1959 lines
107 KiB
Plaintext
1959 lines
107 KiB
Plaintext
This is from a book called the Blue Island published shortly after
|
||
the Titanic sank. It is in the public domain, and claims to be channeled
|
||
from one of the victims of that event.
|
||
|
||
A Letter from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
|
||
|
||
Dear Miss Stead,
|
||
|
||
I found the narrative most interesting and helpful. I have no means of
|
||
judging the exact conditions under which it was produced, or now far
|
||
subconscious influences may nave been at work, but on the surface of it,
|
||
speaking as a literary critic, I should say that the clear expression and
|
||
the happy knack of smiles were very characteristic of your father.
|
||
|
||
We have to face the difficulty that the details of these numerous
|
||
descriptions of next spheres differ in various manuscripts, but, on the
|
||
other hand, no one can deny that the resemblances far exceed the
|
||
differences. We have to remember that the next world is infinitely complex
|
||
and subdivided - {My Father's house has many mansions} - and that, even in
|
||
this small world, the accounts of two witnesses would never be the same.
|
||
|
||
If a description were given by an Oxford don, and also by an Indian
|
||
peasant, their respective stories of life in this world would vary much
|
||
more than any two accounts that I have ever read of the world to come. I
|
||
have specialized in that direction - the physical phenomena never
|
||
interested me much - and I can hardly think that anyone has read more
|
||
accounts, printed, typed and written, than I have done, many of them from
|
||
people who had no idea what the ordinary Spiritualist scheme of things
|
||
might be.
|
||
|
||
In some cases the mediums were children. Always there emerges the same
|
||
idea of a world like ours, a world were all our latent capabilities and
|
||
all our hidden ambitions have free and untrammelled opportunities. In all
|
||
there is the same talk of solid ground, of familiar flowers and animals,
|
||
of congenial occupations - all very different to the vague and
|
||
uncomfortable heaven of the churches.
|
||
|
||
I confess that I cannot trace in any of these any allusion to a place
|
||
exactly corresponding to the Blue Island, though the color blue is, of
|
||
course, that of healing, and an island may be only an isolated sphere -
|
||
the ante-chamber to others.
|
||
|
||
I believe that such material details as sleep, nourishment, etc.,
|
||
depend upon the exact position of the soul in its evolution, the lower the
|
||
soul the more material the conditions. It is of enormous importance that
|
||
the human race should know these things, for it not only takes away all
|
||
fears of death, but it must, as in the case of your father, be of the very
|
||
greatest help when one is suddenly called to the other side, and finds
|
||
oneself at once in known surroundings, sure of one's future, instead of
|
||
that most unpleasant period of readjustment during which souls have to
|
||
unlearn what their teachers here have taught and adapt themselves to
|
||
unfamiliar facts. A. Conan Doyle. Crowborough, Sussex, England.
|
||
September 1922.
|
||
|
||
Preface
|
||
|
||
When in April 1912 the {Titanic} sank in mid-ocean and my father passed
|
||
on to the next world, l was on tour with my own Shakespearean Company.
|
||
Amongst the members of that Company was a young man named Pardoe Woodman,
|
||
who on the very Sunday of the disaster foretold it as we sat talking after
|
||
tea.
|
||
|
||
He did not name the boat or my father, but he got so much that pointed
|
||
to disaster at sea and the passing on of an elderly man intimately
|
||
connected with me, that when the sad news came through we realized he must
|
||
have been closely in touch with what was about to happen.
|
||
|
||
I mention this incident because it formed the first link between my
|
||
father and Mr. Woodman, and as it is largely due to Mr. Woodman's psychic
|
||
powers that my father has been able to get through the messages which are
|
||
contained in this book, I think, therefore, it will be of interest to
|
||
readers and should be put on record.
|
||
|
||
A fortnight after the disaster I saw my father's face and heard his
|
||
voice just as distinctly as l heard I it when he bade me good-bye before
|
||
embarking on the Titanic. This was at a sitting with Etta Wriedt, the
|
||
well-known American direct voice medium.
|
||
|
||
At this sitting, I talked with my father for over twenty minutes. This
|
||
may seem an amazing assertion to many, but it is a fact vouched for by all
|
||
those who were present at the sitting. I put it on record at the time in
|
||
an article published in {Nash's Magazine}, which included the signed
|
||
testimonies of all those present.
|
||
|
||
From that day to this I have been in constant touch with my father. I
|
||
have had many talks with him and communications from him containing very
|
||
definite proof of his continued presence amongst us. I can truly say that
|
||
the link between us is even stronger to-day than in 1912, when he threw
|
||
off his physical body and passed on the to spirit world. There has never
|
||
been a feeling of parting, although at first the absence of his physical
|
||
presence was naturally a source of very great sadness.
|
||
|
||
In 1917, Mr. Woodman was invalided out of the Army and came to stay
|
||
with us at our country cottage at Cobham. Whilst with us, the news came to
|
||
him that his great friend had been killed at the front, and his interest
|
||
in the possibility of communication with the next world, which had been
|
||
indifferent till then, became intense, and he set out to find out for
|
||
himself. It is ever the passing of a loved one that gives the necessary
|
||
stimulus for eager inquiry.
|
||
|
||
It was not long before his friend was able to give him definite proofs
|
||
of his continued existence and of his ability to communicate. His first
|
||
proofs were given through Vout Peters, and were given through Vout Peters,
|
||
and were followed by others through Gladys Osborne Leonard's mediumship
|
||
and through the mediumship of friends gifted with psychic powers.
|
||
|
||
I was present at that first sitting with Mr. Peters; father was there
|
||
also, and his friend said it was due to my father's presence and help that
|
||
he was able to succeed so well in these first attempts at communication.
|
||
|
||
Shortly after this, Mr. Woodman found that he himself had the power of
|
||
automatic writing, and father and others were soon able to write through
|
||
him. Father always prefers me to be present, as if I am not he seems to
|
||
have more difficulty, and very rarely will attempt writing.
|
||
|
||
He explains the necessity of my presence in this way: he and I are so
|
||
much {en rapport}, and so closely in touch with each other, that he is
|
||
able to draw much power from me; I act as the connecting link and form a
|
||
sort of battery between him and Mr. Woodman. I merely sit passively by
|
||
whilst Mr. Woodman Writes.
|
||
|
||
Certainly I see a light around us, and a strong ray of light
|
||
concentrating on Mr. Woodman's arm. Sometimes I am able to see father
|
||
himself, and always, when he is writing, I feel his presence very
|
||
distinctly.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Woodman also writes with his eyes closed, and often holds a
|
||
handkerchief over them. Some of the best messages were given in the
|
||
twilight when it was impossible for me to follow what was being written,
|
||
and yet the words are were never overwritten. The writing will stop
|
||
sometimes whilst father evidently reads over what has been written, and
|
||
alterations will be made, i's dotted and t's crossed correctly.
|
||
|
||
It was a habit of my father's, whilst here, to go back over his copy
|
||
and cross his T's and dot his I's; this habit was only known to a few, and
|
||
was certainly absolutely unknown to Mr. Woodman.
|
||
|
||
Father's foreword explains his object in writing this book, so there is
|
||
no need to dwell on that here. When he started, he had a rather longer
|
||
book in view, but decided in favor of a short book, as it is more likely
|
||
to be read, can be published at a reasonable price, and so stand the
|
||
chance of reaching more people. All who worked with my father here will
|
||
know that such reasoning was characteristic of him.
|
||
|
||
The photograph given as frontispiece to this volume was taken by the
|
||
Crewe Circle at Crewe in the autumn of 1915. ln the spring of that year, I
|
||
had met Mr. Hope and Mrs. Buxton at the house of a mutual friend in
|
||
Glasgow, and they very kindly invited me to call and see them in Crewe if
|
||
I should ever have an opportunity to do so.
|
||
|
||
Soon after my return to London father asked me to arrange to go to
|
||
Crewe, as he said he wanted to try to give us his picture on the same
|
||
plate with mine. Accordingly I arranged to spend a week-end with some
|
||
friends at Crewe and have some sittings with Mr. Hope and Mrs. Buxton.
|
||
|
||
I bought a box of plates in London and took them with me, and I can
|
||
truthfully say that, that box of plates never left my sight or my
|
||
possession all the time I was there. I even slept with the box clasped
|
||
tightly in my hands.
|
||
|
||
We had our first sitting on the Saturday, when I obtained two extras,
|
||
neither resembling my father. One was of interest because it was the
|
||
picture of a lady who had appeared on a plate with my father when he was
|
||
experimenting with Mr. Boursnell in the 'nineties.
|
||
|
||
I took my box containing the rest of the plates away with me after the
|
||
sitting; bought another box of plates in Crewe, and took both boxes with
|
||
me to the sitting on the Sunday. We did not use my first box at all at
|
||
this sitting, and I kept it all the while just inside my dress.
|
||
|
||
We sat around the table, putting our hands over and under the second
|
||
box for a few minutes; I then held the box for a minute against Mrs.
|
||
Buxton's forehead.
|
||
|
||
After this I was instructed by Mr. Hope,s guide to take the box myself
|
||
into the dark room (note the box had not been unsealed or the plates
|
||
exposed to the light). When in the dark room, I was to unseal the box and
|
||
take out the two bottom plates, taking particular care to note which was
|
||
the bottom plate, and then to develop both plates. Mr. Hope was to come in
|
||
with me, but not to touch box or plates.
|
||
|
||
I carried out instructions. I found the bottom plate not even fogged,
|
||
and on the other plate two messages, one from Archdeacon Colley, deploring
|
||
father's inability to write; one from Mr. Walker, the father of my host,
|
||
and in one corner of the plate a faint outline of my father's face.
|
||
|
||
When I got back to my friends that evening, we had a sitting at which
|
||
father expressed his keen disappointment at his failure to give his
|
||
picture. {It is all my fault}, he said. {I am so excited at the idea of
|
||
getting my picture beside yours after I have been so-called 'dead' for so
|
||
many years that I break the conditions; however, many have promised to
|
||
help me tomorrow, and if I fail again we have something else prepared to
|
||
slip on so that you will not be quite so disappointed.}
|
||
|
||
On the following morning I went for my last sitting. Two of my own
|
||
plates were used. On both of these are pictures of my father; one is
|
||
reproduced in this book, the other is a large face of father which
|
||
completely covers me.
|
||
|
||
Now, having, I hope, given a little idea as to how these messages were
|
||
obtained, and our reasons for feeling that they do indeed come from my
|
||
father, I am content to let {The Blue Island} do the rest. I am sure it
|
||
will intrest many, and if it awakens some to a truer realization of what
|
||
is to come, and makes them seek for further definite proofs to themselves,
|
||
then the three chiefly concerned in giving these messages to the public -
|
||
my father, Mr. Woodman and myself - will be amply satisied.
|
||
|
||
Estelle W. Stead
|
||
September 1922
|
||
|
||
|
||
We have received many messages in this way. For a while in 1918 we sat
|
||
regularly every week, and were kept in touch with much that was going on
|
||
at the front and of what was about to happen, and were advised of
|
||
occurrences often days before the news came through in the ordinary way.
|
||
|
||
In one case father gave us the actual headlines which would and did
|
||
appear in the papers the following week.
|
||
|
||
It is interesting also of importance to note that Mr. Woodman and my
|
||
father met only once before the passing of latter. I introduced Mr.
|
||
Woodman to him not long before he left England in the {Titanic}, and they
|
||
only exchanged two or three words.
|
||
|
||
Therefore, Mr. Woodman never knew my father personally nor has he come
|
||
into touch with his writings or with his work in any way, and yet the
|
||
wording and the phrasing of the messages are my father's, and even the
|
||
manner of writing is typical of him.
|
||
|
||
A FOREWORD FROM THE SPIRIT WORLD
|
||
By William T. Stead
|
||
|
||
THERE is great trepidation on the part of all the uninitiated when first
|
||
coming into contact with the occult, psychic or unknown forces. In many of
|
||
life's mysteries there is much pleasure to be had in probing the secret,
|
||
and the mystery is in itself an incentive to search and to inquire, to
|
||
overcome the unknown and to gain knowledge on subjects not previously
|
||
known or proven.
|
||
|
||
This, however, does not seem to apply when dealing with the mysteries
|
||
surrounding the after-life. There is always a fear of something.
