Alfred Sinnett was an English
journalist who had the privilege of being instructed by Master Kuthumi so that
later Mr. Sinnett would relay that knowledge to the Western public.
And that he has done, since in
1883 he published a book entitled "Esoteric
Buddhism" in which Mr. Sinnett summarized the teaching given to him by
Master Kuthumi.
And below I transcribe chapters 5
and 6 of this book where he talks about the Devachan and the Kama-Loka.
Unfortunately Mr. Sinnett, later,
when he returned to Europe, wanting to continue communicating with Master
Kuthumi, he began to practice the spiritism (and this despite the fact that Master Kuthumi had
warned him not to do so).
And this is how some malicious
entities of the astral cheated on him by making believe to Mr. Sinnett that
they were his teacher and began to teach him false or deformed information.
And that is why in the following
reprints of his book, Mr. Sinnett added an appendix where he put a summary of
that distorted information. (And the part that corresponds to Devachan and
Kama-Loka, I also put them down at the end of the article.)
And it should be noted that Mr.
Sinnett uses the word "spiritual" (related to spirituality) to designate "spiritist" (related to mediumship),
and often uses the word "elementals" (synonym with the spirits of elements) to designate "elementaries"
(synonym with the astral shells). And I alert you this so you will not get confused if you
decide to read him.
Personally, I feel that Mr.
Sinnett writes in a very complicated way, which makes it very difficult to
understand what he says and that is why I prefer to study directly the Mahatma
Letters, but in spite of that, I put his text to enrich the blog with more
documentation.
* * * * * * * * * *
Index:
·
Chapter 5: Devachan
·
Chapter 6: Kama-Loka
·
Appendix: Additional notes
CHAPTER 5
DEVACHAN
Table of contents:
- Spiritual destinies of the ego
- Karma
- Division of the principles at death
- Progress of the higher duad
- Existence in Devachan
- Subjective progress
- Avitchi
- Earthly connection with Devachan
- Devachanic periods
It was not possible to approach a
consideration of the states into which the higher human principles pass at
death, without first indicating the general framework of the whole design
worked out in the course of the evolution of man.
That much of my task, however,
having now been accomplished, we may pass on to consider the natural destinies
of each human Ego, in the interval which elapses between the close of one
objective life and the commencement of another.
At the commencement of another, the
Karma of the previous objective life determines the state of life into which
the individual shall be born. This doctrine of Karma is one of the most
interesting features of Buddhist philosophy.
There has been no secret about it at
any time, though for want of a proper comprehension of elements in the
philosophy which have been strictly esoteric, it may sometimes have been
misunderstood.
Karma is a collective expression
applied to that complicated group of affinities for good and evil generated by
a human being during life, and the character of which inheres in the molecules
of his fifth principle all through the interval which elapses between his death
from one objective life and his birth into the next.
As stated sometimes, the doctrine
seems to be one which exacts the notion of a superior spiritual authority
summing up the acts of a man's life at its close, taking into consideration his
good deeds and his bad, and giving judgment about him on the whole aspect of
the case.
But a comprehension of the way in
which the human principles divide up at death, will afford a clue to the
comprehension of the way in which Karma operates, and also of the great subject
we may better take up first, the immediate spiritual condition of man after
death.
At death, the three lower principles
(the body, its mere physical vitality, and its astral counterpart) are finally
abandoned by that which really is the Man himself, and the four higher
principles escape into that world immediately above our own; above our own,
that is, in the order of spirituality; not above it at all, but in it and of
it, as regards real locality, — the astral plane (or Kama-Loka, according to a
very familiar Sanskrit expression).
Here a division takes place between
the two duads, which the four higher principles include.
The explanations already given
concerning the imperfect extent to which the upper principles of man are as yet
developed, will show that this estimation of the process, as in the nature of a
mechanical separation of the principles, is a rough way of dealing with the
matter.
It must be modified in the reader's
mind by the light of what has been already said. It may be otherwise described
as a trial of the extent to which the fifth principle has been developed.
Regarded in the light of the former
idea, however, we must conceive the sixth and seventh principles, on the one
hand, drawing the fifth, the human soul, in one direction, while the fourth
draws it back earthward in the other.
Now, the fifth principle is a very
complex entity, separable itself into superior and inferior elements. In the
struggle which takes place between its late companion principles, its best,
purest, most elevated and spiritual portions cling to the sixth, its lower
instincts, impulses, and recollections adhere to the fourth, and it is in a
measure torn asunder.
The lower remnant, associating
itself with the fourth, floats off in the earth's atmosphere, while the best
elements, those, be it understood, which really constitute the Ego of the late
earthly personality, the individuality, the consciousness thereof, follows the
sixth and seventh into a spiritual condition, the nature of which we are about
to examine.
Rejecting the popular English name
for this spiritual condition, as incrusted with too many misconceptions to be
convenient, let us keep to the Oriental designation of that region or state
into which the higher principles of human creatures pass at death.
This is additionally desirable
because, although the Devachan of Buddhist philosophy corresponds in some
respects to the modern European idea of heaven, it differs from heaven in
others which are even more important.
Firstly, however, in Devachan, that
which survives is not merely the individual monad, which survives through all
the changes of the whole evolutionary scheme, and flits from body to body, from
globe to globe, and so forth, — that which survives in Devachan is the man's
own self-conscious personality, under some restrictions indeed, which we will
come to directly, but still it is the same personality as regards its higher
feelings, aspirations, affections, and even tastes, as it was on earth.
Perhaps it would be better to say
the essence of the late self-conscious personality.
It may be worth the reader's while
to learn what Colonel Henry Olcott has to say in his "Buddhist Catechism"
(14th thousand) of the intrinsic difference between “individuality” and
“personality”.
Since he wrote not only under the
approval of the High Priest of the Sripada and Galle, Sumangala, but also under
the direct instruction of his adept Guru, his words will have weight for the
student of Occultism. This is what he says in his Appendix:
« Upon reflection, I have
substituted “personality” for “individuality” as written in the first edition.
The successive appearances upon one or
many earths, or “descents into generation” of the tanhaically-coherent parts (Skandhas) of a certain being, are a
succession of personalities. In each birth the personality differs from that of
the previous or next succeeding birth. Karma, the deus ex machina, masks (or shall we say, reflects?) itself now in
the personality of a sage, again as an artisan, and so on throughout the string
of births.
But though personalities ever shift,
the one line of life along which they are strung like beads, runs unbroken.
It is ever that particular line,
never any other. It is therefore individual, an individual vital undulation
which began in Nirvana or the subjective side of Nature, as the light or heat
undulation through ether began at its dynamic source; is careering through the
objective side of Nature, under the impulse of Karma and the creative direction
of Tanha; and tends through many cyclic changes back to Nirvana. Mr. Rhys
Davids calls that which passes from personality to personality along the
individual chain, “character” or “doing”.
Since “character” is not a mere
metaphysical abstraction, but the sum of one's mental qualities and moral
propensities, would it not help to dispel what Mr. Rhys Davids calls “the
desperate expedient of a mystery”, if we regarded the life undulation as
individuality, and each of its series of natal manifestations as a separate
personality?
The denial of “soul” by Buddha (see
“Sanyutto Nikaya”, the Sutta Pitaka)
points to the prevalent delusive belief in an independent transmissible
personality; an entity that could move from birth to birth unchanged, or go to
a place or state where, as such perfect entity, it could eternally enjoy or
suffer.
And what he shows is that the “I am
I” consciousness is, as regards permanency, logically impossible, since its
elementary constituents constantly change, and the “I” of one birth differs
from the “I” of every other birth. But everything that I have found in Buddhism
accords with the theory of a gradual evolution of the perfect man, viz., a
Buddha through numberless natal experiences.
And in the consciousness of that
person who at the end of a given chain of beings attains Buddhahood, or who
succeeds in attaining the fourth stage of Dhyana, or mystic self-development,
in any one of his births anterior to the final one, the scenes of all these
serial births are perceptible.
In the “Jatakattahavannana”, so well translated by Mr. Rhys Davids, an
expression continually recurs which I think rather supports such an idea, viz.,
“Then the blessed one made manifest an
occurrence hidden by change of birth”, or “that which had been hidden by, etc.”
Early Buddhism, then, clearly held
to a permanency of records in the Akasa, and the potential capacity of man to
read the same when he has evoluted to the stage of true individual
enlightenment. »
The purely sensual feelings and
tastes of the late personality will drop off from it in Devachan, but it does
not follow that nothing is preservable in that state, except feelings and
thoughts having a direct reference to religion or spiritual philosophy.
On the contrary, all the superior
phases, even of sensuous emotion, find their appropriate sphere of development
in Devachan.
To suggest a whole range of ideas by
means of one illustration, a soul in Devachan, if the soul of a man who was
passionately devoted to music, would be continuously enraptured by the
sensations music produces.
The person whose happiness of the
higher sort on earth had been entirely centred in the exercise of the
affections will miss none in Devachan of those whom he or she loved. But, at
once it will be asked, if some of these are not themselves fit for Devachan,
how then?
