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Theosophy House

The Friendly Philosopher
By
Robert Crosbie
(1849—1919)
Letters and Talks on Theosophy and the
Theosophical Life
The Secret Doctrine by H P Blavatsky
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CONTENTS
TO ALL OPENED MINDED THEOSOPHISTS
THE UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS
DECLARATION
PREFACE
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
TALKS ON THE ETERNAL VERITIES 
 Renunciation of Action   The Recognition of Law  The Occult Side of 
Nature True Clairvoyance Our God and Other Gods The Language of the
Soul
Culture of Concentration The Kingly MysteryThe Power of  Suggestion
The Law of Correspondences The Foundation of Religion Theosophy in
Daily 
Life Man, Visible and Invisible 
The Origin of Evil  The Storehouse
of Thought
The Creative Will What Reincarnates? Instinct and Intuition True
Morality Real  
Memory New Year’s Resolutions Three Kinds of  Faith The Cause of  Sorrow 
Sleep and Dreams Occult Knowledge 
What Survives after Death? 
A League of  Humanity Mental
Healing and Hypnosis Can the Dead Communicate?    
                                                
“A man is said to be confirmed 
in spiritual knowledge when he forsaketh every desire which
entereth into his 
heart, and of himself is happy and content in the Self through the
Self. His 
mind is undisturbed in adversity; he is happy and contented in
prosperity, and 
he is a stranger to anxiety, fear, and anger. Such a man is called
a Muni. When 
in every condition he receives each event, whether favorable or
unfavorable, 
with an equal mind which neither likes nor dislikes, his wisdom is
established, 
and, having met good or evil, neither rejoiceth at the one nor is
cast down by 
the other.”
 
 
 
 
 
 
PREFACE   
ROBERT CROSBIE left no name to conjure with before the  populace, but he lived a 
life that all might emulate. He was one of the unknown soldiers in
the army of 
those who live to benefit mankind, who strive for the redemption of
every 
creature from the bonds of conditioned existence.
There are biographies and autobiographies without number, of men
and women whose 
lives were spent in the pitiless glare of publicity, whether for
their own or 
their party’s sake, or for the good of humanity—more often a
mixture of all 
three. Rare indeed is there to be found, in history or in
tradition, similar 
record of those whose works were done and whose lives were lived
without thought 
of self. Every hall of learning overflows with all manner of detail
concerning 
the world’s great men—rulers, statesmen, re formers, poets,
priests, 
politicians, soldiers of fortune good or evil. But who knows aught
of the 
personal life of Lao-tse, Buddha, Jesus, Pythagoras, Plato, or any
of the great 
of Soul? If this be true of all the great Captains in the Army of
the Voice, how 
slight the human trophies erected to commemorate the battles and
the victories 
of the common soldier in the ranks? Yet without these soldiers, the
greatest 
Captain would have spent his life in vain: a general in the field
is no army.
This book, then, is no biography or autobiography written and
uttered for the 
greater glory of a mortal man, but rather is an introduction to the
only life 
worth living, whether reflected in the small or in the great—the
life of the 
Soul. Its speech is in the language of the Soul; its utterance is
that of the 
Doctrine of the Heart; its purpose is the furtherance of that Cause
in which was 
hid the mortal existence of Robert Crosbie no less than the earthly
careers of 
those great Captains whom he revered and under whom he served: H.
P. Blavatsky 
and Wm. Q. Judge.
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v
“That power which the Disciple shall covet is that which shall make
him appear 
as nothing in the eyes of men.” This was the power which Robert
Crosbie gained, 
this the power that enabled him to keep in touch with the great
Teachers after 
They had cast off the mortal coil; that guided his steps in
following the Path 
They showed, the MASTERS who are behind; that sustained him during
the long 
years when all that could be done was “to work, watch—and wait,”
until the 
propitious hour should come when, under Karma, recruits might be
gathered from 
among the generation following the great 
Teachers.
The world is at the bottom of a cycle, and evidently in a
transition state. The 
old Order changeth and a new one is about to begin—nay, has already
begun. The 
era of disenchantment is running its course; the materials for
rebuilding, a 
foundation on which to rebuild the structure of a better and more
enduring 
civilization—both these are being sought by many minds in many
lands. More and 
more such minds must be influenced by the great ideas and ideals of
Theosophy as 
it was originally recorded. More and more of such minds must be
drawn into the 
active area of the pure theosophical life.
During the fifteen years since the death of Robert Crosbie, the
life lived, the 
example set, the truths voiced by him have become the increasing
inspiration of 
thousands who never knew him personally. The simple mind, the
hungry heart, will 
find in this volume a Presence speaking to them in tones they will
recognize, 
for it is in accord with their own aspirations; speaking to them in
words they 
will understand, for it is the language of their own experience. It
is the voice 
of a soldier fresh from the field of battle addressing those who
would enlist in 
MASTERS’ cause—the service of mankind, Universal Brotherhood
without distinction 
of race, creed, caste, color or condition.
The words used are common terms; the ideas conveyed are those of
the Eternal 
Verities. There is here no display of learning, but light from the
lamp of 
knowledge illumines every statement made. There is here no
intrusion of the 
personal, but the all-inclu-
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vi
sive radiance of one who loved his fellow men: the Spirit in the
Body, the 
friendly philosopher who speaks from Living the Life, those Homely
Hints which 
turn the reader’s meditation inward as well as outward, to the
Eternal Verities, 
so that the will of the indwelling Divine Ego may be done now on
earth, as it 
was In the Beginning.
Robert Crosbie’s life was an embodiment of the gospel of Hope and
Responsibility 
which is Theosophy, the Wisdom-Religion of all time. In this book
are some of 
the seeds he sowed. May they find fertile soil in which to germinate
and grow 
ever more abundantly.
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vii
“For Spirit, when invested with matter or prakriti, experienceth
the qualities 
which proceed from prakriti; its connection with these qualities is
the cause of 
its rebirth in good and evil wombs. The Spirit in the body is
called Maheswara, 
the Great Lord, the spectator, the admonisher, the sustainer, the
enjoyer and 
also the Paramatma, the highest soul.”
—Bhagavad-Gita, Chapter XIII.
“The senses, moving toward their appropriate objects, are producers
of heat and 
cold, pleasure and pain, which come and go and are brief and change
able; these 
do thou endure, 0 son of Bharata! For the wise man, whom these
disturb not and 
to whom pain and pleasure are the same, is fitted for immortality.
There is no 
existence for that which does not exist, nor is there any
non-existence for what 
exists. By those who see the truth and look into the principles of
things, the 
ultimate characteristic of these both is seen.”
 
                                                                                
                   
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The following preliminary memorandum was drawn up by Robert Crosbie 
anticipatory to the formation of The United Lodge of Theosophists.”
It was sent 
to many individual theosophists on 
 
TO ALL OPEN-MINDED THEOSOPHISTS    
When the Messengers departed from this scene, all that was left
here was the 
Message (exoteric and esoteric), and its students of more or less
proficiency in 
the assimilation of that Message.
With the altruistic example of the Messengers and the inspiration
of the 
Message, the Theosophical Society should have been able to stand
alone and 
united.
Unfortunately, history tells another story; disintegration began at
once, and 
still goes on, and a grand opportunity to impress the world with
the spirit and 
life of the Message has been lost, through neglect of the
essentials and pursuit 
of non-essentials.
The First Object—the most important of all—the others being
subsidiary—has been 
lost sight of in its direct bearing upon all the changes and
differences that 
have occurred. “To form a nucleus of Universal Brotherhood without
any 
distinctions what ever” was, and is, the key to the situation. Let
me quote a 
few sentences from H. P. B.’s last message to the American
Theosophists in 
April, 1891:
“The critical nature of the stage on which we have entered is as
well known to 
the forces that fight against us, as to those that fight on our
side. No 
opportunity will be lost of sowing dissension, of taking advantage
of mistaken 
and false moves, of instilling doubt, of augmenting difficulties,
of breathing 
suspicions, so that by any and every means the unity of the Society
may be 
broken and the ranks of our Fellows thinned and thrown into
disarray. Never has 
it been more necessary for the members of the T. S. to lay to heart
the old 
parable of the bundle of
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sticks than it is at the present time; divided, they will
inevitably be broken, 
one by one; united, there is no force on earth able to destroy our
Brotherhood. 
   After all, every wish and
thought I can utter are summed up in this one 
sentence, the never- dormant wish of my heart:
                                                                   
"BE THEOSOPHISTS, WORK FOR THEOSOPHY.”
These ‘were prophetic words—but the warning was not taken.
It now remains for those who are able to take the words that express
the 
never-dormant wish of her heart as the key-note of the present and
future: “Be 
Theosophists, work for Theosophy,” and get together on that kind of
a basis; for 
these are the essentials.
The unassailable basis for union among Theosophists, wherever and
however 
situated, is SIMILARITY OF AIM, PURPOSE, AND TEACHING. The
acceptance of this 
principle by all Theosophists would at once remove all barriers. A
beginning 
must be made by those whose minds have become plastic by the
buffetings of 
experience. An agreement between such is necessary; an assembling
together in 
this spirit.
To give this spirit expression requires a declaration, and a name
by which those 
making the declaration may be known. To call it The Theosophical
Society would 
be to take the name now in use by at least two opposing
organizations. To even 
call it a Society has the color of an “organization”—one of many,
and would act 
as a barrier. The phrase used by one of the Messengers is
significant, and 
avoids all conflict with organizations, being capable of including
all without 
detriment to any. That phrase is: 
                                                                   
THE UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS.
Members of any organization or unattached, old and new students,
could belong to 
it without disturbing their affiliations, for the sole condition
necessary would 
be the acceptance of the principle of similarity of aim, purpose,
and teaching. 
The binding spiritual force of this principle of brotherhood needs
no such 
adventitious aids as Constitution or By-Laws—-or Officers to ad
minister them. 
With it as basis for union, no possible cause for
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differences could arise; no room is found here for leader or
authority, for 
dogma or superstition, and yet—as there are stores of knowledge
left for all—the 
right spirit must bring forth from “Those who never fail” all
necessary 
assistance. The door seems open for those who would, but cannot see
a way. Any 
considerable number, living, thinking, acting, upon this basis,
must form a 
spiritual focus, from which all things are possible.
Local Lodges could be formed using the name and promulgating the
basis of union, 
recognizing Theosophists as such, regardless of organization; open
meetings; 
public work, keeping Theosophy and Brotherhood prominent;
intercommunication 
between Lodges, free and frequent; comparing methods of work of
local Lodges; 
mutual assistance; furtherance of the Great Movement in all
directions possible; 
the motto: “Be Theosophists; work for Theosophy.”
                    
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THE WAY TO UNITE IS TO UNITE—NOTHING PREVENTS IF THAT IS THE
DESIRE.
 The following explanatory statement
drawn up by Robert Crosbie for the 
information of all theosophists, was made public concurrently with
the 
foundation of The United Lodge of Theosophists” and the adoption of
its 
DECLARATION by himself and the seven original Associates, on 
The United Lodge of Theosophists is an integral part of the
Theosophical 
Movement begun in 
Theosophists irrespective of organization, who are bound together
by the tie of 
common aim, purpose and teaching, in the cause of Theosophy.
Theosophy, being the origin, basis and genius of every Theosophical
organization, forms in itself a common ground of interest and
effort, above and 
beyond all differences of opinion as to persons or methods; and
being the 
philosophy of Unity, it calls for the essential union of those who
profess and 
promulgate it.
This 
recognition, mutual assistance and encouragement among all engaged
in the 
furtherance of Theosophy.
The Teacher, H. P. Blavatsky, declared that “Want of Union is the
first 
condition of failure,” and in her last message to the American
Convention in 
1891, said: “Never has it been more necessary for the members of
the 
Theosophical Society to lay to heart the parable of the bundle of
sticks, than 
it is at the present time; divided, they will inevitably be broken,
one by one; 
united, there is no force on earth able to destroy our Brotherhood.
. . . I have 
marked with pain . . . a tendency among you to allow your very
devotion to the 
cause of Theosophy to lead you into disunion. . . . No opportunity
will be lost 
of sowing dissension, of taking advantage of mistaken and false
moves, of 
instilling doubt, of augmenting difficulties, of breathing
suspicions, so that 
by any and every means the unity of the Society may be broken and
the ranks of 
our Fellows thinned and thrown into disarray.”
There are a number of Theosophical organizations in existence
today, all of them 
drawing their inspiration from Theosophy,
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existing only because of Theosophy, yet remaining disunited. The
nature of each 
organization is such, that unity cannot be had on the basis of any
one of them; 
hence a common basis should be taken if the success originally purposed
is to be 
attained.
The need of such a basis with a broader view of the Movement, is
the cause for 
the present Association—the United Lodge of Theosophists—composed
of 
Theosophists of different organizations, as well as those belonging
to none. 
This Lodge, having no constitution, by-laws, officers or leader,
affords in its 
Declaration a common basis of Unity for all who see the great need
of it, and 
seeks their co-operation.
Holding to its motto: ‘There is no Religion higher than Truth,” it
seeks for the 
truth in all things, and beginning with the history of the
Theosophical 
Movement, sets forth herein some facts with their inevitable
deductions, for 
general information and consideration.
There is no question anywhere as to who brought the message of
Theosophy to the 
Western World, nor is there any reason to believe that the
Messenger, H. P. 
Blavatsky, failed to deliver all that was to be given out until the
year x time 
stated by her for the advent of the next Messenger.
‘While she lived there was one Society. After her departure,
dissensions arose, 
resulting in several separate organizations. The basic cause of
these divisions 
is to be found in differences of opinion as to “successorship,”
even where other 
causes were in evidence. No such question should ever have arisen,
for it is 
abundantly clear that H. P. Blavatsky could no more pass on to
another her 
knowledge and attainments, than could Shakespeare, Milton or
Beethoven pass on 
theirs.
Those who were attracted by the philosophy she presented, or who
were taught by 
her, were followers or students, of more or less proficiency in the
understanding and assimilation of Theosophy.
Once the idea of “successorship” is removed from consideration, a
better 
perspective is obtainable of the Movement, the
-------
philosophy, and the principal persons—past and present—engaged in
its 
promulgation.
‘We have the declarations of her Masters that she was the sole
instrument 
possible for the work to be done, that They sent her to do it, and
that They 
approved in general all that she did. That work not only includes
the philosophy 
she gave, but her work with the relation to others in the Movement;
and where a 
relation is particularly defined—as in the case of William Q.
Judge—wisdom 
dictates that full consideration be given to what she says.
H. P. Blavatsky and William Q. Judge were co-Founders of the
Theosophical 
Society in 1875 They were colleagues from the first and ever
remained such. When 
H. P. Blavatsky left 
Judge to establish and carry on the work of the Theosophical
Movement in 
H. P. Blavatsky departed from the body in 1891; William Q. Judge
some five years 
later. He never claimed to be her successor; on the contrary, when
asked the 
question, he said: She is sui generis—she can have no successor;”
the fact being 
that both he and she were contemporaneous in the work, he retaining
his body for 
some five years longer in order to complete the work he had to do.
The work of these two cannot be separated if the Movement is to be
understood. 
The evidence of the greatness and fitness of William Q. Judge, as a
Teacher, is 
to be found in his writings—a large and valuable part of which has
become 
obscured through the organizational dissensions before spoken of.
These writings 
should be sought for, and studied, in connection with those of H.
P. Blavatsky. 
That study will lead to the conviction that both were great
Teachers—each with a 
particular mission—that each was sui generis, that their work was
complementary, 
and that neither of them had, nor could have, any successor.
 
CONTENTS
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THE UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS
DECLARATION:      
The policy of this Lodge is independent devotion to the cause of
Theosophy, 
without professing attachment to any Theosophical organization. It
is loyal to 
the great Founders of the Theosophical Movement, but does not
concern itself 
with dissensions or differences of individual opinion.
The work it has on hand and the end it keeps in view are too
absorbing and too 
lofty to leave it the time or inclination to take part in side
issues. That work 
and that end is the dissemination of the Fundamental Principles of
the 
philosophy of Theosophy, and the exemplification in practice of
those 
principles, through a truer realization of the SELF; a profounder
conviction of 
Universal Brotherhood.
It holds that the unassailable basis for union among Theosophists,
wherever and 
however situated, is similarity of aim, purpose and teaching,” and
therefore has 
neither Constitution, By-Laws nor Officers, the sole bond between
its Associates 
being that basis. And it aims to disseminate this idea among
Theosophists in the 
furtherance of Unity.
It regards as Theosophists all who are engaged in the true service
of Humanity, 
without distinction of race, creed, sex, condition or organization,
and;
It welcomes to its association all those who are in accord with its
declared 
purposes and who desire to fit themselves, by study and otherwise,
to be the 
better able to help and teach others.
                          The
true Theosophist belongs to no cult or sect, yet 
belongs to each and all.”
Being in sympathy with the Purposes of this Lodge, as set forth in
its 
Declaration,” I hereby record my desire to be enrolled as an
Associate; it being 
understood that such association calls for no obligation on my
part, other than 
that which I, myself, determine.
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CONTENTS
 
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
letters
Letter One           
YOU, yourself, have taken a step by your own internal determination
to know the 
truth for the sake of the truth. Your real self is by your trend of
thought 
finding a channel for expression, and this will grow. Right thought
must precede 
right speech and right action, as you know. This has been stated in
many ways, 
the most familiar of which is, perhaps, “Seek ye first the kingdom
of heaven 
(which is within you) and all other things will be added unto you.”
Do not let conditions which surround you, contrasted with what you
can see, 
weigh upon you. Of course you know that whatever conditions exist
were produced 
by you—so far as they affect you—and whatever conditions are to be
will be in 
accordance with your own determination. All that is necessary is
for each one to 
do his duty by every duty. None is small or unimportant.
You know, of course, that attachment to things or results comes by
thinking 
about them. You can have no attachment for a thing you do not think
about; 
neither can you have any dislike for a thing you do not think
about. While doing 
the best you know in every act and present duty, do not attach
yourself to any 
particular form of result. Leave results to the law—they will
surely come in 
accordance with it. Having done your duty as you see it, resign all
personal 
interest in the results. Whatever the results, take them as that
which your true 
self really desired.
Surely, for the individual, it is the motive alone that marks the
line between 
black and white. But what is needed in the world is knowledge Good
motive may 
save the moral character, but it does not ensure those thoughts and
deeds which 
make for the
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highest good of humanity. Good motive without knowledge makes sorry
work 
sometimes. All down the ages there is a record of good motive, but
power and 
zeal misused, for want of knowledge. Theosophy is the path of
knowledge. It was 
given out in order, among other things, that good motive and wisdom
might go 
hand in hand.
If it is remembered that the purpose of life is to learn and that
it is all made 
up of learning, the ordinary duties of everyday existence are seen
to be the 
means by which we learn many things. “Do thy duty by every duty
leaving results 
to the law.” Theosophy was once happily stated to be “sanctified
common-sense,” 
and I am glad that you perceive it.
The Theosophical Movement is greater than any society or
organization. The 
latter are but temporal, changing with the nature and understanding
of those who 
constitute them and influence their policies and ideals; they
correspond to our 
physical bodies, whereas the Movement corresponds to the Soul.
There are many 
kinds of bodies, and work has to be done in each, in accordance
with the 
possibilities afforded by its nature. Those who pin their faith to
any body are 
choosing a transitory guide, a frail support; most of them are
looking for 
“authority.” The human weakness that makes priestly domination
possible leads to 
spiritual darkness in course of time.
The Theosophical Society was founded by Masters as an organization
for the 
promulgation of the Wisdom Religion. That organization has split
into fragments. 
Of course, in all the Theosophical societies the message brought by
H. P. B. to 
the Western world is the basis of their existence. The average
person makes much 
of organization, form, method, authority—what not, and
crystallization of idea 
defeats understanding. Thus the attacks, splits, controversies and
other follies 
that have been perpetrated during the history of the Movement in
this 
generation. You must have noticed that all the difficulties that
have arisen in 
the T. S. raged around personalities, rather than over doctrinal
differences. 
This is significant.
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The T. S. represents the world. In it, in embryo, are fought the
battles of the 
world. Ignorance, superstition, selfishness, ambition—all are
there. There are 
other dangers menacing such a body as the T. S. besides the
“personal-following” 
one. Sometimes self-appointed conservators of the body arise, with
hard and fast 
conclusions as to men, things and methods. These seek to impose
their ideas as 
the only true ones—in reality, endeavoring to make a personal
following under 
the name of a policy—forgetting that no method is the true method;
that the true 
method must be a combination of all methods. All these things are 
lessons—initiations in occultism—if we read them aright. The T. S.
presents such 
lessons as can be had nowhere else in the world of men.
Into each fragment of the original T. S., there have entered many
attracted by 
the philosophy. The right or wrong of the splits does not affect
them. In each 
fragment there must be those who are good and true disciples of
Masters. As far 
as my knowledge goes, I would say that Masters are working in many
ways, and 
through many organizations as well as with individuals. There are
no barriers to 
Their assistance, except such as personalities impose upon
themselves. Their 
work is universal; let our view be as much in that direction as
possible. So 
shall we best serve and know.
H. P. Blavatsky was the Messenger from the Great Lodge to the
western world. 
William Q. Judge was a co-founder and co-worker with H. P. B. from
the 
beginning. It is well to remember that H. P. B. and W. Q. J. were
not accorded 
the positions They held through any authority, but through
recognition of Their 
knowledge and power. They were sui generis; all others are but
students. Those 
who belittle Judge will be found belittling H. P. B. An ancient
saying has it, 
“Accursed by karmic action will find himself he, who spits back in
the face of 
his Teacher.” Not an elegant saying, perhaps, to our ideas, but it
conveys a 
fact of most grave import in occultism. “By their fruits ye shall
know them.”
To those who know H. P. B. and W. Q. J., attacks are worthy of
consideration 
from only one point of view—that they turn the attention of many
who would 
otherwise learn the great truths
                                                                                
                         
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of Man and Nature. Theosophists cannot but take the position
expressed in the 
words, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
 As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Two
You were right in saying that our relations are as they are by
reason of that 
which has been, undoubtedly, but I would not have you look on me in
the light of 
a spiritual Guru. Think of me as kindly as you will, but do not
place me on any 
pedestal; let me be a pilot who will be most glad to help with any
charts and 
guidance. In reality the Masters are Those to whom we should turn
our thoughts 
in meditation. They are the “bridge,” as W. Q. J. says in one of
the “Letters.”
I do not mean by all this that I think you were placing me in a
position where 
none but the blessed Masters should be placed, but I am saying
these things so 
that you may see that it is not the best thing to rely upon any
living person, I 
mean to the extent of idealizing him; for if such an one should be
swept into 
seeming darkness for a time, its effect would not be good and might
dishearten.
I am glad to know that you are so full of the idea of work for
humanity; those 
who are really “touched” by the inner fire are usually so, and it
is a good 
sign. The desire to be and to do comes out strongly and clears the
way for the 
true and permanent growth with its expansion and retardation—which
means growth 
and solidification—necessary processes as we see two kinds of
trees, one of 
which denudes itself entirely and remains expressionless for a
large part of its 
cycle, and another which slowly and continually renews itself in
every part, 
never ceasing to give expression, and often holding in evidence the
old leaf, 
the new leaf, the blossom and the fruit. Both of these are nature’s
processes.
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Speaking of those who have fallen by the wayside, it is quite true
that “the 
greater the height the greater the effort to preserve equilibrium”;
but this 
applies particularly when the height is an intellectual rather than
a spiritual 
one, and where the motive is tinged with a desire for
self-advancement 
regardless of the paramount duty to selves. Very often the
ostensible motive is 
not the real one, and in this we frequently deceive ourselves.
Ambition also 
comes in; the desire for the approbation of our fellows may cloud
our vision in 
our effort to maintain it. There are many temptations, some of
which may come 
disguised as angels of light. Our best safe-guard is an unselfish
desire to 
benefit others, with no anxiety about our own progress, while
striving all the 
time to make ourselves the better able to help and teach others.
There are two doctrines spoken of in the Wisdom Religion, viz., the
doctrine of 
the Eye (or Head) and the doctrine of the Heart; the doctrine of
the Eye is the 
intellectual one, the doctrine of the Heart is spiritual, where
knowledge 
springs up spontaneously within. It is this latter which you crave,
and which I 
can assure you Theosophy will lead you to. There is no need to
grope, nor 
stagger, nor stray, for the chart that has led many to the goal is
in your hands 
in the philosophy of Theosophy. And let me say here to you: do not
be too 
anxious; abide the time when your own inner demands shall open the
doors, for 
those Great Ones who I know exist see every pure-hearted earnest
disciple, and 
are ready to give a turn to the key of knowledge when the time in
the disciple’s 
progress is ripe.
No one who strives to tread the path is left unhelped; the Great
Ones see his 
“light,” and he is given what is needed for his better development.
That light 
is not mere poetical imagery, but is actual, and its character
denotes one’s 
spiritual condition; there are no veils on that plane of seeing.
The help must 
be of that nature which leaves perfect freedom of thought and
action; otherwise, 
the lessons would not be learned. Mistakes will occur, perhaps many
of them, 
but, as is said, “twenty failures are not irremediable if followed
by as many 
undaunted struggles up-
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ward.” The help will come for the most part in ordinary ways and
from one or 
another of the companions with whom you were possibly connected in
other lives, 
and whom your soul will recognize.
The Great White Lodge exists for the service of humanity; They need
and welcome 
workers in the world. Is it strange, then, that the light of souls
attracted 
toward the path of unselfishness should receive Their cognition,
and when 
deserved—when needed such succor as Karma permits? They,
Themselves, have 
written, “Ingratitude is not one of our vices”; and while we may
not claim 
gratitude from Them, yet we may be sure that compassion absolute is
there, and 
with it the understanding of the nature and needs of each aspirant.
There may, 
and there often does come a time when one feels, as you say, like
“standing on 
nothing, in nothing and about to topple over.” The center of
consciousness has 
been changed; old landmarks are slipping away, and sometimes black
doubt ensues. 
Doubt and fear belong only to the— personal consciousness; the real
Perceiver, 
the Higher Ego has neither. The Gita says, “cast aside all doubt
and fight on.” 
You may remember what Judge says in one of the “Letters,” likening
such 
condition to the case of one on a strange path and suddenly
surrounded by a fog; 
the way is obscured, danger may lie in any direction; the thing to
do is to 
stand still and wait, for it is only a fog—and fogs always lift.
And never for 
one moment think that you are not going on with your “journey.” It
is well for 
us if we can always have deep down in our heart of hearts the
consciousness of 
the nearness of Masters; by Their very nature They must be near to
every true 
aspirant.
May I add one word to you, as a friend and brother: make clean and
clear, first, 
the mental conceptions and perceptions; the rest will follow
naturally; there 
will be no destruction—the Undesirable will die a natural death.
“Grow as the flowers grow,” from within outwards.
As ever, R. C.                                                                
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CONTENTS
 
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY      
Letter Three     
There is plenty of material, as well as help, in the devotional
books to the 
realization of the heart doctrine, for they are designed to awaken
the Buddhic 
faculty—that of Intuition, the only means by which light can come
to you or 
anyone. Printed words and the information that they indicate, are
only “ladders” 
by which the learner can climb to Wisdom. Each one has to make his
own 
connection with higher planes and Those who live in higher realms.
It has often 
been said that “when the materials are ready, the Architect will
appear.” So our 
work must be to get the material ready, and that means we have to
get rid of the 
purely personal bias by making Theosophy a living power in our
lives. So long as 
we are working for some reward, are inclined to be despondent or
impatient, we 
shall be placing obstacles in our own way.
Read The Voice of the Silence and see the keys of the different
“portals.” Dana, 
the key of Charity; consideration for others, no matter what their
state. Shila, 
the key of harmony in word and act; that means among other things,
sincerity—not 
to let acts belie one’s words, or words, one’s acts. Kshanti,
patience sweet 
that naught can ruffle. These three, if practised, will create a
fairer and 
clearer atmosphere. Shila counterbalances the cause and the effect
and leaves no 
further room for karmic action. The same idea is set forth in the
Gita where it 
says that “Freedom comes from a renunciation of self-interest in
the results of 
our actions.”
The question always is, “How shall we stand the pressure?” Patience
and 
fortitude are necessary under every condition. The ripening of
one’s Karma 
presents the opportunity to gain these qualities, and it is well
that we should 
learn the lesson. The principal effect of Karma is mental and
psychical. Family 
Karma is not our own, and will come about sooner or later. The same
with
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difficult financial conditions, or any other hard circumstances:
they will come 
to all. So we should strive for calmness, patience, and fortitude,
and also have 
full confidence that the tide is bound to turn, even at the
fifty-ninth minute 
of the eleventh hour. “If the candidate has faith, patience and
confidence, 
verily he will not have to wait too long.” There is one thing that
should be 
remembered in the midst of all difficulties; it is this— the lesson
is learned 
the necessity ceases.”
We should know that Karma does not castigate; it simply affords the
opportunity 
for adjustment. No one can precipitate our Karma upon us, nor would
anyone wish 
to do so; so, what ever happens, it is well to remember that it was
caused by 
ourselves, precipitated by ourselves, can be met by ourselves. We
must, then, 
assure ourselves that nothing can possibly overwhelm us. It is
better to assume 
a cheerful attitude to cultivate in one’s self a feeling of
confidence, and 
endeavor to impart it to our nearest. Our anxiety and inner fears,
as well as 
our outward expression of them, may go a great way in depressing
those who love 
us and whom we love.
We all get in that temporary state of loneliness, but it should be
a matter of 
encouragement to us that we are not alone in reality, for we have
company, 
although we may not be aware of it in our momentary sense of
personal isolation. 
There is a point in our progress which involves the passing from
one state of 
thought and action into another, and knowing this, we should not be
dismayed nor 
disturbed by anything that may come to pass. It may seem to you
that you are now 
useless, and your future circumstances dark and foreboding. These
are only 
shadows of the past cast on the screen of the present; like shadows
they will 
pass, if you but recognize them for what they are.
Are you thinking too much of yourself, your present conditions and
your 
prospects? This is not a firm reliance on the Law of your own being
which brings 
to you the very opportunities that your soul progress needs. What
if the future 
presents no clear view; what if your desires are not fulfilled;
what if your 
progress is not at all apparent—why worry about it? You
-------
cannot change it. All you can do is the best you can under existing
circumstances, and that is the very thing you should do, dismissing
from your 
mind all thought of those things which are not as you would have
them.
Your studies and your efforts are futile if you are disturbed
inwardly. The 
first thing then is to get calmness, and that can be reached by
taking the firm 
position that nothing can really injure you, and that you are brave
enough and 
strong enough to endure anything; also that all is a necessary part
of your 
training. Mr. Judge once said, “It may be a child’s school, but it
takes a man 
to go through it.” Then why not make up your mind to go through it,
no matter 
what the circumstance or condition? Others have; you can. Are you
of weaker 
caliber than they?
The whole position of the sincere student is summed up in the
words: “Hold on 
grimly; have confidence and faith; for faith in the Master will
surely bring 
victory.” We must “have patience, as one who doth forevermore
endure”—and forget 
ourselves in working for others.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY 
Letter Four     
The coming together of the few will bring on a closer tie and bring
out a 
stronger devotion. No doubt there will be some reactions, but even
so, they will 
pass, and all be bettered if all hold firm. Changes will go on. Do
not be 
surprised if the soul gets into a place or condition where it
appears to be 
motionless—inert; it will get used to the new conditions and go on
from there. 
Let our motto be: we are going on with the work.
And look out for criticisms and suspicions of one another; there
will be ample 
occasion for their exercise, or seem to be. Then we have to
recognize that each 
sincere student is trying, and that each has his own way by which
he comes. Our 
way is essentially our way, and his is his, and equally right and
important. We 
need only Loyalty—loyalty to the work, loyalty to our con-
-------
victions, loyalty to each other in full faith and confidence that
each is a part 
of the other and of all. So shall we be united in one thought, one
will, one 
feeling.
This does not mean indiscriminate acceptance of everything and
everyone. The 
attitude of “namby-pambyism” is but a pseudo-tolerance. Carried to
its 
legitimate conclusion, this false idea of brotherhood” would
signify that sin, 
sorrow, suffering, error, all religions and all philosophies are
all right; that 
every body is doing the best he can, and the best he knows how to
do, and cannot 
do any different, and that all are steps of learning.
Humanity sins, sorrows, suffers and dies a thousand deaths; because
of what? 
Just IGNORANCE. Theosophy is TRUTH and as such can have no alliance
with any 
form of error and remain Truth. If partial philosophies could save
the world 
there would be no need for the sacrifices of the Masters.
For those who never knew Theosophy, or whose minds are so crooked
in action that 
they cannot receive it, there should be pity and compassion. But
pity and 
consideration for their false positions cannot call for a surrender
of our 
discrimination—for a surrender of what we know, and of what it is
our purpose to 
live and to know.
I am no believer in diluted Theosophy. The Masters did not dilute
it. We either 
carry on Their work or we do not; there is no need for hypocrisy
nor 
self-deception. Others in the world, not able to perceive the
Oneness of 
Theosophy, nor its bearing at the present time, may and do use
portions of 
it—some of them, it is to be feared, to their own condemnation and
the further 
bewilderment of mankind. Are they right, or to be praised or
“tolerated”? Is it 
not the bounden duty of those who know, to hold aloft the White
Standard of 
Truth? It must be so, else how could an enquiring one perceive it?
Theosophy has 
to be held aloft in such a way as to confront errors of every kind,
with their 
handmaidens of cant and hypocrisy.
As ever, R. C.
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CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Five      
Of the path of true Occultism it is said, “ The first step is
sacrifice.” This 
means sacrifice from the worldly point of view— the point from
which we start. 
That we cheerfully unburden ourselves of undesirable things shows
the workings 
of the true self. Have no fear of the 
often think of the passage, “All things work together for good for
him who loves 
the Lord.” You will have a larger appreciation of this saying than
is common.
You speak of a surer sense of truth than any manner of reasoning.
This: is the 
action of Buddhi—direct cognition—the goal to which all right
philosophy and 
life leads. In our sincere efforts we at times may have flashes
from that seat 
of consciousness. The great result would be to have the continuous
co-operation 
of Manas and Buddhi—higher mind and spiritual knowledge; to work as
the god-man, 
perfect in all his parts, instead of the present sectional
operation which 
obtains.
You may remember that in The Voice of the Silence there are two
doctrines 
mentioned. The Doctrine of the Eye is that of the brain
consciousness, composed 
largely of external impressions. The Doctrine of the Heart is of
the spiritual 
consciousness of the Ego— not perceived by the brain consciousness
until right 
thought, and right action which sooner or later follows it, attune
certain 
centers in the brain in accord with the spiritual vibration. It
might be well to 
read The Voice over and meditate on its sayings. You have had much
of the 
intellectual side; there should be as much of the devotional; for
what is 
desirable is the awakening of the spiritual consciousness, the 
intuition—Buddhi—and this cannot be done unless the thoughts are
turned that way 
with power and purpose. You may, if you will, set apart a certain
half-hour, 
just before retiring and after arising—as soon as possible
after—and before 
eating. Concentrate the mind upon the Masters as ideals and
-------
facts—living, active, beneficent Beings working in and on the plane
of causes. 
Meditate upon this exclusively, and try to reach up to Them in
thought. If you 
find the mind has strayed, bring it back again to the subject of
meditation. The 
mind will stray more or less, at first, and perhaps for a long time
to come, but 
do not be discouraged at the apparent results if unsatisfactory to
your mind. 
The real results may not at once be apparent, but the work is not
lost, even 
though not seen. It is more than likely that the work in this
direction will be 
perceived by others rather than yourselves. Never mind the past, for
you are at 
the entrance of a new world to you as persons. You have set your
feet on the 
path that leads to real knowledge.
Do not try to open up conscious communication with beings on other
planes. It is 
not the time and danger lies that way, because of the power of
creating one’s 
own images, and because of the power and disposition of the dark
forces to 
simulate beings of Light, and render futile your efforts to reach
the goal. When 
the materials are ready the Architect will appear, but seek him
not; seek only 
to be ready. Do the best you can from day to day, fearing nothing,
doubting 
nothing, putting your whole trust in the Great Law, and all will be
well. With 
the right attitude knowledge will come.
I am sorry that so much disagreeableness assails at the beginning.
I can very 
well understand it all: heat, dust, grind, in contrast with what
you have left. 
It requires courage and endurance, and these are desirable
qualities, just such 
as a Kshatriya should have, which, however, does not lessen the
sense of 
distinction— not all at once. But as we all desire such a fight as
will best 
prepare us, we can afford to smile inwardly while we contemplate
the efforts of 
nature to subdue our resolves. We all have our battles, and if we
are in the 
army, we may be sure the Self supplies just such trials as the
peculiar nature 
needs. I think that things will look somewhat better after a
while—they always 
do. It is the personality that does not like discomfort, and the
same chap gets 
used to things after a while. So whatever may be the outcome in the
future, it 
is wise to fight it out on the same lines
-------
as if you had made it your life work. The battle won, the necessity
will cease, 
because from the Self no Waste of effort can be. It is easy to
advise and more 
difficult to perform, but performance is what is called for. All
these things 
must necessarily be tests, training—at least, I think that such is
the way to 
look at it.
The analogy of the Secret Doctrine shows that every change is
preceded by a 
rapid rehearsal of previous processes in evolution It seems to me
that we might 
use this in our own mental processes and possibly might be able to
figure out 
our position in the cycle. We might be able to let the mind only
sweep over the 
preliminaries, and step in when the proper point is reached, using
the upward 
rush as motive power. We should be rushing upward from new levels
all the time. 
“Is it not so that mountains are climbed?” Once in a while we catch
glimpses of 
the place we started from, as we are going up elevations; though
descending 
again, the average rise is apparent. So, expecting these things, we
take 
advantage of every opportunity to increase the ascent and avoid
precipices—for 
it is said that mountainous regions abound in such things.
Also remember that there are many unexpended remnants of past Karma—“mental
deposits,” Patanjali calls them—that you have called for, in order
to balance up 
your account. They have come and will come. Be careful not to incur
new 
indebtedness, and thus delay the final settlement. You know the
difficulties and 
should fortify yourself to pass over them. No one can do this for
you, as you 
well know.
It is well to feel, also, that in your apparent isolation, you are
not alone. 
This “feeling” should help you and I think it does. Keep it up.
As ever, R. C.
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CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Six     
The spirit shown in your letters makes me glad for all of us. Well,
you have 
made a beginning, and in the right way, as it appears to me. While
your audience 
was small, that part you are not responsible for. Such things are
judged by the 
effort made and not by the apparent results; the latter belong to
the Law and 
will be felt in time, as surely as effects follow causes. We should
remember 
that it is harder to make a beginning in a large city than in a
small one; it 
takes harder and longer “shouting” to reach those scattered in a
big population, 
but the results should be much greater in time. Also—no matter who
come—it is 
certain that each one will talk to others who never come, and will
get what ever 
impression is made on the attendant. It is said that each person
who hears will 
in time repeat something to one thousand others. This statement may
be 
arbitrary, but the number is doubtless large that can be touched in
this way; 
so, the radius is not to be reckoned entirely by numbers present,
even on this 
plane of action. This by way of encouragement—not that you need it—
but that it 
is well to bear in mind the wider range of action of all such work,
and that we 
are not alone. An iconoclast of any well-recognized system can
obtain crowded 
houses; but a “builder” gets the few—a commentary on the human mind
as at 
present constituted. It also reminds me of Mr. Judge’s saying,
“Theosophy is for 
those who want it and for none others.”
One phrase in your pamphlet, “The Search For the Ultimate,” should
give a 
key-note and encouragement. I quote from memory: “There are those
who may not 
have outwardly renounced, but they have inwardly relinquished, and
would gladly 
welcome the time when the non-essentials are swept away that the
essentials may 
obtain.” The fact that they have that attitude which would welcome
the sweeping 
away of the non-essentials shows the inner relinquishment.
-------
Sometimes it happens that a student passes through a “portal”
without knowing 
that he is doing so, or has done so, until he finds himself “on the
other side.” 
He knows then that other and greater portals await him, and he
passes them in 
like manner, growing—growing—growing—with no thought of anything
but service to 
the best and highest he knows.
I am glad the “bad week” has gone into the limbo of such things,
for it makes 
another opening, and a rising cycle is a good time to make further
effort. Such 
experiences come to all “humans”; they also go, as we know, and in
this we are 
more fortunate than the world at large. It is the knowledge of the
transitory 
nature of all experiences, while experiencing, that enables us to
remain 
separate from them. “I establish this whole universe with a single
portion of 
myself and remain separate.” The macrocosmic truth must also be the
true 
position to be attained by the microcosm in his realm of creation.
Sometimes, as you say, one gets into the way of doing things
perfunctorily; this 
has been found to result from the mind being on other things—things
other than 
the work in hand. The remedy, of course, lies in the re-directing
of the mind 
and concentrating on that which is done. Our daily lives give us
the best 
opportunities for the practice of concentration, and for increase
of knowledge 
by making Theosophy a living power in our lives.
You speak of control. Control is the power of direction, and when
exercised in 
one way, leads to its exercise in other ways until it covers the
whole field of 
operation. A way to control speech is to think of the probable
effect of what 
one is about to say. This insures deliberation, and the speech
carries with it 
the force of the intention. The deliberation takes no appreciable
time in 
practice—a thought towards it, a glance at effects; it is really an
attitude of 
purposive speech wherein all the processes are practically
simultaneous. If in 
any one thing control is difficult, begin with the purpose of
control in mind, 
and stop at the first indication that control is being lost.
Everything should 
be made subservient to the idea of control, if that is the purpose.
-------
“The great renunciation is made up of little self-denials.” Who,
indeed can deny 
the master admission to his house; and who can enter the house of
the strong man 
and spoil his goods unless the strong man be first bound hand and
foot; and 
again, who can bind him but his lawful vassals who dwell in his
house; and who 
can restrain these but the master of the house?
To be master, we must have control, in all things pertaining to our
kingdom or 
house; if we are swayed by impatience, by irritation at the words
and acts of 
others, by impulse, habit of mind or body, “we” are not in control.
We 
frequently are thus swayed, while knowing better, which indicates
that we have 
not gone to work in earnest to obtain control, or perhaps in the
wrong way. 
Applying analogy, it would seem that the latter consists in the
modern method of 
proceeding from particulars to universals, and that the process
should be 
reversed. We would then begin with the idea, attitude, and purpose
of control in 
all things that concern the vassals of our house. The advance would
then be all 
along the line, and the habit of control established, the balance
preserved. It 
sums itself up in my mind as the establishment of control itself,
irrespective 
of the things controlled. The “attack in detail” is the other way,
but seems to 
me to have the disadvantage of being open to disturbance from the
rest of the 
“details” while assaulting any one point. General Control might
lose his title, 
and even his name in the mêlée. Each “warrior,” however, having in
view the 
forces and disposition of the enemy, must make his own fight in the
way that 
seems to him best.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Seven
We have to stand all tests alike—praise as well as blame. Oft-times
praise is 
the hardest to stand, because it is so easily applied to the
“personal idea,” 
while blame is easier cast aside. And the difficulty is not abated
by the fact 
that what is said is true, in case of praise. should not be elated
by praise or 
success, nor cast down by blame or failure, because either of these
is an
-------
application of the “personal idea”—an identification of oneself
with the event.
Success in doing thus is not to be had at once; it comes, first, by
recognition 
of the right attitude, and then by repeated applications of the
“right attitude” 
towards every event. As your letter shows that you know the
attitude and that 
you make the applications, the rest must be simply a matter of
time, and no 
cause for anything but “going on.”
You say things are not done with “supreme faith.” Perhaps not; yet
“faith” is 
there and ever tends “supreme-wards.” Our ideal is always higher
than our 
attainment; otherwise, there would be no progress. To have attained
one’s ideal 
is to have ceased progress, however high that ideal may be. This
must be true 
for all beings in a universe of infinite possibilities. It is an
expansion of 
the ideal all the time. Your own ideal has changed, although you
may not have 
perceived it. Being in the same direction, the change is not
noticed. Relying on 
the Supreme no effort is wasted, because all “creative thought” is
in the right 
direction. One does not desire to preserve the “undesirable,” but
the 
“desirable.” The maintenance of the desirable thought, and the
cessation of the 
undesirable are to be aimed at.
Then again, it is well to remember that our rea1 is registered in
the “inner 
man”; that every effort to subordinate the lower to the higher, is,
to that 
extent, an endeavor “to live the life,” thus creating and fastening
the “silver 
strings” that take the place of the “catgut.”
All this is going on. Why? Because of out attainments, our
goodness, our 
impeccability? Surely not. It must be “the Service of Man” with all
that the 
term implies in Theosophy. In this age especially, it spells
sacrifice from the 
first step, which is, as H. P. B. has said, the best means to lead
our neighbor 
on the right path, and cause as many of our fellows as we possibly
can to 
benefit by it. This constitutes the true Theosophist. “The first
test of true 
apprenticeship is devotion to the interests of another.” Theosophy
was given for 
“the healing of nations” and must be put out in such form as to
make it of 
practical use in daily life.
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"About W. Q. J.": William Q. Judge, as you know, was a
great being; but many, 
while they admired him as a man, never had his greatness revealed
to them. The 
few who had this good fortune have many times felt like Arjuna in
the eleventh 
chapter of The Bhagavad-Gita—the writer among them—who, while he
tries to 
express him, never forgets that he is but a pupil of a beloved,
revered and 
great Teacher. Following in his steps as best he can, he endeavors
to lead 
others along the path he knows, that they in turn may realize and
profit by the 
inestimable privilege, and become teachers in their turn to others,
all links in 
the great chain of “saviours of men.” So, the “oneness” exists as
far as it may 
be expressed, all along the line, each for all, and all for 
each—non-separateness.
W. Q. J. knew the path that all would have to tread, and balm,
advice, warning 
and encouragement will be found in his writings at every turn and
for every 
circumstance of life. The closer one gets into the current that
flows from 
Him—”the greatest of the exiles”—the more readily will those things
which harass 
and distress fall away and become as nothing. That you have done
so—that is, got 
into the current—is the best Karma for you. The work has been for
you your “rod 
and staff,” and a blessing to many who would never otherwise have
had that help. 
The more of that and similar work for others unknown who are waiting
for it, the 
less room there will be for thought or feeling of any thing that
does not aid 
that work in some way. This is a desirable form of
“one-pointedness.”
We consider the writings of W. Q. J. to be particularly designed
for the needs 
of the Western people. We know their value. We also know that
neither the world 
in general nor theosophists in general, are aware of their
existence, and it is 
our desire and purpose that they shall know, as far as our power
and opportunity 
permit. So, we just stick to our purpose, not because it is ours,
but because to 
us it is the highest good and the very best thing we can do. They
also may come 
to see what we see.
As ever, R. C.
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CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Eight 
I am sure that much that you will meet at will be in the nature of
jolts. That 
is why you went there, in reality. These things are not
“happenstances”; they 
are real steps by which the necessary trials may come, and “you,
yourself 
desired it.” There is joy in that thought, because whatever you do
now is part 
of your schooling, and the knowledge of that as a vital necessity
and as 
desired, keeps the real man serene under it all; he is happy
because things are 
now moving—there’s something doing, as the phrase goes; so if you
watch 
carefully, you will note the insidious manner in which the
personality is led to 
this, that and the other lunch-counter.”
Get the point of view of the One who is doing the leading and hold
to it. You 
will remember a phrase of the Lord’s prayer—truly an occult
one—“Lead us not 
into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for Thine is the power
and the 
glory”; only read it, “permit us not to fall, in temptation.” Even
Jesus Christ 
was tempted, and he fell not, through the power of the “Father”
within. This is 
the real “try-out,” and if in being tried, you can pass on a word
in season, it 
is better for those who listen and better for you; only, do not
cast your pearls 
before those who having ears to hear, neither hear nor understand.
Let your 
words and acts bespeak the power and knowledge that is really
yours. Then will 
you be a radiating center of light, unconsciously doing good wherever
you go and 
whatever you do.
In the way of meditation, DON’T GET PASSIVE; danger lies that way.
Be active in 
all things. The giddiness will pass away in time; the change with
all its 
disturbances, mental, and other wise, has doubtless acted upon the 
nerve-currents and circulatory system. The way to overcome
disturbance, of 
course, is by mental and physical calmness; this should be
maintained. Medical 
assistance should be used for the body at times, because
the"men-
-------
tal attitude” brings about changes in the body—for the most part
gradually—but 
which sometimes needs material aid in be coming co-ordinated; so do
not despise 
medical aid should any need arise. Mr. Judge sought such aid when
necessary, 
leaving to the physician the care of maladjustment.
What you say about cycles is all right, I think. Reincarnation is
most certainly 
one of the workings of cyclic law, and beings are in opposition or
in 
conjunction as the cycle determines tendency, or rather, fosters
and permits 
relations of one or another kind.
Cycles govern all the time and everywhere. Hence the Theosophical
Movement of 
this time and those things which follow it; the coming in touch of
this, that, 
or the other individuals— singly or in pairs—with it. Some hear and
pass on; 
some remain. There is always freedom of choice, the choice in such
case being 
not merely one determination, but made up of many moments of choice
in past 
lives—a conjunction which some are wise enough to perceive and,
forsaking all 
others, “cleave unto,” while swinging around the cycle of
existences. Yet even 
this wisdom was acquired—comes from experience; there should be
confidence in us 
in view of that fact.
We have chosen before, but did not “cleave”; yet the Great Law
brings back again 
to us that which we once have chosen. That Great Law is the law of
cycles, the 
process of karmic action.
“We meet our karma in our daily duties,” is a good saying to bear
in mind, and 
in the performance of those duties come our tests. We should
therefore do what 
we have to do, simply as duties, regardless of whether that
performance brings 
us praise or blame. All the energy would, then, be expended in the
performance 
of duties, and there would be nothing left for the personal idea to
subsist 
upon.
I fully appreciate your generous and good-intentioned purpose,
which is to make 
one who has learned something better able to help and teach others;
and if among 
others you are in-
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cluded, that is your karma, as it is also my good karma to receive
help at your 
hands.
Well, here is good luck to you in your try for “business.” Do not
distrust 
yourself; have confidence in the powers which you embody; seek only
to do your 
duty; holding to that end, all necessary power will be available.
Be steadfast, calm and fearless, as becomes one who doth
forevermore endure.
As ever, R. C.
 CONTENTS
 THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Nine        
It is a matter of much gladness that the “bottle imp” of things has
been 
discovered in your mind, or rather, mental machinery. I know how it
sticks and 
hides and continually throws up clouds of material ideas blinding
the one sight. 
No one can clear an other’s sight. Words, oceans of them, in
themselves 
containing the right ideas will not convey these ideas without a
gradual leading 
on and a determined effort to comprehend. On the one hand, it is so
simple that 
it is passed over in favor of a difficulty; on the other, our mode
of thinking 
is based on separateness. The very power of the cultivated
intellect, by its 
ability to discriminate between the shades of differences, is led
into a maze of 
diversity, forgetting that “The One sees All”; that the explanation
of 
innumerable effects is not the Cause itself, which both produces,
sees and 
reproduces. “Oh, where is the sea, the fishes cried, as they swam
the brimming 
tide.”
We try to free ourselves from something. Is not this the attitude
of 
separateness? W. Q. J. speaks of “The great illusion produced by
nature in 
causing ‘us’ to see objects as different from Spirit.” And in the
Gita—”As a 
single sun illuminateth the whole world, even so doth the one
Spirit illumine 
every body.” If this means anything, it means that in everybody
there is the 
One. Spirit, the Perceiver, the Knower, the Experiencer; it spells
unity 
throughout.
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Nor is it easy to get a true conception, because we are eternally
using terms of 
separateness and resting in such conceptions as arise from them;
yet, these are 
steps by means of which we rise to greater heights of perception.
“Realization 
comes from dwelling upon the thing to be realized.” Degrees of
realization are 
degrees of attainment; are we not then slowly but surely getting
out of the fogs 
into the clear air?
“Abandoning Hope” reads to me the same as ceasing to look for
results for self 
and “shunning pain not yet come.” If we could just take conditions
as they come 
and make the best other “bests” would follow, and all worry, fear,
doubt and 
anxiety would depart. The Law works just and true. “What has been,
is and shall 
be.” We have power over nothing but the is”.  It is by working with present 
conditions that the nature of the future is changed, and in no
other way. This 
is reliance upon the Law and a working under it. The various
conditions that 
confront us are opportunities and means afforded us to increase our
discrimination, strength and knowledge. Having created these
conditions, and 
seeing what is undesirable in them, we go to work to change our
direction of 
creative thought and our relation to the undesirable. The old
adage, “Necessity 
is the mother of invention,” points to the process of growth; we do
not “invent” 
until we see the necessity. In the great economy of Law and Nature,
each being 
just exactly where he needs to be to eradicate defects; all
necessary conditions 
are present for his growth. The only question lies with him: will
he take them 
as “pain” or as opportunities? If the latter, all is well; he is
bound to 
conquer whether the way be long or short The purpose of life is to
learn, and it 
is all made up of learning.” Even those who repeat errors life
after life are in 
process of learning, for evolution makes for righteousness, being
an unfoldment 
from within.
It is “we” ourselves who are creating the phantasmagoria before our
eyes and 
struggling over the solution of its disturbing effects, instead of
creating for 
ourselves a world of effects more in keeping with our real nature—a
world in 
which we can live,
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undisturbed by the effects that disturb others, except as we are solicitous
for 
their welfare.
“We” are the Self. But, as we stand ordinarily in physical
consciousness, “we” 
are converted more or less into physical consciousness; in other
words, “we” are 
what we think or perceive, continually identifying ourselves with
perceptions 
and sense. “Sense” is always nothing else than a channel for desire
to flow 
through to torment ourselves and others. “There is nothing but the
Self.”
As every law is spiritual, so all forms and things, forces, and
aspects must 
also be spiritual. All error springs from an effort to turn to
small purposes 
the diversified streams of spiritual force. If as individuals we
could take the 
position of Kamaduk, the cow of plenty, and with universal
beneficence use our 
powers without thought of self, life would be another story.
“To establish a new religion,” says the enclosed clipping. Humanity
has always 
done that with the clear light of Truth. Always have they created
idols and 
bowed down and worshipped them. What kind of verity is that which substitutes
one kind of idol for another? Theosophy is not a religion, and no
religion what 
ever can be Theosophy, although all forms of religion exist because
of Theosophy 
and contain expressions of it.
It is only too true that “religionists of one sort easily become
religionists of 
another sort.” The fact shows that Americans do not think; they
just 
“cerebrate.” All this was portrayed again and again by W. Q. J. as
the result of 
the advent of the Swamis and others to this country—and warned
against. Yet we 
have self-elected teachers saying that Christianity is Theosophy,
and Buddhism 
is Theosophy, in a sort of namby-pamby catholicism. They are to
blame for much 
of the confusion. If so-called Theosophists  remained true to the Message and 
the lines laid down and followed by Them, there would not have been
room for two 
opinions in the matter.
We base our devotion and our efforts upon the nature of Those who
gave the 
Message, and accept as safe, good, true and what is necessary, the
lines that 
are to be found laid down in
-------
their writings. Those who think that way, will work that way.
There  is a solid 
basis for united effort in this position; any other position can
but lead to 
differences, to assumptions, to authorities. It  is Unity that the Movement 
needs, among all who are attracted by the Message; that which will
best bring it 
about is the true way, no matter what anyone says. Neither Jesus nor
H. P. B. 
lived and died that a book or books should be swallowed wholesale,
nor even that 
men should become disciples but that all men should become
brothers. We have to 
hold to that which eliminates Differences, not pander to any form
of religion 
near or far.
H. P. B. once used this phrase, as I recall it, “ a Theosophist who
understands 
Theosophy in his own bigoted sectarian way.” I was wondering if our
organizational friends might not call us that kind, in view of the
fact that we 
question their methods and practice? We do not question any methods
whatever 
used for the promulgation of Theosophy, but only those that tend to
obscure it. 
We also point out the untheosophical nature of exclusive claims for
persons or 
organizations. This charge will doubtless be made sometime against
us by 
someone. We have a sound and effective reply. We are in sympathy
with every 
movement made to promulgate the message of Theosophy, as such, and
with every 
endeavor to apply that philosophy. While it is true that the
principles of 
Theosophy are just as good and effective under any other name, yet
the name is 
an indication of the source and true embodiment of those
principles, and cannot 
be obscured or changed without some person or system of thought in
the way of 
the seeker after truth. What can be the motives for this? Many,
perhaps. Usually 
some person desires to be the exponent par excellence, knowing well
that he will 
find those who will accede to his claims.
Some organizations claim to be the spiritual organ of Theosophy.
These embody 
separateness, cannot make for unity, and are foreign to the spirit
and genius of 
Theosophy. Theosophy is a Message, which should be made accessible
to all 
without intermediaries or would-be interpreters; which should be
presented as
-------
delivered, and its existence as an all-inclusive philosophy
continually he1d 
forth. Societies which do not do this should assume a name which
would be 
indicative of their particular effort, in the interest of justice
to Theosophy 
and to those who seek to know it. What do we object to? Titles
which present 
interpretations as the Thing itself, and which by the fact are
misleading. No 
one objects to the use of Theosophical principles as admixtures in
any system of 
thought whatever; it will not hurt them; it may break them; but
such use, while 
it might be courtesy to call it Theosophical, is not teaching what
Theosophy is.
Evidently, “The world is not ready for Theosophy, per se”; at
least, one would 
judge so from what is being done, since those who claim to be its
exponents are 
offering something else suited to the “trade.” But do these
exponents give the 
world a chance? They are hiding the light under a bushel; they are
giving stone 
for bread; and the blind world does not know the difference. We do,
however, and 
will keep the link unbroken.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Ten
The coming together of Theosophists of differing degrees and
qualities—yes, of 
training—is bound to stir up latent personalities, preconceptions
and 
prejudices. The mental and psychic atmosphere engendered by their
co-operation 
must work inwards as well as outwards, and still further must
arouse evil 
forces, for it is a known occult law that every advance made along
the path that 
leads to selflessness arouses the forces that are opposed to that
consummation, 
and this is true individually and collectively. In this immense
work which we 
have undertaken, trials of various kinds have to be encountered,
and the ones by 
whom we are tried are those of our own household. There are lessons
in every 
event, even the smallest. We have to do the best we can and leave
the results to 
the Great Law.
About the meetings: your idea in regard to them is all right. Go
right ahead in 
whatever way seems to afford the best oppor-
-------
tunity; use your best judgment and do not be disappointed at
anything in the way 
of results that may turn up; just keep on looking for ways and
means. Act as 
seems best under any circumstances that may arise. Something will
come of it. If 
that something” is different from what you would have liked or
,planned for, 
never mind keep on going. Better make no plan other than to get to
work along 
the line of least resistance. One step will bring another
 "C'est le premier pas
qui coute.”
As to Mrs. Besant’s opinion of Leadbeater: It is of value only to
those who see 
value in it, and in any event it is only an opinion. It has been
said that he 
who speaks of seeing and meeting the Master thereby loses touch. My
judgment 
would be that if, as is said, Leadbeater had stood face to face
with the Great 
Initiator,’” it would never have been spoken of by him, and no
other would know 
the fact. Leadbeater sought to be recognized as a great teacher and
in order to 
break into other realms of nature used most abhorrent means—black
magic, in 
fact. One may be sure that anyone claiming Adeptship is not an
Adept, and this 
in the very nature of things. Apply this to Leadbeater and Mrs.
Besant, who are 
continually making public claims in this direction. The question
arises: how 
much is real, how much for effect, how much self-delusion? The
imagination is 
the image- making power and may create a glorified image of
oneself. I am sorry 
it all occurred, for in the public mind Theosophy is connected with
it, and many 
strange things are assumed to be Theosophy.
Perhaps I should submit to you my opinion that in the interests of
those who are 
new to the subject of Theosophy, and because of the general
tendency to follow 
personalities (particularly living ones), it is not wise to put
such in mental 
touch with writers, who, however good any particular writing of
theirs may be, 
have failed to show a true appreciation of Theosophic principles. I
say this at 
the risk of being misunderstood; it is for you to accept or reject
my opinion, 
as it meets your viewpoint.
The most painful experiences I have had in my Theosophical life
have been the 
witnessing of the negation of Theosophic prin-
-------
ciples by those professing them and were it not my duty to put you
in possession 
of the facts as I know them—facts representing dangers which lie
about us in our 
quest—I would not have spoken. You asked for the facts; I have to
give them as I 
know them. It should be said that while we condemn the act, we
never condemn the 
actor. The Theosophist must recognize that failures are not
irremediable if 
followed by undaunted struggles upwards, and for professing
Theosophists, who to 
our eyes appear to have strayed from the Path, we know that the
time will come 
when the failure will be recognized, and the struggle back will be
hard. Such 
must necessarily have our pity and sympathy, if we are true to the
spirit of the 
Teachings.
Here and there failures; will be noted, but there is much to
encourage. There is 
a distinct change for the better in public sentiment; religions,
sciences and 
governments are changing little by little. The Great Ones do not
repine; neither 
do they cease working. Let us follow Their example. You may
remember that K. H. 
wrote, “He who does all he knows and the best he can does enough
for us”; and 
again, “Ingratitude is; not one of our vices.”
Now possibly it may be seen what our Lodge stands for: the three
objects as laid 
down by H. P. B. and Masters, and along the lines laid down by
Them; no 
dogmatism, no personal followings, no “spiritual authority.” Thus
each may 
follow his line of development with such assistance as may be
afforded by those 
who have traveled further on the Path than himself, when such help
is requested. 
In this way, true discrimination is gained and the bane of all
spiritual 
movements, authority, dogmatism, and their corollary—personal 
followings—avoided.
Perhaps you may have seen how solicitous I have been to get you
started 
right—free from mental encumbrances, using your judgment always to
check your 
intuitions, until in the course of time you come to a direct
perception of 
truth; and why I am so fearful of any abridgment of individual
judgment, or 
cessation of effort to develop individual intuition. I see that you
can
-------
be of much help, and to fit you for that, as far as my assistance
may avail, 
will be my duty and pleasure. But always remember that behind the
immediate 
helper, there is the Great Lodge whose aid is given to all who
serve—serve Them.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Eleven
You have asked me for comment on the questions sent in by our
English brother; 
particularly, as to “Karma being as merciless as the Bible-God.”
But does he 
consider that Mercy is not opposed to Justice, and that the fullest
justice is 
the same as the fullest mercy? Some take the meaning of Mercy to be
a permitted 
escape from the results of wrong-doing; but this would not be
Justice, nor would 
it be merciful to those injured by the wrong-doing. He should
remember the 
definition of Karma: an undeviating and unerring tendency in the
Universe to 
restore equilibrium, which operates incessantly. Karma is inherent
law and its 
operation must therefore be impersonal. Some might take this to be “merciless,”
but that would only be because they desire escape from consequences
that are 
unpleasant.
There are just two ways of looking at the question: either the
Universe is 
governed by Law and under Law, or all is Chaos. Our experience in
every 
department of Nature points to the fact that Law reigns everywhere;
nothing is 
done of any kind or anywhere, except under Law. Our control of the
elements, our 
use of the materials in Nature is possible only because the same
thing can 
always be done when the same conditions are present. Having
discovered some of 
the laws of electricity, for instance, we may direct that fluid or
force, and 
use it for many different purposes.
Now as Law reigns in the material world, it can be seen to rule in
the mental 
and moral world as well. Karma simply means “action” and its
consequent 
“re-action.” There is no Karma unless there is a being to make it
or feel its 
effects; unpleasant effects predicate causes that send forth
unpleasantness in 
the world,
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affecting others, and finding the restoration of equilibrium at the
point of 
disturbance. There can be, then, but one consideration, and that
is, Justice. 
Why should we desire anything but Justice to be done?
The Bible says, “Whatsoever a man sows, that shall he also reap,”
and “Resist 
not evil and it will flee from you.” What is “evil” but the reaping
of effects 
of wrong done? If we try to avoid the restoration of equilibrium,
the evil will 
not flee from us, but come again. But if we accept all as just and
right, then 
the “evil” flees. We should apply Karma not merely to what we call
good and evil 
in physical life. The earth rolls on in its orbit, carried further
and further 
by the Sun in his greater orbit; it grows old through the cycles;
it changes its 
appearance, and comes under states of matter undreamed of by us.
Such is the 
Karma of the earth. Soon or late, even while revolving in its
orbit, our planet 
will slowly move its poles and carry the cold band of ice to where
are now 
summer scenes—the Karma of the earth and its inhabitants. How,
then, shall Karma 
be restricted in consideration to the details of one life, or
judgment passed 
upon it from that basis? I should say that Karma is Mercy itself,
for do I not 
know that nothing can prevent me nor any other from obtaining what
is his by 
law, exact and unerring?
“It knows not wrath nor pardon; utter true
Its measures mete, its faultless balance weighs;
Times are as naught, tomorrow it will judge,
Or after many days.
“Such is the Law that moves to righteousness,
Which none at last can turn aside or stay;
The heart of it is Love, the end of it
Is Peace and Consummation sweet. Obey!”
He asks if we have changed our “Faith.” Theosophy is not a “Faith,”
for “Faiths” 
may be changed; but, being knowledge which each can make his own,
there is no 
question of change, or fear, or doubt. We know of all the claims of
every 
description that are made by societies and individuals. How is any
one to
-------
determine as to their respective values—if any? Just this way: if
you are asked 
to accept anything on the statement of another and the means are
not at the same 
time afforded you to see and know for yourself before acceptation,
you will be 
safe to refuse, for you would in that case have surrendered your
own judgment 
and taken that of another in blind faith.
Now the statement made to him by the Rev. S., being outside of all
known law, 
spiritual, intellectual, and physical, indicates to me a
self-delusion. I would 
not impute to this Reverend any intention to deceive. Nor is he
alone in 
self-delusion on the same or similar lines. If he has heard, as I
have, 
statements made by different claimants in regard to H. P. B., each
one 
contradictory to the other, he would know that self-delusion
reigned in some 
cases and deliberate fraud and pretense in others. To say that H.
P. B. now 
believes in a personal God, or ever could, is the greatest
absurdity that was 
ever uttered: this very statement is the most conclusive proof of
delusion. Now, 
in default of direct knowledge, what evidence has any man as to H.
P. B.? 
Certainly no more than the evidence contained in her voluminous
writings, which 
directly refute such an assumption, and at the same time point out
the laws that 
govern life, being, and consciousness on all planes, so that all
men may be free 
from the “lo here!” and “lo there!” claims of would-be prophets.
For any to declare that they have private directions to do as they
are doing, 
regardless of what were the lines laid down by the Teachers, would
be no better 
nor more elucidating than is the declaration of the Besant people
that the Lodge 
did not know enough to foresee, and had changed Its plan and
purpose. Both these 
declarations vitiate all that has been said and done, as well as
making it 
appear that the Lodge does not work according to Law and Cycles in
public 
effort. For interim efforts of Their followers and disciples, all
ways are open, 
and in these, conditions must be availed of as they arise; the
eternal verities 
can be used in whole or in part according to the minds reached. All
this is to 
be expected from the variety of mental conditions in the world;
-------
yet this variety is not from strength and understanding, so much as
from 
weakness and inability.
Those who are able to perceive, to understand, and to use what They
gave have no 
reason to deviate or dilute anything to suit contemporary forms: or
ideas, nor 
to bolster up a decadence that pollutes the mental atmosphere of
men. The sooner 
Christianity is discredited as a religion, the better for Universal
Brotherhood. 
As it is, orthodox Christianity stands in the way, as do all other
forms 
constructed around a basis of Truth. It is well enough and all that
can be done, 
for the majority of minds, to rebuild and change step by step;
there are 
thousands who will work that way to one who will be able to
understand what is 
needed, and the very goal toward which all the rest tend; but that
one has all 
the more need to keep that goal ever in sight and mind, never
allowing any fogs 
or clouds to obscure it. If this is not done, all direction is
lost. It has not 
been done by those who should have done it; hence, the very loss of
direction 
seen in the world today, and the various cults and systems to which
the majority 
of people are attracted. They asked for bread and have been given a
stone. Shall 
any true Theosophist deem it his duty, then, to persuade these
hungry ones that 
there is valuable nutriment in the stone? Yet, it seems to me, this
is just what 
such would-be Theosophical efforts are doing. Our duty is clear. We
will “feed 
the hungry” with nourishing food, and in so doing follow Law,
precept and 
precedent—thus reverencing our great and illustrious Predecessors
and continuing 
the work They so well began and left in our care.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twelve
The statement made to you by an “Old Theosophist” that “The
Theosophical Society 
(meaning Mrs. Besant’s society, in the opinion of this “old
Theosophist”) and 
Masonry are the two channels in which the Masters are working in
this century— 
hence ‘Co-Masonry,’ ” calls for some comments.
-------
The natural question is, “Who says so, and why does he say it?”
This brings the 
one making the statement, and anyone who may consider it, right
back to a 
consideration of what it is upon which he is relying. is there
anything in the 
records left by the Messengers of the Masters that would give a
clear indication 
that the fact is as stated by “old Theosophist”? If not, then
reliance is placed 
upon the say-so of some person—in this case, Mrs. Besant—and is
based upon 
belief only, not knowledge, and can only be classed as an opinion.
There are 
many opinions and they differ from each other widely. Mrs. Besant’s
declarations 
of “knowledge” and opinions are often self-contradictory, as shown
by her 
published writings. In any case they either do or do not agree with
the 
principles of Theosophy, and the recorded statements of the
Messengers. If there 
were no well-defined principles and applications left by the
Messengers to guide 
those who would follow the Path They showed, then we are all
certainly in the 
dark without a landmark visible, and have to flounder about in the
sea of 
opinions, clutching at whatever promises support.
But if it is true that H. P. B. was the Direct Agent of the
Lodge—and this is 
explicitly stated to be the fact by the Master K. H., however Col.
Olcott, Mrs. 
Besant or others, may twist and interpret H. P. B. and Her
teachings—then we 
must go to the records left by Her and Her Colleague, W. Q. Judge,
for direction 
in all matters pertaining to the Theosophical Movement, regardless
of the 
“opinions” of “old Theosophist” or any other student. For to do
otherwise would 
be equivalent to saying that those Great Beings, the real Founders
of the 
Movement, had left no guidance for the generations to come, and
that humanity 
was left the prey to any and all claimants that might arise.
But it is not true that humanity has been left a prey to mistaken
or designing 
persons; the records left by the Messengers are a sure, consistent
guide, and if 
they are well studied and applied, will show a straight, even and
self-evident 
Path. It is lack of study that leaves so many in ignorance, and
ready to pursue 
every will—o’-the-wisp they see. You will also find that those who
-------Cardiff Theosophical Society in Wales-------
206 Newport Road, Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24-1DL
rely upon such statements and opinions are the most dogmatic and
certain in 
their assurance. Those who point to facts and records, with basic
principles to 
rely on, are not troubled by all these “opinions,” by whomsoever
expressed.
There is another thing that sincere students of H. P. B. have to
bear in mind, 
even if they do not speak much about it. It has been stated by both
H. P. B. and 
W. Q. J., and also by the Master K. H. in his letters to Mr.
Sinnett, that every 
effort by the White Lodge opens a door to the Black Magicians—those
whose very 
existence depends upon keeping humanity where it is, in a state of
ignorance, 
bewilderment, and running after false gods and those who cry lo
here, and lo 
there. In this statement we ought to see why the White Lodge dare
not give out 
more than humanity can put to use.
Every effort has been and is being made by the Dark side to impair
and deflect 
the efforts of the White Lodge. And where else can the Dark Forces
work so 
effectively as on and through the personal weaknesses of
Theosophists, 
especially on all those who become in any way prominent—individuals
who in their 
turn affect many. All the many crises in the old Theosophical
Society, all the 
attacks on H. P. B. and W. Q. J., showed a virulence that could not
have arisen 
from mere personal opinion or interest.
Time and again have warnings been given, but few have heeded them;
or, if heeded 
at all, the facts stated have been used against any opposed,
without making sure 
that those who so used them were themselves right.
The defection of Mrs. Besant from loyalty to the Path shown, and to
H. P. B. and 
W. Q. J., was due to such Dark side efforts. In her last message to
students, H. 
P. B. said, “Never is the danger greater than when ambition, and a
desire to 
lead, dresses itself up in the peacock feathers of altruism.” She
knew; and in 
that last Message are many prophecies, some of which have already
been 
fulfilled. She said that the Brahmins are the Jesuits of India.
Mrs. Besant fell 
under the influence of Brahmins and the Brahmanical lines, and
their influence 
can be clearly seen in her evolution and in all the developments in
her society. 
The Dark Ones could not
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destroy or pervert all the efforts of the White Lodge, but they
could, did, and 
do minimize and corrupt them. In a consideration of all this may be
found the 
explanation of many things that might otherwise be a puzzle. All
those who do 
not follow the lines laid down by the Messengers are certain to be
misled. Yet 
the way is clear; the pity of it is that otherwise sincere and
devoted persons 
will not heed the warnings given; will not study, think, and apply
what was 
recorded for them and their guidance.
There has never been anything said that I know of by either of the
two 
Messengers about Co-masonry.
W. Q. J. is the only one who has spoken specifically in regard to
Masonry as “a 
great and important part of the Theosophical Movement.” And the
context of his 
article, “The Theosophical Movement,” as well as the circumstances
of its 
publication, will give a true idea as to the part Masonry has
played in the past 
in the work of the Theosophical Movement.
The Theosophical Movement includes all efforts that lead to human
freedom and 
enlightenment. Masonry has played and is still playing an important
part in the 
world. For first, its main idea is the Brotherhood of Man, even
though in a 
limited and restricted sense; second, Masonry debars from its
lodges all 
considerations of politics or religions, recognizing those to be
the greatest 
provocatives of dissensions; third, it is the implacable enemy of
religious 
intolerance, and is at the present day engaged in a death struggle
with the 
Catholic church of Mexico and South America. It was through Masonry
and Masons 
that the United States of America was made possible.
So Masonry was and is a great and important part of the
Theosophical Movement. 
Yet there are more important things than Masonry. If it had been
sufficient for 
the needs of humanity, there would have been no need for Theosophy.
But what has either Masonry or Theosophy to do with “Co” masonry?
Each must 
answer that question for himself.
As ever, R. C.
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CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letters
Letter Thirteen     
I think your idea of making collations from the Teachers’ writings
and preparing 
for work later is all right—the proper thing to do. You will find
in yourself 
the incentive as to time and place, “having eyes and arms and feet
in all 
directions.” An open mind, an eager intellect, without doubt or
fear, is the 
unveiled spiritual perception. You did a good work with the
pamphlets already 
written; they are in use continually. The idea is to present what
is beneficial 
for humanity in the most presentable form—a simple passing on of
what was known 
before. I gave S— some of the pamphlets to send to an enquirer for
reading and 
return. They should do good. The energy put in that work has
already found many 
channels of usefulness of the best kind, and they are good for much
more—no 
effort in right direction is lost. Further, it is a labor of love,
and the 
feeling with which you endow your work goes with it. Properly
performed, the 
result is sure. Your latest, “The Real Significance,” is certainly
a “beauty”—W. 
Q. J. would say, “a dandy”—and its manner bears out its title
magnificently. It 
is the best yet—so full of the most vital truths—things so easily
comprehended 
by the way-farer, and yet so full of the highest wisdom. It does me
good.
The introduction is in keeping with the statement below it. In
fact, we may take 
as part of our statement of policy, “The policy of this Lodge is
independent 
devotion to the cause of Theosophy, without professing attachment
to any 
Theosophical organization; it is loyal to the great Founders of the
Theosophical 
Movement, but does not concern itself with dissensions or
differences of 
individual opinion. The work it has on hand, and the end it keeps
in view, are 
too absorbing and too lofty to leave it the time or inclination to
take part in 
side issues.”
This is where we stand, and where all true Theosophists should
also. If our 
position is made clear to Theosophists generally, there
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will be not a few who will see the righteousness of the position.
Much of our 
work in the future will be the presentation of our “platform.” We
have perceived 
and given it form; we should let as many as possible know that it
exists for 
them. We may have something further to say later on. Good work;
keep it up.
Yes, you, too, must find yourselves. Changed conditions will give
occasion. 
These conditions will be bent to the great purpose, “an’ the heart
stay 
steadfast”—and this I do not at all doubt. Make your purpose the
Great Purpose, 
and desire for personal growth will have little breathing space.
Back of it all 
is the Great Lodge, ever watchful, ever working; never doubt that.
Theosophists often speak of “getting rid of the personality,” and,
so far as 
observed, do not appear to have any clear idea of what they mean.
Without 
personalities, there would be no field, no evolution. It is not the
personality 
that is in the way, but the personal idea in regard to it. This is
particularly 
fostered by the present civilization based on Samvritti (relative
truth), 
“origin of all the world’s delusions.”
One of the sentences in the last pamphlet applies directly:
“Instead of crushing out the animal nature, we must learn to fully
understand 
the animal, and subordinate it to the spiritual.” So long as you
know the wiles 
and lures of the elementary nature, you are not in danger of
fooling yourselves, 
however much you may fall under their momentary sway. They or it,
may be likened 
to a steed that is perfectly safe when the reins are well in hand
and the seat 
firm, but which is ready to take advantage of any unguarded moment
to unhorse 
you. Such an animal you would naturally watch carefully until it
became a part 
of yourself. If we could always remember that the body, senses and
mind (brain) 
are the steed, and the Self, the rider, the animal would have fewer
opportunities to get the bit in its teeth. But we are learning to
ride, and 
success does not come at once.
From “The Real Significance”: “You, too, are messengers, so that it
is not well 
that you should regard much your own infirmities. Nature and Time
regard not 
personalities, but swallow up all alike. Yet do Nature and Time and
Destiny 
teach ever the same
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great lesson, and he who would learn of these, must both forego and
forget 
personalities, his own as well as others . . . personalities are
but the 
fleeting waves on the river of time caused by the friction of the
waves of 
fortune; they are thy weakness and not thy strength. Thy strength
is in thy soul 
and thy soul’s strength is in the calm and not in storm revealed.”
To “forego and forget personalities” means to regard truth, only,
by whomsoever 
presented. So it seems wise that we should not think ill of
personalities, and 
this includes our own. If they are our weakness, by doing our duty,
which is in 
our case the promulgation of truth, pure and undefiled, our
weakness will 
finally become our strength. The Masters do not look at our
defects, but at our 
motives and efforts.
In your letter, you have asked my opinion in regard to a specific
matter of 
action. On general principles one might answer such a question, but
in 
particular cases, where all the elements that enter in can only be
considered 
fully by the person involved, that person alone is competent to
reply, or 
determine.
In considering a question bearing on the ethics of any case, we
have first to be 
sure that we have no prejudices or preconceptions that can
interfere with 
correct conclusions; in other words, “to be free from hard and fast
conclusions 
as to men, things and methods.” If we are thus free, we will not be
liable to be 
swayed by the general classifications of good and evil, so common
in the world, 
and the great error of the churches. The way is then open for the
real point at 
issue, which to me is not what is done, but why was it done—the
motive. Now who 
can answer this but the one who acts? If the act appears to him as
a duty, and a 
proper one, he alone has paramount power, and there should be none
to question a 
right to perform duty as it is seen and understood. It might very
well be that 
another’s acts would be improper for us, because of our different
attitude; it 
might also be that our acts, seemingly proper to us, would to that
other seem 
improper. From these considerations it would seem fair to deduce
that the only 
correct sanction, and the one we should seek, would come from
within.
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Of course, different attitudes of mind produce different actions in
any given 
case. Those who have knowledge will not act from the same motive as
those who 
have less knowledge or none. Those who have no knowledge act under
the impulse 
of the common attitude or way of doing things. Those who are wise
naturally take 
all possible results into consideration from their wider point of
view, before 
acting. With them it is largely a question of duty, unswayed by
what the views 
of others may be, except in so far as those views might interfere
with larger 
duties and influence at other times. In fact, so many things have
to be taken 
into consideration possible to be seen and applied by the person
alone who is 
involved, that no direct answer can be given in any particular
case. General 
principles may be stated, and each individual left to apply them as
he sees fit. 
In no other way can progress be made. We have finally, in any case,
to determine 
whether we are swayed by inclination rather than plain duty, in
order that we 
may not deceive ourselves. Whatever, then, is decided in all
honesty with 
ourselves, is our duty, and no man is our judge.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Fourteen
I am really sorry that conditions are as you mention. I can
sympathize with you 
in this, because I have had similar fortune. But while it has been
bad from one 
point of view, it has had advantages which go to the strengthening
of character, 
and in it all I find good experience.
When we come to consider that the purpose of life is to learn and
that it is all 
made up of learning, the circumstances by means of which we learn
become of 
minor importance. As Mr. Judge once wrote me under similar
circumstances: “The 
ocean of life washes to our feet and away again, things that are
both hard to 
lose and unpleasant to welcome, yet they all belong to life; all
come from the 
Great Self that is never moved. So lean back on the Self—be like
the great bed 
of the ocean that is never moved
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though storms may ruffle its surface.” I know that you understand
that attitude. 
It does not mean that we should cease to do the best we can at all
times, but we 
know that whatever comes all is well. Everything is taken as merely
a lesson 
from which growth and knowledge may be obtained, and while we may
appear to 
struggle for many things, our minds may not be set upon the things
themselves, 
but upon the performance of our duty as our expanding knowledge
gives us 
perception. Thus would we be like the ocean, the surface in action,
the greatest 
part of us calm—unmoved.
I am glad to have your confidence so that you may speak frankly at
all times—not 
that any personal knowledge of each others’ past experience is
necessary, but 
that you feel that way is what counts. We both know that what a man
has been 
through, or has appeared to have been, matters not at all; what
does really 
matter is what he is now and what he is trying to do. I think that
the attitude 
at all times should be—fear nothing, doubt nothing, regret nothing,
but GO ON. 
It seems sometimes a waste of words to be writing these things to
you, because I 
am sure you know them. Still, on the other hand, I know that one
needs reminding 
some times, when in the swirl of engrossing events. Once when I was
talking with 
Judge and showing much concern over a probable action, he said,
“You can’t 
prevent people from doing what they can do.” Atruism—something I
knew very 
well—but his words at that time have served me many a time since. What
he said 
came from “the heart,” as my words and thoughts go to you. Perhaps
that will 
explain why you find something other than the words and ideas in
what I write. 
If it is true, and I think it is, that everything in Nature is
septenate, then 
words and ideas are septenate—but this opens a large subject. I am
writing this 
in the office ‘mid noise, confusion and interruption, and just
these few words 
with whatever they may carry to you.
There is a passage which you may have seen in one of the books:
“And that power 
which the disciple shall covet, is that which shall make him appear
as nothing 
in the eyes of men.” This refers to getting rid of the personal
idea, of the 
wish to have one’s attainments noted. The power of the personality
is great and 
in-
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sidious. It retains its hold very often when the aspirations and
efforts are 
noble in character. It is the most difficult thing to be overcome
in our race, 
where the training is all in accentuation of it. Especially is this
so when one 
is taking a public leading part. Adulation fosters ambition, if the
least 
thought of self remains; the person accepts leadership as something
due to him 
or her, and the faults remain even though changed in direction.
“Personality” is 
the last foe to be conquered. Do you wonder then that — and — have
fallen short, 
when it is evident that they do not even perceive how personal they
are? They 
have taken upon them selves (their personal selves) prerogative of
spiritual 
direction. A sort of popery is the result—a sense of infallibility,
which 
doubtless they would intellectually deny, while giving evidence of
its 
possession. Ambition to shine, to be looked up to—that is the curse
that 
blighted both. Less prominent members have not been subjected to
the same 
pressure, and may have learned from the mistakes of these two.
There must be 
compensation for them some where, somehow, as the great wheel of
the Law rounds 
the cycles. They are to be pitied for whatever of failure we may be
able to 
perceive. 
We shall be wise if we do not fall into the same error when Karma
tries us. I 
think that the sense of personal supremacy was so strong in both of
them that 
they were unable to take advice on that line. Efforts were made to
open their 
eyes. A mental bias cannot be changed even by one so wise and
powerful as a 
Master. If the one in error cannot see his fault, nothing can be
done. Another 
life in a humbler station, the lesson may be learned.
How can Masters use such vehicles and use Judge? William Q. Judge
was of another 
class of being than either of those you mention. He was an adept,
using a body 
of the race. The others had merited the opportunity by services in
other lives. 
The possibility of failure was there and known, no doubt; so also
was the 
possibility of success. No one can predicate the result in such
cases. In any 
event, the fact that the opportunity was offered them is evidence
that under 
Karma they had the right to try. Neither H. P. B. nor W. Q. J.
needed to make 
the effort for themselves. The work to be done is for the race and
must be done 
by men and women
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of the race; there is no other way. So, remembering that — and —
are of our 
imperfect race, their lack of success is not to be wondered at, in
the 
circumstances. We have the karmic opportunity of profiting by the
lesson their 
failure teaches. Perhaps we may take the lesson and be ready to
help them, when 
we all re- turn to life again to continue the work begun.
As I understand it, Masters cannot interfere with Karma. They work
at the proper 
season, and with such instruments as are provided by Karma. That
better 
instruments were not ready is undoubtedly due to our racial
development, the 
accentuation of personality being its predominant note. Just here
occurs to my 
mind the shortest verse in the Bible, “Jesus wept,” and its
connotation, “How I 
would have gathered ye under my wings, but ye would not.” Human
history is full 
of such failures, but through it all there have been those who have
attained a 
measurable degree of success, and who are seldom the ones in the
public eye.
We must also remember, all the time, that there are intelligent
evil forces at 
work continually to defeat the emancipation of humanity from
selfishness—beings, 
in fact, whose very existence depends upon selfish desire and its
many ways of 
expression. The plane of existence of these beings is the earth and
its psychic 
atmosphere. Our work is to people our current in space with such
thoughts as 
tend to dissipate these influences, and to assist right thoughts in
others by 
awakening them to the realities which have been placed within reach
of our 
understanding.
And behind all are the Masters who have not deserted us and never
will, so long 
as there remains a spark of true devotion.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Fifteen
I was thinking of you and your meeting; hope you had a good and
encouraging one. 
Are things going hard with you? If so, it is time to push harder
along the way 
you know. That will inevitably destroy all obstacles, and if
persisted in during 
stress
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generates and maintains greater powers of resistance. Everybody on
the Path goes 
through similar obstacles; by having them and overcoming them, you
become 
teachers with knowledge of how to help. If you had no obstacles,
you would not 
know how. Thank Karma for “obstacles.”
“Even this will pass away” is a good motto to keep in mind, when
things come up 
that are hard to stand. The “easy” and happy times are the periods
of rest; the 
“hard” times are the periods of training—opportunities for gaining
strength and 
knowledge. If we can look at both in this light, we shall not be
overcome by 
either.
Kicking against the pricks hurts only the one who kicks; more over,
the pricks 
seem to enjoy it, for, being kicked, they keep coming back. “Resist
not evil and 
it will flee from you” is a true saying; we give the evil thing
power by 
thinking about it, a power that it would not otherwise have. in
fact, many of 
these things of evil are creations of our own mental state, and
have no real 
existence; yet they are even more distracting than realities would
be, because 
composed of fear and doubt. The thing to do is to take higher
ground, mentally; 
read and think about high themes; regard only the good, the meaning
and purpose 
of Life as a whole. If in earnest in this way, the evil is
dissipated like the 
mists before the morning sun.
What is the Dweller? It is the combined evil influence that is the
result of the 
wicked thoughts and acts of the age in which anyone may live. &
When the student 
has at last gotten hold of a real aspiration . . . and has also
aroused the 
determination to do and to be, the whole bent of his nature day and
night, is to 
reach out beyond the limitations that have hitherto fettered his
soul. No sooner 
does he begin to step a little forward, than he reaches the zone
just beyond 
mere bodily and mental sensations. At first the minor dwellers of
the threshold 
are aroused, and they in temptation, in doubt and confusion assail
him. He only 
feels the effects, for they do not reveal themselves as shapes. But
persistence 
in the work takes the inner man further along, and with that
progress comes a 
realization to the outer mind of the experi-
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ences met, until at last he has waked up the whole force of the
evil power that 
naturally is arrayed against the good end he has set before him.
Then the 
Dweller takes what form it may,” which is specialized for each
student by the 
tendencies and natural physical and psychical combinations that
belong to his 
family and nation.
“No earnest one who feels called to work persistently for the good
of humanity, 
and not for his own, need fear aught that heaven or hell holds.”
The minor 
dwellers have to be met and conquered; as long as we stay on their
plane and 
daily with them, they will be with us. We must rise above them in
thought and 
effort to our proper plane where they have no power over us. Each
student has 
his own particular kind of minor dwellers, and no one kind is any
better than 
any other kind; hence we ourselves need to be charitable to the
weaknesses of 
others. We do not look upon our own weaknesses in the same light as
we regard 
those of others. Compassion understands, and seeking nothing, but
desiring to 
help—does so.
The Voice of the Silence says: “Compassion is no attribute. It is
the Law of 
LAWS—eternal Harmony, Alaya’s SELF; a shoreless universal essence,
the light of 
everlasting Right, and fitness of all things, the law of Love
eternal. The more 
thou dost become at one with it, thy being melted in its BEING, the
more thy 
Soul unites with that which Is, the more thou wilt become
"COMPASSION ABSOLUTE.”
“Goodness” that results from the compulsion of physical force,
threats, or 
bribes, physical or “spiritual,” is useless. It must be a
self-impulse from 
within—a real preference for something higher—not an abstention
because of any 
fear of consequences in this or any future existence. If we have
that preference 
for something higher, we must admit that others who are with us on
the “path” 
have it also; we can then sympathize with them in their struggles,
knowing it is 
through continued struggle that both they and “we” become free.
This is the 
beginning of Compassion.
Temptations of any one kind have a tendency to repeat themselves,
and students 
find that what would have at one time 
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swept them away is rendered abortive by apparently irrelevant
occurrences; yet, 
we know that such things are the operation of Law which has its
basis in Unity, 
and we benefit in that law to the extent that we feel that Unity.
If Masters are 
the ideal and goal for which we strive, we should endeavor to
imitate Them, 
insofar as we are able to conceive of Their attitude toward
probationers, Their 
disciples, and struggling humanity.
I did “sit up and take notice” of the last pamphlet. It is to the
point. You 
know when a thing is to the point Theosophically, and “knowing
which you shall 
never again fall into error”—unless you are off your guard, or
perchance close 
your eyes. But what a glorious thing it is to know where the right
road lies! 
Whatever else may be doubtful, that is sure. And to feel that you
are able by 
your surety to point out the way to others! Help of that kind is
greater than 
all other kinds put together.
I am so glad that business looks good in prospect. What you have
done in so 
short a time after establishment is most encouraging, and I hope it
will all 
turn out better than your highest hopes could express. Everything
must turn out 
for the best if we do the best we can with what we have all the
time—that is, do 
our duty by every duty. With this, your help is just as essential
as mine, as 
things are—and both are mutual. So may it ever be, through the
centuries.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Sixteen
You speak of peace and tranquillity; note that it as well as its
opposite comes 
in cycles. There is no stationary condition in this world of
constant change, 
through the innumerable causes constantly set in motion by the
different 
agencies in evolutionary operation. Yes, there is undoubtedly
“something doing.” 
The above statement, if true, would suggest it, even if you did not
know it 
yourself. Of course, changes do not invariably mean
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trouble. Knowledge bridges over many things that would other wise
mean nothing 
but trouble.  About your
little dream of me: I think of you a great deal, and 
that of itself would bring the real selves together where there is
such an 
evident tie as in this case. One might make such an excursion and
not be 
conscious of it, or rather, he might not have a brain recollection
of it, as the 
brain was not there. It might be none the less real, as you can
readily 
understand. Such things must naturally occur, for we are greater
than our bodies 
can at this time express—and I mean by “we,” every soul. ‘We all
have powers and 
knowledge that the brain does not function in. Our work is to
co-ordinate, so 
that the higher knowledge may be made manifest in the flesh. I am
glad that you 
had the experience, especially as the results were good.
In regard to R. et al.: it is safe to say that if a man is
satisfied with what 
he is getting out of life, and if there is nothing that he wants,
then there is 
nothing else desirable. To him anything outside of that which
gratifies is 
adscititious, not worthy of consideration. In such case, there is
nothing that 
can be done. Having dropped some seed, the character of the soil
may be 
determined. The duty of the sower is to sow; the seed will test the
soil.
So, “There was war in heaven for the space of two hours.” I can
understand it. 
Fortunately it is not a case for argumentation. The remark by in
regard to Mr. 
Judge was utterly beyond his knowledge and probably a parrot-like
repeating of 
what he had heard, as is the case of those who take their Theosophy
from Mrs. 
Besant, or from other than the true teachers. Sometime you may say
to for me, 
that I was very, very frequently with Mr. Judge for ten years,
entertained him 
and was entertained by him, and that I know the statement to be an
ignorant and 
malicious libel, for which, however, I do not blame him. Only, a
Theosophist 
ought to know better than to make statements on hearsay. Ask him if
he ever 
heard of never listening to an evil thing said of another without
protest, and 
abstaining from condemning others. He might say tu quoque,” which
you would 
naturally acknowledge; then, questions on the part of both would be
con-
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sidered on their merits, as becomes Theosophists. Mr. Judge was
wise enough to 
know that when people place their attention in the direction of
food, form, or 
ceremonies, they are almost certain to end in ritualism and the
loss of the real 
issue, as has happened in too many cases.
The argumentative attitude is of little value in Theosophy. It
amounts to each 
endeavoring to uphold his own position. With this attitude, any
kind of a 
statement calculated to undermine the opponent’s position is
generally 
considered proper, and is used regardless of the truth involved.
A good thing in regard to control of speech is from the Laws of
Manu. in 
Occultism, speech is regarded as an act, and the most difficult of
all acts to 
control. To control speech, regular and persistent efforts are
required. The 
rule for speech is given as:
                                                  
