CLAIRVOYANCE IN SPACE: INTENTIONAL.
We have defined this as the capacity
to see events or scenes removed from the seer in space
and too far distant for ordinary observation.
The instances of this are so numerous and so various
that we shall find it desirable to attempt a somewhat
more detailed classification of them. It does
not much matter what particular arrangement we adopt,
so long as it is comprehensive enough to include all
our cases; perhaps a convenient one will be to group
them under the broad divisions of intentional and
unintentional clairvoyance in space, with an intermediate
class that might be described as semi-intentional a
curious title, but I will explain it later.
As before, I will begin by stating
what is possible along this line for the fully-trained
seer, and endeavouring to explain how his faculty
works and under what limitations it acts. After
that we shall find ourselves in a better position
to try to understand the manifold examples of partial
and untrained sight. Let us then in the first
place discuss intentional clairvoyance.
It will be obvious from what has previously
been said as to the power of astral vision that any
one possessing it in its fulness will be able to see
by its means practically anything in this world that
he wishes to see. The most secret places are
open to his gaze, and intervening obstacles have no
existence for him, because of the change in his point
of view; so that if we grant him the power of moving
about in the astral body he can without difficulty
go anywhere and see anything within the limits of
the planet. Indeed this is to a large extent
possible to him even without the necessity of moving
the astral body at all, as we shall presently see.
Let us consider a little more closely
the methods by which this super-physical sight may
be used to observe events taking place at a distance.
When, for example, a man here in England sees in minutest
detail something which is happening at the same moment
in India or America, how is it done?
A very ingenious hypothesis has been
offered to account for the phenomenon. It has
been suggested that every object is perpetually throwing
off radiations in all directions, similar in some respects
to, though infinitely finer than, rays of light, and
that clairvoyance is nothing but the power to see
by means of these finer radiations. Distance
would in that case be no bar to the sight, all intervening
objects would be penetrable by these rays, and they
would be able to cross one another to infinity in
all directions without entanglement, precisely as
the vibrations of ordinary light do.
Now though this is not exactly the
way in which clairvoyance works, the theory is nevertheless
quite true in most of its premises. Every object
undoubtedly is throwing off radiations in all directions,
and it is precisely in this way, though on a higher
plane, that the akashic records seem to be formed.
Of them it will be necessary to say something under
our next heading, so we will do no more than mention
them for the moment. The phenomena of psychometry
are also dependent upon these radiations, as will
presently be explained.
There are, however, certain practical
difficulties in the way of using these etheric vibrations
(for that is, of course, what they are) as the medium
by means of which one may see anything taking place
at a distance. Intervening objects are not entirely
transparent, and as the actors in the scene which
the experimenter tried to observe would probably be
at least equally transparent, it is obvious that serious
confusion would be quite likely to result.
The additional dimension which would
come into play if astral radiations were sensed instead
of etheric would obviate some of the difficulties,
but would on the other hand introduce some fresh complications
of its own; so that for practical purposes, in endeavouring
to understand clairvoyance, we may dismiss this hypothesis
of radiations from our minds, and turn to the methods
of seeing at a distance which are actually at the
disposal of the student. It will be found that
there are five, four of them being really varieties
of clairvoyance, while the fifth does not properly
come under that head at all, but belongs to the domain
of magic. Let us take this last one first, and
get it out of our way.
1. By the assistance of a nature-spirit. This
method does not necessarily involve the possession
of any psychic faculty at all on the part of the experimenter;
he need only know how to induce some denizen of the
astral world to undertake the investigation for him.
This may be done either by invocation or by evocation;
that is to say, the operator may either persuade his
astral coadjutor by prayers and offerings to give
him the help he desires, or he may compel his aid by
the determined exercise of a highly-developed will.
This method has been largely practised
in the East (where the entity employed is usually
a nature-spirit) and in old Atlantis, where “the
lords of the dark face” used a highly-specialized
and peculiarly venomous variety of artificial elemental
for this purpose. Information is sometimes obtained
in the same sort of way at the spiritualistic séance
of modern days, but in that case the messenger employed
is more likely to be a recently-deceased human being
functioning more or less freely on the astral plane though
even here also it is sometimes an obliging nature-spirit,
who is amusing himself by posing as somebody’s
departed relative. In any case, as I have said,
this method is not clairvoyant at all, but magical;
and it is mentioned here only in order that the reader
may not become confused in the endeavour to classify
cases of its use under some of the following headings.
