HORNET
The
Wolseley Hornet 1960s model
An
upmarket version of the Mini
A
1930s Wolseley Hornet sports car
The
bodywork for these was made to order by a coachbuilder
of
the customer’s choice and there were many variations of this car.
The
series ran from 1930 to 1935
The Wolseley Hornet both in its 1930s sports
car
incarnation, and its 1960s posh mini version,
has
very little (in fact nothing) to do with
Theosophy
but we have found that Theosophists and new
enquirers do like pictures of classic cars
and we get a lot of positive feedback.
You can find Theosophy Wales groups
in
Bangor, Cardiff, Conwy & Swansea
Theosophy Wales has no controlling
body
and is made up of independent groups
________________________
The
Ancient Wisdom
by
Annie
Besant
The word Devachan is the
theosophical name for heaven, and, literally translated, means the shining
land, or the Land of the Gods. ( Devasthan, the place of the Gods, is the
Sanskrit equivalent. It is the Svarga of the Hindus ; the Sukhâvati of the
Buddhists ; the Heaven of the Zoroastrians and Christians,
and of the
less materialised among the Mohammedans). It is a specially guarded part of the
mental plane, whence all sorrow and all evil are excluded by the action of the
great spiritual Intelligences who superintend human evolution ; and it is
inhabited by human beings who have cast off their physical and astral bodies,
and who pass into it when their stay in Kâmaloka is completed.
The devachanic life consists
of two stages, of which the first is passed in the four lower subdivisions of
the mental plane, in which the Thinker still wears the mental body and is
conditioned by it, being employed in assimilating the materials gathered by it
during the earth-life from which he has just emerged.
The second
stage is spent in the "formless world," the Thinker escaping from the
mental body, and living in his own
unencumbered
life in the full measure of the self-consciousness and knowledge to which he
has attained.
The total
length of time spent in Devachan
depends upon the amount of material for the Devachanic life which the
soul has brought with it from its life on earth. The harvest of the fruit for
consumption and assimilation in Devachan consists of all
the pure thoughts and emotions generated during earth-life, all
the
intellectual and moral efforts and aspirations, all the memories of useful work
and plans for human service – everything which is capable of being worked into
mental and moral faculty, thus assisting in the evolution of the soul.
Not one is
lost, however feeble, however fleeting ; but selfish animal passions cannot
enter, there being no material in which they can be expressed. Nor does all the
evil in the past life, though it may largely preponderate over the good,
prevent the full reaping of whatever scant harvest of good there may have been
; the scantiness of the harvest may render the devachanic life very
brief, but the most depraved, if he has had any faint longings after the right,
any stirrings of tenderness, must have a period of devachanic life in which
the seed of good may put forth its tender shoots, in which the spark of good
may be gently fanned into a tiny flame.
In the past,
when men lived with their hearts largely fixed on heaven and directed their
lives with a view to enjoying its bliss, the period spent in Devachan was very long,
lasting sometimes for many thousands of years ; at the present time, men’s
minds being so much more centred on earth, and so few of their thoughts
comparatively being directed towards the higher life, their devachanic periods are
correspondingly shortened.
Similarly, the
time spent in the higher and lower regions of the mental plane ( Called
technically the Arűpa and Rűpa Devachan – existing on the
arűpa and rűpa levels of the mental plane ) respectively is proportionate to
the amount of thought generated severally in the mental and causal bodies ; All
the thoughts belonging to the personal self, to the life just closed – with all
its ambitions, interests, loves, hopes, and fears – all these have their
fruition in the Devachan
where forms are found ; while those belonging to the higher mind, to the
regions of abstract, impersonal thinking, have to be worked out in the
"formless" devachanic
region. The majority of people only just enter that lofty region to pass
swiftly out again ; some spend there a large portion of their devachanic existence ; a
few spend there almost the whole.
Ere entering
into any details let us try to grasp some of the leading ideas which govern the
devachanic life, for it is
so different from physical life that any description of it is apt to mislead by
its very strangeness. People realise so little of their mental life, even as
led in the body, that when they are presented with a picture of mental life out
of the body they lose all sense of reality, and feel as though they had passed
into a world of dream.
