
of life which has been seeking that very form as the best through which to unfold
its dormant energies.

Life as it evolves has its stages. First, it builds forms in ultra-physical matter, and
then we name it “elemental” life. Then, with the experiences of its past building,
it “ensouls” chemical elements in combination, and becomes the mineral group-
soul. Next, it builds protoplasm, ensouls vegetable forms, and afterwards, at a
later period, animal forms. Then we have the next stage as man. Life now builds
individuals able to think and love, capable of self-sacrifice and idealism, for
...striving to be Man, the worm
Mounts through all the spires of form.
And man is not the last link in the chain.

In all this cosmic process from atom to man, there is one element which must be
taken into account, if we are to understand the process correctly. Though matter
evolves from homogeneous to heterogeneous, from indefinite to definite, from
simple to complex, life does not so evolve. The evolution of matter is a
rearrangement; the evolution of life is an unlocking and an unfoldment. In the
first cell of living matter, there exists, in some incomprehensible fashion,
Shakespeare and Beethoven. Nature may need millions of years to rearrange the
substance, “selecting” age after age, till the proper aggregation is found, and
Shakespeare and Beethoven can come from her bosom to be the protagonists in
one scene of her drama. Yet all the while, throughout the millions of years, the
life held them both mysteriously within itself. The evolution of life is not a
receiving but a giving. For at the root of the life itself, as its very heart and soul,
is something greater still, a Consciousness from His fullness of Power, Love and
Beauty, He gave to the first speck of life all that He is., As all the rays from the
glorious panorama or a mountain range may be converged by a lens into one
invisible geometrical point, so each of life is as a focal point of that illimitable
Existence. Within each cell He resides in His fullness; under His guidance, at the
proper time Shakespeare and Beethoven step forth, and we call the action
Evolution.

If the study of the evolution of forms, according to modern science, has enlarged
and corrected our previous conceptions of the universe, the study of the
evolution of life is more striking still in its consequences. For new elements of
complexity appear in the life-side of evolution, and their consideration means a
new evaluation of evolutionary processes. The first factor in the complexity is
that, within the forms as studied by the scientist, there are several parallel
streams of evolving life, each largely independent of the others in its
development.

Two of these streams are those of Humanity and of a parallel stream called the
evolution of Devas or Angels (Fig.8).

As already mentioned, human life has as its earlier stages animal, vegetable,
mineral, and elemental life.

From that same mineral life, however, the life diverges into another channel,
through the stages of vegetable forms, animal forms, then to forms of “nature-
spirits” or the fairies of tradition, into Angels or Devas. Another parallel stream,
about which little is known, is the life of cells, with its earlier phases and those
to come. A stream of life through electrons, ions and chemical elements is also
probably distinct. Yet other evolutions exist on our planet, but for lack of
sufficient information they may for the moment be left out of consideration.

The ladder of life which evolves through the forms in our midst is seen in Fig. 9.
The life utilizes organisms built up of solid, liquid and gaseous matter; but it also
uses forms built of more tenuous matter in a “fourth state” of matter (called
“etheric” by the Theosophist), and also in types of matter still more rarefied,
called “astral” and “mental” matter. Ascending from the mineral, six distinct
streams will be noted, converging into Adepts or Perfect Men, and into Arupa
Devas or Higher Angels, and culminating in a type of lofty entities called Dhyan
Chohans. Of the six, only two utilize physical matter in its finer physical or
“etheric” states (first and third columns in the diagram), and then build forms in
astral matter as “sylphs”. One stream builds organisms living in water, while
three use forms living on land. Only one of the six streams of life leads into
humanity; the other five pass into the parallel evolution of the Devas or Angels.

It must be carefully noted that the evolution of life has its antecedent phases, its
heredity, as it were, which is sometimes quite distinct from the heredity of the
forms. The fact that mammals and birds have been developed from reptilian
forms only indicates a common ancestry of bodily form. While seaweeds, fungi,
grasses and mosses have a common physical heredity from unicellular aquatic
organisms, the life nevertheless has ascended through four separate streams.
Similarly, while birds and mammals have a common physical ancestry, the life
of birds has, for its future, stages as etheric creatures, the fairies on the surface of
the earth, then as fairies in higher etheric matter and so to astral fairies and
Devas; but the life of mammals passes into the human kingdom.
Before passing from these etheric forms in earth-depths and in the depths of the
sea, it must be pointed out that an etheric form, though composed of “matter”,
can pass through and exist in solid rock, or in the sea, as the air can pass through
a wood-pile or remain among the interstices between the pieces: of wood. Even
our densest substances are porous to the etheric types of matter; and organisms
built up of these latter types find no difficulty in existing inside the earth or sea,
since they are not affected by the heat or the pressure which would make life for
ordinary physical creatures impossible.

The same general differentiation of life is observable if we consider humanity


alone (Fig. 10).
The stream of life, which later is to become humanity, has rudimentary marks of
specialization, even in its early phases of elemental, mineral and vegetable life;
we begin to note these more clearly when the animal kingdom is reached. There
are seven fundamental types of this life which is going to be human; there are
modifications in each type as it is influenced somewhat by the others. The types
persist throughout all the kingdoms preceding the human. The life of dogs is
always distinct from that of cats; that of tile elephants from both. The dog life
evolved in forms of wolves and jackals and other canidae, previous to its highest
embodiment in the domesticated dog. Similarly other types of animal life, like
cats, horses, elephants, monkeys, had their earlier “incarnations” through more
savage and prehistoric forms of the same species. (This subject will be dealt with
more fully in Chapter VII—”The Evolution of Animals”).
When we come to study these types as they appear in humanity, a most
fascinating view of mankind opens before us. It requires but little imagination to
see that the canine life, on its entrance into humanity, will appear as the
devotional type of soul the classification in Fig. 11 is in no way final; it is given
more by way of suggestion than as an absolutely correct clue to, the mystery of
temperaments.

Seven types are clearly marked; one is not better or higher than another. They
are all needed in the great evolutionary drama, and each is great as it contributes
to the whole that development of the one Divine Life and Consciousness which
has been arranged for it by the Logos.
If we examine devotional souls around us we shall note some who in their heart
and mind go to God direct, and others to whom God is vague unless conceived
in the form of some Incarnation or Mediator, such as Jesus Christ or Shri
Krishna. There are also devotional souls who are influenced by the dramatic
wave of life; and then they will covet martyrdom, not out of conceit or from
desire of posing, but because a life of devotion is unreal unless it is continually
dramatic. Love of God and the mind of a Tolstoy will mean identifying himself
in outward ways with the poor and the down-trodden, and playing a role in a
dramatic situation; the Christ-life must be dramatic for these souls, to be full of
meaning.

The affectionate type, too, has its many variants. There are those for whom all
life is centred in the love of one soul alone, the Romeos and Juliets among us,
who are ready to renounce all for one. There are others who are capable of a less
intense love, but who delight in sending it out to a wider circle of parent, child
and friend, and are attracted by philanthropic schemes of activity.
The dramatic type, one variant of which has been mentioned above, is
interesting, as it is often misunderstood. To them life is not real unless an event
is a scene in a drama. Happiness is not happiness, unless it is in a drama in
which the soul is playing a “strong part”; grief is grief only if it is “like Niobe,
all tears”. One variant will be drawn to the stage, developing a dual conception
of action as the self and the not-self; influenced by the philosophic type of life,
another soul will develop into the playwright; while the dramatic soul with
executive tendencies will find life fascinating as a leader of battalions or as the
chief of a political party.
Among the scientific type, the theoretical and experimental variants are easily
recognizable. A third, the reverential, is less common just now, but he is the soul
full of zeal in scientific investigations, yet continually feeling the universe as the
living garment of God. ‘The scientist who is spectacular in his methods has the
dramatic type influencing him; his behaviour is not necessarily the result of
vanity or of a desire to be “in the limelight”, but only because he is living his
God-given temperament.
Of the executive type, there is the dramatic variant, seen in many a political
leader, and another, the magnetic type, who is able to inspire subordinates with
deep loyalty, but is not at all spectacular—if anything, prefers to keep in the
background, so long as the work is done.

Little need be said of the philosophic type, the differences of method adopted by
the various philosophers, in developing their conceptions of life, are due to what
they are, within themselves, as expressions of the One Life. Spencer and
Haeckel, Ruskin and Carlyle, Aristotle, Plato, Shankaracharya, Ramanujacharya,
Kant, Hegel, Spinoza, and others, well represent a few of the many variations of
this “Ray”.

To another type, which is much misunderstood, belong those to whom


symbolism strongly appeals. To these, life is not real unless it is an allegory. An
example of this type would be St. John, the author of Revelation, who delights in
symbols and allegories. A modification of this type is seen in those who find
religion real only when ritual accompanies it. Vestments and processions,
incense and genuflections, are a part of the worship of a being of this type.

In manifold ways the Logos trains His children to help Him in the common
work, and all are equal before Him. For each, He has hewn a path; it is for each
to tread his own path, encouraging the while the others on theirs.

The subject is full of fascination, but enough has been said to show something of
the Evolution of Life, and to suggest a line of thought and observation that will
be productive of much wisdom.

This rapid survey of creation from Orion to man shows, then, an evolutionary
process ever at work, the One becoming the Many. It is not a process where, in
the Many, each strives for himself, but where each slowly realizes that his higher
expression is dependent upon serving the others, for all are One. Not a series of
like parts, simply placed in juxtaposition, but one whole, made up of unlike parts
mutually dependent, is the key-note of the Evolution of Form; not one
temperament, not one creed or mode of worship, but a diversity of temperaments
and creeds and ways of service, all uniting to cooperate with the Logos to bring
to realization what He has planned for us, is ever the key-note of the Evolution
of Life.
CHAPTER II
THE RISE AND FALL OF CIVILIZATIONS

In Fig. 12 we have a picture of the world today.

In its many lands-north and south, east and west—live many peoples of diverse
races and creeds, and a study of their race-characteristics and customs is one of
great fascination. The study of peoples, aiming to understand their racial
characteristics, is called Ethnology. We shall be better able to understand what
Theosophy teaches as to the rise and fall of civilizations, if we first study what
modern scientific research tells us of the living races of mankind.

The peoples of the world today can be classified in many ways; among them are
two recognized as trustworthy guides. It is found that the shape of the head and
the texture of the hair are two fairly safe methods of classification, as they are
characteristics which pass on from generation to generation with but little
modification. Peoples are first divided into three groups according to their
“cephalic index”, as either dolichocephalous or long-headed, or brachycephalous
or short-headed, or mesaticephalous or medium-headed. The “cephalic index” is
that figure obtained when the maximum breadth of the head is stated as a
percentage of its maximum length. Taking one hundred as the length of the head,
then when its width is below seventy-five, a man is called dolichocephalous or
long-headed; between seventy-five and eighty he is mesaticephalous or medium-
headed; and above eighty he is said to be brachycephalous or short-headed.

The second method of classification, according to the texture of the hair, is due
to the fact that hair may be woolly and kinky, or curly and wavy, or straight and
smooth. In woolly hair, each hair is flattened like a ribbon, and a transverse
section under the microscope is seen to be a flat ellipse. Smooth and straight hair
is round like a wire, and a microscopical section shows it to be circular. Wavy
and curly hair is midway between the two peculiarities of oval and circular, and
its section is an oval ellipse. It is these structural characteristics which make hair
woolly, or straight, or wavy.
These two broad methods of classifications, according to the cephalic index and
according to the hair, are summed up in Fig. 13.
Broca’s classification shows us three main types of people. No race in all its
individuals follows one type only; in each may be found long-headed or
medium-headed or short-headed individuals; but one of the three types will
predominate, and according to that will be the classification of the race.
Sometimes, however, even though the hair will be a sure indication of
classification, a race may be so mixed that the ethnologist is uncertain whether it
should be labelled medium-headed rather than long-headed or short-headed.

The classification of Flower and Lydekker is but little different, though it also
takes into consideration the facial angle, the color of the hair and skin, and other
physical peculiarities.

It is noteworthy that both these systems of classification give us in the world


today three principal types of races: (1) the Ethiopian type, dark-skinned, almost
black, with thick lips, head tending to be dolichocephalic, and with black, woolly
hair; (2) the Mongolian, with high cheek bones, yellow or reddish in
complexion, hair black, straight and smooth, and, in the men, scanty on the face;
(3) the

Aryan or Caucasian, either white or brown, with hair curling or with tendency to
curl, in color flaxen, brown, black or “carroty”; the beard is usually full.

We have excellent examples of the Ethiopian type in Figs. 14 and 15. The
woolly hair, the broad nose and thick lips are prominent in these peoples.
Though these two individuals, chosen as examples of their race-type, are not
handsome according to our standards of beauty, nevertheless they are not
repulsive. Fig. 14 shows strength and dignity of a kind,
while Fig. 15 shows a rugged but artistic modelling that would have delighted
the eye of Rodin.

Figs. 16, 17 and 18 give us examples of the second type. We have it in a crude
form in Fig. 16, which is that of a Red Indian “squaw’” from British Columbia,
with her high cheek bones and long, lank hair.

More typical of the second type are Figs. 17 and 18; in the former we have a Red
Indian from the north-west of the United States, and in the latter a Chinese
mandarin; the high cheek bones and the smooth, hairless face show us at once to
which type they belong.
When we come to the Caucasian races, we have a type nearer to our Western
standards of the beautiful. We have two representatives, a Hindu with shaven
face (Fig. 19),

and a bearded Englishman (Fig. 20).

In the Aryan or Caucasian races we have in some respects the highest forms, not
only for beauty of structure, but also for quick response to external stimuli and
high sensitiveness to the finer philosophical and artistic thoughts and emotions.
The peoples of the world today have their civilizations; but no nation continues
for ever, and the fate of Nineveh and Tyre, of Greece and Rome, will be the fate
of all. Some will vanish utterly, leaving hardly a trace; others like Greece, will
leave to mankind a mighty message of the art of life. We may know something
of the rise and fall of civilizations by a study of history, but in historical studies
we see the past through the refracting medium of time and tradition, and we can
never be fully certain that our conclusions are not partial or erroneous. Yet
without a study of the past of humanity, we cannot judge of the present or
construct the future, and our philosophy of life cannot be true to fact.

Theosophy opens a new way to study the civilizations that have been, a method
in which, for the time, the past becomes the present, and therefore written
records or traditions are not essential. Difficult as is this subject to expound, yet
an attempt must be made, for it is one of the fundamental truths of existence, to
which we shall have to refer again and again in the course of this exposition of
Theosophy.
In Chapter I it was mentioned that behind all life and form, as their heart and
soul, is a great Consciousness. It is His manifestation that is the evolutionary
process, and “in Him we live and move and have our being”. Of Him
Theosophists today speak as the Logos. To that Consciousness there is no Past,
and what to us has been is with Him an event that is happening even Now. To the
Logos, the Past is as the Present, and the event of each moment of past time is
still happening in Him, is still a part of His present Self. Mortal mind can little
understand the “Eternal Now”; and yet it is one of the greatest of truths, which,
when grasped, shows new values to all things.
Mysterious and incredible as is this “Eternal Now”, yet man too may know
something of it. Man, the individual evolving soul, is in truth made in the image
of his Maker, and what He is in His fullness now, that man will become
someday. Hence it is that, by a certain development of faculties latent in the
human consciousness, men can touch even now the fringe, as it were, of the
Consciousness of the Logos, and so, with

Him, see the Past as happening even now. It is no picture which passes before
the vision of the investigator, no panorama which unveils itself before him, as on
a stage; it is an actual living in the so-called Past. He has but to select that part of
the “Past” which he desires to investigate, and then he is of it, and in it. Does he
desire to see the earth before its crust has solidified? Then he lives millions of
years ago, and round him is the earth with its seething molten metals, and he can
watch what is happening, hear the explosions, and feel the heat and the pressure.
And this in no dream condition, but exactly as he may go into a busy
thoroughfare today, hear the roar of the traffic, watch the people as they go to
and fro, or look up at the sun and the clouds, and note whatsoever thing interests
him. Does he desire to hear an oration of Pericles or see a triumph of Caeser?
Then he is in Athens or in Rome; the life of that day is all around him; he hears
the musical Greek or the sonorous Latin; he watches the actors in life’s drama of
those days. The Book of Time is spread out before him, and it is for him to select
an event which, to us, happened a thousand years since; but, as he puts himself
in touch with the Memory of the Logos, the Past becomes for him the Present,
and he may study it with such faculties as he possesses today.

Theosophical investigators, of present and past generations, have thus


investigated the Past of the earth by watching this Record in the Memory of the
Logos; and much information gathered in this way forms a part of Theosophical
teaching. What they have found in their researches into past civilizations is as
follows.

Long, long ago—over one million years ago—the distribution of land and water
was as shown in Fig. 21, the dark, shaded parts representing land.

We know that the surface of the earth is changing all the time, with here a
coastline slowly sinking, and there new land rising out of the waves; but how
may anyone know exactly what was the distribution of land and water a million
years ago? It is this that is possible; first, by watching the Record, and secondly,
by study in the museum of the Adept Brotherhood. The Hierarchy, or the Great
Brotherhood, mentioned in the Introduction, has preserved, from the day man
began his habitation of the earth, fossils and skeletons, maps, models and
manuscripts, illustrative of the development of the earth and its inhabitants,
animal and human. To those who, through utter renunciation of self and service
of man, earn the privilege, the study of past forms and civilizations in this
wonderful museum is a never-failing delight. There, the Theosophical
investigator finds models in clay of the appearance of the earth long ago, before
this or that cataclysm, patiently constructed for the guidance of later generations
of students by the Adept investigators of past civilizations. The maps of Figs.
21-24 have been drawn after a survey of the land and water by watching the
earth’s changes, and afterwards checking such survey with the globes in the
museum of the Brotherhood.

As we look at the map in Fig. 21, we see that most of the land today was under
the waves then, while most of the land of those days has sunk below the sea,
leaving here and there remnants, as in Australasia and in parts of other
continents. The continent which is seen to extend along the equator and south of
it, covering much of the present Pacific Ocean, is called Lemuria by the students
of Theosophy. The term is taken from the naturalist Sclater, who believed in the
existence of some such continent, because of the unusual distribution over wide
territories of the Lemur monkeys. Even in the days of Lemuria, men peopled the
earth, and the Lemurian peoples were of our first type, as in Figs. 14 and 15. The
pure Negroes and other woolly-haired races today are remnants of the ancient
Lemurians, with little change of type, except a diminution of stature.
Slowly, as years passed, the configuration became as in Fig. 22.
Where the Atlantic Ocean is today, there existed once upon a time a continent,
which Theosophists, after Plato, called Atlantis. It was on this continent that
there arose the second type of those peoples whom Flower and Lydekker have
called Mongolians—those with smooth hair and high cheek bones. From their
original home in Atlantis they migrated in all directions, and give us today the
millions of China and kindred peoples, and the fast-disappearing Red Indians of
North and South America.

By the time of the map in Fig. 23, Atlantis and the remnants of Lemuria have
changed in outline, and as we come to the days of Fig. 24, there remains of the
once vast continent of Atlantis only a large island in the Atlantic Ocean.
The story of its sinking as narrated to Solon, Plato’s ancestor, by the Egyptian
priests, is given by Plato in his Timaeus and Kritias. In 9564 B.C. mighty
convulsions destroyed this last remnant of Atlantis, and the island sank so
rapidly under the sea that it created a huge tidal wave which swept the low-lands
of the earth, and left in men’s minds the tradition of a vast, devastating “flood”.
As Atlantis sank under the waves, other parts of the earth, such as the desert of
Sahara, rose up; and what was once an inland sea of Central Asia became what is
now the Gobi Desert, and the earth took on more or less its appearance of today.

That Atlantis is not a mere myth is easily seen when we look at Fig. 25.

It gives us in outline the bed of the Atlantic Ocean, as mapped out according to
deep sea soundings. Round the Azores, the land does not slope gently down, as
in the ordinary coast lands, but descends precipitously; for, when Atlantis was
above the level of the ocean, the present Azores were the inaccessible, snow-clad
tops of the highest mountain range of the sunken continent.

Long before the destruction of Atlantis, however, a new race of men had sprung
up round the southern shores of the Central Asian Sea. These are the Aryans or
Caucasians, our third type, of Figs. 19 and 20. Southwards and westwards they
spread, becoming Hindus, Arabs and Persians, Greeks and Romans, Celts, Slavs
and Teutons.

Thus in Lemuria, Atlantis and Asia, arose the three races whose descendants
people the earth today.

Theosophy teaches that the rise and fall of civilizations is not a mechanical
development, “a Checkerboard of Nights and Days where Destiny with Men for
Pieces plays”. Nations come, and nations go, but always according to a Plan.
The Logos, from the beginning of human existence, has planned what races, and
what religions and sciences appropriate to them, shall appear one after the other,
and His Agents on earth, the Great Brotherhood, carry out His Plan. It is the
Adept Brothers who, using all nature’s forces, visible and invisible, direct the
evolutionary process throughout the millions of years. In that

Brotherhood, there are two Adepts whose work is to mould the destiny of each
great race. One is called the Manu, who directs the physical development of the
race, forming the new race-type by modification from that already existing,
according to the Plan of the Logos set before Him. It is the Manu who guides the
migrations of the race, gives to each people its polity, and directs each to do its
appointed work. The other guardian of the race is its Bodhisattva, or Spiritual
Teacher, who watches over its intellectual and emotional development, and
arranges for each people such religions, arts and sciences as shall enable it to
play its role in the drama written by the Logos.
Following the Plan of the Logos, during that period of time in which humanity
evolves on earth, seven great race-types are made to appear, called “Root-races
“. So far in the evolution of men, only five of the seven have appeared; of them
the First and the Second appeared so long ago that they have left no direct
descendants.

Each Root-race has seven modifications, called “sub-races”. A sub-race has the
fundamental characteristics of the Root-race, but it has also some tendency or
modification peculiar to itself. In Fig. 26 we have the names of the three Root-
races and their sub-races, whose representatives we have seen in the three race-
types already studied.
The Third Root-race is the Lemurian, and its earlier sub-races, the first, second
and third, have left no trace at all. Negroes, Negritos, Negrillos, and other
woolly-haired peoples represent the later sub-races of the Lemurian Root-race.
Hardly anywhere is a Root-race to be found now quite pure, but though it may
have intermingled with other races, usually it still shows its peculiar
characteristics.

From the seventh sub-race of the Lemurian, the Manu of the Fourth Root-race
developed the new Root-race, the Fourth or the Atlantean. It too has its seven
sub-races. Of the first and second of its sub-races no pure descendants are living,
but the skeleton of the “Furfooz man” is a fair specimen of the first, and that of
the “Cro-Magnon man” of the second. The third, the Toltec sub-race, still
remains in the “Indios” (Indians) of South and Central America, and the Red
Indians of the United States and Canada. The fourth migrated from Atlantis, and
went eastwards, past Babylonia, along the Yellow River into the plains of China.
Its peoples are represented in certain parts of China today by a tall, yellow
Chinese race, quite distinct from the later seventh sub-race Chinese. The
“original Semites”, the fifth sub-race, have left their descendants for us in the
white pure Jews, and in the
Kabyles of North Africa. The sixth, the Akkadians, were the Phoenicians, who
traded in the Mediterranean Seas; and the seventh, or Mongolians, were
developed out of the fourth or Turanian on the plains of China, and became the
modern Chinese. Two races, the Japanese and the Malays, belong hardly to any
special one of its sub-races, having in them the mixture of two or more. With the
Japanese especially, it is as though they are a final ebullition of the whole Root-
race, as a crowning effort, before the energies of the race begin their slow
decline; hence they possess many qualities which differentiate them from the
seventh sub-race, the Chinese.

From the fifth or “original Semite” sub-race of the Atlantean, the Manu of the
Fifth Root-race evolved His new type. The Fifth or Aryan Root-race also has its
Seven subdivisions, but so far only five of them have appeared. Of the first are
the Aryan Hindus, as also one type among the ancient Egyptians—that to which
the upper ruling classes belonged. The second is the Aryan Semite, distinct from
the “original Semite”, and it has its representatives today in the Arabs and the
Moors. The third is the Iranian, to which belonged the ancient Persians, and
whose descendants are the Iranians and Parsis of today. Of the fourth sub-race,
or the Celts, were the ancient. Greeks and Romans; and to it belong, with the
exception of those of Teutonic descent, their modern descendants in Italy,
Greece, France, Portugal and Spain and their descendants in South and Central
America, Mexico and the Antilles. The Irish, the Scots, the Welsh, the Manx and
the Bretons must also be numbered among the Celts.

To the Teutonic sub-race belong the Slavs, the Scandinavians, the Dutch; the
Germans, the English, and their descendants all over the world. By an
intermingling of several sub-races, the Manu of the Race is now developing the
sixth sub-race, which is called in the diagram the “Austral-American”. It is in
process of formation in the United States, Australia and New Zealand. The
seventh sub-race, whose work is still far in the future, is already showing faint
indications of its future type. In a child here and there in Brazil one may note a
moulding of the face which shows that the type is not Austral-American, but
another variant still of the Aryan race. The seventh sub-race may well be called
“Latin-American”, to distinguish it from the sixth, the Austral-American.
The Manu of the Sixth Root-race will develop His future type later on from the
sixth sub-race of the Aryan, and tens of thousands of years hence the Manu of
the Seventh Root-race will develop His new type from the seventh sub-race of
the Sixth Root-race.

Root-races and sub-races play their roles in the drama of the Logos, in order to
give experiences to us, His children, whom He sends to be born in them. For that
it is, that the Manu brings about differences in His sub-races of color and other
physical peculiarities, and places them among mountains or by the sea; for that it
is, that the Bodhisattva of the race sends to the sub-races different aspects of the
one Truth, in the many religions and philosophies which appear in them under
His guidance.

In Fig. 27 we have something of the characteristics of the races, and to


understand the significance of the table let us imagine a soul as he is born in sub-
race after sub-race, in them all.

Starting with a birth in the first sub-race of the Atlantean what strange
experiences he would have as a primitive, giant-like man; and then how different
those as a mountaineer, taciturn and hardy, sensitive to changes of sun and cloud.
In a birth as a Toltec, in Atlantis or Peru, his life would be as an administrator of
some kind in the wonderful patriarchal government that was the glory of the
Toltecs; he would have thrust upon his shoulders the welfare of a village or
province, would be trained to sink his individuality in some life-work for his
fellow-men. As a Turanian colonist, he would know of wanderings in search of
new lands, of the struggle to tame nature in a new settlement. As an original
Semite, he would be first and foremost a fighter, who developed quickness of
decision and was taught that his life was not his, but belonged to his tribe. As an
Akkad, he would know something of the magic of the sea, the need to sense the
psychological moment in the disposal of his wares, and would develop much
mental strength in business competition. And then as a Chinaman, a farmer,
hardly leaving for a day his ancestral farm, how intimately he would know a few
of his village, share their griefs and sorrows, and learn much of the inner
meaning of life away from the turmoil of war or trade!

Imagine how different, too, would be the soul’s experiences in those same sub-
races, should he then be born in each in a woman’s form, with a woman’s duties;
new standpoints and sensibilities would be developed, for the lack of which
surely the soul would be all the poorer.

Following the soul’s journeyings in rebirths, let us watch his entrance among the
Aryans. Surely a life in India would leave an indelible mark on him, giving him
something of the Hindu philosophical and detached view of life. Later, in Egypt
of old, among its practical and happy people, not given to dreams, he would
develop another phase of his nature. As an Arab, born in the bosom of the desert,
would not that desert leave an impress upon the soul, in a quick sensitiveness
and in the sense of the peopled solitude and the vastness of nature? As an
Iranian, born in a civilization forcing him to a life of success through mercantile
pursuits, what might he not learn of inventiveness and initiative, and of industry
and integrity? He could not speak but his thought would take poetical form, and
even if he had nothing of poetry in him, a life as an Iranian would put him into
touch with another phase of life. Then as a Celt—as a Greek of Athens perhaps
—what a new conception of life he would have, believing that the gods were
everywhere on sea and on land, that he was descended from them, born to make
an art of life, to have as his ideal to know something of everything, and so
develop a rounded nature and a health of heart; or as a Roman, firm in the
conviction that religion and the family and the State are one, with his deep sense
of law and reverence for it, and a readiness to obey, in order that he might learn
how to rule; or as a Frenchman or an Italian, sensitive and quick to respond to
emotions, dazzled by ideas because they are ideas, irrespective of material
considerations; or as an Irishman, perhaps a descendant of the Tuatha de Danaan,
with his dreams and intuitions, with his exaltations and depressions.

And then born a Teuton, in Scandinavia or England or America—what new


qualities would not the soul add to those already acquired? A practical outlook,
impersonality through scientific research, conscientiousness through business,
and individualism, would he gain; and would not Beethoven, too, and Wagner,
and Shakespeare, give him a new message of life?

Of the future sub-race, the sixth, the “Austral-American”, now arising in


America, Australia and New Zealand, we can already forecast some qualities:
fraternal, as in the new conception of the relation of parent and child;
cooperative, with combinations and “mergers” in business and in the work of
material development; intuitive, with an ability to approach anew the world
problem, untrammelled by the traditions of the old world; and a delight in
sunshine and open air and in all things which bring men together in
congregations.

And what of the seventh sub-race? Though still in the womb of time, its faint
stirrings of life may today be noted in the craving of Latin-America for
architecture, poetry and music, remembering subconsciously “the glory that was
Greece and the grandeur that was Rome”. In that far-off future, men will live a
fuller life than even Greece dreamed of; from the treasure-house of Beauty
which a man will then find in his heart and mind, he will know that he is divine,
and realize his Divinity by creation.

Thus civilizations rise and fall, and develop this or that quality; but the meaning
of it all is Reincarnation. They come and go, only to give us training-grounds for
the experiences we need life after life. Our Father in Heaven makes them out of
the dust, lets them play their parts, and sinks them under the waves, or destroys
them in a fiery cataclysm; but they are all only scenes in the drama which He has
written for us, His children, so that by playing well and truly our roles in them,
we may someday become like Him.
CHAPTER III
THE LAWS OF REINCARNATION

The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of a man,


And the man said, “Am I your debtor?”
And the Lord—”Not yet: but make it as clean as you can,
And then I will let you a better.”
TENNYSON
Once in ten thousand years or more, an idea is suddenly born into the world,
that, like another Prometlieus, ushers in a new era for men. In the century behind
us, such an idea was born, a concept of concepts, in that of Evolution. Like a
flash of lightning at night, its light penetrated into every corner, and ever since
men have seen nature at work, and not merely felt her heavy hand. In the dim
dawn of time was similarly born another concept, that of Reincarnation.

Reincarnation—that life, through successive embodiments, ascends to fuller and


nobler capacities of thought and feeling—and Evolution—that form ascends,
becoming ever more and more complex in structure—are as the right hand and
left of the Great Architect who is fashioning the world. The riddle of the
universe is but half solved in the light of one truth alone; consider the two as
inseparable, the one the complement of the other, and man then finds a concept
which grows with his growth.
Though Reincarnation is usually thought of as peculiar to the souls of men, it is
in reality a process which affects all life in all organisms. The life of the rose that
dies returns to its subdivision of the Rosaceae “group-soul”, and then
reincarnates as another rose; the puppy that dies of distemper returns to its dog
“group-soul”, and later reincarnates as the puppy of another litter. With man, the
only difference is that at death he does not return to any group-soul, for he is an
individual and separate consciousness; when he reincarnates, he returns with the
faculties which he developed in his previous lives, undiminished by sharing
them with another individual.
By common usage, however, the word Reincarnation is restricted to the process
as it affects the souls of men, and it is used in one of three senses, as follows:

1. That at the birth of a child, God does not then create for it a soul, because that
soul existed long before as an individual, in some spiritual condition. For the
first and for the last time, the soul takes birth in a human form.
This is the doctrine of Pre-existence.

2. That the soul of man has already appeared in earlier embodiments, sometimes
in human forms, but at other times as an animal or as a plant; and that similarly,
after death, the soul may be reborn as an animal or plant, before returning once
more to a human habitation. This idea is best known as Transmigration or
Metempsychosis.

3. That the soul of man, before birth as a child, has already lived on earth as man
and as woman, but not as an animal or a plant, except before “individualization”,
i.e. before the soul became a permanent, self-conscious, individual entity; and
that at death, after an interval of life in a spiritual condition, the soul returns to
earth again, as man or as woman, but never more taking birth as a plant or as an
animal. This is the doctrine of Reincarnation.
Theosophy teaches that a soul, once become “individualized” and human, cannot
reincarnate in animal or vegetable forms, and Theosophists today use the word
Reincarnation only in the third sense above. In modern Theosophical literature,
Reincarnation never means rebirth as plant or animal, for, were such a thing
possible, a soul would gain nothing for his evolution by such a retrograde step.

Since this work is a textbook of Theosophy, arguments for and against


Reincarnation have here no place. Each inquirer must discover for himself the
fact of Reincarnation by study and observation, as each student of science
discovers the process of Evolution by similar means. This section will outline
the laws under which souls reincarnate, in so far as laws have been discovered
by occult investigations.
At the outset, we must clearly understand who or what it is that reincarnates. For
this, we must understand what is the soul, and what are his vehicles or
instruments of consciousness.
(Fig. 28)

The soul of man is an individual and permanent Consciousness who lives in a


form or body of invisible matter. This soul-body, composed of a type of matter
called higher mental, is called in modern Theosophical studies the Causal Body.
Its form is human, but not of either man or woman with sex characteristics, but
more of the angel of tradition. It is called the Augoeides. It is surrounded by an
ovoid of fiery, luminous matter, yet delicate as the evanescent tints of a sunset.
The Augoeides and the ovoid of luminous matter surrounding it are the soul’s
permanent habitation, the causal body; it is called “causal”, because the best
impulses for thought, feeling and action on all the planes of the soul’s
operations, are caused or created in this permanent residence of the soul. In that
causal body the soul lives, undying and eternal. To him there is no birth,
childhood, old age or death; he is an immortal soul, growing in power to love, to
think, to act, as the ages roll by. He lives his eternal life only in order to make
himself an expert in some department of life by the experiences which he shall
gain, and to find his utmost happiness in aiding the evolutionary Plan of his
Divine Progenitor.

The growth of the soul commences first by experimenting with life on realms
lower than those where is his true home. For this he reincarnates; that is,

1. He gathers matter of the lower mental plane and shapes it into a mental body,
with which to think, that is, to translate the outer world of phenomena in terms of
thoughts and laws;
2. He gathers astral matter and shapes it into an astral body, with which to feel,
that is, to translate the phenomenal world in terms of personal desires and
emotions;

3. He is provided with an appropriate physical body, with which to act; using


that body, he translates the world in terms of physical properties—heavy or light,
hot or cold, movable or immovable, and others.

This process of taking up these three bodies by the soul is Reincarnation. During
the life of the physical body, every vibration to which the nerves respond first
causes a sensorial reaction in the brain; this reaction is noted then by the astral
body as pleasant or unpleasant; the mental body next notes the report of the
astral, and translates the impression as a thought; that thought is finally noted by
the soul in the causal body. The soul then sends, through the mental body to the
astral body, and through the astral to the physical brain, its response to the
phenomenon of the physical world. At every moment of time, when
consciousness works, there is this telegraphing to and from the causal body.
After many ideas are thus gained, the soul analyses them, tabulates them, and
finally generalizes all life’s experiences into ideals of thought and action. He
thus transmutes the phenomenal world into eternal concepts which become a
part of himself.

The return process in Reincarnation, called Death, makes no difference


whatsoever to the soul in the causal body. First, the physical body is put aside,
and a response is no longer made through it to physical phenomena. But he has
still the mental body and the astral body. Then the astral is cast aside, and
attention is no longer paid to astral phenomena, and the soul observes only the
world of the lower mental plane. Lastly, the mental body itself is discarded, and
the soul is fully himself in the causal body; he no longer possesses any lower
vehicles. (See Chapter VI—”Man in Life and in Death”.) He has returned home
once more, as it were, though as a matter of fact he never left his real abode at
all; he did but focus a part of his consciousness and will through his vehicles of
lower matter, and men called it Reincarnation. He used his vehicles for varying
lengths of time and, when he no longer needed them, he cast them aside. What
we call life and death are, to the soul, only the sending forth of some of his
consciousness to lower planes, and then its withdrawal to the higher once more.

