308 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
308 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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(Part 7 of 8)
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YOGA FOR YELLOWBELLIES.
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THIRD LECTURE.
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Dear Children,
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Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
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1. You will remember that last week our study of Yoga had led
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us to the Fathers of the Church. We saw that their philosophy and
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science, in following an independent route, had brought us to the
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famous exclamation of Tertullian: 'certum est quia ineptum!' How
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right the Church has been to deny the authority of Reason!
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2. We are almost tempted to enquire for a moment what the
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Church means by 'faith.' St. Paul tells us that faith is 'the
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substance of things hoped for; the evidence of things unseen.' I do
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not think, then, that we are to imagine this word faith to mean what
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that lecherous gross-bellied boor, Martin Luther, maintained. The
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faith of which he speaks is anything but a substance, and as for
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evidence, it is nothing but the power, as the schoolboy said, of
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believing that which we know to be untrue. To have any sensible
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meaning at all, faith must mean experience, and that view is in exact
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accord with the conclusion to which we were led in my last lecture.
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Nothing is any use to us unless it be a certainty unshakeable by
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criticism of any kind, and there is only one thing in the universe
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which complies with these conditions: the direct experience of
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spiritual truth. Here, and here only, do we find a position in which
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the great religious minds of all times and all climes coincide. It
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is necessarily above dogma, because dogma consists of a collection of
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intellectual statements, each of which, and also its contradictory,
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can easily be disputed and overthrown.
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3. You are probably aware that in the Society of Jesus the
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postulants are trained to debate on all these highly controversial
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subjects. They put up a young man to prove any startling blasphemy
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that happens to occur to them. And the more shocked the young man
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is, the better the training for his mind, and the better service will
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he give to the Society in the end; but only if his mind has been
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completely disabused of its confidence in its own rightness, or even
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in the possibility of being right.
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4. The rationalist, in his shallow fashion, always contends
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that this training is the abnegation of mental freedom. On the
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contrary, it is the only way to obtain that freedom. In the same
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Society the training in obedience is based on a similar principle.
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The priest has to do what his Superior orders him -- 'perinde ac
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cadaver.' Protestants always represent that this is the most outra-
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geous and indefensible tyranny. "The poor devil,' they say, 'is
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bludgeoned into having no will of his own.' That is pure nonsense.
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By abnegating his will through the practice of holy obedience his
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will has become enormously strong, so strong that none of his natural
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instincts, desires, or habits can intrude. He has freed his will of
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all these inhibitions. He is a perfect function of the machinery of
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the Order. In the General of the Society is concentrated the power
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of all those separate wills, just as in the human body every cell
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should be completely devoted in its particular quality to the
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concentrated will of the organism.
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5. In other words, the Society of Jesus has created a perfect
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imitation of the skeleton of the original creation, living man. It
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has complied with the divinely instituted order of things, and that
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is why we see that the body, which was never numerically important,
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has yet been one of the greatest influences in the development of
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Europe. It has not always worked perfectly, but that has not been
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the fault of the system; and, even as it is, its record has been
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extraordinary. And one of the most remarkable things about it is
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that its greatest and most important achievements have been in the
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domain of science and philosophy. It has done nothing in religion;
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or, rather, where it has meddled with religion it has only done harm.
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What a mistake! And why? For the simple reason that it was in a
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position to take no notice of religion; all these matters were
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decided for it by the Pope, or by the Councils of the Church, and the
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Society was therefore able to free itself from the perplexities of
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religion, in exactly the same way as the novice obtains complete
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freedom from his moral responsibilities by sinking his personal
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phantasies in the will of the Superior.
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6. I should like to mention here that the Spiritual Exercises
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of St. Ignatius are in their essence really admirable Yoga practices.
