All the impulses of life which I have
described as building the interpenetrating worlds
come forth from the Third Aspect of the Deity.
Hence in the Christian scheme that Aspect is called
“the Giver of Life”, the Spirit who brooded
over the face of the waters of space. In Theosophical
literature these impulses are usually taken as a whole,
and called the First Outpouring.
When the worlds had been prepared
to this extent, and most of the chemical elements
already existed, the Second Outpouring of life took
place, and this came from the Second Aspect of the
Deity. It brought with it the power of combination.
In all the worlds it found existing what may be thought
of as elements corresponding to those worlds.
It proceeded to combine those elements into organisms
which it then ensouled, and in this way it built up
the seven kingdoms of Nature. Theosophy recognizes
seven kingdoms, because it regards man as separate
from the animal kingdom and it takes into account
several stages of evolution which are unseen by the
physical eye, and gives to them the mediaeval name
of “elemental kingdoms”.
The divine Life pours itself into
matter from above, and its whole course may be thought
of in two stages the gradual assumption
of grosser and grosser matter, and then the gradual
casting off again of the vehicles which have been
assumed. The earliest level upon which its vehicles
can be scientifically observed is the mental the
fifth counting from the finer to the grosser, the
first on which there are separated globes. In
practical study it is found convenient to divide this
mental world into two parts, which we call the higher
and the lower according to the degree of density of
their matter. The higher consists of the three
finer subdivisions of mental matter; the lower part
of the other four.
When the outpouring reaches the higher
mental world it draws together the ethereal elements
there, combines them into what at that level correspond
to substances and of these substances builds forms
which it inhabits. We call this the first elemental
kingdom.
After a long period of evolution through
different forms at that level, the wave of life, which
is all the time pressing steadily downwards, learns
to identify itself so fully with those forms that,
instead of occupying them and withdrawing from them
periodically, it is able to hold them permanently
and make them part of itself, so that now from that
level it can proceed to the temporary occupation of
forms at a still lower level. When it reaches
this stage we call it the second elemental kingdom,
the ensouling life of which resides upon the higher
mental levels, while the vehicles through which it
manifests are on the lower.
After another vast period of similar
length, it is found that the downward pressure has
caused this process to repeat itself; once more the
life has identified itself with its forms, and has
taken up its residence upon the lower mental levels,
so that it is capable of ensouling bodies in the astral
world. At this stage we call it the third elemental
kingdom.
We speak of all these forms as finer
or grosser relatively to one another, but all of them
are almost infinitely finer than any with which we
are acquainted in the physical world. Each of
these three is a kingdom of Nature, as varied in the
manifestations of its different forms of life as is
the animal or vegetable kingdom which we know.
After a long period spent in ensouling the forms of
the third of these elemental kingdoms it identifies
itself with them in turn, and so is able to ensoul
the etheric part of the mineral kingdom, and becomes
the life which vivifies that for there
is a life in the mineral kingdom just as much as in
the vegetable or the animal, although it is in conditions
where it cannot manifest so freely. In the course
of the mineral evolution the downward pressure causes
it to identify itself in the same way with the etheric
matter of the physical world, and from that to ensoul
the denser matter of such minerals as are perceptible
to our senses.
In the mineral kingdom we include
not only what are usually called minerals, but also
liquids, gases and many etheric substances the existence
of which is unknown to western science. All the
matter of which we know anything is living matter,
and the life which it contains is always evolving.
When it has reached the central point of the mineral
stage the downward pressure ceases, and is replaced
by an upward tendency; the outbreathing has ceased
and the indrawing has begun.
When mineral evolution is completed,
the life has withdrawn itself again into the astral
world, but bearing with it all the results obtained
through its experiences in the physical. At this
stage it ensouls vegetable forms, and begins to show
itself much more clearly as what we commonly call
life plant-life of all kinds; and at a yet
later stage of its development it leaves the vegetable
kingdom and ensouls the animal kingdom. The attainment
of this level is the sign that it has withdrawn itself
still further, and is now working from the lower mental
world. In order to work in physical matter from
that mental world it must operate through the intervening
astral matter; and that astral matter is now no longer
part of the garment of the group-soul as a whole,
but is the individual astral body of the animal concerned,
as will be later explained.
In each of these kingdoms it not only
passes a period of time which is to our ideas almost
incredibly long, but it also goes through a definite
course of evolution, beginning from the lower manifestations
of that kingdom and ending with the highest.
In the vegetable kingdom, for example, the life-force
might commence its career by occupying grasses or mosses
and end it by ensouling magnificent forest trees.
In the animal kingdom it might commence with mosquitoes
or with animalculae, and might end with the finest
specimens of the mammalia.
The whole process is one of steady
evolution from lower forms to higher, from the simpler
to the more complex. But what is evolving is not
primarily the form, but the life within it. The
forms also evolve and grow better as time passes;
but this is in order that they may be appropriate vehicles
for more and more advanced waves of life. When
the life has reached the highest level possible in
the animal kingdom, it may then pass on into the human
kingdom, under conditions which will presently be explained.