The answer is, that does not matter.
For the person who loved them they will be there. It is not necessary to say
much more to give a clue to the position.
Devachan is a subjective state. It
will seem as real as the chairs and tables round us; and remember that, above
all things, to the profound philosophy of Occultism, are the chairs and tables,
and the whole objective scenery of the world, unreal and merely transitory
delusions of sense.
As real as the realities of this
world to us, and even more so, will be the realities of Devachan to those who
go into that state.
From this it ensues that the
subjective isolation of Devachan, as it will perhaps be conceived at first, is
not real isolation at all, as the word is understood on the physical plane of
existence; it is companionship with all that the true soul craves for, whether
persons, things, or knowledge.
And a patient consideration of the
place in Nature which Devachan occupies will show that this subjective
isolation of each human unit is the only condition which renders possible
anything which can be described as a felicitous spiritual existence after death
for mankind at large, and Devachan is as much a purely and absolutely
felicitous condition for all who attain it, as Avitchi is the reverse of it.
There is no inequality or injustice
in the system; Devachan is by no means the same thing for the good and the
indifferent alike, but it is not a life of responsibility, and therefore there
is no logical place in it for suffering any more than in Avitchi there is any
room for enjoyment or repentance.
It is a life of effects, not of
causes; a life of being paid your earnings, not of laboring for them. Therefore
it is impossible to be during that life cognizant of what is going on on earth.
Under the operation of such cognition there would be no true happiness possible
in the state after death.
A heaven which constituted a watch-tower
from which the occupants could still survey the miseries of the earth, would
really be a place of acute mental suffering for its most sympathetic, unselfish,
and meritorious inhabitants.
If we invest them in imagination
with such a very limited range of sympathy that they could be imagined as not
caring about the spectacle of suffering after the few persons to whom they were
immediately attached had died and joined them, still they would have a very
unhappy period of waiting to go through before survivors reached the end of an
often long and toilsome existence below.
And even this hypothesis would be
further vitiated by making heaven most painful for occupants who were most unselfish
and sympathetic, whose reflected distress would thus continue on behalf of the
afflicted race of mankind generally, even after their personal kindred had been
rescued by the lapse of time.
The only escape from this dilemma
lies in the supposition that heaven is not yet opened for business, so to
speak, and that all people who have ever lived, from Adam downward, are still
lying in a death-like trance, waiting for the resurrection at the end of the
world.
This hypothesis also has its
embarrassments, but we are concerned at present„with the scientific harmony of
esoteric Buddhism, not with the theories of other creeds.
Readers, however, who may grant that
a purview of earthly life from heaven would render happiness in heaven
impossible, may still doubt whether true happiness is possible in the state, as
it may be objected, of monotonous isolation now described. The objection is
merely raised from the point of view of an imagination that cannot escape from
its present surroundings.
To begin with, about monotony. No
one will complain of having experienced monotony during the minute, or moment,
or half hour, as it may have been, of the greatest happiness he may have
enjoyed in life.
Most people have had some happy
moments, at all events, to look back to for the purpose of this comparison; and
let us take even one such minute or moment, too short to be open to the least
suspicion of monotony, and imagine its sensations immensely prolonged without
any external events in progress to mark the lapse of time.
There is no room, in such a
condition of things, for the conception of weariness. The unalloyed,
unchangeable sensation of intense happiness goes on and on, not forever,
because the causes which have produced it are not infinite themselves, but for
very long periods of time, until the efficient impulse has exhausted itself.
Nor must it be supposed that there
is, so to speak, no change of occupation for souls in Devachan, — that any one
moment of earthly sensation is selected for exclusive perpetuation. As a
teacher of the highest authority on this subject writes:
« There are two fields of
causal manifestations, the objective and subjective. The grosser energies (those
which operate in the denser condition of matter) manifest objectively in the
next physical life, their outcome being the new personality of each birth
marshaling within the grand cycle of the evoluting individuality.
It is but the moral and spiritual
activities that find their sphere of effects in Devachan. And, thought and
fancy being limitless, how can it be argued for one moment that there is anything
like monotony in the state of Devachan?
Few are the men whose lives were so
utterly destitute of feeling, love, or of a more or less intense predilection
for some one line of thought as to be made unfit for a proportionate period of
Devachanic experience beyond their earthly life.
So, for instance, while the vices,
physical and sensual attractions, say, of a great philosopher, but a bad friend
and a selfish man, may result in the birth of a new and still greater
intellect, but at the same time a most miserable man, reaping the Karmic
effects of all the causes produced by the “old” being, and whose make-up was
inevitable from the preponderating proclivities of that being in the preceding
birth, the intermedial period between the two physical births cannot be, in
Nature's exquisitely well-adjusted laws, but a hiatus of unconsciousness.
There can be no such dreary blank as
kindly promised, or rather implied, by Christian Protestant theology, to the “departed
souls”, which, between death and “resurrection”, have to hang on in space, in
mental catalepsy awaiting the “Day of Judgment”.
Causes produced by mental and
spiritual energy being far greater and more important than those that are
created by physical impulses, their effects have to be, for weal or woe,
proportionately as great. Lives on this earth, or other earths, affording no proper
field for such effects, and every laborer being entitled to his own harvest,
they have to expand in either Devachan or Avitchi.
(Note: The lowest states of Devachan
interchain with those of Avitchi.)
Bacon, for instance, whom a poet called:
“The brightest, wisest, meanest of mankind”, might reappear in his next
incarnation as a greedy money-getter, with extraordinary intellectual
capacities.
But, however great the latter, they
would find no proper field in which that particular line of thought, pursued
during his previous lifetime by the founder of modern philosophy, could reap
all its dues.
It would be but the astute lawyer,
the corrupt Attorney-General, the ungrateful friend, and the dishonest Lord
Chancellor, who might find, led on by his Karma, a congenial new soil in the
body of the money-lender, and reappear as a new Shylock.
But where would Bacon, the
incomparable thinker, with whom philosophical inquiry upon the most profound
problems of Nature was his “first and last and only love”, where would this intellectual
giant of his race once disrobed of his lower nature, go to?
Have all the effects of that
magnificent intellect to vanish and disappear?
Certainly not. Thus his moral and
spiritual qualities would also have to find a field in which their energies
could expand themselves. Devachan is such a field.
Hence, all the great plans of moral
reform, of intellectual research into abstract principles of Nature — all the
divine, spiritual aspirations that had so filled the brightest part of his life
would, in Devachan, come to fruition; and the abstract entity, known in the
preceding birth as Francis Bacon, and that may be known in its subsequent
re-incarnation as a despised usurer (that Bacon's own creation, his
Frankenstein, the son of his Karma) shall in the meanwhile occupy itself in
this inner world, also of its own preparation, in enjoying the effects of the
grand beneficial spiritual causes sown in life.
It would live a purely and
spiritually conscious existence (a dream of realistic vividness) until Karma,
being satisfied in that direction, and the ripple of force reaching the edge of
its sub-cyclic basin, the being should move into its next area of causes,
either in this same world or another, according to his stage of progression.
. . .
Therefore, there is “a change of
occupation”, a continual change, in Devachan. For that dream-life is but the
fruition, the harvest-time, of those psychic seed-germs dropped from the tree
of physical existence in our moments of dream and. hope — fancy-glimpses of
bliss and happiness, stifled in an ungrateful social soil, blooming in the rosy
dawn of Devachan, and ripening under its ever-fructifying sky.
If man had but one single moment of
ideal experience, not even then could it be, as erroneously supposed, the
indefinite prolongation of that “single moment”.
That one note, struck from the lyre
of life, would form the key-note of the being's subjective state, and work out
into numberless harmonic tones and semitones of psychic phantasmagoria. There,
all unrealized hopes, aspirations, dreams, become fully realized, and the
dreams of the objective become the realities of the subjective existence.
And there, behind the curtain of
Maya, its vaporous and deceptive appearances are perceived by the Initiate, who
has learned the great secret how to penetrate thus deep into the Arcana of Being.
. . »
As physical existence has its
cumulative intensity from infancy to prime, and its diminishing energy
thenceforward to dotage and death, so the dream-life of Devachan is lived correspondentially.
There is the first flutter of
psychic life, the attainment of prime, the gradual exhaustion of force passing
into conscious lethargy, semi-unconsciousness, oblivion and — not death but
birth!
Birth into another personality and
the resumption of action which daily begets new congeries of causes that must
be worked out in another term of Devachan.
“It is not a reality then, it is a
mere dream”, objectors will urge; “the soul so bathed in a delusive sensation
of enjoyment which has no reality all the while is being cheated by Nature, and
must encounter a terrible shock when it wakes to its mistake”.
But, in the nature of things, it
never does or can wake. The waking from Devachan is its next birth into
objective life, and the draught of Lethe has then been taken. Nor as regards
the isolation of each soul is there any consciousness of isolation whatever;
nor is there ever possibly a parting from its chosen associates.