The first
thing to grasp is that mental life is far more intense, vivid, and nearer to
reality than the life of the senses. Everything we see and touch and hear and
taste and handle down here is two removes farther from the reality than
everything we contact in Devachan.
We do not even see things as they are, but the things that we see down here
have two more veils of illusion enveloping them. Our sense of reality here is
an entire delusion ; we know nothing of things, of people, as they are ; all
that we know of them are the impressions they make on our senses, and the
conclusions, often erroneous, which our reason deduces from the aggregate of these
impressions. Get and put side by side the ideas of a man held by his father,
his closest friend, the girl who adores him, his rival in business, his
deadliest enemy, and a casual acquaintance, and see how incongruous the
pictures.
Each can only
give the impressions made on his own mind, and how far are they from the
reality of what the man is, seen by the eyes that pierces all veils and behold
the whole man. We know of each of our friends the impressions they make on us,
and these are strictly limited by our capacity to receive ; a child may
have as his
father a great statesman of lofty purpose and imperial aims, but that guide of
nation’s destinies is to him only his merriest play fellow, his most enticing
storyteller.
We live in
the midst of illusions, but we have the feeling of reality, and this yields us
content. In Devachan
we shall also be surrounded by illusions – though, as said, two removes nearer
to reality – and there also we shall have a similar feeling of reality which
will yield us content.
The illusions
of earth, though lessened, are not escaped from in the lower heavens, though
contact is more real and more immediate. For it must never be forgotten that
these heavens are part of a great evolutionary scheme, and, until man has found
the real Self, his own unreality makes him subject to illusions.
One thing
however, which produces the feeling of reality in earth-life and of unreality
when we study Devachan,
is that we look at earth-life from within, under the full sway of its
illusions, while we contemplate Devachan from outside,
free for the time from its veil of Mâyâ.
In Devachan the process is
reversed, and its inhabitants feel their own life to be the real one and look
on the earth-life as full of the most patent illusions and misconceptions. On
the whole, they are nearer to the truth than the physical critics of their
heaven-world.
Next, the
Thinker – being clad only in the mental body and being in the untrammelled
exercise of its powers – manifests the creative nature of these powers in a way
and to an extent that down here we can hardly realise. On earth a painter, a
sculptor, a musician, dreams, dreams of exquisite beauty, creating their
visions by the powers of the mind ; but when they seek to embody them in the
coarse materials of earth they fall far short of the mental creation. The
marble is too resistant for perfect form, the pigments to muddy for perfect
colour.
In heaven,
all they think, is at once reproduced in form, for the rare and subtle matter
of the heaven-world is mind stuff, the medium in which the mind normally works
when free from passion, and it takes shape with every mental impulse. Each man,
therefore, in a very real sense, makes his own heaven, and the beauty of his
surroundings is definitely increased, according to the wealth and energy of his
mind. As the soul develops his powers, his heaven grows more and more subtle
and exquisite; all the limitations in heaven are self-created, and heaven
expands and deepens with the expansion and deepening of the soul.
While the
soul is weak and selfish, narrow and ill-developed, his heaven shares these
pettinesses; but it is always the best that is in the soul, however poor that
best may be. As the man evolves, his devachanic lives become
fuller, richer, more and more real, and advanced souls come into ever closer
and closer contact with each other, enjoying wider and deeper intercourse.
A life on
earth, thin, feeble, vapid, and narrow, mentally and morally, produces a
comparatively thin, feeble, vapid and narrow life in Devachan, where only the
mental and the moral survive. We cannot have more than we are, and our harvest
is according to our sowing. "Be not deceived; God is not mocked ; for
whatsoever a man soweth, that,"- and neither more nor less, - "shall
he also reap." Our indolence and greediness would fain reap where we have
not sown, but in this universe of law, the Good Law, mercifully just, brings to
each the exact wages of his work.
