Contents.
It is well known that, in
India, the methods of psychic
development differ with the
Gurus (teachers or masters),
not only because of their
belonging to different schools
of philosophy, of which there
are six, [in Hinduism] but
because every Guru has his own
system, which he generally
keeps very secret. But beyond
the Himalayas the method in
the Esoteric Schools does not
differ, unless the Guru is
simply a Lama, but little more
learned than those he teaches.
The work from which I here
translate forms part of the
same series as that from which
the "Stanzas" of the
Book of Dzyan
were taken, on which the
Secret Doctrine
is based. Together with the
great mystic work called
Paramartha, which, the legend
of Naagarjuna tells us, was
delivered to the great Arhat
by the Naagas or
"Serpents" (in truth
a name given to the ancient
Initiates), the Book of
the Golden Precepts
claims the same origin. Yet
its maxims and ideas, however
noble and original, are often
found under different forms in
Sanskrit works, such as the
Jñaaneshvarii,
that superb mystic treatise in
which Krishna describes to
Arjuna in glowing colours the
condition of a fully illumined
Yogii; and again in certain
Upanishads. This is but
natural, since most, if not
all, of the greatest Arhats,
the first followers of Gautama
Buddha were Hindus and AAryans,
not Mongolians, especially
those who emigrated into
Tibet. The works left by
AAryaasanga alone are very
numerous.
The original Precepts are
engraved on thin oblong
squares; copies very often on
discs. These discs, or
plates, are generally
preserved on the altars of the
temples attached to centres
where the so-called
"contemplative" or
Mahaayaana (Yogachaarya)
schools are established. They
are written variously,
sometimes in Tibetan but
mostly in ideographs. The
sacerdotal language (Senzar),
besides an alphabet of its
own, may be rendered in
several modes of writing in
cypher characters, which
partake more of the nature of
ideographs than of syllables.
Another method (lug, in
Tibetan) is to use the
numerals and colours, each of
which corresponds to a letter
of the Tibetan alphabet
(thirty simple and
seventy-four compound letters)
thus forming a complete
cryptographic alphabet. When
the ideographs are used there
is a definite mode of reading
the text; as in this case the
symbols and signs used in
astrology, namely the twelve
zodiacal animals and the seven
primary colours, each a
triplet in shade, i.e. the
light, the primary, and the
dark -- stand for the
thirty-three letters of the
simple alphabet, for words and
sentences. For in this
method, the twelve
"animals" five times
repeated and coupled with the
five elements and the seven
colours, furnish a whole
alphabet composed of sixty
sacred letters and twelve
signs. A sign placed at the
beginning of the text
determines whether the reader
has to spell it according to
the Indian mode, when every
word is simply a Sanskrit
adaptation, or according to
the Chinese principle of
reading the ideographs. The
easiest way however, is that
which allows the reader to use
no special, or any
language he likes, as the
signs and symbols were, like
the Arabian numerals or
figures, common and
international property among
initiated mystics and their
followers. The same
peculiarity is characteristic
of one of the Chinese modes of
writing, which can be read
with equal facility by any one
acquainted with the character:
for instance, a Japanese can
read it in his own language as
readily as a Chinaman in his.
And yet such ethics fill
volumes upon volumes in
Eastern literature, especially
in the Upanishads. "Kill
out all desire of life,"
says Krishna to Arjuna. That
desire lingers only in the
body, the vehicle of the
embodied Self, not in the SELF
which is "eternal,
indestructible, which kills
not nor is it killed"
(Katha
Upanishad). "Kill
out sensation," teaches
Sutta Nipaata; "look alike
on pleasure and pain, gain and
loss, victory and
defeat." Again,
"Seek shelter in the
eternal alone" (ibid).
"Destroy the sense of
separateness," repeats
Krishna under every form.
"The Mind (Manas) which
follows the rambling senses,
makes the Soul (Buddhi) as
helpless as the boat which the
wind leads astray upon the
waters"
(Bhagavatgiitaa II.
70).
Therefore it has been
thought better to make a
judicious selection only from
those treatises which will
best suit the few real mystics
in the Theosophical Society,
and which are sure to answer
their needs. It is only these
who will appreciate these
words of Krishna-Christos, the
"Higher Self":
In this translation, I
have done my best to preserve
the poetical beauty of
language and imagery which
characterise the original.
How far this effort has been
successful, is for the reader
to judge. "HPB"
- 1. These instructions
are for those ignorant of the
dangers of the lower IDDHI
(1-1).
(1-1). The
Pali word Iddhi, is the
synonym of the Sanskrit
Siddhis, or psychic faculties,
the abnormal powers in man.
There are two kinds of
Siddhis. One group which
embraces the lower, coarse,
psychic and mental energies;
the other is one which exacts
the highest training of
Spiritual powers. Says
Krishna in Shriimad
Bhaagavat: -- "He
who is engaged in the
performance of yoga, who has
subdued his senses and who has
concentrated his mind in me
(Krishna), such yogiis all the
Siddhis stand ready to
serve."
- 2. He who would hear
the voice of Naada (2-2),
"the Soundless
Sound," and comprehend
it, he has to learn the nature
of Dhaaranaa (2-3).
(2-2). The
"Soundless Voice,"
or the "Voice of the
Silence." Literally
perhaps this would read
"Voice in the Spiritual
Sound," as Naada is the
equivalent word in Sanskrit,
for the Senzar term.
(2-3).
Dhaaranaa, [see v85 note] is the intense and
perfect concentration of the
mind upon some one interior
object, accompanied by
complete abstraction from
everything pertaining to the
external Universe, or the
world of the senses.
- 3. Having become
indifferent to objects of
perception, the pupil must
seek out the raajah of the
senses, the Thought-Producer,
he who awakes illusion.
- 4. The Mind is the
great Slayer of the Real.
- 5. Let the Disciple
slay the Slayer.
For --
- 6. When to
himself his form appears
unreal, as do on waking all
the forms he sees in dreams;
- 7. When he has ceased to
hear the many, he may discern
the ONE -- the inner sound
which kills the outer.
- 8. Then only, not till
then, shall he forsake the
region of Asat, the false, to
come unto the realm of Sat,
the true.
- 9. Before the soul can
see, the Harmony within must
be attained, and fleshly eyes
be rendered blind to all
illusion.
- 10. Before the Soul can
hear, the image (man) has to
become as deaf to roarings as
to whispers, to cries of
bellowing elephants as to the
silvery buzzing of the golden
fire-fly.
- 11. Before the soul can
comprehend and may remember,
she must unto the Silent
Speaker be united just as the
form to which the clay is
modelled, is first united with
the potter's mind.
- 12. For then the soul
will hear, and will remember.
- 13. And then to the inner
ear will speak
-- THE VOICE OF
THE SILENCE
And say:--
- 14. If
thy soul smiles while bathing
in the Sunlight of thy Life;
if thy soul sings within her
chrysalis of flesh and matter;
if thy soul weeps inside her
castle of illusion; if thy
soul struggles to break the
silver thread that binds her
to the MASTER (14-4); know, O
Disciple, thy Soul is of the
earth.
(14-4). The
"great Master" is
the term used by lanoos or
chelas to indicate one's
"Higher Self." It is
the equivalent of
Avalokitesvara, and the same
as AAdi-Buddha with the Buddhist
Occultists, AAtman the
"Self" (the Higher
Self) with the Brahmins, and
CHRISTOS with the ancient
Gnostics.
- 15. When to the World's
turmoil thy budding soul (15-5)
lends ear; when to the roaring
voice of the great illusion
thy Soul responds (15-6); when
frightened at the sight of the
hot tears of pain, when
deafened by the cries of
distress, thy soul withdraws
like the shy turtle within the
carapace of SELFHOOD, learn, O
Disciple, of her Silent
"God," thy Soul is
an unworthy shrine.
(15-5). Soul
is used here for the Human Ego
or Manas, that which is
referred to in our Occult
Septenary division as the
"Human Soul" (See
the Secret Doctrine) in
contradistinction to the
Spiritual and Animal Souls.
(15-6). Mahaa
Maayaa "Great
Illusion," the objective
Universe.
- 16. When waxing
stronger, thy Soul glides
forth from her secure retreat:
and breaking loose from the
protecting shrine, extends her
silver thread and rushes
onward; when beholding her
image on the waves of Space
she whispers, "This is
I," -- declare, O
Disciple, that thy soul is
caught in the webs of delusion
(16-7).
(16-7).
Sakkaayaditthi
"delusion" of
personality.
- 17. This Earth,
Disciple, is the Hall of
Sorrow, wherein are set along
the Path of dire probations,
traps to ensnare thy EGO by
the delusion called
"Great Heresy" (17-8).
(17-8).
Attavaada, the heresy of the
belief in Soul or rather in
the separateness of Soul or
Self from the One Universal,
infinite SELF.
- 18. This earth, O
ignorant Disciple, is but the
dismal entrance leading to the
twilight that precedes the
valley of true light -- that
light which no wind can
extinguish, that light which
burns without a wick or fuel.
- 19. Saith the Great Law:
-- "In order to become
the KNOWER of ALL-SELF (19-9)
thou hast first of SELF to be
the knower." To reach the
knowledge of that SELF, thou
hast to give up Self to
Non-Self, Being to Non-Being,
and then thou canst repose
between the wings of the GREAT
BIRD. Aye, sweet is rest
between the wings of that
which is not born, nor dies,
but is the AUM (19-10) throughout
eternal ages (19-11).
(19-9). The
Tattvajñaanii is the
"knower" or
discriminator of the
principles in nature and in
man; and AAtmaajñaanii is the
knower of AATMAN or the
Universal, ONE SELF.
(19-10). Kaala
Hamsa, the "Bird" or
Swan (See fn 19-11). Says the
Naada-Bindu Upanishad
(Rig Veda)
translated by the Kumbakonam
Theosophical Society --
"The syllable A is
considered to be its (the bird
Hamsa's) right wing, U, its
left, M, its tail, and the
Ardha-maatraa (half metre) is
said to be its head."
(19-11).
Eternity with the Oriental
has quite another
signification than it has with
us. It stands generally for
the "Day of Brahma",
the duration of a Kalpa, a
short manvantara of
4,320,000,000 years.
- 20. Bestride the Bird of
Life, if thou would'st know
(20-12).
(20-12). Says
the same Naada-Bindu, "A
Yogi who bestrides the Hamsa
(thus contemplates on Aum) is
not affected by Karmic
influences or crores of
sins."
- 21. Give up thy life, if
thou would'st live (21-13).
(21-13). Give
up the life of physical
personality if you would live
in Spirit.
- 22. Three Halls, O weary
pilgrim, lead to the end of
toils. Three Halls, O
conqueror of Maara, will bring
thee through three states (22-14)
into the fourth (22-15) and
thence into the seven worlds
(22-16), the worlds of Rest
Eternal.
(22-14). The
three states of consciousness,
which are Jagrat, the waking;
Svapna, the dreaming; and
Sushupti, the deep sleeping
state. These three Yogi
conditions, lead to the
fourth, or --
(22-15). The
Turiiya, that beyond the
dreamless state, the one above
all, a state of high spiritual
consciousness.
(22-16). Some
Oriental mystics locate seven
planes of being, the seven
spiritual lokas or worlds within
the body of Kaala Hamsa, the Swan
out of Time and Space,
convertible into the Swan in
Time, when it becomes Brahmaa
instead of Brahman (neuter).
- 23. If thou would'st
learn their names, then
hearken, and remember.
- 24. The name of the
first Hall is IGNORANCE --
Avidyaa.
- 25. It is the Hall in
which thou saw'st the light,
in which thou livest and shalt
die (25-17).
(25-17). The
phenomenal World of Senses and
of terrestrial consciousness
-- only.
- 26. The name of Hall the
second is the Hall of
Learning.* In it thy Soul will
find the blossoms of life, but
under every flower a serpent
coiled (26-18).
[*The Hall
of Probationary Learning.]