Those associates are not in the
nature of companions who may wish to go away, of friends who may tire of the
friend that loves them, even if he or she does not tire of them.
Love, the creating force, has placed
their living image before the personal soul which craves for their presence,
and that image will never fly away.
On this aspect of the subject I may
again avail myself of the language of my teacher:
« Objectors of that kind will
be simply postulating an incongruity, an intercourse of entities in Devachan,
which applies only to the mutual relationship of physical existence!
Two sympathetic souls, both
disembodied, will each work out its own Devachanic sensations, making the other
a sharer in its subjective bliss. This will be as real to them, naturally, as
though both were yet on this earth. Nevertheless, each is dissociated from the
other as regards personal or corporeal association.
While the latter is the only one of
its kind that is recognized by our earth experience as an actual intercourse,
for the Devachanee it would be not only something unreal, but could have no
existence for it in any sense, not even as a delusion: a physical body or even
a Mayavi-rupa remaining to its spiritual senses as invisible as it is it-self
to the physical senses of those who loved it best on earth.
Thus even though one of the “sharers”
were alive and utterly unconscious of that intercourse in his waking state,
still every dealing with him would be to the Devachanee an absolute reality.
And what actual companionship could
there ever be other than the purely idealistic one as above described, between
two subjective entities which are not even as material as that ethereal
body-shadow — the Mayavi-rupa?
To object to this on the ground that
one is thus “cheated by Nature” and to call it “a delusive sensation of
enjoyment which has no reality”, is to show one's self utterly unfit to
comprehend the conditions of life and being outside of our material existence.
For how can the same distinction be
made in Devachan (i.e., outside of the conditions of earth-life) between what
we call a reality and a factitious or an artificial counterfeit of the same, in
this, our world?
The same principle cannot apply to
the two sets of conditions. Is it conceivable that what we call a reality in
our embodied physical state will exist under the same conditions as an actuality^
for a disembodied entity?
On earth, man is dual (in the sense
of being a thing of matter and a thing of spirit; hence the natural distinction
made by his mind) the analyst of his physical sensations and spiritual
perceptions — between an actuality and a fiction; though, even in this life,
the two groups of faculties are constantly equilibrating each other, each group
when dominant seeing as fiction or delusion what the other believes to be most
real.
But in Devachan our Ego has ceased
to be dualistic, in the above sense, and becomes a spiritual, mental entity.
That which was a fiction, a dream in life, and which had its being but in the
region of “fancy”, becomes, under the new conditions of existence, the only possible
reality.
Thus, for us, to postulate the
possibility of any other reality for a Devachanee is to maintain an absurdity,
a monstrous fallacy, an idea unphilosophical to the last degree.
The actual is that which is acted or
performed de facto: “the reality of a thing is proved by its actuality”. And
the supposititious and artificial having no possible existence in that
Devachanic state, the logical sequence is that everything in it is actual and
real.
For, again, whether overshadowing
the five principles during the life of the personality, or entirely separated
from the grosser principles by the dissolution of the body (the sixth
principle, or our “Spiritual Soul”, has no substance) it is ever Arupa; nor is
it confined to one place with a limited horizon of perceptions around it.
Therefore, whether in or out of its
mortal body, it is ever distinct, and free from its limitations; and if we call
its Devachanic experiences “a cheating of Nature”, then we should never be
allowed to call “reality” any of those purely abstract feelings that belong
entirely to, and are reflected and assimilated by, our higher soul — such, for
instance, as an ideal perception of the beautiful, profound philanthropy, love,
etc., as well as every other purely spiritual sensation that during life fills
our inner being with either immense joy or pain. »
We must remember that by the very
nature of the system described there are infinite varieties of well-being in
Devachan, suited to the infinite varieties of merit in mankind.
If “the next world” really were the
objective heaven which ordinary theology preaches, there would be endless
injustice and inaccuracy in its operation.
People, to begin with, would be
either admitted or excluded, and the differences of favor shown to different
guests within the all-favored region would not sufficiently provide for differences
of merit in this life.
But the real heaven of our earth
adjusts itself to the needs and merits of each new arrival with unfailing
certainty. Not merely as regards the duration of the blissful state, which is
determined by the causes engendered during objective life, but as regards the
intensity and amplitude of the emotions which constitute that blissful state,
the heaven of each person who attains the really existent heaven is precisely
fitted to his capacity for enjoying it.
It is the creation of his own
aspirations and faculties. More than this it may be impossible for the
uninitiated comprehension to realize. But this indication of its character is
enough to show how perfectly it falls into its appointed place in the whole
scheme of evolution.
« Devachan (to resume my direct
quotations) is of course, a state, not a locality, as much as Avitchi, its
antithesis (which please not to confound with hell). Esoteric Buddhist
philosophy has three principal lokas so-called — namely, 1, Kama-Loka; 2,
Rupa-Loka; and 3, Arupa-Loka; or in their literal translation and meaning:
- Kama-Loka is the world of desires or passions, of unsatisfied earthly cravings (the abode of “Shells and Victims, of Elementaries and Suicides).
- Rupa-Loka is the world of Forms (i.e., of shadows more spiritual, having form and objectivity, but no substance), and
- Arupa-Loka is the formless world, or rather the world of no form, the incorporeal, since its denizens can have neither body, shape, nor color for us mortals, and in the sense that we give to these terms.
These are the three spheres of
ascending spirituality, in which the several groups of subjective and semi-subjective
entities find their attractions.
All but the suicides and the victims
of premature violent deaths go, according to their attractions and powers,
either into the Devachanic or the Avitchi state, which two states form the numberless
subdivisions of Rupa and Arupa lokas — that is to say, that such states not
only vary in degree, or in their presentation to the subject entity as regards
form, color, etc., but that there is an infinite scale of such states, in their
progressive spirituality and intensity of feeling; from the lowest in the Rupa,
up to the highest and the most exalted in the Arupa-Loka.
The student must bear in mind that
personality is the synonym for limitation; and that the more selfish, the more
contracted the person's ideas, the closer will he cling to the lower spheres of
being, the longer loiter on the plane of selfish social intercourse. »
Devachan being a condition of mere
subjective enjoyment, the duration and intensity of which is determined by the
merit and spirituality of the earth-life last past, there is no opportunity,
while the soul inhabits it, for the punctual requital of evil deeds.
But Nature does not content herself
with either forgiving sins in a free and easy way, or damning sinners
out-right, like a lazy master too indolent, rather than too good-natured, to
govern his household justly.
The Karma of evil (be it great or
small) is as certainty operative at the appointed time as the Karma of good.
But the place of its operation is not Devachan, but either a new re-birth or
Avitchi — a state to be reached only in exceptional cases and by exceptional
natures.
In other words, while the
commonplace sinner will reap the fruits of his evil deeds in a following
re-incarnation, the exceptional criminal, the aristocrat of sin, has Avitchi in
prospect — that is to say, the condition of subjective spiritual misery which is
the reverse side of Devachan.
« Avitchi is a state of the
most ideal spiritual wickedness, something akin to the state of Lucifer, so
superbly described by Milton. Not many, though, are there who can reach it, as
the thoughtful reader will perceive.
And if it is urged that since there
is Devachan for nearly all, for the good, the bad, and the indifferent, the
ends of harmony and equilibrium are frustrated and the law of retribution and
of impartial, implacable justice, hardly met and satisfied by such a
comparative scarcity if not absence of its antithesis, then the answer will
show that it is not so.
“Evil is the dark son of Earth
(matter) and Good — the fair daughter of Heaven (or Spirit)” says the Chinese
philosopher; hence the place of punishment for most of our sins is the earth —
its birth-place and play-ground.
There is more apparent and relative
than actual evil even on earth, and it is not given to the hoi polloi to reach
the fatal grandeur and eminence of a “Satan” every day. »
Generally, the re-birth into
objective existence is the event for which the Karma of evil patiently waits,
and then it irresistibly asserts itself; not that the Karma of good exhausts
itself in Devachan, leaving the unhappy monad to develop a new consciousness
with no material beyond the evil deeds of its last personality.
The re-birth will be qualified by
the merit as well as the demerit of the previous life, but the Devachan
existence is a rosy sleep — a peaceful night with dreams more vivid than day,
and imperishable for many centuries.
It will be seen that the Devachan
state, is only one of the conditions of existence which go to make up the whole
spiritual or relatively spiritual complement of our earth life.
Observers of spiritualistic
phenomena would never have been perplexed as they have been if there were no
other but the Devachan state to be dealt with.
For once in Devachan there is very
little opportunity for communication between a spirit, then wholly absorbed in
its own sensations and practically oblivious of the earth left behind, and its
former friends still living.
Whether gone before or yet remaining
on earth, those friends, if the bond of affection has been sufficiently strong,
will be with the happy spirit still to all intents and purposes for him, and as
happy, blissful, and innocent, as the disembodied dreamer himself.
It is possible, however, for yet
living persons to have visions of Devachan, though such visions are rare, and
only one-sided, the entities in Devachan, sighted by the earthly clairvoyant,
being quite unconscious themselves of undergoing such observation.
