THEOSOPHICAL N«I1I. :h death AND AFTER 1 Annie Besant THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES Theosophical Manuals. No. 3. DEATH-AND AFTER? BY ANNIE BESANT TWENTY-THIRD THOUSAND LONDON THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY City Agents: PERCY LUND, HUMPHRIES & CO. Amen Corner, E.C. 1914 Price One Shilling Net 5^3 1?3f PREFACE Few words are needed in sending this little hook out into the world. It is the third of a series of Manuals designed to meet the public demand for a simple exposition of Theosophical teachings. Some have complained that our literature is at once too abstruse, too tecJinical, and too expensive for the ordinary reader, and it is our hope that the present series may succeed in supplying what is a very real wattt. Theosophy is not only for the learned ; it is for all. Perhaps among those who in these little books catch their first glimpse of its teachings, there may be a few who will be led by them to penetrate more deeply into its philosophy, its science, and its religion, facing its abstruser problems with the student's zeal and the neophyte's ardour. But these Manuals are not written for the eager student, whom no initial difficulties can daunt ; they are written for the btisy men and women of the work-a-day world, and seek to -make plain some of the great truths that render life easier to bear and death easier to face. Written by servants of the Masters who are the Elder Brothers of our race, they can have no other object than to serve our fellow-men. 829307 CONTENTS VIEWS OF DEATH .... THE IMMORTAL AND THE PERISHABLE THE FATE OF THE BODY THE FATE OF THE ETHERIC DOUBLE KAMALOKA, DESIRE-LAND, AND THE FATE OF DESIRES „ THE SHELLS . „ THE ELEMENTARIES DEVACHAN .... THE DEVACHANI THE RETURN TO EARTH NIRVANA COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN EARTH AND OTHER SPHERES APPENDIX— SUICIDES INDEX PASSIONS PAGE 5 12 15 23 27 43 46 48 60 68 71 72 83 87 ; ; 7 aiid uplifted dart, a bony scarecrow shaking an hour- glass—all that could alarm and repel has been gathered , r5oun4 this rightly-named King of Terrors. Milton, who., hag^done so much with his stately rhythm to mould the popular conceptions of modern Christianity, has used all the sinewy strength of his magnificent diction to surround with horror the figure of Death. The other shape, If shape it might be called, that shape had none Distinguishable in member, joint, or limb, Or substance might be called that shadow seemed. For each seemed either ; black it stood as night. Fierce as ten furies, terrible as hell, And shook a dreadful dart ; what seemed his head The likeness of a kingly crown had on. Satan was now at hand, and from his seat The monster moving onward came as fast. With horrid strides ; hell trembled as he strode . . . ... So spoke the grisly terror ; and in shape So speaking, and so threatening, grew tenfold More dreadful and deform . . . but he, my inbred enemy. Forth issued, brandishing his fatal dart. Made to destroy : I fled, and cried out Death ! Hell trembled at the hideous name, and sighed From all her caves, and back resounded Death} That such a view of Death should be taken by the professed followers of a Teacher said to have " brought life and immortality to light " is passing strange. The claim, that as late in the history of the world as a mere eighteen centuries ago the immortality of the Spirit in man was brought to light, is of course transparently absurd, in the face of the overwhelming evidence to ^ Book ii., from lines 666-789. The whole passage bristles with horrors. 8 the contrary available on all hands. The stately Egyptian Ritual with its Book of the Dead, in which are traced the post-mortem journeys of the Soul, should be enough, if it stood alone, to put out of court for ever so preposterous a claim. Hear the cry of the Soul of the righteous : ye, who make the escort of the God, stretch out to me your arms, for I become one of you (xvii. 22). Hail to thee, Osiris, Lord of Light, dvveUing in the mighty abode, in the bosom of the absolute darkness. I come to thee, a purified Soul ; my two hands are around thee (xxi. i). 1 open heaven ; I do what was commanded in Memphis. I have knowledge of my heart ; I am in possession of my heart, I am in possession of my arms, I am in possession of my legs, at the will of myself My Soul is not imprisoned in my body at the gates of Amenti (xxvi. 5, 6). Not to multiply to weariness quotations from a book that is wholly composed of the doings and sayings of the disembodied man, let it suffice to give the final judgment on the victorious Soul : The defunct shall be deified among the Gods in the lower divine region, he shall never be rejected. . . . He shall drink from the current of the celestial river. . . . His Soul shall not be imprisoned, since it is a Soul that brings salvation to those near it. The worms shall not devour it (clxiv. 14-16). (The general belief in Re-incarnation is enough to prove that the religions of which it formed a central doctrine believed in the survival of the Soul after Death ; )but one may quote as an example a passage from the Ordinances of Manu, following on a disquisi- tion on metempsychosis, and answering the question of deliverance from rebirths. Amid all these holy acts, the knowledge of self [should be trans- lated, knowledo^e of the Self, Atma] is said (to be) the highest ; this indeed is the foremost of all sciences, since from it immortality is obtained.' The testimony of the great Zarathustrean Religion is clear, as is shown by the following, translated from the Avesta, in which, the journey of the Soul after death having been described, the ancient Scripture proceeds : The soul of the pure man goes the first step and arrives at (the Paradise) Humata ; the soul of the pure man takes the second step and arrives at (the Paradise) Hukhta ; it goes the third step and arrives at (the Paradise) Hvarst ; the soul of the pure man takes the fourth step and arrives at the Eternal Lights. To it speaks a pure one deceased before, asking it : How art thou, O pure deceased, come away from the fleshly dwellings, from the earthly possessions, from the corporeal world hither to the invisible, from the perishable \\ orld hither to the imperishable, as it happened to thee — to whom hail ! Then speaks Ahura-Mazda : Ask not him whom thou asketh, (for) he is come on the fearful, terrible, trembling way, the separation of body and soul.