[Page 1]
I
PROPOSE to take for tonight a matter which is full of deep interest, I think, to everyone, as everyone comes
in the way of it — the Meaning and the Use of
Pain. First of all as to the meaning. You may remember that when I was speaking here, I think the last time,
I tried to explain to you something of the nature of man and the way in which man's true Self, his innermost
Self, was to be regarded as the man working in the different bodies or sheaths, and so manifesting consciousness
in different ways. You may remember that I laid considerable stress on the fact that it is always the Self
that is working, and that if we want to understand the human constitution we must realise that the spiritual
Self lies at the root of all activities, and that the different characteristics of the activities depend not
on a difference in the Self, but on a difference in the medium — or the qualities — through which
he is at work. Now, I want you to start with that conception tonight, adding to it another which I think I
mentioned previously, but which is essential for the work that I have to do [Page 2] now — to
explain to you the meaning and the use of pain.
The spiritual Self is conscious on his own plane from the very beginning. Offspring of the Universal Consciousness,
what else could he be? But as he descends into this manifested universe, and as he clothes himself in body after
body, or in sheath
after sheath, the eyes, so to speak, of the Self become blinded by these successive veils that he wraps around
him, and so when he arrives at the lowest stage of his manifestation — this physical universe in which
we are — the Spirit has become blinded by Matter, and is no longer conscious of his own high destiny or
of his own essential nature in the physical universe.
Now, it is this blinded Self, as we know, that comes into
the manifested universe for the sake of learning and of gathering experience. Let us think of him for a moment
as wearing those bodies that by this time must have become so familiar to you — the body in which he thinks,
the mind or
mentality; the body in which he feels, that we generally speak of as the “body of desire”,
because feeling and desire are so very closely connected, and feelings of pleasure and of pain arise from contact
with things from without, which work on this body of desire, and make it to be either attracted to or repelled
from external objects.
Think, then, for a moment of the Self clothed in this body of desire, and blinded by it to his own [Page
3] real nature and to the true conditions in which he finds himself.
He will be attracted by all sorts of external objects; attracted by those from which he
gains the sensation of pleasure, repelled, of course, by those from which he feels the sensation of pain.
So that coming into this world of which he knows nothing, you must remember, for I am taking him in the very
earliest stages of his experience — coming into this world of which he knows nothing, he will naturally
be strongly attracted to that which gives him pleasure by contact, which makes him feel that which he recognises
as joy or happiness or content. Thus attracted to everything which appears to him desirable, he will often find
that the gratification of desire is followed by suffering. Attracted by the desirable object, and without experience
which would enable him to distinguish and to discriminate, he flings himself, as it were, towards this attractive
thing, only knowing that he feels pleasure in the contact. Presently out of this contact, which was pleasurable,
pain grows up; and by that pain he finds that he has flung himself against something that is not desirable, but
repellent. And over and over and over again he will have this experience; constantly reiterated he will find
this lesson, which is taught him by the external universe.
Let us take two very common animal appetites which,
thus attracted and gratified by pleasure, turn into sources of pain. Let us take that of [Page
4] attractive
food, which would work on the sense of taste, which is part of the body of desire; this food will attract the
sense of taste, and the unconscious Spirit — unconscious, that is, on this plane as to the results that
will follow — is run away with by this pleasure of contact; if I may repeat the old Eastern simile that
I have used so often, that the senses are like horses that are yoked to the chariot of the body, and that carry
away the Soul towards the objects of desire. He will gratify, then, the sense of taste to excess; he will pass
into gluttony. The result of this gratification of the sense of taste without experience will be the pain that
will follow on the over-gratification. So again if he gratifies the sense of taste, say by over-drinking, by
the taking of alcohol.
There again pain will follow on the gratification of the immediate desire. And when this has been repeated over
and over and over again, this Spirit — which as mind is able to think — connects the two things
together, connects the gratification of the desire with the pain which follows on that gratification, and in
this way he gradually comes to understand that there are laws in the universe connected with his physical body,
and that if he comes into contact with those laws and tries to violate them, he will suffer as a result. It is
just as though a person flung himself against an invisible wall and was bruised by the contact. Over and over
again a person might thus fling himself, attracted by [Page 5] some object visible
on the other side of this invisible barrier but if he bruised himself every time, he would learn to connect the
going after that object with the pain which he felt. Thus there would grow up in his mind the idea of sequence,
of cause and effect, of the relationship existing between the gratification and the suffering which followed
after it; in this way there would become impressed on this infant mind that is learning its lessons, that there
is something in the world that is stronger than itself — a Law which it cannot break; a Law which it may
endeavour to violate but which it cannot violate, and which will prove its existence by the suffering which is
inflicted when the Spirit flings himself against that barrier.