2. By means of an astral current. This
is a phrase frequently and rather loosely employed
in some of our Theosophical literature to cover a
considerable variety of phenomena, and among others
that which I wish to explain. What is really
done by the student who adopts this method is not
so much the setting in motion of a current in astral
matter, as the erection of a kind of temporary telephone
through it.
It is impossible here to give an exhaustive
disquisition on astral physics, even had I the requisite
knowledge to write it; all I need say is that it is
possible to make in astral matter a definite connecting-line
that shall act as a telegraph-wire to convey vibrations
by means of which all that is going on at the other
end of it may be seen. Such a line is established,
be it understood, not by a direct projection through
space of astral matter, but by such action upon a
line (or rather many lines) of particles of that matter
as will render them capable of forming a conductor
for vibrations of the character required.
This preliminary action can be set
up in two ways either by the transmission
of energy from particle to particle, until the line
is formed, or by the use of a force from a higher
plane which is capable of acting upon the whole line
simultaneously. Of course this latter method
implies far greater development, since it involves
the knowledge of (and the power to use) forces of
a considerably higher level; so that the man who could
make his line in this way would not, for his own use,
need a line at all, since he could see far more easily
and completely by means of an altogether higher faculty.
Even the simpler and purely astral
operation is a difficult one to describe, though quite
an easy one to perform. It may be said to partake
somewhat of the nature of the magnetization of a bar
of steel; for it consists in what we might call the
polarization, by an effort of the human will, of a
number of parallel lines of astral atoms reaching
from the operator to the scene which he wishes to observe.
All the atoms thus affected are held for the time with
their axes rigidly parallel to one another, so that
they form a kind of temporary tube along which the
clairvoyant may look. This method has the disadvantage
that the telegraph line is liable to disarrangement
or even destruction by any sufficiently strong astral
current which happens to cross its path; but if the
original effort of will were fairly definite, this
would be a contingency of only infrequent occurrence.
The view of a distant scene obtained
by means of this “astral current” is in
many ways not unlike that seen through a telescope.
Human figures usually appear very small, like those
on a distant stage, but in spite of their diminutive
size they are as clear as though they were close by.
Sometimes it is possible by this means to hear what
is said as well as to see what is done; but as in
the majority of cases this does not happen, we must
consider it rather as the manifestation of an additional
power than as a necessary corollary of the faculty
of sight.
It will be observed that in this case
the seer does not usually leave his physical body
at all; there is no sort of projection of his astral
vehicle or of any part of himself towards that at which
he is looking, but he simply manufactures for himself
a temporary astral telescope. Consequently he
has, to a certain extent, the use of his physical
powers even while he is examining the distant scene;
for example, his voice would usually still be under
his control, so that he could describe what he saw
even while he was in the act of making his observations.
The consciousness of the man is, in fact, distinctly
still at this end of the line.
This fact, however, has its limitations
as well as its advantages, and these again largely
resemble the limitations of the man using a telescope
on the physical plane. The experimenter, for example,
has no power to shift this point of view; his telescope,
so to speak, has a particular field of view which
cannot be enlarged or altered; he is looking at his
scene from a certain direction, and he cannot suddenly
turn it all round and see how it looks from the other
side. If he has sufficient psychic energy to
spare, he may drop altogether the telescope that he
is using and manufacture an entirely new one for himself
which will approach his objective somewhat differently;
but this is not a course at all likely to be adopted
in practice.
But, it may be said, the mere fact
that he is using astral sight ought to enable him
to see it from all sides at once. So it would
if he were using that sight in the normal way upon
an object which was fairly near him within
his astral reach, as it were; but at a distance of
hundreds or thousands of miles the case is very different.
Astral sight gives us the advantage of an additional
dimension, but there is still such a thing as position
in that dimension, and it is naturally a potent factor
in limiting the use of the powers of its plane.
Our ordinary three-dimensional sight enables us to
see at once every point of the interior of a two-dimensional
figure, such as a square, but in order to do that
the square must be within a reasonable distance from
our eyes; the mere additional dimension will avail
a man in London but little in his endeavour to examine
a square in Calcutta.
Astral sight, when it is cramped by
being directed along what is practically a tube, is
limited very much as physical sight would be under
similar circumstances; though if possessed in perfection
it will still continue to show, even at that distance,
the auras, and therefore all the emotions and most
of the thoughts of the people under observation.