^ The Persian Desatir speaks with equal definiteness. This work consists of fifteen books, written by Persian prophets, and was written originally in the Avestaic language ; " God " is Ahura-Mazda, or Yazdan : God selected man from animals to confer on him the soul, which is a substance free, simple, immaterial, non-compounded and non- appetitive. And that becomes an angel by improvement. By his profound wisdom and most sublime intelligence, he con- nected the soul with the material body. ^ xii. 85. Trans, of Burnell and Hopkins. '^ From the translation of Dhunjeebhoy Jamsetjee Medhora, Zoroastrian and some other Ancient Systems, xxvii. lO If he (man) does good in the material body, and has a good knowledge and religion he is Hartasp. . . . As soon as he leaves this material body, I (God) take him up to the world of angels, that he may have an interview with the angels, and behold me. As if he is not Hartasp, but has wisdom and abstains from vice, I will promote him to the rank of angels. Every person in proportion to his wisdom and piety will find a place in the rank of wise men, among the heavens and stars. And m that region of happiness he will remain for ever.^ In China, the immemorial custom of worshipping the Souls of ancestors shows how completely the life of man was regarded as extending beyond the tomb. The Shii King — placed by Mr. James Legge as the most ancient of Chinese classics, containing historical documents ranging from B.C. 2357-627 — is full of allusions to these Souls, who with other spiritual beings, watch over the affairs of their descendants and the welfare of the kingdom. Thus Pan-kang, ruling from B.C. 1401-1374, exhorts his subjects : My object is to support and nourish you all. I think of my ancestors (who are now) the spiritual sovereigns. . . . Were I to err in my government, and remain long here, my high sovereign (the founder of our dynasty) would send down on me great punishment for my crime, and say, " Why do you oppress my people ?" If you, the myriads of the people, do not attend to the perpetuation of your lives, and cherish one mind with me, the One man, in my plans, the former kings will send down on you great punishment for your crime, and say, " Why do you not agree with our young grandson, but go on to forfeit your virtue?" When they punish you from above, you will have no way of escape. . . . Your ancestors and fathers will (now) cut you off and abandon you, and not save you from death. ^ ^ Trans, by Mirza Mohamed Hadi, The Flatonist, 306. ' The Sacred Books of the East, iii. 109, no. II Indeed, so practical is this Chinese behef, held to-day as in those long-past ages, that "the change that men call Death" seems to play a very small part in the thoughts and lives of the people of the Flowery Land. These quotations, which might be multiplied a hundredfold, may suffice to prove the folly of the idea that immortality came to " Hght through the Gospel. " The whole ancient world basked in the full sunshine of belief in the immortality of man, lived in it daily, voiced it in its literature, went with it in calm serenity through the gate of Death. It remains a problem why Christianity, which vigorously and joyously re-affirmed it, should have growing in its midst the unique terror of Death that has played so large a part in its social life, its literature, and its art. It is not simply the belief in hell that has surrounded the grave with horror, for other Religions have had their hells, and yet their followers have not been harassed by this shadowy F'ear. The Chinese, for instance, who take Death as such a light and trivial thing, have a collection of hells quite unique in their varied unpleasantness. Maybe the difference is a question of race rather than of creed ; that the vigorous life of the West shrinks from its antithesis, and that its unimaginative common-sense finds a bodiless condition too lacking in solidity of comfort ; whereas the more dreamy, mystical East, prone to meditation, and ever seeking to escape from the thraldom of the senses during earthly life, looks on the disembodied state as eminently desirable, and as most conducive to unfettered thought. Ere passing to the consideration of the history of 12 man in the post-mortem state, it is necessary, however briefly, to state the constitution of man, as viewed by the Esoteric Philosophy, for we must have in mind the constituents of his being ere we can understand their disintegration. Man then consists of TJie hnmortal Triad : the Individual. Atma, or Spirit as Will. Buddhi, ,, ,, ,, Intuition. Manas, ,, ,, ,, Intellect. TJie Perishable Quaternary : the Person. Lower Manas, or Mind. Kama, or Desire. Prana, as Energising Vitality. ,, ,, Automatic ,, If we consider the bodies of man, the dense body is the visible, tangible outer form, composed of various tissues. The etheric double is the ethereal counterpart of the body, composed of the physical ethers. Prana is vitality, the integrating energy that co-ordinates the physical molecules and holds them together in a definite organism ; it is the life-breath within the organism, the portion of the universal Life-Breath, appropriated by the organism during the span of existence that we speak of as "a life," and appears in two forms in the dense and etheric parts of the