(26-18). The
astral region, the Psychic
World of supersensuous
perceptions and of deceptive
sights -- the world of
Mediums. It is the great
"Astral Serpent" of
Eliphas Levi. No blossom
plucked in those regions has
ever yet been brought down on
earth without its serpent
coiled around the stem. It is
the world of the Great
Illusion.
- 27. The name of the
third Hall is Wisdom, beyond
which stretch the shoreless
waters of Akshara, the
indestructible Fount of
Omniscience (27-19).
(27-19). The
region of the full Spiritual
Consciousness beyond which
there is no longer danger for
him who has reached it.
- 28. If thou would'st
cross the first Hall safely,
let not thy mind mistake the
fires of lust that burn
therein for the Sunlight of
life.
- 29. If thou would'st
cross the second safely, stop
not the fragrance of its
stupefying blossoms to inhale.
If freed thou would'st be from
the Karmic chains, seek not
for thy Guru in those Maayaavic
regions.
- 30. The WISE ONES tarry
not in pleasure-grounds of
senses.
- 31. The WISE ONES heed
not the sweet-tongued voices
of illusion.
- 32. Seek for him who is
to give thee birth (32-20), in
the Hall of Wisdom, the Hall
which lies beyond, wherein all
shadows are unknown, and where
the light of truth shines with
unfading glory.
(32-20). The
Initiate who leads the
disciple through the Knowledge
given to him to his spiritual,
or second, birth is called the
Father, Guru or Master.
- 33. That which is
uncreate abides in thee,
Disciple, as it abides in that
Hall. If thou would'st reach
it and blend the two, thou
must divest thyself of thy
dark garments of illusion.
Stifle the voice of flesh,
allow no image of the senses
to get between its light and
thine that thus the twain may
blend in one. And having
learnt thine own ajñaana (33-21),
flee from the Hall
of Learning. This Hall is
dangerous in its perfidious
beauty, is needed but for thy
probation. Beware, Lanoo,
lest dazzled by illusive
radiance thy Soul should
linger and be caught in its
deceptive light.
(33-21).
Ajñaana is ignorance or
non-wisdom the opposite of
"Knowledge" jñaana.
- 34. This light shines
from the jewel of the Great
Ensnarer, (Maara) (34-22). The
senses it bewitches, blinds
the mind, and leaves the
unwary an abandoned wreck.
(34-22). Maara
is in exoteric religions a
demon, an Asura, but in
esoteric philosophy it is
personified temptation through
men's vices, and translated
literally means "that
which kills" the Soul.
It is represented as a King
(of the Maaras) with a crown in
which shines a jewel of such
lustre that it blinds those
who look at it, this lustre
referring of course to the
fascination exercised by vice
upon certain natures.
- 35. The moth attracted
to the dazzling flame of thy
night-lamp is doomed to perish
in the viscid oil. The unwary
Soul that fails to grapple
with the mocking demon of
illusion, will return to earth
the slave of Maara.
- 36. Behold the Hosts of
Souls. Watch how they hover
o'er the stormy sea of human
life, and how exhausted,
bleeding, broken-winged, they
drop one after another on the
swelling waves. Tossed by the
fierce winds, chased by the
gale, they drift into the
eddies and disappear within
the first great vortex.
- 37. If through the Hall
of Wisdom, thou would'st reach
the Vale of Bliss, Disciple,
close fast thy senses against
the great dire heresy of
separateness that weans thee
from the rest.
- 38. Let not thy
"Heaven-born,"
merged in the sea of Maayaa,
break from the Universal
Parent (SOUL), but let the
fiery power retire into the
inmost chamber, the chamber of
the Heart (38-23) and the abode
of the World's Mother (38-24).
(38-23).
The inner
chamber of the Heart, called
in Sanskrit Brahma-pura. The
"fiery power" is
Kundalinii.
(38-24). The
"Power" and the
"World-Mother" are
names given to Kundalinii --
one of the mystic "Yogi
powers." It is Buddhi
considered as an active
instead of a passive principle
(which it is generally, when
regarded only as the vehicle,
or casket of the Supreme
Spirit, AATMAA). It is an
electro-spiritual force, a
creative power which when
aroused into action can as
easily kill as it can create.
- 39. Then from the heart
that Power shall rise into the
sixth, the middle region, the
place between thine eyes, when
it becomes the breath of the
ONE-SOUL, the voice which
filleth all, thy Master's
voice.
- 40. 'Tis only then thou
canst become a "Walker of
the Sky" (40-25) who treads
the winds above the waves,
whose step touches not the
waters.
(40-25).
Kechara or
"sky-walker" or
"goer." As explained
in the 6th Adhyaaya of that
king of mystic works the
Jñaneshvarii --
the body of the Yogii becomes
as one formed of the wind; as
"a cloud from which limbs
have sprouted out," after
which -- "he (the Yogi)
beholds the things beyond the
seas and stars; he hears the
language of the Devas and
comprehends it, and perceives
what is passing in the mind of
the ant."
- 41. Before thou set'st
thy foot upon the ladder's
upper rung, the ladder of the
mystic sounds, thou hast to
hear the voice of thy inner
GOD* in seven manners.
[*The
Higher SELF.]
- 42. The first is like
the nightingale's sweet voice
chanting a song of parting to
its mate.
- 43. The second comes as
the sound of a silver cymbal
of the Dhyaaniis, awakening the
twinkling stars.
- 44. The next is as the
plaint melodious of the
ocean-sprite imprisoned in its
shell.
- 45. And this is followed
by the chant of Viinaa (45-26).
(45-26). Viinaa
is an Indian stringed
instrument like a lute.
- 46. The fifth like sound
of bamboo-flute shrills in
thine ear.
- 47. It changes next into
a trumpet-blast.
- 48. The last vibrates
like the dull rumbling of a
thunder-cloud.
- 49. The seventh swallows
all the other sounds. They
die, and then are heard no
more.
- 50. When the six (50-27)
are slain and at the Master's
feet are laid, then is the
pupil merged into the ONE
(50-28), becomes that ONE and
lives therein.
(50-27). The
six principles; meaning when
the lower personality is
destroyed and the inner
individuality is merged into
and lost in the Seventh or
Spirit.
(50-28). The
disciple is one with Brahman or
the AAtman.
- 51. Before that path is
entered, thou must destroy thy
lunar body (51-29), cleanse thy
mind-body (51-30) and make clean
thy heart.
(51-29). The
astral form produced by the
Kaamic principle, the Kaama-ruupa
or body of desire.
(51-30).
Maanasa-ruupa. The first refers
to the astral or personal
Self; the second to the
individuality or the
reincarnating Ego whose
consciousness on our plane or
the lower Manas -- has to be
paralyzed.
- 52. Eternal life's pure
waters, clear and crystal,
with the monsoon tempest's
muddy torrents cannot mingle.
- 53. Heaven's dew-drop
glittering in the morn's first
sunbeam within the bosom of
the lotus, when dropped on
earth becomes a piece of clay;
behold, the pearl is now a
speck of mire.
- 54. Strive with thy
thoughts unclean before they
overpower thee. Use them as
they will thee, for if thou
sparest them and they take
root and grow, know well,
these thoughts will overpower
and kill thee. Beware,
Disciple, suffer not, e'en
though it be their shadow, to
approach. For it will grow,
increase in size and power,
and then this thing of
darkness will absorb thy being
before thou hast well realized
the black foul monster's
presence.
- 55. Before the
"mystic Power" (55-31)*
can make of thee a god, Lanoo,
thou must have gained the
faculty to slay thy lunar form
at will.
[*Kundalini,
the "Serpent Power" or
mystic fire.]
(55-31).
Kundalinii is called the
"Serpentine" or the
annular power on account of
its spiral-like working or
progress in the body of the
ascetic developing the power
in himself. It is an electric
fiery occult or Fohatic power,
the great pristine force,
which underlies all organic
and inorganic matter.
- 56. The Self of matter
and the SELF of Spirit can
never meet. One of the twain
must disappear; there is no
place for both.
- 57. Ere thy Soul's mind
can understand, the bud of
personality must be crushed
out, the worm of sense
destroyed past resurrection.
- 58. Thou canst not
travel on the Path before thou
hast become that Path itself
(58-32).
(58-32). This
"Path" is mentioned
in all the Mystic Works. As
Krishna says in the
Jñaneshvarii: "When this
Path is beheld ... whether
one sets out to the bloom of
the east, or to the chambers of
the west, without moving, O
holder of the bow, is the
travelling in this road. In
this path, to whatever place
one would go, that place one's
own self becomes."
"Thou art the Path"
is said to the adept guru and
by the latter to the disciple,
after initiation. "I am
the way and the Path"
says another Master.
- 59. Let thy Soul lend
its ear to every cry of pain
like as the lotus bares its
heart to drink the morning
sun.
- 60. Let not the fierce
Sun dry one tear of pain
before thyself hast wiped it
from the sufferer's eye.
- 61. But let each burning
human tear drop on thy heart
and there remain, nor ever
brush it off, until the pain
that caused it is removed.
- 62. These tears, O thou
of heart most merciful, these
are the streams that irrigate
the fields of charity
immortal. 'Tis on such soil
that grows the midnight
blossom of Buddha (62-33) more
difficult to find, more rare
to view than is the flower of
the Vogay tree. It is the
seed of freedom from rebirth.
It isolates the Arhat both
from strife and lust, it leads
him through the fields of
Being unto the peace and bliss
known only in the land of
Silence and Non-Being.
(62-33).
Adeptship -- the "blossom
of Bodhisattva."
- 63. Kill out desire; but
if thou killest it take heed
lest from the dead it should
again arise.
- 64. Kill love of life,
but if thou slayest tanhaa
(64-34), let this not be for
thirst of life eternal, but to
replace the fleeting by the
everlasting.
(64-34).
Tanhaa -- "the will to
live," the fear of death
and love for life, that force
or energy which causes rebirths.
- 65. Desire nothing.
Chafe not at Karma, nor at
Nature's changeless laws. But
struggle only with the
personal, the transitory, the
evanescent and the perishable.
- 66. Help Nature and work
on with her; and Nature will
regard thee as one of her
creators and make obeisance.
- 67. And she will open
wide before thee the portals
of her secret chambers, lay
bare before thy gaze the
treasures hidden in the very
depths of her pure virgin
bosom. Unsullied by the hand
of matter she shows her
treasures only to the eye of
Spirit -- the eye which never
closes, the eye for which
there is no veil in all her
kingdoms.
- 68. Then will she show
thee the means and way, the
first gate and the second, the
third, up to the very seventh.
And then, the goal -- beyond
which lie, bathed in the
sunlight of the Spirit,
glories untold, unseen by any
save the eye of Soul.
- 69. There is but one
road to the Path; at its very
end alone the "Voice of
the Silence" can be
heard. The ladder by which
the candidate ascends is
formed of rungs of suffering
and pain; these can be
silenced only by the voice of
virtue. Woe, then, to thee,
Disciple, if there is one
single vice thou hast not left
behind. For then the ladder
will give way and overthrow
thee; its foot rests in the
deep mire of thy sins and
failings, and ere thou canst
attempt to cross this wide
abyss of matter thou hast to
lave thy feet in Waters of
Renunciation. Beware lest
thou should'st set a foot
still soiled upon the ladder's
lowest rung. Woe unto him who
dares pollute one rung with
miry feet. The foul and
viscous mud will dry, become
tenacious, then glue his feet
unto the spot, and like a bird
caught in the wily fowler's
lime, he will be stayed from
further progress. His vices
will take shape and drag him
down. His sins will raise
their voices, like as the
jackal's laugh and sob after
the sun goes down; his
thoughts become an army, and
bear him off a captive slave.
- 70. Kill thy desires,
Lanoo, make thy vices
impotent, ere the first step
is taken on the solemn
journey.
- 71. Strangle thy sins,
and make them dumb for ever,
before thou dost lift one foot
to mount the ladder.
