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1
When a man dies, his soul or psychic being, after a time goes
to the psychic world and takes rest there till the hour comes
to take birth again in another body upon earth. There are then
these two periods in the life after death. First, the passage
and next the rest. The passage means the gradual shedding of
all the other sheaths or envelopes that surround the psychic
being and form its earthly frame. With the physical body has
to go also the subtle body, then the vital and finally the mental
too. The reason why one does not remember the past lives is
this that one leaves behind the instrument of memory-the brain
mind-with one's death. One does not carry over with the psychic
being the other parts that constitute the terrestrial life.
They are dispersed and dissolved in their respective cosmic
spheres. The subtle body gives up its elements to the subtle
physical plane, the vital elements are taken up into the vital
world and the mental elements go into the mental world,-unless
the psychic being is highly developed and has organised around
itself as its instrument of self- expression any of these elements.
In that case, as much of the terrestrial parts-namely, of the
subtle body and life and mind-as have come into direct contact
with the psychic and have allowed themselves to be moved and
moulded by its consciousness, will alone persist and share in
the immortality of the soul. Normally, the elements of the human
vehicle form a loose and unorganised aggregate massed round
the psychic centre. When the centre withdraws, they too falloff
automatically and are scattered into the universal storehouse
of Nature. Only when they have been organised and when
they
have attained a definite form and character expressing something
of the psychic nature, can they maintain their identity, for
this identity is part and parcel of the psychic identity.
I have said that the memory of past lives
is effaced because of the effacement of the instrument. But
there is a higher memory which is the attribute of the psychic
consciousness. The psychic being is made of light and knowledge:
it knows, rather it sees and can survey the whole curve of its
past growth and development. Of course, it may not see or remember-
very often it does not-all the physical details of things and
happenings of an earthly life, the hundred incidents, accidents
and contingencies that are not directly linked to its consciousness.
But all things that have had its touch and have contributed
to its growth and development and have in their turn received
its influence--0bjects, persons, happenings or movements-find
themselves harboured in the psychic memory . And thus the only
sure way of remembering the past, remembering, that is to say,
what is worth remembering, is to go into the psychic being,
possess the psychic consciousness. There one has the whole panorama
of the soul's odyssey revealed. Any other way leads only to
imagination, conjecture and delusion.
2
The passage between death and the arrival
at final rest in the psychic world is a most difficult and dangerous
ordeal for the human being. He has left the protection of the
body and has not yet found the refuge in the psychic, he is
obsessed and pulled back by his past-the desires, the hungers,
the attractions and repulsions, the plans unfulfilled, problematic
schemes-all haunt him still, things done, things not done crowd
around him and fetter his forward march. Not only his own Karma,
but the Karma of others too pursues him, all persons with whom
he has had relation, who think of him now, pity him, mourn for
him, lament his absence, raise so many hurdles and obstacles
in his path, oblige him to turn and look back. Again, there
are forces and personalities the intermediate worlds
with whom the poor disembodied creature has now to come in contact,
and not unoften he feels like one unskinned and all his nerves
on edge open helplessly to rough and painful impacts.
Indeed, although it may
sound somewhat strange and wonderful, nevertheless it is literally
true that the body is the fortress par excellence for
the individual being: it is not merely an ugly dirty clothing
that has to be cast off so that one may go straight to the enjoyment
of the beatitude of Paradise; on the contrary, it is, as it
were, an armour, a steel-frame that protects the subtle body
against -the attacks or harsh and cruel touches of other worlds
and their beings. Once outside the body, there is every danger
for the individual to go astray and be hurt, unless he is guided
and protected by a guardian angel, as Dante has had Virgil as
his Maestro. We may note here that the passage of Dante from
Hell through Purgatory to Heaven across their various levels
is almost an exact image of what happens to a soul after death.
The highest Heaven where Dante meets Beatrice may be considered
as the psychic world and Beatrice herself the Divine Grace that
bathes, illumines and comforts the psychic being.
If one has, however, within
oneself an ardent and sincere and unflickering flame, one can
go through more or less easily and unscathed; but that is rare.
Even when alive, in sleep one goes out often into other worlds
and the foreign and unpleasant contacts and experiences he has
there are recorded in the brain-mind as nightmares: on such
occasions the best way to escape is to rush back into the body,
the best place of safety. Many have this experience of rushing
headlong into the body-dropping into the body, as it were-in
order to escape from a threatening danger in sleep and waking
up all on a sudden to find to one's relief that all was illusion
and hallucination.