|
||
Frequently personal, but sometimes fear of harming the individual known
|
||
and loved on earth. In itself that is a good sign; it argues
|
||
unselfishness, and consequently the individual who holds off for that
|
||
reason deserves enlightenment. If he is sufficiently advanced to seek, he
|
||
will get enlightenment together with great help.
|
||
|
||
Again, there are those who, imbued with theosophical ideas, fear to
|
||
come in contact with what is to their minds the shell of a former loved
|
||
one, and those who fear through ignorance due to an undeveloped and
|
||
somewhat uneducated mentality. By that I do not necessarily mean an
|
||
unschooled mentality. I speak of {uneducated} in the sense of lacking
|
||
understanding and appreciation of the higher things of life.
|
||
|
||
To all these people I am, and I always was, most sympathetic. In earth
|
||
life I did my best to help and enlighten, but I was very restricted owing
|
||
to material calls upon my time. Since my arrival in this land I have tried
|
||
to carry on and greatly to increase the amount and the sphere of this same
|
||
work.
|
||
|
||
I have succeeded up to a point, though many have not yet reached the
|
||
half-way step on that stair-case of knowledge leading to understanding. I
|
||
was on the point of saying 'leading to happiness', but that would not be
|
||
quite correct, for happiness is most amply contained in 'understanding',
|
||
and happiness in the sense that it is used and understood on earth is
|
||
{not} the {raison d'etre} of life.
|
||
|
||
We were not made only to be happy. Happiness is part of our reward for
|
||
work done, for progress and for help given to others - which is itself the
|
||
outcome of understanding.
|
||
|
||
As I have said, in my work on this side of the Borderland I have
|
||
achieved a certain success, and I am confident that if I can pass on the
|
||
knowledge I have gained, together with my own personal experiences, to you
|
||
who are still on earth, I shall have gone a little farther in the work to
|
||
which I have set my hand for the good of humanity.
|
||
|
||
What I have to tell will be of interest to many, and will be useless to
|
||
many more, but I am going to tell of things which each one of my readers
|
||
can, up to a point, test for himself. You can each one of you test it by
|
||
soul knowledge, and by that you will know that I am giving you words of
|
||
value, words which God in His infinite love has permitted me to be the
|
||
means of passing to you. It is not {my} idea of the mysteries of life, it
|
||
is a discourse on those mysteries.
|
||
|
||
There is the teaching of Christianity running all through, but the
|
||
application is different to that ordinarily accepted. It is quite
|
||
erroneous to suppose that because a man was a man on earth, he will become
|
||
a spirit angle the moment he dies.
|
||
|
||
Death is only the doorway from one room to another, and both rooms are
|
||
very similarly furnished and arranged. That's what I want you to
|
||
appreciate thoroughly; it is under the same guiding hand. The same
|
||
Personality rules all spheres.
|
||
|
||
Beginning at the beginning, I have to tell you how a man finds himself
|
||
here on arrival. As I have said, this whole book will interest many and
|
||
help a few. It is for that few that all concerned are making the necessary
|
||
effort to bring it to them. It does not attempt or pretend to be on
|
||
scientific lines. All through, you can apply sound common sense, and you
|
||
cannot break down what is.
|
||
|
||
I have dealt with the subject very briefly, only for the reason that
|
||
many will read a short, concise account who would not study a detailed
|
||
one.
|
||
|
||
I must impress upon you all - the interested and the disinterested, the
|
||
believer in this great subject, Spiritualism, and the skeptic - to
|
||
remember you are still on earth and you have still to perform earth's
|
||
duties. You have your daily lives to lead and you must always do well the
|
||
work in hand.
|
||
|
||
Never neglect the present because the future appears more brightly
|
||
colored. Carry on with today, but with a corner of your mind on to-morrow,
|
||
and remember also that phenomenal Spiritualism is {not} for all.
|
||
|
||
Many minds could not absorb the greatness of the subject together with
|
||
the facts of the phenomena and still continue in their routine in normal
|
||
manner - these are the people for whom phenomena Spiritualism is not. They
|
||
will be wise to go no further into the subject than knowledge gained from
|
||
books and from the experiences of others. In this sense, Spiritualism is
|
||
not for all.
|
||
|
||
|
||
William T. Stead.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE BLUE ISLAND
|
||
|
||
Communicated By W.T. Stead,
|
||
through the hand of Estell Stead
|
||
|
||
Experience of a New Arrival Beyond the Veil
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER I
|
||
|
||
Many years ago I was attracted by an article on the subject of spirit
|
||
communication, and, after reading it carefully several times, I was forced
|
||
to admit its soundness. I was struck by the plain and practical ideas of
|
||
the writer. This was the first cause of my becoming actively interested in
|
||
this big and amazing work. From that time onward I did all in my power to
|
||
prove and then forward the movement.
|
||
|
||
Many people know this; and those who do not, can become acquainted with
|
||
the details if they wish. Therefore I am going to pass at once from my
|
||
first earth interest in the occult to my first interest in the earth.
|
||
|
||
Just as I was overcome with astonishment and satisfaction on first
|
||
reaching conviction on earth, so I was astonished almost equally on my
|
||
coming to this land and finding that my knowledge of this subject gained
|
||
on earth was strikingly correct in nearly all the chief points.
|
||
|
||
There was a great satisfaction in proving this. I was at once amazed
|
||
and delighted to find so much truth in all I had learned; for although I
|
||
had believed implicitly, I was not entirely without grave misgivings upon
|
||
many minor details. Hence my general satisfaction when I recognized things
|
||
and features which, though I had accepted whilst on earth, I had scarcely
|
||
anticipated would be as I now found them.
|
||
|
||
This must sound somewhat contradictory, but I want you to understand
|
||
that my earthly misgivings were based on fear that perhaps the spirit
|
||
world had a formula of its own which was quite different from our earthly
|
||
mentality, and that, therefore, the many points were transmitted to us in
|
||
such a form and in such expression as we on earth would be able to grasp
|
||
and appreciate, and were not in themselves the precise descriptions, owing
|
||
to the limitations of earth word-expression.
|
||
|
||
Of my actual passing from earth to spirit life, I do not wish to write
|
||
more than a few lines. I have already spoken of it several times and in
|
||
several places. The first part of it was naturally an extremely discordant
|
||
one, but from the time my physical life was ended there was no longer that
|
||
sense of struggling with overwhelming odds; but I do not wish to speak of
|
||
that.
|
||
|
||
My first surprise came when - I now understand that to your way of
|
||
thinking I was dead - I found I was in a position to help people. From
|
||
being in dire straights myself, to being able to lend a hand to others,
|
||
was such a sudden transition that I was frankly and blankly surprised.
|
||
|
||
I was so taken aback that I did not consider the why and the wherefore
|
||
at all. I was suddenly able to help. I knew not how or why and did not
|
||
attempt to inquire. There was no analysis then; that came a little later.
|
||
|
||
I was also surprised to find a number of friends with me, people I knew
|
||
had passed over years before. That was the first cause of my realizing
|
||
the change had taken place. I knew it suddenly and was a trifle alarmed.
|
||
Practically instantaneously I found myself looking for myself. Just a
|
||
moment of agitation, momentary only, and then the full and glorious
|
||
realization that all I had learned was true.
|
||
|
||
Oh, how badly I needed a telephone at that moment I felt I could give
|
||
the papers some headlines for the evening. That was my first realization;
|
||
then came a helplessness - a reaction - a thought of all my own at home -
|
||
they didn't know yet. What would they think of me? Here was I, with my
|
||
telephone out of working order for the present. I was still so near to the
|
||
earth that I could see everything going on there.
|
||
|
||
Where I was I could see the wrecked ship, the people, the whole scene;
|
||
and that seemed to pull me into action - I could help . . . And so in a
|
||
few seconds - though I am now taking a long time to tell you, it was only
|
||
a few seconds really - I found myself changed from the helpless state to
|
||
one of action; {helpful} not helpless - was helpful, too, I think.
|
||
|
||
I pass a little now. The end came and it was all finished with. It was
|
||
like waiting for a liner to sail; we waited until all were aboard. I mean
|
||
we waited until the disaster was complete. The saved - saved; the dead -
|
||
alive. Then in one whole we moved our scene.
|
||
|
||
It was a strange method of travelling for us all, and we were a strange
|
||
crew, bound for we knew not where. The whole scene was indescribably
|
||
pathetic. Many, knowing what had occurred, were in agony of doubt as to
|
||
their people left behind and as to their own future state. What would it
|
||
hold for them? Would they be taken to see HIM? What would their sentence
|
||
be?
|
||
|
||
Others were almost mental wrecks. They knew nothing, they seemed to be
|
||
uninterested in everything, their minds were paralyzed. A strange crew
|
||
indeed, of human souls waiting their ratings in the new land.
|
||
|
||
A matter of a few minutes in time only, and here were hundreds of
|
||
bodies floating in the water - dead - hundreds of souls carried through
|
||
the air, alive; very much alive, some were. Many, realizing their death
|
||
had come, were enraged at their own powerlessness to save their valuables.
|
||
They fought to save what they had on earth prized so much.
|
||
|
||
The scene on the boat at the time of the striking was not so pleasant,
|
||
but it was as nothing to the scene among the poor souls newly thrust out
|
||
of their bodies, all unwillingly. It was both heartbreaking and repellant.
|
||
And thus we waited - waited until all were collected, until all were
|
||
ready, and then we moved our scene to a different land.
|
||
|
||
It was a curious journey that. Far more strange than anything I had
|
||
anticipated. We seemed to rise vertically into the air at terrific speed.
|
||
As a whole we moved, as if we were on a very large platform, and this was
|
||
hurled into the air with gigantic strength and speed, yet there was no
|
||
feeling of insecurity ... We were quite steady.
|
||
|
||
I cannot tell how long our journey lasted, nor how far from the earth
|
||
we were when we arrived, but it was a gloriously beautiful arrival. It was
|
||
like walking from your own Indian Sky. There, all was brightness and
|
||
beauty.
|
||
|
||
We saw this land far off when we were approaching, and those of us who
|
||
could understand realized that we were being taken to the place destined
|
||
for all those people who pass over suddenly - on account of its general
|
||
appeal. It helps the nerve-racked newcomer to fall into line and regain
|
||
mental balance very quickly.
|
||
|
||
We arrived feeling, in a sense, proud of ourselves. It was all
|
||
lightness, brightness. Everything as physical and quite as material in
|
||
every way as the world we had just finished with.
|
||
|
||
Our arrival was greeted with welcomes from many old friends and
|
||
relations who had been dear to each one of us in our earth life. And
|
||
having arrived, we people who had come over from that ill-fated ship
|
||
parted company. We were free agents again, though each one of us was in
|
||
the company of some personal friends who had been over here a long while.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Blue Island
|
||
CHAPTER II
|
||
|
||
I have told you a little about the journey and arrival, and I want now
|
||
to tell you my first impression and a few experiences. I must begin by
|
||
saying I do not know how long after the collision these experiences took
|
||
place. It seemed to be a continuation without any break, but I cannot be
|
||
certain that this was so.
|
||
|
||
I found myself in company with two old friends, one of them my father.
|
||
He came to be with me, to help and generally show me round. It was like
|
||
nothing else so much as merely arriving in a foreign country and having a
|
||
chum to go around with. That was the principal sensation. The scene from
|
||
which we had so lately come was already well relegated to the past.
|
||
|
||
Having accepted the change of death, all the horror of our late
|
||
experience had gone. It might have been fifty years ago instead of,
|
||
perhaps, only last night. Consequently our pleasure in the new land was
|
||
not marred by grief at being parted from earth friends. I will not say
|
||
that none were unhappy, many were; but that was because they did not
|
||
understand the nearness of the two worlds; they did not know what was
|
||
possible, but to those who understood the possibilities, it was in a sense
|
||
the feeling, {Let us enjoy a little of this new land before mailing our
|
||
news home}; therefore there was little grief in our arrival.
|
||
|
||
In writing my first experiences I am going to give a certain amount of
|
||
detail. My old sense of humor is still with me, I am glad to say, and I
|
||
know that what I have to say now will cause a certain amount of amusement
|
||
to those who treat this subject lightly, but that I do not mind.
|
||
|
||
I am glad they will find something to smile at - it will make an
|
||
impression on them that way, and then when their own time comes for the
|
||
change they will recognize themselves amongst the conditions of which I am
|
||
going to write. Therefore to that kind of skeptic I just say, {It's all
|
||
right, friend,} and, {You give no offense.}
|
||
|
||
My father and I, with my friend also, set out immediately. A curious
|
||
thing struck me. I was clothed exactly as I had been, and it seemed a
|
||
little strange to me to think I had brought my clothing with me...