physical body. Kama is the aggregate of appetities, passions, and emotions, common to man and brute, the emotions evolving to a higher point in man under the play of the lower mind. Manas is the Thinker in us, the Intellect. Buddhi is the aspect of the Spirit, which manifests above the Intellect. Now the link between the Immortal Triad and the Perishable Quaternary is Intellect, which is dual during earth life, or incarnation, and functions as Intellect and Mind. Intellect sends out a Ray, Mind, which works in and through the human brain, functioning there as brain-consciousness, as the ratiocinating intelligence. This mingles with Desire, the passional nature, the passions and emotions thus becoming a part of Mind, as defined in Western Psychology. And so we have the link formed between the higher and lower natures in man, this Desire-Mind belonging to the higher by its intellectual, and to the lower by its emotional, elements. As this forms the battleground during life, so does it play an important part in post-mortem exist- ence. We might now classify our seven principles a little differently, having in view this mingling in Desire- Mind of perishable and imperishable elements : r Will. Imniortal . . . \ Intuition (intellect. Conditionally Imniortal Desire-Mind. ( Desire. Mortal . . .J Energising Vitality. (Automatic ,, Some Christian writers have adopted a classification similar to this, declaring Spirit to be inherently im- mortal, as being Divine ; Soul to be conditionally im- mortal, i.e.^ capable of winning immortality by uniting itself with Spirit ; Body to be inherently mortal. The majority of uninstructed Christians chop man into two, the Body that perishes at Death, and the something — called indifferently Soul or Spirit — that survives Death. This last classification — if classification it may be called — is entirely inadequate, if we are to seek any rational explanation, or even lucid statement, of the phenomena of post-mortem existence. The tripartite view of man's nature gives a more reasonable representation of his constitution, but is inadequate to explain many pheno- mena. The septenary division alone gives a reasonable theory consistent with the facts we have to deal with, and therefore, though it may seem elaborate, the student will do wisely to make himself familiar with it. If he were studying only the body, and desired to understand its activities, he would have to classify its tissues at far greater length and with far more minute- ness than I am using here. He would have to learn the differences between muscular, nervous, glandular, bony, cartilaginous, epithelial, connective tissues, and all their varieties ; and if he rebelled, in his ignorance, against such an elaborate division, it would be explained to him that only by such an analysis of the different components of the body can the varied and complicated phenomena of life-activity be under- stood. One kind of tissue is wanted for support, another for movement, another for secretion, another for absorption, and so on ; and if each kind does not have its own distinctive name, dire confusion and mis- 15 understanding must result, and physical functions remain unintelligible. In the long run time is gained, as well as clearness, by learning a few necessary technical terms, and as clearness is above all things needed in trying to explain and to understand very complicated post-mortem phenomena, I find myself compelled — contrary to my habit in these elementary papers — to resort to these technical names at the outset, for the English language has as yet no equivalents for them, and the use of long descriptive phrases is ex- tremely cumbersome and inconvenient. For myself, I believe that very much of the antagon- ism between the adherents of the Esoteric Philosophy and those of Spiritualism has arisen from confusion of terms, and consequent misunderstanding of each other's meaning. One eminent Spiritualist lately impatiently said that he did not see the need of exact definition, and that he meant by Spirit all the part of man's nature that survived Death, and was not body. One might as well insist on saying that man's body consists of bone and blood, and asked to define blood, answer : "Oh! I mean everything that is not bone." A clear definition of terms, and a rigid adherence to them when once adopted, will at least enable us all to understand each other, and that is the first step to any fruitful comparison of experiences. The Fate of the Body The human body is constantly undergoing a process of decay and of reconstruction. First builded into the i6 etheric form in the womb of the mother, it is built up continually by the insetting of fresh materials. With every moment tiny molecules are passing away from it ; with every moment tiny molecules are streaming into it. The outgoing stream is scattered over the environment, and helps to rebuild bodies of all kinds in the mineral, vegetable, animal, and human kingdoms, the physical basis of all these being one and the same. The idea that the human tabernacle is built by countless lives, just in the same way as the rocky crust of our Earth was, has nothing repulsive in it for the true mystic. . . . Science teaches us that the living as well as the dead organism of both man and animal are swarming with bacteria of a hundred various kinds ; that from without we are threatened with the invasion of microbes with every breath we draw, and from within by leucomaines, aerobes, anaerobes, and what not. But Science never yet went so far as to assert with the Occult Doctrine that our bodies, as well as those of animals, plants, and stones, are themselves altogether built up of such beings, which, except larger species, no microscope can detect. So far as regards the purely animal and material portion of man, Science is on its way to discoveries that will go far towards