The mental
impressions, or mental pictures, we make of our friends will dominate us in Devachan. Round each soul
throng those he loved in life, and every image of the loved ones that live in
the heart becomes a living companion of the soul in heaven. And they are
unchanged. They will be to us there as they were here, and no otherwise. The
outer semblance of our friend as it affected our senses, we form out of
mind-stuff in Devachan
by the creative powers of the mind; what was here a mental picture is there –
as in truth it was here, although we knew it not – an objective shape in living
mind-stuff, abiding in our own mental atmosphere ; only what is dull and dreamy
here is forcibly living and vivid there.
And with
regard to the true communion, that of the soul with soul? That is closer,
nearer, dearer than anything we know here, for, as we have seen, there is no
barrier on the mental plane between soul and soul; exactly in proportion to the
reality of the soul-life in us is the reality of soul-communion there ; the
mental image of our friend is our own creation ; his form is as we knew and
loved it ; and his soul breathes through that form to ours just to the extent
that his soul and ours can throb in sympathetic vibration.
But we can
have no touch with those we knew on earth if the ties were only of the physical
or astral body, or if they and we were discordant in the inner life ; therefore
into our Devachan
no enemy can enter, for sympathetic accord of minds and hearts can alone draw
men together there.
Separateness
of heart and mind means separation in the heavenly life, for all that is lower
than the heart and mind can find no means of expression there. With those who
are far beyond us in evolution we come into contact just as far as we can
respond to them ; great ranges of their being will stretch beyond our ken, but
all that we can touch is ours. Further, these greater ones can and do aid us in
the heavenly life, under
conditions we
shall study presently, helping us to grow towards them, and thus be able to
receive more and more. There is then no separation by space or time, but there
is separation by absence of sympathy, by lack of accord between hearts and
minds.
In heaven we
are with all whom we love and with all whom we admire, and we commune with them
to the limit of our capacity, or, if we are more advanced, of theirs. We meet
them in the forms we loved on earth, with perfect memory of our earthly
relationships, for heaven is the flowering of all earth’s buds, and the marred
and feeble loves of earth expand into beauty and power there. The communion
being direct, no misunderstandings of words or thoughts can arise ; each sees
the thought his friend creates, or as much of it as he can respond to.
Devachan, the
heaven-world, is a world of bliss, of joy unspeakable. But it is much more than
this, much more than a rest for the weary. In Devachan all that was
valuable in the mental and moral experiences of the Thinker during the life
just ended is worked out, meditated over, and is gradually transmuted into
definite mental and moral faculty, into powers which he will take with him to
his next rebirth. He does not work into the mental body the actual memory of
the past, for the mental body will, in due course, disintegrate ; the memory of
the past abides only in the Thinker himself, who has lived through it and who
endures. But these facts of past experiences are worked into mental capacity,
so that if a man has studied a subject deeply the effects of that study will be
the creation of a special faculty to acquire and master that subject when it is
first presented to him in another incarnation.
He will be
born with a special aptitude for that line of study, and will pick it up with
great facility. Everything thought upon earth is thus utilised in Devachan ; every
aspiration is worked up into power ; all frustrated efforts become faculties
and abilities ; struggles and defeats reappear as materials to be wrought into
instruments of victory ; sorrows and errors shine luminous as precious metals
to be worked up into wise and well-directed volitions.
Schemes of
beneficence, for which power and skill to accomplish were lacking in the past,
are in Devachan
worked out in thought, acted out, as it were, stage by stage, and the necessary
power and skill are developed as faculties of the mind to be put into use in a
future life on earth, when the clever and earnest student shall be reborn as a
genius, when the devotee shall be reborn as a saint. Life then, in Devachan, is no mere
dream, no lotus-land of purposeless idling ; it is the land in which the mind
and heart develop, unhindered by gross matter and by the trivial cares, where
weapons are forged for earth’s fierce battlefields, and where the progress of
the future is secured.
When the
Thinker has consumed in the mental body all the fruits belonging to it of his
earthly life, he shakes it off and dwells unencumbered in his own place.
All the
mental faculties which express themselves on the lower levels are drawn within
the causal body – with the germs of the passional life that were drawn into the
mental body when it left the astral shell to disintegrate in Kâmaloka – and
these become latent for a time, lying within the causal body, forces which
remain concealed for lack of material in which to manifest. (The thoughtful
student may here find a fruitful suggestion on the problem of continuing
consciousness after the cycle of the universe is trodden. Let him place Îshvara
in the place of the Thinker, and let the faculties that are the fruits of a
life represent the human lives that are the fruits of a Universe. He may then
catch some glimpse of what is necessary for consciousness, during the interval
between universes).