The method of studying the laws of Reincarnation is to observe souls as they are
born into physical bodies, as they live in them, as they cast them aside at death,
as they later free themselves from their astral and mental bodies, and as they are
finally fully themselves in their causal bodies. Every incident of this process is
recorded in the Memory of the Logos, and the investigator who can put himself
in touch with that Memory can watch the reincarnations of any soul time after
time.
Investigations by this method have been made, and enough facts have been
gathered already to enable us to deduce laws. The first important fact in
Reincarnation is that its laws differ for various types of souls. All souls at any
given epoch are not of equal capacity, for some are older souls and others are
younger. (Why there should be this difference in age will be explained in
Chapter VII—”The Evolution of Animals”.) The aim of Reincarnation is to
enable a soul to be wiser and better after the experiences of each incarnation; but
it is found that while one soul has the ability of learning quickly from an
experience, another will be extremely slow to learn, and needs each experience
to be repeated over and over again. This difference in capacity for assimilating
experience is due to the difference in age of the two souls, and, according to such
differences, souls naturally fall into five broad classes, as in Fig. 29.
The youngest souls are those who are unable to control their violent and crude
desire-natures and are lacking in mental ability; in the world today, these souls
appear in the savage and semi-civilized races, as also in the backward or
criminal-minded individuals in civilized communities (No.5). Somewhat further
evolved, and so older, are those souls who have passed beyond the savage stage,
but are still simple-minded, unimaginative, and lacking in initiative (No.4).
These two classes include more than nine-tenths of humanity.
Then come the more advanced and cultured souls in all races, whose intellectual
horizon is not altogether limited by family or nation, who crave an ideal of
perfection, and are consciously aiming to achieve it (No.3). Fewer still are those
souls who have discovered that the meaning of life is self-sacrifice and
dedication, and are “on the Path” and consciously moulding their future (No.2).
And as the rare blossoms on our tree of Humanity are the Adepts, the Masters of
the Wisdom, those mighty Elder Brothers of Humanity who are the Shadows of
God upon earth, who stand guiding evolution according to the Divine Plan
(No.1).

Reincarnation takes place in the sub-races of the Root-races studied in the last
chapter; but before we come to its laws, we must first exempt from their working
two classes—that of the Adepts and that of those “on the Path “. The Adept is
past any need of Reincarnation; he has already gained all experiences which
civilizations can give him; he has “wrought the purpose through of what did
make him man”. Though he has become “a pillar in the temple of my God” and
“shall go no more out”, yet many an Adept reincarnates among men to be a
Lawgiver and Guide, to at-one mankind with God. As the Adept takes birth, he
chooses where and when he will be born, for he is the absolute master of his
destiny.

Those “on the Path” are the disciples of the Masters of the Wisdom, and usually,
after death, they reincarnate within a few months or years, without discarding
their mental and astral bodies, as is normally the case before rebirth. The general
law is that, after the death of the physical body, the soul has a brief period of life
on the astral plane; and then, after discarding the astral body, spends several
centuries in the lower mental world. This lower mental world is in the Lower
Heaven (often called Devachan in Theosophical literature), and there the
longings and aspirations of the earth-life are lived over again, but with complete
realization now of all the happinesses longed for. Centuries are thus spent in
happy activity, till the forces of aspiration work themselves out, and the soul
discards the mental body itself. He has then finished his incarnation, and is
himself, in his causal body only, with all his experiences transmuted into ideals
and capacities. But as he has still much to do towards perfecting himself, he
reincarnates again, taking three new bodies—the mental, the astral and the
physical.

An exception to this usual method of evolution is the disciple “on the Path”; he
puts by the centuries of happiness which he might have in the heaven world, for
he is eager to continue on the physical plane the work for his Master; he
therefore renounces the happiness which is his due, in order to serve mankind
with his work. His Master chooses for him when and where he shall be born, and
he returns to birth with the astral and mental bodies of the life just closed, taking
only a new physical body.

The laws of Reincarnation, which apply to souls who are neither disciples, nor
Adepts, can be deduced as we analyse the facts in Figs.30-33.
The charts give us, in tabular form, facts concerning the past lives of four
individuals.2 All four have of course behind them several hundred lives; but, for
purposes of study, only their more recent lives have been investigated. These
four belong to the cultured class of souls, but the study of the laws governing
their evolution will give us also some facts concerning the reincarnation of the
other two classes—the simple-minded and the undeveloped.
From the particulars given as to the place, time, sex and race of the incarnations,
and from the time intervening between lives, we can deduce the following:

1. There are among the cultured souls two sub-types: one of those whose period
between death and rebirth averages about 1,200 years (Subjects A, Band D, Figs.
30, 31 and 33), and the other, of those whose interval between lives is only about
700 years (Subject C, Fig. 32). The period between incarnations is largely spent
in the lower heaven world, in “Devachan”, and the length of life there depends
on the amount and intensity of aspiration during the earthly life. In the case or
the undeveloped and the simple-minded souls, a life in the physical body of
some sixty years will create spiritual force which will give a life in Devachan,
for the former from five to fifty years, and for the latter of some two or three-
centuries; should, however, the physical life be short, as when death occurs in
childhood or youth, the Devachan will be much shorter, since the spiritual force
generated will be smaller in quantity.

In the case of the majority of cultured souls, a life of sixty years may need from
1,000 to 1,200 years in Devachan; the period of time depends on the quantity of
force to be transmuted into faculty. Among these cultured souls, however, is a
small group, of the type of Subject C in Fig. 32, who, though they may generate
the same quantity of aspirational force as the others who require twelve centuries
in Devachan, yet condense their heaven-world life into some seven centuries.

2. Cultured souls of the first sub-type are born, in one cycle, in the sub-race of a
Root-race at least twice in each sub-race, and generally in their numerical order.
When we consider Subject A of Fig. 30, we find him born, in 23,650 B.C., in the
first sub-race of the Atlantean Root-race; his subsequent lives occur in its other
sub-races in their order. At his incarnation in the sixth sub-race, he changes sex.
After his life in the seventh sub-race, he returns to the first again, and then is
born in the next sub-races in numerical order. As he returns to these, he changes
sex in the second and fifth sub-races. As he is born for the second time in the
sub-races, he omits the seventh sub-race; when a sub-race is altogether missed, it
is because the soul has already acquired elsewhere the qualities which are
usually to be gained only in that race. In A’s case, evidently one life in the
seventh sub-race was enough to gain from it what he required. Similarly, where a
life in a sub-race is repeated more than twice, the extra incarnation is needed for
the soul to accomplish the purpose planned.

The second sub-type, represented by Subject C, must also follow some general
law, but no such law can be deduced as we consult Fig. 32; later on, no doubt,
when other individuals of the same sub-type are examined, some law may be
seen.
3. Concerning the sex of the body, we may observe that these four individuals
vary considerably. An incarnation as man or woman is for the purpose of gaining
qualities more readily developed in the one sex than in the other. Since, however,
the capacity for assimilating experiences varies with different souls, and since,
further, the needs change as the lives are lived, there is no hard and fast rule as to
the number of incarnations in the sexes. Usually, there are not more than seven
lives consecutively, nor less than three, in one sex, before changing to the other;
but there are exceptions, and we find our Subject A, after a series of three as a
man, changes to two as a woman, and then reverts to the male sex again. There
has been observed the case of a soul having as many as nine consecutive lives as
a woman.

4. There is no general principle to be deduced as to the length of life in the


physical body. The time of birth is determined by the ending of the life in the
heaven world; the time of death is usually fixed beforehand by the “Lords of
Karma”—those Angels of God’s Plan whose work is to adjust the good and the
evil of man’s past and present, so that through their interaction the maximum of
good may result for the future. The life may be brought early to a close through
accident or disease, if they see that that is best for the soul’s future evolution; if,
on the other hand, a long life is just then needed to enable the soul to acquire
some faculty, then the length of life will be adjusted to that end.

Though the main incidents and the close of an incarnation are fixed by these
commissaries of God according to the soul’s “Karma”“—i.e., according to the
services due by him to others, and by them to him, as the result of past lives—
nevertheless the general plan may be modified by an exercise of initiative by the
individual himself, or by others whose actions directly affect him. For instance,
when death is by accident, it is not infrequently the ending planned by the Lords
of Karma for that incarnation; but sometimes it is not so intended, and the
accidental death is therefore an interference by new forces brought to bear on the
life. In such a case, the disturbed plan will be adjusted in the beginning of the
next life, so that there will not be anything lost in the end to the soul whose
destiny has been changed for the moment by others.
In no case is suicide in the plan of a man’s life; for such an act the soul is
directly responsible, though that responsibility may also be shared by others.
There are many varieties of suicide, some in order to escape the result of evil-
doing, some due from mental derangement, and some due to noble motives.
According to the causes and motives of the suicide will be the karmic result
which follows.

For souls of the two classes—the simple-minded and the undeveloped—the law
of Reincarnation is modified to the extent that they will be born repeatedly in a
sub-race before passing on to the next. This will be due to their inability to gain
the required experience during two or three lives in a sub-race. The period
between their incarnations is sometimes only a few years, though it may be as
long as two or three centuries. They are in reality millions of years behind the
cultured class, so far as their general evolution is concerned. Yet the
backwardness of classes 4 and 5 is not due to any evil in them; it is merely a
matter of the age of the soul; they are young souls. The larger outlook on life and
the wider sympathies, which are natural today to a cultured soul, will some day
be possessed by the undeveloped and the simple-minded souls also. Growth
comes to all, sooner or later, in the endless life of the soul.

Looking at these charts of lives, and noting the particulars therein of place and
date and race, it may be asked how the occult investigator is certain as to any of
them. How is he sure that a man in Poseidonis (Subject D) and an Eskimo
woman of the next life are the same soul? Granted that there is a Memory of the
Logos, how can these things be found out?

The question is natural, and the answer will perhaps make clear that the methods
of occult investigation are not radically different from those employed by the
scientists today. The locating of any part of the earth where an individual is born
is not a difficult matter; the investigator will see the birth of the child, and then
he will have to look round the surrounding country to note its relation to seas
and mountains and lakes and rivers; his present knowledge of geography will
then enable him to locate the place. If the epoch is remote, and the configuration
of the surface of the globe is different, he must for one moment look at the place
as it was then, and the next moment put himself in touch with the Divine
Memory, at the same place, but in later historical times or even today; he can
then know what name geographers give to the place today.
To know the race and sub-race, much previous study in ethnology is required. To
one who has travelled much, there is little difficulty in distinguishing a
Chinaman from a Japanese, or even a French Celt from an Italian Celt, or a
Norwegian from an Englishman. Similarly, observations of the race peculiarities,
and especially of the variations in the constituents of the subtle invisible bodies
of the sub-races, will enable the investigator to find the information which he
seeks.
The fixing of dates is a more difficult task. As the investigator reads the Memory
of the Logos, he can watch the events on earth as fast or as slowly as he desires.
He may, if he likes, watch the incidents of a day of long ago, minute by minute;
or he can in the course of a few seconds swiftly note summer, autumn, winter
and spring, and summer once more, at any place he chooses, and so count time
by seasons. If he desires perfect accuracy, he must watch the seasons as they fly
thus, rapidly counting the passage of time, year by year.

Within historical times, for instance, if he is watching a scene in Egypt, and


desires to know the date, he may perhaps need to observe some court ceremony,
catch the Pharaoh’s name as it is pronounced by someone, and then consult an
encycloproia to find the date of that monarch. In Greece he may need to see
someone write a letter or document, and note the number of the Olympiad, or he
may fix upon some well-known event, like the Battle of Marathon, and then
count the number of years from that to the incident in which he is interested. In
Rome he must find a scribe dating a letter “such and such a year from the
founding of the City”, or he could find the date by watching some debate in the
Senate and noting the names of the Consuls for the year, and then by getting
their date from an historical list. Sometimes he will count backwards or forwards
from a landmark in time, like the sinking of Atlantis, 9564 B.C.—that time
having been once and for all fixed by him by previous counting. When hundreds
of thousands of years are needed to be counted, the investigator will need to
know something of astronomy so as to calculate the large periods by the relative
position of the Pole Star to the earth’s axis. As with modern scientific research,
so too the value of the work of the occult investigator depends upon his care in
observation, and upon his general culture and ability to present his observations
in a methodical manner.

In recognizing a soul in his different incarnations, a careful investigator need


never make any mistake in identification. It is quite true that the subject’s
physical body is a different one in each incarnation; but his soul-body, the
Causal Body with the Augoeides in it, does not change. Once the investigator
has noted the appearance of that permanent body of the soul, he will recognize it
life after life, whatever be the changes in the temporary physical body. It is that
causal body which is the certain mark of identification, and that will be the same,
whether the physical body be that of a new-born infant or that of a man tottering
to the grave.
Two more diagrams remain to be considered in this chapter. They are Figs. 34
and 35.
The three souls, A, Band C, whom we have studied, are closely linked by bonds
of affection, by bonds, that were forged many, many lives ago. Each soul evolves
under the pressure of his own separate Eternity, but he does not tread the path to
his Deification alone, but in companionship with other souls whom he learns to
love. A true bond of deep affection is always one between souls, and not merely
between their earthly garments; and whatever these latter may be, love will flash
through them from soul to soul. Physical relationships are of minor consequence;
the one many-dimensional power of love will manifest itself—always as love
and service, whatever be the earthly channel marked out for it by the Lords of
Karma.
Of the three subjects A, B and C, A and B belong to that sub-type among
cultured souls who have 1,200 years in Devachan, while C belongs to the second
sub-type with only 700 years interval between lives. It is obvious that A and B
cannot appear in all the lives of C, unless they both die in each life at that age
which will entitle them to some 700 years only of Devachan. What has really
happened is given in Fig. 34. During the time that C has lived 31 incarnations, A
has lived only 19, and B only 23. In the first of A’s lives in this series, he meets
C, and they become husband and wife; but in that life A does not meet his other
friend B. When A is next born again, he is husband to B, and brother-in-law to
C; but in the meantime B has had three lives and C one, where they have not met
A. Studying the chart, we shall find that during 31 lives C meets A twelve times,
while he meets both A and B together only eight times. The bond between A and
C is specially strong, as will be seen from the diagram; whatever is the physical
relation—as husband and wife, or wife and husband, as brother and sister, or as
lovers to whom the fates are unpropitious, so that they do not marry—soul
speaks to soul. Once B as a woman adopts a little girl, A; that debt is paid later
by A when as a man he adopts a little boy, B.

In fourteen of the lives of Subjects E and F, Fig. 35, in which they meet, we see
how the bond of love appears in varying forms. When E changes sex and has
two lives as a woman, her beloved is with her, first as son, and then as husband.
When F changes sex and has three lives as a man, in the third of them he meets
his friend E as a man; between the two men there springs up an unusual bond of
sympathy and affection. In the next life, E is a priest, and a little orphan girl is
brought to him to be admitted to the temple; little need for many months to
elapse before they are great friends, and the priest is father and guide. Then
comes a life where they are husband and wife again, and then two lives in which
they meet and love springs up between them, but the course of true love does not
run smooth. Follows then a life where F does not meet her beloved; but they
meet again as husband and wife in Rome. In their present life they have not yet
met each other; though the plans of the Lords of Karma for each has kept them
apart this time, the bond, soul to soul, is strong and unbroken, and they will meet
again in future lives,—as wife and husband, as son and father, or as friends.
They will be true lovers once more, capable of that many-dimensional love
which goes out in devotion and sacrifice to its beloved, in whatever channel for
it the Lords of Fate give.
——-
Act first, this Earth, a stage so gloom’d with woe,
You all but sicken at the shifting scenes.
And yet be patient. Our playwright may show
In some fifth Act what this wild Drama means.
Life, without Reincarnation as a clue, is a wild, wild drama indeed, as it seemed
to Tennyson once, in spite of his Christian faith. A cruel process is Evolution,
careful of the type and careless of the single lite. But grant that Life,
indestructible and undying, also evolves, then the future of each individual is
bright indeed. In the light of Reincarnation, death loses its sting and the grave its
victory; for men go ever onwards to Deification, hand in hand with those they
love, with never a fear of parting. Mortality is but a role which the soul plays for
a while; and when the play is done, when all lives are lived and all deaths are
dead, then the soul begins his destiny as a Master of the Wisdom, as a Shadow of
God upon earth, even as “the Word made flesh”. To us one and all, cultured or
savage now, this is the future that awaits us, the glory that shall be revealed.
CHAPTER IV
THE LAW OF KARMA

Who toiled a slave may come anew a Prince,


For gentle worthiness and merit won;
Who ruled a King may wander earth in rags
For things done and undone.
— The Light of Asia
Little by little, as man’s knowledge grows, the world in which he lives is seen to
be a world of law. Each law of nature, as it is discovered, liberates more of our
will, however much it may seem at first sight to circumscribe our action; and
since actions are but the resultant diagonal of a series of forces of thought and
feeling of an inner world, man’s supreme need is to understand that inner world
of his as one of law and order. The great Law of Karma or Action, which
Theosophy expounds, reveals to man something of the inner fabric of his being,
and so helps him little by little to be a master of circumstance, and not its slave.

We are already familiar in science with the conception of the whole universe as
an expression of energy. The electron is a storehouse of energy; so too, though
on a larger scale, is a star. This energy is continually changing, motion
transforming itself into light or heat or electricity, and a heavy element into a
lighter, and so on from one transformation to another. Man himself is a
storehouse of energy; he takes in energy with his food, and transforms it into the
movements of his body. The energy in man, when utilized for a kindly action, is
beneficent; and we call such a use “good”; when it is employed to injure another,
we term such a use “evil”. All the time that man lives, he is a transformer; the
universal energy enters into him, to be transformed by him into service or into
injury.
The Law of Karma is the statement of cause and effect as man transforms
energy. It takes into account not only, as science does, the visible universe and its
forces, but also that larger, unseen universe of force which is man’s true sphere
of activity. Just as, with the flicker of an eyelid, man throws into the universe a
force which affects the equilibrium of all other forces in our physical cosmos, so
too, with each thought and feeling, he changes the adjustment of himself to the
universe, and the adjustment of the universe to himself.

The first principle to grasp, in the attempt to understand Karma, is that we are
dealing with force and its effects. This force is of the physical world of
movement, or of the astral world of feeling, or of the mental world of thinking.
We are using all three types of force, the first with the activities of our physical
bodies, the second with the feelings of our astral bodies, and the third with the
concrete and abstract thoughts of our mental and causal bodies. To aspire, to
dream, to plan, to think, to feel, to act—all this means to set in motion forces or
three worlds; and, according to the use made by us of these forces, we help or we
hinder.

Now, all the force which we use, on all the planes, is the energy of the Logos; we
are but transformers of that energy. As we so transform and use that energy, it is
His Desire that we use it to further His Plan of Evolution. When we help that
Plan, our action is “good”; when we hinder it, our action is “evil”. And since we
use His force all the time, we must, at each moment of time, either help or hinder
that Plan.
Since man is not an individual by himself, but is one unit in a Humanity of
millions of individuals, each thought or feeling or act of man affects each of his
fellow-men, in proportion to the nearness of each to him as the distributor of
force. Each such use of force by a man, which helps or hinders the whole, of
which he is a part, brings with it a result to him; this result is briefly stated, in
terms of his action and its resultant reaction, in Fig. 36.
Each hurtful act is so much force (represented in the diagram by a black square)
thrown out into the universe, which works itself out in the injury inflicted on
another; but the equilibrium of the universe to that other has then been disturbed
by the injurer, and that equilibrium must be restored at the expense of the wrong-
doer. His “karma” for the injury is a “pain”; the force which produces that pain
discharges itself through the injured as the fulcrum, and thus restores the original
equilibrium. Similarly is it with a kind act; its karma or reaction is a force which
adjusts circumstances so as to produce a “comfort”.
Furthermore, in this universe of law, each type of force works on its own plane.
One man may give alms to a beggar with pity and sympathy, but another merely
to get rid of him as a nuisance; both perform a kind act, and to both the karma of
the act on the physical plane is a “comfort”;’ but there is to the former an
additional karma on the astral plane for his pity and sympathy, and it returns to
him as a happy emotion, while to the latter there is no karma of this kind.
Similarly, I may have nothing but pity to give to a sufferer; I reap thereby an
emotional “happiness”, but I do not reap a physical “comfort” as well.

For the purpose of the exposition of this difficult subject, a symbol has been
taken for each type of force which makes karma (see last column in diagram);
these signs-squares, triangles, circles and the star—are merely symbols, and
nothing more. On the higher mental plane, where the soul of man resides in his
causal body, evil “is null, is naught, is silence implying sound”; there, no evil
counterpart exists to the soul’s aspiration. There is therefore nothing which can
be symbolized by a black star. The wicked man is not a wicked soul; he is but
the representative in an earthly body of an undeveloped soul, whose energies are
too feeble as yet to control his emotional and physical agents.
Each one of us, as he enters this life, comes from a long past of many lives; as
we take up our task once more on earth, we bring with us our karma of good and
evil. Now this karma, as already explained, consists of forces; and Fig. 37 is an
attempt to suggest to our imagination this fact of the individual as a fulcrum for
the discharge of the good and evil forces of his own creation.3
Perhaps, as we look at the diagram, our eye is first impressed by the large
number of “pains”, “griefs” and. “worries” which are the man’s due; and we
count only three “ideals”. But we must not forget that the forces of all the planes
are not of equal value in the production of changes in a man’s destiny; a unit of
physical force, producing a “comfort”, may be only a hundredth fraction as
powerful as a unit of mental force which makes an “ideal”. If we give 1 as the
“work” equivalent for a physical unit of force, we shall not be exaggerating if we
put 5 for an astral unit, 25 for a lower mental, and 125 for an “ideal” of the
higher mental world. While a man may have many “pains” ‘and “griefs” and
“worries” as his karma, yet if he but have a few “ideals” as well, he will make a
success of his life and not a failure; on the other hand, a man may get as his
karmic due wealth and position, giving him many “comforts” and “happiness”,
and yet, if he has not brought from his past any “inspirations” for his mind, his
life may be merely one largely of agreeable futility.

Looking round us at the lives which men and women live, it is scarcely an
exaggeration to say that, in most lives today, there is more “bad” karma than
“good”, that is, there is on the whole more of tedious toil and sorrow than of
happy labor and joy. At the present stage of human evolution, there is, in the
store of forces accumulated by each of us, more to give us pain than pleasure.
Our evil account is larger than our good, because in our past lives we have not
desired to be guided by wisdom, but preferred instead to live selfish lives, caring
little whom we hurt by our selfishness. But each karmic force must discharge its
energy, for “whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap”.

As a man “reaps”, his karmic forces are carefully adjusted, so that, from the
interaction between his good and his evil, the final result shall be an addition,
however slight, to his good. If, as we enter life, all our karmic forces of good and
evil were to be set into operation, then, seeing how much larger a stock we have
of evil than of good, our lives would be so weighted with pain and sadness that
we should have little spirit to struggle through the battle of life. In order,
however, that we should struggle and succeed, and increase the good side of our
account and not the bad, a careful adjustment is made for each soul as he enters
into incarnation.
This adjustment is made by the “Lords of Karma”, those beneficent Intelligences
who, in the Plan of the Logos, act as the arbiters of Karma. They neither reward
nor punish; they only adjust the operation of a man’s own forces, so that his
karma shall help him one step forward in evolution. We can study a typical
method of adjustment from the diagrams which now follow.

In Fig. 38 we have a circle which represents the totality of a man’s karma, or the
accumulated force of all his past lives; the circle has two segments, the white
and the dark. The white segment represents the quantity of good karma, and the
dark that of the evil karma.

We will presume that the individual’s total karma comes to one hundred units,
and that the relation between his good and his evil is in the ratio depicted in the
diagram, which is as 2 to 3. The segment a e b c a, then, represents the good
karma of 40 units, while the segment a d b c a represents the bad karma of 60
units. This total of accumulated past karma is known in Indian philosophy as
Sanchita or “accumulated” karma.

Out of this total, the Lords of Karma select a certain quantity for the new life of
the soul; we will imagine that they take for the work of the new life one-fourth
of the total. This one-fourth is represented in the diagram by the segment e c d a
e; and of this e c a represents the good, with 10.7. units, and a c d the bad, with
14.3 units. The ratio between this good and bad is not as 2 to 3, which is that of
the total; it is as 3 to 4, thus giving the individual more out of his good account
than is properly speaking his share. This stock of karma, with which the soul
starts his incarnation, is called in Sanskrit Prarabdha or “starting” karma; it is
that “fate” which the Muslim believes God ties round the neck of each soul at his
birth.
In Fig. 39 we have this Prarabdha karma; and its good is the white segment f i g
h f and its evil is the dark segment f h g f. It was mentioned that more of good
karma was selected for the life than was the ratio in the total karma of all past
lives. This is shown in the diagram, where the segment f i h f represents the
proportion of good according to the total of karma, and the larger segment f i g h
f represents the proportion of good actually selected for the new life.

Karma is force; as force spends itself, it does “work”. This “work” brings about
in a man’s life those reactions which are described in Fig.36. As a man’s life is
lived, the Karma represented by our Fig. 39 exhausts itself. But the “work” it
does has, however, the result of making him create new karma by its reaction;
according to the man’s wisdom will be this new karma which is thus produced.
If his “pains” teach him resignation and sympathy, if his “grief” and “worries”
spur him to effort to right the wrongs which he has done, if he “pays his karmic
debts” with understanding, then the new karma which he generates is good and
not evil. But if he is resentful of the debts which he is called upon to pay, if his
nature hardens, and as a result he causes misery to others, the new karma which
he makes is evil. As a matter of fact, most of us, as we pay our karmic debts,
make our new karma mixed, as of old, of both good and evil; only, there will be,
in the wiser of us, a larger proportion of good than evil.

This new karma created, called in Sanskrit Agami or Kriyamana, or “future”


Karma, is shown in Fig. 40.
It is a larger circle than that of Fig. 39. While 25 units of karma were spent, good
and bad, we shall presume that 36 new units of both have been created; whereas
the proportion of good and evil with which the life was started was as 3 to 4, the
proportion, as the life closes, of the new karma created—of good 16 and of bad
20—is as 4 to 5. In Fig.40 the radii m l and k l mark respectively the sizes of the
segments of the old exhausted good karma and the new generated.

In Fig. 41 we have the two Figs. 39 and 40 superimposed one over the other; we
see at once that here both a larger quantity of force is generated, and a larger
proportion of good to evil.

Referring once more to Fig. 38, we now find that the segment a e c d a has been
exhausted; we must put in its place the new karma represented by Fig. 40. This
is done in the new Fig. 42.
The outer circle represents the new total of 111 units, while the inner circle
represents the old total of 100; the radii p r, p o show us how there is for the
future a larger proportion of good to evil, the proportion being now practically as
41 to 59. Since the proportion of the old total was 40 to 60, the change is not
great; there is only one more unit of the good, and one less of the bad, as the
result or one incarnation. But as a matter of fact, till a man understands the plan
of evolution, there is no great change in him from life to life; there are the usual
ups and downs of good and evil fortune, of griefs and joys, as years pass and
lives are lived. It is only when a man definitely aspires to serve the Plan of the
Logos, to live not for himself but for his fellow-men, that great changes take
place in his karma, and his evolution is hastened. Then his progress is swift from
life to life, even as in the ratio of geometrical progression.

We can understand now, how to some extent, there is for each man a “fate”, for
“fate” is that quantity of good and evil karma selected for him by the Lords of
Karma for a given life. His parents, his heredity, those who help him and those
who hinder him, his opportunities, his obligations, his death—these are as his
“fate”; but while these forces spend themselves, they do not impose upon him
the manner in which he shall react to them. Small though his will is, as yet, that
will is still free; he can react to his old karma and produce good rather than bad
new karma. It is true that he is greatly handicapped, both by his past tendencies
and by the pressure of his environment; yet the Divine Spirit lives within him,
and, if he will but rouse himself, he may cooperate with the Divine Will in
evolution, and not work against it. It is the duty of his teachers and elders, as
well as of the government under which he lives, so to arrange his education and
environment that he will find it easier to cooperate with the Divine Will than to
thwart it; but this Utopia is still in the womb of the future. Till that day comes,
when any man fails—and much of his failure now is due to his environment—
each of us who has helped to make that environment shares in the karma of his
failure.

It has been mentioned that, in the working out of karmic forces, the Lords of
Karma direct their operation; we must now understand the principles which
guide these Directors; they are briefly summarized in Fig. 43.

The Lords of Karma must use the individual’s own stock of force; they cannot
add to it nor diminish it. He comes out of a past, with karmic bonds to
individuals, to a community, to a people; he must be sent to be born where he
can “work out” his karma with respect to these. But also, his life is only one of a
series of lives, and at the end of them, he is to become a Master of the Wisdom, a
Perfect Man, in the image of an Archetype which the Logos has created for him.
The Lords of Karma, then, must adjust the individual’s karma so that he grows
steadily towards his Archetype.

Now, much of a man’s activities will depend upon the kind of physical body
which he has; and since this is provided by a father and a mother, the heredity
from the parents is an important matter. In these days we think of heredity in
terms of Mendelian “genes” — those units of physical attributes which are in the
germ-cells of the parents; the Lords of Karma have therefore to select such
“genes” as will be useful for the type of body which the karma requires. I quote
here what I have written previously on the subject in Theosophy and Modern
Thought, whence, too, is taken this Fig. 43.
“Once more the problem resolves itself into happenings in two worlds, the seen
and the unseen. On the seen, the form side, we have man as a body, and that
body has been fashioned by factors.4 But these factors are helpful to some and
are handicaps to others; one man is born with a splendid physique, while another
has night-blindness or hemophilia as his share; one may be musical, and another
deaf and dumb. In a family with the factor for color-blindness, we have one son
normal, but three are affected; why are three handicapped thus, but not the
fourth?

“We must turn to the life side to understand the riddle of man’s destiny. Three
elements there come into play. Of these the first is that the man is an Ego, an
imperishable circle in the sphere of Divinity; “long, long ago, indeed, he had his
birth, he verily is now within the germ”. He has lived on earth in many a past
life, and there thought and felt and acted both good and evil; he has set in motion
forces that help or hinder both himself and others. He is bound and not free. But
he lives on from age to age to achieve an ideal, which is his Archetype. Just as
for plant and animal life there are archetypes of the forms, so are there
archetypes for the souls of men. One shall be a great saint of compassion,
another a teacher of truth, a third a ruler of men; artist and scientist, doer and
dreamer, each has set before him his Archetype, that Thought of God Himself of
what each man shall be in the perfection of his God-given temperament. And
each ego achieves his Archetype by finding his work. For this it is that we, as
egos, come into incarnation—to discover our work and to release the hidden
powers within us by battling with circumstances as we achieve that work.
“But to do our work we must have a body of flesh; and the help or, the handicap
the body is to our work depends on the factors of which it is made. Here once
more there is no fortuitous concourse of factors; Deva Builders come to help
man with his destiny. These are the Lords of Karma, those invisible Intelligences
who administer the great Law of Righteousness which establishes that as a man
soweth so shall he reap; they select from the factors provided by the parents
those that are most serviceable to the ego for the lesson he has to learn and for
the work he has to do, in that particular body which Karma allots to him.

“The Lords of Karma neither punish nor reward; they only adjust the forces of a
man’s past, so that those forces in their new grouping shall help the man one step
nearer his Archetype. Whatever the Lords give to a man, joy or sorrow,
opportunity or disaster, they keep one thing in mind, that man’s purpose in life at
his present stage is neither to be happy nor miserable, but to achieve his
Archetype. There is, later on, untold bliss for him in action, when he is the
Archetype in realization; but till that day, it is their duty to press him on from
one experience to another.

“After the zygote5 is made, the Lords of Karma select the factors, since as yet
the ego cannot do so himself; if the next stage in evolution for him is by
developing some particular gift—as, for instance, that of music—then they select
for him the appropriate factors; the musician will need an abnormally sensitive
nervous system and a special development of the cells of the ear, and the Lords
will pick out these factors as the embryo is fashioned. If at the same time the
man’s inner strength is to be roused by a handicap, or his nature to be purified by
suffering, then an appropriate factor will also appear, some factor perhaps like
that which brings about a lack of virility or of resistance to disease. If on the
other hand the ego, already a mathematician, is in this life to be a mathematical
genius, then those factors in the zygote that build the mathematical brain will be
brought out as the zygote grows to be the embryo.
“Whatever is the work for the ego, appropriate factors are selected for; it by the
Lords; virility for the pioneer in new lands, the psychic temperament for those
who can help by communing with the invisible, a disabling factor for one who
shall grow through suffering, and so on, factor by factor, the Lords distribute the
karma of men. With infinite compassion and with infinite wisdom, but swerving
not one hair’s breadth from justice, they build for one soul a body suited for
genius, and for another a body which is as a log. It is not theirs to make the man
happy or discontented, good or evil; their one duty is to guide the man one step
nearer his Archetype. Helps and handicaps, joys and pains, opportunities or
privations, are the bricks of the ego’s own making for his temporary habitation;
the Lords of Karma add nothing and take nothing away; they only adjust the
forces of the soul’s making, so that his ultimate destiny, his Archetype, shall be
achieved as swiftly as may be, as he treads the round of births and deaths.”

We must not, however, imagine that this “fate” selected for the individual is
absolutely rigid and immutable; a man can, and does, change his “fate”
sometimes, by an unusual reaction to circumstances. For instance, suicide is not
in a man’s fate, though his visible and invisible circumstances may, seemingly to
us, be too much for his strength; the plan for the individual is always to struggle
through his “pains” and “griefs” and “worries”, and not “go under “. Similarly,
an individual may take an opportunity not specially arranged for him; some
religious teacher, for instance, whose appearance is not specially related to him,
may affect him, and he may make for himself a new opportunity. Not
infrequently too, a man’s karma may be as it were put out of gear by the actions
of others which are not calculated for in his karma. In all these cases, whether
the event be of service or disservice to the individual, there is always a large
reserve of karma not actually in operation, and the new karma is deducted from
or added to this reserve, so that there is no final favoritism or injustice.
It is also interesting to note that there are several types of karma, and that
individuals can be related by one, or more, of them, but not necessarily by all.
The commonest “karmic link” is of love or hatred; but there are also links of
caste, or of race. A man born, for instance, into a priestly caste shares to some
extent in the good or the evil done by the caste as a whole; an individual born
among a particular people is handicapped or helped by the karma which that
people has made for itself throughout the centuries. There is also the karma
attaching to a special type of work; the henchmen of a Pericles or the lieutenants
of a Caesar will be drawn by karmic links to their chief whenever that chief is in
incarnation and works again at his life’s dream. In such cases, there may or may
not be any emotional links at all between those united in the common work; the
link which binds them, so that they help or hinder each other and the common
work, is a karmic link of work.
This vast subject of the soul’s karma, or the soul at work, can only be suggested
in outline in such a brief summary as this. To understand Karma in its fullest
operation and significance requires the wisdom of an Adept; but to understand
the principle 0f Karma is to revolutionize one’s conception of the possibilities of
life and of oneself. As Theosophy is intensely ethical in its outlook, there
perhaps is no more useful way of summarizing what we know of Karma than as
done in Fig. 44.

* * * *
Ah, Love, could you and I with Him conspire,
To grasp this sorry scheme of things entire,
Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
Remould it nearer to the heart’s desire!

There is indeed One who has made this “scheme of things entire “ according to a
Plan of Love and Beauty; but, at the present stage of human evolution, that Plan
is “in heaven”, and not “on earth”. But He is waiting till the day when His Will
shall be done “on earth, as it is in heaven”; and that day cannot come till each
one of the myriads of souls who are Fragments of Him is ready to work with
Him to shatter His present scheme and remould it nearer to His “heart’s desire”.
He is the great Reconstructor, who shatters what He erstwhile built, and rebuilds
nearer to His heart’s desire. For the whole world is His Karma, His Action. And
we need only to follow His guidance, as He whispers in our inmost hearts how to
shatter our scheme of things entire, and then make it nearer to our heart’s desire.
When each of us has indeed the vision of his heart’s true desire, and wants to
shatter his scheme of things entire, so that a better, diviner scheme shall exist for
all men and not for himself alone, then he will inevitably know how so to
fashion his Karma that each action of his shall be the action of the Logos,
according to His Heart’s Desire.
CHAPTER V
THE INVISIBLE WORLDS

In the life of each of us, the world which surrounds us has a very great, if not the
greatest, influence. We are very much what our knowledge of the world makes
us. We know the world by means of our five senses; and if one of our senses is
defective, our knowledge of the world is less by that defect.

Now, though we are all the time exercising our senses, and see, hear, touch, taste
and smell the objects of the world in which we live, we little realize what
complex processes of consciousness are involved in our “knowing” the world.
Nor do we realize that we know only a part of what there is to be known of the
world around us.

Let us consider, for instance, our knowledge of the world through the faculty of
sight. What do we mean by “seeing” an object? It means that our eyes respond to
such vibrations of light as are given off by the front of the object, and that our
consciousness translates those vibrations into ideas of form and color.