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They have, it is true, a tinge of magical technique, and they have
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been devised to serve a dogmatic end. That was, however, necessary,
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and it was good magic too, at that, because the original will of the
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Founder was to produce a war engine as a counterblast to the Reforma-
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tion. He was very wise to devise a plan, irrespective of its ab-
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stract merits as philosophy, which would most efficiently serve that
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single purpose. The only trouble has been that this purpose was not
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sufficiently cosmic in scope to resist internal forces. Having
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attained the higher planes by practice of these exercises, they found
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that the original purpose of the Society was not really adequate to
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their powers; they were, so to speak, over-engined. They stupidly
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invaded the spiritual sphere of the other authorities whom they were
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founded to support, and thus we see them actually quarrelling with
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the Pope, while failing signally to obtain possession of the Papacy.
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Being thus thwarted in their endeavours, and confused in their
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purpose, they redoubled the ardour of their exercises; and it is one
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of the characteristics of all spiritual exercises, if honestly and
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efficiently performed, that they constantly lead you on to higher
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planes, where all dogmatic considerations, all intellectual concepts,
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are invalid. Hence, we found that it is not altogether surprising
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that the General of the Order and his immediate circle have been
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supposed to be atheists. If that were true, it would only show that
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they have been corrupted by their preoccupation with the practical
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politics of the world, which it is impossible to conduct on any but
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an atheistic basis; it is brainless hypocrisy to pretend otherwise,
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and should be restricted to the exclusive use of the Foreign Office.
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It would, perhaps, be more sensible to suppose that the heads of
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the Order have really attained the greatest heights of spiritual
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knowledge and freedom, and it is quite possible that the best term to
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describe their attitude would be either Pantheistic or Gnostic.
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7. These considerations should be of the greatest use to us now
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that we come to discuss in more detail the results of the Yoga
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practices. There is, it is true, a general similarity between the
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ecstatic outbursts of the great mystics all over the world. Compari-
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sons have often been drawn by students of the subject. I will only
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detain you with one example: 'Do what thou wilt shall be the whole
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of the Law.' What is this injunction? It is a generalisation of St.
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Augustine's 'Love, and do what thou wilt.' But in 'The Book of the
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Law', lest the hearer should be deluded into a spasm of antinomi-
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anism, there is a further explanation: 'Love is the law, love under
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will.'
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8. However, the point is that it is no use discussing the
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results of Yoga, whether that Yoga be the type recommended by Lao-
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Tze, or Patanjali, or St. Ignatius Loyola, because for our first
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postulate we have: that these subjects are incapable of discussion.
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To argue about them only causes us to fall into the pit of Because,
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and there to perish with the dogs of Reason. The only use, there-
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fore, of describing our experiences is to enable students to get some
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sort of idea of the sort of thing that is going to happen to them
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when they attain success in the practices of Yoga. We have David
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saying in the Psalms: 'I hate thoughts, but Thy law do I love.' We
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have St. Paul saying: 'The carnal mind is enmity against God.' One
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might almost say that the essence of St. Paul's Epistles is a strug-
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gle against mind: 'We war not against flesh and blood' -- you know
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the rest -- I can't be bothered to quote it all -- Eph. vi. 12.
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9. It is St. Paul, I think, who describes Satan, which is his
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name for the enemy, owing to his ignorance of the history of the
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world, as the Prince of the Power of the Air; that is, of the Ruach,
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of the intellect; and we must never forget that what operated the
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conversion of St. Paul was the Vision on the road to Damascus. It is
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particularly significant that he disappeared into the Desert of
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Arabia for three years before coming forward as the Apostle to the
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Gentiles. St. Paul was a learned Rabbi; he was the favourite pupil
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of the best expositor of the Hebrew Law, and in the single moment of
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his Vision all his arguments were shattered at a single stroke!
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10. We are not told that St. Paul said anything at the time,
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but went quietly on his journey. That is the great lesson: not to
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discuss the results. Those of you who possess a copy of 'The Equinox
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of the Gods' may have been very much surprised at the extraordinary
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injunction in the Comment: the prohibition of all discussion of the
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Book. I myself did not fully understand that injunction; I do so
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now.
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11. Let us now deal with a few of the phenomena which occur
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during the practices of Pratyahara.