There are many people for whom this
type of clairvoyance is very much facilitated if they
have at hand some physical object which can be used
as a starting-point for their astral tube a
convenient focus for their will-power. A ball
of crystal is the commonest and most effectual of
such foci, since it has the additional advantage of
possessing within itself qualities which stimulate
psychic faculty; but other objects are also employed,
to which we shall find it necessary to refer more
particularly when we come to consider semi-intentional
clairvoyance.
In connection with this astral-current
form of clairvoyance, as with others, we find that
there are some psychics who are unable to use it except
when under the influence of mesmerism. The peculiarity
in this case is that among such psychics there are
two varieties one in which by being thus
set free the man is enabled to make a telescope for
himself, and another in which the magnetizer himself
makes the telescope and the subject is simply enabled
to see through it. In this latter case obviously
the subject has not enough will to form a tube for
himself, and the operator, though possessed of the
necessary will-power, is not clairvoyant, or he could
see through his own tube without needing help.
Occasionally, though rarely, the tube
which is formed possesses another of the attributes
of a telescope that of magnifying the objects
at which it is directed until they seem of life-size.
Of course the objects must always be magnified to
some extent, or they would be absolutely invisible,
but usually the extent is determined by the size of
the astral tube, and the whole thing is simply a tiny
moving picture. In the few cases where the figures
are seen as of life-size by this method, it is probable
that an altogether new power is beginning to dawn;
but when this happens, careful observation is needed
in order to distinguish them from examples of our next
class.
3. By the projection of a thought-form. The
ability to use this method of clairvoyance implies
a development somewhat more advanced than the last,
since it necessitates a certain amount of control upon
the mental plane. All students of Theosophy are
aware that thought takes form, at any rate upon its
own plane, and in the vast majority of cases upon
the astral plane also; but it may not be quite so
generally known that if a man thinks strongly of himself
as present at any given place, the form assumed by
that particular thought will be a likeness of the
thinker himself, which will appear at the place in
question.
Essentially this form must be composed
of the matter of the mental plane, but in very many
cases it would draw round itself matter of the astral
plane also, and so would approach much nearer to visibility.
There are, in fact, many instances in which it has
been seen by the person thought of most
probably by means of the unconscious mesmeric influence
emanating from the original thinker. None of the
consciousness of the thinker would, however, be included
within this thought-form. When once sent out
from him, it would normally be a quite separate entity not
indeed absolutely unconnected with its maker, but
practically so as far as the possibility of receiving
any impression through it is concerned.
This third type of clairvoyance consists,
then, in the power to retain so much connection with
and so much hold over a newly-erected thought-form
as will render it possible to receive impressions by
means of it. Such impressions as were made upon
the form would in this case be transmitted to the
thinker not along an astral telegraph line,
as before, but by sympathetic vibration. In a
perfect case of this kind of clairvoyance it is almost
as though the seer projected a part of his consciousness
into the thought-form, and used it as a kind of outpost,
from which observation was possible. He sees almost
as well as he would if he himself stood in the place
of his thought-form.
The figures at which he is looking
will appear to him as of life-size and close at hand,
instead of tiny and at a distance, as in the previous
case; and he will find it possible to shift his point
of view if he wishes to do so. Clairaudience
is perhaps less frequently associated with this type
of clairvoyance than with the last, but its place
is to some extent taken by a kind of mental perception
of the thoughts and intentions of those who are seen.
Since the man’s consciousness
is still in the physical body, he will be able (even
while exercising the faculty) to hear and to speak,
in so far as he can do this without any distraction
of his attention. The moment that the intentness
of his thought fails the whole vision is gone, and
he will have to construct a fresh thought-form before
he can resume it. Instances in which this kind
of sight is possessed with any degree of perfection
by untrained people are naturally rarer than in the
case of the previous type, because of the capacity
for mental control required, and the generally finer
nature of the forces employed.
4. By travelling in the astral
body. We enter here upon an entirely
new variety of clairvoyance, in which the consciousness
of the seer no longer remains in or closely connected
with his physical body, but is definitely transferred
to the scene which he is examining. Though it
has no doubt greater dangers for the untrained seer
than either of the methods previously described, it
is yet quite the most satisfactory form of clairvoyance
open to him, for the immensely superior variety which
we shall consider under our fifth head is not available
except for specially trained students.
In this case the man’s body
is either asleep or in trance, and its organs are
consequently not available for use while the vision
is going on, so that all description of what is seen,
and all questioning as to further particulars, must
be postponed until the wanderer returns to this plane.