        Let him say what is 
true.
                                                          
Let him say what is 
useful.
                                                          
Let him say what is 
pleasant.
                                                           Let him utter no 
disagreeable truth.
                                                          
Let him utter no 
agreeable falsehood.
In the same line is Judge’s admonition: “Let us use with care those
living 
messengers called words.” These are good things to bear in mind at
all times, 
without making so much of them as to neglect other things quite as
important.
If aspiration is for all, and not for self alone, it reaches up to
the Universal 
finally ; if for self, some degree of illumination results, but
only in degree. 
The stream of effort cannot rise above its source.
As to the “we,” there is but one “we,” or perceiver, who perceives
on any plane 
through the sheaths evolved by him on each plane; his perceptions
on any plane 
will depend on the quality of the sheath or vehicle. Atma (spirit)
or 
consciousness alone, is what remains after the subtraction of the
sheaths. It is 
the ONLY witness—a synthesizing unity. On this plane—and this means
during 
waking consciousness or its dream effects—the perceiver knows only
what it knows 
on this plane (generally speaking),
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and through the ignorance of the Real, involves itself in the cause
and effect 
of physical nature, identifying itself with body and sensations,
and looking at 
other human beings in the same light. This is a wrong attitude of
mind. The 
“we,” at this end, is the identification of the perceiver with this
plane’s 
perceptions—a misconception of the perceiver, a dream—a play—in
which the 
perceiver is so involved as to have lost sight and memory of his
real life.
The mind is both “carrier” and “translator” of both lower and
higher self; the 
attitude determines the quality and kind of action, for one will
act according 
to the attitude of mind firmly held. The great and incalculable
value of acting 
for and as the Supreme is that there is nothing higher in the way
of attitude, 
and this endeavor must by its very nature bring about the best
results.
What moves the “mind” this way or that is usually desire for the
attractions of 
matter, and self-interest in them; these then move and control the
mind through 
the brain. “We,” the Perceiver, does not perceive anything but the
“ideas” which 
the senses and organs present. He is not wholly awake on this
plane; some times 
he gets partly wakened, but drops off to sleep again, lulled by the
sounds and 
memories of his dream; sometimes “bad dreams” awake him; sometimes
he is 
awakened by the voices of those who are awake.
The “Real” and the “unreal,” the “fleeting” and the “ever lasting”
are terms 
which will be more fully understood if looked at from the point of
view of the 
Perceiver. This is the attitude of mind we should hold.
The appearances you speak of will wear off in time and you will get
beyond that 
place where these things appear, if attention is not paid to them.
“He who would 
hear the voice of Nada, the ‘Soundless Sound’ and comprehend it, he
has to learn 
the nature of ‘Dharana,’ ”—perfect concentration upon one interior
object, by 
“having become indifferent to other objects of perception.” These
appearances 
are objects of perception.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
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THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY 
Letter Seventeen
There is only one Perceiver; the sights are modified by the
channels through 
which the Perceiver looks. It is the same Soul in any and all
modifications. The 
power of seeing is the Soul; the power of the Soul goes into the
seeing, hence 
what It “sees” is to It real because seen; as sights each is a
reality; but the 
nature of Soul is different from any and all “sights.”
The nature of Soul as unmodiflable must be grasped; then, each
sight is 
perceived as a relativity and there is no more identification than
we assume 
when we see the many thousands of things that are about us every
day, 
unaffected, unless we concentrate upon them. We concentrate upon
some things, 
automatically, through habitude; this automatic habit has to be
gradually 
changed, and control substituted. It is to be effected by trying to
do it, by 
keeping at it. The Mind as at present constituted is a or repelled
by 
externalities, and the power of the Soul flows in the direction of 
concentration, be that long or short. Through the Mind, the Soul
determines bad, 
good, better, best, on this or any plane. Mind has to be adjusted
by knowledge 
of essential nature, of causes, and by analogies and
correspondence. The views 
held in regard to existence constitute the Mind and direct the
Soul’s energy in 
that relation.
There is just “Consciousness” and its “states,” which are
conditioned 
consciousness. We speculate on conditions; we cannot on
Consciousness itself, 
for we are that. We cannot find Ourselves in any kind or number of
conditions, 
which are but pictures in the mind. “It is of this stairway that
thou art the 
mirror and faithful climber” might mean climbing beyond conditions;
is not that 
the “awakening of the Self” which the Upanishads speak of? A man in
a dark room 
is conditioned by the darkness; in the open he is conditioned in
other ways; but 
he is the same man. We must have knowledge in order to use power
rightly, but we 
must know that
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we are neither knowledge nor power; they are ours; to imagine that
we are any 
given knowledge or power is illusion. It might be said that there
are to kinds 
of knowledge—knowledge of any and all conditions, and knowledge of
the Self. 
Knowledge of the Self is beyond relativity; relativity cannot be
known by 
relativity, but only by that which is beyond all relativity. “To
blend thy Mind 
and Soul” is to make the Mind subservient to the purposes of Soul,
an instrument 
for use, not a cage of relativities in which to imprison ourselves.
“No action from a true basis could proceed far in an erroneous
direction” is 
right. Right basis is the compass; should wind or tide deflect the
course, the 
compass is there to tell the story. We have many correct ideas in
particulars, 
but forget the universal application of them. The fact that the
Perceiver is One 
and Impartite, and that the “seeing” is looking directly on Ideas,
is the basis 
of consideration. No idea is real, for on “looking” at it, motion
is caused 
which spells “change.” The change is not so much in the object of
vision, as in 
the mode of seeing. We are so liable to imagine that the change is
external, and 
endeavor to adjust externalities to internal change—an eternal and
ineffectual 
struggle. We seek one of the pair of opposites, instead of finding
the basis of 
their unity, because of our desires.
Kama-loka means the plane or place of Desire. Doubt and Desire seem
to go 
together; for wanting a thing implies the doubt of getting it, and
intensity of 
doubt is expressed in fear. So Desire, Doubt, and Fear are the
characteristics 
of the Kama-lokic state. I think we may have these about anything
in life, and 
in accordance with our intensity attract similar energies from the
Kama-lokic 
state, whether emanating from living or dead personalities. Lengthy
periods of 
doubt and fear are more intensive than shorter ones in their
drawing power and 
subsequent effects. We enter that current and receive from that
plane so long as 
we hold on to it. But there is the other side—we can desire nothing
for 
ourselves and determine to accept what comes. Events and conditions
come and go, 
and no amount of desiring will prevent their coming or hinder their
going. 
Taking this attitude, we live in the Eternal and
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watch the wheel of Progress called change with neither desire, fear
nor doubt to 
assail us. When we desire anything, the thing itself is not what we
want, but 
the feeling that the thing gives us; if the thing gave us no
“feeling,” we would 
not desire it. To do service is also “feeling,” but how different
in its effects 
—  instead of harmful
reactions.
What will we do when we hear and see what is in Kama-loka? I think
that when we 
arrive at that stage, we shall know we are looking at a condition,
and will not 
be identified with it, unless we should choose to plunge into it in
order to 
“feel” the state. Those in it know nothing but the desires and
passions which 
animate them, think of nothing else; to them there is no other
state.
I have read the articles you sent. They are all right in them
selves, but they 
lack “point” in the direction we are concerned about. The writer
brings out the 
fact that the existence of Masters was not first made known in the
nineteenth 
century. Of course not; the Ocean and H. P. B. speak of Them and
adduce evidence 
of such a belief in many ways. But the evidence of past beliefs
would have but 
little effect upon the present, unless it were not only pointed
out, but shown, 
that They are living Men. The main thing that was shown and needs
constant 
pointing to is the fact that these past beliefs referred to past
efforts of the 
Lodge, and that the close of the nineteenth century marked Their
latest effort 
through Their chosen Messenger. To say that the accumulated
knowledge of the 
ages is not new, is to say nothing; from this point of view the
articles would 
mislead the ordinary reader, and we are not in that business.
“To abstain from condemning others” is a course to be continually
striven for; 
it is vital. No two really act from the same basis of perception;
how then can 
anyone judge? It should be granted that each one is trying to do
his best—the 
best that he knows. His knowledge may be small, but if he strives
to do the best 
he knows, his knowledge increases. For myself, I have an end in
view in what I 
do; not my end, but something which includes
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many others—all if possible. Whether a temple is intended or a
building for a 
saloon, similar work has to be performed; so actions are no safe
basis to judge 
from. As students get to understand this in regard to each other,
each in his 
degree, better results may be confidently expected. We credit each
other with 
the best of motives and let it go at that; any other way leads to
confusion and 
misunderstanding, hence to separative thought and action.
“What do people get ‘mad’ about?” I think, generally, at some thing
another has 
done, or failed to do; or at some fancied slight. We feel annoyed
at the 
circumstances, really, not the person; although we foolishly
confuse the two. 
Now a thing done, is done; no amount of irritation can change it.
What is needed 
is a consideration of what led up to the doing; this should be
taken up as 
calmly as any other proposition. If someone annoys you or irritates
you by 
manner or action, it is to be assumed that he is not doing it on
purpose to 
annoy. Try to understand his viewpoint; examine the man’s
machinery, just as you 
would a machine. Some people have been known to get mad at a
machine, and feel 
destruction in regard to it; but where is the fault? The machine cannot
learn 
anything; the man can, and needs to. The main trouble, I think, is
that most 
people consider it perfectly proper to make their likes and
dislikes a basis for 
action, everything being judged from that basis. This, of course,
is altogether 
wrong, although very common. We are not called upon for judgment,
but for right 
action; to act rightly ourselves, and by precept and example induce
it in 
others. If we essay this task, it will at once appear that we
cannot act rightly 
unless calmly. We have to cultivate Calmness under all
circumstances. Calmness 
is like a rock; waves of irritation may dash at it, but cannot
affect it; it can 
be attained by seeing the necessity for it, and by endeavor which
is constant. 
It comes from “resting in the Real,” which is never moved, but
moves all things, 
sees all, without being involved.
So if we take all these things as just our “tryouts,” we shall be
able to get 
the right view of them, and the right attitude. These things in themselves
do 
not matter; it does matter that we are unshaken.
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Of course, I am saying these things to myself, for you know them
right well; 
only sometimes we forget and revert to habitude. But there is
always that place 
which is never moved, to rest on and in. So with confidence in Them
we go 
forward, and may Peace be ever ours.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Eighteen
“In order to be the knower of All-Self (tattwa-jynanain—a knowledge
of all the 
tattwas or forces) thou hast first of Self to be the knower.” This
is exactly 
what we are driving at; what W. Q. J. set forth in “Act for and as
the Self” as 
“the first lesson to learn”—and the hardest, as our minds are
constituted.
The mind or “thinking principle” is a general term, meaning the
power of 
thinking; but this power exercised partially, or restricted in
direction, makes 
what is called “mind” among men— “bundles of perceptions,”—my mind,
and your 
mind. So Patanjali says, “A firm position assumed, with the end in
view” is 
necessary, this position being that of the Spirit in Man “untouched
by troubles, 
works, fruits of works or desires.”
It is well to keep in mind what W. Q. J. said: “Realization comes
from dwelling 
upon the thing to be realized.” The “dwelling” has to be done by
the one who 
desires to “realize.” Consciousness, Spirit, Life, are really
synonymous terms 
expressing co existence; neither idea can be conceived of as apart
from the 
other two. Consciousness sees all, experiences all, makes all
changes, is all. 
It is the One Reality, and although the most important factor (to
use a word) in 
the world of differentiation, it appears the least Real because
indefinable. It 
is like the power of Sight which sees all things but cannot see
Itself, being 
universal, unchangeable and inexhaustible. Divide the Kosmos into
the permanent 
and invisible, and the visible and invisible impermanent; thus we
may hope to 
guide first the lower and terrestrial, and then the higher and
cosmic. The whole 
story is contained in, “That which is
                                                                                
     
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neither Light nor Darkness, Spirit nor Matter, but which is verily
the Root and 
Container of these—That Thou Art.”
If one were to attempt to write pages, they would be but
reiterations. Does not 
the whole of life’s purpose point to a realization of Unity in
Diversity; seeing 
all things at once and as One, instead of separately and in detail?
There are 
always the “pairs of opposites” in separative considerations, and
these are 
effects. The One Reality sees both as reflections, as light and
dark; if not 
seen, they do not exist.
“The nice old gentleman” claiming Theosophy to be “largely a matter
of belief” 
is like so many others who think themselves passing wise in lightly
dismissing 
things beyond them as mere matters of belief. “Tomorrow” is a
matter of belief 
from that point of view; but no one doubts the “morrow,” because of
“today” and 
“the days gone by,” which are matters of knowledge. Theosophy can
be tested out 
by present knowledge and proves it self with every test.
The common-sense of Theosophy must appeal to any man of the world;
the great 
thing is to have it.
W. Q. J. had it par excellence; his lead is a safe and a good one
to follow. If 
one has it, he will show himself in possession of knowledge which
to others 
seems desirable. Some will try for it, while others will be “too
busy” about 
their petty affairs. Who knows what seeds are sown in common-place 
conversations?
An acquaintance with the hopes, aims, and general life of those we
desire to 
help is desirable, and to be found only in contact and converse.
Such touch with 
others also emphasizes the Contrast and shows the value of our
philosophy in 
brighter Colors: the pairs of opposites—attitudes of mind—with and
without a 
philosophy of life.
I have read H.’s letter. The gist of it apparently is that he and
his chums, as 
named by him, know what H. P. B. desires Now. This is a large claim
and 
assumption of authority. H. P. B. well knew, and we can say,
“knows,” that just 
such claims would be made. We know that they are made in several
quarters. How 
is
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55
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any one desirous of following in Their footsteps to know what They
desire? 
Undoubtedly, the only guide is to be found in Their own records
left for that 
very purpose. Different minds and dispositions will interpret these
records in 
various ways peculiar to themselves, as is being done. The only
guide is 
oneself—as H. very truly says—but there must be an open mind, an
eager 
intellect, an unveiled spiritual perception, to have true
direction. This 
peculiar sentence in H.’s letter sounds like “cocksureness”: “If
you are certain 
that we are wrong and you are right, that ends it.” It is their
position from 
the first; they practically say, “We know what H. P. B. desires to
be done from 
day to day; we have found our Guru and are obeying Him. H. P. B.’s
and W. Q. 
J.’s message was that They had found Their souls, and that the
message was so 
that others could do likewise.” To my mind, this is not pointing to
the 
“message” itself, nor does it take into consideration the nature of
the Two who 
masqueraded in mortal garments; it only says, “WE KNOW.” If this is
not a demand 
for acquiescence, I do not know what is. He talks about our taking
Their 
writings as “authoritative”; well, they are, in the sense that They
told us the 
way and laid down the lines that would be best to follow.
As for myself, I bow to Their wisdom; I doubt it not. I and every
other was 
thought of in the message and the directions They gave. It was and
is not to be 
trimmed by interpretations, nor special mediums. It stands as Their
message as 
it was left by Them, and no one has the right to change it. WE WILL
NOT. Let 
others do as they please—assume authority if they think well of it;
but we 
reject every authority except that of our expanding spiritual
perceptions, and 
we recognize and give our devotion to the cause of Theosophy, and
are loyal unto 
death to the great Founders of the Movement. “They who undervalue
Her gift and 
Her creation, have not imbibed the Teaching and cannot assimilate
its benefits.”
Is it not strange that H. denounces “authority” as applied to Their
writings, 
yet puts it forward for himself and his confreres? This certainly
is the way of 
confusion and of delusion, and the one followed by every claimant
we know of. 
Strange that they cannot see the incongruity of their position.
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It is a crooked world all tangled up with false actions born of
false ideas of 
life. The present generation has a right to a presentation of
truth; a few will 
benefit greatly—and all, to some extent; but the time w come when
the truth 
shall prevail, and all the more convincingly because of having
stood through 
seas of error and rocks of determined opposition. Knowing this, we
can 
confidently go on, patiently, yes, even cheerfully, since even
those who flout 
the truth now will sometime come to know it; for these, too, we
serve and wait.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Nineteen
“What is the Perceiver?” is asked. I do not see how any definition
can be made. 
What is sight? Sight cannot see itself, yet it sees all things. It
cannot be 
defined or described, yet with out it nothing can be seen; it is
not changed 
though it receive millions of impressions, nor can a limit be
assigned to its 
action. Apply this to Consciousness, or the Perceiver, and there is
apparent the 
changeless, inexhaustible, unprovable Spirit. Reality Is, and
cannot be proved 
by changing unrealities. Space is not proved by the number of
things in it, 
insofar as its infinitude is concerned; yet a realization of the
impossibility 
of a beginning or ending to space can exist.
I think you have the idea right when you say that the trouble
exists in the 
“thinking principles” on each plane not being in accord. We
eternally endeavor 
to see the Perceiver as something different, something separate
from ourselves, 
whereas, “Thou art That.” Our methods of analysis are illustrated
in the old 
query, “Which was first, the hen or the egg?”—with no solution. Is
it not 
looking for something separate, different from what we conceive to
be ourselves? 
“Immortality is on both sides of death,” or change. He is wise
indeed who sees 
the Self in all things and all things in the Self. The time must
come for a 
being when “He”
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may know all things, but he would also know that he is not all nor
any of these 
things. So far as I can grasp words to convey an idea, he would
know himself to 
be “All-Self,” limitless, and there fore beyond anything that we
would call 
“knowing.” All manifestation is the result of the action of
Consciousness: would 
not the first film of substance be the homogeneous product of a
previous 
manifestation? The time must come for a being when he knows the
nature and 
possibilities of this homogeneous substance, but “He,” as a
conscious power, 
stands above and beyond all perceptions and conceptions—infinite,
all-pervading, 
creator, preserver, destroyer. The power of seeing is not visible;
it is the 
cause of visibility. But what is the use of troubling about all
this? There are 
many steps in the stairway of wisdom to be climbed, and one step
leads to 
another; we cannot climb the stairs by looking up at the top. I
think your 
expression of “finding the Unity in a pair of opposites to be in
itself one of a 
higher pair,” is a good one; this might represent the “rungs in
Jacob’s ladder.”
It is all right and well to state your difficulties to me. If
“mind” has power, 
and the will to give all possible help is there, action must
follow. Your faith 
in this must act as an open door. “Have confidence and faith in
Master,” applies 
to everything in life and all living; our doubts are the
deterrents. We have to 
beware that we ask not amiss—from wrong motive. I have no doubt
that adjustments 
are brought about where there is honest striving, and even apparent
mistakes are 
made to serve a good purpose in such case. The Masters are not
“absentee 
landlords.” They are present in the world and we should hold to
this fact always 
in our personal and collective efforts. We have to do as They do,
i.e., take 
conditions as they exist and work in them and through them. If all
do their 
best, Masters can adjust and bring all the lines together for the
best and 
highest good. In the effort of each, all cannot be in the same
place, nor doing 
the same thing in the same way, but if the aim is one for all, all
benefit, and 
the world as well.
I am going to keep your notes in regard to the inability of the
student to 
relate admonitions to himself. I think despair and despondency come
from not 
following what we know, and did not
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apply. If we make effort to apply what we know, with an end in
view, failure to 
achieve does not disconcert us, because we still have the active
knowledge and 
the end is still in view; it just means a continuation of effort.
“It is only in 
the present that we can gain wisdom.”
There is so much pettiness in the attitude toward small things, an
attitude 
which accentuates the personality instead of subjugating it. The
fight must 
begin there, for all these small irritations are based upon
self-assertion. I 
have seen these small matters neglected as unimportant, and then
the time came 
when this very habit of self-assertion showed itself as an
assertion against the 
Teachers Themselves: “They were nothing but persons, liable to
err,” etc.; 
ingratitude and disloyalty follow, as a matter of course, and even
loss of all 
benefit from the teachings. It is as you say— the Arjunas postpone
the 
engagement, awaiting some big thing to overcome; but they have not
the stamina, 
should they be so confronted. They fall or flee, blaming everyone
but 
themselves—self- assertion to the last, and another failure is
recorded where 
success might have been.
As to “The brother and sister of the Order of Regeneration”: all
down the ages 
men have been endeavoring to correct existing conditions, by simply
re-arranging 
them. A re-arrangement of errors does not make for knowledge; the
errors arise 
because of ignorance; knowledge must be sought as to the causes
that produce 
existing conditions. This, Theosophy teaches by showing what man
is, his origin, 
nature, history, and development so far, as well as his grand
destiny. Without 
this knowledge, all attempts to obtain true and better conditions
but plunge 
mankind deeper in the mire of ignorance and error. Works without
knowledge can 
but lead to more and more ignorant works, piling up all the time a
worse and 
worse future, as history has shown and is showing. Restraint from
any kind of 
food, habit or practice, leads nowhere. The wise man does not try
to regenerate 
the world by any one course, but having obtained knowledge, lives
according to 
it as best he can under any conditions, using his energy and
knowledge in the 
world and for the world, by presenting what he sees to be truth.
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It is well to have these things come out and to formulate right
ideas and 
applications in our minds, for they do not remain inert if we
“feel” them; we 
endow them with our life and energy, and they are our messengers
carrying seeds 
of thought for other minds. There is an occult meaning to
everything, and all 
things work together for good to those who love the Lord (Law).
That we should 
have been brought into direct communication with error, while
naming it truth, 
has its meaning; it must be a step in the great cause. We should be
glad to be 
able—and be able—to correct erroneous views and applications. In
that is our 
strength; our personal weaknesses and troubles are but bubbles on
the stream of 
time, which our “strength” will safely carry us through and over.
This thought, 
which comes from inner knowledge, should make us stronger, better
able, surer of 
victory.
It may appear to some that these are criticisms of the methods of
others; they 
are not so intended. They are intended to show there is a definite
philosophy of 
Theosophy; that it is scientifically based; that the mission of
distinctively 
Theosophical societies, viz., to study, apply and promulgate
Theosophy, is not 
filled by the holding of such misconceptions; and finally to prove
that such 
misconceptions are not based upon the philosophy of Theosophy,
whatever else may 
be their foundation.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY 
Letter Twenty
Do not all the senses resolve themselves into what may be called
“feeling”—the 
residuum of all perceptions, the resolution into the one
sense-perception? If I 
do not feel any perception there is none for me; also there are
grades of 
feeling, deep or superficial, more or less transient in effect. We
often say “I 
see” when we really do not mean what we call sight, but
comprehension, which to 
my way of thinking means a feeling in regard to the matter. We may
rightly call 
this “one sense” seeing, if that implies the grasp of all the
characteristics of 
the subject.
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It seems to me that the true body of man could be well considered
as a set of 
trained "mirrors" these as conscious lives have their own
“seeing” and “memory,” 
but man’s seeing and memory would not be theirs nor his feeling,
either. “The 
eyes of the Highest see through the eyes of the lowest,” but the
“lowest” does 
not see what the “Highest” does. In each case the seeing is related
to the area 
of vision. The Perceiver may be universally perceptive without
relation, or may 
be particularly related by focalization— which would mean a
shutting out of all 
perceptions but those upon which feeling was concentrated. In such
latter case, 
the various “mirrors” thus cut off from contemplation would have
their own 
seeing, which might or might not be stored and regained by the
Perceiver in 
accordance with the training given them by the individualized
being. “Kutastha 
he who standeth on high, unaffected. But there is another spirit
designated as 
the Supreme Spirit—Paramatma—which permeates and sustains the three
worlds.” The 
former could be taken as the Perceiver, the latter as Consciousness
per Se.
JiveAtma is the One Life; from and in this arises being and
Divinity; i.e., full 
self-consciousness. Light, Life, Being, and Divinity—growth and 
individualization within the One, ever tending toward greater
universality: this 
seems to tell the story, but words do not always carry the meaning
of the 
speaker or writer; yet sometimes a new meaning is given by the
juxtaposition of 
ideas as expressed in words. The usual tendency is to consider
differentiation 
in general and in particular, forgetting that That which sees
differentiation is 
not any of the things seen, and to attribute to the “sights” the
qualities which 
can be seen and known only by That which sees.
Yes, the problems are to be faced now, in this life, because they
present 
themselves. And we have the ways and means to “over come” in our
philosophy of 
life. Does not the command to “stand aside” mean to look on, to
watch the play 
of forces? We cannot do that if we make ourselves the lighter. “Be
not thou the 
warrior, let him battle for thee,” bespeaks renunciation of
self-interest in the 
result of one’s actions.
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Do you not think that much of our feeling of “strenuosity” comes
from wanting 
what we want and not wanting what we don’t want? Like and dislike.
To be neither 
elated by success nor downcast by failure is the even way; we know
that and we 
keep trying for it. The very effort and desire to attain will bring
it about 
through all the circumstances which are our teachers.
I think that the way is to begin with the small things. Do not
permit yourself 
to be annoyed by them: we demand services as our right in so many
ways, and are 
annoyed when we do not get them as we think they should come. At
least, that is 
the way I have found it. And adopting that attitude in the small,
the same is 
maintained in the great, and much more easily. Also, to help us,
perhaps, there 
is a multitude of small annoyances to each great trouble.
If sensitiveness goes no deeper than the personality, it will be
constantly 
offending the basis of that false entity, and be a source of
irritation to the 
person, as to others by reaction. With strong natures this is
difficult to 
control, but a simple rule might be adopted which would help much
if carried 
out: “Never speak nor write if the slightest trace of irritation
remains”; wait; 
or, if speaking or writing is necessary, take some subject which
permits of 
accord. It is remarkable how quickly one state may be stilled and
quite another 
one induced by a recognition of the fact and a use of knowledge.
Another help is 
to take everything that comes as a matter of course—as it really is
law. No use, 
expending energy on what might have been, nor throwing the onus of
conditions on 
any one else. When the condition is taken care of calmly and
dispassionately, 
the causes that led up to it may be judicially considered and
stored away for 
future use. In this way power grows, is “stored.” The other way
fritters away 
energy and causes its dispersion in others.
If we are looking for light, it is because we find darkness where
at one time we 
thought there was light: this is also experience and of the truer
sort. One’s 
personal experience is one facet through which experience may be
gained; to be 
of real value it has to be related to and made a part of all
experiences. It is 
as you say, “de-
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pendence on principles and faith in those principles” leads us out
of the 
obscurity cast by the bundles of perceptions that are dignified by
the name of 
“mind.” This means a stoppage of the ordinary basis of action, the
(lower) mind 
in use, and a creation from the source within, in a true relation,
a creation 
which proceeds from the basis of the eternal verities. “By those
who see the 
truth and look into the principles of things, the ultimate
characteristic of 
these both is seen.”
Undeniably, it is startling to many to think that perhaps we had
some of the 
Masters working directly among us, with us, and for us, and that we
judged them 
as though they were actuated by our small and selfish motives. This
might not be 
true for us, but it is true for many who are now very much in the
public eye as 
Theosophical exponents, and who appear to be still oblivious of the
fact. That 
this lack of discrimination should lead to all sorts of mistakes
and wrong steps 
is easily perceived, as also that many who came later were blinded
by those who 
claimed to know. It must be clear to everyone who has done much
Theosophical 
reading and study of H. P. B. and W. Q. J., that the failure of the
T. S. lay 
principally in that non-recognition, for it implies a lack of
comprehension and 
power to apply the philosophy given. “They may learn, but what of
that?” It 
would be well for us and for the world if all had held true to the
Teachers and 
Teachings; we know that they have not. Belief in any one or any
thing is not 
called for, but devotion to the lines laid down is, and this is
sure to bring 
about right understanding and right relation.
These words occur in H. P. B.’s message: “Although Theosophical
ideas have 
entered into every development or form which awakening spirituality
has assumed, 
yet Theosophy pure and simple has still a severe battle to fight
for recognition 
. . . there are others among us who realize intuitionally that the
recognition 
of pure Theosophy—the philosophy of the rational explanation of
things and not 
the tenets—is of the most vital importance inasmuch as it alone can
furnish the 
beacon light needed to guide humanity on its true path. This should
never be 
forgotten.”
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To us, here is clearly and unequivocally stated the duty of those
who desire to 
carry on the work done by Her, and there is no question at all as
to Who and 
what She spoke for. It is that we are by every means in our power
endeavoring to 
do. We have devoted our lives to it, and there is no energy to
spare for any 
other issue.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-One
I am more than glad that surroundings are pleasant and prospects
fair. While you 
may be mentally living with us, as you say, we are in like manner
living with 
you. It is like getting a multiplied experience—a study of the
hearts of men. I 
think we shall get some good things out of it all, and at long
range, too.
Yes, there is really a Thinker, who thinks; who has perceptions on
the 
phenomenal side of every plane. While in waking consciousness,
those who 
identify the Thinker with the phenomenal perceptions of physical
existence are 
fully as wise as one would be who identifies himself with the
scenes in a moving 
picture show. Such an one would not be creative in active thought, 
deliberatively peopling his current in space with thought-forms
that spring from 
a knowledge of the true; he would be a mere reflector of
impressions—a sort of 
battledore and shuttle-cock; of such is not the kingdom of heaven.
These thinkers have gotten themselves into the realm of “passing
shadows” which 
shut out the light. They may be likened to the prodigal son who
left his 
father’s house and fed on husks with the swine. Some day, they may
like him 
remember and say, “I will arise and go to my father.” When they do
so and 
endeavor to find the way back, they will be helped by the
deliberate thoughts of 
those who have lighted the fires for their guidance; we all can
help in that 
way, as well as in others. There should be an encouragement in that
thought. 
Have you seen Mr. Judge’s article in the Path, “Each Member a
Center”? “As 
above, so below—” analogy everywhere and correspon-
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dence. But correspondence does not imply sameness of process. The
thinker is a 
creator, and endows his thoughts with self-reproductive power for
such time as 
accords with their nature, and the kind of matter they relate to.
Kinds of 
matter and states of consciousness are intimately related; in fact,
the teaching 
indicates that Manasic consciousness has its habitat in the fifth
state of 
matter as does Buddhic in the sixth state. The permanency of
thought creations 
would naturally be greater in subtile than in gross matter; these
last would die 
out in short order were it not that the lower aspect of Manas
receives the first 
impact, and, by attention given, recharges their batteries to a
greater or less 
degree. That attention is of the nature of identification with the
impact. Here 
we have the meaning of self-interest. The destruction of these
obstacles lies in 
renunciation of self-interest in the result of actions and reliance
upon the 
power of Truth—the Self—the Supreme.
You say, “It is strange how little faith there is in the power of
truth.” I 
translate this, “in the power of truth perceived.” There is power
in this 
perception, when reliance is placed on it. Rely on the power of
truth perceived; 
if this is done, there is not much left for any other assumption of
power. So 
with speaking; it is an acquisition—a talent gained by yourself,
and for use—not 
of the transient physical man, but of the Divine Man. To talk
Theosophy in the 
spirit of Theosophy cannot be wrong; so what we have to learn is to
guard and 
“use with care those living messengers called words.” Let us make
all our 
faculties serve the one end.
That action and reaction take place more rapidly with you is not a
bad sign. It 
shows a fluidic state wherein the sediment may be precipitated, and
it will 
be—if reliance is placed upon the power of truth. For the nature of
the inner 
man is of Truth, and the perception of truth is of the same nature.
Action and 
reaction must be mutual and complementary.
The “theosophical” meeting that you write of is much as I should
imagine—they 
have missed the key as have so many others; they have become
involved in the 
processes of life. I wonder if these unfortunates ever think what
it was that H. 
P. B. founded?
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Was it any branch or the people who belong to branches? “Let it be
understood 
that with the exoteric society H. P. B. has nothing to do.” That
which was 
founded by H. P. B. was not the diversified aggregation now
existing, but 
something else which bore that name. They might also consider the
saying well 
known to them, “If ye love me ye will keep my commandments.” It
would be good if 
— should voluntarily desire to come with us, but I do not think it
wise to press 
any one or try to convince; make bold statements if you wish, to
provoke 
questions and stimulate enquiry, but let it go at that. Do not try
to explain 
everything so fully as to leave no room for germinative thought on
the part of 
enquirers.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-Two
Why is it necessary to sleep? Primarily, because the nature of the
body is such 
that it can stand the impact of the life-current needed to allow
the exhibition 
of waking-consciousness, for a portion of the time, only; the
resistance of 
waking-consciousness must cease, so that the “current” flows
through the body 
unobstructed, thus renewing the ability to withstand the impact.
This impact 
during loss of sleep tends to break down the cells of the body and
organs faster 
than new ones can be formed. The body will die from lack of sleep
more quickly 
than from lack of food.
It is the body that sleeps—the Ego does not. When the impact of
Life grows too 
strong for the body, the power to function through it ceases; the
Ego, 
therefore, functions in other sheaths until the body becomes
equilibrized.
The Ego lives its own separate life whenever it becomes free from
the trammels 
of matter—that is, during the physical sleep. Its thoughts are not
subjective 
pictures in the brain, such as our thoughts when the body is in
use, but living 
acts—realities—for they instantly realize themselves in action by
the power of 
Kriya sakti, that power which transforms ideas instantaneously into
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visible forms. Sometimes these thought-actions are reflected in the
brain and 
the person says, “I dreamed thus and so.” He feels as though he had
lived 
through something as a person (which means his
brain-consciousness), whereas as 
such he had not; but what he perceived through the brain were
partial 
impressions, usually distorted, as other ideas mingle by the power
of the 
association of ideas. It can be seen, then, why Right thought and
Right action 
must prevail in order to be able to use the higher knowledge on
this plane. 
Right thought prepares the “thinking principle,” and Right action
so prepares 
the physical brain that no distortion arises from it. The “real
man” knows; the 
evanescent personality does not know, in the race generally,—but
may. This is 
the great work which our present efforts, if persisted in, lead to.
From the fact that we “wake” during the day, and “sleep” at night,
might be 
deduced the conclusion that the direct and in direct rays of the
Sun (Sun and 
Moon) have much to do with the states. As a rule men do not rise
and retire with 
the Sun, especially in races where intellectual growth is marked;
on the other 
hand, lower races—simpler minds—do. This might be taken to indicate
that Manas, 
being of a higher plane, and partially active on the physical, has
the power to 
draw from either the direct or indirect rays of the Sun in
maintenance of the 
body. In either case, how-ever, the body will remain in condition
for waking 
consciousness for only a certain period. Being of the earth earthy,
it is 
subject to the general laws of forces pertaining to the earth, of
which it is a 
part.
The general laws of forces pertaining to the earth, again, are the
subsidiary 
results of the higher laws under which advanced beings are
evolving; so, it may 
be summed up that the body sleeps because it needs rest (the Ego
does not need 
it all the time), and because body, Egos, all beings and
Manvantaras are 
possible only under the law of periodicity—activity followed by
rest. Rest 
represents “the unmanifested,” and activity the manifested, the
“Unmanifested” 
being a limited but general state, such as “sleep,” in and from
which, as we 
have heard, other higher states are acces-
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sible. So there you are, link upon link, chain upon chain—all
connected and all 
under one great law. I have your last pamphlet from Path IV. It is
nourishment 
in tabloid form, and will give basis for many talks. Thank you on
behalf of 
myself and others who will be benefited. No doubt, your heart-felt
desire for 
that benefit will be felt by those open. Yes, indeed; all our
gratitude should 
be to H. P. B., and to her “alter ego” W. Q. J., particularly, for
those 
building-up efforts which have for so long been passed over by
selfishly 
ambitious Theosophists (save the mark!). That we are so fortunate
as to be 
brought in touch and understanding of his endeavor is the best of
Karma; and 
that we should feel impelled to bring this benefit to the notice of
others is 
indicative of discrimination and a test of true discipleship.
“Inasmuch as ye 
have done it to the least of these, ye have done it unto me.”
It matters little if few come to the meetings; these few may be the
means of 
bringing many; and besides, the effort and sacrifice are what bring
the ultimate 
result. “A few drops of rain do not constitute a monsoon but they
presage it.”
In our age it is well to consider what the Great Ones have done and
do. Age 
after age, year after year, They conserve the knowledge and wait,
doing what 
They can, and how They can in accordance with cyclic law. Knowing
this and doing 
thus, there can be no room for doubt or discouragement. “Theosophy
is for those 
who want it, and for none others.” We are holding, waiting and
working for those 
few earnest souls who will grasp the plan and further the work,
“for the harvest 
is ready and the laborers are few.” Those who were entitled to the
first 
invitation to the feast have had it, and now with many of these—sad
to say—their 
ears are so dulled and their attention so diverted that no number
of repetitions 
will reach them. Yet it must be held out continually for all. That
is our 
work—our self-assumed work. We have the example in W. Q. J., in
means, methods 
and spirit, and we, so doing, serve that Great Lodge of which he
was and is a 
great and devoted part.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
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THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY 
Letter Twenty-Three
Reactions must come; a period of high thought and endeavor is not
yet the 
consummation, and must of necessity— being above the normal
level—bring about a 
condition below it. Knowing this to be the law of action and
reaction, the 
buoyancy resulting from this knowledge should bring us quickly from
below to a 
higher level than before, to a better understanding.
Ships, sailors and men of all kinds get into “doldrums” at times.
The sailors 
know that there is no getting anywhere without the ship, and the
ship goes not 
without wind, so they—just wait for the wind. Some, I have heard,
go to 
whistling in order to raise a breeze, but I do not imagine that the
wind is 
hurried at all by their efforts, and the whistlers only keep
themselves in a 
state of irritation by their deferred hopes. The wiser take the
opportunity to 
repair their kits, and do a general overhauling, so that when the
wind does 
come, all is ready for it. The general position with them, no
doubt, is that a 
sailor’s life is “work all the time,” the kind of work. being
determined only by 
the circumstances.
A true student of Theosophy is, I think, a good deal like the
sailor in many 
ways—particularly in the realization that whatever comes, it means
work, in one 
way or another. A realization of the thing to be done gives the
right direction 
to effort. And we, who know that the universe exists for the
purposes of Soul, 
can be but momentarily disturbed by anything that may come to pass.
You have 
attitude, and the adjustment of the effects of events to it must
become more and 
more easy and rapid as time goes on, and enough “monads” have been
examined to 
get the general classification. Call it a study class doing
examples in 
obstacles. To my mind, you are dead right in saying we blunder if
we think that 
we get anything outside. That is the tendency of the age—analysis
instead of 
synthesis. We have not only to fight this in ourselves, but
likewise to meet the 
effects of it on every hand. It
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is a tough fight, but it makes strong souls; and we accept both
these 
propositions. We did not start out expecting a “train deluxe” to
heaven. We knew 
it was to be a fight every step of the way; and not only do we have
to fight, 
but to meet and surmount all the obstacles that the enemy—this 
civilization—places in our way. But in view of the great prize—the
uplift of 
humanity—these obstacles offer opportunity to get into fighting
trim, and as 
such should be welcomed rather than decried or denied. We know all
these things, 
yet we have to say them over and over again to ourselves and to
each other for 
mutual encouragement. And it is right that it should be so. The
comrades who are 
well support those who may be suffering from illness and disability
from 
whatever cause, and they are right glad to do so, for our army is
an army by 
reason of mutual support. Think what OUR ARMY is, and despair—if
you can.
I am reading all your statements with interest; they all show a
consideration 
from the right standpoint—from Universals to particulars. I think
with you that 
what is called “old-fashioned hard thinking” is worse than useless,
and that “if 
one keeps pondering on the philosophy or some application of it,
ideas arise in 
the mind.” Pondering on the Self as in all things, and all things
in the Self 
must be productive, even as the Self is the producer.
It is not so much what we can formulate as what we consciously
live; the 
formulation may give direction and continuity, and so is useful to
ourselves and 
to others; but the application of right thought comes from pondering
on the 
Self. Your letters indicate that attitude. The thing to be guarded
against is 
the materializing of the ideas, and I see no sign of that in you.
The Egoic 
consciousness, being not limited like that of the physical, and in
a state of 
matter inconceivable to us, our terms cannot comprehend it,
although its 
universal application can be brought to bear upon our present
plane, and a 
junction made—which is no junction in the ordinary sense, but a
higher 
view-point. All these attempts are efforts, and everywhere in
Nature we see that 
effort brings results.
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Judge said “All, all is the Self.” He said this for no other
possible reason 
than that the idea might be seized upon and held. The Gita says:
“Enveloped by 
my magic illusion I am not visible to the world” (that is, to
segregated forms 
of perception), “for this my divine illusive power acting through
the natural 
qualities is difficult to surmount, and those only can surmount it
who have 
recourse to Me alone.” “I am the Cause unseen, and the visible
effect.” “But for 
those who thinking of me as identical with all, constantly worship
me, I BEAR 
THE BURDEN OF THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THEIR HAPPINESS.”
All these quotations you know very well, yet they cannot be too
often repeated. 
I think you stated the gist of the matter when you said that any
differentiation 
whatever is Maya—because impermanent. There is nothing but
Consciousness per se; 
all the rest are perceptions in and of different states of matter,
and in 
infinite aggregations.
You have had a hard week of it; look for the compensation not for
yourself, but 
under Law.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-Four
The despondency of the age is a general tendency, partly personal
and partly 
belonging to the age. It comes in cycles, as you will have
observed. When it 
comes, the cycle has reached its lowest point. Knowing this, we
begin to lift up 
that cycle by rising quickly from it, and so help to reduce its
influence, not 
only for ourselves but for the age. When we are at the low point,
we should try 
to remember our fellows who are unconsciously suffering from that
of which we 
not only know the cause, but the remedy.
“The student oftentimes by reason of the changes going on within,
feels himself 
less fitted to cope with existing conditions, but He Must Work. It
is his only 
salvation. What is needed is an utter and entire consecration of
the worker to 
the Cause.”
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Never were truer words said, and all that follows is in direct
line. Keep that 
spirit, and all will be well. You have asked for a synopsis of what
was said at 
the last meeting, but I find this most difficult, as I do not
remember the words 
I used. The pamphlet was used as a basis for talk—the subject, “The
Unknown 
God.” One questioner asked, “How could there be a philosophy of the
Infinite?” 
Reply was, there could not be a philosophy of the Infinite, but
there could be a 
philosophy of all Existence. Whether there be existence or none,
the Infinite 
Is, and must be outside of all speculation; the philosophy is in
regard to the 
origin, nature, history, development and destiny of Man, and his
worlds—for 
worlds and men develop together. I then gave the idea of Space as
representing 
the Infinite; of Consciousness, per Se, the Power to
perceive—without anything 
to perceive; the desire to know itself could only be fulfilled by
seeing itself 
reflected. The possibilities of all grades of density of matter
being in the 
primordial matter, and the Power of Creation, Preservation and
Destruction 
residing in Consciousness, the first differentiation took place in
accordance 
with the desire. Functioning in that denser state, and thereby
obtaining form, a 
further differentiation was produced, more dense, and so on, down
to the present 
state. Pointed out that it was the desire to live that kept us
alive; the desire 
for sentient life that brought us back into incarnation. As we rise
to higher 
planes of being, desire becomes less individual and more
general—for the welfare 
of humanity and all creatures. From this we may be able to get some
perception 
that Desire, from being general in the beginning of manifestation,
became more 
and more individual as denser matter was evolved, until with us it
reached the 
point of separated personal desire. The way back must lie through continual
approach to that Unity from which all have come. The philosophy
exists in order 
that Man may rebecome a God—as he was and in reality Is.
Your last pamphlet is to my mind a great one; it points out so many
things so 
clearly. For instance, when it speaks of “analysis” as being the
“thought-form” 
of the age, it indicates to me that our general consciousness is
one of 
analysis—classifications—
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no synthesis anywhere. In pointing this out to others, there is
much opportunity 
to show how narrow a range of thinking our much lauded civilization
has. Then 
how clearly stands out the statement, “There can be but one
philosophy, which is 
a synthesis of the whole, and which by its consistency and logic
proves itself.”
On the other hand, what have we? Warring dogmatic religions;
science which 
clings to a materialistic basis; and a psychology which is worse
off than 
either, because it attempts to deal with meta-physics from a
material basis of 
consciousness; and at last, so-called New Thought which devotes its
energies to 
one physical life. What a contrast! How can men fail to realize
that they are 
ignorant indeed, and that none of these things bring knowledge.
Then they would 
arouse themselves to seek for light. The student of Theosophy knows
that the 
reason they are so blind to patent facts is that they are
surrounded by the 
clouds of past lives and cannot pierce through them; that all that
can be done 
is to let the light so shine that all who will may see it, thus
sowing seed for 
future harvests. It would be a hopeless task were it not for
Reincarnation.
I am glad that you are able to perceive and hold the right attitude
in regard to 
events. In both of your letters there is evidence, perhaps
indefinable, yet 
plainly perceptible, of an inner action; moreover, there is more of
unanimity—accord—however the outer at times may seem to deny it.
While we work, 
we grow; we grow most when our thought is so occupied with the work
that we have 
no thought for ourselves, nor for events, in their color and their
relation to 
us. Knowing that there must be light and shade, heat and cold, pain
and pleasure 
in life, we can take them as we take any climate in which we live,
and just 
accept what comes—as the meta-physical climate of the time, place
and condition 
in which we are—and go on with the appointed work.
What we have learned gives us a larger view of Karma than the mere
personal. We 
begin to perceive that beyond the personal there comes to the
worker in the 
field of Theosophy—the student disciple—those other phases of Karma
which arise 
from family and race. By the very nature of the effort made, and
the position
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from which it is made, those other phases must be felt more and
more as the 
student progresses. It may seem to him that it is all personal; and
it is, in 
the sense that he is a focus for it; but, if we have assimilated
what the steps 
must be that lead to adeptship, we must know that the battle we are
fighting is 
not our own, but that of the world, and that the sins of the world
will in 
increasing measure be laid on us until we have finally conquered.
If, on the 
contrary we take these things as personal only, we may conquer them
as such, but 
of us then it would be said, “Inasmuch as ye did it not unto the
least of these, 
ye did it not unto me.”
Your Sunday meeting was certainly a small one, and apparently of
little use; but 
who can tell? We know that it is the effort that counts, and having
made it, 
Karma does the rest. There are many of these poor unfortunates who
are caught in 
the mazes of the psychic realm; as long as they look there for
their “guru,” he 
will not be found. Good thoughts and ideas may go quite easily with
self-delusion; indeed, if they did not, there would be less
delusion. All these 
things are good practice for you; each “crank” presents a new phase
of delusion, 
and has to be studied at the time and handled as well as may be, as
well as 
studied further subsequently. It is fortunate also that they come
to you in such 
small detachments, and not in crowds or with crowds. The greater
the obstacle 
the greater the effort, so we will see to it that the good work
goes on, with 
charity toward all and with malice toward none, and with all our
power as the 
cycle permits. Well, “sleep sweet” and may you bring from the other
side of life 
all necessary power and help.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-Five
“Doubt nothing, fear nothing, chafe at nothing”—we often have to
say to 
ourselves, when conditions seem to hedge us in and prevent the
carrying out of 
some good work. These conditions are not only our Karma but that of
those we 
have in mind to help. Yet we must strive for them, the best we can,
to lift 
their Karma
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and ours. Sometimes it may seem as if everything conspired to laugh
at us and 
deride our best efforts; but we know all that is but the dead
weight of the 
world’s conditions which the Masters, and those who have
volunteered, are 
working continuously to lift; and we feel the assurance which comes
from 
understanding that none of this struggle is in vain. Masters do all
that is 
possible for Them to do; we strive to follow Their example in doing
Their work 
in this world of conditioned existence, each in his place; the
knowledge that it 
is Their work, and what should be done, sustains us. What matters
it, then, what 
kind of conditions confront us? Nothing has yet stopped us,
although at times it 
has seemed that we could go no further; and we are constrained to
see that 
nothing can stop us—not life nor death nor any other thing. So we
cheer-fully go 
on to the end of ends, with our lives and all that they contain—that
All may 
Live, following the footsteps of those Great Ones who have trodden
the Path 
before us.
One may constitute himself a disciple by his own inward desire, but
that does 
not involve the Masters until he reaches that degree of development
where he is 
actually accepted as a chela. Masters cannot be drawn in
unwillingly; neither 
will They ever refuse help when deserved. Masters in bodies do take
upon 
themselves the Karma of that which They teach, and where an actual
relation 
mutually assumed exists, They must feel bodily the errors of
omission and 
commission of each pupil. Undoubtedly, Those who have been here
would have 
remained until this time, or longer, had the professed disciples
been true to 
their pledges.
It is said They hold back the awful Karma of the world in order to
provide 
further opportunities. But They do not feel the Karma, while
knowing it, and 
mitigating the evil forces generated by Man. The power to feel all,
implies the 
power of not to feel. They must be able to do the right thing, in
the right 
measure, at the right time, and in the right place, and thus can
isolate 
themselves from prying curiosity, or desire toward Them from wrong
motive. 
Otherwise Their work would be impeded. A desire to know is not a
condition, and 
the proper condition
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is the necessary requisite for a demand upon Them; the demand is
contained in 
the condition. in Their Message to the Western World, They have
shown how They 
may be reached, even publicly, in every possible way. Those who
admit that 
Masters exist, and deny or ignore Their message, can hardly be in
the way of 
receiving Their direct help. Yet help is accorded to all in a
general way, each 
raising the self by the Self until the requisite condition of
notice or demand 
exists. None can be shut out; the welfare of all is desired.
Yet there must be indirect ways, and the direct way. If any aspirant
cannot be 
made to perceive the direct way, then he must take the way he sees.
His 
inability to see bespeaks his Karma, his condition; so also, the
fact of not 
having had the Message brought forcibly to him bespeaks former
opportunities 
deliberately turned aside or neglected—a Karma numerously incurred
during the 
past thirty-odd years. Much as it may seem like dogma, there is but
one 
philosophy; there are Masters; there is Their Message. It is not
dogma because 
it is a statement of fact, which each is invited to prove for
himself—and shown 
how to do it. True knowledge has been lost to the world; the
Masters restore it. 
They help those directly whom They can; those so helped help others
directly and 
indirectly. The cycle has an upward, less material, tendency; it
needs right 
direction, which the direct and indirect influence of the Message
provides. 
Blessed are those who are able to perceive and take the direct way.
You are quite right, I think, in your deductions regarding
“repetitions.” They 
are, in the case of my talks, re-petitions; only, most do not see
what is in 
them. “There is nothing new under the sun”; there is only a handing
on of what 
has been known before. As the synthesis of the philosophy can be
given in a very 
few words comparatively, those who make only one application of the
words—see 
only one color of the prism, hear only one sound of the
scale—naturally get the 
monotony of it. I think the main obstacle in the way of some is an
attitude of 
criticism, such as, for instance, is taken in saying, “His
interpretation does 
not agree
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with mine;” or anything, in fact, that considers the person, rather
than the 
meaning.
Our last meeting was a good one. One questioner asked, ‘Why is it
that 
Theosophists are so passive to political and social conditions?” My
reply was: 
No true Theosophist is passive to any-thing; his knowledge,
however, shows him 
where his energy can be best used for the benefit of humanity. He
does not waste 
his energy poulticing the boils on the body corporate, but devotes
it to the 
pointing out of the seat of the disease and the remedy. It is
apparent to 
anybody that the cause of all human troubles is selfishness and
ignorance. The 
ignorance, which is the cause of the selfishness, lies in men’s way
of 
thinking—their ideas in regard to life. The prevailing idea is that
there is but 
one life, and that each must struggle for himself as against all
others. The 
very idea contains in it “fight,” “opposition,”—his hand against
every man and 
every man’s hand against him. As long as these ideas prevail in
men’s minds, 
they will act selfishly and in opposition, where self-interest is
concerned. The 
Theosophist knows what the true way is; that man lives many lives,
and that in 
each life he reaps what he sowed in other lives, as well as in this
one; that if 
every man were to have this knowledge, he would see that true
happiness for all 
can be obtained only when each human being uses all his powers for
the good of 
others. Under such a way of thinking, no man would be allowed to
suffer for one 
moment, because there would be many willing hands to help on every
side. The 
greatest need, then, is to have a right and true philosophy of
life, for the 
following of it will not only bring relief from the many forms of
suffering, but 
a knowledge that will lead humanity to greater heights. The
Theosophist works to 
relieve the cause in the only way possible. Doubtless, if
Theosophists were more 
numerous, they would be found relieving every possible distress to
the best of 
their ability; but, unfortunately for the world, they are few, and
are thus 
compelled to put all their energy into calling attention to the
true nature of 
man, and to a philosophy of life, so that more and more minds may
be turned that 
way, and the day of relief brought nearer.
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This was not by any means an ideal answer, but it seemed to be what
the 
questioner was ready to consider.
With regard to Metaphysics and Physics; metaphysics is beyond
physics and must 
have preceded the latter. It seems to me that Metaphysics becomes
physics by 
ideation on the plane of physical density. To the perceiver on any
plane, 
perceptions are objective to him; on a higher plane than this,
would they not be 
his “physics,” although metaphysical to us? From our plane, that
which is 
metaphysical becomes physical when embodied. Perhaps I do not get
what you want; 
if there is nothing here, come again.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-Six
“Try; try; ever keep trying.” “Realization comes from dwelling on
the things to 
be realized.” Following such injunctions of Those Who Know, a
constant gain will 
appear. Ups and downs there will be, in accordance with the swing
of the 
pendulum, or, more properly, the turn of the spiral. Knowing the
law of action, 
we can keep on, whether we are at the highest or lowest point of
the cycle. As 
time goes on and the right attitude is maintained, we shall grow
less and less 
subject to the high or the low.
To realize, at the beginning, the continuous effort required, would
be 
discouraging; but as the greatness of the task we have set before
ourselves 
becomes more and more real, we grow into the condition represented
in the six 
glorious virtues as that of being constitutionally incapable of
deviating from 
the right path.
We have in the past generated, or created by thought, and
re-inforced by action, 
numerous elemental beings of the nature of Prakriti. As long as our
thought is 
in keeping with their natures, no great friction is observed; but
when our 
thoughts fail to provide them with sustenance, the struggle for
life begins, and 
must continue until these creatures of ours die, or are so changed
as to cause 
no hindrance. It is a new Manvantara in our little solar system,
“the guiding 
spirit” ruling, controlling, or sweeping away
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all entities connected with the old evolution, in accordance with
the key-note 
of the new. So, in the concrete state of the old, and the nebulous
state of the 
new, we have to go through the preparatory Rounds. Great Nature
repeats her 
action in accordance with Law, in the small as well as the great.
As to “the hardest job of reconciliation” set you in this matter of
H—: you will 
remember that I said in a recent letter that I wanted you to keep
in touch with 
the various events, so that you might be able to observe
developments—see how 
things work out under certain methods founded on principles, for
all these 
things are object lessons.
In the first place, there is no room for misjudgment; judge not at
all as to 
persons should be the rule. As to their ideas, their capacity to
grasp one set 
implies capacity to grasp other kinds. If they have wrong
conceptions and are 
amenable to reason, their wrong conceptions can be reasonably
considered on 
their merits— in themselves, first, and then in their relation to
other 
conceptions. In all this, there has to be first sought points of
agreement—all 
of them; in fact, show a disposition to agree. At no time should
any 
oppositional attitude be felt or assumed—no expressed or implied
superiority of 
knowledge. If opposition exists even in thought, a counter opposition
is set up, 
and the aim to enlighten is not effected. Of course, none of this
prevents one 
from seeing things as they are, and leaving the door wide open for
others to see 
what we do.
Our work lies among those whose ideas are in strong opposition to
what we know 
as truth. We have to meet ideas as we find them, and extend them in
the 
direction we know. This is a different case from a talk on
Theosophy, where we 
are giving an exposition in order that others may know what it is.
One of the results of wisdom is the ability—in degree, at least—to
do the right 
thing, at the right time, and in the right place. The object of all
right doing 
is to help others who are seen and known not to be right. Our
seeing and knowing 
their present condition gives us the clue to the kind and manner of
helping. If 
we judge them incapable of help, we shall afford them none. So
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we judge not, but like the Sun and Nature, treat all alike—shine
for all, work 
for all, irrespective of presently held ideas, or presumable
qualifications in 
any. Such has been the course of all great Teachers. They come to
call “not 
saints, but sinners to repentance.” All have had their Judases, but
even Judases 
have to have their chance with the rest; even they are inherently
perfect, and 
having free will may rise to the opportunity. The Gospel hymn which
says, “While 
the lamp holds out to burn, the vilest sinner may return,” voices a
truth; so 
what is there in all this that calls for mortal judgment? None, I
think you will 
say, when you consider the matter in its wider bearing, and in the
light of 
Karma which brings opportunity both to give and to receive.
There is no pretense of personal virtue or knowledge in handing on
for the 
benefit of others what one perceives to be good for them. A claim,
even a 
thought of personal virtue, is detrimental— because it is personal.
The Egoic 
perceptions on this plane are limited by this very thing.
“Thy body is not self, thy Self is in itself without a body, and
either praise 
or blame affects it not.”
“Deliverance of mind from thralldom by the cessation of sin and
faults is not 
for ‘Deva-Egos’ (reincarnating egos). Thus says the ‘Doctrine of
the Heart.’
“The Dharma of the ‘Heart’ is the embodiment of Bodhi (True, Divine
Wisdom), the 
Permanent and Everlasting.”
“To live to benefit Mankind is the first step. To practise the six
glorious 
virtues is the second.”
The six glorious virtues are:
ONE—“Sama.” It consists in obtaining perfect mastery over the mind
(the seat of 
emotions and desires), and in forcing it to act in subordination to
the 
intellect which had been strengthened by attaining— 
(1.) “Right knowledge of the real and the unreal” (Right
Philosophy).
(2.) “Perfect indifference to the fruits of one’s actions, both
here and 
hereafter.” (Renunciation of the fruits of actions.)
TWO—“Dama.” Complete mastery over bodily acts.
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THREE— "Uparati."Renunciation of all formal religion, and
the acquirement of 
contemplation of objects without being in the least disturbed in
the performance 
of the great task one has set before oneself.
FOUR—“Titiksha.” Cessation of desire and a constant readiness to
part with 
everything in the world.
FIVE—“Samadana.” That which renders the student constitutionally
incapable of 
deviating from the right path.
six—“Shradda.” Implicit confidence on the part of the pupil in his
Master’s 
power to teach, and his own power to learn.
SEVEN—One other, and the last accomplishment required, is an
intense desire for 
liberation from conditioned existence, and for transformation into
the One Life.
While some of these may be beyond us, we can “practise” in these
directions; in 
fact, we have been so doing, and we know that practice makes
perfect. Well, I 
must stop now and send you the best I have, with love.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-Seven
It is said that there is but one sense; the different organs are
but modes of 
reception. From the same point of view it might be said that there
is but one 
“Eye”; the rest are modes of seeing. These, of course, have to be
brought into 
line for unobstructed vision. The various soul sheaths, as I
understand it, are 
formed from the first ethereal substance of which the permanent
body is 
composed. Man is the microcosm of the macrocosm; so, imagine one
individual in 
his permanent body at the beginning of a solar system: that body
will contain 
within it all possible changes of density; those changes will be
the necessary 
steps, under the general law of the solar system, to reach the most
concrete 
expression.
The concrete expression must be reached in order that the
descending 
intelligences may be able to help or impel to a higher standard the
forms of 
consciousness not yet self-conscious; all
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forms meet and mingle in man. Each change in density of sheath
involves a loss 
of spiritual perception, and knowledge of the more dense matter
obtainable in no 
other way.
As the universe exists solely for purposes of soul, and as
resistance is met in 
degree in all states of matter below the first state, the power of
Creation, 
Preservation and Destruction must be in operation on every plane
and all the 
time. Creation works in the change in density, and toward the ideal
form for 
fullest expression on this plane. This involves continual
adjustment, implying 
the preservation of that which fulfills the purpose, and the
destruction of that 
which does not, as well as further creation to take the place of
that which was 
destroyed. The Creator, Preserver and Destroyer within his own
sphere, then, 
must be the permanent Ego. The same law applies everywhere. For
instance, in 
your business, a new department is added; the other departments
keep on and the 
new one is either shaped into line with the general purpose—or cut
off.
The Secret Doctrine says that we are at the middle point of the
seven Rounds; 
this means that the collectivity of beings called ‘Nature” has
passed through 
the changes in density three times, each time reascending to the
original state, 
each descent marking a further density of each change. We now
ascend perfecting 
and assimilating for three and a half Rounds more, each succeeding
plane 
becoming less dense until the completion of the seventh Round, back
to what 
might be called real matter. Relating this to soul, it would appear
that the 
sheaths are not yet what they will be, though the Perceiver is one
through all 
the changes. The Self is the key, the plan, the purpose and the
fulfillment—to 
lose that sight, is to lose all.
The quality of your Theosophical expositions seems to dissatisfy
you, but the 
attitude you hold in regard to it is infinitely better than as if
you were proud 
of it, and the probability of the improvement is thereby made
certain. As I 
understand the matter. your exposition is not criticised, but the
manner of it; 
if there is fault there, necessary correction should not be very
difficult. All 
progress is made by a recognition of disabilities at first, after
which
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follow steps for their removal; but these are minor things. The
great effort is 
to promulgate the fundamental principles of Theosophy; it requires
strenuous and 
persevering exertion, but personal progress is forgotten in the
effort. ‘With 
the right attitude we would not realize our own advance, while it
would be 
perfectly patent to others; this, because we are aware of defects,
which 
probably look more important than they really are. Defects—not
being 
valuable—are not important; their absence is; therefore our thought
should be in 
regard to those qualifications which displace them. If we were
refurnishing a 
house, we would not be thinking of the old furniture, but of the
new, which was 
to take its place.
Being of the Kshatriyas, and in training for the greatest battle
that can be 
fought, we welcome every event, great or small, that makes us fit
for the 
strife.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Twenty-Eight
Your letter received. True, it is hard for those who think in other
ways to have 
to exist in a world and at a time when the generally worshipped god
is so hard, 
unfeeling and merciless in his requirements. Yet such is our Karma,
and the 
Karma of the race we desire to help. We cannot help without sharing
the Karma, 
and in sharing we have to do it in all ways. These things are part
of our 
trials. We can but recognize that even heavenly death is provided
for, and if 
so, why not life—even as we know it?
We would know that Law reigns for all, and for each and every
circumstance, were 
it not for our doubts and fears. It is natural that fears should
arise, for all 
terrestrial things tend to create them, yet we know from “Those who
know” that 
“the man who knoweth the Supreme Spirit, who is not deluded, and
who is fixed on 
him, doth not rejoice at obtaining what is pleasant, nor grieve
when meeting 
what is unpleasant.” “Be free from the ‘pairs of opposites’ and
constant in the 
quality of Sattwa, free from worldly anxiety and desire to preserve
present 
possessions.”
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All this is like sending coals to Newcastle, yet sometimes a
reiteration helps 
one free himself; and too, your letter shows that you see clearly
what is right, 
so absolutely clear and sound that I fear some difficulty more than
ordinary 
must present itself to you. Yet for every difficulty there is a
way, even if it 
is not the way we see as the preferable one. And we have to
overcome all sorts 
of difficulties.
I can understand right well the many things you have in mind to be
provided for. 
In all things there is but one thing to be done, and that is, the
best we can. 
Then await the event; meet one thing at a time, and as it comes.
Thus we avoid 
attachment to results, and interject no interference with the law
which works 
for good to those who love it.
We so desire personal assurance that all will be well with the
personal self 
that we distrust ourselves and all others, if we do not get it; and
all the time 
we know that we should rely upon the law that works for
righteousness. What, 
then, is needed is a greater faith and confidence, a stronger
courage.
I had a little stone once, upon which was engraved, “Even this will
pass away.” 
It served many a time to remind me of the transitory nature of all
trials and 
troubles. The motto is a good one and may serve many others, if
used when need 
arises.
In all the above, it is not meant that proper care should be
neglected, but that 
fear and doubt should be dismissed. “Fear is the same thing as
frigidity on the 
earth, and always proceeds by the process of freezing.” Who can say
in how many 
ways that “freezing” prevents what would otherwise be.
To one confronted by “hard facts,” philosophy seems inadequate,
especially when 
one has to meet the fact, and when the philosophy is quoted by
another. Yet it 
is this very application that has to be made in every circumstance.
No great 
effort is necessary to apply philosophy when the stress is slight;
but when the 
stress is great, greater effort is needed. The main thing is to
apply the 
philosophy, and in fact rely on it. All sorts of unforeseen
obstacles will arise 
to test that reliance, in order that we may be
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confirmed, and ourselves rendered “constitutionally incapable of
diverging from 
the true path.”
We do not encompass the six glorious virtues all at once, nor one
at a time, but 
make progress in all of them. Obstacles will arise in the
circumstances of 
every-day life and in our relations to each other.
I have found it helpful to go back to the time when full confidence
abounded, if 
obstacles pressed hard and insistently. It often appears to us that
obstacles 
that meet us need not be; that they have no relation to the great
task we have 
set before ourselves; yet due consideration of what we have learned
must show 
that nothing can possibly occur which is out of that relation. We
often say to 
ourselves, “If this thing were only different, or proceeded or
occurred in this 
other way, it would be better,” failing to perceive that if it were
different, 
it would be different. The key to conduct, then, seems to be—taking
things as 
they come, and dealing with them singly day to day. We find this
hard, yet the 
“hardness” will continue in degree as we become “confirmed,” until
all is easy. 
The harder the effort, the greater the strength acquired.
I used to look calmly and dispassionately at the very worst picture
I could 
conjure up as happening to myself, and found it helpful in getting
rid of “fear 
of consequences.” I mentally took account of the very worst, saw
myself in it 
with all that it entailed, went through it in all its parts leaving
myself 
alone, dishonored, stripped of everything. Those very things have
happened to 
me, but I knew them, had outlived them, and went on undismayed. Had
I not done 
it, I would not be where I am to-day. But you know all this and it
may seem like 
cold comfort. I would that I could give you more.
Look back at the chain of circumstances since first we met, and
realize more 
fully that there is “a Destiny that shapes our ends, rough hew them
as we may.” 
Can we question Master’s hand in everything done in His name? The
circumstances 
may not smile at us, but it is not their favor that is sought. We
ought to know 
by this time that seeming evil is very often—we might say, always— 
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turned to good. For it is “that Great Initiate of All, Who keeps
this whole 
Movement in being.” May you have all power, health, and courage
externally, 
internally and eternally. Good night to you.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY 
Letter Twenty-Nine
I have your letter of first today. Also those “fat pages,” which
certainly merit 
all you say of them. Judge once said, “It is not money that is
needed but 
Hearts.” And it would not take so many, as numbers go, to save a
city or a 
nation. “Providing there be found three righteous men, I will not
destroy the 
city,” says an ancient scripture. There could be no greater work
than that in 
which we are engaged. When our lives are ended, what will count?
Our defects? 
Not at all. It will be the efforts we have made to destroy the
causes of all 
defects among our fellow men.
At a late meeting the question of being charitable to the
weaknesses of others 
came up for discussion, and brought out quite a lengthy talk on why
that 
attitude is absolutely necessary, from the standpoint of the
spiritual Ego, for 
right development in the mind of spiritual perception and
knowledge. It was 
pointed out that all the errors of any life result in reality from
a diseased—if 
not insane, at least, un-sane mentality. An imperfection is an
imperfection—the 
difference in kind not being anything that anyone should pride
himself upon. Our 
duty is not to rid our neighbors of their imperfections, but
ourselves of our 
own. The pride that results from fancied virtue was spoken of;
judgment in 
anger—that the anger passes but the judgment remains as a bias in
the mind, and 
a hindrance to the one judged; the danger of thus standing in the
way of 
another, to say nothing of the reactionary effect on ourselves. The
talk came up 
because of the tendency of minds in general to pride themselves
upon not having 
the defects that others have, while at the same time they may
exhibit defects, 
which, while not so obvious—as generally classed by the
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world—are yet worse, because of being deeper seated and harder to
eradicate, as 
well as being more widely injurious. In regard to your question of
confidence: 
your words sound as if you had more real courage than you ever had.
This 
confidence should not merely be the power to endure trials and
suffering, but to 
stand firmly and courageously through anything and everything. To
fall short of 
that would be a useless sacrifice for all, for slipping to the
bottom means to 
do it all over again. Now is the time to hold fast. “Live while you
can and die 
only when you must.” For it is during life, and then alone, that
the most and 
best can be done for your fellows in that life. No circumstances
can arise that 
will deprive you of the power of assistance, if that is your inmost
desire. For 
are you not greater than any circumstance? And are not all
circumstances your 
field of battle? There-fore, arise, 0 Arjuna, and resolve to fight.
If one cannot do what he would like to do, he can always do what he
can. No one 
can do more than this. And doing this, he does all. You see that
clearly. So let 
us meet each moment and circumstance as it comes, putting all our
energy into 
doing what should be done according to our best judgment at the
moment, and 
living every moment free from doubt, fear, anxiety—joyful that we
are alive, and 
that there is so much of life in us. Every possible circumstance
has its 
Sattwic, Rajasic, and Tamasic quality, and as all experience
affects only in 
accord with its meta—physical aspect, let us take the Sattwic of
each and every 
one. Thus shall we live and get true learning out of living.
Don’t worry about me, the meetings, B— or anything; we should know
that all that 
is provided for. You remember what Jesus said: “Take no thought for
the morrow 
what ye shall eat, nor wherewithal shall ye be clothed.” This to
his disciples, 
because reliance on the Law places no hindrance in the way of its
free action.
Now, once more, good nights and days to you, and all help.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
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THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty
Your letter, as well as the books mailed, have just arrived. Many
thanks for all 
of it, and for the good thoughts and wishes you send me; they are
sincere. May 
they all bear fruit.
There is a “feeling” of closing in. It comes from that
steadfastness which trial 
alone can bring, and I dare swear that you have that steadfastness,
even though 
you may know it not. In the work we have undertaken together,
matters not 
whether it fails or succeeds as far as we are concerned. Our effort
has been and 
will be for success; the rest is in “other hands,” and stronger
ones. We have 
thrown, each one of us, the best he had into the breach. That
“best” may not 
seem great to us, but certainly the motive was there, even if at
times nature 
and events conspired to minimize it. They did not defeat us—that is
sure. To 
hold our ground is victory, in some cases. It is more, if we manage
to move 
forward, and we have done the latter—which is worth all that it
cost and much 
more.
“Having found a secluded spot remain firm and steadfast in it.”
When a student 
enters upon the new life, he does so because he sees the true. At
the same time 
he is buffeted about by the effects which have arisen, and arise,
from whatever 
of untruth he had held. He oscillates between the real and the seeming
real—or, 
as he might term it, “the ideal and the facts.” His effort should
be to remain 
steadfast in the true, having found that secluded spot.
A right, true, and correct philosophy of life is absolutely
necessary if 
constant, steady growth is to be attained. This philosophy must
have in it—as a 
center—immutability; otherwise any building up of an “inner body”
on a center 
which is mutable necessitates the destruction of that building and
the beginning 
of another one on another center, with loss of time, effort, and
progress. If 
the second center prove mutable, again destruction is necessary.
This is why 
there can be no progress from the standpoint of any but the Supreme
Self. This 
is LAW and not sentiment.
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We should endeavor to remain steadfast, relying upon the Supreme
and dedicating 
all our thoughts and actions to THAT. As we endeavor, the
oscillations will 
become less manifest. ALL of the events of life give us opportunity
to exercise 
the “power of steadfastness.” So we should welcome
everything—pleasant or 
otherwise—as a means of growth, for, as has been said many times,
the purpose of 
life is to learn; it is all made up of learning.
The essence of growth is change. Any center short of the Self
(which is all) 
implies a finality; hence, concretion and cessation of growth, from
which 
necessarily follows decay. With the “true center” all growth
remains, for it is 
of the nature of that center, and indestructible—“The Changeless
Self,” with 
fluidic instruments—always fluidic.
You say, “I am doing nothing.” Perhaps, but the Self has been
afforded an 
opportunity—yes, opportunities, and these will be continued. The
little “I” may 
take some pride in it, but the real “I” says “you” did not do it
and never 
could, because you are only a reflection and an instrument. You
served the 
purpose well, and will continue to improve. Gradually the lower
Manas will 
become so attuned with the Higher that there will be no distinction
between 
them; then, instead of “puffing up” in one department, the energy
will express 
itself as incentive and power for more and greater work. The
“pride” is natural, 
but when properly diffused, it will not be called by that name. It
is energy, of 
course.
You seem to be getting interesting questions at your meetings. It
is splendid 
training—all of it; just what is needed. It may help if you take
the position 
that “I do not answer; the philosophy does;” and “I do not answer
the person; I 
answer the question.”
If the right attitude is kept up, all necessary qualities will
appear. “No 
concern but to keep in fighting trim” is most excellent. “Desire
ceases to 
attract us when we cease to identify ourselves with it.” Similarly,
“badness” 
ceases to affect us, when we cease to identify ourselves with it.
“Badness” is 
but one of the three qualities.
“We are apt constantly to forget the existence of the great force
and value of 
our super-sensuous consciousness. That con-
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sciousness is the great register, where we record the real results
of our 
various earthly experiences; in it we store up the spiritual
energy, and once 
stored there it becomes our own eternal possession.” We forget, in
looking for 
appearances of advancement, which is common to all students at
first; but by 
retaining the fact in their minds, they by degrees cease to observe
or care for 
signs of such progress, and none of their energy is wasted. They
know that the 
“storing” goes on, and they keep busy at it, which means the
performance of 
duty, doing the best they know and can— under all circumstances.
They “lay up 
treasures in heaven,” not on earth. This we are doing and will
continue to do. 
It serves to destroy the personal idea”—the enemy of progress.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-One     
“OLD WARRIOR” is true as regards the Self, and also as regards the
real inner 
evolved man. He is a fighter in lawful war fare, and is only
hindered by 
ineffectual accoutrement, and lack of co-operation; so it applies
to you and to 
all of us who are fighting in lawful warfare. This warfare is
against the causes 
of sin, sorrow and suffering.
“The Self acts only through the creatures.” It needs bodies or
vehicles. The 
units give adhesion, which then becomes cohesion— unity on all
planes.
The U.L.T. will go along all right as long as there is some one
individual who 
knows the right lines and will keep them. If the Lodge centers
spread by being 
taken up by people not trained at all in the right line of thought
and study, 
they could very easily go wide of the intention and lead others
wrong. 
There-fore, while there is no Constraint, there will be a point
from which right 
direction can be obtained, and advice given as to methods and kind
of study. 
This has to be provided for, even if it is not the ideal condition.
The latter, 
of course, could only exist with ideal minds, and we are not
dealing with such. 
“To perish doomed
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is he, who out of fear of Mara refrains from helping man, lest he
should act for 
self,” says the Voice; so we need not fear doing whatever has to be
done to meet 
the circumstances of the case and time. H. P. B. found it necessary
to lay down 
the lines along which the psychical currents might flow from the
Lodge. In like 
manner, we in a smaller way have to provide lines of thought and
influence along 
which may flow the spirit and genius of that which we have
undertaken. Our 
Associate cards provide the means of individual adhesion to the
principles. They 
are a form of pledge, and on individual honor. The sum of
individual adhesions 
makes the cohesive body.
The a holding power” is the power to hold things together with a
definite end in 
view; statements of that end are contained in our Declaration. The
power grows 
as does the conviction of the reality of our endeavor and the
soundness of the 
principles we promulgate: centripetal foci.
The motto of U. L. T. is There is no religion higher than Truth.”
Truth alone 
can be authority; it demands nothing from anyone, but invites close
examination. 
Falsehood disagrees with falsehood as well as with Truth; Truth
disagrees with 
falsehood, but agrees with itself. As in an authoritative claim
that a certain 
metal is gold, the test does not lie in the authority, but in the
test of the 
metal. One who has gold and has proved it to be so, has a right to
say so, but 
he does not exact belief in his authority; he presents his gold for
testing. 
This is the kind of authority you will find in Theosophy.
Well, must stop now and call this today’s letter. Good luck to you
and all the 
other good things.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-Two     
I think that what we have to do is to carry on the work of
disseminating the 
philosophy of Theosophy in the best way known to us, avoiding the
errors of 
omission and commission that have
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been observed by us. Thus working in and through the “minor
currents,” we begin 
to learn the greater lesson. The Lodge has to have its agents in
the world of 
men. “Those who can to any extent assimilate the Master, to that
extent they are 
the representatives of the Master, and have the help of the Lodge
in its work.” 
In a letter of K. H. to Sinnett, He says that the work of the
society has to be 
carried on by “carefully devised plans by the best minds among
you,” or words to 
that effect. Having the fundamental principles, we have to put them
into 
practice by applying them in every way—in our lives and in the
work. All this is 
part of our schooling. There is no set way given us nor any
particular form and 
method; we have to work it out—and yet all that we do has Their
help. We shall 
do rightly and well in any event, if we are single-hearted in what
we do. It is 
true that we have landmarks here and there to guide us, but to be
able to 
recognize these is also a part of right knowledge. The power of the
“initiatory” 
in right direction has to be developed, and that must be done by
exercise. If 
what we have undertaken leads to adeptship we have to begin the
development of 
the powers here and now, while clearing up our natures. One process
is 
complementary to the other, if both are carried on. All this by way
of adding to 
what you say.
“We cannot prevent people from doing the things they can do,” and
would not use 
force even if we could, because the mind has to be free to choose;
otherwise 
there would be no real progress. We might apply an analogy right
here: let 
Oxygen represent the Truth, and Nitrogen purely terrestrial
conceptions; the 
more nitrogenous the conception, the less room for “oxygenation” in
any given 
vehicle. There can be no breath whatever without some oxygen, and a
little is 
better than none at all. Perhaps the Tingley, Besant and other
stripes of 
Theosophy have their place in the great economy of consciousness;
they must 
have, or minds would not seize and hold that kind. If the “kind”
does not bring 
the expected result or knowledge, a further search is indicated.
“It is better 
to have no side, for it is all for the Master, and He will look out
for all, if 
each does just right, even if, to our view, another seems not to do
so. By not 
looking at their errors too closely the Master will
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be able to clear it all off and make it work well. Hence, go on,
and keep the 
spirit that you have only to proceed, and leave the rest to time
and the Lodge.” 
I think that this is a good attitude for us all in the matter of
Theosophical 
claims and exponents. Every person really waked up by them will
touch us sooner 
or later if we hold to the straight line.
Meditation as used by us, is what is called in Sanscrit Dhyana,
i.e., want of 
motion, and one-pointedness. The main point is to free the mind
from the power 
of the senses, and to raise a current of thought to the exclusion
of all others. 
Realization comes from dwelling on the thing to be realized.” W. Q.
J. says, “To 
meditate on the Higher Self is difficult; seek then, the Bridge,
the Masters. 
The patient dwelling of the mind on a single thought results in the
gaining of 
wisdom, and it is thus that the true Occultist is developed.
Aspiration toward 
the Higher Self should form part of the daily meditation; the
rising toward the 
higher planes of our being, which cannot be found unless they are
sought. 
Earnest and reverent desire for Master’s guidance and enlightenment
will begin 
the attunement of the nature to the harmony to which it must one
day respond. 
Concentration on a single point in the Teaching is a road to the
philosophy; 
self-examination, a road to knowledge of oneself. To put oneself in
the place of 
another, to realize his difficulties, and thus be able to help him,
is that 
faculty—which when extended makes it possible for the Adept to
understand the 
nature of the stone or other form of consciousness.” Meditation is
a good 
beneficent practice leading to a great end. It is also a great
destroyer of the 
personal idea.
Generally speaking, a “ray” comes from a “light”; the ray is not
the light 
itself, but a projection of it, and yet is the light, because
without the light 
there would be no ray. The color of the light is clear and uniform;
the ray is 
changed in color by the substances through which it passes. When
the “ray” is 
“indrawn,” it is of the same color as the light and is the light;
in fact, was 
the light all the time, for the appearance of the different colors
in it was not 
from the light, but from that through which it passes.
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Unity; one in essence. There is nothing but the Self. Was this what
you had in 
mind?
I will mail the Incidents. It will require considerable keenness to
pick out 
valuable information from this book, because it is composed of
incidents which 
are often unrelated to each other as to time. You will, however,
get something 
from it as to general idea, dismissing, of course, any personal
conclusions of 
the author. You will note that the tenant of the body is considered
as the same 
all the time by him. There is also a terrible wound spoken of, in
regard to 
which there is no information; also a desperate sickness. A change
in occupancy 
might be looked for about that time. I do not know the cause of the
wound, and 
it does not matter, nor is it necessary to know. We can understand
something of 
the personal nature, habits and manners running concurrently with
“something 
else,” by comparison with the case of W. Q. J.
The Incidents are what others saw, and, of course, do not relate to
what the 
relators did not see or understand. From our point of view, we may
be able to 
discern matters unperceived by them, from what they relate. They
observed the 
personality and the effects produced through it, but had not the
slightest idea 
of the nature of the Consciousness and Power behind these, masked
as they were 
by commonplaces. “Great is the mystery of the human ego.” I think
you will find 
the book very interesting.
We are preparing for the future as best we can and feeling our way,
taking 
advantage of the seasons and opportunities. Onward and Upward is
our watchword, 
and we might as well add to it what the Old Lion of the Punjab did,
the word 
“Forevermore.”
Well, good nights to you—even if days are not what we would like.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY 
Letter Thirty-Three    
From the intellectual point of view, the truth explains; from a
higher point of 
view, each one contains within himself, and actually is the Truth.
The 
intellectual is microscopic; the other,
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vision itself. “The great difficulty to be overcome is the
registration of the 
knowledge of the Higher Self on the physical plane.” It cannot be
done by the 
intellect, although the intellect may put the house in order.
Patanjali tells 
what the “hindrances” are; Manas has to get rid of these so that
“the way of the 
Lord” who comes with Truth and Knowledge may be made clear. He is
waiting, 
watching, working. “Behold I stand at the door and knock.” Nothing
withholds 
knowledge from us but the mode of operation of our lower mind. We
can have no 
complaints, if we do not make it conform; but Theosophy, applied,
leads us to 
Truth, which is ourself. Service is a great clarifier.
You speak of the balancing of forces. In what relation? Perhaps you
mean that 
“continuous adjustment of internal relations to external
relations,” which is 
the basis of rebirth, both of which have to be subjugated before
freedom is 
obtained. If so, this is kundalini—the power or force that moves in
a spiral 
path; it is the Universal life-principle manifesting everywhere in
nature. This 
force includes the two great forces of attraction and repulsion;
electricity and 
magnetism are but manifestations of it. Hermes says: “the genii
have, then, the 
control of mundane things, and our bodies serve them as instruments
. . . but 
the reasonable part of the soul is not subject to the genii; it is
designed for 
the reception of the God who enlightens it with a sunny ray, for
neither genii 
nor gods have any power in the presence of a single ray of God. But
all other 
men, both Soul and body, are directed by genii, to whom they cleave
and whose 
operations they affect.” If forces are balanced, there must be
something upon 
which the balance may be obtained; anything that can be moved by
the forces 
would not so serve. There is but One Immovable—the Self.
Transitory balancings may be obtained but not maintained. The “ups”
and “downs” 
every one is subject to; sometimes psychic, sometimes mental and
sometimes 
physiological; occasionally, all three at once. These must
necessarily be the 
various adjustments, or “balancing of forces,” which are in
constant process of 
variation. There are, of course, “devachans” in between. The same
old process.
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It does not surprise me that you find “something” at the
Theosophical rooms—and 
stronger at times than at others. Help comes often, when least
expected, and it 
is liable to come at that place where the work is done which merits
help. As the 
rooms are set apart particularly for Theosophy, there would be less
obstacle 
there than elsewhere to such help.
You have it right: one has to grow into that state where he seeks
nothing for 
himself, but takes whatever comes to pass as the thing he most
desired. There is 
no room for personal desire in this.
With reference to the mind’s poor grasp of things: what we want
cannot be 
obtained by anxiety, doubt, fear, impatience, expectancy that it is
time that 
something should come to us, and so forth. This latter is looking
for reward. 
Make up your mind to continue as you are for one hundred lives, if
necessary, 
and continue. The hindrances must be stopped, if that which is
hindered is to 
come. All the other study is good, necessary, and preparatory. 
Unity—Study—Work—are the trinity of this plane. Universality,
Wisdom, and 
Service are the higher trinity. You are the One who is preparing the
way for the 
latter, by means of the former.
We learn by experience. Confidence gives courage—is courage. After
a while we 
learn that the Law will act, regardless of any sentiment we may
hold. And in 
this work things occur in peculiar ways—not to be accounted for by
the usual 
process. At least, such has been my experience.
The attention that is paid to what you have to say in the meeting
lies primarily 
in the native force of truth, but much comes from the conviction
that one has in 
presentation, as well as the form used. This triad you have. The
main thing to 
be minimized is whatever you have of diffuseness. It is only a
question of 
keeping on the line of making more and more perfect. The feeling
that “I am 
doing something” is natural. But it is better far to “let the
warrior in you do 
the fighting.” Think of the Master as a living man within you; let
Him speak 
through the mouth and from the heart. The strength shown is not
that of the 
personality, for like an organization, the personality is only a
machine for 
conserving energy and putting it to use. Why give it credit for
anything else?
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The general habit is to think of ourselves first, and others
afterwards. Reverse 
the habit—consider ourselves last and least in anything we have to
do or say. At 
the meetings, take the view that we are there to give what help we
can to those 
who come, instead of looking at those present as there to listen to
us. Judge 
would sometimes say, “You must not think that I know all these
things; I am only 
telling you of knowledge that exists, and which I am convinced is
true.” Each 
one must arrive at conviction through a study and application of
the knowledge. 
There is no other way.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-Four     
Thought, being self-reproducing, would suggest crystallized
centers, but they 
are more than “crystallized,” if we would take into consideration
that 
everything is conscious. Each thought stirs to action some form of
life; 
according to the nature of the thought is the nature of the life
stirred and 
guided, the permanence of the thought-action depending upon the
energy put into 
it. I think that the subsidence of the direct energy leaves a
latent tendency in 
the conscious lives to respond to analogous or similar energy. Some
of these 
impressions may be so deep as to have left respondent foci in the
physical 
brain; hence, remembrance is more easily recalled into action;
other 
impressions, not so deep, are obliterated by subsequent ones as far
as brain 
foci are concerned, but remain in some one or other of the sheaths
of the brain, 
and are recollected by the proper stimulus, which may come from
similar thought, 
or from the impressions of the organs or cells of the body.
Nature tends to repeat any action; thought is the plane of
action—the creator, 
preserver and destroyer of Nature’s modes of action. The Manasic
plane is the 
noumenal plane; the plane of the essence of the phenomenal; the
active-aspect of 
Atma-Buddhi.
As to your question on Spirit and Matter. You will remember what
Judge said: 
“The whole universe is made up of spirit and
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matter, both constituting together the Absolute. What is not matter
is spirit, 
and what is not spirit is matter; but there is no particle of
matter without 
spirit, and no particle of spirit without matter. If this attempted
definition 
is correct, you will see that it is impossible to define the things
of the 
spirit, and that has always been said by great Teachers of the
past.” 
Spirit-matter contains both consciouness, per se, and all possible
states of 
matter from the finest to the coarsest. These states are evolved
individually 
for individual experience, and also collectively for collective
experience, each 
individual proceeding on his own line, and in accordance with the
general 
progress of the mass of beings. Changes of matter take place in
regular sequence 
by the force or energy of the mass, of which energy each individual
supplies his 
portion. This energy might be called consciousness in action, or
the force of 
ideation, the lesser entities being guided in their energy by the
greater, and 
more progressed.
Also, hold in mind that Spirit and Substance are co-existent and
co-eternal. We 
are higher beings clothed in bodies made up of small lives on this
plane. We 
call these lives “matter,” but they are matter only relatively,
because we can 
mold them. To them-selves they are conscious in their way,
receiving impress 
from us, but not recognizing the source of the impress nor its
import. We are 
their incognizable universe in which they live, move, and have
their being; our 
light adds to theirs, as ours is added to by the impress from still
higher 
beings. So there is a chain of life and consciousness which
gradually tends to 
fuller and fuller individualization of being in
non-separateness—the more 
complete the individualization, the more full the sense of
non-separateness.
This quotation from H. P. B. may be helpful. “At the ‘Day be with
us’ every Ego 
has to remember all the cycles of his past reincarnations for
Manvantaras . . . 
. It sees the stream of its past incarnations by a certain divine
light. It sees 
all humanity at once, but still there is ever, as it were, a stream
which is 
always the ‘I’.”
The place where the line of involution and evolution meet is in the
incarnation 
of the descending gods—ourselves—in the highest evolved form. The
analogy is 
seen in any reincarnation.
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The consciousness leaves the body, which goes to pieces on its own
plane. When 
the real man returns, he has to wait until the lower lives have
built up a form 
for him into which he may enter, this form being built under the
impress given 
by the real man in other lives. A Manvantara is an enlarged and
expanded similar 
process. We came from the Moon, where we had evolved form to a
degree. At 
pralaya all things stopped evolution of form; on re-manifestation,
the lower 
lives or “builders” began to build up as before, and as their
impress and 
previous building admitted. When the form of man had reached the
highest 
previous point reached, the Kumaras, or real men, overshadowed and
entered to 
carry the evolution further. “They, and no other, are we.” Well,
good nights and 
days to you all the time. The days help make the nights and the
nights help to 
make the days; they both belong to life.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-Five     
I have your letter of Sunday. Sorry that the trip was hard and
immediately 
fruitless, but we know that there is no blame for results, if the
best we know 
is done. So we can rest on that, and go on to the next duty free
from any 
anxiety.
I have read the extracts you send: they are all good, and we cannot
have too 
many of them. Even if we do not use them all in the prospective
pamphlet, they 
will be at our hand in compact form for reference and use for
others. All this 
research must have its effect on your perceptions as to what the
intention of 
the Messenger was and is. You have found for yourself and cannot be
accused of 
taking any other’s statement. It places you in a position which is
unassailable, 
and that is good for you, for the benefit of others who have
accepted other 
ideas and follow other courses.
“The Self of Matter and the SELF of Spirit can never meet.” The
trouble is as 
you say—materialization of concepts. When we see that the trouble
lies in that, 
we are on our guard against it,
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and all the time endeavor to correct that personal tendency; as
results always 
follow effort, the difficulty is finally overcome. If we have
confidence in our 
power to learn, and reliance on the law of our being, we can never
feel 
discouraged even though we seem to be falling back, or making no
progress. The 
result of the effort is not in that with which we identify
ourselves when we are 
impatient or discouraged, but of, and in, the inner nature which
impelled the 
effort, and which in reality was then in action. We are not our
body, brain, 
circumstances, duties nor any changeable thing; they constitute our
instrument 
and opportunities only; they change and pass away. In them all,
“Duty is the 
royal talisman.” I think it would be better to take the position
that you never 
fail nor fall nor slip back, but that you have not been constant
and careful in 
guidance of your responsive, but irresponsible instrument; hence,
you feel the 
effects through it of your lack of care. Get hold of it, take care
of it, guide 
it, use it, but be the Self—”The man that is, that was, that ever
shall be,” to 
whom all these things are but fleeting shadows.
The fight against the personal idea is a long one. The personality
has to be 
watched that it does not insidiously take to itself what it has no
claim to. 
Theosophy was given to us; we but pass it on. People are naturally
grateful to 
receive it, and this is right, but the one who passes it along
knows where 
gratitude belongs. He can say, “Thank Theosophy, as I do. It
enables me to help 
others; it will also enable you.” In that way he helps himself as
he helps 
others.
Now as to your extracts on which you want me to say something: “I
establish this 
whole universe with a single portion of myself and remain
separate.”
The finite mind cannot understand many things, and being finite and
conditioned 
myself, I cannot explain that which is beyond the power of sages,
but if I were 
endeavoring to form an idea for myself in regard to the above, I
would take that 
of Abstract Space as the basis of that “I” which establishes the
universe as a 
portion of “itself.” That portion could not be formed by any other
cause or 
inherency than the Absolute (Space) ; yet
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Space is illimitable, notwithstanding innumerable universes; Space
being not 
only around such universes, but in and throughout every particle of
manifested 
matter. Our bodies are in space, and space is in our bodies, so
that while 
bodies are formed from and in space, yet space remains space and
hence separate. 
These are words only, yet may serve to convey an idea—grasped but
not 
materialized.
“I am the origin of all,” would have its explanation in the above;
the Self as 
All and in All.
“The eight-fold division of my nature is inferior,” even though it
includes 
Manas, Buddhi, and Ahankara; these divisions are inferior because
they are 
divisions, conditioned aspects, progressively changeable, hence
non-eternal. The 
superior nature is different because eternal and unchangeable—the
origin, nature 
and basis of all beings. While all these conditioned aspects exist,
that which 
perceives in them all is the Self; there is nothing but the Self.
Take 
ourselves: what perceives in waking; what in dream; what in
sushupti; what in 
Manas; what in Buddhi; is it not the same consciousness per se
under varying 
conditions? This consciousness is no one of the aspects or conditions,
nor all 
of them put together, but is the cause of all evolution of matter
and form, and 
the perceiver and knower in all. It is said that the universe is
embodied 
consciousness. Consciousness must be the Knower of all embodiments
and superior 
to any embodiment or conditioned aspect of perception. Our bodies
are made up of 
in numerable and varying small lives, through which we obtain
contact with this 
plane. Our conditioned aspect of consciousness is so by reason of
this contact 
and attraction of lives; their aspect is expanded; and both are
consciousness 
differently conditioned. We might consider it this way: All is
Consciousness, 
either
Unconditioned or conditioned in innumerable degrees, and yet that
consciousness 
is One—the power to perceive. The more any aspect expands, the more
the sense of 
Oneness in it—“the Self in all things and all things in the Self.”
It cannot be 
explained, but it may be felt. The conditioned has its origin,
basis and being 
in the Unconditioned, but the conditioned is not the Unconditioned.
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“Know that Purusha and Prakriti are eternal.” This is the same as
saying “Spirit 
and Matter are co-existent and co-eternal.” Spirit and Matter are
not to be 
regarded as independent realities, but as two facets or aspects of
the Absolute, 
which constitutes the basis of conditioned Being, whether
subjective or 
objective. If nothing in these suggestions, call again.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-Six      
I dropped you a line yesterday which doubtless you have received.
If you caught 
the line and held it, it will be good for you. For, after all, it
is not what we 
get but our eagerness to grow that counts; that, when held, never
loses an 
opportunity. Now, whatever comes of the present occasion, you will
have taken 
the right position, and the results must be in the direction of
growth. If you 
could but have taken this position from the start, it would, of
course, have 
been better; but now that you see it, you have a basis to work from
in future.
I know very well what you forego must be a severe deprivation, but
its very 
severity makes the lesson greater and stronger. So, work now as if
you were 
alone, and always going to be alone. Taking such an attitude will
bring out your 
strength—your reliance being on the Law, the Lodge, and your inner
Self. Have no 
fear whatever; forget results and let the Warrior fight in you. So
will you grow 
into a closer union, a better realization. “Good Karma is that
which is pleasing 
to Ishwara.” It is “good” because of the attitude taken, and
because it came 
from beyond the personality—was not striven for as such.
I do not suppose that it offers much consolation to think that we
will have to 
avoid making “good Karma” as well as “bad”; for, generally
considered, both are 
personal and physical, relating to the lower self. We use Karma in
performing 
duty, but our work is evidently not that of manufacturing any
special brand for 
our own use and pleasure; we take it as it comes, and are happy
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as may be under the circumstances, learning to be happy under any.
So, in any 
case, we will resignedly say, “It is a good opportunity to learn
something.” 
Yet, we would have been equally glad had it been otherwise.
Doubt is a horror; it grows and spreads quickly in the soil of the
personal 
idea. The remedy is to go back to the time when you had the
strongest sense of 
sureness, and then rehearse your grounds of surety; by this, doubt
will be 
dispersed like the mists before the morning sun. You apparently know
how, for 
having given definite expression to a form of doubt, you let the
sun shine on it 
and it went.
“The shifting serpent of Self” is a great “murkier” of the waters
of life, as 
you remark. Fortunately, WE are not the waters, and we can learn to
swim, with 
the “head” high; then, it makes little difference how much the
serpent “murks”; 
that’s his business—not ours.
“Prakriti is said to be that which operates in producing cause and
effect in 
action.”
“He who gives up the results of action, is the true renouncer.”
“The true renouncer is averse neither to the works that fail nor
those which 
succeed.”
“Let us be true renouncers.”
That is the right idea, to fight it out on the line of battle, no
matter what 
comes. The worst that can come is to die fighting in a righteous
cause. It is 
also the very best that can come. So there is nothing to fear.
“Death never 
touched it at all, dead though the house of it seems.”
About the meeting: I think that the explanation about the “astral”
was all 
right. When a man sleeps, he neither knows nor cares what is going
on in the 
world about him; yet he has his self-consciousness and is otherwise
occupied 
than with the doings of physical bodies. At the same time, he may
converse with 
people who may be actively engaged in bodily actions at the time,
and who will 
know nothing of the converse. The “community” is within the
sleeper, as the 
result of waking experiences; the heavenly state is, also, the
result of the 
best of the waking ex-
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periences; both are individual and assimilative rather than
communal, in the 
ordinary man. The astral plane is a reflection of earth and an
inferno. The wise 
man tarries there neither during life nor after death. When a man
dies, he does 
so to get rid of the earthly body and its connections; having had a
meal of 
earthly conditions, he stops eating, in order to assimilate the
food. If he had 
to “eat” more on the astral plane (which communal life would
necessitate), the 
cessation of bodily activity would confer no advantage, nor
opportunity for the 
assimilation of desirable elements acquired during physical life.
Other 
analogies may occur to you.
The elemental kingdoms have never been fully explained, for which
there must be 
a reason. There are seven great classes of Devas, with their seven 
sub-divisions, among the former being the Kumaras with whom man has
most to 
do—or vice versa. The nature-spirits seem to be the off-shoots of
the first 
elemental kingdoms, some passing the concrete Mineral (not becoming
crystallized) ; others not becoming herbalized; others escape forms
of watery 
life; still others escape forms of air life. It may be that there
is a greater 
supply of the spirit of the lower kingdoms than opportunity for
entrance, and 
that these become the spirits of the elements connected by nature
with the four 
elements of earth, water, air and fire; some would have etheric
forms, and some 
astral, their field of operation being in their respective
elements. They appear 
to be outside the line of evolution that leads to human
consciousness—in this 
-manvantara—but must be necessary elements in the great scheme. H.
P. B. says, 
“There are no entities in the four lower kingdoms possessing
intelligence that 
can communicate with men, but the elementals have instincts like
animals. It is, 
however, possible for the Sylphs (the wickedest things in the
world) to 
communicate, but they require to be propitiated.” Just why the
Sylphs are 
wicked, I do not know, but think that this is a class that can
alter shape at 
will and produce glamour where human defects permit their
impersonations; they 
seem to court and delight in human worship. No doubt, there are
several classes 
of them. “The heathen in his blindness bows down
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to wood and stone,” but he, if the above be true, is better off
than many who 
call him heathen. He is wise who sees the Self in all things and
all things in 
the Self.
There is no memory without thought. The moment we cease to think of
a desire, it 
is non-existent for us. Memory is the thinking of a past
experience. We 
sometimes recall these experiences into action, purposely;
sometimes, they arise 
by association with other things thought of or experienced; but we
do not need 
to identify ourselves with them or entertain them. The best way is
to entertain 
and keep busy with other kinds of thought; then, there will be no
room for 
undesirable tenants. Well, I will let this go—best of luck and
health.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-Seven    
You should have got a lot of strength and courage from the present
short 
separation and its circumstances. It may not be fully apparent just
now, but the 
results will flow from it, if your attitude has been toward the
performance of 
duty as it came, regardless of self-interest. This is not easy to
learn, but 
every circumstance, taken rightly, leads to this priceless
acquisition. We 
sometimes forget that we ourselves desired to be tried and tested,
and that 
these trials and tests come in the ordinary events of everyday
life. If we 
cannot take these as they should be taken, we do not gain the
strength that will 
carry us through, nor do we lessen the bonds that hold us to
rebirth.
I have your letter about the meeting of Thursday night. Of course
one feels 
one’s inability to meet all inquiries, but it is the very learning
of what is 
needed that induces the study lacking. We accept and know many
things 
interiorly, but if we are to give others the proper words and ideas
that will 
convey them, we have to be able to formulate them; so we practice
formulation of 
answers, constructing them ourselves, or adopting those used by
others that do 
so effectively.
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In your last paragraph you say, “When the Self ideates, the
Manvantara is going, 
and the ideations of the Self are ‘the Rays from and one with the
Absolute’ 
”—meaning all beings from man up—all the rest of the Cosmos being
the results of 
the ideation of these Rays. Could there be any ideations other than
those of the 
Self, whatever their focalizations? Ideation implies consciousness,
and as 
everything in the universe from the atom to Brahma is conscious,
each in its 
degree, can the Self be absent from any? Is it not apparent that
the personal 
man holds himself as separate from all the rest, and that the lower
forms have 
less and less of such sense as they descend?
How does this sound: The Self ideates and the Universe is formed in
primeval 
focalizations. In these upadhis Its ideation produces less ethereal
and more 
limited focalizations; so, on to the more concrete, all are forms
and aspects of 
the Self, indissoluble as to essence, ever changing as to aspect
and form, each 
aspect and form acting and being acted upon by every other in both
ascending and 
descending cycles, or Rounds. All rebecome the Self at the close of
a 
Manvantara, each to re-emerge in its integrity at the beginning of
a new one, to 
continue its eternally recurring active progression.
To get back to the Real would be like standing back from the whole
manifestation 
and seeing how it looks—to use a phrase. Standing back thus, the
Real is gained, 
but as rest is followed by activity, still further and greater
manifestation 
must follow. The Real is the Creator, Preserver, and Destroyer in
order to 
further create, but is not subject to change, although the Cause
and Experiencer 
of all change.
“The Self ACTS only through the creatures.” It can only know itself
in action 
through its differentiations, which by the inherent power of
Self-hood and the 
action and re-action of all in giving direction, are raised from
perception to 
self-consciousness; this Self-consciousness, once achieved, must
continue to 
expand or be lost. This, of course, is one way of putting it.
Your letter of today is an excellent statement. I would add to it:
the Om is the 
omnipresent spirit which is also in the body.
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106
Its powers are Preservation, Creation and Destruction—the basis and
the means of 
progress. Re-creation, on an advanced basis, follows destruction
until such 
perfection as is possible in any given age is reached, which, in
turn, forms the 
basis for further creation. Progression is eternal, yet the Self is
one and 
changes not. One might say, as a conception, that It realizes
Itself through its 
creations. The higher the creation, the higher the realization. The
realization 
may be individual, but that which realizes is the Self. It cannot
be fully 
understood, yet the mind gets glimpses now and then which no word
or idea can 
convey.
As to Masters: the power of Preservation is Theirs as well as other
powers. Any 
height may be retained as long as serviceable, or if not retained
in particular 
can be quickly reached when needed. The present time may be a
period when 
Preservation is in force; who knows? Some have bodies of the
highest 
transmutation of matter; others are Nirmanakayas, we are told. The
sheaths used 
are in accordance with the work to be done. Nirmanakayas can and do
act in the 
way you describe; if They did not retain the Nirmanakaya kosha,
They would be 
beyond the possibility of helping humanity. By this it would seem
that certain 
“Preservations” are necessary for long periods, possibly a
Manvantara. So, there 
must be a “retaining” in order to “remain” and help. This is the
“sacrifice,” 
and it must be so all along the line. They help on higher planes
always; Their 
lower koshas enable them to help on lower planes as well. At least,
that is what 
I understand from what is given.
The copies of the pamphlets you send are priceless in value for
students whose 
eyes are open. The unfortunate thing is, that until each one has
clarified his 
perceptions, he would not know gold of Ophir from base metal. So
much that is 
here and ready is too high for most; if given, it avails them not.
You know how 
that is in your own progress; words and sentences do not always have
the same 
meaning—the point of view alters them. The danger lies, as you say,
in 
finalities. A high concept serves as a stepping-stone to higher
ones; as 
stepping-stones they are
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good, but as resting places they are distinctly inhibitive of
progress. Progress 
precludes finality. Well, good nights and days to you.
As ever, R. C.
CONTENTS
THE SPIRIT IN THE BODY
Letter Thirty-Eight     
I read with pleasure of your meeting. I remember the name of Dr.
G—. He is one 
of the “old-timers”; he should be able to pick up the string once
more. Some of 
them think that the effort has failed for this cycle, because of
the 
dissensions, but they ought to remember that Masters never cease
working, and 
that it is always possible for the clear-eyed and the humanity -
loving to aid 
Their endeavor. The way to know is to get right back to what They
gave—as to 
philosophy and as to right work; if that is done, it will be found
that there is 
neither variableness nor shadow of turning in the U. L. T. from the
lines laid 
down. And I would call again to mind what H. P. B. wrote: “Night
before last I 
was shown a bird’s-eye-view of the Theosophical Societies. I saw a
few earnest 
reliable Theosophists in a death- struggle with the world in
general, and with 
other nominal but ambitious Theosophists. The former are greater in
number than 
you may think, and they prevailed, as you in America will prevail,
if you only 
remain staunch to Master’s program and true to yourselves.”
Also this: “For it is only when the nucleus is formed that the
accumulations can 
begin that will end in future years, how ever far, in the formation
of that body 
we have in view.”
To think that the effort has failed and that it is no use to try
further, would 
show lack of faith in Masters and the Law, and a misunderstanding
of the great 
occult laws that govern such a Movement as this. “The wheel of the
Good Law 
moves swiftly on. It grinds by night and day. The worthless husks
it drives from 
out the golden grain, the refuse from the flour.” This applies to
the Movement 
as well as anything else—being universal in its scope.
Apply—apply—apply the 
Teachings. This, as well
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as the booklet, would be good for Dr. G— and for others as well.
There is no 
time-limit to effort.
The “Authority” you speak of is not what men term authority, which
comes from 
outside and which demands obedience of mind and body, but an
internal 
recognition of the value of that which flows through any given
point, focus, or 
individual. That is the authority of one’s Self-discrimination;
intuition; the 
highest intellection: that kind we all hold to, and if we follow
what we 
recognize in that way and still find it good, we naturally keep our
faces in 
that direction, in the source found to be pure and right. But this
means no 
slavish following of a person—a distinction which some are unable
to appreciate.
You will remember that H. P. B. said: “Do not follow me nor my
path; follow the 
Path I show, the Masters who are behind.” The wisdom of which is
seen in the 
course of those who judged of the teaching by what they were able
to understand 
of the Teacher. They judged Her by their standards and fell down on
everything. 
In their views, a Teacher of high philosophy should not smoke,
should be 
conventional; she made mistakes, in their wise opinions; ergo, her
philosophy 
must be wrong. All the time she said, I am nothing; I came but to
do the bidding 
of Him that sent me. W. Q. J. had similar judgment passed on him;
primarily, 
because he upheld H. P. B. first, last, and all the time— which was
the 
underlying reason for the attacks. Fearful of “authority,” they
minimized the 
only possible source upon which reliance could be placed, and then
endeavored to 
convey the impression that they were so much greater than H. P. B.,
that they 
could explain Her away; in this, they made a greater claim for
authority than 
she ever made. Where was W. Q. J. all this time? Right beside Her,
holding up 
Her hands, pointing to Her as the one to whom all should look.
Those who 
followed his advice or yet follow it, will find where She pointed.
It comes to 
this, that those who pretend to follow H. P. B. do not do so,
unless they also 
recognize W. Q. J. They had to vilify H. P. B. in order to do
likewise with W. 
Q. J. These Two stand or fall together. About W. Q. J. being
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at work now. It can be said that he never ceased working, and that
work has gone 
on directly and indirectly. He is working for unity—what he has
always worked 
for. His aid will be given to every effort to spread Theosophy pure
and simple, 
and to such individuals as could understand him, and this in exact
measure.
Here are some significant statements from H. P. B.’s messages to
the American 
Convention:
“The ethics of Theosophy are more important than any divulgement of
psychic laws 
or facts.”
“Do not work merely for the Theosophical Society, but through it
for Humanity.”
“Theosophy is Universal Brotherhood, the very foundation as well as
the key-note 
of all movements towards the amelioration of our condition.”
“There is a power behind our society which will give us the
strength we need; 
which will enable us to move the world, if we will but unite and
work as one 
mind, one heart.”
“Once united in real solidarity, in the true spirit of Universal
Brotherhood, no 
power can overthrow you, no obstacle bar your progress, no barrier
check the 
advance of Theosophy in the coming century.” “Each can, and should
co-operate 
with all, and all with each, in a large-hearted spirit of
comradeship to forward 
the work of bringing Theosophy home to every man a woman in the
country.”
“But in order that we may be able to effect this working on behalf
of our common 
cause, we have to sink all private differences. Many are the energetic
members 
of the Theosophical Society who wish to work and work hard. But the
price of 
their assistance is that all the work must be done in their way and
not in any 
one else’s way. And if this is not carried out, they sink back into
apathy or 
leave the Society entirely, loudly declaring that they are the only
true 
Theosophists. Or, if they remain, they endeavor to exalt their own
methods of 
working at the expense of all other earnest workers. This is fact,
but it is not 
Theosophy.”
As ever, R. C.
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Contents    
HOMELY HINTS
To make ourselves “better able to help and teach others” is the
task. The 
personality naturally either rebels or is depressed—or both. But we
may expect 
that and can be prepared for the reaction if we are wise and have
confidence in 
Masters’ teaching. We want to know, to be, and to go forward, and
we know that 
every little assertion of “personal ideas” is a hindrance, and that
these ideas 
and their particular “feelings” are very easily disturbed and hurt.
Their very 
“tenderness” shows their fragile nature, and that they are not
worth preserving, 
in the face of what we have learned and what we have to do to
forward the great 
results. “Thou grievest for those that may not be lamented” is a
true saying, 
which we should take to heart.
“The personality, driven from one defense, takes refuge in any
other available 
one;” we have to watch all along the line. The right attitude will
make the 
battle easy; so, having taken this, “send the arrow straight to the
mark.”
We have to learn that we are dealing with minds which need leading,
by 
presenting wider ideas. We can say a great many things if the right
manner is 
adopted and the right, kindly feeling held. It does no good to
arouse 
opposition, and this is most forcibly done if ridicule is used. In
any effort to 
point out fallacies every factor counts: a harsh uncompromising
voice, an abrupt 
manner, together with words whose significance is
unfriendliness—these can 
easily provoke a charge of intolerance. To point out where a system
of thought 
is inadequate, however, is not “tearing it down.” The motto of
Theosophists is: 
“There is no religion higher than Truth,” and all philosophies must
be able to 
stand the most rigid and critical examination in its light, or they
are 
valueless. Everything must stand upon its own merits. If this is
pointed out and 
the talk is in the line of examination
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of merits, and the pointing out of demerits in the endeavor to
reach the true, 
no one can find fault. Candid, unprejudiced examination appeals to
all.
Dogmatism is a failing of many. I think it is engendered by a
feeling of 
insecurity, in reality, while endeavoring to assure oneself and
others of the 
certainty of one’s correct knowledge. Of course there are other
kinds, such as 
the maintenance of one’s own opinion simply because it is one’s
opinion—an 
egotistical assertion. Dogma is said to be that which appears good
and right to 
one; Dogmatism, arrogance usually, is assertion. It always calls up
to my mind 
the idea of the assertion of a statement the proof of which is
unattainable. One 
may speak convincingly of that which to him is true, without
incurring the 
charge of dogmatism. When we are convinced of the truth of a
matter, there is no 
reason why we should not voice that conviction as strongly as the
case demands, 
but there is no reason why, in such case, we should demand
acceptance of it. In 
our case, we do not demand acceptance of Theosophy; we point out
its principles 
and their applications. Theosophy makes certain statements as being
matters of 
knowledge by perfected men, but not as statements to be believed.
It is shown 
that such knowledge, being acquired by Them from observation and
experience in 
many bodies, can be reached by all men, and the ways to do so are
pointed out. 
The reasonableness of the claim of knowledge takes the statement
out of the 
realm of dogma.
“Consciousness is ubiquitous, and can neither be localized nor
centered on, nor 
in, any particular subject, nor can it be limited. Its effects
alone pertain to 
the region of matter, for thought is an energy that affects matter
in various 
ways, but consciousness per se does not belong to the plane of
materiality.”
Faith is really our confidence in the fact that Masters exist, and
that Their 
teachings are what we are following. If our study, so far, of Their
philosophy 
has not begotten that confidence, there is little hope for us—that
is, if we 
have already
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studied long. But if we have that confidence, and have realized
benefit from 
Their teachings, we can surely go on in full confidence; for it is
only by 
following the lines laid down by Them that we will ever know. It is
not so much 
a question as to what “we” promise to abstain from—that is, our
intention to do 
so— as a knowledge of the right course to pursue. No one compels
us, and no one 
will punish us, but “we” succeed or fail in accordance with our use
of the 
advice and suggestions freely given. Do we doubt our ability? As
long as we 
really do so, we shall never make much success. We learn to know
our ability by 
using it to the limit. Mistakes need not worry us, if they
represent 
conscientious and unwearied efforts—we can learn through the
mistakes we make. 
It is pure selfishness to desire to know that any advised course
will benefit 
us; advice can be given, but knowledge is acquired. Personal
results should not 
be looked for. We should do things because they are the right
things to do, and 
not because they will be of benefit to us. All our vacillations,
fears and 
despondencies arise from a personal attitude. This we must change,
each one for 
himself. No one can change it for us. The first step towards making
the change 
is the seeing of the necessity for it.
Many of the statements made by the Teachers are axioms to be
applied, while at 
the same time they are woven in with such reasoning as may suit the
ordinary way 
of thinking. Most people imagine and accept as fact, that there is
but one way 
of thinking—reasoning from premises to conclusions, and tabulating
things in 
order to find the cause. By the infinitude of tabulations they come
to imagine 
finally that Matter is every-thing and does all, because nothing is
found that 
can be “nailed down.” Science, Psychology and all other efforts
that proceed 
from particulars and are based upon them, fail. They fail for no
other reason 
than that they will not admit the existence of a true and full
knowledge, or 
that it could have existed in times preceding theirs. Has not the
science of 
every period held that theirs was the highest and most glorious
that ever has 
been, their civilization the grandest? If Western Science and
Psychology would 
go on
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with their painstaking effort in the light of the knowledge of the
ages, the 
spiritual and intellectual darkness would soon be overcome, and a
civilization 
come into being which would express the spiritual and intellectual
in a true 
physical life. What hinders? Intellectual pride hinders, together
with the 
cramping effect of false conceptions of religion which give a
material bent to 
thought, which makes a material life, heaven, hell, god—“idols made
of mud.” It 
is a wonder that life is as bearable as it is; or, it would be a
wonder, if we 
did not know that man is more than his experiences, his
conceptions, or 
philosophy, and that he does not follow out to its logical
conclusions what he 
adopts as his “religion.”
After an explosion of personality, and the ensuing reaction, a
Disciple 
sometimes resolves that in future he will not oscillate so much.
This is not the 
true position—it shows he expects to oscillate some. Of course if
he expects to 
oscillate, he will oscillate. It would be better to expect to hit
the mark, 
instead of expecting to miss it. There is a great difference in the
psychological position, as well as in the quality of the energy
aroused. We 
should cease doubting our power to accomplish. If we doubt, it will
be like 
trying to shoot an arrow with a loose bow-string—no force, and no
certainty of 
direction. When the bow-string is pulled taut, and let go, there is
no 
hesitation in the arrow. It goes where pointed and with the
strength in the 
pull.
The sincere desire to help others acts as a great inlet from our
supersensuous 
consciousness. More reliance on our inner nature, and the Power
that is 
conjoined with it, will bring forth fruit. Always the inner is the
more perfect, 
and this makes the apparent imperfections and inabilities of the
outer more 
obvious; but this very perception arouses the necessary effort to
bring the 
inner and outer into accord. We could not think, we were perfect or
imperfect, 
were we not actually above and beyond both. H. P. B. says, “The
progress of the 
Ego is a series of progressive
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awakenings.” Not being sticks nor stones, but human beings, we must
“feel” 
success or failure. The wisdom is shown in not being “swelled-up”
by the one or 
cast down by the other; we should make a steady, unvarying pursuit
of that which 
is seen to be right.
Every working student of Theosophy must sooner or later meet some
Theosophical 
“bumps.” These are all good as they come, for if we “bump”
anything, it must be 
because we are off the straight road, and “bumps” are of
consequence only as 
indications to us to look to our bearings. We would not feel them
if we had not 
a “compass” inside. The purpose of life is to learn and it is all
made up of 
learning; so these things, while they may not smile at the time,
will be matters 
to smile at later on. Among the Greeks it was said that when the
Earth was 
started rolling in space, the Gods burst into a fit of laughter,
just to see the 
thing go. So we, being those very Gods, can afford to smile at the
follies we 
meet, and go on with the work of promulgating correct ideas for
those who are 
able to receive them. We have to cultivate the attitude of mind
spoken of in The 
Bhagavad-Gita, of being undisturbed by anything that may come to
pass. And these 
disturbing things are the very means by which we arrive at that
attitude.
We sometimes, perhaps often, feel our weakness, as we think. The
weakness is not 
that of our real Selves, the inner Man, but of that which we have
leaned upon, 
the false ego. If we remember that we are working with a portion of
our powers 
now—that portion which needs exercise and proper direction—in order
to 
assimilate it with what we really know and are, we shall feel more
content to 
await the full blossoming. The point of view from which we regard
things 
determines the kind and quality of action. The keeping in mind that
the Masters 
are not only Ideals, but Facts, and that all that H. P. B. and W.
Q. J. have 
written about Them was for our help and encouragement in the
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struggles that must be ours, brings us closer to Them, and makes us
strong with 
the power that flows from such reliance.
The best method to follow in trying to help our friends is to aid
them to see 
their obstacles. One way to do this is the in direct way—telling a
story, for 
instance, of somebody we know who thought or did thus and so; and
telling it in 
such a way as to arouse no suspicion in the mind of the one we are
trying to 
help. It requires finesse, but it can be done—and well. Of course,
an obtuse 
mind, engrossed in its own affairs, is sometimes best dealt with by
the direct 
method. The main point is, not to work for an opportunity, but to
take it when 
it comes.
Some students have never gotten down to a sound basis. There are
many who call 
themselves Theosophists who take this view of things: “The
principles are as 
good under any name.” This is quite true; but one soldier in the
field is not an 
army, and one principle is not an all-embracing philosophy.
Theosophy points to 
a fact—one of the utmost importance—namely, that there are
Masters—our Elder 
brothers, who have under the name of Theosophy given to the world a
record of 
the Laws that govern all the constituents of Man and of Nature. To
take some of 
the minor portions of this, and withhold from mankind the knowledge
of the 
whole, is an ignoring of the great fact itself—a fact sadly needed
in the 
world—as well as a prevention of the knowledge itself. Whether done
consciously 
or ignorantly, such action entails detrimental karmic results. It
is no small 
thing to stand between the Masters and Their work in an obstructive
way. The 
fact cannot be too often repeated that Theosophy is a record of
knowledge, and 
cannot be assimilated or understood if trimmed and modified in
order to suit the 
preconceptions and prejudices of the time or people; it is sui
generis, and must 
be so taken if benefit is to accrue from it.
People sometimes say they find a kind of “coldness” at a
Theosophical meeting, 
where principles of philosophy and their
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application to the affairs of daily life are discussed; they find
more 
“devotion” at the meetings of the various sects or cults, or even
at other types 
of meetings called “theosophical.” It would be interesting to know
what such 
people understand by “devotion.” They often doubtless refer to
those types of 
meetings where there is “meditation,” a sort of prayer-meeting
where 
psycho-religio emotions are aroused. The Teachers of Theosophy say,
“The first 
test of true discipleship is devotion to the interests of another.”
So there are 
different kinds of “devotion,” some of them to the personality. The
real 
meditation is not that.
Some Theosophists do not study; this makes them weak. They are
often sincere, 
but they do not work, nor feel the intense desire to do all that
they can. On 
this account they lose in every way. The work will not come without
the feeling; 
even working for personal results without the feeling would be
futile. There is 
but one way to progress—to cultivate the feeling that produces the
work. This 
both strengthens and improves the whole nature, and even the circumstances
of 
life. Again, other students have the devotional feeling, but center
a 
considerable amount of it in themselves. They need to forget
themselves in 
working for others, and to give all their thought, strength and
effort to the 
Cause they see to be true. This will include the personality as a
means, not as 
an end.
Is it not true that when the personal self is suppressed, the
higher finds 
expression? There is a leaning back, as it were, on the great Ocean
of Life—the 
SELF—and identification with personal ideas and feelings becomes
non-existent. 
When such times come we must beware of self-gratulation; the lower
feeds and 
waxes strong on this, and very often without our being sensible of
it—yes, even 
when we are trying to guard against it, or think we are. Nor is it
well to talk 
to others about these inner struggles, even to our best friends,
for there is a 
self-satisfaction engendered by it—so subtle is the nature of the
personal. We 
must
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learn to recognize things for what they are, in fact, and cease to
value them in 
the light of the opinions or feelings of others. Nor should we feel
depressed. 
In other words, we should not be affected by the depression of the
lower nature, 
for that is what is felt, and show no signs outwardly of the
struggle going on 
within.
The life of the Disciple must be one of constant watchfulness, not
merely of 
others, but most of all of himself. Our tendency often is to
separate our 
Theosophical life from our personal life. But we cannot restrict
our efforts 
upon ourselves to include only those relations directly connected
with our 
active Theosophical work. In our home life and in our ordinary communications
there is more probability of our slacking down than in our public,
student 
relations. The personality has had home life and connections as its
paramount 
stamping-ground, and is more apt to give full play to its
disposition there than 
elsewhere. And this play can be carried on, apart from what we
might call 
inordinate self-assertion, in small and seemingly harmless methods
of keeping 
itself in evidence—such as telling others in the home what one is
going to do in 
regard to matters that are not necessary to communicate. When one
comes to think 
of it—and thinking of these things is necessary—such actions are
just the 
efforts of the personal nature to keep itself in evidence, trying
to attract 
attention to oneself in any way—by speech, by action, by calls for
sympathy, by 
assumed direction to others, by patronizing speech, and the
thousand and one 
ways that the personality keeps on tap, by means of which he keeps
alive; for 
when suppressed in one direction, he slyly emerges in some other
way. “He” will 
do this as long as we leave any loop-hole for “him.”
The foregoing may seem very restrictive and difficult, but it
really is not. The 
very feeling of “restriction” comes from the personality, not from
the Ego. Some 
Disciples who were trying, and trying very hard, have been known to
draw 
attention to the fact that they had overcome this and suppressed
that—this is 
the same old personality with another suit of clothes on. So it is
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best always not to speak about one’s self, “either as to what he
shall eat, 
drink, or wherewithal he shall be clothed.” Here are some good
maxims, to apply: 
“Never ask another to do for you what you can do for yourself;”
“Know where your 
things are and get them for yourself when you need them;” “Do for
others all you 
can in a nice way, but don’t expect others to do for you;” “You are
valuable 
only when you are helpful, not when you require help.” These will
be found good, 
if we try them out.
The animal is able to relate cause and effect in some directions,
but perceives 
little, if any, relation between different states. A cat out in the
cold will 
cry to come in, for instance; once in and warm, it will go out
again with no 
hesitancy, nor recollection of the state it had shortly before
suffered in. Some 
humans come perilously near to a similar state of existence, and
all fall into 
it in some degree. Most people identify the power to perceive with
the act of 
perception and thus lose right comprehension and application. “What
shall arouse 
them from the living body of this death?” Trouble, pain, sorrow,
loss. In the 
meantime, they are joined to their idols, and have to be let alone.
“Theosophy 
is for those who want it and for none others.”
If Consciousness is the only Reality, the Knower, Sustainer and
Experiencer, 
then every condition or state is more or less a temporary
appearance. All 
classifications refer only to actions of Consciousness—the universe
being 
“embodied consciousness,” a creation of forms, a building up of the
great from 
combinations of the small, so to speak. You will remember that H.
P. B. says, 
“It stands to reason that life and death, good and evil, past and
future, are 
all empty words, or, at best figures of speech. They are changes of
state, in 
fact, and no more. Real life is in the spiritual consciousness of
that life, in 
a conscious existence in Spirit—not matter.” She also said that she
had in vain 
endeavored to impart this idea to Theosophists at large, and that
with this 
basic idea all the rest becomes easy; yet thousands of Theosophists
read-
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ing the statement and like statements, time and again, get no
meaning from them.
Consciousness is the cause and basis of all states, whether the
fact is realized 
or not. It alone is whether there are universes or none. If we take
the idea 
that Sight which sees all things cannot see itself, and apply it to
Consciousness, we must concede that Consciousness cannot know
itself, although 
knowing all things. Is not Consciousness Knowledge itself as an
abstraction? “It 
is wisdom itself, the object of wisdom, and that which is to be
obtained by 
wisdom; in the hearts of all it ever presideth.” It is
ever-present, ever 
perceiving the changing panorama of existence. “I establish this
whole universe 
with a single portion of myself and remain separate.”
Our form of consciousness is made up of various and differing
contacts with 
other forms of consciousness. We base our modes of action upon
these partial 
expressions, and get the reaction from them in constant
repetitions. As the Self 
is all and in all things, and all things are in the Self, the Self
is the 
Witness of all. The seeming separate view in us is not a separate
Self, but the 
One and Same as appears separate in all creatures.
Self-knowledge comprises both Self and Knowledge; without Self
there could be no 
knowledge; without being there could be no knowledge of Self. “The
Highest see 
through the eyes of the lowest.” All are partial expressions of the
One, seen by 
the One, known by the One. Individualization of being does not tend
to 
separateness, but to universality of ideation and consequent
action. What does 
it? Thought does it. All experience is by and in Consciousness;
Ideation becomes 
more and more universal.
“And when unreality ceases to exist in the individual self, it is
clear that it 
returns towards the universal; hence there is to be a rejection of
the 
self-assertion and other characteristics of the individual self.”
As to our fellow students: we are apt to be mistaken in regard to
their real 
attitude towards us. It is so often our attitude towards them that
presents to 
us a false conception of theirs. That
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we all have defects is quite certain, and a defect of one kind is
no better than 
a defect of another kind. We notice defects in others, or what
appear as such, 
in much the same way as they may notice defects in us, and then on
both sides 
there is judgment of one another on the basis of the defects
perceived. This is 
the opposite of that respect for our fellow students which we ought
to have, 
because they are such, and all are working for a common purpose. We
will readily 
admit the common ground, but say at the same time that on no other
basis would 
we be at all congenial; so it must be true that there rests
misunderstanding of 
one another. What this may be has to be searched out by each one.
There is 
something that causes it. Is it fear, doubt, ambition, jealousy—or
what? These 
things we have to determine and act upon for ourselves, regardless
of what any 
other may do, or what we may have thought of that other. All this
will keep us 
so busy in watching ourselves that we will have no time nor
inclination to take 
offense at others. And all the time we will be raising ourselves to
a higher and 
better degree of discrimination and power to help in the best and
most effectual 
way the very ones whom we may have placed in a pigeon-hole that we
have 
specially constructed for them.
It is written that students are not selected because of their
natural affinity 
for one another, but for quite other reasons. Each student or
disciple carries 
with him some particular expression of racial defects, which on the
surface 
appear as points of dislike to others, and yet which have similar
roots in each 
student, so much alike that one could not tell them apart. So each
has to dig 
out the root, and when he has done this, the true nature shines
forth and is 
reflected in the others.
The desire to know the “whence, where and whither” of humanity
springs from the 
general “religious instinct,” the real basis of religion being in
man’s own 
spiritual nature. Religion does not arise outside of man, as the
word itself 
shows—from religere, to bind back. Religion is the binding back of
all men and 
all beings to the One Source of all. Real knowledge arose within
man him-
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self as he perceived his real nature. Knowledge of man’s nature has
always been 
and has been restated from time to time by perfected men from other
periods of 
evolution. All forms of religion are pale and distorted copies of
the original 
statements upon which they are based, the Three Fundamental
Propositions of 
Theosophy.
The greatest thing most students have to guard against is
self-deception. The 
versatility of lower Manas in this direction is beyond
characterization. So we 
have to watch to see whether our ostensible motives are not cloaks
for other 
underlying ones. While doing this, we should be serious but
cheerful—not taking 
“our selves” too seriously, but the task. itself as seriously as we
can. By this 
course we will gain insight and strength, if we never despair,
never doubt—and 
keep quiet, thoughtful and persistent, as well as cheerful, through
it all. 
Nothing is as bad as we think it is, nor ever will be.
People sometimes charge others with intolerance. Perhaps this
accusation arises, 
not on account of the statements actually made, but because of the
tone and 
feeling within and behind them. One can usually state his belief
and 
understanding, giving his reasons therefore, without arousing
antagonism. This 
is a good thing to strive for. Tolerance is good, if understood
rightly; but 
there are many strange ideas in regard to it. Some think it to be
intolerance to 
point out to others holding different views any errors of statement
or fact. But 
Truth never yet agreed with error, nor does error agree with error;
Truth agrees 
only with Truth. So if we firmly believe, and are convinced by fact
and reason, 
that we are in possession of Truth, it would be a false tolerance
which would 
withhold it in the face of error. Truth exists in the world for the
purpose of 
destroying error. Error is dogmatic and does not court close
investigation. 
Truth courts all and every possible investigation, and, calm in its
certitude, 
examines everything upon its merits, tests it by the standard of
Truth. The 
average mind of the day is still under the sway of superstition, of
dogma and
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authority, and must remain so for some time to come. Meeting
frequently those 
who have broken loose from old forms to engulf themselves and, what
is worse, 
others in newer forms of the same old errors, we can but keep on
the straight 
path we know, making a trail that these very ones may follow in the
future. We 
need not be distressed that they cannot now see. Their time will
come; for all 
these things are provided for in the vastness of time. We have but
to go on with 
the Work.
At certain stages of his student life, the Disciple often feels
that getting 
away alone somewhere with regularity helps him keep his psychic
balance. Surely 
it is not a good thing for progress to depend upon externals for
balance. 
Thinking so only perpetuates the dependence, and cannot bring that
inner 
strength and perception which is so necessary. That dependence
occasions 
dissatisfaction at the majority of externals, and demands
periodical changes, 
none of which brings anything lasting. From all this a nervous
tension is 
produced which is corrosive and destructive, occupies the mind with
one’s 
fancied needs, and reacts injuriously on the body.
True strength lies within and can only be aroused and used by
ceasing to think 
that anything in particular of an external nature is necessary for
us, in the 
ordinary acceptation of the word. We have our place and our duty to
fulfill and 
perform; externals are our temporary opportunities, and we shall be
wise to use 
these rightly. Furthermore, we will do well if we take the attitude
that “we” 
are not necessary to others; that if we were gone they would miss
us only for a 
comparatively short time, and that other persons and things would
finally fully 
occupy their attention. Only when we have arrived at that state—the
sooner the 
better—where we stand self-centered in the true sense, and “upon
nothing 
depend,” can we realize our inner nature, and be of the greatest
service in the 
world of men. All of which means that our tendency is to exaggerate
our 
importance; and that is distinctly separative and obstructive to
real knowledge 
and effectiveness.
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Effective Theosophical work cannot be done unless there are found
persons in the 
world who can see the necessity for it and will fit themselves more
and more to 
supply the need. That certain persons find such an opportunity is
their karma, 
but what they do with the opportunity depends upon their
realization of its 
importance. Once we see something of what the Theosophical Movement
means to the 
world, we are necessary to it—not as persons—but because we see and
do. The 
Movement is accelerated by us to the extent we work for it, and
hindered to the 
extent that we, as it were, let it pull us along. Of course, if we
were dead and 
gone, or not able to grasp the great fact of such existence as the
Lodge of 
Masters and Their work in the world, the great Movement would be
going on in 
such measure as others— perhaps not so wise nor capable in many
ways—might 
afford. So, every student who will strive to make himself a fitting
instrument 
is necessary to the work, to his full capacity, Soul, Mind and
Body. It is a 
fact of tremendous significance to our personalities! If we are
impressed with 
the significance of it, and accept ‘ fight that only fortune’s
favored soldiers 
can obtain,” we will hesitate not at all, but seeing that the
present basis of 
action in the world is wrong will work with it as far as we must,
while 
ourselves thinking and acting from a very different basis. Our
thoughts are our 
thoughts; our lives are our lives, and both are devoted to our
work. Having put 
our hands to the plough, and seeing the field that needs
cultivation, we may 
push on in confidence and faith. More power is needed? It will
come, if we will 
just open those big hearts of ours and let “them” work.
The right kind of Theosophical talking comes only from practice. It
is not 
merely the use of a facile vocabulary, but the possession of
well-digested ideas 
that is necessary. These come only from constant study and
application. Frequent 
reading of articles by W. Q. J. develops the tendency to present
the right ideas 
in the simplest form, and these ideas become a mental storehouse
which can be 
drawn upon at will. It is not necessary that we understand the
deeply 
metaphysical concepts of Theosophy, as
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it is to comprehend the fundamentals and be able to make an
application of them 
to every problem of life. W. Q. J.’s articles will be found to
contain 
“alphabet, grammar, and composition,” or, in other words, a basis
for right 
ideas, right thinking and right application. A daily reading from
his writings 
is advisable. One who does this cannot help but imbibe—absorb—the
spirit of 
them, and become an exponent who is at once deep, simple and
convincing.
The question of personality is so large that it might seem as
though its 
successful solution should resemble the working out of a
complicated 
mathematical problem. But the greatest truths are the simplest. And
if we 
reflect a moment on what impersonality is not, perhaps that will
help us to see 
what it is. Some orate forcibly against personality. That does not
prove they 
are free from it. Some say little, but the effect of what is said
is to imply 
that they are impersonal. They seem so modest, but are only
politic. Some are 
afraid to talk about personality, thinking that it must be shunned
as an ogre.
Yet others preach a doctrine of impersonality which takes
everything human out 
of life and makes of it a cold negation. This doctrine has no
patience with 
evolution—all faults must disappear at a single stroke.
Impersonality isn’t talking; it isn’t silence; it isn’t
insinuation; it isn’t 
repulsion; it isn’t negation. Above all, it isn’t a diplomacy which
masks 
ambition.
Impersonality means freedom from personality, but none of us are
going to attain 
that, right away; we are doing well enough if we are persistently,
albeit 
slowly, overcoming.
For practical purposes: if we are developing the child-heart; if we
are learning 
to love things beautiful; if we are becoming more honest and plain
and simple; 
if we are beginning to sense the sweet side of life; if we are
getting to like 
our friends better and extending the circle; if we feel ourselves
expanding in 
sympathy; if we love to work for Theosophy and do not ask position
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as a reward; if we are not bothering too much about whether we are
personal or 
impersonal—this is traveling on the path of impersonality. So much
for the 
individual. For the T. S. A. impersonality means not to worship
itself as an 
organization; to endeavor to get broader and freer; to merge
itself, more and 
more, into the living spirit of the movement— its higher self; to
neither 
despise itself because it is a form nor exalt itself because it has
a soul; to 
become less doctrinal and more human.
July 12, 1897.
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“Seek this wisdom by doing service, by strong search, by questions,
and by 
humility; the wise who see the truth will communicate it unto thee,
and knowing 
which thou shalt never again fall into error, o son of Bharata. By
this 
knowledge thou shalt see all things and creatures whatsoever in
thyself and then 
in me. Even if thou wert the greatest of all sinners, thou shalt be
able to 
cross over all sins in the bark of spiritual knowledge. As the
natural fire, O 
Arjuna, reduceth fuel to ashes, so does the fire of knowledge
reduce all actions 
to ashes. There is no purifier in this world to be compared to
spiritual 
knowledge; and he who is perfected in devotion find eth spiritual
knowledge 
springing up spontaneously in himself in the progress of time.”
                                                                    