corroborating this theory. Chemistry and physiology are the two great magicians of the future, who are destined to open the eyes of mankind to the great physical truths. With every day, the identity between the animal and physical man, between the plant and man, and even between the reptile and its nest, the rock, and man, is more and more clearly shown. The physical and chemical constituents of all being found to be identical, chemical Science may well say that there is no difference between the matter which composes the ox and that which forms man. But the Occult Doctrine is far more explicit. It says : Not only the chemical compounds are the same, but the same infinitesimal invisible lives compose the atoms of the bodies of the mountain and the daisy, of man and the ant, of the elephant, and of the tree which shelters him from the sun. Each particle — whether you call it organic or inorganic — is a life.'^ ^ Secret Doctrine, vol. i. p. 281. These "lives" which, separate and independent, are the minute vehicles of Automatic Vitalit)', aggregated together form the molecules and cells of the physical body, and they stream in and stream out, during all the years of bodily life, thus forming a continual bridge between man and his environment. Controlling these are the " Fier)' Lives," Energising Vitality, which constrain these to their work of building up the cells of the body, so that they work harmoniously and in order, subordinated to the higher manifestation of life in the complex organism called Man. These Fiery Lives on our plane correspond, in this controlling and organising function, with the One Life of the Universe,^ and when they no longer exercise this function in the human body, the lower lives run rampant, and begin to break down the hitherto definitely organised body. During bodily life they are marshalled as an army ; marching in regular order under the command of a general, performing various evolutions, keeping step, moving as a single body. At " Death " they become a disorganised and tumultuous mob, rushing hither and thither, jostling each other, tumbling over each other, with no common object, no generally recognised authority. The body is never more alive than when it is dead ; but it is alive in its units, and dead in its totality , alive as a congeries, dead as an organism. Science regards man as an aggregation of atoms temporarily united by a mysterious force called the life-principle. To the Materialist, the only difference between a living and a dead body is that in the one case that force is active, in the other latent. When it is ' See Secret Doctrine, vol. i. p. 25^3. extinct or entirely latent, the molecules obey a superior attraction, which draws them asunder and scatters them through space. This dispersion must be Death, if it is possible to conceive such a thing as Death, where the very molecules of the dead body manifest an intense vital energy. . . . Says Eliphas Levi : " Change attests movement, and movement only reveals life. The corpse would not decompose if it were dead ; all the molecules which compose it are living and struggle to separate."^ Those who have read TJie Seven Principles of Man ^'^ know that the etheric double is the vehicle of Prana, the life-principle, or vitality. Through the etheric double Prana exercises the controlling and co-ordinating force spoken of above, and "Death" takes triumphant pos- session of the body when the etheric double is finally withdrawn and the delicate cord which unites it with the body is snapped. The process of withdrawal has been watched by clairvoyants, and definitely described. Thus Andrew Jackson Davis, "the Poughkeepsie Seer," describes how he himself watched this escape of the ethereal body, and he states that the magnetic cord did not break for some thirty-six hours after apparent death. Others have described, in similar terms, how they saw a faint violet mist rise from the dying body, gradually condensing into a figure which was the counterpart of the expiring person, and attached to that person by a glisten- ing thread. The snapping of the thread means the breaking of the last magnetic link between the dense body and the remaining principles of the human constitu- tion ; the body has dropped away from the man ; he is excarnated, disembodied ; six principles still remain as '- his Unveiled, vol. i. p. 480. ^ Theosophical Manuals, No. i. 19 his constitution immediately after death, the seventh, or the dense body, being left as a cast-off garment. Death consists, indeed, in a repeated process of unrobing, or unsheathing. The immortal part of man shakes off from itself, one after the other, its outer casings, and — as the snake from its skin, the butterfly from its chrysalis — emerges from one after another, passing into a higher state of consciousness. Now it is the fact that this escape from the body, and this dwell- ing of the conscious entity either in the vehicle called the body of desire, the kamic or astral body, or in a yet more ethereal Thought Body, can be effected during earth-life ; so that man may become familiar with the excarnated condition, and it may lose for him all the terrors that encircle the unknown. He can know him- self as a conscious entity in either of these vehicles, and so prove to his own satisfaction that "life" does not depend on his functioning through the physical body. Why should a man who has thus repeatedly ' ' shed " his lower bodies, and has found the process result, not in unconsciousness, but in a vastly extended freedom and vividness of life — why should he fear the final casting away of his fetters, and the freeing of his Immortal Self from what he realises as the prison of the flesh? This view of human life is an essential part of the Esoteric Philosophy. Man is primarily divine, a spark of the Divine Life. This living flame, passing out from the