METHODS OF DEVELOPMENT.
When a man becomes convinced of the
reality of the valuable power of clairvoyance, his
first question usually is, “How can I develop
in my own case this faculty which is said to be latent
in everyone?”
Now the fact is that there are many
methods by which it may be developed, but only one
which can be at all safely recommended for general
use that of which we shall speak last of
all. Among the less advanced nations of the world
the clairvoyant state has been produced in various
objectionable ways; among some of the non-Aryan tribes
of India, by the use of intoxicating drugs or the
inhaling of stupefying fumes; among the dervishes,
by whirling in a mad dance of religious fervour until
vertigo and insensibility supervene; among the followers
of the abominable practices of the Voodoo cult, by
frightful sacrifices and loathsome rites of black
magic. Methods such as these are happily not
in vogue in our own race, yet even among us large
numbers of dabblers in this ancient art adopt some
plan of self-hypnotization, such as the gazing at
a bright spot or the repetition of some formula until
a condition of semi-stupefaction is produced; while
yet another school among them would endeavour to arrive
at similar results by the use of some of the Indian
systems of regulation of the breath.
All these methods are unequivocally
to be condemned as quite unsafe for the practice of
the ordinary man who has no idea of what he is doing who
is simply making vague experiments in an unknown world.
Even the method of obtaining clairvoyance by allowing
oneself to be mesmerized by another person is one
from which I should myself shrink with the most decided
distaste; and assuredly it should never be attempted
except under conditions of absolute trust and affection
between the magnetizer and the magnetized, and a perfection
of purity in heart and soul, in mind and intention,
such as is rarely to be seen among any but the greatest
of saints.
Experiments in connection with the
mesmeric trance are of the deepest interest, as offering
(among other things) a possibility of proof of the
fact of clairvoyance to the sceptic, yet except under
such conditions as I have just mentioned conditions,
I quite admit, almost impossible to realize I
should never counsel anyone to submit himself as a
subject for them.
Curative mesmerism (in which, without
putting the patient into the trance state at all,
an effort is made to relieve his pain, to remove his
disease, or to pour vitality into him by magnetic passes)
stands on an entirely different footing; and if the
mesmerizer, even though quite untrained, is himself
in good health and animated by pure intentions, no
harm is likely to be done to the subject. In so
extreme a case as that of a surgical operation, a
man might reasonably submit himself even to the mesmeric
trance, but it is certainly not a condition with which
one ought lightly to experiment. Indeed, I should
most strongly advise any one who did me the honour
to ask for my opinion on the subject, not to attempt
any kind of experimental investigation into what are
still to him the abnormal forces of nature, until
he has first of all read carefully everything that
has been written on the subject, or which
is by far the best of all until he is under
the guidance of a qualified teacher.
But where, it will be said, is the
qualified teacher to be found? Not, most assuredly,
among any who advertise themselves as teachers, who
offer to impart for so many guineas or dollars the
sacred mysteries of the ages, or hold “developing
circles” to which casual applicants are admitted
at so much per head.
Much has been said in this treatise
of the necessity for careful training of
the immense advantages of the trained over the untrained
clairvoyant; but that again brings us back to the same
question where is this definite training
to be had?
The answer is, that the training may
be had precisely where it has always been to be found
since the world’s history began at
the hands of the Great White Brotherhood of Adepts,
which stands now, as it has always stood, at the back
of human evolution, guiding and helping it under the
sway of the great cosmic laws which represent to us
the Will of the Eternal.
But how, it may be asked, is access
to be gained to them? How is the aspirant thirsting
for knowledge to signify to them his wish for instruction?
Once more, by the time-honoured methods
only. There is no new patent whereby a man can
qualify himself without trouble to become a pupil in
that School no royal road to the learning
which has to be acquired in it. At the present
day, just as in the mists of antiquity, the man who
wishes to attract their notice must enter upon the
slow and toilsome path of self-development must
learn first of all to take himself in hand and make
himself all that he ought to be. The steps of
that path are no secret; I have given them in full
detail in Invisible Helpers, so I need not
repeat them here. But it is no easy road to follow,
and yet sooner or later all must follow it, for the
great law of evolution sweeps mankind slowly but resistlessly
towards its goal.
From those who are pressing into this
path the great Masters select their pupils, and it
is only by qualifying himself to be taught that a
man can put himself in the way of getting the teaching.
Without that qualification, membership in any Lodge
or Society, whether secret or otherwise, will not
advance his object in the slightest degree. It
is true, as we all know, that it was at the instance
of some of these Masters that our Theosophical Society
was founded, and that from its ranks some have been
chosen to pass into closer relations with them.
But that choice depends upon the earnestness of the
candidate, not upon his mere membership of the Society
or of any body within it.