The spirit of the clairvoyant
ascends into the condition of Devachan in such rare visions, and thus becomes
subject to the vivid delusions of that existence.
It is under the impression that the
spirits, with which it is in Devachanic bonds of sympathy, have come down to
visit earth and itself, while the converse operation has really taken place.
The clairvoyant's spirit has been raised towards those in Devachan.
Thus many of the subjective
spiritual communications (most of them when the sensitives are pure-minded) are
real, though it is most difficult for the uninitiated medium to fix in his mind
the true and correct pictures of what he sees and hears. In the same way some
of the phenomena called psychography (though more rarely) are also real.
The spirit of the sensitive getting
odylized, so to say, by the aura of the spirit in the Devachan becomes for a
few minutes that departed personality, and writes in the handwriting of the
latter, in his language and in his thoughts as they were during his lifetime.
The two spirits become blended in
one, and the preponderance of one over the other during such phenomena
determines the preponderance of personality in the characteristics exhibited.
Thus, it may incidentally be
observed, what is called rapport, is, in plain fact, an identity of molecular
vibration between the astral part of the incarnate medium and the astral part
of the disincarnate personality.
As already indicated, and as the
common sense of the matter would show, there are great varieties of states in
Devachan, and each personality drops into its befitting place there.
Thence, consequently, he emerges in
his befitting place in the world of causes, this earth or another, as the case
may be, when his time for re-birth comes.
Coupled with survival of the
affinities, comprehensively described as Karma, the affinities both for good
and evil engendered by the previous life, this process will be seen to
accomplish nothing less than an explanation of the problem which has always
been regarded as so incomprehensible — the inequalities of life.
The conditions on which we enter
life are the consequences of the use we have made of our last set of
conditions. They do not impede the development of fresh Karma, whatever they
may be, for this will be generated by the use we make of them in turn. Nor is
it to be supposed that every event of a current life which bestows joy or
sorrow is old Karma bearing fruit.
Many may be the immediate
consequences of acts in the life to which they belong — ready-money
transactions with Nature, so to speak, of which it may be hardly necessary to make
any entry in her books.
But the great inequality of life, as
regards the start in it which different human beings make, is a manifest
consequence of old Karma, the infinite varieties of which always keep up a
constant supply of recruits for all the manifold varieties of human condition.
It must not be supposed that the
real Ego slips instantaneously at death from the earth-life and its
entanglements into the Devachanic condition.
When the division or purification of
the fifth principle has been accomplished in Kama-Loka by the contending
attractions of the fourth and sixth principles, the real Ego passes into a
period of unconscious gestation.
I have spoken already of the way in
which the Devachanic life is itself a process of growth, maturity, and decline;
but the analogies of earth are even more closely preserved.
There is a spiritual ante-natal
state at the entrance to spiritual life, as there is a similar and equally
unconscious physical state at the entrance to objective life. And this period,
in different cases, may be of very different duration — from a few moments to
immense periods of years.
When a man dies, his soul or fifth
principle becomes unconscious and loses all remembrance of things internal as
well as external.
Whether his stay in Kama-Loka has to
last but a few moments, hours, days, weeks, months or years; whether he dies a
natural or a violent death; whether this occurs in youth or age, and whether
the Ego has been good, bad, or indifferent, his consciousness leaves him as
suddenly as the flame leaves the wick when it is blown out.
When life has retired from the last
particle of the brain matter, his perceptive faculties become extinct forever,
and his spiritual powers of cognition and volition become for the time being as
extinct as the others.
His Mayavi-rupa may be thrown into
objectivity as in the case of apparitions after death, but unless it is
projected by a conscious or intense desire to see or appear to some one
shooting through the dying brain, the apparition will be simply automatic.
The revival of consciousness in Kama-Loka
is obviously, from what has been already said, a phenomenon that depends on the
characteristic of the principles passing, unconsciously at the moment, out of
the dying body.
It may become tolerably complete
under circumstances by no means to be desired, or it may be obliterated by a
rapid passage into the gestation state leading to Devachan.
This gestation state may be of very
long duration in proportion to the Ego's spiritual stamina, and Devachan
accounts for the remainder of the period between death and the next physical
re-birth.
The whole period is, of course, of
very varying length in the case of different persons, but re-birth in less than
fifteen hundred years is spoken of as almost impossible, while the stay in
Devachan which rewards a very rich Karma is sometimes said to extend to
enormous periods.
CHAPTER 6
KAMA-LOKA
Table of contents:
- The astral shell
- Its habitat
- Its nature
- Surviving impulses
- Elementals
- Mediums and shells
- Accidents and suicides
- Lost Personalities
The statements already made in
reference to the destiny of the higher human principles at death will pave the
way for a comprehension of the circumstances in which the inferior remnant of
these principles finds itself, after the real Ego has passed either into the
Devachanic state or that unconscious intervening period of preparation therefor
which corresponds to physical gestation.
The sphere in which such remnants
remain for a time is known to occult science as Kama-Loka, the region of
desire, not the region in which desire is developed to any abnormal degree of
intensity as compared with desire as it attaches to earth-life, but the sphere
in which that sensation of desire, which is a part of the earth-life, is
capable of surviving.
It will be obvious, from what has
been said about Devachan, that a large part of the recollections which
accumulate round the human Ego during life are incompatible in their nature
with the pure subjective existence to which the real, durable, spiritual Ego
passes; but they are not necessarily on that account extinguished or
annihilated out of existence.
They inhere in certain molecules of
those finer (but not finest) principles, which escape from the body at death;
and just as dissolution separates what is loosely called the soul from the
body, so also it provokes a further separation between the constituent elements
of the soul.
So much of the fifth principle, or
human soul, which is in its nature assimilable with, or has gravitated upwards
toward, the sixth principle, the spiritual soul, passes with the germ of that
divine soul into the superior region, or state of Devachan, in which it
separates itself almost completely from the attractions of the earth; quite
completely, as far as its own spiritual course is concerned, though it still
has certain affinities with the spiritual aspirations emanating from the earth,
and may sometimes draw these towards itself.
But the animal soul, or fourth
principle (the element of will and desire as associated with objective
existence), has no upward attraction, and no more passes away from the earth
than the particles of the body consigned to the grave. It is not in the grave,
however, that this fourth principle can be put away.
It is not spiritual in its nature or
affinities, but it is not physical in its nature. In its affinities it is
physical, and hence the result. It remains within the actual physical local
attraction of the earth (in the earth's atmosphere) or, since it is not the
gases of the atmosphere that are specially to be considered in connection with
the problem in hand, let us say, in Kama-Loka.
And with the fourth principle a
large part (as regards most of mankind unfortunately, though a part very
variable in its relative magnitude) inevitably remains.
There are plenty of attributes which
the ordinary composite human being exhibits, many ardent feelings, desires, and
acts, floods of recollections, which even if not concerned with a life as
ardent perhaps as those which have to do with the higher aspirations, are
nevertheless essentially belonging to the physical life, which take time to
die.
They remain behind in association
with the fourth principle, which is altogether of the earthly perishable
nature, and disperse or fade out, or are absorbed into the respective universal
principles to which they belong, just as the body is absorbed into the earth,
in progress of time, and rapidly or slowly in proportion to the tenacity of
their substance.
And where, meanwhile, is the
consciousness of the individual who has died or dissolved?
Assuredly in Devachan; but a
difficulty presents itself to the mind untrained in occult science, from the
fact that a semblance of consciousness inheres in the astral portion — the
fourth principle with a portion of the fifth — which remains behind in Kama-Loka.
The individual consciousness, it is
argued, cannot be in two places at once. But first of all, to a certain extent,
it can.
As may be perceived presently, it is
a mistake to speak of consciousness, as we understand the feeling in life,
attaching to the astral shell or remnant; but nevertheless a certain spurious
semblance may be reawakened in that shell, without having any connection with
the real consciousness all the while growing in strength and vitality in the
spiritual sphere.
There is no power on the part of the
shell of taking in and assimilating new ideas and initiating courses of action
on the basis of those new ideas. But there is in the shell a survival of
volitional impulses imparted to it during life.
The fourth principle is the
instrument of volition though not volition itself, and impulses imparted to it
during life by the higher principles may run their course and produce results
almost indistinguishable for careless observers from those which would ensue
were the four higher principles really all united as in life.
It, the fourth principle, is the
receptacle or vehicle during life of that essentially moral consciousness which
cannot suit itself to conditions of permanent existence; but the consciousness
even of the lower principles during life is a very different thing from the
vaporous fleeting and uncertain consciousness, which continues to inhere in
them when that which really is the life, the overshadowing of them, or
vitalization of them by the infusion of the spirit, has ceased as far as they
are concerned.
Language cannot render all the
facets of a many-sided idea intelligible at once any more than a plain drawing
can show all sides of a solid object at once.
And at the first glance different
drawings of the same object from different points of view may seem so unlike as
to be unrecognizable as the same; but none the less, by the time they are put
together in the mind, will their diversities be seen to harmonize.