What we see is of course only the front of the object, never the whole, which is
both the front and the back. Our faculty of sight, then, is due to waves of light to
which our eyes respond. But what, after all, is “light”? In answering that
question we shall quickly see how small a part of the true world is the visible
world, and how’ large a part the invisible. In Fig. 45 we have a diagram showing
us the main facts about light.
Light is a vibration; according to the frequency of the vibration is the color
produced by it. The light by which we see comes from the sun, which throws off
bundles of vibrations of various frequencies, and we call the aggregates of these
bundles white light. But if we interpose a prism of glass in the way of a white
ray of light, the particles of glass break the white light into its constituent
vibrations. These vibrations create in our consciousness, when they are noted by
the retina of our eyes, the sense of color. The colors which our eyes can see are
seven—red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet; these seven colors
and their shades and their mixtures make up the many colors of the world in
which we live.

But the colors which we see are not the only colors which exist. We see only
such colors as our eyes can respond to. But the response of our eyes is limited;
we can see in the spectrum the colors from red to blue, and then the violet; few
of us can see any indigo between the blue and the violet. So long as the
vibrations are not larger than 38,000 to the inch (or 15,000 to the centimeter),
making the color red, nor smaller than 62,000 to the inch (or 25,000 to the
centimeter), making the color violet, we can respond to solar vibrations, and
know them as color. But a little experiment will quickly show us that, below the
red of the spectrum, and beyond the violet, there exist vibrations which would
mean color to us, if we could but respond to them. If, after the spectrum is made,
we put a burning-glass where come the infra-red rays (where our eyes see
nothing), and put a piece of phosphorus where the rays of the lens converge, we
shall have the phosphorus set on fire by heat; evidently, below the color red of
the spectrum, there are vibrations producing heat. Similarly, at the other end of
the spectrum, if we shut off the violet rays by a screen, and in that part of the
space beyond the violet, where our eyes see no color, we place a disc or screen
covered with plantino-cyanide, the disc will begin to glow, owing to the effect of
the ultraviolet rays. There are, then, in the sun’s rays, infrared and ultraviolet
colors which our eyes cannot see; if we could see them, it is obvious that the
colors in natural objects would be seen to have not only new colors but also new
shades.

Our sense of hearing is similarly limited; there are sounds both too high and too
low for us to hear. Sound is made by waves in the air; 16½ sound-waves per
second make the low C note of the organ. While some can hear this, others
cannot hear a note which produces fewer vibrations than 40 per second. So too
with the highest audible note; some can hear a note as high as 40,000 per second,
but others only up to 20,000 per second. Wherever exist sounds which some of
us, due to some defect, cannot hear, they do not exist for us; they exist for others
who respond to those vibrations. In Fig. 46 we have a table of vibrations, giving
us a general idea of such effects as are produced in nature by vibrations in air
and in the aether.6
If we imagine a pendulum swinging twice per second, then increasing to four
times per second, and then to eight, and so on, doubling at each step, we shall
produce certain numbers of vibrations per second. Of waves producible in the
air, our faculty of hearing begins only when they are at the 5th step, and it ends
between the 13th and 15th steps. Of the electro-magnetic waves in the ether,
also, we “see” only those of a definite range of frequency. The wire carrying the
current to a lamp is opaque to our eyes, but when the electricity meets with
resistance, and vibrations, corresponding to those of the 45th to 46th steps in the
diagram, are produced in the ether, then light appears and our eyes recognize the
presence of the electric current. Of the wide range of vibrations, extending from
waves a minute fraction of an inch in length, to many miles, which have been
tabulated by science, our senses respond only to a little more than one-ninth of
the whole. Thus, of the world around us, which science has discovered, we know
only about one-eighth; seven-eighths of the world is hidden to our
consciousness.

Suppose that our nerves were differently organized; suppose they did not
respond to light waves but to some other range of electro-magnetic vibrations,
what a different world would then be around us! When the sun shone, there
would be no sunlight; the atmosphere about us would be opaque but for waves
such as those used in radio. When we turned on the electric switch, our rooms
would be lit, not by the light of the electric bulb, but by the wires along the walls
and by the discharges of static electricity from the objects in the room. As a
matter of fact, if our eyes responded to electric waves, we should require no
wires at all; we should “see” by means of the light emitted by the protons and
electrons composing the atoms. There would then be for us no alternations of
night and day; it would always be “day” for us, so long as the protons and
electrons swung in their orbits.

Fig. 47 and 48 show us how different an object can appear if cognized by two
different types of vibration. Both are pictures of the sun, taken by the
photographic camera; but in Fig. 47 we have a picture made by the ordinary
photographic negative, which responds to all the rays emitted by the sun, that is,
to the white rays.
But Fig. 48 is a picture of the sun taken by means of the spectroheliograph, in
which the negative responds only to selected vibrations from the sun and to no
others. To make this picture, only the vibrations of light emitted by the hydrogen
vapors of the sun are allowed to enter the camera. We have thus two different
pictures of the sun, both made by the camera. If, therefore, at one and the same
time, we were to photograph the sun by two telescopes, one with the ordinary
camera attachment and the other with the spectroheliograph adjusted to a
particular rate of vibration, we should then obtain two photographs, of one and
the same sun, differing entirely in detail, except for the circular contour common
to both.

This is exactly the principle underlying what is called Clairvoyance. Around us


are many types of vibrations to which the ordinary mortal cannot respond. He is
blind to and unconscious of a part of the universe which is ready to reveal itself
to him, were he but ready to respond to its vibrations. But the clairvoyant does
so respond, and therefore he “sees” more of the real world in which we spend
our days. Of course all clairvoyants are not alike in their response to the unseen
world; some “see” only a little, others a great deal; some make clear conceptions
of what they see, others are confused and incoherent. But the principle of
Clairvoyance is exactly the principle of ordinary sight7. We do not yet know
what special development of nerves and of brain centres is necessary to call out
response to the vibrations of the invisible world; the science of a future day will
map out for us the occult physiology of the brain, which will explain to us more
than we now know of the mechanism of Clairvoyance.

On this matter of a larger, unseen world around, us, I speak not at second hand,
but partly of my own direct observation and knowledge. What there is peculiar
in the centres of my brain I do not know; but a never-vanishing fact of my
consciousness is that there is on all sides of me, through, within and without
everything, an invisible world, which is most difficult to describe. It scarcely
requires an effort of the will to see it; there is no greater need to concentrate to
see it than for the physical eye to focus instantly to see an object. It is not seen
with the eye; whether the eye is open or shut makes no difference. The sight of
the physical eye and this inner sight are independent of each other, and yet both
work simultaneously; my eye sees the paper on which I write this, and at the
same time my something—scarcely know what to call it—sees the invisible
world above, below, around and through the paper, and the table, and the room.
That world is luminous, and seems as if every point of its space was a point of
self-created light of a kind different from the light of the physical world; the
whole of its space is full of movement, but in a puzzling, indescribable manner,
suggestive of a fourth dimension of space. I must testify, with all the vehemence
at my command, that to my consciousness, to all that I know of as “I”, this
invisible world has a greater reality than the physical world; that as I look at it,
and then with my physical eye look at the world of earth and sky and human
habitations, the physical world is an utter illusion, a Maya, and has no quality in
it which my consciousness can truly label as “real”. “Our world”, when I
compare it to the intense reality of even this fragment of the invisible worlds
which I see, is less than a mirage or a shadow or a dream; it seems scarcely even
an idea of my brain. Nevertheless, of course, our physical world is “real”
enough; in its own way, it is real enough just now to me, seeing that, as I write
this among the hills of Java, mosquitoes are biting me, and I am acutely
conscious of their stings. Some day, when opportunity permits, I may be able to
develop this faculty with which I have been born, and add to the stock of facts
about the invisible worlds which have already been gathered by Theosophical
investigators.

The facts already gathered by the scientists of the Theosophical tradition tell us
that this physical world of ours is only a fragment of the true world, and that
interpenetrating this world, as also beyond it, are many invisible worlds. Each of
these worlds is material, that is, not a mere conception, but made of matter; the
matter of the invisible worlds, however, is far finer in quality and substantiality
than the matter to which we are usually accustomed. We are aware of solid
matter, and liquid matter; gaseous matter, as of the air, we are not normally
conscious of, and we note gases only when they incommode us, as when wind
obstructs us, or some gas causes difficulty in breathing. Beyond this gaseous
state of matter, modern science has discovered further states, once termed by
Crookes “radiant” matter; and there is also the mysterious luminiferous ether—
in every sense matter, and yet differing in its attributes from such matter as we
know. All this vast domain of finer states of matter has been investigated and
described in Theosophy, and in Fig. 49 we have in tabular form some facts about
the invisible worlds.
There are seven “planes” or worlds which have special relation to man, and each
individual has some phase of his life in them. He is represented in the three
lower planes by a vehicle or body made of matter of each of those planes, and
each body serves him as a means of knowledge and communication with that
plane. Thus, each of us has a physical body, made up of the seven sub-states of
physical matter, and through that body he gains his experiences of the physical
world. Similarly, each of us has a body of “astral” matter—so called because the
matter is starry or self-luminous—which is called the “astral body”, and each has
also a “mental body” and a “causal body” made up of materials of the mental
world. (See Fig. 28.) Each invisible body is of course highly organized, as is the
physical body; there is an anatomy and physiology of these invisible vehicles
more complex than that of the physical body. On planes higher than the mental
world, man’s consciousness is as yet rudimentary, and his bodies or vehicles in
them are still awaiting organization.

As is shown in the diagram, each plane or world is quite distinct from all the
others; natural phenomena like heat and light and electricity are of our physical
world of physical matter, and do not affect, for instance, the world of mental
matter. As there are laws of solid, liquid and gaseous states of physical matter, so
are there similarly laws of matter for each plane. The matter of each plane has
seven sub-states, called sub-planes; our physical world has not only the three
sub-states, solid, liquid and gaseous with which we are familiar, but also four
other sub-states, called respectively etheric, super-etheric, sub-atomic and
atomic. (It should here be mentioned that the word “etheric” relates to certain
sub-states of physical matter, and does not refer to the ether, that substance
which fills interstellar space and bears to us the lightwaves from the farthest
stars.)

The highest sub-plane of each of the seven planes is labelled “atomic”, for the
reason that its particles are not molecular; each particle is a unit which is not
further divisible into smaller constituents of that plane.
All the invisible worlds exist around us, here and now; they are not removed in
space from this world. The astral world and its inhabitants are around us all the
time, though most of us are unaware of them. So too is that invisible world
which is known in tradition as “Heaven”; the glories of Heaven are here and
now, and all about us, had we but the eye to see and the ear to hear. How can this
be, that in our rooms, in our gardens and roads and cities, there are also other
worlds? How can several worlds exist in one and the same space?
They can so exist, because each higher world is of finer matter than the one
below. If we compare the matter of the three lower worlds—physical, astral,
mental—to the three states of physical matter with which we are familiar—solid,
liquid and gaseous; if we think of the physical world for a moment as “solid”,
the astral world as “liquid”, and the mental world as “gaseous”, then in one and
the same space these three worlds can exist. A bottle can be filled with sand; but
it is not really full, as there are air spaces between the particles of sand; we can
put water into the bottle, and the water particles will occupy the empty spaces in
the sand. Even with the sand and the water the bottle is not really full, for we can
aerate the water, that is, send gas particles to fill the empty spaces in the water,
since water does not closely pack space but is full of holes between its particles.
Sand, water and gas can thus exist together inside one and the same bottle.

We can use another simile in order to understand how several worlds can occupy
the same space. Suppose a large room or hall were filled with old-fashioned
round cannon balls, as closely as they will pack; because of the spherical shape
of the balls, there will be empty spaces between them, however closely they are
packed. Suppose then we send into the room thousands of small gun shot, each
having a mysterious faculty of movement; the shot could exist in the empty
spaces between the cannon balls, and move about without finding them an
insuperable obstruction. Suppose the room is quite full of shot, and there is no
room for them to move at all among the cannon balls; still, because the shot are
round, there are empty spaces between them. If then we send in an army of
microbes, they will live quite at ease among the small shot, move about without
finding the shot an obstruction.

This is somewhat the way that the astral world, the mental and the higher worlds,
are here all about us; our physical world, of solid and liquid and gaseous and the
etheric states, is porous, and between its finest particles exist great spaces; in
these spaces exist particles of matter of the higher planes. An atom of a rare gas
in the atmosphere, like argon, might move in and out between the meshes of a
wire fence without in the least being incommoded by the fence; and as argon
will not combine with any substance, the argon atom and the fence will be shut
off from each other, as it were, in consciousness, though both partake of the
same space. Similarly, entities of the astral and other worlds are all about us,
living their life, but we are not conscious of them, nor they of us, except under
abnormal circumstances.
Suppose there exists a man who responds to the vibrations of the astral and
mental worlds, and so can “see” them, and that he has also been scientifically
trained in observation and judgment, what does he see? He sees a multitude of
phenomena, which will take him long years to analyze and understand. The first
and most striking thing will be that he sees, living in either astral or mental
bodies, those friends and acquaintances of his whom he thought of as dead; they
are not removed in space, in a far-off heaven or purgatory or hell, but are here, in
the finer unseen extensions of this world. He will see the “dead” blissfully
happy, mildly contented, bored, or utterly miserable; he will note that entities
with these attributes of consciousness are localized to various sub-planes of the
astral and mental worlds. He will observe how far from the earth’s surface these
sub-planes extend, and so he will make for himself a geography of the invisible
worlds.

He will see that in the astral world, and in its lowest subdivision, live for a time
men and women acutely miserable, and that that part of the astral world is
evidently the “hell” described in all the religions; that a higher part of the astral
world is evidently “purgatory”; and that a higher part still is the “Summerland”
described by the communicating entities at spiritualistic seances. With a higher
faculty of observation still, he will note a part of the invisible world where the
“dead” live as intensely happy as each is capable of being, and he will note that
this is evidently “heaven”, though in many ways radically different and more
sensible than the religious imagination has conceived heaven to be. The mystery
of life and death will be solved for him as he thus observes the invisible worlds.

Fig. 50 is an attempt to sum up in tabular form the various inhabitants of the


“three worlds”, the physical, the astral and the mental or heaven world.
Three distinct types of evolving entities share in common these worlds: (1) the
human (including individualized animals), (2) the life of “elemental Essence”,
and the life of minerals, (3) the Devas or Angels, with the nature-spirits or
fairies. The second type is the most difficult to grasp, because it is life which is
not differentiated into stable or persistent forms. The matter of the astral and
mental worlds, quo matter, that is, irrespective of the soul who makes a
vehicle out of it, is alive with a peculiar kind of life, which is delicately
sensitive, quick with life, and yet is not individualized; if we imagine what the
particles of water in a cup might feel as an electric current passed through the
water, we have a faint idea of the increased vitality and energy of mental and
astral grades of matter as “elemental essence” of the first, second and third types
acts through them.

This elemental essence is, as it were, in a “critical state”, ready to precipitate


into “thought-forms” the moment a vibration of thought from a thinker’s
mind affects it. According to the type and quality and strength of the thought is
the thought-form which is made by elemental essence out of astral or mental
matter. These thought-forms are fleeting or last for hours, months or years; and
hence they can well be classed among the inhabitants of the invisible worlds.
They are called Elementals.
Of the same somewhat undifferentiated type of life are forms of the etheric
grades of physical matter; while more differentiated is the life of minerals. A
mineral has a dual existence, as form and as life; as form, it is composed of
various chemical elements; as life, it is a grade of evolving life trained to build in
matter crystal forms according to geometrical designs.

Looking at the second column of the diagram, we have, of course, as physical


inhabitants, all minerals, plants, animals and men. Temporary inhabitants,
disintegrating after a few weeks or months, are those finer etheric counterparts
of the physical bodies, called the “etheric doubles”, which float over graves
where the coarser physical bodies are buried. “Since these etheric doubles have
the shape of their more physical counterparts, and since they are still ‘physical
matter of a sort, they are sometimes seen by sensitive people in churchyards, and
mistaken for the souls of the dead.

In the astral world exist temporarily all those physical entities, men and animals,
for whom sleep involves a separation of the physical body for a time from the
higher bodies. While we “sleep”, we live in our astral bodies, either fully
conscious and active, or partly conscious and semi-dormant, as the case may be,
according to our evolutionary growth; when we “wake”, the physical and the
higher bodies are interlocked again, and we cease to be inhabitants of the astral
world. Of course the “dead” live in astral bodies in the astral world;
“temporarily”, as mentioned in the diagram, since after a period of time they
finally pass on to life in the heaven world; this temporary life in the astral world
may, however, vary from a few hours to several dozen years. (See Fig. 54.)

“Discarded astral bodies” are exactly described by the words; just as we discard
our physical bodies when we “die”, and go to live in the astral world for a time,
so too, when we leave the astral world to pass on to the mental world, our astral
bodies are cast aside. These discarded astral bodies are, however, different from
our discarded physical bodies, because they retain a certain amount of the
departed soul’s consciousness locked up among their astral particles; they
possess, therefore, many memories, and, having a curious vitality for a while,
will, like automata, enact certain habits and modes of expression of the departed
entity. They are called “spooks”, and often are attracted to seances, where
they are mistaken for the true souls, of whom they are nothing more than mere
simulacra8. Unless they are artificially stimulated, as at seances; they
disintegrate in a few hours, or in a few months or years, according to the
spiritual or material nature of the entity who has passed on into the heaven
world.

The seven sub-planes of the heaven world [the Mental Plane] form two great
divisions; the three higher sub-planes make the higher heaven, and the four
lower sub-planes make the lower heaven. The lower heaven world is also known
as “Devachan”, the abode of Bliss, or the place of intense joy because in its four
lower sub-divisions are found souls after death in conditions of happiness
described in the various religions as “heaven”. Here too are found those animals
who, before death, became “individualized”, and attained to the stature of a
human soul. On the lowest sub-plane live those men and women and children in
whom affection predominated in the character when on earth (however limited
may have been its manifestation, owing to adverse circumstances), and they
dwell in bliss for centuries in happy communion with those to love whom was
the highest possible heaven of earthly dreams. On the next higher sub-plane are
those who added to affection a devotion to some definite religious ideal; on the
sub-plane above, the men and women who delighted to express their dreams of
love and devotion in philanthropic action; on the fourth sub-plane are those who,
with all these beautiful attributes, added philosophic, artistic or scientific
interests to their soul’s manifestations when on earth.

In the three higher sub-planes, in the higher heaven, ever live all the souls who
compose our humanity. Here each lives as the “individuality”, as the totality of
capacity and consciousness evolved throughout the long course of evolution.
From here, as the individuality, each soul descends into incarnation, putting forth
only a part of himself as the “personality”, to experiment with life on lower
planes. On the highest sub-plane live the Adepts and their higher pupils; on that
next below, the souls whose higher evolution is attested by their inborn culture
and natural refinement when in earthly bodies; and on the third sub-plane are the
vast majority of the 60,000 millions of souls who form the mass of our, as yet,
backward humanity.

Totally distinct from all the life in the visible and invisible worlds so far
described, is the life of an evolution of entities known as Devas or Angels. In the
higher heaven live Devas of the highest grade, known as Arupa or “formless”
Devas, because the matter of their bodies is made up of the three higher sub-
planes of mental matter, technically called “formless”. The term “formless” is
used because thought in that matter does not precipitate into definite shapes
having form, but expresses itself as a complex, radiating vibration. On the four
lower sub-planes, called the Rupa or “form” sub-planes, because thought creates
thought-forms having definite shapes with outlines, exist the Rupa or “form”
Devas, the lesser-Angels.
On the astral plane exists a still lower order of Angels known as Kama or
“desire” Devas, since the astral world in which they live is essentially the realm
of self-centred emotions. On this plane and on the higher etheric levels of the
physical, exist the nature-spirits or fairies, whose relation to the Devas is
somewhat akin to the relation which our domestic pets hold to us. These fairies,
though their higher grades possess high intelligence, are not yet individualized,
i.e., they are still part of a fairy group-soul. They individualize and become
permanent egos by their devotion to individual Devas, just as, one by one, our
pet dogs and cats attain to the possession of a reincarnating soul through their
devotion to us.

The invisible worlds of Fig. 49 are those within the boundaries of our solar
system, and are the fields of experience for our evolving humanity. There are,
however, other planes, extra-solar and so cosmic in their nature and extent,
called the “Cosmic Planes”. Each of these cosmic planes too has its seven
subdivisions or sub-planes; the lowest and seventh sub-plane of each cosmic
plane makes the highest and first, the atomic, sub-plane of our seven planes
within the solar system. The idea will be clear if we study the two diagrams of
Figs. 49 and 51 together.
It is on the fifth or Cosmic Mental Plane that there exists as a definite Thought-
Form the great Plan of the evolution of all types of life and form in all our seven
planes; this Plan is the Thought of the Logos Himself of how evolution shall
proceed from its beginning to its end. In this “Mind of the Logos” are the
“Ideas” or “Archetypes” discussed by Plato; here, “as it was in the beginning, is
now and ever shall be” is an objective reality.

As will be noted by examining the two diagrams of the Planes of the Solar
System and of the Cosmic Planes, the highest sub-plane of our mental world is
seen to make the lowest subdivision of the Cosmic Mental Plane; from this
follows a striking fact, that whoever can raise his consciousness to work in the
former comes directly under the inspiring vision and power of the Archetypes of
the latter. As the glorious colors of a sunset are reflected on the still surface at
the bottom of a deep well, though in space the water and the clouds are far
removed, so can the purified intellect and the spiritual emotions of the soul see
and sense and know the Eternal Now, the future that awaits us, “the glory that
shall be revealed”. It is in this manner that the great artists glimpse with their
intuitions what eternally IS, and so create for us works of art which are, at one
and the same time, beauty and wisdom, work and sacrifice.

Such are the worlds invisible and visible, in the lowest and least part of which
we play at our roles of mortality. But our immortal selves are the inheritors of a
vast unseen universe, in which our fuller life shall become, as we advance in
knowledge and growth, a series of inspiring adventures amidst divine
masterpieces. Even a tiny glimpse of that vast invisible world corrects our mortal
vision of things, and gives a perspective to life and evolution which never palls
in its fascination. All doubts of man fade away, as mists dissolve when the sun
rises, when man can thus see for himself, and know by direct vision, and not
merely believe.

Though for most of us this vision is not as yet attainable, yet there is another
vision of the purified intellect and of the glorified intuition, which is indeed as a
beacon light to guide our steps amid the dark paths of our mortal world. If
Theosophy cannot give at once, and to all, the direct vision to the eye, it can at
least give, more satisfactorily than any other philosophy, a vision of “things as
they are” to the human intellect, which inspires to good and adds to life’s
enthusiasms. Till all can see what now only a few see, this is all that Theosophy
can legitimately claim, as the vision of the invisible worlds is thus revealed to
the aspiring intellects of men.
CHAPTER VI
MAN IN LIFE AND IN DEATH

It is an axiom in our modem conception of evolution that the more diverse are
the functions of which an organism is capable, the more complex is its structure.
It is therefore in the order of things that man should have a complexity of
structure not found in less developed organisms. But the complexity of the
human organism revealed to us in anatomy and physiology is only a small part
of the full complexity of man; even what we are told in modern psychology lays
bare but little of the complexity revealed in Theosophy.

In Fig. 52 are summarized the main facts about man, as seen in Theosophy.
At the birth of an individual, we have several elements which go to build the unit
of humanity whom we call “man”. They are as follows:
1. The Ego, the true Soul of man, of whom in all cases only a part can ever be
manifested in a physical body. This Ego is the Individuality.

2. A part of the Individuality which is manifested in a reincarnation, at a given


time, in a particular race, and as either a man or a woman. This is the
Personality.

The relation between the Individuality and the Personality has been expressed by
many symbols; one, which has been used in the old mysteries, is that of a string
of pearls, where the string represents the Individuality, and the pearls the
separate Personalities in successive incarnations. In Fig. 52 another symbol is
taken. If we take the three-dimensional, twenty-equal-surfaced geometrical solid,
known as the icosahedron, to represent the Individuality, then the Personality is
equivalent to one of the twenty two-dimensional triangles which make up the
surface of the figure.

All the twenty triangles of the surface, even when put side by side, will always
fail to represent one characteristic of the figure, which is its third dimension; and
conversely, since a triangle has only two dimensions, and the solid figure has
three, it is possible to separate an infinity of triangles from each face of the
icosahedron. In a similar fashion, each Personality—as, too, all the Personalities
together which an Ego ensouls at successive rebirths—fails to reveal certain
attributes of the real Ego; and, also, an Ego can ensoul as many Personalities as
his force is adequate to, without exhausting his true nature as the Ego.
Only one Personality, however, is ensouled by the Individuality for the purpose
of the work done in any one incarnation.

3. The Personality (Fig. 52, column 3) at rebirth takes a Mind or Mental Body,
an Astral Body and a Physical Body.

4. Each of these three bodies has a life and consciousness of its own, quite
distinct from the life and consciousness of the Personality who uses them. This
“body-consciousness” of each vehicle is known respectively as the “mental
elemental” of the mind body, the “desire elemental” of the astral body, and the
“physical elemental” of the physical body (column 2). This “body-
consciousness” is the life of the Elemental Essences of mental and astral matter,
and the life of the mineral, vegetable and animal streams of life which make up
the physical body (column 4).

5. The physical body, which is provided by the parents, is the repository of the
hereditary Mendelian genes or “factors” which are in the parental ancestry; out
of these parental genes such of them are selected, at the building of the embryo
at conception, as are consonant with the karma of the Individuality, and will be
useful for the work of the Personality.
6. The astral and mental bodies also have hereditary factors of a kind; but these
are not provided by the parents but by the Ego himself. The astral and mental
bodies with which a child is born are replicas of the astral body and the mental
body with which the previous incarnation ended, when the Personality of the
previous life discarded his astral body to enter the heaven world, and later
discarded his mental body, at the end of his period in the heaven world.

Man then, when examined in the light of Theosophy, is a very complex entity,
the resultant of the diagonals of many parallelograms of forces of three worlds;
for the purpose of coherent study, we can well arrange these forces into three
groups:

1. The Individuality, who lives on in the permanent Causal Body from life to life,
and retains the memories of the experiences of all his Personalities;

2. The Personality, a more or less partial representative of the Individuality;

3. The “body consciousness” of each of the three vehicles, the mental, astral and
physical elementals.

We shall consider first the kinds of body-consciousness. The physical body has a
consciousness which, however limited, is sufficient for the purposes of its life
and functions. This consciousness knows how to attract the attention of the
occupier when there is need for it; when the body is tired it urges the individual
to rest; when it needs food and drink, it creates in him the desire to eat and drink.
When such physical functions work, it is not the Ego who wants to eat and drink;
but merely the physical elemental. It is clever enough, through long ancestral
habits of heredity, to protect itself; when attacked by disease germs, it marshals
its army of phagocytes to kill them; when wounded, it organizes the cells to heal
when the body is asleep (that is, when the owner departs in his astral body, and
the physical body is tenantless), it pulls up the bedclothes to cover itself against
the cold, or turns over to sleep in a new position. In any event which it thinks
threatens its life, it will instantly do what it can, however limited, to protect
itself; if a shot is fired or a door is slammed, it jumps back; its consciousness is
not sufficient to distinguish between the danger revealed by the sound of a shot
and the absence of danger from the slamming of a door.

Many of these manifestations of the physical elemental are natural enough, and
need not be interfered with by the consciousness of the tenant of the body; but
sometimes such interference is necessary, as when a duty has to be performed,
and the body is tired and objects, and yet must be forced to work, or when there
is a work of danger to be done, and the elemental, fearing for its life, wants to
run away and yet must be held to its task by the will of the owner. In children the
physical elemental is most pronounced; when a baby cries and screams, It is the
elemental which manifests its objections (reasonable to it, though often
unreasonable to us), but it is not the Soul of the baby who screams and cries.

This physical elemental’s life and consciousness is the reservoir of all the
experiences of pleasure and pain of its long line of physical ancestors; its life
was once the life of the desire elementals of savages of long ago. It has all kinds
of ancestral memories and tendencies, to which it often reverts, whenever the
Ego’s consciousness over it is lessened. It is this body-consciousness which has
been discovered in the researches of modern psychoanalysts of the schools of
Freud, Jung and Adler, and its vagaries of consciousness are manifest in our
inconsequential and often meaningless dreams.

The elementals of the astral and mental bodies consist of the life of the
Elemental Essence. This Elemental Essence is a phase of the life of the Logos at
an earlier stage of manifestation than even the life of the mineral; it is on the
“downward arc” of life, and is “descending into matter”, to become, later,
mineral life, and later still, vegetable and animal life. Its chief need is to feel
itself alive, and in as many new ways as possible; it wants a variety of
vibrations, and the coarser they are, that is, tending more to materiality, the better
pleased it is. This is that “law in my members, warring against the law of my
mind”, of which St. Paul speaks, the “sin that dwelleth in me”.

The desire elemental likes the astral body to be roused, to have in fact “a rousing
time”; variety, novelty, excitement are what it wants on its downward arc of life.
The mental elemental does not like the mind to be held to one thought; it is ever
restless, and craves as many varied thought vibrations as it can induce its owner
to give; hence our difficulty in concentration because of this “fickleness of the
mind”.
But the owner of the astral and mental bodies, the Ego, is on the upward arc of
life; billions of years ago he lived as the mineral, the plant and the animal; such
experiences as the mental and desire elementals now prefer, on their downward
arc, are not necessarily what he, the Ego who is on the upward arc, finds useful
for his work in life. Hence that continual warfare for mastery between the Ego
and his vehicles, graphically described by St. Paul; “the good that I would, I do
not; but the evil which I would not, that I do.”
Man’s work in life and death and beyond is to control his vehicles, and use their
energies to accomplish a work mapped out for him by the Lords of Karma, and
acquiesced in by the Ego. He may succeed or he may fail according to the
amount of will-power in the Ego, and according to his knowledge of how to
exercise it. This battleground of life, this crucible of experience, is outlined in
Fig. 53.

The Individuality is the “Higher Self”, “the Demon” of Plato; he has three
fundamental attributes, described as Atma, the Spirit; Buddhi, the Intuition; and
Higher Manas, the Abstract Mind. Will, Wisdom and Activity also describe this
fundamental triplicity of the Higher Self. The personality is the “Lower Self”,
and is composed of the Lower Manas or the Concrete Mind, the astral or desire
nature, the physical functions, and the three vehicles in which these activities
manifest. The Higher Self “puts down” a part of himself into incarnation for the
work of transforming experiences into faculty.

Everything now depends on how much power of will exists in the Ego, and is
being manifested by him in the control of his vehicles. Where the will of the Ego
dominates the instincts of the mental, desire and physical elementals, the
incarnation is a success; where, on the other hand, the three elementals gain the
upper hand, the incarnation is so much wasted effort. In the case of most men,
there is neither complete domination nor complete slavery; in some things we
succeed in dominating, in others we fail. What happens in each case, we can see
from the diagram.

The functions of the physical body are neither good nor evil; it is the body’s duty
to eat to live, drink to satisfy thirst. The evil begins when a natural function is
intensified, by the identification of the desire nature of the man with the
function. When the purely animal sensations from food and drink are delighted
in by the astral body, the body becomes gluttonous and craves stimulants; at first
the astral body dictates when the cravings must be indulged in, but after a while
the physical elemental makes the astral body its tool. It is natural enough for a
primitive savage to gorge and be a glutton; but when a civilized man allows a
purely physical function to hypnotize his desire nature, he is for the time
reverting to the savage. The process of reversion is well illustrated in the
Japanese proverb about drunkenness:
First the man takes a drink;
Then the drink takes a drink;
Then the drink takes the man.
But where the will is dominant, then, from the physical functions, permanent
qualities are developed by the Ego of self-control and purity. It is of great use to
the Ego to have perfect control over the physical body, so that the body’s
technique may be fully and swiftly under the Ego’s control in the work in life.
Rational and pure diet, perfect health, control over muscle and limb, through
exercise and games, are invaluable in transforming physical functions into self-
control and purity.
In exactly a similar way, it is natural for the astral body to desire; it is natural
that the astral body should object to offensive smells or to discords in sound, and
be pleased at harmonious surroundings and agreeable tones. The desire nature of
the astral body provides a delicate instrument of cognition. Evil begins when the
desire elemental dominates and dis-possesses the Ego for the time. A natural
desire then becomes a craving, and the astral body gets out of control.

When a man loses his temper, so that for the time he is not showing a soul’s
attributes, but those of a wild beast, he has for the time reverted to an early stage
of evolution, dragged thereto by the astral body which he cannot control.

What we have to understand is that we are not the habits of the desire elemental
of the astral body, but are to search out, for our soul’s purpose, such aptitudes in
it as are useful to us. Sometimes, through suffering, we discover for ourselves
this duality in us; an American girl of thirteen whom I knew so discovered it.
One day she came home from school almost crying because her playmates had
been teasing her; and when her mother asked her if they had hurt her, she
replied: “N-no, but they made my feelings feel bad.” When we realize that we
are not the feelings of the astral body but possess them, just as we might possess
a tennis racket or a motor car, then we shall know exactly how much freedom to
give to the feelings.

On the reverse side of the picture, the feelings of our astral body, when
controlled, can be made most sensitive and delicate, and can be transformed into
wonderful revelations of the soul’s affection and sympathy; the astral body then
becomes a fine instrument upon which we can play, so as to throw the invisible
world around us into waves of inspiring and purifying emotions.

What has been said above, about the desire elemental of the astral body, applies
with even greater force to the mental elemental of the mind body. The mental
body has, as its natural function, that of responding to thought; and thought,
when exercised by the Ego, is a means of discovering the world in which he
lives. Concrete thought weighs and measures the universe; the function of
abstract thought is to transform all experiences of the mental and lower bodies
into eternal concepts which can be incorporated into the soul’s nature.

But very few of our thoughts are of this nature, for two reasons: first, that the
mental elemental often clings to past thoughts of ours, and insists on thinking
them, despite our attempts to control it; and secondly, that what we think is less
our own creation, and more what is supplied to us by others. Of the former type
are prejudices, which are in reality thoughts which were once useful to us in our
work in life, though not necessarily true; they become later no longer useful, and
we are better without them, but the mental elemental retains the strength which
we instilled into them, and, the better to gain its end, hypnotizes us into
believing that they are still our true thoughts. The prejudices which men have as
to the superiority of race, creed, sex, caste, class or color, are largely of this
nature.

Of the second type are the thoughts of other people, which are being continually
poured into the world’s mental atmosphere, and which, impinging on our mental
bodies, draw out of us automatically a response of like thoughts. When such
thoughts seek admittance, we need to take care that we give welcome only to
those which are useful for our soul’s work, and that we rigorously exclude all
others.

Certain thoughts of both these types sometimes behave like the “malignant
growths” which appear in the human body as tumors and cancers. Some
thoughts make definite centers in the mental body, and gather round them similar
thoughts, and absorb their vitality; they then become distinctly malignant mental
growths of the mind body. Just as a tumor in the brain, in the beginning, will
produce only a slight ache, but afterwards, as it grows larger, will derange many
functions of the body, so too is it with these malignant mental growths; at first
they are hardly evident, except perhaps as unreasonable phantasies and worries;
later, they grow and produce definite mental diseases, like phobias of various
kinds and insanity.
The transmutation of the experiences into eternal concepts, which is gained
through right thinking, feeling and acting, is only partly accomplished during the
life on earth and in the astral world after death; the task is continued when the
individual begins his life in the heaven world. There, under the most ideal and
congenial surroundings, with the power to create all such happiness as he longs
for, and above all with the wonderful aid of the Mind of the Logos playing upon
his mental body and causing it to grow, the man lives his period in the heaven
world. He develops his will and transforms all his experiences into eternal
concepts, and into faculties which more and more reflect his hidden Divine
Nature.
This work which man does during his period, “in Heaven” naturally depends
upon the strength of his aspirations, and upon the amount of capacity with which
he sets to work upon the work of transmutation. These factors determine how
long he is “in Devachan”, growing there through happiness. In Fig. 54 we have a
table giving a general average for various types of Egos.

When the death of the physical body takes place, the man lives in the astral
world for a while; afterwards he passes to the lower heaven, to live there “in
Devachan”. At the end of Devachan, the mental body, the last remnant of the
Personality, is cast aside, and the Ego is once more fully himself, with all his
energies, in the higher heaven. After a period, brief or long, dimly conscious or
fully aware of the process of rebirth, the Ego once more puts down a part of
himself into incarnation to become the new Personality.