- 72. Silence thy thoughts
and fix thy whole attention on
thy Master whom yet thou dost
not see, but whom thou
feelest.
- 73. Merge into one sense
thy senses, if thou would'st
be secure against the foe.
'Tis by that sense alone which
lies concealed within the
hollow of thy brain, that the
steep path which leadeth to
thy Master may be disclosed
before thy Soul's dim eyes.
- 74. Long and weary is
the way before thee, O
Disciple. One single thought
about the past that thou hast
left behind, will drag thee
down and thou wilt have to
start the climb anew.
- 75. Kill in thyself all
memory of past experiences.
Look not behind or thou art
lost.
- 76. Do not believe that
lust can ever be killed out if
gratified or satiated, for
this is an abomination
inspired by Maara. It is by
feeding vice that it expands
and waxes strong, like to the
worm that fattens on the
blossom's heart.
- 77. The rose must
re-become the bud born of its
parent stem, before the
parasite has eaten through its
heart and drunk its life-sap.
- 78. The golden tree puts
forth its jewel-buds before
its trunk is withered by the
storm.
- 79. The pupil must
regain the child-state he has
lost, ere the first sound can
fall upon his ear.
- 80. The light from the
ONE Master, the one unfading
golden light of Spirit, shoots
its effulgent beams on the
disciple from the very first.
Its rays thread through the
thick dark clouds of matter.
- 81. Now here, now there,
these rays illumine it, like
sun-sparks light the earth
through the thick foliage of
the jungle growth. But, O
Disciple, unless the flesh is
passive, head cool, the soul
as firm and pure as flaming
diamond, the radiance will not
reach the chamber (see fn 38-23), its
sunlight will not warm the
heart, nor will the mystic
sounds of the AAkaasic heights
(81-35) reach the ear, however
eager, at the initial stage.
(81-35).
These mystic sounds or the
melody heard by the ascetic at
the beginning of his cycle of
meditation called Anaahatashabda
by the Yogiis. (The Anahata is
the fourth of the chakras.}
- 82. Unless thou hearest,
thou canst not see.
- 83. Unless thou seest
thou canst not hear. To hear
and see, this is the second
stage.
.....
- 84. When the disciple
sees and hears, and when he
smells and tastes, eyes
closed, ears shut, with mouth
and nostrils stopped; when the
four senses blend and are ready
to pass into the fifth,
that of the inner touch --
then into stage the fourth he
hath passed on.
- 85. And in the fifth, O
slayer of thy thoughts, all
these again have to be killed
beyond reanimation (85-36).
(85-36). This
means that in the sixth stage
of development which, in the
occult system is Dhaaranaa,
every sense as an individual
faculty has to be
"killed" (or
paralyzed) on this plane,
passing into and merging with
the Seventh sense, the most
spiritual.
- 86. Withhold thy mind
from all external objects, all
external sights. Withhold
internal images, lest on thy
Soul-light a dark shadow they
should cast.
- 87. Thou art now in
Dhaaranaa (87-37), the sixth stage.
(87-37). See
note (2-3) above.
- 88. When thou hast
passed into the seventh, O
happy one, thou shalt perceive
no more the sacred Three (88-38),
for thou shalt have become
that Three thyself. Thyself
and mind, like twins upon a
line, the star which is thy
goal, burns overhead (88-39).
The three that dwell in glory
and in bliss ineffable, now in
the world of Maayaa have lost
their names. They have become
one star, the fire that burns
but scorches not, that fire
which is the Upaadhi (88-40) of
the Flame.
(88-38).
Every stage of development in
Raaja Yoga is symbolised by a
geometrical figure. This one
is the sacred Triangle and
precedes Dhaaranaa. The
[UUUUtriangle] is the sign of the
high chelas, while another
kind of triangle is that of
high Initiates. It is the
symbol "I"
discoursed upon by Buddha and
used by him as a symbol of the
embodied form of Tathaagata
when released from the three
methods of the Prajñaa. Once
the preliminary and lower
stages passed, the disciple
sees no more the [9999triangle]
but the -- the abbreviation of
the --, the full Septenary.
Its true form is not given
here, as it is almost sure to
be pounced upon by some
charlatans and -- desecrated
in its use for fraudulent
purposes.
(88-39). The
star that burns overhead is
the "star of
initiation." The
caste-mark of Shaivas, or
devotees of the sect of Shiva,
the great patron of all
Yogiis, is a black round spot,
the symbol of the Sun now,
perhaps, but that of the star
of initiation, in Occultism,
in days of old.
(88-40). The
basis (upadhi) of the ever
unreachable Flame," so
long as the ascetic is still
in this life.
- 89. And this, O Yogi of
success, is what men call
Dhyaana (89-41), the right
precursor of Samaadhi (89-42).
(89-41).
Dhyaana is the last stage
before the final on this Earth
unless one becomes a full
Mahaatmaa. As said already in
this stage the Raaja Yogii is yet
spiritually conscious of Self,
and the working of his higher
principles. One step more,
and he will be on the plane
beyond the Seventh (or fourth
according to some schools).
These, after the practice of
Pratyaahaara -- a preliminary
training, in order to control
one's mind and thoughts --
count Dhaaranaa, Dhyaana and
Samaadhi and embraces the three
under the generic name of
SAMYAMA.
(89-42).
Samaadhi is the state in which
the ascetic loses the
consciousness of every
individuality including his
own. He becomes -- the ALL.
- 90. And now thy Self is
lost in SELF, thyself unto
THYSELF, merged in THAT SELF
from which thou first didst
radiate.
- 91. Where is thy
individuality, Lanoo, where
the Lanoo himself? It is the
spark lost in the fire, the
drop within the ocean, the
ever-present Ray become the
all and the eternal radiance.
- 92. And now, Lanoo, thou
art the doer and the witness,
the radiator and the
radiation, Light in the Sound,
and the Sound in the Light.
- 93. Thou art acquainted
with the five impediments, O
blessed one. Thou art their
conqueror, the Master of the
sixth, deliverer of the four
modes of Truth (93-43). The
light that falls upon them
shines from thyself, O thou
who wast disciple but art
Teacher now.
(93-43). The
"four modes of
truth" are, in Northern
Buddhism, Ku, "suffering
or misery"; Tu, the
assembling of temptations; Mu,
"their destructions"
and Tau, the "path."
The "five
impediments" are the
knowledge of misery, truth
about human frailty,
oppressive restraints, and the
absolute necessity of
separation from all the ties
of passion and even of
desires. The "Path of
Salvation" -- is the last
one.
- And of these modes
of Truth: --
- 94. Hast thou not passed
through knowledge of all
misery -- Truth the first?
- 95. Hast thou not
conquered the Maaras' King at
Tsi, the portal of assembling
-- truth the second? (95-44).
(95-44). At
the portal of the
"assembling" the
King of the Maaras the Mahza
Maara stands trying to blind
the candidate by the radiance
of his "Jewel."
- 96. Hast thou not sin at
the third gate destroyed and
truth the third attained?
- 97. Hast not thou
entered Tau, "the
Path" that leads to
knowledge -- the fourth truth?
(97-45).
(97-45). This
is the fourth "Path"
out of the five paths of
rebirth which lead and toss
all human beings into
perpetual states of sorrow and
joy. These "paths"
are but sub-divisions of the
One, the Path followed by
Karma.
- 98. And now, rest 'neath
the Bodhi tree, which is
perfection of all knowledge,
for, know, thou art the Master
of Samaadhi -- the state of
faultless vision.
- 99. Behold! thou hast
become the light, thou hast
become the Sound, thou art thy
Master and thy God. Thou art
THYSELF the object of thy
search: the VOICE unbroken,
that resounds throughout
eternities, exempt from
change, from sin exempt, the
seven sounds in one, the
VOICE OF THE SILENCE
100. Om Tat Sat
The Voice of the
Silence
FRAGMENT II
THE TWO PATHS
- 101. AND now, O Teacher
of Compassion, point thou the
way to other men. Behold, all
those who knocking for
admission, await in ignorance
and darkness, to see the gate
of the Sweet Law flung open!
The voice of the candidates:
- 102. Shalt not thou,
Master of thine own Mercy,
reveal the Doctrine of the
Heart? (102-1) Shalt thou refuse
to lead thy Servants unto the
Path of Liberation?
(102-1). The
two schools of Buddha's
doctrine, the esoteric and the
exoteric, are respectively
called the "Heart"
and the "Eye"
Doctrine. Bodhidharma called
them in China -- from whence
the names reached Tibet -- the
Tsung-men (esoteric) and
Kiau-men (exoteric school).
The former is so named, because it is
the teaching which emanated
from Gautama Buddha's heart,
whereas the "Eye"
Doctrine was the work of his
head or brain. The
"Heart Doctrine" is
also called "the seal of
truth" or the "true
seal," a symbol found on
the heading of almost all
esoteric works.
Quoth the Teacher:
- 103. The Paths are
two;*(see v179) the great
Perfections three;**(see fn 306-34)
six are the
Virtues***(see v198, 206 ff)
that transform the
body into the Tree of
Knowledge (103-2).
(103-2). The
"tree of knowledge"
is a title given by the
followers of the Bodhidharma
(Wisdom religion) to those who
have attained the height of
mystic knowledge -- adepts.
Naagaarjuna the founder of the
Maadhyamika School, was called
the "Dragon Tree,"
dragon standing as a symbol of
Wisdom and Knowledge. The
tree is honoured because it is
under the Bodhi (wisdom) Tree
that Buddha received his birth
and enlightenment, preached
his first sermon and died.
- 104. Who shall approach
them?
- 105. Who shall first enter
them?
- 106. Who shall first hear
the doctrine of two Paths in
one, the truth unveiled about
the Secret Heart? (106-3) The Law
which, shunning learning,
teaches Wisdom, reveals a tale
of woe.
(106-3).The
"Secret Heart" is
the esoteric doctrine.
- 107. Alas, alas, that all
men should possess AAlaya, be
one with the great Soul, and
that possessing it, AAlaya
should so little avail them!
- 108. Behold how, like the
moon, reflected in the
tranquil waves, AAlaya is
reflected by the small and by
the great, is mirrored in the
tiniest atoms, yet fails to
reach the heart of all. Alas,
that so few men should profit
by the gift, the priceless
boon of learning truth, the
right perception of existing
things, the Knowledge of the
non-existent!
Saith the pupil:
- 109. O
Teacher, what shall I do to
reach to Wisdom?
- 110. O Wise one,
what, to gain perfection?
- 111. Search for the
Paths. But, O Lanoo, be of
clean heart before thou
startest on thy journey.
Before thou takest thy first
step learn to discern the real
from the false, the
ever-fleeting from the
everlasting. Learn above all
to separate Head-learning from
Soul-Wisdom, the
"Eye" from the
"Heart" doctrine.
- 112. Yea, ignorance is
like unto a closed and airless
vessel; the soul a bird shut
up within. It warbles not,
nor can it stir a feather; but
the songster, mute and torpid
sits, and of exhaustion dies.
- 113. But even ignorance
is better than Head-learning
with no Soul-Wisdom to
illuminate and guide it.
- 114. The seeds of Wisdom cannot
sprout and grow in airless
space. To live and reap
experience the mind needs
breadth and depth and points
to draw it towards the Diamond
Soul (114-4). Seek not those
points in Maayaa's realm; but
soar beyond illusions, search
the eternal and the changeless
SAT (114-5), mistrusting fancy's
false suggestions.
(114-4).
"Diamond Soul"
"Vajrasattva," a
title of the supreme Buddha,
the "Lord of all
Mysteries," called
Vajradhara and AAdi-Buddha.
(114-5). SAT,
the one eternal and Absolute
Reality and Truth, all the
rest being illusion.
- 115. For mind is like a
mirror; it gathers dust while
it reflects (115-6). It needs the
gentle breezes of Soul-Wisdom
to brush away the dust of our
illusions. Seek O Beginner,
to blend thy Mind and Soul.