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Very early during my retirement in Kandy, I had been trying to
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concentrate by slanting my eyes towards the tip of my nose. This, by
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the way, is not a good practice; one is liable to strain the eyes.
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But what happened was that I woke up in the night; my hand touched a
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nose; I immediately concluded that some one was in the room. Not at
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all; I only thought so because my nose had passed away from the
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region of my observation by the practice of concentrating upon it.
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12. The same sort of thing occurs with adequate concentration
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on any object. It is connected, curiously enough, with the phenomena
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of invisibility. When your mind has gone so deeply into itself that
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it is unconscious of itself and its surroundings, one of the most
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ordinary results is that the body becomes invisible to other people.
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I do not think that it would make any difference for a photograph,
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though I have no evidence for saying this; but it has happened to me
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on innumerable occasions. It was an almost daily occurrence when I
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was in Sicily.
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13. A party of us used to go down to a very beautiful bay of
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sand, whence jutted fantastically-shaped islets of rock; it is rimmed
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by cliffs encrusted with jewels of marine life. The way was over a
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bare hillside; except for a few hundred yards of vineyard there was
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no cover -- nay, not for a rabbit. But it often happened that one of
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the party would turn to speak to me, and fail to see me. I have
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often known this to happen when I was dictating; my chair was
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apparently empty.
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Incidentally, this faculty, which I think is exercised, as a
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rule, unconsciously, may become an actual magical power.
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14. It happened to me on one occasion that a very large number
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of excited people were looking for me with no friendly intentions;
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but I had a feeling of lightness, of ghostliness, as if I were a
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shadow moving soundlessly about the street; and in actual fact none
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of the people who were looking for me gave the slightest indication
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that they were aware of my presence.
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There is a curious parallel to this incident in one of the
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Gospels where we read that 'they picked up stones to stone him, but
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he, passing through the midst of them, went his way.'
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15. There is another side to this business of Pratyahara, one
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that may be described as completely contradictory against what we
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have been talking about.
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If you concentrate your attention upon one portion of the body
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with the idea of investigating it, that is, I suppose, allowing the
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mind to move within very small limits, the whole of your conscious-
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ness becomes concentrated in that small part. I used to practise
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this a good deal in my retirement by Lake Pasquaney. I would usually
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take a finger or a toe, and identify my whole consciousness with the
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small movements which I allowed it to make. It would be futile to go
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into much detail about this experience. I can only say that until
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you acquire the power you have no idea of the sheer wonder and
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delight of that endlessly quivering orgasm.
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16. If I remember rightly, this practice and its result were
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one of the principal factors which enabled me afterwards to attain
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what is called the Trance of Wonder, which pertains to the Grade of a
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Master of the Temple, and is a sort of complete understanding of the
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organism of the universe, and an ecstatic adoration of its marvel.
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This Trance is very much higher than the Beatific Vision, for
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always in the latter it is the heart -- the Phren -- which is in-
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volved; in the former it is the Nous, the divine intelligence of man,
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whereas the heart is only the centre of the intellectual and moral
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faculties.
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17. But, so long as you are occupying yourself with the physi-
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cal, your results will only be on that plane; and the principal
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effect of these concentrations on small parts of the body is the
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understanding, or rather the appreciation, of sensuous pleasure.
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This, however, is infinitely refined, exquisitely intense. It is
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often possible to acquire a technique by which the skilled artist can
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produce this pleasure in another person. Map out, say, three square
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inches of skin anywhere, and it is possible by extreme gentle touches
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to excite in the patient all the possible sensations of pleasure of
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which that person is capable. I know that this is a very extraordi-
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nary claim, but it is a very easy one to substantiate. The only
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thing I am afraid of is that experts may be carried away by the
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rewards, instead of getting the real value of the lesson, which is
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that the gross pleasures of the senses are absolutely worthless.
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This practice, so far as it is useful to all, should be regarded
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as the first step towards emancipation from the thrall of the bodily
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desires, of the sensations self-destructive, of the thirst for
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pleasure.