We see from the diagram that the degenerate, low type of human being lives
about five years in the astral world and, having no spiritual qualities needing
Devachan for their growth, returns at once into incarnation. The terms artisan,
farmer, merchant are used to describe general types; and doctor is used to
represent professional men in general. But a farmer or a merchant may be a
highly cultivated man and belong really to a higher type of Ego than is
represented by his occupation.

The cultured man, who is definitely idealistic and who makes sacrifices for the
sake of his ideals, has a consciously active life as the Individuality in the higher
heaven. The man consecrated to service under the guidance of a Master of the
Wisdom, should he “take his Devachan”, will have so purified his astral nature
before death that he need have no life in the astral world at all; he will pass at
once into his Devachan.

We see from the diagram that the period between incarnations may vary from
five years to twenty-three centuries. When a child dies, he, too, has his short
astral life and his short Devachan before return to birth again; the period
between his death and rebirth may vary from a few months to several years,
according to the age and the mental and emotional nature of the child.

Many of the facts already mentioned, about the hidden nature of man and his
finer vehicles, are restated in the next diagram, Fig. 55.
In the first column we have the seven planes of the solar system; in the second
we have the four bodies which man now uses. It will be seen from the third and
fourth columns that man exists, in his highest nature, as the “Monad”, on the
four planes higher than the mental plane, but that he has as yet no vehicle or
instrument of cognition and action in them.
For all general purposes of study, the soul of man is the Individuality in the
causal body. The Individuality creates a Personality for the purpose of
incarnation, and the Personality has three vehicles, the mental, astral and
physical bodies. Each of these three lower bodies represents one aspect of the
Ego; and since the Ego in the causal body gives the fundamental tone or
temperament for the incarnation, we, may think of the Ego and his three lower
vehicles as forming a chord of temperamental, tones, the Chord of the Man. But
the Individuality in the causal body is only a partial representation of all his
qualities; behind his Higher Manas or Abstract Mind exists the Buddhi, the
Divine Intuition, and behind that, the Atma or the indomitable Spirit of God in
man. But the Atma, Buddhi and Manas are themselves reflections of still higher
attributes of the Monad, “the Son in the bosom of the “Father”, The fundamental
note of the Life of the Logos gives the dominant tone for the Monad, and the
three attributes of the Monad, on the Adi, Anupadaka and higher Nirvanic
planes, make the “Chord of the Monad”. The Monad then creates the
Individuality; the tone of the Monad being then the dominant, it and the tones
represented by the Atma, Buddhi and Manas make the “Chord of the
Augoeides”. When next the Individuality creates the Personality, the “mask”, we
have the “Chord of the Man”.

* * * *

Man’s work in life and in death is to discover what he is, what is the world, and
what is the Logos “in whom we live, and move, and have our being”. Ages of
experience and action are required before he begins to grasp this “Wisdom of
God in a mystery”, and to understand “God’s Plan, which is Evolution”. Yet this
is his eternal work—to know, in himself and in others, the clod, the brute and the
God. All life is a workshop where he is taught his work; and many are the
instructors who come to help him. These are the religions and the philosophies,
the sciences and the arts of his time. Instructors too, unwelcome for the most
part, are the sufferings which are his lot. But most welcome of all his instructors
can be the Hidden Wisdom known as Theosophy, which reveals God’s Plan with
such a fascination to the mind, and with such an inspiration to the heart, as have
not yet been found in any other revelation.
CHAPTER VII
THE EVOLUTION OF ANIMALS

When we survey nature, we can readily see that by far the greater number of
living organisms are to be found not in the human kingdom, but in the vegetable
and animal kingdoms. The theories of modern science tell us that there is a
bridge in the evolution of forms from the vegetable to the animal, and from the
animal to man; therefore it is evident that, since man is the highest so far in
evolution, all forms lower than man must be tending towards his type. The
highest type in the animal kingdom, which is nearest to man, is the “missing
link”; and the anthropoid apes are the forms now existing which are nearest to
this “missing link”. On the side of the physical form, we can see clearly enough
the transition from the anthropoid apes to man; but when we consider
intelligence in the animal kingdom, there is a serious gap in the scientific
conception of evolution. We have certain domestic animals, like dogs, cats and
horses, in whom distinctly human characteristics of intelligence and emotion
appear; many a dog in his inner nature is nearer to man than the anthropoid ape.
It is obvious that there is no possible transition, on the side of form, from the dog
to man; inevitably, therefore, the high human attributes developed in our
domestic pets must be practically wasted, if evolution proceeds rigidly according
to the ladder of forms enunciated by science. (Fig. 5.)

In order to understand more thoroughly nature at her work, we must supplement


the conception of the evolution of form in the animal kingdom with that of the
evolution of its life. Only this latter conception will enable us fully to understand
the role which the animal kingdom plays in evolutionary processes.

All life whatsoever, whether in mineral, plant, animal or, man, is fundamentally
the One Life, which is an expression of the nature and action of the Logos; but
this Life reveals its attributes more fully, or less fully, according to the amount of
limitation which it has surmounted in evolution. The limitations to its
manifestation are greatest in the mineral, but they become by degrees less in the
plant, the animal and man. In the evolution of its attributes, the Life undergoes
these limitations in succession; after enduring the limitation or mineral matter,
and there having learned to express itself in the building of geometrical forms
through crystallization, it next passes on to become the life of the vegetable
kingdom. Retaining all the capacities which the Life learned through mineral
matter, it now adds new capacities as the plant, and discovers new ways of self-
revelation. When sufficient evolutionary work has been done in the vegetable
kingdom, this Life, with all the experiences gained as the mineral and as the
plant, builds organisms in the animal kingdom, in order to reveal more of its
hidden attributes through the more complex and more pliant forms of animal
life. When its evolutionary work is over in the animal kingdom, its next stage of
self-revelation is in the human kingdom.

Through all these great stages, as the mineral, the vegetable, the animal and the
human, it is the One Life which is at work, building and unbuilding and
rebuilding, ever at work to build higher and higher forms. This One Life, long
before it begins its work in mineral matter, differentiates itself into seven great
streams, each of which has its own special and unchanging characteristics. (Fig.
56.)
The One Source of Life is symbolized in the diagram by the triangle within the
circle. Each of these seven streams differentiates itself into seven modifications.
If we represent the seven great streams by the figures 1, 2, 3,4, 5, 6, 7, then the
modifications of each are as in the following table.

It will now be apparent how the first type or life has seven variants, in the first of
which its own special characteristic is doubly emphasized (11), but in its 2nd to
7th variants its own special characteristic is modified by the characteristics of the
six other fundamental types l.2 l.3 l.4 l.5 l.6 l.7. The same principle holds good
with reference to the six other fundamental types also, as will be seen from the
table. These types are known as the “Rays”.
Each of the forty-nine variants of the One Life follows its own characteristic
development through all the great kingdoms of life, the mineral, the vegetable,
the animal and the human. The type of life, which in the animal Kingdom
belongs to the 3.2 variety, passes from the mineral kingdom to the vegetable
kingdom along its own special channel, and is the 3.2 life of the vegetable
kingdom; when the time comes for it to pass into the animal kingdom, it appears
there still as 3.2 animal life, and through animal forms which are exclusively
reserved for the development of this type or life. When this animal life comes to
the stage of passing into the human, it will build an individual of the 3.2 type of
human being, and not one of another type. These forty-nine variants of the One
Life-Stream follow their forty-nine distinct channels through all the great
kingdoms, and there is no mingling of one type of life with another type.

When the forty-nine life-streams in the animal kingdom are ready to pass into
the human, each of the seven variants of each fundamental type converges, in the
highest phases of its animal life, to a few predetermined animal forms. These
animal forms are arranged in the Divine Plan so as to come into close touch with
humanity as domestic pets; and, under the influence of the care lavished upon
them, the animal life reveals its hidden attributes, and develops them, and
“individualizes” into the human kingdom.
We have today certain animal types which stand as the doors from the animal
kingdom to the human; such types are the dog, the cat, the horse, the elephant,
and probably also the monkey. The transition from the animal to the human can
take place through these doors, provided the proper influences are brought to
bear on the animal by the action of man. While the life in dogs and cats is of the
highest type along their two “Rays”, yet the transition will take place only when
an individual dog or cat has developed his intelligence and affection by the direct
action of a human being.

Our domestic animals have been developed out of earlier and more savage types
of animal life; the dog is the descendant of the wolf, and the cat of various cat-
like creatures, like the panther, the tiger, etc. At the present stage, the life-
streams manifesting in the dog-streams of life, the Canine, all converge upon the
domesticated dog for the purpose of entering the human kingdom; and similarly
the Feline types of life converge today upon the domesticated cat. In future ages
we shall have other “domesticated animals, who also will be among the forms
making the seven doors to humanity.

In the understanding of the evolution of the animals, it is necessary to grasp


clearly what is the animal group-soul. Just as, from the Theosophical standpoint,
the individual man is not the physical body, but an invisible spiritual entity
possessing a physical body, so too is the animal. The true animal is not the body;
he is an invisible life which acts on the animal form as does the soul of man on
man’s body. This invisible life, which energizes the animal forms, is called the
Group-Soul.

The group-soul is a certain definite quantity of mental matter charged with the
energy of the Logos. This mental matter contains a definite life at the animal
grade of evolution, and in that life are retained all the possible developments of
animal consciousness and activity. This animal group-soul was, in previous
cycles, the vegetable group-soul; and in earlier cycles still, it was the mineral
group-soul. So that now, at the stage we are considering, the animal group-soul
is already highly specialized, as the result of its experiences in vegetable and
mineral matter. At the present stage of evolution, there is no one animal group-
soul for the animal kingdom, just as there is no one physical type for all animals;
and just as in the evolution of forms we have today their division into kingdom,
sub-kingdom, group, class, order, family, genus and species, so have we similar
divisions in the animal group-soul.

Our next diagram, Fig. 57, will give us an idea of the way that the group-soul
works.
Let us presume that there exists, on the mental plane, the group-soul of some
species of animal life; this group-soul will repeatedly reincarnate on earth
through its animal representatives. The life of two animals of this group-soul
will be quite distinct so long as they are alive; but when they die, the life of each
returns to the group-soul, and is mingled with all other such returning lives
which form the group-soul of that species. Looking at our diagram, if we
consider that A and B are two representatives of the group-soul on the physical
plane, then, when they give birth to offspring—A to a, b, c, d, and e, and B to f
and g—the life ensouling the bodies of the new generation comes direct from the
group-soul on the mental plane. Let us presume that, in the litter of A, the young
animals represented by a, d and e, die young through feebleness, or get destroyed
by the enemies of the species; and also that one offspring of B, denoted by g,
suffers a similar fate. When these animals die, their life returns direct to the
group-soul, and contributes to its stock of experiences such few experiences as
they gained before death. Now we see, according to the diagram, that b gives
rise to offspring h, i and j, and c to offspring k and l, and f to offspring m, and o.
The life ensouling the bodies of the third generation also comes direct from the
group-soul, but it will have impressed upon it such experiences as have been
gathered by those of earlier generations who had died before the third generation
was conceived. As each animal dies, the life which ensouled that animal form is
poured back into the group-soul; and this life, as it returns to the group-soul,
adds as innate memories the experiences it gained in its various physical
environments. It is the memory of these past experiences which expresses itself
as instinct in animals; and the consciousness of the group-soul is slowly
changing, according to the contributions received by it from its representatives
on earth after their return.

It will be evident that b, c and f survived only because they were able to adapt
themselves to the environment of nature, which is constantly changing around
them; and a, d, e and g died because they were not strong enough to adapt
themselves to that environment. The former survived because they were the
strongest and the fittest, in an environment full of struggle and competition; and
being the fittest to survive, they become the channels of the evolving life of the
group-soul; they then produce descendants who possess this quality of fitness to
survive which had been developed for a given environment.

In this action by nature of selecting the forms best fitted to survive, an important
role is played by certain entities in the invisible worlds who are called, in our
diagram, the “Builders”. These Intelligences belong to a kingdom higher than
the human, and are known as Devas or Angels. One department of these
“Shining Ones” has as its work that of guiding the processes of life in nature; it
is they who guide the Struggle for existence, and watch for the development in
their charges of those characteristics which are tending towards the ideal forms
of the species. They combine the Mendelian genes which are so intimately
connected with the revelation of the latent characteristics of the life dwelling in
the form. These Builders have before them certain ideal Types which have to be
developed in nature, so as to serve best the purposes of the Life; with these
Archetypes before them, they watch and mould organisms from the unseen
worlds, so as to bring about that arrival of the fittest which is difficult to explain
with the ordinary evolutionary theories.

Present-day theories of biology are not sufficient to explain the “three major
problems of evolution”—the origin of species, the origin of adaptations, and the
maintenance of long range trends. That “blind nature” can work so purposefully
with a purely mechanical method of trial and error is not convincing. The
adaptations are towards a definite end in the long run. The conception of the
group-soul, and of the operations of the Deva Builders, provide a reasonable
explanation. It is the Builders who use trial and error as their method in their
long range operations throughout the ages, but the final type is before them from
the beginning.

The struggle for existence is the method adopted by the Builders to the living
organisms, in order to find out which of them will develop, in that struggle, those
adaptations which build types that steadily approximate to the Archetypes. It
must be remembered that, in the death of any organism, its life is not dissipated
into nothing; that life, with its experiences, returns to its group-soul, and thence
issues later to dwell in another form. Therefore, when we see that out of one
hundred seeds perhaps only one finds soil in which to grow, and ninety-nine are
wasted, the waste is only apparent, since the life of the “unfit” ninety-nine
appears in a later generation as the descendants of the one “fit” seed.

With this principle before them of the indestructibility of Life, the Builders
arrange for a keen struggle for existence in the vegetable and animal kingdoms.
This method, which brings about a fierce brutality in visible nature, yet has on its
unseen side a most amicable cooperation among the Builders who are directing
the growth of rival forms. They all have but one aim, which is, to carry out the
Divine Will, which places before them the Archetypes which must be
reproduced in the evolution of forms.
We must now understand how the animal life differentiates itself in its progress
to individualization. If we consider any group-soul, such as, for instance, the
Canine (Fig. 58), we shall first note that its group-soul exists on the mental
plane.
Let us presume that it puts out expressions of itself in Canine forms in different
parts of the world. The differences of climate and other variations in
environment will draw out of the individuals’ differences of response, according
to the part of the world where the life of each is manifest; each individual in a
country will, as it dies, take back to the group-soul a particular type of
experience and tendency. As time passes and these experiences accumulate,
there will arise in the group-soul different nuclei, each segregating particular
experiences and tendencies. If we think of an experience as a rate of vibration in
the indwelling life, then, where in one mass two rates of vibration are produced,
there will be a tendency for the mass to divide, just as a glass cracks when
boiling water is poured into it, because the rate of vibration of the inner particles
is suddenly made more rapid than that of the outer particles. Similarly we shall
find that, after several generations, the Canine group-soul will subdivide into
specialized group-souls of wolves, foxes, dogs, jackals and other varieties.
Similarly, the Feline group-soul (Fig. 58) will divide, following specializations
of experience, into smaller group-souls of lions) tigers, cats, etc. In fact, just as
genera subdivide into families, so too does the group-soul slowly divide itself
into smaller and smaller group-souls containing more and more specialized
characteristics and tendencies.

In this process of the subdivision of the group-soul, we shall come to a point


when a highly specialized small group-soul will be the indwelling life of only a
small number of physical forms; when this happens, and when the forms can be
brought under the influence of man, the transition from the animal to the human
becomes possible, and individualization is near.

If, for instance, we consider the original Feline group-soul, we shall, in the
course of time, have a small group-soul which energizes one highly specialized
breed of domestic cats (Fig. 58); at this stage individualization is possible. If we
consider two cats, No. 1 and No. 2, we may presume that their experiences will
vary; we will presume that cat No.1 finds a home where he is appreciated and
much interest and affection are lavished upon him, and that cat No.2 is born in
another home where he is relegated to the kitchen and banished from the
drawing-room. Cat No.1, in his favorable environment, will begin to respond to
the high rates of vibration impinging upon him from the thoughts and feelings of
his master or mistress; and even before his death, this will bring about such a
specialization in the little group-soul that that part of the group-soul which
stands as the soul of Cat No.1 will break off from the rest of the group-soul. In
the case of Cat No. 2, the life in him, when he dies, will return to the group-soul,
there to mingle with all the other returning lives.
When Cat No. 1 has so separated himself during life from his group-soul, the
further stages of individualization can be understood from the next diagram (Fig.
59).
The animal taken into consideration is, however, not a cat, but a dog, “Jack”.
Jack was a fox terrier of pedigree who was most devoted to his master and
mistress, and also a great friend of the writer. If we look at our diagram and
imagine the group-soul, with Jack in it before he came to his master, as a
rectangle, then the special affection lavished on Jack will have the effect, which
is shown in the diagram, of drawing up that part of the group-soul which is Jack
into a cone that rises upwards. The amount of mental matter, which stands as the
“Soul of Jack”, then slowly separates itself from the rest of the mental matter
making up the group-soul, as shown in the third column of the diagram.
Now this specialization of Jack out of the dog-group-soul is due, not only to the
higher vibrations sent towards him from Jack’s master, mistress and friends, but
also to the fact that a Monad, “a Fragment of Divinity”, is seeking to form an
Ego or Soul in order to begin his human pilgrimage. This Monad long ago
attached to himself an atom of each of the planes as a center on that plane, as an
“earnest” deposited in advance with a view to his future work. These “permanent
atoms” of his were sent out into the elemental, mineral, vegetable and animal
group-souls in succession, there to receive whatever experiences they could.
When the “permanent atoms find themselves in touch with a highly specialized
part of the animal group-soul, like the “soul of Jack”, then the Monad sends
down from his high plane certain influences, in response to the outer work done
for the “soul of Jack” by his human friends. These influences are symbolized in
our diagram as the force from the Monad sprayed on the “soul of Jack”. The
Monad is symbolized in the diagram as the upper inverted cone, and each star in
that cone represents the quality which the Monad is manifesting on each of the
planes of his activity.

When the “soul of Jack”, as a result of the stronger and more divine radiations
from the Monad, breaks off from the group-soul, Jack is still a dog to outer
appearance, but he is really at an intermediate stage, as he certainly is not dog
nor yet man. This stage is illustrated in the third column of the diagram. The
next stage, illustrated in the last column of the diagram, is when, as a result of
the increased outpouring from the higher planes by the Monad, the Causal Body
is made.

What happens can only be described by a simile; if we imagine that the “soul of
Jack” which in the third column is represented by the lower cone, is like a
volume of watery vapor of no precise shape or coherence; if we then think of all
this vapor as being condensed into a drop; if we then imagine that into the drop
air is blown and a bubble is created; then this is something like what happens to
the “soul of Jack” when the Monad descends and creates a causal body. A divine
afflatus, which is the energy of the Monad, pours into the mental matter which
has stood to Jack as his little soul. The mental matter rearranges itself into a
causal body, to become the vehicle of this “Son in the Bosom of the Father” who
has descended to become a human soul.

It should here be clearly noted that, in this process of individualization, the


animal does not become the human in the same way that the vegetable evolves
into the animal; at individualization, all that has been for ages the animal
becomes now the vehicle to hold a fragment of Divinity, the Monad, who has
descended from above.

This Monad cannot make an Ego with a Causal Body until all the previous
stages have been achieved, of experience in the animal and preceding kingdoms;
but, while he utilizes what the animal kingdom has prepared for him, he is in
reality an utterly different stream of energy and consciousness of the Divine Life
from what is found in kingdoms lower than man. That is why there is an infinite
gap in evolution between the highest anthropoid ape and the youngest
individualized soul; in the latter is the life of a Monad, in the former we have as
yet only the higher manifestations of animal life.
From the time that the “soul of Jack” separates itself from his dog-group-soul, he
has in reality ceased to be a dog, though he still has a dog’s form. From this
point of separation up to the actual formation of the causal body, there are
several stages of transformation. These stages can be hastened by the proper
understanding by men of the process of individualization, so that our animal
friends may pass swiftly to the reception of that Divine Outpouring which makes
of each a Soul of Man.
One of the greatest privileges in life which men have is to cooperate with the
Divine Plan in hastening the individualization of the higher animals; but it is a
privilege which, through ignorance, only a few are ready to accept today. Most
people now take for granted that animals exist only to serve men’s purposes;
though animals are indeed intended to give us their strength and intelligence to
help us in the development of our civilizations, yet they exist not primarily for
men, but to fulfil their own purposes in the Divine Plan. In our dealings with
animals, we have to remember that, while they give us their strength, yet our
first duty is to see that they develop in such ways as hasten their
individualization. In these days, we train the intelligence of horses to take pride
in speed, that of dogs to develop their cunning in hunting, that of cats to be
“good mousers”. All this is utterly wrong, for the animals are brought into touch
with man to have their savage instincts weaned out of them, and to have the
higher human attributes called out of them. Each action of man, which utilizes
the mere cunning of the animal to gratify man’s desires, is so much injury done
to the evolving animal life. We have yet to learn that, while our superior
intelligence and control of nature’s forces give us a control of the animal
kingdom, yet that control has to be exercised for the benefit of the animal
kingdom, and not for our own.
CHAPTER VIII
THE WORK OF THE TRIPLE LOGOS

Each system of thought worthy of the name Philosophy has in it many elements
which cannot be tested by the limited intelligence of man. Man’s experiences
deal mainly with a world interpreted for him by his five senses; even such
faculties of the imagination as he has are largely circumscribed by these
experiences. When, therefore, a philosophy tells of the beginnings of things, or
unveils a panorama of past or future events, no man can judge of its truth by the
standard of his own experiences.

This is the case with some of the teachings of modern science; when science tells
us that all the planets and the sun once formed a nebula, we can logically infer it
by observing the many nebulae existing in the heavens, but we should be certain
of it only if we were to see the original nebula, and watch its process of division
into sun and planets. When science tells us of the evolutionary process, of the
building of molecules into protoplasm, and of protoplasm into man, through
definite stages of a ladder of evolution, we accept the account, not because we
can prove it to be true, but because our acceptance of it makes our intellectual
life more vital and fruitful. Logically, if the test of truth were only man’s own
experiences, he should put aside every statement of science or philosophy which,
for him, is outside the range of possible experience. But, on the other hand, he
would lose thereby most of his present intellectual poise and imaginative vigor.
It is only as a man is continually imaginative, that he transcends the limitations
which a perishable body imposes upon his sense of individuality. The larger is a
man’s intellectual horizon, the more powerful is his imagination, and the
combined result of both makes him more forceful in his environment. Since the
sum total of any philosophy, in terms of conduct, is to give us more power to
change our environment, philosophical ideas are essential for our life, even
though at any particular moment it may be beyond our capabilities to test their
truth.
When a man is confronted by philosophical ideas which deal with subjects
outside his experience, he can survey them as a whole, and accept them only in
so far as they appeal to his sense of the fitness of things. If the intellectual
edifice which a philosophy provides for him proves not only sound but also
inspiring, and if all the facts of which he is aware: find logical and harmonious
place in that dwelling, he may as well accept that philosophy to live by as any
other. Exactly this, no more but no less, can be said of those particular
Theosophical ideas which form this chapter and the next; while they are not
likely to be personally proved for many a life by the average inquirer,
nevertheless they offer to the mind a conception of life which is attractive to
man’s reason and inspiring to his imagination.

1. The Divine Wisdom tells us that the universe with its myriads of stars is the
expression of a Conscious Life, called variously God, Isvara, Ahura Mazda,
Allah, or the Logos. This One Life is, we are told, a Person but He transcends all
the limitations which necessarily are associated with our ideas of Personality. We
are told that this Cosmic Logos is ever a Unity, “One without a second” (ekam
advitiyam); nevertheless, as He energizes a universe, He energizes it as a Trinity
of three fundamental modes of manifestation. God as a Trinity is described in
Hinduism as Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver, and Shiva the Destroyer;
in Christianity the Trinity is stated as God the Father, God the Son, and God the
Holy Ghost. In other religions too, we find names for the trinitarian modes of the
divine activities.

2. Associated with the work in the universe of the Cosmic Logos are seven
Embodiments of His Nature, called the Seven Cosmic Planetary Logoi. All the
stars in the universe, each of which is the center of a great evolutionary system,
belong to one or other of these great Seven, and are in some way expressions of
Their life, as They in turn are expressions of the One Life of the Cosmic Logos.
Fig. 60 is an attempt to symbolize the Primordial One and His seven
Embodiments; the seven small circles, within each of which should be
innumerable stars, both great and small, represent the Seven Planetary Logoi,
while the large circle, embracing the seven small circles, represents the Cosmic
Logos.
3. In all this vast splendor of universal life, the Lord of our Solar System, the
Solar Logos, exists. As a Star, as the Lord of a System among the myriads of
stars, He lives and moves and has His Being in His Father-Star, one of the great
Seven; yet He mirrors directly the Life and Light and Glory of the “One without
a second”. What is the special purpose which the Solar Logos, with the Brother-
Stars of His Company, fulfils in the growth of the Universe, who can tell? But
this at least is sure, that, for us men, He is God, the ultimate of all our thought
and imagination, the only God whom we can conceive, because we ourselves are
He and none other.

True, we are rooted in the “One without a second”; but we abide in that glory
only as seeds within the seed-pod. The action of the Solar Logos is to nourish us
till we grow into. Individuality, as the mother nourishes the embryo till it can
begin its separate existence as an entity. But for His thinking we could not think,
but for His loving we could not love, but for His living we could not live. Our
Individualities are fractions of the Total of His Individuality, circles inscribed on
the vast sphere of His Being. His field of activity is a vast sphere, whose radius
begins with the sun and ends with the last satellite of the farther-most planet yet
to be discovered. Within this sphere, in “bright-space”, He works, ever impelling
His system to reveal more and more of His wondrous nature as the cycles pass,
patiently waiting for the Day when all the life of the system which has come
forth from Him shall return to Him, conscious of its revealed glory.

4. “As above, so below.” In the image of the. Cosmic Logos, the Logos of the
solar system is also a Trinity when He energizes His system. He works in three
fundamental modes, which are symbolized in the great religions as those of the
Creator, the Preserver, and the Destroyer; or the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost. In modern Theosophical nomenclature, this triple activity is described as
that of the First Logos (Father), the Second Logos (Son), and the Third Logos
(Holy Ghost). The First Logos, the Second Logos and the Third Logos are but
three Aspects of the one Solar Logos; while three in manifestation, He is yet ever
the one indivisible Godhead. (Fig. 61.)
5. “As above, so below.” Associated with “the work of the Logos of our solar
system are seven Beings, who are as seven expressions of His Nature, as seven
channels of His inexhaustible Life. These Seven are called the Seven Planetary
Logoi. (Fig. 62.) In Hinduism They are called the Seven Prajapatis (Lords of
Creatures), in Zoroastrianism the Seven Amesha Spentas (Immortal Holy
Ones), in the Hebrew and Christian tradition the “Seven Spirits before the
Throne of God.” [Revelation 4:5]
The energies of these Seven control and direct all that takes place within the
solar system; each of the Seven contributes His typical nature as a vibratory
response even to each atom, so that when an atom is affected by the sun’s ray,
the seven “minor strands” of the atom flash out the seven prismatic colors. Each
of the Seven is the Head and Ruler of hierarchies of creative entities who work
under His direction in the building and sustaining of the solar system. Under
each are ranged those Devas (Shining Ones) or “Angelic Hosts, called in
Oriental religions Adityas, Vasus, Phyani Buddhas, Dhyan Chohans, etc., and in
the Christian tradition, Angels, Archangels, Thrones, Dominations,
Principalities, Virtues, Powers, Cherubim and Seraphim.

6. In Fig. 63 we have a condensed summary of the work of the Triple Logos


within His system.
The Logos works through three aspects or modes, whose fundamental
characteristics may be stated as follows:
I. First Logos: Divinity-Humanity.
II. Second Logos: Life-Form.
III. Third Logos: Force-Matter.
Before the Logos began the work of the system, He created on the “Plane of the
Divine Mind” (see Fig. 51) the system as it was to be, from its commencement
to its end. He created all the Archetypes of forces, forms, emotions, thoughts and
intuitions, and determined how and by what stages in civilization each should be
realized in the evolutionary scheme of His system. Then, in that part of space
selected by Him for the work of His Plan, He commenced His work through His
Third Aspect, the Third Logos as Force-Matter.

The vast sphere in space, within which the sun and its planets were to arise,
contained at the beginning no substance in any way akin to matter (visible or
invisible) which we have within the system today. There was onlyMulaprakrti or
“root-matter”, that ether of space once postulated by science which is
incomprehensible to our imagination, since it is only out of “holes in the aether”
that matter such as we know is composed. In our Theosophical studies we have
called this primordial ether or negation of matter “Koilon”, the “emptiness”.
(Fig. 64.)

Into this Koilon, or primordial ether of “space, the Cosmic Logos poured His
energy, pressing back the Koilon from innumerable points within it. (Fig. 65.)
Each “bubble” or point of light exists where Koilon is not; therefore each bubble
is in reality a point of consciousness of the Third Aspect of the Cosmic Logos;
and each bubble persists only so long as He wills to keep back the enveloping
Koilon.

As the next action, the Solar Logos, acting in His Third Aspect, swept these
bubbles into spiral formations (Fig. 66), with seven bubbles spiral. The bubbles
are so held by His Will. These are termed “spirals of the first order”. He coiled
great lengths of these spirals of the first order, into larger loops still, with seven
spirals making one “spiral of the second order”; lengths of spirals of the second
order were similarly twisted and held as “spirals of the third order”; and so on
till there were created lengths of “spirals of the sixth order”. (Fig.66 shows
spirals of the first, second and third orders; the white line connecting the bubbles
in the spiral of the first order, and that going through the loops in the spirals of
the second and third orders, denote the particular forces of the Will of the Third
Logos which holds the bubbles in each spiral order.) Ten parallel strands,
composed of lengths of spirals of the sixth order, were then twisted, as shown in
Fig. 67, to make the fundamental unit of our physical matter.
Each action in the making of these spirals, from the spiral of the first order to the
physical atom, is due to the focussing of the consciousness of the Third Logos to
that particular purpose; each order of spirals retains its formation only because
His consciousness continues to hold it so. Our physical atom is not “matter”; it is
in reality myriads of points of the consciousness of the Third Cosmic Logos,
held by the Solar Logos in a particular formation to do a specific work—that of
building the physical plane.

But the building of the physical plane is preceded by the building of the
superphysical planes; to grasp this we must revert to Fig. 63. In that diagram, we
find that the little circle representing the Third Logos has two lines issuing from
the right side; these two lines denote two activities which build the planes and
sub-planes. The shorter line refers to the first action of all of the Third Logos
which is, as already described, that of grouping the bubbles in Koilon; these
bubbles are the final units, the bricks so to say, out of which all the seven planes
of the solar system are made.

The first or Adi plane is made out of the bubbles in Koilon directly, and the atom
of this plane is one bubble. The atom of the next plane, the Anupadaka, is made
out of 49 bubbles. The Atmic atom is made out of 492 or 2,401 bubbles. We
have the atoms of the lower planes then made in succession with bubbles to the
number as follows: atom of the Buddhic plane, 493 or 49 x 2,401 bubbles; atom
of the Mental plane, 494 or 2,401 x 2,401 bubbles; atom of the Astral plane, 495
or 49 x 2,401 x 2,401 bubbles; atom of the Physical plane, 496 or 2,401 x 2,401 x
2,401 bubbles, with a definite number of bubbles in addition, owing to the
peculiar formation of the physical atom.

When the atoms of each of the seven planes have been created, then the Third
Logos creates the sub-planes of each plane. (The longer line, issuing to the right
from the small circle of the Third Logos, denotes this second action.) The atoms
of each plane are swept into groups of two, three, four, etc., to make the sub-
planes. The first or highest sub-plane is composed of the single atoms
themselves, while the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh sub-planes
are made by combinations of these atoms into molecules. Thus, on the physical
plane, the highest sub-plane is composed of unit physical atoms, of two varieties,
the positive and the negative. Then, by combination of these positive and
negative atoms, there are built the remaining, sub-planes, called sub-atomic,
super-etheric, etheric, gaseous, liquid and solid. It is in the course of building the
sub-planes of the physical world, that the chemical elements are produced, as
will later be explained when dealing with the subject of Occult Chemistry.

The work of the Third Logos, then, builds the seven great planes, with their sub-
planes, of the solar system. That building is not complete, and it is still
proceeding apace. He is the ensouling Force in the Matter of all the planes;
electricity is one expression of His force through the matter of the physical
plane; another expression, which is totally distinct, is Kundalini, the mysterious
“serpent fire” which operates in all higher organisms.
In the seven great planes thus built by the Third Logos, next appears the work of
the Second Logos. His energy is essentially of an order best described as Life-
Form; with this energy He ensouls the matter of the seven planes, and enables it
to build forms which have that mysterious quality which we call “life”. This life
builds the matter of the planes into varying forms, and, each form persists only
so long as the life of the Second Logos holds the matter in that form.
Now for the first time appear the phenomena of birth, growth, decay and death.
A form is born because the Life of the Second Logos has a work of evolution to
do through that form; it grows while that work is progressing to its culmination;
it shows signs of decay because the Second Logos slowly withdraws the life
from the form, since the life has evolved all it can through that form; it dies
when finally the “Second Logos withdraws all of the life, in order to send it back
once again to build a newer and better form, which can give the evolving life the
new experiences necessary for its further growth and self-revelation. On the
physical plane, the expression of the force of the second Logos is Prana, Vitality.

When manifest on the four highest planes of the solar system, that life of the
Second Logos is called the Monadic Essence; it descends stage by stage, gaining
at each stage the growth which has been planned for it in the Great Plan. During
a long period of time, called a Chain, it first manifests in the matter of the Adi
plane; at the end of the Chain, it returns to the Second Logos, from whom it
issues forth again at the beginning of the succeeding Chain, in order to ensoul
the matter of the second, the Anupadaka plane. It commences the work of the
second Chain, with all the experiences of the first Chain inherent in it as
tendencies and capacities.
Chain by Chain, the Monadic Essence descends from plane to plane, and at the
beginning of its fifth cycle, it begins to ensoul the matter of the higher mental
plane. Up to this point, the Monadic Essence was not limited for its experiences
to one “scheme of evolution”; but henceforth its experiences are restricted to
those obtainable in our “scheme of evolution”. From the time of its entrance into
the matter of our mental plane, it is called Elemental Essence. During the period
of its growth in higher mental matter, this life of the Second Logos is called the
First Elemental Essence; after the end of a Chain, it reappears at the
commencement of a new Chain, and ensouls lower mental matter; at this stage it
is called the Second Elemental Essence. At the next Chain, it becomes the Third
Elemental Essence, and ensouls the matter of the astral plane.
1 In the next chapter the terms “chain” and “scheme of evolution” will be fully explained.

It is this ensouling life of the Second Logos which gives to mental and astral
matter their peculiarly living quality, so that the faintest vibration caused in the
mental world by a thought, or in the astral world by desire, makes the mental and
astral matter swiftly generate shapes and forms, and causes it to crystallize into
“thought-forms”.
Still “descending into matter” Chain by Chain, the life of the Second Logos,
after ensouling astral matter, next ensouls physical matter. The first effect of this
new ensouling is to give to the chemical elements a power of combination
among themselves. While the Third Logos creates hydrogen and oxygen, it is
only when the life of the Second Logos appears that two atoms of hydrogen can
combine with one of oxygen to make water. Physical matter as we know it today
appears with the work of the Second Logos; under His guidance there now
appears the mineral kingdom, ready to build a solid earth. In terms of rhythm
and beauty, matter now crystallizes with mathematical precision; through each
physical encasement the work of the Second Logos is done according to the
Plan. To our eyes, the mineral is inert and lifeless, mere earth; yet all the while
the Second Logos is at work in that seemingly inert matter. Of a truth is the God
now “dead and buried”, crucified on a cross of matter.

The life of the Second Logos, after its lowest descent into matter as the mineral
kingdom, now begins its ascent. Its next manifestation is as the vegetable
kingdom. At the commencement of this stage, the substances of earth develop a
new capacity, that of becoming a vehicle for life, such life as our eyes can see.
The chemical elements group themselves together, and a mysterious life appears
among them, and builds them into protoplasm. Guided by the Second Logos, this
protoplasm undergoes transformation, becoming in process of time the vegetable
kingdom. (Fig. 4.) After long experiences of growth, slowly evolving during the
period of a Chain, the vegetable kingdom appears in a subsequent Chain as the
animal kingdom. (Fig. 5.) In due course of time, out of the animal kingdom,
arise those highest animals which are capable of individualization.