The outpouring leaves one kingdom
and passes to another, so that if we had to deal with
only one wave of this outpouring we could have in existence
only one kingdom at a time. But the Deity sends
out a constant succession of these waves, so that
at any given time we find a number of them simultaneously
in operation. We ourselves represent one such
wave; but we find evolving alongside us another wave
which ensouls the animal kingdom a wave
which came out from the Deity one stage later than
we did. We find also the vegetable kingdom, which
represents a third wave, and the mineral kingdom,
which represents a fourth; and occultists know of the
existence all round us of three elemental kingdoms,
which represent the fifth, sixth and seventh waves.
All these, however, are successive ripples of the same
great outpouring from the Second Aspect of the Deity.
We have here, then, a scheme of evolution
in which the divine Life involves itself more and
more deeply in matter, in order that through that matter
it may receive vibrations which could not otherwise
affect it impacts from without, which by
degrees arouse within it rates of undulation corresponding
to their own, so that it learns to respond to them.
Later on it learns of itself to generate these rates
of undulation, and so becomes a being possessed of
spiritual powers.
We may presume that when this outpouring
of life originally came forth from the Deity, at some
level altogether beyond our power of cognition, it
may perhaps have been homogeneous; but when it first
comes within practical cognizance, when it is itself
in the intuitional world, but is ensouling bodies
made of the matter of the higher mental world, it is
already not one huge world-soul but many souls.
Let us suppose a homogeneous outpouring, which may
be considered as one vast soul, at one end of the scale;
at the other, when humanity is reached, we find that
one vast soul broken up into millions of the comparatively
little souls of individual men. At any stage
between these two extremes we find an intermediate
condition, the immense world-soul already subdivided,
but not to the utmost limit of possible subdivision.
Each man is a soul, but not each animal
or each plant. Man, as a soul, can manifest through
only one body at a time in the physical world, whereas
one animal soul manifests simultaneously through a
number of animal bodies, one plant soul through a
number of separate plants. A lion, for example,
is not a permanently separate entity in the same way
as a man is. When the man dies that
is, when he as a soul lays aside his physical body he
remains himself exactly as he was before, an entity
separate from all other entities. When the lion
dies, that which has been the separate soul of him
is poured back into the mass from which it came a
mass which is at the same time providing the souls
for many other lions. To such a mass we give
the name of “group-soul”.
To such a group-soul is attached a
considerable number of lion bodies let
us say a hundred. Each of those bodies while it
lives has its hundredth part of the group-soul attached
to it, and for the time being this is apparently quite
separate, so that the lion is as much an individual
during his physical life as the man; but he is not
a permanent individual. When he dies the soul
of him flows back into the group-soul to which it belongs,
and that identical lion-soul cannot be separated again
from the group.
A useful analogy may help comprehension.
Imagine the group-soul to be represented by the water
in a bucket, and the hundred lion bodies by a hundred
tumblers. As each tumbler is dipped into the bucket
it takes out from it a tumblerful of water (the separate
soul). That water for the time being takes the
shape of the vehicle which it fills, and is temporarily
separate from the water which remains in the bucket,
and from the water in the other tumblers.
Now put into each of the hundred tumblers
some kind of colouring matter or some kind of flavouring.
That will represent the qualities developed by its
experiences in the separate soul of the lion during
its lifetime. Pour back the water from the tumbler
into the bucket; that represents the death of the
lion. The colouring matter or the flavouring will
be distributed through the whole of the water in the
bucket, but will be a much fainter colouring, a much
less pronounced flavour when thus distributed than
it was when confined in one tumbler. The qualities
developed by the experience of one lion attached to
that group-soul are therefore shared by the entire
group-soul, but in a much lower degree.
We may take out another tumblerful
of water from that bucket, but we can never again
get exactly the same tumblerful after it has once been
mingled with the rest. Every tumblerful taken
from that bucket in the future will contain some traces
of the colouring or flavouring put into each tumbler
whose contents have been returned to the bucket.
Just so the qualities developed by the experience
of a single lion will become the common property of
all lions who are in the future to be born from that
group-soul, though in a lesser degree than that in
which they existed in the individual lion who developed
them.
That is the explanation of inherited
instincts; that is why the duckling which has been
hatched by a hen takes to the water instantly without
needing to be shown how to swim; why the chicken just
out of its shell will cower at the shadow of a hawk;
why a bird which has been artificially hatched, and
has never seen a nest, nevertheless knows how to make
one, and makes it according to the traditions of its
kind.
Lower down in the scale of animal
life enormous numbers of bodies are attached to a
single group-soul countless millions, for
example, in the case of some of the smaller insects;
but as we rise in the animal kingdom the number of
bodies attached to a single group-soul becomes smaller
and smaller, and therefore the differences between
individuals become greater.