An easy and quick passage
to the place of rest, that is what the being needs and asks
for after death. This is determined by one's Karma in life and
the last wish and prayer at the moment of death-for the force
of consciousness at this critical moment acts not only upon
the character of the passage but also upon the character even
of the next birth. Apart from one's own merit, one can be helped
by others also who are still upon earth and who claim to be
his friends and relatives and well-wishers-not in the way they
think they do at present, that is to say, by grieving and lamenting
or even by performing rites and ceremonies, these often retard
rather than accelerate the passage, but by an inner detachment
and calm prayer and goodwill, often perhaps to forget the departed
is the best way to help him. A truly conscious help can be given
only by one who has the requisite occult power and spiritual
realisation-the Guru, for example.
3
Once in its place of rest the soul enjoys
profound peace and delight and is in a kind of luminous sleep.
There it assimilates all the experiences of its last life, that
is to say, imbibes out of them all the substance that goes to
increase and strengthen its consciousness, the sap that lends
itself to the growth of the build and stature of the being.
These experiences are meant to bring the soul nearer-each life
being one step nearer-to the fullness of its union with the
Divine Consciousness out of which it came originally upon earth
as a mere spark, a parcel yet apart. This process may be short
or long according to the nature of assimilation undertaken.
Here also the being prepares for the impending birth, that is
to say, gathers all the elements that will be required for the
play of the consciousness in that life. A broad planning too
is made here, a scheme in outline of the kind of experiences
that one will need for the particular growth of consciousness
envisaged. Some forces of consciousness, out of the stock developed
and assembled by the being, are kept back, in reserve, others
are brought forward for immediate use in the life to be lived
next. AIl this, however, is not the deliberate rational process
of the mind, it is something spontaneous, involved, a luminous
brooding and incubation, something like the trance of Brahman
within which the seed of creation is about to germinate.
The psychic being is a packet of gathered
power, a charged battery, as it were; when it comes down upon
earth, it calls round itself elements of mind and vital and
even subtle physical needed for the purpose of the particular
life' experience, and even those that would go to constitute
the physical body. The psychic being usually picks up these
elements of mind and life and body out of the universal store-house
of earth's atmosphere as it needs them, in the same way as it
returns them there on the journey back after death. But as I
have already said, there are beings who have developed well-
formed personalities of mind and life and even of the physical
consciousness. These formations are not mere loose accretions,
temporary arrangements for a life experience, but are welded,
organised, given a more or less permanent shape, as the proper
instrument of the psychic being, as its own expression. In such
cases, the outer personality too continues to exist as an essential
mode or vibration in and with the psychic consciousness itself
and when the soul descends upon earth, is in contact with the
earth's atmosphere, it projects out of itself the external personality
and formation. This does not mean certainly that the personality
remains something fixed and rigid, but that it has attained
an essential fullness of form and yet retains the capacity for
further change and growth through further growth of the psychic
being in other life experiences.
Now the time and occasion for a particular
birth of the soul depends naturally on the inner need of that
being. But it must be noted-as it is a fact in the occult world-that
the souls are not so many absolutely separate unrelated autonomous
self-sufficient entities, each one coming and going as and when
it chooses and likes: on the contrary, the souls form groups
or families according to some secret affinity. And when they
come down, they do so not unoften in company. A call goes, a
bell is rung as it were intimating that the hour is come and
they rush down. And it may even happen that in rushing down
a psychic being is not too careful or fastidious about the instrument,
the vehicle he chooses to inhabit.
whatever is handy and nearest and on the whole suitable to his
purpose he takes up and goes forward. He takes it all as an
adventure and has the joy of battle and the warrior spirit that
can taste of victory only when hard fought and won. That is
how we meet not unoften a considerable discrepancy between the
inner being of a man and his earthly tenement, his soul and
his external character and physical nature. There is a meaning
in the choice, a significance in the utilisation of unfavourable
conditions: there is a method in the madness.