(115-6). From
Shin-Sieu's Doctrine, who
teaches that the human mind is
like a mirror which attracts
and reflects every atom of
dust, and has to be, like that
mirror, watched over and
dusted every day. Shin-Sieu
was the sixth Patriarch of
North China who taught the
esoteric doctrine of
Bodhidharma.
- 116. Shun ignorance, and
likewise shun illusion. Avert
thy face from world
deceptions; mistrust thy
senses, they are false. But
within thy body -- the shrine
of thy sensations -- seek in
the Impersonal for the
"Eternal Man" (116-7);
and having sought him out,
look inward: thou art Buddha
(116-8).
(116-7). The
reincarnating EGO is called by
the Northern Buddhists the
"true man," who
becomes in union with his
Higher-Self -- a Buddha.
(116-8).
"Buddha" means
"Enlightened."
- 117. Shun praise, O
Devotee. Praise leads to
self-delusion. Thy body is
not self, thy SELF is in
itself without a body, and
either praise or blame affects
it not.
- 118. Self-gratulation, O
disciple, is like unto a lofty
tower, up which a haughty fool
has climbed. Thereon he sits
in prideful solitude and
unperceived by any but
himself.
- 119. False learning is
rejected by the Wise, and
scattered to the Winds by the
Good Law. Its wheel revolves
for all, the humble and the
proud. The "Doctrine of
the Eye" (119-9) is for the
crowd, the "Doctrine of
the Heart," for the
elect. The first repeat in
pride: "Behold, I
know"; the last, they who
in humbleness have garnered,
low confess, "thus have I
heard" (119-10).
(119-9). See
Note 102-1. The exoteric Buddhism
of the masses.
(119-10). The
usual formula that precedes
the Buddhist Scriptures,
meaning, that that which
follows is what has been
recorded by direct oral
tradition from Buddha and the
Arhats.
- 120. "Great
Sifter" is the name of
the "Heart
Doctrine," O disciple.
- 121. 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. The
hand of Karma guides the
wheel; the revolutions mark
the beatings of the Karmic
heart.
- 122. True knowledge is
the flour, false learning is
the husk. If thou would'st
eat the bread of Wisdom, thy
flour thou hast to knead with
Amrita's* clear waters. But
if thou kneadest husks with
Maayaa's dew, thou canst create
but food for the black doves
of death, the birds of birth,
decay and sorrow.
[*Immortality.]
- 123. If thou art told
that to become Arhan thou hast
to cease to love all beings --
tell them they lie.
- 124. If thou art told
that to gain liberation thou
hast to hate thy mother and
disregard thy son; to disavow
thy father and call him
"householder" (124-11);
for man and beast all pity to
renounce -- tell them their
tongue is false.
(124-11).
Rathapaala, the great Arhat thus
addresses his father in the
legend called Rathapaala
Suutrasanne. But as all such
legends are allegorical (e.g.
Rathapaala's father has a
mansion with seven doors), hence
the reproof, to those who
accept them literally.
- 125. Thus teach the
Tirthikas, the unbelievers.*
[*Braahmana
ascetics.]
- 126. If thou art taught
that sin is born of action and
bliss of absolute inaction,
then tell them that they err.
Non-permanence of human
action; deliverance of mind
from thraldom by the cessation
of sin and faults, are not for
"Deva Egos."* Thus
saith the "Doctrine of
the Heart."
[*The
reincarnating Ego.]
- 127. The Dharma of the
"Eye" is the
embodiment of the external,
and the non-existing.
- 128. The Dharma of the
"Heart" is the
embodiment of Bodhi,* the
Permanent and Everlasting.
[*True,
divine Wisdom.]
- 129. The lamp burns
bright when wick and oil are
clean. To make them clean a
cleaner is required. The
flame feels not the process of
the cleaning. "The
branches of a tree are shaken
by the wind; the trunk remains
unmoved."
- 130. Both action and
inaction may find room in
thee; thy body agitated, thy
mind tranquil, thy Soul as
limpid as a mountain lake.
- 131. Wouldst thou become a Yogi of
"Time's Circle"?
Then, O Lanoo: --
- 132. Believe thou not
that sitting in dark forests,
in proud seclusion and apart
from men; believe thou not
that life on roots and plants,
that thirst assuaged with snow
from the great Range --
believe thou not, O Devotee,
that this will lead thee to
the goal of final liberation.
- 133. Think not that
breaking bone, that rending
flesh and muscle, unites thee
to thy "silent Self"
(133-12). Think not, that when
the sins of thy gross form are
conquered, O Victim of thy
Shadows (133-13), thy duty is
accomplished by nature and by
man.
(133-12). The
"Higher Self" the
"seventh" principle.
(133-13). Our
physical bodies are called
"Shadows" in the
mystic schools.
- 134. The blessed ones
have scorned to do so. The
Lion of the Law, the Lord of
Mercy,* perceiving the true
cause of human woe,
immediately forsook the sweet
but selfish rest of quiet
wilds. From AAranyaka (134-14) He
became the Teacher of mankind.
After Julai (134-15) had entered
the Nirvaana, He preached on
mount and plain, and held
discourses in the cities, to
Devas, men and gods (134-16).
[*Buddha.]
(134-14). A
hermit who retires to the
jungles and lives in a forest,
when becoming a Yogii.
(134-15).
Julai, the Chinese name for
Tathaagata, a title applied to
every Buddha.
(134-16). All
the Northern and Southern
traditions agree in showing
Buddha quitting his solitude
as soon as he had resolved the
problem of life -- i.e.,
received the inner
enlightenment -- and teaching
mankind publicly.
- 135. Sow kindly acts and
thou shalt reap their
fruition. Inaction in a deed
of mercy becomes an action in
a deadly sin. Thus saith the Sage.
- 136. Shalt thou abstain
from action? Not so shall
gain thy soul her freedom. To
reach Nirvsana one must reach
Self-Knowledge, and
Self-Knowledge is of loving
deeds the child.
- 137. Have patience,
Candidate, as one who fears no
failure, courts no success.
Fix thy Soul's gaze upon the
star whose ray thou art (137-17),
the flaming star that shines
within the lightless depths of
ever-being, the boundless
fields of the Unknown.
(137-17).
Every spiritual EGO is a ray
of a "Planetary
Spirit" according to
esoteric teaching.
- 138. Have perseverance as
one who doth for evermore
endure. Thy shadows live and
vanish (138-18); that which in
thee shall live for ever, that
which in thee knows, for it is
knowledge (138-19), is not of
fleeing life: it is the man
that was, that is, and will
be, for whom the hour shall
never strike.
(138-18).
"Personalities" or
physical bodies are called
"shadows", are
evanescent.
(138-19). Mind
(Manas) the thinking Principle
or EGO in man, is referred to
"Knowledge" itself,
because the human Egos are
called Maanasa-putras, the sons
of (universal) Mind.
- 139. If thou would'st
reap sweet peace and rest,
Disciple, sow with the seeds
of merit the fields of future
harvests. Accept the woes of
birth.
- 140. Step out from
sunlight into shade, to make
more room for others. The
tears that water the parched
soil of pain and sorrow, bring
forth the blossoms and the
fruits of Karmic retribution.
Out of the furnace of man's
life and its black smoke,
winged flames arise, flames
purified, that soaring onward,
'neath the Karmic eye, weave
in the end the fabric
glorified of the three
vestures of the Path (140-20).
(140-20).
See fn 306-34 et seq.
- 141. These vestures are:
Nirmaanakaayaa, Sambhooga-Kaayaa,
and Dharmakaayaa, robe Sublime.
(141-21).
(141-21).
Ibid.
- 142. The Shangnaa robe
(142-22), 'tis true, can purchase
light eternal. The Shangnaa
robe alone gives the Nirvaana
of destruction; it stops
rebirth, but, O Lanoo, it also
kills -- compassion. No
longer can the perfect
Buddhas, who don the
Dharmakaayaa glory, help man's
salvation. Alas! shall SELVES
be sacrificed to Self;
mankind, unto the weal of
Units?
(142-22). The
Shangnaa robe, from Shangnavasu
of Raajagriha, the third great
Arhat or "Patriarch",
as the Orientalists call the
hierarchy of the 33 Arhats who
spread Buddhism.
"Shangnaa robe" means
metaphorically, the
acquirement of Wisdom with
which the Nirvaana of
destruction (of personality) is
entered. Literally, the
"initiation robe" of
the Neophytes. Edkins states
that this "grass
cloth" was brought to
China from Tibet in the Tong
Dynasty. "When an Arhan
is born this plant is found
growing in a clean spot"
says the Chinese as also the
Tibetan legend.
- 143. Know, O beginner,
this is the Open PATH, the way
to selfish bliss, shunned by
the Boddhisattvas of the
"Secret Heart," the
Buddhas of Compassion.
- 144. To live to benefit
mankind is the first step. To
practise the six glorious
virtues (144-23) is the second.
(144-23). To
"practise the Paraamitaa
Path" means to become a
Yogii with a view of becoming
an ascetic.
- 145. To don Nirmaanakaayaa's
humble robe is to forego
eternal bliss for Self, to
help on man's salvation. To
reach Nirvaana's bliss, but to
renounce it, is the supreme,
the final step -- the highest
on Renunciation's Path.
- 146. Know, O Disciple,
this is the Secret PATH,
selected by the Buddhas of
Perfection, who sacrificed The
SELF to weaker Selves.
- 147. Yet, if the
"Doctrine of the
Heart" is too high-winged
for thee. If thou need'st
help thyself and fearest to
offer help to others, -- then,
thou of timid heart, be warned
in time: remain content with
the "Eye Doctrine"
of the Law. Hope still. For
if the "Secret Path"
is unattainable this
"day," it is within
thy reach
"to-morrow." (147-24).
Learn that no efforts, not the
smallest -- whether in right
or wrong direction -- can
vanish from the world of
causes. E'en wasted smoke
remains not traceless.
"A harsh word uttered in
past lives, is not destroyed
but ever comes again."*
The pepper plant will not give
birth to roses, nor the sweet
jessamine's silver star to
thorn or thistle turn.
(147-24).
"Torow" means
the following rebirth or
reincarnation.
[* Precepts
of the Prasanga School.]
- 148. Thou canst create
this "day" thy
chances for thy
"morrow." In the
"Great Journey,"
(148-25) causes sown each hour
bear each its harvest of
effects, for rigid Justice
rules the World. With mighty
sweep of never-erring action,
it brings to mortals lives of
weal or woe, the Karmic
progeny of all our former
thoughts and deeds.
(148-25).The
"Great Journey" or
the whole complete cycle of
existences, in one
"Round."
- 149. Take then as much as
merit hath in store for thee,
O thou of patient heart. Be
of good cheer and rest content
with fate. Such is thy Karma,
the Karma of the cycle of thy
births, the destiny of those,
who, in their pain and sorrow,
are born along with thee,
rejoice and weep from life to
life, chained to thy previous
actions.
......
- 150. Act thou for them to
"day," and they will
act for thee "tomorrow."
- 151. 'Tis from the bud of
Renunciation of the Self, that
springeth the sweet fruit of
final Liberation.
- 152. To perish doomed is
he, who out of fear of Maara
refrains from helping man,
lest he should act for Self.
The pilgrim who would cool his
weary limbs in running waters,
yet dares not plunge for
terror of the stream, risks to
succumb from heat. Inaction
based on selfish fear can bear
but evil fruit.
- 153. The Selfish devotee
lives to no purpose. The man
who does not go through his
appointed work in life -- has
lived in vain.
- 154. Follow the wheel of
life; follow the wheel of duty
to race and kin, to friend and
foe, and close thy mind to
pleasures as to pain. Exhaust
the law of Karmic retribution.
Gain Siddhis for thy future
birth.
- 155. If Sun thou can'st
not be, then be the humble
planet. Aye, if thou art
debarred from flaming like the
noon-day Sun upon the
snow-capped mount of purity
eternal, then choose, O
Neophyte, a humbler course.