On the other hand the sight is much fuller and more
perfect; the man hears as well as sees everything which
passes before him, and can move about freely at will
within the very wide limits of the astral plane.
He can see and study at leisure all the other inhabitants
of that plane, so that the great world of the nature-spirits
(of which the traditional fairy-land is but a very
small part) lies open before him, and even that of
some of the lower devas.
He has also the immense advantage
of being able to take part, as it were, in the scenes
which come before his eyes of conversing
at will with these various astral entities, from whom
so much information that is curious and interesting
may be obtained. If in addition he can learn
how to materialize himself (a matter of no great difficulty
for him when once the knack is acquired), he will
be able to take part in physical events or conversations
at a distance, and to show himself to an absent friend
at will.
Again, he has the additional power
of being able to hunt about for what he wants.
By means of the varieties of clairvoyance previously
described, for all practical purposes he could find
a person or a place only when he was already acquainted
with it, or when he was put en rapport with
it by touching something physically connected with
it, as in psychometry. It is true that by the
third method a certain amount of motion is possible,
but the process is a tedious one except for quite
short distances.
By the use of the astral body, however,
a man can move about quite freely and rapidly in any
direction, and can (for example) find without difficulty
any place pointed out upon a map, without either any
previous knowledge of the spot or any object to establish
a connection with it. He can also readily rise
high into the air so as to gain a bird’s-eye
view of the country which he is examining, so as to
observe its extent, the contour of its coast-line,
or its general character. Indeed, in every way
his power and freedom are far greater when he uses
this method than they have been in any of the previous
cases.
A good example of the full possession
of this power is given, on the authority of the German
writer Jung Stilling, by Mrs. Crowe in The Night
Side of Nature . The story is related
of a seer who is stated to have resided in the neighbourhood
of Philadelphia, in America. His habits were
retired, and he spoke little; he was grave, benevolent
and pious, and nothing was known against his character
except that he had the reputation of possessing some
secrets that were considered not altogether lawful. Many
extraordinary stories were told of him, and amongst the rest the following:
“The wife of a ship captain
(whose husband was on a voyage to Europe and Africa,
and from whom she had been long without tidings), being
overwhelmed with anxiety for his safety, was induced
to address herself to this person. Having listened
to her story he begged her to excuse him for a while,
when he would bring her the intelligence she required.
He then passed into an inner room and she sat herself
down to wait; but his absence continuing longer than
she expected, she became impatient, thinking he had
forgotten her, and softly approaching the door she
peeped through some aperture, and to her surprise
beheld him lying on a sofa as motionless as if he were
dead. She of course did not think it advisable
to disturb him, but waited his return, when he told
her that her husband had not been able to write to
her for such and such reasons, but that he was then
in a coffee-house in London and would very shortly
be home again.
“Accordingly he arrived, and
as the lady learnt from him that the causes of his
unusual silence had been precisely those alleged by
the man, she felt extremely desirous of ascertaining
the truth of the rest of the information. In
this she was gratified, for he no sooner set his eyes
on the magician than he said that he had seen him before
on a certain day in a coffee-house in London, and
that he told him that his wife was extremely uneasy
about him, and that he, the captain, had thereon mentioned
how he had been prevented writing, adding that he
was on the eve of embarking for America. He had
then lost sight of the stranger amongst the throng,
and knew nothing more about him.”
We have of course no means now of
knowing what evidence Jung Stilling had of the truth
of this story, though he declares himself to have
been quite satisfied with the authority on which he
relates it; but so many similar things have happened
that there is no reason to doubt its accuracy.
The seer, however, must either have developed his faculty
for himself or learnt it in some school other than
that from which most of our Theosophical information
is derived; for in our case there is a well-understood
regulation expressly forbidding the pupils from giving
any manifestation of such power which can be definitely
proved at both ends in that way, and so constitute
what is called “a phenomenon.” That
this regulation is emphatically a wise one is proved
to all who know anything of the history of our Society
by the disastrous results which followed from a very
slight temporary relaxation of it.
I have given some quite modern cases
almost exactly parallel to the above in my little
book on Invisible Helpers. An instance
of a lady well-known to myself, who frequently thus
appears to friends at a distance, is given by Mr.
Stead in Real Ghost Stories and Mr.
Andrew Lang gives, in his Dreams and Ghosts
, an account of how Mr. Cleave, then at Portsmouth,
appeared intentionally on two occasions to a young
lady in London, and alarmed her considerably.