This grouping will appear natural and inevitable
when we bear in mind the purpose of creation and the role of
the psychic consciousness. For it is not a matter of individual
salvation, of the unilateral growth and development and fulfilment
of an individual psychic being. The soul is a luminous point
in an inconscient universe and its role is to make it conscious,
at least a representative portion of it. The psychic being's
activity is the means of a new creation, the tranmutation of
the earth-consciousness, the growth and advent of a divine race,
the manifestation and embodiment of the Divine and his play
upon earth. The souls are the warriors, playmates, the beloved
of the Lord. They have to assemble and move together for the
interest of the play. They have to be in companies and regiments
and battalions, in associations and concert and harmonised formations.
4
The souls group themselves into natural types
according to the fundamental mode of consciousness and its dynamism.
And they form a hierarchy: they exist and function in an organisation,
the type and pattern of which is the pyramid. At the apex is
the One Supreme, at the base the infinity of individual and
disparate souls, earthly sparks, that are emanations, derivations,
scattered condensations, parts and parcels of that One Supreme.
In between, from the top towards the bottom, lie in a graded
scale formations more and more specialised, particularised and
concretised : as we rise we meet the larger, vaster more comprehensive
forms of the same entities till we arrive at the typal and original,
the source being. Thus we can view a soul along its line of
emanation from the central source as a series of beings, the
higher enclosing and encompassing the lower. Not only so, a
higher entity can have several lower emanations and each of
these again can emanate several others. The number of emanations
multiply as one goes down and they decrease as one goes up.
We can understand now what is meant when we speak of kindred
souls. When there is an inexplicable natural affinity or similarity
between two souls, it happens in such a case that the souls
are emanations of the same Over-Soul. And it happens also sometimes
that the guardian angel or daemon whom one may contact is none
other than one's own Over- Soul. The term Over-Soul takes thus
a literal and a profound significance.
We may illustrate here a little. At the apex
of the pyramid of existence is the Divine, the Supreme Person,
the Purushottama. Even there as He begins to lean and look down,
He expresses himself at the very outset as the dual personality
of Ishwara and Shakti (the Divine Father and the Divine Mother)
-sa dvitryam aicchat, as the Upanishad says. That is
still the Divine in His highest transcendent status, partitpara.
Next, this dual or biune or divalent reality shows itself
or throws itself further out in a fourfold valency of the dynamic
truth consciousness, creating and leading the cosmic evolution.
The Four Aspects of Ishwara, forming the male or puruya line,
are the great names: Mahavira, Balarama, Pradyumna and Aniruddha.
And the corresponding four aspects of Ishwari form the other
great quaternary : Maheshwari, Mahakali, Mahalakshmi and Mahasaraswati.
They embody the four major attributes of the Divine in his relation
to the created universe: Knowledge, Power, Love and skill in
work. They also represent thus a divine fourfold order. The
first embodies the Brahmin quality of large wisdom, wide comprehension,
a vast consciousness; the second has the Kshatriya quality of
force, dynamism, concentration and drive of energy; the third
possesses the Vaishya quality of harmony, beauty, mutuality
and the fourth has the Shudra quality of perfect execution,
thoroughness in detailed working, order and arrangement.
The higher Gods, like those, for example,
envisaged in the Veda, may be considered each as an emanation
of one or other of these Divine Aspects. They are dwellers of
Swar or the Overmind. Varuna seems to be an emanation of Mahavira,
a son of Maheshwari: for he is pre-eminently the god of the
pure and vast consciousness who releases us from the triple
bonds and shows us the winding way into the embrace of the infinite
Mother. His associate, Mitra, is the lord of love and harmony,
evidently an emanation of Pradyumna (or Mahalakshmi).
Other gods of the same category are Bhaga and Soma. The Balarama
or Mahakali aspect is manifested in Aryaman: Rudra being another
form of the same. And Mahasaraswati (or Aniruddha) must have
given birth to and inspired the Ribhus, who are artisans of
divinity. The Puranic trinity-Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva-with
Indra as the fourth member forms a parallel system embodying
a similar conception.
Another tradition gives the Four Supernals
as ( I) Light or Consciousness, (2) Truth or Knowledge, (3)
Life and (4) Love. The tradition also says that the beings representing
these four fundamental principles of creation were the first
and earliest gods that emanated from the Supreme Divine, and
that as they separated themselves from their source and from
each other, each followed his own independent line of fulfilment,
they lost their divinity and turned into their opposites. Light
became obscurity, Consciousness unconsciousness or the inconscient,
Truth became falsehood and Knowledge ignorance, Life became
death and finally Love and Delight became suffering and hatred.