And thus with object of desire after object of desire this lesson will be learned, until an accumulated mass
of experience will gradually be gained by the Spirit, and he will learn by pain to regulate his desires and no
longer to let the horses of the senses gallop whithersoever they will, but to curb them and rein them in, and
permit them only to go along the roads that are really desirable. Thus the lesson of self-control
will be the result of this painful experience.
Now it may be said here, or thought, that after all we have this
body of desire in common with the lower animal, and that the lower animal is in one curious way distinct from
man: that it is mostly guided to the avoidance of this painful experience by what we call instinct; that while
man has the
[Page 6] experience constantly until he learns self-control, the animal by an innate
inherited experience, as it has been called, which we speak of as instinct, is, to a very great extent at least,
preserved from this experience of pain. And that is so. Observing the fact, we ask the reason. And the reason
is not far to seek. First, I ought perhaps to say, in order to guard against possibility of mistake, that people
to some extent exaggerate the force of instinct in the highest animals. In the lower animals the rule of instinct
is fairly complete. In the higher animals it is less complete
than in the lower, and some experience is often needed by them before the instinct becomes a thoroughly safe
guide for them.
And the reason in their case, and the deeper reason in our own case, is this: that in man you have not only to
deal with this body of desire — which, if it were alone, would be guided by an external law, which would
direct it towards the objects that were healthful and health-giving and make it avoid the objects which were
fatal or dangerous — but you have in man the coming in of the Soul: that is, of the individualised Spirit,
which is not to be compelled by a Law from without, but evolved by a Law from within; it is not simply to be
forced into conformity with outside Nature by the compulsion to which the mineral, the vegetable, and the animal
kingdoms are subjected; it is no longer the case of evolution in the aggregate, of the [Page
7] collective evolution
which, in order that it may take place effectively, must be under the control of an external Law. Man is to take
his evolution into his own hands; his evolution is to be by experience and not by compulsion; for at this period
of evolution Spirit has become individualised by the sheath of mind, and the accumulating experience of the reincarnating
Soul is to take the place of the compulsory education of the lower realms in Nature.
And so it is the presence of manas, or mind, in man that makes this element of pain so necessary a part of his
education. He is able to remember, he is able to compare, he is able to draw this link of relation between the
things that form the sequence of events; and just because he has this power of thought, of mind, he is able to
take his growth into his own hands, that he may become a fellow-worker with Nature; not merely a brick as it
were in her edifice, but a self-conscious builder, taking part in that building of the whole.
And so gradually
by this education of pain, working upon mind through the body of desire, this knowledge of Law in the external
universe grows up. So that here the meaning of pain is hostile contact with Law, the effort to break Law that
never can succeed; and the use of pain is the gaining of the knowledge of Law, and so the guiding and the education
of the lower nature by the reasoning intelligence. [Page 8]
Let us pass from that view of pain to another. By
pain this growing Soul has learned the existence of Law. The next use that is found in pain is a deeper one.
By pain is rooted out desire for every object in the external universe, found, in the language of the Bhagavat-Gītā,
to prove one of “the wombs of pain”. Desire is that which draws the Soul to re-birth; desire is that
which fundamentally causes the manifestation of the universe. It was when “Desire first arose in the bosom
of the Eternal” that the germ of the manifested universe appeared; and so always it is desire that leads
to manifestation — whether of the whole or of the part; and desire continually draws back the Soul over
and over again to earth.
Notice that it is desire which draws the Soul outwards, always outwards, to the external. And the education
of the Soul consists in this passing out into the external, gathering there all knowledge, and then by experience
losing its taste for the external, and carrying inwards the knowledge it has obtained. But suppose that objects
of desire remained desirable, then there would be no end to the revolution of the wheel of births and deaths;
then there could be no garnering, as it were, of knowledge, and no real evolution of the highest possibilities.
For remember that human perfection is not the end of our growth; it is the end of the present cycle; but this
is only the preparation for another, and those who become [Page 9] perfect men in
the present cycle are those who, from the calmness of Nirvāna, are to come out in the next period of manifestation,
no longer men to be educated, but Builders and Gods to guide the next manifested universe, passing on into that
higher sphere of activity and utilising there the experiences that here they have won. It is thus essential that
these manifesting Souls that today are human but in future millenniums are to be divine — it is necessary
that they shall not only gather knowledge but shall also carry it back with them, and so make it part of their
own future being; and in order that this may be done, desire must gradually change its nature until at last it
vanishes away.