When the animal group-soul has been built, as has been explained in the
previous chapter, and a particular animal is ready for individualization, then
begins the action of the First Logos. He sends a Fragment of Himself, a
“Monad”, to make an Individuality in a Causal Body. A Soul of Man, made “in
the image of his Maker”, then begins his evolution, which is to discover the
Divinity in himself, in his fellowmen, and in all the life of nature which
surrounds him. On the physical plane the expression of the force of the First
Logos is the Immortal Soul in a mortal body.

* * * *
Thus swiftly we have surveyed the mighty work of the Triple Logos, which
began long, long ago, and yet is, as says the Upanishad, still “in the womb”.
Creator, Preserver and Destroyer, He builds, and unbuilds, and builds again,
coming by each stage one step nearer to the Perfection of His Plan. To see that
Plan is to have the Beatific Vision; to work for that Plan is to change one’s
mortal nature to that of a deathless immortal. Deathlessness in life, Eternity in
time, Divinity in humanity, are his who, understanding the Plan, works for it
unceasingly.
CHAPTER IX
THE KINGDOMS OF LIFE

Magnificently, as modern science has developed the concept of evolution, it has


yet to come to that breadth and grander which is revealed in Theosophy. The
word “life”, especially has, in Theosophical studies, a profounder and more far-
reaching significance; for life is seen, not only, as with modern science, in the
small circle of existence which comprises the human, animal and vegetable
kingdoms, but also as manifesting in the seeming dead matter of minerals, and in
organisms of invisible matter lower than minerals and higher than man. In Fig.
68, we have briefly summarized the wave of evolving life which leads up to
humanity.
A comparison of this figure with that of Fig. 9 will show that there are other
streams of evolving life which, without touching the human kingdom, pass,
through levels which correspond to that of humanity, into kingdoms higher than
man.
Fig. 68, however, deals with those forms of life, which, in their evolutionary
growth, issue in a humanity like ours. We see from it that, stage by stage, the life
of the Logos manifests as three types of Elemental Essence, and then
subsequently as Mineral Life, Vegetable Life, Animal Life and Humanity. The
transition from stage to stage was explained in the previous chapter, and, in Fig.
59, was shown the transition of the highest animal into the human kingdom.
The seven stages of evolving life, from Elemental Essence I to Humanity, are
called the “Life Wave.”. Other forms of life and consciousness are also, of
course, “life waves”; but, for the clearer understanding of a difficult topic, the
term “life wave” is reserved for those forms of life which are most closely
related to our humanity in a direct line of growth, as shown in Fig. 68.

All these great changes involve vast periods of time; nevertheless in each
fraction of time the evolutionary work is done according to a pre-destined plan.
Each type of form and consciousness appears in evolution only at its given time,
and always under the supervision of those Workers in the Divine Plan whose
function it is to supervise the intricate workings of evolution. We must think of
these periods of time less in terms of actual years, and more in terms of quotas of
evolutionary work completed in the furtherance of the Plan.
It was shown in Chapter II, on “The Rise and Fall of Civilizations”, that, during
the time that humanity exists on our Earth, seven great Root-races appear, and
that each of these Root-races has seven sub-races. The period of time which is
necessary to accomplish the work, which has to be done through seven Root-
races and their sub-races, is called a “World Period “. During a World Period, the
evolutionary scheme, as it affects the seven kingdoms of our life wave, is in full
operation; the life wave may be said to begin with the appearance of the first
sub-race of the First Root-race, and it ends when the seventh sub-race of the
Seventh Root-race has done its work.
When the allotted span of work for a particular World Period is finished, the life
wave passes from our Earth, to commence its evolution on another globe of our
solar system. On this new globe, each of the seven stages of life, from Elemental
Essence I to Humanity, resumes its work and continues its further development.
Once again, this development, so far as humanity is concerned, takes place
through civilizations and cultures develop in seven Root-races and their sub-
races. At the end of the evolutionary work on this new globe, the life wave
passes on to another globe, there to resume its work under new conditions, and
accomplish the part in evolution next allotted to it in the Great Plan.
The work of the life wave, with which humanity on this Earth is associated, will
be understood if we carefully study our next diagram, Fig. 69.
Our life wave requires for invisible types of matter. These too have their
revolutions round the sun, as have the visible planets, but their matter is of
superphysical states. Of these four invisible planets, two—B and F—are of astral
matter, and the remaining two—A and G—of lower mental matter. Each of these
globes is separated in space from all the others; each is a complete planet by
itself, just as are Mars, Earth and Mercury.

If we consult our diagram, and carefully study that part of it which represents
our Earth, we shall see that the Earth is shown as being composed of physical
matter surrounded by envelopes of astral, lower mental and higher mental types
of matter. It goes without saying that each higher and finer type of matter
interpenetrates all grosser than itself; thus the astral envelope not only extends
from the Earth’s surface miles upwards, but it also interpenetrates the Earth; and
similarly, the envelope of lower mental matter interpenetrates both the astral
world and the physical Earth. This astral envelope round our Earth, and
interpenetrating it, is our Astral Plane; the lower mental matter is our Lower
Heaven, and the higher mental matter makes our Higher Heaven. Associated
with all these are, of course, the higher planes of nature, composed of Buddhic,
Atmic and higher types of matter though they are not shown in the diagram.

But in a similar fashion, Mars, a physical globe, has also an astral envelope, and
two envelopes of lower and higher mental matter. The astral envelope
interpenetrating the physical planet Mars is the astral plane of Mara. This
Martian astral plane is totally distinct from the astral plane of our Earth.
Moreover, just as there is no communication of a physical kind through
interplanetary space between the Earth and Mars, so is there no astral
communication between the astral plane of Mars and our astral plane. Mars also
has its lower heaven world and its higher heaven. Exactly the same scheme holds
good for Mercury, which has its own astral and lower and higher mental planes.
When we come to planets B and F, we find that they have no physical
counterparts; they are astral planets, but each planet has its own lower and higher
heavens and also higher planes still. Planets A and G, it will be seen from the
diagram, are globes of lower mental matter; they too have their higher mental,
Buddhic, Atmic and higher planes, but they have no planes below the lower
mental plane. We must think then, of the seven planets—A, B, Mars, Earth
Mercury, F and G—as complete in themselves, and each revolving round the
sun; but only three of them are visible to our physical eyes.

We can now grasp in general outline the work of the life wave. The life wave on
the Earth, at this actual moment, is doing the work, so far as humanity is
concerned, of the Third, Fourth and Fifth Root-races, and it has progressed up to
the point of starting the first variants—the sixth sub-race of the Fifth Root-Race;
they are now appearing in the United States of America, Australia and New
Zealand. Side by side with the work of humanity is the evolutionary work of
animals, plants, minerals and the three types of Elemental Essence.
There still remains to be done on the Earth the work of the seventh sub-race of
the Fifth Root-race, and the vast work of the Sixth and Seventh Root-races
which are still to come, with their respective sub-races and variations. How
many hundreds of thousands of years more this work will require, we can
scarcely tell; but the life wave will not have accomplished the work set before it,
during its occupation of the Earth and its higher planes, till all this further work
comes to a successful conclusion.

When the seventh sub-race of the Seventh Root-Race has given its message to
evolution there is no more work to be done, for the time, on the Earth; the life
wave then passes on to another planet, to begin there the next stage of its
unfoldment. This planet is Mercury. On Mercury, as on the Earth, the life wave
in all its divisions, from Elemental Essence I to Humanity, will continue its work
from stage to stage; in the human kingdom there will be seven Root-races with
their sub-races. Each Root-race, through the structure of its visible and invisible
bodies, enables the development of some new form and expression of
consciousness and activity; hence the need for the various Root-races and their
sub-divisions.
After the life wave has finished on Mercury, it will be transferred to the next
planet, which is F. On F, which is an astral planet and has no physical
counterpart, obviously there can be no physical forms for the evolving life; that
life will have to do its work through forms of astral and higher matter. After the
life wave has completed its work on planet F, it will then be transferred to planet
G. As this planet G is composed of lower mental matter, all evolution will
necessarily take place in forms of this and finer types of matter. When the life
wave completes its work on planet G, it will pass on to evolutionary work on
planet A. From A it will pass on to B, where evolution will be resumed again in
astral forms. After the work done on B, the life wave will pass on to Mars, where
work will be begun once again through physical forms also. After the life wave
completes its work on Mars, it will be transferred to the Earth, there to begin
another stage of evolution through new human, animal and, vegetable types.
When the life wave has completed its work on the seven planets in succession, it
will have taken a period of time called a “Round”.
In the description so far given of the transference of the life wave, it was made to
start from the Earth and to pass through Mercury, F, G, A, B, Mars, to return to
the Earth again, thus making a completed Round. In reality, however, the life
wave begins on planet A, then passes on to planet B, and next to Mars, Earth,
Mercury; F and G. Our present life wave, therefore, began long ages ago on
planet. A in the First Round, and has already gone through three complete
Rounds; only after this work was done, began then the work of the Fourth
Round, on planet A. Then the life wave passed on to B, and then to Mars, and so
to the Earth; this is where it is today.

In the evolutionary scheme, we are at present on the fourth planet of the Fourth
Round. This is exactly midway in the larger scheme of our evolution, since the
life wave has yet to complete the Fourth Round bypassing to Mercury, F and G,
and then afterwards to complete the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Rounds. When the
life wave has so passed through seven complete Rounds in succession, the time
occupied in the process is called a Chain.

These facts are summarized in Fig. 70.

Seven sub-races compose one Root-race; the time occupied by seven Root-races
is that of one World Period. Seven World Periods, on seven successive globes
while the life wave passes from one to another, compose one Round. Seven
Rounds, in each of which the life wave has passed from planet to planet,
compose one Chain.
The work of evolution, of all life and form in the solar system is, however, not
accomplished within the period of one Chain. It is intended in the Plan that,
during the period of activity of one Chain, one kingdom of life shall have
evolved to the next-higher kingdom; thus, that which began as animal life at the
beginning of bur Chain, that is, on planet A of the First Round, will rise to the
stage of humanity at the end of the Chain, which will be on planet G of the
Seventh Round; similarly, that which began the Chain as vegetable life will, at
its ending, have risen to the animal life. If we look back to Fig. 68, we see the
various steps of evolution of the kingdom of life; each step requires one
complete Chain.

When our Chain began on planet A of our First Round, the work was
commenced In all the seven kingdoms, from the First Elemental Essence to
Humanity; but where did Humanity achieve its human characteristics, and the
animal life its animal characteristics, so as to begin the Chain already thus
equipped? To answer this we must turn to Fig. 71.

We find in it, as the fourth circle, the Earth Chain; this is practically Fig. 69in
miniature, for we find Mars, Earth and Mercury as the three black spheres
denoting physical matter, while planets B and F are marked as of astral matter
and planets A and G as of matter of the lower mental plane. We see preceding
the Fourth Chain a Third, called in the diagram the Moon Chain. In this Moon
Chain we find that there are seven globes, but only one of them is physical,
while two are astral, two are lower mental, and two higher mental.

Now, our life wave, before it entered our Chain, the Earth Chain, was for
countless ages the life of the preceding Chain, the Moon Chain; but the life wave
on the Moon Chain was exactly one stage earlier than what it is today on the
Earth Chain. That is to say, that which is humanity now on the Earth Chain was
the animal kingdom of the Moon Chain; our present animal kingdom of the
Earth Chain was the vegetable kingdom of the Moon Chain; and similarly, all the
other kingdoms of life on the Earth Chain were one stage earlier on the Moon
Chain.
In an exactly similar fashion, the kingdoms of life of the Moon Chain themselves
came into it from an earlier Chain still, Chain No.2 on the diagram. It will be
seen that this Chain has no physical planet at all, but is composed of one astral,
two lower mental, two higher mental, and two planets of Buddhic matter. Each
kingdom of life on this Second Chain was exactly one stage earlier than it was
on the Moon Chain; thus, that which was the animal kingdom of the Moon
Chain was the vegetable kingdom of Chain No.2. Chain No.2 itself derived its
life from an earlier Chain No. 1; in this we have only one lower mental planet,
two higher mental, two of Buddhic matter, and two of Nirvanic matter.
The kingdoms of life on this Chain No.1 were at one stage earlier than they were
on Chain No.2. To sum up, following the direction of evolution, that which
began on Chain No.1 as the mineral kingdom appeared on Chain No.2 as the
vegetable kingdom, and on Chain No.3—the Moon Chain—as the animal
kingdom, and on Chain No. 4—our present Earth Chain—it is our Humanity.

When the work of this Earth Chain is completed at the end of the Seventh
Round, each kingdom of evolving life will have ascended one stage; our animals
of today will, at the end of our Chain, have come to the human level; our
vegetable life will have entered into the animal kingdom. Our Humanity will
have gone to a stage beyond humanity. The Fifth Chain will be similar to the
Third Chain, so far, at least, as the nature of its globes is concerned; just as, on
the Third Chain, there was only one physical planet, so will there be but one
physical planet in the Fifth Chain, though it will have two astral planets, two of
lower mental matter, and two of higher mental.
The constituent planets of Chains No.6 and No.7 will be as marked on the
diagram.

The work of the First, Second and Third Chains is now over, and their planets
have disintegrated, except that the only physical planet of the Third Chain still
remains, though shrunk, as the Moon which goes round the Earth. The Moon has
now on it none of the life wave, and it is practically a dead planet, waiting its
final disintegration. Evolution is now exactly midway among the seven Chains,
since our present Chain is the Fourth; and on this Fourth Chain we are at the
fourth planet of the Fourth Round.
We have before us, when the work of the Earth Chain is completed, work to be
done by the kingdoms of evolving life in the next, the Fifth Chain. This Chain
will have one physical planet, which will be made by coalescing into one
planetary mass the Asteroids, which now make a ring of little planets between
Mars and Jupiter. By the time the Asteroids have coalesced into a planet, and
become the center of evolution of the life wave, the work will have been
completed in the Earth Chain. Our Earth will have become a dead planet with no
evolving life upon it; it will have shrunk in size through loss of its liquids and
gases and other causes, and It will then be attracted to the physical planet of the
new Chain and attached to it as a Moon.

Our present animal kingdom will begin the work of the Fifth Chain as its
humanity; our present vegetable kingdom will then be its animal kingdom. In
exactly a similar way, the work in the Sixth and Seventh Chains, which are yet to
come, will be accomplished. In each successive Chain the life evolves from one
kingdom to the next beyond it.
The work done through seven Chains in succession makes one “Scheme of
Evolution”. There are seven such Schemes of Evolution, and over the work of
each presides a Planetary Logos; nay, more, each Scheme is the expression of
His exalted Life, and the seven Chains of His Scheme are as successive
incarnations of that Life. Each of the seven Planetary Logoi has thus before Him
a Scheme of Evolution to develop and guide; each Scheme involves seven
Chains, and each Chain requires seven distinct globes.
There are now in the solar system seven Schemes of Evolution; they require, at
some stage of their work, a physical planet; the stage of each of these seven
Schemes is given in our next diagram, Fig. 72. (We are told that there are three
Schemes which require no physical planet at all; but there is no information
about their arrangement.) The Schemes of Evolution which involve Vulcan,
Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus, are behind the Earth Scheme by one Chain; the
Neptune Scheme (which includes Pluto and another planet not yet discovered) is,
like the Earth Scheme, at its Fourth Chain whereas the Venus Scheme of
Evolution is in advance of the Earth Scheme by one Chain.

It must be remembered that though a physical planet may not be able, owing to
heat and pressure or absence of atmosphere, to permit life in such organisms as
we have on our Earth, nevertheless there are types of non-physical evolution
which can do their work efficiently on the astral planes of planets, where
physical life is not possible.

It is because the Venus Scheme is one Chain in advance of the Earth, and
therefore the average humanity of Venus is near the Adept level, that Adepts
from Venus were able to help the work of the Earth Chain at its commencement,
becoming Lords of Worlds, Manus, Buddhas, Chohans, and other great leaders
of our evolution. These are the “gods” and “divine rulers” of the myths of
primitive mankind. In exactly a similar fashion, such of the Earth’s humanity as
attain Adeptship at the end of the Earth Chain, and care to do so, may begin
helping the work of evolution of the four backward Chains of the Vulcan,
Saturn, Jupiter and Uranus Schemes.

When an individual completes the work of evolution set before him, he attains
the level of a Master of the Wisdom. He will attain this level, in the normal
course of slow evolution, at the end of the Seventh Round of this Chain; but he
may, by hastening his evolution, attain Adeptship far earlier than this. A small
number among the advanced souls of humanity have already done so. Whenever
a soul attains the Adept level, and has gained such experiences as this Chain can
afford him, he has before him seven choices, regarding his future growth and
activity. These seven choices are summarized in our next diagram, Fig. 73.

Among the seven choices none is better than the others; each Adept will choose
his path according to his temperament and the needs of the Great Plan. A certain
number, quite a minority, decide to qualify themselves to become Manus,
Buddhas, Chohans and other officials of the Hierarchy who guide the evolution
of the kingdoms of life on a globe; this choice requires constant physical
incarnation, though, as an Adept, the need for incarnation is long over. Adepts of
another temperament, while not desiring to take office as officials of the
Hierarchy, nevertheless remain with humanity, and live in the invisible worlds as
“Nirmanakayas”; in this condition of existence, they create great spiritual forces,
which are then transferred to the members of the Hierarchy to be used to further
human advancement.

A third type of Adept passes into the kingdom of the Devas or Angelic Hosts,
there to work sometimes indirectly with humanity as Angels, and sometimes to
do the work of the Angelic Hosts in other parts of the solar system than the
Earth. Yet another type of Adept enrolls himself in the “Staff Corps of the
Logos”, training himself to work in any part of the solar system, and in any work
needed, where he may be sent, in accordance with the needs of the Plan. A
certain number of Adepts will choose to do the work of preparation necessary to
initiate the Fifth Chain. The sixth and seventh types of Adepts enter upon a
phase of spiritual evolution and activity incomprehensible to our consciousness,
and technically called “entering Nirvana”; they do not achieve any kind of
“annihilation” or negativity, but give their splendid contribution to the Great
Plan, though in ways incomprehensible to our present limited human
consciousness.

All this process of evolution, taking millions of years for its unfoldment, is far
vaster than our imagination can conceive. At each stage, more power, wisdom
and beauty are released in the universe. The vegetable kingdom in each Round is
more highly evolved than the vegetable kingdom of the previous Round; in each
Chain it is more evolved still. What our present trees, plants and shrubs, with
their exquisite foliage and flowers, are to the antediluvian forests of tree ferns;
what our birds, with their gorgeous coloring, song and joyous life, are to their
ungainly, drab ancestors of bygone ages; that too will the animal kingdom, of
Rounds and Chains to come, be to what is the animal kingdom of the present
Round. Even the invisible atom evolves, Round by Round and Chain by Chain;
and all life grows in greater self-expression and self-revelation as the cycles go
by.

Man’s life, too, changes Round by Round; Our mental life will have in the next
Round a richness scarce to be grasped today, for our lowest instrument of
thinking, the brain, will be composed of atoms of substances more evolved than
they are in this Fourth Round. Since matter is force, and form is life, and man’s
humanity is fundamentally Divinity, so, wherever evolution is, there the Logos is
at work; and where He is, there a joyous work comes, step by step, near to
fulfilment.
CHAPTER X
THE EVOLUTION OF MATTER AND FORCE

It is usual for men to make a contrast between mind and matter; mind signifies to
them a spiritual faculty while matter denotes a lifeless unspiritual substance
which is the very opposite of mind. But a new outlook arises when we realize
that both mind and matter are the expressions and revelations of a wondrous
Personality, the Logos “in whom we live and move and have our being”. Then
we see that matter is no less divine than mind, and that there is a gospel of
beauty and grandeur to be found, not only in the mind of a genius, but also in the
tiny fragment of matter which makes a crystal. Behind both mind and matter a
mighty Doer works, who wills to evolve, and who directs each stage. In the
understanding of what constitutes His matter, no less than in the understanding
of His mind, we may gain a slight glimpse into His Nature—that ever-attractive
nature, for which matter is a mirror of His wisdom, strength and beauty.

Before we attempt to understand the Life of the Logos as matter, as revealed in


Theosophy, we must first grasp fairly clearly what matter is, as modern science
has discovered it for us. For the facts established by science are God’s Facts, and
the understanding of them enables us to lay a sure foundation for the deeper
wisdom about God’s Facts revealed in Theosophy. Leaving aside for the time the
fact that matter consists fundamentally of “holes in the ether”, with those “holes”
grouped into electrons, protons and neutrons, the matter of the world around us
consists of various substances with which we are more or less familiar. The earth
we tread is solid, the water we drink is liquid, and the air we breathe is gaseous;
our houses, our utensils, our furniture are all made of matter of various kinds—
earths, woods, metals; we have matter, but of a different kind, in the living
bodies of ourselves and of people around us, and in the plants and animals and
other “living” things which people our world.
Now, this matter is either solid, as wood or iron; liquid, as water; or gaseous, as
the atmosphere. It exists for us in thousands of variations. But, numerous are the
kinds of matter which compose the objects of our world, in reality they are made
up out of a few fundamental substances. These fundamental substances are
called the “chemical elements”, and modern science has, so far, tabulated for us
92 elements9. Each chemical element exists in an “atomic”10 state; thus, for
example, a piece of sulphur is an aggregation of sulphur “atoms”, and the nature
of each of these atoms is such that it cannot be further subdivided, without losing
its characteristic as the element. The atom (is built of protons (carrying a charge
of positive electricity) electrons (negative electricity) and neutrons (neither
positive nor negative).

The known chemical elements are divisible into two main groups-metals and
non-metals.

Metallic elements are Aluminium, Manganese, Calcium, etc., and non-metals are
Carbon, Boron, Oxygen, Chlorine, etc. Metals in electrolysis appear at the
cathode or negative pole, and non-metals at the anode or positive pole. The
metals are good conductors of heat and electricity, while the non-metals are bad
conductors. There is a third group of elements, like Arsenic, Antimony, etc.,
called metalloids, as they are hybrid in character, being like both metals and non-
metals in their behavior.

In Fig. 74, we have in its first division twelve out of the 92 chemical elements,
with the symbols used for them: H=Hydrogen, C=Carbon, N=Nitrogen,
O=Oxygen, Na (for Natrium)=Sodium, Cl=Chlorine, K (for Kalium)=Potasium,
S=Sulphur, AI=Aluminium, Fe (for Ferrum)=Iron, P=Phosphorus, Ca=Calcium.
Each has its definite weight, and certain other marked characteristics.
In the second and third divisions of Fig. 74, we have illustrated the fact that
these primary elements combine among themselves to make new substances.
Thus, two particles of Hydrogen will combine with one of Oxygen to make a
unit particle of water; one particle of Sodium will combine with one particle of
Chlorine to make a unit particle of salt. So element combines with element to
make the myriads of organic and inorganic substances which make up our world.
While only two atoms of Carbon, with six of Hydrogen and one of Oxygen, are
necessary to make one molecule of alcohol, we require, to make one molecule of
Hemoglobin (the red coloring-matter of the blood), no less than 712 Carbon,
1,130 Hydrogen, 214 Nitrogen, 1 Iron, 2 Sulphur and 425 Oxygen atoms.
Protoplasm, the primary living substance out of which all cells are made, is
composed of Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Sulphur, Phosphorous,
Chlorine, Sodium, Potassium, Calcium, Magnesium and Iron atoms, but in what
proportion science cannot as yet say.
The chemical elements, the bricks, so to say, of our universe, not only combine
(with a few exceptions) among themselves, but they combine according to
certain habits characteristic of each element. This habit of combination is called
“valency” (see Fig. 75). Thus (see Figure, first column), one atom of Fluorine, or
of Chlorine, Bromine or Iodine, prefers to combine with one atom of Hydrogen
rather than with two; while on the other hand, an atom of Oxygen, or Sulphur,
Selenium or Tellurium, prefers to combine with two Hydrogen atoms rather than
with one (see Figure, second column). Nitrogen, Phosphorous and Arsenic atoms
select three Hydrogen atoms for combinations, and atoms of Carbon and Silicon
choose four (see Figure, third and fourth columns). Chemical science merely
catalogues this behavior of the elements, and terms it valency, without being able
to account for it precisely.

In the lower half of Fig. 75, we have illustrated two cases of an atom of an
element combining with five other bodies. When Ammonium Chloride is made
by 1 Nitrogen, 4 Hydrogen and 1 Chlorine atoms, Chemistry presumes that
Nitrogen, whose valency is, as here, five, in some way puts out of itself in five
directions five unsatisfied desires for combination; these are fulfilled by
combining with 4 Hydrogen and 1 Chlorine atoms. We have a similar case of a
fivefold valency in Phosphorus Pentachloride.
The next interesting fact taught us in Chemistry is that, as chemical elements
combine they combine so as to make geometrical figures; we have this fact
illustrated for us in Fig. 76.

Marsh Gas is composed of 1 Carbon and 4 Hydrogen atoms; it has been


suggested by Kekule that the spatial positions of the five atoms are as shown in
the diagram, that is, the Carbon atom stands in the middle of a tetrahedron, and
the 4 Hydrogen atoms are placed at its four corners. With another gas, called
Ethane, which is composed of 2 Carbon and 6 Hydrogen atoms, it has been
suggested that the positions of the 8 atoms are as in the figure, where the apices
of two tetrahedra interpenetrate each other, there being at each apex 1 Carbon
atom, and 6 Hydrogen atoms being placed at the other corners of the two
tetrahedra.
A further illustration of this geomtetrical building appears in the ammoniacal
derivatives of Cobalt, Violeocobaltammine and Praseocobaltammine. The former
in color is violet and the latter green; yet in both there are 2 atoms of Chlorine
with four groups of Ammonia, each of which is made up of 1 Nitrogen and 3
Hydrogen atoms. Now, it has been suggested that the difference of color is due
to the difference of position in an octohedron of the two Chlorine atoms; where
the two atoms of Chlorine are at the opposite apices of the octohedron, the
Cobalt derivative is Violet, while when these two atoms are at the ends of an
edge of the octohedron, the derivative is green.

There are certain marked characteristics in the chemical elements, which can be
summarized as follows:

1. Each element has a definite average weight, and no two elements are of the
same weight.
2. Elements are either paramagnetic or diamagnetic; that is to say, when they are
brought under the influence of magnetic force, some remain parallel to the lines
of that force (paramagnetic), while others remain at right angles to that force
(diamagnetic).

3. Elements are either electro-positive or electro-negative.


4. Elements have valency, that is, they can combine with or displace one or more
atoms of Hydrogen.

Now when all the elements are arranged in a list, according to their atomic
weights, it is found that they group themselves naturally in a certain order
according to valency, magnetic and electric qualities. This method of grouping of
the elements is known as the “Periodic Law”. There are several ways of stating
this “periodicity” of the elements but, the way that the Periodic Law has been
stated for us by the late Sir William Crookes is perhaps the clearest. We have it
in our next diagram, Fig. 77.
(Click here for Figure 77.) In the line depicting a pendulum which swings
backwards and forwards all the elements are marked in their order of weight; the
lightest, Hydrogen, beginning the pendulum swing, and the heaviest, Uranium,
(and possibly one or more heavier, yet to be discovered) closing the swing.
Among the upper-right lines is a middle line, and there are four on either side; if
the middle-perpendicular line represents no valency, and also “inter-periodicity”,
if the four lines on either side of this median line represent, in order, valency 1,
valency 2, valency 3 and valency 4; then, it is found, as the elements are mapped
out in the order of their atomic weights, and placed at the intersecting points of
the pendulum line and the nine upright lines, that (with a few exceptions):
1. On the median line fall the “inert gases”, whose characteristic is that they will
not combine with any other element, and hence have valency

0. They appear regularly after one complete swing of the pendulum.

2. On the same median line, and at regular intervals, that is, after one complete
swing of the pendulum (after Neon), occur the Inter-periodics.
3. All elements to the right of the median line are diamagnetic, and those to the
left paramagnetic, according to the theory of Crookes.

4. The elements appear in a certain order of valency; beginning with any element
having characteristic valency 0, the next heavier has valency 1, and following it
there come those with valency 2, valency 3, valency 4; next the valency
diminishes, and the succeeding elements have valency 3, valency 2 and valency
1; and after this the next element, valency 0.

5. As the pendulum swings outward from the median line, most of the elements
coming on the outward swing are all electro-positive; as the pendulum swings
inward to the median line, the elements coming on this inward swing are all
electro-negative.
As long ago as 1887, Crooke conceived or the chemical elements as appearing in
the Cosmos one after another, their characteristics modified by forces brought to
bear upon them. He drew a picture of the “Genesis of the Elements” out of a
primordial substance which he called “protyle”. The diagram of Crookes appears
as Fig. 77, with scarcely any modifications; the chief changes are the giving to
each element not the weight given in Chemistry but its “number weight”, i.e., the
number of “ultimate physical atoms” which it contains11, and that new elements
discovered since 1887 have also been added to the diagram.
The idea of a “genesis of the elements “is in reality no mere hypothesis at all, but
a fact of the greatest inspiration. Let us first conceive the idea as Crookes
presented it to a materialistically-minded scientific audience at the Royal
Institution of London on February 18, 1887; we shall then have our imaginations
fairly prepared to grasp the more magnificent conception given as in
Occultism.12

“We may trace, in the undulating curve, the action of two forms of energy, the
one acting vertically and the other vibrating to and fro like a pendulum: Let the
vertical line represent temperature gradually sinking through an unknown
number of degrees from the dissociation-point of the first-formed element
downwards to the dissociation-point of the last member of the scale.

“But what form of energy is figured by the oscillating line? We see it swinging
to and fro to points equidistant from a neutral center. We see this divergence
from neutrality confer atomicity of one, two, three, or four degrees, as the
distance from the center increases to one, two, three, or four divisions. We see
the approach to or the retrocession from this same neutral line deciding the
electro-negative or electro-positive character of each element; those on the
retreating half of the swing being positive, and those on the approaching half
negative. In short, we are led to suspect that this oscillating power must be
closely connected with the imponderable matter, essence, or source of energy we
call electricity.
“Our pendulum begins its swing from the electro-positive side: lithium, next to
hydrogen in the simplicity of its atomic weight, is now formed, followed by
glucinum, boron, and carbon. Each element, at the moment of birth, takes up
definite quantities of electricity, and on these quantities its atomicity depends.
Thus are fixed the types of the monatomic, diatomic, triatomic and tetratomic
elements.

“It has been pointed out by Dr. Carnelly that “those elements belonging to the
even series of the periodic classification are always paramagnetic, whereas the
elements belonging to the odd series are always diamagnetic”. Now in our curve
the even series to the left, so far as has been ascertained, are paramagnetic,
whilst, with a few exceptions, all to the right are diamagnetic.
“We come now to the return or negative part of the swing; nitrogen appears and
shows instructively how position governs the rriean, dominant atomicity.
Nitrogen occupies a position immediately below boron, a tri-atomic element,
and, therefore, nitrogen is likewise tri-atomic. But nitrogen also follows upon
carbon, a tetratomic body, and occupies the fifth position if we count from the
place of origin. Now these seemingly opposing tendencies are beautifully
harmonized by the endowment of nitrogen with a double atomicity, its atom
being capable of acting either as a tri- or as a pent-atomic element. With oxygen
(di and hex-atomic) and fluorine mon- and hept-atomic) the same law holds
good, and one half-oscillation of the pendulum is completed. Passing the neutral
line again, we find successively formed the electro-positive bodies sodium
(monatomic), magnesium (diatomic), aluminium (triatomic), and silicon
(tetratomic).

“The first complete swing of the pendulum is accomplished by the birth of the
three electro-negative elements, phosphorus, sulphur, and chlorine; all three, like
the corresponding elements on the opposite homeward swing, having at least a
double atomicity, depending upon position.

“Again let us follow our pendulum... and the first element to come into
existence, when the pendulum starts for its second oscilation, is not lithium, but
the metal next allied to it in the series, i.e., potassium, which may be regarded as
the lineal descendant of lithium, with the same hereditary tendencies, but with
less molecular mobility and a higher atomic weight.

“Pass along the curve, and in nearly every case the same law holds good. Thus
the last element of the first complete vibration is chlorine. In the corresponding
place in the second vibration we have, not an exact repetition of chlorine, but the
very similar body bromine, and when the same position recurs for a third time
we see iodine. I need not multiply examples. I may, however, point out that we
have here a phenomenon which reminds us of alternating or cyclical generation
in the organic world, or we may perhaps say of atavism, a recurrence to ancestral
types somewhat modified. “

Now that we have gained a general idea of the speculations of modern science as
to a possible “genesis of the elements”, we can understand more fully what
Theosophy reveals of the mysteries, of force and matter. From the beginning we
must remember that there is no such thing as a “fortuitous concourse of atoms”;
the building of the universe was thought out by a Divine Builder, and each step
in the building is directed by Him. Atoms rush together or part, only because He
so wills.
The first stages in the building of matter by the Logos have already been
described in Chapter VIII, on “The Work of the Triple Logos”, in Figs. 64, 65
and 66. The energy of the Cosmic Logos, called “Fohat” in The Secret Doctrine,
“thrilling through the inert Substance” makes in Koilon those holes or bubbles
which are the true units of our solar planes. Then these holes, thus filled with the
Consciousness of the Cosmic Logos, are whirled by the Solar Logos into spiral
formations. When, in the process of forming the physical, atom, spirillae of the
sixth order have been formed, He then coils strands of them into three parallel
series, as in Fig. 78. The coils in this figure go from right to left, in order to
make a positive atom;13 the coils are wound from left to right, to make the
negative atom.14

These three coils in some mysterious way are charged with the three types of
energy characteristic of the Triple Logos; “in the three whorls flow currents of
different electricities”.15 Then the seven embodiments of the Triple Logos, the
Seven Planetary Logoi, twist seven parallel coils to complete the physical atom.
Each of these minor seven coils, when affected by light and sound, throws out
one color of the solar spectrum and one of the seven sounds or the natural scale,
and there with the special influence of its Planetary Logos.

The atom, when completed, appears in outline as in Figs. 79 and 80, which are
diagrams of a positive and a negative atom.
We must never forget that the atom is not “substance”, but the negation of
substance; the white lines in Figs. 79 and 80 represent the bubbles in their coils,
and are lines of force. The substance, the fundamental rather, is represented by
the black background of the diagram. So, as Poincare truly said, the atom is only
a “hole in the ether”. Yet is this “hole in the ether” filled with the Divine Nature;
“hole” though it be, when compared with Koilon, it is real to us, true substance
to our knowing, just because the Cosmic Logos is there, and creates in us the
thought of substance and reality. As He thinks, and as the Solar Logos thinks, so
think we, at our level, with Them.

When the physical atom; of the two types, positive and negative, is constructed,
then begins the building of the chemical elements. They are built according to
the Periodic Law, outlined in Fig. 77; but there is more Wisdom and Beauty in
the Periodic. Law than has yet happened to the scientific imagination to
conceive. Before we can appreciate the Periodic Law in all its magnificence, we
must turn aside for a while to study what are known as the Platonic Solids (Fig.
81).
There are five, and only five, three-dimensional solids, in each of which its lines,
angles and surfaces are equal. They are the Tetrahedron, Cube (Hexahedron),
Octahedron, Dodecahedron and Icosahedron.16 In the first row of Fig. 81 are
illustrations of them, as the five solids appear when they lie on a flat surface. In
this position, their symmetry is not readily evident; hence they are placed in a
different position, in order to bring out their symmetry, and their appearance then
is given in the illustrations of the second and third rows. These five “Platonic
Solids “were considered of special significance by the Platonic schools of
Greece and Alexandria; the reason for this will be evident soon. Now, these five
solids, distinctive though each is in the number of its lines, angles and surfaces,
are all developable from one solid, the tetrahedron. Thus, the cube and the
octahedron are developed out of two tetrahedra when symmetrically interlaced
(see the second figure of the second row); the 8 corners of the 2 interlacing
tetrahedra give the 8 corners of the cube, while the 6 intersecting points give the
6 corners of the octahedron. This fact has long been well known in geometry.
But the further fact, that the two remaining Platonic Solids, the dodecahedron
and the icosahedron, are also developable from the tetrahedron, was discovered
by Senor Arturo Soria y Mata, a Theosophist of Madrid. By interlacing 5
tetrahedra, we have the complicated solid shown in the first figure of the third
row; the 20 corners of the 5 interlacing tetrahedra make the 20 corners of the
dodecahedron, while the 12 intersecting points give the 12 corners of the
icosahedron.

There are, in each of the five solids, a number of surfaces and corners; these give
the directions for the building of the chemical elements. Taking the first three
solids—the tetrahedron, cube and octahedron—we have:
SOLID SURFACESCORNERS

Tetrahedron 4 4

Cube 6 8

Octahedron 8 6

We find that these three solids are the tanmatras—“the measures of That”—or
axes for the building of the divalent, trivalent and tetravalent elements of the
Periodic Law. Thus, all divalent elements, both positive and negative,
paramagnetic and diamagnetic, with the single exception of Oxygen, are of the
general type of Beryllium (Glucinum), illustrated in Fig. 82.