Central Fire, weaves for itself coverings within which it dwells, and thus becomes the Triad, the Atma-Buddhi- Manas, or Spirit, the reflection of the Immortal Self. 20 This sends out its Ray, which becomes encased in grosser matter, in the desire body, or kamic elements, the passional nature, and in the etheric double and the physical body. The once free immortal Intelligence thus entangled, enswathed, enchained, works heavily and laboriously through the coatings that enwrap it. In its own nature it remains ever the free Bird of Heaven, but its wings are bound to its side by the matter into which it is plunged. When man recognises his own inherent nature, he learns to open his prison doors occasionally and escapes from his encircling gaol ; first he learns to identify himself with the Immortal Triad, and rises above the body and its passions into a pure mental and moral life ; then he learns that the conquered body cannot hold him prisoner, and he un- locks its door and steps out into the sunshine of his true life. So when Death unlocks the door for him, he knows the country into which he emerges, having trodden its ways at his own will. And at last he grows to recognise that fact of supreme importance, that "Life" has nothing to do with body and with this material plane ; that Life is his conscious existence, unbroken, unbreakable, and that the brief interludes in that Life, during which he sojourns on Earth, are but a minute fraction of his conscious existence, and a fraction, moreover, during which he is less alive, because of the heavy coverings which weigh him down. For only during these interludes (save in exceptional cases) may he wholly lose his consciousness of continued life, being surrounded by these coverings which delude him and blind him to the truth of things, making that real 21 which is illusion, and that stable which is transitory. The sunlight ranges over the universe, and at incarna- tion we step out of it into the twilight of the body, and see but dimly during the period of our incarceration ; at Death we step out of the prison again into the sun- light, and are nearer to the reality. Short are the twilight periods, and long the periods of the sunlight ; but in our blinded state we call the twilight life, and to us it is the real existence, while we call the sunlight Death, and shiver at the thought of passing into it. Well did Giordano Bruno, one of the greatest teachers of our Philosophy in the Middle Ages, state the truth as to the body and Man. Of the real Man he says : He will be present in the body in such wise that the best part of himself will be absent from it, and will join himself by an indis- soluble sacrament to divine things, in such a way that he will not feel either love or hatred of things mortal. Considering himself as master, and that he ought not to be servant and slave to his body, which he would regard only as the prison which holds his liberty in confinement, the glue which smears his wings, chains which bind fast his hands, stocks which fix his feet, veil which hides his view. Let him not be servant, captive, ensnared, chained, idle, stolid, and blind, for the body which he himself abandons cannot tyrannise over him, so that thus the spirit in a certain degree comes before him as the corporeal world, and matter is subject to the divinity and to nature.^ When once we thus come to regard the body, and by conquering it we gain our liberty. Death loses for us all his terrors, and at his touch the body slips from us as a garment, and we stand out from it erect and free. On the same lines of thought Dr Franz Hartmann writes : 1 The Heroic Enthusiasts, trans, by L. Williams, part ii. pp. 22, 23. 22 According to certain views of the West, man is a developed ape. According to the views of Indian Sages, which also coincide with those of the Philosophers of past ages and with the teachings of the Christian Mystics, man is a God, who is united during his earthly life, through his own carnal tendencies, to an animal (his animal nature). The God who dwells within him endows man with wisdom. The animal endows him with force. After death, the God effects his own release from the man by departing from the animal body. As man carries within him this divine consciousness, it is his task to battle with his animal inclinations, and to raise himself above them, by the help of the divine principle, a task which the animal cannot achieve, and which therefore is not demanded of it.' The " man," using the word in the sense of person- ality, as it is used in the latter half of this sentence, is only conditionally immortal ; the true man, the evolving God, releases himself, and so much of the personality goes with him as has raised itself into union with the divine. The body thus left to the rioting of the countless lives — previously held in constraint by Prana, acting through its vehicle the etheric double — begins to decay, that is to break up, and with the disintegration of its cells and molecules, its particles pass away into other combinations. On our return to Earth we may meet again some of those same countless lives that in a previous incarnation made of our then body their passing dwelling ; but all that we are just now concerned with is the breaking up of the body whose life-span is over, and its fate is complete disintegration. To the dense body, then. Death means dissolution as an organism, the loosing of the bonds that united the many into one. 1 Cremation, Theosophical Siftings, vol. iii. 23 The Fate of the Ethkric Double The etheric double is the ethereal counterpart of the gross body of man. It is the double that is sometimes seen during life in the neighbourhood of the body, and its absence from the body is generally marked by the heaviness or semi-lethargy of the latter. Acting as the reservoir, or vehicle, of the life-principle during