That, then, is the only absolutely
safe way of developing clairvoyance to
enter with all one’s energy upon the path of
moral and mental evolution, at one stage of which
this and other of the higher faculties will spontaneously
begin to show themselves. Yet there is one practice
which is advised by all the religions alike which
if adopted carefully and reverently can do no harm
to any human being, yet from which a very pure type
of clairvoyance has sometimes been developed; and
that is the practice of meditation.
Let a man choose a certain time every
day a time when he can rely upon being
quiet and undisturbed, though preferably in the daytime
rather than at night and set himself at
that time to keep his mind for a few minutes entirely
free from all earthly thoughts of any kind whatever
and, when that is achieved, to direct the whole force
of his being towards the highest spiritual ideal that
he happens to know. He will find that to gain
such perfect control of thought is enormously more
difficult than he supposes, but when he attains it
it cannot but be in every way most beneficial to him,
and as he grows more and more able to elevate and
concentrate his thought, he may gradually find that
new worlds are opening before his sight.
As a preliminary training towards
the satisfactory achievement of such meditation, he
will find it desirable to make a practice of concentration
in the affairs of daily life even in the
smallest of them. If he writes a letter, let
him think of nothing else but that letter until it
is finished if he reads a book, let him see to it that
his thought is never allowed to wander from his author’s
meaning. He must learn to hold his mind in check,
and to be master of that also, as well as of his lower
passions he must patiently labour to acquire absolute
control of his thoughts, so that he will always know
exactly what he is thinking about, and why so
that he can use his mind, and turn it or hold it still,
as a practised swordsman turns his weapon where he
will.
Yet after all, if those who so earnestly
desire clairvoyance could possess it temporarily for
a day or even an hour, it is far from certain that
they would choose to retain the gift. True, it
opens before them new worlds of study, new powers
of usefulness, and for this latter reason most of
us feel it worth while; but it should be remembered
that for one whose duty still calls him to live in
the world it is by no means an unmixed blessing.
Upon one in whom that vision is opened the sorrow
and the misery, the evil and the greed of the world
press as an ever-present burden, until in the earlier
days of his knowledge he often feels inclined to echo
the passionate adjuration contained in those rolling
lines of Schiller’s:
Dien Orakel zu verkuenden,
warum warfest du mich hin
In die Stadt der
ewig Blinden, mit dem aufgeschloss’nen
Sinn?
Frommt’s, den Schleier
aufzuheben, wo das nahe Schreckniss
droht?
Nur der Irrthum
ist das Leben; dièses Wissen
ist der Tod.
Nimm, O nimm die traur’ge
Klarheit mir vom Aug’ den
blut’gen Schein!
Schrecklich ist
es deiner Wahrheit sterbliches Gefaess zu
seyn!
which may perhaps be translated “Why
hast thou cast me thus into the town of the ever-blind,
to proclaim thine oracle by the opened sense?
What profits it to lift the veil where the near darkness
threatens? Only ignorance is life; this knowledge
is death. Take back this sad clear-sightedness;
take from mine eyes this cruel light! It is horrible
to be the mortal channel of thy truth.”
And again later he cries, “Give me back my blindness,
the happy darkness of my senses; take back thy dreadful
gift!”
But this of course is a feeling which
passes, for the higher sight soon shows the pupil
something beyond the sorrow soon bears in
upon his soul the overwhelming certainty that, whatever
appearances down here may seem to indicate, all things
are without shadow of doubt working together for the
eventual good of all. He reflects that the sin
and the suffering are there, whether he is able to
perceive them or not, and that when he can see them
he is after all better able to give efficient help
than he would be if he were working in the dark; and
so by degrees he learns to bear his share of the heavy
karma of the world.
Some misguided mortals there are who,
having the good fortune to possess some slight touch
of this higher power, are nevertheless so absolutely
destitute of all right feeling in connection with it
as to use it for the most sordid ends actually
even to advertise themselves as “test and business
clairvoyants!” Needless to say, such use of the
faculty is a mere prostitution and degradation of it,
showing that its unfortunate possessor has somehow
got hold of it before the moral side of his nature
has been sufficiently developed to stand the strain
which it imposes. A perception of the amount of
evil karma that may be generated by such action in
a very short time changes one’s disgust into
pity for the unhappy perpetrator of that sacrilegious
folly.