|
||
{There's number one, Mr. Skeptic}
|
||
|
||
My father was also dressed as I had always known him. Everything and
|
||
everybody appeared to be quite normal - quite as on earth. We went out
|
||
together and had refreshment at once, and naturally, that was followed by
|
||
much discussion about our mutual friends on both sides. I was able to give
|
||
them news and they gave me information about our friends and also about
|
||
the conditions ruling in this new country.
|
||
|
||
Another thing which struck me was the general coloring of the place; of
|
||
England it would be difficult to say what the impression of coloring is,
|
||
but I suppose it would be considered grey-green. Here there was no
|
||
uncertainty about the impression; it is undoubtedly a blue which
|
||
predominated. A light shade of blue. I do not mean the people, trees,
|
||
houses, etc., were all {Blue}; but the general impression was that of a
|
||
{blue land.}
|
||
|
||
I commented upon this to my father - who, by the way, was considerably
|
||
more active and younger than he was at time of death; we looked more like
|
||
brothers. I spoke of this impression of blue, and he explained that it was
|
||
so in a sense. There was a great predominance of blue rays in the light,
|
||
and that was why it was so wonderful a place for mental recovery. Now some
|
||
say, {How completely foolish...}
|
||
|
||
Well, have you not on earth certain places considered especially good
|
||
for this or that ailment?
|
||
. . . Then bring common sense to bear, and realize that
|
||
the next step after death is only a very little one. You do not go from
|
||
indifferent manhood to perfect godliness! It is not like that; it is all
|
||
progress and evolution, and as with people, so with lands. The next world
|
||
is only a complement of your present one.
|
||
|
||
We were a quaint population in that country. There were People of all
|
||
conditions, of all colors, all races and all sizes: all went about freely
|
||
together, but there was a great sense of caring only for oneself - self
|
||
absorption. A bad thing on earth, but a necessary thing here, both for the
|
||
general and individual good. There would be no progress or recovery in
|
||
this land without it.
|
||
|
||
As a result of this absorption there was a general peace amongst these
|
||
many people, and this peace would not have been attained without this self
|
||
centeredness. No one took notice of any other. Each stood for himself,
|
||
and was almost unaware of all the others.
|
||
|
||
There were not many people whom I knew. Most of those who came to meet
|
||
me had disappeared again, and I saw scarcely any I knew, except my two
|
||
companions. I was not sorry for this. It gave me more chance of
|
||
appreciating all this new scene before me. There was the sea where we
|
||
were, and I and my companions went for a long walk together along the
|
||
shore.
|
||
|
||
It was not like one of your seaside resorts, with promenade and band;
|
||
it was a peaceful and lovely spot. There were some very big buildings on
|
||
our right, and on our left was the sea. All was light and bright, and
|
||
again this blue atmosphere was very marked. I do not know how far we went,
|
||
but we talked incessantly of our new conditions and of my own folk at home
|
||
and of the possibility of letting them know how it fared with me, and I
|
||
think we must have gone a long way.
|
||
|
||
If you can imagine what your world would look like if it were
|
||
compressed into a place, say, the size of England - with some of all
|
||
people, all climates, all scenery, all buildings, all animals - then you
|
||
can, perhaps, form an idea of this place I was in. It must all sound very
|
||
unreal and dreamlike, but, believe me, it was only like being in a foreign
|
||
country and nothing else, except that it was absorbingly interesting.
|
||
|
||
I want to give you a picture of this new land without going too deeply
|
||
into the minute details. We arrived at length at a huge building, circular
|
||
and with a great dome. Its general appearance was of a dome only - on legs
|
||
- I mean a great dome supported on vast columns, circular and very big.
|
||
This again, in the interior, was an amazingly lovely blue.
|
||
|
||
It was not a fantastic structure in any way. It was just a beautiful
|
||
building, as you have on earth - do not imagine anything fairylike; it was
|
||
not. This blue was again very predominant, and it gave me a feeling of
|
||
energy. I wanted immediately to write. I would like to have been a poet at
|
||
that moment, but as it was I just wanted to express myself with pen and
|
||
ink.
|
||
|
||
We stayed there some time and had refreshment very similar, it seemed
|
||
to me, to what I had always known, only there was no fresh food.
|
||
Everything appeared quite normal there, too, and the absence of some
|
||
things which would on earth have been present was not noticed.
|
||
|
||
The curious thing was that the meal did not seem at all a necessity -
|
||
it was there , and we all partook of it lightly, but it was more from
|
||
habit than need - I seemed to draw much more strength and energy out of
|
||
the atmosphere itself. This I attributed to the color and air. It was
|
||
while we were in this place that my father explained the reason and work
|
||
of the different buildings I had noted on our walk together. --- <20> RNet
|
||
1.07R:ILink:After Five BBS * Elkhart,IN * (219) 262-1370
|
||
|
||
Interesting Buildings CHAPTER III
|
||
|
||
LOOKED upon as a meal - a lunch out - it was the longest one I have
|
||
ever known and without question the most interesting. I learnt a great
|
||
deal in those first few hours with my father. It was all conversational,
|
||
but it was of great use to me and of vast interest. He explained to me
|
||
that the place we were then in was a temporary rest-house, one of many,
|
||
but the one most used by newly-arrived spirit people. It was nearest to
|
||
earth conditions and was used because it resembled an earth place in
|
||
appearance. There were other buildings used for the same purpose as well
|
||
as for other purposes; by that I mean there is more than one of each.
|
||
|
||
These houses were not all alike, they varied considerably in outward
|
||
appearance, but there is no need to describe each. To call it a big
|
||
building is sufficient, and by that you must understand a place like your
|
||
museum or your portrait gallery, or your large hotels . . . anything you
|
||
like, and it is near enough. But it was not fantastic in any way and had
|
||
no peculiarities, therefore by {"building" I mean a} building only.
|
||
|
||
There were a great number of these places in different parts - not
|
||
grouped together, but variously placed about this land.
|
||
|
||
It seemed that all the senses are provided for here. The chief work on
|
||
this island is to get rid of unhappiness at parting from earth ties, and
|
||
therefore, for the time being, the individual is allowed to indulge in
|
||
most of earth's pleasures. There are attractions of all kinds to stimulate
|
||
and generally to tone up strength.
|
||
|
||
Whatever the person's particular interest on earth has been, he can
|
||
follow it up and indulge in it here also for the present. All mental
|
||
interests and almost all physical interests can be continued here, for
|
||
that one reason of coaxing the newcomer to a level mental outlook.
|
||
|
||
There are houses given over to book study, music, to athleticism of all
|
||
kinds. Every kind of physical game be practiced - you can ride on
|
||
horseback, you can swim in the sea. You can have all and any kind of sport
|
||
which does not involve the taking of life. In a minor degree that can be
|
||
had too, but not in reality; that is only make-believe.
|
||
|
||
From this you will understand that particular buildings are given over
|
||
to their own kind of work. The man who has spent his life in games, heart
|
||
and soul, would be disconsolate without them here . . . he can have them
|
||
and enjoy them to the full; but he will find that after a time the desire
|
||
is not so keen and he will turn to other interests automatically, though
|
||
gradually, and it may be that he will never entirely abandon his games,
|
||
but the desire will be less absorbing.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, the man who used his life for, say, music, for
|
||
instance, will find his desire, his interest, and his ability increasing
|
||
by leaps and bounds - because music belongs to this land. He will find
|
||
that by spending much time in one of the music houses, as he {will} if his
|
||
life is music, his knowledge and ability are amazingly increased. Then
|
||
there is the bookworm. He, too, finds intense satisfaction in his
|
||
new-found facilities. Knowledge is unlimited - works of priceless value,
|
||
lost upon earth, are in existence here. He is provided for.
|
||
|
||
The keen business man on earth whose only interest is in making his
|
||
business successful will also find scope for ability. He will come in
|
||
contact with the house of organization, and he will find himself linked up
|
||
with work transcending in interest anything that he could have imagined
|
||
for himself whilst upon earth.
|
||
|
||
Now all this is done for a reason. Everyone is provided for. On
|
||
arriving here there is often much grief; grief that is sometimes
|
||
incapacitating, and no movement forward can be made until the individual
|
||
wishes it himself. Progress cannot be forced upon him.
|
||
|
||
Thus in the scheme of creation the blessed Creator has devised this
|
||
wonderful means of appealing to the main interest on earth of each one.
|
||
Everyone comes in touch with the chief longing of earth life, and is given
|
||
opportunity to indulge in it, thus progress ms assured.
|
||
|
||
In all things that are purely and solely of the earth, the interest
|
||
flags after a little time; a gradual process -nothing is dramatic here
|
||
-and the person passes from this to another interest which on earth would
|
||
be called a mental one. Those whose interests have been in this
|
||
mind-category will continue and enlarge the scope of their work, and will
|
||
progress along the same lines - the others change.
|
||
|
||
Whilst in this {Blue Island} each one is very much in touch with the
|
||
conditions left behind. At first there is nothing done but what is both
|
||
helpful and comforting - later there is a refining process to be gone
|
||
through. At first it is possible to be closely in touch with the home left
|
||
behind, but after a little time, there is a reaction from this desire to
|
||
be so close to earth, and when that sets in the process of eliminating
|
||
earth, and flesh instincts begins. In each case this takes a different
|
||
course, a different length of time.
|
||
|
||
In trying thus to explain the use of this land and its buildings, I
|
||
have not numbered them {"Building A"} for so-and-so, {"Building B"} for
|
||
this, that and the other, but, in a conversational way, I hope I have
|
||
helped you to understand and form a general idea of this country and some
|
||
of its conditions. I hope I have made it clear now, after a time, the
|
||
desire for earth things leaves us all. It may be a short or long time,
|
||
according to the disposition of the person concerned.
|
||
|
||
Take the athlete. He loves his games, his running, his physical
|
||
strength and his muscular exercise. Well, he will love it here as much. He
|
||
will love it here more, because he will find an added pleasure in feeling
|
||
no fatigue, a sharpened enjoyment altogether, but after a time his
|
||
appreciation of all this will change. He will not dislike this hitherto
|
||
loved sport, but he will pass to a different form of it; a form which is
|
||
full of movement and satisfaction but not a physical affair at all; his
|
||
mind will become more awake, and he will get enormous mental satisfaction
|
||
from the studies which will come before him concerning the ways and means
|
||
of travel here.
|
||
|
||
Locomotion of all kinds here is very different to that which obtains in
|
||
earth conditions, and this former athlete of earth will drop into line in
|
||
his new surroundings and will presently realize that life here is a
|
||
different thing for him, for, though still on the same lines, it holds an
|
||
increased mental interest. Is that clear? . . . Well, apply it in the same
|
||
fashion to every other type of individual.
|
||
|
||
(everything in TILDES was originally in ITALICS)
|
||
|
||
Life on the Island CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
||
HAVING given you a little idea of this land and its appearance, I want
|
||
to tell you about the life of the people here, so that you can form a
|
||
mental picture in completeness. It is only natural that many should say,
|
||
{What are they all doing?} Now, this is a very broad question to answer,
|
||
and to help you to see how big a thing I am dealing with in thus
|
||
attempting to give my story of the next life I must put a simple question
|
||
to you.
|
||
|
||
I want you to try to imagine you have not been living on earth and
|
||
that, knowing nothing of earth life, you have suddenly been landed by an
|
||
airship in the busiest part of the city of London - with all its traffic
|
||
and its people. You have arrived from some other world and have not seen
|
||
this sight before. You will exclaim, {How strange... What are they all
|
||
doing?}
|
||
|
||
Well, could you answer that question easily? It would not mean much to
|
||
you to be told they are going about their own individual business - one
|
||
man bakes bread, another sweeps the streets, another drives a cart, and
|
||
another sits in an office and runs a business - all that would leave you
|
||
none the wiser.
|
||
|
||
These are facts, and yet you would not understand them. You could not
|
||
comprehend them. That is my difficulty in trying to make you understand in
|
||
a satisfactory way the life of this Blue Isle. I have to consider how to
|
||
explain it. It is no use my telling you that one person sits by the sea
|
||
all the time, weeping because of her parting from her lover, and another
|
||
is in a mental stupor for drink, and another still thinks he is ringing
|
||
the bells of his local chapel on Sunday, etc., etc. - that is not the
|
||
life, those are only bits of it. Atoms of the whole.