So with these subtle attributes of
the invisible principles of man — no treatise can do more than discuss their
different aspects separately. The various views suggested must mingle in the
reader's mind before the complete conception corresponds to the realities of
Nature.
In life the fourth principle is the
seat of will and desire, but it is not will itself. It must be alive, in union
with the overshadowing spirit, or “one life”, to be thus the agent of that very
elevated function of life — will, in its sublime potency. As already mentioned,
the Sanskrit names of the higher principles connote the idea that they are
vehicles of the one life.
Not that the one life is a separable
molecular principle itself, it is the union of all — the influences of the spirit;
but in truth the idea is too subtle for language, perhaps for intellect itself.
Its manifestation in the present case, however, is apparent enough. Whatever
the willing fourth principle may be when alive, it is no longer capable of
active will when dead.
But then, under certain abnormal
conditions, it may partially recover life for a time; and this fact it is which
explains many, though by no means all, of the phenomena of spiritualistic mediumship.
The elementary”, be it remembered (as
the astral shell has generally been called in former occult writings) is liable
to be galvanized for a time in the mediumistic current into a state of
consciousness and life which may be suggested by the first condition of a
person who, carried into a strange room in a state of insensibility during
illness, wakes up feeble, confused in mind, gazing about with a blank feeling
of bewilderment, taking in impressions, hearing words addressed to him and answering
vaguely.
Such a state of consciousness is
unassociated with the notions of past or future. It is an automatic
consciousness, derived from the medium. A medium, be it remembered, is a person
whose principles are loosely united and susceptible of being borrowed by other
beings, or floating principles, having an attraction for some of them or some
part of them. Now what happens in the case of a shell drawn into the
neighborhood of a person so constituted?
Suppose the person from whom the
shell has been cast died with some strong unsatisfied desire, not necessarily of
an unholy sort, but connected entirely with the earth-life, a desire, for
example, to communicate some fact to a still living person.
Certainly the shell does not go
about in Kama-Loka with a persistent intelligent conscious purpose of
communicating that fact; but, amongst others, the volitional impulse to do this
has been infused into the fourth principle, and while the molecules of that
principle remain in association, and that may be for many years, they only need
a partial galvanization into life again to become operative in the direction of
the original impulse.
Such a shell comes into contact with
a medium (not so dissimilar in nature from the person who has died as to render
a rapport impossible), and something from the fifth principle of the medium
associates itself with the wandering fourth principle and sets the original
impulse to work.
So much consciousness and so much
intelligence as may be required to guide the fourth principle in the use of the
immediate means of communication at hand (a slate and pencil, or a table to rap
upon) are borrowed from the medium, and then the message given may be the
message which the dead person originally ordered his fourth principle to give,
so to speak, but which the shell has never till then had an opportunity of
giving. It may be argued that the production of writing on a closed slate, or
of raps on a table without the use of a knuckle or a stick, is itself a feat of
a marvelous nature, bespeaking a knowledge on the part of the communicating
intelligence of powers of Nature we in physical life know nothing about.
But the shell is itself in the
astral world; in the realm of such powers. A phenomenal manifestation is its
natural mode of dealing. It is no more conscious of producing a wonderful
result by the use of new powers acquired in a higher sphere of existence than
we are conscious of the forces by which in life the volitional impulse is
communicable to nerves and muscles.
But, it may be objected, the “communicating
intelligence” at a spiritual séance
will constantly perform remarkable feats for no other than their own sake, to
exhibit the power over natural forces which it possesses.
The reader will please remember,
however, that occult science is very far from saying that all the phenomena of
spiritualism are traceable to one class of agents. Hitherto in this treatise
little has been said of the “elementals”, those semi-intelligent creatures of
the astral light who belong to a wholly different kingdom of Nature from
ourselves. Nor is it possible at present to enlarge upon their attributes for
the simple and obvious reason, that knowledge concerning the elementals,
detailed knowledge on that subject, and in regard to the way they work, is
scrupulously withheld by the adepts of occultism.
To possess such knowledge is to
wield power, and the whole motive of the great secrecy in which occult science
is shrouded turns upon the danger of conferring powers upon people who have
not, first of all, by undergoing the training of initiates, given moral
guarantees of their trustworthiness.
It is by command over the elementals
that some of the greatest physical feats of adeptship are accomplished; and it
is by the spontaneous playful acts of the elementals that the greatest physical
phenomena of the séance room are
brought about.
So also with almost all Indian
Fakirs and Yogis of the lower class who have power of producing phenomenal
results. By some means, by a scrap of inherited occult teaching, most likely,
they have come into possession of a morsel of occult science.
Not necessarily that they understand
the action of the forces they employ any more than an Indian servant in a
telegraph office, taught how to mix the ingredients of the liquid used in a
galvanic battery, understands the theory of electric science.
He can perform the one trick he has
been taught; and so with the inferior Yogi. He has got influence over certain
elementals, and can work certain wonders.
Returning to a consideration of the
ex-human shells in Kama-Loka, it may be argued that their behavior in spiritual
séances is not covered by the theory
that they have had some message to deliver from their late master, and have
availed themselves of the mediumship present to deliver it.
Apart altogether from phenomena that
may be put aside as elemental pranks, we sometimes encounter a continuity of
intelligence on the part of the elementary or shell that bespeaks much more
than the survival of impulses from the former life.
Quite so; but with portions of the
medium's fifth principle conveyed into it the fourth principle is once more an
instrument in the hands of a master. With a medium entranced so that the
energies of his fifth principle are conveyed into the wandering shell to a very
large extent, the result is that there is a very tolerable revival of
consciousness in the shell for the time being, as regards the given moment. But
what is the nature of such consciousness, after all?
Nothing more, really, than a
reflected light. Memory is one thing, and perceptive faculties quite another. A
madman may remember very clearly some portions of his past life; yet he is
unable to perceive anything in its true light, for the higher portion of his
Manas (fifth) and Buddhi (sixth) principles are paralyzed in him and have left
him.
Could an animal (a dog, for
instance) explain himself, he could prove that his memory, in direct relation
to his canine personality, is as fresh as his master's; nevertheless, his
memory and instinct cannot be called perceptive faculties.
Once that a shell is in the aura of
a medium, he will perceive, clearly enough, whatever he can perceive through
the borrowed principles of the medium and through organs in magnetic sympathy
therewith; but this will not carry him beyond the range of the perceptive
faculties of the medium, or of some one else present in the circle.
Hence the often rational and
sometimes highly intelligent answers he may give, and hence, also, his
invariably complete oblivion of all things unknown to that medium or circle, or
not found in the lower recollections of his late personality, galvanized afresh
by the influences under which he is placed.
The shell of a highly intelligent,
learned, but utterly unspiritual man, who died a natural death, will last
longer than those of weaker temperament, and (the shadow of his own memory
helping) he may deliver, through trance-speakers, orations of no contemptible kind.
But these will never be found to
relate to anything beyond the subjects he thought much and earnestly of during
life, nor will any word ever fall from him indicating a real advance of
knowledge.
It will easily be seen that a shell,
drawn into the mediumistic current, and getting into rapport with the medium's
fifth principle, is not by any means sure to be animated with a consciousness
(even for what such consciousnesses are worth) identical with the personality
of the dead person from whose higher principles it was shed. It is just as
likely to reflect some quite different personality, caught from the suggestions
of the medium's mind.
In this personality it will perhaps
remain and answer for a time; then some new current of thought, thrown into the
minds of the people present, will find its echo in the fleeting impressions of
the elementary, and his sense of identity will begin to waver; for a little
while it flickers over two or three conjectures, and. ends by going out
altogether for a time.
The shell is once more sleeping in
the astral light, and maybe unconsciously wafted in a few moments to the other
ends of the earth.
Besides the ordinary elementary or
shell of the kind just described, Kama-Loka is the abode of another class of
astral entities, which must be taken into account if we desire to comprehend
the various conditions under which human creatures may pass from this life to
others.
So far we have been examining the
normal course of events, when people die in a natural manner. But an abnormal
death will lead to abnormal consequences.
Thus, in the case of persons
committing suicide and in that of persons killed by sudden accident, results
ensue which differ widely from those following natural deaths.
A thoughtful consideration of such
cases must show, indeed, that in a world governed by rule and law, by
affinities working out their regular effects in that deliberate way which
Nature favors, the case of a person dying a sudden death at a time when all his
principles are firmly united, and ready to hold together for twenty, forty, or
sixty years, whatever the natural remainder of his life would be, must surely
be something different from that of a person who, by natural processes of
decay, finds himself, when the vital machine stops, readily separable into his
various principles, each prepared to travel its separate way.
Nature, always fertile in analogies,
at once illustrates the idea by showing us a ripe and an unripe fruit. From out
of the first the inner stone will come away as cleanly and easily as a hand
from a glove, while from the unripe fruit the stone can only be torn with
difficulty, half the pulp clinging to its surface.
Now, in the case of the sudden
accidental death or of the suicide, the stone has to be torn from the unripe
fruit. There is no question here about the moral blame which may attach to the
act of suicide.