There is any amount of evidence to be had on the subject
by any one who cares to study it seriously.
This paying of intentional astral
visits seems very often to become possible when the
principles are loosened at the approach of death for
people who were unable to perform such a feat at any
other time. There are even more examples of this
class than of the other; I epitomize a good one given
by Mr. Andrew Lang on of the book last cited one
of which he himself says, “Not many stories have
such good evidence in their favour.”
“Mary, the wife of John Goffe
of Rochester, being afflicted with a long illness,
removed to her father’s house at West Malling,
about nine miles from her own.
“The day before her death she
grew very impatiently desirous to see her two children,
whom she had left at home to the care of a nurse.
She was too ill to be moved, and between one and two
o’clock in the morning she fell into a trance.
One widow Turner, who watched with her that night,
says that her eyes were open and fixed, and her jaw
fallen. Mrs. Turner put her hand upon her mouth,
but could perceive no breath. She thought her
to be in a fit, and doubted whether she were dead
or alive.
“The next morning the dying
woman told her mother that she had been at home with
her children, saying, I was with them last night when
I was asleep.’
“The nurse at Rochester, widow
Alexander by name, affirms that a little before two
o’clock that morning she saw the likeness of
the said Mary Goffe come out of the next chamber (where
the elder child lay in a bed by itself), the door
being left open, and stood by her bedside for about
a quarter of an hour; the younger child was there
lying by her. Her eyes moved and her mouth went,
but she said nothing. The nurse, moreover, says
that she was perfectly awake; it was then daylight,
being one of the longest days in the year. She
sat up in bed and looked steadfastly on the apparition.
In that time she heard the bridge clock strike two,
and a while after said: ’In the name of
the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, what art thou?’
Thereupon the apparition removed and went away; she
slipped on her clothes and followed, but what became
on’t, she cannot tell.”
The nurse apparently was more frightened
by its disappearance than its presence, for after
this she was afraid to stay in the house, and so spent
the rest of the time until six o’clock in walking
up and down outside. When the neighbours were
awake she told her tale to them, and they of course
said she had dreamt it all; she naturally enough warmly
repudiated that idea, but could obtain no credence
until the news of the other side of the story arrived
from West Malling, when people had to admit that there
might have been something in it.
A noteworthy circumstance in this
story is that the mother found it necessary to pass
from ordinary sleep into the profounder trance condition
before she could consciously visit her children; it
can, however, be paralleled here and there among the
large number of similar accounts which may be found
in the literature of the subject.
Two other stories of precisely the
same type in which a dying mother, earnestly
desiring to see her children, falls into a deep sleep,
visits them and returns to say that she has done so are
given by Dr. F. G. Lee. In one of them the mother,
when dying in Egypt, appears to her children at Torquay,
and is clearly seen in broad daylight by all five
of the children and also by the nursemaid. (Glimpses
of the Supernatural, vol. ii., .) In
the other a Quaker lady dying at Cockermouth is clearly
seen and recognized in daylight by her three children
at Settle, the remainder of the story being practically
identical with the one given above. (Glimpses in
the Twilight, .) Though these cases appear
to be less widely known than that of Mary Goffe, the
evidence of their authenticity seems to be quite as
good, as will be seen by the attestations obtained
by the reverend author of the works from which they
are quoted.
The man who fully possesses this fourth
type of clairvoyance has many and great advantages
at his disposal, even in addition to those already
mentioned. Not only can he visit without trouble
or expense all the beautiful and famous places of
the earth, but if he happens to be a scholar, think
what it must mean to him that he has access to all
the libraries of the world! What must it be for
the scientifically-minded man to see taking place
before his eyes so many of the processes of the secret
chemistry of nature, or for the philosopher to have
revealed to him so much more than ever before of the
working of the great mysteries of life and death?
To him those who are gone from this plane are dead
no longer, but living and within reach for a long
time to come; for him many of the conceptions of religion
are no longer matters of faith, but of knowledge.
Above all, he can join the army of invisible helpers,
and really be of use on a large scale. Undoubtedly
clairvoyance, even when confined to the astral plane,
is a great boon to the student.
Certainly it has its dangers also,
especially for the untrained; danger from evil entities
of various kinds, which may terrify or injure those
who allow themselves to lose the courage to face them
boldly; danger of deception of all sorts, of misconceiving
and mis-interpreting what is seen; greatest of
all, the danger of becoming conceited about the thing
and of thinking it impossible to make a mistake.