- 156. Point out the
"Way" -- however
dimly, and lost among the host
-- as does the evening star to
those who tread their path in
darkness.
- 157. Behold Migmar,* as
in his crimson veils his
"Eye" sweeps over
slumbering Earth. Behold the
fiery aura of the
"Hand" of Lhagpa**
extended in protecting love
over the heads of his
ascetics. Both are now
servants to Nyima*** (157-26) left
in his absence silent watchers
in the night. Yet both in
Kalpas past were bright
Nyimas, and may in future
"Days" again become
two Suns. Such are the falls
and rises of the Karmic Law in
nature.
[*Mars.]
[**Mercury.]
[***The Sun.]
(157-26).
Nyima, the Sun in Tibetan
Astrology. Migmar or Mars is
symbolized by an
"Eye," and Lhagpa or
Mercury by a "Hand.".
- 158. Be, O Lanoo, like
them. Give light and comfort
to the toiling pilgrim, and
seek out him who knows still
less than thou; who in his
wretched desolation sits
starving for the bread of
Wisdom and the bread which
feeds the shadow, without a
Teacher, hope or consolation,
and -- let him hear the Law.
- 159. Tell him, O
Candidate, that he who makes
of pride and self-regard
bond-maidens to devotion; that
he, who cleaving to existence,
still lays his patience and
submission to the Law, as a
sweet flower at the feet of
Shzakya-Thub-pa,* becomes a
Srotzapatti (159-27) in this birth.
The Siddhis of perfection may
loom far, far away; but the
first step is taken, the
stream is entered, and he may
gain the eye-sight of the
mountain eagle, the hearing of
the timid doe.
[*Buddha.]
(159-27).
Srotaapatti or "he who
enters in the stream" of
Nirvaana, unless he reaches the
goal owing to some exceptional
reasons, can rarely attain
Nirvaana in one birth. Usually
a Chela is said to begin the
ascending effort in one life
and end or reach it only in
his seventh succeeding birth.
- 160. Tell him, O
Aspirant, that true devotion
may bring him back the
knowledge, that knowledge
which was his in former
births. The deva-sight and
deva-hearing are not obtained
in one short birth.
- 161. Be humble, if thou
would'st attain to Wisdom.
- 162. Be humbler still,
when Wisdom thou hast
mastered.
- 163. Be like the Ocean
which receives all streams and
rivers. The Ocean's mighty
calm remains unmoved; it feels
them not.
- 164. Restrain by thy
Divine thy lower Self.
- 165. Restrain by the
Eternal the Divine.
- 166. Aye, great is he,
who is the slayer of desire.
- 167. Still greater he, in
whom the Self Divine has slain
the very knowledge of desire.
- 168. Guard thou the Lower
lest it soil the Higher.
- 169. The way to final
freedom is within thy SELF.
- 170. That way begins and
ends outside of Self (170-28).
(170-28).
Meaning the personal lower
self.
- 171. Unpraised by men and
humble is the mother of all
Rivers, in Tirthika's proud
sight; empty the human form
though filled with Amrita's
sweet waters, in the sight of
fools. Withal, the
birth-place of the sacred
rivers is the sacred land
(171-29), and he who Wisdom hath,
is honoured by all men.
(171-29).
Tirthikas are the Braahmanical
Sectarians "beyond"
the Himaalayas called
"infidels" by the
Buddhists in the sacred land,
Tibet, and vice versa.
- 172. Arhans and Sages of
the boundless Vision (172-30) are
rare as is the blossom of the
Udumbara tree. Arhans are
born at midnight hour,
together with the sacred plant
of nine and seven stalks (172-31),
the holy flower that opes and
blooms in darkness, out of the
pure dew and on the frozen bed
of snow-capped heights,
heights that are trodden by no
sinful foot.
(172-30).
Boundless Vision or psychic
superhuman sight. An Arhan is
credited with
seeing and knowing
all at a distance as well as
on the spot.
(172-31). See fn
22 above: Shangnaa plant.
- 173. No Arhan, O Lanoo,
becomes one in that birth when
for the first time the Soul begins
to long for final liberation.
Yet, O thou anxious one, no
warrior volunteering fight in
the fierce strife between the
living and the dead (173-32), not
one recruit can ever be
refused the right to enter on
the Path that leads toward the
field of battle.
(173-32). The
"living" is the
immortal Higher Ego, and the
"dead" -- the lower
personal ego.
- 174. For, either he shall
win, or he shall fall.
- 175. Yea, if he conquers,
Nirvaana shall be his. Before
he casts his shadow off his
mortal coil, that pregnant
cause of anguish and
illimitable pain -- in him
will men a great and holy
Buddha honour.
- 176. And if he falls,
e'en then he does not fall in
vain; the enemies he slew in
the last battle will not
return to life in the next
birth that will be his.
- 177. But if thou would'st
Nirvaana reach, or cast the
prize away (177-33), let not the
fruit of action and inaction
be thy motive, thou of
dauntless heart.
(177-33). See
fn 306-34.
- 178. Know that the
Bodhisattva who liberation
changes for Renunciation to
don the miseries of
"Secret Life," (178-34)
is called, "thrice
Honoured," O thou
candidate for woe throughout
the cycles.
(178-34). The
"Secret Life" is
life as a Nirmaanakaayaa.
- 179. The PATH is one,
Disciple, yet in the end,
twofold. Marked are its
stages by four and seven
Portals. At one end -- bliss
immediate, and at the other --
bliss deferred. Both are of
merit the reward: the choice
is thine.
- 180. The One becomes the
Two, the Open and the Secret
(180-35). The first one leadeth
to the goal, the second, to
Self-Immolation.
(180-35). The
"Open" and the
"Secret Path" -- or
the one taught to the layman,
the exoteric and the generally
accepted, and the other the
Secret Path -- the nature of
which is explained at
initiation.
- 181. When to the
Permanent is sacrificed the
Mutable, the prize is thine:
the drop returneth whence it
came. The Open PATH leads to
the changeless change --
Nirvaana, the glorious state of
Absoluteness, the Bliss past
human thought.
- 182. Thus, the first Path
is LIBERATION.
- 183. But Path the Second
is -- RENUNCIATION, and
therefore called the
"Path of Woe.".
- 184. That Secret Path
leads the Arhan to mental woe
unspeakable; woe for the
living Dead (184-36), and helpless
pity for the men of Karmic
sorrow, the fruit of Karma
Sages dare not still.
(185-36). Men
ignorant of the Esoteric
truths and Wisdom are called
"the living Dead."
- 185. For it is written:
"teach to eschew all
causes; the ripple of effect,
as the great tidal wave, thou
shalt let run its
course.".
- 186. The "Open
Way," no sooner hast thou
reached its goal, will lead
thee to reject the
Bodhisattvic body and make
thee enter the thrice glorious
state of Dharmakaayaa (186-37) which
is oblivion of the World and
men for ever.
(186-37). See fn
306-34.
- 187. The "Secret
Way" leads also to
ParaNirvaanic bliss -- but at
the close of Kalpas without
number; Nirvaanas gained and
lost from boundless pity and
compassion for the world of
deluded mortals.
- 188. But it is said
"The last shall be the
greatest," Samyak
Sambuddha, the Teacher of
Perfection, gave up his SELF
for the salvation of the
World, by stopping at the
threshold of Nirvaana -- the
pure state.
- 189. Thou hast the
knowledge now concerning the
two Ways. Thy time will come
for choice, O thou of eager
Soul, when thou hast reached
the end and passed the seven
Portals. Thy mind is clear.
No more art thou entangled in
delusive thoughts, for thou
hast learned all. Unveiled
stands truth and looks thee
sternly in the face. She
says:
- 190. "Sweet are the
fruits of Rest and Liberation
for the sake of Self; but
sweeter still the fruits of
long and bitter duty. Aye,
Renunciation for the sake of
others, of suffering fellow
men."
- 191. He, who becomes
Pratyeka-Buddha (191-38), makes
his obeisance but to his Self.
The Bodhisattva who has won
the battle, who holds the
prize within his palm, yet
says in his divine compassion:
(191-38).
Annie Besant wrote: The
"Pratyeka Buddha stands on the level of the Buddha, but his work
for the world has nothing to do with its teaching, and his office
has always been surrounded with mystery.
The preposterous view that He, at such super-human height of
power, wisdom and life, could be selfish, is found in the exoteric
books, though it is hard to see how it can have arisen. HPB charged
me to correct the mistake, as she had, in a careless moment, copied
such a statement elsewhere."
(The Secret Doctrine, Adyar ed., 1971, v5, p399. fn.)
There follows the erroneous passage from the first edition.
[Pratyeka Buddhas are those
Bodhisattvas who strive after
and often reach the Dharmakaayaa
robe after a series of lives.
Caring nothing for the woes of
mankind or to help it, but
only for their own bliss, they
enter Nirvaana and -- disappear
from the sight and the hearts
of men. In Northern Buddhism
a "Pratyeka Buddha"
is a synonym of spiritual
Selfishness.]
- 192. "For others'
sake this great reward I
yield" -- accomplishes
the greater Renunciation.
- 193. A SAVIOUR OF THE
WORLD is he.
.......
- 194. Behold! The goal of
bliss and the long Path of Woe
are at the furthest end. Thou
canst choose either, O
aspirant to Sorrow, throughout
the coming cycles! ...
- 195. OM VAJRAPANI HUM.
The Voice of the
Silence
FRAGMENT III
THE SEVEN PORTALS
- 196. "UPAADHYAAYA (196-1),
the choice is made, I thirst
for Wisdom. Now hast thou
rent the veil before the
Secret Path and taught the
greater Yaana (196-2). Thy servant
here is ready for thy
guidance."
(196-1).
Upaadhyaaya is a spiritual
preceptor, a Guru. The
Northern Buddhists choose
these generally among the
"Naljor," saintly
men, learned in
gotrabhuu-jñaana and
jñaana-darshana-shuddhi, teachers
of the Secret Wisdom.
(196-2). Yaana
-- vehicle: thus Mahaayaana is
the "Great Vehicle,"
and Hiinayaana, the "Lesser
Vehicle," the names for
two schools of religious and
philosophical learning in
Buddhism.
- 197. 'Tis well, Shraavaka
(197-3). Prepare thyself, for
thou wilt have to travel on
alone. The Teacher can but
point the way. The Path is
one for all, the means to
reach the goal must vary with
the pilgrims.
(197-3).
Sraavaka -- a listener, or
student who attends to the
religious instructions. From
the root "Sruu." When
from theory they go into
practice or performance of
asceticism, they become
Sramanas,
"exercisers," from
Srama, action. As Hardy
shows, the two appellations
answer to the words akoustikoi
and asketai of the Greeks.
- 198. Which wilt thou
choose, O thou of dauntless
heart? The Samatan (198-4) of
"Eye Doctrine,"
four-fold Dhyaana, or thread
thy way through Paaramitaas (198-5),
six in number, noble gates of
virtue leading to Bodhi and to
Prajñaa, seventh step of
Wisdom?
(198-4).
Samtan (Tibetan), the same as
the Sanskrit Dhyaana, or the
state of meditation, of which
there are four degrees.
(198-5).
Paraamitaas, the six
transcendental virtues; for
the priests there are ten.
- 199. The rugged Path of
four-fold Dhyaana winds on
uphill. Thrice great is he
who climbs the lofty top.
- 200. The Paaraamitaa heights
are crossed by a still steeper
path. Thou hast to fight thy
way through portals seven,
seven strongholds held by
cruel, crafty powers --
passions incarnate.
- 201. Be of good cheer,
disciple; bear in mind the
golden rule. Once thou hast
passed the gate Srotaapatti
(201-6), "he who the stream
hath entered"; once thy
foot hath pressed the bed of
the Nirvaanic stream in this or
any future life, thou hast but
seven other births before
thee, [see v297] O thou of adamantine
will.