The mental
body, the last of the temporary vestures of the true man, disintegrates, and
its materials return to the general matter of the mental plane, whence they
were drawn when the Thinker last descended into incarnation.
Thus the
causal body alone remains, the receptacle and treasure-house of all that has
been assimilated from the life that is over. The Thinker has finished a round
of his long pilgrimage and dwells for a while in his own native land.
His condition
as to consciousness depends entirely on the point he has reached in evolution.
In his early stages of life he will merely sleep, wrapped in unconsciousness,
when he has lost his vehicles on the lower planes. His life will pulse gently
within him, assimilating any little results from his closed earth-existence
that may be capable of entering into his substance ; but he will have no
consciousness of his surroundings. But as he develops, this period of his life
becomes more and more important, and occupies a greater proportion of his devachanic existence.
He becomes
self-conscious, and thereby conscious of his surroundings – of the not-self –
and his memory spreads before him the panorama of his life, stretching
backwards into the ages of the past. He sees the causes that worked out their
effects in the last of his life-experiences, and studies the causes he has set
going in this latest incarnation. He assimilates and works into the texture of
the causal body all that was noblest and loftiest in the closed chapter of his
life, and by his inner activity he develops and co-ordinates the materials in
his causal body. He comes into direct contact with great souls, whether in or
out of the body at the time, enjoys communion with them, learns from their
riper wisdom and longer experience.
Each
succeeding devachanic
life is richer and deeper ; with his expanding capacity to receive, knowledge
flows into him in fuller tides ; more and more he learns to understand the
workings of the law, the conditions of evolutionary progress, and thus returns
to earth-life each time with greater knowledge, more effective power, his
vision of the goal of life becoming ever clearer and the way to it more plain
before his feet.
To every
Thinker, however unprogressed, there comes a moment of clear vision when the
time arrives for his return to the life of the lower worlds. For a moment he
sees his past and the causes working from it into the future, and the general
map of his next incarnation is also unrolled before him.
Then the
clouds of lower matter surge round him and obscure his vision, and the cycle of
another incarnation begins with the awakening of the powers of the lower mind, and
their drawing round him, by their vibrations, materials from the lower mental
plane to form the new mental body for the opening chapter of his life-history.
This part of our subject, however, belongs in its detail to the chapters on
reincarnation.
We left the
soul asleep, (See Chapter III., On Kâmaloka, ) having shaken off the last
remains of his astral body, ready to pass out of Kâmaloka into Devachan, out of purgatory
into heaven. The sleeper awakens to a sense of joy unspeakable, of bliss
immeasurable, of peace that passeth understanding.
Softest
melodies are breathing round him, tenderest hues greet his opening eyes, the
very air seems music and colour, the whole being is suffused with light and
harmony.
Then through
the golden haze dawn sweetly the faces loved on earth, etherialised into the
beauty which expresses their noblest, loveliest emotions, unmarred by the
troubles and the passions of the lower worlds. Who may tell the bliss of that
awakening, the glory of that first dawning of the heaven-world?
We will now
study the conditions in detail of the seven subdivisions of Devachan, remembering that
in the four lower we are in the world of form, and a world, moreover, in which
every thought presents itself at once as a form. This world of form belongs to
the personality, and every soul is therefore surrounded by as much of his past
life as has entered into his mind and can be expressed in pure mind-stuff.
The first, or
lowest, region is the heaven of the least progressed souls, whose highest
emotion on earth was a narrow, sincere, and sometimes selfish love for family
and friends. Or it may be that they felt some loving admiration for some one
they met on earth who was purer and better than themselves, or felt some wish
to lead a higher life, or some passing aspiration towards mental and moral
expansion.