earth- life, its withdrawal from the body is naturally marked by the lowering of all vital functions, even while the cord which unites the two is still unbroken. As has been already said, the snapping of the cord means the death of the body. When the etheric double finally quits the body, it does not travel to any distance from it. Normally it remains floating over the body, the state of conscious- ness being dreamy and peaceful, unless tumultuous dis- tress and violent emotion surround the corpse from which it has just issued. And here it may be well to say that during the slow process of dying, while the etheric double is withdrawing from the body, taking with it the higher principles, as after it has withdrawn, extreme quiet and self-control should be observed in the chamber of Death. For during this time the whole life passes swiftly in review before the Ego, the individual, as those have related who have passed in drowning into this unconscious and pulseless state. A Master has written : At the last moment the zvhole life is reflected in our memory^ mid emerges from all the forgotten nooks and corners, picture after picture, one event after another. . . . TJie man may often appear dead, yet from the last pulsation, from and between the last throbbing of his heart and the moment when the last spark of animal heat leaves the body, the brain thinks, and the Ego lives over in those few brief seconds his whole life. Speak in ivhispers, ye who assist at a deathbed, and find yourselves in the solemn presence of death. Especially have ye to keep quiet Just after death has laid her clammy hand upon the body. Speak iji ivhispers, I say, lest ye disturb the quiet ripple of tJiougJit, and hinder the busy ivork of the past, casting its refection upon the veil of the future.^ This is the time during which the thought-images of the ended earth-life, clustering around their maker, group and interweave themselves into the completed image of that life, and are impressed in their totality on the Astral Light. The dominant tendencies, the strongest thought- habits, assert their pre-eminence, and stamp themselves as the characteristics which will appear as "innate qualities " in the succeeding incarnation. This balanc- ing-up of the life-issues, this reading of the karmic records, is too solemn and momentous a thing to be disturbed by the ill-timed wailings of personal relatives and friends. At the solemn moment of death every man, even when death is sudden, sees the whole of his past life marshalled before him, in its minutest details. For one short instant the personal become one with the individual and all-knowing Ego. But this instant is enough to show to him the whole chain of causes which have been at work during his life. He sees and now understands himself as he is, unadorned by flattery or self-deception. He reads his life, remaining as a spectator, looking down into the arena he is quitting.^ ' Man: Fragments of Forgotten History, pp. 119, 120. ^ Key to Theosophy, H. P. Blavatsky, p. 109. Third Edition. 25 This vivid sight is succeeded, in the ordinary person, by the dream}', peaceful semi-consciousness spoken of above, as the etheric double floats above the body to which it has belonged, now completely separated from it. Sometimes this double is seen by persons in the house, or in the neighbourhood, when the thought of the dying has been strongly turned to someone left behind, when some anxiety has been in the mind at the last, something left undone which needed doing, or when some local disturbance has shaken the tranquillity of the passing entity. Under these conditions, or others of a similar nature, the double may be seen or heard ; when seen, it shows the dreamy, hazy consciousness alluded to, is silent, vague in its aspect, unresponsive. As the days go on, the five higher principles gradually disengage themselves from the etheric double, and shake this off as they previously shook off the grosser body. They pass on, as a fivefold entity, into a state to be next studied, leaving the etheric double, with the dense body of which it is the counterpart, thus becoming an ethereal corpse, as much as the body had become a dense corpse. This ethereal corpse remains near the dense one, and they disintegrate together ; clairvoyants see these ethereal wraiths in churchyards, sometimes showing likeness to the dead dense body, sometimes as violet mists or lights. Such an ethereal corpse has been seen by a friend of my own, passing through the horribly re- pulsive stages of decomposition, a ghastly vision in face of which clairvoyance was certainly no blessing. The process goes orv pari passu, until all but the actual bony 26 skeleton of the dense body is completely disintegrated, and the particles have gone to form other combinations. One of the great advantages of cremation — apart from all sanitary conditions — lies in the swift restora- tion to Mother Nature of the physical elements compos- ing the dense and ethereal corpses, brought about by the burning. Instead of slow and gradual decomposi- tion, swift dissociation takes place, and no physical remnants are left, working possible mischief. The ethereal corpse may to some extent be revivified for a short period after its death. Dr. Hartmann says : The fresh corpse of a person who has suddenly been killed may be galvanised into a semblance of life by the application of a galvanic battery. Likewise the astral corpse of a person may be brought back into an artificial life by being infused with a part of the life principle of the medium. If that corpse is one of a very intellectual person, it may talk very intellectually ; and if it was that of a fool, it will talk like a fool.