(201-6).
Srotaapatti -- (lit.) "he
who has entered the
stream" that leads to the
Nirvaanic ocean. This name
indicates the first Path. The
name of the second is the Path
of Sakridaagaamin, "he who
will receive birth (only) once
more." The third is
called Anaagaamin, "he who
will be reincarnated no
more," unless he so
desires in order to help
mankind. The fourth Path is
known as that of Rahat or
Arhat. This is the highest.
An Arhat sees Nirvaana during
his life. For him it is no
post-mortem state, but
Samaadhi, during which he
experiences all Nirvaanic
bliss.*
[* How little one can rely upon
the Orientalists for the exact
words and meaning, is
instanced in the case of three
"alleged"
authorities. Thus the four
names just explained are given
by R. Spence Hardy as: 1.
Sowaan; 2. Sakradaagaami; 3.
Anaagaami, and 4. Arya. By the
Rev. J. Edkins they are given
as: 1. Srootaapanna; 2.
Sagardagam; 3. Anaagaani, and
4. Arhan. Schlagintweit
again spells them differently,
each, moreover, giving another
and a new variation in the
meaning of the terms.]
- 202. Look on. What
see'st thou before thine eye,
O aspirant to god-like Wisdom?
- 203. "The cloak of
darkness is upon the deep of
matter; within its folds I
struggle. Beneath my gaze it
deepens, Lord; it is dispelled
beneath the waving of thy
hand. A shadow moveth,
creeping like the stretching
serpent coils. .... It
grows, swells out and
disappears in darkness."
- 204. It is the shadow of
thyself outside the Path, cast
on the darkness of thy sins.
- 205. "Yea, Lord; I
see the PATH; its foot in
mire, its summits lost in
glorious light Nirvaanic. And
now I see the ever-narrowing
Portals on the hard and thorny
way to Jñana."*
[*Knowledge, Wisdom.]
- 206. Thou seest well,
Lanoo. These Portals lead the
aspirant across the waters on
"to the other shore"
(206-7). Each Portal hath a
golden key that openeth its
gate; and these keys are: --
(206-7).
"Arrival at the
shore" is with the
Northern Buddhists synonymous
with reaching Nirvaana through
the exercise of the six and
the ten Paaramitaas (virtues).
- 207. 1. Daana, the key of
charity and love immortal.
- 208. 2. Shiila, the key
of harmony in word and act,
the key that counterbalances
the cause and the effect, and
leaves no further room for
Karmic action.
- 209. 3. Kshaanti,
patience sweet, that nought
can ruffle.
- 210. 4. Viraaga,
indifference to pleasure and
to pain, illusion conquered,
truth alone perceived.
- 211. 5. Viirya, the
dauntless energy that fights
its way to the supernal TRUTH,
out of the mire of lies
terrestrial.
- 212. 6. Dhyaana, whose
golden gate once opened leads
the Naljor* toward the realm
of Sat eternal and its
ceaseless contemplation.
[* A saint,
an adept.]
- 213. 7. Prajñaa, the key to which
makes of a man a god, creating
him a Bodhisattva, son of the
Dhyaaniis.
- 214. Such to the Portals
are the golden keys.
- 215. Before thou canst
approach the last, O weaver of
thy freedom, thou hast to
master these Paraamitaas of
perfection -- the virtues
transcendental six and ten in
number -- along the weary
Path.
- 216. For, O Disciple!
Before thou wert made fit to
meet thy Teacher face to face,
thy Master light to light,
what were thou told?
- 217. Before thou canst
approach the foremost gate
thou hast to learn to part thy
body from thy mind, to
dissipate the shadow, and to
live in the eternal. For
this, thou hast to live and
breathe in all, as all that
thou perceivest breathes in
thee; to feel thyself abiding
in all things, all things in
SELF.
- 218. Thou shalt not let
thy senses make a playground
of thy mind.
- 219. Thou shalt not separate thy
being from BEING, and the
rest, but merge the Ocean in
the drop, the drop within the
Ocean.
- 220. So shalt thou be in
full accord with all that
lives; bear love to men as
though they were thy
brother-pupils, disciples of
one Teacher, the sons of one
sweet mother.
- 221. Of teachers there
are many; the MASTER-SOUL is
one (221-8), AAlaya, the Universal
Soul. Live in that MASTER as
Its ray in thee. Live in thy
fellows as they live in It.
(221-8). The
"MASTER-SOUL" is
AAlaya, the Universal Soul or
AAtman, each man having a ray
of it in him and being
supposed to be able to
identify himself with and to
merge himself into it.
- 222. Before thou standest
on the threshold of the Path;
before thou crossest the
foremost Gate, thou hast to
merge the two into the One and
sacrifice the personal to SELF
impersonal, and thus destroy
the "path" between
the two -- antahkarana (222-9).
(222-9).
Antahkarana is the lower
Manas, the Path of
communication or communion
between the personality and
the higher Manas or human
Soul. At death it is
destroyed as a Path or medium
of communication, and its
remains survive in a form as
the Kzamaruupa -- the
"shell."
- 223. Thou hast to be
prepared to answer Dharma, the
stern law, whose voice will
ask thee at thy first, at thy
initial step:
- 224. "Hast thou
complied with all the rules, O
thou of lofty hopes?"
- 225. "Hast thou
attuned thy heart and mind to
the great mind and heart of
all mankind? For as the
sacred River's roaring voice
whereby all Nature-sounds are
echoed back (225-10), so must the
heart of him 'who in the
stream would enter,' thrill in
response to every sigh and
thought of all that lives and
breathes."
(225-10). The
Northern Buddhists, and all
Chinamen, in fact, find in the
deep roar of some of the great
and sacred rivers the key-note
of Nature. Hence the simile.
It is a well-known fact in
Physical Science, as well as
in Occultism, that the
aggregate sound of Nature - such
as heard in the roar of great
rivers, the noise produced by
the waving tops of trees in
large forests, or that of a
city heard at a distance -- is
a definite single tone of
quite an appreciable pitch.
This is shown by physicists
and musicians. Thus Prof.
Rice (Chinese Music) shows
that the Chinese recognized
the fact thousands of years
ago by saying that "the
waters of the Hoang-ho rushing
by, intoned the kung"
called "the great
tone" in Chinese music;
and he shows this tone
corresponding with the F,
"considered by modern
physicists to be the actual
tonic of Nature."
Professor B. Silliman mentions
it, too, in his Principles of
Physics, saying that
"this tone is held to be
the middle F of the piano;
which may, therefore, be
considered the key-note of
Nature."
- 226. Disciples may be
likened to the strings of the
soul-echoing Viinaa; mankind,
unto its sounding board; the
hand that sweeps it to the
tuneful breath of the GREAT
WORLD-SOUL. The string that
fails to answer 'neath the
Master's touch in dulcet
harmony with all the others,
breaks -- and is cast away.
So the collective minds of
Lanoo-Shraavakas. They have to
be attuned to the Upaadhyaaya's
mind -- one with the Over-Soul
-- or, break away.
- 227. Thus do the
"Brothers of the
Shadow" -- the murderers
of their Souls, the dread
Dad-Dugpa clan (227-11).
(227-11). The
Bhöns or Dugpas, the sect of
the "Red Caps," are
regarded as the most versed in
sorcery. They inhabit Western
and little Tibet and Bhutan.
They are all Taantrikas. It is
quite ridiculous to find
Orientalists who have visited
the borderlands of Tibet, such
as Schlagintweit and others,
confusing the rites and
disgusting practices of these
with the religious beliefs of
the Eastern Lamas, the
"Yellow Caps," and
their Naljors or holy men.
The following is an instance.
- 228. Hast thou attuned
thy being to Humanity's great
pain, O candidate for light?
- 229. Thou hast? ...
Thou mayest enter. Yet, ere
thou settest foot upon the
dreary Path of sorrow, 'tis
well thou should'st first
learn the pitfalls on the way.
. . . . . .
- 230. Armed with the key
of charity, of love and tender
mercy, thou art secure before
the gate of Daana, the gate
that standeth at the entrance
of the Path.
- 231. Behold, O happy
pilgrim! The portal that
faceth thee is high and wide,
seems easy of access. The
road that leads therethrough
is straight and smooth and
green. 'Tis like a sunny
glade in the dark forest
depths, a spot on earth
mirrored from Amitaabhaa's
paradise. There, nightingales
of hope and birds of radiant
plumage sing perched in green
bowers, chanting success to
fearless pilgrims. They sing
of Bodhisattvas' virtues five,
the fivefold source of Bodhi
power, and of the seven steps
in Knowledge.
- 232. Pass on! For thou
hast brought the key; thou art
secure.
- 233. And to the second
gate the way is verdant too.
But it is steep and winds up
hill; yea, to its rocky top.
Grey mists will over-hang its
rough and stony height, and
all be dark beyond. As on he
goes, the song of hope
soundeth more feeble in the
pilgrim's heart. The thrill
of doubt is now upon him; his
step less steady grows.
- 234. Beware of this, O candidate!
Beware of fear that spreadeth,
like the black and soundless
wings of midnight bat, between
the moonlight of thy Soul and
thy great goal that loometh in
the distance far away.
- 235. Fear, O disciple,
kills the will and stays all
action. If lacking in the
Shiila virtue, -- the pilgrim
trips, and Karmic pebbles
bruise his feet along the
rocky path.
- 236. Be of sure foot, O
candidate. In Kshaanti's*
essence bathe thy Soul; for
now thou dost approach the
portal of that name, the gate
of fortitude and patience.
- [*Kshaanti,
"patience," see v206-v214 --
the enumeration of the
golden keys.]
- 237. Close not thine
eyes, nor lose thy sight of
Dorje (237-12); Maara's arrows ever
smite the man who has not
reached Viraaga* (237-13).
(237-12).
Dorje (rdo rje,
Tibetan) is the Sanskrit Vajra, a
weapon or instrument in the
hands of some gods (the
Tibetan Dragshed, the Devas
who protect men), and is
regarded as having the same
occult power of repelling evil
influences by purifying the
air as Ozone in chemistry. It
is also a Mudraa a gesture and
posture used in sitting for
meditation. It is, in short,
a symbol of power over
invisible evil influences,
whether as a posture or a
talisman. The Bhöns or
Dugpas, however, having
appropriated the symbol,
misuse it for purposes of
Black Magic. With the
"Yellow Caps," or
Gelugpas, it is a symbol of
power, as the Cross is with
the Christians, while it is in
no way more
"superstitious."
With the Dugpas, it is like
the double triangle reversed,
the sign of sorcery.
[*Ibid.]
(237-13).
Viraaga is that feeling of
absolute indifference to the
objective universe, to
pleasure and to pain.
"Disgust" does not
express its meaning, yet it is
akin to it. [Dispassion is, perhaps,
the nearest equivalent.]
- 238. Beware of trembling.
'Neath the breath of fear the
key of Kshaanti rusty grows:
the rusty key refuseth to
unlock.
- 239. The more thou dost
advance, the more thy feet
pitfalls will meet. The path
that leadeth on, is lighted by
one fire -- the light of
daring, burning in the heart.
The more one dares, the more
he shall obtain. The more he
fears, the more that light
shall pale -- and that alone
can guide. For as the
lingering sunbeam, that on the
top of some tall mountain
shines, is followed by black
night when out it fades, so is
heart-light. When out it
goes, a dark and threatening
shade will fall from thine own
heart upon the path, and root
thy feet in terror to the
spot.
- 240. Beware, disciple, of
that lethal shade. No light
that shines from Spirit can
dispel the darkness of the
nether Soul, unless all
selfish thought has fled
therefrom, and that the
pilgrim saith: "I have
renounced this passing frame;
I have destroyed the cause:
the shadows cast can, as
effects, no longer be."
For now the last
great fight, the final war
between the Higher and the
Lower Self, hath taken place.
Behold, the very battlefield
is now engulphed in the great
war, and is no more.