There is not
much material here out of which faculty can be moulded, and their life is but
very slightly progressive ; their family affections will be nourished and a
little widened, and they will be reborn after a while with a somewhat improved
emotional nature, with more tendency to recognise and respond to a higher
ideal. Meanwhile they are enjoying all the happiness they can receive; their
cup is but a small one, but it is filled to the brim with bliss, and they enjoy
all that they are able to conceive of heaven. Its purity, its harmony, play on
their undeveloped faculties and woo them to awaken into activity, and the inner
stirrings begin which must precede any manifested budding.
The next
division of devachanic
life comprises men and women of every religious faith whose hearts during their
earthly lives had turned with loving devotion to God, under any name, under any
form. The form may have been narrow, but the heart rose up in aspiration, and
here finds the object of its loving worship.
The concept
of the Divine which was formed by their mind when on earth here meets them in
the radiant glory of devachanic
matter, fairer, diviner, than their wildest dreams.
The Divine
One limits Himself to meet the intellectual limits of His worshipper, and in
whatever form the worshipper has loved and worshipped Him, in that form He
reveals Himself to his longing eyes, and pours out on him the sweetness of His
answering love. The souls are steeped in religious ecstasy, worshipping the One
under the forms their piety sought on earth, losing themselves in the raptures
of devotion, in communion with the Object they adore.
No one finds
himself a stranger in the heavenly places, the Divine veiling Himself in the
familiar form. Such souls grow in purity and in devotion under the sun of this
communion, and return to earth with these qualities much intensified. Nor is
all their devachanic
life spent in this devotional ecstasy, for they have full opportunities of
maturing every other quality they may possess of heart and mind.
Passing
onwards to the third region, we come to those noble and earnest beings who were
devoted servants of humanity while on earth, and largely poured out their love
to God in the form of works for man. They are reaping the reward of their good
deeds by developing larger powers of usefulness and increased wisdom in their
direction. Plans of wider beneficence unroll themselves before the mind of the
philanthropist, and like an architect, he designs the future edifice which he
will build in a coming life on earth ; he matures the schemes which he will
then work out into actions, and like a creative God plans his universe of
benevolence,
which shall be manifested in gross matter when the time is ripe. These souls
will appear as the great philanthropists of yet unborn centuries, who will
incarnate on earth with innate dower of unselfish love and of power to achieve.
Most varied
in character, perhaps, of all the heavens is the fourth, for here the powers of
the most advanced souls find their exercise, so far as they can be expressed in
the world of form. Here the kings of art and of literature are found,
exercising all their powers of form, of colour, of harmony, and building
greater
faculties with which to be reborn when they return to earth. Noblest music,
ravishing beyond description, peals forth from the mightiest monarchs of
harmony that the earth has known, as Beethoven, no longer deaf, pours out his
imperial soul in strains of unexampled beauty, making even the heaven world
more melodious as he draws down harmonies from higher spheres, and sends them
thrilling through the heavenly places. Here also we find the masters of
painting and of sculpture, learning new hues of colour, new curves of undreamed
beauty.
And here also
are others who failed, though greatly aspiring, and who are here transmuting
longings into powers, and dreams into faculties, that shall be theirs in
another life. Searchers into Nature are here, and they are learning her hidden
secrets ; before their eyes are unrolling systems of worlds with all
their hidden
mechanism, woven series of workings of unimaginable delicacy and complexity ;
they shall return to earth as great "discoverers," with unerring
intuitions of the mysterious ways of Nature.
In this
heaven also are found students of the deeper knowledge, the eager, reverent
pupils who sought the Teachers of the race, who longed to find a Teacher, and
patiently worked at all that had been given out by some one of the great
spiritual Masters who have taught humanity. Here their longings find their
fruition, and
Those they sought, apparently in vain, are now their instructors ; the eager
souls drink in the heavenly wisdom, and swift their growth and progress as they
sit at their Master’s feet. As teachers and as light-bringers shall they be
born again on earth, born with the birthmark of the teacher’s high office upon
them.