^ This mischievous procedure can only be carried out in the neighbourhood of the corpse, and for a very limited time after death, but there are cases on record of such galvanising of the ethereal corpse, performed at the grave of the departed person. Needless to say that such a process belongs distinctly to "Black" Magic, and is wholly evil. Ethereal corpses, like dense ones, if not swiftly destroyed by burning, should be left in the silence and the darkness, a silence and a darkness that it is the worst profanity to break. ' Magic, White and Black, Dr. Franz Hartmann, pp. 109, 1 10. Third Edition, 27 Kamaloka, Desire-Land, and the Fate of Passions and Desires Loka is a Samskrit word that may be translated as place, world, land, so that Kamaloka is literally the place or the world of Desire, Kama being the name of that part of the human organism that includes all the passions, desires, and emotions which man has in common with the lower animals.^ In this division of the universe, the Kamaloka, dwell all the human entities that have shaken off the dense body and its ethereal double, but have not yet disentangled them- selves from the passional and emotional nature. Kama- loka has many other tenants, but we are concerned only with the human beings who have lately passed through the gateway of Death, and it is on these that we must concentrate our study. A momentary digression may be pardoned on the question of the existence of regions in the universe, other than the physical, peopled with intelligent beings. The existence of such regions is postulated by the Esoteric Philosophy, and is known to the Adepts and to very many less highly evolved men and women by personal experience ; all that is needed for the study of these regions is the evolution of the faculties latent in every man; a "living" man, in ordinary parlance, can leave his dense and ethereal bodies behind him, and explore these regions without going through Death's gateway. Thus we read in the Theosophist that real knowledge may be acquired by the Spirit in the living ^ See The Seven Principles of Man, pp. 17-21. 28 man coming into conscious relations with the world of Spirit. As in the case, say, of an initiated Adept, who brings back upon earth with him the clear and distinct recollection — correct to a detail — of facts gathered, and the information obtained, in the in- visible sphere of Realities} In this way those regions become to him matters of knowledge as definite, as certain, as familiar, as if he should travel to Africa in ordinary fashion, explore its deserts, and return to his own land the richer for the knowledge and experience gained. A seasoned African explorer would care but little for the criticisms passed on his report by persons who had never been thither ; he might tell what he saw, describe the animals whose habits he had studied, sketch the country he had traversed, sum up its products and its characteristics. If he was contradicted, laughed at, set right, by un- travelled critics, he would be neither ruffled nor dis- tressed, but would merely leave them alone. Ignorance cannot convince knowledge by repeated asseveration of its nescience. The opinion of a hundred persons on a subject on which they are wholly ignorant is of no more weight than the opinion of one such person. Evidence is strengthened by many consenting witnesses, testifying each to his knowledge of a fact, but nothing multiplied a thousand times remains nothing. Strange, indeed, would it be if all the Space around us be empty, mere waste void, and the inhabitants of earth the only forms in which intelligence could clothe itself. As Dr. Huxley said : ^ Theosophist, March 1882, p. 158, note. Without stepping beyond the analogy of that which is known, it is easy to people the cosmos with entities, in ascending scale, until we reach something practically indistinguishable from omnipotence, omnipresence, and omniscience.^ If these entities did not have organs of sense Hke our own, if their senses responded to vibrations different from those which affect ours, they and we might walk side by side, pass each other, meet each other, pass through each other, and yet be never the wiser as to each other's existence. Mr Crookes gives us a gHmpse of the possibiHty of such unconscious co-existence of intelHgent beings, and but a very sHght effort of imagina- tion is needed to reaHse the conception. It is not improbable that other sentient beings have organs of sense which do not respond to some or any of the rays to which our eyes are sensitive, but are able to appreciate other vibrations to which we are blind. Such beings would practically be living in a different world to our own. Imagine, for instance, what idea we should form of surrounding objects were we endowed with eyes not sensitive to the ordinary rays of light, but sensitive to the vibra- tions concerned in electric and ma^jnetic phenomena. Glass and crystal would be among the most opaque of bodies. Metals would be more or less transparent, and a telegraph wire through the air would look like a long narrow hole drilled through an impervious solid body. A dynamo in active work would resemble a conflagra- tion, whilst a permanent magnet would realise the dream of mediaeval mystics, and become an everlasting lamp with no ex- penditure of energy or consumption of fuel. - Kamaloka is a region peopled by intelligent and semi-intelligent entities, just as our own is thus peopled ; it is crowded, like our world, with many types and forms of living things, as diverse from each other as a ' Essays upon some Controverted Questions, p. 36. "^ Fortnightly Review, 1892, p. 176. 