Bhagavad-Gita, Chapter IV.
                                                                                
      
Contents
LIVING THE LIFE
        Letter One
YOUR letter of ‘Wednesday is here; a good brave letter, and true
all through, 
covering the ground. Yes, if we were quite certain that They were
on hand always 
to pull us out of holes we walk into carelessly, or have made
possible by past 
neglect, we would never become as They are. All the same we are
helped, and in 
the right way, the way our nature needs, not necessarily according
to the way we 
assume would be the proper one. If helped at all, it must be so.
“Ingratitude is 
not one of our vices,” is Their written statement, and it is lived
up to; the 
very best that can be done for us is done, and being done all the
time. At times 
we may doubt, but this arises from the personal uncertainty, fear
of some or 
another kind of consequence. We should take it that whatever arises
is a 
necessary position for us to be in, in order for us to do further
and greater 
work for Them. This must be, if we are true to Them; so, while
doing all we can 
to make the way sure and clear according to our light, we step
forward with 
strength and boldness because the Path is ours and Theirs. We lay
our strength 
and our weaknesses on the altar of sacrifice. Does not the Gita say
“Place all 
thy works, failures and successes alike, on me”? The fact that some
are 
recognized as bad means their relinquishment, sooner or later. The
reason for 
this seems plain; if we waited till we were saints, would we ever
begin? We 
would not. So, recognizing this interiorly—if not in words—we go on
and keep 
going. This is the gist of your letter, and it warms me up to have
you write it.
This is a school and everything that comes for us to do contains a
lesson for 
us. ‘We should not forget that, ever. What comes
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at any time contains in it the thing we need; so whether it seems
hard, 
troublesome, or pleasant, there is something in it for us. Also it
is well to 
bear in mind that W. Q. J. says in the “Spiritual Will,” that the
essence of 
eradicating the personal element lies in doing the things we
dislike to do. 
Fortunately for us, we don’t have to hunt them up. They come to us
right along. 
If we had to hunt them, we might let a lot of them go by, as not
the right kind, 
or for some other reason. Being Arjunas, we have the battles ready
to our hand.
There comes a time in our development when work seems useless and
irksome, but 
W. Q. J. says, “the disciple must work,” notwithstanding. I think
that in the 
irksome work is the clearing up of Karma, and clarification of the
sheaths. We 
are doing it all, bearing it all, for the Self. It is by the giving
up of self 
that the White Adept becomes. That which galls, that which hurts,
is the 
personal desire unattained, or feared to be unattainable. We know
it very well, 
but find the pressure hard many times. We also know that
“realization comes from 
dwelling on the thing to be realized;” so we have to keep on, and
“dwell” as 
much as we possibly can. Every effort brings the time of
realization nearer.
I was amused at the remark of the lady, “If we could see on the
astral plane, we 
could find there that H. P. B. made mistakes.” I would say,
“Perhaps if we could 
understand English, our mother tongue, and could understand the
simplest 
information in regard to a thing we had never heard before, and
knew the very 
first laws of Occultism, we would keep silence, try to learn, and
refrain from 
showing our ignorance.” This “parrot-talk” has a tendency to make
me “tired.” I 
have heard it before, and I am not gentle with it as I am with
other things. It 
is so unspeakably silly; I often quietly say things that tend to
startle such 
people out of their goose-like assurance. (You have seen geese and
heard them!)
These people should be told to stop taking as a fact what other
people tell 
them, and if they want to know anything, go study the history of
the Movement 
from every point of view. We have done it, and are giving out the
result, which 
they can
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verify if they choose. What we are giving cannot be refuted in any
way but by 
that history, assimilated and understood. We stand on the whole
record, without 
omissions or interpolations. Of course, the study needs a modicum
of power to 
understand the meaning of words and their application; if they have
it not, then 
they would better follow some “leader” or another until they have
acquired it. 
This is not their class.
When the lady asked if never lectures on “what Theosophy is,” it
would have been 
a great opportunity to have her tell what it is. I imagine she
would have 
exposed her ignorance. Such people—many of them—think that talk
about Lemuria 
and Atlantis, Parabrahm, the Logoi, Pitris and what not, is
Theosophy; none of 
them understand even what they talk about. No very explicit
information was 
given out by H. P. B., and there is none other to be had. The races
are simply 
sketched so as to give a general comprehension of the history and
nature of the 
preceding races; if we knew every detail about them, it would not
help us any. 
True knowledge does not lie in the direction of book-study, as we
know, and as 
doubtless you have told them.
The — were asking last night in respect to the “Declaration.” I had
said at one 
time that the very words were Mr. Judge’s; they evidently got the
idea that he 
had “communicated” the Declaration to me. I told them that I had
been looking 
for the right thing to put Out as a Declaration of Principles and
that while on 
that hunt, you had sent me the very thing I wanted, further
explaining that the 
Messengers had left all that was necessary for us, and that it was
for us to 
apply the right things at the right time and places. thought that
was rather 
discouraging, evidently thinking that we should have direction in
ways and 
means. I tried to show we could not do any good, if directed in
everything; we 
would not grow in discrimination, power and judgment; we would be
but automata, 
and would never fill the necessary place. No doubt we would be
helped by 
readjustment rather than direction, so we should not look for the
latter, but 
using our best Theosophical judgment, move forward, feeling sure
that if our 
understanding of the nature of the task is good,
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and our motive pure, the right way will appear to us. Such would be
guidance of 
the right sort, one that leads to growth. Should it be necessary to
have 
“direction” at any time, we may be sure that it, also, will come.
In the 
meantime we live and learn; and we should not forget that They and
we are 
working for the future, and for the same end.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Two
Glad that you had such a good and large meeting, and that your
courage increases 
as time goes on. You would not have believed a year ago that such
progress in 
the work and in understanding could be made in the time elapsed.
Think of the 
numbers of souls awakened and set upon the right path by going the
way yourself 
and pointing it out to others. This is something that falls to the
very few. 
“Just to thy wish the door of heaven is found open before thee,
through this 
glorious unsought fight which only fortune’s favored soldiers may
obtain.” The 
kind of fighting was not our choosing, but was and is that of
fortune’s favored 
soldiers; the end of the battle is not seen until the enemy has
surrendered. He 
may be defeated in one place to stand and give battle in another;
so the fight 
keeps on because a soldier of the Kshatriya tribe has no duty
superior to lawful 
war. War is his business, and he should find joy in the battling
with 
difficulties presented to him to try his courage, to test his
strength and 
endurance. “Make pleasure and pain, gain and loss, victory and
defeat, the same 
to thee, and then prepare for battle, for thus and thus alone shalt
thou in 
action still be free from sin.”
I can readily imagine the troubles found in getting people to
really study; as a 
rule, the necessity is not perceived, and this, I think, on account
of the 
present methods of education wherein the soul and mind are
considered as mere 
recorders. Is it not strange that plain statements are not grasped,
that the 
superficial meanings of words are taken to be the applications of
them? All
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of which is chargeable to our modern educational methods. Most men
think that 
when they have heard a statement made, they know it.
Some one or two may wake up, among a number of those interested,
and therein 
lies the hope; also we know that those who merely listen or read
with attention 
get something in the way of a trend that sometime will develop into
greater 
things. It is not labor lost, although results at times do not
appear to be 
commensurate with the effort put forth. We make the effort, and the
effort 
brings results: this is enough. We may not look for any specific
kind of 
results, but keep on doing the best we know and can; this includes
all proper 
ways and means open to us.
What you say about Consciousness is right, as I see it. There is
consciousness 
and its perceptions, the latter becoming more and more objective
creations on 
different planes of matter on account of the Creative, Preservative
and 
Destructive powers inherent in Consciousness, or, more properly,
the Self. 
‘Whatever state of consciousness the Perceiver may be in, the
things of that 
plane are for the time being his only realities.” It is all
relativity and here 
is where the knowledge of the Real and the Unreal frees from
bondage. The whole 
universe exists only for purposes of Soul. Soul is
individualization of Being; 
we, as self-conscious beings, have to remain in the bondage of
matter long 
enough to give lower segregated entities the necessary impetus
toward self- 
consciousness. The majority do this work unconsciously, partly
right and partly 
wrong. It is possible to do it consciously and free from
attachment, as well as 
rightly.
A good comprehension of the processes is wise and necessary, for
the sake of 
others who need to see that the way of devotion is not that of
merely being 
good. The books of devotion contain the rules of war, the
duties—individual and 
collective—of the warrior, the right conduct in the field.
Moreover, they give 
the maps of battle-grounds where the foe is to be met, and tell how
the battle 
should be fought—to win. All the works of the Teachers have their
places, and 
all of Them had a particular work
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to do. Those who think that the Teachers can be pigeon-holed— as
some do—have 
failed to grasp the meaning of the Movement. We can see how the
work of one 
Teacher so clearly and so beautifully complemented that of the
other. You 
remember what H. P. B. wrote to W. Q. J.: “As you in America will
prevail, if 
you only remain staunch to Master’s program.” There is no way under
heaven by 
which we shall know that program except through the record left by
those Two. 
The more we proceed on the line we are going, the more clear does
it show itself 
to be according to the “program.
 
CONTENTS
 LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Three
I am rejoiced that you find lessons in all these things that come
to pass: this 
is the realizing of the meaning of life. Most people take it to
mean eating, 
drinking, waking, sleeping, enjoying, doing business for gain in
order to do 
these things—and learning nothing, frittering away opportunities,
multiplying 
difficulties, avoiding by every possible means those things from
which they 
might learn.
Our attitude should be that if there is work and we can do it, we
must, 
regardless of results; we know that the Law takes care of them,
without thought 
or effort on our part, and with exactitude undisturbed by our
sentiments. We see 
that and admit it, yet fear to trust, even when we know that there
is nothing 
else that can be done by us.
One finds spiritual knowledge springing up spontaneously within
him, not because 
of his mental exertions, but because of his “attitude of mind.”
“Place thy heart 
on me as I have declared myself to be, serve me, offer unto me
alone, and thou 
shalt come to me; I swear it, for thou art dear unto me.” Krishna
calls these 
“my supreme and most mysterious words”; he adds, “He who expoundeth
this supreme 
mystery to my worshippers shall come to me if he performs the
highest worship of 
me, and there shall
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not be among men any one who shall serve me better than he, and he
shall be 
dearest unto me of all on earth.” What determines it? Thought
determines it. 
Motive determines it.
I am glad that you wrote R— and put it up squarely. I think that
was the right 
thing to do; if it hurt personal pride for you to do it, the hurt
showed the 
need. A sore place like that is not right; some massaging will not
do it any 
harm. The fact that you felt better after writing shows you knew
that it was the 
right thing all the time, but hesitated, like the boy with the
tooth and the 
string. The personality is what you say—a “peach.” It can play all
parts, from 
lord of all creation to Uriah Heep, as its occasion requires, and
the man is 
involved in its pretensions. But he learns, and some time Mr.
Personality will 
be “out of a job”; “there won’t be no such thing”; instead, there
will be a 
whole man.
I can understand the trepidation that arises in such a transaction
as you 
mention; one does not want to make a mistake because of the large
loss that 
would be incurred, and yet one must decide to do or not to do. The
nature of 
your business contemplates a certain amount of risk based on the
probable action 
of others. It is a sort of gamble; probabilities are better in some
cases than 
in others, but in any, there is no certainty to be obtained. To be
able to 
determine accurately one would have to know all the converging
factors, to see 
them all in their several courses, and this is not possible to us;
so we have to 
guess on probabilities to a great extent. It is this uncertainty
which un nerves 
us. We do not want to make a loss, and we do not want to lose a
business 
opportunity. The only course left, is seems to me, is to determine
whether it 
would be considered a fair risk; if so, we would be justified in
taking it, 
because there is no way by which results can be absolutely assured.
Our judgment 
would then be centered on the quality of the risk, leaving results
to general 
average—that being all that we can do.
The Conditioned is surely unlimited in its capacity for wrong
action, but we 
might remember that the Unconditioned does not and cannot act. “The
Self acts 
only through its creatures;” the
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conditioning is collective. The conditioned has also to exercise
its capacity 
for right action; its ascertained errors lead in this direction,
and the 
possibilities are also unlimited. All being is conditioned, but in
it there is 
an infinite variation. If we rise out of one set of conditions we
are in 
another. The secret would seem to be non-identification with
conditions of any 
kind, while working in and with those which on any plane surround
us, improving 
our judgment and discrimination in regard to them all the time, as
well as the 
instrument in use on that plane, giving the conscious lives of
which that 
instrument is composed the right direction.
Had we transcended physical conditions, we should not be trammelled
by them, 
would not be in them, except by choice. Even then we could not do
other than put 
ourselves under their operations and limitations, in order to gain
a full 
comprehension of them in all their bearings upon those in that
condition by 
necessity. We have to abide by the rules of whatever game we are
playing; at the 
same time we may know better games.
It is good to have that “touch of heart” which transcends time,
space and 
conditions. I fully appreciate it, and you know that it exists on
my part. Love 
to you and the highest success in your endeavors.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Four
While situations are not always agreeable, or what we would choose,
yet they are 
the very apparatus by means of which we learn discrimination; you
know that. 
Seeming misfortunes turn into blessings if taken right; this must
be true if the 
purpose of life is to learn. Everything that comes is a part of
life, and when 
it comes to us, it is a part of our life; so all must be right for
us if our 
object is to learn. If people could only look at it in that way,
they would 
learn more, get through with less friction, be happier, and, in
reality, have 
fewer difficulties to surmount; the necessity for learning ceasing,
no means are 
drawn to us for that
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purpose. It is Karma, all of it, and as students we should realize
and benefit 
by the knowledge. But it takes time for most to do so, and
opportunities are 
lost and energy uselessly expended in the meantime. Our work is
with ourselves, 
however, and we can do only what we can for others, giving them
such 
opportunities as are beyond us to take; then they must choose. W.
Q. J. said 
there are two things needed—to hold on firmly, and to have perfect
confidence. I 
think therein lies the door to a safe refuge. (He used the words
“hold on 
grimly”—which is more expressive of determination.)
It is true that when we are relying on other things, we are not
relying on the 
law. Yes, it looks a good deal darker than it really is. We have to
grow 
accustomed to another kind of light, and we shall then see as
plainly, or more 
so, than before. The very sacrifices made to relieve the trials of
others are 
also tests for ourselves, and means of growth, growth coming from
the sacrifice 
of the lower to the higher in every way, as well as on every plane
of being. It 
is spiritual fire that burns out all the dross. At no time is the
way easier, 
but it is sure, and the refining goes on. If we must go down, it
will be with 
our flags flying, fighting to the very last. That is the worst that
could 
happen, and even that is not very bad for us, though others might
suffer because 
of our removal to another field. We may now regret the possibility,
but then we 
would not, because no more could be done.
Also, your thought that we are not deserted must be right. Too
often we think 
all depends upon our effort and continuance; yet we must know that
all these 
things are provided for, and there are always those who are near
us, who see and 
know, and will never fail us, even though we have to go through the
gates of 
death to get a wider vision and understanding. All the trial and
training tend 
to pull us out of one place in order that we may lay hold of
another and better 
one, when we determine to “suffer or enjoy whatever the Higher Self
has in store 
for one by way of discipline and experience.” It is the Higher Self
that pulls 
us into places and conditions that the personality would run in
affright
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from, if it alone were acting. It shrinks from the unknown like the
steed, but 
the rider by spur, bridle, and encouragement makes it carry him
where he desires 
to go, for he knows where food, shelter, and rest await both.
In this work natures are intensified; good and bad come to the
surface, but the 
cleansing process is gradual. Each must do his own work of
elimination where 
such is seen to be needed; it is a process of purpose and
discrimination, and 
events bring us opportunities. Wise are those who take advantage of
opportunities and examine motives in the handling of events.
The Law works in strange ways at times; it is never idle and it
makes no 
mistakes. Let us rely on IT, for there is nothing else on which we
may. If I 
were utterly worthless, your love and faith and courage would bring
results to 
you just the same, and your sacrifice to an ideal bring out in you
all that the 
ideal holds. And when it is Truth itself we seek and serve, nothing
can dismay 
us or turn us aside. It is much to have gained this
understanding—worth its cost 
ten thousand times.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Five
You have it right about passing from plane to plane daily but
relating 
everything to the brain circle of necessity and thus losing the
meanings. I 
think both a dwelling on the fundamentals and a giving it to others
is what 
produces the best results. W. Q. J. says, ‘ it (the Will) is freed
from the 
domination of desire and at last subdues the mind itself. But
before the 
perfection of the practice is arrived at, the will acts according
to desire, 
only that desire is for higher things and away from those of
material life.” The 
ordinary events and duties of the day do become fatiguing and
harassing to the 
earnest student by the very nature of the change of attitude and
plane of 
action, and of the changes going on in the body itself; but this
has to be 
overcome. The disciple must work, must do every duty, not in order
to get it
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done, but as though his whole interest were in it and it were the
only thing to 
be done. This, you will see, is because desire is working in the
new field.
As to memory: you see that memory is a faculty of perceiving
registration. 
Registration is there, but oftentimes remote from the plane of
perception, the 
impression being pressed upward, as it were, from below. Physical
memory can be 
trained to greater effectiveness, a close observation and notation
of every 
thing and every circumstance being the principal agent. We have
many careless 
habits of letting things impress us without definite notation. For
instance, 
people often look at their watch and put it back in the pocket;
then, being 
asked, “What time is it?” have to look again, being unable to tell.
In such 
cases, the object was to see what time it wasn’t, and observation
went no 
further in the way of notation. To carefully note things and not
allow the 
notation to affect our proper course of conduct—that is, to note
impersonally—is 
studying the hearts of men who make up the world in which we live;
is studying 
man as a whole, in fact, for the whole is made up of the parts.
Such an attitude 
neither judges nor condemns, but votes, in order to help
understandingly. This 
careful notation works both ways, inwardly as well as outwardly,
and tends to 
effectiveness of the physical registry. Motive counts in this as
well as 
elsewhere; otherwise, it might descend to “peering about.” One sees
without 
giving any indication of having done so, and without the slightest
intention of 
making any personal use of perception so gained. When we can read
the thoughts 
of others, such knowledge is never used to the detriment of others
but ever for 
their benefit and with wisdom; like the saying of the Masons, it is
“locked in 
the safe and sacred repository of the heart.”
I think you have the understanding of “Look not behind or thou art
lost.” The 
context says, “Kill in thyself all memory of past experiences.” If
we do not do 
this, we live in them and rejuvenate them. Having in the past made
a deep 
impression, while we have now increased our power of thought, they
are re-lived 
with increased power and expression. Reliance on the Self— “That
Thou Art”—is 
the way out. “As we admit the reality of the
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Higher Self, we should embrace the idea, dwell on it day in and day
out until 
the will and desire naturally incline to it and have it as the
subtone or aim of 
thought. This process will make the line of influence brighter and
better with 
every thought. When the influence grows strong it pervades the
entire nature and 
strengthens as well as improves. It will give knowledge and also
energy. This is 
the real and only road to the Masters, the Adepts, the Mahatmas.”
What you say is true, that any other position than that of the Self
is all the 
more disastrous because temporarily strong. Whatever a man relies
upon, to that 
he goes; he, only, who relies upon the Self is not subject to
rebirth. It does 
require an immortal courage to have an immortal point of view, and
to hold to it 
while watching and guiding the lower forces in unity, for the Self
of All. The 
Spiritual Will cannot act so long as there is any selfishness in
the action or 
the desire for its results. The only way out is renunciation of
self-interest in 
the fruits of actions, and while the perfection of renunciation may
not now be 
ours, growth in that direction is always possible, and each modicum
of growth 
makes for better attainment.
It is well to have recognized that for a long time the hidden
activity of the 
spiritual aspiration manifests most in the increased activity of
the lower 
nature, and this may also mean in the circumstances of life. It is
the hastening 
of Karma, which may be good quite as well as what we might be
disposed to call ‘ 
Karma. Good Karma is that which is pleasing to Iswara; bad Karma is
that which 
is displeasing to Iswara—the best definition of the two kinds.
We need not mind what we have not done nor yet what we have done.
Have care only 
for what we are doing; so shall we best work and serve. Like St.
Paul, we find 
the spirit willing but the flesh weak, yet the latter gets stronger
all the 
time. It looks weaker than it is because of the higher standard of
judgment we 
apply to it. Always the inner is the more perfect, and it is that
which does the 
work of perfecting. He who seeth that all his actions are performed
by nature 
only and that the Self within
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is not the actor sees indeed.” Our Declaration says, “A truer
realization of the 
Self, a profounder conviction of universal brother-hood.” We are
beginning to 
realize what those words mean, and we realize it by teaching it and
endeavoring 
to live it.
The Perceiver having to be understood as changeless troubles a good
many. This 
is because we identify that which perceives with its perceptions.
Each person 
has what he calls his mind, but many think that the present
attitude of mind is 
the Perceiver, although he had other attitudes at one time, and
will have still 
others because He changes his mind as He perceives need for such
change. The 
mind is therefore only his instrument for comprehending things and
natures on 
the plane upon which it is used. That instrument can be
strengthened and 
improved; it is and must be something permanent which uses,
strengthens, and 
improves the instrument. The mind might be likened to a telescope
in use by the 
Man, the Perceiver, in order to be able to perceive the nature of
the things 
about him. He can act only in accordance with what He perceives
through the 
telescope. If the telescope is not properly adjusted or out of
focus, the 
perception will be out of true, and wrong action will follow. The
Perceiver must 
there-fore learn, by experience and through the experience of
others like 
himself with similar instruments, the proper adjustment and
focussing of the 
instrument upon which right perception and action depend. If he
became any 
particular perception or perceptions gained through his instrument,
he would 
immediately lose all relation with other possible attitudes to be
obtained, 
together with those that have been obtained.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Six
You ask about the Ego leaving the astral body. I think that the
best 
comprehension of the subject can be had by analogy. ‘When one is
said to be 
asleep, the Manas or mind is no longer receiving nor transmitting
impressions 
through the body; he
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passes into the dreamless state, where he functions as a
spiritually 
self-conscious being until the cycle of return comes to function
through the 
body again. Now if we regard death as a more complete sleep, a
final one for 
that body, the Ego would simply cease forever to function through
that body; the 
linga sarira or “form” astral would immediately begin to
disintegrate, remaining 
with the body until its last particle, except the skeleton, is
dissipated. The 
Ego, however, is no more tied to the one than to the other; the
Kama Rupa, or 
desire form, aggregates itself from the skandhas or tendencies of
the lower 
nature clothed in astral matter (not the linga sarira), and the Ego
ascends to 
Devachan clothed in his highest essence. The Kama Rupa quickly or
slowly fades 
out, according to the grossness of the nature of the man in life,
but its 
“seeds” remain, awaiting the return of the Ego from Devachan. As
the Ego while 
inhabiting a body, and during the sleep of the body, may ascend to
Devachanic 
regions without hindrance by the fact of the existence of that body
or the 
desires pertaining to it, so, after the death of the body, the Ego
is not held 
by the disintegrating process of his lower principles, but may
quickly pass 
through the kama-lokic (dreaming) to the Devachanic state. The
kama-rupa is but 
the mass of desires and passions, abandoned by the real person who
has fled to 
“heaven.” Yet, as some dream more than others and in different
ways, there is a 
period of greater or less extent before the segregation of the
kama-rupa is 
complete, before the Triad is entirely free. You will note that Mr.
Judge 
writes, “When the separation is complete (between the body that has
died, the 
astral body and the passions and desires) . . . the Higher Triad .
. . 
immediately goes into another state.”
If it is remembered that the real Man is the Perceiver of all
states, the 
different states will simply mean his perceptions on different planes.
When he 
finally leaves his lower principles or instruments, he has no
further 
perceptions of those sorts, but has others of a higher sort. He
never ceases to 
perceive, while in manifestation, on any plane; he simply changes
the direction 
of perception. While occupying a body and during waking hours, he
is affected by 
the stimuli received through the body; after the body
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sleeps, he is affected by the repetition of the stimuli more or
less during the 
dream; these die out and he is free as Ego on a still higher plane.
At death 
these have a wider range, each of the lower principles beginning to
disintegrate 
immediately upon the death of the body, for it was the field of
their operation.
Body of itself has no consciousness, no power of perception; it is
the gross, 
concrete, earthly part with which we contact earthly things. One of
the Teachers 
wrote, “Chelaship does not Consist in any kind of eating or
drinking, in any 
practices, observances, forms, or rituals; it is an attitude of
mind.” Another 
Teacher said, “Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven and all the rest
shall be 
added unto you.” The reason for this is that it is the mind which
is involved. 
If we resort to practices, then the mind is bent upon them, becomes
more and 
more implicated in them, and as they are concrete things, the mind
becomes of 
that complexion. Jesus said, “Be ye not as the Pharisees who make
clean the 
outside of the platter.” The inner nature has a diet out of our
thoughts and 
motives. If those are low or gross or selfish, it is equivalent to
feeding that 
nature upon gross food. True Theosophic diet is therefore of
unselfish thoughts 
and deeds, untiring devotion to the welfare of Humanity, absolute
negation of 
self, unutterable aspiration to the Supreme Soul. This only is what
“we can grow 
upon, and vain are the hopes of those who pin their faith on any
other 
doctrines.”
As to bodily food. It is that which best agrees with you, taken in
moderation, 
neither too much nor too little. If your Constitution and
temperament will 
permit vegetarianism, then that will give less heat to the blood.
“If from 
illness or long habit a man cannot go without meat, why, by all
means let him 
eat it. It is no crime; it will only retard his progress a little;
for after all 
is said and done, the purely bodily functions are of far less
importance than 
what a man thinks and feels, what desires he encourages in his mind
and allows 
to take root and grow there.” (H. P. B.)
I am saying so much on this subject because experience has shown
that it is so 
easy for students to slip into bodily observances and stay there;
this is the 
wrong end to begin on. It is best
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not to make any particular selection as to diet; take what best
agrees with you 
and sustains your body best. There is nothing in vegetarian diet to
create 
spirituality. The Hindus who have been vegetarians for centuries
are, for the 
most part, degraded, and the better portion have as much difficulty
as the 
western man in the acquirement of spiritual knowledge. Also, cows
and sheep 
would be spiritual if such food had that kind of effect. It is the
motive that 
counts, too, in anything. If a person stops eating meat in order
that he may, by 
complying with that condition, attain to a development he has set
before him, he 
misses the mark and has acquired a selfish motive for the line thus
adopted. 
Also, of course, you should know that it has proved to be a real
danger for 
western peoples, whose digestive organs have become habituated to a
meat diet, 
to change to a vegetarian one. The trouble does not arise from
weakness 
following lack of meat, but from imperfect digestion causing
disease—due to the 
retention in the stomach of vegetable matter for so long a time
that yeasts and 
other growths, including alcoholic fermentations, are thrown into
the 
circulation, sufficiently to bring on nervous diseases,
tuberculosis, and 
manifold other derangements. It is well known that a man who has
melancholia due 
to systemia cannot expect to reach a high development in occultism.
The first thing, then, is to have the right kind of thoughts; the
other, and by 
far the least important, is diet, in which the main thing to be
observed is, eat 
whatever will keep the body in the best working condition, so that
it may be as 
effective an instrument for work in the world as possible. It is
quite true that 
the foods of the present time are not ideal. In the future better
products will 
be had, but they will come from right thinking; our present work is
to think 
from a right basis and become established in that basis, and assist
others to do 
likewise. From this will flow what is in accord with it, from
within, outward—a 
natural growth.
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146 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Seven
No one who sees his mistakes can be a hopeless case. The moment we
see that we 
are deluded, that moment we are no longer deluded, although we may
be surrounded 
by the consequences of delusion and have to work through them. Any
trouble and 
hindrance come from self-identification With delusion and mistakes;
this is the 
delusion of delusions.
The way you are furnishing the motive power for the business is
great. One feels 
less and less desire for the things of this world, but he must
work. It is 
Karma, and Karma is Dharma—duty; duty, not ‘inclinations,” is what
is required 
of us. The motive is duty, not love of the game as it is played; we
would not 
play for love of it. But if we aspire to become as Masters are, we
work as those 
do who work for themselves and for ignoble aims. We work just as
they do, but 
our work is not theirs.
It is well to keep the mind off the future as much as possible, as
far as 
results are concerned, and to concentrate on the immediate work in
hand; do that 
and the rest will follow and find you ready to go on with
it—whatever it may be. 
Above all, avoid being carried away by the excitement of effort; be
calm and 
confident; cultivate calmness and confidence; by them one preserves
his best 
judgment and highest powers. Each day contains no more than a day’s
work; each 
day contains so many hours for the appointed work; let each day and
hour be 
attended to as it arrives. Avoid useless sacrifice of thought and
effort; 
conserve energies; work without strain.
If help is to come into the Movement we have at heart, the ways by
which it will 
come are provided, and the opportunities will be presented. All we
have to do is 
to take advantage of the opportunities, step by step, as they
arrive, doing the 
best we know, but fearing no failure, courting no success. Keep the
attitude “I 
am doing nothing” before you; it will serve to lessen the strain
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that makes you tired. Take the position that everything is going to
be for the 
best, and that your part is to perform whatever comes before you to
do. It then 
becomes the performance of duty, and should arouse no more strain
than routine 
work. And build no castles in the air: they cause only fear of
their 
destruction, and in themselves are useless. Take what Karma brings
you and make 
good use of it. Karma will bring to us what belongs, so there can
be no cause 
for worrying over any future. There is need only that we hold all
our powers in 
readiness to make good use of what is brought to us, and this is
best done by a 
quiet, calm, confident performance of what we are able to do, day
by day, from 
day to day.
I am glad that M— is getting on right lines. Hope that he will get
on a straight 
line of thought and action. So many mystical minds from their love
of mystic 
meanings turn over the dust heaps of times when hidden meanings
were absolutely 
necessary, and overlook the clear unequivocal truth which is before
their very 
eyes. This is lack of discrimination. If they studied the work of
the Lodge down 
the ages, they would know better than to spend much time on past
efforts, the 
only record of which is found in the impress made on minds of the
time, and they 
would at once take up the lines laid down in the present effort.
Yes, it is war; but not against persons. War for the Truth— the
eternal ideas, 
the eternal thought in the Eternal Mind; war against error, cant
and hypocrisy. 
When the Eternal Verities are presented to the world, they are
always presented 
through persons. Some worship or lean on the persons; others curse,
defame or be 
little them; none of these look at what is brought forward and
handed on. So, 
too, when error is pointed out, it has to be designated and names
used to 
specify; again, the thoughtless see an attack upon persons. In an
age of 
“personality,” the ordinary mind cannot see beyond it, unless care
is taken on 
each occasion to explain it. The war is to help “personalities” to
become 
“living souls.” It is the Mahabbarata—the Holy War. Ideas are ideas
by whomever 
written or expressed; so, they can flow through anyone who is in
the right 
condition. We find
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Theosophical ideas in every direction, in all classes of thought,
speech, and 
writing; pieces here and there are as good as any that Theosophy
gives, but 
there is no synthesis. Theosophy is synthetic and spells unity in
diversity, the 
diversity being only apparent, not real. “Meanwhile the world of
real Occultists 
smiles silently, and goes on with its laborious process of sifting
out the 
living germs from the masses of men. For occultists must be found
and fostered 
and prepared for coming ages when power will be needed and
pretensions go for 
naught.”
When we consider—as we must—that our individual lives stretch back
for untold 
ages, and have an illimitable future, and that the present bodily
existence is 
but one small aspect of that great continuous Being, we rise above
the 
temporary, while acting in it, and, seeing more of the right
proportions and 
relativities, are less involved or troubled by “what may come to
pass.” This of 
itself is much to have gained; it gives the steadiness of the
warrior in the 
fight. “Forget not this lesson, the spiritual man is in this world
to get rid of 
defects. His external life is for this only, hence we are all seen
at a 
disadvantage.” Looking at life from this point of view, everything
that comes is 
an opportunity to be taken advantage of by that “spiritual man,”
and in 
everything we find that “glorious unsought fight that only
fortune’s favored 
soldiers may obtain.”
You will remember what W. Q. J. wrote: “None of us, and especially
those who 
have heard of the Path, or of Occultism, or of the Masters, can say
with 
confidence that he is not already one who has passed through some
initiations, 
with knowledge of them. We may already be initiated into some
higher degree than 
our present attainment would suggest, and are undergoing a new
trial unknown to 
ourselves. It is better to consider that we are, being sure to
eliminate all 
pride of that unknown advance we have made.” We may all take
comfort and 
encouragement from what is there said, for it may be especially
true of those 
who are fired with zeal for Master’s work. Well, I will close now;
grieve not, 
fear not, but cut all doubts with the sword of knowledge.
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CONTENTS
 LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Eight
What you say about “incarnations like H. P. B. and W. Q. J. being
evidently 
governed by conditions widely different from ordinary humanity” is
correct. If 
we would look at the bodily H. P. B. as a mirror which reflected
from above and 
from below as well, giving back to each who confronted it his own
reflection 
according to his nature and power to perceive, we might get a
better 
understanding of her nature. To the discriminative, it was a well
of 
inspiration; in it the commonplace, the Judas, the critic, and
every other saw 
himself reflected. Mighty few caught a glimpse of the real
individuality. Each 
got the evidence that he sought. We have the Master’s words that
the body of H. 
P. B. was the best that they had been able to obtain for many
centuries. Those 
who looked at the body and its human characteristics got what that
view was 
capable of giving them; those who looked at the mind behind got
what came from 
it, in the degree of their comprehension; those who were able to
look into the 
causes of things saw what their depths of sight gave them—more or
less of Truth. 
“By their fruits, shall ye know them.”
The Jews are still looking for a coming Messiah. It is very, very
few who 
discover the “Presence,” and among them, even, the tendency is to
relate it to 
the present times and surroundings only, and so miss the greater
scope. Many 
years after such Visits, one here and there begins to see landmarks
that 
indicate that “some one of importance” has been among the people;
but they too 
relate everything to their “present time.” And so it goes, each
“discoverer” 
putting his construction on the facts, while there results an
exoteric 
degradation of Truth—a regard of events and persons, rather than an
understanding of truths imparted; finally, someone else has to
come, facing 
similar treatment. All the time, however, and each time, an impress
is made upon 
the thought of the age and humanity gains a little: there is no
other way.
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It is interesting to turn to the “Esoteric Character of the
Gospels,” by H. P. 
B. “Theosophists—at any rate some of them— who understand the
hidden meaning of 
the universally expected Avatars, Messiahs, and Sosioshes and
Christs—know that 
it is no end of the world, but the consummation of the age—that is,
the close of 
the cycle—that is fast approaching.” 
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 was written November and December, 1887,
and January, 1888. She said, “There are several remarkable cycles
that come to 
a close at the end of this century
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 nineteenth  . First, the 5,000 years of the Kali-Yuga
cycle; again, the 
Messianic cycle of the Samaritan (also Kabalistic) Jews, of the Man
connected 
with Pisces. It is a cycle historic and not very long, but very
occult, lasting 
about 2155 years, but having a true significance only when computed
by lunar 
months. It occurred 2410 and 255 B. C. or when the equinox entered
into the sign 
of the Ram, and again into that of Pisces. When it enters, in a few
years, the 
sign of Aquarius, psychologists will have some extra work to do,
and the psychic 
idiosyncrasies of man will enter on a great change.” This “great
change” I think 
can be stated in three words:
Susceptibility to suggestion, good, bad or indifferent. Look about
you and see 
if this is not so. Are the “Messiahs” of today using suggestion?
And was there 
ever a time when men should use their reason more than at the
present time, 
based upon the widest possible consideration of facts collected for
humanity? 
Jesus said, “Take heed lest no man lead you astray, for many shall
come in my 
name, saying, ‘I am the Christ,’ and shall lead many astray.
If any man shall say unto you, ‘Behold, he is in the wilderness,’
go not forth; 
‘behold he is in the inner chambers,’ believe them not. For as the
lightning 
(light) cometh from the East, and is seen even in the West, so
shall be the 
presence of the Son of Man.” The esoteric savior is no man, but the
divine 
principle in every human being. What is needed is a knowledge of
the Path that 
leads to Him or It. The foolish look for a “Man”; the wise look for
a “Message.” 
Few know the Messenger when He comes, but it is possible for many
to know a true 
Message by putting it to every conceivable test. The “Messiah” has
come and 
gone; but
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He has left the “Comforter”—His Message. He will return, but not
for several 
generations of men. It is possible for men to get at the truth of
these things 
if they will take the trouble to make the search in all sincerity.
H. P. B. said, “Do not follow me nor my path; follow the Path I
show, the 
Masters who are behind.” This she knew to be the safe course for
all, for each 
one will judge of the words and deeds of a personality from his own
standpoint 
and understanding, some under-rating, some exaggerating, and some
with 
indifference. At the same time, for those who are able to see
behind the veil of 
physical maya, there is recognition of those who are travelling the
same path, 
and in that recognition, there is comfort and help which extends
from the 
smallest to the greatest—a great band of brothers which includes
the Masters as 
the Guides and the Consummation. “Whosoever does it unto the least
of these, 
does it unto me.”
A Siddha-Purusha (perfect man) is like an archeologist who removes
the dust and 
lays open an old well which has been covered up by ages of disuse.
The Avatara, 
on the other hand, is like an engineer who sinks a new well in a
place where 
there was no water before. Great Men give salvation to those only
who have the 
waters of piety hidden in themselves, but the Avatara saves him too
whose heart 
is devoid of love and dry as a desert.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Nine
I think you have taken the right position in your letter and I like
it very 
much. There are just two positions. One stands fairly and squarely
upon the 
Messengers, Their Message, and the admission of Their knowledge as
to the needs 
of the interim between Their appearances, that period being clearly
stated by 
Them so that there could be no vain imaginings that we were left
alone in the 
world and to our own devices. The other position holds that They
could not see 
ahead, that They did what They could, 
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and left what They did to the tender mercies of the world and the
imperfect 
knowledge of Their followers; that, in fact, there was no guidance
in what They 
left of record, as to study, philosophy, and propaganda.
We stand in and on the first position; there we are sure. The
closer we stick to 
it and to what They left us, the nearer we will be to the lines
They laid down. 
You will remember what is covered in that article of
W. Q. J.’s on “The Future and the Theosophical Society”:
“There must be adherence to the program of Masters. That can only
be ascertained 
by consulting her and the letters given out by her as from Those to
whom she 
refers. There is not much doubt about that program.” . . . ‘ This
is the moment 
to guide the recurrent impulse which must soon come and which will
push the age 
toward extreme atheism or drag it back to extreme sacerdotalism, if
it is not 
led to the primitive, soul-satisfying philosophy of the Aryans.’ .
. . “We must 
follow this program and supply the world with a system of
philosophy which gives 
a sure and logical basis for ethics, and that can only be gotten
from those to 
which I have adverted.” . . . “By our unity the smallest effort
made by us will 
have ten-fold the power of any obstacle before us or any opposition
offered by 
the world.” . . . “Our destiny is to continue the wide work of the
past in 
affecting literature and thought throughout the world, while our
ranks see many 
changing quantities but always holding those who remain true to the
program, and 
refuse to become dogmatic or give up common sense in Theosophy.
Thus we will 
wait for the new messenger, striving to keep the organization alive
that he may 
use it.”
Our friends may claim that they are affecting literature and
thought in the way 
they pursue, but is it true that they could do so with any purpose
or direction, 
were it not for those who stand by the program and uphold the
standard of true 
philosophy and the scientific basis for ethics? Besides, it is
recorded in 
scripture well known to our friends, “No man putteth new wine in
old bottles, 
lest the bottles break and the wine be lost.” The inevitable result
will be as 
just stated. Literature is not affected that way, nor
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religion. Christianity is a “revealed religion”; its basis lies in
the Bible 
revelation, and nowhere else; to change it, the true basis must be
given without 
pandering to error; otherwise, there is only a change of error. We
may well 
remember that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump, and
dispense the leaven, 
leaving the leavening process in both literature and religion to
take its own 
course, as it undoubtedly will if we are true to our trust.
Theosophy is for those who want it and for none others. Our
standard is clear 
and unequivocal, and we may be able to help even old and sincere
students by our 
inquiries. Either there is true knowledge or there is not; if there
is, and we 
are assured in our-selves of it, let us assert it, maintain it, and
let error 
correct itself. It looks hypocritical to me to get in with a lot of
church 
people and pretend that we think just as they do, to say that
Christianity is 
just what we believe, is, in fact, Theosophy, when what is
understood by the 
word “Christianity” is antagonistic to the Eternal Verities, and we
know it. Is 
Theosophy to be administered surreptitiously? If so, will the
unfortunate 
“patients” ever know where they are? If they get a distaste for
Christianity as 
it is taught, what will they have a taste for? We know where we
stand and why.
Perhaps the lack of any real success in all these years is a lack
of real faith 
in Masters, as well as the attitude of being “poor miserable
sinners” and 
unworthy; hence, the lack of strength of Conviction. If there is to
be learning, 
the student must have confidence in his Teacher, and follow the
lines he sets 
forth, or no good result can come. When he knows more, or thinks he
does, than 
his Teacher, let him seek another more advanced. If one desires to
teach 
another, there must be a “tone of settled conviction” to carry any
weight. It 
will appear if the Teacher has any real knowledge. But this does
not carry with 
it any more “authority” than the student accords, and in Theosophy
could never 
rightly be imposed, as the appeal is to the reason, intelligence,
and inner 
perception. What does it matter if the writer believes he speaks
from a higher 
plane of knowledge than that with which the reader is
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acquainted, if he seeks to impose nothing? is not the whole effort
of students 
to acquire knowledge in order to pass it on? How can they pass on
what they have 
not? Are there different degrees of knowledge, and are they to be
recognized and 
sought after? To sum up in a nutshell: There are older students;
without them 
there would be no younger ones, and no work done; this line runs
from the very 
youngest to the Masters. “We are all alike and some different.”
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Ten
I suppose it is inevitable that you should find yourself head over
heels in work 
on your return home. It is a “muddy civilization,” and we have to
wade through 
the “mud” of it; but there is comfort in the thought that we are
not any of the 
mud and can go through it and look toward the end in view—the goal
to be 
reached—for the sake of those who are hopelessly floundering. So, perhaps
we 
take upon ourselves the muddiest kind of mud in performing the task
we have 
undertaken. If we look at all the pressures and strains in this
way, we shall 
not be discouraged by anything that may come to pass. In our course
we have to 
take advantage of conditions as we may, and always of such as tend
to the end in 
view. Is it not so that mountains are climbed? Also, we can reach
the valley 
only by careful descent. Do we not thus climb and descend,
figuratively, all the 
time?
About men and women “as such,” and the ideas which prevail with
each in regard 
to the other: these must change, being based on physical
differentiations and on 
accentuation of separateness mentally and physically. We have to
look at souls 
and minds, regardless of the kind of body which envelops them, and
get away from 
the hard and fast conclusions so common in the world. These
differentiations are 
not at once to be gotten rid of, but a better recognition must have
its 
beginning, and who should have this, most clearly, but those who
see the Triad 
in every human being?
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The present movement of women is such an assertion; it is neither a
fad nor a 
fancy, but an urge of the rising cycle. Necessarily it must follow,
at first, 
the ordinary lines of thought and action pursued by the men in
general; but it 
is bound to work into lines which affect the home, the family, and
general human 
interests, rather than possessions. Errors of judgment and mistakes
will 
doubtless be made, but from them better judgment will come. No one
can help the 
restrictions of time, place and circumstance; they should be
recognized, and 
what is to be done, done as best may be under them.
Most men are burdened with positivity, right or wrong; most women
with 
negativity, right or wrong; both men and women having these
qualities in 
balance, or approaching it, are nearer to the “double spinal cord,”
which must 
come about in the race as a whole. I share your opinion as to women
speakers in 
general, but I am not blind that there are exceptions, and I look
for them, and 
am glad when I see signs of such in the work; for they can best
help that side, 
and they can and do express a quality of devotion which mighty few
men possess.
As you say, not only much but all that was ever written was by way
of 
“pointers.” Each soul is held by some conception, some interest,
which he takes 
to be the "summum bonum”; the consideration of these is
necessary in order to 
lead the mind from the unreal to the Real. There is no other way.
Even those who 
know real things get caught up in the “turba,” the phantasmagoria
that we create 
for ourselves, and have difficulty in reverting to the Real and
Eternal—such is 
the strength of objective consciousness which begets the idea of
separateness. 
We have to see and know all these classifications in pointing to
the unity of 
which they are impermanent expressions. True it is that there are
but few books 
necessary.
“Let me say one thing I know; only the feeling of true brotherhood,
of true love 
toward humanity aroused in the soul of some one strong enough to
stem the tide, 
can carry us through. For love and trust are the only weapons that
can overcome 
the Real enemies against which the true Theosophist must fight.”
“Let us all 
draw together in mind and heart, soul and act, and try thus
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to make that true brotherhood through which alone our universal and
particular 
progress can come.”
“The number of true Theosophists is not legion. The ranks are not
crowded. They 
are not to be known or judged by standards of the world, but by the
strength of 
their convictions. They are one and all dead in earnest. They are
those who 
though they may not have outwardly renounced, have inwardly
relinquished, and 
who will be glad when the incidentals are swept away, and only the
essentials 
remain. They are those who move from age to age invincible and
eternal.”
One asked me a question the other day: why, in view of our
undoubted relations 
in past lives, are we placed in positions that are so difficult and
so dark, 
when the obviously fortunate one was so near and so clearly
defined. The answer 
that came to me was:
Long ago you took a vow, one of the meanings of which was to step
out of 
sunlight into shade to make more room for others.” We should
remember that this 
was voluntarily done by the inner man, and that now, the very
principles of our 
nature compel us to act, as it were, against our inclination. We
should also 
remember the harder the battle, the greater the victory, and
nothing but victory 
will suffice us. Yes, the present is the test; the past we will
meet in the 
future—that present which has not yet ripened. Yet it is said that
the process 
of development consists in the recovery of the memory of the past.
This, 
however, cannot mean the sordid details of physical existence, nor
would there 
be much concern whether one wielded a battle-axe, or what “part”
one played in 
the various dramas of existence, but a something larger, finer,
greater—the 
memory of the divine Ego, and those functions of our real life
which go on 
during sleep.
It is all lived out in the mind. Most minds instead of living and
acting out 
their ideals in the present, and fulfilling their present known
duties to 
others, waste most of their opportunities in memory and
anticipation. To live 
and act fully and rightly in the present is the whole of life; the
dynamic force 
of the brain would then act fully and rightly, and there would be
no exhaustion.
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CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Eleven
As the work goes on and new elements are added to it, there must
occur the 
process of assimilation. Each new nature is a new element and has
its peculiar 
effect, but there is nothing in this to cause any surprise or
dismay. All the 
time there must be the getting closer together of the “living
germs”; this goes 
on while we work, each in his own way. Few of us have pleasure in
the works 
themselves that are our Dharma, but we know we are there to do, and
they are 
there to be done.
One of the great troubles we make ourselves, I think, is the
construction of a 
mechanical universe. And it will not work out to our satisfaction.
This way is 
swimming against the stream. The Universe is guided from within
outwards and all 
possible knowledge of “outwards” will give no real understanding.
In trying to 
gain a knowledge of “outwards,” there is an exercise of what we are
pleased to 
call the mind; but from what foundation and to what end? The
problems that the 
“mind” has are before it here and now, and concern not what has
been or what is 
to be. What if we do know all the laws and forces, all the
processes; will that 
fit us any better to do whatever comes before us? The law works in
us and 
through us; we are ministers of the law, and while recognizing
this, while doing 
our best with what we have and see, further power and perception
come. The 
Upanishads say that this “real knowledge is not to be gained by the
mind, but by 
the subtle sight of the subtle—sighted”—---the Perceiver.
What is your confusion about Mind? The Self only eternally Is. Now
what are all 
the rest? Perceptions, I think; some permanent, being related to
the Self, or of 
the Self; others, perceptions of perceptions and impermanent in
that they are in 
constant change. The two classes or bundles of perceptions in
individuals would 
be Higher and Lower Mind. Perhaps Higher and Lower Self would be
better, but no 
set terms can give anything but approximations
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of differences of perceptions. We may call what is perceived
“matter,” or 
“prakriti,” that basis by which action may take place. It would
seem that this 
basis is the general result of the interpenetration, interblending,
and 
interaction of the perceptions of multitudinous classes of beings.
The “mind” with which we work is just a bundle of perceptions of
this physical 
plane wherein every idea held has a physical basis. Can such a
“bundle” include 
or solve that which is the cause, or sustaining power itself? Each
plane has its 
own mode or “mind,” and the only way by which we in lower manas can
approximate 
the inner is by rising to that plane where the perception and the
mode is 
different. Can it be wondered at that all at tempts to solve by
brain-mind must 
be temporary hypotheses, one after the other discarded as we see
its futility? 
Yet the very exasperation induced sometimes opens a door to us.
There is a state of Soul as Spectator without a spectacle, also
many states of 
“spectacles” more or less circumscribed. Spirit, I think, would not
be the whole 
of any given class, although such a condition might be called
“spirituality,” if 
the ideas were the eternal verities. Naught adheres to Spirit.
There must be that Mind or Power to Perceive which takes in primal
causes as 
well as subsequent effects; also that other circumscribed action
which deals 
with minor causes and effects. Mind is the power to perceive,
residing in the 
Perceiver, its manifold perceptions and possibilities presenting
kinds of mind 
and separate ideas and actions. All spiritual beings are the same
in kind, 
differing only in degree. Terms are confusing, but ideas may be had
out of the 
confusion, if we adhere to the One Reality—which is both Being and
Non-Being. 
Each has his own way of seeing and translating what he sees.
The question as to whether one could, or could not, get benefit
from hearing of 
Theosophy before death, depends on one’s ability to realize its
truth; the mere 
listening to the words without realization or acceptance could have
no place in 
the thoughts of the thinker. The karma, however, that brought the
dying one in 
contact with those desirous of so helping, will bring him again in
con-
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tact with that knowledge and probably under better auspices. No
effort is lost. 
Our love for others is truly shown in our desire to serve, and love
is the great 
bond. The highest love that we can have for those nearest and
dearest to us 
should be the standard which we should strive to hold toward our
other selves—an 
intense love of humanity, one which seeks their highest good, which
seeks 
nothing for self, but has all that fortuitously comes. “Friends for
the future.”
A mental change or glimpse of truth may make a man suddenly change
to the truth 
even at death, thus creating good skandhas for his next life. But
the karmic 
effects of the past life must follow. H. P. B. said that the Ego
was drawn 
before birth to the scenes of his former life, saw the meaning and
trend of it 
all and the karmic results that must ensue, and knows the justice
of it. There 
is also the “summing up” after death—cause and sequence, and
“Being’s ceaseless 
tide.”
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Twelve
It is well to hold the position you do—to maintain the true
attitude of the 
“higher carelessness.” It makes no difference what ever what we do;
how we do 
anything is what counts. And as there is always something doing, we
have always 
opportunity to practice right doing.
It is no good being anxious; all we have to do is to do our best
with each 
moment and live it as it comes. “If the candidate has firm reliance
on the Law, 
he will not have to wait too long.” In this way whatever comes will
be right for 
him. We must take the position that whatever is right will come
about, and while 
making use and taking advantage of every opportunity, feel that if
what seemed 
good did not come our way, it was best that way for the main object
that we 
worked for. In this case we preserve our best energies, and are
neither elated 
nor cast down by whatever comes to pass.
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We are apt to overlook the good we afford to others by our effort.
Every one we 
affect, even in a slight degree, affects others, and no one can say
what may be 
done for the future through indirect methods. There is much
encouragement in 
this, and encouragement means a continuation of courage. We have but
to keep on 
in the courage with which we began, for in all great effort there
is sure to be 
reaction; and knowing this to be the Law, we are prepared, and
never downcast, 
but like the song, “We wait for the turn of the tide,” and ride
higher on it.
I was looking over the magazine article you mentioned. It is
interesting, 
instructive in places, intelligent and bountifully interspersed
with diagrams. 
It gives the impression of great learning on the subject. But it
speaks here and 
there of the Logos and His care of His children. Too much of the
personal God 
under another name, thus leaving “His” poor, ignorant, sinful
children none the 
wiser as to their godlike nature! The article made me think of the
way the 
Jesuits side-tracked Masonry. They entered it, obtained its
secrets, invented 
“higher degrees” to draw attention from what lay hidden in the
original ones, 
and gradually made it innocuous, and incapable of leading to the
knowledge that 
they feared. Much that is going on and has gone on in the . . .
society has the 
appearance of leading into innocuous desuetude. This is the mode of
working of 
Brahmano-Jesuitical forces, and the ordinary thinker is unable
either to 
perceive, or credit it if warned. It is not believed that there are
Dark Forces 
and their agents in the world, and that they war within that which
they would 
destroy; that they dress themselves up in “sheep’s clothing” so as
to be 
unsuspected. But it is too true. Every failure to establish the
Wisdom-Religion 
is to be traced to the work of the Dark ones among the unsuspecting
stupid 
“sheep,” who are appealed to through their weakness and led astray.
There is no 
panacea for stupidity and ignorance but self-knowledge,
discrimination; anything 
that leads away from them leads to desolation. Would that there
might be some 
way by which eyes could be opened to a wise and proper
consideration of all 
things. Yet, if one should publicly point out these things,
“untheosophical” 
would be the least charge laid at his 
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door. All that we can do is to accentuate the difference between
the Eye 
Doctrine and the Doctrine of the Heart with full exemplification. The
. . . talk 
glibly of these, but in the words of Kipling, “what do they
understand?” Those 
in that society who have the “heart-desire” may find that doctrine,
but the mass 
have it not, and are kept from its consideration by every means.
Without any conceit, you know it would be admitted by those who
listen to you 
that it would be an easy matter for you to draw diagrams, and
lecture on the 
differentiation of species, on the various Logo, Dhyanis, and
classes of beings, 
Rounds and Races and so forth; but you know, and anyone can see,
that if one had 
all these qualities at his tongue’s end, he would not be one whit
better in 
character, nor would he possess any real knowledge—the knowledge
that leads to 
the wisdom and power of the Adept. Intellectual acquaintance is
well enough for 
those who are entertained by that sort of thing, but those who seek
self-knowledge, who will not be satisfied with anything else, go
not by that 
road. Self-knowledge is the first desideratum; the other is
incidental, and 
useless without the first. The first requires whole-heartedness, 
self-discipline, constant service, unflagging determination. It is
undertaken 
only by determined souls and continued by increased heroism—of such
are the 
immortal heroes of the ages. The second can be followed by any
schoolboy, and is 
necessary to some extent, as an equipment for the sake of others,
but unless 
subservient to the first, it is useless as a means of growth. The
general 
tendency is toward “intellectualism,” and it is easy to follow that
line of 
acquisition. The effort should therefore be to present and practice
the study 
that leads to growth, using the “process” only to assist the
understanding. The 
opposite is too generally the practice. There are Theosophists in
name and 
Theosophists by nature; they are different.                                      
                      