Probably, in the majority of cases,
such moral blame does attach to it, but that is a question of Karma which will
follow the person concerned into the next re-birth, like any other Karma, and
has nothing to do with the immediate difficulty such person may find in getting
himself thoroughly and wholesomely dead.
This difficulty is manifestly just
the same whether a person kills himself, or is killed in the heroic discharge
of duty, or dies the victim of an accident over which he has no control
whatever.
As an ordinary rule, when a person
dies, the long account of Karma naturally closes itself; that is to say, the
complicated set of affinities which have been set up during life in the first
durable principle, the fifth is no longer susceptible of extension.
The balance-sheet, so to speak, is
made out afterwards, when the time comes for the next objective birth; or, in
other words, the affinities long dormant in Devachan, by reason of the absence
there of any scope for their action, assert themselves as soon as they come in
contact once more with physical existence. But the fifth principle, in which
these affinities are grown, cannot be separated in the case of the person dying
prematurely from the earthly principle — the fourth.
The elementary, therefore, which
finds itself in Kama-Loka, on its violent expulsion from the body, is not a
mere shell — it is the person himself who was lately alive minus nothing but
the body. In the true sense of the word he is not dead at all.
Certainly elementaries of this kind
may communicate very effectually at spiritual séances at their own heavy cost; for they are unfortunately able,
by reason of the completeness of their astral constitution, to go on generating
Karma, to assuage their thirst for life at the unwholesome spring of
mediumship.
If they were of a very material
sensual type in life, the enjoyments they will seek will be of a kind the
indulgence of which in their disembodied state may readily be conceived even
more prejudicial to their Karma than similar indulgences would have been in
life. In such cases facilis est descensus.
Cut off in the full flush of
earthly-passions which bind them to familiar scenes, they are enticed by the
opportunity which mediums afford for the gratification of these vicariously.
They become the incubus and succubus of mediaeval writing, demons of
thirst and gluttony, provoking their victims to crime.
A brief essay on this subject, which
I wrote last year, and from which I have reproduced some of the sentences just
given, appeared in "The Theosophist",
with a note, the authenticity of which I have reason to trust, and the tenor of
which was as follows:
« The variety of states after
death is greater if possible than the variety of human lives upon this earth.
The victims of accident do not generally become earth walkers, only those
falling into the current of attraction who die full of some engrossing earthly
passion, the selfish who have never given a thought to the welfare of others.
Overtaken by death in the
consummation, whether real or imaginary, of some master passion of their lives,
the desire remaining unsatisfied even after a full realization, and they still
craving for more, such personalities can never pass beyond the earth attraction
to wait for the hour of deliverance in happy ignorance and full oblivion.
Among the suicides, those to whom
the above statement about provoking their victims to crime, etc., applies are
that class who commit the act in consequence of a crime to escape the penalty
of human law or their own remorse. Natural law cannot be broken with impunity;
the inexorable causal relation between action and result has its full sway only
in the world of effects, the Kama-Loka, and every case is met there by an
adequate punishment, and in a thousand ways, that would require volumes even to
describe them superficially. »
Those who “wait for the hour of
deliverance in happy ignorance and full oblivion” are of course such victims of
accident as have already on earth engendered pure and elevated affinities, and
after death are as much beyond the reach of temptation in the shape of
mediumistic currents as they would have been inaccessible in life to common
incitements to crime.
Entities of another kind
occasionally to be found in Kama-Loka have yet to be considered. We have
followed the higher principles of persons recently dead, observing the
separation of the astral dross from the spiritually durable portion, that
spiritually durable portion being either holy or Satanic in its nature, and
provided for in Devachan or Avitchi accordingly
We have examined the nature of the
elementary shell cast off and preserving for a time a deceptive resemblance to
a true entity; we have paid attention also to the exceptional cases of real four
principled beings in Kama-Loka who are the victims of accident or suicide.
But what happens to a personality
which has absolutely no atom of spirituality, no trace of spiritual affinity in
its fifth principle, either of the good or bad sort?
Clearly in such a case there is
nothing for the sixth principle to attract to itself. Or, in other words, such
a personality has already lost its sixth principle by the time death comes.
But Kama-Loka is no more a sphere of
existence for such a personality than the subjective world; Kama-Loka maybe
permanently inhabited by astral beings, by elementals, but can only be an
antechamber to some other state for human beings.
In the case imagined, the surviving
personality is promptly drawn into the current of its future destinies, and
these have nothing to do with this earth's atmosphere or with Devachan, but
with that “eighth sphere” of which occasional mention will be found in older
occult writings.
It will have been unintelligible to
ordinary readers hitherto why it was called the “eighth” sphere, but since the
explanation, now given out for the first time, of the sevenfold constitution of
our planetary system, the meaning will be clear enough.
The spheres of the cyclic process of
evolution are seven in number, but there is an eighth in connection with our
earth, our earth being, it will be remembered, the turning-point in the cyclic
chain, and this eighth sphere is out of circuit, a cul de sac, and the bourne from which it may be truly said no
traveler returns.
It will readily be guessed that the
only sphere connected with our planetary chain, which is lower than our own in
the scale, having spirit at the top and matter at the bottom, must itself be no
less visible to the eye and to optical instruments than the earth itself, and
as the duties which this sphere has to perform in our planetary system are
immediately associated with this earth, there is not much mystery left now in
the riddle of the eighth sphere, nor as to the place in the sky where it may be
sought.
The conditions of existence there,
however, are topics on which the adepts are very reserved in their
communications to uninitiated pupils, and concerning these I have for the
present no further information to give.
One statement though is definitely
made, viz., that such a total degradation of a personality as may suffice to
draw it, after death, into the attraction of the eighth sphere, is of very rare
occurrence.
From the vast majority of lives
there is something which the higher principles may draw to themselves,
something to redeem the page of existence just passed from total destruction:
and here it must be remembered that the recollections of life in Devachan, very
vivid as they are, as far as they go, touch only those episodes in life which
are productive of the elevated sort of happiness of which alone Devachan is
qualified to take cognizance; whereas the life from which for the time being
the cream is thus skimmed may come to be remembered eventually in all its details
quite fully.
That complete remembrance is only
achieved by the individual at the threshold of a far more exalted spiritual
state than that which we are now concerned with, and which is attained far
later on in the progress of the vast cycles of evolution.
Each one of the long series of lives
that will have been passed through will then be, as it were, a page in a book
to which the possessor can turn back at pleasure, even though many such pages
will then seem to him, most likely, very dull reading, and will not be
frequently referred to.
It is this revival eventually of
recollection concerning all the long-forgotten personalities that is really
meant by the doctrine of the Resurrection. But we have no time at present to
stop and unravel the enigmas of symbolism as bearing upon the teachings at
present under conveyance to the reader.
It may be worth while to do this as
a separate undertaking at a later period; but meanwhile, to revert to the
narrative of how the facts stand, it may be explained that in the whole book of
pages, when at last the "resurrection" has been accomplished, there
will be no entirely infamous pages; for even if any given spiritual
individuality has occasionally, during its passage through this world, been
linked with personalities so deplorably and desperately degraded that they have
passed completely into the attraction of the lower vortex, that spiritual
individuality in such cases will have retained in its own affinities no trace
or taint of them.
Those pages will, as it were, have
been cleanly torn out from the book. And, as at the end of the struggle, after
crossing the Kama-Loka, the spiritual individuality will have passed into the
unconscious gestation state from which, skipping the Devachan state, it will be
directly (though not immediately in time) re-born into its next life of
objective activity, all the self-consciousness connected with that existence
will have passed into the lower world, there eventually to “perish
everlastingly”; an expression of which, as of so many more, modern theology has
proved a faithless custodian, making pure nonsense out of psycho-scientific
facts.
APPENDIX
ADDITIONAL NOTES
There is no part of the present volume which I now regard as in so much
urgent need of amplification as chapters V. and VI.
The Kama-Loka stage of existence, and that higher region or state of
Devachan, to which it is but the antechamber, were, designedly I take it, left
by our teachers in the first instance in partial obscurity, in order that the
whole scheme of evolution might be the better understood.
The spiritual state which immediately follows our present physical life
is a department of Nature, the study of which is almost unhealthily attractive
for every one who once realizes that some contact with it (some processes of experiment
with its conditions) are possible even during this life.
Already we can to a certain extent discern the phenomena of that state
of existence into which a human creature passes at the death of the body. The
experience of spiritualism has supplied us with facts concerning it in very
great abundance.
These facts are but too highly suggestive of theories and inferences
which seem to reach the ultimate limits of speculation, and nothing but the
bracing mental discipline of esoteric study in its broadest aspect will protect
any mind addressed to the consideration of these facts from conclusions which
that study shows to be necessarily erroneous.
For this reason, theosophical inquirers have nothing to regret as far as
their own progress in spiritual science is at stake, in the circumstances which
have hitherto induced them to be rather neglectful of the problems that have to
do with the state of existence next following our own.