But a little common-sense and a little experience should
easily guard a man against these.
5. By travelling in the mental
body. This is simply a higher and,
as it were, glorified form of the last type. The
vehicle employed is no longer the astral body, but
the mind-body a vehicle, therefore, belonging
to the mental plane, and having within it all the
potentialities of the wonderful sense of that plane,
so transcendent in its action yet so impossible to
describe. A man functioning in this leaves his
astral body behind him along with the physical, and
if he wishes to show himself upon the astral plane
for any reason, he does not send for his own astral
vehicle, but just by a single action of his will materializes
one for his temporary need. Such an astral materialization
is sometimes called the mayavirupa, and to form it
for the first time usually needs the assistance of
a qualified Master.
The enormous advantages given by the
possession of this power are the capacity of entering
upon all the glory and the beauty of the higher land
of bliss, and the possession, even when working on
the astral plane, of the far more comprehensive mental
sense which opens up to the student such marvellous
vistas of knowledge, and practically renders error
all but impossible. This higher flight, however,
is possible for the trained man only, since only under
definite training can a man at this stage of evolution
learn to employ his mental body as a vehicle.
Before leaving the subject of full
and intentional clairvoyance, it may be well to devote
a few words to answering one or two questions as to
its limitations, which constantly occur to students.
Is it possible, we are often asked, for the seer to
find any person with whom he wishes to communicate,
anywhere in the world, whether he be living or dead?
To this reply must be a conditional
affirmative. Yes, it is possible to find any
person if the experimenter can, in some way or other,
put himself en rapport with that person.
It would be hopeless to plunge vaguely into space
to find a total stranger among all the millions around
us without any kind of clue; but, on the other hand,
a very slight clue would usually be sufficient.
If the clairvoyant knows anything
of the man whom he seeks, he will have no difficulty
in finding him, for every man has what may be called
a kind of musical chord of his own a chord
which is the expression of him as a whole, produced
perhaps by a sort of average of the rates of vibration
of all his different vehicles on their respective
planes. If the operator knows how to discern that
chord and to strike it, it will by sympathetic vibration
attract the attention of the man instantly wherever
he may be, and will evoke an immediate response from
him.
Whether the man were living or recently
dead would make no difference at all, and clairvoyance
of the fifth class could at once find him even among
the countless millions in the heaven-world, though
in that case the man himself would be unconscious
that he was under observation. Naturally a seer
whose consciousness did not range higher than the
astral plane who employed therefore one
of the earlier methods of seeing would
not be able to find a person upon the mental plane
at all; yet even he would at least be able to tell
that the man sought for was upon that plane, from
the mere fact that the striking of the chord as far
up as the astral level produced no response.
If the man sought be a stranger to
the seeker, the latter will need something connected
with him to act as a clue a photograph,
a letter written by him, an article which has belonged
to him, and is impregnated with his personal magnetism;
any of these would do in the hands of a practised
seer.
Again I say, it must not therefore
be supposed that pupils who have been taught how to
use this art are at liberty to set up a kind of intelligence
office through which communication can be had with
missing or dead relatives. A message given from
this side to such an one might or might not be handed
on, according to circumstances, but even if it were,
no reply might be brought, lest the transaction should
partake of the nature of a phenomenon something
which could be proved on the physical plane to have
been an act of magic.
Another question often raised is as
to whether, in the action of psychic vision, there
is any limitation as to distance. The reply would
seem to be that there should be no limit but that of
the respective planes. It must be remembered
that the astral and mental planes of our earth are
as definitely its own as its atmosphere, though they
extend considerably further from it even in our three-dimensional
space than does the physical air. Consequently
the passage to, or the detailed sight of, other planets
would not be possible for any system of clairvoyance
connected with these planes. It is quite
possible and easy for the man who can raise his consciousness
to the buddhic plane to pass to any other globe belonging
to our chain of worlds, but that is outside our present
subject.
Still a good deal of additional information
about other planets can be obtained by the use of
such clairvoyant faculties as we have been describing.
It is possible to make sight enormously clearer by
passing outside of the constant disturbances of the
earth’s atmosphere, and it is also not difficult
to learn how to put on an exceedingly high magnifying
power, so that even by ordinary clairvoyance a good
deal of very interesting astronomical knowledge may
be gained. But as far as this earth and its immediate
surroundings are concerned, there is practically no
limitation.