SIMPLE CLAIRVOYANCE: PARTIAL.
The experiences of the untrained clairvoyant and
be it remembered that that class includes all European
clairvoyants except a very few will, however,
usually fall very far short of what I have attempted
to indicate; they will fall short in many different
ways in degree, in variety, or in permanence,
and above all in precision.
Sometimes, for example, a man’s
clairvoyance will be permanent, but very partial,
extending only perhaps to one or two classes of the
phenomena observable; he will find himself endowed
with some isolated fragment of higher vision, without
apparently possessing other powers of sight which
ought normally to accompany that fragment, or even
to precede it. For example, one of my dearest
friends has all his life had the power to see the
atomic ether and atomic astral matter, and to recognize
their structure, alike in darkness or in light, as
inter-penetrating everything else; yet he has only
rarely seen entities whose bodies are composed of
the much more obvious lower ethers or denser astral
matter, and at any rate is certainly not permanently
able to see them. He simply finds himself in possession
of this special faculty, without any apparent reason
to account for it, or any recognizable relation to
anything else: and beyond proving to him the
existence of these atomic planes and demonstrating
their arrangement, it is difficult to see of what
particular use it is to him at present. Still,
there the thing is, and it is an earnest of greater
things to come of further powers still awaiting
development.
There are many similar cases similar,
I mean, not in the possession of that particular form
of sight (which is unique in my experience), but in
showing the development of some one small part of the
full and clear vision of the astral and etheric planes.
In nine cases out of ten, however, such partial clairvoyance
will at the same time lack precision also that
is to say, there will be a good deal of vague impression
and inference about it, instead of the clear-cut definition
and certainty of the trained man. Examples of
this type are constantly to be found, especially among
those who advertise themselves as “test and
business clairvoyants.”
Then, again, there are those who are
only temporarily clairvoyant under certain special
conditions. Among these there are various subdivisions,
some being able to reproduce the state of clairvoyance
at will by again setting up the same conditions, while
with others it comes sporadically, without any observable
reference to their surroundings, and with yet others
the power shows itself only once or twice in the whole
course of their lives.
To the first of these subdivisions
belong those who are clairvoyant only when in the
mesmeric trance who when not so entranced
are incapable of seeing or hearing anything abnormal.
These may sometimes reach great heights of knowledge
and be exceedingly precise in their indications, but
when that is so they are usually undergoing a course
of regular training, though for some reason unable
as yet to set themselves free from the leaden weight
of earthly life without assistance.
In the same class we may put those chiefly
Orientals who gain some temporary
sight only under the influence of certain drugs, or
by means of the performance of certain ceremonies.
The ceremonialist sometimes hypnotizes himself by
his repetitions, and in that condition becomes to
some extent clairvoyant; more often he simply reduces
himself to a passive condition in which some other
entity can obsess him and speak through him.
Sometimes, again, his ceremonies are not intended to
affect himself at all, but to invoke some astral entity
who will give him the required information; but of
course that is a case of magic, and not of clairvoyance.
Both the drugs and the ceremonies are methods emphatically
to be avoided by any one who wishes to approach clairvoyance
from the higher side, and use it for his own progress
and for the helping of others. The Central African
medicine-man or witch-doctor and some of the Tartar
Shamans are good examples of the type.
Those to whom a certain amount of
clairvoyant power has come occasionally only, and
without any reference to their own wish, have often
been hysterical or highly nervous persons, with whom
the faculty was to a large extent one of the symptoms
of a disease. Its appearance showed that the
physical vehicle was weakened to such a degree that
it no longer presented any obstacle in the way of
a certain modicum of etheric or astral vision.
An extreme example of this class is the man who drinks
himself into delirium tremens, and in the condition
of absolute physical ruin and impure psychic excitation
brought about by the ravages of that fell disease,
is able to see for the time some of the loathsome
elemental and other entities which he has drawn round
himself by his long course of degraded and bestial
indulgence. There are, however, other cases where
the power of sight has appeared and disappeared without
apparent reference to the state of the physical health;
but it seems probable that even in those, if they could
have been observed closely enough, some alteration
in the condition of the etheric double would have
been noticed.