Atoms of the positive and negative types are massed together in groups, but
especially in four main groups or “funnels”, which radiate from the center of the
tetrahedron to its four surfaces. This is the simple divalent structure for the
lighter elements; in the heavier elements there appear, in addition to the
“funnels”, new groups termed “spikes”, four in number, and radiating from the
center to the four corners. (The unit of each element is surrounded by a spherical
limiting wall, composed of the circumambient matter of the atomic sub-plane of
the physical plane, but for the sake of simplicity, this is not shown in the
diagrams.)
All trivalent elements, with the single exception of Nitrogen, are of the type in
Fig. 83; the lighter trivalents are composed of six “funnels” radiating from the
center of a cube 10 its six surfaces; the heavier trivalents have, in addition to the
six funnels, eight “spikes” radiating to the eight corners of the cube.

All tetravalent elements, with the exception of Titanium and Zirconium, are of
the type in Fig. 84; the lighter tetravalents are composed of eight “funnels”,
starting from the center of an octahedron and pointing to its eight surfaces; the
heavier tetravalents have, in addition, six “spikes” pointing to the six corners:

There remain the dodecahedron and the icosahedron; the former is the tanmatra,
not for anyone type of elements, but for a constituent of some of the elements.
This constituent is composed of groups of atoms which are placed at the twenty
corners of a dodecahedron.17 Except that the icosahedron is implied in a
dodecahedron—for the corners of an icosahedron are the twelve points where
the five tetrahedra regularly intersect—no definite groups of bodies in the
building of the elements have so far been noted, as placed at the twelve corners
of an icosahedron.

The monovalent elements are built according to the types represented by Figs.
85 and 86. The paramagnetic monovalents start with Lithium, whose structure is
given in Fig. 85.

Lithium contains 127 ultimate physical atoms. The remaining elements, down
the line of Lithium, in Fig. 77 of the Periodic Law (with the exception of
Fluorine), have the center pillar or “cigar” of Lithium, but made heavier by the
addition of new bodies, and multiplied in a definite series, and radiating from a
common center. The direction of these radiating bodies has not yet been
determined, but they will be sure to follow definite positions formed by the
interlacing of various solids. The diamagnetic monovalents are all built after the
type of Sodium in Fig. 86; there is a central bar or rod, which connects an upper
group of twelve

(This page only contains Fig. 85.) radiating funnels with a lower group of twelve
similarly radiating funnels.

There are two remaining groups in the table of the chemical elements to be
accounted for; these are the “interperiodic” metals, and the “inert gases” of the
atmosphere. Both groups, come on the median line of the diagram of the
Periodic Law. The appearance of the Interperiodics (Iron, Cobalt, Nickel,
Palladium, Ruthenium, Rhodium, etc.) is given in Fig. 87.
Each is composed of 14 “bars” radiating from a center. The four interperiodic
groups so far noted go in triplets (with the fourth group adding a fourth
member), and they have a striking peculiarity in that each member of its group is
28 atoms heavier than the preceding member. Thus, since each Interperiodic is
composed of 14 bars, all of which within one element are alike, we have
“periodicity” coming regularly as follows in each group:

GROUP I. IRON, COBALT, NICKEL


in Total Total Weight,

a Bar 14 Bars H=1

Iron 72 1008 56

Cobalt 74 1036 57.55

Nickel 76 1064 59.11

- 260 -

GROUP II. RUTHENIUM, RHODIUM, PALLADIUM

Ruthenium 132 1848 102.66

Rhodium 134 1876 104.22

Palladium 136 1904 105.77

GROUP III. X, Y, Z

X 189 2646 147

Y 191 2674 148.55

Z 193 2702 150.11

GROUP IV OSMIUM, IRIDIUM, PLATINUM, PLATINUM B

Osmium 245 3430 190.55


Iridium 247 3458 192.11

Platinum 249 3486 193.66

Platinum B18 251 3514 195.22

This same characteristic of periodicity appears in the second type of elements


which come on the median line, the inert gases. Their general appearance is
given in Fig. 88.
These inert gases go in pairs, the second member of the pair having exactly 42
atoms more than the first member. Fig. 88 shows us that in the center there
appears the complicated five interlacing tetrahedra which came in Fig. 81;
radiating from this, but all on one plane, are six arms, each having the same
number of atoms. Periodicity appears in the fact that, in each inert gas, the
second member or “isotope” has 7 atoms more in each arm., (In all of the inert
gases, the center sphere has only 120 atoms.)
GROUP I. NEON, META-NENON
Number Total Weight,

in an Arm H=1

Neon 40 20

Meta-Neon 47 22.33

GROUP II. ARGON, META-ARGON

Argon 99 39.66

Meta-Argon 106 42

GROUP III. KRYPTON, META-KRYPTON

Krypton 224 81.33

Meta-Krypton 231 83.66

GROUP IV. XENON, META-XENON

Number Total Weight,

in an Arm H=1

Xenon 363 127.66

Meta-Xenon 370 130

GROUP V. “KALON”, “META-KALON”


“Kalon” 489 169.66

“Meta-Kalon” 496 172

GROUP VI. RADON, META-RADON

Radon 645 221.6

Meta-Radon 652 224

In the description given above of the elements, it has been stated that certain
elements (i.e., Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, etc.) are exceptions. There are no
“exceptions” to divine laws; the word is merely used in the conventional sense,
to imply that we have not as yet discovered of what law each exception is an
example. We do not yet know why the exceptions are different in structure from
that which is seen as the “ancestral type “. But, even from what little we have
already seen of the building of the elements, it is fairly clear that further
discoveries will explain exactly why these exceptions have their present
formations.
Of the few exceptions, among the noteworthy are Hydrogen, Nitrogen and
Oxygen, represented in Figs. 89, 90, 91. In Fig. 89, which is that of Hydrogen,
the stages of its building are given. Hydrogen has in each unit 18 atoms, but
there are two varieties of Hydrogen, the first compsed of ten positive and eight
negative atoms, and the second composed of nine positive and nine negative
atoms. Figure 89 shows the first variety. In its first stage, the atoms, ten of which
are positive and eight negative exist, on the atomic sub-plane of the physical
plane. At the next stage, on the sub-atomic sub-plane (see Fig. 49), the 18 atoms
arrange themselves into 6 groups of 3 each. At the next stage, on the super-
etheric sub-plane, there is a rearrangement. At the fourth stage on the etheric
sub-plane, there is a further rearrangement. Finally, when we come to the
gaseous sub-plane, the 18 atoms making up the one unit of Hydrogen (the
chemical atom of Hydrogen) re-group themselves into 6 groups of 3 each; three
of these 6 groups are specially linked together as a positive half of Hydrogen,
while the remaining 3 groups link themselves together as the negative half of
Hydrogen.
In this First Principles of Theosophy it is obviously out of place to write fully on
“Occult Chemistry”, i.e., chemical structure as seen by the enlarging power of
trained clairvoyance. But Occult Chemistry is interesting even to a beginner in
Theosophy, because, when, after leaving on one side mere theories and
speculations about chemical structure, one sees how elements are actually
constructed, then one realizes how, even in the proton, electron, and neutron in
the atom and the element, the Logos is at work, building.
The vision of “things as they are” is a vision revealing a wonderful
craftsmanship and an inspiring wisdom. A glimpse of His Plan, even for the
chemical element, enables one to know that there is no place where He is not,
and nothing in which He is not working.

We have had glimpses of the modes of His working in the elements in their
geometrical design, in their periodicity, in their “valency”. We get another
glimpse as we look at one more diagram, that of Fig. 92, which gives us the
skeleton of the structure of six monovalent elements—Sodium, Chlorine,
Copper, Bromine, Silver and Iodine. All these come on one line of the Periodic
Table, Fig. 77, and all are of the “ancestral type” of Sodium shown in Fig. 86.
That figure shows us Sodium somewhat like a dumb-bell in shape; there is a
central rod connecting two groups of funnels, an upper and a lower; the funnels
of each group are twelve in number, and each set of twelve radiates on to two
planes from a central sphere. This “dumb-bell” structure is carried on to all
elements appearing on the diamagnetic monovalent line. If, therefore, in anyone
of these elements, we know the bar, one funnel, and one sphere from which the
funnels radiate, we can construct the full element. Then, by counting the total
number of “ultimate physical atoms”, and dividing by 18 (for Hydrogen has 18
such atoms, and if we make H=1, to reduce “atomic weights” to a common
standard), we get the “atomic weight” of the element in terms of Hydrogen.19
Fig.92 is illuminating, as it shows us how the Logos builds from an “ancestral
type”, as Crookes suggests. To make a funnel of Chlorine20, the funnel of
Sodium is taken, and added to, and the bar is made heavier by 5 atoms. Then the
funnel of Chlorine is in turn taken to make the funnels of Copper and Bromine,
and new groups of atoms are added. Bromine in its turn is taken to build Silver
and Iodine, and the Bromine funnel of 58 atoms is used with additions in order
to build them. The changes made in the spheres connecting the funnels are
shown in the diagram. It will be seen that from Chlorine to Iodine no change is
made in the bar. Counting all the dots, which represent “ultimate physical
atoms”, and remembering that in each element there is one bar, two spheres, and
24 funnels (see Sodium, Fig. 86), we get the following:
Number Weight,
Element
of Atoms H=1

Sodium 418 23.22

Chlorine1 639 35.50

Copper 1139 63.27

Bromine 1439 79.94

Silver 1945 108.05

Iodine 2287 127.05

Here I must leave this fascinating subject of the building of the chemical
elements, referring students who care to follow the matter further to the special
work on the subject, Occult Chemistry, by Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater.21

When most of us turn our attention to the substances around us, which are all
composed of the chemical elements, we think of these substances by the relation
which they bear to us. Utterly wrapped up in our man-centered outlook, we say
that this substance is useful, or that useless. We look with interest at a diamond,
but with no interest at all at a piece of granite or clay. It has not yet dawned on
our imagination that all substances have their part in the Divine Plan, and are
doing their work to further that Plan, irrespective of their relation to us mortals.

How different all nature appears when we come to know that even the” dead
“substances which compose our world are evolving; and that, as each one of us
is irresistibly drawn upwards towards an ideal, so all the elements and their
combinations are being drawn upwards slowly to become more perfect lenses of
the Divinity dwelling within them. For He does so dwell, even as in the soul of
man. Did not Christ the Logos say: “Raise the stone, and there thou shalt find
Me; cleave the wood, and there am I?” To him that hath ears to hear, there is not
only a melody in the surf of the sea and in the whispers of the wood, there is also
a Song of nature wherever even the tiniest speck of matter exists, and does its
part in the Great Plan. Out of the earth, out of heaven and hell, from every corner
of all the worlds visible and invisible, there ever rises one triumphant pean of
nature:
Thus at the roaring Loom of time I ply,
And weave for God the Robe thou seest Him by.
CHAPTER XI
THE EVOLUTION OF LIFE

Of all the perennially inspiring facts in life which Theosophy reveals, none is so
overwhelming as the fact that Matter, Life and Consciousness are three aspects
of one indivisible Unity. It is impossible to conceive of any matter which is not
living, nor of any life which has not consciousness. And when a man realizes
that all forms of consciousness, from that of an electron to that of a Dhyan
Chohan, are embodiments of the one Logos; that, “cabined, cribbed, and
confined” though He be there, yet He is within the electron; then he begins to
live in a universe of perpetual light, and to him nature at work in realms visible
and invisible is one blaze of glory of the Ineffable. To know this, even merely
intellectually, is to gain a new insight into everything in heaven and earth. But to
feel it, to live it, is to discover an exhilaration and an enthusiasm of which he had
not thought himself capable.

It was shown, in the chapter on “The Evolution of the Matter and Force”, that
the Consciousness of the Logos pervades all the processes in the building of the
chemical elements. The same is true when we watch all the processes which we
consider characteristic of life, as distinct from those of matter. At each stage of
life, from the lowest to the highest, from a bacterium to an archangel, He works,
with His agents as His helpers, with His plan before Him. Nothing comes to
birth by chance; nothing dies by chance; life and death are the warp and woof of
His loom. Each organism contains—when the seed, when the tree, in life, as too,
in death—one chapter of the Divine Wisdom for him who will study its
processes.

What are the principles which guide the evolution of life? There are many, and
one of them is that life grows in response to a stimulus from without. Stimuli
from the world without are needed so as to rouse the slumbering life, whether of
mineral, plant, animal or man. Heat, strain, pressure and other external impacts,
which impinge on the slumbering life in a mineral, awaken that mineral to its
higher possibilities of organization. The fiery glow of a nebula has no meaning
to us men, and we do not grow, but die, in that whirling mass of heat and
pressure and movement. But to the chemical element, all that incandescence is as
the breath of its life. Our earth, when it was one seething mass of lava, was
impossible for us men as a habitation; but it was as a fairy garden to the mineral,
who rejoiced in receiving those fiery impacts and pressures which would have
annihilated plant and animal organisms. An inner impulse in the life and a
stimulus from the outer environment are both necessary for the life’s growth;
without the impact, the life is dormant; with stimulus alone, but without the
inner impulse, the form is dead.

A second principle to note is that life grows by building and unbuilding. A


myriad deaths or unbuildings matter little to the life, so long as one opportunity
can be seized to build a more fitting form. Life lavishly builds and unbuilds, ever
seeking to build for itself that garment which is placed before it as its ideal. In all
this process, there seems to be a terrible waste of forms; yet in reality there is no
waste at all. The matter of the forms, after they are broken up, still remains the
same matter. As for the life, it withdraws from the dying organisms, to reappear
undiminished in the forms of succeeding generations. Since life is indestructible,
it works at its self-evolution by experiment after experiment in the building of
forms. (See Fig. 57.)

Perhaps the most vital principle to grasp is that, as life evolves, more and more
consciousness is released. A successful evolutionary form means one through
which the consciousness locked up within the life can manifest more fully.
Simply to live means little for the life; but, while living, to think, to feel, to
intuit, to aspire, however vaguely, however feebly, is what all nature is striving
for. There is not an electron that is not vaguely aspiring to be a fuller
representative of the Divine Force of which it is a channel; each plant and each
animal, from the dim recesses of its thought and feeling, is dumbly hoping and
trying to be a larger mirror of the Divine Life which it contains. Life is ever
striving to be more and more self-conscious, and, above all, to be conscious of
the Great Plan, and of its own joyous participation in that Plan.

These principles of the evolving life are seen in operation in that struggle for
existence which characterizes the evolution of our vegetable and animal forms.
Seen through the cold passionless eyes of a scientific materialism, nature is “red
in tooth and claw with ravin”; what else may one think as one examines nature
with the magnifying lens of a botanist?
The gaily-colored lid of the Sarracenia pitcher is bedewed in spring and early
summer with drops of nectar, which lie on its inward surface, at least for the
most part; not on both, as in the pennon of the Darlingtonia.

A closer examination of its surface shows that these drops are at once helped to
form, and if sufficiently large to trickle downwards, by a coating of fine but short
and stiff hairs which arise from the epidermic surface. Here, in fact, is in every
way an admirably-constructed “attractive surface”, and it is obvious as well as
natural that the insects which sip the honey should travel down into the interior
of the pitcher to seek for more. Beyond the lid surface, with its hairs and nectar-
glands, they come upon the smooth and glassy “conducting surface”, and well-
paved path leading indeed towards destruction. In S. purpurea there are indeed a
few fresh nectaries to be reached by this descent, a new secreting surface below
the conducting one—in S. flaua and other species not even this—but in all cases
we soon reach the “detentive surface” of the whole lower part of the pitcher.
This is covered with long, stout, bristly hairs, averaging say 1/4 inch long, all
sloping downwards into the cavity of the pitcher, and so presenting no obstacle
towards descent, but much resistance towards return, as the finger can easily
verify, or as the dead inmates of the tubular prison still more conclusively show.
That so comparatively powerful an insect as a wasp or bluebottle can be thus
detained may be at first sight perplexing; but we see that there is no scope to use
the wings for escape, while legs and wings alike become entangled and held
back by the stiffly-pointed hairs, which the struggling insect can at most only
thrust along, and thus not break. Another captive soon comes on top; ventilations
becomes checked, and the foul air rising from dead predecessors must still
further check respiration; little wonder then that life must fail.. Even in our
greenhouses the leaf thus becomes filled, not only 1 or 2, but often 5 or 6 inches
deep with dead insects; while observers on the spot, notably Dr. Melichamp, to
whom our knowledge is mainly due, have shown that there is normally a
considerable amount of fluid secreted by the pitcher, although this does not seem
to appear in European cultivation, and that this fluid has distinctly anaesthetic
and fatal properties to insects immersed in it.

It is an old fact that while with us the bluebottle falls an easy and natural prey to
this unwanted trap, being doubtless attracted like the wasp by that odor of
decomposing carrion to which the bee and butterfly in turn owe their safety, a
shrewder American cousin (Sarcophaga sarraceniae) lays few eggs over the
pitcher edge, where the maggots hatch and fatten on the abundant food. In April
three or four of these larvae are to be found, but in June or July only one
survives, the victor who has devoured his brethren. But nemesis is often at hand
in the form of a grub-seeking bird, who slits up the pitcher with his beak, and
makes short work of all its eatable contents. For this bird in turn the naturalist
has next to lie in wait, and so adds a new link to the chain.

The larvae of a moth, (Xanthoptera semicrotea) also inhabit the pitcher, but
devour its tissue, not its animal inmates; in fact, they spin a web across its
diameter, as if to exclude further entrance of these, and then devour the upper
part of the tissue especially, it would seem, the nectar-glands, finally passing
through their chrysalis stage within the cavity of the pitcher, and not, as in the
case of theSarcophaga larva, making their exit into the ground.
It is said that spiders also spin their webs over the mouths of the pitchers and
wait to reap the profit of their attractiveness-again a point of almost human
shrewdness.22

The struggle for existence in the vegetable and animal kingdoms is a wonderful
part of the Great Plan. Ever at its work of releasing more and more of
consciousness, it strives to select those forms which are most responsive both to
the inner urge of the life and to the changing environment. It works at selection
first by multiplying forms and then by segregating those most suited to survive
in the struggle for existence. Hosts of Devas or Angels, higher and lower, are
guardians of the multitudinous types of evolving life; they carry on a fierce
warfare, for each Deva arranges for his charges to fatten on those of another
Deva, to slay and to be slain; each concentrates on his own type of life and form,
as if it alone were intended to thrive according to the Great Plan. But since the
death of the form is not a waste of the life, and since, too, each seeming loss
brings with its experience both of wisdom and force to the life, to help it towards
its ultimate success, the ghastly warfare in nature is a mimic warfare after all, for
all the unseen Builders are one in their dedication to the needs of the Plan.
The conception that the life-energies in nature do not work blindly nor at
haphazard, but are guided by Builders, is not only novel to most, but startling to
many. Yet the idea is as old as the hills. Mankind has ever believed in the greater
invisible workers, the Angels or Devas, that they ruled planets and stars, and that
patron saints guide the destinies of nations. The belief is still vital in Hinduism
and Buddhism; Zoroastrianism and Muhammadanism have it as an integral part
of their teaching. It exists in Christianity, but is professed sincerely only by a few
today. The belief in the lesser invisible workers is equally widespread; fairies of
earth and water, of air and fire, are well known in Oriental traditions; faith in
their existence began to disappear in Europe only after the birth of modern
science. But that such a faith is not irrational is well illustrated in the following
description of a process in embryology by T. H. Huxley, whose trained scientific
imagination led him beyond the bounds of his temperamental agnosticism:

The student of nature wonders the more and is astonished the less, the more
conversant he becomes with her operations; but of all the perennial miracles she
offers to his inspection, perhaps the most worthy of admiration is the
development of a plant or of an animal from its embryo. Examine the recently
laid eggs of some common animal, such as a salamander or a newt. It is a minute
spheroid in which the best microscope will reveal nothing but a structureless sac,
enclosing a glairy fluid holding granules in suspension. But strange possibilities
lie dormant in that semi-fluid globe. Let a moderate amount of warmth reach its
watery cradle, and the plastic matter undergoes changes so rapid and yet so
steady and purpose-like in their succession that one can only compare them to
those operated by a skilled modeller upon a formless lump of clay. As with an
invisible trowel, the mass is divided and subdivided into smaller and smaller
proportions, until it is reduced to an aggregation of granules not too large to
build withal the finest fabrics of the nascent organism. And then, it is as if a
delicate finger traced out the line to be occupied by the spinal column, and
moulded the contour of the body, pinching up the head at one end, the tail at the
other, and fashioning flank and limb into due salamandrine proportions in so
artistic a way that, after watching the process hour by hour, one is almost
involuntarily possessed by the notion that some more subtle aid to vision than an
achromatic microscope would show the hidden artist, with his plan before him,
striving with skilful manipulation to perfect his work.23

This is exactly what happens. Myriads of Builders, great and small, are ever at
work, building cells, guiding organs to form, moulding and coloring the flowers,
selecting from the Mendelian “genes” those which are most suited to bring about
the particular form, the model of which is placed before them by the Deva in
charge. Nature is truly a factory, but so vast and stupendous that the imagination
of man can but stand dazed at the sight of her many creations.
Stage by stage life evolves, and in these days we need but take a textbook of
Botany or Zoology to see what is God’s Plan for the vegetable and animal
kingdoms. But while we study that Plan, we must never forget that the Plan is
He, and that it is His self-revelation which we are watching as the pageant of
nature passes before our eyes. The crude ideas of Animism professed by
primitive savages are in some ways nearer the truth than the expositions of
modern skeptical scientists; the former have discovered the truth as to the Life,
while the latter have found the truth as to the Form. Both are blended and given
us in symbol in Hinduism in its doctrine of the Avataras (Fig.93). An Avatara is
literally a “descent”, and is specially used to describe the descents or
“incarnations” 24 of Vishnu, the Second Person of the Hindu Trinity.

In all the Trinities, the Second Logos is specially identified with the Life-Form
activities in manifestation. Thus it is that the Avataras are of Vishnu, and not of
Brahma or Shiva, the Third and First Persons of the Hindu Trinity.
According, then, to the Hindu myth, the first stage in the Divine Revelation is
marked by the fish, the creature of water. The statement that God was a fish
seems revolting, until we grasp its inner significance. How that statement
appears to the Hindu imagination is shown in Fig. 94, which represents the
popular idea of the Matsya or Fish Avatara. The Avatara came at the time of the
“Deluge” to save for the human race the volumes of the Divine Revelation, the
four Vedas, which are represented as four children rescued from the flood. The
artist has drawn the children white, brown, yellow and black in color, his
imagination sensing in the children the races of mankind.

The next higher stage is one of transition, as the life in water-creatures slowly
ascends to life in creatures of the land. Hence the Avatara is the tortoise, the
animal both of land and water. The next stage in evolution is represented by a
creature who lives completely on land, the boar. Next comes once again a
transition, that of the Divine Life in animal forms as it slowly begins to manifest
in human forms. This is the mythical “man-lion”, the lion being taken to
represent the highest stage of animal evolution. After the man-lion, the next
stage is that of complete humanity, but of a primitive kind; and the Divine Life
in the early stage of human activity is represented by the “dwarf”, the primitive
man. The human life, after ages of growth, becomes strong in body, with giant
shapes, violent, selfish, destructive; yet that life is God Himself, and so the
Avatara is Parashu Rama—Rama with the axe—whose energies were bent more
on destruction than on reconstruction.

Now comes the stage of the Divine Life as full and perfect humanity, and the
Avatara is Ramachandra, the ideal king of the Hindus, who reigned in India tens
of thousands of years ago, and whose exploits and sacrifices for Duty and
Righteousness are treasured in every Indian heart today. Comes thereafter the
succeeding stage, when the perfect man is both man and conscious God, and so
the Avatara is that of Shri Krishna, who taught with authority, ruling and guiding
men because He was God. A further Avatara is promised, though our
imaginations can scarce grasp what it is; the books say that Kalki will come,
riding on a white winged horse25, again to establish Righteousness for the sake
of men.
So life evolves, at each stage releasing more of the consciousness enshrined in it,
and steadily becoming a fuller reflection of Divine Wisdom, “Strength and
Beauty. Whoso can dream with a mineral, feel with a flower, rejoice with the
birds, sympathize with the cravings and delights of the animals, is a poet, a seer,
whose imagination senses what is the Divine Purpose for which they were
planned. Not merely to look at a landscape, but to think and feel as each blade of
grass, as each shrub and tree opens its heart to the sun’s rays, as each of them
contributes its tiny note to nature’s wondrous harmony, is to transcend man’s
limitations and to put on the attributes of an Angel, a deva, and lastly of God
himself. It was not a beautiful phantasy but a most glorious verity which
Coleridge saw, when he sang:
And what if all of animated nature
Be but organic harps diversely framed,
That tremble into thought, as o’er them sweeps,
Plastic and vast, one intellectual breeze,
At once the Soul of each, and God of All?
CHAPTER XII
NATURE’S MESSAGE OF BEAUTY

When we use the word “truth”, we mean a knowledge of the universe, in all its
embodiments, visible and invisible. These embodiments, when mirrored in our
consciousness, give rise to the sense of law.
But each law concerning the universe is woven into its innermost texture.
Because the universe is what it is, the laws which our minds formulate exist,
whether we exist or not to discover them. Truth, in reality, is not the result of the
discoveries of the seekers of truth. Truth is, because the universe is.

Now, this truth is ourselves. For man, who is an infinitesimal part of the Whole,
is nevertheless, in a mysterious way, himself that Whole. Furthermore, in a way
that seems incredible, every truth which concerns the Whole is to be found
somewhere in every fraction of the Whole.

Therefore, the truths as to God, nature, and man’s ascent to Divinity exist in man
himself.
The treasures of the wisdom, love and beauty of the Whole exist in the
innermost recesses of man’s soul. If a man will but seek rightly, he can find all
truth.

There are two possible modes of discovering truth. One process is by using
Manas, the mind; the other is by using Buddhi, the intuition. At the present stage
of evolution, the process of discovering truth by Buddhi, unaided by Manas, is
possible only to a few; we may therefore omit Buddhi in our consideration of the
means of arriving at truth. The mind, however, has already been well developed
by the advanced Egos of our Humanity, and it has served us well to discover
truth. The modes of discovery are mathematics, science and philosophy.

But what mind has so far revealed is incomplete, because the mind has omitted
to bring into the problem one aspect of nature. This aspect is that of nature as
revealing Beauty. Until nature is seen to reveal not only Law, but also Beauty,
our vision of truth remains only partial.
We have seen in Chapter X, in our study of the laws of the building of matter,
how the Divine Mind of the Logos constructs according to certain fundamental
principles. We not only watch, as we study the chemical elements, an enthralling
wisdom, but we can also react with a sense of wonder in admiration of a work
that is exquisite in symmetry and proportion. When we shall have before our
eyes the diagrams which give in detail the building of all the chemical elements
of the Periodic Law26, this sense of wonder will be as powerful as when we
contemplate a perfect edifice like the Parthenon or the Taj Mahal. For, as the
Logos builds, He builds in beauty, and all nature is His handiwork.

Let us look at three leaves (Figs. 95, 96, 97). Nature has worked throughout the
ages to produce in each of them a quality that is beautiful. Many laws are
involved in building into the leaf the carbon of the air, in using the sun’s rays for
making its chlorophyll, in transmuting the minerals of the earth and in lifting
them from the soil against gravity. But what is the mysterious attribute of nature
which has built, “mechanically” we are apt to think, such a beautiful thing as one
of these leaves? We get a glimpse of one law of nature’s handiwork in our next
illustration (Fig.98). The law is not of chemistry or physics, but of another
sphere, that of art. It is the law of radiation. Beauty is once more revealed as
nature builds a leaf, a flower, a crustacean and a crystal of snow. A beauty which
is less evident to most is shown when building the cells of Scolopendrium
officinarium (Fig. 99), as its protoplasmic filaments traverse the cell walls.
One fact is clear, that, while the essential attribute of nature is beauty, yet that
beauty has a framework of geometry. The old maxim of the Stoics, “God
geometrizes”, is full of truth, as science delves into nature’s mysteries. In the
radiating whorl of spiral leaves in Alstroemeria (Fig. 100), one of the commonest
geometrical forms is revealed.
How the life-force in the vegetable kingdom insists on building geometrically
appears in a fungus (Fig. 101), which was photographed eleven years ago near
Wellington in New Zealand.

More instructive is the sea-shell, Solarium perspectivum (Fig. 102), because its
spiral is a logarithmic curve.27 This shell—as indeed all spiral shells—brings us
directly into the realm of art.

The spiral volute in the Ionic pillar in Greek architecture (Fig. 103) is
developed from this and other shells which reveal the logarithmic curve. The
curve which is drawn, when a string wound round a conical shell is unwound
from its top, with a pencil touching the paper, is shown in Fig. 104.
An exquisite wonder is the building of the sea-creature, Lichnaspis giltochii, one
of the acantharia (Fig. 105), whose spines radiate in so precise a fashion that a
law, formulated by Muller, tells us that the spines are arranged in groups which
are designated respectively, north polar, north tropical, equatorial, south tropical
and south polar spines.
We all know that nature builds geometrically in all minerals. We know that ice is
a crystal but who would dream that water freezing to ice could ever form the
wonder revealed in Fig. 106? “But this exquisite design must have been drawn
and moulded by a great artist, surely,” we would say, if the photograph were of a
moulded ceiling. But it is a photograph of ice-crystals. What is the principle in
nature that produces the fronds of the American maiden-hair fern, Adiantum
pedatum (Fig. 107), so that the artistic imagination is thrilled with their beauty?
Everywhere nature builds in beauty.

Whence the beauty of the Lyre bird of Australia (Fig. 108), or the beauty of the
curve of the cat’s back (Fig. 109)?
How could nature “mechanically”, ever fashion a structure of bone and muscle
so that the cat’s pose is beautiful, and equally too that of the playful kitten?
Watch any bird in flight (Fig. 110), and there nature reveals not merely her
masterly artistic hands, but also the poetry of motion.
It is when we come to coloring, as shown in birds and fishes, that our sense of
delight in nature’s artistic creations becomes profound. No theory of a
mechanical selection of the genes within the chromosome, nor even that of a
geometrical structure inherent in nature, will explain the rich fantasy of a master
artist who has colored the birds and the fishes. It is only one who is himself an
artist—that is, one who has trained his eye and hand through long years, and has
developed his imagination to sense that indescribable principle which is “Art”—
who knows that nature cannot be mechanical, nor merely the fashioning by a
“pure geometrician”. The life of nature throbs with art, though geometry can also
be found if we seek for it.

Let anyone look at two among the dozens of varieties of fishes to be found in the
seas around Hawaii, and shown in the aquarium at Honolulu; and he cannot help
feeling (if he has the root of art in him) that he is gazing at the creations of a
master. Teuthis achilles, Pa kui in Hawaiian, is pure black, the last imaginable
color for a fish; yet round the mouth, ear and eye, and in the lower and upper
fins, are touches of color, blue and red; and in the tail and the side-fins near the
tail such a “laying on”, as a painter would say, of red that the observer, if he is
artistic, knows and salutes with joy the unseen artist.
Impossible to describe in words is Zanclus canescens, Kihikihi in Hawaiian, a
fish strange in shape; once again the color is “laid on” with a master’s hand. But
more than its color is its shape, which reveals the rich fantasy of the artist who,
in a playful mood and as if to rest from serious labors, sends forth from his
studio this fish so strange in shape and yet beautiful.

Were one to describe the beauty of the birds, the only way would be to gather
together all the birds, and say to the seeker of truth, “Look; and if you do not
understand, look again”.

The next two illustrations, of a spider’s web (Fig. 111), and of the Periodic
Law of the chemical elements (Fig. 112), link in an undecipherable mystery a
microcosm with the Macrocosm. For in the center of the spider’s web is the
logarithmic curve; how does the spider know to build according to geometrical
principle? And why does the universe, as it comes into being, create 92
elements in such a rhythmic fashion that we can group them into families, and
tabulate them all according to their atomic weights, so as to make a spiral
curve similar to the spider’s and to that of Solarium (Fig. 102)?
An acute sense of the beauty of nature as she works is essential to our
understanding of truth. For the mind which catalogues facts and deduces laws
can take us only up to a certain point, and no farther.

Life has more mysteries than the mind can ever formulate. As we gaze at
Hymenocallis litoralis (Fig. 113), it is as if we must perforce fall in adoration.
(But, indeed, he who seeks to know the Eternally True does fall in adoration in
his imagination before every flower.) Are not the beads in the feather of the
Argus pheasant (Argus argusianus) of Java (Fig. 113a) like the repetition of a
chord in music?

And what of the star fish (actual size) picked up on Madras Beach by the writer
(Fig. 114)?
And when we look at the picture of the Wave, by Hokusai of Japan (Fig. 114a),
and when we sense the Cosmic Will in the wave and feel in it the beauty of
nature’s rhythm, what may we do but be dumb? Yet it is in that silence that we
discover one aspect of the Eternally True, which is also the Eternally Good and
the Eternally Beautiful.
CHAPTER XIII
THE EVOLUTION OF CONSCIOUSNESS

Could one but understand what Consciousness really is, one would find the clue
to all problems in evolution. For consciousness is the highest expression of that
One Existence which is both force and matter, form and life.
OM, AMITAYA! measure not with words
The Immeasurable; nor sink the string of thought
Into the Fathomless. Who asks doth err,
Who answers, errs. Say nought!28

Yet such is the fabric of our nature that we must ask, and we can find satisfaction
in life only as we deem ourselves to have found answers to our questions. The
answer of yesterday may not satisfy us today; but we cannot be content today,
unless we find some answer for today, though we may discard it tomorrow. An
intellectual grasp of how consciousness evolves only takes us part way to the
realization of what consciousness is. Nevertheless, the knowledge of how
consciousness evolves is the science of sciences.

The first great marvel about consciousness is that the whole is in the part, the
total is in the unit. For, though the consciousness in an electron be as a pinpoint
of consciousness, yet that tiny unit is linked to the vast totality of consciousness
which is the Logos. All of Him is there, though we with our limitations can only
discover so much of Him as makes the electron. Just as, when a myriad diffused
rays of sunlight are focused by a lens into a point, all the ray’s energies are there
in that point, so is it with every type of consciousness ensouling every form. All
possible revelations of consciousness are in each ensouled unit, great or small.
The Mendelian biologist is only stating the occult truth when he says that
“Shakespeare once existed as a speck of protoplasm not so big as a small pin’s
head”29. Place a lens before a great panorama extending for miles; the lens will
bring all the rays of the panorama in to one focal point. The whole landscape
will there exist in the point, and yet there will be no picture to be seen. It is only
as we get away from the focal point, that picture after picture will appear on a
screen placed to reflect the rays, each picture varying in size according to the
distance from the point where we place the screen. According to the distance is
the size of the picture; and according to the size will be the legibility of the
picture’s details. The picture is all there in the point; it is only as we get away
from the point that the picture steps out of nothing towards us. This is an apt
illustration of the evolution of consciousness.

The evolution of consciousness is also as the drawing aside of a curtain which


screens a light; the action of drawing the curtain aside adds nothing to the light.
Having nothing to gain, the Light only wills to banish the Darkness. Till we
ourselves consciously identify ourselves with the Light, we shall not realize why
It so wills. Its action is both a sacrifice and a joy; the sacrifice comes from
enduring a limitation, the joy from a giving. To partake of that Sacrifice and of
that Joy is to attain Divinity.

The evolution of consciousness in man is by giving. The principle of growth for


the animal and vegetable kingdoms is competition, rivalry and self-seeking; the
principle of growth for man is cooperation, renunciation and self-sacrifice. The
Logos is eternally sacrificing Himself on the cross of life and matter; only as
man imitates Him does man grow into His likeness. This is the great principle
ever to keep in mind. The consciousness in man unfolds hidden possibilities
stage by stage, but without self-sacrifice there, is no passing from one stage to
the next. Man must die to every remnant of the brute in him, though it takes
hundreds of lives. When, after many births and deaths, self-sacrifice has become
instinctive with him, then he knows that sacrifice is joy, the only conceivable
joy.
Before consciousness can evolve, it must first have been involved. It is this
process of involution which we have outlined in our next diagram, Fig. 115.
There are in it seven horizontal divisions to make the seven great planes of our
solar system; and above them all is the symbol of the Unmanifested Logos,
before creative processes begin. Within the circle, which represents the
Absolute, is a triangle. This is the Trinity of the Logos. Within that triangle is a
Star; it represents the Monad of man.