It is impossible to exaggerate the intellectual advantages to be derived
from studying the broad design of Nature throughout those vast realms of the
future which only the perfect clairvoyance of the adepts can penetrate, before
going into details regarding that spiritual foreground, which is partially
accessible to less powerful vision, but liable, on a first acquaintance, to be
mistaken for the whole expanse of the future.
The earlier processes, however, through which the soul passes at death,
may be described at this date somewhat more fully than they are denned in the foregoing
chapter.
The nature of the struggle that takes place in Kama-Loka between the
upper and lower duads may now, I believe, be apprehended more clearly than at
first.
That struggle appears to be a very protracted and variegated process,
and to constitute, — not, as some of us may have conjectured at first, an
automatic or unconscious assertion of affinities or forces quite ready to
determine the future of the spiritual monad at the period of death, — but a
phase of existence which may be, and in the vast majority of cases is more than
likely to be, continued over a considerable series of years.
And during this phase of existence it is quite possible for departed
human entities to manifest themselves to still living persons through the
agency of spiritual mediumship, in a way which may go far towards accounting
for, if it does not altogether vindicate, the impressions that spiritualists
derive from such communications.
But we must not conclude too hastily that the human soul going through
the struggle or evolution of Kama-Loka is in all respects what the first glance
at the position, as thus defined, may seem to suggest.
First of all, we must beware of too grossly materializing our conception
of the struggle, by thinking of it as a mechanical separation of principles.
There is a mechanical separation involved in the discard of lower principles
when the consciousness of the Ego is firmly seated in the higher.
Thus at death the body is mechanically discarded by the soul, which in
union, perhaps (with intermediate principles), may actually be seen by some
clairvoyants of a high order to quit the tenement it no longer needs. And a
very similar process may ultimately take place in Kama-Loka itself, in regard
to the matter of the astral principles.
But postponing this consideration for a few moments, it is important to
avoid supposing that the struggle of Kama-Loka does itself constitute this
ultimate division of principles, or second death upon the astral plane.
The struggle of Kama-Loka is in fact the life of the entity in that
phase of existence. As quite correctly stated in the text of the foregoing
chapter, the evolution taking place during that phase of existence is not
concerned with the responsible choice between good and evil which goes on during
physical life. Kama-Loka is a portion of the great world of effects, — not a
sphere in which causes are generated (except under peculiar circumstances).
The Kama-Loka entity, therefore, is not truly master of his own acts; he
is rather the sport of his own already established affinities. But these are
all the while asserting themselves, or exhausting themselves, by degrees, and the
Kama-Loka entity has an existence of vivid consciousness of one sort or another
the whole time.
Now a moment's reflection will show that those affinities, which are
gathering strength and asserting themselves, have to do with the spiritual
aspirations of the life last experienced, while those which are exhausting
themselves have to do with its material tastes, emotions, and proclivities.
The Kama-Loka entity, be it remembered, is on his way to Devachan, or,
in other words, is growing into that state which is the Devachanic state, and
the process of growth is accomplished by action and reaction, by ebb and flow,
like almost every other in Nature, — by a species of oscillation between the
conflicting attractions of matter and spirit.
Thus the Ego advances towards Heaven, so to speak, or recedes towards
earth, during his Kama-Loka existence, and it is just this tendency to
oscillate between the two poles of thought or condition that brings him back
occasionally within the sphere of the life he has just quitted.
It is not by any means at once that his ardent sympathies with that life
are dissipated. His sympathies with the higher aspects of that life, be it
remembered, are not even on their way to dissipation.
For instance, in what is here referred to as earthly affinity, we need
not include the exercise of affection, which is a function of Devachanic essence
in a preeminent degree.
But perhaps even in regard to his affections there may be earthly and
spiritual aspects of these, and the contemplation of them, with the circumstances
and surroundings of the earth-life, may often have to do with the recession
towards earth-life of the Kama-Loka entity referred to above.
Of course it will be apparent at once that the intercourse which the
practice of spiritualism sets up between such Kama-Loka entities as are here in
view, and the friends they have left on earth, must go on during those periods
of the soul's existence in which earth memories engage its attention; and there
are two considerations of very important nature which arise out of this
reflection.
1st. While its attention is thus directed, it is turned away from the
spiritual progress on which it is engaged during its oscillations in the other
direction. It may fairly well remember, and in conversation refer to, the
spiritual aspirations of the life on earth, but it is new spiritual experiences
appear to be of an order that cannot be translated back into terms of the
ordinary physical intellect, and, besides that, to be not within the command of
the faculties which are in operation in the soul during soul during its occupation
with old-earth memories.
The position might be roughly symbolized, but only to a very imperfect
extent, by the case of a poor emigrant, whom we may imagine prospering in his
new country, getting educated there concerning himself with its public affairs
and discoveries, philanthropy, and so on.
He may keep up an interchange of letters with his relations at home, but
he will find it difficult to keep them au courant with all that has come to be
occupying his thoughts.
The illustration will only fully apply to our present purpose, however,
if we think of the emigrant as subject to a psychological law which draws a
veil over his understanding when he sits down to write to his former friends,
and restores him during that time to his former mental condition.
He would then be less and less able to write about the old topics as
time went on, for they would not only be below the level of those to the
consideration of which his real mental activities had risen, but would to a great
extent have faded from his memory.
His letters would be a source of surprise to their recipients, who would
say to themselves that it was certainly so-and-so who was writing, but that he
had grown very dull and stupid compared to what he used to be before he went
abroad.
2dly. It must be borne in mind that a very well-known law of physiology,
according to which faculties are invigorated by use and atrophied by neglect,
applies on the astral as well as on the physical plane.
The soul in Kama-Loka, which acquires the habit of fixing its attention
on the memories of the life it has quitted, will strengthen and harden those
tendencies which are at war with its higher impulses.
The more frequently it is appealed to by the affection of friends still in
the body to avail itself of the opportunities furnished by mediumship for
manifesting its existence on the physical plane, the more vehement will be the
impulses which draw it back to physical life, and the more serious the
retardation of its spiritual progress.
This consideration appears to involve the most influential motive which
leads the representatives of Theosophical teaching to discountenance and
disapprove of all attempts to hold communication with departed souls by means
of the spiritual séance.
The more such communications are genuine the more detrimental they are
to the inhabitants of Kama-Loka concerned with them. In the present state of
our knowledge it is difficult to determine with confidence the extent to which
the Kama-Loka entities are thus injured.
And we may be tempted to believe that in some cases the great
satisfaction derived by the living persons who communicate, may outweigh the
injury so inflicted on the departed soul.
This satisfaction, however, will only be keen in proportion to the
failure of the still living friend to realize the circumstances under which the
communication takes place.
At first, it is true, very shortly after death, the still vivid and
complete memories of earth-life may enable the Kama-Loka entity to manifest
himself as a personage very fairly like his deceased self, but from the moment
of death the change in the direction of his evolution sets in.
He will, as manifesting on the physical plane, betray no fresh
fermentation of thought in his mind.
He will never, in that manifestation, be any wiser, or higher in the
scale of Nature, than he was when he died; on the contrary, he must become less
and less intelligent, and apparently less instructed than formerly, as time
goes on.
He will never do himself justice in communication with the friends left
behind, and his failure in this respect will grow more and more painful by
degrees.
Yet another consideration operates to throw a very doubtful light on the
wisdom or propriety of gratifying a desire for intercourse with deceased
friends.
We may say, never mind the gradually fading interest of the friend who
has gone before, in the earth left behind; while there is anything of his or
her old self left to manifest itself to us, it will be a delight to communicate
even with that.
And we may argue that if the beloved person is delayed a little on his
way to Heaven by talking with us, he or she would be willing to make that
sacrifice for our sake.
The point overlooked here is, that on the astral, just as on the
physical plane, it is a very easy thing to set up a bad habit.
The soul in Kama-Loka once slaking a thirst for earthly intercourse at
the wells of mediumship will have a strong impulse to fall back again and again
on that indulgence.
We may be doing a great deal more than diverting the soul's attention
from its own proper business by holding spiritualistic relations with it. We
may be doing it serious and almost permanent injury.
I am not affirming that this would invariably or generally be the case,
but a severe view of the ethics of the subject must recognize the dangerous
possibilities involved in the course of action under review.
On the other hand, however, it is plain that cases may arise in which
the desire for communication chiefly asserts itself from the other side: that
is to say, in which the departed soul is laden with some unsatisfied desire (pointing
possibly towards the fulfilment of some neglected duty on earth) the attention
to which, on the part of still living friends, may have an effect quite the
reverse of that attending the mere encouragement of the Kama-Loka entity in the
resumption of its old earthly interests.
In such cases the living friends may, by falling in with its desire to
communicate, be the means, indirectly, of smoothing the path of the spiritual
progress. Here again, however, we must be on our guard against the delusive
aspect of appearances.