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CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Thirteen
Your statement of monthly expenses is not encouraging, but we have
seen worse 
conditions, and with less in view to face them. It looks like
“alone and 
possessing nothing” for us; but we can face all this without the
slightest fear. 
‘We must trust absolutely to the Law, doing our conservative best
as we go 
along. We have but to keep that work, which we see to be the Real
work, going 
through thick and through thin; then, whatever comes will be right,
and we shall 
finally see the right results for All, for it is “All” that we are
working for.
Business has been defined as “a lot of useless activities which we
have created 
and now bow down to and worship.” But there are some we know who
are heretics in 
that direction, and I like these best. Well, the world we live in
is governed by 
these very follies, and we are here to hold fast and get going a
crop of better, 
finer ideas. The fact that burdens are growing heavier cannot be
accounted a bad 
sign; there must be in those to whom burdens come From an unused
strength that 
needs exercise. We will have to take the Bible saying as true that
“the burden 
is to the strong.” Too, it is well to know one’s strength, which
cannot be known 
without using it. By and by you will know what you can do, and the
necessity for 
these trials will cease.
In answer to H— I am glad that you made it plain—and it cannot be
made too 
plain—that there is absolutely no one in U. L. T. who “instructs
and informs 
other members of what he or she gets as coming from Masters.” This
is the safest 
way for all: point to the records and advise an open mind and an
eager intellect 
as well as an unveiled spiritual perception. We have faith that
“the Master’s 
hand is over all” and go the limit on that. I think that your
letter covers the 
ground pretty well. The “writer” of the “extracts” in question does
not care 
what is done with any
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words he has written, so long as the sense and meaning is main
tamed, the intent 
preserved; nor would he in the least object to the presentation of
the ideas in 
any other way; in any event, no name is attached, nor recognition
sought.
In regard to the question asked. In the Voice it speaks of
Kundalini as Buddhi, 
considered an active power—the power of that sheath in full
operation. 
Ordinarily, Buddhi acts indirectly through Mamas in its lower
aspect of action, 
thought and feeling, as they relate to the objective consciousness.
In this 
sense, there-fore, Buddhi may be called passive; the power is there
but 
transmuted into lower and divergent energies.
The unitary idea in the septenary nature is to be had from the
conception of 
Consciousness, or the Perceiver, using different vehicles for
expression and 
reception on different planes. It is not waking nor sleeping nor
Deep sleep, nor 
Sushupti, nor Turya, but just Consciousness acting in these various
ways and 
conditions. We are That which perceives in these various ways.
Consciousness is 
One—the ways are various. The Seer is unitary, but has many ways
and directions 
of seeing. “Man” is not any of his principles, but they are “his”
instruments. 
These principles or sheaths are made up of the “lives” of various
kinds of 
different planes. The unitary idea is consciousness with power to
perceive in 
every direction through appropriate evolved instruments. Like the
God of the 
Bible, “Man” cannot be found out, for darkness surrounds his
pavilion. “He” is 
ever behind every manifestation and expression, and is also
Paramatma, the 
Highest Soul.
Unity cannot be stepped down. IT ever is; IT is to be realized. Of
course, it is 
a consideration of processes that is confusing with our present
perceptions; but 
it is not so difficult to have a working generalization sufficient
for our 
present purpose. The thing to be realized is Unity—the One, not
separate in its 
manifold appearances. “That Thou Art, 0 Svetaketu.”
I think that the word “Perceiver” connotes both individuality and
that power of 
perception which is infinite. As individual, or as Ego, it connotes
all the 
experience of the immense past. It is also Ishwara and Paramatma,
for that which 
perceives has no limita-
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tions to its possible field. The Perceiver rests in the Infinite
and is always 
behind and above any and all expansions of perceptions. ‘Man” is
greater than 
any mind he may have, for he is constantly changing it—and remains.
The Soul 
looks directly on ideas; nothing comes to it but ideas, obtained
through its 
various evolved sheaths. We can have no experience whatever,
whether from the 
bodily organs, or by suggestion, unless an idea is presented. Ideas
may come 
from objects, from words written or spoken, but our only real
perception of them 
is in “idea.” We classify ideas because of an assumption of
separateness, but 
that is not the true way, and the effort should be made to realize
that the Soul 
is vision itself, and that it looks directly upon ideas.
There are minds many, and many kinds of mind, but there is the
Eternal Thought 
in the Eternal Mind—the world of Eternal Idea which is the world of
True Being. 
We must bring back to the light of day the present sense of our
divinity which 
illumines us in dreamlessness—where the “Spirit thinks not, yet
thinking not, he 
thinks, for the energy that dwelt in thinking cannot cease because
it is 
everlasting.”
Study, work and service are the means, with the motive of being
better able to 
help and teach others. Doing all we can, we do all that can be
done. There is no 
use in distressing ourselves about what we do not know; we find
knowledge 
springing up spontaneously within us as we do our best with what we
see and 
know. It matters not whether that which we consider as “we” gains
or loses, so 
long as what should be done is done as best we are able. It is 
desire—results-—---that trouble us; they always will. The right
done everywhere 
is ours. No learning is learning unless it leads to readjustment.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Fourteen
What you wrote about Karma is a splendid conception, to my mind.
Karma is Law. 
Those who best know the Law are Karma, and others the directors of
Karma in 
varying degrees. Knowledge
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of it begins by performing that which comes to us as duty, simply
because it is 
duty, and not in order to produce anything for our-selves. This
practice begets 
and inculcates a recognition of Karma and use of and subservience
to it. In time 
we do only those things that work for the general welfare. Masters
are the 
highest expression of this.
In order to make minds think, I sometimes point out that we know
what has been 
and will be by what is now. We observe the law and sequence of
years, seasons, 
and elements; this is knowledge, and lies outside of memory or
prevision. In the 
same way we know reincarnation to be a fact without having any
memory in the 
brain of this body. Some, however, do remember, that memory coming
by the study 
and application of a true philosophy of life. The reasonableness
precedes the 
realization. We know the infinitude of numbers but cannot
demonstrate that 
knowledge.
Changes go on, and for good, with our efforts to apply the
philosophy. Any 
failures made in such case are stepping-stones to success because
followed by 
undaunted struggles upward. The efforts count and are registered in
the 
supersensuous consciousness. Sometime they will be of quality and
force enough 
to counter balance all opposition.
Your letter conveyed to me the impression that G— held in his mind
too much of a 
condemnatory attitude as to the deficiences and failings of others;
perhaps not 
altogether condemnatory, but contemptuous, and that it was general
in its 
application. My remarks were addressed to this, not to him as a
person, and not 
to you.
I think that much of the failure of “old-timers” in study and
knowledge of the 
meaning of Theosophy and the Movement lies in not realizing how
necessary it is 
to apply to ourselves the criticisms and judgments we so freely
apply to others. 
And in saying this I do not say that I am free from these faults. I
only 
recognize that they exist and need correction. So, from that point
of view, it 
is not desirable to let the mind become of the shape and mirror of
undesirable 
things. Then it is not easy to avoid a contemptuous, if not a
condemnatory 
attitude toward others,
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which engenders a sort of pride by comparison with our own attitude
or what we 
imagine we would have done under similar circumstances. This is all
detrimental 
to the performance of our own duty, and to our progress on the Path
of 
Compassion. Errors have to be recognized and avoided, and pointed
out to others 
when necessary; but there is a wide difference between that and
mere gossip.
I have found that the knowledge of many “old-timers” consists of
just such 
things. They give them forth to new adherents as evidence of their
knowledge of 
the Movement, the Society, and by implication, of Theosophy. This
is not wisdom 
nor is it good for anyone, and it certainly does not help
Theosophy. Of course, 
here and there all the crimes in the category have been committed
by members, 
though the majority were good, according to their “lights,” and
well-meaning, 
but ignorantly misled by their misconceptions, desires and
passions, sometimes. 
For all honestly striving with their enormous difficulties, we
should have pity, 
sympathy, charity; we cannot do this if we mentally reproduce the
opposites, 
weighing the act and actors in the balance of the mind.
You will run across more of this as “old-timers” drift in with
their mental 
accumulations, so I wanted you to assist them to dump their encumbering
load and 
to take a fresh cargo of good material. I would gently discourage
them from 
making that kind of mental picture by paying little attention to
it, and by 
presenting present time and opportunity.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Fifteen
Pressure is pressure, no matter what the immediate means. Things
going so hard 
in so many directions looks like a settling down into place—getting
firmly 
fixed. Of course our attention to outside things and the pressure
of them must 
affect all others interested to some extent. It cannot do much so
long as we are 
internally firm and calm. Taking this position as you have and do,
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matters will find their own adjustment naturally. We see a thing to
be done, and 
we try it out in the way most ready to hand; it does not go that
way; then we 
try another and another until the way is found.
No duty, of course, should be neglected; we have such by natural
law and by 
agreement, and we should faithfully fulfill them until they leave
us; we must 
not desert them. By doing our duty by every duty, we work out our
Karma 
fulfilling the Law, and are thus made fit for higher duties. W. Q.
J. said, 
“Duty is the royal talisman; duty, alone, will lead you to the
goal.” We must 
place an absolutely firm reliance upon the Law, doing that which is
nearest to 
us first, and then what is farther away. It is not what is done,
but the motive 
in doing it, that counts; so we have to watch well our motives; if
the motive is 
right, anything we do is right, and every duty is equally great. If
the right 
course is followed, there will be time and occasion for all duties
and none will 
be neglected.
Also we are warned against considering our own progress; first,
because that 
kind of thought is personal and actually prevents progress; and
second, because 
our real progress being in the inner nature is only discoverable by
results, and 
these results may even appear to us to be the opposite of progress.
Thus all 
thought of our own progress should be dismissed from consideration.
The line of 
duty is the right line, to which must be added a Theosophical
education, because 
that assists us to distinguish between what is duty and what is
habit or mere 
inclination. UNITY, STUDY, and WORK should be the watchword. We
should be united 
in aim, purpose and teaching; to do this we have to accept all
others on the 
same basis, who, under the Law of Karma, are drawn together with
us. Each should 
endeavor to learn as much as possible so as to be the better able
to help and 
teach others, and in so doing gradually eliminate such defects as
present 
themselves in the course of study and effort. Hence, we have to
hold the 
greatest charity for the faults and weaknesses of others while
striving to 
accentuate the good in ourselves, and in those who seem weaker than
ourselves in 
some respects. Unity brings an irresistible energy;
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study and its application in work gives us the knowledge of how
best to apply 
the energy aroused; but the motive of our study and work must be
that we may be 
the better able to help others to attain—not that we may climb.
Yes, true knowledge is synthetic, and when we are truly at tuned,
perception 
through any one channel would give us the sum of the attributes so
perceived. 
This synthetic ability has to grow little by little toward a
perception of the 
“one sense” through any of its divisions or channels. The holding
of this idea 
tends toward that growth, for it is consciousness, or the
Perceiver, that is the 
Knower.
Everything is reducible to states of consciousness; every feeling
has to be 
traced to some one experiencing it. Consciousness connotes all.
There is 
universal feeling and relative feelings. Feeling might be taken to
be the effect 
produced or perceived on any plane and depending on the relative or
universal 
nature of thought, as the case may be. We could not have a thought
without 
feeling, but feeling has many grades, depending upon the fineness
or grossness 
of the sheath upon which the Will acts; for, it seems to me,
Thought and 
Ideation are one and may be applied to any plane, while Will is the
dynamic 
energy of thought or idea.
You are right about “the swing back of consciousness from higher
states” 
reacting with force upon the lower states and arousing them;
knowing this, we 
gradually subdue the lower because such is our desire and
intention. No doubt we 
all fall down from where we see we ought to reach, and that is not
to be 
wondered at, since the inner is always more perfect than the outer.
But the 
great thing in it all is that such seeing makes us increase our
efforts. We need 
not worry about our failures or successes, for if we worry about
failure we are 
thinking of success, and if we worry about success we are thinking
about 
failure, in a squirrel wheel-round of action. We can take the
advice to “be up 
and doing” and forget the rest, only remembering at the moment of
action all 
that is necessary for the act. All of us have to persevere in
perfecting the 
instrument by removing the barriers erected by
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the personality. The Path lies up-hill all the way, brightened by
the 
consciousness of doing right. Now more power to you; all these
trials and 
obstacles are but strengtheners for us—beneficial exercises. We
play the game 
knowing what it all means.                                                      
                          
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Sixteen
Your letters are ‘ meditation” and “good medicine.” Just hold to
what you have 
expressed. It is not easy but every effort counts; the failures do
not, and all 
the time there is progress. If we could only see our true destiny,
as W. Q. J. 
puts it, we would not consider the events of life as anything but
opportunities. 
Not one thing can come amiss to those who so see. If we find that
suffering, 
stress and strain are our lot, we may also see that they afford
opportunities 
for strengthening; and who should be better able to bear them than ourselves,
in 
view of what we see and know to be true? As we carry these burdens
we help the 
whole. Our work is constructive with the right attitude toward all
things. With 
the right attitude toward all things, all that we do is
constructive. We may not 
be enamored of our own proficiency—we may see many deficiencies—but
we can help. 
The fact that we find ourselves of admitted help to others tells
the story, and 
as we help we are better able, all the time.
Of course, the instruments we are working with are not strong; they
are what the 
race into which we came provided us with, and they are what they
are and the 
best we have. We all can see their limitations but we can push them
to the 
limit, “and then some,” and still know that the end is not to be found.
So while 
we are working to the best advantage possible as we find things, we
are always 
moving toward a better efficiency and bound to get there. You
remember what W. 
Q. J. said in that convention address: “The society was founded by
those who 
were determined to succeed.” Well, that is our determination, no
matter how long
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it takes, nor what we have to undergo; we look for nothing less
than success. 
And we have the inner knowledge that “the Master’s hand is over
all,” and can 
reverently seek His guidance and enlightenment in full confidence
that “in the 
hour of our need the Lord will provide.” Having confidence in the
knowledge, we 
do not set any particular ways and means, but await the movement of
events to 
point out both. “With patience and full reliance upon the Law, the
candidate 
will not have to wait too long.” We rest on that.
A Kshattrya is none the less a warrior when wounded, as long as he
resolves to 
fight. Such a “jolt” as you describe was meant in kindness, and for
your 
betterment according to the minds of those who gave it. Something
must have 
impressed itself as an impairment of an ideal instrument upon their
minds. It 
does not matter if the things were small or great in themselves; it
only matters 
that they aroused certain effects and detriments in the minds of
others. In the 
enthusiasm of our effort and the greatness of the subject smaller
lapses escape 
our notice; when such are called to our attention we should
eradicate them. They 
may be tricks of speech and beneath notice in relation to the real
meaning 
intended to be conveyed; we may even see that the attitude which
objects to them 
is hypercritical; yet we are bound to remove to the best of our
ability anything 
and everything that puts a bar—detracts attention from the main
thing. Then 
again “any old” jolt is good; that which feels jolts is the
personality, as you 
know; we get a reminder that there is still work to be done upon
it. We have to 
avoid all kinds of offense, real or imaginary. I do not think one
would need to 
spend much time on such reformations; it would not need more than
the admission 
that they are needed. So long as we do not admit that they are
needed, we shall 
be resenting the reformations and making no headway. So when things
come, the 
way to do is to conform, not necessarily reform, remembering St.
Paul’s saying, 
“All things are lawful but not all things are expedient.” It
depends on what you 
are trying to do. You have got it right, and I take your letter
just as a 
setting down of things in order to get rid of the pressure. There
is a law of 
our being
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underlying this; the Chela’s Daily Life Ledger and the Catholic
confessional are 
based upon it. We have to meet conditions as they arise, and need
not worry 
about those that do not confront us. We have, of course, to act
prudently on the 
line of what we have in view, but anxiety should be absent from any
act done to 
the best of our ability. I know all you would do if you could; you
have done and 
are doing all you can; what more can be done? I know that it has
been very hard 
for you; it is harder now than it has been, but in a different way.
By-and-by 
you will be so firm and hard that nothing will “feaze” you for a
minute, and 
that time will find the full play of your energies on whatever is
to be done.
Now good night to you. Be happy as those who live for happiness
alone, and 
accept all blessings possible.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Seventeen
I should like to meet your Mr. C. The statement that Theosophy ‘ in
anything 
needs straightening out. There are a lot of self-satisfied
Theosophists who 
never use the words Theosophy, Reincarnation and Karma, yet who
would doubtless 
call themselves Theosophists. The excuse generally given is that
Theosophy has 
been “discredited,”—as if such a thing could ever happen. It is no
doubt true 
that many people calling themselves Theosophists have by their
folly given false 
impressions of what Theosophy stands for and means, but that should
induce in 
all Theosophists more strenuous effort to correct the falsities and
put the 
philosophy in its true light. If there were more Theosophists of
the latter kind 
there would not be so much of false impression; so the moral is to
swell the 
number, instead of helping the enemy by withdrawal, or retreat,
which is the 
course of the ill-informed, the coward and the traitor. What he
should have said 
is that some Theosophists, or members of the Theosophical
societies, believe in 
a big being—the “Logos,” in the sense that he implied. But he may
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have the wrong conception of what they believe, and may be imputing
to others 
his own belief and misunderstanding. There is a wide difference
between “big 
being,” in the sense of a “personal god,” and the Logos as set
forth in the 
Secret Doctrine as a “being”; between the conception of “Jehovah”
of the Bible 
and the churches, and the Logos as a collection of beings of many
grades in 
posse—considered as a “being” only because assembled together in
one stream of 
evolution, and necessary to each other for further experience.
No doubt there is a school of “Occult Arts” in the Catholic Church,
as he says, 
but there is certainly not a school of Occultism in the sense of
the Lodge of 
Masters. It is not only not probable but impossible for a school,
whose motive 
is selfish in basis, to aquire spiritual powers of the higher
order. “The least 
taint of selfishness and the spiritual is turned into the psychic
and dire are 
the results.” One might remain in the Catholic or any other church
and be a 
Theosophist, but it would mean that he was only ostensibly a
Catholic. One might 
be there with knowledge and for some purpose other than
perpetuating that malign 
system. To be really and truly a Catholic and a Theosophist at the
same time 
would be like going in two directions at the same time.
His saying that H. P. B. made mistakes is a pitiful attempt to drag
her down to 
the level of his own ignorance. It might very well be that she (He)
purposely 
laid herself open to a charge of errancy in unimportant things, in
order to 
prevent dependence upon her “as a person,” but I for one do not
believe that she 
made one single “mistake”; but that everything that she did was
intentional, and 
with a beneficent end in view. It does not make any difference what
A— or Mr. C— 
said about H. P. B.; the value of both are identical—guesswork.
“Those who do 
not understand her had best not try to explain her; if they find
the task she 
laid down too heavy for them, they had better leave it alone.”
These are 
Master’s words, and their repetition at times would help to
eradicate wrong 
impressions. It is quite true that we may be too insistent in
speaking our 
beliefs in regard to H. P. B. and W. Q. J., for that course
followed
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incontinently would serve to arouse opposition in some and a
supposition in 
others that belief in Them was a sine qua non—either of which would
defeat the 
end in view. One’s own conviction may be given when found
advisable, and the 
reasons for it presented; just as in the Ocean, the Masters are
presented in the 
very first chapter. For without Them as the Custodians of Ancient
Wisdom, to 
what could we assign the existence and appearance of Theosophy? It
is the 
Message that the world needs, and in consideration of that, the
question as to 
who brought the Message naturally follows. Understanding of the
Message brings a 
comprehension of the nature of the Messengers. Otherwise, H. P.
Blavatsky and 
William Q. Judge might be considered as “just people like
ourselves,” and as 
liable to error.
The kind of Theosophical education that is needed is one that will
not feel 
bewildered by any turnings aside of individuals, no matter how high
or advanced 
they may appear to have been. All prate about the “original lines”;
what are 
they? ‘Well, W. Q. J. wrote after H. P. B. had gone, that we must
go to Her and 
the Master’s letters for the “program.” It is not laid down in
schedule form, 
but it is there and can be found by anyone who is anxious to follow
the program. 
The course of the Theosophical Society and Theosophists all along
gives evidence 
that it is possible to drift onto some sandbank of thought, some
finality, and 
stay there even when exceptional opportunities have been had.
Well, it does not do to be “cock-sure,” but to be ready ever to revert
to the 
Source, the Message, the plan as far as outlined; with that
readiness, every new 
development, event or change— whether in persons or things—is taken
into 
consideration in relation to what has been recorded. If
“intuitions” do not 
accord with that, then it is wise to stick to what the Messengers
laid down. The 
mysteries of lower Manas are great and many.
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CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Eighteen
Glad that business keeps up so remarkably well. It is a good sign,
as is your 
success under all the circumstances that stood in the way of it. We
need not 
expect disaster because we are endeavoring to do right, though if
disaster 
comes, we know it is not from our endeavor, and we keep up the
endeavor in full 
confidence. Help comes on all planes of being, and must, if unity
means 
anything. Also, working with the Law and from within outwards,
improvement and 
strength must follow in every direction. There is good reason to
take more 
courage.
As we aspire and work for Theosophy, the nature changes, and what
would not 
affect the man of the ordinary way of thinking is found to react
upon us in a 
marked way. When this occurs, we should endeavor to find that
particular cause 
in our thought and conduct so as to be able to prevent repetitions
if possible. 
The thought and effort in this direction will finally bring us to a
point where 
we are able to resist the impulse arising from desire and anger. We
may plan, 
while living in a house, a much better one; from perceived defects
we will build 
better when the time for building comes. As thought is the plane of
action, the 
proper thought will bring about concordant action in its own good
time, even if 
we have to await a new body for it. But there is no saying what
changes may come 
about in the present body; we have to live on and think and do.
People have to be encouraged to take hold, in the hope that for
their own and 
humanity’s sake they will “stick.” It would not be helpful to
discourage them by 
presenting the difficulties that we know will confront them; when
such 
difficulties do arise we have still to encourage them by pointing
out what the 
great Ideal means. Some fall away for a time, coming back when they
get new 
strength and determination; others ignominiously retreat and lose
their chance 
for this incarnation. But there are always others,
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and for them and for the faithful—“the living germs among the
masses of men”—we 
work on without discouragement. “To have started one soul in the
right direction 
is an opportunity not given to many.” We have had and improved that
opportunity 
to the best of our ability. In all we are building for the
future—we work in the 
present for the future.
You know how I feel about going to churches and other meetings
where duty does 
not call and where you are not in sympathy with the prevailing
ideas. It does no 
good, and only opens the door to possible hindrances which affect
all those in 
the same line of relation with you; so, even if indifferent to
personal results, 
there is the other more important view to be considered. Where it
is a question 
of duty it is a different matter, there then being nothing of the
personal in 
it. As to the other meeting, am not surprised that you felt a
pressure in the 
room where that aggregation of class-minds was. You did well not to
stay and 
would have done better still to have kept away altogether. Nothing
is gained by 
going to such places and no good can be done to minds whose sole
idea of 
existence is physical betterment for themselves as against others
who appear to 
have that betterment. It is easy to learn the lines of thought of
such people 
from the papers and other literature. Besides, there is danger of
certain kinds 
of infection, as you know. One of the strange things noted during
the past 
twenty years is the fact that students—so many of them—have thought
that the 
warnings were not meant for them, but for others; have disregarded
them, and 
then wondered at occurrences of an unpleasant nature, and at their
lack of 
progress. It did not show an appreciation of the fact that such
warnings are 
statements of Law, and of value, or they would not have been said.
The question as to whether we “should change the vibration from
pain to 
pleasure,” arouses the counter question, “Why should we desire to?”
The object 
of life is neither pain nor pleasure, and making that object merely
the avoiding 
of pain is to be as nothing but a rationalized animal. Pain is what
we feel of 
the cry of the “lives” that are afflicted, and need attention to
have the cause 
removed intelligently so that the course of all may run smoothly.
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To desire to drown this cry would not be wise, but foolish.
Conscientious 
medical men use opiates only when absolutely necessary and then
only for a 
temporary relief while effecting a cure of the trouble. A mental
‘dope” is 
equally objectionable, supposing it could be done. But this is
found to be the 
case: those who seek pleasure feel pain more keenly than those who
accept what 
comes as guides on the way. And it may be safely assumed that those
who seek 
pleasure and fail to see the lesson of pain have not the power
indicated in the 
question, however much they may desire it; for desire is not a
condition, nor is 
it knowledge.
Well, it is Mahabharata, the Great War. We have waged it before to
some purpose, 
and will continue to wage it to greater and greater purpose, with
added power 
and knowledge as lives go on. It makes all the difference in the
world to have 
this outlook and purpose.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Nineteen
The only storms that really affect us are those “inside.” Of
course, being human 
and having bodies that act and react to the “within” and the
“without,” we feel 
these effects; but we know them to proceed from the “qualities in
nature” and 
are able to take the wise advice of Krishna that they “come and go
and are brief 
and changeable; these do thou endure, 0 son of Bharata!” It seems
to me that B— 
is in a state of complaint and, being so, the intuitive perceptions
are not so 
keen as they otherwise would be. But this all will pass away. It is
in fact 
nothing else than an exhibition of the despondency of Arjuna,
although it 
probably will not seem so to B—. In such cases everything appears
to be wrong 
and all things futile; but knowing it all to proceed—not from the
outside 
affairs which merely give the occasion, but temporarily from
within—I place no 
especial importance on it, save as an expression of the then
feeling. All things 
may not come out just to our liking, but we should know better than
to expect 
that, or
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find cause for complaint in it. All this brings unnecessary strain
not only to 
B— but on others intimately concerned.
What you said to C— was right, and he ought to know that there was
and is a 
definite purpose in U. L. T. It is not a “one man-business” but a 
One-Truth-business. There will be plenty of writing for the “man in
the street.” 
There has been much, there is much, there will be much; but where
does it leave 
the “man”? Just where it found him—“in the Street”! Those who are
inclined that 
way will do that sort of thing; but where in all the societies, and
by all the 
writers, is there to be found clear direction or a sound foundation
to build 
upon? Well, we know our work, and what we have set out to do. To us
the way is 
clear and we ask no persons to accept our way if they see what to
them is a 
better way. Let C— do what he will do that is consonant with our
work. But what 
is most necessary at the present is the putting into the hands of
the public the 
writings of H. P. B. and W. Q. J. which have been obscured. We are
following the 
lines of W. Q. J. in particular because they do not diverge from H.
P. B.’s, but 
strengthen and confirm them. As well they make simple for “the man
in the 
Street.”
C— thinks that we have lost sight of the “Second and Third Objects”
because we 
do not mention them particularly. We have not. The second and third
objects are 
pursued by some, and never were obligatory on any member’s
acceptance. The U. L. 
T. is an exoteric body and sticks to the first object—a “Nucleus of
Universal 
Brotherhood.” The second object is sufficiently covered in the
readings from the 
Upanishads, Voice, Gita, etc. The third object is “to investigate
the 
unexplained laws of nature and the psychical powers latent in man”;
but 
“investigate” does not mean experiment. There are warnings galore
about the 
latter.
It is good to hear that the Thursday meetings, while small, have a
stronger, 
better feeling and tone. With the devotion that we know is there
this must of 
necessity be, and strength and tone coming from within—from the
heart—must reach 
outward in all directions and make the instrument a better and
better expression 
of that harmony. M— as an exponent will change as time goes on.
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His natural manner is inoffensive, perhaps apologetic at times. As
he obtains 
what might be called a “deadly certainty” it may be he will
approach the “calm, 
quiet movement of the glacier” which with the genial warmth of the
sun will 
prove effective. All natures have their purpose and uses. It is the
fire of 
conviction that gives each its highest efficacy.
I think as students become more earnest and closely allied to one
another and 
the work, ideas flow from them to the one speaking. The speaker
sees it in 
another’s mind, unconsciously, perhaps—but truly so. The
intercommunication 
between minds is much more common than supposed, both for good and
bad. The best 
strength comes from the Masters when the mind is centered on doing
Their work; 
this opens the channel between Them and us. “Thought is the plane
of action”; 
all else are results.
What is this about “looking for orders”? They should know better.
Students 
should look about to see what they can find to do—find ways,
methods, and means. 
It is certain that if one looks for “orders,” he is depending upon
authority and 
direction. The right way is to go ahead and if it is not right, the
wrong will 
be pointed out. It would be well if such would take a more active
part in the 
meetings, get more and more able to carry them on. No doubt they
will do this, 
having begun.
There is a getting closer together among “the faithful,” and this
of itself has 
its effect upon those about us, as well as upon others not so near.
Union and 
harmony is the secret of strength. So the nearer and closer we get
in thought, 
will and feeling, the more power will flow from us as a body, “till
we saturate 
time and eras, that the men and women of races, ages to come, may
prove brethren 
and lovers as we are.”
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Twenty
In your last, you question about memory. Memory is a large field.
That which we 
call “memory” must belong to “being” and relate to experience—in
fact, it might 
be said that “memory” and
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“being” are synonymous, considering in this view of it that ‘ is
the result of 
experience not necessarily remembered or recollected. It is also
said that 
memory of past lives is recoverable, so that there must be a plane
of memory not 
accessible to us in our present plane of action. Yet these memories
are of other 
lives such as this one. Remember that every sound in the visible
world awakens 
its correspondence in every one of the so-far developed elements;
so, by 
inference, every thought on this plane awakens its correspondence
on inner 
planes. The real register, then, must be in the more ethereal and
more permanent 
substance. The physical brain does not retain all the multifarious
impressions 
received by it, for it is in constant motion and change. While some
impressions 
which are constantly repeated appear to reside in the brain itself
and to be of 
ready access, others, not repeated, fall below the line of
perception and have 
to be recalled through association with some other present idea. H.
P. B. said, 
“there is a constant telegraphic communication going on
incessantly—day and 
night—between the physical brain and the inner man.” The brain is
such a complex 
thing, both physically and metaphysically, that it is like a tree
whose bark you 
can uncover layer by layer, each layer being different from all the
others, each 
having its own special work, function and properties.
Each plane has its own tablet of memory and produces the
appropriate effects on 
any other plane—being accessible, in fact, but not perceived on
account of other 
predominating perceptions. Memory per se must be on all planes of
being, each 
plane producing “kinds” of memory, or such as relate to that plane
only, in 
which case it is “being” on that plane. On all planes “memory” must
be the power 
of reproducing past experiences; it is manasic because creative; on
the highest 
manasic plane there is said to be neither past nor future but all
in Present 
Creation. The Soul is vision itself. Would not the highest memory
be superlative 
vision? The Seer is in no case the things he sees.
I am astounded at the infernal practices you speak of that the “New
Psychology” 
follows. One might as well give tests on the action of hasheesh,
opium, whiskey 
or any other thing that causes
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abnormal accentuation of the organs and seats of sensation as those
“emotional 
tests.” No wonder the girl fainted! If the students themselves or
their families 
cannot be made to see the wrong and folly of it all, they cannot be
helped, for 
these “professors” are in the ascendant and no layman’s voice would
be listened 
to. The papers lately gave an account of experiments in observation
of the 
“human aura.” The medical men were greatly interested in the
wonderful discovery 
and, marvelous to relate, saw in it “a new mode of the diagnosis of
disease.” 
Was it not said by H. P. B. that “the psychic idiosyncrasies of
humanity” would 
undergo a great change?
You say that our attitude toward these things seems to many like
“condemning” 
others. It is the duty of esoteric students to unmask error and
hypocrisy; to 
face lie with truth; not as personal criticisms but as facts
against 
misstatements. It is assumed in charity that one who wrongs the
Truth does so in 
ignorance; but the custodians of Truth voice it in the face of lie,
ignorance 
and error, and take every opportunity possible to correct erroneous
impressions. 
Theosophy is in the world for that purpose. We are not to be
self-assertive nor 
flabby; knowing the truth, we speak it and care only for it and
that it be as 
widely known as possible. All of which is entirely compatible with
charity to 
the weaknesses of others and abstention from condemnation of others.
Does “death-bed repentance” do any good? Well, it depends on what
is meant by 
repentance. If it is recognition of wrong and a change in the mind
and nature 
that would look with abhorrence upon a repetition of the deed,
coupled with the 
desire to make every amend in one’s power, it must be good. But if
it is only a 
recognition and a consideration of the deed from the point of view
of the evil 
that fell upon the perpetrator because of it, it is no good at all,
being 
selfish and occasioning no change in disposition, or only such
change as 
regarded self-interest. The first kind, in the mind of one who knew
Theosophy, 
would be deeper and have a wider scope of action than in the mind
of one who 
regarded every thing from the standpoint of one life. The Karma is
the same; the 
one who created Karma is affected by the results, but the extent
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and kind of results depend on the extent of change and the direction
of the 
change that may have taken place in the mind of such “repentant.”
The phrase, 
“right thinking brings everything,” should have been, “thinking has
brought 
everything that exists—right or wrong.” A man’s thoughts may be a
gulf apart 
from what he is constrained to do, and he is what he aspires and
desires to 
do—not his inabilities to perform. He might go through a whole life
with out 
much apparent change, but if he has inwardly relinquished, that
which is left 
after he drops the body is his mind, and his next embodiment will
call forth the 
performance.
 
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Twenty-One
The work you have planned out for the others seems good, for they
should be 
helped as much as possible. If others are not trained to take hold,
the 
necessary help and education will be minus, should anything happen
to us; it is 
also the study and preparation on the part of beginners that will
make them more 
efficient as propagandists. But let their initiative work as much
as possible; 
suggest and adjust when necessary. Why not begin by taking the
three fundamental 
propositions of the Secret Doctrine? For upon these the whole
system hinges. Get 
them all grounded in these. The first thing to make clear is the
impossibility 
of the ordinary conception of a personal or separative God; then
the importance 
of realizing the Self as all in all; then the law of periodicity
with all its 
applications—“the world’s eternal ways”; and reincarnation by
analogy. After the 
Fundamentals, they might take up the Ocean, chapter by chapter,
getting grounded 
in question and answer. Explain that the object is to formulate for
themselves, 
and thus make their understanding good. If they are helped, they
should get 
themselves in a position where they can best help others. This is
the way to 
learn and know.
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It is difficult to help individuals as such, especially where all
the strength 
is needed for a general effort. It is quite easy to be drawn into
this helping 
of individuals by our sympathies, and sometimes we do things that
are not helps 
at all, although perhaps a pleasure to both giver and receiver.
Wisdom is 
required in any case; sometimes “jolts instead of johnnie-cake” are
needed. I 
have met much of all kinds of people and have learned some
discretion in the 
treatment of them. You in your position will also meet them and
will have to 
deal with them—for their good, so far as the general good permits
and wisdom 
dictates.
That is an interesting phenomenon you speak of where a brain injury
made the man 
forget his name, and able to do some-thing he was unable to do
before. It was 
the same man, of course; his lapse of memory did not alter that
fact at all. 
Neither did the other fact, that he was under the new condition
able to play 
billiards, change the man; the brain instrument by the injury had
one door 
opened and another shut. If he was able to play billiards actually
and never 
played before in his life, I should say that such an one had done
so in some 
previous life, which the injury gave access to. The previous life,
also, must 
have been comparatively recent because that game in its present
form is not very 
old. We have to remember that every man has a vast store of
capacities, behind 
the nature we see, gained in past lives. Anybody’s capacity is
governed by the 
particular Karma of that life, permitting the expression of only a
portion of 
his acquired knowledge and capacity. There are many lives where the
tastes, 
desires, and capacities change entirely without any brain injury,
showing that 
one set of Karmic causes is expended and another set ensues. In any
and all 
cases, what is in expression is from the store of experience of the
past, for no 
one can do anything that is not related to past experience, whether
in this life 
or some other one. Solomon said there is nothing new under the sun,
meaning, I 
think, that whatever is done, flows from what has been done. There
is no other 
knowledge than that which comes from experience, “experience” being
considered 
in its widest sense.
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The Saptarishis are not very well explained anywhere, though there
are certain 
things said about them that might give an idea, such as: “they are
intimately 
connected with the present age— the Dark Kali Yuga;” “they mark the
time and 
duration of our septenary life-cycle;” “they mark the time and the
periods of 
Kali-Yuga, the age of sin and sorrow;” “they are as mysterious as
their supposed 
seven wives, the Pleiades, of whom only one— the hidden one—has
proved 
virtuous.” Speaking of the constellation of the Great Bear, H. P.
B. makes the 
remark that these Rishis are the informing souls of the stars
mentioned, and 
that they lie across the loins of the constellation (her
underlining) and that 
they are the Seven elemental powers—the Rupa Devas. There is a
hint, too, that 
they are connected with generation.
From it all I judge that there is a class of beings that have not
been and will 
not be men in this Manvantara; they are of seven different degrees,
not 
connected with man as a septenary being, although they are with the
cycle of 
Kali Yuga. These cycles must be in a general way determined by man
as to their 
nature, which is what the Star Rishis respond to in particular. It
would seem 
that all the sex vagaries that come up in various directions, and
the many 
visions and “communications” of “Masters” spoken of by persons so
thinking are 
of that nature. You know it is said that very little information
was given out 
about the elementals for the reason that the mind, by directing the
consciousness, can segregate the various planes and arouse the
elementals to 
action in relation to the Thinker. Sex ideas strongly held and
attempted to be 
“spiritualized" as the saying is—might easily, I can conceive,
attract beings of 
that nature which would assume the coloring of one thinking in that
relation, 
adding to the main point of attraction—generation—anything that
would serve to 
keep the close contact. Being elemental they respond to their own
peculiar 
stimuli, without any sense of responsibility— not knowing man’s
nature. The safe 
road is the one pointed out by the Messengers: you remember H. P.
B. said, 
“Beware of the path of the Star Rishis.”
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Well, Companions, keep on with well-doing; our work is needed
badly, and while 
there are few to listen, we serve the many through the few. Love to
you and best 
of success every where.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Twenty-Two
There is compensation everywhere and for everything; only, as we
look for 
results, we do not, at once perceive the compensation at times and
at the 
moment. Business, being a contest of interests, is full of
perplexities all the 
time to us if we are fearful or anxious or impatient. But bad as it
is and must 
be in itself, if we engage in just a present performance of duty as
it comes and 
to the best of our ability, all strain disappears and we have that
calmness 
which is necessary in the fight. No doubt time is required to be
able to hold 
that position, but it is the condition to be tried for and
obtained.
In the article mentioned, I should take exception to the phrase
used: “When the 
first state of consciousness arises there is the Unmanifested
viewed as a 
whole.” It would sound better to me to say that the Unmanifested
precludes any 
“state,” but represents “Be-ness” or Consciousness per Se;
differentiation 
brings states of being or perception. If we take the simple and
well known 
analogy of sleeping and waking, and call waking the “manifested”
and sleeping 
the “unmanifested,” we see that what transpires in consciousness
during sleep is 
the “unmanifested” to the waking state, while what to us in this
state appears 
as un manifested is but a higher kind of manifestation. May not
this be equally 
true in regard even to that which we call Universal Pralaya? We
speak of 
“consciousness” and mean thereby our present relative and
restricted modes of 
perception, but we get no idea of what the consciousness of our own
Higher Ego 
is. We have the feeling which arises from our present incomplete
state; but what 
do we know of the feeling that comes from a higher state?
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You ask about the sentence in Patanjali: “The mind is a factor
without which 
concentration cannot be obtained.” The question is “Why?” It is not
easy to say 
what the “mind” is: it must be basic as well as selective; it can
be withdrawn 
from one object and placed upon another; without “mind” nothing is
done. We 
regard all actions as being mind operation. Thought is the plane of
action; so 
to get at the basis we have to assume a Perceiver, who from his
perceptions is 
the cause and effect in action. Prakriti is said to be that which
produces cause 
and effect in actions, being the basis in which any action inheres.
The 
Perceiver acts upon many planes; his perceptions as adopted by him
on any plane 
might be called his “mind” on that plane. Concentration of
perception on any 
desirable point is necessary to full knowledge.
I think you have the idea all right, as I understand it: “Universal
Mind is the 
sum total of ideas of all beings concerned in the system” (which as
a totality 
and in the last analysis must be in accord with all other systems)
; and any 
given mind must be a collocation of ideas within the Universal
Mind. “There is 
nothing but the Self and its environments.”
The main trouble is we are constantly working with and upon effects,
and 
endeavoring to adjust effects to effects without any relation to
the plane of 
causes, mistaking cause for effect and effect for cause
continually. The second 
chapter of the Gita gives a splendid statement. Speaking of the
“three 
qualities” (prakritic), it says, “Be thou free from these three
qualities,” that 
is, from the ordinary influence of the natural opposites. We are
not to perform 
actions to obtain favor from Masters, nor from a morbid fear of
Karma, not even 
from a desire to obtain good Karma; but “perform thy duty; abandon
all thought 
of the consequences, and make the event equal to thee whether it
terminate in 
good or evil. Such equanimity is called Yoga.”
You remember the saying of H. P. B., “Embodied consciousness gains
knowledge 
through observation and experience; disembodied consciousness is
the Cause.” So 
the whole is comprehended in Consciousness, conditioned and
unconditioned. There
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is the internal cause of ideation—Thought; and the external cause
and effect in 
action on the planes of prakriti. Only through spirit can we know
spirit in any 
of its modifications. But to explain high metaphysical ideas in any
western or 
modern language is like doing fine carving with an axe; our
perceptions have to 
expand by application and exercise, so that words in their common
application 
and ordinary relations to each other appear as correspondences
rather than 
definite expressions.
The mind and Consciousness acting together have the power to
separate or 
segregate the different planes, and this too in the case of the
merest beginner. 
I do not think you can get any better idea in regard to the image-making
faculty 
than is contained in the article by W. Q. J. in Vol. VII of the
Path magazine, 
p. 289. The power of concentration is the first consideration: “One
should have 
the imagination under such control as to be able to make a picture
of anything 
at any time. If a picture were made of the ineffectual thoughts of
the 
generality of people, it would show little lines of force flying
from their 
brains, and instead of reaching their destination, falling to the
earth just a 
few feet away from the person who is thus throwing them out.”
Not much help here I am afraid, but you may get something out of
it. Now to you 
may there be all blessings and growth.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Twenty-Three
So the question was asked as to “the body of H. P. B.,” and you
wish further 
light upon it. The body of H. P. B. was born in the usual way with
its peculiar 
physical heredity—a “house” of the kind in use by the people of the
age, and 
subject to its own physical karma. It could not be made perfect any
more than 
its shape, features, sex, or color could be made different than
they were. It 
was selected for its adaptability to the work in hand.
 “Imagination and Occult
Phenomena,” reprinted in Theosophy, October, 1913.
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All great Initiates appear among men in a body of the kind in use
by the race to 
whom they come. The Bible says of the prophet of Nazareth that “he
became in all 
things like unto us.” Should such beings come in their own form and
glory, they 
would be worshipped as gods by some, and hunted as devils by
others, and the 
object of inducing right effort on the part of the people would be
entirely 
missed. So although it entails suffering, it is done for humanity’s
sake, from 
the compassion felt for those younger brothers who continue to
bring woe upon 
them-selves through ignorance. The Masters do not need the
experience for 
Themselves. They sacrifice for others, and as other Masters did in
more ancient 
times for them.
It is a question whether They suffer any pains from death as the
ordinary human 
does who hangs on to life physical. The force in use by Them racks
any ordinary 
body and disintegrates it. In the case of H. P. B., extraordinary
means had to 
be used to keep the body together as long as it was kept. A couple
of weeks 
before leaving the body She wrote to one in Boston, “Even will and
yoga cannot 
keep this old rag of a body together much longer.” This does not
abrogate her 
power, but it does show that the bodies of the present race are not
able to 
stand such a strain as the occupancy of such a being entails. The
nervous force 
in our own bodies if intensified will destroy the body’s capacity;
imagine a 
force a hundred times higher than that, and it is not difficult to
understand 
why bodies so occupied go to pieces.
Bodies are formed under the law of cause and effect, and are
maintained under 
it. There is physical karma, mental karma, and psychical karma;
these interact 
upon each other, yet have their own particular lines of operation.
The 
production of the bodies of any race is through causes set in
motion upon the 
physical plane, and continued in reproduction on that plane; they
are of a 
certain nature and subject to the actions and reactions of the
collective karma 
of the race of which they are a part. An Adept assuming such a body
would be 
subject, so far as the body is concerned, to the racial qualities
inherent in 
the body assumed,
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just as a man moving into a town and taking a house in the town,
would dwell 
therein; if the houses were deficient in any way, he could do no
better and 
would have to take what he could get, even if  far from his standard. So he 
would be subject to the “karma” of the dwellings of the time and
place. Bodies 
are the physical dwellings constructed by the race.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Twenty-Four
I have read your note and the enclosed letters. It is passing
strange that Mr. 
B. could have gotten such a conception of us—that we are a
self-satisfied, 
patronizing bunch”; that we are not straight in sending out
unsigned letters, or 
hiding in any way. I would like very much to clear up their minds
on these and 
other lines for they are fine people and need only to get rid of
some prejudices 
to place them in that relation which will benefit them. The letters
indicate 
much self-assertion and belligerent personality on the part of one,
while the 
other says somewhat naïvely that he was so interested in the
subject itself he 
never thought to inquire about the history of the U. L. T. and the
persons 
connected with it—which was exactly the effect most desirable to be
brought 
about!
Strange, they do not see, if some human beings know the existence
of the most 
important message to the world in untold centuries, and bring the
fact and the 
message to their attention, leaving it to be accepted or rejected without
drawing any attention to themselves, that an act of self-effacement
has been 
performed in order that the Message may be judged on its own
merits. They are 
evidently not aware that it was the prominence of persons and their
claims of 
personal knowledge that drew the attention of enquirers from the
Message itself. 
Nor does it seem to be understood by them that the
"anonymity" adopted was for 
the very benefit of such as they and all others who desire to
obtain that 
message at first hand with no intermediate distractions.
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As persons concerned with the Message and its propagation, we
certainly are not 
“hiding,” for we exist and can be found; but as “persons” of
intelligence, 
character and self-sacrifice, we desire most of all to place the
Message of 
Masters in the hands of those who wish to learn and know, without
attracting 
attention to ourselves or seeking any distracting notoriety. For
many years this 
has been done at a tremendous cost of time, money, and effort; for
with us it 
has been a constant and consistent giving and we have asked for
nothing in 
return. Nor can it be said that we are seeking recognition or fame
of any kind, 
since no names are presented to which fame may be attached.
How does anyone suppose the Teachings of Theosophy pure and simple
as given by 
the Teachers of Theosophy have been carried forward intact? Blind
alleys have 
been spread in every direction by persons who have been and are
accepted by the 
unwary as true Theosophical exponents; the original teachings have
been obscured 
and a flood of speculations arc put forth as Theosophy, to the
detriment of 
Theosophy and those who would learn and understand. How else could
such a 
condition be remedied save by some who knew the truth, knew the
Teachers, knew 
the right lines, and had sufficient experience in the Movement to
avoid the 
rocks that split the original society into a number of fragments?
The policy and methods of U. L. T. were instituted to avoid
personalities 
altogether and make the effort dependent upon a body of students
who desire no 
recognition for nor of themselves, thus putting the Teaching
directly in the 
hands of those who would know, to be studied and applied; hence the
“anonymity.”
Another critic once said that U. L. T. was “hiding behind
Theosophy.” The reply 
was, “That is much better than standing in front of it and hiding
Theosophy.” 
The U. L. T. does not “hide” behind anything; it is simply holding
Theosophy up 
so that all can see without let or hindrance. Whether it is persons
or a number 
of “two-by-fours” that hold Theosophy up in plain view does not
matter; in 
either case, it could be said with 
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some show of justice that Theosophy was hiding them from view. But
there is no 
complaint from that quarter nor thought of any—as you well know.
Mr. B. does not 
appear to distinguish between anonymous communications from enemies
or would-be 
friends, which, as he justly remarks, are cowardly, and an
impersonal 
presentation of Theosophy without placing persons in the
lime-light—all of it 
for the undiluted benefit of those who seek to know Theosophy. The
point is that 
we stand in our own persons for Theosophy, and, while presenting
its principles, 
defend it against any kind of attack.
Well, in all kindness of heart we will do the best we can with
anyone who 
desires to learn. For those who expect principles and methods to
conform to 
their personal prejudices we can do nothing, however much we might
desire to. 
Yet there is always hope that a little Theosophy may work as a
leaven which will 
wear away or displace existing prejudices, and for this, time must
be allowed. 
Theosophy is for those who want it; it cannot be given to any
others.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Twenty-Five
Yes, many people will come to your meetings; of these, a few will
remain. Those 
who really get the spirit of the Movement will not be found running
here and 
there for any purpose of their own. They may go occasionally for
general 
information or to do good to others. Whenever personal friction
comes up, as it 
may—do you stick to principles; enunciate them, illustrate them,
but keep away 
from direct reference to any trouble. So each is left to understand
and apply as 
seems best to him. Study is the great thing. Unity, study, and work
are the 
Trinity that will keep all together and yet leave play for
individual 
idiosyncrasies along harmless lines while subduing them. What you
say of some 
who come, remain away for a time, and come back, may indicate that
such have 
taken a sample away with them, and
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compared “the goods” with those offered elsewhere. No doubt that
goes on here 
and there with those who work from reason alone.
There are many whom we cannot help. Their time has not yet come,
perhaps, in 
that they have not arrived at that condition which permits such
help as we can 
give. We can help those that are ready; they may not be many in
number, but they 
exist, and will come, as the way clears for them to do so. A steady
out pouring 
of the eternal ideas will attract and hold those who need them;
others will come 
and go as their mood determines. I do not think you are to blame
for the kind of 
people that come to you; they are samples of the city—mixed; some
good—bless 
them—some indifferent, some bad and some very bad. You try to serve
all and give 
them of your best; no one can do more. Every spiritual effort is a
good action.
It is true that the “door to the Masters” lies through Their work,
and in no 
other way. You remember that W. Q. J. wrote, “Generosity and love
are the 
abandonment of self.” The Masters love humanity and all creation;
Their 
generosity and love are not stinted, nor tainted with selfishness.
We can get 
rid of our hindrances only by following the Path They indicate.
That Path little 
by little rids us of our besetting “sins.” And They have said that
every 
thought, every desire, every effort in that direction counts. What
we need to do 
is to forget our estimation of ourselves, be that good or bad, and
just work on. 
We shall find more strength and larger opportunities as we move
along that road. 
The idea that we are poor miserable sinners is so ingrained in the
race mind 
that we find ourselves holding separateness either as to goodness
or as to 
badness all the time. This has to be overcome. It is not a question
of our 
goodness nor our badness, but our desire and effort to follow the
highest path 
possible for us.
If a path is one we know, we have the confidence of knowledge; but
where the 
path is a strange one, various kinds of doubts and misgivings
arise. There is 
only one thing to be feared, really, and that is anything that
takes us off the 
Path we are treading.
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I think, too, there is sometimes a stronger reason for disquietude
than mere 
personal fear or doubt. We do not want to stray from the Path, and
so we examine 
our steps to see if they are in the right direction, especially if
the steps 
bring us any joy. Ordinary doubt or fear would stop us, but right
solicitude 
only makes us cautious, and that is not a bad thing at all, so long
as we keep 
moving.
As to the friend you speak of: I hope he has found something to do,
and that 
whatever it is he will determinedly settle down to do it as if it
were the only 
thing to be done. I have found that doing what comes, with all my
heart, mind 
and strength, in time brought me to another place and opportunity
and always to 
a better advantage. I have seen in many the attitude, “I don’t like
this,” or, 
“I must have something better,” lead to perpetual change,
dissatisfaction and 
poor results, invariably. On the other hand, I have seen those whom
neither 
sickness nor any other cause could deter, nor diminish their
courage and 
efforts, gain success, the reason being that no opportunity was
overlooked and 
no effort too great for them. It was really an unconscious fulfilling
of Karma 
on their part. I think students too often regard their personal
existence and 
predilections as one thing, and their student life as another. It
is not so. 
Both are interwoven and interbended at every point. The student
should see 
clearly that his present existence is his opportunity to live and
learn, as well 
as learn to live to the best advantage; it contains and presents
the 
opportunities which, if rejected, will come before us in one form
or another 
until we realize that a step forward can be taken in no other way
than by 
overcoming obstacles, and thus, defects. How wonderfully and
perfectly this 
works, when seen and faithfully applied, the generality of people
do not credit 
or know; but we, as students, should be able to apply the lessons
of life on the 
basis of the knowledge which has been imparted to us and which we
recognize.
That we are living in a period of transition when everything is
changing may 
easily be seen. We are necessarily involved in this transition
which in the 
general case makes for betterment, and,
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with the student, opens the door to that success which is greater
than all 
governmental and worldly advance or betterment—true knowledge and
perception, 
control, strength and wisdom to apply, fitting us to become leaders
of men in 
the times to come. We should therefore go through our appointed
task, not only 
courageously but gladly, knowing what it leads to, and what the
great end in 
view. The lives we have lived with their joys and sorrows,
pleasures and pains, 
are forgotten; the one we are now living will pass into the same
limbo of the 
past; but we shall be what we have made ourselves, strong or weak,
as the case 
may be, and face once again what we have brought about. We have
only the present 
in which to do what may be done, so we ought to be bold and
courageous and go 
forth and show our strength in the face of any and all difficulties,
for they 
are veritably our saviours.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Twenty-Six
As to the statement that we have to “assimilate the bliss of
Devachan and the 
woes of Avitchi”: all have to learn these states. Those who of
their own free 
will enter bodies to help humanity pass through them like any human
being, but 
are not involved in them. They feel like any human being, and go
through much 
more than most, so that there may be fresh in their bodily
experience all 
feelings that afflict or ease humanity. Their grief—if it may be
called so—is 
over the inability of humans to understand because of the purely
personal 
elements which prevail in mankind.
“Masters feel pain but are not disturbed by it.” That feeling is
sympathy—a 
feeling with the condition. They know what any one feels under the 
circumstances, but They also know that the so-called sufferings of
others are 
not due to the circumstances, but to a false attitude toward them.
How could 
They identify Their glorious knowledge and power with a mistaken
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conception? The pain we feel most is mental pain, not physical, and
this mental 
pain is due to fighting against Karmic conditions—in fact, Karmic
opportunities. 
Our inner nature compels us to go in directions that contravene our
personal 
desires; then there is pain in the personal mentality with and
because of the 
identifying our Self with it. The personal nature is extremely
sensitive because 
its constitution is such that it is easily deranged, being made up
of separate 
ideas. Usually with students the changes in ideas are simply the
exchange of one 
separative idea for another; so, the changes leave them still tied
up in 
personal ideas. True growth comes from regarding all things that
come and 
go—some of them pleasant and some unpleasant— as the tides in the
ocean of life 
of which one is the observer. Pleasure is necessary, as also is
pain, for these 
are guide-marks and indicate the “effect” upon us by the varying
tides. We are 
not these effects which are simply means of measuring the value of
experiences 
and of learning how to put them to the best use. What is needed is
freedom, and 
freedom comes from a resigning of all self-interest in results.
A question was asked, “Is it not very hard to rise?” It is not
hard, for our 
Real nature is at the place we wish to rise to. In the East they
catch monkeys 
by putting nuts in the bottom of a narrow-necked jar; the monkeys
see the nuts 
at the bottom and at once put their arms and hands in to grab a
fistful of the 
nuts; they do not know enough to let go the nuts and be free and so
are caught. 
‘We are much like the monkeys in that we want to rise and be free,
but we will 
not let go the “nut-ideas” that we hold. If we only would, we
should rise by our 
own nature. We ought to be wiser than the monkeys; to be our self
and let things 
go.
Your friend’s statement on tobacco is quite interesting to me,
perhaps because I 
may at one time have held similar ideas and for that reason
recognize the 
prejudice and preconception that his statement presents. Our
personal habits one 
way or another are matters purely personal and do not affect the
facts in the 
case, but our preconceptions may and too often do just
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that. Having erroneous ideas, or partially so, as to the facts in
any given 
case, these, together with any existing prejudices, lead us to
wrong 
conclusions. As to his remark in regard to Masters smoking, it
would be well to 
enquire just what his understanding of the nature of Masters is,
for upon a 
right or wrong understanding of that nature our basis of judgment
depends. It 
has been stated by Themselves that They are human beings, but not
such as we 
are. They have bodies, of physical matter indeed, but of such a
refined and 
spiritual kind as to be beyond our ordinary conception and
experience. They are 
perfected septenary beings and present the goal to which humanity
may tend. 
Necessarily, then, control absolute over all Their vehicles or
instruments must 
have been gained before They could reach the stage of septenary
perfection. It 
would also follow that what They do would be with knowledge and for
a beneficial 
purpose. So, even if They used tobacco, it would have to be
conceded that They 
knew what They were doing and why, while we ignorant physical
beings would be 
judging by hearsay and appearances, and considering ourselves
competent to do 
so, which would be a grave mistake.
There is one thing certain, They have never promulgated anything
about tobacco 
nor mentioned the weed; we should therefore be guided solely by
Their message to 
the world of men, and leave all other matters alone, if we would
understand or 
reach Them. It is said that H. P. B. smoked cigarettes; if she did,
it did not 
impair her wisdom nor ability. No one with any insight whatever
would care what 
any person did as a matter of personal habit, if that person could
and did 
present such a wonderful and complete cosmogenesis and
anthropogenesis as the 
Secret Doctrine. It is never so much a question of what a person
does as ‘Why 
does he do it?” If for self-benefit, it is just as reprehensible as
any other 
selfish procedure. It is motive and motive alone that makes an
action good or 
bad, black or white. After all is said and done, “the purely bodily
functions 
are of far less importance than what a man thinks and feels.
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what desires he encourages in his mind, and allows to. take root,
and grow 
there.” “True chelaship is not a matter of diet, postures or
practices of any 
kind; it is an attitude of mind.”
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Twenty-Seven
The letter you send is very interesting. The writer asks only one
question: “Why 
do all religions look upon the cheerless side of life, only, as if
the other 
side did not exist?” We presume that the only answer to this
question would be 
that the religionists and theologians are ignorant—and ignorance,
as we know, is 
the parent of fear. The Founders of the world religions, however,
did not 
present merely “the cheerless side.” They one and all enunciated
the doctrines 
of hope, for almost without exception their teachings cannot be
understood 
except on the basis of reincarnation—in fact, many of them directly
taught 
it—and reincarnation is the “doctrine of hope.”
We think the questioner must have been weary and world- worn when
he wrote that 
letter, for truly Theosophy does not over-emphasize “the cheerless
side” of life 
at all. It supplies a logical common-sense explanation of existing
things; and 
once a man understands what life is for and what it truly means,
together with 
its great possibilities, he can no longer dwell on the “cheerless
side” but 
feels the greatest confidence, hope and cheerfulness—and has a true
basis for 
the feeling.
The fact that Law rules in everything and every circumstance
(Karma) is evidence 
that exact justice is the rule of life. As soon as one sees that
there is no 
“God” to condemn or punish him and that he can only get that which
belongs to 
him, and will surely get everything that does belong to him in a
Universe of 
Law, then he has no reason for being “cheerless,” but feels
satisfled, 
responsible, and confident. And no matter how much we may have
transgressed or 
how little we may have known in the past, as soon as we sense the
truth of 
Reincarnation—the process
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by which Law rules realize that we can set up better causes and
make the future 
what we wish.
The longer anyone studies along Theosophical lines, and the more he
makes the 
Philosophy a basis for thought and action, the more fully, I
believe, he will 
see the beauty and possibilities of life, and the tremendous
opportunities it 
affords those who are willing to serve.
Yes, as the questioner says, the vast mass of people do suffer; but
the law, 
inherent in themselves, brings them the suffering because they
earned it. All of 
them experience some joy as well as suffering; the law brings them
that also 
because they earned it. Many of those who now suffer most are
paying the penalty 
for their transgression against the rest, but in time the
compensation will 
come. Furthermore, we always have the power of choice—if only in
the attitude we 
take toward the circumstances of life.
He speaks of the tremendous task Theosophy has. That is true, but
we as students 
need not worry about that. We can only do what we can do—and
remember that the 
Master’s hand is over all. They know when the times are ripe for
beginning a 
work; They know what to expect; otherwise They would not be
“Masters of Wisdom.” 
It is pioneer work for those now in the world, and by doing what we
can now, we 
make ourselves a place in the future into which we will come under
law. Perhaps 
he has not thought of that.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Twenty-Eight
Your note and questions were handed to me last evening and I am
glad to reply. 
From your statement I should say that you brought forward from a
previous life 
that extension of sight and hearing which you possess. It is not a
“gift”; it 
was acquired by you while in a body before.
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The strong tie between yourself and your mother does not come, in
my opinion, 
from the fact of your physical relation in this life, but is a soul
bond in 
other lives, and not necessarily in the same relation as in this
life, although 
that could very well be. The fact remains that there is a strong
bond between 
your soul and hers—a bond of unselfish love, the strongest power in
the world.
As all human beings are primarily spiritual beings, the earth is
not their 
permanent abiding place; they are born into bodies, live, form
their relations 
as physical, psychic, and spiritual beings, and again return to
their own more 
real and abiding states.
As you may be aware, the universe exists for the purposes of soul,
and our 
entrance into earthly existence is but one phase of our continuous
conscious 
existence. When we sleep, whether our consciousness be in the dream
state or in 
inner and deeper ones, our real (subjective) relations with other
human beings 
continue. So also, at death, when we leave the body, we pass into a
state like 
to the dream state for awhile, and then enter into the fullest
enjoyment of a 
self-conscious existence which creates for itself its own
surroundings with all 
those loved during the life last lived. The state is called
Devachan—or the 
state of the ‘ When one whom we have loved has left the body, he
carries with 
him whatever he has felt, loved, or despised. Since he, as well as
those he has 
left in bodies, has the interior states and forms, that which is
felt by him is 
felt inwardly by those in bodies; the impress of the feeling of the
departed is 
carried so as to be recognized as such. The feeling of nearness,
the sense of 
receiving words, admonitions, or encouragement is due to the inner
relation and 
love of the departed, who are not physically near, nor are they
aware of our 
daily earthly experiences, but their love ever operates as a
protection and as a 
help, for they are connected with us in our inner and higher
nature. In our 
inner states we see, feel, understand, and translate that
connection into terms 
of everyday life.
You can understand that there could be no happiness for our
departed loved ones 
if they were aware of our trials and
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troubles in earthly existence. The Soul’s need for the undisturbed
assimilation 
of the highest and best of its life’s experience requires that only
the inner 
contact shall be held, and that is above the exigencies of the
physical 
embodiment.
The “dim vapor” which you saw in the death hour was the withdrawal
of the 
“astral form” from the physical one; the senses, faculties, and
feelings of the 
departed were in that astral “body.” It represented the physical
form, for it 
was that into which the purely physical elements had been drawn and
which was 
now discarding them.
You did exactly the right thing to have allowed the body to rest
and to have 
remained quiet until the process of separation from the body had
been completed. 
This must have come from inner understanding, as you do not seem to
be 
acquainted with the rationale of the process. You had an inner and
truer 
perception than those who thought you had “lost your mind.” The
fact was that 
they had not found theirs, being bound up in their physical
perceptions and 
senses.
What you feel and understand to be of “her busy life over there and
of friends 
she has met,” are representative of her thoughts and feelings and
are not actual 
actions on her part, for she is in a subjective state and is not in
contact with 
other beings, except in a subjective way—that is, she is thinking
of them in 
various ways and relations, and you perceive the subjects of her
thoughts and 
actions.
I do not know whether you have read the Ocean of Theosophy. It
gives a great 
deal about post-mortem states, as also does the Key to Theosophy. A
reading and 
re-reading of them would be a help to you in understanding that the
real contact 
we have with others is in Thought, Will, and Feeling, which is not
dependent 
upon bodily relations or contact.
If the writer can further help you in understanding, he will be
glad.
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CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Twenty-Nine
You have the right attitude, I believe, and as time goes on, more
and more light 
will come and other steps appear. It is just to keep moving, with
face turned in 
the right direction. Masters do not elect their disciples; the
disciples elect 
to serve, and thus constitute themselves disciples to the extent of
the 
completeness of their self-abnegation and service.
“I produce myself among creatures” has reference to voluntary and
conscious 
incarnations of high spiritual beings—avatars, saviours of the
people—including 
not only the incarnation itself but the influence of a spiritual
kind that 
attends the being. What brings such? The Gita says that They come
“whenever 
there is an insurrection of vice and injustice in the world.” There
is an 
analogy between this and what was hinted about earthquakes by William
Q. Judge, 
who wrote at the time of an earthquake that some soul of use had
been born. It 
is possible that such events conjoin. No doubt that the energy
thrown out by 
masses of men could produce disturbances, affecting the earth
itself and 
bringing into birth patriotic souls whose powers and knowledge will
come into 
play in the mental and physical conditions produced. Local
disturbances affect 
the place disturbed and the people whose karma placed them at that
point; there 
is also a general effect which is shared in different degrees by
individuals at 
other places in the country, by the country as a whole and by the
world in 
general. It is probable that while a destructive earthquake may
have a defined 
field, it may be the production of a general condition, finding
expression at 
the “corroded” point.
You ask as to the nature and mission of the one called “Jesus.”
There is reason 
to think that the mission of Jesus was a minor one, being in a
falling cycle, 
and that it was not so much to disclose as to cover up the avenues
to occult 
knowledge, so that the following times of the decadence of
spirituality should
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not have dangerous weapons left for selfish, unprincipled and
ignorant people to 
use; hence He accentuated ethics. This does not say that the being
known as 
Jesus was inferior to the one known as Buddha. They might have been
the same 
being, in reality. The statement is that the “missions” or efforts
were of a 
different nature because of the different cycles and peoples. It is
and must be 
necessary for “those who know” to hide away dangerous knowledge at
times, as 
well as to give it out when the time is ripe. “It is under cyclic
law, during a 
dark period in the history of mind that the true philosophy
disappears for a 
time, but the same law causes it to reappear as surely as the sun
rises and the 
human mind is present to see it.” We cannot judge of the nature of
any of these 
great incarnations to the extent of saying that one is superior to
the other. We 
can see something of the nature of the cycle and people of any
period, and hence 
obtain an idea of the difference in the missions.
With regard to cycles, there are of course wheels within wheels and
no doubt 
there are smaller “waves” which in degree correspond to the larger
ones, but we 
have not much on that line in the way of direct information except
that there 
are cycles of differing lengths within the greater cycle of the
precession of 
the equinox. Several remarkable cycles came to a close at the end
of the 
nineteenth century; among them, the Messianic. It would appear that
the 
Messianic cycle, lasting 2,155 solar years, closed in 1897.
Allied to our period, if we consider that the quality of the cycle
varies in 
importance, and, consequently, in the degree of the being needed at
any time, we 
find the conjunction of the cycles above spoken of points to a most
important 
period, and consequently, to important “beings”—which may give us a
clue to what 
the Messengers H. P. B. and W. Q. J. really were. Other periods of
less 
importance bring incarnations of probationary chelas who are on
their trial.
There may be something in the above that will enable you to bring
to expression 
what is as yet undefined; but, if not, it may open the door to
other ideas and 
questions.
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CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE 
Letter Thirty
It is not worth the effort expended to try to interest special
people; the very 
effort made prevents, by arousing erroneous notions in the minds of
those so 
sought. Let everyone know about Theosophy, but seek no one in
particular—is the 
wisest course. It is not well, of course, to let the impression
grow in anyone’s 
mind that he is important to Theosophy, for Theosophy is for those
who want it 
and for none others. Rather, convey the impression that to learn the
philosophy 
in such a way as to understand and apply it comes to the very few;
not because 
it is with held, but because mental and physical karma are not of
such nature as 
to leave the mind open, or present the ways and means. In many,
many cases, in 
an age when so much of the ancient wisdom is given out, this effect
comes from 
failure to take ad vantage of opportunities in other lives. The
opportunity is 
due to a larger number than might be suspected. All get their
chance—some, more 
favorably than others. It is the height of unwisdom to neglect the
opportunity 
again, most especially in cases where it is brought home to people
without their 
effort.
The Karma of most is such as to leave no mental, nor physical doors
open; yet 
even they, through the effort of others, may take hold and find the
way. “Many 
are called but few are chosen.” You have found it to be true that
the harder the 
pressure, the more there is of spiritual power if we hold fast. So
you think 
that your typewriter spelled the word right the first time—
scared—in the 
“sacred band of heroes”? “Scared” applied to that which you so
fondly thought 
was yourself at one time—and at times. This scare is natural,
because common 
sense tells us that if we stay on earth we must eat. We cannot
fight without the 
munitions of war on this plane, and as we are against the whole
trend of the 
times, we have not the aid they give. But we are working for them
just the same, 
unnoticed and unthanked, and
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the work we do is not ours, but of Those who sent us, and neither
desires notice 
nor reward. We live while we can, and die when we must—when we
must, not before, 
and we’ll never say die while there’s a shot in the locker.
The struggle is fierce—as we face it—not knowing the out come, but
it is 
evidently part of the game, and the struggle is for us or we would
not have it. 
We are expected to do the best that we can and all we can under all
circumstances; having done so, we take whatever the Law has in
store for us. If 
it is suffering, then we should be glad it is not death; if it is
death, then we 
may rejoice that there is no more of life. We must not be bound by
results while 
doing the best we know and can.
You said truly, “We will take what comes, and will give our all to
the common 
cause. More we cannot do, and less we may not do under the Law of
Brotherhood.” 
Would that I could do something to make the way clear. You know
that I will do 
what I can, and I know that you will; so all must come right, even
if it turns 
out to be some unexpected way. Our very thought and effort will
produce results. 
Thus we continue the thought and effort and let the results come as
they will. 
Whatever comes must be right for us, for our work, for everything.
Doubt, 
anxiety, fear, only hinder and delay the outcome. So doing what may
be done from 
day to day, with right motive and trustfully, we meet all
requirements, fulfill 
every duty. I feel the hardship of your trials and struggles, and
yet I know you 
would not change anything except as it should be changed by law,
all the time 
using your best judgment, making your best endeavors under existing
circumstances. We must be able to fight against what seem to be
overwhelming 
odds, and as long as we fight we are not overcome. We need not fear
for 
ourselves, nor be unduly anxious for others—just simply, surely,
steadily keep 
doing our duty as it comes before us.
If I loved you less or knew you less, I would be sorry for you. As
it is, I am 
glad that you have the strength, the courage that you show, and
which you would 
neither have nor show, were not the difficulties just what they
are. Without you 
and
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your courage those who have had help and are having it from us
would suffer that 
loss. In all this you have borne the heat and burden of the day,
never faltering 
although the load is staggering in weight and shows no sign of
getting lighter. 
It is for Them you do it—for Their work, as far as it is
understood. I do not 
think any of us will starve or even suffer from want, yet if such
should be our 
lot, we shall do it gracefully by reason of the knowledge we
possess.
To give of one’s bounty is easy, and yet how few having possessions
really give. 
Those who think they would, if they were rich, would not do
anything worth 
while, and many who could do more are afraid to deprive themselves
of anything. 
Such are humans in this twentieth century. A few—very few—suffer
that others may 
not perish but have everlasting life, and in their turn bear the
burden of still 
others. Of such are the immortal sages and heroes.
Well, eat well, sleep well, think well, and cut all doubts by the
sword of 
spiritual knowledge. Love again and again and
PEACE.
CONTENTS
LIVING THE LIFE
Letter Thirty-One
Things past are always easier than things present or things yet to
come. The 
past can be judged by relative importance; it is the hollow of the
wave of our 
progress, whereas the present and the future represent the crest
and the 
resistance felt or feared. Yet if we remember—the past, when it was
both present 
and future, held such disturbances, which we now see were a waste
of energy. We 
should learn from this to “resist without resistance;” that too
great an 
expenditure of thought, of energy is not wise. When we fight we are
drawn into 
the swirl of events and passions; so it is best to lean back on the
Self, which 
is never moved, and look on at the flotsam and jetsam through which
“we” move. 
We can look at the very worst that may happen, in
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the same way as we now look back on what has been. Knowing this,
when disturbed, 
we can say, “Even this will pass away,” and wait till the clouds
roll by, seeing 
ourselves in the sunshine and looking at the East of Time. I think
that 
practically all that troubles us is unnecessary, as trouble, but
necessary for 
experience.
The experience of the Ego in its progress on this plane is a series
of 
progressive awakenings, and awakening means “awareness.” It knows
the landmarks 
on its way back to Divinity. I do not think the Great Ones withdrew
as we 
approach—although that is a description of a perception of their
natures by 
degrees—but that we are surrounded by an “invisible escort” as long
as our faces 
are set toward the goal and we remain staunch to Their program.
They neither 
push, pull, nor hinder voluntary action. To do so would prevent
true 
self-reliance. For this reason some may think they are deserted by
Masters, or 
are not seen or heard by Them. This is the worst conception that
could be; it 
belittles Them and implies ignorance and ingratitude on Their part.
They gave us 
the Message and have spoken clearly of Their nearness to those who
try and ever 
keep trying. We cannot take part and harbor doubts as to the rest.
I did not know that my recent letters had in them discouragement,
and in the 
writing of the Teachers I have found but encouragement. I think you
must mean 
that the deep sense of the gulf between our ideals and attainment
dismays the 
personal conception. This is quite true, but “we” are not the
personal 
conception nor its deductions. If we involve ourselves in the Karma
of the 
personal conception, we shall feel despondent, like Arjuna. We are
not these 
relations, but the warriors who will conquer them in order to make
friends.
Of course, we are all links in the chain; what affects one affects
all, in 
degree. Every-one who endeavors to help others in any real way puts
himself in 
the place where he must take reactions. You are in that place,
also, with regard 
to those who are waked up more particularly, and in a minor degree
as to
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others whom you teach. In this Karma acts, of course, because we
made the Karma 
of that kind. The Karma of the T. S. is also the Karma of H. P. B.
and W. Q. J., 
known beforehand in general. The first effort is to spread
Theosophy, and much 
has been done in this respect, but its application has not been as
general as 
might have been. The reactions from the spreading of the philosophy
and its 
wrong or non-application will be taken care of when They come
again. It might be 
likened to a plant, which has to be trimmed to proper growth; but
before this 
can be done, the errant tendencies have to get their growth. You
will remember 
what W. Q. J. said, “Our old Lion of the Punjab is not so far off,
but all the 
same is not in the place some think, nor in the condition, either.”
We are 
linked with the Lodge by aspiration, by service, by following of
the Master’s 
program as nearly as we know; we have no other desire. And we know
that “in the 
lives of all who aspire to higher things there is a more or less
rapid 
precipitation of old Karma, and it is this which is affecting you.
It will go 
off shortly, and you will have gained in having gotten rid of a
troublesome 
piece of business.”
Yes, the feeling of responsibility grows as more and more come for
light and 
help, but, being “transmitters,” we have but to transmit that which
is the 
doctrine of Him who sent us, and this you can do for a million as
well as a few, 
for it is not a case of individual treatment. Of course, we improve
all the 
time, and the wider the responsibility the greater the improvement;
everybody 
who starts small “grows up with the business.” As to the appeal of
selfishness, 
does not nearly everyone begin selfishly? They get a broader vision
as they 
learn more, and it is better to begin even selfishly, than not at
all. Some have 
to come that way, but, of course, that way is not accentuated, even
if mentioned 
as a matter of self-benefit; it is the door for some.
Your letters of late have been showing much more of an in sight
into principles 
and things, an understanding clear and impersonal. We are all pawns
on the board 
of the Great Game, willing ones, conscious ones, and also have our
values which
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become cumulative as we serve; we also study and learn the methods.
Ease of mind 
and confidence are better than all, in this work of dealing with
other men, that 
is, with the human heart. The more wise one is, the better he can
help his 
fellows; the more cosmopolitan he is, the better too. More power to
you.
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                                          “When
thy heart shall have worked 
through the
                                           snares of delusion, then thou
wilt 
attain to high
                                         