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18. I think this is a good opportunity to make a little digres-
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sion in favour of Mahasatipatthana. This practice was recommended by
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the Buddha in very special terms, and it is the only one of which he
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speaks so highly. He told his disciples that if they only stuck to
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it, sooner or later they would reach full attainment. The practice
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consists of an analysis of the universe in terms of consciousness.
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You begin by taking some very simple and regular bodily exercise,
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such as the movement of the body in walking, or the movements of the
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lungs in breathing. You keep on noting what happens: 'I am breath-
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ing out; I am breathing in; I am holding my breath,' as the case may
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be. Quite without warning, one is appalled by the shock of the
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discovery that what you have been thinking is not true. You have no
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right to say: 'I am breathing in.' All that you really know is that
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there is a breathing in.
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19. You therefore change your note, and you say: 'There is a
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breathing in; there is a breathing out,' and so on. And very soon,
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if you practise assiduously, you get another shock. You have no
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right to say that there is a breathing. All you know is that there
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is a sensation of that kind. Again you change your conception of
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your observation, and one day make the discovery that the sensation
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has disappeared. All you know is that there is perception of a
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sensation of breathing in or breathing out. Continue, and that is
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once more discovered to be an illusion. What you find is that there
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is a tendency to perceive a sensation of the natural phenomena.
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20. The former stages are easy to assimilate intellectually;
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one assents to them immediately that one discovers them, but with
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regard to the 'tendency,' this is not the case, at least it was not
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so for my own part. It took me a long while before I understood what
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was meant by 'tendency.' To help you to realise this I should like
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to find a good illustration. For instance, a clock does nothing at
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all but offer indications of the time. It is so constructed that
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this is all we can know about it. We can argue about whether the
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time is correct, and that means nothing at all, unless, for example,
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we know whether the clock is controlled electrically from an astro-
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nomical station where the astronomer happens to be sane, and in what
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part of the world the clock is, and so on.
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21. I remember once when I was in Teng-Yueh, just inside the
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Chinese frontier in Yunnan. The hour of noon was always telegraphed
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to the Consulate from Pekin. This was a splendid idea, because
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electricity is practically instantaneous. The unfortunate thing was,
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if it *was* unfortunate, which I doubt, that the messages had to be
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relayed at a place called Yung Chang. The operators there had the
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good sense to smoke opium most of the time, so occasionally a batch
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of telegrams would arrive, a dozen or so in a bunch, stating that it
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was noon at Pekin on various dates! So all the gross phenomena, all
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these sensations and perceptions, are illusion. All that one could
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really say was that there was a tendency on the part of some lunatic
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in Pekin to tell the people at Teng-Yueh what o'clock it was.
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22. But even this Fourth Skandha is not final. With practice,
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it also appears as an illusion, and one remains with nothing but the
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bare consciousness of the existence of such a tendency.
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I cannot tell you very much about this, because I have not
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worked it out very thoroughly myself, but I very much doubt whether
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'consciousness' has any meaning at all, as a translation of the word
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Vinnanam. I think that a better translation would be 'experience,'
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used in the sense in which we have been using it hitherto, as the
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direct reality behind and beyond all remark.
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23. I hope you will appreciate how difficult it is to give a
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reasoned description, however tentative, of these phenomena, still
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less to classify them properly. They have a curious trick of running
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one into the other. This, I believe, is one of the reasons why it
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has been impossible to find any really satisfactory literature about
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Yoga at all. The more advanced one's progress, the less one knows,
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and the more one understands. The effect is simply additional
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evidence of what I have been saying all this time: that it is very
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little use discussing things; what is needed is continuous devotion
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to the practice.
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Love is the law, love under will.
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touches
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to excite in the patient all the possible sensations of pleasure of
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which that person is capable. I know that this is a very extraordi-
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nary claim, but it is a very easy one to substantiate. The only
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thing I am afraid of is that experts may be carried away by the
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rewards, instead of getting the real value of the lesson, which is
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that the gross pleasures of the senses are absolutely worthless.
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This pra
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