- 241. But once that thou
hast passed the gate of
Kshaanti, step the third is
taken. Thy body is thy slave.
Now, for the fourth prepare,
the Portal of temptations
which do ensnare the inner
man.
- 242. Ere thou canst near
that goal, before thine hand
is lifted to upraise the
fourth gate's latch, thou must
have mustered all the mental
changes in thy Self and slain
the army of the thought
sensations that, subtle and
insidious, creep unasked
within the Soul's bright
shrine.
- 243. If thou wouldst not
be slain by them, then must
thou harmless make thy own
creations, the children of thy
thoughts, unseen, impalpable,
that swarm round humankind,
the progeny and heirs to man
and his terrestrial spoils.
Thou hast to study the
voidness of the seeming full,
the fulness of the seeming
void. O fearless Aspirant,
look deep within the well of
thine own heart, and answer.
Knowest thou of Self the
powers, O thou perceiver of
external shadows?
- 244. If thou dost not --
then art thou lost.
- 245. For, on Path fourth,
the lightest breeze of passion
or desire will stir the steady
light upon the pure white
walls of Soul. The smallest
wave of longing or regret for
Maayaa's gifts illusive, along
Antahkarana -- the path that
lies between thy Spirit and
thy self, the highway of
sensations, the rude arousers
of Ahankaara (245-14) -- a thought
as fleeting as the lightning
flash will make thee thy three
prizes forfeit -- the prizes
thou hast won.
(245-14).
Ahankaara -- the "I"
or feeling of one's
personality, the
"I-am-ness."
- 246. For know, that the
ETERNAL knows no change.
- 247. "The eight dire
miseries forsake for evermore.
If not, to wisdom, sure, thou
can'st not come, nor yet to
liberation," said the
great Lord, the Tathaagata of
perfection, "he who has
followed in the footsteps of
his predecessors." (247-15).
(247-15).
"One who walks in the
steps of his
predecessors" or
"those who came before
him," is the true meaning
of the name Tathaagata.
- 248. Stern and exacting
is the virtue of Viraaga. If
thou its path wouldst master,
thou must keep thy mind and
thy perceptions far freer than
before from killing action.
- 249. Thou hast to
saturate thyself with pure
AAlaya, become as one with
Nature's Soul-Thought. At one
with it thou art invincible;
in separation, thou becomest
the playground of Samvrtti
(249-16), origin of all the
world's delusions.
(249-16).
Samvriti is that one of the
two truths which demonstrates
the illusive character or
emptiness of all things. It
is relative truth in this
case. The Mahaayaana school
teaches the difference between
these two truths --
Paramaarthasatya and
Samvrittisatya (Satya
"truth"). This is
the bone of contention between
the Maadhyamikas and the
Yogaachaaryas, the former
denying and the latter
affirming that every object
exists owing to a previous
cause or by a concatenation.
The Maadhyamikas are the great
Nihilists and Deniers, for
whom everything is
parikalpita, an illusion and
an error in the world of
thought and the subjective, as
much as in the objective
universe. The Yogaachaaryas are
the great spiritualists.
Samvriti, therefore, as only
relative truth, is the origin
of all illusion.
- 250. All is impermanent
in man except the pure bright
essence of AAlaya. Man is its
crystal ray; a beam of light
immaculate within, a form of
clay material upon the lower
surface. That beam is thy
life-guide and thy true Self,
the Watcher and the silent
Thinker, the victim of thy
lower Self. The Soul cannot
be hurt but through thy erring
body; control and master both,
and thou art safe when
crossing to the nearing
"Gate of Balance."
- 251. Be of good cheer, O
daring pilgrim "to the
other shore." Heed not
the whisperings of Maara's
hosts; wave off the tempters,
those ill-natured Sprites, the
jealous Lhamayin (251-17) in
endless space.
(251-17).
Lhamayin are elementals and
evil spirits adverse to men
and their enemies.
- 252. Hold firm! Thou
nearest now the middle portal,
the gate of Woe, with its ten
thousand snares.
- 253. Have mastery o'er
thy thoughts, O striver for
perfection, if thou wouldst
cross its threshold.
- 254. Have mastery o'er
thy Soul, O seeker after
truths undying, if thou
wouldst reach the goal.
- 255. Thy Soul-gaze centre
on the One Pure Light, the
Light that is free from
affection, and use thy golden
Key. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
- 256. The dreary task is
done, thy labour well-nigh
o'er. The wide abyss that
gaped to swallow thee is
almost spanned. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
- 257. Thou hast now
crossed the moat that circles
round the gate of human
passions. Thou hast now
conquered Maara and his furious
host.
- 258. Thou hast removed
pollution from thine heart and
bled it from impure desire.
But, O thou glorious
combatant, thy task is not yet
done. Build high, Lanoo, the
wall that shall hedge in the
Holy Isle,* the dam that will
protect thy mind from pride
and satisfaction at thoughts
of the great feat achieved.
[*The
Higher Ego, or Thinking Self.]
- 259. A sense of pride
would mar the work. Aye,
build it strong, lest the
fierce rush of battling waves,
that mount and beat its shore
from out the great World
Maayaa's Ocean, swallow up the
pilgrim and the isle -- yea,
even when the victory's
achieved.
- 260. Thine
"Isle" is the deer,
thy thoughts the hounds that
weary and pursue his progress
to the stream of Life. Woe to
the deer that is o'ertaken by
the barking fiends before he
reach the Vale of Refuge --
Jñana Maarga, "path of
pure knowledge" named.
- 261. Ere thou canst
settle in Jñana Maarga (261-18) and
call it thine, thy Soul has to
become as the ripe mango
fruit: as soft and sweet as
its bright golden pulp for
others' woes, as hard as that
fruit's stone for thine own
throes and sorrows, O
Conqueror of Weal and Woe.
(261-18).
jñaana Maarga is the "Path
of jñaana," literally; or
the Path of pure knowledge, of
Paramaartha or (Sanscrit)
Svasamvedanaa, "the
self-evident or self-analysing
reflection."
- 262. Make hard thy Soul
against the snares of Self;
deserve for it the name of
"Diamond-Soul."
(262-19).
(262-19).
See fn 114-4
"Diamond-Soul"
or Vajradhara presides over
the Dhyaani-Buddhas.
- 263. For, as the diamond
buried deep within the
throbbing heart of earth can
never mirror back the earthly
lights; so are thy mind and
Soul; plunged in Jñana Maarga,
these must mirror nought of
Maayaa's realm illusive.
- 264. When thou hast
reached that state, the
Portals that thou hast to
conquer on the Path fling open
wide their gates to let thee
pass, and Nature's strongest
mights possess no power to
stay thy course. Thou wilt be
master of the sevenfold Path:
but not till then, O candidate
for trials passing speech.
- 265. Till then, a task
far harder still awaits thee:
thou hast to feel thyself
ALL-THOUGHT, and yet exile all
thoughts from out thy Soul.
- 266. Thou hast to reach
that fixity of mind in which
no breeze, however strong, can
waft an earthly thought
within. Thus purified, the
shrine must of all action,
sound, or earthly light be
void; e'en as the butterfly,
o'ertaken by the frost, falls
lifeless at the threshold --
so must all earthly thoughts
fall dead before the fane.
Behold it written:
- 267. "Ere the gold
flame can burn with steady
light, the lamp must stand
well guarded in a spot free
from all wind."* Exposed
to shifting breeze, the jet
will flicker and the quivering
flame cast shades deceptive,
dark and ever-changing, on the
Soul's white shrine.
[*Bhagavatgiitaa.]
- 268. And then, O thou pursuer of
the truth, thy Mind-Soul will
become as a mad elephant, that
rages in the jungle.
Mistaking forest trees for
living foes, he perishes in
his attempts to kill the
ever-shifting shadows dancing
on the wall of sunlit rocks.
- 269. Beware, lest in the
care of Self thy Soul should
lose her foothold on the soil
of Deva-knowledge.
- 270. Beware, lest in
forgetting SELF, thy Soul lose
o'er its trembling mind
control, and forfeit thus the
due fruition of its conquests.
- 271. Beware of change!
For change is thy great foe.
This change will fight thee
off, and throw thee back, out
of the Path thou treadest,
deep into viscous swamps of
doubt.
- 272. Prepare and be
forewarned in time. If thou
hast tried and failed, O
dauntless fighter, yet lose
not courage: fight on and to
the charge return again, and
yet again.
- 273. The fearless
warrior, his precious
life-blood oozing from his
wide and gaping wounds, will
still attack the foe, drive
him from out his stronghold,
vanquish him, ere he himself
expires. Act then, all ye who
fail and suffer, act like him;
and from the stronghold of
your Soul, chase all your foes
away -- ambition, anger,
hatred, e'en to the shadow of
desire -- when even you failed. . .
- 274. Remember, thou that
fightest for man's liberation
(274-20), each failure is success,
and each sincere attempt wins
its reward in time. The holy
germs that sprout and grow
unseen in the disciple's soul,
their stalks wax strong at
each new trial, they bend like
reeds but never break, nor can
they e'er be lost. But when
the hour has struck they
blossom forth (274-21).
(274-20). This
is an allusion to a well-known
belief in the East (as in the
West, too, for the matter of
that) that every additional
Buddha or Saint is a new
soldier in the army of those
who work for the liberation or
salvation of mankind. In
Northern Buddhist countries,
where the doctrine of
Nirmaanakaayaas -- those
Bodhisattvas who renounce
well-earned Nirvaana or the
Dharmakaayaa vesture (both of
which shut them out for ever
from the world of men) in
order to invisibly assist
mankind and lead it finally to
ParaNirvaana -- is taught,
every new Bodhisattva or
initiated great Adept is
called the "liberator of
mankind." The statement
made by Schlagintweit in his
"Buddhism in Tibet"
to the effect that Prulpai Ku
or "Nirmaanakaayaa" is
"the body in which the
Buddhas or Bodhi-sattvas appear
upon earth to teach men"
-- is absurdly inaccurate and
explains nothing.
(274-21). A
reference to human passions
and sins which are slaughtered
during the trials of the
novitiate, and serve as
well-fertilized soil in which
"holy germs" or
seeds of transcendental
virtues may germinate.
Pre-existing or innate
virtues, talents or gifts are
regarded as having been
acquired in a previous birth.
Genius is without exception a
talent or aptitude brought
from another birth.
- 275. But if thou camest
prepared, then have no fear. . . . . .
- 276. Henceforth thy way
is clear right through the
Viirya gate, the fifth one of
the Seven Portals. Thou art
now on the way that leadeth to
the Dhyaana haven, the sixth,
the Bodhi Portal.
- 277. The Dhyaana gate is
like an alabaster vase, white
and transparent; within there
burns a steady golden fire,
the flame of Prajñaa that
radiates from AAtman.
- 278. Thou art that vase.
- 279. Thou hast estranged
thyself from objects of the
senses, travelled on the
"Path of seeing," on
the "Path of
hearing," and standest in
the light of Knowledge. Thou
hast now reached Titiksha
state (279-22).
(279-22).
Titiikshaa is the fifth state of
Raja Yoga -- one of supreme
indifference; submission, if
necessary, to what is called
"pleasures and pains for
all," but deriving
neither pleasure nor pain from
such submission -- in short,
the becoming physically,
mentally, and morally
indifferent and insensible to
either pleasure or pain.
- 280. O Naljor thou art
safe.
. . . . . .
- 281. Know, Conqueror of
Sins, once that a Sowanee (271-23)
hath cross'd the seventh Path,
all Nature thrills with joyous
awe and feels subdued. The
silver star now twinkles out
the news to the
night-blossoms, the streamlet
to the pebbles ripples out the
tale; dark ocean-waves will
roar it to the rocks
surf-bound, scent-laden
breezes sing it to the vales,
and stately pines mysteriously
whisper: "A Master has
arisen, a MASTER OF THE
DAY" (281-24).
(281-23).
Sowani is one who practices
Sowan, the first path in
Dhyaana, a Srotaapatti.