It is sometimes objected that the
possession of clairvoyance destroys all privacy, and
confers a limit-less ability to explore the secrets
of others. No doubt it does confer such an ability,
but nevertheless the suggestion is an amusing one
to anyone who knows anything practically about the
matter. Such an objection may possibly be well-founded
as regards the very limited powers of the “test
and business clairvoyant,” but the man who brings
it forward against those who have had the faculty
opened for them in the course of their instruction,
and consequently possess it fully, is forgetting three
fundamental facts: first, that it is quite inconceivable
that anyone, having before him the splendid fields
for investigation which true clairvoyance opens up,
could ever have the slightest wish to pry into the
trumpery little secrets of any individual man; secondly,
that even if by some impossible chance our clairvoyant
had such indecent curiosity about matters of
petty gossip, there is, after all, such a thing as
the honour of a gentleman, which, on that plane as
on this, would of course prevent him from contemplating
for an instant the idea of gratifying it; and thirdly,
in case, by any unheard-of possibility, one might
encounter some variety of low-class pitri with whom
the above considerations would have no weight, full
instructions are always given to every pupil, as soon
as he develops any sign of faculty, as to the limitations
which are placed upon its use.
Put briefly, these restrictions are
that there shall be no prying, no selfish use of the
power, and no displaying of phenomena. That is
to say, that the same considerations which would govern
the actions of a man of right feeling upon the physical
plane are expected to apply upon the astral and mental
planes also; that the pupil is never under any circumstances
to use the power which his additional knowledge gives
to him in order to promote his own worldly advantage,
or indeed in connection with gain in any way; and
that he is never to give what is called in spiritualistic
circles “a test” that is, to
do anything which will incontestably prove to sceptics
on the physical plane that he possesses what to them
would appear to be an abnormal power.
With regard to this latter proviso
people often say, “But why should he not? it
would be so easy to confute and convince your sceptic,
and it would do him good!” Such critics lose
sight of the fact that, in the first place, none of
those who know anything want to confute or
convince sceptics, or trouble themselves in the slightest
degree about the sceptic’s attitude one way
or the other; and in the second, they fail to understand
how much better it is for that sceptic that he should
gradually grow into an intellectual appreciation of
the facts of nature, instead of being suddenly introduced
to them by a knock-down blow, as it were. But
the subject was fully considered many years ago in
Mr. Sinnet’s Occult World, and it is needless
to repeat again the arguments there adduced.
It is very hard for some of our friends
to realize that the silly gossip and idle curiosity
which so entirely fill the lives of the brainless
majority on earth can have no place in the more real
life of the disciple; and so they sometimes enquire
whether, even without any special wish to see, a clairvoyant
might not casually observe some secret which another
person was trying to keep, in the same way as one’s
glance might casually fall upon a sentence in someone
else’s letter which happened to be lying open
upon the table. Of course he might, but what
if he did? The man of honour would at once avert
his eyes, in one case as in the other, and it would
be as though he had not seen. If objectors could
but grasp the idea that no pupil cares about
other people’s business, except when it comes
within his province to try to help them, and that
he has always a world of work of his own to attend
to, they would not be so hopelessly far from understanding
the facts of the wider life of the trained clairvoyant.
Even from the little that I have said
with regard to the restrictions laid upon the pupil,
it will be obvious that in very many cases he will
know much more than he is at liberty to say. That
is of course true in a far wider sense of the great
Masters of Wisdom themselves, and that is why those
who have the privilege of occasionally entering their
presence pay so much respect to their lightest word
even on subjects quite apart from the direct teaching.
For the opinion of a Master, or even of one of his
higher pupils, upon any subject is that of a man whose
opportunity of judging accurately is out of all proportion
to ours.
His position and his extended faculties
are in reality the heritage of all mankind, and, far
though we may now be from those grand powers, they
will none the less certainly be ours one day.
Yet how different a place will this old world be when
humanity as a whole possesses the higher clairvoyance!
Think what the difference will be to history when
all can read the records; to science, when all the
processes about which now men theorize can be watched
through all their course; to medicine, when doctor
and patient alike can see clearly and exactly all
that is being done; to philosophy, when there is no
longer any possibility of discussion as to its basis,
because all alike can see a wider aspect of the truth;
to labour, when all work will be joy, because every
man will be put only to that which he can do best;
to education, when the minds and hearts of the children
are open to the teacher who is trying to form their
character; to religion, when there is no longer any
possibility of dispute as to its broad dogmas, since
the truth about the states after death, and the Great
Law that governs the world, will be patent to all
eyes.
Above all, how far easier it will
be then for the evolved men to help one another under
those so much freer conditions! The possibilities
that open before the mind are as glorious vistas stretching
in all directions, so that our seventh round should
indeed be a veritable golden age. Well for us
that these grand faculties will not be possessed by
all humanity until it has evolved to a far higher level
in morality as well as in wisdom, else should we but
repeat once more under still worse conditions the
terrible downfall of the great Atlantean civilization,
whose members failed to realize that increased power
meant increased responsibility. Yet we ourselves
were most of us among those very men let us hope that
we have learnt wisdom by that failure, and that when
the possibilities of the wider life open before us
once more, this time we shall bear the trial better.