|
||
|
||
I do not want to particularize, I want to generalize, with some detail.
|
||
Therefore I must say that if you were to pay this land a visit in your
|
||
earth bodies, as you are at present, you would be struck by the lack of
|
||
excitement. You would think it all so like earth. That is what you would
|
||
say to people on your return. {Oh, it's so much like our life here, only
|
||
there are a lot of different races of mankind there.}
|
||
|
||
Everyday life for the individual is strikingly like the everyday life
|
||
he's always been used to. At first he takes a great deal of rest, having
|
||
the earth habit of sleep - and it is a necessity - he needs sleep here,
|
||
too, for the present. We have no night as you have, but he sleeps and
|
||
rests just the same. He has his interests in visiting different parts, in
|
||
exploring the land and its building and in studying its animal and
|
||
vegetable life. He has friends to seek out and to see. He has his pastimes
|
||
to indulge. He has his new-found desire for knowledge to feed.
|
||
|
||
The routine of a day here is similar to the routine of a day on earth;
|
||
the difference being that earth's routine is often made by force of
|
||
circumstance, whereas, here it is made according to desire for knowledge
|
||
on this or that subject.
|
||
|
||
In clothing, we are all practically as on earth, and as there are so
|
||
many races here you can well understand the general appearance of this
|
||
land is most unusual, and in an odd way particularly interesting and
|
||
amusing, also instructive. I think I have said that in general appearance
|
||
we all are as we all were. We are only a very little way from earth, and
|
||
consequently up to this time we have not thrown off earth ideas. We have
|
||
gained some new ones, but have as yet discarded few or none.
|
||
|
||
The process of discarding is a gradual one. As we live here we gain
|
||
knowledge of many kinds, and come to find so many things, hitherto thought
|
||
essential, not only of no importance but something of a bore, a nuisance,
|
||
and that is how we grow to a state of dropping all earth habits. We get to
|
||
the state of not desiring a smoke, not because we can't have it, or think
|
||
it not right, but because the desire for it is not there.
|
||
|
||
As with a smoke, so with food, so with many a dozen things; we are just
|
||
as satisfied without them. We do not miss them; if we did we should have
|
||
them, and we do have them until the desire is no longer there.
|
||
|
||
At first there is practical freedom of thought and action, and there
|
||
are only certain limitations imposed - not by rule but by conditions.
|
||
Beyond these limitations there is absolute freedom. After a time, when the
|
||
spirit has advanced to the point of desiring knowledge and enlightenment,
|
||
he will be drawn like a piece of steel to a magnet, into contact with this
|
||
or that house of organization dealing with the subject on which he desires
|
||
knowledge.
|
||
|
||
From the time of coming into touch with this house the spirit will be,
|
||
as it were, {at school.} He will perforce have to attend this house of
|
||
instruction. He will spend a good deal of his time there learning, and,
|
||
when finished with one house, will pass to another, but it is not
|
||
compulsory information, it is craved-for information, and nothing is given
|
||
until asked for.
|
||
|
||
You are not forced to acquire {anything.} You are more than ever free
|
||
agents. That is why on earth it is so essential to control your bodies by
|
||
your minds, and not the reverse. When you come here your mind is all
|
||
powerful, and everything depends, for your own degree of happiness here,
|
||
upon the kind of mind you bring with you.
|
||
|
||
The presence or absence of contentment is entirely due to the earth
|
||
life you have led, the character formed, opportunities taken and lost, the
|
||
motive of and for your actions, the help given, the manner of help
|
||
received, your mental outlook and your use and abuse of flesh power.
|
||
|
||
To sum all these up it is the quality of mind control over body
|
||
{versus} body over mind. Mind matters and body matters; it is in your
|
||
keeping entirely and is in whatever state you have made it by your life.
|
||
On your arrival here the degree of your happiness will be determined
|
||
automatically by the demands of your mind.
|
||
|
||
When you are inclined to ask, {What are they all doing there?} turn
|
||
your mind to some dear one on earth who has taken up an out-of-the-way
|
||
kind of life somewhere abroad, where you are not in constant and intimate
|
||
touch, and say of him, {I wonder what he's doing now?} . . . Then answer
|
||
it yourself by saying {I suppose he's carrying on.} So are we, we people
|
||
in the {blue Island.}
|
||
|
||
|
||
Intimate Life CHAPTER V
|
||
|
||
There is a good deal of reasoning and argument as to why in earth life
|
||
we should do this or that. Why we should refrain from many of the delights
|
||
of everyday life and why we should {go straight.}
|
||
|
||
People say it is handicapping in their business or their profession to
|
||
have to observe these {nice points.} They may not confess this thought
|
||
openly, but to themselves they do - they do not see why such-and-such
|
||
should not be done. True, they think it may injure so-and-so's business a
|
||
little, but that is his affair.
|
||
|
||
{All in ignorance.}
|
||
|
||
There is a reason, and that reason can be very easily found by the rule
|
||
of common sense. I almost might call this a discourse upon cause and
|
||
effect.
|
||
|
||
Earth life has deteriorated. The whole scheme of creation is planned
|
||
with great precision, with the object of allowing free individual
|
||
development and progress. Its rules are laid down clearly. Every man knows
|
||
by instinct when he is obeying and when disobeying these rules.
|
||
|
||
It needs no police officer to tell him. He may deceive himself that
|
||
such an act is all that it should be, but at the same time he knows in his
|
||
own consciousness that, that act or thought is not only {not} all that it
|
||
should be but that it is all that it ought {not} to be. I say that all
|
||
mankind knows - but most of mankind prefers to think it does not know.
|
||
|
||
Not one person on earth can stand up and say I am not speaking a
|
||
profound truth here!
|
||
|
||
Mostly these things are not considered from the point of right or
|
||
wrong, but from the view, {Shall I benefit by this?} - but I say that all
|
||
people on earth {can} discriminate, I do not say that they do, between
|
||
good and not good motive in their lives. Instinct does this for them. They
|
||
cannot help themselves. They are bound to know.
|
||
|
||
The trouble is that the vast majority by force of habit, the desire for
|
||
business gain, or social gain, or any kind of gain, but always a gain for
|
||
itself, has ceased to consider the quality of its actions and thinks only
|
||
of the first result. It is a pity. It is more than that, Looked upon from
|
||
the next stage in evolution it is {Pitiful.} Poor undeveloped egos,
|
||
preparing their own discomfort and suffering - not a hell fire but a
|
||
mental torture.
|
||
|
||
The self or spirit of a man is encased in his mind, and, examined in a
|
||
purely physical way, the brain is the most baffling organ of the body
|
||
scientific man ever had to deal with. Much can be understood; all never
|
||
will be. Judged as being the casing and instrument of the soul it becomes
|
||
an even more delicate and intricate and baffling piece of work. You all
|
||
know that mind is the generating-house for all your acts and deeds, but
|
||
you do not fully appreciate the fact that every act and every thought is
|
||
{booked} - is recorded.
|
||
|
||
You do not see the elaborate scheme of work which goes on in any of
|
||
your large business houses, when you buy something and do not pay at once.
|
||
It is booked and passes through many hands before the bill is sent to you
|
||
a little later, and having paid the bill you forget it all, but the record
|
||
of that business house has it still. So with the brain; an act or a
|
||
thought, no matter what the quality, is recorded for all time.
|
||
|
||
Settling will come after life, and when paid the {book} is finished
|
||
with and troubles no more, though the record is still there. Now follow
|
||
me. Mind and its work - thought - is the force that drives and creates
|
||
everything on earth. It has all to be mental before physical or material.
|
||
That you all know. Every building was conceived mentally before being
|
||
built.
|
||
|
||
Thought is divided in itself into different types. There is the
|
||
thought of your next meal which is of no particular interest, and there
|
||
are the thoughts constructive and destructive. These are important. There
|
||
are the purely personal thoughts. Sometimes advantageous and sometimes the
|
||
reverse.
|
||
|
||
Now, the all-important forms of thought are the constructive and
|
||
destructive. The others referring to your meals, your clothes, your
|
||
appearance, your anything you like, these are not of importance until they
|
||
are allowed to hinder the flow of constructive thought; when they do this
|
||
the character of these same thoughts changes and becomes {destructive.}
|
||
|
||
It is the material embodiment of destructive thought which causes most
|
||
of the distress and misery in the world. The sum total goes on increasing,
|
||
and will continue to increase, until mankind as a whole, and individually,
|
||
will listen and try to understand a little more about himself beyond what
|
||
is necessary for him to know for the selling of his goods, and thus give
|
||
fuller play to the beneficent action of constructive thought which alone
|
||
can redeem and save the world.
|
||
|
||
More About Intimate Life CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
||
TO a great extent the individual hardships of earth life are directly
|
||
due to wrong thinking. I am fully aware that people are placed in many
|
||
different positions right from birth. Some inherit unhappiness and
|
||
difficulty from their parents, and their lot in life is harder and their
|
||
pleasures are less than in the lives of those who are born in better
|
||
conditions.
|
||
|
||
Accepting these differences of position and condition - one man a life
|
||
of much hard work, another a comfortable and perhaps rather idle life -
|
||
the same rule of thought applies. The man who has grown up under hard
|
||
conditions is by circumstances forced into a groove of thought - a regular
|
||
rut. He cannot help himself because there are no real attempts made by amy
|
||
to change his outlook; he may meet with material help from time to time,
|
||
but he meets with little practical mental assistance. He is under the
|
||
disadvantage of his lifelong earth conditions, and is in ignorance because
|
||
he does not understand and has little opportunity for learning about these
|
||
things; by his thought he adds to his difficulties instead of easing and
|
||
finally removing many of them.
|
||
|
||
The other man, who is comfortably settled and has no particular
|
||
worries, does precisely the same thing. He trudges along in the same
|
||
mental rut -stagnation, {Mental Stagnation,} and the same results will
|
||
fall to them both hereafter. They are both building up their future
|
||
states.
|
||
|
||
Then there are people of keen intelligence, clever people, who use
|
||
their brains to achieve material gain no matter the cost to others. These
|
||
people are indulging in the most positive form of destructive thought.
|
||
They are not like the other two - negative. They are very alive, alert
|
||
and positive. They are at once using destructive and constructive thought.
|
||
|
||
The latter is entirely misapplied, and when they come here the account
|
||
against them will be much heavier, because they will have built up a wall
|
||
of greedy thought which themselves have originally sent out and which they
|
||
must settle in this next condition.
|
||
|
||
A thought - no matter the heading it comes under - that has come into
|
||
your mind and which you have sent out, is an accomplished thing so far as
|
||
your {mind} goes. Your physical act may or may not keep swift
|
||
accompaniment with the thought; that does not matter from the point of
|
||
view of what you are building up for yourself {here.}
|
||
|
||
Once having had his thought it is {done,} so far as your mind is
|
||
concerned, and, whether you follow it up actively or not, you have to make
|
||
repayment for it when you come here. I am not speaking about the thousand
|
||
trivial thoughts of every hour, but about those which I might describe as
|
||
having personality.
|
||
|
||
You will say it is impossible to control every thought of the day, and
|
||
I agree that it is, but if once you accepted for fact what I have said you
|
||
would keep a sharp eye on your mental actions. They matter. You will find
|
||
this very difficult to accept because it is indeed an intimate thing for
|
||
each one; you do not know each other's thoughts whilst upon earth,
|
||
therefore I have headed this chapter {Intimate Life.}
|
||
|
||
Each of you will live to thank the person who is responsible for giving
|
||
you this information if you act upon it, and those of you who hear and
|
||
know but do not act upon the knowledge, will have one day to cast
|
||
reproaches upon yourselves for this failure.
|
||
|
||
To realize oneself that one has failed is far more bitter than the
|
||
consciousness that others know it.
|
||
|
||
Think upon this and reason a little with your own inner self.
|
||
|
||
|
||
First Attempts CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
||
Leaving the question of time out of it entirely, as I must, I want to
|
||
write of my first attempt to communicate with the earth world. I know
|
||
there is much dissatisfaction with the spirit world on account of the
|
||
practical impossibility to give correct ideas of time-spacing. I would
|
||
like to say a little about that before going into the main interest of
|
||
today's writing. You must not be over-hasty in condemning us for this
|
||
failure.