indifference as to those doctrines 
which are already
                                               
taught or which are yet to be 
taught.”
                                           ‘It is
even the same exhaustless, 
secret, eternal,
                                           
doctrine I have this day 
communicated unto thee
                                              
because thou art my devotee and 
my friend.”
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE FOUNDATION OF RELIGION
T0 most people the word "religion" signifies something
separate from human 
existence, and presents the idea of preparation for some unknown
future 
existence. Some religions are based upon the knowledge of an
individual who laid 
the foundation for them; others are believed to be the revelations
of a Supreme 
Being at the time of the creation of the world. Each people has a
God of its 
own; so many peoples, so many Supreme Beings corresponding to the
mental ideas 
of the people. And so with individuals—as the ideas of men differ
widely—so many 
individuals, so many Gods. All these Gods or Supreme Beings are the
creations of 
men, and not facts in themselves. But back of all those ideas does
lie a 
Reality. The very power that resides in man to create images and
endow them with 
virtues which he does not possess points to something greater than
the things 
created. The creatures cannot be greater than the creators. That
which in man 
creates ideas is greater than any idea he may at any time have held
or now 
holds. We have, then, to get back of all ideas to find the true ‘
true religion.
True religion must give us a basis for thinking, and consequently,
a basis for 
acting; it must give us an understanding of nature, of ourselves
and of other 
beings. Religion is a bond uniting men together—not a particular
set of dogmas 
or beliefs— binding not only all Men, but also all Beings and all
things in the 
entire Universe, into one grand whole. Just that basis and that
bond are 
presented in the three fundamental propositions of the Secret
Doctrine.
Behind everything that exists is the Sustainer of all that exists,
of all that 
ever was, is, or shall be. Nothing exists without It. It is
omnipresent, and It 
is infinite. But, if we take that idea
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and endeavor to confine it to the form of any Being whatever, we
shall find we 
have attempted the impossible. We cannot hold the idea of being
with that which 
is omnipresent and infinite. No being can exist outside of Space
which itself 
is, whether there is void or fulness, whether there are planets,
gods or men, or 
none; which itself is not altered in any way by objects occupying
it; which is 
illimitable—without beginning and without end. A Being must exist
in Space, and 
so must be less than Space. We can then call the Highest Power any
name we 
choose—the Supreme, the Self—so long as we do not limit It, or give
It 
attributes. We may not say It is pleased, nor angry, nor rewards,
nor punishes; 
doing so, we limit It. If Space itself cannot be measured or
limited, how can we 
limit the Supreme? The Highest Power cannot be less than Space.
Even to name It 
is to limit It; yet It must be the One Reality, the One Sustainer,
the One Cause 
of all existences, the One Knower, the One Experiencer, in all
directions and in 
every thing. This proposition drives us back to the very basis of
all 
thought—the power to think, itself—the power which is in each and
every being.
We cannot understand nature, other beings and ourselves, by going
outside to any 
conceivable being. The growth of knowledge must be within the
perceiver, the 
thinker himself. All his observation and experience bring him
knowledge which he 
relates to himself in connection with others. Each stands in the
vast assemblage 
of beings, seeing them all, understanding what he may of them all,
but himself 
the only one who sees; all the rest are seen. All others are the
same as he is 
in their essential nature; all are endowed with the same qualities,
the same 
perfections and imperfections; all are copies of every other,
differing only in 
the predominance of one or another quality. But the thinker is the
Self—the only 
Self, so far as he is concerned—the One Life, the One
Consciousness, the One 
Power. As action proceeds from that basis, the greater the powers
which flow 
from that spiritual quality, the greater the increase of knowledge.
Knowledge is religion—not a supposed “revelation” from some
superior being who 
created us as inferior beings, but an
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actual knowledge gained through myriads of years and many
existences by Those 
who have expressed them all. Those beings above us on the ladder of
evolution, 
who are greater than any “Gods” we can conceive of, passed through
the same 
trials and the same sufferings which we are undergoing, until they
learned to 
know their innermost nature and to act in accordance with it. They
came to know 
that true religion is a knowledge of one’s own self, and action in
accordance. 
Drawing nearer in themselves to the very Source of their being,
they found the 
source of every other being to be the same—only the knowledge
acquired and the 
use of that knowledge making the differences between all beings.
Their knowledge 
is an absolutely accurate knowledge of the essence of everything in
nature, 
which alone is the foundation of all true religion.
What is it that prevents us from understanding true religion? It is
our minds, 
which we have filled with narrow ideas of life, with small ideas of
the nature 
of humanity and of ourselves. It is our beliefs which constrain us.
A belief is 
always a statement of ignorance. If we believe, we do not know; if
we know, 
there is no occasion for belief. Unless beliefs are tested out in
the fires of 
experience and show themselves true, they are absolutely useless
and worse than 
useless, because they tempt us to use the very powers of our
spiritual being in 
wrong directions which bring suffering and disaster upon ourselves.
It is our 
very spiritual nature which makes our present unhappy condition
possible, for 
from it flows the One power, either exercising itself through small
ideas—its 
obstacles—or acting fully and without constraint. Each man is his
own creator, 
and each one has to be his own savior through learning right use of
the One 
Power. Those who have learned can only point out to us the Way they
learned it; 
no one can learn for us. We ourselves have to clear away the
obstacles that 
prevent us from knowing our inner selves. We ourselves have to
throw aside the 
hindrances in thinking, in forms of religion, in mental as well as
physical 
idols.
There is one realization which immediately sets our minds in order:
it is of 
That in us which is unchangeable and un-
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changing. We are that Spirit in very essence; all that has been in
our past 
lives and in our present life, all that will in future be, proceeds
from the 
power of that Spirit itself, and is sustained by the power of that
Spirit 
itself. There is nothing apart from us. Nature does not exist
separate and apart 
from us. The laws of nature are but the interrelations and
interdependence of 
all the beings concerned in this stream of evolution. The forces of
nature do 
not exist of themselves. There never was a force of any kind that
was not the 
result of intelligent action. We as spiritual beings are eternally
creating 
forces; for every man’s brain and every thought has a dynamic
power. Are they 
lost? No: all the thoughts, all the feelings of all the beings in
the universe, 
provide a store of dynamic energy which constitutes the forces, as
we know them, 
of nature. We draw upon that general reservoir of force in
accordance with the 
ideas held and in accord with our present inward nature. All the
time we are 
adding to the powers of nature for good or for evil. So, too, we
are taking from 
the powers of nature the additions which other beings have put
in—the forces 
which other beings have aroused in nature.
All the powers in the universe are latent in us if we only open the
doors to 
their use. Everyone of us is a little copy of the whole universe.
There is not 
one single element existing any where which each one of us does not
contain 
within his own sphere; there is not a power anywhere that can not
be drawn upon. 
Always the director of that power is the Self within each one. If
that Self sees 
darkly, it is because the mirror into which the Self looks is
covered with the 
dust of false ideas; he sees distorted images. He moves in the
directions 
suggested by the mirror, but it is the Self which supplies the
power to move. We 
would open the door to all powers by a daily and hourly living in
accordance 
with the nature of the Self—seeing that every other being is but an
aspect of 
Self, and acting so that every other being will be helped on its
way. For we can 
not go on our way alone. We have our duty to fulfill by every other
being, 
whether in the kingdoms below us, without which we could not
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exist, or in the human kingdom. Every other stands as a vicarious
atonement for 
us—an object lesson—and if we have reached a point higher than that
which is 
ordinarily reached by men, then all the more are we constrained to
duty by them.
We come to physical existence incarnation after incarnation under
the law 
inherent in our natures, to work with mortal ideas and passions and
thoughts; 
but we who created them, we who sustain them, are immortal. If we
were not 
immortal in our very natures, never by any chance could we become
immortal. If 
we were less than Divinity, then we never could by any possibility
understand 
divinity. Those beings who have been men and who have gone beyond
our degrees of 
illusion—like Jesus of Nazareth, Buddha, and many others—have
attained to Their 
Divinity. They accept the woes of birth to which Their younger
brothers are 
subject, to remind us of our own natures—the only natures over
which we have 
permanent control—that we may become as One of Them, bound to Them
as to all 
nature. To live for others is the foundation and basis of
religion—of true 
spiritual knowledge.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
OUR GOD AND OTHER GODS
As a people we speak of “our God,” imagining that we all have the
same idea, 
that we all mean the same thing by the term. Peoples of the past
had their 
meaning of “our God,” and peoples of the present time also say “our
God and 
other Gods,” imagining that their conception is the only true
one—all others, 
untrue, false. The Great War was fought among so-called Christian
peoples, who, 
so far as a consideration of Christianity is concerned, ought to
have been 
worshipping the same God, and guiding thought and action by the
precepts 
ascribed to that God. But is it not true that our theologians and
the 
theologians of those people at war with us addressed petitions to
the same “Our 
God,” in order to bring success to their efforts as against other
peoples 
worshipping the same God? There would then appear to
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be a multiplicity of Gods, or else something wrong in the
conceptions of all of 
us. If we ask ourselves individually, “What do I mean by the term
God?” perhaps 
we would all say: “The highest there is.” But do we mean the
highest there is? 
Do we mean that great power which sustains all beings, all forms,
that which by 
its very nature and by our contemplation of it must appear as
infinite, as 
eternal, as changeless? If we do mean that, then we shall have to
amend a great 
many other ideas which generally connote with the term God. For
instance, we 
shall have to leave the idea of a being entirely outside of our
calculations. We 
have thought that the source and sustainer of all things, all
beings, from all 
time and in all time, is a being; that the something in us which
reaches up 
beyond everything physical, beyond every thing thinkable, is
outside ourselves. 
How could that possibly be? How could we possibly prove that this
God is a being 
existing in some far-off heaven unknown to us and separate from us?
How can we 
imagine a being as omnipresent, and at the same time separate from
us or from 
anything? If Deity is infinite and omnipresent, there is not a
grain of sand nor 
a point of vacant space anywhere where Deity is not. And how again
can we give 
to the idea of Deity, attributes—such as being angry or pleased,
rewarding or 
punishing, since every attribute that we give is a limitation and
precludes the 
idea of omnipresence? No being could be the origin, the sustainer,
the source of 
all that was, is or ever shall be. Any being, however great, is
contained and 
limited in space; no being can be omnipresent.
There is that which is beyond speech, beyond description, and
beyond 
conception—the highest there is in the universe. But are we to look
outside in 
the heavens, in the sea, in the secret places of the earth, in any
place 
whatever; or are we to find it in a much nearer place, that is,
within 
ourselves? For all that anyone can know of God, or the Highest, is
what he knows 
in himself, through himself and by himself. There is no other place
of knowledge 
for us. Yet at the same time we have to perceive that God, or
Deity, is not 
absent from anything, is immanent
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in the whole, is omnipresent, is at the root and is the seed of
every being of 
every kind anywhere; that there is no thing, not even a grain of
sand nor a 
speck of dust, no point in space, absent from that Source which
sustains the 
whole manifested universe. We can imagine, then, that God, as the
ancients put 
it, “seated in the hearts of all beings;” for there is something in
the heart of 
man whence proceeds all feeling, all true life, all true
conception. The heart 
is not the same as the head—a man’s heart may be right and sound
and his head 
wrong. The feeling of the true in the heart is not deceived by this
thought or 
that thought or the other thought; it can only be experienced by
each one for 
himself within himself. God is not an outside God, but is to be
sought in the 
very innermost recesses of our own nature— in the silent chamber,
the temple, 
within us—and nowhere else.
We think that our present civilization far transcends any past
civilizations 
that ever have been; yet there are many records and relics of arts,
sciences, of 
knowledge, of religion, of philosophy such as we have not yet
mastered. We are 
but a young people, as a matter of fact. It is not so many
centuries ago since 
the Founder of the Christian Religion lived upon the earth, and
there were many 
thousands of centuries before that. The people who lived down the
course of 
those centuries knew far more than we. They knew, as we may know,
that there is 
no such thing as creation. No being ever created the earth, or its
conditions. 
This planet, or any other planet, was never created by any being.
This solar 
system and other solar systems were not created by any being.
Something produced 
them. Yes, and it is possible to understand how that production was
brought 
about! By evolution—always an unfolding from within outward—from
the very root 
of every being, from the Deity, the Soul of all, the Spirit of all.
Spirit is 
the root, the sustainer, the energy producing force for all the
evolution that 
has gone on. Every being in the universe is a product of
evolution—all from the 
same identical root of being, all drawing their powers of
expression from the 
one Source. All are rays from and one with that
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Absolute Principle, which is our very Self—the Self of all
creatures. What of 
all those beings who were the Self in process of evolution, who
reached a 
realization of this truth ages and ages before the present
civilization? What 
became of them? Have all their hopes and fears been lost? What is
the meaning of 
those races, those civilizations—was it death for them when their
civilization 
passed out as ours must, since just so surely as it had a beginning
so it will 
have an ending? Just so surely as there are those rises and falls
in 
civilizations, so is there a cycle of time through which the
conscious man goes, 
and a cycle of form which the conscious man animates, uses, and
leaves—to take 
another—from civilization to civilization. When, then, we look
about us for the 
results of the civilizations that have been, and try to understand
the 
conditions of the present civilization, we have to see that the
people of the 
world to-day are the very ones who passed through those ancient
civilizations, 
left them, and carried forward whatever of knowledge or of
ignorance, of truth 
or of error, they had gained during those vast periods of time. For
LAW rules in 
every thing and every circumstance, every where. There is a law of
birth—of 
successive lives on earth, each life the successor and result of
the life or 
lives which preceded. That which sustains man, garners all
experience, retains 
it, carries it forward, and propels evolution, is the One
changeless, eternal, 
immortal Self—the real perceiver, the real knower, the real
experiencer in every 
body, in every form.
The Self is its own law. Each one is the Self, and each—as Self—has
produced the 
conditions under which he finds him self. When the Self acts, it
receives the 
re-action. If it acts not at all, then there is no re-action. Every
action 
brings its re-action from those who are affected by it for good or
for evil. For 
good and evil do not exist of themselves nor in ourselves; they are
but effects 
we feel and classify as good or bad according to our attitude
toward them; that 
which seems ‘good to one is “evil” to another. When we have rid
ourselves of the 
idea that there is a God who produced and sustains good, and a devil
who pro-
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duced and sustains evil, we have come to the fact of true
perception from within 
outwards.
Every civilization that has been, and the one in which we now are
living, is due 
to a true or false perception of what our real nature is. If we
would ever know 
and understand our natures, we must first understand that there is
in us That 
which never changes at all, whatever changes are brought about by
it. We never 
are the things we see, or feel, or hear, or know, or experience. No
matter how 
many the experiences may be, we are still unchanged with the
possibility of 
infinite other experiences. That the Self in us is changeless may
seem difficult 
for the Western mind to grasp, thinking that without change there
is no 
progress; but it may be perceived by the fact of our identity
remaining ever the 
same in a child’s body and through all the changes of body that
have occurred 
since childhood. If the identity ever changed, it could never
observe change. 
Only that which is permanent and stable can see change, can know
it, can make 
it. And—what theology, modern philosophy, modern science have never
taught 
us—there is this fact: as we are immortal spirit at the very root
of our being, 
we have made for ourselves many mansions all down through the
process of 
nature’s changes. The gradual condensation which goes on with every
planet and 
in every solar system goes on with every body; every form has its
initial 
existence as form in the finest state of matter, from which it is
condensed and 
hardened to the present physical state of matter. But the
illimitable 
experiences of higher planes, back through all those changes, are
now resident 
within ourselves— present with us wherever we are or may be—except
as we have 
shut the doors on them. Why? Because this brain of ours, the most
responsive 
organ in the body, since it is used in our modifications of
thought, is 
concerned with things of the earth, in relation to the body. A
brain trained and 
sustained by this kind of thinking can not register from the higher
nature—from 
the finer sheaths of the soul. But once we begin to think and act
from the basis 
of these verities, the brain—which is the most rapidly changing
organ in the 
body—becomes porous to the im-
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pressions of our inner life. Dimly at first, and more strongly as
time goes on, 
we begin to realize the fact of this inner experience, and—what is
more to us 
than all else—the continuity of our consciousness; the fact that
consciousness 
never ceases, no matter on what plane we may be acting. Therefore,
we may have 
in our own bodies and during our lifetime—not a promise—but a
sense, a 
realization, a knowledge of immortality here and now!
We have been taught to believe. But, belief is not knowledge. We
have been 
taught to believe in a formula, but a formula is not knowledge. So
we have gone 
astray in every direction and made of this life a terror to
ourselves. We are 
afraid of death, of disaster; we are always buttressing ourselves
with some sort 
of guard in this or that direction. We are afraid to trust the very
God we say 
we believe in. We will not trust Christ. We will use all the means
we can think 
of to look out for ourselves. Each one of us is Spirit and each one
of us is 
using spiritual powers to induce what we call good and what we call
evil; but 
the misapplication of the spiritual powers, in default of real
knowledge, must 
lead us to misery. So we have to know what we are, and to think and
live in the 
light of our own real natures. Then we shall know the truth within
ourselves. We 
shall understand ourselves and we shall understand our fellow-men,
and we shall 
never again say, “Our God and other Gods,” but the SELF of all
creatures. We 
shall see the Self as all and in all; we will act for and as the
Self, because 
the Self acts only through the creatures; and we shall see every
being—man, 
below man, or above man—as an aspect of ourselves; as
individualized beings we 
will try more and more to exercise the spiritual knowledge that is
our own 
heritage. Like the prodigal son who ate the husks with the swine
and then 
suddenly remembered his Father’s house, we will say: “I will arise
and go to my 
Father.” For there is no one so wicked, so ignorant, so poorly
endowed that he 
may not make good progress in the right direction; on whom the
light may not 
dawn and a feeling of power and strength and purpose arise that
will do away 
with fear and make him a strong helpful being in the world of men.
Far from 
taking us away
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from our families, our duties, our business, or our citizenship,
this knowledge 
will make us better citizens, better husbands, better fathers,
better patriots, 
if you will, than ever we were before—patriots of not just one
country, but of 
all.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE KINGLY MYSTERY
The “kingly mystery” is Life itself. We all have Life. We all are
Life. Every 
being everywhere is Life—expresses Life. To know what is Life
itself is to know 
the mystery. But there is a condition precedent to this mysterious
knowledge, 
stated by Krishna, in the opening of the Ninth Chapter of the
Bhagavad Gita: 
“Unto thee who findeth no fault I will now make known this most
mysterious 
knowledge, coupled with a realization of it, which having known
thou shalt be 
delivered from evil.” When the one who desires to learn is not in a
critical 
attitude, when he has sensed in one way or another that truth lies
in a certain 
direction and gives all his attention to it without quarreling with
terms or the 
ideas put forward, his is the attitude of the true student. The one
who desires 
to know must set aside for the time being all preconceptions,
pride, and 
prejudices which he may have held, and then he is ready to begin
his studies— to 
take the first step in the right direction.
The world is full of false ideas, false religions, false
philosophies which must 
be thrown away. We of the Western peoples have been taught that we
were poor 
miserable sinners who could do nothing of ourselves. We have
assumed that we are 
poor miserable sinners and have acted as such. Our whole
civilization is colored 
and steeped through with this falsity. Our theologies, our
sciences, our 
commercial, social and political conditions are all based on this
false idea, 
which in its turn rests upon another equally false—that man is here
on earth for 
once only. Hence, that his entrance on this physical scene was
through the act 
of others, and we believe that whatever of merit or demerit is his
was handed on 
to him by his forebears. As a consequence, man constantly shifts
his 
responsibility, and acts as an irresponsible
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being. The whole falsity of our existence is centered there, for we
are 
responsible for every ill that exists among us; every kind of
suffering on every 
hand has been brought about through a false idea, and the false
action which 
followed. What are sin, disease, sorrow and suffering but the
result of our own 
thoughts and actions?
Again, we say “we cannot know;” or, “this life is all there is.”
Therefore, the 
whole force of our consciousness is directed in the line of that
one false idea 
and inhibited in the expression of any other; whereas all
directions lie 
absolutely open to us, if only we understand our own natures. Man
circumscribes 
his own conditions by the false ideas he holds in regard to life.
No one holds 
him back. He holds himself back. Yet, even with his narrowing,
limiting ideas 
and conceptions, he is able to accomplish wonderful things.
Whatever he sets out 
to do on the purely physical, material plane of life, he
accomplishes in a 
shorter or greater length of time. If his ideas of religion are all
concerned 
with the physical aspect of life, however, how can he know more?
All the 
conquests that he can make will be physical conquests. What could
it avail him 
in the direction of real knowledge, if he continued similar
conquests from 
civilization to civilization, age to age, planet to planet, solar
system to 
solar system? He could gain nothing but a small sum of possible
combinations and 
correlations, and in all that search and effort would not have
gained the first 
fundamental of true knowledge, of true thought and action.
The kingly mystery of Life can not mean physical existence, which
is merely one 
aspect of the Great Life. We have to go deeper into our own
natures, and into 
the natures of all beings, in order to grasp what that great
mystery is. Then 
the lives of all beings become clear Unto us; we understand what
all phases of 
existence mean; we see the causes for all the difficulties that
surround us; we 
know how to bring about better results, and we perceive from the
very first that 
the power lies in us, and in us alone, to bring about all future
changes for 
ourselves. Looking at all existence from a universal point of view,
we become 
able
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to exercise the power which lies in the essential spiritual basis
of every 
being, high or low. The One Self appears only to be divided among
the creatures; 
in reality, It is not divided at all. Each being is That in his
essential 
nature. In It is the foundation of all power; in It lies the power
of unfolding, 
of evolution, which makes possible for each being—representing one
ray of that 
One Life—the attainment of a full knowledge of Life in his own true
nature.
Each one of us stands in the midst of a great and silent evolution.
Each one of 
us sees many expressions of different beings— those of the same
grade as 
ourselves and beings of grades below us. We find relations with
other elements, 
the power of which we do not see, the source of which we do not
grasp, yet the 
effects of which we feel. On every hand we are getting effects from
different 
beings of different grades, each one receiving those effects
differently. The 
beings below us in forms of the mineral, vegetable, and animal
world are all 
working, just as we are working, toward a greater and greater
realization of the 
whole. Sparks of the One Spirit, of the One Consciousness, they
have begun their 
little lives in forms, or bodies, by which they may contact others.
As they have 
need for better and better instruments, need for further and
further contact, 
they evolve, from within, a better instrument. Such is the whole
course of 
evolution, always from within outwards, and always with the
tendency to an 
increasing individuality. From the one ocean of Life there finally
tends to 
arise—Divinity.
Divinity is always acquired. It is not an endowment. It does not
exist of 
itself. If we could be made good, if we could be made to turn
around and take a 
righteous course, life might seem very much easier to us. But there
is no 
escaping the law; no one can get us “off” from the effects of our
wrong-doing; 
no one can confer knowledge on another. Each one has to see and
know for 
himself. Each one has to gain Divinity of himself, and in his own
way. We think 
of this as a common world. But it is not so. There are no two
people who look at 
life from the same view point, who have the same likes and
dislikes, whom the 
same
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things affect in exactly the same way. No two people are alike
either in life or 
after the death of the body. Each makes his own state; each makes
his own 
limitations; each acquires his own Divinity. Divinity lies latent
in each one of 
us; all powers lie latent in every one, and no being anywhere can
be greater 
than we may become.
What is Divinity but all-inclusive knowledge? True spirituality is
not a hazy 
condition. It is not something that denies any portion of the
universe, nor any 
kind of being. A hazy abstract condition would mean no men, no
principles, no 
opposites; but Divine spirituality is the power to know and see
whatever is 
wished known or seen; it is an intimate knowledge of the ultimate
essence of 
everything in nature. Such knowledge would not mean seeing all
things at once, 
nor being everywhere at the same time, but it is the power to see
and know in 
any direction—the power to grasp whatever it wishes, the power to
shut out 
whatever it wishes. Otherwise it would be no power at all; there would
be no use 
in having power and wisdom, and such beings as the Masters could be
afflicted 
with all the grief and misery in the world, unable to help where
help is needed 
and possible.
All-inclusive knowledge lies before every living being, if lie will
but take the 
necessary steps. What prevents him are the false ideas he holds;
for thought is 
the basis of all action, and wrong ideas in regard to life
inevitably bring 
about wrong actions. We have thought we are all different, because
we have 
different ideas, but, in essence, we are One. The One Life is in
each of us. 
Each one of us stands in the same position, looking out; all the
rest are seen. 
Starting from this point, we begin to find ourselves, to see
ourselves, to feel 
ourselves, and, in feeling ourselves, feel all others. All that a
man can know 
of God is what he knows in himself, through himself, and by
himself. Never by 
any outside presentation can that realization be gained. All the
great saviors 
of all times have never asked man to rely on some outside God, to
fear some 
devil, to go by this or that revelation, to believe in any book,
church, 
‘ology,” or ism” of any kind. They have asked him to take the step
that the 
height
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of his calling demands—to know himself, to know his own true
nature, and the 
nature of every other being. They have shown that the Real Man must
assert 
himself, and must act in accordance with his own nature, and the
responsibility 
which the oneness of all nature demands.
Man occupies the most important place in the whole scheme of
evolution. He 
stands where Spirit and matter meet. He is the link between the
higher beings 
and those below. He has so to act, so to think and act, in and upon
and with 
this physical matter that he raises it all up, and gives it another
tendency, 
another trend. By the very constitution of his nature, by reason of
his being 
connected as he is in a physical body with all nature, the Secret
Doctrine 
states that man can become greater than any one of the Dhyan
Chohans and equal 
to all of them put together. That is the goal which lies before
him—the goal of 
the ‘Kingly Mystery”—the seeing and knowing and feeling and acting
universally. 
For there is a power in man which enables him to judge aright; he
has the 
all-seeing eye—the all-encompassing sight which permits him to see
the justice 
of all things. And always there is present the power of choice in
one direction 
or another. The questions before each human being are: Whom will ye
serve? Will 
you serve the higher spiritual nature, or the body of flesh? WHOM
CHOOSE YE THIS 
DAY?
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE RECOGNITION OF LAW
We have to assume either that this is a universe of law or a
universe of chaos, 
chance, accident. In fact, we know perfectly well that it is not a
universe of 
chance, because everything we use and understand we see to be under
law; and 
where something befalls us, the cause of which we cannot discern,
we none the 
less assume a cause and try to find it. We cannot even imagine an
effect without 
a cause.
The first thing that the student has to learn to perceive in
everything and in 
every circumstance is the reign of law. We recognize law in part,
but not in 
full, as it should be recognized.
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Mistaking our own nature, by the very power of that nature, we set in
motion 
causes that produce the results we now feel, and then call those
results by such 
terms as “destiny,” “fate,” “chance,” or the “will of God.” The
operation of law 
to most minds means a fate which befalls us wherein we are
benefited or 
afflicted, but over which we have no control, and in producing
which we had no 
hand. Yet the operation of law can be easily understood. It has
been enunciated 
by all the great Teachers of the past as meaning action and its
consequent 
reaction. Let us remember that these are not two separate and
unrelated things— 
Cause and Effect, Action and Reaction, are the two aspects of one
and the same 
thing. In Sanskrit, both these aspects are included in the one
word, Karma.
Karma has been recognized in the Christian scriptures, with which
we are most 
familiar, in the expression, “Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall
he also reap.” 
By consequence, we should easily see that whatever a man is
reaping, that he 
must have sown. Once we get the conception that actions do not produce
themselves, that law does not operate of itself, we can see that we
cause 
actions and experience their reactions; that it is we who set up
causes and feel 
their effects. Cause and effect, action and reaction—the operation
of law—are 
seen to be in ourselves, not outside. There is no action unless
there is a being 
to make it and to feel its effects. Everything that happens to any
being has its 
antecedent cause, and that cause lies in some past action of the
being himself. 
In other words, law rules on every plane of being, and every being
of every 
grade is under that law.
We are all reaping what we have sown, individually and
collectively; for we must 
know that we never act alone. We always act on and in connection
with others, 
affecting them for good or evil, and we get the necessary reaction
from the 
causes set in motion by ourselves. This presents to us the idea of
absolute 
Justice, for under such a conception of Law each being receives
exactly what he 
gives.
This points to another conception: there could not be action and
its consequent 
reaction, unless there were a community of
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being amongst us. There must be that in our natures which is
peculiar to none, 
but common to all. In other words, we have all sprung from the same
Source; we 
are all traveling toward the same Goal. The path differs only with
the pilgrims. 
The causes that each one sets in motion determine the path that one
must follow. 
This might be called “destiny,” if we understand that it is a
destiny of our own 
creation. Being created by us, it can be sustained by us or changed
by us. If we 
do not like the “destiny” that befalls us, the effects that surround
us, the 
conditions that encompass us, all we have to do is to set in motion
such causes 
as will produce other and more desirable effects. But we have to do
it; no one 
else can do it for us. No one holds us back. No one propels us
forward.
There is no difference in our powers. Each one of us has the same
power to 
perceive, to experience, to learn. ‘What we learn differs, our
experiences 
differ, our perceptions differ, but that does not show a difference
in our 
powers—it shows a difference only in the application of those
powers. Each one 
of us contains within himself the same possibilities as exist
anywhere and 
everywhere in the universe. The lines that we have hitherto taken
have brought 
us to whatever pass, conditions or surroundings that may obtain at
the present 
time. But we might have gone another way and produced an altogether
different 
environment. We ought to see that even now, however hampered we may
be as the 
result of mistaken actions in the past, we have not lost and can
never lose our 
power to set other and better causes in motion. The path toward all
knowledge 
lies before us: “All nature lies before you—take what you can.”
This means that all beings below man, and all beings above man, as
well as man 
himself, have gained whatever individual positions they may now be
in by their 
own exertions. It means that no being is standing still; all are
acting, all 
progressing in one direction or another, according to the lines
they have 
followed and are following. It also means that all the beings below
man will 
some time reach our stage, and that every being above man has
passed through 
stages similar to our own—which is evolution carried to
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its highest point, spiritual and mental, as well as physical. We
have applied 
the great Truths of nature only in a partial, a limited, a personal
sense. These 
are universal truths and should be applied in a universal sense, if
we desire to 
arrive at the fullest recognition of them.
The life in each of us is the Universal Life. Many imagine that
Life means 
existence in a physical body, and that only; that out side of
physical existence 
there is no life. But Life includes all things and forms from the
highest 
spiritual down to life in its grossest form; it is the same Life
all through, 
common to all. It is the One Life, the One Spirit in each and all,
so that in 
each being of every grade there lies the potentiality of All-Being.
There is 
that in each which is beginningless and endless, which is
changeless; and that, 
though illimitable, invisible, inconceivable, can be realized by
every human 
being.
Some illustrations will bring this fact forcibly to our minds. We
speak of 
ourselves, of our identity. We say, “I was a child; when I was a
young man or 
woman; when I was middle-aged; as I am today; as I will be in the
future.” Now, 
what is That, itself unchanged, which is going through all those
changes? The 
same “I,” the same identity. That does not change. The body
changes, the 
ideas—the mind—change, the surroundings change. But the Man
himself, the 
identity, remains unchanged through all these changes of body,
scene and 
circumstance.
Again, take the power of seeing: we all have that power, and no
matter how much 
we exercise it, it still remains the power to perceive. It is not
changed by 
what we see. And we may consider this: change cannot see change.
Only that which 
is permanent can see change. So there is that in us which is
permanent, which is 
Real, which is of the highest, which is a ray from and one with the
Supreme, the 
universal Principle or Power, the creator, the sustainer, the
regenerator of all 
that was, is, or ever shall be. We have to realize That—each one
for 
himself—first by recognizing that IT IS, omnipresent, eternal,
boundless and 
immutable; second, by divesting ourselves of those things we
thought It to be: 
that It is this body, this mind, these circumstances. All these are
changing
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things, things seen; but that which is the Real, the Supreme, our
very Self and 
the Self of all things, is not subject to change; It is changeless;
It cannot be 
seen, for It is the Perceiver.
The ideas we entertain of the Supreme, of Law, of Nature, and of
our own Being 
govern the actions we perform. When we were children we had certain
ideas, and 
we acted according to them, and so on, all through the years. Some
of our ideas 
we have from time to time discarded, and others that we have
collected have 
taken their place. We are now acting according to the ideas we now
hold. Are 
they the best and highest possible to us?
If we change our ideas, we change our actions. If we see that Law
rules, that 
this Law is inherent in our highest nature and not outside of us,
we shall see 
that it is the Spirit in us—our very Self—that is the cause and
sustainer of all 
our actions; and this Spirit by its very power as the Highest,
through false 
ideas creates for itself false positions and false destinies. We
have often 
adopted and we often change our ideas without any real
consideration as to their 
truth, as to their relation to Life, as to their bearing upon
existence. We must 
adopt and hold fast to three great ideas: that each human being has
what are 
called the ‘ attributes of the God power of creation, the power of
preservation 
as long as that creation seems satisfactory, and the power to
destroy that 
creation and regenerate better ones. All we have to do is to
realize our own 
real nature, see what our defects are, strengthen our virtues, and
move on. Just 
so surely as we do this, we shall find that our Virtues and
strength increase, 
and our defects gradually fall away.
 
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE ORIGIN OF EVIL
Christian theology states that evil came into the world through the
sin of the 
first man’s eating of the tree of forbidden fruit. All men sinned
in Adam; 
because of Adam’s sin, every other being is and has been a sinner.
Strangely 
enough this first man was made by a Superior Being in His own
image, or, in 
other words, perfect;
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yet, he was not able to restrain himself from doing those things
which he had 
been forbidden to do. In the very first being created in the image
of the 
“Supreme,” there was a tendency to do wrong!
We have, then, in this creation, out of nothing, a very limited
Creator, as it 
is perfectly patent that any being must be. A being could be
neither infinite, 
supreme, nor omnipresent; for there is That in which all beings,
however high, 
or planets, or solar-systems, have their existence—Space, which
exists whether 
there is anything in it or not; which has no beginning nor ending;
which always 
is; which is outside as well as inside of every being. Any being
must be less 
than Space; could the Absolute be less than Space? Illimitability
and infinitude 
are not in relation to any being whatever; hence creation from the
point of view 
of a Creator has to be abandoned.
But the existence of all beings—not only of mankind, but of beings
of every 
grade and everywhere—has to be accounted for: what is the basis of
all 
existence? We have to go back of all form, back of every kind of
being, to see 
that all beings and all forms spring from One Source, which is not
different in 
any. It is in deed the Supreme which lies within and behind every
being; every 
being of every kind in the universe is in its innermost essence a
ray from and 
one with It. It is Life. It is Spirit. It is Consciousness. Each is
God in his 
innermost Essence. Taking this basis for our thinking, let us ask
the question: 
under what process do things become? What brings about the
operation of all the 
different forms that we see? Whether consciously or unconsciously,
we all 
recognize the fact that Law rules in this universe, but what we
have to 
understand is that Law is merely the inter-relation and
inter-action and 
inter-dependence of all the acts of all beings concerned in the
universe. The 
one inclusive law is the law of action and reaction—a law not
outside of, but 
inherent in the nature of every being. From the very Source there
is the power 
to act, but there is no action unless there is a being to act and
feel the 
effects of the action. If I act, I get re-action. If the highest
archangel acts, 
he gets the re-action of his action.
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There are two kinds of re-actions produced from acts: those that
are good or 
beneficent; those that are evil or maleficent. The whole
responsibility of every 
action rests upon each and every being. So, if any being finds
himself in any 
given state, good or bad, it is because of his thoughts, words and
deeds—his 
own, and those of nobody else. We get some good and we get some
evil, all of our 
own reaping; but all the time, every single moment of our
existence, we have the 
power of choice in the direction of good or evil.
Good has no existence by itself; evil has no existence by itself.
The two terms 
relate to matters of conduct and of impressions we receive. They
merely 
characterize the effects produced upon us: a thing is “good” to us
if it 
benefits us in any way, and “evil” if it does not benefit us. Who
is it that 
judges between good and evil effects? In every case, it is the man
himself. One 
man will say such and such things are good for me, and such and
such things are 
evil; while another man, with a different point of view and
different relations 
to things, will perhaps say the exact contrary about the very same
matters. So 
it always resolves itself into the individual point of view: in the
last 
analysis each man is himself the sole director and final authority
as to what is 
good and what is evil, so far as he is concerned.
We need to ask ourselves if we have always followed that which
seemed to us to 
be the best course to follow; and, then again, if we have, did we
consider that 
course from the point of view of personal self-benefit, or from the
point of 
view of benefit to all others. For if we moved along the line of
that which at 
the time seemed best for us personally, we must have acted in a way
that 
afflicted others; we must have done evil to others, whether
consciously or 
unconsciously, by obstructing their path. There we sowed evilly,
and we either 
have reaped or will reap evilly. The very first act that was
selfishly done was 
the origin of evil so far as that being was concerned. Likewise,
wherever there 
was an unselfish act, there was the origin of good for him. Let us
remember, 
too, that the Tree of Knowledge mentioned in the Bible was the
knowledge of both 
good and evil. Good and evil are not to be
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considered separately, but together. You cannot tell good except by
its 
opposite, evil. Goodness would speedily cease to be such, were it
not for the 
operation of its contrary.
There are many things in life regarded by us as evils----like
sorrow and 
death—which are not, in fact, evils. They are merely stages and
conditions 
through which we pass in our progress up the ladder of development.
We need not 
be afraid of death, for death will never touch us at all. We pass
on out of 
life, and on. One of the Great Teachers said that death ever comes
to the Ego as 
a friend. There is no need to fear anything, for there is nothing
in the 
universe, high or low, that can ever destroy us—our consciousness,
or our 
acquired individuality. Mistakes occur, for many of our actions are
performed 
through ignorance, and evil results follow. Even so, it is through
those very 
wrong actions that we learn. It is through the operation of vice
that virtue is 
seen as a resistance to vice.
The origin of evil is to be found in ignorance of our own true
natures. There 
are no afflictions put upon us by any being other than ourselves.
We are 
afflicted just to the extent that we make ourselves open to
affliction. Things 
affect some people terribly. The same things affect other people
very little or 
not at all. Why? Because of their point of view. Attitude towards
things makes 
the suffering or the not suffering, the pleasure or the pain—not
the things in 
themselves. If we knew ourselves to be divine beings merely going
through a 
school of life—our whole purpose to learn—what would there be to
fear, or even 
to be anxious about? If it were not for the obstacles in life—if
life were one 
happy, placid dream—we never would make the motion or the effort
that would 
arouse the highest characteristics of thought and action. It is by
reason of the 
obstacles we have to overcome that we become stronger and obtain
nobler traits. 
There is no such thing as a divinely created being, for everything
that exists 
becomes.
Is it not true that now we can look back upon and smile at anything
‘ that ever 
happened to us in the past? It looked awful at the time, but it has
passed, and 
we can see that from those very things came something of gain, of
strength and 
wis-
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dom. Under the law no one can meet with an obstacle which he is not
able to 
overcome; the obstacle is but an opportunity for him to get rid of
some defect 
which he now possesses. Often the very things which seem the most
difficult for 
us prove to be the most beneficent.
Those who stand the greatest chance of loss in the future are those
who have the 
easy times. When one has ‘ Karma—that is, when everything is coming
his way—he 
is prone to take the ease of it and flow with the current of the
river, missing 
many an opportunity to do good. Through these errors of omission,
which are as 
bad as any errors of commission, he fails to under stand that he
has diminished 
his own stock of good Karma and must of necessity share in the evil
which flows 
from his lack of appreciation of the situation and his opportunity.
We need 
never fear our opportunities, but should always act up to them,
relying on the 
law of our own spiritual being to carry us through any thing and
everything. The 
Path is within ourselves, not outside; each of us is the stair to
his own 
development.
We have so long been ruled by political and religious man made laws
that we have 
come to believe in them. Yet, goodness does not need laws. Our laws
are based on 
the ignorance and selfishness and wickedness in men’s natures; they
are made to 
restrain the evil which we think is ineradicable and incurable
because ‘we all 
sinned in Adam and cannot help it.” Then, too, because we think we
know what is 
good and what is evil, we are very anxious that everybody else
should be made to 
think in the same way. We want to prohibit those things which we do
not desire 
ourselves; we want other people to eat what we think they ought to
eat, and to 
clothe themselves as we think they should be clothed. We talk much
of the 
“rights” of men. But we have just one right, and that is the right
to do right. 
No man was ever made “good” by law; no man was ever made moral by
law. Each man 
must be a law for himself, both moral and spiritual.
Are we proud of this civilization, made by the collective thought
and action of 
every individual in it? Have our telephones, automobiles,
airplanes, and 
radiographs made us any more
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divine? Do they measure our true progress? No; because ignorance
and selfishness 
still lie in every human heart; because men, according to the
vicarious 
atonement idea, blame their parents for their wrong attributes and
tendencies, 
and accept only the good as their own. They are unjust, for both
good and bad 
are their own earnings. If we have good, let us be happy that at
some time we 
earned it; if we are in bad case, let us be glad, claim it,
understand it and 
correct it. If we want a civilization better than the one we have
now, we are 
the ones to start right now to make it. No one else will make it
for us. We have 
to set the lines in motion towards a true civilization from a true
basis; but if 
we think we are not able to do much and are not now doing what we
can, it is 
certain we never can do more. As we do what we can, greater
opportunities arise 
to do. Until we do what is before us, never will any greater
opportunities 
arise.
When we get the right attitude of mind—and that is what
discipleship is—there is 
not a quality in us, not a force, not an at tribute, but can be put
to the best 
and highest use. We do not get off this plane. We do not cut off
any part of our 
being. We do not destroy the usefulness of any part of us, but put
all to the 
proper use and for the proper end. Herein is seen the difference
between one who 
knows and one who does not know. One who knows does not get off to
the 
Christian’s heaven, nor to any other heaven. He works right here
where he finds 
himself and does the best work he can with the instrument he now
has, fearing 
nothing, trusting the Law of his own being. If any being will trust
the Law of 
his own nature, if he will work on with nature by helping all
others in every 
direction possible, then all nature will turn and help him. It
never was 
otherwise. It cannot be otherwise.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
  WHAT REINCARNATES?
What reincarnates is a mystery to many minds because they find a
difficulty in 
understanding such a permanency as must stand behind repeated
incarnations. They 
know that the body is born and dies and is dissolved, but their
minds are so 
identified with the body in its relations and surroundings that
they are un-
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able to dissociate themselves from it. They think of themselves as
persons, as 
bodies of a physical nature, and hence can not see where in them
may reside that 
power of incarnating from life to life.
Theosophy presents a larger view in showing that man is not his
body, because 
the body is continually changing; that man is not his mind, because
he is 
constantly changing his mind; that there is in man a permanency
which is the 
identity throughout all kinds of embodiments. There has been no
change in our 
identity from childhood up to the present day. The body has
changed; the 
surroundings have changed; but the identity remains the same and
will not change 
from now on through all changes of body or mind or circumstance.
That in us 
which is itself unchanging is the only real. Nothing is real that
changes. It is 
only the real that perceives change. Change can not see change.
Only that which 
is constant perceives change; only the permanent can perceive
impermanence. 
However dimly we may perceive it, there is that in us which is
eternal and 
changeless.
This unchanging, constant, and immortal something in us is not
absent from any 
particle or any being whatever. There is only one Life in the world
to which we, 
as well as all other beings, pertain. We all proceeded from the
same one 
Source—not many— and we are proceeding on the same path to the same
great goal. 
The ancients said that the Divine Self is in all beings, but in all
it does not 
shine forth. The real is within, and may be realized by any human
being in 
himself. Everyone needs that realization that he may shine forth
and express the 
God within, which all beings but partially express.
If then the Source is the same—the One Spirit—in all beings, why so
many forms, 
so many, personalities, so many individualizations? All, again
Theosophy shows, 
are developments. In that great Ocean of Life, which is at the same
time 
Consciousness and Spirit, we move and live and have our being. That
ocean is 
separable into its constituent drops and the separation is effected
through the 
great course of evolution. Even in the kingdoms below us, which are
from the 
same Source, the tendency to separate into drops of individualized
consciousness 
goes on in ever-increas-
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ing degree. In the animal kingdom, those species that are nearest
to us make an 
approach to self-consciousness; but we as human beings have arrived
at that 
stage where each is a constituent drop of the great ocean of
Consciousness. As 
with an ocean of water, each drop of it contains all the elements
of the great 
body, so each constituent drop of humanity—a human being—contains
within its 
range every element of the great universe.
The same power exists in all of us, yet where we stand on the
ladder of being we 
see many below us and others greater than we above us. Humanity now
is building 
the bridge of thought, the bridge of ideas that connects the lower
with the 
higher. The whole purpose of incarnation, or our descent into
matter, was not 
only to gain further knowledge of matter, but to impel the lower
kingdoms to 
come up to where we are. We stand as gods to the lower kingdoms. It
is our 
impulsion that brings them weal or woe. It is our misconception of
the aim of 
life that makes Nature so hard; that causes all the distress and
disasters which 
afflict us in cyclones, tornadoes, diseases, pestilences of every
kind. All are 
our own doing; and why? Because there is a sublimation of mineral,
vegetable and 
animal kingdoms in our bodies, which are lives in themselves. Every
cell in our 
bodies has its birth, youth, manhood, decay and death, and its
reincarnation. We 
are impelling each one of those lives according to whatever
thought, will, or 
feeling we may have, whether for help or injury to others. These
lives go out 
from us for good or evil, back into their kingdoms with good or
evil. So by our 
lack of understanding of our own true natures, without a
comprehension of 
universal brotherhood, we are imperfectly performing our duties on
this plane 
and are imperfectly helping the evolution of the lower kingdoms. We
shall 
realize our responsibility to them only as we see that every being
is on his way 
upward; that all above man have been men at one time; that all
below man will 
some time reach man’s estate, when we have gone on further; that
all forms, all 
beings, all individualizations are but aspects of the One Spirit.
Granted, then, 
that this one unchanging Spirit is in all—the cause of all
evolutionary 
development, the cause of all incarna-
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tions —where, we may ask, do we carry the power to see and know
from life to 
life? How is continuity of knowledge, gained by observation and
experience, 
preserved? How is the individual maintained as such?
We should remember that we were self-conscious beings when this
planet began; 
some even were self-conscious when this solar system began; for
there is a 
difference in degree of development among human beings. If the
planet or solar 
system began in a state of primordial substance, or nebulous
matter, as Science 
calls it, then we must have had bodies of that state of substance.
In that 
finest substance are all the possibilities of every grade of
matter, and hence 
it is that within the true body of primordial matter all the
changes of coarser 
and coarser substance have been brought about; and within that body
is all 
experience. Our birth is within that body. Everything that occurs
to us is 
within that body—a body of a nature which does not change
throughout the whole 
Manvantara. Each one has such a body of finest substance, of the
inner nature, 
which is the real container for the individual. In it he lives and
moves and has 
his being, and yet even the great glory and fineness of that body
is not the 
man; it is merely the highest vesture of the Soul. The Real Man we
are is the 
Man that was, that is, and that ever shall be, for whom the hour
will never 
strike— Man, the thinker; Man, the perceiver—always thinking,
continually 
acting.
Life is one. Spirit is one. Consciousness is one. These three are
one—a 
trinity—and we are that trinity. All the changes of substance and
form are 
brought about by Spirit and Consciousness and expressed in various
forms of 
life. We are that One Spirit, each standing in a vast assemblage of
beings in 
this great universe, seeing and knowing what he can through the
instruments he 
has. We are the Trinity—the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost;
or, in 
theosophical parlance, we are Alma, Buddhi, and Manas. Atma is the
One Spirit, 
not belonging to any one, but to all. Buddhi is the sublimated
experience of all 
the past. Manas is the thinking power, the thinker, the man, the
immortal man. 
There is no man without the Spirit, and no man without that
experience of the 
past; but
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the mind is the realm of creation, of ideas; and the Spirit itself,
with all its 
power, acts according to the ideas that are in the mind.
The Voice of The Silence says, “Mind is like a mirror. It gathers
dust while it 
reflects.” It needs soul-wisdom to brush away the dust. This mind
of ours, or 
that which we call the mind, is merely the reflector, which
presents as we train 
it, different pictures. The Spirit acts in accord with the ideas
seen, for good 
or for evil. Is there evil in the world? It is the power of Spirit
that caused 
it. Is there good in the world? It is the power of Spirit that
caused it. For 
there is only one power. The misdirection of that power brings
evil; its right 
direction brings good.
We must give up the idea that we are poor, weak, miserable
creatures who can 
never do anything for ourselves; for as long as we hold that idea,
so long will 
we never do anything. We must get the other idea—that we are
Spirit, that we are 
immortal—and when we come to realize what that means, the power of
it will flow 
directly in and through us, unrestricted in any direction, save by
the 
instruments which we ourselves caused to be imperfect. let us get
away from the 
idea that we are this poor, miserable, defective physical body over
which we 
have so little control. We can not stop a heart beat; we can not
stop the breath 
without destroying the body; we can not stop the constant
dissociation of matter 
that goes on in it, nor prevent its final dissolution. Some people
talk of 
“demonstrating” against death, but we might as well try to
demonstrate against 
the trees shedding their leaves when the winter blasts come. Death
will always 
be, and there is a great advantage in it. If we could not change
our bodies, how 
would there be any chance for advancement? Are we so well pleased
with the 
bodies now ours that we would desire no change? Certainly not.
There is only one 
thing in this life that can be retained permanently, and that is
the spiritual 
nature, and the great divine compassion which we may translate by
the word 
“love.”
We are the reincarnating Egos who will continue to incarnate until
the great 
task which we undertook is completed. That task is the raising up
of the whole 
of humanity to the highest possible
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stage of perfection on an earth of this kind. We incarnate from age
to age for 
the preservation of the just, the destruction of wickedness, and
the 
establishment of righteousness. That is what we are here for, whether
we know it 
or not, and we must come to a recognition of the immortality of our
own natures 
before we shall ever relieve ourselves from the distresses that
afflict humanity 
everywhere. We have to bring ourselves in touch and tune with the
whole great 
purpose of Nature which is the evolution of Soul, and for which
alone all the 
universe exists
CONTENTS
 THE ETERNAL VERITIES
REAL MEMORY
The general idea with regard to memory is that it depends entirely
on the 
orderly functioning of the physical brain, and that where
derangement of that 
function occurs, there is loss of memory. It is quite true that
certain forms of 
memory depend upon the brain, as in those two particular functions
known as 
remembrance and recollection. In remembrance, we can get the idea,
but not all 
the particulars that have brought about some feeling, event, or
circumstance of 
the past; in recollection, we can collect back from one point all
the other 
points connected with it. But there is a third function of the
memory, known as 
reminiscence, which is not at all dependent upon the brain. It is
brought into 
function oftentimes, not by any present object or occurrence
arousing attention 
in that direction, but as it were, springs direct from the soul
itself. It is a 
direct perception of what was. It comes from something behind the
brain—the 
brain serving merely as a sort of filter, or interceptor, or
translator of 
impressions.
We can understand why remote memories are difficult to recall to our
brain 
perception, when we consider the fact that the brain cells are
constantly 
changing. It is not conceivable that the millions of impressions
received during 
a lifetime could be retained and given out again by those changing
cells. All 
the time during our lives there is a continuity of perception, but
we do not re 
member one-thousandth part of the impressions that we have received
in those 
days or years. Very few events are impressed upon
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us, or are immediately translatable through the brain, by way of
remembrance. 
Even if we so desired, we could never make any complete history of
all those 
impressions through the faculty of recollection. Yet there is the
innate faculty 
of recalling and recollecting in such a way as to have a
consecutive or 
synthetic grasp of all those impressions through reminiscence, that
faculty of 
memory which applies to the soul—is a peculiarly innate quality of
the soul.
To reach into and exercise soul memory, we must first under stand
the real 
nature of man. We must first see that all beings of every grade—not
only man, 
but the beings above man and the beings below man—are of the same
essence, the 
same Spirit, the same Life, and of the same potential powers. The
higher beings 
have brought these potential powers into activity, and differ from
the lower 
orders by reason of a greater degree of development, a greater
range of 
perception and a finer evolution of form. But highest as well as
lowest are rays 
from and one with the Divine Absolute Principle. Each one is the
Seer, the 
Perceiver, who stands in the center of his own universe, through
which alone we 
may know all that may be known of the Highest.
We must recognize the fact that this is a universe of law, with no
chance or 
accident anywhere in it, and that we have arrived at our present
position under 
law—the law of our own being, set in operation by ourselves; that
the same law 
rules in every direction in space and in nature. The races of men
that now exist 
are the result of races of men which preceded them; the planet on
which we now 
live is the result of a planet that preceded it; the solar system
of which our 
planet is a part is the result of a solar system that preceded it.
Everything is 
an exact consequence of that which preceded it—everything is a
repetition of 
that which was. This return of the same action or preceding
impression occurs 
under the true aspect of memory; it is the memory of what we have
been through 
that brings about the repetition.
On the physical plane, the action of true memory is seen in all
those stages 
through which the human form goes from conception to
birth—representations, in 
fact, of the evolution of
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earlier races. In every act of our existence we are exhibiting true
memory, 
whether we realize it or not. The memory of walking is with us now;
the memory 
of talking is with us now. We may not remember how nor when we
learned to talk 
or to walk, but we have present with us the knowing how to walk and
to talk. 
True memory is just that—the possession of the knowledge of the
past. It is 
memory which connects us physically with the body, through all
changes of body, 
scene and circumstance; without it, we should be living merely from
impression 
to impression; there would be no connection whatever with the past
and there 
would be no sense of self-identity.
Memory exists also in other inner departments of our nature. Living
on the 
physical plane, our ideas connected almost entirely with the
“three-dimensional” 
state of matter, we are no more conscious of those inner planes of
being than, 
when in sleep, we are conscious of the physical plane, being
absolutely shut off 
from the outside world, from the happenings to our friends, to the
nation, and 
to the world at large, which are then of no consequence whatever to
us. Yet 
there is an active life in those inner departments of our nature,
and there is a 
memory of it. The Thinker who uses the brain in the waking state is
simply 
acting on another plane of matter and using another plane of
memory. Every plane 
of consciousness has a memory of its own.
That consciousness never ceases, but is continuously active, is
evidenced by the 
fact that no one has ever experienced sleep. Nor does death come to
us any more 
than sleep. We may be aware that sleep or death is coming for the
body, but we 
know those states only as we see them in others. When we say “I was
asleep,” we 
mean that the body was in the sleeping state, while we passed away
altogether 
from this plane for the time being. Then we passed back again from
the inner 
planes to this, picking up the memory of the waking state where we
laid it down, 
and leaving behind the memory of what passed on the other side.
There is no 
record made in this physical instrument of the inner planes, for
the brain has 
not been trained in that direction, and hence it can
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not translate those planes of consciousness, except in some partial
recollections such as occur in dreams. Dreams attest that we are
alive and 
active on inner planes; for in them, we think, speak, smell, taste,
hear and 
move, as individuals, and never have any question as to our
identity, even 
though the personality presented should be that of some past
incarnation. The 
dreaming state is very close to the point of waking—the
intermediate state 
between waking and sleep—so that we are able to impress the
brain-cells with 
what has occurred before waking, and remember. But beyond the
dreaming stage, 
which is a very short stage of sleep, there is a Vast extent of
human thought 
and action. We go in and in until we are close to the source of our
own being, 
where the Thinker is at work, where he knows all that he has been
before—all his 
past incarnations—where he sees and knows himself as he is. The
memory of all 
the experiences through which he has been as an individualized
being is there in 
one consecutive whole. That, indeed, was the Paradise of man, when
he walked 
with Deity, when he knew himself as he really was. True memory is
the Paradise 
which all human beings should strive to regain. To recover that
whole memory, to 
make that great knowledge of the past usable, here and now in the
brain and in 
the body, is the true work of ‘salvation. Only when we understand
what we really 
are, shall we be able to take a conscious, active, purposeful part
in the 
evolution of our race. Only when we gain the perception that we are
the Eternal 
Spirit, that Death never touches us at all, that we may have a
conscious life in 
spirit, not in matter—only when we begin to think and act from that
basis, can 
true memory come through to the brain; only then can we know for
ourselves, have 
nothing to ask of anyone, but have everything to give to every
other one. That 
true memory is possible for every living being.
The barrier for every man is not in the memory, but in the false
ideas of life 
according to which he acts. However much the soul remembers, if we
are using the 
brain contrary to the nature of the soul, the brain can not
translate its 
impressions. The Thinker must transfer the memory of the soul to
the brain, and 
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he can do so only by thinking and acting along right lines during
active waking 
consciousness, until the brain responds to the ideas and learns to
transmit what 
occurs while the body is inoperative. Then the true memory of the
past that is 
in the soul is our knowledge in the brain.
The Masters are those who have the true memory of every step
through which They 
have gone—the knowledge of all past civilizations, the
understanding of all that 
every human being has to experience, the recognition of all the
laws ruling 
evolution. As custodians of that knowledge, and as our Elder
Brothers, They 
stand ready to help mankind in the only way open to Them—by
recording as much of 
that knowledge as we can assimilate, by directing us to its proper
use for the 
benefit of all other human beings, that all humanity may advance in
an orderly 
way to the true goal. Greater and greater individualization, wider
and wider 
range of perception, are the objects of evolution; but there are
two paths by 
which we may reach the goal. One path leads to an individualization
that is 
selfish, and self-righteous—a state of separateness from all human
beings; on 
the other, there is no cessation of work for humanity. The Elder
Brother goes as 
high as he can, but he stops before he enters the final door that
separates him 
from the rest; he returns and takes up again a body of the race, as
Jesus did, 
that he may help those who know less than He does. So we are never
alone. Never 
will there come a time when those Great Beings will cease from that
labor, which 
is a labor of love. But we are the ones who must determine for
ourselves, sooner 
or later, whether to go on through aeons of suffering and millions
of lives of 
ignorance, or to follow the path They show, which leads straight to
the 
goal—which involves the power of direct cognition of truth without
any mistake 
whatever, and which includes real memory.
                                                                          
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE CAUSE OF SORROW
We are never free from pain, sorrow, and suffering in the world.
Pleasures come 
and go very lightly, but always the sorrow and suffering of life
itself abides 
with us. If we could see and
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understand the cause of the sorrow existing in the world in every
direction—not 
only the sorrows of the ordinary life but those brought about by
collective 
action, as wars are—we should cease to make that cause. We have
assumed that all 
these sorrows are due to external causes—to some higher being or
beings, or to 
some outside laws of the universe; never to ourselves. And because
we have never 
brought it home to ourselves that we are in any way connected with
the causes of 
sorrow which come our way, we go on looking for something external
to relieve us 
of those sorrows. Not all the religions that ever have existed on
the face of 
the earth, not all that the sciences have so far achieved or may
achieve will 
ever give us that knowledge, because the cause of sorrow does not
lie outside; 
it lies within each one. Each one contains within himself the power
to cause 
sorrow; he also has the power to cause its cessation.
The wisdom of the ages explains the cause of sorrow. It teaches
that each being 
is spirit; that the power of spirit is illimitable, although we
limit it because 
we assume that it is limited; that the changeless spirit in the
heart of every 
being is behind every form, the cause and sustainer of all forms;
that spirit is 
the force be hind evolution, and also the force that rules and
relates all 
things of whatever grade; that every being is the result of an
unfoldment from 
within outwards—of a desire for greater and greater expression. But
we who have 
reached this stage of self-consciousness, unlike the lower
kingdoms, now have 
the power of choice and can draw upon that illimitable source of
our being and 
realize it while we live in a mortal and ever-changing body.
Desire, in a limited way, with regard to the personality, is the
cause of all 
sin, sorrow, and suffering. Such desire is based on selfish
thought; it is not 
what others desire; it heeds not any other urge than its own. The
unfulfilled 
desires, it is, that hurt us; yet do the fulfilled desires give us
happiness? 
Never, for so soon as they are achieved, there begins a further
desire for 
something more, something greater. With many conflicting desires,
then, we live 
upon each other, we prey upon each other, we devour each other, we
injure each 
other—in every way. There is no necessity
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for all this. It never was the original plan—the original nature of
the 
development of man. There is never any need to desire. All our woes
are 
self-inflicted; the very inherent power of spirit has plunged us
into them and 
maintains us in them.
Yet misery, sorrow and suffering have a mission. It is usually only
the misery 
we bring upon ourselves that makes us stop doing wrong, to look
around and ask 
and see what is right. It is by our mistakes we learn to see the
difference 
between right and wrong, and in seeing that difference is the whole
story of 
progress. We have to be able to tell the difference. It is only
through ‘ 
opposites”—the perception of them and the employment of them—that
any being can 
grow at all. There has always to be duality in nature. All human
beings are One 
in spirit, dual in expression. Always there is the actor and
something to act 
upon. Always there are the two—Purusha, the spirit, and Prakriti,
matter—not two 
separate things, but two aspects of one and the same thing. No
perception is 
possible unless we have that duality. We have to experience
darkness first in 
order to see light, and so with the opposites of pleasure and pain.
Without pain 
we could not understand pleasure; without pleasure we could not
understand pain. 
What lies behind all advance in intelligence, from the lowest to
the highest, is 
perception gained by that which acts, from that which is acted
upon.
Law rules everywhere in nature in accord with the basis of duality.
We call it 
the law of periodicity, but it is simply a statement of Karma, or
action and 
reaction. What we call the laws of the elements are in reality but
perceptions 
of the actions and reactions of various grades of intelligences.
‘What we call 
our seasons, and all the cycles of time or of individuals, are
covered by that 
law—reaction from action previously sent forth. The people who form
a nation are 
people who were together in other times; their collective actions
have brought 
them the same collective reactions. Every thought we have has its
return of 
impression; every feeling we have has its return. All react upon
us, coming back 
either impoverished or enriched. Thus, with the power to produce
any kind of 
effect resident in us, we can understand the power of false, mis-
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taken ideas. We can sustain these ideas interminably by the law of
return of 
impression, and continually suffer reactions from them. The whole
power of 
spirit used in a wrong direction, in ignorance of our own nature
and the nature 
of beings in general, creates sorrow of every kind.
No one can stop us in our mistaken course so long as we foolishly
entertain 
false ideas. Our evolution has been brought about by us under the
laws of our 
own operation—action and reaction within ourselves—and in no other
way. It is a 
mistake to think that good comes to us from outside quarters. It
never does. 
Whatever good or whatever evil comes is the reaping of what we have
sown, in 
every way and in every circumstance. There are no exceptions. We
look for 
“justice.” We are getting it, according to our own thought and
action. For let 
us remember that the plane of action is thought itself, that is to
say—ideas. 
Action is merely the sequence of the concretion of thought. So
there is every 
necessity for us to clear out the rubbish which we hold as ideas.
Our “minds,” 
as a rule, are found to be made of a bundle of ideas that somebody
has handed on 
to us. We accept the ideas of the race, of the people about us, of
this “ism” or 
that “ology,” and call it our mind, when, in reality, we have no
mind of our own 
at all. The mind is the power to receive and to reject. What we
receive and what 
we reject depends upon ourselves—on our ignorance or on our wisdom.
There is 
nothing outside we have to learn, but every thing inside. The task
we have at 
hand is to understand our own natures.
If any great number of beings in this world should reach the
understanding of 
their own natures, and so exercise their inherent spiritual powers
for the 
benefit of their fellow-men, in no long time we should find the
misery of the 
world most wonderfully abated. As was said of old, a little leaven
leaveneth the 
whole lump. And one of our Teachers said, “Give me five hundred
good, earnest, 
sincere, devoted men and women and I will move the world.” Our
success does not 
depend upon any form of physical evolution, nor upon any form of
scientific 
advancement. These are but means and not ends in themselves, though
did we but 
know
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our own real powers, they could be carried to a pitch not yet
dreamed of. We 
must and eventually will carry the civilization of the world to a
higher stage 
than has ever before existed, but that will never be until men
realize their own 
natures and act from that basis. We can go on indefinitely
repeating the present 
thinking and acting, but so long as we do, just so long will there
be sin and 
sorrow and suffering. Never will they cease, nor wars, diseases,
pestilences, 
tornadoes, cyclones, nor earthquakes—for all these come from man’s
errors.
We shall never find a vicarious atonement. We must take the results
of what we 
sow. Recognizing that we are responsible for our own conditions, we
must do our 
best to adjust them. Readjustment can come only through assuming
our own 
spiritual birth right, instead of assuming that we are these
unfortunate bodies 
that are born, live for a while and die; through the fulfillment of
our duties 
in every direction as the opportunities are offered us. For we
cannot work out 
our salvation alone. We cannot live alone. We cannot progress
alone. We cannot 
raise ourselves beyond the rest, but must help all the rest to
whatever stage we 
occupy, going further and further ourselves that we may be the
better able to 
help and teach the others. Jesus was what he was because he became
so. Buddha 
was what he was because he became so. There was a time when they
were sinning 
and erring mortals like ourselves. But they saw the true path and
turned and 
followed it, as in all time to come must every being.
Just so long as we think that we are physical beings and follow
after this or 
that desire, just so long do we put off the day of readjustment and
suffer from 
the causes we have set in motion. But when in place of false ideas
we commence 
to base our thought and action on correct ideas, the brain begins
to be 
clarified and to be permeable to the immense knowledge of the inner
man—a 
knowledge which is not now recorded because of the wrong way in
which we have 
trained it. The brain has to be made a good conductor for spiritual
knowledge. 
If true knowledge were ours, would we have desires? Would we seek
after this or 
that thing in physical life and expend our
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best energies upon them? No. Further, we would know that no matter
what there is 
in the universe anywhere, nothing can stop the progress laid down
for ourselves 
in a spiritual direction. We would also know that nothing can harm
us; nothing 
can be wilder us. We would trust the law of our own spiritual
nature, seeking 
only to do what good we can; seeking nothing for our selves, but to
do service 
in every possible way for every other being. Then we should be in
accord with 
the nature of the whole, and the natures and forces of all beings
would carry us 
along on the stream that brooks no obstacle whatever. Would we be
sorrowful? 
Never; because we would be fulfilling the real purpose of spirit
and soul in 
helping all other souls on the path, so far as the opportunity lay
before us. In 
this course there is no need to strain and struggle; we have only
to take those 
opportunities which our reactions bring us. The evil that comes to
us—well, it 
is something for us to adjust, to balance. The good that comes to
us—that too is 
the result of our own actions. So we may take the good and enjoy
it, and meet 
the evil without fear or trembling or resistance of any kind in an
attempt to 
avoid it.
    The only sorrow of the
great Teachers, or Masters of Wisdom, is to see men 
perpetually engulfing themselves in sin and sorrow and suffering which
They 
cannot prevent. One of Them was asked at one time, “Why is it with
your great 
knowledge and power that you do not make men think as they should?”
He said, 
“The human soul is not so constituted. It has to see and act for
itself.” For 
the action is from within outward, and the power goes with the
action. No one 
can save us but ourselves.                                                      
                   
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
WHAT SURVIVES AFTER DEATH?
Day after day we are constantly confronted by the fact that we are
all subject 
to death. No matter how we may live, whether our lives bring to us
failure or 
the greatest possible success in the eyes of the world, death is
there at the 
end. So sure as there is birth for us, so there is death. Each one
knows that 
sooner or later death must be his portion; but what does he know of
after-death?
 