Those who have only one instance of
clairvoyance to report in the whole of their lives
are a difficult band to classify at all exhaustively,
because of the great variety of the contributory circumstances.
There are many among them to whom the experience has
come at some supreme moment of their lives, when it
is comprehensible that there might have been a temporary
exaltation of faculty which would be sufficient to
account for it.
In the case of another subdivision
of them the solitary case has been the seeing of an
apparition, most commonly of some friend or relative
at the point of death. Two possibilities are then
offered for our choice, and in each of them the strong
wish of the dying man is the impelling force.
That force may have enabled him to materialize himself
for a moment, in which case of course no clairvoyance
was needed or more probably it may have acted mesmerically
upon the percipient, and momentarily dulled his physical
and stimulated his higher sensitiveness. In either
case the vision is the product of the emergency, and
is not repeated simply because the necessary conditions
are not repeated.
There remains, however, an irresolvable
residuum of cases in which a solitary instance occurs
of the exercise of undoubted clairvoyance, while yet
the occasion seems to us wholly trivial and unimportant.
About these we can only frame hypotheses; the governing
conditions are evidently not on the physical plane,
and a separate investigation of each case would be
necessary before we could speak with any certainty
as to its causes. In some such it has appeared
that an astral entity was endeavouring to make some
communication, and was able to impress only some unimportant
detail on its subject all the useful or
significant part of what it had to say failing to get
through into the subject’s consciousness.
In the investigation of the phenomena
of clairvoyance all these varied types and many others
will be encountered, and a certain number of cases
of mere hallucination will be almost sure to appear
also, and will have to be carefully weeded out from
the list of examples. The student of such a subject
needs an inexhaustible fund of patience and steady
perseverance, but if he goes on long enough he will
begin dimly to discern order behind the chaos, and
will gradually get some idea of the great laws under
which the whole evolution is working.
It will help him greatly in his efforts
if he will adopt the order which we have just followed that
is, if he will first take the trouble to familiarize
himself as thoroughly as may be with the actual facts
concerning the planes with which ordinary clairvoyance
deals. If he will learn what there really is
to be seen with astral and etheric sight, and what
their respective limitations are, he will then have,
as it were, a standard by which to measure the cases
which he observes. Since all instances of partial
sight must of necessity fit into some niche in this
whole, if he has the outline of the entire scheme
in his head he will find it comparatively easy with
a little practice to classify the instances with which
he is called upon to deal.
We have said nothing as yet as to
the still more wonderful possibilities of clairvoyance
upon the mental plane, nor indeed is it necessary
that much should be said, as it is exceedingly improbable
that the investigator will ever meet with any examples
of it except among pupils properly trained in some
of the very highest schools of occultism. For
them it opens up yet another new world, vaster far
than all those beneath it a world in which
all that we can imagine of utmost glory and splendour
is the commonplace of existence. Some account
of its marvellous faculty, its eneffable bliss, its
magnificent opportunities for learning and for work,
is given in the sixth of our Theosophical manuals,
and to that the student may be referred.
All that it has to give all
of it at least that he can assimilate is
within the reach of the trained pupil, but for the
untrained clairvoyant to touch it is hardly more than
a bare possibility. It has been done in mesmeric
trance, but the occurrence is of exceeding rarity,
for it needs almost superhuman qualifications in the
way of lofty spiritual aspiration and absolute purity
of thought and intention upon the part both of the
subject and the operator.
To a type of clairvoyance such as
this, and still more fully to that which belongs to
the plane next above it, the name of spiritual sight
may reasonably be applied; and since the celestial
world to which it opens our eyes lies all round us
here and now, it is fit that our passing reference
to it should be made under the heading of simple clairvoyance,
though it may be necessary to allude to it again when
dealing with clairvoyance in space, to which we will
now pass on.