|
||
|
||
On earth you all space your time by days and hours, etc., but those
|
||
spacings are also based, or perhaps more definitely marked in your mental
|
||
reckoning, on the habits of the day. You have always taken certain things
|
||
at certain hours. You have a light sky and a dark sky; without a watch you
|
||
know fairly accurately the time of day by your inclinations - fatigue or
|
||
freshness, the need for food or rest, etc., etc.
|
||
|
||
Now, on this side of the grave we have no real necessity for rest or
|
||
for food. We have no dark sky - only a light one, and we have, for the
|
||
sake of the present illustration, an unlimited supply of energy.
|
||
Consequently we are not able to break up time into spaces which correspond
|
||
with earth-spacings.
|
||
|
||
We do break up our time, but it is not {your} breaking, therefore we
|
||
can seldom be accurate in telling when a thing did, or when a thing will,
|
||
happen.
|
||
|
||
For that reason I am not able to tell how long I had been in this
|
||
country before I made my first attempt to link up with earth again. To me
|
||
I seemed to have lived in this land always.
|
||
|
||
It appeared incredible to me that it could be only a few days since I
|
||
arrived. I had not forgotten my family or my friends, but I felt
|
||
peculiarly happy about them. I cannot think why, except that finding my
|
||
earth knowledge so very correct I gathered strength in feeling that they
|
||
too would understand everything was quite well with me, and that this
|
||
little delay in writing was natural considering the new country I had come
|
||
to.
|
||
|
||
The house which is given over to this work in the {Blue Island} had
|
||
been a regular haunting-place of mine ever since my father had told me of
|
||
it, together with the works of the other buildings. I went to this house a
|
||
great deal, and received much help from the various people in charge. They
|
||
were all very sympathetic, but entirely business-like.
|
||
|
||
It was not merely a house of tears and sympathy, it was an amazingly
|
||
well organized and business-like place. There were many hundreds of people
|
||
there. Those who had on earth believed and those who had not, came to try
|
||
to wire a message home.
|
||
|
||
The heart call was the one which received the most serious attention.
|
||
Many were there only as lookers-on, incredulous and facetious. They got
|
||
nothing more than the satisfaction of their own amazement.
|
||
|
||
{After a little time my turn came.}
|
||
|
||
For a building given over to this kind of work it appeared to be
|
||
inadequately equipped. I had rather expected to see many implements and
|
||
instruments, many wires and machines, and the presence of electric forces,
|
||
but there was nothing of that kind at all. It was all and only the human
|
||
element.
|
||
|
||
I had a long conversation with a man there - a man obviously of some
|
||
importance, though I cannot say he looked like an angel; he appeared quite
|
||
as mundane as myself. I had a long talk with him, and from him heard how a
|
||
great deal of this work was carried on. He told me they had a system of
|
||
travelers, whose work was very close to physical earth. They had the power
|
||
of sensing people who could and would be used for this work at the other
|
||
end.
|
||
|
||
These men could locate and then tabulate the earth people, marking each
|
||
individual ability, and when the newly-arrived spirit came in search of
|
||
help, these sensitives on earth were used as each could be used. This is
|
||
a sketchy outline of the work done in that building ... There I came
|
||
frequently and tried to get my messages through to home by more than one
|
||
means; I succeeded in some ways, I failed in others. The spirit has much
|
||
to do himself with the success or failure attained; a great deal depends
|
||
upon him.
|
||
|
||
Every time I succeeded I helped another. Ever time I failed went for
|
||
help, and got it. Having given much time and study to the subject on
|
||
earth, I was given unlimited assistance at this end of the line now that I
|
||
needed it.
|
||
|
||
I want to explain how I got some of my first messages through and how I
|
||
knew I had succeeded. We had been taught by this time how to come in close
|
||
contact with the earth, although it was not possible for me to do this
|
||
alone. I had a helper with me. I must call him an official. He came with
|
||
me to my first trial.
|
||
|
||
We came into a room, which seemed to have walls made of muslin
|
||
-something and yet nothing. I know it was a house, and was conscious of
|
||
the walls of the room, and yet they seemed such poor things because we
|
||
could see through them and move through them. I could not have done this
|
||
by myself at that time, but with my official we did.
|
||
|
||
Then came the attempt. There were two or three people in this room, and
|
||
they were all talking together about the horror of this great disaster and
|
||
about the probability of people coming back. They were holding a seance,
|
||
and my official showed we how to make my presence known.
|
||
|
||
The controlling force, he told me, was thought. I had to visualize
|
||
myself among these people in the flesh. Imagine I was standing there in
|
||
the flesh, in the center of them, and then imagine myself still there with
|
||
a strong light thrown upon me. . . . Create the picture. Hold the
|
||
visualization very deliberately and in detail, and keep it fixed upon my
|
||
mind, that at that moment I {was} there and that they were conscious of
|
||
it. I failed, of course, at first, but I know that after a few attempts I
|
||
succeeded and those people did actually see me.
|
||
|
||
My face only, but that was because in my picture I had seen myself only
|
||
as a face. I imagined the part they would recognize me by. I was also able
|
||
to get a message in the same way. Precisely the same way. I stood by the
|
||
most sensitive present, and spoke and concentrated my mind on a short
|
||
sentence, and repeated it with much emphasis and deliberation until I
|
||
could hear part of it spoken by this person. I knew that at last I had
|
||
succeeded, and I succeeded reasonably easily because I knew so intimately
|
||
what the conditions of those people and that earth room were. Many who had
|
||
not my earth knowledge made little impression at all.
|
||
|
||
There was none of my own family present that time. Had there been it
|
||
would have made it impossible for me, as I was then feeling their sorrow
|
||
acutely, and I would not have been able to give my mind so full a power as
|
||
I did - I became almost impersonal. It was a good thing that my first
|
||
attempt was purely a test one - to see if I could break through to home.
|
||
|
||
Reality of Though Communication CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
||
In trying to establish a definite form of communication between the
|
||
earth sphere and the Blue Island, people are always looking for the return
|
||
of the physical part of the individual. They find it exceedingly difficult
|
||
to accept even the most pressing mental tests as being proof of
|
||
communication; and in giving so much attention to this physical form, they
|
||
nearly overlook the form of thought communication, which is much more
|
||
personal and very much less tainted by outside influence, such as the
|
||
medium's mind, or other sitters . . . antagonism, or bias either way.
|
||
This thought communication is a much more real form than is accepted by
|
||
the majority of believers in the possibility of it.
|
||
|
||
In concentrating the mind on any one spirit person, you are sending out
|
||
real, live, active forces. These forces pass through the air in precisely
|
||
the same way as electric waves do, and they never miss their mark. You
|
||
concentrate on Mr. A in the spirit world, and immediately Mr. A is
|
||
conscious of a force coming to him
|
||
|
||
In this land we are much more sensitive than whilst on earth, and when
|
||
thoughts are directed to us by people on your side, we have a direct call
|
||
from those currents of thought thus generated, and we are practically
|
||
always able to come in close contact with the person who is thinking of
|
||
us; when near and acclimatized to his conditions we can impress thoughts
|
||
and ideas upon his mind. He will seldom accept them for what they are, but
|
||
will think they are his own normal thoughts or something of an
|
||
hallucination.
|
||
|
||
Nevertheless, if frequent opportunity is given he will be startled at
|
||
the amount of information he can record. This applies to everyone, not
|
||
merely to the believer in these subjects. Anyone who sits for a moment and
|
||
allows his mind to dwell on some dear one who had {died} will actually
|
||
draw the spirit of that persons to himself. He may be conscious or
|
||
unconscious of the presence, but the presence is there.
|
||
|
||
If people on earth realized the result of their thoughts upon those to
|
||
whom they refer, they would be very much more careful in giving their mind
|
||
free play. There are so many thoughts possible, and all of them are
|
||
registered here; many of them affect the people they concern, but all of
|
||
them affect the people from whom they emanate.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps in telling you all thoughts are recorded I am making it more
|
||
difficult for you to accept and understand. It will be better, therefore,
|
||
to explain that by {all thoughts} I refer only to all {direct} thoughts.
|
||
In reality every thought is registered; the personal ones are, as I have
|
||
previously said, of no importance so long as they are not allowed to grow
|
||
into destructive thoughts.
|
||
|
||
In speaking of direct thought I mean you to understand {positive}
|
||
thoughts, about other people, pleasant or unpleasant, and not the thoughts
|
||
of every-day trivialities.
|
||
|
||
Many people find it impossible to believe that every direct thought
|
||
they have is registered, or that it can in any way influence or affect the
|
||
person concerned, or return to influence themselves, but this is so.
|
||
|
||
You are fully aware of the influence given out by any one person who is
|
||
deeply depressed or more than usually excited and happy. Each of you has
|
||
felt this influence. This is, of course, caused by the lowered or raised
|
||
mental vibrations, giving out particularly strong currents of either
|
||
depression or happiness.
|
||
|
||
They are equally strong currents in themselves although they act
|
||
differently upon the people with whom they come into contact. It is in
|
||
this way that all direct thoughts act. Frequently the subject is not
|
||
conscious of these thoughts upon himself, but influence is there in a
|
||
subtle and greater or lesser degree of strength, and all these thoughts
|
||
are very definitely registered in the mind of the thinker long after the
|
||
incident itself has passed.
|
||
|
||
When coming to this land, that whole record has to be dealt with. Not
|
||
by a judge in wig and gown, but by our own spirit selves. In spirit life
|
||
we have a full and clear remembrance of all these things and, according to
|
||
quality of these individual thoughts, so we are brought into a state of
|
||
regret, happiness or unhappiness, despair or satisfaction.
|
||
|
||
It is here that we meet with the desire to make return, to put right
|
||
all the discomfort and distress, minor or major, as it may be, caused by
|
||
thoughtless mind action whilst on earth.
|
||
|
||
This is why I say that whilst on earth it is not only advisable, but
|
||
essential to keep your minds under control and in order. It is only wisdom
|
||
so to do. The difficulty is that people will not realize this whilst upon
|
||
earth, although they know from their own inner consciousness that I am
|
||
stating a truth.
|
||
|
||
I want you all to try to realize the results you are making, the
|
||
unhappiness you are causing others, and the regret and sorrow you are
|
||
laying up for yourselves in the next world when you have to face the
|
||
conditions you have made. Remember that your minds are the
|
||
generating-houses. You are building up whatever is to be your next
|
||
condition, precisely and exactly by the lives you are leading on earth, by
|
||
your thoughts and by the degree to which your body controls your mind
|
||
instead of your mind ruling supreme.
|
||
|
||
So long as you are upon earth you are Body (Physical) and Soul (Mind)
|
||
and Spirit (Self). When you come here you are Mind (Soul) and Self
|
||
(Spirit) only. Therefore for your own future happiness it is essential
|
||
that your Mind should rule during earth life. It is for you to say whether
|
||
it shall do so. If you are willing to pay your bill when you come over,
|
||
carry on as you are, but there is no further credit given; you have to
|
||
settle it here. If you are a quarter as practical as you each and all
|
||
think you are, you will see to it that the mind leads.
|
||
|
||
It can lead very delightfully, although you may think it leads only to
|
||
religious restriction - it does not only lead there; it leads to all
|
||
earth's pleasures, all earth's enjoyments, but it always holds the ruling
|
||
hand, and can stop at the right time, whereas the body cannot, and so it
|
||
runs up debts which have to be paid, and paid sometimes very dearly and
|
||
bitterly.
|
||
|
||
Earth was made beautiful for Man to enjoy - not merely to tantalize him
|
||
- lead him on and then say, {No } That is not the way of our blessed
|
||
Creator. He has given beauty and the faculty for enjoying beauty to all
|
||
mankind, and so long as the mind rules it will continue to be beauty, but
|
||
when only the body rules, influencing and degrading the mind as it will,
|
||
then trouble lies ahead; much trouble and much acute regret.
|
||
|
||
When we are here our minds work in the same manner, they obey the same
|
||
rules, and the presence or absence of body does not hinder our thinking
|
||
powers, and consequently there is no difficulty in coming into touch with
|
||
some of our people left behind and being in close touch with them,
|
||
influencing them greatly; although many of them are unconscious of it.