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‘What, if anything, survives? Religions such as we have professed
do not give us 
any information whatever on this most serious question;
materialistic science 
presents us no solution; from neither religion nor science have we
gained 
anything to rest upon when the great conqueror of all human bodies
appears 
before us. Is there any hope in life that what we are doing may be
of any value 
after death? Whether we can answer that question, or not, before
death confronts 
us—the confronting of death will be there. The time will come.
If any solution to the problems presented by death exists, it must
be 
perceptible during life to have any value for us as living human
beings. It must 
be a reasonable solution, sufficiently evident to us as we now
live, to convince 
us of the correctness of the solution. There must be clear evidence
as to an 
understanding of the facts of life, before we may accept any
explanation as to 
what must be after death. When we know the meaning of birth; when
we know what 
we are working here in bodies for; when we know what all manifested
life exists 
for—then, we may have an answer as to why we pass so few years in
any one 
physical existence; we may know where are our friends, our parents,
our 
grandparents, who lived as we are living but now are gone; we may
know if life 
has ceased for them; and, then, if life can ever cease for us.
There is one fact of human existence which should guide us in our
thinking—the 
fact of law, ruling in everything that we do. Is it not our
knowledge, our 
perception of law that enables us to control the elements in
nature? We control 
the various substances and elements by understanding the law of
their operation. 
We know that the law of action and re-action prevails in nature; we
recognize in 
nature the law of cause and effect. But do we not know that law
rules in our 
very selves? We know there is a law under which the body grows from
conception 
to birth, from birth to maturity, followed by gradual declination.
Just as there 
is for man a cycle of birth, youth, manhood, decay and death, so
there is a 
succession of events in nature, which we perceive to be a universal
law. 
Morning, noon, and night are followed by morning again; spring,
summer, autumn, 
and winter are followed by spring
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again. We ought then to be able to perceive that, as in nature our
birth this 
time is but in orderly succession after previous death, so must we
come again 
and again for a life-time on earth, as we come again and again to
our day-times 
after the night. We must have passed through a great sweep of
existence to have 
reached this present birth, but that must also have been the
operation of law. 
The choice lies between law and chaos. There can not be law here
and chaos 
there. All is under law; or, all is chaos. Our whole experience
shows that law 
rules, and the conclusion becomes necessary that law rules in every
thing and in 
every circumstance. Law, therefore, must rule on both sides of
death.
But is this law enforced upon us by some powerful Being? If so,
there is no hope 
whatever for us. And who are WE operating under this all-inclusive
law? If we 
are mere bodies, we are small and restricted beings. If all the
life there is, 
is what we feel and experience in our bodies, life amounts to
nothing. Very 
little thought, however, will convince us that we are not our
bodies. We know 
that our bodies are under constant change from birth to the present
time; 
constant change will go on until the cessation of these bodies; but
we do not 
change. The same “I” was child, youth, young man, and older man.
The identity 
has not changed at all through all the changes of body it has
experienced. Nor 
are we our minds, as so many believe. Our minds are merely certain
bundles of 
ideas in regard to life, and we must be greater than those minds
because we can 
change them. Nor is there any imaginable limit to that changing. No
matter how 
much knowledge we may acquire, we can go on learning; no matter
what kind of a 
mind we may have, we possess the illimitable power to go on
increasing it. If 
one doubts the existence of anything greater than mind, he has but
to see that 
the very fact of doubting—the expression of doubt—shows an act and
purpose 
beyond the idea. We could utterly refuse to think, and still exist.
We must look 
deeper for ourselves than the mind and the body. Both are but
instruments which 
WE use. Then, what can we be? There is that in us which lives,
which thinks, 
which is life itself, which garners all experience, which it 
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self changes not at all. It is smaller than the small, as the
ancients said; it 
is greater than the great. It can not be weighed nor measured. We
can not say 
where it is and where it is not; and yet it is the one thing in
us—our very 
selves—---which enables us to have any experience, any idea or
combination of 
ideas. Call it Spirit, if you will. Call it Life. Call it
Consciousness; for we 
well know that we can not have any experience unless we are
conscious of it. The 
ancients said: “The Soul is the Perceiver, is Vision itself, pure
and simple, 
and looks directly on ideas.” Spirit sees the idea; actions flow
from the ideas 
adopted. Our differences are in respect to mentality, in accordance
with the 
kind and range of ideas; but we have all sprung from the same Source;
we all 
have a common basis, a common essential nature, which is Spirit and
Life itself.
Our days and nights afford an illustration of the fact that we can
let the body 
go, that we can depart from the body, and still exist. While we are
awake in the 
day-time, we act outwardly through the organs of the body which
serve to 
transmit and receive impressions. At night, these activities are
stilled, and it 
is said that we sleep. But how may we know we are conscious during
those hours 
of the night? Because when we awake, we can say, “I dreamed,” and
there is no 
question as to our identity in the dream. We were conscious, too,
of having all 
the senses; we had, apparently, the powers of motion.
Notwithstanding the 
dormant condition of the body in that state we call deep sleep, we
were still 
acting, living, conscious beings. It may not be difficult to
conceive that, 
during the greater portion of the night’s rest passed in what is
known as 
“dreamless slumber” of the body, we are conscious; that our action
is of a 
higher and finer kind than in waking-life; that it is possible for
us to keep a 
conscious hold on that action— to bring back into this brain of
ours, which we 
are using during the day-time, the memory of every act on every
inner plane of 
being. The soul—the Real Man—with all his past experiences is fully
awake when 
the body is asleep. The night-time of the soul is the day-time of
the body. It 
is only in exceptional cases, however, that a human being knows
that he is 
conscious all the time; that Consciousness can never by any
possibility cease. 
Yet each
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one can see for himself that if Consciousness ever ceased, there
would be no 
possibility of its ever beginning again. We can see continuing
consciousness in 
the fact that we are able to take up, each day in our life, the
work of the day 
and days before.
Theosophy is presented for the purpose of showing that this full
consciousness 
in the day-time, in operation through the body, is possible to
every man. If we 
had that consciousness, what would death mean to us? It would mean
no more than 
sleep. Death would mean merely a letting go of the body which had
become useless 
to us. We should know that death could never touch us any more than
sleep 
reaches us; that as our consciousness is continuous, whether the
body is asleep 
or awake, so when the body dies, there is no cessation for us.
What, then, survives after death? The man himself, with all his
tendencies, with 
all his experience. The Thinker, the Soul, is what survives, is
what can never 
be extinguished, can never itself suffer, can never be involved, is
always of 
its own nature, no matter what conditions a man may become involved
in for the 
time being. Conditions, whether of joy or suffering, must have an
ending; but 
the One who enjoys, the One who suffers, the One who feels, changes
not at all. 
That which survives is our very selves—all that we call
ourselves—the self who 
wakes, who dreams, who enjoys, who goes into different states,
through all the 
worlds. Let us say that this life is a dream in which we have our sufferings
and 
our joys. When we awake, we shall have other experiences, but it is
that 
something permanent in us which takes to itself of each and every
experience; 
coming into any field of operation, it gathers experience according
to the 
tendencies which itself has engendered on that plane of being. Thus
man has no 
other experience on earth save that which is his very own, save
that which he 
has made part of his action on this earth. The law of action and
reaction, of 
cause and effect, sowing and reaping is, then, his own law.
What is it that survives? WE survive, as conscious beings, with all
the powers 
of perception, with all that we have ever gained, and thus shall it
ever be. 
There is no cessation for us. Bodies wear out in one life, as we
know, when they 
are no longer capable and
                                                                              
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useful. Would we in wisdom wish to continue in such bodies? No: the
soul demands 
a better instrument. We tear down the old house to build a better
one—or it may 
be a worse one, we might remember. If we are selfish, if we work
for this body 
alone, if we are against our fellow beings, then, in a body we
shall have the 
reaction from our selfish action. This is law, and not sentiment.
It is not the 
doings of our fellow men that we are suffering from, but the evil
we have sown, 
coming back and pressing with its full weight against us. Not until
man assumes 
his birthright and realizes that the whole course of evolution is
the working 
out of the laws of justice, will he take the first step forward in
true 
progress, which leads to conscious immortality.                                  
                                        
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
CAN THE DEAD COMMUNICATE?
Since the forties of last century Spiritualists have affirmed the
answer to this 
question, claiming sufficient evidence for the survival of
intelligence after 
the state known as death. But Spiritualism is not a new thing. Five
hundred 
years or more ago, and, way back through every age of man, people
have practised 
what is called Bhut worship—that is, worship of the “spirits” of
the dead. 
Present day Spiritualism is but a repetition of a former error,
even though its 
resurrection has been among those whom we would call of higher
intelligence, 
“deep thinkers,” and men of science. The “communications” of today,
just like 
those others all down the ages, bear nothing whatever in them of a
truly 
spiritual nature; they are physical to the last degree, as the
communications to 
Sir Oliver Lodge from his son, Raymond (through a medium,
remember), bear 
witness. According to the latter’s statement, his life after death
is very much 
like the one he has left behind: people there still drink, smoke
cigars and, in 
fact (?) have cigars made for them in spirit-factories out of cigar
stuff 
belonging to that state of matter. If this is a “spiritual”
communication, 
anybody is welcome to take it as such, but it only goes to show
that when we are 
out of physical life we are not necessarily in a spiritual state—
as is the 
common supposition.
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The question is, what do we learn from such “communications”? Is
there anything 
or has there ever come anything from the plane of spiritualistic
communication 
which has been of any benefit to mankind? Has anything from that
source shown us 
the great purpose for which we are here? Does it tell us the
meaning of life; 
why there appears to be so much injustice in the world? Does it
tell us of wars 
that are to be, and how to prevent various great catastrophies from
falling upon 
us? Does it inform us as to the connection or common cause of all
the different 
beings in the world? Does it show us the nature of the becoming of
beings who 
are greater than we are, as well as of beings lower than we are?
Does it show 
why and how this solar system came into existence, and the laws
which rule it? 
No. These are all matters on which we need knowledge; yet from
so-called 
“spirits” we get all sorts of differing communications as a basis
for reasoning 
about them. Those very differences should show us there is no
source of 
knowledge in that quarter. ‘What we need is not what any “spirit”
or anybody 
else says about anything, but rather, a reasonable, logical, just
statement of 
laws which each and every person can test out for himself.
Let us consider the presentment of Theosophy as to how man has
become what he 
now is—the real story of evolution, as gained by observation and
experience in 
the vast ages that have passed. The basis underlying that evolution
is the same 
in every human being, in every human heart, in every animal life,
in every speck 
of matter—the same Spirit in all, the same One Life, the One
Intelligence. All 
are rays from that One Life, that One Intelligence, and each
expresses the 
possibilities existing in the Infinite Source. Differences in
beings, in 
mankind, in various races, all mean degrees of intelligence; for
each has the 
same power as the highest being and the same power as all beings;
the use or 
employment of the power brings about an instrument to represent it
more or less 
fully. Evolution is Spirit expressing itself, whether in this solar
system, or 
in those which preceded it. Intelligence was behind the beginning
of this planet 
in its nebulous condition, or fire mist; intelligence was behind
the cooling and 
hardening processes
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through many, many ages. In all those states and in all those
substances 
connected with this planet we also have existed as spiritual
beings, nor are 
they absent from us now. At the end of every life, we go back
through all those 
stages again to the highest one, and then descend again to the
earthly stage, to 
reap the effects of causes set in motion by us before in other
bodies. For there 
is no transforming power in death; as a tree falls, so must it lie.
It is during 
the life-time that we must recognize and awaken our true natures.
Death opens no 
door to knowledge.
We have proof of these states of consciousness right within our
nightly 
experience. When we sleep—though we never sleep; only the body
sleeps—the 
consciousness of this physical plane is gone from us. We have no
idea of what is 
going on among our friends or relatives; we have not one slightest
sensation of 
what is occurring anywhere on the earth while we are not using the
body. Here is 
“death”—a smaller, temporary death—for the body. Then we pass into
another state 
altogether, which we know as the dreaming state. The human soul
goes on in 
dream, knowing oneself as the one there, seeing, smelling, hearing,
talking, 
moving and doing all the other things which he does while in the
body, awake. 
They used to say that if you took hold of a sleeper’s great toe he
would talk to 
you. You would get a communication from a “spirit,” but what kind
of a 
communication would it be! The man would tell you just what his own
mind had 
worked with; he would not know in the dreaming state any more than
his own 
personal thoughts, his own personal ideas and activities.
Applying this analogy to the time of death, we can see that in
reality the time 
of death never comes. We finally give up this body and it goes back
to the earth 
from which it was taken; but WE are not dead. We are still alive.
We are still 
conscious on other planes and in other degrees, though we are not
using the body 
nor the brain. But what kind of a consciousness, what kind of an
intelligence, 
are we using? Just the same kind that we had when we were in the
body. Our 
thoughts and feelings and desires go on acting for a time just as
they did when 
we were using the body, because of the energy we had put into them.
As there is 
no renewal
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of it, that energy wears itself out, and the man—as a real
spiritual 
being—enters into quite another state, where no one on earth can
disturb the 
action of his intelligence and the enjoyment of his bliss. How
could that be a 
state of bliss if for one single instant it could be disturbed by
the sorrows 
left behind on earth? Could there be a worse hell to some people
than seeing 
from their “heaven” the appeasing of a husband’s sorrow and the
place of mother 
taken by another? We should understand that when a human being
passes out of 
life, he passes through something like the dream state—a mixed
state—and then 
reaches the best state he is capable of expressing. A spiritual
human being, it 
would be folly to imagine otherwise, could not be disturbed by
earthly doings, 
for his mission on earth was fulfilled when he left it. But he
would come back 
again in another body to take up another day’s work. Then, can we
not see that 
all this idea of communication with so-called “spirits” who have
left the body 
is nonsense?
Let us not imagine that there are no other beings besides men
outside the body. 
Let us not imagine that dead men, or living dead men, are the only
ones existent 
on the other side of this physical world. There are myriads of
kinds of beings 
who do not live in bodies like ours but inhabit planes into which
men pass from 
this earth. Contiguous to our plane all sorts of beings—sub-men, as
well as 
human elementals, dwell. Can we imagine these are desirable
communicants? And 
how can we be sure that any external communication is not connected
with some 
devilish spirit who likes to pose, to take the cast-off clothing of
man because 
of its at traction to his nature and desires, and exploit it to us?
A great deal 
of knowledge is required to understand the real nature of man, nor
is it arrived 
at by any kind of “communication” what ever, but by entering into
our own 
natures. The Father in secret is within, not without, and
everything we know or 
ever will know has to be known in ourselves and by ourselves. Never
from other 
people, never from any other kind of spirit, will it be known. The
Spirit of God 
within everyone—the Knower in everyone—is the last resort, the
highest tribunal, 
the last eminence that we shall reach.
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We are now traveling together through earth matter; when we leave
the earth, we 
leave it, alone. So, when we travel through astral matter, we are
not 
confabulating with the denizens of the astral plane but are moving
along our own 
lines. The states after death are merely the effects of the life
last lived. We 
step through from the place of our endeavor to reap what we have
sown—first 
casting off the evil, and then experiencing the highest and best of
all our 
aspirations. In all of these states each being realizes himself to
be the same 
person; never for an instant does it enter one’s perception, or
consciousness, 
that he is any other than the one who was on earth; nor does he
know that any 
such thing as death has occurred at all, in his highest state he
has with him 
all those whom he loved, and in just that condition which he would
desire to 
have for them. He has his bliss, because the balance between cause
and effect, 
even for his sufferings on earth, is struck straight and true for
the spirit. 
All those states are within us, not outside; in those states, we
meet first, 
last, and all the time Ourselves—first as we think we arc, and
finally as we 
really are.
There is no possibility of any communication from a “dead” person
to a living 
one, except perhaps in the very short period before the real individual
has 
shaken off the ideas held during life. Sometimes then a very, very
strong desire 
to impart something will effect some sort of communication, but
after the great 
change known as “the second death” all connection with earth is
broken off. A 
pure-minded living person by his aspiration and love may himself
ascend to a 
heavenly place, and there seem to speak and feel and be with those
he loved, but 
that speaking and feeling do not disturb the one there. The very
essence of the 
spiritual state would exclude all disturbance, though we can obtain
the kinds of 
feeling which exist in that condition. All that a medium obtains
are simply 
reflections and repetitions of what has occurred, recorded in the
nature of the 
sitter. A medium will describe the after death state of a person
very much 
alive, which should show how subject to mistakes and errors a
medium is. In the 
passive mediumistic state there is no control over anything; there
is merely a 
channel provided through which certain things can come, or “leak.”
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The majority of the “spiritual” communicants of the mediums are
suicides and the 
victims of “accidental” death. For not always is there death when
the body dies. 
Unless the death coincides with the end of the life-term, which is
fixed at 
birth, a man is still tied to earth until the end of his term.
But there are cases of communications with beings in the
world—almost within the 
realm of this world—beings not in physical bodies, who live and
move on another 
plane of substance, far away from connection with some easy going
medium. These 
beings are known as Nirmanakayas. They are men who have become
perfected—who 
could if they chose reach up to and hold the very highest state of
bliss, but 
who refuse that bliss because it would mean forever to forsake all
chance of 
helping their fellow-men. They can, when the nature of the person
is true and 
aspiring strongly, communicate, if it is necessary to help him. But
there is no 
mistake about these communications. They are personal, meant for
that one as 
direct help. It is the within which induces any outside help that
we receive. It 
is a recognition of the spiritual nature of ourselves and all
beings which makes 
the true condition. It is from the spiritual that all true strength
comes. And 
it is for the perfection of humanity that all the Divine
Incarnations have 
labored.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
  SLEEP AND DREAMS
There is something in each of us which enters the state called
dreams, the state 
called sleep, and the state called death. No understanding whatever
can be had 
of the states into which we pass and from which we emerge save
under the idea 
that there is an Ego, a thinker, a perceiver, a knower, an
experiencer, who 
enters the states and re-emerges there from, and that this Ego, the
real man, 
retains his integrity throughout them all.
We are more than any of the states we enter into, no matter how
highly we may 
have considered any of those states. Even if we imagine that we
have reached, or 
can reach, the highest state of intelligence and action—that which
we call the 
divine—it is we who enter it. So an understanding of the states
into which we go
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cannot be had until we recognize that there is That in us which
goes through 
them all; then we must try to understand what that something is,
and in this 
endeavor begin right where we now are; we cannot start from any
other place or 
position than where we are at any time.
What do we find, then? That we are a continuing identity. We have
passed through 
many changes from birth up to now, but our identity has not changed,
no matter 
through what changes it may have passed, or may pass. When we get
this fact 
firmly fixed in our minds we will have reached the point of
understanding that 
there is an immortal nature in each of us; that it is divine in its
essence, not 
subject to change; for It is changeless.
The dreaming state we enter just as we let go of the body, before
we pass into 
the state of dreamless sleep; and on awakening is, again, the
transitional state 
into which we return before resuming waking state in the body. We
know that we 
have all the senses in dreams, although the body is quiescent, and
the sense 
organs are not in use. We can see and feel, we hear, talk, and act,
just as we 
do in waking state, without using the physical organs associated
with those 
sensations and actions. This shows that we are conscious, alive,
existent, 
although the body knows nothing. We know further that our identity
is not 
disturbed by entering dream-state; it is we ourselves, and none
other, 
experiencing that state.
Dreaming state is known to be a very short state as contrasted with
the waking 
state. It is known that we can dream and experience through what
seems to 
represent a very long period of time in the dream, though the state
last but a 
few seconds by the clock. There is a portion, by far the greater
portion, of the 
“night’s rest” which is only known to us (in waking state) as
“dreamless sleep.” 
This is merely the slumber of the body. The body is then almost as
if one had 
left it entirely. Yet the entity must be in contact somewhere, for
he is 
existent all the time, and is conscious—the same identity. Were
this not true, 
we would not wake, or on awakening there would be a new being
altogether.
Further than these ideas as to dream and sleep Western
psychologists have not 
gone. They do not know what was known ages
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ago, and what is known to some today, that the Ego, the man, the
thinker, is 
more fully occupied, more his real self, during the dreamless
slumber of the 
body than at any other time. So it was said that the day-time of
the body is the 
night-time of the soul, and the night-time of the body is the
day-time of the 
soul. When the body sleeps, the real man is most active, with the
greatest 
degree of intelligence, but thinking and acting on another plane
altogether, in 
a different state altogether, from any known to us in ordinary waking
human 
existence.
We know nothing about sleep, although we say that we experience it.
What we know 
is that we are getting sleepy—that is, that the body is growing
exhausted—but 
sleep never comes to us. We are awake in the day-time; we are
conscious; we 
think. But our power to see and know when awake is applied almost
exclusively to 
external things of a material kind, so that what we call
knowledge—waking 
knowledge—is, practically, an application of all our powers to
physical 
existence, and to that alone. When we sleep, what takes place?
During that interval we know that the body is absolutely
irresponsive in regard 
to anything external. We do not know nor feel anything that happens
to our 
friends. The most frightful calamities might occur around about us,
and we would 
know nothing about them until we resumed control of the body. Yet
we must have 
been alive, conscious, with an unchanged identity. This brings our
minds to the 
question as to why or how it is that we know nothing when awake of
that activity 
on higher and altogether different planes during the deep sleep of
the body.
We have within us in abeyance, but not forgotten, not inaccessible,
all that 
knowledge. It is recorded, impacted, in our imperishable nature as
truly as any 
record can possibly be made—every thing that we have been through,
every degree 
of experience, of knowledge, that we have ever acquired. When we
sleep—that is, 
when the body sleeps—we go back to that fountain of knowledge which
is within 
ourselves; and “wake up” in the morning none the wiser. How can it
be that, 
possessing such knowledge, possessing the powers that belong to
immortal Spirit, 
to divine Intelligence,
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we nevertheless cannot use them, are not even aware of their
existence in us?
There is a law known as Karma, the law of action and reaction,
which has been 
stated: “Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” We have
so thought 
and acted while in the body as to produce finally an instrument
that is not in 
accord with our own real nature. We have put the power of our
intelligence upon 
a consideration and use of material things—things that appertain to
a lower 
state of being than our own—and so have become involved in them.
The brain that 
we use is responsive almost entirely to these lower ideas; so that
when we 
return into it, upon awakening, there is nothing in that brain
which will take 
the slightest impression or record of those states of consciousness
through 
which we have passed.
If we are beings who have passed through higher states during
sleep, how are we 
ever going to regain a knowledge of these possessions? If we are
told that we 
are divine in nature, not earthly; that we have an immense past;
that we have 
planes of consciousness higher than this and powers of action on
those 
planes—what does that do for us? What does that impart to us? What
does that 
arouse in us? Does it not make us look at life from a different
standpoint than 
the one we have hitherto been accustomed to take?
Everything that we do in life, every result that we experience, is
governed by 
some attitude of mind which we hold in regard to life. If one is an
atheist, let 
us say, or a materialist, who thinks that life began with this body
and will end 
with it, then all his thoughts and acts will be on that basis. But
if he changes 
that idea, as he may, for the idea that he is immortal in essential
nature, then 
that of itself begins to work a transformation.
It is not what we go through that counts; but what we learn from
it. Knowledge 
is what we should desire; not comforts nor station. We desire to
know, for in 
knowing we perceive the right things to do, the right thoughts to
hold. As we 
are thinking all the time, we are thinking either good or evil or
indifferent
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thoughts; our actions are good, evil or indifferent according to
our thoughts. 
If we begin to think aright, we give direction to that Spiritual
Force which is 
the very essence of our nature. Let a man think aright, let him
think and act 
unselfishly, and just so surely as he does that he opens up the
channels of his 
brain to a greater and greater perception and realization of his
own nature. 
When he reaches a certain point he is able to perceive that whether
the body is 
awake or asleep or dreaming, or whether the body has passed through
the state 
called death—there is no cessation for him.
Supposing we were able to pass from waking to dreaming, from
dreaming to 
sleeping, from sleeping to death, from death to re-birth in another
body—and 
able to go through all these states and changes without a single
break of 
memory, so that we could not only carry the memory intact from
lower to higher 
states, but bring it through with us from higher to lower states,
through every 
plane, bringing back the knowledge into this or an other body—what
would we be? 
Then we would know just what we are. We would know the relation of
this plane to 
every other. We could read the hearts of men. We could help them to
take a 
greater and higher stand. We should no longer be deluded by the
ideas which 
impel the majority of men. We would no longer struggle for place or
position. We 
would struggle only for knowledge, for possessions of every kind in
order that 
we might be the better able to help and teach others. We would
sojourn with 
Deity all the time, whether in a body or out of it.
It is to arouse man to an understanding of his own nature and to
the right use 
of his powers that Theosophy has been brought to him again, as it
has been 
brought in period after period by Those who are greater than we
are—Those who 
have passed through the same stages we are now passing through—our
Elder 
Brothers, the Christs of all times, the Divine Incarnations. It is
They who come 
to remind us of our own natures; to remind us and to arouse us to
action, so 
that what we really are may be known to us and expressed by us here
on this 
lowest physical plane, on which we are working out our destiny—a
destiny made
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by ourselves, a destiny which can only be changed by ourselves, by
the very 
power of that Spirit which we are..
No one can know anything for another. Each one has to know for
himself. Each one 
has to do his own learning. The object of Theosophy is to teach man
what he is, 
to show man what he is, and to present to him the necessity of his
knowing for 
himself. No vicarious atonement, no vicarious transmission of
knowledge, is 
possible. But the direction in which knowledge lies may be pointed
out; the 
steps which will lead us in that direction may be shown, as can be
done only by 
those who have passed that way before. It is exactly what is being
done. It is 
the course of all Saviors of humanity. It is the doctrine of
Krishna, of Buddha, 
of Jesus, no less than the doctrine of H. P. Blavatsky. The two
teachings that 
the West is most urgently in need of are those of Karma and
Reincarnation, the 
doctrines of hope and responsibility— Karma, the doctrine of
responsibility 
means that whatever a man sows he shall also reap—Reincarnation,
the doctrine of 
hope, means that—whatever he is reaping—there never will be a time
when he may 
not sow better seed. The very fact of suffering is a blessing.
Karma and 
Reincarnation show us that suffering is brought about by wrong
thought and 
action; through our suffering we may be brought to a realization
that a wrong 
course has been pursued. We learn through our suffering. Life is
one grand 
school of Being, and we have come to that stage where it is time
for us to learn 
to understand the purpose of existence; to grasp our whole nature
firmly; to use 
every means in our power in every direction—waking, dreaming,
sleeping, or in 
any other state—to bring the whole of our nature into accord, so
that our lower 
instrument may be in line” and thus more and more fully reflect our
divine inner 
nature.
                                                                                
                         
CONTENTS
 THE ETERNAL VERITIES
INSTINCT AND INTUITION
Instinct is a direct perception of what is right, within its own
realm. 
Intuition is a direct cognition of the truth in all things. Reason
is, as it 
were, the balance between instinct and intuition. Animals have
right instinct in 
regard to what to eat, and in regard
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to what is dangerous to them, for their instinct is acquired experience;
but 
they do not reason in their instincts—they feel them. We reason
about both our 
instincts (for we have some) and our intuitions, and usually reason
ourselves 
into a false position from a false basis of thinking. Reason is an
instrument we 
are working with, but if we start with wrong premises we are bound
to come to 
false conclusions, however faultless the reasoning. Working
logically, we can 
come to right conclusions only with an eternal premise; in no other
way shall we 
ever determine the right in our modes of looking at things.
In trying to understand instinct and intuition, therefore, we shall
have to 
ascertain their true foundation. Certainly, there must be a deep
meaning in, and 
a deep cause for, their existence. Looking upon the animal kingdom
and seeing 
therein actions proceeding for the welfare of the different animal
beings, we 
call those actions on their part instinct, without at all realizing
that some 
thing produced that instinct. It could not arise of itself. It must
have been a 
production, as all things in this or any universe are productions.
The statement 
of the ancient Wisdom-Religion is that at the root of every being
of every 
grade, of every form and of every kind, there is one
reality—Spirit, and Spirit 
alone. From Spirit have come all productions; from Spirit all
evolutions have 
been brought about. The Spirit is the same in all; the acquisition
differs in 
accordance with the degree of progress of the individual or being;
for 
evolutions proceed on individual lines. All beings are of the same
nature, but 
because the thought, the ideal and the action differ, we find in a
great 
universe like ours many kinds of intelligence evolved from the
great Root of all 
evolution—the Spirit in each being.
All beings below man are evolutions each in its own degree. Even in
the mineral 
kingdom there is form, whether that form be of a crystal or an
atom; it is a 
spiritual something with a psychic nature, expressing itself
according to its 
own acquired nature. Crystals have their own particular sympathies
and 
antipathies, their own attractions and repulsions. Are these
mechanical? Not in 
the least. They are inherent instinct—an unerring faculty which
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is but that spark of the divine lurking in every particle of in
organic matter. 
If the mineral kingdom did not have a psychic intelligence, man
could never use 
it. The same is true with the vegetable and animal kingdoms, which,
each, adds 
something to the mere psychical intelligence of the mineral kingdom
in a limited 
way. Then, coming to man, we find that he has the power of
transcending his 
conditions, of standing apart from them and looking upon them as a 
self-conscious being, separate from them, and of an entirely
different nature. 
That which is but a spark of divinity in the lower kingdoms grows
to be a flame 
in the higher beings.
There are seven distinct stages through which all forms come, from
nebular 
matter down to our present concrete formations. Conditioned
existence is 
produced by various kinds of lives in every state of matter—by
different 
acquired intelligences. But Man had a large part in the determination
of the 
processes, of the degrees of descent to be undertaken, and it was
according to 
his knowledge and processes instituted by him, that the state or
conditions of 
the kingdoms below him were made. For Man was a self-conscious
being when this 
earth began. Man stands midway between spirit and what we call
matter; he is the 
turning point of evolution, and on him depends the future of this
evolution. Man 
has both instinct and intuition. Every cell in our bodies is
instinctively 
impelled by us. Whether we are conscious of it or not, that
instinct causes them 
to evolve. The lives in our bodies have been trained life after
life, until 
their action is automatic and reflex. The cells of the different
organs have 
their own special impulsations. The cells subtract from food
whatever is 
necessary for the composition of the blood, the bones, the various
tissues, and 
the brain—which, too, is made of the food we eat and is changing
all the time, 
like any other part of the body, being in constant dissociation.
But the Real 
Man is not his body, nor his brain, and it is to the Real Man that
intuition 
pertains.
Both instinct and intuition have been gained in no other way than
through 
observation and experience. All the instinct
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of animals is a gain in that particular species along the lines of
their own 
growth in intelligence and expression in bodies. So, man’s
intuition carries 
with it all the knowledge existing in his real nature. Man has
lived lives 
anterior to this one, not few but many—even on a planet which we
inhabited 
before this earth began, or, rather, before we began with this
earth. The many, 
many experiences gained through many, many lives are still with us.
We have 
never lost them. They are still resident and potentially active in
our innermost 
being—in that real nature of ours which each one of us reaches
every twenty-four 
hours, when the body is asleep, when the dreaming state is passed.
There lies 
intuition— the sum total of all our past experiences. Something
comes through 
occasionally, giving us an inkling of what is the true nature. The
voice of the 
conscience is the outlook of that true nature upon the action which
is 
contemplated. Some people hearing that “voice of the silence” think
God is 
speaking to them, or that some other outside being impresses them.
But, in 
reality, it came from their own inner nature—was born from and
drawn from the 
accumulation of all past wisdom; it was “the voice” of their own
spiritual 
nature.
The channel through which the intuition may flow may be made clear
by any and 
every one of us. In what way? By desiring to perpetuate the
personality? Never, 
in this nor any other world. There must be a recognition of what,
in reality, 
our personality is. It is not the body; it is the ideas held. Ideas
make a body 
a fit vehicle for them; ideas control the action of the body. Our
personalities 
are composed of our ideas, our likes and dislikes, our attractions
and 
repulsions, of the little things that we demand for ourselves, that
buttress up 
in us the notion that all this is for me. This is not the Real Man.
The 
personality can not be retained; whatever the ideas held today, they
are not the 
same as those we held in the past; yet in the past we acted, as
now, according 
to the ideas then entertained. In the future we shall have still
other ideas, 
and will act in accordance with them. It is our thinking which
limits our 
action. It is, then, for us to see that we are real spiritual
beings internally, 
and that it is only the
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outer—the personality—which needs clarifying. The clearing can come
about only 
by acting for and as the One Self. Then we shall express our real
natures 
clearly in this world of material things; then we shall know what
some men only 
suspect—for intuition is a direct cognition of the truth.
The Message of Theosophy was given us that we may reach into that
part of our 
nature which knows, which notes and knows. This is not an
impossible task; for 
we are not poor miserable sinners, and others have accomplished it.
They went 
this way and tested out for themselves, as is the only true way for
every one. 
They found it to be absolute fact that all this inner knowledge, or
intuition, 
is recoverable. They know that our ideas, our thoughts, our modes
of thinking, 
our limited understandings of our natures make our hindrances; they
know that 
neither the body, nor any environment whatever is detrimental, but
that every 
environment is an opportunity—the greater the obstacles, the more
hindrances of 
circumstance, the greater the opportunity. If we could but be wise
enough, if we 
could open our eyes wide enough to see, we could learn something
from the 
various instincts perceived in the kingdoms below us. All those
beings are 
proceeding by instinct on that long, long journey which leads to
that place 
where we now are. If we are wise, by intuition we also will proceed
on that 
small old Path which leads far away—the Path that all the
Predecessors of all 
time have trodden. All the Beings who have appeared in the world as
our Elder 
Brothers—Divine Incarnations—in past civilizations have reached
that stage 
toward which we are now consciously or unconsciously proceeding.
Our intuition 
is not so asleep as we think. It is shining in us all the time. If
we will only 
remove the false conceptions which prevent us now from seeing,
those of us who 
are operating on this side of the dark veil can draw that veil
aside and let the 
light shine through.
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CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE CREATIVE WILL
There is no possible way of understanding or explaining the nature
of any being 
whatever except through Evolution, which is always an unfolding
from within 
outwards, the expression of spirit or consciousness through the
intelligence 
acquired. The will of spirit in action has produced everything that
exists.
If we understand that intelligent will lies behind everything that
exists, is 
the cause of everything that is, is the Creator in the universe, we
may perhaps 
gain some idea of what it is necessary for us to know in order
properly to use 
our powers.
All stand as creators in the midst of our creations. There are
creators below us 
in the scale of intelligence. We stand in another place, with a
wider range of 
vision, a greater fund of experience; so we can see that below us,
infinitely 
below us, are beings so small that many of them could be gathered
on the point 
of a needle. Yet the scientists who have examined them under many
conditions 
cannot deny to these infinitesimal organisms a certain
intelligence, an ability 
to seek what they like and to avoid what they dislike. From the
smallest 
conceivable point of perception and action there is a constantly
widening range 
of expression, of evolution, a development more and more in the
direction of a 
greater range of being. This evolution of intelligence, or soul,
proceeds very 
slowly in the lower kingdoms, more rapidly in the animal kingdom,
and in man has 
reached that stage where the being himself knows that he is, that
he is 
conscious, that he can understand to some extent his own nature and
the natures 
of the beings below him, and see their relation to each other.
Man has now reached a point where he begins to inquire what more
there is for 
him to know. He has ceased to think exclusively of the material; he
is sensing 
his own nature, and he asks, What am I, whence came I, whither do I
go?
If we have these ideas, we can perceive that there must have been
in the past 
some amongst men who asked these very questions that we are now
asking, and who 
took the steps that car-
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ried them to a higher point of experience and knowledge than we now
occupy. It 
is these very beings, now above us, who form a stratum of
consciousness, of 
knowledge and power, that we have not—men who have passed through
the stages we 
are now in. They are the very ones who come to this earth as
Saviors from time 
to time.
As Christians, we look back to the advent of One such, and think of
Him as 
unique. Yet He came in His time to but one small nation; He said
Himself that He 
came but to the Jews. Do we not know that every civilization and
every tribe 
that ever has existed has held a similar record—that of some great
Personage who 
came amongst them?
Back of all the religions that ever have been, there is the record,
the 
tradition, of some great Personage. And we find an astonishing fact
in studying 
the scriptures and teachings of other days—each of these great
Teachers taught 
the same doctrines. There is no difference between the teachings of
Jesus and 
the teachings of Buddha, although those teachings are recorded in
different 
languages and an interval of six hundred years separated the two
great Teachers. 
What is true of these two is like wise true of all the other many
Saviors of 
different times and peoples—they all taught the same fundamental
ideas.
This fact suggests that there is a body of Men, of perfected men,
product of 
past civilizations and evolution, our Elder Brothers, in fact, who
have acquired 
and are the Custodians of the knowledge and experience gained
through aeons of 
time. Their knowledge is actually the very Science of Life, for it
enters into 
every department of existence, of nature. They know the natures and
processes of 
the beings below man, and above man, as we know the processes of
ordinary 
every-day experience. This knowledge they have preserved and
recorded, and they 
have the memory of it, just as we have the memory of yesterday’s
experiences and 
events.
They have not extended their power to know. We have each of us the
same power to 
know that is theirs. But they have extended the facilities of the
instruments 
which they possess. They
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have improved what they have. They have better brains. They have
better bodies. 
How did they acquire them? By fulfilling every duty which faced
them, regardless 
of what came to themselves. They thought nothing of acquiring power
and 
knowledge for themselves; they thought only of gaining power that
they might 
expend it for the benefit of every living creature. In so doing
they opened the 
doors to the full play of the power of the Spirit within.
We do the very opposite. We contract the divine power of the Spirit
within us to 
the pin-holes of personal desires and selfishness. Do we not see
that? Do we not 
see that we ourselves stand in the way of the use of the power
within us because 
our ideas are selfish, small, mean?
The great work of evolution proceeds from within outwards. The Soul
is the 
Perceiver; it looks directly on ideas. The action of the will is
through ideas. 
The ideas give the directions. Small ideas, small force; large
ideas, large 
force; the Force itself is illimitable, for it is the force of
Spirit, infinite 
and exhaustless. What we lack are universal ideas. We need to
arouse in 
ourselves that power of perception which will lay the whole field
of being open 
to us. A stream cannot rise higher than its source.
The nature of man can never be understood in the least degree by
the ideas and 
methods which modern psychologists and scientists and popular
religions are 
following. They all proceed from the basis of physical life, many
of them from 
the basis of one life only. They tabulate experiences of many
kinds, with out 
any firm basis upon which to fix their thought, their reason, and
so never 
arrive at any definite conclusion or real knowledge of what man is,
or of the 
powers that he may exhibit. This is their use of the creative
power, but it is a 
limited use, a misuse. Those who follow that way usually have some
selfish 
purpose at the base of their desire, something they wish to achieve
for 
themselves, some benefit they desire for themselves. This is not
the way. 
Theosophy says that if the desire or aspiration is unselfish,
noble, universal, 
then the force which flows through the indi-
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vidual is grand, noble, universal in its character. Further, that
every human 
being has in him the same elements, the same possibilities, as any
other, even 
the noblest and highest beings in this or any solar system. This
puts man in 
quite a different position from where our religions, our science,
or our 
philosophy of the West place him. They all treat of man as if he
were his body 
or his mind, as if he were the creature and not the creator.
The body changes; we change our minds; but there is a Something in
us which does 
not change, which does not depend on change, whether of body, mind
or 
circumstances, but which is the creator, the ruler, the experiencer
of all 
changes of every kind. It is this portion of our nature—the real
Man within us— 
that we need to know the nature of. If we can reach such a point of
perception 
that we can grasp the fact of the Spirit within us, we shall have
reached a 
point where a knowledge of ourselves is possible; and if a
knowledge of 
ourselves, then a knowledge through that of all other beings
whatsoever.
The great Teachers point to the fact that the real basis of man’s
nature is 
Divinity, Spirit, God. Deity is not some other being, however
great. It is not 
something outside. It is the very highest in ourselves and in all
others. That 
is the God, and all that any man may know of this Spirit is what he
knows in 
himself, of himself, through himself. This is the idea that all the
ancients put 
forward in saying there is but one Self, and that we are to see the
Self in all 
things and all things in the Self. That is what we all do to some
extent; we see 
the Self, more or less. Nothing is seen outside ourselves;
everything that we 
see or know is within ourselves. But we think of the Self in us as
mortal, 
perishable, having no existence apart from this body and this mind,
and as 
separate from the Self in all other forms.
If we had within us and behind us all the power that there is in
the universe, 
and we had no channel through which that power could flow—or only a
narrow, 
twisted, distorted channel— that great Power would be of no use to
us. would be 
non-existent to us. To open up the channel it is necessary for us
to understand 
the real basis: the God within, immortal and eternal, the
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Source of all being, our very selves; second, that all action
proceeds from that 
Source and Center of our being and of all being. Then who is the
constructor of 
all? How was all this evolution brought about? All the beings
involved in it 
make up both the world and its inhabitants; all that exists is
Self-produced, 
Self-evolved—the creation of Spiritual beings acting in, on, and
through each 
other. The whole force of evolution, and the whole power behind it,
is the human 
will, so far as humanity is concerned. We do not realize that every
form 
occupied by any being is composed of Lives, each undergoing
evolution on its own 
account, aided, impelled or hindered by the force of the higher
form of 
consciousness that evolved it. For this universe is embodied
Consciousness, or 
Spirit. And just as a single drop of water contains within it every
element and 
characteristic of the whole ocean, so each being, however low in
the degree of 
its intelligence, contains within itself the potentiality and
possibilities of 
the highest. The will of the Spirit in action has produced all.
The great Message of Theosophy has provided for every interested
enquirer the 
means by which he may know the truth about himself and nature. Just
as the Elder 
Brothers have provided in the past, so They have again in our day.
Everything 
that Humanity needs has been given to us. But can you give to any
one what he 
does not Want? Can you cause to enter into the mind of another what
that mind 
will not receive?
There has to be an open mind, a pure heart, an eager intellect, an
unveiled 
spiritual perception, before there is any hope for us. As long as
we are 
self-centered, as long as we are satisfied with what we know and
what we have, 
this great Message is not for us. It is for the hungry, for the
weary, for those 
who are desirous of knowledge, for those who see the absolute
paucity of what 
has been put before us as knowledge by those who style themselves
our teachers, 
for those who find no explanation any where of the mysteries that
surround us, 
who do not know themselves, who do not understand themselves. For
them there is 
a way; for them there is food in abundance; for them this whole
Movement is kept 
in being by one single will, the Will of the
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Elder Brothers who have carried these great eternal truths through
good and evil 
in order that mankind may be benefited; not desiring any reward,
not desiring 
any recognition, desiring only that Their fellow men, Their younger
brothers, 
may know, may realize what They know.                              
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
MAN, VISIBLE AND INVISIBLE
“There are two kinds of beings in the world, the one divisible, and
the other 
indivisible: the divisible is all things and the creatures, the
indivisible is 
called Kutastha, or he who standeth on high unaffected. But there
is another 
spirit designated as the Supreme Spirit—Paramatma—which permeates
and sustains 
the three worlds.”—Bhagavad-Gita.
In considering these statements, our immediate tendency is to make
a 
separateness—a division—in our minds; but to understand nature at
all, to 
understand ourselves at all, we may not make any such division.
Both the 
divisible and the indivisible, and the Supreme Spirit, exist within
each and 
every being. The “three worlds” exist in the nature of man as a
being. Man, 
“visible and invisible,” is Man, “divisible and indivisible.” There
are 
different classes of visible beings, as well as different classes
of invisible 
beings, but whatever we may know of those different classes must
come from a 
perception within ourselves. For that perception, however high,
there is no 
stoppage any where; it may reach to the utmost confines of space.
The power in 
each one is the Supreme Spirit.
When w look at a human being with our physical eyes, we are able to
see only the 
form; when we listen to the speech of a human being, we are able to
understand 
only the sounds that we hear, or the ideas that the words convey.
We can not 
tell just what a human being is, just what his possibilities are,
or what 
knowledge is his, either by looking at him or by hearing him speak.
We may know 
this or that presentment, or the various circumstances under which
we came in 
contact; we may gain ideas from those contacts; but to know one
through and 
through, root and branch, is not given to any mere physical
thinker. So
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there is in the human being that which is invisible—that power of
perception and 
expression of which we sense only a part. That invisible part of
man has never 
been fathomed, though it exists in all of us, and from it all that
is visible 
has sprung.
Spirit is invisible, yet can we think of a place where Spirit is
not? Spirit is 
everywhere, in everything, the cause, the sustainer, of all that
was, is, or 
ever shall be. Spirit is not outside of us; the same Spirit is in
all; whatever 
differences we may be able to perceive in any other are not
differences of 
Spirit, but differences in range of perception. All our powers rest
upon that 
One Spiritual Nature. The limitations placed upon the power to
express are not 
made by any external force whatever, but made by ourselves, by the
ideas that we 
hold. Our range of perception is governed by the ideas we hold in
regard to 
ourselves, our nature, and the life about us. These ideas that
control our 
physical lives and our minds are, in fact, the limitations in
ourselves; yet, 
however varied, however high, however low they may be, their very
permanency 
rests on the Spirit itself and every one of them springs from
perceptions of 
Spirit. Truth and error both spring from perceptions of Spirit, and
by the very 
power of Spirit are sustained. Ideas rule actions, and, as ideas
have, like 
actions, their cycle of return, so we create a vicious cycle in
which we become 
involved, from the one single fact that we constantly identify
ourselves with 
this, that, or the other condition. But this very power of
self-identification 
is from Spirit.
Visible man—his body, his physical instrument—alone is a growth
from below 
upwards. The physical body is merely the shell of the man, made of
matter of the 
earth, from the three lower kingdoms—mineral, vegetable, and
animal—and is being 
constantly renewed from day to day, constantly worn out from day to
day. Man, 
himself, is that invisible power and entity which inhabits the
body, which is 
the cause of its present construction and development from lower
forms of 
consciousness. Man, himself, is above all physicality. From the
physical point 
of view, man, himself, is absolutely invisible. He is that which
acts. No form 
may restrain him. No form can in any real sense
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contain him. Any form may be the focus from which he may and can
act. The Real 
Teaching is that the man himself, as spiritual being, descends from
the plane of 
spirituality, or spiritual self-consciousness, step by step,
through all the 
stages of condensation of matter; that he meets the uprising tide
of form from 
the lower kingdoms, and when the most perfect form of all has been
brought to 
its highest stage of development, he enters it. Not until the
invisible man 
enters the physical instrument, could there be humanity at all. So
we, as human 
beings, are the product of the higher Divine Spirit, of all the
knowledge of a 
past immensity of time, and also, of all that lies in the lower
kingdoms, which 
constitutes our lower nature. Man’s higher nature is not divisible.
It is 
constant, eternal and true. The lower nature is impermanent and
changing, but 
the invisible man within is the one who makes the changes, who
forces on the 
changes, and who gathers experience and knowledge through them.
There is no 
static condition for any instrument whatever in all the kingdoms,
in all the 
worlds and in all systems. Never-ceasing motion, the power to move
on and on, in 
greater and greater ranges of perception, is the birth-right of
every human 
being. We are like the one who went out from his father’s house and
dwelt among 
the swine and fed upon husks. The time must come for us to say,
like the 
prodigal son, ‘ will arise and return to my Father”—I will arise
and resume my 
own real place in Nature; using all the instruments that I have, I
will work to 
the end that all beings may share in all knowledge, that they may
progress in a 
consecutive range of steps, ever on and upward, without the breaks
and obstacles 
that a false conception of our nature brings about. Such is the
whole object of 
the ancient Wisdom Religion—that man may resume his own birthright.
No being or 
beings of any grade can confer upon man the knowledge that he alone
can get. 
That knowledge is all in reserve in the invisible part of his
nature, the result 
of every experience of all his immense past; it is right with him,
although he 
has made his physical instrument of such
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a nature that it will not register what he, as the real being—the
invisible 
man—knows. Man, the invisible being, eternally is; for him there is
never for an 
instant cessation of consciousness. The curtain rings down on one
scene to 
immediately rise on another. When the body is at rest, the man is
still acting 
and thinking, in another way, in a finer form, on planes not so
restricted as is 
the physical plane. There he has freedom. There he sees and feels
and hears and 
speaks and acts (as he does on the physical plane) but he can be
here, there or 
elsewhere, wherever his thought brings him, wherever his desire is;
he can move 
freely and unhampered by gross physical material. The power of
perception of all 
kinds of substance, and of all kinds of beings is the power of
everyone of us, 
but that power to see lies behind the physical eye; it belongs to
the eye 
within—the eye of the soul.
How shall we recognize that power? By acting from the basis of our
eternal, 
divine nature; by assuming our own identity; by ceasing to place
dependence on 
any philosophy, on any science, or religion, or any statement
whatever; by 
depending on the reality of the inner, true, spiritual man; by
clarifying our 
mental conceptions; by thinking right thoughts and by acting in
accordance with 
them. In that way, every channel in the body becomes open to what
goes on when, 
as spiritual beings, we leave the physical instrument at night, and
are active 
on the inner, spiritual planes of being. Each and every human being
must open up 
those channels on his higher nature for himself. He must know for
himself, and 
the only place where he may know is within himself. Each one, in
reality, stands 
at the center of the universe, and all the rest are pictures and
sounds and 
experiences, in which he may see the play of spirit.
How may we obtain a resumption of divinity? It can not be obtained
by much 
speaking, nor by argument. It can be obtained only by taking the
position. 
Always we act in accordance with the position assumed. So let us
take the 
highest position, the position that is shown by everything in
nature. The 
highest of the high is ours. We must assume that high position. We
must affirm
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it. How else can we gain a knowledge of immortality than by taking
the position 
of immortality? We assume and act in accord with the position of
wickedness very 
easily. If we take the high position, we not only act in accordance
with the 
greatness of the position taken, but we come to a realization of it
within 
ourselves, where is all perception of it, all fulfillment of it.
What knowledge could we have of immortality from the point of view
of mortality? 
What idea of perfection could we get from the basis of
imperfection? None but a 
faulty one. The highest idea on that basis would merely be less
imperfection. 
Real perfection does not mean a relative perfection; it means an
intimate 
knowledge of the essential basis of everything that exists in
nature. True 
spirituality is not a hazy condition; not a mere existence without
action; but 
the power to know and to do, to have what the ancients called
‘all-knowingness.” 
When we reach "all-knowingness" then are we truly
divine—-divine in knowledge, 
divine in power, acting through every conceivable state of matter,
and through 
every conceivable instrument. And that is our great destiny. Just
let us seize 
it. Life is ours. Spirit is ours. Consciousness is ours. Eternal
existence is 
ours. Just let us take it.
The greatest of all knowledge does exist. All the experience of the
past, all 
the civilizations that ever have been, have produced beings who now
are the 
custodians of all the knowledge that has been gained. That
knowledge is waiting 
for us as soon as we shall take the necessary steps to fit
ourselves to become 
the possessors of it. That knowledge includes all intellectual
knowledge, all 
spiritual knowledge, and all knowledge of every force in nature.
Great and 
powerful as are some forces that we know of now, there are forces
to be known 
that far transcend them all. The power to destroy a world is
reachable by the 
one who takes the right step; but the one who takes the right step
will never 
destroy. He will only build. He will use all the power that he has
to construct 
a path on which humanity may travel the way that he has gone. If,
then, we all 
think of ourselves as eternal invisible beings, acting through
visible 
impermanent instruments, we shall get a
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better and truer conception of life; and if we will try to reach
inward to the 
innermost part of our heart of hearts, we shall find a greater
vision ours—a 
power to perceive in wider ranges, to greater depth, with more
effect than can 
ever be gained by our physical organs of sight. As one of our Great
Teachers 
said, “All nature is before you; take what you can.” It is for each
one to 
listen, to learn, to apply.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
RENUNCIATION OF ACTION
It would be a grave mistake to think that by not acting one frees
himself from 
the consequences of action. Such would be a totally false view of
the 
“renunciation of action.” The whole universe is action. First,
last, and all the 
time ceaseless motion lies behind everything that is. Among all
creatures the 
impulse to move on—to progress—is action, and it comes from the
very nature of 
Spirit itself; it cannot be denied. Nor can one, even if he should
think so, 
ever cease from action, in not doing that which ought to be done;
for there is 
action in the very thought—thought being the real plane of action
and that which 
induces any kind of action. Without action there is no manifested
life. While we 
live, we are constantly acting. There is not a moment when action
ceases, 
whether the action is through a mind in a body, or after the
terrestrial mind 
and body are laid aside for the time being and functioning goes on
in inner 
instruments and sheaths of the soul.
Motion is the basis of man’s physical existence. There is not one
atom, not one 
molecule in the body, which is not in constant motion, and it is
through that 
constant motion that the body is enabled to register the various
differing 
effects presented by physical matter itself. But within the body is
that which 
gives direction—the mind—or that bundle of ideas which each one
has. In the last 
analysis, it comes home to each individual that he himself is his
own judge, 
jury and executioner; for, if his ideas are small and concerned
only with 
physical existence, then the
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motion given is in a wrong direction, personal and physical. If,
however, we 
realize that such ideas as we have accepted and made a basis for
our action may 
not be true, we can change and enlarge them, or reject them
altogether. Who, 
then, are WE, having the power behind both body and mind to arouse
change?
We are the real mover behind the ideas and behind the will—the 
Experiencer—Spirit itself—that which looks out through our eyes and
that which 
senses through our organs. It is the same Self in each and every
instrument. 
Spirit has the faculty of identifying itself with the business upon
which the 
mind is concentrated, so that it becomes involved in its
instruments and 
confused by its involution. Although we are Spirit—divine, eternal,
beginningless, endless—we have created right or wrong ideas as to
our own 
natures, as to anything and everything which we experience in any
direction, 
upon any plane of being. We are the One Reality behind all
experiences, behind 
all planes of being—which are but temporary in their nature, while
Man himself, 
divested of every means of communication with them, becomes creator
of his own 
means. Within the spiritual nature lie every possible power, force
and means for 
the creation of a more and more perfect instrument, yet, by our own
actions, by 
our own creation of false ideals as their basis, we have made the
conditions in 
which we find ourselves.
We could get beyond the troubles by which we are affected, if we
would cease to 
deal in every case with effects. We are constantly in a sea of
effects, and we 
try to relate one effect to another without for one moment going
back to the 
basis of causation—to the Self, the Spirit within. In the Spirit,
no one of us 
differs—no human being, nor any kind of being—whether above man,
man, or below 
man. The One Spirit in all is the perceiving power. It is the
executing power. 
It is the creative, the preservative and the regenerative power in
every being. 
Out side of us lies nothing but perception, but within us lies the
power of 
realization of Spirit itself and of the powers which lie within
that Spirit. Our 
differences lie in our spiritual advancement and in our
discriminative 
knowledge, according to our self-evolved
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nature of mind and body—an evolution which always takes place under
law, under 
the same law ruling from the minutest life to the highest spiritual
being—that 
inherent law which is the power to act. Action is merely the
execution of that 
spiritual law.
We are learning all the time because we are acting all the time. In
every fresh 
combination, the understanding and proper use of it points us
onward and enables 
us to go still further into higher worlds and wider combinations.
Each one of us 
is a sensitive instrument—the embodiment of everything there is in
the whole of 
nature; for we have evolved from instruments of homogeneous
substance more 
concrete instruments and we move in them, as spiritual beings from
an immense 
past, to make all possible differentiations and combinations to be
obtained in 
our evolutionary stream. And let us not forget that we were
concerned not only 
with the beings above us and those of our own high estate when we
began this 
evolution, but with all the beings below us in the mineral,
vegetable, and 
animal kingdoms. All are interdependent. It can only be when we
realize our own 
natures and act in accordance with them that we shall fulfill the
purpose of our 
life here, which, in fact, includes every being of every kind
anywhere. We act 
upon them all to some degree in every thought and action of our
own, and just as 
we affect them so the effect flows back upon us through beings like
us, and 
beings above us and below us. So, the whole course of
understanding—the proper 
ideas from which to act—lies within our selves and not outside.
To imagine that we are here by chance, that there is no law, that
there are 
accidents, that we are not responsible for our selves being
impinged upon while 
others are gratified of their desires—is an error. We have brought
ourselves 
into the present condition by doing similar things before. We have
in other 
lives pursued a course that shut us out from a knowledge of our own
nature. We 
have so acted through the inherent power within ourselves as to bring
about a 
closure between our high perception and our lives in the body; we
have affected 
others in a
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similar way, and they in their turn come back to affect us and keep
us on that 
plane of thought and action. For it can be seen that our thoughts
are action 
more than the acts themselves. It is the way we think that produces
action, and 
others are permeable to these thoughts of ours, be they good or
bad.
There is the faculty in man of identifying himself with whatever
condition he 
finds himself in—the faculty, called in The Bhagavad-Gita Ahankara,
or egotism. 
As soon as we are involved in any set of circumstances—be it
happiness or 
misery—we immediately identify ourselves with the prevailing
condition, 
forgetting that there were other conditions before and that there
will be other 
conditions in the future with which we may again identify
ourselves, if we have 
not learned to do otherwise. So we go on thinking that we are this
body, that we 
are this nation, these events, and this period of time. All these
ideas are 
subversive of an understanding of our true natures, but they are
eradicable, 
because we ourselves created and maintain them.
A true understanding may be had by no matter whom or where through
what is known 
in one of the ancient writings— the Mundaka-Upanishad”—as the
shaving process. 
It is the elimination of all that is not the Self. For nothing that
we can see 
is Self; nothing that we can hear, or smell, or taste, or know is
Self. The Self 
senses all, through its instruments, but is not any of these
things. Nor are we 
any of the experiences we have ‘had, are now having, or will have.
We are that 
which experiences, and are not any of the changes. We are none of
the processes 
through which we go every day, from sleeping to waking, or from
life to death, 
according to universal law. ‘WE never sleep; WE never die. Sleep is
just the 
reaction of the body, and when the body sleeps WE are still
thinking and 
perceiving and experiencing, in the dreaming state, and in deep
sleep states 
beyond, where we have full spiritual self-consciousness.
Why do we bring back so little memory of the action of consciousness
during deep 
sleep? Because our registering apparatus is of a small calibre. The
physical 
brain which is the register of our thinking—our manipulating
instrument 
here—like every-
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thing else in our bodies is formed from food, and so is constantly
changing as 
our impressions change. It becomes receptive only to the constant
influence of 
our earthly thinking. But, if while awake, we take a spiritual
basis for our 
thinking—that which compels us in right action, with the
recognition of all men 
coming from the same source and proceeding toward the same goal,
though the path 
varies with the pilgrim—thinking and acting on that basis during
our daily 
lives, then the brain will become responsive to those other forms
of 
consciousness during the sleep of the body; then, all that we know
on the high 
planes of being can be carried through and to a great degree
expressed in the 
body.
In all processes something of change is going on. So, action from
the highest 
basis of thought institutes an action in the body itself and
changes the very 
nature of the lives in our bodies, making them porous to the inner
side of 
nature so that they finally become translucent, and permeable to
all higher and 
finer influences. There is the higher and inner side of any and
every form that 
exists—mineral, vegetable, animal, human or beyond the human—and as
we become 
more universal in our modes of thinking and of action, we contact
more fully 
that higher, inner side. We raise ourselves higher, and we see the
world as 
quite different from the one perceived when we were treading the
path of mere 
terrestrial existence. ‘We see what all false modes of thought and
action have 
brought about- animosities, wars, divisions between individuals,
pestilences, 
disease, cyclones and earthquakes, noxious insects and animals.
The great errors of mental conception which darken man’s mind keep
him as an 
ever-acting being creating the conditions which bring him his
sorrows and 
disabilities. If there were no human being in the world who would
ever harm 
another, there would be no harm. All harmful things would
disappear. But even 
though there be harmful beings, and their nature can not be
changed, we can so 
change our own attitude that no harm can come to us from them. If
harm comes to 
us, there must be harm in us. The Yogi of the East can go into the
midst of all
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kinds of harmful creatures unharmed, because of his own
harmlessness. When our 
thought is fixed on false ideas, it is apparent to the harmful
creatures, and 
their instinct of so-called self-preservation moves them to attack
us, because 
they recognize a danger in us. The natures of those beings below us
will be 
changed only by man, for they can not change themselves. It is the
lives which 
we are using in our own bodies—themselves motion, action—which
become the 
embodiment of beings in the various kingdoms, because we have
endowed them with 
our thought and action and given them direction, as each moment
passes, back on 
to their own plane. We are their creators and their providence, or
we delay 
their progress by misunderstanding our own natures and,
consequently, theirs.
What will be in the future depends upon those who have the power to
act in any 
state of matter. The civilization that now is has been created by
ourselves, but 
behind all true progress there must be a universal conception of
Spirit, mind, 
and action. Let us dismiss any idea of renunciation of action. Act
always. We 
have to act. Every principle of our nature compels us to act. If we
fear or fail 
to act in any given place where the situation calls for action,
then we have 
acted in a wrong way, for we have missed an opportunity. And an
error of 
omission is worse than an error of commission. Act, then, but act
for and as the 
Self of all creatures. Renounce not action, but selfish interest in
every 
thought and act.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE LAW OF CORRESPONDENCES
“ Law of Correspondences” is a greater subject than people are
liable to 
suspect; yet we all know something of correspondences in the simple
facts of 
nature—the seven colors of the spectrum, the seven notes of the
scale. Each 
color of each octave corresponds to the same color of another
octave. We see 
only a certain number of rates of vibration, but above the number
perceptible to 
us are those too fine for us to perceive with our physical senses,
and, also 
below, are vibrations too coarse for our
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perception. ‘We stand in the middle, as it were, of a great range
of 
perceptions, aware of only a portion of the universe in which we
live. The same 
is true with regard to sounds——from the note do up to Si; do
corresponds to 
every other do in the seven octaves which we are able to perceive
physically; 
but these seven octaves are merely a portion of all the great
octaves of nature 
above us and below us. There is correspondence between the high and
the low 
throughout all nature, because the great Center of Life, of
Consciousness, of 
Perception is the same in every being of what ever grade; and
because from 
within that Center proceeds all action. The use of the power to act
which is 
inherent in that Center is the cause of all manifestation.
All things which are visible come from the invisible. In the
evolution of a 
planet there is a beginning in homogeneous, radiant matter—such as
composes the 
Milky Way—the basis of all subsequent forms that are brought about,
or produced, 
by the beings existent in that homogeneous state. Each being is a
Center and 
each Center is the same as the One Great Center. Proceeding from
the same 
Source, necessarily, all beings proceed under the same laws. The
same Law rules 
all beings. The power to act and the subsequent reaction—the law of
laws which 
we know as Karma—is brought into operation by all beings to produce
the 
manifested universe and all the differentiations in forms and
substance. Thus 
there is a connection between each being and every other being.
There is a 
correspondence between each being and every other being. There is a
correspondence between the constituents of each being and the
constituents of 
every other being.
The law which rules the atoms of our world as well as the highest
spiritual 
beings in it—that law inherent in the Center of each being—proceeds
in a 
definite, orderly mode. This progress is known to be divided into
seven degrees, 
or the septenary nature, from the states of fine matter down to the
matter that 
we now know in the body. All beings go through forms in the various
states, and 
not only do they go through them but they possess them at the
present time. Man 
possesses every body which
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ever has existed for him in any stage of matter. But our planet is
one of many 
planets. It exists in a solar system which is one of many solar
systems. There 
are inhabitants of other planets— some of them below us in point of
development 
and others so much higher than we that if we knew the state of
their progress we 
would esteem them divine beings. All beings of each and every
planet are of the 
same Center and proceed under the same universal law of
manifestation. Thus, 
there is a correspondence between each and every planet: we are
related to Mars, 
to Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn and the Moon by certain
correspondences in 
fact, there are organs in our bodies which correspond to the
various planets.
At the root of all these correspondences with planets, beings and
states of 
matter, and behind all these points of attachment with every
thing—the most 
minute as well as the coarsest—lies a tremendous, almost immeasurable
SCIENCE 
related to all portions of the universe, to every state of matter
and every 
plane of consciousness—a science which by our self-induced and
self- devised 
efforts it is possible for us to attain it ourselves. For knowledge
does not 
exist outside of us, nor does knowledge exist without the knowers
of it. Always 
the knowers of the greater knowledge have achieved it through
observation and 
experience. Those Beings who are greater than we are and who have
handed down to 
us Theosophy—the science of life and the art of living—in the far
distant past 
had to go through similar experiences to those we are now
encountering. So again 
we see there is a correspondence in ourselves with those higher
Beings, and, as 
well, with lower beings. We have to manifest as various classes of
beings, some 
on higher planes and some on lower planes. The forms of the
kingdoms below us 
are embodiments of minor grades of consciousness on their way up to
our estate, 
which they will reach when we have progressed to still higher
states, under the 
law of evolution. For evolution of form is always brought about by
the extension 
of the Consciousness of the being in habiting the form, and our own
purpose, as 
spiritual beings connected with all states of matter, is to evolve
a better and 
better
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instrument on this plane of being to correspond to, or be
accessible to, those 
inner states of being and higher planes of consciousness which we
all in reality 
possess. It may seem strange to us that we possess what we know
nothing of, and 
that there are powers latent in us which in our present case we are
unable to 
manifest. But we ought to see that we have the power to learn. We
have the power 
to learn sciences of various kinds, or languages entirely different
from those 
we now know. The power to learn is within us. We could not learn
these things if 
they were new—that is, due to some formation of nature separate
from ourselves. 
There is a power that we may gain over all nature, and ‘use, for in
fact nothing 
is of use by way of knowledge that can not be practical for the
true evolution 
of man, for the forwarding of humanity. There is a certain
knowledge in the 
possession of some which relates to the occult sciences, to powers
which we do 
not presently possess but which are latent in us—the reason for
either latency 
or possession lying in the fact that this life is the reaping of
what has gone 
on be fore. As day succeeds day and life succeeds life, as planet
succeeds 
planet and solar system succeeds solar system, so we have come down
through the 
immeasurable past to the present conditions—to conditions, let it
be remembered, 
where spirit and matter conjoin, where man may become higher than
any being in 
our solar system because he is conjoined with the lower kingdoms;
because he may 
so increase his knowledge in connection with those lower kingdoms
that lie may 
raise them up and use the powers that exist there and are produced
by beings of 
every grade. Let us remember, too, that even on this physical plane
there are 
beings other than those we ordinarily see in mineral, vegetable,
animal and 
human embodiments; there are invisible beings existing in what we
call our air, 
in the ether, in electricity, in fire—for it is life everywhere in
this 
universe; there is not a hand’s breadth of vacant ‘ space anywhere.
However 
minute, visible or invisible, the forms of life may be, they are
Centers of 
Consciousness, beginnings of perception, the beginnings of
individuality—ever 
increasing from form to
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form until the human form is reached, and then, on and on. For we
as human 
beings are not the product of this earth. Our bodies are; but as
spiritual 
beings we were present before this earth was formed. Once more we
have come down 
through the stairway of the seven worlds from that primal state
which is the 
very Center of being, plus all that we had gained before in other
worlds. ‘We 
bring with us all that we have gained in similar states and planes
of substance 
before, and go on with the world in each stage, just as we go on
from day to day 
with our various occupations. Thus we may see that there is a
continuity 
throughout the entire course of evolution; what we have to learn is
that 
knowledge of it along the line of true correspondences will never
be acquired by 
mere study, nor by information given us by any being or beings
whatever.
True knowledge has to be gained through an increasing perception of
the 
universality of all law and the universal line of progress for
every being of 
whatever grade. We have to think and practise altruism before the
higher and 
more recondite powers of the universe can be placed in our
possession for our 
use. The thought and the motive must be that which makes for the
good of all 
beings. What has been given to us in the philosophy of Theosophy is
for the 
purpose of arousing the attention of that Center within us which
can see, which 
can know and which can do, when it resumes its own nature and
status. For there 
is a deep knowledge of all these things in the soul of every human
being and the 
soul knows what it needs; it can understand when the brain can not
understand; 
it can feel when the senses are not capable of transmitting
feeling. This 
knowledge is open to every human being; but only when the mind that
we now 
possess is in exact accord with the nature of the indwelling
Spirit, shall we 
begin to see, from within outwards, all the lines of correspondence
and relation 
that exist between us and all other beings. Only when we realize
that we are a 
part of the Great Chain of being, that no one of us is unnecessary
and no one 
can drop out, that the development is one for all, that we are all
from the same 
Source and going towards the same goal; only when we shall
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think and act from that basis, will we move onward with the great
force 
proceeding from the Center in that true direction which leads to
enlightenment 
and power. The law of correspondences constitutes a science which
is perhaps 
beyond the idea of any one of us. Can we realize that — all beings
are forces 
and all forces proceed from beings? Can we realize that there are
forces or 
beings in nature which can be moved without the lifting of a
finger—just by the 
thought, just by the will of one who knows the law of
correspondences? 
Fortunate, indeed, it is that men as they are now constituted, with
the wrong 
ideas that rule their actions, do not possess these powers which
they could use 
against their fellow men! For is it not true that if we had them we
would use 
them to blot out of existence many human beings who are running
counter to our 
own ideas? And those beings are, just like ourselves, controlled by
ideas 
foreign to the true progress of the whole and must meet the exact
results of 
their wrong course of thought. Even without knowing it, perhaps, we
may fight 
the battle of humanity merely by taking one idea of Theosophy—one
universal 
idea— towards the freedom of the soul, and holding to that help.
But we have to 
go much farther than that, which is but one step on the way. We
have to realize 
within ourselves the kind of bodies, inner and outer, which we
possess and the 
powers that belong to those bodies. We must bring those higher
powers into 
operation through this physical body. We must build a higher and
greater 
civilization than ever yet has existed. Whether it is accomplished
in this or in 
ten million lives, whether we go straight to the goal or through
suffering after 
suffering, it must ultimately be brought about.
We are here for a great purpose. A great mission lies before every
one of us, as 
well as a great knowledge. We are here as knowing, self-conscious
beings, buried 
in, and identified with this body, with this matter. Involved in
the very work 
we had to do on this plane of being, we have forgotten our own true
natures. It 
behooves us to understand what our true nature is and to think and
act in 
accordance with it. Let us remember, too,
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that “the true nature” is not far away; it is right within us—
within our 
hearts. In the silence of our own hearts there pulsates that One
Life, which 
beats in correspondence in the action of the lungs, the action of
the tides, the 
flux and reflux which is going on all the time and everywhere in
nature. Can we 
not see that the laws of correspondences are the same now that they
were 
millions of years ago? Nor has humanity changed. We have changed
the conditions 
surrounding us, but we ourselves are experiencing the same desires,
the same 
feelings, the same stupidities which were ours millions of years
ago. We have 
not advanced spiritually beyond the civilizations that are dead and
gone, but in 
what we call “advancement” we have made merely another closer bond
to physical 
existence. So there is much for us to do.
We move from death to death until we realize our true natures and
take the 
course pointed out by the Wise Men of all ages—the course by which
They gained 
Their wisdom. Theosophy was brought into the world to wake up the
souls who are 
in the least degree susceptible to an awakening, to join that body
of pilgrims 
moving on their way with their faces turned in the direction of the
Masters of 
Wisdom, regardless of their present conditions, quickly or slowly
clearing away 
their defects that they may be the pioneers and helpers and guides
of the 
humanities that are to follow. Moving on with courage and
confidence in the 
Great Beings, they gradually learn and come to a resumption of
those powers 
which we all possess but do not express. Nor can one express in
words the power, 
the happiness, the freedom from fear of any kind, the realization,
while in a 
body, of immortality which spiritual knowledge brings. This
knowledge and these 
powers are within the reach of all of us. As the ancients said,
“The Great Self 
shines in all beings, but in all it does not shine forth.” We may
reach that One 
Self, the One Spirit, whence come all law, all possibilities—which
has the power 
to produce all changes, but of itself changes not at all— ever the
experiencer, 
the enjoyer or the sufferer of the changes. Power comes from this
knowledge, 
which springs up spontane-
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ously within us because it resides in the innermost parts of our
natures.
 