Many a
student on earth, all unknowing of these subtler workings, is preparing himself
a place in this fourth heaven, as he bends with a real devotion over the pages
of some teacher of genius, over the teachings of some advanced soul. He is
forming a link between himself and the teacher he loves and reverences, and in
the heaven-world that soul-tie will assert itself, and draw together into
communion the souls it links. As the sun pours down its rays into many rooms,
and each room has all it can contain of the solar beams, so in the heaven-world
do these great souls shine into hundreds of mental images of themselves created
by their pupils, fill them with life, with their own essence, so that each
student has his master to teach him and yet shuts out none other from his aid.
Thus, for
periods long in proportion to the materials gathered for consumption upon
earth, dwell men in these heaven-worlds of form, where all good that the last
personal life had garnered finds its full fruition, its full working out into
minutest detail. Then as we have seen, when everything is exhausted, when
the last drop
has been drained from the cup of joy, the last crumb eaten of the heavenly
feast, all that has been worked up into faculty, that is of permanent value, is
drawn within the causal body, and the Thinker shakes off him and the then
disintegrating body through which he has found expression on the lower levels
of the devachanic
world. Rid of this mental body, he is in his own world, to work up whatever of his
harvest can find material suitable for it in that high realm.
A vast number
of souls touch the lowest level of the formless world as it were but for a
moment, taking brief refuge there, since all lower vehicles have fallen away.
But so embryonic are they that they have as yet no active powers that there can
function independently, and they become unconscious as the mental body slips
away into disintegration. Then, for a moment, they are aroused to
consciousness, and a flash of memory illumines their past and they see its
pregnant causes ; and a flash of foreknowledge illumines their future, and they
see such effects as will work out in the coming life. This is all that very
many are as yet able to experience of the formless world. For, here again, as ever,
the harvest is according to the sowing, and how should they who have sowed
nothing for that lofty region expect to reap any harvest therein?
But many
souls have during their earth-life, by deep thinking and noble living, sown
much seed, the harvest of which belongs to this fifth devachanic region, the
lowest of the three heavens of the formless world. Great is now their reward
for having so risen above the bondage of the flesh and of passion, and they
begin to experience the real life of man, the lofty existence of the soul
itself,
unfettered by vestures belonging to the lower worlds. They learn truths by
direct vision, and see the fundamental causes of which all concrete objects are
the results; they study the underlying unities, whose presence is marked in the
lower worlds by the variety of irrelevant details.
Thus they
gain a deep knowledge of law, and learn to recognise its changeless workings
below results apparently the most incongruous, thus building into the body that
endures firm unshakable convictions, that will reveal themselves in earth-life
as deep intuitive certainties of the soul, above and beyond all reasoning. Here
also the man studies his own past, and carefully disentangles the causes he has
set going ; he marks their interaction, the resultants accruing from them, and
sees something of their working out in the lives yet in the future.
In the sixth
heaven are more advanced souls, who during earth-life had felt but little
attraction for its passing shows, and who had devoted all their energies to the
higher intellectual and moral life. For them there is no veil upon the past,
their memory is perfect and unbroken, and they plan the infusion into
their next
life of energies that will neutralise many of the forces that are working for
hindrance, and strengthen many of those that are working for good.
This clear
memory enables them to form definite and strong determinations as to actions
which are to be done and actions which are to be avoided, and these volitions
they will be able to impress on their lower vehicles in their next birth,
making certain classes of evils impossible, contrary to what is felt to
be the
deepest nature, and certain kinds of good inevitable, the irresistible demands
of a voice that will not be denied.
These souls
are born into the world with high and noble qualities which render a base life
impossible, and stamp the babe from its cradle as one of the pioneers of
humanity. The man who has attained to this sixth heaven sees unrolled before
him the vast treasures of the Divine Mind in creative activity and can study
the archetypes of all forms that are being gradually evolved in the lower
worlds.
There he may
bathe himself in the fathomless ocean of the Divine Wisdom, and unravel the
problems connected with the working out of those archetypes, the partial good
that seems as evil to the limited vision of men encased in flesh.
In this wider
outlook, phenomena assume their due relative proportions, and he sees the
justification of the divine ways, no longer to him "past finding out"
so far as they are concerned with the evolution of the lower worlds.