|
||
|
||
I want you to think of this and to realize that your own people can
|
||
come to you, that thought is all-powerful and that you can build up or
|
||
destroy, help or hinder, draw near you, or drive away from you, the people
|
||
incarnate and discarnate, who were and who are so dear to each of you by
|
||
this power of thought.
|
||
|
||
Thought communication is the closest link between the two worlds, but
|
||
it must be well-ordered and well-trained brain action. You must not
|
||
imagine that every idea which enters your mind is put there by a spirit
|
||
person; it is not so at all, but at the same time, if you train your mind
|
||
in the way an athlete trains his body, you can then ask for and receive
|
||
great knowledge and much help, both spiritual and material.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Important Points CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
||
A SUBJECT of this importance and interest is full of queries. Each one
|
||
has his own questions to put, and each brings what he considers a hitherto
|
||
unnoticed point. I want, if possible, to answer a few of these constantly
|
||
recurring queries now. I had many put to me during my investigations
|
||
whilst on earth, and some of them I can answer at last. I want you first
|
||
to realize that by the change of death you {do not} become part of the
|
||
Godhead {Immediately.}
|
||
|
||
The mysteries of life of life are not revealed to you as a kind of
|
||
welcoming gift on your arrival here. You must not think that I, or any,
|
||
have {full} knowledge on all subjects, profound and trivial, the moment we
|
||
come to spirit life . . . I cannot tell you when your grandson will next
|
||
require new shoes . . . nor can I tell you the settlement of the Irish
|
||
question.
|
||
|
||
I can only see a little farther than you, and I do not by any means
|
||
possess the key to the door of All Knowledge and All Truth. That, we have
|
||
each to work for
|
||
. . . and as we pass through one door we find another
|
||
in front of us to be unlocked ... and another and another.
|
||
|
||
But, on the other hand, remember that I do know considerably more than
|
||
you do, because I am in more intimate touch with the Main Source of
|
||
knowledge, and I have passed through an experience which is still ahead of
|
||
you all.
|
||
|
||
I should like first to speak about the word {conditions} and its true
|
||
meaning. It is a word which is grossly misapplied in all forms of psychic
|
||
work. It is given as a reason for this or that failure - for a success
|
||
-for any peculiarity in result, and it is looked upon as necessary in any
|
||
apartment in which a meeting is to be held. Rightly and wrongly - usually
|
||
wrongly. The main factor or essential in obtaining good results lies in
|
||
the condition of the sitter's mind more than in the room he is in.
|
||
|
||
The mental attitude and the {physical} state of the sitter is of very
|
||
much more importance than of the presence of draped windows, thick
|
||
carpets, exotic perfumes, etc., etc. It is the method of mental approach
|
||
which matters chiefly. That is a feature often overlooked by even
|
||
first-grade sensitives . . . Certain {extras} if rightly used and properly
|
||
directed round the apartment, such as a cheerful face, pleasant flowers,
|
||
laughter and brightness, these are all quite useful assets, but they are
|
||
not the essentials.
|
||
|
||
Some people always try to reduce to ridicule communication with the
|
||
next world, one of the greatest of God's blessings to mankind, and
|
||
complain of what they consider to be the senseless conditions ruling at a
|
||
seance. Many of these conditions, as I have said, are meaningless and
|
||
sometimes a hindrance, but at the same time others are necessary according
|
||
to the kind of communication sought after.
|
||
|
||
To make my point, I must recall to you how conditions govern
|
||
everything, and so much does everything depend upon given suitable
|
||
conditions that people do not even notice that this is so. The simplest
|
||
and perhaps the most useful example of this is in making a pot of tea. You
|
||
must have the tea in a certain condition, you must have the water in a
|
||
certain condition - if you do not, you get poor results.
|
||
|
||
{Your flowers} - you have your seeds in a certain condition of dryness
|
||
and you put them to earth when the climate is in a certain condition,
|
||
according to time of year, and, once planted, you tend your plants,
|
||
flowers, trees, everything according to the conditions they {demand.}
|
||
|
||
We demand conditions. Why should you think that this great scientific
|
||
work can be governed, mastered by inexperienced hands at any
|
||
take-it-or-leave-it moment? You cannot reasonably expect it, and if you
|
||
do, you won't get it! Conditions govern earth and all forms of life on
|
||
it, from an earlier state than that when consciousness begins - but I tell
|
||
you many of the conditions demanded by intelligent workers in this subject
|
||
are futile and - worse - harmful.
|
||
|
||
You cannot achieve success in anything, or along any line, by directing
|
||
your force in opposition to your intelligence. A vast number do, in this
|
||
subject, and {that} is why there is so much failure. You may as well try
|
||
to take a photograph without putting any film into the camera, and,
|
||
because you get no result, say the whole thing is impossible and
|
||
fraudulent. You must have conditions in order to secure success in any and
|
||
everything. It is due to lack of these necessary conditions that we fail
|
||
sometimes to influence a person to do or not to do a certain act.
|
||
|
||
A father, in spirit life, may be fully conscious of is son
|
||
contemplating a certain deed, say, suicide or murder, or anything of that
|
||
kind. Such knowledge will cause great sorrow to the father, and he will
|
||
work his utmost to influence the son, to direct his thoughts, and destroy
|
||
the idea of whatever is contemplated; but at such time the son is in an
|
||
abnormal state of excitement, which nearly always prevents our influence
|
||
from getting to him and working upon him. It is not at all a state of
|
||
happiness, for the father, because he is fully aware of his sons acts, and
|
||
he is powerless to prevent him.
|
||
|
||
In action we are free. Absolutely free. We have graduated in the Blue
|
||
School. We are free to go amongst the other spheres. The hands where many
|
||
or several - or none - of our own people are. We can go to them, and we
|
||
can take help from those more developed, and give help to those less
|
||
fortunate. Help by advice, help by demonstration, and help by association.
|
||
We are still living on the Blue Island; not yet do we pass to the next
|
||
sphere for domicile.
|
||
|
||
As we are able to travel among these other lands, so we are able to be
|
||
in constant touch with earth. Thoughts of us sent out by people on earth
|
||
reach us, and we sense from whom they come, and can follow up the person,
|
||
if so desired. We would not get every thought from anyone who happened to
|
||
see our names and make a casual remark, but from anyone with whom we were
|
||
intimate whilst on earth a thought of us will come straight, as along a
|
||
telephone wire from one house to another, and if we wish we can come.
|
||
|
||
In this way we are able to help people left behind. We can follow
|
||
their actions and their minds, and influence them one way or the other,
|
||
according to our idea of what is for their good; but we cannot do
|
||
impossible things even for those dearest to us.
|
||
|
||
Whilst on earth one can give advice, but one cannot force it into
|
||
practice - so here we can influence but not create. Having attained this
|
||
state there is no parting, there is no sting to death, we can be with our
|
||
own beyond us, with us, below us, and with those still on earth.
|
||
Separation and partings are not known except by the law of attraction and
|
||
affection.
|
||
|
||
We leave people behind on the earth who dutifully mourn for us, who are
|
||
genuinely upset at {their} loss; but after a while - short or long - their
|
||
remembrance of us grows thin. They cease to think of us, to recall us, and
|
||
to remember our companionship. They are the only partings. In some cases
|
||
even those people come back to our lives when they themselves come to this
|
||
land. Gradually, as they throw off the influences which dimmed their
|
||
remembrance of us, they find the foundation of the old affection.
|
||
Sometimes it is untouched; sometimes spoilt; but these are the only
|
||
partings.
|
||
|
||
A spirit who comes here, and is anxious to get in touch with earth
|
||
ties, may be made more unhappy by being with the earth people, for if they
|
||
do not understand that he is still alive, they are all sadness, and they
|
||
think of him as dead - as something finished.
|
||
|
||
Although the spirit will go to them a great deal at first, the earth
|
||
people will not know he is there, and seeing them but being unable to make
|
||
his presence know causes him much disappointment and sorrow, and they are
|
||
ignorant of his presence and think only of him as dead, he will finally
|
||
stay away altogether, content to wait until they join him.
|
||
|
||
This accounts for many people who are not apparently making any attempt
|
||
to communicate, and for earth people to say that this cannot be true
|
||
because their dearest so-and-so never made any sign to them.
|
||
|
||
When you are over in this life you will not be continually associated
|
||
with people who are not of interest to you. On earth you eliminate, as far
|
||
as practicable, the people who tire and try you - but here that can be
|
||
done effectively because those feelings and instincts are entirely mutual.
|
||
The governing force is love. Affections bind people together, and if the
|
||
love between any two, or any group, is a strong and real thing, then those
|
||
people are in close unison and happiness together. But wherever the love
|
||
is not on both or all sides, there is automatically a falling away of the
|
||
affected party.
|
||
|
||
Nothing uneven or unequal holds. When you come, through death, you are
|
||
attracted by the ties of love into the set of people who vibrate the same
|
||
affection, and if you have had an affection for another which is not
|
||
equally shared although you will at first be together, you will gradually
|
||
and yet quietly cease to attract each other, and cease to be in each
|
||
other's company.
|
||
|
||
The State Of Freedom CHAPTER X
|
||
|
||
Everything is ordered. I have touched lightly upon my first arrival and
|
||
my impression of the new surroundings, and of my first return to earth and
|
||
the manner of it. Without giving technical and scientific formula at all,
|
||
I thing I have given you a fair picture and a rough idea of the next step
|
||
after earth life. What I have said applies to all the human race. Whites,
|
||
blacks and yellows - there is no differentiation; one rule holds for all
|
||
races of mankind.
|
||
|
||
I shall pass for the present to a further stage.
|
||
|
||
I may return to say more about the Blue Island, but now I will leave
|
||
all life there to continue on its way, and will deal with a further point
|
||
of development - the state of being rid of most earth instincts. Once rid
|
||
of these we are able to pass with comparative ease, and almost at will,
|
||
from one sphere to another, and from this or another sphere back to earth;
|
||
keeping thereby in close association with our own people - or those of
|
||
them who desire it. We help by influencing them in their daily lives and
|
||
actions, and we do this {without in any way retarding our own work,
|
||
development and construction of character.} Character is the main thing to
|
||
be studied.
|
||
|
||
Whilst on the Blue Island I studied, as all do, the secrets of self and
|
||
of life, and I came to realize the vastness of Creation. It is not life on
|
||
earth and then life on this island only. As progress is made and earth's
|
||
inclinations and habits are put aside, so other interests take their
|
||
place, and then comes the desire for true knowledge. As other do and will
|
||
do, so did I. I fell into line also, and as I learned so I progressed.
|
||
Capacity for wisdom grew with the wisdom acquired.
|
||
|
||
I had learnt of the existence of other lands besides this island, and
|
||
at one time it seemed as incredible as the possible existence of this land
|
||
does to many now on earth; but eventually the time came when I was taken
|
||
to these other spheres. I cannot tell where they are, but it was like
|
||
traveling amongst the stars. It seems as if we left our world and traveled
|
||
through space until we reached another star, another land.
|
||
|
||
There are several of these other lands, and they are inhabited by
|
||
former earth people who have progressed sufficiently to qualify for entry
|
||
into this or that land. These other lands are nearly all inhabited by a
|
||
higher form of life, a happier form and, individually, a more powerful
|
||
form, but there are one or two other lands of not so high an order, where
|
||
happiness is less or not at all, according to whether life on earth was a
|
||
well or lightly ordered thing.
|
||
|
||
In these lands the people who are there fail and fail again to find the
|
||
spirit in themselves to desire to rise, to improve an control themselves,
|
||
although the necessary strength is offered and offered and even thrust at
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
All races have the gift of free will. All are free agents in
|
||
determining their own destinies. At all times, not only after the body's
|
||
death. Just as a father and a mother of a family order the day's routine
|
||
for their children, and allow the children then to amuse themselves in
|
||
their own way, so the races of mankind are free to develop and model their
|
||
lives upon their own individual pattern - being given certain rules to
|
||
conform to.
|
||
|
||
All life is originally free, but whilst on earth, through poor
|
||
comprehension and mismanagement, the individual often thinks he is not a
|
||
free personage with free will - but he is. As the same father and mother
|
||
will influence and guide their children, the cause being love, so when we
|
||
are here and find ourselves able, we do our utmost to help and influence
|
||
those we love who are still on earth. Always it is the driving force of
|
||
love which causes us to do our work.