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
CULTURE OF CONCENTRATION
Concentration, or the use of the attention in the direction of
anything that we 
wish to do, consistently and persistently, has long been recognized
as the most 
effective means of arriving at the full expression of our powers and
energies. 
The ancients called the power to focus the attention upon a subject
or object 
for as long a time as is required, to the exclusion of every other
thought and 
feeling, ‘one-pointedness.” Concentration is difficult to obtain
among us as a 
people, because the key-note of our civilization is, in fact,
distraction rather 
than concentration. Constantly and in every direction we are having
presented to 
our minds objects and subjects—one thing after another to take our
attention and 
then to pull it off from what we are putting it on. So, our minds
have acquired 
the tendency to jump from one thing to another; to fly to a
pleasant idea or to 
an unpleasant idea, to remain passive. Remaining passive is
normally sleep; 
abnormally, its tendency is towards insanity. That we have be come
habituated to 
these distractions and are not able to place our minds on any given
thing for 
any length of time may be easily proved by anyone. If he will sit
down and try 
to think of one single thing, one single object or subject, for
only five 
minutes, he will find even in a very few seconds, perhaps, that he
has wandered 
miles away mentally from the thing he intended to place his mind
upon.
We have first to understand what man is, his real nature, what the
cause of his 
present condition, before we can arrive at any pure and true
concentration, 
before we can use the higher mind and the powers that flow from it.
For the 
powers that we use in the body are transmitted powers, drawn,
indeed, from our 
inner spiritual nature, but so disturbed and limited that they are
not powerful. 
We need to know about our minds, and we need to control our
minds—that is, the 
lower mind, occupied
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with personal and physical things, known in Theosophical
phraseology, as Lower 
Manas. It is this
“organ,” the thinking principle, which the ancients said is the
great producer 
of illusion—the great distracter of concentration. For there is no
possibility 
of obtaining real concentration until the possessor of the mind can
place it 
where he will, when he will, and for as long a time as he pleases.
It is written in The Voice of the Silence: ‘ Mind is the great
slayer of the 
Real. Let the disciple slay the Slayer.” The disciple, who is the
Real Man—the 
spiritual man—has to act as such. He has to stop the switchings and
fittings of 
his thinking principle and become calm in that knowledge to which
the 
consideration of his own true nature brings him. The object of all
advancement 
is the realization of the true nature of each one and an employment
of the 
powers which belong to it. What hinders is the thinking principle.
WE are the 
thinkers, but we are not what we think. If we think wrongly, then
all the 
results of our thoughts and actions must lead to a wrong
conclusion, or to a 
partial one, at best; but if we realize that we are the thinker,
and the 
creator—the evolver of all the conditions through which we have
been, in which 
we now are, and in which we shall find ourselves in the future—then
we have 
reached the point of view of the Real man, and it is only to the
Real man that 
the power of concentration belongs.
Again, in order to obtain concentration, we need an understanding
of the 
classification of the principles of man. We all have the same
principles, the 
same kinds of substances within us, the same spirit within us. We
all contain 
every element that exists anywhere or in any being. So, too, each
one has all 
the powers that exist anywhere, in himself, though latent. We are
all of the 
same Source, all parts of one great Whole, all sparks and rays from
the Infinite 
Spirit, or the Absolute Principle. The second principle is Buddhi,
or the 
acquired wisdom of past lives, as well as this one. It is the cream
of all our 
past experiences. The next principle is Manas, the Higher mind, the
real power 
to think, the creator—not concerned with this physical
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phase of existence, but with the spirit and the acquired wisdom.
These three 
principles together make the Real Man—Atma Buddhi-Manas—and these
three each one 
of us is in his inner nature.
Our Lower Manas is the transitory aspect of the Higher mind; that
is, the 
portion of our attention, our thoughts and feelings addressed to
life in a body. 
But if our thinking faculty is concerned only with the personal
self—only with 
the body— the powers which reside in the Triad, the Real man, and
the acquired 
wisdom of the past, can not force themselves through that cloud of
illusion. 
Lower Manas is the principle of balance. It is the place from which
the man in a 
body either goes up towards his higher nature or down towards his
earthly 
nature, made up of the desires pertaining to sensuous existence.
Life about us 
is throwing its impressions and energies upon us all the time. We
are constantly 
subject to them and connected with them by our ideas, our feelings
and emotions, 
so that there is a constant turmoil going on within that inner mind
which makes 
a barrier to absolute calmness and concentration.
Then we have the astral body, itself an aspect of the real inner
body which has 
lasted through the vast period of the past and must continue
through the far 
distant future. This astral body is the prototype, or design,
around which the 
physical body is built, and which, considered from the point of
view of the 
powers, is the real physical body. Without it the physical body
would be nothing 
but a mass of matter—an aggregation of smaller lives. It is the
astral body 
which contains the organs, or centers from which the organs have
been evolved in 
accord with the needs of the thinker within. The real senses of man
are not in 
the physical but in the astral body. The astral body lasts a little
over one 
lifetime. It does not die when the physical body dies, but is used
as a body in 
the immediate after-death states.
Now as soon as we begin to make the effort to control the mind, and
desire to 
know and to assume the position of the inner man, the effort and
the assumption 
bring an accession of power and of steadiness. We have started
something going 
in the astral
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body. What were before merely centers of force around which organs
were builded 
now tend to become separate astral organs. A gradual building of
those organs 
goes on within us, until in the completion of our effort we have an
astral body, 
with all the organs of the physical completely synthesized, and we
are beyond 
the vicissitudes of physical existence; we have the power of the
action of the 
astral body. The astral body is even more complete and effective on
its own 
plane that our bodily instrument here on the physical plane, for it
has a wider 
range of action in its seven super-senses, where physically we have
use of only 
five senses.
Many hindrances arise, however, as soon as the effort is begun. Old
habits of 
thought and feeling press us on every hand, be cause we have not
yet been able 
to check our responsiveness to them, and so we find ourselves
subject to certain 
feelings and emotions which tend to destroy that astral body which
is being 
built. First, and most potent, is anger. Anger has an explosive
effect, and no 
matter how much we may have progressed in our growth, the
uncontrollable inner 
shock coming from anger will tear that inner body to pieces so that
the work has 
to be done all over again. Next to contend with is vanity—vanity of
some kind or 
another, of some accomplishment, of ourselves, our family, our
nation, or what 
not. Vanity tends to grow and grow, until finally we will not
listen to anybody 
and are too vain to learn anything. So, vanity tends to
disintegrate this inner 
body, although it is less disruptive than anger. Envy is another
hindrance. Fear 
is another, but fear is the least of them all because it can be
destroyed by 
knowledge. Fear is always the child of ignorance. We fear those
things we do not 
know, but when we know, we do not fear.
We are all a prey to those fears that tend to disrupt the very
instrument by 
means of which true concentration may be attained; but it may be
attained. The 
peculiar power and nature of concentration is that, when complete,
the attention 
can be placed on any subject or object to the exclusion of every
other for any 
given length of time; and this thinking principle—this
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mind of ours which has been flitting about—can be used to shape
itself to the 
object gazed upon, to the nature of the subject thought about.
While the mind 
takes the shape of the object, we get from that shape the form, the
characteristics of every kind that flow from it; and when our
inquiry is 
complete, we are able to know everything that can be known of the
subject or 
object. Such a height of concentration we can easily see is not to
be attained 
by intermittent efforts, but by efforts made from “a firm position
assumed” with 
the end in view. All efforts made from that basis are bound to be
of avail; 
every effort made from the point of view of the spiritual man
counts, because it 
makes the body subservient to the thinking principle.
Other things come about from that true power of concentration. We
begin to open 
up the channels that reach from our brains to the astral body, and
from the 
astral body to the inner man. Then, that which is temporary tends
to become a 
part of that which is eternal. All the planes become synthesized
from above 
down, and all the vestures of the soul which we have evolved from
the past 
become in accord with each other. It is just like the tumblers in a
lock: when 
they work together, the lock works accurately. So we have to bring
all the 
sheaths of the soul into exact accord, and that we can do only by
taking the 
position of the spiritual being and acting as such.
The height of concentration is possible to us, but not on a selfish
basis. The 
concentration of the brain mind stands beside true concentration as
a rush light 
beside the sun. True concentration is, first of all, a position
assumed out of 
regard for the end in view of union with the Higher Self. That is
the highest 
Yoga. Concentration upon the Self is true concentration. And
concentration must 
be attained before we can ever reach that stage where eternal
knowledge of every 
kind is ours to the last degree; before we shall once more resume
and wield 
those powers which are the heritage of all.
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CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
MENTAL HEALING AND HYPNOSIS
Mental healing, metaphysical healing, mind cure, spiritual healing
and Christian 
Science all come under the same head; there is no difference
between them in the 
range of their action or the basis upon which they are founded. All
are forms of 
self- hypnotism. But hypnosis is something of itself, and in
itself, which calls 
for extensive consideration, its basis being a sort of artificial
catalepsy. 
Whoever is hypnotized is thrown out of his normal modes of
perception; his own 
external perceptions are closed to him and he sees only from the
basis which the 
operator presents to him. Mental healers and Christian Scientists
make use of 
certain ideas and abstractions in formula which take the mind off
the body, 
though it is generally believed that thought” is the means by which
the healing 
is effected. Now thought differs entirely in its nature and
relation according 
to the knowledge of the thinker, and to use a prescribed formula,
as do the 
adherents of these healing cults, is by no means to employ thought.
What passes 
for ‘thought” is the idea that diseases are caused by thinking of
them, and that 
the only way to over come them is by thinking of that which is not
disease. Of 
course, this is only a formula.
Are there cures brought about by such practices? Certainly; by each
and every 
system, no matter how much they suffer from one another in their
claims. Just 
so, there are cures made by every remedy” ever proposed under the
sun. 
Testimonials are found for every kind of remedy and to every kind
of formula 
that was ever presented mankind. Medical practitioners bring about
their cures 
also, and even the ‘quack” remedies advertised in the newspapers
bring floods of 
testimonials from people who have been cured of disease after
having been given 
up by physicians. Since, then, healing is brought about in many
ways, it is 
clear that neither the fact of healing, nor any number of
testimonials, have any 
value as evidence that any one of these systems of healing is a
true system.
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We need to inquire into these systems from the point of view of
Theosophy, for 
let it be understood that the Theosophist does not attack any form
of belief nor 
any form of philosophy what ever; he merely compares them with
Theosophy. If 
that comparison shows a lack in their theories of explanation and a
failure to 
give human beings a true basis to think from, by which they shall
gain a 
realization of their own nature and the laws ruling everything in
every place, 
it can not be said that Theosophy is at fault, but that the partial
philosophy 
under consideration has failed to withstand the test.
People are attracted to these partial systems of thought by the
healing of 
disease promised. What they need to look for is not the cure, but
the cause of 
disease. The fact that no one specific method is a cure-all ought
to show that 
there are different kinds of disease; some, the result of bad
habits, lack of 
exercise, wrong diet, and the failure to observe the ordinary laws
of hygiene; 
others, nervous diseases, the effect of wrong ways of thinking, of
worriments of 
various kinds. There are also diseases which are mechanical and
organic, where 
certain organs have become affected to such an extent that they can
not respond 
to normal action in accord with the other organs. The organs are
materially 
formed of the matter of the three lower kingdoms—mineral, vegetable
and 
animal—taken from the food eaten and transmuted into the organs.
Consequently, 
where some kind of element is discovered to be lacking, something
of a material 
nature may be added which, in most cases, in itself will restore
the organ to 
its natural condition. Diseases caused by wrong habits are, of
course, cured by 
correcting the habits. Where an irritation and nervous condition
has been caused 
by too much thinking about some ailment that may exist in the body,
mental” 
operators have their great field of ‘success"; for when the
mind is with drawn 
from the ailment, the body has within itself the power to restore
itself to a 
normal condition in many, many cases. Where the mind is self-centered
and 
concentrated, it does not permit the body to resume normal
operation, but rather 
increases the
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disease, since the power of the consciousness of the being is
placed upon that. 
The body has its own immunizing power, if left alone. The body is a
mechanical 
instrument which has been brought into being and is kept in action
by the 
thinker who inhabits it. But those who put forward ideas in regard
to mental 
healing have never concerned themselves for a single moment with
determining the 
cause of humanity’s having such bodies, being born into such bodies
at this time 
on the earth. They do not inquire where they themselves have come
from, whither 
they are going, and what the purpose of life is. All these panaceas
for ills 
fail absolutely to recognize the operation of law—the operation of
cause and 
effect. They call for no understanding, nor do they present a basis
for right 
thinking, right conduct, and right progress. Therefore, people who
take up these 
lines get nowhere. If perchance, by taking their minds off the
disease, the body 
gets better of itself, they have gained no knowledge by the
experience; they are 
only made better able to continue along their ignorant lines; they
die when the 
time comes no wiser than when they were born, believing this to be
the only 
physical existence they will ever have.
To minds engaged with universal ideas, such as the Self of all
creatures, the 
Divine Law of Justice, the evolution of all grades of beings, the
great cycles 
of men and planets and universes—ideas of healing these temporary
bodies appear 
very, very small. For what does healing mean? Getting rid of the
effects which 
we ourselves have produced, consciously or unconsciously. What does
a diseased 
body mean but that we have ignored our own natures and acted as
though we were 
bodies, and broken every law of hygiene that we know of? If we
lived according 
to the laws of hygiene as we know them, these diseases would not be
upon us. The 
savage does not know anything about Christian Science; the Red
Indians of the 
past knew nothing about mental healing of any kind, but they had
remarkably 
healthy bodies. Was it their thought? No, for the Red Indians did
much murder. 
It was not their thinking that made them healthy. It
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was their mode of life—because they lived naturally. It is our
modes of life 
that make us unhealthy. It is our modes of thought that make us
take up these 
modes of life. We have not discerned what we are, and consequently
we have acted 
in ignorance.
All these healing systems are presented for one purpose—to enable
us to relieve 
ourselves of the responsibility of our own acts. In Occultism that
is a crime. 
We may use natural bodily methods, but we may not try to drag the
Spirit itself 
down to relieve us of the diseases that we have brought upon
ourselves. That we 
can think for a moment that Spirit, the root of all being, can be
dragged down 
to relieve us of those troubles brought upon ourselves is a
blasphemy to anyone 
who thinks deeply, and a denial of the Real Self. The body is a
machine, which 
represents the effects of causes set in motion, whether ignorantly
or 
consciously. We should recognize that being a machine—an instrument
formed from 
the matter of the earth—it can be kept in balance by restoring
those elements it 
lacks. We should not think too much of the body, nor think of it at
all, save as 
an instrument—our present physical automobile, so to say—which we
ought to keep 
in running order and use as we would any machine. We have to run it
according to 
the laws of its operation to make the body a perfect instrument;
but we should 
keep our consciousness on the plane to which it belongs— not
chained to the 
body.
In these mental healing processes there is a great danger. The powers
of Spirit 
are far greater than any known power we possess—greater than
dynamite, or the 
applications of electricity. Moving along these lines blindly as
many do is 
liable to bring disaster, has brought insanity time and time again.
We hear the 
“demonstration” of cures, but we do not get the demonstration of
failures. They 
are many. Mental healing may throw the disease back into the place
from which it 
came, back into the mind, but just so surely will it come out in
some other form 
and also with more force than before. The spiritual nature itself
will not 
permit us to avoid the results of causation which we ourselves have
set in 
motion. Those abstractions which take the
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mind off the body, such as “God is all Good,” “There is no
imperfection,” set 
certain currents in motion in what is known as the Pranic or Astral
body. These 
currents act and re-act and interact between the inner and outer
body, and in 
the end are bound to produce injury, no matter what the present
benefit may 
appear to be. At the best, we have only delayed the day of
settlement.
The only way in which the affairs of life may be brought into their
proper 
relation and harmony is by an understanding of our own nature, and
fulfilling 
it. That course would make a heaven of this civilization, compared
with what it 
is now. It would obviate nine-tenths, yes, one hundred percent, of
those 
diseases which now afflict us, whether individual or general,
sporadic or 
epidemic. For all diseases are caused by men, individually and
collectively; 
even the catastrophes in nature are the result of man’s
misunderstanding of his 
own nature, and the thinking and acting based upon it. The
spiritual power that 
lies in man’s thinking goes much farther than the formulation of
it. Whatever of 
error he produces finds its return from all parts of nature—from
fire and air 
and earth and water—for all the elements are but the embodiments of
so many 
degrees of intelligence, and we affect them against the nature of
the whole, 
which is a synchronous evolution. We hinder the lives and they
resent it. Even 
the forces of our bodies are composed of lives or different kinds;
the very 
organs in our bodies are composed of different kinds of elemental
lives, all 
having their relations to different parts of nature.
All these healing schemes, ‘isms, and religions are attempts to
dodge our 
responsibility. Our complaints about our environments are attempts
to dodge our 
responsibility. Our belief in this God or the other God, or this
system of 
belief, this salvation, are attempts to dodge our responsibility.
We have to 
accept that responsibility, and stay with it, first, last and all
the time. For 
we are all bound up in one great tie; we can not separate ourselves
from each 
other, nor from any other being. The high beings above us who have
passed 
through the stages which we
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are now passing through are just as closely related to us—and more
so—than we 
are to each other; for They desire to help us in every way, if we
would only 
allow Them. Savior after Savior has come to the earth for our
benefit, but no 
one can give us any more benefit than to point to the truths that
have been 
given all down the ages. We must take advantage of that knowledge
and advance 
out of the state in which we have placed ourselves. No Savior can
save us. No 
God can protect us. No devil can torment us. For both the God and
the devil are 
within. The devil is the misunderstanding of our nature. The God is
that place 
in ourselves that we come to know and realize and see reflected in
the eyes of 
every living being. It is the God in us which demands
self-advancement, 
self-induced and self-devised exertions, and the full acceptance of
responsibility.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE OCCULT SIDE OF NATURE
The word Nature used in its widest sense, as when we speak of Great
Nature, or 
Mother Nature, means the whole of the outside—all that is external
to us—the 
trees, the open places, and the world of men. We do not, in fact,
know what that 
nature is, because it presents to us something external to our
perceptions. We 
speak of “the laws of nature,” seeing that nature always acts in an
orderly way, 
without in fact knowing at all what those laws spring from nor what
they rest 
in. Yet nature cannot exist of itself, by itself, and come from
nothing. It must 
come from a sufficient cause. There must of necessity be an occult
side to 
nature. The “sufficient cause” in reality lies upon those planes
which are 
invisible to us, but constitute a part of nature. The invisible
side is the 
producing side—the causal side— of what we see; all the laws noted
on the 
visible side are really existent in and proceed from the invisible
side of 
nature.
First, then, let us try to understand what composes the basis of
nature—what 
lies behind it all. Certainly not a Creator, by whose whim or
command all beings 
and things in nature exist and move about in their established
places. THAT in 
which lie all powers, all possibilities, all infinitude, is greater
than any
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Being, however high. IT is an impersonal Deity. Call the divine in
all of us 
Spirit, if you will, the Self, or God—if you do not personify or
limit or define 
it. This One Spirit is not divided, though it seems to be divided
in all 
creatures, just as the Sun’s rays are merely the Sun extended—they
do not 
dissipate when the Sun disappears from our view but indraw to the
Source from 
which they came. That which lives and thinks and perceives in each
of us, and 
that which suffers and enjoys in each of us, is Spirit. All anyone
can know of 
the Highest—of God—is what he knows in himself, through himself,
and by himself. 
No out side information can bring us that perception, but only the
indrawing 
into the very essence of our being—the center, the same center as
the Great 
Center whence it sprang.
The laws which rule in us are not imposed by any Being or beings
whatsoever. In 
the center of every being, whatever its form, the power of action
is present. 
Action always brings its re-action, and it is this Law—or
Karma—which operates 
from within alike upon every individual, incessantly and
unerringly. So, too, we 
have collective actions and reactions of all the beings of every
grade that make 
up the world and its inhabitants. These collective actions make
what we regard 
as the laws of the various elements and kingdoms, but they are
contained in and 
subservient to that one universal Law of Karma, which is ethically
stated as 
sowing and reaping.
Law rules all the time from the very first beginning in the finest
radiant 
matter. That matter was builded by beings of all grades of every
kind—beings of 
a world which preceded this where they had their course of
evolution and from 
which they were indrawn again to the Center of the Self. Then came
the dawning 
of another Great Day of manifestation, and all those beings were
there with all 
the potencies, the ideas, and all their past experience—once more
to go forth 
and carry on the work which they had started. It is the action and
reaction by 
different classes of beings which causes a change and concretion in
primordial 
substance, and this goes on from stage to stage down through seven
steps of the 
stairway of matter. On each plane the beings
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clothed themselves in the substance of that plane, and we are the
beings who 
have come down through all those stages. There is, then, hidden
within us a 
nature, and natures, which we have not suspected. There is
something within us 
which is not clear to us with our present modes of perception. Yet
these 
invisible natures are ours; they are not apart from us; we have not
left them 
anywhere on the stairway of the seven worlds. This outside nature
which we all 
perceive through the body and with the physical senses is only the
external 
envelope of states and stages of consciousness hidden to the
generality of man 
kind.
There is an occult side not only to our own nature but to the
nature of all 
beings, as should always have been apparent to us, if we had been
observant; had 
we thought for ourselves; had we not taken for granted what others
have handed 
down to us as religion or revelation. For there are stages in our
very daily 
lives which are hidden from us. While we are awake, we operate
through the body; 
then we sleep—we do not operate through the body—and that side of
our nature is 
hidden to most people. They may know they dream, but they think the
dreaming has 
no relation to the lines under which they operate when awake; they
do not 
understand that dreaming is a transitional stage which precedes the
reaching 
into our own spiritual nature and also precedes the return into
operation of the 
body again. Usually, the dreaming state is a repetition of the
scenes or 
experiences of daily life, but sometimes things come to us in dream
that are 
far, far away and apart from any experience in this body.
Oftentimes, the dreams 
which occur upon waking bring an influx from our inmost self; they
bring down 
with us some of the experiences of a vast past. We have
premonitions. We have 
presentiments. We have sometimes what are called minor initiations”
occurring in 
dreams. Never for a moment do we cease to be conscious, whether in
the dreaming 
state, or in the full consciousness of the finer sheaths of the
soul beyond 
dreaming, or in the stage of “dreaming” after “death”; how, then,
could we ever 
know death?
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In every direction in the air about us are lives which are
invisible to us. 
There is no vacant space—not one vacant point of space. All is
life. All is 
being of some kind or another. We take in with every breath small
lives 
invisible to us. All these lives are classes of beings which have
their own 
laws—laws which pertain to their own actions and reactions in kind.
But to 
understand our own natures, we must understand the laws which
operate upon those 
planes of being of which we are a part and on which none of us is
separate from 
the others. This immense knowledge is back of us and within us and
to be 
regained. There is always a high and a low expression. There is a
full and an 
incomplete expression. The fullness of our expression is upon the
highest plane; 
the incompleteness of our expression is on this lowest plane. We
have touched 
the bottom of the stairway, plus all the experience gained; but if
we are to 
reach that state from which we have descended, without any misstep,
we have to 
understand the real occult laws which rule all the different stages
of our 
being.
There are pretenders to a knowledge of these occult laws— for
unfortunately no 
great amount of good can be given at any time without opening the
doors to an 
equal amount of evil. Consider, for instance, the power of
dynamite: it is good 
for man when properly used, but in the hands of an evil-minded one
it can work 
great evil to humanity. Thus, a knowledge of occult laws makes it
possible for a 
man to do good in any direction he chooses without raising a
finger—or, also, to 
do evil. The means by which either the evil or the good is done is
always a 
control of invisible beings—messengers for the man who knows how to
use them and 
who understands them. All he has to do is to loose that power
within himself 
which propels those beings to execute his mission, whatever it may
be. Those 
powers, let it be known, lie sleeping in the sheaths of every man,
and in the 
human body— for this body which we now possess is formed under the
same laws as 
those of the solar system, and there is not an organ in it which
does not 
correspond with some one or other of the celestial mansions, with
some sheath or 
plane of consciousness, and with all the powers belonging to them.
We have to 
ask ourselves if
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we are ready to accept the responsibility which a knowledge of
these laws 
implies. Could we trust ourselves to have these laws imparted to
us—laws which 
are set into operation merely by our thinking and feeling?
To use these powers rightly, a universal attitude must be held, and
all actions 
based upon that universal nature. The philosophy of Theosophy
presents that 
universal attitude and basis, showing that each one is the SELF;
each one looks 
upon all others and gathers from all others what he may of understanding
and of 
knowledge; each one must act for that SELF and as that SELF, which
includes all 
other selves. So acting, all ideas of selfishness, of personality,
of desire for 
reward, of fear of punishment, leave us; defects are corrected, and
the whole 
force of what we may call nature in its fullest sense comes into
play; all the 
great powers of nature flow into the one moving in that direction
and from that 
basis. We shall come to understand all laws; for, as we progress,
those laws 
exhibit themselves spontaneously within us. We find in our
possession the power 
to accomplish by thought, the power to do this or that at a
distance, the power 
to speak at a distance, to be heard at a distance, to be seen at a
distance, to 
know anything at a distance. There is nothing hidden for the one
who works on 
and with nature; with the interests of all, he has the force of
all.
The powers that were used by Jesus, as recorded in the New
Testament, and those 
of some of the older Prophets as recorded in the Old Testament,
were not 
“God-given” powers. They came from a knowledge of the occult laws,
the hidden 
laws of so-called “nature.” The miracles of Jesus—transforming
water into wine, 
raising the dead, operating where his body was not—were all part of
his occult 
knowledge. Everyone who moves along that universal line learns the
operation of 
these laws. H. P. B. and W. Q. J. did as wonderful things, and even
more 
wonderful things than were ever recorded of Jesus. They knew the
occult laws of 
nature. They knew the workings of occult law in themselves and
therefore in all 
other natures. These powers are latent in every human being—not
peculiar to some 
great ones. H. P. B.
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and W. Q. J. knew the story of “Give up thy life, if thou wouldst
live.” If we 
would live the life of a spiritual being, then all these sheaths of
ours—this 
body and all—would be at our service. Possessing everything, we
would want 
nothing. We should be able to do anything, but we would use no
powers for 
ourselves. Just as we have to live Theosophy if we are to know the
doctrine, so 
we have to “live the life” if we are to know its laws.
The minor laws by which phenomena are produced on this plane are a
small part of 
occult study in its universal aspect. For in it lie every science,
all the laws 
and all the powers of all, all the planes of existence and all the
states of 
consciousness that ever have been. We are never alone. Always in
some of our 
sheaths, bodily or bodiless, we are connected with other beings,
other stages 
and states of substance and other planes of consciousness. Never
can we be lost 
in that sense. But we may suffer, and suffer immensely, through
making a mistake 
in regard to our own natures and acting with the power of our
spiritual nature 
along false lines, creating, as the ancients said, “the black doves
of death and 
sorrow.” It is for us to arouse ourselves to take the path pointed
out, to test 
it for ourselves. Then, only, will each one know the truth about
himself and 
about all other beings; then, only, will he gain what we all
seek—the power to 
be a beneficent force in nature.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
A LEAGUE OF HUMANITY
Now that the most frightful and destructive war known to the annals
of history 
is over, the questions that arise in every thinker’s mind are: What
has been 
learned from the war? Has there been any lesson learned? Do we
think for a 
single moment that the end of the war has brought an end to our
troubles? Do we 
not see the clouds gathering in the skies of humanity?
Revelations of every kind are spread before us as panaceas. On the
part of some 
there is evidence of a desire to bring people to “a moral sense”—a
sense which 
they think resides in the
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Christian religion. So, they are trying to effect an amalgamation of
the 
churches, imagining that to be the remedy for preventing wars and
causing men to 
act more humanely towards each other. But the moral sense existed
in times 
before the Christian religion was ever thought of, in other
religions; in fact, 
the basis of all religions is morality. How comes it, if
Christianity is to be 
the remedy, that after its being the basis of thought and action
for nearly two 
thousand years, such a struggle has gone on among Christian
nations? Does 
Christianity give any promise whatever of what ought to be? Would
there be any 
benefit whatever in returning to Christianity, the whole history of
which has 
been one of intolerance and persecution? If the Christian church
had the power 
today, would it be any less dogmatic or intolerant than it was in
the days of 
the Spanish Inquisition?
There is no hope in the direction of the church, because, in the
first place, 
the people will have none of it. It has not satisfied their minds;
it has not 
answered their questions. Instead of the knowledge they asked for,
it has: given 
them only hope or fear. The church has lost its hold upon the
people—for the 
great majority are not adherents of any Christian church—be cause
of its poverty 
of idea, because of its dogmas and creeds. People have tried out
the ideas and 
found them wanting. Nothing else will do but that which appeals to
their sense 
of judgment and to their spiritual perception.
Others have placed their faith in a league of nations. Yet, they
begin to see 
that though the ideal is beautiful, it does not prove out in
practice. The 
members of the league have each desired to take all they could, and
give as 
little as they could. The same spirit exists between nations now,
after the 
settlement of peace, as existed during the conflict; the same
nations are just 
as grasping and just as selfish as they were before the war. In
this country, 
too, our public men still voice the particular interests of this
particular 
nation as against all others. A league of nations could only
fulfill its purpose 
by a common aim and by a like ideal. Such do not obtain. The
nations are not 
alike. None of them have high ideals—not even our own nation, which
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should have the greatest ideal of humanity and of nature. In stead,
our ideal is 
one common idea—of trading, of gaining dollars or possessions, of
getting 
advantage and prestige over other nations. Such an ideal will never
give us 
peace, will never bring happiness, content, nor right progress, and
there will 
always be struggle until we change that ideal. A league of nations
among similar 
selfish nations can only bring what self-interest always brings—disasters
of 
some kind. The seeds of war are in it.
Where shall we find the true foundation for a changed civilization
that all men 
and women can see and stand on? It is not philosophies nor
religions nor 
political panaceas that are needed; but Knowledge, and a wider
scope of vision 
than the vicissitudes of one short physical life. The knowledge
that is greater 
than all the forms of religion ever invented is the knowledge of
the very nature 
of man himself, for himself and in him self. For we are not here as
things 
apart; we are here because of one great sustaining Cause—infinite
and 
omnipresent, not separate from us, nor from any other being. It is
the same in 
all beings above the human and in all beings below the human—the
very root of 
our natures, the very man himself. It is the Source of all powers
and of all 
actions, whether good or evil. Then, everything that is done by
beings affects 
all beings, and all that is has been caused by beings, each one
affected 
according to its share in the cause. What the past has been, we are
experiencing 
now—our lives now being but repetitions of lives that preceded
them. What the 
future will be, we are making now—the lives to come depending
entirely on the 
choice and direction of our thoughts and actions now.
The war of this or any time is the result of the warring spirit, of
the 
selfishness of mankind. It is the result of the failure to
understand the great 
purpose of life, the nature of our minds, the full power of
attainment within 
each being, the one Law of absolute justice inherent in all beings,
the One 
Deity behind and in all, the one Goal for every Pilgrim, however
the path 
varies. As soon as men are brought to the perception that every one
reaps 
exactly what he sows, no one will do harm to any other being;
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there will then be no war. There will be no such misery as now
exists; for to 
realize our own responsibility to all others and to act in
accordance, is to 
have become unselfish, and to have done away with the prime cause
of sin, sorrow 
and suffering.
Back of the failure to understand our own true natures lie false
ideas, false 
conceptions of life, false ideals—the heritage of our Christian
civilization. We 
have believed that we were born in this condition or environment by
the “will” 
of some God. We have imagined a personal God, a personal devil, and
a personal 
Savior. We have imagined an impossible heaven and an equally
impossible hell. We 
have imagined a “creation,” instead of evolution. We have believed
that we are 
poor, weak, miserable sinners, and have acted out the part. We have
laid all our 
troubles and evils and pain upon some other imaginary Being. Thus,
we have 
remained irresponsible creatures, mere rationalized animals; not
immortal souls. 
We have dodged our responsibility. But we must guide ourselves
according to the 
realities of our own nature. We must take care of each other, not
of ourselves 
according to the personal basis on which this and every other
nation in the 
world is proceeding today.
We are going to have a league of humanity only when the ancient
truths of the 
Wisdom Religion are once more perceived—when there is one purpose
and one 
teaching. Its truths are self- evident, not to be accepted because
written in 
some book, nor because they are the dicta of some particular
church. They are 
the only truths worth considering because in the use of them they
prove 
themselves true. And truth, as we ought to know, always explains.
When we have 
the explanation, we have the truth. Each has to make his own
verification of the 
truth, but the fact remains that there is truth, and it has always
existed. It 
has come to us from Beings higher than we, because once They turned
Their faces 
in the right direction and pursued the course pointed out to Them
as leading to 
spiritual, divine perfection. They know all that has been known.
They know us, 
although we may not know Them. They know our needs, although we may
be densely 
ignorant of them. They come again and again to present
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the truths of life to man, hoping that some echo may be aroused in
his soul so 
that he, too, shall arrive at a realization of Self, of
Spirit—which is 
Knowledge.
Those who can see the course of humanity see nothing but much
trouble yet for 
the world in general. Nothing but severe, dire disaster will make
men stop and 
think. The war has not ceased! The war is going on between us all
the time. 
Consider our selfish pursuits, our condemnations, our judgments,
our criticisms, 
our foolish laws, which seek to make men “good” by legislation with
no attempt 
to arouse the real nature of man, but only to repress what is
considered “bad.” 
Prohibitions of all kinds serve only to exasperate the evil nature
in men. We 
need not to prohibit. We need to educate, and first of all, we need
to educate 
ourselves. Let us take the beam out of our own eyes before we try
to remove the 
mote from the eyes of others. Let us retreat into the shrine of our
own being. 
Let us be that Self, and act for and as that Self. Let us follow
the lines of 
the law of our own being—compassion, love, helpfulness for all—and
then we shall 
be able to understand ourselves and the natures of all others. Then
we shall be 
able to help men in a way they are sometimes not aware of; we shall
be able to 
help leaven the whole lump.
It is because there are those in the world desirous of helping
humanity to 
proceed further, that we are not worse off. Often the ideas given
out by men in 
high places are not the result of their own cogitations, although
thought to be 
such. Many an idea is received by those who have the ear of the
public, who 
speak and will be heard, from Those with a far deeper knowledge of
the issues at 
stake, yet whose voices would not be heard at all. So, though there
may seem to 
be little action on the part of Theosophical disciples, there is
much action on 
inner planes of being, and that action never but for the benefit of
humanity. If 
only once any considerable number of persons could take the true
position and 
act from the true nature, right ideas would soon spread all over
the earth. Once 
the ideas are implanted in our minds, we can help the world by
speaking of them, 
and by
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exemplifying them. We can do that much, however selfishly the world
moves on.
A true league of humanity could be formed—without social
distinctions, class 
distinctions, national distinctions. In their stead would come a
common 
perception and a common realization of the universe and a common
course for 
humanity. We must know that we are all of other peoples. We came
through all the 
civilizations that have been. We have passed through the Eastern,
the near East, 
and the European peoples and now we are here, at the farthest
confines of the 
West, under the law of Karma. Civilization must roll back over the
course it 
came, and as it goes back in spirit, speech, act, and example
towards the East 
from which it came, the misconceptions that have arisen around
religious and 
other ideas will be cleared away by the power of our knowledge and
example.
We are here as the best representatives of the people of the
world—the most 
intelligent, the freest in mind and opinion, the freest in action.
All that 
means something under Law, and it means that every being coming in
contact with 
the Ancient Wisdom has an opportunity devolved upon him. We have
not met for the 
first time, nor have we met for the last. Once more we are
together, and 
listening to what we do absolutely know inside. There is that in us
which sees 
and knows when the word is spoken which gives first indication of
the life 
within a life, of a life greater than this we have conceived life
to be. Then we 
begin to tread that small old path that stretches far away—the Path
that our 
great Predecessors, the Masters, have trod before us.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES 
NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS
All have doubtless made New Year’s resolutions, and all, no doubt,
have failed 
to keep them. There must be a reason for our failures, as well as
for the fact 
that there comes a certain season in the year when we have the
inclination to 
make resolutions. These reasons lie hidden in the depths of our own
being. 
Unconsciously to ourselves,, it may be, we have a natural per-
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ception of occult law in our observance of this particular period
of the year. 
The ancients celebrated and understood what was called by them “the
birth of the 
Sun,” or the return of the Sun on its northern course, beginning
the 21st of 
December. They knew that all the occult forces in nature have an
upward and 
increasing tendency at the return of the Sun. When the Sun’s rays
become warmer 
and stronger, all the other forces behind the Sun itself, and
behind ourselves, 
become stronger within us. In the rising wave of spiritual and
psychic renewal, 
all that we desire to do has a greater impulsion than at some other
time of the 
year.
The reason for our failures is that we do not understand our own
natures. 
Consequently, we are not able to use the force and influence that
lie within us, 
so far as we are physically concerned, and we have difficulty in
endeavoring to 
carry out resolutions of any kind. Our first mistake is to make
negative 
resolutions. We say, I will not drink; I will not lie; I will not
do this; I 
will not do that. Whereas the proper resolve to make is that—I will
do this, the 
opposite of what we are now doing. In this case, we make a direct
affirmation of 
will, while the other form of resolution puts us in a purely
negative position. 
Perhaps we have thought with regard to others or ourselves, that
because we do 
not do a number of questionable things, therefore we are “good.” On
the 
contrary, we are merely not bad—again a negative position. True
goodness is a 
positive position.
To effect our resolutions we have to call on the will of man, for
that will is 
not restrained by any form of obstacle what ever. By will, however,
is not meant 
what is ordinarily called will. We are prone to think that a person
who is very 
determined on gaining his ends has “a strong will,” and is very
positive in his 
character; but such a person exhibits only a kind of will. He has
very, very 
strong desires, rather than Will itself, and will follow them out.
There are many exhibitions of the will itself, some phases being
quite 
unrecognized. The very will to live is a recondite aspect of Will.
If the will 
to live were not present, we would
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not live. It is not the body which holds us here but the desire to
live. Always 
behind Will stands Desire. Again, everyone of man’s bodily organs
and processes 
was at one time evolved by conscious effort. Even the process of
digestion, of 
assimilation, the heart beat, the various qualities and functions
of all the 
organs were consciously evolved. Now we have bodies which will
proceed 
automatically, while we use our consciousness, perceptions and
attention in 
other directions. Our will, then, operates in reality in every part
of our 
physical life though we may not be able to perceive it and
understand it. There 
is also a mental phase of the will which can be cultivated by
practice: the 
fixed attention, or concentration in certain directions capable of
effecting 
desired results.
But the real and true Will is known as the Spiritual Will, which
flies like 
light and cuts all obstacles like a sharp sword. It is that Will
proceeding from 
the highest spiritual part of our natures which causes man to be an
evolution 
from within out wards, through all the forms of substance that have
been, and to 
continue evolving instruments in this state of matter. All the
powers that exist 
or can exist are latent, however ill expressed, in the spiritual
nature. We draw 
from it in degree, but in small degree because most of us, having
our ideas so 
fixed on physical existence, have come to the conclusion that life
means nothing 
more than physical existence.
We were once conscious of our spiritual nature, but as we came down
through the 
planes of matter to this plane, we made a growth in intellectuality
at the 
expense of spiritual perception. With our intellect we always
reason from 
premises to conclusions, whereas the spiritual nature has the power
of direct 
cognition of the nature of anything regarded. So our intellectual
gain was at 
the loss of spiritual insight, and it is useless for theology,
science, and 
psychology to proceed from the personal and physical perceptions in
order to get 
an understanding of what man really is: their psychological causes
are but 
reflections of the physical ideas. If we are going to realize our
own natures, 
we must begin at the highest point of our nature—by assuming that.
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It is, and by holding to the power of that assumption. We begin to
see light by 
the very affirmation of the spiritual nature.
As we stand, we are always using our will along the line of our
desires and of 
our likes and dislikes, imagining these to be a proper basis for
thought and 
action. What is most necessary for us is a proper basis for
thinking. We need to 
eject the false idea of our being weak, sinful creatures, with all
the faults of 
our parents and their parents before them, because we were born
that way. We 
need to eject the mental idol of an outside creator. We need to
understand the 
purpose of life, to see that we are the product of many of our own
prior lives, 
and to recognize an evolution under law—a law both true and
merciful—which 
operates everywhere. It is because that law operates in a round of
impression 
that we have the tendency each year to make New Year’s resolutions.
We could by 
an understanding and using of this law of recurrence bring into
effect those 
resolutions.
Often, however, resolutions are made because it is ‘proper” to make
them—with no 
real expectation of keeping them. We remember them for a few
days—they choke us 
off for a little while—and then gradually the old desires assert
themselves and 
we find ourselves traveling along the old way. Resolutions will
never do us any 
good if we do not sustain them. A desire is not a condition. The
mere desire 
will never get us anywhere. We have to maintain the desire; we have
to stick. to 
the resolution; we have to exert our will, and cleave to the object
of that will 
throughout. We can’t get rid of the evil in us by thinking of it,
nor can we get 
rid of any unpleasant thing by thinking about it; for it is truly
said that we 
are attached to anything by thinking about it. The harder we don’t
think about 
the evil things in us, the better; think about their opposites, and
the evil 
will not have the chance to return. Attachment is by thought, first
of all. 
Desire exists in thought, first of all. Then follows the action. We
have to have 
a firm basis for our thinking if we are ever going to express
ourselves as we 
should, as spiritual beings. Why do we all have our pet theories of
life, our 
pet religions or philosophies? Because they conform to our own
desires; not
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because they conform to truth or that they provide an explanation
of all the 
mysteries we see about us. This is why after so many thousands of
years of what 
we call civilization, we have become none the wiser, still moving
in the same 
old tread-mill of life and death and sorrow and suffering and pain.
Yet we are 
not bound to it, save as we bind ourselves by our own thoughts and
action. We 
are not under the necessity of following along on those planes of
error as we 
are now doing.
There is a chance for us if we understand our own natures. Then,
let us resolve 
one great thing: resolve to know; resolve to think right, and do
right; resolve 
to acquire some of the knowledge that always has existed—the
knowledge of man as 
a spiritual being through all his fluctuations in the realm of
matter. As we 
rely more and more upon the Self within, we begin to express and
use the power 
which we already have—and that is far more than we imagine. We have
to help 
ourselves by taking the suggestions already given in the teachings
of 
Theosophy—which are Masters’ suggestions. And then, as the
sustaining power of 
the will is held along the line in which we desire to do, more direct
help comes 
from those Elder Brothers, who at every hour of each day “are
willing and 
anxious to meet those clear-eyed enough to see their true destiny
and 
noble-hearted enough to work for ‘the great orphan, Humanity’.”
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
OCCULT KNOWLEDGE
Occult Knowledge means knowledge which is “hidden,” but it also
means knowledge 
which is known. If it is knowledge that is known, there must be
Those who know 
it; there could be no knowledge without the knowers of it. True
occult knowledge 
can be obtained only by those who follow the path to it. That path
was set down 
by Those Who Know; all who will may and can arrive at that
knowledge. This is 
not a path open only to certain persons; it is open to every living
human being, 
and limited only by the limitations we ourselves place around it
through choice 
or through ignorance.
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Much is heard in the world today of what passes for “occult
knowledge.” Much 
experiment goes on under that name in various directions: we have
societies for 
psychical and psychological research, and there is much talk of
psychic and 
astral “experiences” and “communications” with the dead. All these
various 
methods of research are from below, upwards, and will never find
the goal. 
Scientific methods, psychological methods, the methods of the
Spiritualists, 
alike proceed from particulars to universals. Particulars are
infinite, and 
those who follow that path will inevitably get lost in its infinite
ramifications, with no real knowledge gained. The goal is to be
found from 
above, below—from universals to particulars, and not the reverse.
The Path of real occult knowledge begins where all begin. It is the
Path of all 
beings, and we need to see the reason why it is an open path for
all. We find 
ourselves in the midst of a vast evolution, with beings of many
grades still 
below us—lower in point of consciousness and intelligence than
ourselves—as also 
we ought to see there must be beings above us far greater than we
are. All these 
beings have sprung from a common Source; all differ seemingly, yet
there exists, 
supreme in all, the same power to perceive, to know, to learn.
We have to understand the reason for the differences in beings and
for our own 
limitations. Let us, then, seek out the beginnings of things—for
everything that 
exists had a beginning, and, of course, everything that had a
beginning will 
have an ending. If our beginning was with this life only, the end
of this life 
would be our complete extinction; then we would have no concern
with anything 
else. But there is knowledge that extends prior to this birth and
beyond this 
life, and in that hidden knowledge we may get the clue to an understanding
of 
not only our own natures, but the nature of all beings everywhere.
Our first firm basis is in the perception that all knowledge must
lie in and be 
sustained by the common Source of which we are a part and an
expression. That 
common Basis could not be any supreme Being, for “Being” means
finiteness and 
limitation, and outside of it must still be that which is not
contained.
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We have to go far back of all beings and creations and creatures to
that Cause 
which lies behind all life, all consciousness, all spirit, all
being. That is 
not different in any being. IT is the same in all, so must be the
essential 
Divinity in all beings of every grade. There is one Absolute
Principle which is 
the origin, the sustainer, the container, of all that ever was, is,
or shall be. 
We call it a PRINCIPLE, because to name IT is to define IT, to
limit IT, to 
belittle IT. To endeavor to give IT attributes of any kind is a
limitation, and 
we must go back of all limitations if we are to understand the
Omnipresent and 
Immortal in us and in all things.
Our search for knowledge is almost universally a looking for
something outside. 
We are looking for information, for instruction, in the thoughts of
other men, 
in the ideas of other peoples, which, in this school of Occult
Knowledge, is not 
knowledge at all. The only knowledge we can have is that which we
gain for 
ourselves, and within ourselves, as actual experience. External
facts and 
information can never give us any understanding whatever of the
higher, more 
divine parts of our nature.
There is no understanding, no explanation, of the mysteries of our
own 
existence, on the basis of a single life. We have to go beyond
that, back of 
that, to realize what evolution means. Evolution means an unfolding
from within 
outwards. That is the way all beings grow—physically,
intellectually, 
spiritually. The beings below us are unfolding; they are embryonic
souls not yet 
arrived at the human stage of self-consciousness and
self-realization, but they 
are on their way to where we already are. The same thing is true of
all the 
beings above us. They have already passed through stages similar to
ours. The 
inner part— the Enduring in every being—is illimitable, infinite,
in its power 
of unfolding and expression, because it is the Immortal.
But, one may say, there was a beginning to this life. So, too,
there was a 
beginning to this day, to this experience, to this collection of
experiences, to 
this body. Yes; but in each and every case this beginning and those
beginnings 
were the repetitions of other beginnings and endings—of what? Of
experiences, of 
instruments, of perceptions; not of the Perceiver, the real being.
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This brings us to the perception of Law; the Law of Periodicity, of
Cycles, 
which is illustrated in every department of nature. Our being here
under 
evolution ought to show any intelligent person that no one has
reached his 
present stage save through previous stages. That which pushes “us”
on, that 
which is the basis of all the powers we show or express, is the
Spirit in us, 
our real Self. The Spirit of man has all the powers that any Spirit
has. That 
Spirit is universal, not limited to any one being or class of
beings. In man it 
is individualized and is the true Ego in each of us. As such Ego we
have the 
direction of that inflow of universal force which we call the
Spirit, and we 
direct that power in various ways, some of which we call good, and
others we 
recognize as evil; for it must be understood that neither good nor
evil exist of 
themselves, but only as the results of action.
We have imagined that good and evil have come to us from others,
but as 
directors of the forces of Spirit, as Egos, we can see there is
nothing brought 
to us nor upon us except as we cause that operation ourselves. ‘We
have often 
heard it said, “Whatsoever a man sows, that shall he also reap,”
and we have 
perhaps believed it. But have we ever applied it in another way,
that whatever 
we are reaping we must have sown?
The Law of Periodicity, of Cycles, being universal, must apply in
every 
particular to every particular being. That is justice. If Law is
not universal 
then this is not a universe of law, but of chance. If it is a
universe of law, 
then our very conditions, our possessions, our intelligence, our
beliefs, 
everything that comes to us, comes as the result of our thought and
action. As 
we are reaping at any time, so we must have sown at some time. As
we are sowing 
at any time, so we must reap at some time. Our birth, our
circumstances, are 
reapings. Our attitude towards them, our use of them, are sowings.
We are born 
into any body, any conditions, as the result of our past sowing—our
past lives. 
This is justice, and it alone explains the differences between
people.
We are responsible beings, and the feeling of responsibility is the
first step 
towards selflessness. The thought that Law is im-
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posed upon us by any being or beings, is destroyed by the recognition
that Law 
is inherent in ourselves: as each one acts—that is, affects
others—so is the 
re-action upon himself.
The differences between people, and the contradictions in
ourselves, are in the 
fundamental ideas held; for as a man thinks, so he acts. If he
thinks this is 
the first time he has been on earth, that it is the only time; if
he believes 
that some being brought him here, governs him while here, is going
to take care 
of him when he dies—if he has those ideas, he will act in
accordance with them, 
and will receive the inevitable reaction.
But if we see that the Spirit is behind everything, that all Law is
the action 
of Spirit, that we are Spirit, we shall have a true perception of
our own 
natures. We will begin to think in ages, instead of the days of one
short life; 
the basis of our actions will be those Eternal verities that have
been proven 
again and again by Supermen—those Beings above us who once passed
through our 
stage, and who are now the Knowers of the Eternal. They hold this
knowledge, and 
that which has been given out by Them as Theosophy is a statement
of a portion 
of Their knowledge. It is as much as we can assimilate, or
understand, or use.
So, being Spirit, and acting under the Law of our own Being, we
grow to realize 
what the whole Universe means: that the Universe exists for no
other purpose 
than the evolution of Soul—the embryonic souls below us, the
partially developed 
souls here among us, and the perfectly developed souls above us—all
climbing the 
great stair of development, of Self-evolution. No one can force us
up the stair. 
We may go on and on, remaining on the same level for myriads of
lives; we may go 
lower; but if we are ever to make the ascent from Man to Superman,
from Soul to 
Great Soul, we ourselves must fulfill the conditions that will
enable us to do 
so.
Along these lines lies Occult Knowledge. There is such a knowledge,
and it is 
far beyond what we call reason; for reason is merely working from
premises to 
conclusions, whereas real knowledge is direct cognition. We do not
reason about 
the things
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we know. We do not have to reason about all the knowledge we have
attained in 
the past; when we are on the plane of Knowledge, we know without
any reasoning 
whatever. This goes far deeper than most people imagine. It is
possible for the 
human being to reach that stage where by looking at anything he can
tell the 
whole nature of it—from its origin, all the processes through which
it has 
passed, all the incidental relations it may have had. This is
direct 
cognition—Occult Knowledge. It is to be gained by the recognition
and conscious 
use of the powers of the Inner Self. It cannot be gained by
reasoning, nor by 
the inferences reached from looking at things from outside and
judging from what 
we are able to perceive; it is gained by what we call the
Intuition—the acquired 
knowledge of all the past. Occult Knowledge enables one absolutely
to determine 
what is the nature and essence of anything regarded.
True and full Intuition can come to us as a steady light only
through our doing 
away with the false ideas that we now hold and employ. What is
required is a 
correction of our basis of thinking. Theosophy gives us the true
basis for right 
thinking, and so for right action. The consistent and persistent
effort to think 
and act from the right basis draws out a certain power in
ourselves, and that 
power manifests, first of all, as the power of concentration—the
ability to hold 
our mind upon a single subject or object to the exclusion absolute
of every 
other thing.
How many of us have that power? I venture to say, not one. We have
no stability 
of mind, and we must get that. But the power of concentration
cannot be used if 
we imagine ourselves to be changeable, perishable beings. We think
that in order 
to “develop,” we must change. It is not true. We need to change our
fundamental 
ideas, our minds, our modes of thought, our instruments. That is
where the 
development comes. If we are ever going to learn to concentrate, we
must 
concentrate from the basis of the steady point in us, the
Perceiver, the Spirit, 
our real unchanging Immortal Self. We cannot come to or connect
with that Power 
in ourselves unless we realize that all life is One, that all
beings like 
ourselves are moving on the same path. In that
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way we realize Universal Brotherhood in a spiritual sense: Altruism
should 
actuate us in every thought, word and deed.
If we consider these things we shall see how far away we may be
from making a 
beginning in the direction of Occult Knowledge. A beginning has to
be made, and 
the sooner we start the better. It calls for the arousal of the
Spiritual Will. 
Will is not a thing in itself, a power in itself. The will is
consciousness in 
action, as distinguished from consciousness inactive. As soon as we
think or 
desire in any direction the ‘will” works. That will is weak or
strong according 
to our idea of ourselves, our thoughts, our desires, our
aspirations, our 
considerations of our weaknesses, our limitations. If we realize
that we are 
Spiritual beings and think and act in the right direction, at once
the Spiritual 
Will begins to work, the power of Concentration is strengthened,
the feeling of 
responsibility grows, the whole nature begins to change, to be
transformed—the 
Great Transition is going on.
These are the Eternal Verities that we ought to grasp. We ought to
grasp them 
first and apply them in ourselves and to ourselves, and then we
will find that 
these ideas are true, because their truth is realized—has become as
evident to 
us as the sun in heaven.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE POWER OF SUGGESTION
The power of suggestion means many different things to many minds.
It is coupled 
with the idea of hypnosis, where the operator is able to make the
subject think, 
say, do, or imagine anything he chooses. That is possible through
the abnormal 
condition of the subject. The means and methods of inducing this
abnormal 
condition are not generally known, although some practitioners have
hit upon 
various ways of bringing on hypnosis in some subjects.
But what is to be discussed is the fact of suggestion itself,
generally 
considered, and as it affects all men. People are not aware that
they act almost 
entirely under suggestion. From our birth we are surrounded by
those who suggest 
certain ideas to
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us as true, and we follow these suggested ideas. There is very
little original 
thought anywhere, and particularly is this true in those lines to
which the 
public pays the most attention—that is, politics, religion,
science. Whatever 
system of thought is presented to us, that we adopt. We follow the
suggestion 
given, with no attempt to reach to the basis of that which is
suggested. The 
foundation upon which the suggestion rests is taken for granted,
even in the 
most important things in life.
Our religion, for example, is stated to be a ‘revelation.” We
accepted it in 
childhood, accepted it as a fact, without looking into it to see
what it is and 
on what it is founded. Our powers of thought and action being based
upon a false 
suggestion does not inhibit their exercise, but as a result all our
possibilities of thought and action, all our mental creations, the
whole super 
structure of our existence, are false, because, thinking from false
premises, 
our thinking will inevitably lead to false conclusions.
This is just as truly the fact as in the case of the hypnotized
subject. He is 
thrown into an abnormal condition; he has nothing before his mind;
the operator 
presents a given idea and with it the suggestion of a certain mode
of action. 
Immediately the subject adopts the suggestion, goes to work on it,
and will 
continue working along the suggested line cumulatively until the
suggestion is 
changed.
Those who are born into any particular sect ought to know this.
With our first 
sense of understanding, ideas are presented to us, instilled into
our minds as 
absolute facts. We proceed from that basis, and however long it is
followed, no 
true understanding or conclusion can be reached. What do we know of
the truth or 
falsity of these ideas when presented to us in childhood? Nothing
whatever. What 
do our parents and teachers know of them? Nothing whatever. They
have merely 
passed on to us the suggestions which they received in childhood
and which have 
operated in them cumulatively ever since.
We must learn not to accept statements, no matter by whom made,
simply because 
they are made to us. We must get at the basis of whatever is presented,
know 
what its principles are—
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whether those principles are self-evident. If they are not self-
evident, how 
can they be basic?
The idea is common to everybody in the Western world that there is
a Creator of 
this universe. What do we know about it? If it is true that a being
created the 
universe and all the beings in it, then we are not responsible. In
continuance 
of that idea other ideas follow it: that man is here but once, that
this is his 
only birth, and that from here he knows not where he goes. We have
followed the 
suggestion that a man lives but one life, that he is fundamentally
irresponsible 
for his being here, and we have built up our thoughts and actions
on that basis. 
Does it make us wiser, happier, while we live? Does it produce
peace and 
happiness for others? Does it bring us to the end of life any
wiser, any better 
off? For we know that when we come to the end of life we leave
every earthly 
thing we have gained while here.
But this earth is only one of many earths. What of the other
planets, the other 
solar systems with which space is filled? Have we any vital
knowledge in regard 
to them or the reason for their existence under the suggestions
that have been 
handed to us?
When our religious impressions are changed, when other suggestions
are given us, 
are they not handed to us in the same way? Whatever they are—
Science,” “New 
Thought,” “Christian Science,” and so on—we adopt them, move along
the lines 
suggested by those who give them to us, and what do we really
learn? Nothing. We 
come to the end of life just as encased in ignorance, despite all
the 
“revelations” ever given us. What do we know of their bases? Are
they true or 
only partially so? We are never asked to look into their
fundamentals, to see 
for ourselves if they are true, self-evident. No; we are asked to
accept what is 
given us and go to work on that. That is suggestion.
Our municipal life, our national life, our political life, are all
under 
suggestion, and few are they who try to go to the root of things
and understand 
what the nature of being is, so that they can know for themselves
and thus act 
with power and knowledge. As we look the field over, we find that
we are all 
prey to the power of suggestion in every direction.
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What is the criterion which we should apply to every suggestion
presented to us? 
Just this: If we have the truth, it will explain what was before a
mystery. And 
as we are surrounded by mysteries, the Truth must explain them all.
This power of suggestion must still be used, whatever line may be
pointed out to 
us. If Truth exists and is possible to us—the Truth in religion,
science and 
philosophy—it must first come to us by suggestion from Those who
know. If it 
were not possible for this to be done, were not possible for us to
avail 
ourselves of it, then there would be no use talking of these
things. But when 
the true is suggested to us, there is always a means presented by
which we may 
see and verify it. That means is not in anyone’s authority or
endorsement, but 
in the fact that we can perceive it and test it for ourselves. The
final 
authority is the man himself.
An outside God is an idol. We have to reach into the very recesses
of our own 
being and understand that it is ourself that chooses and determines
for itself 
what it shall accept and what reject. The very power of
Divinity—the power of 
choice—is in each one of us. When we begin to understand that, we
get the first 
clue to our own immortality. So we may see that That which lives
and thinks in 
man is the Eternal Pilgrim. If you prefer to use the term God, you
may say, “So 
many men on earth, so many Gods in heaven.”
There are many beings below man; perhaps some will admit that there
may be, that 
there are, beings greater than man. None of these beings can be
omnipresent, 
none of them can be the Supreme. What is that which is omnipresent
and supreme 
in each and every being—in man, in the beings below man, in the
beings above 
man? is it not this Power to perceive, to think, to choose, to act
upon the 
thinking and the choosing—upon the Intelligence which the being
has? That Power 
transcends all beings, all conceptions. It is that Power which lies
at the root 
of all evolution, and is the very Essence of every being. No one is
separate 
from That. No one is without That. All are rays from
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and one with That. There is no possibility of any existence apart
from That.
Man stands in the midst of a vast and silent evolution—the
evolution of 
Intelligence, of Soul. All the beings below man must be coming up
the ladder of 
being to our stage, and whatever beings may exist beyond man, they
must have 
passed through our stage and gone still farther up the ladder. They
are our 
Elder Brothers and have passed through civilizations before
ours—many, many ages 
before ours—and have reached a point of development far higher than
ours. It is 
They who have carried forward all the knowledge gained in that vast
evolution 
which has preceded ours.
These Elder Brothers of the human family are not spirits in the
ordinary sense 
of the word, nor are they hazy beings, ‘ or ‘ They are men,
Mahatmas (Great 
Souls), who are perfected beings physically, mentally, morally,
psychically, 
spiritually—who stand now where we shall one day stand, when we
have perfected 
ourselves in the same way that They have done, through self-induced
and 
self-devised exertions.
These Masters stand to us in Their knowledge and power, in Their
ability and 
efforts to help and guide us, as the greatest and most powerful
suggestion that 
could be made to any human being. They are willing and ready to
help whenever 
and where ever we are willing and ready to receive. They never ask
for anything; 
They are always ready to give to those who may be willing to follow
the lines 
indicated, so that we in our turn may become as They are—may know
for ourselves.
If we take Their philosophy as given to us in Theosophy, if we take
it as a 
theory to be examined on its merits, we shall find that it
explains. It explains 
why there are so many different kinds of people; it explains
different natures; 
it explains why some suffer more and others suffer less. It
explains why each 
one is born in a particular place, in that family, in that nation,
at that time. 
It explains every inequality in life, every injustice, every
mystery. It will 
enable a man to realize his own immortality, to live a conscious
existence in 
Spirit, even while incarnated
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in a body here on this earth. At present we live in matter; we
think that we 
exist in matter and are dependent on matter for our existence. We
think in 
matter. Our religion is materialistic; our science is
materialistic; our 
philosophy is materialistic. All this is due to the misuse of the
power of 
suggestion and to our acceptance of ideas without investigation,
without 
comparison, upon authority. We believe; we do not know.
There is no Divinity, save it has evolved as such from the One
Spirit. Every 
Divine being is an evolution. Where ever divinity is spoken of it
means an 
evolution of a being. All intelligence is based in the Power to
perceive, and 
that exists in every grade of being. Intelligence is the extension
of the power 
to know. This idea sets aside a great many suggestions that we have
perhaps 
depended upon. It would be well for us if we did not depend upon
anything save 
our own inherent power to learn, to extricate ourselves from our
difficulties. 
All our powers are born with us; all our past experiences are with
us, but they 
are crowded out by the suggestions given to us when we were
children, and by the 
false ideas which we still entertain. Nothing but the Truth can
ever set us 
free, and that Truth each one can find and follow, and thus come to
know for 
himself.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
TRUE CLAIRVOYANCE
Since the Theosophical Movement took outward expression in 1875,
the term 
clairvoyance (clear seeing) has become familiar to many people. In
the latter 
part of last century and in the early part of this century, many
kinds of 
clairvoyance have been observed and experienced. Clairvoyance
itself had its own 
peculiar development and facility, the different kinds of
clairvoyance relating 
to varying degrees of perception of matter where there was no
physical thing to 
be seen, and to events transpiring at a great distance from where
the seer was 
located. Unfortunately, all of these kinds of clairvoyance were
limited in their 
scope; they were but partial clairvoyance.
Societies of psychology and of psychical research have under taken
the task of 
finding out what the power of clairvoyance
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may or may not be, from the basis of brain, or mere physical
existence. They 
seek the necessary causes in effects which themselves have been set
in motion by 
causes which are hidden. Consequently, their researches are
limited. Yet, 
clairvoyance itself, however followed, points to the fact that
there is latent 
in man the power to see, hear, feel, contact, at any distance
whatever; and the 
power is not limited to any special person, or persons, but is common
to all 
humanity.
There is a true clairvoyance. There is a true school of occultism.
There are 
many false clairvoyants. There are many false schools of occultism.
All the 
false schools go in some particular direction that is attractive to
the ordinary 
human mind—the mind that desires to obtain something for itself, as
it believes 
itself to be. So with the different kinds of clairvoyance—if the
desire on the 
part of one endeavoring to find the power in himself is to obtain
something for 
himself, the clairvoyance obtained will never lead him in any true
direction. 
Nothing can give a true understanding of clairvoyance, nor bring to
our minds 
what true clairvoyance may be, but a study of the nature of man, of
the nature 
of the world in which he lives, and the nature of the solar system
in which that 
world exists.
The clue to true clairvoyance lies in the septenary nature of man.
There are 
seven distinct planes of consciousness; there are seven distinct
states of 
matter, of which the physical is one. These seven distinct planes
of action are 
the different departments of man’s nature, but it is the same One
who acts in 
all the different departments. Clairvoyance, then, in any true
sense, we should 
understand to be clear seeing in each and every one of these seven
departments 
of the nature of man. All other partial clairvoyance can bring us
no great 
results, and, certainly, no great knowledge.
Many are those who have ‘sat for development,” have endeavored to
obtain the 
state that is termed “the astral plane,” in order to be able to see
and hear at 
a distance. But the greatest danger imaginable lies in that
direction. The mere 
seeing or hearing things does not give any understanding of their
nature,
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and many things to which we may be attracted on the astral plane
are dangerous 
and poisonous in their nature. The efforts made to reach that plane
are always 
by means of passivity, and, when we allow ourselves to become
passive, any 
influence what ever outside of the normal physical perceptions may
reach us. We 
are just as much the prey of evil effects as we are open to good
effects, but we 
are not choosers in either direction. What ever may be in our
nature attracts 
the good, or evil, or mixed, accordingly; but the mere seeing or
hearing would 
of itself give us no knowledge, nor carry us one step on the way of
progress. 
For illustration, say we were transported to the planet Mars, saw
the operation 
of the beings there and heard the sounds made in their speech. If
they were a 
different kind of beings from ourselves we would have no
understanding at all of 
what they were doing. True knowledge and true understanding are
gained by a 
comprehension of laws and principles, and in no other way. Just as
there is a 
law which from the very beginning of our being prompted us to
advance step by 
step in development, so there is a law which admits us step by step
up the 
stairs of knowledge. Not one of those steps may be omitted. To
attempt to get to 
the top by springing from the bottom is not possible, for each step
depends upon 
every other—the highest resting upon all the rest, the lowest
preceding the 
highest.
The septenary nature of man is best explained by reference to the
three great 
principles which underlie all life, as well as every religion and
every 
philosophy that ever has been, or ever can be. They may be
indicated by the 
brief terms God, Law, and Being. As to God, the ancients have
recorded that 
there is One Absolute Principle—Unspeakable, Untranslatable,
Undefinable, 
Infinite, Omnipresent—the Cause, the Sustainer of all that was, is,
or ever 
shall be. Deity, the Omnipresent, can be absent from no point of
space, and we 
are inseparable from It. Each one is of That—a ray from and one
with that 
Absolute Principle. The power in us to perceive, to know, to
experience—apart 
from any thing that is seen, known, or experienced—is the One Self,
the One 
Life, and the One Consciousness, shared by all alike—the
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Source of every being, the Life of every being, the Power of every
being. Behind 
all perceiving and knowing and experiencing is the One undivided
Self. Herein 
lies the true basis of Brotherhood—the unifying bond for all above
man and for 
all below man—and the real growth into divine life is the increasing
realization 
of the fullness of that Life in each. Acting for and as that Self
in every 
direction, realizing that the Self acts in all and through all, and
endeavoring 
to realize more and more that each one is that Self, the fullness
of one’s own 
nature and of other natures comes to be seen, appreciated,
understood, and 
helped.
The second great principle—Law—shows that the universe is a
boundless plane, in 
which occur periodical manifestations. This earth had a beginning;
this solar 
system had a beginning. So, too, they will have an ending, since
everything that 
begins in time ends in time. All earths, solar systems, and beings
of every 
grade, have reached their present stage through evolution—that
evolution under 
exact law, inherent in the nature of the beings concerned. All
evolution 
proceeds from beings. It is the force of the beings in action which
causes 
individual and collective results. The law of laws is Karma—the law
of action 
and re-action, of cause and effect, which are the aspects of
action, and which 
can not be separated. All progress goes on under this law in the
natural 
sequence of periods of activity and periods of rest. As after night
comes 
morning again; as after spring, summer, autumn, winter comes spring
again; so 
after birth, youth, manhood, death comes birth again. The process
of 
reincarnation, or coming into a body again, is just as natural as
coming into 
another day which is not yet. This life is; last life was; next
life will be. 
So, as planets or solar systems have their ending, will they and
the beings who 
composed them, have their re-incarnation—a new beginning.
The third fundamental principle points to the fact that all beings
in the 
universe have evolved from lower points of perception into greater
and greater 
individualization; that the beings above man have gone through our
stage; that 
there never can never be a stoppage of evolution in an infinite
universe of 
infinite possibilities; that whatever stage of perfection may be reached
in
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any race, on any planet, or in any solar system there are always
greater 
opportunities beyond.
When this solar system began, then, it was merely a continuation of
that which 
had been. In another aggregation, on another planet, beings of
every grade, 
corresponding to our mineral, animal, man, and superman, were
working together. 
That great day of operation ceased; that world stopped so far as
any further 
action was concerned, just as we stop when we cease waking
consciousness and go 
into sleep. Then the dawn of the next day comes. There is an
arousal and 
operation again. All the beings that had hitherto expressed
themselves, that had 
been indrawn into the primordial state of matter, go forth again on
a new basis 
to further development.
We were self-conscious beings when this world began, clothed in
that primordial 
state of matter from which all subsequent states have proceeded,
and in which 
the possibilities of change are infinite. Just as our planet,
beginning in a 
nebulous state, tends to a concretion, gradually cooling,
hardening, and 
condensing, so every living human being has made himself
concretions of 
substance, until he has reached this most dense plane, and final
concretion in 
the present physical body. Those stairs down which he has descended
are seven in 
number. That this solar system, this earth and man are septenary in
nature is 
the teaching. Observe the seven notes of the scale, and the seven
colors of the 
spectrum. These colors do not ‘happen,” by chance; they are
evolutions, 
differentiations of the one substance. Both sound and color are
different rates 
of vibration caught by the instruments of the ear, the eye, or
both. Some think 
that while we have now only five senses, we are gradually acquiring
another 
sense. What we really have are five organs that give five distinct 
characteristics of matter. What we shall next arrive at is an
understanding of 
the sixth characteristic of matter, and beyond that is the seventh
synthetic 
sense, which covers all and belongs to the higher planes of being.
If we are that being who is the perceiver, the knower, the spirit,
Life, 
Consciousness itself—what would be true clairvoy-
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ance? Could that by any possibility be called true clairvoyance
which would be 
embraced in the mere looking through fleshly eyes upon a state of
matter only a 
little removed from this of the earth? There are true clairvoyants
who not only 
know what is apparent to everybody, but who see everything that is
in a human 
being, or in any being. In their sight, one can not make a motion
of any 
kind—such a simple motion as moving from one chair to
another—without setting 
every one of his seven senses into action and exhibiting along the
line of those 
seven senses every single qualification and motive he may ever have
held. It is 
within the power of some to know the very hearts of men, to know
the very 
motives that actuate them. In true clairvoyance, the real being is
absolutely 
and unconditionally awake. He is using every one of the instruments
with 
precision and in exact line with one another. He has clear seeing.
He reaches 
down into the motives of man, because he sees everything. How can
he see? Every 
center in man—that is, every organ—has been evolved under the
operation of the 
laws that govern the solar system. These laws may be known. Every
center has its 
own distinctive color and its own distinctive sound; it also
presents a 
distinctive symbol and form. If, then, one knew the laws of sounds,
colors, 
symbols and form, he could tell, just as exactly as we tell the
simplest thing, 
what caused the nature of any motion and the motive that underlay
it. From him, 
deception could not be hid; evil could not be hid; motives could
not be hid. 
Such an acquisition, without any possibility of failure, would be
divine—the 
true clairvoyance.
True clairvoyance is not gained by “sitting for development.” One
might sit for 
development ten million years, and in the end be only capable of
sitting. The 
true power is gained by trying to realize our own divine nature,
and to act as 
divinity acts; by trying to get all the possessions possible, that
we may place 
them at the service of our fellow-men. The power is gained by self
sacrificing 
service, and in no other way. The divine in us has its fullest
expression in 
self-sacrifice. As man moves along, realizing more and more his own
nature, 
working more and more for the
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natures of every other, he finds spiritual knowledge springing up
spontaneously 
within him. He seeks nothing for himself. He seeks all power and
all knowledge 
only that he may help others less endowed. Jesus said: “Let him who
would be the 
greatest among you serve the least.” And so it has always been in
this great 
work, that those who were the greatest among us served the least,
were the 
humble ones, who sought no preference, no recognition.
Altruism, self-sacrifice, devotion to the highest interests of humanity—these
constitute the one password to true clairvoyance. If it could be
had in any 
other way, would not a great many things that have happened, a
great many 
disasters that have befallen different peoples, been avoided? If
such knowledge 
could be bought, would not institutions be despoiled, people
robbed, the 
stock-market exploited, and all sorts of self-advantages gained?
But true 
knowledge is never used for self-advantage; not even for defence.
When Jesus was 
on the cross, they said: “Let Him save Himself; let Him come down
from the 
cross. He saved others; Himself He cannot save.” ‘Was He powerless
to come down? 
Not at all. They had wreaked their natures upon Him, and He
suffered it. He 
could have destroyed them all, if He chose, but He said: “Father,
forgive them, 
for they know not what they do.” Nor would those who were able to
read the inner 
most thoughts of a person be “peering about,” be endeavoring to
discover what 
others desired to hide. Never would they look where the demand had
not been made 
upon them. They would take each person at his own valuation. If
such an one 
deceived—whatever the deception—they would meet him on his own
ground, striving 
all the time to give him a higher point of view.
There are beings who come into the world from time to time, with no
marks of 
distinction that we, as human beings, can recognize, yet the
possessors of a 
knowledge which we ardently desire to possess. They are never
recognized, save 
by the very few while they are among us; but when they go, that
which they have 
given tells us what they were. By the very character of the
teachings of Jesus 
we recognize the nature of the being who brought them. So the
teachings of 
Theosophy—a knowledge which is absolutely
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scientific, covering every department of nature, explaining all
that now are 
mysteries—declare the nature of those beings who brought Theosophy,
our Elder 
Brothers. And They, who have raised themselves out of our ranks, do
not leave us 
in trouble, in darkness, in ignorance. Their desire is that we
shall see, under 
stand, know ourselves; that, quickly setting right the ideas which
we hold of 
life, and letting right actions flow from right ideas, we may act
as divine 
beings. However blind, however ignorant, we are not left alone, but
are helped 
just so far as we desire and merit help, and just so far as we,
with what we 
learn, help others who know still less than we. Unselfishness, and
that alone, 
brings us all the gifts there are. As Jesus said: ‘Seek ye first
the kingdom of 
heaven, and all the rest will be added unto you.”
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
TRUE MORALITY
True morality is not a thing of words or phrases or modes of action
of any kind, 
nor is its basis to be found in the many kinds of ideas of morality
in the 
world, which vary as to time and place. What is “moral” at one time
is “immoral” 
at another. There is no basis whatever in this changing attitude
towards 
actions, changing classifications of good and evil, in a changing
“division of 
the universe.” Intolerance is their sure resultant; for those who
pride 
themselves upon their own special brands of “morality” are always
intolerant of 
others who do not accept that brand. True morality rests in an
understanding and 
in a realization of man’s own spiritual nature, and must of
necessity flow from 
it, irrespective of all kinds of conventions. We need to know our
own inner 
natures in order to know what is, in truth, morality.
The conventions of external life are established merely by a
consensus of 
opinion of the beings living at any one time and in any one place.
They are not 
necessarily based on truth, and certainly not on a perception of
the whole of 
truth. As we may see, the best interests of all are not served by
the ideas that 
are generally held. The world is in a tremendously evil and selfish
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state. With all our prevailing ideas of progress, of morality and
of religion, 
it is not anywhere nearly so happy a place as it was perhaps a
century or two 
ago; it is not nearly so good a place for human beings to live in
as it was in 
the more innocent and less complex civilizations of the older
nations. There is 
evidently some thing wrong with the ideas that we hold, if we find
it impossible 
to deny the fact that instead of the world getting better and in stead
of life 
becoming more simple, the world is growing worse and life is
becoming more and 
more complex. We should not find ourselves in the present condition
if our 
ideas, religious and moral, flowed from the underlying basic ideas
of all 
religions, philosophies, and systems of thought.
The basis of understanding of life accepted by the majority of
Western peoples 
has been a revealed religion, and a personal God who revealed that
religion. 
From this basis have sprung all our wrong conceptions. Hence the
great stress 
laid on physical existence. in fact, one might say that the
generality of human 
thinking is centered entirely on physical existence. The question
has not even 
been asked, “How is it that I am born at this time, under such
conditions, in 
this people, and not at some previous or future time, when the
world might be 
better?” The question has not been asked, “Why are we here at all?”
Nor have we 
asked, “What is the pre-existing cause that brought us into this
relation? Was 
it at the whim or caprice of a special Being, or was it under the
operation of 
an indwelling, inherent law within ourselves?” If we are here with
our present 
qualities, surrounded with difficulties, not because of anything we
ourselves 
have done, but because of the whim or caprice of some Being, then
we must regard 
ourselves as absolutely irresponsible for anything what ever. If we
were so 
created, there is nothing that can undo that creation and we must
suffer the 
consequences, the causes for which we did not set in motion!
The true ideas of the ancient philosophy relieve us of two
misconceptions: one, 
the idea that there is a revengeful God who punishes us for those
things that we 
are unable to prevent ourselves from doing; and second, the idea of
a Devil to 
whom
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we are consigned if we do not follow the lines that some people
have laid down 
for us. A knowledge of Theosophy enables us to understand that
there never was 
any “creation,” in the sense of making something out of nothing;
but that 
everything—every being of every kind—has evolved, and is still
evolving. The 
beings below us are evolving to our estate, where the beings, now
evolved so far 
beyond us, some time in the distant past went through a similar
stage. All 
beings are what they are through evolution from within outwards,
that evolution 
proceeding under Law.
Law is operative everywhere and upon every being, because the Law
is not 
something separate from him; it is not separate from the inner
spiritual man. 
Law is the law of man’s own action. So, as we act along those lines
that affect 
others for good or for evil, we necessarily receive the return from
those good 
or evil effects which we cause others to experience. Each
individual is the 
operator of the Law; according to his actions he gets the
re-actions; according 
to his sowing, does he reap. In place, then, of the idea of a
revengeful God, we 
have the ideas of absolute Justice and individual responsibility.
If, from the point of view of Law, we ask ourselves what
pre-existing causes 
brought us into these relations, we can see that what now is must
have been 
brought about by ourselves, and what now is is similar to what was.
At once the 
idea is presented to our minds that this is not the first time, by
many times, 
we have been in a body; that re-incarnation is the process by which
human beings 
reach greater and greater heights; that there is no other way or
means to learn 
all the lessons to be gained in physical life among our fellow-men,
except 
through repeated incarnations.
We come, then, to another phase of our being—for we see there is in
us something 
that is continuous in its operation, something which was never born
and never 
dies. If it continues from one life to another, through many lives,
and for many 
lives, there must be a permanency in us which no change of
condition or body or 
circumstance can alter for a single instant. As we thus think in
terms of ages 
rather than in the days of one short life,
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we begin to get a glimpse of that Reality which lies within us; we
open the door 
so that those internal, real, more permanent perceptions can find
operation in 
our daily waking thoughts—for every single human being has sprung
from the One 
Great Source, is animated by That, is, in fact, That at the very
root of his 
being; in That is his power of perception and of action, which is
spiritual and 
permanent. The power of perception and of action exists in
everyone; the 
direction of that perception and action rests in each one. Each has
the power to 
take the course which to him seems best; but, in taking the course,
he sows, and 
must also reap as was the nature of his sowing. Every being in this
universe of 
Law is experiencing as he is because of his own thoughts, words,
and deeds; 
every circumstance, every misshapen day, every evil that comes to
us as well as 
every good, is due to thought, word of deed of ours in the past. In
each 
incarnation we find friends as well as enemies. So our minds may be
set at rest 
with regard to either God or Devil. Each one of us represents both
the 
Spirit—the highest divine nature—and also, the very lowest—the
infernal nature. 
Man is spiritual, in fact, but, thinking himself material and separate,
and 
acting in accordance with his thinking, he brings about the battle
between the 
two natures in him.
The great mistake of religionists in our age has been the
classification of good 
and evil. There is nothing good in itself. There is nothing evil in
itself. It 
is the use to which anything is put that makes it good or makes it
evil. How can 
we draw a fine line between good and bad in every case? Good and
evil are judged 
by the effects that flow from the action done, but what might seem
bad in one 
case might be in fact the highest good, and what might seem good in
another case 
might, in fact, lead to the greatest evil. Just a hair’s line
divides the Divine 
from the Satanic. And that hair’s line consists, not in this nor in
that mode of 
conduct, but in the clearly presented motive or intention of the
one who acts. A 
good motive can never produce altogether evil results, and yet a
good motive is 
not enough. We may have the best motive in the world, but if we
have not also 
knowledge and wisdom, we may unintentionally do a wrong thing when
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we intended to do good; and sometimes we may do a good thing when
we intended to 
do evil. Thus true morality may be seen to lie not in the act
itself, but in the 
motive; it depends on the knowledge and intelligence of the being
acting.
The lines of true morality may go anywhere, but by this is not
meant that we do 
evil that good may come! How could we do evil if our perception is
good, if our 
knowledge is clear, if our motive is unquestioned and without
self-interest? No 
imaginable evil could flow under such conditions, which are of the
nature of the 
Spirit. The widest range of intelligence and wisdom are required to
make it 
possible for no evil effects to flow even if good is intended.
Wisdom is always 
required, because the very nature and essence of our being is
wisdom itself, the 
object of wisdom, and that which is to be obtained by wisdom. There
is nothing 
higher than that essence of our being, and we may consciously gain
it by first 
setting aside all those ideas that conflict with it, and then,
acting from the 
basis of our spiritual nature, from the basis of absolute, unerring
Law. Once 
these ideas are held in mind to the exclusion of all other
separative ideas, 
unity of Spirit, unity of thought and unity of action take place.
This great philosophy of Theosophy, then, presents a basis from
which the truest 
kind of morality can be perceived. True morality does not depend
upon words, 
phrases, or conventions, but upon a universal perception of all
things, whereby 
everything is done for good, every thought and feeling expended for
the benefit 
of others rather than for one’s self. A clear perception of one’s
own spiritual 
nature, and the motive to benefit mankind in every direction and in
every case, 
without self-interest, are the two essentials for true morality.
True morality 
is, in fact, a universal existence, and the beginning of it is in
the desire to 
live to benefit mankind without self-interest or hope of any reward
whatever; 
then, to practice and to help those who know still less than we do.
This is quite the reverse of prevailing religious ideas of personal
salvation, 
yet this universal existence is our salvation. At
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once, when these universal ideas are seen and to some extent
realized, one loses 
all fears. Neither change nor death, nor things present or to come,
can have any 
effect upon that one. He meets conditions as they come, does what
he can, and 
lets other conditions succeed them. He moves through life, far from
an un happy 
being, quite capable of taking all the joy and pleasure that exist
in the 
world—all that upon which his fellow-men only subsist or hope to
subsist. He 
moves among his fellow-men, understanding everything that they are
going 
through, enjoying with their joy and sorrowing when they sorrow,
yet himself 
free from either joy or sorrow. When we arrive at that condition,
our sense of 
morality will be based on the nature of man. We shall then look on
each and 
every being as of the same kind as ourselves, differing only in
degree of 
understanding. There can not be in us anything but tolerance and
mercy, for we 
shall know we can not judge others in their struggles; we can not
say that there 
is good in this case, bad in that; we shall understand that
goodness and badness 
are entirely relative in men, while they perceive the Reality not
at all; we 
shall see that the best thing we can do for anyone is to assist him
to 
understand himself, so that he may reach that point of perception
and knowledge 
and power which is, in reality, his own and which he has but to
realize.
Man’s false conceptions of life are what prevent him from knowing
the truth, and 
it is evident that the first step towards true perception lies in
throwing aside 
the prejudices and predilections he has lived by. And there is
always help. 
Never have we been, left alone. Always there are beings greater in
evolution 
than we, who return to this field of physical existence to help us,
to wake us 
up to a perception of our natures. Such has been the mission of all
Divine 
Incarnations down the ages. Those beings have come and lived among
us, have 
become “in all things like unto us,” as was said of Jesus, in order
that the 
human words They spoke should be words we would understand. They
meet us on the 
basis of our ideas and try to clarify them and set them in a true
course. They 
can do nothing to stop what
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we have done and what we want to do; They can not interfere; but
They can help 
us to see the right direction, if we are so willed; They can give
help when we 
turn to that direction which They indicate—that Path which They
themselves 
followed so many ages ago. Always They try to help us, even when we
are 
proceeding along wrong lines and bringing upon ourselves the
suffering such 
wrong lines entail—even then They try to direct the results into a
better 
channel. They hold back the awful Karma that would shake the world,
and let the 
effects come so gradually that we can stand and bear them. That is
part of the 
protective power of the spiritual nature, and it operates in every
direction.
It is for us, then, to say which way we shall go. We are not
creatures of 
circumstance. We are not the creatures of environment. We are their
creators. It 
is for us to see that we think right, that we build right, that we
build upon 
the strong foundation of the eternal verities, and that we keep our
eyes upon 
that Path which the great Masters of Wisdom have sought to open
before us. So in 
our turn we shall point out the Way among the hosts who are moving
in delusion 
and ignorance, and as we help each one, we help ourselves. As we
help ourselves 
by helping others, we raise all.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE STOREHOUSE OF THOUGHT
When we consider the idea of thought we must remember that there
cannot be 
thought without a thinker. There are no thoughts that arise of
themselves; they 
are all produced by intelligent beings, no matter what kind of
thoughts they 
are.
We are all thinkers, and we all assume that we have minds, but of
what does the 
mind consist? What we call our mind is not, in reality, mind at
all. The mind 
itself is the power to think. The bundles of ideas that we call our
minds are 
the products of the thinking faculty; they are the effects of
intelligent 
ideation, and we have to get further and further back from the
effects perceived 
to the causes of those effects.
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Mind itself is not limited; we all have the unlimited power to
think in any and 
all directions. But we all are born into or come in contact with
different sets 
of ideas which we consciously or unconsciously adopt and cling to.
Yet we ought 
to recognize and realize from the very outset that we are not those
ideas, 
because we have the power to “change our minds”; if we were in fact
our ideas, 
we could not change them, could never get a new idea nor expel an
old one.
We think that our ideas are our own; but, when we come to
self-analysis, we find 
that as a matter of fact not one in a million is an independent
Thinker who 
creates his thoughts from a realization of the universality of
nature and the 
common source from which we all derive or draw what seem to be our
separate 
powers. It is strange that we do not see that there is a common
source for us 
all, and for all our powers; that only the use of life and the
life-powers 
differ in each, according to the ideas each one holds. We all have
the power to 
think, and we all think differently, and that makes us seem to be
different.
We live in a world of effects, overwhelmed mentally by them, unable
to extricate 
ourselves from them. So what is most needed in the world is a
realization of 
what our own real nature is. If we find what our own real nature
is, then we 
shall know what the real nature of every other being is, whether
that other 
being is below us in point of intelligence, or as far above us as
has yet been 
attained by any being.
If we are ever going to know anything of the common Source of all
our being and 
of all our powers, we have to gain that knowledge within ourselves.
For no one 
is separate from It; each one springs from the same Supreme, is one
with It in 
his inner most nature. The idea is beyond any conception of the
Deity as people 
hold God today, or that has been popularly held in the past.
The Supreme is beyond form. It is beyond expression. Where is the
man who can 
say what That is within himself which sees, which knows, which
feels, which 
experiences, which garners the results of all experience? Each one
is of that 
Infinite Source,
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because all have the same infinite root; each one is an expression
of It.
If a man does not understand what his real Source is, what his real
nature is, 
and assumes himself to be that which he is not, then all his
exercise of the 
power to think, all his creative thoughts, all his subsequent
actions, will 
follow the lines of his wrong basis of thought and action. If he
thinks he is a 
poor miserable sinner who cannot do anything of himself and for him
self, then a 
poor, miserable sinner he will remain. But if he realizes that all
the effects 
which surround him are due to thinking, that he can create better
effects, that 
all things are within his reach, he will gain a new insight and a
greater 
strength. He gets beyond effects to the field of causes, and begins
to realize 
that all things are alike in essential nature. He finds from that
consideration 
that the universe is under Law. The very highest being is under
law, just the 
same as the very lowest. That Law does not exist outside of us, and
is not put 
in motion by some being or beings outside us, but is inherent in
each. As we 
act, we experience the reaction; as we think, so are we. In
accordance with the 
intelligence of our action, so will be the expression returning to
us. ‘ ye sow, 
so shall ye also reap;” as we are reaping, so we must have sown.
We have there the first and final expression of Justice: that we
reap what we 
have sown. In whatever conditions we may find ourselves, we have to
admit that 
they are our own productions. How were they originally produced? By
the thoughts 
of the thinker based on a false conclusion. The power of the
Supreme is in every 
one. No matter what the man thinks, there is power in it; and if he
holds to 
that thinking he is bound to produce the effects that flow from the
lines of his 
special endeavor. If he is creating things that perish, if he is
creating things 
that do not relate to his own true nature—if his power to think is
wrapped up in 
the things that have to do only with his body or the bodily
surroundings, or his 
physical advancement—is it any wonder that soon or late we find
ourselves in a 
complex situation and with such usually disastrous consequences to
ourselves? We
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are bewildered by the very effects that we have produced by our
thinking based 
upon wrong ideas.
We have then to beware that we do not set the power of our
spiritual nature in a 
personal direction, for personal, selfish ends; such will only
bring reaction 
upon us, of necessity. Each one has pursued his own individual
path, as if he 
were separate from all the rest, and so has created the conditions
under which 
he exists, the experiences that bring him suffering or enjoyment.
We have considered that good and evil are things in themselves.
They are not. 
There is nothing good in itself; there is nothing evil in itself.
Good and evil 
are the effects felt by us. What is good to one may be evil to
another. It 
depends on the recipient, on his attitude of mind. If we see that
Law rules and 
recognize that these effects were produced by ourselves, that we
receive the 
exact return of causes set in motion by ourselves, then we see that
whatever we 
do or have done affects others either for good or evil, and that we
must in the 
nature of things in time pay that debt incurred or receive back the
benefit 
conferred. The good that comes is what we have earned through
service to others. 
The evil that befalls us is also what we have earned, by lack of
service or by 
injury to others—every effect is the continuation of the cause set
in motion by 
ourselves.
There is the true idea to be established in us—that of our
individual 
responsibility to all others for the use of our powers. In it is
implied the 
Spiritual Identity of all beings, the divinity of every being that
exists—not 
only of mankind—the good and bad natures there—but every being
below us, as well 
as every being above us. This presents the fact that all powers—of
perception, 
of experience, of knowledge, of wisdom—lie for each being within
himself, in his 
inmost nature. And it brings instantly to our minds the idea of
development, of 
unfoldment, of evolution, for every being high or low. There are
embryonic souls 
below us in their various stages of progress; there are the souls
of men with 
their varying degrees of development; and there are Great Souls—Men
who have 
gone through the stages we are now passing through. The whole
universe is made 
up of
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beings. The form is the home, the instrument, of some minor or
greater 
intelligence. No intelligence, no form; no intelligence, no action
of any kind, 
no responsibilities of any kind. Wherever you find actions and
conditions, there 
you get intelligence, and where ever there is intelligence there is
responsibility, whether recognized or not. So that the universe
exists for one 
purpose, and for one purpose only—for the Soul’s experience and
emancipation.
Soul means the acquired experience of the Spiritual Being. In the
vast universe, 
with such an innumerable and immeasurable range of intelligent
beings, differing 
infinitely in their respective degrees of acquired intelligence, or
Soul, where 
or what would be the Storehouse of Thought?
In this vast assemblage of beings there are many, many kinds of
thought. There 
are the thoughts or ideas of all the men now on earth and of those
who have 
been; the thoughts or expressions of the beings below man; the
ideas and still 
wider expressions of the beings above man. All these make a vast
storehouse; but 
no one of us can draw from that storehouse any more, nor any
different than he 
puts himself in a position to receive. He must make room for it.
All that we 
perceive directly is ideas. Behind all action is thought of some
kind. It is the 
kind of ideas we hold that makes us do everything—good or evil.
Now we can see how important it is that we should know what we
really are—become 
acquainted with our own nature— and have that as a basis of our
thought and 
action. Upon the quality of thought depends the quality or kind of
action. It is 
all a sequence, and so what is needed is an orderly succession of
thoughts based 
on our true natures, and action in accordance with them. Then
everything flows 
along the line of divine unfoldment, of divine evolution; then we
are working in 
accord with nature, in accord with all others.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THE LANGUAGE OF THE SOUL
The Soul is pictured in the ancient teachings as the real Self man.
There are 
many different conceptions of what man is
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and what the soul. From Christian teachings we are led to believe
that man has a 
soul, and may save it or lose it—the idea generally held in the
West. But the 
conception of the ancients, and that of Theosophy, which is a
re-presentation of 
this eternal idea, is different. The teaching is that Man is a
Soul; that Soul 
is in fact the one who perceives; that it is vision itself, pure
and simple, 
unmodified—not subject to change—and that it looks directly on
ideas.
This idea presents the fact that the real Man in whatever condition
he may be 
existing, whether asleep or awake, whether in a physical body
during his 
lifetime, or whether in another form of body after death or before
birth, or 
before the existence of this planet or this solar system—that this
real Man was 
the same Perceiver, then as now, the same Soul all the time; the
Creator of all 
the conditions that have arisen; the intelligent Creator of this
universe, in 
connection with all the beings below him and all the beings above
him. Man thus 
forms part of one great Brotherhood, and this bond of brotherhood
extends 
throughout, from the lowest being to the very highest.
They are all Souls; even the very lowest forms of matter are none
the less 
Souls, for in the lowest form of matter is the power to perceive,
the power to 
act, the power to gain experience. The potentiality is the same in
all, and that 
potentiality becomes a potency ever expanding as the Soul increases
its range of 
experience. All the forms, the bodies, that compose the universe
are the results 
of the experience and action of the souls inhabiting them. They are
all the 
instruments of the soul, and we always act with others in any grade
or class of 
beings. There is that unity of action which produces a similarity
of instrument. 
In these similarities of instrument we play upon and are played
upon by beings 
of the same class in the fullest degree, and by lower and higher
classes in a 
greater or less degree.
So, taking this conception that the Self is the same in each being,
no matter 
how great that being may be, nor how low, we get another idea in
regard to 
soul—that soul also represents the acquired experience gained
through evolution 
by each and every
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class of being. Each individual being is not only Self, but, in
addition, the 
acquired experience gained through contact with all other beings.
Realizing that 
there are individual souls, we can see that the only differences
between souls 
are in their degrees of acquired experience. Taking the soul from
this point of 
view, then, as the acquired experience of individuals, when we
speak of God, or 
the Over-Soul, the Universal Over-Soul, we simply mean the acquired
experiences, 
or wisdom, of every soul and all souls. That would be the meaning
of the 
sentence in the Bhagavad Gita that the Self is “Wisdom itself, the
object of 
Wisdom and that which is to be attained by Wisdom”—full
consciousness of the 
union of all-souls, or Spiritual Identity.
If we are to try to relate these conceptions to language we would,
perhaps, have 
to clear up many ideas which we now hold. Supposing there is a real
language of 
the soul, what would it be capable of expressing? Undoubtedly every
experience 
through which it had ever been.
Theosophy teaches the doctrine of reincarnation—of successive lives,
both on 
this earth and in other states of substance and consciousness.
Continuity of 
Consciousness, or Spirit, is preserved through all these states and
environments, and the record of all that occurred in all these
lives is present 
at all times in any one- life in manifestation, because the Self,
the Spirit, is 
present. The language of the Soul would be capable of expressing
all that we 
ever experienced.
In those past lives we have undoubtedly spoken different languages
from those we 
now speak; in those personal existences we used languages now
altogether 
deserted and forgotten by us as persons. But the memory of those
languages must 
be there, if we are a continuing Self and preserve the continuity
of experience 
gained, as well as the continuity of consciousness. Those old
languages which we 
once used, in themselves amount to nothing, because any language
and all 
languages are only the expression of the feeling and thought of the
individual 
soul; his emotions, hopes, fears, ideas and aspirations. So there
must be at all 
times behind any language whatever, the basis for it—the Soul and
its ex-
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perience. Where is that recorded? It is impacted in the
imperishable part of 
man’s nature. It cannot be any spoken tongue what ever. What, then,
is its 
nature?
To understand these propositions we have again to consider the
philosophy of 
Theosophy. Theosophy points out that matter is in seven states or
degrees of 
substances, and each of these with seven sub-states, the whole
ranging from the 
very finest, most plastic and enduring state down to the very
coarsest—what we 
may call the material plane, or matter as it is known and suspected
by us, with 
its many differing gradations and combinations. Man, as the highest
and most 
evolved being concerned in the evolution of this solar system, is
clothed in all 
these seven states of substance derived from the original
primordial 
substance—the homogeneous matter from which every form is evolved.
These degrees 
of substance are indicated in the seven colors of the spectrum;
they are also 
pointed to in the seven notes of the scale of music.
The notes and colors are not exactly what we think they are: they
represent the 
seven great distinct states of matter; sound itself, or light
itself, represents 
the homogeneous state from which the seven notes and the seven
prismatic colors 
are derived. Our colors and our musical notes are only replicas of
these—their 
reflections or correspondences in this one state of matter and
sound with which 
we are acquainted. We know there are seven colors; we know that
there are other 
octaves of color beyond those, which our eyes are unable to
transmit to us—some 
so high, some so low that our eyes will not register their
vibrations. The same 
is true with sound. We are able to detect several, but there are
degrees of 
sound beyond the highest we are able to detect, and also sounds too
low for us 
to hear.
Let us call the Soul the Ego; perhaps that, for us, is the most
compact 
expression for what is meant by Soul, since it includes both the
one who 
perceives and his perceptions, both the one who knows and his
experiences. Well, 
then, the Ego has a language of his own, and that language is one
of color, 
sound and symbol. It is a language that may be seen; that may be
heard; that may
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be felt. It is by means of this language of the soul that the
experiences of 
others may become directly known to us, comprehensible to us, no
matter what 
vocal tongues we may use. This is why it was said in old times, as
mentioned in 
the Bible, that the Wise understood every man speaking in his own
tongue, 
although many different languages were used, then as now. It was
because these 
Wise men could read back of the spoken language, that they knew the
very 
thoughts, feelings and natures of the speakers. That is why in any
person’s 
motion—even so simple an action as in moving from one chair to
another— quality 
of the thought, the very nature of the person, is clearly shown by
the 
assemblage of colors and shades of colors produced by the action.
The same with 
any uttered sounds or speech, no matter what—the centers in the
body are set in 
motion, each having its own particular tell tale colors and rates
of vibration.
Strange as it may seem to us, colors may be heard, sounds may be
seen, and forms 
may be experienced, because all are merely different rates of
vibration—the 
motion of Intelligent Consciousness, or Spirit. They are all
correlated, and one 
does not exist with out the others. They are merely aspects of that
which is the 
real propulsion of the soul itself, or the conscious being. So, in
our thoughts 
we have a great combination of colors and sounds, constantly
changing their 
form, or appearance. Our brain is the finest material instrument we
use. It, 
like everything else we use, is an evolution. It is the organ of
thought on this 
plane of substance where we are now acting. If we think high and
noble thoughts, 
then our brains become very susceptible to that kind of use. Every
kind of 
thought has its own particular rate and range of vibration, its own
particular 
colors. If we were acquainted with ourselves, in reality, we could
read thought 
as we now read a book. We could read thoughts as we now hear
sounds. If our 
brains are trained to high thoughts while we are awake; if we try
to understand 
what we really are while occupying this physical instrument; what
this body of 
ours represents; what it is capable of— then gradually the brain
will begin to 
respond to something of our higher knowledge. It will carry forward
and transmit 
more
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and more of the Language of the Soul, of all the garnered experience
of the 
past.
The ideas that we have, even in regard to Spirit and Soul, to Life
hitherto, 
here and hereafter, are those we have been taught. They are nearly
all personal 
and keep us entirely on the personal plane—the plane of merely
physical 
existence. They give us no true ideas whatever of the real inner
self. We have 
not yet begun to think—in any true sense, in any true direction;
and it is only 
true ideas that will give us knowledge of the inner nature of man.
Our habits 
are merely memory impacted in our nature, whether they be habits of
body or 
habits of thought. We do not store knowledge anywhere but within
ourselves; but 
sometimes we forget where we have hidden it, or we cover it up with
a lot of the 
useless rubbish of mere mental activity. Most of our mental
activity is applied 
solely to the things of this life, to things of the body; so,
mankind is 
continually moving along a false path. No being, however high, can
prevent this, 
because each man is Soul, is Spirit, is Consciousness—is of the
Highest, however 
he use and apply his powers.
Theosophy endeavors to present to man what his real nature is; that
he is first, 
last, and all the time SPIRIT. Spirit means Life and
Consciousness—the power to 
see, to know, to experience. We all have that. That is common to
all of us. It 
is not separate in self—it is the One Life in all beings of every
grade. But we, 
as individuals, have evolved into individuals from the great Ocean
of Life. We 
are Individualized Spirit, and so we each have a separate
individual existence, 
which is continuous. In that sense we are an evolution, but an
evolution of 
Spirit, not Matter—an evolution of Knowledge, not of form only.
This has been 
obtained through observation and experience; whatever differences
exist are 
because of more or less experience, or a better adaptation and
application of 
it; there is no difference in the Source or Potentialities of any
being. All 
this we shall find out, if we move along the Path shown. For it is
not an 
uncharted path. Remember, others have been along that path before
us. They are 
our Elder Brothers—Jesus, for
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example; Buddha for another; and all those who came at different
times as 
Saviours to the many different peoples. They had all acquired the
Language of 
the Soul. They all had a common body of knowledge. They come
amongst men from 
time to time, as the intelligence of humanity progresses, and give
out as much 
of that knowledge as the then existing state of humanity permits.
They came 
again in our own time; and greater than Those who so came there has
not been. 
Why should anyone say that? Because other Saviours came to separate
and distinct 
peoples, but the Message of Theosophy is not to any one nation, not
to any one 
class of beings, but to the whole world.
That knowledge is obtainable by any self-conscious being for
himself, for it is 
not a question of our ideas, of our present perceptions of morality
or success, 
nor of external power, but of Spiritual perception—of the Language
of the Soul. 
We may make all the mistakes in the world, according to the world,
in the body 
and through the body, and yet have a power of Spiritual perception
that would do 
away with all “mistakes. We would not have to’ have any vicarious
atonement, but 
would be able to act in a proper relation with every being. Our
thoughts and 
actions would be in accord. (but we would have to go through the
crucifixion of 
the false ideas in ourselves, and arise as the Saviour did, to the
right hand of 
the Father—the Ego free from all these delusions which have caused
him to 
maintain himself in sin, sorrow and suffering.
All men desire Spiritual knowledge, yet the great bulk will not
abate one jot or 
tittle of their mental and physical absorption in present and
worldly things to 
obtain the spiritual knowledge they say they ardently long for.
They will have 
to move on through suffering and pain till they really desire to
know the truth 
about themselves. If any man thinks he can get that knowledge by
merely desiring 
to possess it, or by desiring to possess it for himself alone, he
is not in the 
position that would permit of his knowing it. The Language of the
Soul can be 
acquired only when the being realizes that his duty is not to
himself, but to 
the highest interests of his fellowmen; not to “save his own soul”
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but to lead as many of his neighbors as he possibly can in the
direction of the 
Truth, desiring nothing for himself. This very attitude opens the
flood-gates of 
spiritual knowledge within himself. Then he becomes the true
enjoyer, using 
every power he has, all the knowledge he has, to benefit others.
The man who has 
come to that knowledge and is on the road to its realization finds
“spiritual 
knowledge springing up spontaneously in him self in the progress of
time.” He 
requires no books to tell him; he cares not what religions have
been, that now 
are, that ever will be. He knows the truth about himself and
consequently the 
truth about all others.
Why do not all men take the path to this realization? Is it because
they have no 
organs of perception, are incapable of seeing? No, it is because
they will not 
listen; they will not take what is given and try it out. They will
rather follow 
anything that promises some success in this life. Yet they know
just as well as 
anyone that they cannot take a single one of the “successes” away
with them from 
the earth. When they go, they leave on earth every earthly thing
they have 
accumulated. And they have to go, because they do not belong here;
they are of 
Spirit, not earth; they are only working in this matter for awhile.
They all 
know that, and yet dream of “possessions.”
No one damned any of us to this condition in which we find so many.
No 
conditions compel us to stay in a state of mental unrest,
inactivity or 
ignorance. All these things are imposed on us by our own hard and
fast 
conclusions as to men, things and methods. These keep us fast bound
in our 
present conditions and will continue to hold us, as long as we
maintain that 
attitude of mind, and cling to false ideas of God, of Nature, and
of Man. We 
keep the doors closed of our own will. In ignorance? Yes; but who
remains 
ignorant? Those only who will not hear, those only who doubt the
Language of the 
Soul.
      
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THEOSOPHY IN DAILY LIFE
Many people think that religion means a preparation for death or
the states of 
the future. Religion really means a prepa-
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ration for and a knowledge of life—a living of our life as it
should be lived. 
That which prepares for death is life, and ever living. Formal
religions do not 
even answer the question, why is death—nor any of the other burning
questions in 
daily life. Why do we have suffering and sorrow? Why are we here?
What was the 
origin of man? Why so many different conditions among mankind; why
are some born 
to sorrow, and others to joy; why some in lowly places, some in
high; why some 
with great faculties and others with very few and poor ones?
Justice demands an 
answer which is not furnished by religion, with its ‘ —for if man
is the 
creature of a creator he can not help himself and is absolutely
irresponsible. 
Any being, if “perfect,” would maintain justice; yet there are
injustices among 
men. The caprice or whim of a creator does not explain the
difficulty. Any 
being, however great or high, must of necessity be limited, finite,
and 
imperfect—something outside us, something which does not contain
the universe 
but is contained by it.
We have to go behind any idea of a Being, to the source of all
being—to a basis 
common to the highest and to the lowest being. That basis and
source is not to 
be found by looking outward at all, but is the very power to
perceive, wherever 
there is life. Spirit, Life, Consciousness are the same in every 
being—undivided, however many and varied the perceptions. Evolution
is not a 
compelling force from without, but the impelling force of Spirit
from within, 
urging on to better and better expression. All advancement is from
within. All 
the knowledge that we gain, all the experience that we obtain, is
obtained and 
held within. Each one, then, is the Seer; all the rest are seen.
So, the 
knowledge that we have to obtain is not information from without,
not the 
thoughts of other men, but an under standing of our own essential
nature, which 
represents every element in the great universe, from the basis of
all life to 
every outward expression, and every possibility of further
expression— just as 
each drop of water contains in itself everything existing in the
great ocean 
from which it came. Nor does Law exist outside of us. Law is always
inherent in 
Spirit; it is the action
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which brings re-action in every individual case, and to the
collective mass of 
humanity. We are here under law and under justice. There is no such
thing as 
injustice in the universe.
Knowing something as to our essential nature, knowing some thing of
the purpose 
of life, and that life is all made up of learning, knowing that the
universe is 
all alive, and that there is in reality no injustice save that
which we inflict 
upon our selves by re-action, we would take an entirely different
view of life 
and put these ideas into daily practice. We would take the position
which most 
of all we need to take—that of our own responsibility, which
religions have 
taught us to shift on to some God or devil. Recognizing that each
one of us is 
from the same Source and going towards the same goal, though the
path will vary 
with the pilgrim, we will act toward each one as if he were a part
of ourselves. 
Like us, each one is moving onward— perhaps below us, possibly
above. From the 
one above, we can obtain help. To the one below, we can give help.
Such is the 
interdependence which should exist between all conscious beings;
and under such 
a conception our civilization would not be as it is now. We should
not find 
every man’s hand raised against every other man. We should not see
those in poor 
case finding fault with the wrong conditions, but finding fault
rather with 
their own wrong relations to others at some time when they abused
the power they 
had. We should see each one trying to discipline himself, trying to
bring 
himself into proper relation with all the rest—not so much
outwardly, perhaps, 
as inwardly; for we may be sure that if we make clean the inside of
the bowl, 
the outside will take care of itself. We have no greater duty to
perform than to 
make clear and clean our natures—to make them true, to make them in
accord with 
the great object of all life, the evolution of soul.
We can not wait to make our start in this direction until the
nation wakes up to 
Theosophy; for the nation will itself awake only when each
individual wakes up 
to that which is in himself and by his thought and action instills
a similar 
thought and action in other human beings. Supposing each one
determined
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to do all he could for every other one wherever he could, do you
think that 
anybody would suffer? Not one! There would be more to help than
those to suffer. 
But we are afraid that if we so act, the other man will not. So we
do not move 
at all along that line. The majority of people are thinking about
quite other 
things. They are busy at the shrine of their gods of comfort,
seeking to get the 
best of everything in life at the expense of someone else. Or they
are seeking 
to acquire “the power of will,” so that they can get something for
nothing from 
someone else. That is the kind of “will” which is generally
desired, its object 
being the getting of exactly what one pleases. Is not this psychic
banditry? 
Anything gotten that way is taken from another, and we shall have
to pay it back 
to the uttermost farthing—if not in this life, then in some other,
for the 
scales of justice are unerring.
Do we not see that we can trust a universe that moves along
unerringly under the 
law of perfect justice? ‘We certainly can. We can go forward with
an absolute 
reliance on the law of our own spiritual being, knowing whatever
conditions come 
are necessary for us, knowing that those very things we feel so
hardly are 
object lessons for us because they indicate a wrong tendency or
defect in us 
which this present distress affords us an opportunity to overcome,
to strengthen 
our true character. That is all we have at the end of life,
whatever of 
character—good, bad, or indifferent—we have acquired. Men spend
their lives 
trying to avoid what they do not like, and trying to get what they
like—what 
they can and while they can. Yet if they got all the wealth of the
world, every 
possession and every possible desire, what good would it do them?
At death 
everything would be left where they got it, because nothing adheres
to Spirit. 
The idea of getting for themselves is one of the false notions
which prevent men 
from understanding themselves as spiritual beings and using the
power which 
belongs to them—for all powers of every kind—electrical, dynamic or
explosive—come from the One Universal Spirit, and each man has
latent in him all 
the powers in the universe.
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Physical life is not necessarily a vale of sorrow. The time must
come when we 
shall have made man’s life on earth what it ought to be, when we
shall have no 
fear of anything, when we shall not be afraid of our fellowmen. It
was said of 
Daniel, when he entered the lions’ den, the beasts of prey did not
touch him at 
all. Why? Because his heart was pure. He had no harm in it for
anyone. He 
trusted to the spiritual law of his own being, and all nature makes
obeisance to 
that. We could go out calmly, courageously, happily, relying on the
laws of our 
own natures. If we did so, we would bring our daily lives in line
with that 
nature; for there is nothing of our action which does not come from
the mind, 
and back of the mind is the ‘motive we have in acting. Motive is
what makes our 
actions really “good” or “bad.” If we are righteous in ourselves
and desirous of 
doing right, then all that we do will flow rightly from us and
every function 
will be a righteous function. All action springs from and is
colored by the 
motive held in performing it.
Theosophy is the only philosophy that can be used in every
direction in daily 
life. It can be used in all directions, high or low, because that
use comes from 
an understanding of the Spirit itself, from acting for that Self and
as that 
Self—for the Self acts only through the creatures. Acting for and
as that Self 
in every direction, all else flows into line. All the destruction
that is around 
us, all the misery that we see, has been brought about through our
denial of the 
Holy Ghost—our denial of the Spirit within us. We deny it when we
act as if we 
are our bodies, or our minds. THAT will not be denied. So man,
meeting all the 
results of that denial and seeing them to be evil, learns that this
is not the 
way. Then he seeks for Truth, and finding the truth, obtains all
that he can 
desire—hope, happiness and a better understanding of his and all
existence. It 
was to give to men all they could take in regard to the nature of
the soul—that 
they might come out from this vale of sorrow—that those Beings
known as Divine 
Incarnations have descended here of Their own will. They have
carried forward 
from age to age this knowledge of nature and of man and of the
purpose of life, 
learned through
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many civilizations of mankind. It is this knowledge which makes
Them as gods to 
us in Their glory and power.
 