Thus the group-souls gradually break
up. Returning to the symbol of the bucket, as
tumbler after tumbler of water is withdrawn from it,
tinted with some sort of colouring matter and returned
to it, the whole bucketful of water gradually becomes
richer in colour. Suppose that by imperceptible
degrees a kind of vertical film forms itself across
the centre of the bucket, and gradually solidifies
itself into a division, so that we have now a right
half and a left half to the bucket, and each tumblerful
of water which is taken out is returned always to
the same section from which it came.
Then presently a difference will be
set up, and the liquid in one half of the bucket will
no longer be the same as that in the other. We
have then practically two buckets, and when this stage
is reached in a group-soul it splits into two, as
a cell separates by fission. In this way, as the
experience grows ever richer, the group-souls grow
smaller but more numerous, until at the highest point
we arrive at man with his single individual soul,
which no longer returns into a group, but remains always
separate.
One of the life-waves is vivifying
the whole of a kingdom; but not every group-soul in
that life-wave will pass through the whole of that
kingdom from the bottom to the top. If in the
vegetable kingdom a certain group-soul has ensouled
forest trees, when it passes on into the animal kingdom
it will omit all the lower stages that is,
it will never inhabit insects or reptiles, but will
begin at once at the level of the lower mammalia.
The insects and reptiles will be vivified by group-souls
which have for some reason left the vegetable kingdom
at a much lower level than the forest tree. In
the same way the group-soul which has reached the
highest levels of the animal kingdom will not individualize
into primitive savages, but into men of somewhat higher
type, the primitive savages being recruited from group-souls
which have left the animal kingdom at a lower level.
Group-souls at any level or at all
levels arrange themselves into seven great types,
according to the Minister of the Deity through whom
their life has poured forth. These types are
clearly distinguishable in all the kingdoms, and the
successive forms taken by any one of them form a connected
series, so that animals, vegetables, minerals and the
varieties of the elemental creatures may all be arranged
into seven great groups, and the life coming along
one of those lines will not diverge into any of the
others.
No detailed list has yet been made
of the animals, plants or minerals from this point
of view; but it is certain that the life which is found
ensouling a mineral of a particular type will never
vivify a mineral of any other type than its own, though
within that type it may vary. When it passes
on to the vegetable and animal kingdoms it will inhabit
vegetables and animals of that type and of no other;
and when it eventually reaches humanity it will individualize
into men of that type and of no other.
The method of individualization is
the raising of the soul of a particular animal to
a level so much higher than that attained by its group-soul
that it can no longer return to the latter. This
cannot be done with any animal, but only with
those whose brain is developed to a certain level,
and the method usually adopted to acquire such mental
development is to bring the animal into close contact
with man. Individualization, therefore, is possible
only for domestic animals, and only for certain kinds
even of those. At the head of each of the seven
types stands one kind of domestic animal the
dog for one, the cat for another, the elephant for
a third, the monkey for a fourth, and so on.
The wild animals can all be arranged on seven lines
leading up to the domestic animals; for example, the
fox and the wolf are obviously on the same line with
the dog, while the lion, the tiger and the leopard
equally obviously lead up to the domestic cat; so
that the group-soul animating a hundred lions mentioned
some time ago might at a later stage of its evolution
have divided into, let us say, five group-souls each
animating twenty cats.
The life-wave spends a long period
of time in each kingdom; we are now only a little
past the middle of such an aeon, and consequently the
conditions are not favourable for the achievement
of that individualization which normally comes only
at the end of a period. Rare instances of such
attainment may occasionally be observed on the part
of some animal much in advance of the average.
Close association with man is necessary to produce
this result. The animal if kindly treated develops
devoted affection for his human friend, and also unfolds
his intellectual powers in trying to understand that
friend and to anticipate his wishes. In addition
to this, the emotions and the thoughts of the man
act constantly upon those of the animal, and tend
to raise him to a higher level both emotionally and
intellectually. Under favourable circumstances
this development may proceed so far as to raise the
animal altogether out of touch with the group to which
he belongs, so that his fragment of a group-soul becomes
capable of responding to the outpouring which comes
from the First Aspect of the Deity.
For this final outpouring is not like
the others, a mighty outrush affecting thousands or
millions simultaneously; it comes to each one individually
as that one is ready to receive it. This outpouring
has already descended as far as the intuitional world;
but it comes no farther than that until this upward
leap is made by the soul of the animal from below;
but when that happens this Third Outpouring leaps down
to meet it, and in the higher mental world is formed
an ego, a permanent individuality permanent,
that is, until, far later in his evolution, the man
transcends it and reaches back to the divine unity
from which he came. To make this ego, the fragment
of the group-soul (which has hitherto played the part
always of ensouling force) becomes in its turn a vehicle,
and is itself ensouled by that divine Spark which
has fallen into it from on high. That Spark may
be said to have been hovering in the monadic world
over the group-soul through the whole of its previous
evolution, unable to effect a junction with it until
its corresponding fragment in the group-soul had developed
sufficiently to permit it. It is this breaking
away from the rest of the group-soul and developing
a separate ego which marks the distinction between
the highest animal and the lowest man.