These are the fallen angels, the Asuras that deny their divine
essence and now rule the world. They have possessed mankind
and are controlling earthly existence. They too have their emanations,
forces and beings that are born out of them and serve them in
their various degrees of power. Men talk and act inspired and
impelled by these beings and when they do so, they lose their
humanity and become worse than animals.
But still the Pure Reality descends undeviated
in its own line and man enshrines that within him, the undying
fire that will clean him and bear him to the source from where
he came. And there are luminous godheads that help him and wish
themselves to participate in the terrestrial transformation.
There is a pressure from above and there is an urge from below,
between these two infinities all is ground and moulded and changed.
Even the Lords of Denial will in the end change and learn to
affirm, become again what they truly were and are.
5
First then there are
the supreme divinities, aspects or own personalities of the
Divine in his supreme status, the Supermind; next come the first
emanations, the true or pure gods in the Overmind. Thence or
simultaneously there is the line of deformation, that of the
false gods and godheads, the Asuras and Titans. These too extend
in a series of emanations down to the subtle physical; except
when they themselves incarnate on the earth in an earthly body.
Man, the soul, we
said, comes direct from the Divine and is thrown and almost
stuck into the earth as a spark, as a point of luminous consciousness-force.
This soul, as it develops, we find, belongs to one or other
of the fundamental type of divine personality, it is a lineal
descendant, as it were, of one of the quaternary and its growth
means growing into the nature of that particular godhead and
its fulfilment means identification with that.
We may try to illustrate by examples, although it is a rather
dangerous' game and may tend to put into a too rigid and f mathematical
formula something that is living and variable.
Still it will serve to give a clearer picture of the matter.
Napoleon evidently was a child of Mahakali; and Caesar seems
to have been fashioned largely by the principle of Maheshwari
; while Christ or Chaitanya are clearly emanations in the line
of Mahalakshmi. Constructive geniuses, on the other hand, like
the great statesman Colbert, for example, or Louis XIV, le
grand monarque, himself belong to a family ( or gotra,
as we say in India) that originated from Mahasaraswati.
Poets and artists again, although generally they belong to the
clan of Mahalakshmi, can be regrouped according to the principle
that predominates in each, the godhead that presides over the
inspiration in each. The large breath in Homer and Valmiki,
the high and noble style of their movement, the dignity and
vastness that compose their consciousness affiliate them naturally
to the Maheshwari line. A Dante, on the other hand, or a Byron
has something in his matter and manner that make us think of
the stamp of Mahakali. Virgil or Petrarch, Shelley or our Tagore
seem to be emanations of Beauty,
! Harmony, Love-Mahalakshmi. And the perfect artisanship of
Mahasaraswati has found its especial embodiment in Horace and
Racine and our Kalidasa. Michael Angelo in his fury of inspirations
seems to have been impelled by Mahakali, while Mahalakshmi sheds
her genial favour upon Raphael and Titian; and the meticulous
care and the detailed surety in a Tintoretto makes us think
of Mahasaraswati's grace. Mahasaraswati too seems to have especially
favoured Leonardo da Vinci, although a brooding presence of
Maheshwari also seems to be intermixed there.
For it must be remembered that the human soul
after all is not a simple and unilateral being, it is a little
cosmos in itself. The soul is not merely a point or a single
ray of light come down straight from its divine archetype or
from the Divine himself, it is also a developing fire that increases
and enriches itself through the multiple experiences of an evolutionary
progression-it not only grows in height but extends in wideness
also. Even though it may originally emanate from one principle
and Personality, it takes in for its development and fulfilment
influences and elements from the others also. Indeed, we know
that the Four primal personalities of the Divine are not separate
and distinct as they may appear to the human mind which cannot
understand distinction without disparity. The Vedic gods themselves
are so linked together, so interpenetrate one another that finally
it is asserted that there is only one existence, only it is
given many names. All the divine personalities are aspects of
the Divine blended and fused together. Even so the human soul,
being a replica of the Divine, cannot but be a complex of many
personalities and often it may be difficult and even harmful
to find and fix upon a dominant personality. The full flowering
of the human soul, its perfect divinisation demands the realisation
of a many-aspected personality, the very richness of the Divine
within it.
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