|
||
|
||
We can be in close touch with our people on earth, and by suggestion
|
||
and by close association we can influence them. Through our influence
|
||
often much material good will come to them. We spirit people cannot give
|
||
material riches to {any} on earth, but we can frequently advise as to the
|
||
best step to take in a business matter which, if taken, will bring in
|
||
considerable material wealth. Just as we can influence in a spiritual
|
||
sense, so we can influence in a business way.
|
||
|
||
We people over here can see both sides of the argument. When a thing is
|
||
to be decided between two people we can see both points and can therefore
|
||
see which is right, and if we play straight we throw our influence in with
|
||
that, whether it is to the benefit of our earth friend, in a material
|
||
sense, or not. If we do this, and our earth friend loses or suffers from
|
||
it, we invariably make it up later in a different way.
|
||
|
||
If we throw our influence against our own conviction, only in order to
|
||
help our earth friend, {we} pay for it here ourselves, and our earth
|
||
friend, who thereby gains unjustifiably, pays for it later, either whilst
|
||
on earth or when in spirit life. He will have to make return sooner or
|
||
later; there is no escape, it is automatic.
|
||
|
||
In saying we can and do influence people on earth, I do not propose to
|
||
go into the precise process of how we work. It is near enough to say that
|
||
you know how you influence each other on earth; here the result is the
|
||
same, although the process is quite different - but that is a matter which
|
||
each one of you will deal with individually later on, when your own change
|
||
comes, therefore it is not of necessity nor of interest to you to know
|
||
now.
|
||
|
||
You have on earth a saying that {coming events cast their shadows
|
||
before}. This is a truth. They do cast their influences, and sensitive
|
||
people can always register them and can often make a guess at their
|
||
origin.
|
||
|
||
|
||
(again, words in brackets were italicized)
|
||
|
||
Premonitions CHAPTER XI
|
||
|
||
There are many superstitions and many reasons given to explain what is
|
||
called {premonition}, but in almost every instance it can be traced to
|
||
telepathy; there are so many forms of mental sympathy.
|
||
|
||
The chief form of premonition is that concerning the death of another,
|
||
friend or relation. Now {always} that can be traced to telepathy. You will
|
||
argue that perhaps the person about to pass on was not anticipating his
|
||
death. It may have been through a sudden accident, and yet so-and-so had a
|
||
certain sign - a premonition - so many days, or such and such a time,
|
||
beforehand.
|
||
|
||
To explain: Mr. A has a premonition about the death of Mr. B. It is
|
||
followed up later by an accident in which Mr. B is killed. The spirit
|
||
friends who are interested in Mr. B have been in continual attendance upon
|
||
him, and are watching him in order to be of use whenever possible; but
|
||
they cannot make him do this or do that with any certainty, they can only
|
||
influence him one way or another.
|
||
|
||
Now, all the actions of Mr. B's life are producing certain effects,
|
||
some of which Mr. B himself is not at once conscious of . . . His spirit
|
||
friends are, and they can see, a certain distance ahead, what the results
|
||
of these actions - the general routine of his life - may be. In this way
|
||
they can see ahead what is going to occur to Mr. B, and although they will
|
||
do their utmost to guide him they cannot {act} for him. He sets his own
|
||
destiny in motion and he alone can alter it.
|
||
|
||
At such a time, the spirit friends, realizing that Mr. B is in physical
|
||
danger, will do their utmost to divert his actions and movements:
|
||
sometimes they are successful, but in this particular instance they are
|
||
not, and Mr. B meets his death. The influences being used by the spirit
|
||
people have created a disturbance of thought-force around him and,
|
||
although he was not conscious of it himself, his friend Mr. A has
|
||
registered it upon his mind and it has reproduced itself in sleep, as a
|
||
dream, or as a vision built up by thought-power and materialized through
|
||
and from the physical strength of Mr. B. Distance between A and B makes no
|
||
difference.
|
||
|
||
Premonitions concerning an arrangement made which is afterwards not
|
||
fulfilled are caused by the influence of spirit friends trying always to
|
||
guide their charges to the benefit of themselves. In this way you can
|
||
figure out the cause of all so-called premonitions. In every case it is
|
||
spirit friends trying to communicate with the person chiefly concerned -
|
||
he often fails to register what {another} will pick up.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Residence CHAPTER XII
|
||
|
||
I come now to the last days on the Blue Island and the taking up of our
|
||
residence on the next and far more permanent world. The Blue Island is a
|
||
transient life; a land for acclimatizing the newcomer, and as soon as he's
|
||
fit he passes from it to what I might term the Real World, inasmuch as
|
||
each one will be much longer on it than any has yet been on earth.
|
||
|
||
We can at will return to the Blue Island, and many do so frequently,
|
||
both to meet newly arrived friends and associates, and to help any person
|
||
or group with whom we are in sympathy. These are only visits, and we do
|
||
not ever again return there to live.
|
||
|
||
Travel here is a very different thing to the methods you all know, and
|
||
we all set out in a large party for the Real World. Not our whole party,
|
||
as on first arrival; many weren't ready to leave, but with us were many
|
||
other spirit people besides those with whom we had originally arrived.
|
||
There was the same sensation of flying, moving rapidly through the air;
|
||
then we came to our new home.
|
||
|
||
After the color and generally striking appearance of the {Blue Island},
|
||
this new land appeared less attractive at the outset. It was more toneless
|
||
in color, the people more engrossed in their regular routine. It seemed as
|
||
if we had returned to earth life again, it was so like. I thing, on
|
||
arrival here, we must all have been attracted to different parts of this
|
||
land, for my own seemed strikingly like parts I had known on earth, and
|
||
there were also buildings I knew. Other people have told me the same, so
|
||
I am confident that according to our race and degree of development so we
|
||
are automatically attracted to different parts of this new world.
|
||
|
||
It is in this land that I and most of our people are, and certainly all
|
||
will be, in due course. We continue our studies and our work of developing
|
||
spiritually, whilst at the same time controlling and dispersing the few
|
||
still-clinging earth habits and thoughts. We are all very much more
|
||
conscious of each other in this land, and life resumes a much greater
|
||
similarity to the life we have known on earth.
|
||
|
||
We have our homes in the same way and our interests in other people,
|
||
and according to taste so we are habited together in houses or on the open
|
||
hillside country. Some people live in very elaborate palaces, and it is
|
||
very curious to note that many of these people are those who have led very
|
||
rough and hard lives upon earth. Their idea of Heaven is a palace and a
|
||
life of ease.
|
||
|
||
After a period of time, during which they must make specified progress
|
||
in general development, these people are given their palaces in order to
|
||
allow them full advantage of environment to make forward steps in their
|
||
evolution. If they don't progress, they lose their palace and must
|
||
re-qualify for it. This applies to everyone; each has to qualify in order
|
||
to obtain his desired object; and in order to keep it he must continue his
|
||
progress and his help to others.
|
||
|
||
When we come to this land, we have ceased to desire food, drink and
|
||
sleep; we are now pure spirit in the rough state; there is still more
|
||
refining to be done in the next phase. Here, also there are {Rest Houses
|
||
-Houses for Music - Houses for Scientific Research} - Houses for all, and
|
||
every kind of information and knowledge; and the entrance fee to each and
|
||
all of these is Desire.
|
||
|
||
We do not lead a life of continual cramming of information - we lead
|
||
ordinary earth lives, but with a much keener social interest and much more
|
||
freedom and exchange of thought. There is no distinction of the classes.
|
||
Our earth life may be forgotten, in so far as our individual task on earth
|
||
is concerned, when that task was a matter of little or no interest to us.
|
||
|
||
It is only the spiritual and mental knowledge and development which
|
||
hinders and advances the individual here; and spirit knowledge is not
|
||
hindered by whatever one's job on earth may have been. In this respect
|
||
there is a great and sudden broadening of the point of view of all comers
|
||
to this land.
|
||
|
||
It is a land of freedom. A land of happiness and smiles. A land of
|
||
happiness brought about through the real love of man for man. A land to
|
||
work for - a land in which your place is made according to the knowledge
|
||
you have had whilst upon earth and the way you have used that knowledge.
|
||
|
||
It is impossible to over-emphasize the degree of freedom in this new
|
||
world, or the joy each and all has in it.
|
||
|
||
In saying that your happiness is gauged by the knowledge acquired on
|
||
earth and the application of that knowledge, I am saying what is accurate
|
||
to the smallest detail, but I would like to explain precisely.
|
||
|
||
On being established here, in the Real World, each one is interviewed
|
||
by one of the Advanced Spirit Instructors and the whole record of earth is
|
||
discussed and analyzed. Reason, motive and result. The full and detailed
|
||
record contains everything, there is nothing overlooked, and this is the
|
||
time for paying the bill. Each is interviewed alone, and there is a
|
||
minute analysis of all events, acts and thoughts. Then there is the making
|
||
good to be gone through, the sum total to be paid . . . for all our
|
||
thoughtlessness and our unkind acts and words - all that have had direct
|
||
results must be paid for.
|
||
|
||
We have then to spend time in close touch with earth, in order, by
|
||
influence, to make good for our past misdoings; make good as far as
|
||
possible. Also we have the knowledge and full sight of the results of
|
||
these earlier acts, and they do not bring happiness; but after that state
|
||
is passed and we can bring all these things into proper perspective and
|
||
form a table of work, which will gradually and continually be working out
|
||
results and troubles we have caused, then we can each one settle down to
|
||
live here in freedom.
|
||
|
||
The form of life differs here enormously according to temperament,
|
||
personality, and the influence of earth life. People vary in strange
|
||
contrast to one another. Many of us carry on with our same work as on
|
||
earth. Here we have no need to work in order to obtain daily livelihood,
|
||
we work here solely for spiritual refinement and progress; at the same
|
||
time we keep in touch with our earth interests as a form of recreation.
|
||
|
||
We are not always, without any break, in one house or another studying
|
||
this, that and the other; we have a certain program to go through but it
|
||
has many breaks, and in this {off duty} time we come back to our dear
|
||
people on earth, and either out of interest and love, or from the desire
|
||
to be useful, we try our utmost to help them in their material and mental
|
||
difficulties.
|
||
|
||
We have every form of recreation here, as I have already told you when
|
||
dealing with the Blue Island. Any habit or hobby formed on earth can be
|
||
indulged in here, always providing it is progressive.
|
||
|
||
From this you can understand that life after death is a very normal and
|
||
natural affair. We have still our affections, and those which last are
|
||
still strongly binding links. Between families and friends we have the
|
||
same affections - and yet not the same, because sometimes on earth there
|
||
are differences which cause a silence between members of a family, and
|
||
perhaps over here that family will once more be very united - the earth
|
||
differences being based solely upon material things - once remove the
|
||
material and physical and underneath the love often remains.
|
||
|
||
One great change which death brings is a much broader point of view and
|
||
a much larger mind. A deeper understanding, a keener intuition, clears
|
||
away immediately many former difficulties and misunderstandings. Once on
|
||
this Real World, and once past the first initiation and payment of debts,
|
||
we are free to do as we wish, but we have to progress or we ourselves
|
||
curtail our liberties.
|
||
|
||
It is not an enforced progress, we can take our own time about
|
||
everything, but we must not allow any of earth's instincts to increase in
|
||
their power over us. We have to learn the new conditions and live for
|
||
them entirely.
|
||
|
||
Once free, we can travel at will over our own world and over yours. So
|
||
great is our speed and method of travel that we can be in two places
|
||
almost simultaneously.
|
||
|
||
Everywhere we go we are conscious of the general love for one another.
|
||
It is much more evident than on earth, and that great affection is the
|
||
direct cause of the general brightness and radiance of this world. I do
|
||
mean that it gives off rays of light, but rather that the general
|
||
atmosphere is light in quality and very invigorating and strength-giving.
|
||
|
||
Life here is a grander thing - a bolder thing, and a happier thing for
|
||
all those who have led reasonable lives on earth, but for the unreasonable
|
||
there are many troubles and difficulties and sorrows to be encountered.
|
||
There is a great truth in the saying that {as ye sow, so shall ye reap.}
|
||
|
||
|
||
General Results CHAPTER XIII
|
||
|
||
I HAVE been away from my earth life now a number of years, and although
|
||
I have been in constant and unbroken touch with my old conditions and
|
||
affections, I have never, since leaving the Blue Island, had any desire to
|
||
return to the earth for habitation.