As the first step of involution, the Logos descends on to the Adi plane; there all
the three great aspects, as Shiva, Vishnu and Erahma, or Father, Son and Holy
Ghost, function in perfection. When the Logos descends to the next plane, the
Anupadaka, He endures limitation, for His aspect as the First Logos is there
latent, and only the aspects as the Second and Third Logos can find perfect
expression. This is represented in the diagram by omitting the side of the triangle
which symbolizes the First Logos. At the, next stage of descent, the Logos
undergoes still further limitation, and the Third Logos alone can fully manifest
on the plane of Nirvana, the aspects of the Second and First Logos finding it
impossible to manifest Their attributes on that plane. Only one line of the
triangle remains.
Perhaps it may be difficult to some to grasp how an omnipotent Logos should
suffer limitation, as He descends from plane to plane. We can grasp the idea, if
we take an example from our knowledge of space relations. We all know what a
cube is; it has three dimensions, of length, breadth and height. To everyone who
can walk round a cube, and look down upon it, and look too at its bottom by
lifting it, a cube is a solid object, having six square faces, with twelve bounding
lines.

But suppose we put ourselves into the consciousness of a microbe who is on a


piece of paper, a microbe who is unable to lift himself out of the surface of the
paper. Then, when the cube is placed on the paper, the microbe, coming up to the
cube, and walking round the cube where it touches the paper, will see or feel
only four equal, impenetrable lines; with his highest imagination, he may be able
to conceive of a square, that is, a plane surface bounded by four equal lines. But,
since the microbe cannot leave the plane of the paper, the cube will never be able
to reveal itself to him as a cube, a solid in three dimensions. The cube may
present its six faces in succession before the microbe’s eyes; but the microbe will
say each time: “It is only a square.”
So too, when any object of three dimensions presents itself to a consciousness
which knows only two dimensions, that object undergoes a limitation. That
limitation is not in the nature of the object; it exists with reference to the power
which the object can exercise in the two-dimensional world. Similarly it is with
the limitations which the Logos undergoes, as He descends from plane to plane.
In His Nature, He is ever the same; but as He works on the planes which He
creates, He suffers limitation plane by plane, according to the materiality of the
plane.

During all the period of the descent of the Logos on to the three highest planes,
the human Monad dwells within Him. This fact is symbolized in the diagram by
the tiny star within the triangle. There is never a moment when each of us, as a
Monad, does not live and move and have our being in Him. Though at first we
know nothing of Him, though we, even when knowing, may for a while go
contrary to His Will, yet, in all the stages through which we have gone, from
mineral to plant, from plant to animal and man, no separation from Him has ever
been possible. Thus speaks the ancient stanza of The Secret Doctrine:30

The Spark hangs from the Flame by the finest thread of Fohat. It journeys
through the Seven Worlds of Maya. It stops in the First, and is a Metal and a
Stone; it passes into the Second, and behold—a Plant; the Plant whirls through
seven changes and becomes a Sacred Animal. From the combined attributes of
these Manu, the Thinker, is formed.

And ever, the Spark hangs from the Flame. The sense of individuality, as a doer,
begins in the Monad when, on the plane of Nirvana, he finds himself as a
triplicity of Atma, Buddhi and Manas, separate from the Flame as a spark, and
yet gaining from the Flame all the attributes of its light and fire. The triple
Monad, on the plane of Nirvana, is a miniature Logos, in all ways in the image
of his Maker. He is represented in the diagram by the little triangle.

Just as the Logos underwent a process of involution, so too does the Monad in
his turn.

All three aspects of the Monad reveal themselves on his true plane, that of
Nirvana. The moment he descends to the Buddhic plane, he undergoes a
limitation, and his aspect as the Atma is veiled, and only Buddhi and Manas
manifest themselves. So one side of his triangle becomes unmanifest and latent.
Similarly, when he descends one plane lower still, to the mental plane, he
undergoes a further limitation; and, in the causal body which he forms there,
only his aspect as Manas appears, the other two being latent with regard to the
higher mental plane. Now only one side of his triangle, its base, can manifest.

Once again, there begins the process of involution, and now of the Ego who lives
in the causal body. When the Ego descends into incarnation, he undergoes
limitation plane by plane, as he makes successively the mental, astral and
physical bodies.

The evolution of consciousness is the process of releasing the hidden energies,


first of the Ego, then of the Monad, and lastly of the Logos, through the vehicles
made on all the planes. The mode of releasing the consciousness of the Ego, by
the process of training his vehicles, has already been dealt with in Chapter VI,
“Man in Life and in Death”, where the process is described with the aid of Fig.
53. After the Ego has gained the requisite control of his vehicles, the next stage
in the expansion of his consciousness comes when he enters the Great White
Brotherhood. He is then taught, at the First Initiation, how to function in full
consciousness on the lowest sub-plane of Buddhi. Then, for the first time, he
begins to know, by actual realization and not by mere belief, the unity of all that
lives, and how his destiny is indissolubly linked with the destiny of all the
myriads of souls who with him form Humanity. Nay, more, he realizes that they
are a part of him, and that all those divisions of “I” and “thou,” of “mine” and
“thine” which mark existence on the planes below Buddhi, are illusions. He has
now, at this ascending stage on the Buddhic plane, realized and brought into
manifestation two sides of his triangle.

Further expansions of consciousness, at the Second, Third and Fourth Initiations,


give him mastery of the remaining sub-planes of the Buddhic plane, till, at the
Fifth Initiation, that of the Asekha, his consciousness works unbrokenly on the
plane of Nirvana. The triangle of the Monad is now complete, and the “Eternal
Pilgrim” has now returned home, “rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him”.
Him the Gods envy from their lower seats;
Him the Three Worlds in ruin should not shake;
All life is lived for him, all deaths are dead;
Karma will no more make.
New houses. Seeking nothing, he gains all;
Foregoing self, the Universe grows “I”.
If any teach Nirvana is to cease,
Say unto such they lie.
If any teach Nirvana is to live,
Say unto such they err; not knowing this,
Nor what light shines beyond their broken lamps,
Nor lifeless, timeless, bliss.31

At this stage of the Asekha Adept, the Monad knows, by direct realization, that
marvel of marvels—that, Spark though he be, he is the Flame. He is thenceforth
the Christos, the “Anointed”, crowned with that kingly Crown which, as the Son
of God, he went forth “to war” to gain.

From this time, the triangle of the Monad is in direct contact with the Triangle of
the Logos, though only with one line of it, with its base, which is the aspect of
the “Holy Ghost”. Hence Christian tradition tells us that there are two baptisms,
one of water and the other of “fire”. John the Baptist could give the first baptism,
with water; but only a Christos could give the second, with the Holy Ghost and
fire: “I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance; but he that cometh after
me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am not worthy to bear; he shall baptize you
with the Holy Ghost, and with fire.”

It is when the Monad is so baptized “with the Holy Ghost and with fire”, that he
can say in triumph and in dedication: “As the Father knoweth me, even so know
I the Father.... I am the resurrection and the life; he that believeth in me, though
he were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall
never die.... I and my Father are one.”

To further heights still, inconceivable now to us, does the Eternal Pilgrim go,
making, on the Anupadaka plane, his Buddhi one with the Buddhi of the great
Triangle and, at last, on the Adi plane, making his Atma one with the eternal
Atma of all that is, was and ever shall be, the Logos of our System.

Man’s ascent to Divinity can be studied from many points of view, and another
such is given in the next diagram, Fig. 116. The fundamental thought in it is that,
as is the kind of impact on a consciousness from outside, so is the discovery of
the world by that consciousness. Response to impacts, physical, astral or mental,
gives us a knowledge of the world; according to the type of response is the
expansion of consciousness in the individual. A physical stone responds, in the
main, only to the impacts of heat and cold and pressure; therefore it knows only
the physical world. A plant responds to astral vibrations of like and dislike; and
hence it has an instinct of adaptation to environment; it knows both the physical
and astral worlds, though the latter only dimly. The animal responds to the
vibrations of the lower mental world, and so thinks as well as feels; it therefore
knows the physical, astral and mental worlds, though the last only vaguely, But
man is capable of being affected by the higher mental world, which means that
his vision of the universe is from that plane.
The lower astral world is thrown by man into activity by animal feelings like
anger, lust, envy and jealousy, As man’s astral body gets refined, and he is
capable of affection, devotion and sympathy, though they may be strongly tinged
with his personal needs, he discovers the higher astral world of feeling. In a
similar fashion, the disjointed, unrelated thoughts which we have concerning
things in general enable us to contact the lower mental world of particularized
thought. It is only when we can arrange our ideas into categories of thought and
feeling, and discover laws from them, that we reach up to the vision of the
higher mental world, To think with the causal body is to rise above particularized
thoughts, and to come to those universal thoughts concerning religion,
philosophy, science and art which characterize the philosophic mind.
Beyond the highest attribute of pure thought, man has yet another faculty, or
instrument of cognition, which, for want of a better term, Theosophy calls by the
Hindu philosophical term Buddhi. Its characteristic is that an object is known by
it, not by examination from outside, but by identification with it by the knower.
Buddhi is a mode of consciousness which is neither thought alone, nor feeling
alone, nor both simply combined; yet at once it is both, and more still, a kind of
indescribable being-thought-feeling. One can only say that, when Buddhi affects
the higher mental plane, the mind grasps universal concepts; and that, when the
force of Buddhi is reflected on a pure astral nature, the tenderest of sympathies
result. Buddhi is a Divine Intuition, surer than knowledge, because it judges not
only from a past and a present but also from a future, more precise in
understanding than the profoundest emotion, because the knower at will
becomes the known. Hindu philosophers have termed it arsha-buddhi, the
Buddhi of Rishis or saints, not of common men.

If already words fail to describe what Buddhi is, how may one describe that
faculty of the Monad which expresses itself on the Nirvanic plane? Suffice it to
say that, as Buddhi is different and more wonderful than pure thought and pure
emotion, so is the Atma aspect of the soul more wonderful still than Buddhi.
The cultural growth of humanity will not be complete till all can function on the
plane of Nirvana. So far, the highest achievement of mankind has been to touch,
through the efforts of a few geniuses, the Buddhic plane through Art. We must,
however, not forget that “art” is not merely painting, sculpture, music, etc. Art
also manifests through Devotion, through Love, through Philosophy, whenever
these touch the realm of Buddhi. But it is as if only yesterday that mankind
discovered art, and that there exists a realm of being where man can fashion
objects of beauty that are joys forever, and create not for a day but for all time.

When the mind of a genius, whether in religion or art, in philosophy or science,


breaks through into the Buddhic plane, what he creates enshrines the essence of
art. If as scientist he deals with nature’s facts, he conceives and presents them so
artistically that his science is luminous with intuition; if as philosopher he
creates a system, he broods with tenderness on both the small and the great, and
enwraps them with a beauty and a unity. The ethical precepts of the great
Teachers are revelations of the purest art, for their commandments are universal
in their applicability to all men’s problems, and un-ageing in their freshness and
beauty at all epochs of time.
Any one expression of art contains within it some of the characteristics of all the
others; a picture is a sermon, and a symphony is a philosophy. When Buddhi
gives its message, religion is science, and art is philosophy, and all four are love.
It is only on the lower mental plane of particularized thoughts that the unity
breaks into diversity, and then he who cannot sense the unity through one
particular expression sees the particulars as contradicting each other. Man the
thinker, the lover, the doer, when the Buddhi is awake in him, achieves a unity of
himself which he cannot fully reveal except on the Buddhic plane.

Mankind is being taught to attain to That, which exists out of time and space, by
using time and space. Our highest tool of cognition, so far, is creative art. How
its various aspects are related to each other is one of the problems in philosophy;
one mode of their relation is suggested in diagram, Fig. 117.

In literature of the highest type, we have both a brilliant “word-painting” and a


graphic dramatization of events and ideas. From literature, according as it uses
time-values or space-values, the arts develop. On the side of time, literature
leads to drama, and drama tends to poetry, and poetry through its essential
musical quality leads on to music.

On the side of space, the word-painting of literature is linked to painting, and


painting that uses two dimensions rises to a three-dimensional manifestation in
sculpture, and sculpture to those wonderful abstract conceptions of rhythm and
beauty which architecture gives. It is not difficult to see how drama, narrating
events in time, is related to painting, which depicts events in space.
Sculpture is like dumb poetry, while poetry sculptures image after image from
the matter of the imagination. The description of Goethe and Lessing, that
architecture is “frozen music”, gives us the clue to the relation between music
and architecture.

All true forms of art lead man’s consciousness to grasp those values in life which
the Monad knows on the Buddhic plane. The artistic sense of humanity is
rudimentary as yet, but with the growth of Brotherhood more of art will be
sensed in life. On the other hand, with the development in men of their artistic
sense, there will be a greater power to realize Brotherhood. Lastly, when we
have come to the utmost limits of artistic creation, and begin to feel in us powers
and realizations not expressible even in the highest art, then shall we know those
activities of creation which characterize the Monad on his true plane of Atma.
But in what manner we shall join the splendor of Nirvana and this earth of ours
into one realm of Action is a mystery of the future.
* * * *

To understand fully the evolution of consciousness is to solve the mystery of


God’s nature. Yet since all life is He, and since we too are fragments of Him, our
growth in consciousness is both a discovery of Him and a growing into His
likeness. Yet while we discover Him, it is ourselves whom we discover. This is
the mystery of consciousness, that the part is the Whole. But to know this is one
thing, and to be this another. To be the Whole is only possible as we act as the
Whole, and that is, by giving ourselves as fully and freely to all within our little
circle of being, as the Whole gives Himself to all within the vast circle of His
Being. It seems incredible that we shall ever be capable of imitating the Whole.
Yet because that indeed is our destiny, He has sent us forth from Him to live our
separated lives. That the only life worth living is to join in His eternal Sacrifice
is the testimony of all who have come from Him, and are consciously returning
to Him.
CHAPTER XIV
THE INNER GOVERNMENT OF THE WORLD

Among the many startling ideas which confront the inquirer into Theosophy, one
of the most significant is that there is an inner Government of the World. The
international life of the world throughout the ages seems to us so purposeless in
most ways, that one is thoroughly in accord with Gibbon’s dictum that the
history of the nations “is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes,
follies, and misfortunes of mankind”.

It seems scarcely credible to the skeptical mind of today that every event in the
world’s happenings is being used and guided to fulfil a Divine Plan. Our
religious faith is sufficient to believe in a far-off “divine event to which the
whole creation moves”; but when it comes to believing literally that not a
sparrow “shall fall on the ground without your Father”, our faith is of the heart
and not of the head.

Yet no more wonderful fact exists in nature than this revealed by the Christ; it is
literally true that not a sparrow falls, without that event being noted in a
Consciousness, and without a Love enwrapping the sparrow as it falls, and
guiding it beyond the gates of death to a happier life. Here, on this globe of ours
which spins round the sun, Mighty Beings guide every event; and the crimes,
follies and misfortunes of mankind, as too, their heroisms, sacrifices and dreams,
are used by Them to achieve that particular part of the Plan of the Logos, which
is intended for fulfilment as the days and months pass, one by one.
The facts as to an Inner Government of the World have been long kept as the
most precious of secrets in the Ancient Mysteries; but, with the opportunities of
a swifter evolution now dawning for men, what was once hidden is now
revealed. To many, no doubt, the revelation will mean nothing at all; in some it
will give rise to mockery; in a few it may call forth both a new insight into life,
and a new determination to throw themselves heart and soul into the work of
furthering “God’s plan, which is Evolution”. It is for the sake of these latter, who
long to understand in order to justify to the brain the faith which is in their
hearts, that a great body of occult knowledge has been revealed to men through
the Theosophical Movement.

Throughout all these pages of First Principles of Theosophy, the one dominant
theme has been that all that happens in nature, in life, and in the heart of man, is
the Self-revelation of the Logos. It has been shown that His Life reveals itself
stage by stage, and that all forms of life and consciousness are related to each
other in a ladder of evolution. An atom and an ameba contain His Life; but more
of His Life is revealed in a Dhyan Chohan or a Planetary Logos. On this earth of
ours, all of us men are embodiments of His Life, and we reveal Him more fully
than can our younger brothers of the animal creation. In an exactly similar way,
there are Beings higher than man who reveal more still of His Life than can man.
It is They who form the Inner Government of the World.

Each globe within the solar system has a band of His Ministers who carry out
His Plan for that globe. This body is called the “Hierarchy” of the globe, and the
Hierarchy on our Earth is known in tradition by many names, the one now
chiefly in use being the “Great White Brotherhood”. This Brotherhood is not a
mere association of Supermen but a living organism which contains the Life-
energies of the Logos. It is truly a “Grand Lodge Above”, the pattern of every
Grand Lodge that has ever been, and its mighty Officers labor from noon to noon
without ceasing. The Adepts of the Great White Brotherhood work in true
hierarchical order, according to their qualifications, each having his work in a
particular department of the Plan.
It has just been said that the Great White Brotherhood contains the Life-energies
of the Logos. As the Logos, when in manifestation, works as a Trinity, so all His
energies flow through three Ministers, who are the representatives for this Earth
of His triple nature, and who are the channels of the energies of that Triplicity.
The Great Triangle, “eternal in the heavens”, is that of the Logos as the First,
Second and Third Logos—Shiva, Vishnu and Brahma, or Father, Son and Holy
Ghost. Its representation here on the Earth is another Triangle, composed of
three Great Adepts, known as the Lord of the World, the Bodhisativa and the
Maha-Chohan. The First brings down to humanity the energies of the Atmic or
Power aspect of the Logos; the Second, as the World-Teacher, is the channel of
His Wisdom aspect, and performs for humanity the mysterious function which is
the “Atonement”; the Third is the channel of His Divine Mind, and reveals to
earth all those activities which are typical of the Third Logos, the “Holy Ghost”.
Though the Logos in activity is a Trinity, there is an aspect of Him as the
Unmanifested; similarly is it with the Triangle of the Hierarchy of this Earth.
Behind the Great Three—the King who wills, the Prime Minister who plans, and
the General who executes—is a Fourth, the Silent Watcher, who in the last
Round was the Lord of the World of our globe, and now “watches and waits”
behind the Three, but doing what mighty actions for man and God we scarce can
conceive.

The grades of the Hierarchy which rules the world are set down briefly in Fig.
118.
The Head of the Hierarchy is that lofty Being, the Lord of the World, who wills
and orders all events on this globe for men and for angels. Within His
consciousness is recorded everything which happens on all the seven planes of
our globe. Since His aura pervades the entire Earth, He is aware of all that
happens within that aura, and no act is so secret but He knows, no injustice so
small but He records it.

The King, as He is often named, is not an Adept of our humanity; the position
which He holds is too lofty a one to be filled by any Adept of our human
evolution. He is a mighty Adept of the great Venus Scheme of Evolution, and
came thence six and a half million years ago to take charge of the evolution of
this Earth, to succeed a predecessor who had taken charge when humanity had
been transferred from the Moon Chain to the Earth Chain. Without His fiat, none
can be admitted into the Great White Brotherhood, and it is His Star which
flashes in assent over the head of the Adept Initiator, as a sign that He accepts
the initiate into His Brotherhood. Hindu tradition, which knows or Him, calls
Him Sanat Kumara; the “ Eternal Virgin-Youth “, for His Body, though physical,
is not born of woman, but was made by kriyashatki, or will-power, and it never
ages; and He is in appearance not a man but a “Youth or sixteen summers”. He is
the Will of the Logos incarnate for men, and yet is His mighty Love as vast as
the ocean.

Round Him stand the Four Great Devarajas, or the Rulers of the Elements, who
adjust the karmas of men, and great Devas or Angels are as His ministers, ready
to do His bidding. All earthly kings, whose dynasties have gained His
Benediction as a recognition of their selfless service for men, have that
mysterious “divine right of kings” as a part of their invisible heritage. When the
crown of England is set upon the head of her King, a far-off reminiscence of the
tradition as to the Great King of the World is seen in the little globe which is
placed in the King’s left hand, and in the sceptre, or Rod of Power, which is
placed in his right. For of a truth, this Earth of ours, large though it be to us, does
lie in the hollow of His Hand, and verily not a sparrow falls but He knows.

With Him are three Pupils and Assistants, who also came from Venus; They are
named in Hindu tradition Sanandana, Sanaka and Sanarana, and all the glorious
Four are called “mind-born Sons of Brahma” and “Lords of the Flame”. The four
Lords of the Flame have been also called “the Head, the Heart, the Soul and the
Seed of undying knowledge”. When the life wave shall pass from Earth to
Mercury, it is these Three who will become in turn Lords of Mercury, and guide
all evolution on that globe. They are known in Buddhism as Pratyeka Buddhas,
the “solitary Buddhas”; for They do not teach, or establish world-religions. They
are on the First or ruling Ray, while the Buddhas are on the Second or teaching
Ray. Though They stand at the level of the Buddhas, Theirs is not the role of
World-Teachers. Hence the curiously misleading description in popular
Buddhism of Them as “solitary” or “selfish” Buddhas, who “cannot” teach.
Their love is as great as that of the Buddhas, but They give to men Power, not
Wisdom.

The Buddha Initiation is the highest achievement on this Earth on the Second
Ray, and it is taken by a Bodhisattva or World-Teacher as the crown of His work
of ages for humanity. After founding religion after religion, [a Bodhisattva]
gathers, in the last of His lives, all His pupils who are ready to enter the various
grades of Initiation, and He reincarnates on earth with them. Then He establishes
a world-religion, and after the work of that physical body is over, He passes to
loftier work on other planes. As He passes from humanity, He hands over to His
successor the duties of the World-Teacher. The last of the Buddhas was the
Buddha Gautama, and His successor in the office of World-Teacher is the
Bodhisattva Maitreya, already called by Buddhist tradition Maitreya Buddha, in
anticipation of His future office.

On all the remaining five Rays, from the Third to the Seventh, the highest
Initiation, as a member of our humanity, is that of the Maha-Chohan. This office
is held by only one Adept at a time. According to the dominant influence in
evolution, at any given epoch, of a Ray and its sub-rays, is the type of Adept
who holds the position of Maha-Chohan. He is the great “Keeper of the
Records” of the evolutionary processes of the globe, and supervises and directs
all the activities of the members of the Great Brotherhood, as stage by stage
They develop the Great Plan. He has been described as one “to whose insight the
future lies like an open page”.

The Adept of the First Ray who takes the Fifth Initiation usually enters thereafter
upon the arduous duties of the Manu of a Root-race on a globe. His work has
already begun with the slow selection of the Egos who are going to work under
Him at the commencement of the new race, and through all the successive sub-
races as they appear one by one. During the hundreds of thousands of years of
the history of a Root-race, He directs as its Manu the building of variant after
variant of the sub-races, and Himself incarnates in each sub-race to set the form
for it. After His work as Manu is completed, He passes on to take the Eighth
Initiation as a Pratyeka Buddha, and aeons later to take the Ninth Initiation, that
of a Lord of the World. Only two Manus now remain with humanity, the Manu
Chakshusha who founded the Fourth Root-race, the Atlantean, over a million
years ago, and the ManuVaivasvata, who founded the Fifth Root-race, the Aryan,
about sixty thousand years ago.

A careful study of Fig. 118 will show that, on all the seven Rays, there are
Adepts up to the level of the Asekha Initiation32. At this stage, the Adept can
make one of seven choices, as to his future work (see Fig.73). If he decides to
continue to work with our humanity, he works on and finally takes the Sixth
Initiation. After this, he may, if he so chooses, leave his work with humanity, and
take up work elsewhere. But if he decides to continue with humanity, he then
qualifies himself to be a Manu, or a Bodhisattva, or a Maha-Chohan, and takes
the Seventh Initiation33. The Adept who is a Maha-Chohan, after his period of
office is over, once more makes his “choice”. If he chooses still to continue to
work with humanity as an official of the Hierarchy, he must transfer himself to
the First or the Second Ray, in order to proceed to take the Eighth Initiation.
Similarly, the Adept who holds the office of Buddha, if he chooses still to take
office in the Hierarchy, must transfer himself to the First Ray to take the Ninth
Initiation.
The Adepts of any Ray, who leave humanity from the Asekha level upwards,
will take elsewhere those Initiations for which they have not qualified
themselves on this globe. One Ray is not better than another. All the Initiations
can be taken on all the Rays. But since only three Lords of the World are
required during a world-period, and only seven Manus and seven Buddhas, and
only a certain number of Maha-Chohans, not all Adepts as a matter of fact
qualify for these offices, and the majority of them “enter Nirvana” after the
Asekha Initiation, and pass on to forms of work which do not bring them directly
in touch any more with our humanity.

The work of the world, visible and invisible, is under the direction of the Adepts
of the Great White Brotherhood. Into Their hands the Logos commits His Power,
Wisdom and Love, and They distribute the energy of the Logos into all the many
departments of human activity. Religion and philosophy, science and art,
commerce and development, are inspired and guided by Them; either
incarnating among men, or from the invisible, They move men and nations as
pawns on a board, striving to win over men to cooperate with the Divine Plan.
They are constantly hindered in Their work by the unwillingness of men; yet
since They may not coerce men’s wills, They toil with a patience which has no
bounds, and They inspire and guide all, brooding over men’s good and evil with
infinite love and understanding.

The “Everlasting Arms” of the Great Brothers enfold humanity, and while They
labor to complete the Plan, no ultimate failure is possible for mankind. Because
They, once weak and sinful as we are today, have now achieved Perfection, the
vision of our Perfection some day is not a dream but a reality. In Their love is
our comfort, and in Their strength is our peace and salvation. To serve Them is
to gain the certainty that all things move in the direction of the Good, the True
and the Beautiful; to be accepted by Them as Their assistants and helpers is to
enter on the Path that leads to Deification.
CHAPTER XV
THE PATH OF DISCIPLESHIP

As the Ancient Wisdom unfolds to the gaze of the seeker the majestic Plan of
Evolution, there are some whose hearts burn within them with an overwhelming
longing to consecrate themselves to that Plan. All things in life lose their savor
after the Heavenly Vision is seen, and nothing thenceforth is possible except to
give utterly, holding back nothing, to an Ideal of service, devotion or
renunciation. The noblest impulses in man are the manifestations on earthly
levels of an expansion of consciousness in the heavenly realms; the vision of an
ideal brings with it the promise of its attainment. For within man is the Way, the
Truth and the Life; he only needs to be roused from his lethargy to see the Light
which burns in his Soul.

The awakening of the soul has many stages, and the influences of all forms of
culture are brought to bear on him, to make the Divine Spark within him to shine
forth as a flame. In the long history of the soul’s unfolding of consciousness,
there comes the stage when he is clearly recognizable as committed not to self-
seeking but to altruism. The soul is then on earth the man or woman of ideals,
who, however often he or she may betray the ideal, never finally renounces it,
though the cost is suffering and martyrdom.
It is at this stage that there enters into the soul’s life One who shall guide his
expansion of consciousness to greater heights of realization. This is a “Father in
God”, a Master of the Wisdom, who has watched the soul’s struggles, life after
life, to be true to his ideal; He now comes to make a bond with the soul as
Master to disciple.

The stages on the Path of Discipleship, leading upwards from the man of ideals
to the Initiate of the Great White Brotherhood, are given in Fig. 119.
The first stage is that of the Probationary Pupil, when a Master of the Wisdom
puts the aspirant “on Probation”. This is done either on the physical or the astral
plane, but more usually on the latter. At the Master’s command, the aspirant is
conducted to Him by a senior pupil, and the Master formally puts the candidate
on Probation. It is at this time that the Master makes what is known as the
“living image”; it is a living replica, fashioned by the Master’s will, of the
pupil’s astral and mental bodies. The living image is kept near the Master, and it
is so magnetically connected with the pupil that it records perfectly the effects of
the latter’s thoughts and emotions as he does his work in life. The Master
examines frequently this living image, to note how far the pupil is succeeding or
failing. Needless to say, when He so examines, it is not merely as judge; He
sends through the living image to the pupil such purification and strengthening
as the latter will allow himself to receive.

The act of being put on Probation is the response to a demand, made by the pupil
to the Guardians of Humanity, to be given opportunities for a swifter evolution
than is normal with the generality of mankind. The response brings with it a
readjustment of the individual’s karma. This karmic readjustment has the aim:
(1) of freeing the individual slowly from such types of karma as handicap him
from exercising a greater usefulness; (2) of giving him opportunities for a wider
knowledge, especially the knowledge of the hidden truths of nature; (3) of
bringing to him new opportunities for self-expression through Service.

The Probation or proving of the pupil consists in testing him, to see how far he
can withstand the shocks of his karma, and remain without diminishing his
altruism, in spite of the fact that his life becomes more barren of those
satisfactions and delights which make life worth living for most men. He is also
tested to see if, as a worker, he can sufficiently adapt himself to be a worker in
the Master’s plan. For each Master of the Wisdom is the center of a large number
of activities, which He has undertaken to foster as His contribution to the Plan of
the Logos; an aspirant, therefore, is put on Probation less to gain knowledge
from the Master and, more to train himself to be an apprentice to help the Master
in His work. The probationary pupil must therefore be ready, if necessary, to
change his methods of work to fit himself to those of his Master; he must be
ready to cooperate with his fellow-apprentices; and in all ways he must prove
that an Ideal of work weighs more with him than his personal satisfaction as a
worker.

When a Master takes an aspirant as a probationary pupil, it is usually with the


expectation of presenting him for Initiation in that life. It does not follow that the
pupil will succeed because a Master has responded to his aspiration; he has
earned a karmic right to be given the opportunity, but what he makes of that
opportunity depends on himself. Still, if he “means business”, and will allow
himself to be guided by the senior pupils of his Master, he is more likely to
succeed than to fail.
If he strenuously works at the qualifications for Initiation, then the Will to Good
inherent in nature will help him with illumination and strength. These
qualifications are given in tabular form in Fig. 120; they are taken from At the
Feet of the Master, by J. Krishnamurti. The author of that priceless gem gives
the explanations and comments on them which were given to him by his Master
when he was prepared for Initiation. The aspirant who is seeking the Master
cannot do better than take that little book, study it, and live it. If, after seven
years of testing, the pupil on Probation is found to have grown in self-sacrifice to
man and to God, his Master then finally receives the pupil into the stage of
Acceptance. The living image is dissolved, and the Master makes with the
accepted pupil an inward link which, even if temporarily broken by the pupil
through failure, will in all lives to come be felt as drawing him to his Master.

When accepted, the pupil is given the right to a mystical experience, which is of
the greatest inspiration to him in his work. When any matter arises which he
cannot decide out of his own experience, he may test his judgment by the
judgment of the Master on the matter. This is done by raising his consciousness
for the moment so as to touch the fringe of his Master’s consciousness. If he can
free himself of the prejudices of his personality, and knows how to guard himself
against the idiosyncrasies of his temperament, then such a possibility of testing
his judgment by the criterion of the Master is one of the greatest privileges in life
to which the pupil can attain. It enables him to distinguish between what is more
useful and less useful, between what is more helpful and less helpful, as he
works for men in the name of his Master.
There are some pupils put upon Probation who have shortened the usual seven
years between Probation and Acceptance into one year, or even less; but such
fortunate souls are few, for it means that behind them, as they enter upon
Probation, there exists a great accumulated karma of Service, which gives them
the strength and the opportunities which others have not earned. The interval of
time between the various stages on the Probationary Path depends upon the
initiative and the capabilities of the pupil; if he is forceful and determined, he
may override obstacle after obstacle and “enter the Path” swiftly; or, if he lets
opportunities slip by, he may spend decades in one stage before passing to the
next. All pupils, without distinction, receive the inspiration of the Master, but
each assimilates from it according to his capacity.

A still closer link between Master and pupil takes place at the next stage, when
the pupil becomes the “Son of the Master”. More and more the pupil’s hopes and
dreams begin to reflect the wondrous life which the Master lives among His
peers, and slowly the pupil becomes as a cell in the living organism of his
Master. He grows to be a ray of his Master’s consciousness, and he comes to
possess a depth of wisdom which is not his, but is given to him for use by his
Father in God.

Nevermore can the pupil be alone; in griefs and in joys, in darkness and in light,
the Master’s consciousness enfolds that of the pupil, even though at times the
pupil may not be aware of that glorious fact. Now, as he works for the plan of his
Master, whether the world accepts him with acclamation or martyrs him, he
works, not as a solitary craftsman, but as a younger brother by whose side toils
an elder and more expert Brother.

His commandments grievous are not Longer than men think them so; though He
send me forth, I care not, Whilst He gives me strength to go. When or whither,
all is one, On His business, not mine own, I shall never go alone.

At each stage, from Probation to Acceptance and to Initiation, the Master


formally presents his pupil to the Maha-Chohan, the Keeper of the Records of
the Hierarchy; the pupil’s name and rank are entered by the Maha-Chohan in His
imperishable Record.
Coincident usually with the stage of the Son of the Master, the pupil is presented
by his Master to the Great White Brotherhood for Initiation. The Master thereby
affirms to the Brotherhood that his pupil is sufficiently fit, by his ideals and by
his life; and by the balance between his good karma and bad, to share in the
mysterious life of that august Body, and to be a channel of Its forces to the
world. Besides his own Master, a second member of the Brotherhood, of the rank
of a Master, has also to stand sponsor for the candidate. The presentation is made
in the first instance to the Maha-Chohan, who then appoints one of the Adepts to
act as the Hierophant Initiator. Either in the Hall of Initiation, or in some other
appointed place, the candidate is formally initiated at a stately ceremony. What
happens to the candidate is truly an “initiation”, i.e., a beginning. It is the
beginning of a new phase of existence, where the Personality becomes steadily
more and more a reflection of the Ego, and the Ego himself begins to draw upon
the powers of his Monad34.
The Soul of Man is in truth that highest part of him which is the Monad; but
from that moment, when the Monad made the causal body out of the animal
group-soul at individualization, the “Spark hangs from the Flame by the finest
thread of Fohat”. The Ego, though linked thus to the Monad, has had, up to the
moment of Initiation, no means of communication with that highest aspect of
himself. But at Initiation, at the call of the Hierophant, the Monad descends into
the causal body to take the vows of Initiation. From that moment, the “finest
thread of Fohat” becomes as a bundle of threads, and the Ego, instead of hanging
merely as a “spark”, becomes as the lower end of a funnel, which reaches
upwards to the Monad and brings down from him life and light and strength.
From the time of Initiation, there comes into the Initiate a virility and a power of
resistance of which he was not capable before, and he finds thenceforth in his
own self a Rock of Ages which nothing can shake.

After his Initiation, the candidate is taken by his Master, or by a senior pupil, to
the Buddhic plane, to be taught to function there in his Buddhic vehicle. This
means that the causal body must be transcended. Here now happens what has not
happened before. Each night, when he left his body to work on the astral or the
mental plane, his physical body, or his astral—one or both, as the case may be—
has been left behind on the bed, to be donned when he returned to them. When
he leaves the higher mental plane for the Buddhic plane, he of course leaves his
causal body; but this causal body, instead of remaining with the physical, astral
and mental bodies, vanishes.
When the pupil, from his Buddhic vehicle, looks down on to the higher mental
plane, no causal body is there any longer to represent him. It is true that, when
he returns, he finds himself in a causal body again; but it is not the causal body
which he has had for millions of years since the day of individualization, but a
causal body which is a replica of that age-long house of his.
This experience shows the Initiate that he is not the Ego, but something more
transcendental still; he knows now at first hand that his “self”, to which he has
clung from the time of individualization, is no true self at all, but only “that thing
which he has with pain created for his own use and by means of which he
purposes, as his growth slowly develops his intelligence, to reach to the life
beyond individuality”35. Also, with his first Buddhic experience, the Initiate
knows, not merely believes on faith, the Unity of all that lives—how all men’s
lives, their griefs as their joys, their failures as their successes, are inseparable
from his life. Thenceforth, his standard of all things is changed; he has shifted
his center from that of his personal self and its interests to that of a greater Self,
the “great Orphan”, Humanity. At Initiation, the Soul “enters the Stream”, (Fig.
121).

This is the ancient Buddhist phrase, which describes the great transition which
takes place in the life of the Initiate. He enters the great tide of the Will of the
Logos, which has determined that, on this Earth Chain, the majority of our
humanity shall commit themselves to His Plan, before the great day of testing in
the Fifth Round, when the laggard souls must drop out of evolution, as the
failures of the Earth Chain. They drop out, not for ever, but only for an age;
when the next Chain begins, they resume their evolution, after their long rest, at
that level whence they dropped out from the Earth Chain.
This is that “eternal damnation” with which the ungodly are threatened in
Christianity. But it is not a condemnation, but rather an evolutionary
arrangement for those souls who must drop out, because they cannot keep pace
with their more spiritually equipped fellows. Nor is it eternal, but only, as in the
original Greek of the New Testament, “eonian”, that is, for the period of an eon
or dispensation. But he who has “entered the Stream” is “safe” or “saved”; and,
slowly or with speed, he will “attain Nirvana”, the goal of human perfection,
according to the plan for the Earth Chain. Therefore the Initiate is called in
Buddhism Sotapanna, “he who has entered the Stream”.