The objects of the lowest external world must become undesirable to the Soul that
has gained knowledge; the objects of each phase of the external world, subtle or physical, must become undesirable;
everything must become undesirable save the Eternal, which is the essence of the Soul himself: and so gradually
the Soul learns by pain in the physical universe to get rid of desire.
There is no other way in which desire
can be conquered. You might, if there were no pain in the gratification of these external desires, you might
by strong will hold back the horses and prevent them from galloping along the road along which you did not choose
that they should go. But you want to do more than hold them back by [Page 10] force — that
is a very elementary stage of the progress of the Soul: you want them no longer to desire to gallop after these
objects; that is, you want to cut off the very root of desire, and that can only be by the objects that once
attracted losing their power of attraction, so that they no longer can draw the Soul outwards; then the Soul,
having exhausted everything that he can learn from the object, and having found it productive of pain in the
end, no longer finds it desirable, but casts it aside, and carries away only the knowledge he has gained. For
the Soul is like the bee that visits the flower; it does not need to remain always in the flower, it needs only
the honey that the flower contains; when it has gathered the honey, the flower is no longer desirable to it.
And when the Soul has gathered the honey of knowledge from the flowers of earth, then it is the use of pain that
he no longer feels desire for the flower; he has gained from it all that is needed for the lesson, and the pain
destroys desire and throws the Soul inward on himself.
If you think it over at your leisure you will not, I think, be able to invent any other way of really getting
rid of desire. And unless you can get rid of desire for the things of the physical world, you will never feel
the inner drawing, first to the things of the mind, and then to those of the Higher Life, which it is the very
object of the Soul's evolution to make the experience of all that are born into the world. [Page
11]
But what
other use has pain ? We have found out two — the learning of Law and the gradual extirpation of desire.
The next lesson that we learn through pain is the transitory nature of all that is not of the essence of the
Spirit himself. In one of the many allegories of the Hindu Scriptures you may read how the God of Death looking
at men and sorrowing over their sorrows, wept as he contemplated Humanity; and as the tears of Yama dropped upon
the earth they turned into diseases and miseries which afflicted human kind. Why should the pity of the God have
been turned into scourges for the torturing of man? These allegories are always worth thinking over, for always
under the veil of the allegory is hidden some truth which reaches you the more surely because of the simile under
which it is veiled. What is the God of Death? He is as it were, the incarnation of change. Sometimes we hear
of Yama as
Destroyer; the truer word is Regenerator; for there is no such thing as destruction in the manifested universe.
Always that which on one side is death; on another side is birth; and that which is change and which seems to
destroy, is that which in another aspect is giving new form and new shape to the life which is seeking embodiment.
And so Yama, the God of Death, is the great representative of change — the change which marks manifestation,
the change which is in everything save in the Eternal itself; and inasmuch as [Page 12] he
who is change incarnate weeps over men, it is natural that his tears should be the things that teach men the
transitory nature of all that surrounds them. And these miseries and diseases into which turn the tears of the
God of Death are the lessons which in guise of pain bring the most useful teaching of all — that nothing
that is transitory can satisfy the Soul, and that only by learning the transitory nature of the lower life will
the Soul turn to that in which true happiness and satisfaction must lie. Thus, the teaching of the transitoriness
of all things is the object of these tears of Yama, and he shows the deepest compassion in the lessons that by
pain he gives to human kind. For in this fashion, by disease and misery, by poverty and by grief, we learn that
everything that surrounds us — not only in the physical world, but also in the region of desire, and in
the region of the mind itself — that
all these things are changing, and that in the changing he who is changeless may never find his rest. For at
heart we are the Eternal and not the transient; the centre of our life, the very Self within us, is immortal
and eternal, he can never change nor die.
Therefore, nothing that changes can satisfy him; nothing over which Death has power can bring to him final happiness
and peace. But he must learn this lesson through pain, and only in that learning lies the possibility of final
joy. Thus the Soul
also learns the difference between the stages of [Page 13] transitoriness; very
slow are these lessons in the learning, and many a life it takes to complete them. At first the Soul will not
think of the Eternal being that in which he must rest; but he will learn to turn from the physical to the mental,
to turn from the sensuous to the intellectual, because relatively the one is permanent to the other, and the
happinesses of the mind are lasting as compared with the pleasures of the body. And in the slow course of evolution
that lesson is learned long before the lessons of the Spirit are touched, and man becomes a higher creature when
he has learned to dominate the animal side and to find satisfaction in the mind and in the intelligence, so that
the pleasures of the aesthetic
tastes overbear the pleasures of the body, and the pleasures of the mind and of the intellect and of the intelligence
are more attractive than the pleasures of the lower senses.