The questions
over which on earth he pondered, and whose answers ever eluded his eager intellect,
are here solved by an insight that pierces through phenomenal veils and sees
the connecting links which make the chain complete. Here also the
soul is in
the immediate presence of, and in full communion with, the greater souls that
have evolved in our humanity, and, escaped from the bonds which make "the
past" of earth, he enjoys "the ever-present" of an endless and
unbroken life.
Those we
speak of here as "the mighty dead" are there the glorious living, and
the soul enjoys the high rapture of their presence, and grows more like them as
their strong harmony attunes his vibrant nature to their key.
Yet higher,
lovelier, gleams the seventh heaven, where Masters and Initiates have their
intellectual home. No soul can dwell there ere yet is has passed while on earth
through the narrow gateway of Initiation, the strait gate that "leadeth
unto life" unending. ( See Chapter XI, on "Man’s Ascent." The
Initiate
has stepped
out of the ordinary line of evolution, and is treading a shorter and steeper road
to human perfection).
That world is
the source of the strongest intellectual and moral impulses that flow down to
earth ; thence are poured forth the invigorating streams of the loftiest
energy. The intellectual life of the world has there its root; thence genius
receives its purest inspirations. To the souls that dwell there it matters
little whether, at the time, they be or be not connected with the lower
vehicles ;
they ever enjoy their lofty self-consciousness and their communion with those
around them ; whether, when "embodied" they suffuse their lower
vehicles with as much of this consciousness as they can contain is a matter for
their own choice – they can give or withhold as they will.
And more and
more their volitions are guided by the will of the Great Ones, whose will is
one with the will of the LOGOS, the will which seeks ever the good of the
worlds. For here are being eliminated the last vestiges of separateness – (
Ahamkâra, the " I " making principle, necessary in order that self
consciousness may be evolved, but transcended when its work is over) – in all
who have not yet reached final emancipation – all, that is, who are not yet
Masters – and, as these perish, the will becomes more and more harmonised with
the will that guides the worlds.
Such is an
outline of the "seven heavens" into one or other of which men pass in
due time after the "change that men call death." For death is only a
change that gives the soul a partial liberation, releasing him from the
heaviest of his chains. It is but a birth into a wider life, a return after a
brief exile on earth to the soul’s true home, a passing from a prison into the
freedom of the upper air. Death is the greatest of earth’s illusions ; there is
no death, but only changes in life’s conditions. Life is
continuous,
unbroken, unbreakable ; "unborn, eternal, constant," it perishes not
with the perishing of the bodies
that clothe
it. We might as well think that the sky is falling when a pot is broken, as
imagine that the soul perishes when the body falls to pieces. ( A simile used
in the Bhagavad Purâna).
The physical,
astral and mental planes are "the three worlds" though which lies the
pilgrimage of the soul, again and again repeated. In these three worlds
revolves the wheel of human life, and souls are bound to that wheel throughout
their evolution, and are carried by it to each of these worlds in turn. We are
now in a
position to trace a complete life-period of the soul, the aggregate of these
periods making up its life, and we can also distinguish clearly the difference
between personality and individuality.
A soul when
its stay in the formless world of Devachan is over, begins a
new life-period by putting forth the energies which function in the form-world
of the mental plane, these energies being the resultant of the preceding
life-periods. These passing outwards, gather round themselves, from the matter
of the four lower mental levels, such materials as are suitable for their
expression,
and thus the new mental body for the coming birth is formed. The vibration of
these mental energies arouses the energies which belong to the desire-nature,
and these begin to vibrate ; as they awake and throb, they attract to
themselves suitable materials for their expression from the matter of
the astral
world, and these form the new astral body for the approaching incarnation.
Thus the
Thinker becomes clothed with his mental and astral vestures, exactly expressing
the faculties evolved during the past stage of his life. He is drawn, by forces
which will be explained later, (See Chapter VII , on "Reincarnation")
to the family which is to provide him with a suitable physical encasement, and
becomes
connected with this encasement through his astral body.
During
prenatal life the mental body becomes involved with the lower vehicles, and
this connection becomes closer and closer through the early years of childhood,
until at the seventh year they are as completely in touch with the Thinker
himself as the stage of evolution permits. He then begins to slightly control
his vehicles, if sufficiently advanced, and what we call conscience is
his monitory
voice. In any case, he gathers experience through these vehicles, and during
the continuance of earth-life, stores the gathered experience in its own proper
vehicle, in the body connected with the plane to which the experience belongs.