It is said that usually seven lives intervene between the First Initiation and the
Fourth, that of the Arhat, and that similarly between the Arhat and the Asekha,
seven more lives are necessary in which to do the required work of purification.
Each Initiation means an expansion of consciousness, and each must be prepared
for by adequate experience and self-training. But while one Initiate may take the
full limit of time for the work to be done, another may condense it all into a
much briefer period. It is largely a matter of the accumulated karma of the
individual, i.e., of the work done in past lives, and of the growth in strength and
purification achieved by him in them. But all who “enter the Stream” reach the
“further shore”, that is, to the bliss of Nirvana.

The stages on the Path of Holiness, as this process of spiritual unfoldment is


called, are marked by expansions of consciousness, and by the gift by the Great
White Brotherhood of new knowledge and new powers to the Initiate. The
Brotherhood requires from the candidate, before he can pass from one stage to
another, a record of work done for humanity, a freedom from specified mental
and moral defects, and the possession of certain spiritual faculties. In particular,
there are ten “Fetters”, which the candidate must cast off one by one, before he
can finally come to Adeptship. After the candidate has “entered the Stream”, and
before he can be given the Second Initiation, he must show, besides the record of
work which he presents, that he is free of the first three Fetters; these are,
according to Buddhist terminology:
(1)Sakkayaditthi,
(2) Vichikichchha, and
(3) Silabbataparamasa.

The first Fetter, Sakkayaditthi36, means “the delusion as to one’s individuality or


Self”. Many a man thinks of his physical body as the Self; and he identifies
himself with its lusts and cravings, with its health or want of health, with its
persistence during life, or with its death. A man more evolved will identify his
Self with his “temperament”, with his professions of belief, with his religious
and esthetic ideas, and with his sympathies and antipathies. Only very few, who
are capable of dispassion and analysis, will begin to realize how most of the
ideas and emotions, which a man thinks are his own, are in reality a garment
which he wears, a garment which is less of his own making and far more made
for him by his sex, race, caste or class, and religion. And all, except the supreme
idealists, instinctively make a distinction between their personal selves and the
humanity of which they are units.

To get rid of the Fetter of the delusion of Self is to know what the real Self is—
that It is the Heart of all that lives, and that Its gain and good come only from the
gain and good of the Whole. The Buddhic experience, when the causal body
vanishes, shows the way to the Initiate to discover by experiment and experience
what is that true Self in him, which has no part in the limiting forces of “race,
creed, sex, caste or color”.

The second Fetter, Vichikichchha37, means “Doubt”. This is doubt as to “God’s


plan, which is Evolution”, especially as to that part which concerns the growth
of the individual by the process of Reincarnation, in accordance with the Law of
Karma. There are many stages in doubt, from rank disbelief to the acceptance of
a truth as a “working hypothesis”. In practical conduct, the noblest lives have
been lived by men and women who have had only working hypotheses as to the
nature of existence. A lofty idealism, based on working hypotheses, will lead a
man through the gates of Initiation; but there comes the time when some at least
of his working hypotheses must be living facts of his inmost consciousness, facts
known to be true because, by outer observation and by inward realization, they
are part of his individuality evermore. The Fetter of Doubt as to the fundamental
laws governing human evolution must be utterly thrown aside, before the soul
can pass to the second stage.

The third Fetter, Silabbataparamasa38, means “reliance upon rites and


ceremonies”. It was the Lord Christ who pointed out in Palestine that “the
sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath; therefore the Son of
man is Lord also of the sabbath”. It was the same great truth which the Lord
Buddha proclaimed, when He held that reliance upon prayers and invocations,
upon rites and ceremonies, is a superstition, from which the wise man should be
free. Rituals and ceremonies, when scientifically constructed, are like any other
piece of scientific mechanism; they are reservoirs of energy or conductors of
force. But they are to be servants to do man’s will, not masters to control man’s
behaviour. This is the true attitude towards rites and ceremonies.
They are not necessary, nor indispensable, for wise conduct or for cooperation
with the Divine; they are useful, especially to souls of certain temperaments; to
help them to attune their wills to the One Will. But the same work can be done
by earnest striving and aspiration, each man for himself, without rites and
ceremonies, and without help of priests or Devas or Angels. The advice and
guidance of men or Supermen, of earthly or heavenly denizens, are only useful
to enable a man to look up and not down, forward and not back; but these
helpers cannot tread the Path for him, nor lead him to Salvation. A man must
“save” himself. To know utterly that within one’s own self, and not without, is
“the Way, the Truth and the Life”, is to cast off forever this Fetter of
Superstition.

When the Master finds that the pupil has transcended the first three Fetters, and
has to his credit the requisite amount of work done, then He presents the pupil
once again for Initiation. As before, in a similar stately ceremony, the Hierophant
opens up at Initiation new possibilities of consciousness in the candidate, and
entrusts him with those secrets and powers which appertain to the new stage.
The Initiate of the second grade is called Sakadagamin, “he who returns once”,
for only one more physical birth is obligatory for him; at the end of his next
physical life he can, if he so chooses, complete the remaining stages of the Path
without returning to incarnation.

As he passes on to the next Initiation, new faculties must be evolved, and a yet
larger record of work must be achieved. There are no Fetters to be cast off
between the Second and Third Initiations; but the higher mind must be made a
mirror of the wisdom of the Intuition, and trained to conceive and elaborate
those truths which the mind cannot discover, unless implanted in it by a faculty
greater than the mind.

When the higher mind has become the tool of the Intuition, and the pupil’s
record of service is adequate, he is presented by his Master for the Third
Initiation. He becomes then Anagamin, “not returning”; for birth in a physical
body, unless he so chooses, is no longer obligatory in order to attain to the final
goal. The work can be done in the invisible worlds, and the Initiate can from
there, if he so decides, proceed to the Fourth and Fifth Initiations.
Between the Third and Fourth Initiations, two Fetters must be cast off:
Kamaraga, sensuality, and Patigha, anger. Of course, long before this, all the
cruder forms of sense-gratification and anger will have been eliminated by the
Initiate; but there are subtle forms of these two Fetters which bind the aspirant as
firmly as their cruder forms enslave the man of the world. In addition to freedom
from these Fetters, and the record of work, the candidate must show that he has
acquired mastery over some of the invisible worlds, and that his brain
consciousness can be made, when necessary, a true record of his life on higher
planes. At the Fourth Initiation, he becomes the Arhat, “the venerable”. During
all the stages—Sotapanna, Sakadagamin, Anagamin and Arhat—the Initiate is
sekha, a “disciple”, under the instruction and supervision of a Master of the
Wisdom. The next stage is to become Asekha, “no-more-disciple”, the Master39.
He is a Master of the Wisdom, that is, he has within him all the capacities and
powers which are requisite in order to know all that concerns the evolution-past,
present and future-of the Planetary Chain to which he belongs. But before this
stage can be reached, five more Fetters must be cast aside, the hardest of all.
Lo! like fierce foes slain by some warrior,
Ten sins along these Stages lie in dust,
The Love of Self, False Faith, and Doubt are three
Two more, Hatred and Lust.
Who of these Five is conqueror hath trod
Three Stages out of Four; yet there abide
The Love of Life on earth, Desire for Heaven, Self-Praise, Error, and
Pride40.

The five Fetters which the Arhat must cast off before he can take the Fifth
Initiation, that of the Asekha, are Rulparaga, “desire for life in worlds of form”,
Aruparaga, “desire for life in worlds of no-form”, Mano “pride “, Uddhachchha,
“irritability”, and Avijja, “ignorance”. What is the true significance of these
terms it is difficult to say; but knowledge about these five Fetters is not essential
to those who have not yet entered the Path. Suffice it to say that, before the Fifth
Initiation can be taken, man must put on the attributes of the Superman; he must
become the Christos, “the Anointed”, who has come “unto the measure of the
stature of the fullness of Christ”.41

This is the great Day for which the Monad went forth a “kingly crown to gain”;
and when he gains it, he gains it not for himself but for all creatures, human,
sub-human and super-human. All nature rejoices in his achievement; for one
more Saviour of Humanity has joined the ranks of those who live to give utterly,
as the Logos gives. It is said that when one of our humanity attains to Perfection,
all Nature thrills with joyous awe and feels subdued. The silver star now
twinkles out the news to the night-blossoms, the streamlet to the pebbles ripples
out the tale; dark ocean-waves will roar it to the rocks surf-bound, scent-laden
breezes sing it to the vales, and stately pines mysteriously whisper: “A Master
has arisen, a Master Of The Day”42.

* * * *
Know, O disciple, that those who have passed through the silence, and felt its
peace and retained its strength, they long that you shall pass through it also....
Give your aid to the few strong hands that hold back the powers of darkness
from obtaining complete victory. Then do you enter into a partnership of joy,
which brings indeed terrible toil and profound sadness, out also a great and ever-
increasing delight43.

These are the words of a Master of the Wisdom, uttered to those who seek to
serve God or Man or an Ideal. There awaits each man and woman of noble
instincts and pure enthusiasms such a life of delight as only those know who
have become Disciples. It is a delight which comes not from ease and the
fruition of dreams, but from ceaseless toil in the noblest cause which man’s
imagination can conceive. To look up and see God, and know that one can be
His messenger; to look down and see men’s ignorance and misery, and know that
in one’s hand is the power to lessen both for them; to look round at nature and
know that one can become her prophet; to look within and know that a Light is
there to lead men from the darkness of death to a new day—it is these things
which inspire; those who have torn the veil of self-interest which enwraps them,
and have seen something of the Hidden Light and the Hidden Work. It was said
by the Rishis of India, of those who see the Heavenly Vision: Nanyah panthah
vidyate ‘yanaya—“No other path at all is there to go.” For those who have seen
what the Logos does and, from that what the Logos is, there is indeed “no other
path at all to go”.
The Path is full of toil, and renunciation of hopes and dreams, and weariness; yet
are the days and nights, when treading that Path” suffused with a keen
enthusiasm inspiring to new hopes and to new dreams, and filled with the delight
of knowledge and mastery. It is said in a book of occult maxims: “When one
enters the Path, he lays his heart upon the cross; when the cross and the heart
have become” one, then hath he reached the goal.” And that goal is a
Transfiguration. To that Transfiguration the Logos calls us, and to go whither He
calls is to discover what has never yet been revealed.
Enter the Path; There is no grief like hate!
No pains like passion, no deceit like sense!
Enter the Path! Far hath he gone whose foot
Treads down one fond offence.
Enter the Path! There spring the healing streams
Quenching all thirst! There bloom th’ immortal flowers
Carpeting all the way with joy! There throng Swiftest and sweetest
hours!44
CHAPTER XVI
GOD’S PLAN, WHICH IS EVOLUTION

There is a saying attributed to Plato which is full of significance: it is, “God


geometrizes”. In that saying we have the proclamation of the Divine Wisdom
that there exists a God of the universe, and that all nature is a creation by Him
after a Plan. Modern science, with her doctrine of evolution, acknowledges a
“design in Nature”, but that design is to most scientists, merely the result of the
mechanical interplay of natural forces, and it in no way warrants the belief in a
Creator. It is only a scientist here and there who is ready to acknowledge that the
structure of the universe reveals the mind of a “pure mathematician”, the Great
Architect of the Universe.
The Ancient Wisdom proclaims with no hesitating voice that every part of
nature’s design reflects the plan of a Divine Mind. This “God’s plan, which is
Evolution” is not mechanical; what seems a “fortuitous concourse of atoms” is
the resultant diagonal of the energies of the Logos, and their quantity and
direction as they operate are determined by Him at each moment of time.

It is difficult for the modern mind to imagine our Solar System as a living
organism. Yet that is what it is. The sphere in space, whose center is the Sun and
whose radius is the distance from the center to the trans-Plutonian planet “X”45,
is the physical body of the Logos, and His mind directs all the activities within
that vast sphere. The magnitude of that Mind baffles human imagination; only a
few glimpses here and there of Its wonders can we gain as we study creation.
Looking at that Mind with the heart, It appears as infinite Love; observing It
with the developed artistic imagination, It is infinite Beauty.
When the mind looks at Its activities in visible nature, there is revealed a
fascinating geometrical design. Why “God geometrizes” we may not know till
our little minds can directly contact His great Mind; we can but look with our
eyes and ponder on what they report, and what they report is order, rhythm and
beauty.
All matter is electricity, though no one yet knows what is electricity, nor what is
magnetism, the force induced by electricity. Unknown as these two forces are in
their true nature, we yet know that, as one of them, magnetism, operates,
geometrical design at once appears. When needles are pierced upright in corks,
each needle made into a magnet with a north and south pole, and when the corks
are allowed freely to float in water, and when over the floating needles there is
held a powerful electro-magnet, the result is shown in Fig. 122.

When only one needle floats, it comes directly under the magnet; on the
introduction of a second cork, the two corks range themselves side by side; three
form a triangle; four a square; five a pentagon; six a pentagon with a needle at its
center. The experiment has been carried to 52 needles; with 51, the circles are of
6, 11, 14 and 19, with one needle in the middle. With 52 needles, the circles are
the same, but instead of one needle, two form the nucleus round which the
circles are grouped. Why do the magnets arrange themselves in these
geometrical designs? Because so to act is “God’s plan” for magnetism.

For, everything has work to do, mapped out for it in that Plan. Even at this very
beginning of physical forces, “number” and geometry come into play. It was this
that Pythagoras taught when he said that the universe is constructed according to
“number”. Everywhere we look, a geometrical design appears. And as rhythm in
structure and movement means music, the universe makes music as it works at
its tasks. The electrons make waves as they rush through the ether; but their
notes are scarcely within the audibility of the average clairaudient ear. But the
note which the Earth makes as it circles the Sun, pushing its way through the
ether, and the harmonies of that note, can be heard46. Each visible and invisible
planet has its note, and the “music of the spheres” is not a fantasy, but a most
sober verity.

Let us look for a moment now at the ultimate physical atom (Fig.123).

It is a living heart, pulsating with energy; with its three thicker whorls and the
seven thinner, it is also a transformer; each whorl is made up of seven orders of
spirillae. Spirals and spirillae are its basis or structure; the atom is fashioned to
do a work.

“In the three whorls flow currents of different electricities, the seven vibrate in
response to etheric-waves of all kinds—to sound, light, heat, etc.; they show the
seven colors of the spectrum; give out the seven sounds of the natural scale;
respond in a variety of ways to physical vibration—flashing, surging, pulsing
bodies, they move incessantly, inconceivably beautiful and brilliant.

“The atom has—as observed so far—three proper motions, i.e., motions of its
own, independent of any imposed on it from outside. It turns incessantly upon its
own axis, spinning like a top; it describes a small circle with its axis, as though
the axis of the spinning top moved in a small circle; it has a regular pulsation, a
contraction and expansion, like the pulsation of the heart. When a force is
brought to bear upon it, it dances up and down, flings itself wildly from side to
side, performs the most astonishing and rapid gyrations, but the three
fundamental motions incessantly persist. If it be made to vibrate, as a whole, at
the rate which gives anyone of the seven colors, the whorl belonging to that
color glows out brilliantly.”47
Why has the atom this peculiar shape, and these many motions and functions?
Because that is “God’s plan” for the atom. Out of its tiny life the Logos expects a
cooperation, and age by age the atom is being trained by His agents to perform
that duty. And when men are willing to do their duty to the full, then the atom
and mankind will join in a common work with a forcefulness not now possible.

Order, rhythm and beauty are more evident to our minds when we look at the
shapes of the chemical elements48. The five “Platonic Solids” (Fig. 124) give the
axes of structure for all the elements. Verily God geometrizes, as He builds the
bricks of matter out of which the solar system is to be made.

Why is Calcium a tetrahedron and Phosphorus a cube? Because it is God’s plan.


For each element has its part in the Great Plan; each gives to the universe its own
revelation of the nature of the Logos. Each is a mirror of the inexhaustible
fullness of the Divine Life; each is a channel, both to bring down to earth the
energies of that Life, as also to conduct upwards and inwards to It the response
which nature gives.

When we come to the molecular world, who that has looked at minerals has not
noted how crystals carry out geometrical design to perfection? The precision of
their angles is often more perfect than can be achieved by the most accurate of
man-made measuring tools. After building angular solids, exquisite for
symmetry and beauty, the mineral life next fashions out of them solids with
curves; one can but perennially marvel at the ingenuity of the mineral, as it
arranges tiny crystals of quartz and other minerals to make spirals (Fig. 125).

The life activities of the mineral kingdom are a glorification of the Divine Mind
which thinks in “numbers”, and ever shapes the combinations of the elements
into forms of order, rhythm and beauty. Each mineral carries out God’s plan for
it, and the crystal world is a mirror of those geometrical laws of the Divine Mind
which the artist senses and the mathematician deduces.

As the life of the Logos expresses itself in more pliant forms of matter, the
rhythm and the music become ever more complex with each higher stage. Each
plant is built rhythmically, the place of leaf on twig, and branch on stem, being
fixed by laws of geometry and design. When we look at the flowers, then each
flower, built as it is according to “number”, is as a chord in a great musical
octave. Consider the arrangement of sepals and petals, of stamens and ovaries, in
any flower, and the geometry of the mineral life reappears in new variations and
combinations at the next stage as the vegetable group-soul; surely God
geometrizes as He builds the four types of Fig.126, the Loosestrifes, Gourds,
Borageworts and Geraniums.
And when we come to the life of the animal kingdom, how exquisite is God’s
geometry in the shell of the Nautilus pompilius (Fig. 127), and in that of
Solarium (Fig. 128).

Beauty is there clear to our gaze; but what of the laws of mathematics in their
curves, and of mechanics in the moulding of their chambers? In the Nautilus,
Surely a Grand Geometrician is visibly at work, and His Mind is full of rhythm
and melody.

In all the myriads of creatures of the animal kingdom, God geometrizes as in the
plant and the mineral. But His geometry is less evident, though the movement of
every muscle illustrates laws of rhythmic motion, and a higher beauty exists in
the animal than in plant or mineral. Grace of line and limb and movement, with a
complexity of rhythm difficult to analyze, characterizes all the forms of the
animal world. In each animal God geometrizes, and teaches its duty in His plan.

So “God’s plan, which” is Evolution”, is worked out in each order of creation,


from the atom to the animal. And when the animal life individualizes to become
the habitation of a Monad, a Son of God gone forth to realize his Divinity, then
the whole life of man, did he but know how to live it, can become one harmony
of thought and feeling and action, bodying forth, in worlds visible and invisible,
form after form of beauty. Every atom and cell in his vehicles then spring forth
to give their love of order, rhythm and beauty, to make his life as a melody in the
eternal symphony of the Logos. For, we make music wherever we go, with all
our bodies—physical, astral, mental and causal; either we amplify the great
chords sounded by the Logos, and weave out of them new melodies of our own,
or we mar the music of nature, and introduce discords which reverberate and
cause confusion in the melodies which others, more noble than we, are trying to
weave.

God’s plan for men is to unfold their latent Divinity. For that, the Logos sends us
forth from Himself to live our separate lives, each bound on a wheel of birth and
death and birth again; and each life is as a day in the School of Eternal Life.
There, we learn, taught by His Messengers, what are the lessons necessary for us
in order to pass from a lower class to a higher (Fig. 129).
God’s plan for the savage is selfishness, with an ever-insistent “I want it”, in
order to strengthen the center of his individuality. But after many lives as the
savage, God’s plan for him changes, and “We”, not “I”, becomes slowly the
lesson which he must learn; he must now cooperate with the Logos by sharing,
not by asking for himself alone. “Let us share it” becomes his creed as the
citizen of a community. Comes next the later stage, when he must be spiritual,
having as the keynote of his life a desire to share the burdens of others. “I will
help you” is the way that God’s plan speaks to the heart of the man rising to
spirituality.

God’s plan for the Disciple is that he shall live in the name of his Master,
becoming day by day a nobler warden and a saintlier almoner of the blessings
which his Master creates for the world. At the last stage of all, that of the Master
of the Wisdom, God’s plan is fully achieved, and the soul lives in an
indescribable unity of man and God. “I seek not mine own will, but the will of
the Father,” is then the motive of every action. As he alone can know, and none
below the level of his achievement; he realizes what the Sages meant when they
said, “I am the Self”, and what Christ meant when He proclaimed, “I and my
Father are one “.

And this wonder, which is each moment’s experience for the Master of the
Wisdom, is God’s plan for all men, the savage and the civilized, the spiritual and
the Disciple. And He will fulfil it in His own good time, winning the cooperation
of all, of the sinner as of the saint. For that purpose alone has He sacrificed
Himself to fashion a universe for our habitation and growth. Where He works,
no failure is possible, and to join Him in His work is to feel deathlessness and
mastery.
God’s plan is not, as it sometimes seems to our eyes, a round of weariness and
pain, an implacable Fate which wrings out of man many griefs for each joy
which he creates for himself. To the babe who tries to walk, there is stress of
limb and anxiety of mind as he makes his first steps; but, if a mother’s joyous
face and laughing eyes are before him to encourage him, the effort of body is
little, compared to the final bliss in her loving arms. So is it with all life. If, from
one angle, evolution seems an unending stress, from another it is an exhilarating
play. It is the great Game which the Logos plays with us, and the laws of
Righteousness are the rules of the game.
The joyousness which is the undercurrent of nature’s processes must be sensed
by each for himself, out of his own experiences. It may take many a life before
he can say, in spite of all that he has suffered, that Love is the fulfilling bf the
Law; but his evolution is incomplete till he knows for himself that the heart of
things is indeed Love and Joy, and that all the tragedy of evolution is only a
passing phase.

One of the mystery teachings of the past is that the universe is at play while it is
at work. Hinduism teaches that all manifestation is the “dance of Shiva”, and the
same doctrine was taught in the Eleusinian Mysteries. One of the experiences of
the initiated in those Mysteries was to feel what was in the “sacred basket”; these
were the “playthings” of Dionysus, the Divine Child. Tradition reports that they
were the dice, the spinning-top, the ball, and the mirror. What they were in
reality, tie have in Fig. 130.

The “dice” were the five Platonic Solids, which give the axes for the growth of
the chemical elements and crystals; the “top” was a model of the ultimate
physical atom; the “ball” was a model of the Earth, and the “mirror” was the
symbol of the seven planes on which are reflected what the Logos fashions on
high. These were the “play-things” of the Logos as the Divine Child and the
initiates at Eleusis were taught to sense beneath the processes of nature a deep
under-current of joy.
All the principles of Theosophy, which this work has so far tried to explain, are
summed up in our next figure, Fig. 131.

The first and the last maxims give the clue to what is happening around us, that
all is consciousness, the Divine Consciousness itself, and none less; and that,
wherever the Divine: Manifestation reveals itself there is neither “less” nor
“more”. Where He is, there He is in His Perfection.

We have so far considered God’s plan largely from the standpoint of man, as the
individual and as the unit, and only here and there gained a glimpse of the Plan
in its larger aspect.

There remains only to attempt to see the Plan as a whole. Could we but step
outside the limits of the planes of our globe, then should we see the work of the
Logos for the Solar System as a whole.

Those who are able to see that work in its entirety say that the appearance of the
Solar System from high planes is that of a wonderful cosmic Flower of many
petals and colors, with a great golden pistil which is the Sun, as the heart of the
Flower (see frontispiece, Fig.132.)49 Each of the seven Planetary Logoi
permeates the whole system with His influences, but the matter especially
affected by one type of those influences forms a great ellipsoid in space, the
major focus of which is the Sun, and the minor focus the planet of the Planetary
Logos. These ellipsoids of influence are changing in their relation to each other,
and those changes are partly indicated by the changing positions of the physical
planets. So the Solar System, as the Logos and His seven great Assistants who
work with Him, appears as a great Flower of many petals, with a great, glowing,
golden heart at its center.50

Whoso can attain to this vision of the work of the Logos can never have a
shadow of doubt as to His Love and Might and Beauty. Each vision of the Truth,
through religion or philosophy, through science or art, or through philanthropy
and service, leads the soul one step nearer to the goal, which is, to live and move
and have his being, in full consciousness, and with exceeding joy, in the Logos
of our Solar System.

CONCLUSION

In a swift survey, we have seen what the Ancient Wisdom says of man and his
destiny, of Nature and her message, and of God and His Work. There is no
philosophy to equal Theosophy in its idealism, in its hopefulness, and in its all-
embracing tenderness. It reveals to the intellect so stupendous a panorama of
life’s activities, in worlds visible and invisible, that the mind of man is at first
stupefied, and then transported with its entrancing beauty. Above all, the Ancient
Wisdom does not speculate, but speaks with authority. “These are the eternal
facts of Nature”, say the Teachers of the Wisdom, and They ask us to live a life
of Idealism, because no other life is possible for reasonable men and women
who desire to act in the light of Truth, and not under the sway of error. Well may
the inquirer into Theosophy ask, confronted with its seeming dogmatism: How
can I know for myself that all this is true?

Knowledge is of many kinds—what the senses report, what the mind sees, what
the heart conceives, and what the intuition knows. One or other of these, or all,
are for a man avenues to Truth, according to his temperament. We are not all
alike, and, the value to each of us of the world and its happenings varies
according to what we seek from life. As is the fabric of a man’s mind and heart,
so is his vision of life.
But while what is a fact to one man may perhaps be an illusion to another, there
is one test of Truth which is the same for all. Truth is what compels. A fact of
nature, when once viewed honestly and clearly, thereafter draws all one’s nature
to act in accordance with it; its compulsion may be swift or slow, but such is the
effect on the mind of the Thing-that-is, that the mind can never free itself from
the power of that Thing. Furthermore, if what the mind has seen is a vision of
Truth and not an illusion, the vision grows day by day, ever revealing larger
horizons. Doubts may surge up one after another, but a million doubts cannot
invalidate one truth. The soul who thinks that he has grasped the essence of
Truth can patiently fight on, slaying one by one the hosts of doubts as they arise.

If these many truths of Theosophy are facts in nature, then in time they will
prove themselves so to everyone. They must sooner or later be built into the
fabric of every man’s thinking, if a man is to think truly in accordance with all
facts. They can be seen, one by one, as the faculties necessary for their sight are
developed; but to see all, from the atom at its work to the solar system as it
carries out the Will of the Logos, is not for everyone of us, at our present stage
of limitation. As a man’s consciousness grows, and faculty after faculty is added,
more and more facts will be seen. One by one, each fact, which is at first merely
believed in, will be seen with direct vision, and relied upon with an unassailable
certainty. To all will come this direct vision; but the full vision in its splendor
will come only when the soul becomes the Master of the Wisdom.

Till that day, we can at least each act in the light of the vision of Truth which
each has. If we will only realize that not only the five senses and the mind are
the avenues of sight, but also the aspirations, the imagination, our refined loves
and our spirit of sacrifice, then Truth will pour into our natures from many
avenues which are now barred by us. Life is a greater thing than can be known
by merely one instrument of cognition, the mind; the mind is a useful instrument
to record, but it is a very limiting one to give us vision.
There is no surer way for the inquirer, if he desires to prove one by one the truths
of Theosophy, than to put into practice one great truth which he can readily
accept. It is the truth of Brotherhood. Let a man remember that another is as
himself, that the same life of nature flows in both, that what is hard for himself is
hard for the other too; let him, looking at his neighbour, say, “This is myself, in a
hitherto unknown aspect of me”; let him study with patience this mysterious part
of himself that exists outside of him; then let him see if, as he grows in charity
and long-suffering, he is not mysteriously impelled to discover about man and
God truths of whose existence he was not aware. Loving action is Divine
Wisdom at work and whoso acts lovingly must inevitably come to the Wisdom.

This is the surest way to prove that the truths of Theosophy are realities, and not
the beautiful creations of some philosopher’s brain. If a man cannot believe in all
the teachings of Theosophy, let him at least act as Theosophy teaches. He will
then find that the word “Theosophy” describes a wonderful Reality. And when
he knows, with every fiber of his being, and in each moment of time, that all that
he is—his highest love and sacrifice, his fullest faith and offering—is that
Reality in him, and that apart from It he has no existence, then he will find
within himself an instrument of knowledge by means of which he can discover
all for himself. For God’s Truth is within a man’s own nature; it is not an utter
stranger to him, but ever the Companion of his dreams.
Because man is Divine, the Wisdom is his heritage. Nay, not Wisdom alone, but
Power also—power to dare, to suffer, and to conquer. This sense of Victory,
which brings with it all joy, is the gift which the Ancient Wisdom gives to all
who cherish her.

May 14, 1921

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

In continuation of my obligation to various sources for illustrations, I have to


add the following, with sincere thanks: Fig. 98 to the late C. F. Bragdon;
Fig.101 to The Evening Post, Wellington, New Zealand; Fig. 103 to
Architecture of Athens by Stuart and Revett; Fig. 104 to The Curves of Life
by T. A. Cook; Fig. 106 to Illustrated London News; Fig. 107 to Art Forms in
Nature by Karl Blossfeldt; Fig. 108 to the Australian Museum, Sydney; Fig.
109 to Tiere in Schonen Bildren by K. R. Langewische; Fig. 113 to Vita delle
Piante by R. H. France; Fig. 105 to The Protozoa by G. N. Calkins; Fig. 110
to the famous Japanese painter Chiura of the period of the Shogun Yoritomo.
Notes
[←1]
1 Herbert Spencer, Life, I, page 147

[←2]
These four individuals, A, B, C and D, are respectively the character-egos. Sirius, Orion, Alcyone
and Erato of “The Lives of Alcyone”. Sirius and Alcyone do not, strictly speaking, belong anymore
to class 3 of Fig. 29, since they are now “on the Path”. But as they entered “the Path” only recently—
in the case of Sirius, in his Greek incarnation, 524 B.C., and in the case of Alcyone, in A.D. 1910—
their lives are probably typical of class 3.

[←3]
In the diagram, the black signs represent pains, griefs and worries respectively, and the white
symbolize ideals, inspirations, joys and comforts. See Fig. 36.

[←4]
In 1914, when I wrote, the word “gene” had not been invented as a substitute for Bateson’s “factors”
what are now termed “genes”.

[←5]
The first cell of the embryo, made by the union of the two germ-cells contributed by the parents.

[←6]
I know that physics today has discarded the existence of the aether, since the phenomenon of light
can be explained without any need to postulate a medium in which it moves. All the same the ether
exists, for I see it.

[←7]
I refer here only to those clairvoyants who see objectively, that is, the object is seen in front of them,
and apart from them, just as in the case of physical sight. Many clairvoyants, however,” see”
subjectively, that is, by mental impressions received which create images or pictures.

[←8]
cái giống hoặc được cho làm giống ai/cái gì; vật thay thế giả tạo

[←9]
List of chemical elements as given in the International Atomic Weights Table of 1937: Aluminium,
Antimony, Argon, Arsenic, Barium, Beryllium, Bismuth, Boron, Bromine, Cadmium, Calcium,
Carbon, Caerium, Cesium, Chlorine, Chromium, Cobalt, Columbium, Copper, Dysprosium, Erbium,
Europium, Fluorine, Gadolinium, Gallium, Germanium, Gold, Hagnium, Helium, Holmium,
Hydrogen, Indium, Iodine, Iridium, Iron, Krypton, Lanthanum, Lead, Lithium, Lutecium;
Magnesium, Manganese, Mercury, Molybdenum, Neodymium, Neon, Nickel, Nitrogen, Osmium,
Oxygen, Palladium, Phosphorus, Platinum, Potassium, Praseodymium, Protoactinium, Radium,
Radon, Rhenium, Rhodium, Rubidium, Ruthenium, Samarium, Scandium, Selenium, Silicon, Silver,
Sodium, Strontium, Sulphur, Tantalum, Tellurium, Terbium, Thal- lium, Thorium, Thulium, Tin,
Titanium, Tungsten, Uranium, Vanadium, Xenon, Ytterbium, Yttrium, Zinc, Zirconium.

[←10]
The words “atomic” and “atom “are here used in the ordinary chemical sense, not in that of “Occult
Chemistry”.

[←11]
As discovered by clairvoyant investigation by Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater. See the book,
Occult Chemistry.

[←12]
In quoting from Crookes’s lecture at the Royal Institution, I have left out here and there sentences
and paragraphs of a somewhat technical nature.

[←13]
The word “atom” is used henceforth in the Theosophical sense.

[←14]
The details of this subject of “occult chemistry” will be found in Occult Chemistryby Annie Besant
and C. W. Leadbeater.

[←15]
Occult Chemistry, page 7 of First Edition

[←16]
Tetrahedron, 4, surfaces; Hexahedron, or Cube, 6 surfaces; Octahedron, 8 surfaces; Dodecahedron,
12 surfaces; Icosahedron, 20 surfaces.

[←17]
The dodecahedron also appears in the “ring” series of carbon compounds like napthalene, anthracene,
etc., with 12 funnels pointing to the 12 surfaces of the dodecahedron.

[←18]
As later this element of weight 195.22 was said to be discovered in Canada, a few Canadian chemists
gave it the name of “Canadium”. But the discovery has not been confirmed.

[←19]
If it is desired to get the “atomic weight” in terms of Oxygen = 16, as is done now in Chemistry, the
divisor will have to be made 18.144.

[←20]
There is an isotope of Chlorine with 667 atoms, and weight 37.05.
[←21]
First edition, 1908; second edition, 1919; third edition, 1951. French, Italian and German translations
of this work have appeared.

[←22]
Geddes, Chapters in Modem Botany, pp.8-IO.

[←23]
Lay Sermons, Addresses and Reveries, Chapter, “The Origin of Species”.

[←24]
In the literal sense of the word, i.e” “entering into flesh”, into physical life for the first time. Compare
in the Christian Gospel: Et Verbum caro factum est—“And the Word was made flesh.”

[←25]
Perhaps the aeroplane.

[←26]
In the third edition of Occult Chemistry.

[←27]
See also Fig. 127, the shell of the chambered Nautilus pompilius.

[←28]
The Light of Asia, Book VIII.

[←29]
Bateson, Presidential Address, British Association, 1914.

[←30]
By H. P. Blavatsky.

[←31]
The Light of Asia, Book VIII.

[←32]
The first, second, third and fourth Initiations will be dealt with in the next Chapter, “The Path of
Discipleship”.

[←33]
There are, however, Adepts on both the First and Second Rays who have taken the Seventh Initiation,
and who do not hold the offices of Manu or Bodhisattva, but do other work in the Great Plan.
[←34]
For further information, see The Masters and the Path, by C. W. Leadbeater.

[←35]
Light on the Path

[←36]
Sanskrit: Sat-kaya-drishti

[←37]
Sanskrit: Vichikitsa.

[←38]
Sanskrit: Sh£la-vrata-paramarsha

[←39]
These five stages on the Path probably correspond to the five stages in Hinduism, known as:
1. Kutichaka,
2. Bahudaka,
3. Hamsa,
4. Paramahamsa,
5. Atita.
In the Festivals of the Christian Church, the five Initiations are symbolized in the life- story of the
Christ by five great Festivals, commemorating
(1) the Virgin Birth,
(2) the Baptism,
(3) the Transfiguration,
(4) the Crucifixion and the Resurrection, and
(5) Ascension and Descent of the Holy Ghost.
(See The Hidden Side of Christian Festivals, by C. W. Leadbeater.)

[←40]
Light on the Path, Book VIII.

[←41]
St. Paul, Ephesians, iv, 3.

[←42]
The Voice of the Silence, by H. P. Blavatsky
[←43]
Light on the Path

[←44]
The Light of Asia, Book VIII.

[←45]
See Fig. 3.

[←46]
I can testify to the existence of some of these notes by continuous personal experience night and day.
—C.J.

[←47]
Occult Chemistry, by Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater

[←48]
See Chapter X, “The Evolution of Matter and Force”

[←49]
It is impossible to do more than barely suggest this vision in a diagram. The planets cannot be placed
to a true scale in the small diagram. The colors adopted are not the ancient traditional colors of the
Seven Planetary Logoi, but simply the seven colors of the solar spectrum taken in order. The colors
used in Ancient Chaldea are described in Man: Whence, How and Whither, by Annie Besant and C.
W. Leadbeater, Chap. XIII.

[←50]
See The Inner Life, by C. W. Leadbeater, Vol. I, under “Symbology” [starting with the sentence,
“Another symbol is that of the lotus ...], for a fuller description.

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