Thus man is gradually evolving today, and the great
work of human evolution at the present time — speaking of the average human evolution — is not the
evolution of the Spirit, but this evolution of the relatively permanent as compared with the senses, and of the
body in which the waking consciousness of man is still so active.
So that what man on the average needs to do is to turn his desires from the transient to the relatively permanent,
and rather to cultivate the mind and the intelligence and the artistic side of Nature, instead of seeking the
gratification of the senses which he has in common [Page 14] with the lower forms
of animal life. And those are helping human evolution who are turning away from the life of the body and are
training themselves in the life of the mind, who are seeking the relatively permanent; although in its turn it
will be found to be transitory, still it is a step upward, it is the drawing away of desire from the body to
the mind, from the senses to the internal organ, from sensations to ideas and images, and that is part of the
experience of the indrawing Soul, which draws himself away from the senses and fixes himself for a while in the
inner organ of the mind. And then that inner organ is also found only to
give rise to things that are transitory. See, yet, how great is the gain for conflict between men is over when
the desire turns to the intelligence, to the inner organ instead of to the outer things of sense. The things
of sense are limited; and men fight the one with the other in order to get their share of the limited quantity.
The things of the tastes, the higher tastes, and of the intelligence are practically unlimited, and there is
no conflict between men for them; for no man is the poorer because his brother is richly gifted artistically
or intellectually; none has his own share diminished because his brothers share is great. And so humanity progresses
from competition to co-operation, and learns the lesson of Brotherhood: that the richer you are in intellect
the more you can give and the less you need grudge, seeing that we [Page 15] are going upwards to the Higher
Life where all is giving, and where none desires to seize for self. For in this middle region of intellect and
of the higher tastes and emotions, there is no need for grudging; but all may share what they have, and find
themselves, after the sharing. the richer and not the poorer for the giving.
But even then it is found that satisfaction
does not lie that way, for still it is of the nature of desire. On this I pause one moment. On the realisation
of the principle that I am now going to put to you depends the whole direction of your life.
If you seek gratification of desire you will never find happiness, for every desire that is gratified gives birth
to a new desire, and the more desires you gratify the more open mouths there are which demand that they shall
be filled. Says an ancient Scripture:
As well might you try to put out a fire by pouring upon it melted butter,
as try to get rid of desire by filling
it with the objects of desire.
— a saying that is worthy your long and thoughtful consideration. For if happiness does not lie that way, then the great majority of people, especially in civilised lands, are on the wrong road to happiness: they will never reach it along the road they travel. And if you notice the demand of modern life, it is always for more of the same thing which is already possessed — that is, for the multiplication of the objects of desire, and so the [Page 16] continual increase of the longings which cannot be gratified. I might put it in a somewhat rough form which comes to my mind, because it was quoted to me the other day as an illustration of the way in which, with the narrowness of thought, this idea of more and more of the same thing comes out increasingly. You remember the story of the rustic who was asked what would make him completely happy, and he said: “To sit upon a gate and swing, and chew fat bacon all day”. Then he was asked: “Suppose you could have something more to make you happy, what would you ask for ?” And he said: “More swinging on a gate, and more fat bacon”. Now, that is a rough way of putting it; but it is essentially the answer the majority of people make. They may have a higher desire, I grant, than sitting on a gate and eating fat bacon; but the principle of their desire is the same as the principle of the rustic — that they want more of these things that they already possess, and that they do not realise that happiness does not lie in this increasing gratification of desires, but in the transmuting of the desire for the transitory into the aspiration to the Eternal, and the complete changing of the nature from that which seeks to enjoy to that which seeks to give. And if this be true, then in your search for happiness you had better consider on what line you are travelling; for if you be travelling along the line of the gratification of desire, [Page 17] then no matter how much you refine it, you are travelling along a road that is practically an endless circle, and that will always leave you unsatisfied and never give you the bliss which is the natural goal of the Spirit in man.
“We feel the slanders and the criticisms of mankind just as much as the heights of the Himalayas feel the hissing of the serpents that glide around their feet.”
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