30 blade of grass is dififerent from a tiger, a tiger from a man. It interpenetrates our own world and is inter- penetrated by it, but, as the states of matter in the two worlds differ, they co-exist without the knowledge of the intelligent beings in either. Only under ab- normal circumstances can consciousness of each other's presence arise among the inhabitants of the two worlds ; by certain peculiar training a living human being can come into conscious contact with and control many of the sub-human denizens of Kamaloka ; human beings, who have quitted earth and in whom the kamic elements were strong, may very readily be attracted by the kamic elements in embodied men, and by their help become conscious again of the presence of the scenes they had left ; and human beings still embodied may set up methods of communication with the disem- bodied, and may, as said, leave their own bodies for awhile, and become conscious in Kamaloka by the use of faculties through which they have accustomed their consciousness to act. The point which is here to be clearly grasped is the existence of Kamaloka as a definite region, inhabited by a large diversity of entities, among whom are disembodied human beings. From this necessary digression we return to the particular human being whose fate, as a type, we may be said to be tracing, and of whose dense body and etheric double we have already disposed. Let us con- template him in the state of very brief duration that follows the shaking off of these two casings. Says H. P. Blavatsky, after quoting from Plutarch a descrip- tion of the man after death : 31 Here you have our doctrine, which shows man a septenary during life ; a quintile just after death, in Kamaloka.' Prana, the portion of the Hfe-energy appropriated by the man in his embodied state, having lost its vehicle, the ethereal double, which, with the physical body, has slipped away from its controlling energy, must pass back into the great life-reservoir of the universe. As water enclosed in a glass vessel and plunged into a tank mingles with the surrounding water if the vessel be broken, so Prana, as the bodies drop from it, mingles again with the Life Universal. It is only "just after death " that man is a quintile, or fivefold in his constitu- tion, for Prana, as a distinctively human principle, cannot remain appropriated when its vehicle disintegrates. The man now is clothed, but with the Kama Rupa, or body of Kama, the desire body, a body of astral matter, often termed " fluidic," so easily does it, during earth-life, take any form impressed upon it from with- out or moulded from within. The living man is there, the immortal Triad, still clad in the last of its terres- trial garments, in the subtle, sensitive, responsive forms which lent it during embodiment the power to feel, to desire, to enjoy, to suffer, to think, in the physical world. When the man dies, his three lower principles leave him for ever ; i.e., body, life, and the vehicle of the latter, the etheric body, or the double of the living man. And then his four principles — the central or middle principle (the animal soul or Kama Rupa, with what it has assimilated from the lower Manas) and the higher Triad — find themselves in Kamaloka.^ 1 Key io Theosophy, p. 67. - Ibid. , p. 97. 32 This desire body undergoes a marked change soon after death. The different densities of the astral matter of which it is composed arrange themselves in a series of shells or envelopes, the densest being outside, shutting the consciousness away from all but very limited con- tact and expression. The consciousness turns in on itself, if left undisturbed, and prepares itself for the next step onwards, while the desire body gradually disinte- grates, shell after shell. Up to the point of this re-arrangement of the matter of the desire body, the post-mortem experience of all is much the same; it is a "dreamy, peaceful semi-consciousness," as before said, and this, in the happiest cases, passes without vivid awakening into the deeper " pre-devachanic unconsciousness" which ends with the blissful wakening in Devachan, heaven, for the period of repose that intervenes between two incarna- tions. But as, at this point, different possibilities arise, let us trace, a normal uninterrupted progression in Kamaloka, up to the threshold of Devachan, and then we can return to consider other classes of circumstances. If a person has led a pure life, and has steadfastly striven to rise and to identify himself with the higher rather than the lower part of his nature, after shaking off the dense body and the etheric double, and after Prana has re-mingled with the ocean of Life, and he is clothed only with the Kama Riapa, the passional elements in him, being but weak and accustomed to comparatively little activity, will not be able to assert themselves strongly in Kamaloka. Now during earth- life Kama and the Lower Manas are strongly united 33 and interwoven w ith each other ; in the case we are considering Kama is weak, and the Lower Manas has purified Kama to a great extent. The mind, woven with the passions, emotions, and desires, has purified them, and has assimilated their pure part, absorbed it into itself, so that all that is left of Kama is a mere residue, easily to be gotten rid of, from which the Immortal Triad can readil}- free itself. Slowly this Immortal Triad, the true Man, draws in all his forces ; he draws into himself the memories of the earth-life just ended, its loves, its hopes, its aspirations, and prepares to pass out of Kamaloka into the blissful rest of Devachan, the *' abode of the Gods," or, as some say, "the land of bhss." Kamaloka is an astral locality, the Limbus of scholastic theology, the Hades of the ancients, and, strictly speaking, a locality only in a relative sense. It has neither a definite area, nor boundary, but exists within subjective space, /., 76 et seq- Theosophist, The, summarised, 77, 82, 83. Unconscious co-existence of in- telligent beings, 28 et seq. Vishnu Purdna, quoted, 59. rRINTED BY NEILL AND CO., LTD., EDINBURGH. TT^ UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. ■p>.s '■ 1 1 198 Ul^ REC'D LI>URi: MAR15 1984 LOS ANGELES 3 1158 00039 0319 UC SOUTHER^I RH;">"."' ! ii=i-VM^v I Aril iTY AA 001 346 754 3