A wish manifested by an inhabitant of Kama-Loka may not always be the
expression of an idea then operative in his mind. It may be the echo of an old,
perhaps of a very old, desire, then for the first time finding a channel for
its outward expression. In this way, although it would be reasonable to treat
as important an intelligible wish conveyed to us from Kama-Loka by a person
only lately deceased, it would be prudent to regard with great suspicion such a
wish emanating from the shade of a person who had been dead a long time, and
whose general demeanor as a shade did not seem to convey the notion that he
retained any vivid consciousness of his old personality.
The recognition of all these facts and possibilities of Kama-Loka will,
I think, afford theosophists a satisfactory explanation of a good many
experiences connected with spiritualism which the first exposition of the
Esoteric Doctrine, as bearing on this matter, left in much obscurity.
It will be readily perceived that as the soul slowly clears itself in
Kama-Loka of the affinities which retard its Devachanic development, the aspect
it turns towards the earth is more and more enfeebled, and it is inevitable
that there must always be in Kama-Loka an enormous number of entities nearly
ripe for a complete mergence in Devachan, who on that very account appear to an
earthly observer in a state of advanced decrepitude.
These will have sunk, as regards the activity of their lower astral
principles, into the condition of the altogether vague and unintelligible
entities, which, following the example of older occult writers, I have referred
to as “shells” in the text of this chapter.
The designation, however, is not altogether a happy one. It might have
been better to have followed another precedent, and to have called them “shades”,
but either way their condition would be the same.
All the vivid consciousness inhering, as they left the earth, in the
principles appropriately related to the activities of physical life, has been
transferred to the higher principles which do not manifest at stances.
Their memory of earth-life has almost become extinct. Their lower
principles are in such cases only reawakened by the influences of the
mediumistic current into which they may be drawn, and they become then little
more than astral looking-glasses, in which the thoughts of the medium or sitters
at the stance are reflected.
If we can imagine the colors on a painted canvas sinking by degrees into
the substance of the material, and at last re emerging in their pristine
brilliancy on the other side, we shall be conceiving a process which might not
have destroyed the picture, but which would leave a gallery in which it took
place a dreary scene of brown and meaningless backs, and that is very much what
the Kama-Loka entities become before they ultimately shed the very material on
which their first astral consciousness operated, and pass into the wholly
purified Devachanic condition.
But this is not the whole of the story which teaches us to regard manifestations
coming from Kama-Loka with distrust. Our present comprehension of the subject
enables us to realize that when the time arrives for that second death on the
astral plane, which releases the purified Ego from Kama-Loka altogether and
sends it onward to the Devachanic state — something is left behind in Kama-Loka
which corresponds to the dead body bequeathed to the earth when the soul takes
its first flight from physical existence.
A dead astral body is in fact left behind in Kama-Loka, and there is
certainly no impropriety in applying the epithet “shell” to that residuum. The
true shell in that state disintegrates in Kama-Loka before very long, just as
the true body left to the legitimate processes of Nature on earth would soon
decay and blend its elements with the general reservoirs of matter of the order
to which they belong.
But until that disintegration is accomplished, the shell which the real
Ego has altogether abandoned may even in that state be mistaken sometimes at
spiritual séances for a living
entity. It remains for a time an astral looking-glass, in which mediums may see
their own thoughts reflected, and take these back, fully believing them to come
from an external source.
These phenomena in the truest sense of the term are galvanized astral
corpses; none the less so, because until they are actually disintegrated a
certain subtle connection will subsist between them and the true Devachanic
spirit; just as such a subtle communication subsists in the first instance
between the Kama-Loka entity and the dead body left on earth.
That last - mentioned communication is kept up by the finally-diffused
material of the original third principle, or linga-sharira, and a study of this
branch of the subject will, I believe, lead us up to a better comprehension
than we possess at present of the circumstances under which materializations
are sometimes accomplished at spiritual séances.
But without going into that digression now, it is enough to recognize
that the analogy may help to show how, between the Devachanic entity and the
discarded shell in Kama-Loka a similar connection may continue for a while,
acting, while it lasts, as a drag on the higher spirit, but perhaps as an
after-glow of sunset on the shell. It would surely be distressing, however, m
the highest degree, to any living friend of the person concerned, to get,
through clairvoyance, or in any other way, sight or cognition of such a shell,
and to be led into mistaking it for the true entity.
The comparatively clear view of Kama-Loka which we are now enabled to
take, may help us to employ terms relating to its phenomena with more precision
than we have hitherto been able to attain.
I think if we adopt one new expression, “astral soul”, as applying to
the entities in Kama-Loka who have recently quitted earth-life, or who for
other reasons still retain, in the aspect they turn back towards earth, a large
share of the intellectual attributes that distinguished them on earth, we shall
then find the other terms in use already, adequate to meet our remaining
emergencies. Indeed, we may then get rid entirely of the inconvenient term “elementary”,
liable to be confused with elemental, and singularly inappropriate to the beings
it describes.
I would suggest that the astral soul as it sinks (regarded from our
point of view) into intellectual decrepitude, should be spoken of in its faded
condition as a shade, and that the term shell should be reserved for the true
shells or astral dead bodies which the Devachanic spirit has finally quitted.
We are naturally led in studying the law of spiritual growth in Kama-Loka
to inquire how long a time may probably elapse before the transfer of consciousness
from the lower to the higher principles of the astral soul may be regarded as
complete; and as usual, when we come to figures relating to the higher
processes of Nature, the answer is very elastic.
But I believe the esoteric teachers of the East declare that as regards
the average run of humanity (for what may be called, in a spiritual sense, the
great middle classes of humanity) it is unusual that a Kama-Loka entity will be
in a position to manifest as such for more than twenty-five to thirty years. But
on each side of this average the figures may run up very considerably.
That is to say, a very ignoble and besotted human creature may hang
about in Kama-Loka for a much longer time for want of any higher principles
sufficiently developed to take up his consciousness at all, and at the other
end of the scale the very intellectual and mentally-active soul may remain for
very long periods in Kama-Loka (in the absence of spiritual affinities in
corresponding force), by reason of the great persistence of forces and causes
generated on the higher plane of effects, though mental activity could hardly
be divorced in this way from spirituality except in cases where it was
exclusively associated with worldly ambition.
Again, while Kama-Loka periods may thus be prolonged beyond the average
from various causes, they may sink to almost infinitesimal brevity when the
spirituality of a person dying at a ripe old age, and at the close of a life
which has legitimately fulfilled its purpose, is already far advanced.
There is one other important possibility connected with manifestations
reaching us by the usual channels of communication with Kama-Loka, which it is
desirable to notice here, although from its nature the realization of such a possibility
cannot be frequent.
No recent students of theosophy can expect to know as yet very much
about the conditions of existence which await adepts who relinquish the use of
physical bodies on earth.
The higher possibilities open to them appear to me quite beyond the reach
of intellectual appreciation. No man is clever enough, by virtue of the mere
cleverness seated in a living brain, to understand Nirvana; but it would appear
that adepts in some cases elect to pursue a course lying midway between
re-incarnation and the passage into Nirvana, and in the higher regions of
Devachan; that is to say, in the arupa state of Devachan may await the slow
advance of human evolution towards the exalted condition they have thus
attained.
Now an adept who had thus become a Devachanic spirit of the most
elevated type would not be cut off by the conditions of his Devachanic state —
as would be the case with a natural Devachanic spirit passing through that
state on his way to re-incarnation — from manifesting his influence on earth.
His would certainly not be an influence which would make itself felt by
the instrumentality of any physical signs to mixed audiences, but it is not
impossible that a medium of the highest type (who would more properly be called
a seer) might be thus influenced.
By such an Adept spirit, some great men in the world's history may from
time to time have been overshadowed and inspired, consciously or unconsciously
as the case may have been:
The disintegration of shells in Kama-Loka will inevitably suggest to any
one who endeavors to comprehend the process at all, that there must be in
Nature some general reservoirs of the matter appropriate to that sphere of
existence, corresponding to the physical earth and its surrounding elements,
into which our own bodies are resigned at death.
The grand mysteries on which this consideration impinges will claim a
far more exhaustive investigation than we have yet been enabled to undertake;
but one broad idea connected with them may usefully be put forward without
further delay.
The state of Kama-Loka is one which has its corresponding orders of
matter in manifestation round it. I will not here attempt to go into the
metaphysics of the problem, which might even lead us to discard the notion that
astral matter need be any less real and tangible than that which appeals to our
physical senses. It is enough for the present to explain that the propinquity
of Kama-Loka to the earth, which is so readily made apparent by spiritualistic
experience, is explained by Oriental teaching to arise from this fact, — that
Kama-Loka is just as much in and of the earth as, during our lives, our astral
soul is in and of the living man.
The stage of Kama-Loka, in fact, the great realm of matter in the
appropriate state which constitutes Kama-Loka and is perceptible to the senses
of astral entities, as also to those of many clairvoyants, is the fourth
principle of the earth, just as the Kama-rupa is the fourth principle of man.
For the earth has its seven principles like the human creatures who
inhabit it. Thus, the Devachanic state corresponds to the fifth principle of
the earth, and Nirvana to the sixth principle.
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