CONTENTS
THE ETERNAL VERITIES
THREE KINDS OF FAITH
Every human being has faith—faith in something, some ideal, some
conception, 
some religion, some formula—but while the faiths of different
people have one or 
another object, the faith itself proceeds from the Highest, and is
inherent in 
the heart of every being. Faith is the very basis of our nature.
Whatever way we 
follow is because of the faith we have—the conviction that it is
the best way. 
That the world is full of false faiths is because of the differing
ideas, 
beliefs and philosophies which limit faith itself to the means
thought necessary 
for obtaining a particular object of faith.
In the seventeenth chapter of the Bhagavad-Gita faith is said to be
of three 
kinds: faith of the quality called sattwa, the good and the true;
faith of the 
quality called rajas, of action, and of passion; and faith of the
quality called 
tames, of indifference and ignorance. These three qualities given
to faith are, 
in fact, the three limitations placed on faith by every human
being; for the 
power of faith in itself is limitless. We continually limit that
power to its 
operation within the range of some minor object or ideal based on
externalities. 
“The embodied soul being gifted with faith, each man is of the same
nature as 
that ideal on which his faith is fixed.” Man has that quality of
faith in 
accordance with his disposition; and he also continually becomes of
the nature 
of the ideal on which his faith is fixed. It is evident, then, that
we ought to 
be sure of the nature of the faith upon which our ideal is placed.
If one places his faith on any externality, whatever it may be—gods
or men, 
religions or systems of thought—he has placed it upon a broken
reed; he has 
limited the very power of his own spirit to expand itself beyond
the limitations 
of his ideal. When, for instance, we accept the idea that nothing
is real but 
that which we can see or hear or taste or smell or touch, we have
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placed our faith on a very low basis. There is some reason for our
falsity of 
thought and action, when we have assumed the present moment to be
the only 
moment, the outward terrestrial world and this one existence to be
the only 
life, from which we go, we know not where, nor to what purpose it
all has been. 
To look on all beings according to one’s own limitation of mind and
range of 
perception, and to see only their externalities of speech or action
in 
accordance, is not seeing them as they really are. An outside God,
or an outside 
devil, an outside Law, an outside atonement for sins, the idea of
sin being 
other than a denial of our own spiritual nature (the unpardonable
sin), are All 
external faiths of the nature of tamas, or ignorance. Ignorance
always leads to 
superstition. Superstition leads to false belief, and false belief
to false 
faith.
We are all in constant conflict with each other because of false
bases of faith, 
for the very reason that faith fixed on any thing will bring
results, and men 
are blinded to real and true faith by the results of even false
faith. Yet so 
long as we have a false faith shall we continue to create for
ourselves lives of 
misery. The results flowing from a false faith in a selfish ideal
must bring us 
bad effects in wrong conditions. They are the very limitations we
have imposed 
upon ourselves by external faiths in other lives, and we must come
again and 
again into bodies until we have rid ourselves of the defects in our
nature which 
those external faiths have engendered. We have to get a better
basis for thought 
and action than the false faith of the likes and dislikes we have
obtained by 
heredity. We have produced the effects we see, but we need not go
on repeating 
the same mistakes life after life, if we will but change our
ideals. We have to 
find a true basis of faith. We have to place our faith upon that
which is not 
external, but internal.
The Internal is the very source of the powers that we possess of
every kind, and 
that Internal is the same in every living one. At the very root of
our being is 
that changeless Self which we can know only within ourselves. To
reach in and in 
to It, we must first divest ourselves of all our ideas—of
everything which
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changes. First of all, let man divest himself of the idea that he
is his body. 
He occupies it; he uses it; but he knows that it is ever changing,
that never 
for one single instant is it the same as it was the moment before.
Let him 
divest himself further of the idea that he is his mind; for he
himself can 
change the ideas that compose it—throw them out bodily and take
their very 
opposite, if he chooses—yet he is still acting with other ideas. We
are not 
bodies; we are not minds; nor are we both together; but we are That
which uses 
and sustains them both. Through all the changes of the past and
present, and 
those that are to come, we shall always be ourselves. Even when
death comes we 
shall still be operating in another way than in the physical body.
The basis of 
the Changeless Self places the whole universe within the reach of
any being’s 
mind—a stable basis for thought and action and realization within
himself.
These three things we have to know: Each one is the Self in his
innermost 
nature; every power that he has arises in that Self; every being of
every kind 
is conscious, with the power of the extension of its range of
perception and 
action, while every instrument is due to the limitation of the
conception of the 
individual’s real nature. Never by looking at other beings, nor by
any kind of 
faith whatever can man realize his oneness with the One Great Life;
he can 
realize it only by looking into his own nature. His own nature is
realized by 
seeing that which is not the nature of the Self. For anything seen,
heard, or 
felt, or tasted or perceived is not the Self, but merely a
perception of the 
Self. The Self perceives what may be perceived according to its own
ideas, 
according to its own faith, but that which is perceived is never
the Self. 
Within every being from whom we obtain any action or from whom we
perceive 
anything, there is the Self, but we do not perceive That. It is
only by 
realizing It within our selves that we realize its existence in
every other 
being. Then honor the spiritual nature of every being and strive to
aid that 
being to see for himself the true path by which he can realize his
true nature! 
We all have to think and act with that true nature as our guide.
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We find ourselves prevented on every hand from taking the position
of the true 
nature—it seems impossible. But this is only a delusion born from
the false 
faith we have held. We have established ideas, likes and dislikes,
and feelings 
which under the law of the return of impressions recur again and
again. The 
moment we attempt to take an opposite stand we meet the result of
the combined 
action of all these forces within ourselves. This is what we may
call “the war 
in heaven”—the war in the man’s own nature. But if he remains true
to his own 
spiritual nature, he is bound to be the conqueror. If he has faith
in the law of 
his own nature, he will go forward and gradually the obstacles will
disappear. 
But we must hold on grimly and have confidence and faith in That
which is the 
only Real anywhere—Life itself Consciousness. Then the fetters we
have made for 
ourselves will fall away. Every force in nature begins to act for
us and with us 
because we have no desire of our own, but only for the good, for
the salvation 
of all. Every soul and every thing seems to work for our advantage,
but not 
because we want it. We begin to see the spiritual meaning of the
saying that the 
man who desires to save his life must lose it. He gives up
everything as an 
acquisition for himself, devoting every power he has or gains to
the service of 
others, and the whole universe is before him. He can take all—but
let him take 
nothing save to give it out again, accept nothing save to lay it at
the feet of 
others!
There is no question of sin, or sinner. There is no question of
good or evil. 
There is only the question: Are you working for yourself as you
understand 
yourself, or are you working for the Self as you ought to
understand you are, 
and not for anything else? If you want nothing for yourself,
require nothing for 
this body, but think only to do for others, what is needed comes
under the law 
of the very force for which you make attraction. Support comes in
every 
direction. The whole nature—spiritual, intellectual, psychical,
astral and 
physical—is strengthened; even the surroundings are improved. It is
our lack of 
faith—our Unfaith in That, which puts us where we would not be.
Denying the 
Christ within, the Krishna within, the Spirit within, is “the
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unpardonable sin,” and so long as we crucify that Christ within,
just so long 
will we suffer on the cross of human passions and desires. Service
for ourselves 
is a creation which ties us fast to wrong conditions. We may strive
for better 
bodies, better positions, for possessions of all kinds, better
qualities, better 
understanding on one condition only, that the motive be to make
ourselves the 
better able to help and teach others.
The only true faith is that in the Highest—in the Changeless, in
That which each 
in his innermost nature is. The only true path is the trusting to
the law of our 
own spiritual nature. Men may go from faith to faith, from faith in
one thing to 
faith in some other thing, moving along from life to life and
obtaining some 
results according to the nature of the ideal upon which their faith
is fixed, 
but the only way out is through the faith in the spiritual,
essential nature of 
all beings. And no greater gift could be given to any human being
than the 
inalienable fact that he—and each one—has the power to realize it.
This is a 
part of the ancient knowledge known by a few, followed by a few,
which They have 
ever brought into a world of false faiths and tried to teach the
people in 
general.
Those who follow the Path of true faith are not drawn away from
their 
fellow-men. One’s fellow-men are more to him than they ever were
before. He sees 
more in them. He sees more clearly the difficulties under which
they labor, and 
desires to help them in every way. So he is more of a living man.
He acts more 
knowingly than do the rest. He gets more from nature than they do,
because he 
sees the whole and the aspects of the individuals that compose the
whole. He 
gets as much out of this life and more, far more, than the man who
lives for 
enjoyment, for happiness, whose ambition is for himself. But he
lives not for 
himself. The whole aim of his life is that men may know these
truths; for he 
knows that knowledge means the destruction of false faiths, and
hence of all the 
suffering and horrors of physical existence. Then, evolution will
go on by leaps 
and bounds. Men will be extricated from the places to which they
have consigned
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themselves, and move on without limit in a universe of infinite
possibilities.
When all our false beliefs, our desires and passions, our likes and
dislikes 
have fallen away from us like cast-off garments, and we have
resumed that nature 
of us which is divine, then we shall be able to build a
civilization as much 
higher than this as we can possibly imagine. For we cannot get away
from the 
Karma of the race to which we belong, and those effects which have
been produced 
by us together, we must work out together. The best way, the
highest way, and 
the surest way, is to proceed along the line of our own inner
nature, and, so 
doing, give the suggestion to others by which they may realize
their inner 
nature. Then, dwelling on That which is immortal, changeless,
limitless, which 
is our very self and the Self of all creatures, the realization
will come—little 
by little, but it will surely come.
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CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter One
    IT is futile to accept
revelations on anybody’s say-so. They convey no 
knowledge, and it is actual knowledge that is required by each one.
Shibboleths 
and formulas are mere words, not a criterion of truth.
    Theosophy is in the world
to present the means by which each one can acquire 
knowledge for himself.
    Its study and application
call forth the judgment and discrimination latent 
in the man himself.
    Truth is not a man, nor a
book, nor a statement. The nature of Truth is 
universal; its possessors in any degree will be found to be
appliers of 
universality in thought, speech and action. Their efforts will be
for humanity 
regardless of sex, creed, caste or color. They will never be found
among those 
claiming to be the chosen spokesman of the Deity—and exacting
homage from their 
fellow-men: true Brotherhood includes the least developed as well
as the very 
highest. We must seek to give aid to all in search of truth. Our
value and aid 
in this great work will be just what we make them by our motive,
our judgment, 
our conduct.
    The heart-felt desire
that others may benefit from our lives will be felt by 
those open—it matters little how few; they may be the means of
wakening many 
others. It is the effort and the sacrifice that bring the ultimate
results, but 
in our zeal it is well to consider what the Masters have done, and
do year after 
year, age after age. They do what They can, when They can, and as
They can—in 
accordance with cyclic law. They conserve the knowledge gained—and
wait. Knowing 
this, and doing thus, there can be no room in us for doubt or
discouragement. 
The-
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osophy is for those who want it. We are to hold, wait, and work for
those few 
earnest souls who will grasp the plan and further the Cause. Many
have their 
ears so dulled, or their attention so diverted, that no number of
repetitions 
can reach them—yet Theosophy must be held out continually for all
who will 
listen. That is our self-assumed work; we have our example in H. P.
B. and W. Q. 
J. to means, method and manner: let us imitate them, and so do
their work in 
their spirit.
    The Theosophical “arch”
has been thrown across the abyss of creeds and 
materialism. Some have discovered where a base rests on one or the
other side; 
others have found “stones” that belong to the arch, but the
“key-stone” has been 
“rejected” because of its irregular shape—all like the story of old
in masonic 
tradition. But we are also reminded that the time came when the
rejected stone 
became “the head of the corner” because it was found to be the
key-stone. All 
the time there were those who knew of the key-stone, but they were
very few and 
their voices were not heard amid the clamor of the claims made by
those who had 
found portions of the arch and desired recognition. So the few had
to “Work, 
Watch—and ‘Wait,” knowing that history repeats itself, and that
there is nothing 
new under the sun.
    The allegory of the tower
of Babel applies to the present times. Everything 
is in confusion, everyone talking his own gibberish—and nobody
listening. I said 
“nobody”—but some are; a few realize that none of these things
bring knowledge. 
All that can be done is to let the light so shine that all who will
may seek it, 
thus sowing for future harvest. It would be a hopeless task were it
not for 
Reincarnation; so the great effort should be to promulgate the
fundamental 
principles of Unity, of Brotherhood, of Karma and Reincarnation.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
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CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Two
    In the work which we have
undertaken together, it matters not whether “we” 
fail or succeed: Our purpose has been and will be that the Work
shall go on. We 
can throw—each one of us—our best into the effort; the rest is in
other and 
stronger hands. Our “best” may not be great, but if the motive is
there, even to 
hold our ground is victory in some contingencies, for where there
is no standing 
army, the art of fighting has to be learned; the recruits have to
do the 
fighting, the older teaching and leading the younger. With no
concern but to 
keep in fighting trim, our best work is done when most heavily
pressed and 
tried.
    It is, then, to the
Teachings that attention has to be called— not to 
ourselves who are only handing them on as best we can. If one sees
that in many 
ways he is not able to do all that needs to be done, or that he
would like to 
accomplish, it is evidence that he is in the way of improving. Our
ideals are 
never reached: they continually precede us. As a man thinks, so he
becomes; time 
is an element in this, and it is shortened by patient doing of what
we can. To 
be in the least cast down by our apparent imperfections is a form
of 
impatience—a disregard of Law. Whatever comes is right—until
something better 
appears. Observed defects will fade out under observation, so we
can cheerfully 
bear with our own defects as well as with those of others, while we
go right on 
working.
    One of the greatest helps
that Theosophy gives is the power to take a wider 
survey of the field of action than is otherwise possible: we do not
look on this 
life only, but on many future lives during which “I and thou and
all the princes 
of the earth” will live and strive for the universal redemption of
mankind— ever 
looking ahead, ever seeing further heights toward which the
awakening spirit may 
be directed. There is much strength, there are many faculties among
men and 
mostly used without direction of a permanent nature. Could right
philosophy be 
implanted—
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even the single idea of the Divine nature in man—a greater impetus
would be 
given to right living; then a philosophy in accord with this nature
would be 
sought by those so quickened.
    It would not take so
long, nor be so difficult, if those who are interested 
in Theosophy would stop figuring it out for themselves, and get
busy in 
spreading the philosophy and the idea of service. Without the right
philosophy, 
strength and special faculties are useless. If all study so as to
be the better 
able to help and teach others, there must result a general gain and
help. I 
think that the word “Theosophy” has power: if it had not, there
would not be so 
many misusing the name. In spite of all these, Theosophy itself is
untouched. 
Our work is to keep it pure as it was delivered to us, for the sake
of those who 
can be helped—and we are finding some all the time. In better days
we will be 
able to do more—and all the better because of present difficulties.
Theosophy 
pure and simple is the standard by which efforts may be applied and
errors 
combated, so it must always be kept in evidence as the source of
all right 
effort.
    When the Parent
theosophical society was established, it was necessary to 
give it the form that would be best understood by the people of the
time. It was 
known that many would cling to the form rather than to the spirit
of the 
Theosophical Movement, and would imagine that the spirit could not
exist in any 
other form. But also it was known that some would perceive the
spirit and care 
only for that. Events have justified all this, so that we stand at
another point 
in the cycle. Perfection in action is not possible; so, while
showing forth the 
spirit of the Movement only, we yet present a visible basis
necessary in any 
exoteric work. “U. L. T.” is a name given to certain principles and
ideas; those 
who associate themselves with those principles and ideas are
attracted and bound 
by them only—not by their fellows who do likewise or who refrain or
who cease to 
consider themselves so bound.
THE DECLARATION, with its signature by the Associates, is a wide
departure from 
anything that exists as an organization.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
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IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Three
    We are not concerned in
“seeing things,” but in awakening the Higher 
Consciousness—for we know that Theosophy gives the knowledge of the
principles 
that should guide its students in their public and private work. We
should also 
be able to find explicit directions—explicit in the sense that Theosophy
points 
the way clearly how best to serve our fellows. So it is good work
to search out 
and make available to all, those necessary quotations from their
writings which 
carry the intent of the Teachers. If such could not be found, one
might have 
grave doubts as to the course to be pursued. If we are able thus to
throw a 
clearer light upon the intent, our work will be good for both the
learners and 
the learned.
    The basis of successful
work is Unity: this is the constant cry of H. P. B. 
and W. Q. J. To be able to afford a basis for Unity to individuals
or 
organizations, without demanding any relinquishment of affiliation
or belief, is 
no small thing. The Declaration of
“U. L. T.” does just that: it is not a theory, but a carrying out
of the spirit 
of the Messengers. Paraphrasing a saying of the Master, we might
say: “All 
Theosophy is before you; take what you can.”
    The part we play, major
or minor, does not concern us at all.’ We might say, 
as Judge once did, “sometimes a minor agent is used by the Lodge to
call the 
attention of greater ones to a proper course.” Our work is to call
attention to 
the true basis for Union among Theosophists—and at the same time to
set the 
example. People need, whether new students or old, to grasp the message
of 
Theosophy for itself—not because of belief in any person or
organization. If 
students succeed in grasping and applying the Philosophy, they will
have true 
clairvoyance as to men, things and methods, and their gratefulness
will include 
all that contributed to their opportunity; this gratitude will find
expression 
in their doing the same for others.
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    So, the effort should be
to get those interested to participate, to 
associate themselves with the Work and share in its
responsibility—not by 
proselyting or urging, but by keeping the idea before them in
various ways. As 
with anything else, every method has to be tried, but without
making the line 
too hard-and-fast. The main work is to convey ideas.
    No doubt the
“successorship” and organizational proponents will do some 
squirming over the “U. L. T.” Declaration. Any thing that might be
said will not 
prevent their thinking and saying what they like—nor will their
squirming affect 
the facts. If the Declaration shows itself to be directly in line
with the 
teachings, the teachers, and the original lines laid down, it will
make the 
observant think. Doubtless the Declaration could be amplified, but
would not 
amplification detract from attention to the points made by it? It
is direct and 
it is short, therefore quickly grasped. All can make their own
deductions, but 
with us it is “a firm position assumed out of regard for the end in
view.”
    Our purpose is to draw
attention to the Teachers and the Teaching, not to 
any others; hence it is conservation, safety, to maintain the
impersonality of 
“U. L. T.” Its aim, scope and purpose are shown in the Declaration,
and besides, 
attention is called to the great underlying Movement which compels
such 
alterations from time to time; so, as the declared policy is
followed out and 
the Teaching is studied, the practical amplification will come of
itself. Until 
each one clarifies his own perceptions he would not know gold of
Ophir from base 
metal. What we have avoided is the prevailing tendency to say too
much.
    Let “U. L. T.” flourish
on its moral worth alone. The work we have to do, 
the knowledge we have to give out, depends on no other names than
those of the 
true Teachers, H. P. B. and W. Q. J. Associates must learn to look
to Them, to 
point to Them and to the Masters whom They served. Nothing else
will restore the 
Movement. Unity is the key note of our attempt, and living persons,
if made 
prominent, will detract from that attempt, will be attacked, to the
injury of 
the Movement. So we will keep their names out of consideration. Let
the curious 
and
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the antagonistic surmise all they want to—the really earnest will
then judge by 
the fruits, not by persons. Theosophy does not emanate from any
society nor from 
any living persons. So far as the world and all Theosophists are
concerned, 
Theosophy comes from H. P. B. and W. Q. J., or rather, through
them. So, to 
avoid misconceptions, we get back of living persons to the Message
and the 
Messengers.
    W. Q. J. was not the
“successor” of H. P. B.; he was her Colleague and 
Co-worker who retained his body a few years longer than she
remained in hers. He 
was the “stone that was rejected by the builders,” who desired to
pose as 
successors to H. P. B.—to the confusion of all who depended on
them. The real 
foundation of the “successor craze” is the itch for more
instructions; this 
begets the hunt after anyone who will promise fresh “revelations.”
What was 
given Out by H. P. B., and applied by W. Q. J., was not and is not
studied by 
Theosophists at large, or it would have awakened a fuller thought
and 
realization by the students. All the theosophical follies are the
result of 
ignorance, superstition and selfishness, which knowledge alone can
overcome. Our 
efforts may seem inadequate, but they are in the right direction,
and “a little 
leaven leaveneth the whole lump.” We will do what we can and all
that we know 
how to do, enduring the evils of the present while attempting that
which will 
work for greater good in the future, here a little and there a
little, thus 
leading the minds of Theosophists of every degree and in every
society to as 
broad a conception of the Philosophy as possible. And all these
efforts will be 
educational for us, too, for we will have to meet all kinds of
minds from 
ignorance to arrogance, and so speak as to leave an impress that
will stick.
    H. P. B. once wrote: If
anyone holds to Buddha’s philosophy, let him say and 
do as Buddha said and did; if a man calls himself a Christian, let
him follow 
the commandments of Christ—not the interpretations of his many
dissenting 
priests and sects.” The moral is—If anyone desires to be a
Theosophist, let him 
study Theosophy as it was given by those who enunciated it. For one
to accept as 
true what any teacher chooses to tell him,
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without any means given him by which to verify the statements made,
or without 
verifying for himself the facts alleged—is simply to believe on
blind faith, as 
do so many others.
    Our own difficult task is
to avoid all semblance of authority of any kind, 
while being at the same time sure of our ground and not afraid to
say so. We 
have, like the Founders, to give everyone an opportunity to see for
himself that 
what we have to say is well founded. At present, the initiative is
in our hands 
as the pioneers. We have to strike the key-note for those who come
after us; 
once struck, it will be followed by those who take hold. The others
will find it 
“too absorbing and too lofty” for them, and will not attempt it. In
other words, 
we have to show the raison d’être of “U. L. T.” so that others may
see it as 
clearly as we do. We have undertaken a high mission and a heavy
task—not because 
we think ourselves so eminently fit, but because we see the need
and there is no 
one else to do it; and we also know that we will not be left alone
in the doing. 
So, what we have to give are the salient points, clear and
definite, as well as 
concise in statement, so that thought shall be directed to them; to
make the 
points so striking that they cannot be passed over, even by the
careless reader; 
and that they shall stand as facts, and facts only, before the
mind, verifiable 
by anyone who cares enough to do so.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Four
    Mere attendance at
meetings is not enough to make us feel our identity with 
the work. Attendance is but the preliminary to a further step; this
shows itself 
when those who attend begin to ask how they may obtain further
understanding. As 
they participate they develop, of course—but they must not be
allowed to forget 
the object of the help afforded them, nor that such help is but a
means and a 
way. The object of Theosophical study and
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work is not individual development, but that each and all should
become true 
helpers of Humanity. Some will catch the feeling. The tendency to
say more than 
is useful to the newcomers is a common one in the beginning, but is
gradually 
overcome when it is seen to minimize inquiry. We should push nothing,
while 
responding to everything. We would not use force if we could,
because each mind 
has to be free to choose; otherwise there would be no true
progress. And I think 
this is a good attitude to be taken in the matter of questions
concerning 
theosophical claims and exponents. These various stripes must have
their place 
in the great economy of consciousness—they must have, or people
would not be 
attracted by them, would not seize and hold on to them. When the
particular 
“stripe” does not bring the devotee the expected result in
knowledge, then a 
further search is indicated to the mind so caught. Every person
really waked up 
by such claims or exponents will touch us sooner or later, if we
hold to the 
straight line. On this, Mr. Judge once wrote: “By our not looking
at their 
errors too closely, the Master will be able to clear it all off and
make it work 
well.”
    The fewer the words an
idea can be expressed in, the better. Our effort is 
to disseminate among Theosophists the idea of unity regardless of
organization. 
Many “old timers” will not see the need, but those disgusted with
the claims and 
squabbles of organizations will fall into line on the true basis of
union: 
“Similarity of aim, purpose and teaching”—for they will see that
the failure of 
the various societies is in that basic lack. Let each go his own
way, and with 
best intention, giving credit to others for the same: in this way
we set up no 
hindrances, no matter what others may do. No hindrance leaves an
inlet, and 
there is no saying what may come about even among those who hold to
separateness. We sympathize with all efforts to spread broadcast
the teachings 
of Theosophy pure and simple, without expressing preference for any
organization 
or individual so engaged—recognizing that while methods differ, the
Cause of one 
is the Cause of all, Meantime, we go on with our own line of work
which, because 
of its freedom from any complications of organization,
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presents a catholic spirit. We are not drawing attention to our
selves as a 
body, but to the principles that, as a body, we hold. The
Declaration is a 
summation of the stand that all Theosophists should take—toward the
work and 
toward each other. We all need to cultivate that charity which
sympathizes with 
every effort to spread Theosophy, even if the methods and other
things do not 
appeal to us: any effort is better than no effort at all.
    This tolerance does not
mean “fraternizing” with everything and everyone 
that demands it; it only means that no one is to be condemned for
his opinions. 
We may not care to spend time and energy in his direction, which is
our 
privilege—and if he were himself tolerant he would not wish us to.
Many who talk 
“tolerance” seem to think it means that every one else should
endorse what they 
want to say or do. The tolerance is of little value which consists
in the 
egotistical attempt to enlist the support of those who have their
own duty to 
attend to.
    “U. L. T.” and its
Declaration will be compared by many with the claims made 
by the various societies and their exponents. Each of these makes
the claim that 
he or it is alone right. What are our claims?—it will be asked. We
make none: we 
point to the Message, the Messengers, and Their enunciation of the
Work—and 
carry on the latter in accordance; we have no “revelation” to
offer, we only 
hand on that which was known before. The position is unique and
unassailable in 
that it makes no claim to any other authority than, the Message and
the 
Messengers. It should be our policy to state at each meeting what
our purposes 
are—namely, to disseminate the fundamental principles of Theosophy
and to answer 
questions on the provided.
    The Authority which we
recognize is not what men term authority, which comes 
from outside and which demands obedience, but an internal
recognition of the 
value of that which flows through any given point, focus, or
individual. This is 
the authority of one’s Self-discrimination, intuition, the highest
intellection. 
If we follow what we recognize in that way, and still find it good,
we naturally 
keep our faces in that direction. This means no slavish following
of any 
person—a distinction
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which some are unable to grasp. H. P. B. wrote: “Don’t follow me or
my Path: 
follow the path I show, the Masters who are behind.” We point
always that the 
most and the best anyone can do is to do as Judge did—follow the
lines laid down 
by H. P. B., regardless of any others. All that we are doing is to
help others 
to find those lines. We do not want attention paid to us. It is
true that “U. L. 
T.” necessarily centers around those most active in it, but they
could do 
nothing if history, evidence, and energies were not in the lines
taken. So we 
point to those lines of direction as the things to be seen and
known. For 
ourselves we are merely some who are able to grasp and apply as
well as aid in 
direction. This will prevent 
“U. L. T.” from degenerating into some such 
condition as now exists throughout the theosophical world, for if
attention is 
attracted to the living workers, it is thereby detracted from the
real issue. 
One may have confidence, how ever, without making the mistake of
placing anyone 
too high. The strength shown by any worker is not that of the
personality, which 
has none, of itself; it lies in the words, the ideas, the
conviction of truth 
held by the inner man.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Five
    H. P. B. showed herself a
true Teacher when she said, “Do not follow me nor 
my path; follow the path I show, the Masters who are behind.” The
wisdom of this 
advice is seen in observing the course of those who judged of the
teaching by 
what they could see of the teacher. They judged her by their
standards, not by 
her adhesion to the Theosophy she taught. W. Q. Judge had similar
judgment 
passed on him, primarily because he upheld H. P. B. first, last,
and all the 
time. This was the underlying cause of the attacks made on him by
those who 
should have been his defenders. They were fearful of “authority”—so
fearful they 
tried
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to convey the impression that they could explain her away, could
tell where she 
was right and where she made “mistakes”; thus making a claim to
authority that 
she never made. They minimized the only possible source on which
reliance could 
be placed, while Judge continually pointed to her as the Teacher to
whom all 
alike should look.
    Those who followed his
example and advice then, or who will follow it now, 
found and will find where she pointed. In effect it comes to this,
that those 
who professed or who profess to look to H. P. B. as their Teacher,
do not do so 
unless they also look on Judge as she looked on Him. If they minimize
or vilify 
Judge, they have to minimize and vilify H. P. B.
    We are striving for Unity
first, and as far as possible leave out points 
that may antagonize. Theosophy itself, pure and simple, is the
great “unifier”; 
more we can encourage others to study and apply Theosophy, the more
will they 
see for themselves the parts played by the various persons and
personages in the 
movement. Our work is to inform, not to proselyte.
    The Masters used Colonel
Olcott because he was fit for the work he was given 
to do, and the only one at that time who could do it; and
furthermore, he was 
willing, despite his failings, to stick to his task without hope of
reward. It 
is certain that he missed much that he might have had, and finally
let the 
Society drift into the wrong hands through his very inability to
discriminate. 
For this, he alone was to blame; but the law adjusts and will
adjust. We cannot 
judge as between him and Those who used him. They did not condone
his faults. 
They used his virtues—and gave him every opportunity to increase
them. Perhaps 
his close and unremitting attention to the exoteric work he had to
do, prevented 
attention to his own nature, so that he thought he was entitled to
some 
relaxation of the kind he understood. It may be that some knowing
his faults, 
and that he still did good and prominent work for the Movement 
notwithstanding—have reasoned that the faults do not count, and can
be atoned 
for, or overlooked, as is the case with many a public man by reason
of service. 
This is a mistake, for the path of true Occultism and
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that of immorality do not coincide. The Masters do not judge
anyone, nor can 
They “forgive” anyone for sins of omission and commission.
Naturally They must 
stand as did the Essenian Master, when he said, “Let him that is
without sin 
amongst you, cast the first stone.” Masters have to use such
material as exists. 
If anyone has lapses, so much the worse for him and for the work.
It should also 
be remembered that so long as one is willing to stay in the work,
he can. Each 
stays or goes out in accordance with his own desire. The door is
never shut on 
him by the Law, and the laws of Occultism do not permit “removal
for cause.” It 
is strange that so many who have studied Theosophy fail to
understand these 
things, but never fail to characterize and pass judgment.
    And all this applies, not
to Colonel Olcott only, nor to any particular 
person. It applies to all and sundry—ourselves included. All
through the 
writings and conduct of H. P. B. and Judge, condemnation of others
is warned 
against; yet those who elected themselves to be their students paid
little 
attention either to warning or example. This led either to
condemnation of 
persons, or to worship of them, and then to dissensions and
disruptions, ending 
in total lack of discrimination. The Path of Brotherhood and the
Path of 
Occultism are One Path.
    Of course, here and
there, all the crimes in the calendar have been 
committed by professed theosophists, but the majority, in the old
days as now, 
have been good men and women—many times misled by their own
ignorance, by their 
misconceptions, by their desires and passions sometimes, but
honestly striving 
with their enormous difficulties. Olcott was not young when he was
“pulled out 
of the fire,” and had the vices of his time and position in the
world. But he 
did what no one else at that time would undertake; the Masters
assisted him, 
while knowing his weaknesses; and we should judge him by what he
did for 
Theosophy. So also with Mrs. Besant, who is sincere, if mistaken.
In Mrs. 
Tingley there is apparent lack of sincerity, and much that is the
opposite of 
theosophical conduct. When questions are asked, and when occasion
compels it, 
plain statements of fact have to
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be made, but in defense of Theosophy, not in condemnation of any
person. This is 
our key to a right attitude in all such cases presented by
theosophical history, 
made or in the making. It may be a hair line—but we have to find
it, and while 
pointing out truth, whether in Theosophical philosophy or history,
to avoid 
condemnation, even where names have to be mentioned. Where others
have made 
mistakes and gone wrong, they become a vicarious atonement for
those who might 
have done the same thing but for the lesson learned from the errors
of others.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Six
    Organizational
Theosophists have the “successorship” idea in their minds, as 
has the world in general, simply because of the various claims made
in that 
direction. This has to be cleared up in no uncertain way, but at
the same time 
without the slightest intimation of intolerance or condemnation, by
pointing out 
that one has to know Truth in order to detect its counterfeits. So
we point to 
the Message and the Messengers as the Source upon which all should
rely who 
desire to learn what pure Theosophy is and what it is not.
There are many things to be worked out in connection with the “U.
L. T.” If the 
movement is to spread, how are beginnings to be made in other places,
and how 
are they to be started right and kept in line? It can only be done
through close 
communication with some sure and solid point of help and guidance.
As matters 
stand, anyone can take the name and consciously or unconsciously
mix things 
up—as has been done with Theosophy itself. What means, if any,
should be taken 
to conserve the name “U. L. T.” to the particular effort? It is for
us to devise 
ways and means. There is time enough, but the field should grow in
extent, so 
that the future has to be considered. Would not a magazine serve as
guide and 
means of communication whereby
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the discrimination and judgment of all would grow? What all need is
intelligent 
devotion to Masters’ cause, which involves the subservience of the
personal 
self. It is always personal divagations that throw students off the
Philosophy 
and “the straight and narrow path.” We have to go ahead, doing what
seems right 
in ever varying circumstances, and that is where discrimination
comes in. It is 
never what one would like to do in this or that condition—but what
should be 
done. We have much to do to fit ourselves for what may be in store.
Can we do 
it? We can try.
If basic ideas are not taken in, nothing can be done. If we can do
no more, as 
humble agents, than to keep these ideas alive in the world and
among 
Theosophists, we should be content; but we are not through, and
while our life 
lasts we will keep on doing all we can to give others a sound
basis, a better 
understanding of what the great Ideas of Theosophy mean. Each of us
must find 
his own expressions of the same great Truths.
     This is an age of
transition and our work is to hark back to first 
principles, promulgate and sustain them as best we can, so that
they shall be 
ready for those who need them, drawing our inspiration from the
Message and the 
Messengers. This constitutes the right work for all Arjunas. It is
not the 
“personality,” but what “it” represents to us that is the danger.
In the case of 
some it might drag down the ideal; so, let the ideal exist, but let
the visible 
focus be unknown except to those who have a right to know.
There must be “someone” to reply to questions; a magazine would do
this without 
making anyone responsible for the opinions therein expressed. We
must get one 
started, but we will need readers—where will they be found? That
also is for the 
future. We will have to advance boldly without,—not in our own
strength, but in 
the strength of that for which we speak. We have to be like Sir
Galahad whose 
“strength was as a thousand men because his heart was pure.” There
will be then 
no terror of personal defeat, nor anxiety for personal success, but
only 
Masters’ work and our continued effort in it. If this spells
failure, we will 
have the right to pronounce the word and understand
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its meaning; at the very Worst, We Will not have “failed” in vain.
But we have 
no idea of failing, because the only real failure would be to stop
working, and 
we will not do that.
     We cannot and should not
prevent others from using the Declaration of “U. 
L. T.”—but we should see that they get started right. If other
centers are begun 
and those beginning them have the right spirit, they will want to
be in close 
touch with the rest. We have not only the duty of promulgating, but
of 
safeguarding as far as possible the spirit of our Declaration. “U.
L. T.” is 
avowedly a voluntary association; hence a Lodge that would not want
association 
with the rest would be an anomaly. Is it possible that any group in
sympathy 
with the Declaration would hold the opinion that unity is local
only? They 
might; but Registration would help. If any did not wish to
register, would they 
be in accord? Lodges, like Associates, should become so by the
simple fact of 
registration.
     Growth of the movement
should be and will be slow, but it cannot be kept 
confined and still be growth. As new centres spring up, perhaps at
great 
distance, they would easily be thrown into confusion without the
help of trained 
Associates. What means should be taken to keep such centers in
touch with older 
students? A magazine would help greatly if all the Associates took
it—but we 
have to remember that only a very small proportion did that in the
old days. 
That may prove to be the case with us, yet we must try to lay firm
foundations 
for all who will enter. This is our duty to them, to the Masters,
and to 
ourselves whose aim is to serve the cause of Masters.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Seven
    What we need to be on our
guard against in working theosophically, is not 
our mistakes—but our avoidable mistakes.
    It is a mistake to allow
the impression to grow in anyone’s mind that he is 
of importance to Theosophy. Theosophy was
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restored to the world for the sake of those who are looking for
light, not for 
those who are satisfied with things as they are and life as they
find it. So, to 
try to interest special persons is not worth the effort expended.
The very 
effort made prevents by arousing either opposition or erroneous
notions. To let 
as many as possible know about Theosophy, but to seek out no one in
particular, 
is the wiser course.
    The Karma of many is such
as to leave no mental or physical doors open 
directly, yet even they may be reached indirectly through the
efforts of others 
in affinity with them, who may take hold and find the way. What we
should do is 
rather to convey the information that the opportunity to understand
and apply 
Theosophy comes under Karma to the very few, not because it is
withheld from 
anyone, but because their prevailing tendencies are not of a nature
to leave the 
mind open to the consideration of new truths, or to enable them to
take 
advantage of the ways and means afforded. This comes from neglect
or misuse of 
opportunities in former lives, in many cases. Especially is this
true in this 
age when so much of the ancient Wisdom is once more made available
to all who 
will. All get this chance, some more favorably than others. It is
the height of 
unwisdom to neglect the opportunity again, most especially in those
cases where 
it is brought home to them without effort. In our daily lives we
mingle with 
people as they are. This enables us to show human sympathy with
their life, to 
understand their conditions, without getting involved in either,
while in 
indefinable ways giving the impression of the serious side of life
and the 
necessity of real knowledge as to its meaning.
    It is both wise and
necessary to have a good comprehension of ways and 
means, of the processes of dealing with others’ minds, not merely
for the sake 
of doing or being good,” but that they and we may learn the rules
of 
Soul-warfare, the duties, individual and collective, of the
incarnated Ego, the 
‘Warrior.” We are Karma, for we are the cause of all we do. Our
trouble is that 
we do not realize the extent to which the causes go which we set in
motion, 
either for good or evil. Hence the necessity for know-
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ing our pedigree, spiritual, intellectual, and physical. Our
heredity is our 
own, the present effects of causes set going by us in the long
past.
    Although all that we can
say is but a re-statement, there is a different 
light cast sometimes by a word or an application, which will be
helpful and 
useful to some. The two things that hinder effectiveness are our
own failure to 
give as good an impression as might be, and the failure of the
listener to 
appreciate the meaning of what is said. Most minds cannot look
beyond the 
person, with his faults and limitations, beyond the giver to the
gift itself and 
all that it implies, and so, expect too much of the personality in
that it does 
not fully embody what is handed on.
    This will be true of the
“U. L. T.,” as of the workers who make up its life, 
for the course of “U. L. T.” will be what its Associates make it—no
more, no 
less. Its “basis for union” is purposely left undefined from the
exoteric, the 
personal, point of view, in order to make more prominent the true
and lasting 
basis for unity among all who call themselves Theosophists. A
central office or 
bureau of registry will serve to keep a record of all Associates,
and to receive 
and give out information and help to all Lodges and individual
inquirers 
interested in any way in Theosophy and the Theosophical Movement,
quite 
regardless of whether they are affiliated with our Association or
not.
    This means of Theosophical
inter-communication will be of great importance, 
but every care must be taken to keep it impersonal, non-partisan, 
non-proselyting, while at the same time a dependable source of
information on 
Theosophical history as well as philosophy. It must be so conducted
that it will 
never drift into any kind of a controlling force. This can always
be obviated 
and guarded against by continual reiteration and application of the
principle of 
union, that “mental control” of any kind is contrary to the letter
and the 
spirit of our Declaration, and that, while Lodges and individuals
may seek 
information, advice and suggestion, they are not in any way bound
in so doing.
    Those who are true to
this principle will always remain in union, even on an 
agreement to differ, if the older students take
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that position and set the example themselves. It should never at
any time, nor 
should any of our policies and practices, degenerate into hard and
fast 
conclusions as to men, things, or methods of work. If we stand true
and 
steadfast as to our aim, purpose and teaching, we will afford such
aid and 
guidance as is in our power to all who may inquire, and all
necessary 
arrangements will shape themselves. We have but to keep continually
in mind and 
heart the original lines laid by H. P. B. and W. Q. J., namely
UNITY first, as a 
focus for spiritual growth and mutual strength; STUDY, that a
knowledge of the 
Movement, its purpose, its Teachers and its Message, may be had;
WORK, upon 
ourselves in the light of that study, and for others first, last,
and all the 
time.
    All that any of us can
give is Theosophy. We did not invent it. It was given 
to us; we stand in line and pass it along, as people used to do at
fires in 
passing the buckets of water. People are grateful to the one who
passes the 
“water of life” along to them, but the “passer” knows where
gratitude belongs, 
and says: “don’t thank me; thank Theosophy—as I do. It enables me
to help 
others; it will also enable you.” Thus he helps them and helps
himself to get 
rid of the personal idea. The fight against the “personal idea” is
a long one 
and a strong one. It has to be guarded against that it does not
take to itself 
what it has no claim to. What others think we are serves as an
object lesson for 
them, but our ideal is beyond all personality and personalities. It
does not 
matter what people think of “us,” as long as they come and get
Theosophy 
straight. There should be more and more come in closer, for the
sake of 
Theosophy—new units in the body of Workers.
    The Messengers have left
all that is necessary—for us and for others—in the 
way of direction; it is for us and for them to apply the right
things at the 
right times and in the right way. Some may think this discouraging;
so, many are 
looking for “orders and instructions” from Masters in ways and
means. This would 
not do any good, even if it were possible, for if directed in every
thing, how 
could we grow in discrimination, judgment and
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power? We would be but automata, and would never fill the necessary
place. No 
doubt They help all sincere men by adjustment rather than
direction; so we 
should not look for the latter, but using our own best Theosophical
judgment 
move forward, feeling sure that if our understanding of the nature
of the task 
is good, and our motive pure, the right way will appear to us. This
will be 
guidance of the right sort—one that leads to growth. In the
meantime we live and 
learn, and should not forget that They and we are working in the
present for the 
future, and for the same great end. It is a “bumpy” road that we
are 
traveling—because the Karma of our race has constructed that kind
of a road; 
there is no other way to get help to the race but by traveling it
as best we 
can.
    Masters do not direct;
They adjust. There have been and there are those who 
think and say, in effect: “the Master will do everything.” All such
are bound to 
go wrong, by not considering what is the right thing and the right
way, by not 
using all the powers they have to determine the right procedure and
conduct. We 
trust to the great Lodge and to the Law, but use the powers we have
to the best 
of our ability: what we cannot do, we know They will do when
necessary. We have 
to present this idea for the better guidance of all.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Eight
    Many members of the
various theosophical societies will naturally demur to 
our conclusions and conduct, while sympathizing with our
determination to adhere 
to Theosophy strictly as originally recorded. Others, the “old
timers” who play 
the leading roles in these societies, will oppose us vigorously
while themselves 
claiming to “revere” H. P. B. This cannot be avoided if we are to
be true to our 
declared purposes, for those purposes would necessitate a radical
change in 
attitude on the part of both leaders
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and followers in the different societies. But all those who are not
so deeply 
committed that they will not or dare not consider philosophy, logic
and facts on 
their merits—all those who are or who may become to any extent
open-minded, will 
make some investigation, will gain a better outlook to that degree,
a better 
appreciation of the need for Unity on a philosophical basis. These
impressions 
will be recalled when such theosophists themselves are forced by
events within 
their own sphere of interest to a reconsideration. Let us, then,
trust to 
recorded facts, recorded philosophy, and the consistent example set
by the true 
Teachers H. P. B. and W. Q. J.
    It was natural that you
should attend the Art Exhibit, but unfortunate that 
it detracted from the strength of the meeting by taking you away.
Where there 
are so few, the absence of even one is felt by all. It weakens the
current by 
division of interest for the time being; moreover, the tendency to
repeat is 
easily established. This may seem like making a “jealous god” out
of Theosophy, 
but it springs from experience, and is given for what it may be
worth to you. It 
should not be taken as a stricture on any particular thing or
person, but in 
general, as a guiding principle. I know that you are no lukewarm
Theosophist, 
but I am thinking of the example set to younger students. It is so
easy, and 
especially in the earlier stages, to lose enthusiasm for the Work
itself through 
dissipation of energy in diversions harmless in themselves. It is
better to take 
relaxation or to attend to “social” matters at other than meeting
times, if our 
intention really is “to sacrifice to the Permanent the mutable.”
    A year ago at this time,
what has since been done and what is in the air to 
be done, all seemed a long, long way off.  U. L. T. has made quite a stride 
since it was formed, and already it is standing firmly on its own
feet, and 
begins to make its voice heard in the land. Devotion did it, and
has grown 
stronger through the efforts made; so there is every encouragement.
A few have 
already grasped something of the spirit of this movement; there
will be more as 
time goes on, and some of them will grow into real warriors. If we
give our 
hearts to the Cause, all the rest will follow.
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    Many hear, but few heed
the Message, and of those who heed, few are they who 
take to heart the warnings of the Teachers. Some think, evidently,
that all 
warnings are a sort of scare crow to test their courage. They
forget or ignore 
that the real test is not of our courage but of our discrimination.
If the 
philosophy is true and Masters are behind it, then what They say is
meant. They 
have said other things besides warnings, and these also are meant,
as fully and 
as truly as their warnings.
    Theosophy is not in
conflict with any form of religion, any society, any 
man, any opinion—however much these may be in conflict with
Theosophy. What 
Theosophy is engaged in, through those who believe in it, as we do,
without any 
mental reservations whatsoever, is a battle for recognition.
Theosophy serves to 
explain the hidden side, the real and inner meaning of all things,
for it is a 
friend to understanding, an aid to knowledge. By it a man may come
to know 
himself through and through. It is because of misunderstanding of
the real Self 
that we have all these religions, sects, parties, dogmas, with all
their vested 
interests and sustainers. It is the Karma of the race that meets
us, so we will 
not cry out nor dodge it when it confronts us. What we might
otherwise think is 
the worst, is the best thing that could come, if we meet it in the
right spirit, 
clearing up our Karma as we go along, making ourselves better
instruments for 
Them. We are not working because of our self-interest in the
results, but for 
Masters and for Humanity. So, we will take cheerfully whatever
comes, “enjoy or 
suffer whatever the Higher Self may have in store for us by way of
experience or 
discipline.” It is for us to go on without doubt or anxiety: both
are hindrances 
which spring from the lower nature, not the Higher. We suffer, and
must continue 
to suffer from the bodily and mental weaknesses of the race. We can
cheerfully 
endure all this when we are working for a better time, better minds
and bodies, 
better understanding for the whole of humanity.
    There come times to
everyone in his development when work seems useless and 
irksome. I think that the irksomeness of the work is the cleaning
up of Karma 
and the clearing up of “the
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sheaths of the Soul.” That which galls, that which hurts, is our
personal 
desires unattained or feared to be unattainable. We can go through
all, bear 
all, in thinking of the Self of all. It is by giving up self to
Self that the 
White Adept has become what He is. We “know” all this very well,
but it is the 
realization of it that we lack; hence we find the pressure hard
many times. We 
have to keep on, and dwell as much as possible in the Self and on
the Self; 
every effort brings the time of realization nearer.
    It is by dwelling on our
inherent perfectibility that we get rid of our 
imperfections. The last thing to doubt is the inherent
perfectibility of all 
men. Here is an interesting statement by H.P. B.:
    “Every Ego has the Karma
of past Manvantaras behind him. The Ego starts with 
Divine Consciousness—no past, no future, no separation. It is long
before 
realizing that it is itself. Only after many births does it begin
to discern, by 
this collectivity of experience, that it is individual. At the end
of its cycle 
of reincarnation it is still the same Divine Consciousness, but it
has now 
become individualized Self- Consciousness.”
    Without this sense of
inherent perfection, there would be nothing worth 
living for: a few years of “pleasure and pain,” and then it is all
gone—and what 
has been gained? Do what we will, we cannot escape Life, for we are
Life—all the 
time; most of us realize but a portion of its possibilities.
Sometime we will 
learn what Life really means. We are working to that end, for
others as well as 
ourselves—mostly now for those others “who know still less than
we,” but we also 
are learning all the time. Is it not worth all that it costs? Men
make greater 
sacrifices than we are called upon to make, and for infinitely
less—a few years 
of questionable happiness, and then oblivion as far as they know or
can see. 
That we can see even a little of the purpose of life, is much; to
feel it, is 
greater still; to realize it, is to Live. If Nietzsche’s doctrine
is right, then 
we have made a great mistake. Well, have we? There is no “if” about
it; we have 
every certainty that we are doing right in following the Path of
Mas-
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ters, the lines laid by H. P. B. So what matters it if we suffer
wounds in 
battling for Them and for all mankind. We have accomplished
something, however 
small. We have done all that we could do and the fight is still on.
It is a 
School of Life, and everything that comes to us at any time
contains in it the 
thing we need, whether it seems hard, troublesome ,or pleasant.
    The Work makes up for the
sacrifice. “Nothing is gained with out sacrifice.” 
Let us take to heart Judge’s words: “And yet, at every moment,
every hour of 
each day, these Masters are willing and anxious to meet those who
are clear-eyed 
enough to see their own true destiny, and noble-hearted so as to
work for ‘the 
great orphan, Humanity.’”
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Nine
    There are many “good
souls” who do not know their own minds, and hence have 
no solid basis in Theosophy while accepting it as the only thing
worth knowing. 
They cannot “stay put” any where. We don’t have to hunt them
up—they come to us 
right along. If we had to look for them we might let them go by, as
not being of 
the right kind or from some other ostensible reason. There are
hundreds who have 
gone off on one wrong track or another. They all have some good
traits—Karmic 
inheritances; but these do not bring Wisdom nor Will. They need
guidance, not 
leadership. Study and work is their only salvation and we can help
them all to 
the degree that our Karma and theirs permits, if only by example.
Our work is 
with all Theosophists. As far as I can see, “U. L. T.” is the only
real “olive 
branch” in the Movement, for it means peace with all, in unity of
aim, purpose, 
and teaching.
    Had Theosophists remained
together on this basis, dissensions could never 
have occurred, and the many side-issues would have had no vogue.
What a Karma 
for the delinquents and for the
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world! The ignorant take up with pretensions and promises, and
while some will 
remain ignorant, no small number will develop into sorcery of the
worst kind. 
The undiscriminating innocents in all these bodies screen what is
behind, 
because unable to see that they are being used for selfish ends.
That is the 
pity of it. The great majority of people deride the idea of anyone
possessing 
occult powers for evil.
    This is the mystery of
the human mind. Being creative, it endows its every 
form of thought with life and being, makes for itself idols in its
own image, 
and then seeks to exact obedience from others. And such idols as it
creates—monsters or vampires! These things are not pleasant to
contemplate, but 
they exist. We cannot shut our eyes to them, and must warn all whom
we can, 
pointing to the SELF as the refuge. Theosophists, if they would
follow the one 
safe, true and royal road, have to forget persons and leaders and
attend to 
Principles, and be loyal to Those who gave them out. In order to be
loyal to H. 
P. B. and W. Q. J., they have to follow the lines laid down by the
Teachers. If 
we are loyal to H. P. B. and Judge and what They stand for, we
shall not be 
found running after leaders who cry lo here, and lo there. Many are
“joined to 
their idols: let them alone.” But warnings to would-be’s are always
in order, 
and where we see danger to others, it is our duty to warn—not in
antagonism to 
anything but those errors and wrong practices which bring injurious
results. 
Theosophists must point out error by comparison with Theosophy.
Methods must 
vary with time, place and conditions. Few minds, especially those
attracted by 
“the lure of the Occult,” are able to make applications in any wide
sense. 
Distinctions have to be pointed out to them. We have to learn that
the way to 
present truth is by examining various beliefs in its light, not by
forcible 
attempts to “corner” another. Even an animal resists when cornered;
so the right 
way to obtain consideration of the ideas we have to present implies
a full sense 
of freedom on the part of the one who listens, as well as on the
part of the 
speaker. In these days of proselyting and propaganda for all sorts
of ‘isms 
there is the more need for tolerance if we are to find those chinks
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in the mind of others through which questions may possibly be
aroused. We can 
set the example of examining anything on its merits, and then
presenting in 
contrast the Theosophical view, which accords with nature as a
whole.
    The “U. L. T.” Declaration
should turn the attention of every open-minded 
Theosophist from forms to principles. It provides a real basis for
study and 
work. Its reasonableness should awaken many to get busy on
themselves. The door 
is open to all, but we cannot help those who will neither listen
nor think. I 
was amused at the statement published in the Besant periodical that
U. L. T. is 
a “secession from Point Loma.” I wonder how they made the
deduction? As it is 
largely composed of Theosophists from different organizations, it
might better 
be called a “secession” from them all! The fact that “U. L. T.”
does not profess 
attachment to any organization, and that it has no organization of
its own, does 
not appear to have registered with those who would pigeon-hole us as
well as 
themselves. We can leave it to time to vindicate the truth. As the
years go on, 
and “U. L. T.” becomes better known by its fruits, it will be more
and more 
difficult for those who have an axe to grind to label us anything
but 
straight-line Theosophists, resolutely declining any connection
with any 
theosophical organization, but always in full sympathy with our 
fellow-Theosophists of all organizations or of none. Yet we must be
watchful to 
correct the impression wherever it exists that “U. L. T.” is a
secession or 
succession, or anything but an Association to study and apply
Theosophy pure and 
simple. Can any sincere student observe the things taught and done
in the name 
of Theosophy and fail to see the crying need for just such an Association
as “U. 
L. T.”? Some otherwise loyal Theosophists think that the Movement
has failed for 
this cycle, because of the dissensions and false doctrines so much
in evidence. 
They ought to remember that Masters never cease working, and that
it is always 
possible for even the humblest Theosophist who is clear-eyed and
humanity-loving 
to aid Their endeavor. The way to know the truth is to get back to
what the 
Teachers themselves gave, both in philosophy and
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in right work. If that is done, it will be found that there is
neither 
“variableness nor the shadow of turning” in the “U. L. T.” from the
lines laid 
down by those Teachers. We need to bring again and again to the
attention of all 
discouraged or bewildered Theosophists what H. P. B. wrote to Judge
in 1888:
    “Night before last I was
shown a bird’s-eye view of the Theosophical 
Societies. I saw a few earnest, reliable Theosophists in a
death-struggle with 
the world in general, and with other—nominal but
ambitious—Theosophists. The 
former are greater in number than you may think, and they
prevailed, as you in 
America will prevail, if you only remain staunch to the Master’s
programme and 
true to yourselves.” And again: “For it is only when the Nucleus is
formed that 
the accumulations can begin that will end in future years, however
far, in the 
formation of that body which we have in view.”
    Students have missed much
by careless reading. If this is a Movement 
inspired by Masters, and if H. P. B. and Judge were Their
mouth-pieces, there is 
the necessity for looking into the meaning behind the words They
used. To think 
that the effort had failed and that it was no use to try further,
would show 
lack of faith in the Masters and a misunderstanding of the great
occult laws 
that govern such a Movement as this. “The wheel of the Good Law
moves swiftly 
on. It grinds by night and day. The worthless husks it drives from
out the 
golden grain, the refuse from the flour.” This must apply to the
Movement, as 
well as to everything else—being Universal in its scope. I do not
think that 
They used words purposelessly; it is for us and for all others who
would serve 
Them, to apply, apply, apply Their teachings. There is no time
limit to effort.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
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IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Ten
     If we waited until we
were saints would we ever begin? The Gita says, “Lay 
all thy deeds, good and bad alike, upon me.” We have to give
ourselves as we 
are, not as we would like to be, or we could never become as
Masters are. The 
fact that some of our deeds are recognized as bad, means their
relinquishment 
sooner or later. This must be so, if we are striving to be true to
Them. So, 
while doing all we can to make the way sure and clear according to
our lights, 
we may step forward with strength and boldness, because the path is
Theirs as 
well as ours. At times we may doubt, but this arises from the
personal 
uncertainty, the fear of one or another consequence. We should take
it that what 
ever comes is a necessary position for us to be in, in order to do
further and 
better work for Them.
And we are helped, and in the right way, the way our nature
needs—not 
necessarily according to what we assume would be the proper way. If
we felt 
certain that They would be on hand to pull US Out of holes we walk
into 
carelessly, or have made possible by past neglect, how could we
ever learn right 
discrimination and right action? “Ingratitude is not one of our
vices.” They 
have said this, and it is lived up to. We may be sure the very best
that can be 
done for us is done and being done all the time. We have to find
the way to Them 
through service. Criticisms by others may or may not be well taken.
We have to 
judge by results obtained, rather than by anyone’s opinion, and
follow those 
methods which bring desirable results. “Old timers” will naturally
criticize 
because in many cases they have lost the spirit of the work. They
are in the 
dark generally, both as to Theosophy and the theosophical
organizations, so that 
simple loyalty and devotion to the Message and the Messenger is
difficult for 
them to understand. We shall be glad to have their moral support if
no more, and 
their criticisms will help us to steer clear of repeating the
errors of the 
past. The
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old timers” do not realize that they need adjustment more than any
newcomers to 
Theosophy. The best way to help both classes of mind as well as
ourselves is to 
stick to principles and let each apply them for himself. The
“stuff” handed out 
by all these organizations and leaders, the claims made for them,
only go to 
show how vitally necessary it is that the true Teachers and the
true Teaching 
should be pointed out in no uncertain tone.
     There is a psychic wave
at present and it will require much effort to 
maintain any movement in the true direction. So far as we are
concerned, this 
will cause the output of energy which increases strength. If it
were not for 
such obstacles and opportunities we might fall into mere reliance
upon our 
present acquirements and results achieved, and so go no further. We
have to 
think at all times of others and of the future. If others are not
helped and 
trained to take hold, to share in the work and its
responsibilities, then, 
should anything happen to us, the Work would suffer. Study and
preparation on 
the part of beginners will alone make them efficient as
propagandists. In 
endeavoring to aid them, it is essential to encourage their own
initiative as 
much as possible, suggesting and adjusting when and where
necessary.
For the beginning, the middle, and the end, we should hold to the
Three 
Fundamental Propositions of The Secret Doctrine in all our public
work—for upon 
these the whole philosophy hinges, and unless well grounded in
them, no real 
progress can be had. The first thing to make clear in every
exposition of 
Theosophy is the impossibility of the ordinary conception of a
personal or 
separate God, and the importance of realizing the SELF as all, in
all. Then, the 
Law of Periodicity, Cycles or Karma, in all its applications as
“the world’s 
eternal ways.” This shows Reincarnation by analogy, as also the
successive 
re-embodiments of solar systems, planets, and every form of matter.
This leads 
naturally to the consideration of “the Universal Over-Soul,” the
collective 
intelligence in any solar system, as well as in all of them—for all
are 
connected, “down to the minutest conceivable atom,” and what
affects one affects 
all—Egos small and great as well as
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embryonic ones. This means Unity throughout all, inter-action among
all, 
individual responsibility.
     It will be well at every
study class to state what the purpose of the 
meeting is; to have volunteers state in their own words their
understanding of 
the Three Fundamentals. Questions should be freely invited and
asked, the object 
being that students, even beginners, should formulate for
themselves. Only so 
can they make their understanding good, and get themselves in the
position where 
they can best help others even as they have been helped. In the
class in The 
Ocean of Theosophy, the Three Fundamentals are the background of
the whole work. 
Chapter by chapter, in question and answer, the applications can be
brought out 
and the consistency of the entire philosophy made clear. Individual
students who 
want to learn should both ask and answer questions in terms of the
philosophy 
itself. There will be difficulty in getting many to see the
importance of this 
continual reiteration, but it is essential to all true progress.
     Unavoidably we shall
draw the attention of those who are inimical to 
anything we may attempt in Theosophical work, as well as the
attention of those 
who desire to learn what pure Theosophy is. Well, all this takes
time to 
overcome, but time swallows up men, centuries, and worlds—as well
as some 
attitudes of mind. We know such an effort as ours is needed, and we
know that 
what we present is eternal Truth itself, the effects of which will
go on 
forever. We are glad to have people “register,” glad for them, and
glad for the 
world’s sake, but not as a favor to us. We can rejoice that those
interested are 
able to see their true interest and join themselves to the helpers
of humanity. 
There is much of wrong, of error, of mistaken idea, and these we
have to 
recognize where found, take a lesson from them, and so avoid the
pitfalls into 
which so many have stumbled. We need not care for what is said
about any of us 
personally, though we shall have to meet it so that “U. L. T.” will
not be 
affected by anything of the kind. All attacks upon Theosophy and
Theosophical 
work have been directed, not at the philosophy or the Objects of
Theosophical 
work, but at those who were at the front and looked
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upon as the directors of the Movement. We will discount this as
much as possible 
by keeping ourselves in the background, so that if attacks should
come, as is 
not improbable, they will affect the work as little as possible.
The way we have 
marked out for ourselves bids fair to prevent any particular
hindrance to our 
work. H. P. B. and Judge were pioneers, and many of the
theosophical 
illuminati—save the mark—have sought to belittle Them. The whole
crowd of 
“successors” have either to belittle the Teachers—or direct
attention to Them. 
In the latter case, the “successors” lose out; what they have done
and are doing 
tells its own story. Well, people can take their choice between our
work, which 
directs attention to the Messengers and Their Message, and the work
of those who 
call attention to themselves by hoisting themselves up on what the
Messengers 
have left for the world. If the world had to depend on these “old
timers” for 
Theosophy pure and simple, what chance would the world have?
     The Movement begun by H.
P. B. and Judge has passed through many 
changes—changes unavoidable in a period of transition and among
people whose 
heredity and training are obstacles in the way of right appreciation
and 
application. But out of all these confusions must come the nucleus
of that great 
body, the formation of which They had in view from the very first.
We do but 
labor to hasten that great aim and object. ‘Who or what can
prevent, however 
much they may try to hinder?
     It is strange that so
many who have studied Theosophy fail to understand 
and apply it, but never fail to characterize and pass judgment.
Their interest 
is limited either to the worship or the condemnation of persons.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Eleven
     The right way of looking
at things is shown in Theosophy. Each has to 
learn, to know, and to control his own nature, if he is to acquire 
discrimination—the ability to help others. Each
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has to take the philosophy and apply it, in the face of all
mistakes and acts 
which, while they make the task more difficult, have been the means
of arousing 
the very discrimination needed. Our vicarious atonement having
shown us the way, 
our mistakes can be turned to good account. We will take time to
think what we 
shall say and how we shall say it. One gets over changeableness and
indecision 
as he takes time to think things out fully before acting or making
promises. He 
will then study to do what ever he says he will do. This
carefulness will 
increase true self-reliance and the reliance that others will place
in him. Only 
as full confidence is gained can men be helped in themselves and
with each 
other. Masters must work with those who will work, and as They can,
and this 
applies to all. Some blame H. P. B. and Judge for the mistakes made
by those who 
played leading parts in the Movement, as pupils lay on the
shoulders of the 
Teacher their own fiascos. All this comes from lack of
discrimination, the 
failure on the part of leaders and followers to apply what H. P. B.
and W. Q. J. 
taught. The letters written to you are the results of observation,
experience, 
study and application of the philosophy of Theosophy, and as such
must be of use 
to others in like case with your own. So must also be the results
of your own 
efforts, and those of all other sincere students.
     The Western mind is apt
to look upon mere literary form and fine phrases as 
the standard of judgment. People in general do not get the meaning
of what is 
written, in the same way that they do not extract the value from
their 
experiences. They make surface deductions and applications only. So
they have 
little ability to apply the philosophy to daily life, nor can they
see its 
practical value. They have to be helped to assimilate the
fundamental principles 
if they are to realize right valuations and applications. Each has
to eradicate 
his own faults in these as in other directions—not the faults of
others. Until 
students set to work seriously on these lines they cannot find
surety nor 
happiness. Theosophy and its application go together, if there is
to be real 
progress. It is not for us to say, “Do this,” or “Don’t do that.”
It is for us 
to put the case, Theosophy and its individual
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application, and leave each student, each inquirer, to make his own
decisions. 
People get into tight places right along by following “advices,”
instead of 
exercising their own discrimination, and then invariably blame the
“advisor” 
when matters do not go according to their expectations.
     Is it not strange that
plain statements are not grasped? That superficial 
meanings are taken to be true applications? Most men think, when
they have heard 
a statement made, they know it. All of this is chargeable to our
modern 
educational methods, wherein soul and mind are considered as mere
recorders. 
“Amongst thousands of mortals a single one perhaps strives for
perfection.” So, 
among the many who may be interested in Theosophy—the philosophy of
the 
perfectibility of Man—here and there will be one who may wake up.
Therein lies 
the hope. And even those who are interested enough merely to listen
or to read 
with attention, will get something in the way of a trend that may
some day 
develop. If we keep trying in all proper ways and means open to us,
something 
will come from such mutual endeavors.
     The fundamental
statements of the Teachers are axioms to be applied. At the 
same time they are woven in with such reasoning as may affect the
ordinary way 
of thinking. Science, Psychology, and all efforts that are based on
them, 
fail—and for no other reason than that they do not assume or admit
that full and 
true knowledge exists. If Western Science and Psychology would go
on with their 
painstaking efforts in the light of Theosophy, the spiritual and
intellectual 
darkness of the world would soon be overcome and a civilization
brought into 
being that would best express a true physical life. What hinders?
Intellectual 
pride, together with the cramping effects of false religious
conceptions. If the 
idea is held that there is but one life on earth, then all the
learning of the 
man and of the age is limited to a small and narrow range. But if
one grasps the 
idea of successive lives on earth—all under Karma—then, the learning
takes on a 
wider sweep, leading the man to the conception that all powers of
every kind 
proceed from the Supreme, the Self of all creatures; that
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he himself is in reality a spiritual being, and must think and act
as such.
     We may not be able to
apply, as fully as we and others might desire, all 
the axioms and reasoning of the philosophy; but what of that? We
can apply what 
is possible and all that is possible to us, and in that application
greater 
understanding and facility arise. Each one has to find his way.
Words cannot 
give it, yet there is a way for each. Most of the trouble lies in
trying to see, 
trying to hear, trying to “think” it all out, instead of applying
what we do 
see. All ability comes very gradually, imperceptibly—felt, grasped,
realized, 
rather than perceived in the ordinary sense. Here, there is not
enough 
acquaintance as yet with the philosophy itself for many of the
students to have 
confidence enough to take hold and carry on the work. When I have
hinted at 
approaching departure, it brings dismay because they imagine that
Theosophy will 
be dead if I go: yet they ought to have learned that no one is
Theosophy and the 
best are but transmitters; that they too, having received, should
get busy doing 
as much by others, becoming transmitters in their turn. 41
Associates of “U. L. 
T.”! If 25 of them turn out to be “good stuff,” will the effort not
prove to be 
worth all that it has cost? “Good stuff” means just that many
Warriors for the 
restoration of the Theosophical Movement to its original lines.
Many thousands 
are needed, but as the body grows, it takes care of itself. The
struggle will be 
fierce—as we face it, not knowing the outcome—but the struggle is
for us, or we 
would not have it. We will take what comes, and will give all that
we are and 
have to the common cause, knowing that we are not fighting for self
but for all. 
More we cannot do, and less we may not do under the Law of
Brotherhood. A year 
ago today we began this struggle, and so it naturally brings
retrospections to 
us. Things past are always easier than things present, or the
unknown yet to 
come. The past can be judged as to relative importance, for it is
now the hollow 
of the wave of progress, whereas the present and the future
represent the crest 
and the resistance felt or feared. Yet—if we remember—the past,
when it was both 
present and future,
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held just such disturbances which we now see were a waste of
energy. In the 
writings of the Teachers there is naught but encouragement. It is
the deep sense 
of the gulf between our ideals and their attainment that dismays
the personal 
conception. If we involve “ourselves” in these personal
conceptions, we shall 
feel despondent—like Arjuna. In reality we should feel more of
encouragement 
than ever, for the past year has brought a success greater than we
could then 
have dared to hope in the circumstances.
     We are all links in the
great chain of the Theosophical Movement. What 
affects one affects all, and in degree. Everyone who endeavors to
help others in 
any real way, puts himself in the position where he must take the
reactions. The 
Karma of the Parent theosophical society is that of H. P. B. and
Judge, known by 
them beforehand in a general way. It is also our Karma and that of
all other 
Theosophists. Theirs was the first effort to spread Theosophy; much
has been 
done since in this respect, and by many students. But its
application has not 
been as general as might have been. The reactions from the spread
of Theosophy 
and of its mis- and non-application by students will be taken care
of when They 
come again. We and all other true students are linked with the
Great Lodge by 
aspiration, by service, by following the Masters’ program as nearly
as we know. 
All sincere students are surrounded by an “invisible escort” as
long as their 
faces are set toward the Goal and they remain staunch to Masters’
program. 
Masters neither push, pull, nor hinder voluntary action. To do so
would be to 
prevent true Self reliance. For this reason some may think that
Masters have 
deserted them, or do not see nor hear them; but this is the worst
conception 
that could be. It belittles Them and implies ignorance and
ingratitude on Their 
part. They have spoken clearly of Their nearness to all those who
“try and ever 
keep trying.”
            —ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
 
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IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Twelve
     “MASTERS never cease
working, but they cease at times from such public 
efforts as were made at the establishment of the Theosophical
Society; before 
that They were working with individuals.” Mr. Judge made this
statement at a 
crucial time, repeating what the Master had written years before to
Mr. Sinnett, 
and what H. P. B. had more than once put of record.
     Applying this, it would
seem to mean that They are not now working directly 
with any theosophical bodies as such, as They at one time were
working with the 
Parent society, but that They continue to work with individuals.
Those who 
thought or think that any organization carries the Masters with it
have taken 
the shadow for the substance, have mistaken the tool for the Work
man. If these 
mistaken theosophical leaders were really Initiates, or under the
guidance of 
Masters, there would not be so much of personality and pretensions
in evidence 
as are exhibited on every hand. Even minor Initiates would not act
that way.
     It may very well be that
the public effort and the recorded teachings of 
the Masters were put forth in order to find willing, clear-eyed and
noble-hearted men and women, able to see their true destiny and
anxious to serve 
humanity. If it did not and does not find them, then H. P. B. and
Judge’s 
mission was largely futile—for Theosophy can be used selfishly as
well as in the 
right way. The good comes from the fact that Theosophic ideas pave
the way for 
those who are as yet not clear-eyed. So even those who selfishly
use 
Theosophical ideas unconsciously help by keeping these ideas before
the world. 
Theosophy is, and even a mistaken idea of it may lead to a correct 
understanding. Let us keep to the correct understanding and refrain
from 
condemnation, and success must come in some measure. If we make and
keep our 
selves ready and fit, we shall be used as occasion and fitness
permit. We are 
dealing with minds, not persons. The Soul, being
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conformed to the mind, reacts upon the whole nature. If, as
persons, we could 
all look at the world of ideas in that way, we would learn more,
gain more 
discrimination, and be more useful to others, so meriting Their
guiding 
influence. It is Karma, all of it; students should realize that and
benefit by 
the knowledge. The right start is everything. If this is gained and
held, then 
all that each one does carries him and others in the right
direction. In this 
Work, natures are intensified, good and bad come to the surface.
The 
‘cleaning-up” process is gradual and each must do his own work of
elimination 
where such work is seen to be needed. The barriers to help from
Masters are in 
ourselves and nowhere else.
     Either Theosophy pure
and undefiled is the most real thing in the world, or 
we are all wasting our time and effort. If we are able to conceive
its reality 
in all seriousness, we should then never cease trying to understand
and apply 
what has been recorded by Masters’ Messenger for our guidance and
instruction. 
What is the distinction between Theosophy and anything else? In
Fundamental 
Principles, I should say. Nothing else affords an all-inclusive
view of 
existence. All kinds of sincere efforts help, all kinds of systems
contain some 
truth, but they all fall short, because they all exclude or ignore
some part of 
nature. Theosophists of every degree should realize that under
Karma much is 
required of those to whom much has been given in opportunity and
knowledge. We 
can only use our opportunities and knowledge to the best possible
advantage and 
continue to do so, if we would not ourselves fall short of the
requirement of 
"the Law of Laws—Compassion absolute.” What has been done has
been of real and 
lasting advantage to many; there are others yet unborn, yet to
come. This is the 
time when one wishes to be like Brahma with “eyes, heads, mouths
and ears in 
every direction.” Read “The Tidal Wave” in Lucifer, volume V, page
173, if you 
would learn how H. P. B. felt—and feels. The real point of issue is
the divine 
nature in man. The real basis of work is to impress this on the
minds of those 
who come. In Theosophy
 Reprinted in Theosophy, Vol.
, page 446; Vol. 27, page 496.
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we have this basis. A right philosophy is desperately needed by the
world. 
Without this, strength and special faculties are useless because
they are 
misapplied. Theosophy is not merely words. It is Life, and this
includes all 
things in life and all the planes of living. To have Brotherhood
among the many, 
it is first necessary to realize brotherhood among the few, and the
basis of 
brotherhood is the divinity inherent in all men.
     All true impressions
come from within—from the highest Principle in us, 
Atma, or the Divinity which is one and the same in all. If there is
nothing in 
the brain but impressions from the lower principles of our being,
nothing to 
connect the Thinker with higher planes, he can but waver between
these lower 
states. If thought is to rise further, it must be thought without a
brain. 
Nature works by orderly processes to which we give the name of law.
In the 
individual it is called the Will. By an act of the will all
ordinary mental 
processes may be stopped; then the habitual center of mental action
may be 
transcended and the ascent to the next plane made, without losing
the power to 
perceive on this. In all such attempts we must keep the
Fundamentals in view—in 
mind. The Spirit in man, the Perceiver, is “untouched by troubles,
works, fruits 
of works, or desires.” It seems to me that the clearest
comprehension, if not 
understanding, of all this comes from dwelling on the idea of the
Perceiver as 
looking into one or another of his “sheaths” and finding there the
record of the 
actions in any or all of them.
     Everything depends on
what one has in mind—his fundamental conceptions of 
Deity, Nature, and Man, when considering or attempting to practice 
“concentration.” The general idea on this as on other subjects and
objects is 
purely personal. There is no self-examination of motives, no
altruism, no effort 
to carry out in daily life the assumed object of fitting one’s self
to be the 
better able to help and teach others, no observation of the evil
effects of 
rushing in for “psychic development.” H. P. B. says, “One has to
have an 
unshakable faith in the Deity within, an unlimited belief in his
own power to 
learn; otherwise he is bound to fall into delusion and
irresponsible 
medium-ship.” Here
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is the signpost of warning against all attempts to develop
psychically before 
one has learned to master and guide the lower, personal self. What
is 
indispensable is right philosophy and its application in daily
life. By the 
wrong attitude in this and other respects, many well-meaning
theosophists fail, 
and harm themselves and others. The meaning is plain. Leave
psychism alone; work 
from the spiritual side upon the lower nature—visible and
invisible, psychic and 
physical—first, by analysis and comprehension of the principles of
our being as 
Theosophy teaches, then by the guidance of knowledge as it arises
within 
oneself. We pass from plane to plane daily, but relate everything
to the brain 
circle of necessity, and thus lose the real meanings. Dwelling on
the 
Fundamentals and the endeavor to help others is the true
concentration. Mr. 
Judge wrote: “Thus the Will is freed from the domination of desire
and at last 
subdues the mind itself.”
     We have to gain, each
for himself, the unshakable faith that “the Master’s 
hand is over all” sincere Theosophists, the humblest as the most
progressed. In 
true work for Masters’ Cause there is no rivalry. Our place in that
Work is 
clear to us, and can be shown to be clear to anyone who will take
the trouble to 
make the search that we have made. This place we hold for those who
have the 
good Karma to come in contact with it before meeting other phases
of the 
Movement, as well as for those who, having met other phases, are
either 
entangled in them or trying to find a way out of them. The harm of
the dark 
phases we cannot help, but we can let the true light shine “as
widely and as 
quickly as possible.” I would like to see the “U. L. T.”
Declaration known to 
every Theosophist as to every searcher for Truth.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Thirteen
     The tendency among men
to accept words and names as realities is 
unfortunately all too common. An article in a publication issued by
one of the 
theosophical organizations propounds the
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question “Theosophy or Orthodoxy; Which?”—evidently presenting to
its readers 
the necessity for a choice between them.
     A moment’s thought
should have shown that Orthodoxy has no existence of 
itself, but can only be considered in relation to some formulated
system of 
thought, and that the title in question presents an impossible
situation.
     This would be a small
matter and could have been passed over without notice 
if the same unfortunate tendency had not been applied to a field of
thought 
where correctness of understanding is vital. For, if Theosophy is
taken to be 
something of an abstraction, or a simple point of beginning from
which a system 
is to be developed by individual research, the whole idea of
Masters as the 
custodians of the accumulated wisdom of the ages and Their Message
to the world 
of men, has to be abandoned. This is practically the position taken
in the 
article in question; for, while there are occasional references to
both 
Messenger and Message, these seem to be used as names and not as
realities.
     The question therefore
which every student should put before himself for 
solution is neither orthodoxy nor heterodoxy, but— “Did anyone
present to the 
world a formulated system of philosophy, religion and science? Did
that 
personage give a name to the system? Who was that personage?” The
answer cannot 
be obtained by consulting the opinions of any person or persons
whatever; they 
are questions of fact, and facts alone can answer.
     Every student worthy of
the name knows that H. P. Blavatsky gave a body of 
knowledge to the world; that She named what She gave “Theosophy”
and that She 
explicitly declared it to be from the Masters of Wisdom.
     In justice to the
Message, to the Messenger who brought it and to the ideal 
of Masters, nothing should be named Theosophy but this Message.
Whoever takes 
any other position violates the first laws of occultism by
belittling both 
Message and Messenger, and cannot expect to benefit by them. Those
who accept 
the Message and belittle the Messenger, are equally unfortunate,
for in 
belittling one, they belittle both. To these it should be said that
it is folly 
to imagine that the Masters
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of Wisdom did not know enough to select a Messenger who would
deliver Their 
Message correctly and in its entirety. The Masters’ wisdom being
questioned, the 
whole edifice falls to the ground.
     The materials of which
that building was composed may of course be put to 
use by those who desire to erect structures according to their own
ideas, and 
sad to say, this is exactly what has occurred among the various
theosophical 
organizations; each has taken more or less of the material supplied
by the 
Message of Theosophy, has built an edifice according to ideas of
its own, and 
has labeled its structure “theosophical.” Each building so
constructed differs 
from every other.
     Yet—here was a building
known as “Theosophy,” complete in design and 
structure; each separate component part accurately adjusted to
every other part 
and to the whole.
     The mystery of it all is
that these latter-day constructors should 
recognize the beauty and symmetry of the portions selected by them,
and fail to 
perceive that there was a perfect building, an Architect and a
plan. It is the 
old story over again: “They have divided his raiment among them and
for his 
vesture have cast lots.” The failure to accept the teaching as
given and to 
revere the ones whose sacrifice made that presentation possible is
at the root 
of every past failure. The responsibility for every failure rests
with those who 
interposed themselves between the Message and those who would
learn. The woe of 
the world has been intensified by such as these, and surely a
fearful 
responsibility is theirs. It is no small thing to obstruct the work
of the Lodge 
of Masters, hence every student, be he prominent among his
fellow-men or not, 
should take heed lest he fall and in falling drag down thousands
with him. There 
is but one safe course. Theosophy must be understood to be a gift
to mankind by 
more progressed beings than ourselves. We must learn, and apply the
fundamental 
principles which underlie that grand philosophy, and understand the
operation of 
law as disclosed therein. Then, and then only can we begin to
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make Theosophy a living power in our lives. We should preserve a
willingness to 
give and receive instruction, but we should in either case be sure
that such 
instruction is in exact accord with the principles and laws set
forth in the 
Theosophic philosophy.
     If each student did
this, all would have one aim, one purpose, one 
teaching, and a sure basis for united effort. Such differences of
individual 
opinion as might arise would be solved by a careful adjustment of
these to the 
philosophy. Thus all would be united; all preserve the utmost
freedom of 
thought; all progress most rapidly by self-induced and self-devised
efforts. No 
one, then, would make the fatal blunder of imagining that Theosophy
is something 
which can be developed, but each would devote his thought and
effort to growth 
along the lines that Theosophy indicates, so that he may become the
better able 
to help and to teach others. If there are Masters, and They have
delivered a 
Message to us, that Message is Their Orthodoxy—or right
understanding; this 
should be preferred to that of all others, however highly such may
esteem 
themselves or be esteemed by their fellow-men.
—ROBERT CROSBIE.
CONTENTS
IN THE BEGINNING
Letter Fourteen
     “The orthodoxy of
Masters, or that of men?” This question is raised in a 
communication signed “A Student.” We care nothing for the identity
of our 
correspondent, but we have respect for an honest expression of
opinion, and are 
glad to make answer. Not that we desire to change “A Student’s”
opinion but that 
she (or he) and others of like conceptions, may gain something of
an insight 
into the causes and reasons for the methods pursued by the
Associates of The 
United Lodge of Theosophists. We quote from the communication the
following:
     “Providing we remember
that Theosophy is not a dogmatical presentment of 
the Wisdom-Religion—a system delivered for once to the Saints—but a
progressive 
system of Religion.”
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     There is some confusion
in this statement, for if there is such a knowledge 
as the Wisdom-Religion, it is the result of the observation and
experience of 
the Masters of Wisdom, and as such stands for itself; it can
neither be enlarged 
nor improved upon by its students. Furthermore, what was named
“Theosophy” by 
Mme. Blavatsky is that same Wisdom-Religion so far as the latter
has been 
promulgated by the Teacher. In regard to the latter statement H. P.
B. herself 
has written:
     The Secret Doctrine (or
Wisdom-Religion) is not a series of vague theories 
or treatises, but is all that can be given out in this century. It
will be 
centuries before much more is given. A similar statement by Wm. Q.
Judge is as 
follows:
     It (Theosophy) is not a
belief or dogma formulated or invented by man, but 
is a knowledge of the laws which govern the evolution of the
physical, astral, 
psychical and intellectual constituents of nature and of man.
     In the face of such
statements and similar ones made by Those who brought 
Theosophy to us, the assumption that it is a system of progressive
religion can 
only proceed from ignorance of the facts, and a false conception
which can only 
lead to confusion on the part of any “student.” Theosophy is not a
religion, but 
Religion itself in the truest sense; even the use of the term
“religion” without 
any qualification is misleading, for Theosophy is not “a belief” as
religions 
are generally, but rather Religious Science, Scientific-Religion,
and an 
all-inclusive Philosophy.
     As to “a dogmatical
presentment,” Theosophy has never been put forth as a 
Dogma, but as a relation of facts which have been gathered through
observation 
and experience, which any one can accept or reject without
condemnation or 
praise. One might as well call the only exact science we use, viz.,
Mathematics, 
dogmatic or a dogma because it is presented as an assemblage of
facts which the 
student can study, apply and prove for himself. Theosophy stands in
exactly the 
same position: a presentation of Knowledge gained through aeons of
time; it is 
not to be confounded with the speculations of any of its students,
who at
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best are subject to their personal prejudices, predilections and
weaknesses. It 
should also be clearly understood that all theosophical writers or 
leaders—except Those who brought Theosophy to the world—are
students of more or 
less proficiency in the Science, and are therefore liable to
misconceptions and 
erroneous applications. The only possibility of discerning such
errors lies in a 
comparison with the Science as originally presented.
     In the same
communication we are taken to task in the following words, “you 
are doing no good by ‘barking against the bad’ as Emerson would
say, about what 
is going on in the Theosophical world. I believe you over-emphasize
the evil 
that is being done, while minimizing the good.”
     It is admitted that evil
is being done. Can it be wrong to point out where 
and how such evil comes about? How else can any sincere student who
desires only 
to warn against pitfalls help his fellow-men?
     As to the “good” in any
presentation, it stands for itself, and is the only 
reason why error or evil has any possibility of acceptance; it is
the mixture of 
Truth and Error that confuses and misleads the ignorant and the
unwary. Remove 
the error and its sequence, evil, and the Truth stands out all the
more clearly; 
there is no “minimizing the good” in such a course.
     It is an unfortunate
fact that there are more misconceptions and 
misapplications of Theosophy among its would-be students, than
there is of real 
understanding. Most of this is due to the self-acclaimed leaders of
societies 
who are very prominent in the public eye, and who proclaim and
issue their own 
ideas, interpretations, and speculations as Theosophy pure and
simple. One would 
expect from such exponents the false and misleading idea that
“Theosophy is a 
progressive system of religion,” for such a statement beclouds the
facts, and 
serves to draw attention to their own lucubrations as “progressed”
Theosophy, 
and to themselves as having progressed farther and as knowing more
than the 
original Teachers. No one would have a word to say if these
exponents chose some 
other name under which to promulgate their ideas, but to
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present the latter as Theosophy,—the Message delivered to the world
by 
Masters—is to our mind the greatest imaginable crime against
humanity. Every 
presentation of Truth given to the world in the past has been
vitiated in a 
similar way, being filtered through the minds of the original
disciples to the 
disciples of the latter, and so on for generations, until but
little was left of 
the spirit of the Message—and that little obscured by systems of
materialistic 
concepts under the name of religion. Under the conditions of past
periods, this 
could not be helped, because there existed no way by which the
“written word” 
could be so duplicated as to place it within the reach of every
human being who 
desired it. The present period, however, made it possible for every
enquirer to 
obtain or study Masters’ Message as it was written by one qualified
to do so. 
This was done in order that there should be no need of
intermediaries between 
those who would know and the knowledge itself. But, sad to say,
many who drew 
their inspiration and ideas from the delivered Message, and had the
great Karmic 
opportunity of presenting and promulgating that Message pure and
undefiled to 
the world-at-large, turned the eyes of men to their own
personalities as 
“successors” and “teachers” and have not only misled thousands of adherents,
but 
have made the name of Theosophy stand for everything that is
undesirable in the 
minds of humanity at large. H. P. B. and W. Q. J. knew well the
probability and 
the danger of such a sequence, but They could only warn. H. P. B.’s
last message 
to Theosophists in Convention assembled contained the following
words: “Never is 
there greater danger than when vanity, ambition and a desire to
lead, dresses 
itself up in the peacock feathers of altruism.”
     What is at the root of
the schisms that have disrupted the Theosophical 
Society that H. P. B. left? Personalities every time. ‘What is the
opposite and 
corrective of Personality? Nothing less than Impersonality which seeks
nothing 
for itself and every thing for the Cause of Theosophy pure and
simple. There is 
no worldly fame, glory or profit in such a course, yet it, and it
alone, removes 
every obstacle that might intervene between the Message of
Theosophy and those 
who desire to study and apply it on its
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own merits. For that reason, and that reason alone, are the
magazine Theosophy 
and “The United Lodge of Theosophists” conducted anonymously. The
mind of the 
race is still obsessed by the idea that it is important and
essential to know 
who the active agents are, whereas the important thing is the merit
of the thing 
done. The injunction by the Man of Nazareth, “Let not thy right
hand know what 
thy left hand doeth” is as binding as any other injunction of His,
but do 
Christian peoples follow it, or regard it as of any importance? Do
theosophical 
exponents exhibit a regard for the above injunction, or for that
more explicit 
one they well know, “that power which the disciple shall covet is
that which 
shall make him appear as nothing in the eyes of men”? Let them
answer. If they 
excuse themselves, it will be on the ground that men will not
listen unless the 
personality of the speaker is under intimate inspection; but have
they tried it? 
Truth is not dependent upon the one who utters it, but upon its own
self-evident 
nature, and whether spoken by the wicked man or one who is esteemed
as 
righteous, it is neither debased by the one nor enhanced by the
other.
     If Theosophists or
Christians recognize that the world has gone mad on 
personalities, can it be made sane by glossing over that madness or
pleading 
expediency? They know it cannot; but they are the creatures of
their generation 
and have not the courage to do that which puts personality out of
court in their 
own cases, and sets the example of a truer, less selfish line of
effort. Yet if 
the change is to be brought about, someone must make the beginning;
it is the 
first step that begins the count, and if the goal is a right and
true one, the 
results can be left to time and Karma. We rest on that.
—ROBERT CROSBIE
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