|
||
|
||
There have been many occasions when I have very badly wanted a tongue
|
||
for a few hours. With my extra sight I have known the right treatment when
|
||
seeing certain situations being mishandled. At such times I have very
|
||
badly wanted to return to earth for an hour, in order to be the means of
|
||
bringing about great improvements - beyond these passing desires I have
|
||
had no wish ever to take up residence on earth; my travels and my works
|
||
and studies on this side of the grave have been of such vital interest.
|
||
Since being here I have acquired greater knowledge, and have been able to
|
||
pass to earth people {some} of that knowledge, at different times.
|
||
|
||
Ever since my leaving the world, your world, I have been keenly
|
||
interested in its development, and very live to all its internal and
|
||
external difficulties. Patriotism still holds with me, as with most of
|
||
us, and will continue to hold so long as I have personal ties upon earth.
|
||
When there are no longer any of these personal ties remaining my interests
|
||
will gradually and naturally turn more exclusively to {this} side among my
|
||
own people, and my place will be filled by another - and so the race goes
|
||
on - always moving forward, progressing and evolving.
|
||
|
||
Looking back on it all since I first came to the {Blue Isle} I have
|
||
great satisfaction in seeing the advance I have made. Coming here was
|
||
quite a shock to me. I had no idea that my death was so near when that
|
||
particular year began, and I certainly had no desire that it should be
|
||
soon. I had an overwhelming number of important things on my hands. Some
|
||
of these have been able to finish since, and I have followed the progress
|
||
of many others.
|
||
|
||
Soon after arrival, I had grown acclimatized to the new conditions, the
|
||
new appearance of everything, the new power of locomotion and
|
||
communication. We do not talk to each other very much here, we have a more
|
||
expressive and intimate way than that. Here, thoughts are communicated
|
||
from one mind to another without the need of vocal expression, although we
|
||
{can} talk in earth manner at will.
|
||
|
||
There are, of course, many and vast differences between my world and
|
||
yours, but I always find one of the most blessed and merciful differences
|
||
between the two to be the manner in which the mental is unhindered by the
|
||
physical. You on earth have mental desires and ambitions of various kinds,
|
||
for money, success in business, pleasure, power, knowledge, etc.; but
|
||
always these desires are limited, cramped, often made impossible owing to
|
||
your physical condition - here, when the mental desire is good, the field
|
||
is unlimited.
|
||
|
||
Any mental desire for truth, knowledge, be it what it may, can be
|
||
gratified in a most astonishing manner in {this} world. Be it good or bad,
|
||
it will bring its results, and if the desire is bad it will grow in power
|
||
and must be paid for; if good, it will grow in power also, and will bring
|
||
strength and happiness with it.
|
||
|
||
I cannot emphasize to you too much that as {you are}, so {you will be.}
|
||
|
||
You are now, whilst on earth, making your bodies for your next
|
||
conditions. These are built up by your present lives on the quality of
|
||
your thoughts. This world, which I have been in a long time now, is the
|
||
closest thing imaginable to your earth. It is full of mineral, vegetable,
|
||
animal, and {all} forms of life. All the animals you have loved on earth
|
||
and educated to understanding, will be with you here. Those other animals
|
||
who belong to no one in particular are here too, but they are in their own
|
||
places.
|
||
|
||
You will say, {Oh, then it is only a reflection of our word.} It is not
|
||
that way - the earth is only a reflection of this world. Earth is not the
|
||
lasting world. It is the training school. You are not only on earth to
|
||
amass riches and enjoy life, just for what it is; you are there to learn
|
||
the truth about your own character, and how to control and develop it, to
|
||
make full use of all earth's beauties and pleasures, but you must be
|
||
master, and not allow them to master you.
|
||
|
||
As I have said, looking back on my life here, I am satisfied with what
|
||
has been done both in the personal and individual way {and} the bigger
|
||
way. We spirit people have made great advances in our communications with
|
||
earth. We have been greatly and enormously helped by the physical strength
|
||
of the spirits of all the young men and women who passed over during the
|
||
recent fighting all over the world; not only English, but all. They
|
||
brought with them great physical power and determination, and we have been
|
||
able, through this power, to break down many of the barriers which keep
|
||
the two worlds apart.
|
||
|
||
These truths do not conform with the ideas of many people, but that is
|
||
no reason for saying they are not true. Truth is sometimes unexpected and
|
||
none too pleasant, but it is always the most powerful, and {will} make
|
||
itself known - no matter whether it brings pleasure or pain.
|
||
|
||
Go, each one of you, in reality or imagination, to the edge of a high
|
||
cliff overlooking the sea. Let it be a bright, starry, frosty night, and
|
||
go alone. Stand there and meditate. Look down upon the lights of any
|
||
harbored, anchored boats, and think; then look up to the stars. You know
|
||
where you are, and you are fully conscious of the flickering and movement
|
||
of the lights on the boats.
|
||
|
||
You can see them. You are only a little way off . .
|
||
. and perhaps you could make them hear if you called,
|
||
but it would be easier to wait till the darkness breaks when they can see
|
||
you without any effort on your part. That is how we spirit people are;
|
||
conscious of those left behind, some willing to wait, others fighting and
|
||
struggling to make themselves heard. It is only a little way from earth,
|
||
and between this, our spirit state and the Great Universe, there is as
|
||
much distance as between you on the cliff and the farthest star.
|
||
|
||
{We are only a little way on our journey - nothing yet forgotten. Love
|
||
still remaining.}
|
||
|
||
The Great Ultimate CHAPTER XIV
|
||
|
||
MY LIFE here has been a very normal, healthy and interesting affair,
|
||
just as my life on earth was. I have been invested with no powers
|
||
generally attributed to spirits and fairies, I am still just an ordinary
|
||
man with an ordinary plain, blunt outlook on life; the change has in no
|
||
way altered me. The only change there is in me is my greater ability to
|
||
move speedily and to act quickly. I am rejuvenated, and this is a
|
||
condition which becomes more marked as time goes on.
|
||
|
||
Many people who give thought to these subjects no matter what their
|
||
particular point of view may be, ask the question, {To where is it all
|
||
leading? What is to be our ultimate state?} This is a question of extreme
|
||
difficulty to deal with on account of the limitations of the mind; both
|
||
yours and ours.
|
||
|
||
I have explained to you that, as you are, so you will be when you come
|
||
here. When here you will qualify for a further state, which will be your
|
||
lot in due time, and there you will be exactly as you have made yourself
|
||
by your life {here}. Better or worse, happier or more unhappy. From that
|
||
you will go to a further state, another sphere if you like, and there
|
||
again you will have made your own conditions.
|
||
|
||
In this further state you will be more self-contained; a word I use to
|
||
express a state of being less dependent upon other people and things for
|
||
development and progress. In this sphere you will again come in contact
|
||
with your {whole record}.
|
||
|
||
A record in full, of all former states: and from this sphere, if your
|
||
record has qualified to the point of allowing it, you will be given the
|
||
choice of returning to earth again. Reincarnating. If your record does not
|
||
qualify for choice in this matter, you will be {directed} either to return
|
||
or to continue according to what the Teachers - the Purified - consider
|
||
will afford you most opportunity for re-creating yourself and cleansing
|
||
yourself in the necessary way.
|
||
|
||
It is from this sphere that spirits return to earth, but by the time
|
||
the most progressed spirit has reached this state he has forgotten in
|
||
detail his association with earth. I cannot give the shortest period of
|
||
time which would be necessary to reach this sphere, but the sojourn in the
|
||
Real World after the Blue Island is a much longer period than that of
|
||
mortal life; and in each sphere as progress is made the sojourn is
|
||
{longer}.
|
||
|
||
The spirits who have reached this {Return or Stay Sphere,} and are
|
||
purified and qualified in themselves, those who stand the tests and pass
|
||
out as Grade I, pass to another and altogether different and lighter land
|
||
- and each becomes impersonal. Impersonal in the sense that they are no
|
||
longer {Jack Brown} or {Madge Black;} they are now pure spirit people, and
|
||
their former love, which had been a personal and individual thing, is no
|
||
longer for one but equally for all. All are alike to all. The purest
|
||
tissue of God's love binds one and all.
|
||
|
||
I have given a brief outline, sufficient for you to form your own
|
||
ideas, your own mental pictures of Creation and its process. There would
|
||
be no point in my going further into details, because if I were to give
|
||
the facts you could not understand the conditions ruling in those advanced
|
||
states.
|
||
|
||
I am not able fully to understand them myself, for, as I have said, I
|
||
am only a little way on my journey, but just far enough to grasp the
|
||
intense beauty of life, and in life.
|
||
|
||
As one standing on a higher point than yourselves, and able to see a
|
||
little more than you see, I can best explain to you that in these further
|
||
states you receive not merely fifty, or sixty, or even a hundred per cent
|
||
out of your lives in happiness and joy but you receive comparatively six
|
||
hundred per cent. This is simply a graphic way of indicating the degree of
|
||
happiness that obtains here.
|
||
|
||
Were I able to describe all the processes of our evolution many would
|
||
say, {Oh, but I don't want that}! But when progress has been made and
|
||
intelligence brightened and Reality seen as Reality, not as Imagination,
|
||
they will want it. If I said to an old man in an invalid chair that he
|
||
could have a motor-bicycle, he'd say he preferred his invalid-chair, but
|
||
if he were to be a young, robust boy of nineteen again, which do you
|
||
suppose he'd choose? This is the underlying principle.
|
||
|
||
Do you think that this scheme of the World is hateful and unkind and
|
||
full of continual partings from all other spirits who are dear to each
|
||
individually. l have said that there are {no} partings. It is always
|
||
possible and customary for spirits to keep in close touch with each other
|
||
on this side. When the highest states of the impersonal are reached there
|
||
are no partings from dear ones; only a wider opening of that same door of
|
||
love - a higher, purer love, a Golden or God love - to admit not one or
|
||
two or twenty but to embrace all.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Christ and Spiritualism CHAPTER XV
|
||
|
||
UNFORTUNATELY the word {Spiritualism} has been associated with so many
|
||
misconceptions that it affords scope for misinterpretation, and for this
|
||
reason thousands of people misunderstand the word and suppose that it
|
||
deals only with forms of fortune-telling and chicanery of all kinds, and
|
||
must necessarily be wrong and dangerous - therefore the work of
|
||
anti-Christ.
|
||
|
||
For this reason it is a barred subject. Not only do these people know
|
||
nothing about it, but they are so horrified at the travesty they
|
||
themselves have created that they would refuse to hear, see, or read a
|
||
word upon the subject.
|
||
|
||
To all people who have knowledge of Spiritualism, this attitude is
|
||
tiresome an regrettable; nevertheless it exists today, and in great force.
|
||
|
||
In my concluding chapter I want to say a few simple words on this
|
||
point.
|
||
|
||
Spiritualism is not the work of anti-Christ. All the teachings of
|
||
Christ are to be found in the teachings of Spiritualism. Christ taught
|
||
love amongst mankind, generous thought and generous help for one another.
|
||
{Love thy neighbor as thyself,} and so on. Spiritualism teaches these same
|
||
doctrines. Christ was imbued with the Divine Spirit, and He laid down laws
|
||
upon which His disciples were to model their lives and their work, and in
|
||
those laws you will find the laws which govern Spiritualism.
|
||
|
||
Because one of the disciples was a dishonest, weak man, and because
|
||
some of the workers since then, workers in the churches of various and
|
||
many creeds have been, and are to this day, weak and sinful in their
|
||
lives, you do not, any of you, think for one moment that the whole is bad
|
||
and evil.
|
||
|
||
You realize that the teachings of Christ were of the highest. Always He
|
||
spoke of Love as the binding link and the force of all good. I want you to
|
||
understand, perhaps for the first time, that Spiritualism is based upon
|
||
the same foundations. All its rules are rules given by Christ Himself.
|
||
|
||
All the creeds existing upon earth are based upon these same rules.
|
||
They vary in minor points considerably. What one will allow, another will
|
||
condemn, and it is for the individual to decide which particular one of
|
||
all is most fitting to himself. By his choice he will show his ability to
|
||
grasp the meaning of God's laws, and according to his development so will
|
||
he select.
|
||
|
||
The teachings of all alike are limited but some go farther, see
|
||
farther, and understand more. Just as all roads may converge to a given
|
||
point, so many creeds follow in the main the teachings of Christ. Some by
|
||
narrow little roads and byways, some by wide roads, and some by main
|
||
highways. {Spiritualism is God's Main Highway.}
|
||
|
||
THE END
|
||
|