(281-24).
"Day" means here a
whole Manvantara, a period of
incalculable duration.
- 282. He standeth now like
a white pillar to the west,
upon whose face the rising Sun
of thought eternal poureth
forth its first most glorious
waves. His mind, like a
becalmed and boundless ocean,
spreadeth out in shoreless
space. He holdeth life and
death in his strong hand.
- 283. Yea, He is mighty.
The living power made free in
him, that power which is
HIMSELF, can raise the
tabernacle of illusion high
above the gods, above great
Brahm and Indra. Now he shall
surely reach his great reward!
- 284. Shall he not use the
gifts which it confers for his
own rest and bliss, his
well-earn'd weal and glory --
he, the subduer of the great
Delusion?
- 285. Nay, O thou
candidate for Nature's hidden
lore! If one would follow in
the steps of holy Tathaagata,
those gifts and powers are not
for Self.
- 286. Would'st thou thus
dam the waters born on Sumeru?
(286-25) Shalt thou divert the
stream for thine own sake, or
send it back to its prime
source along the crests of
cycles?
(286-25).
Mount Meru, the sacred
mountain of the Gods.
- 287. If thou would'st
have that stream of
hard-earn'd knowledge, of
Wisdom heaven-born, remain
sweet running waters, thou
should'st not leave it to
become a stagnant pond.
- 288. Know, if of
Amitaabha, the "Boundless
Age," thou would'st
become co-worker, then must
thou shed the light acquired,
like to the Bodhisattvas twain
(288-26), upon the span of all
three worlds (288-27).
(288-26). In
the Northern Buddhist
symbology, Amitaabhaa or
"Boundless Space"
(Parabrahma) is said to have in
his paradise two Bodhisattvas
-- Kwan-shi-yin and Tashishi
-- who ever radiate light over
the three worlds where they
live, including our own (see
288-27), in order to help with
this light (of knowledge) in
the instruction of Yogis, who
will, in their turn, save men.
Their exalted position in
Amitaabhaa's realm is due to
deeds of mercy performed by
the two, as such Yogiis, when
on earth, says the allegory.
(288-27).
These three worlds are the
three planes of being, the
terrestrial, astral and the
spiritual.
- 289. Know that the stream
of superhuman knowledge and
the Deva-Wisdom thou hast won,
must, from thyself, the
channel of AAlaya, be poured
forth into another bed.
- 290. Know, O Naljor, thou
of the Secret Path, its pure
fresh waters must be used to
sweeter make the Ocean's
bitter waves -- that mighty
sea of sorrow formed of the
tears of men.
- 291. Alas! when once thou
hast become like the fix'd
star in highest heaven, that
bright celestial orb must
shine from out the spatial
depths for all -- save for
itself; give light to all, but
take from none.
- 292. Alas! when once thou
hast become like the pure snow
in mountain vales, cold and
unfeeling to the touch, warm
and protective to the seed
that sleepeth deep beneath its
bosom -- 'tis now that snow
which must receive the biting
frost, the northern blasts,
thus shielding from their
sharp and cruel tooth the
earth that holds the promised
harvest, the harvest that will
feed the hungry.
- 293. Self-doomed to live
through future Kalpas,*
unthanked and unperceived by
man; wedged as a stone with
countless other stones which
form the "Guardian
Wall" (293-28), such is thy
future if the seventh gate
thou passest. Built by the
hands of many Masters of
Compassion, raised by their
tortures, by their blood
cemented, it shields mankind,
since man is man, protecting
it from further and far
greater misery and sorrow.
[*Cycles
of ages.]
(293-28). The
"Guardian Wall" or
the "Wall of
Protection." It is taught
that the accumulated efforts
of long generations of Yogiis,
Saints and Adepts, especially
of the Nirmaanakaayaas -- have
created, so to say, a wall of
protection around mankind,
which wall shields mankind
invisibly from still worse
evils.
- 294. Withal man sees it
not, will not perceive it, nor
will he heed the word of
Wisdom . . . for he knows it
not.
- 295. But thou hast heard
it, thou knowest all, O thou
of eager guileless Soul. . . . .
and thou must choose.
Then hearken yet again.
- 296. On Sowan's Path, O
Srotaapatti,* thou art secure.
Aye, on that Maarga,** where
nought but darkness meets the
weary pilgrim, where torn by
thorns the hands drip blood,
the feet are cut by sharp
unyielding flints, and Maara
wields his strongest arms --
there lies a great reward
immediately beyond.
[*Sowan
and Srotaapatti are synonymous
terms.]
[**Maarga
-- "Path." ]
- 297. Calm and unmoved the
Pilgrim glideth up the stream
that to Nirvaana leads. He
knoweth that the more his feet
will bleed, the whiter will
himself be washed. He knoweth
well that after seven short
and fleeting births Nirvaana
will be his. . . .
- 298. Such is the Dhyaana
Path, the haven of the Yogii,
the blessed goal that
Srotaapattis crave.
- 299. Not so when he hath
crossed and won the AArhata
Path.*
[*From the
Sanscrit Arhat or Arhan.]
- 300. There Klesha (300-29) is
destroyed for ever, Tanhaa's
(300-30) roots torn out. But
stay, Disciple . . . Yet,
one word. Canst thou destroy
divine COMPASSION? Compassion
is no attribute. It is the
LAW of LAWS -- eternal
Harmony, AAlaya's SELF; a
shoreless universal essence,
the light of everlasting
Right, and fitness of all
things, the law of love
eternal.
(300-29).
Klesha is the love of pleasure
or of worldly enjoyment, evil
or good.
(300-30).
Tanhaa, the will to live, that
which causes rebirth.
- 301. 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
(301-31).
(301-31). This
"compassion" must
not be regarded in the same
light as "God, the divine
love" of the Theists.
Compassion stands here as an
abstract, impersonal law whose
nature, being absolute
Harmony, is thrown into
confusion by discord,
suffering and sin.
- 302. Such is the AArya
Path, Path of the Buddhas of
perfection.
- 303. Withal, what mean
the sacred scrolls which make
thee say?
- 304. "Om! I believe
it is not all the Arhats that
get of the Nirvaanic Path the
sweet fruition."
- 305. "Om! I believe
that the Nirvaana-Dharma is
entered not by all the
Buddhas"* (305-32).
- [*Thegpa Chengoido,
"Mahaayaana Suutra,"
Invocations to the Buddhas of
Compassion," Part I.,
iv.]
(305-32). In
the Northern Buddhist
phraseology all the great
Arhats, Adepts and Saints are
called Buddhas.
- 306. "Yea; on the
AArya Path thou art no more
Srotaapatti, thou art a
Bodhisattva (306-33). The stream
is cross'd. 'Tis true thou
hast a right to Dharmakaaya
vesture; but Samboogakaayaa is
greater than a Nirvaanii, and
greater still is a Nirmaanakaaya
-- the Buddha of Compassion"
(306-34).
(306-33). A
Bodhisattva is, in the
hierarchy, less than a
"perfect Buddha." In
the exoteric parlance these
two are very much confused.
Yet the innate and right
popular perception, owing to
their self-sacrifice, has
placed a Bodhisattva higher in
its reverence than a Buddha.
(306-34). This
same popular reverence calls
"Buddhas of
Compassion" those
Bodhisattvas who, having
reached the rank of an Arhat
(i.e., having completed the
fourth or seventh Path),
refuse to pass into the
Nirvaanic state or "don
the Dharmakaayaa robe and cross
to the other shore," as
it would then become beyond
their power to assist men even
so little as Karma permits.
They prefer to remain
invisibly (in Spirit, so to
speak) in the world, and
contribute toward man's
salvation by influencing them
to follow the Good Law, i.e.,
lead them on the Path of
Righteousness. It is part of
the exoteric Northern Buddhism
to honour all such great
characters as Saints, and to
offer even prayers to them, as
the Greeks and Catholics do to
their Saints and Patrons; on
the other hand, the esoteric
teachings countenance no such
thing. There is a great
difference between the two
teachings. The exoteric
layman hardly knows the real
meaning of the word
Nirmaanakaayaa -- hence the
confusion and inadequate
explanations of the
Orientalists. For
Schlagintweit believes that
Nirmaanakaayaa means the
physical form assumed by the
Buddhas when they incarnate on
earth -- "the least
sublime of their earthly
encumbrances" (see
Buddhism in Tibet)
-- and he proceeds to give an
entirely false view on the
subject. The real teaching
is, however, this: -- The
three Buddhic bodies or forms
are styled: --
1.
Nirmaanakaayaa.
2.
Sambhoogakaayaa.
3. Dharmakaayaa.
The first is that ethereal
form which one would assume
when leaving his physical he
would appear in his astral
body -- having in addition all
the knowledge of an Adept.
The Bodhisattva develops it in
himself as he proceeds on the
Path. Having reached the goal
and refused its fruition, he
remains on Earth, as an Adept;
and when he dies, instead of
going into Nirvaana, he remains
in that glorious body he has
woven for himself, invisible
to uninitiated mankind, to
watch over and protect it.
Sambhoogakaayaa is the same, but
with the additional lustre of
"three perfections,"
one of which is entire
obliteration of all earthly
concerns.
The Dharmakaayaa body
is that of a complete Buddha,
i.e., no body at all, but an
ideal breath: Consciousness
merged in the Universal
Consciousness, or Soul devoid
of every attribute. Once a
Dharmakaayaa, an Adept or Buddha
leaves behind every possible
relation with, or thought for,
this earth. Thus, to be
enabled to help humanity, an
Adept who has won the right to
Nirvaana, "renounces the
Dharmakaayaa body" in
mystic parlance; keeps, of the
Sambhoogakaayaa, only the great
and complete knowledge, and
remains in his Nirmaanakaayaa
body. The esoteric school
teaches that Gautama Buddha
with several of hid Arhats
is such a Nirmaanakaayaa,
higher than whim, on account of
the great renunciation and sacrifice
to mankind, there is none known.
- 307. Now bend thy head
and listen well, O Bodhisattva
-- Compassion speaks and
saith: "Can there be
bliss when all that lives must
suffer? Shalt thou be saved
and hear the whole world
cry?"
- 308. Now thou hast heard
that which was said.
- 309. Thou shalt attain
the seventh step and cross the
gate of final knowledge but
only to wed woe -- if thou
would'st be Tathaagata, follow
upon thy predecessor's steps,
remain unselfish till the
endless end.
- 310. Thou art enlightened
-- Choose thy way.
. . . . . .
- 311. Behold, the mellow
light that floods the Eastern
sky. In signs of praise both
heaven and earth unite. And
from the four-fold manifested
Powers a chant of love
ariseth, both from the flaming
Fire and flowing Water, and
from sweet-smelling Earth and
rushing Wind.
- 312. Hark! . . . from
the deep unfathomable vortex
of that golden light in which
the Victor bathes, ALL
NATURE'S wordless voice in
thousand tones ariseth to
proclaim:
- 313. JOY UNTO YE, O MEN
OF MYALBA (313-35).
(313-35).
Myalba is our earth --
pertinently called
"Hell," and the
greatest of all Hells, by the
esoteric school. The esoteric
doctrine knows of no hell or
place of punishment other than
on a man-bearing planet or
earth. Aviichii is a state and
not a locality.
- 314. A PILGRIM HATH
RETURNED BACK "FROM THE
OTHER SHORE."
- 315. A NEW ARHAN (315-36) IS
BORN. . . .
(315-36).
Meaning that a new and
additional Saviour of mankind
is born, who will lead men to
final Nirvaana, i.e., after the
end of the life-cycle.
- 316. Peace to all beings
(316-37).
(316-37). This
is one of the variations of
the formula that invariably
follows every treatise,
invocation or Instruction.
"Peace to all
beings," "Blessings
on all that Lives,"
&c., &c.
spell-checked, footnotes moved, reset in HTML v4.0 during Nov-Dec 1999;
dual person checking Dec, Jan, Feb.