When the
earth-life is over the physical body drops away, and with it his power of contacting
the physical world, and his energies are therefore confined to the astral and
mental planes. In due course, the astral body decays, and the outgoings of his
life are confined to the mental plane, the astral faculties
being
gathered up and laid by within himself as latent energies.
Once again,
in due course, its assimilative work completed, the mental body disintegrates,
its energies in turn becoming latent in the Thinker, and he withdraws his life
entirely into the formless devachanic
world, his own native habitat. Thence, all experiences of his life period in
the three worlds being
transmuted
into faculties and powers for future use, are contained within himself, he anew
commences his pilgrimage and treads the cycle of another life-period with
increased power and knowledge.
The
personality consists of the transitory vehicles through which the Thinker
energises in the physical, astral, and lower mental worlds, and of all the
activities connected with these. These are bound together by the links of
memory caused by impressions made on the three lower bodies ; and, by the
self-identification of the Thinker with his three vehicles, the personal "
I " is set up. In the lower stages of evolution this " I " is in
the physical and
passional
vehicles, in which the greatest activity is shown, later it is in the mental
vehicle, which then assumes predominance.
The
personality with its transient feeling, desires, passions, thus forms a
quasi-independent entity, though drawing all its energies from the Thinker it
enwraps, and as its qualifications, belonging to the lower worlds, are often in
direct antagonism to the permanent interests of the "Dweller in the
body," conflict is set up in which victory inclines sometimes to the
temporary pleasure, sometimes to the permanent gain. The life of the
personality begins when the Thinker forms his new mental body, and it endures
until that mental body disintegrates at the close of its life in the form-world
of Devachan.
The
individuality consists of the Thinker himself, the immortal tree that puts out
all these personalities as leaves, to last through the spring, summer and
autumn of human life. All that the leaves take in and assimilate enriches the
sap that courses through their veins, and in the autumn this is withdrawn into
the parent trunk, and the dry leaf falls and perishes. The Thinker alone lives
forever ; he
is the man for whom "the hour never strikes," the eternal youth who
as the Bhagavad Gitâ has it, puts on and casts off bodies as a man puts on new
garments and throws off the old.
Each
personality is a new part for the immortal Actor, and he treads the stage of
life over and over again, only in the life-drama each character he assumes is
the child of the preceding ones and the father of those to come, so that the
life-drama is a continuous history, the history of the Actor who plays the
successive
parts.
To the three
worlds that we have studied is confined the life of the Thinker, while he is
treading the earlier stages of human evolution. A time will come in the
evolution of humanity when its feet will enter loftier realms, and
reincarnation will be of the past. But while the wheel of rebirth and death is
turning, a man is bound thereon by desires that pertain to the three worlds,
his
life is led
in these three regions.
To the realms
that lie beyond we now may turn, albeit but little can be said of them that can
be either useful or intelligible. Such little as may be said, however, is
necessary for the outlining of the Ancient Wisdom.
_____________________________________
Annie Besant Visits Cardiff 1924
A
“G” reg Aug 1968 – July 1969 Wolseley Hornet MK III
The
1960s Wolseley Hornet was produced by the British Motor Corporation
(BMC)
from 1961 to 1969 and was upgraded thro’ MKI, II & III models
although
the outward design remained the same.
The
Wolseley Hornet was similar to the more expensive Riley Elf which ran
for
the same period with only the Riley grill and badge to distinguish
it
to the casual observer.
_____________________________
More Theosophy Stuff
with these links
Cardiff Theosophical
Society meetings are informal
and there’s always a
cup of tea afterwards
The
Cardiff Theosophical Society Website
The
National Wales Theosophy Website
Bangor,
Cardiff, Conwy & Swansea
A
1931 Wolseley Hornet saloon style convertible
The Wolseley Hornet was a
lightweight saloon car produced by the Wolseley Motor Company from 1930 to
1935.
It had a six cylinder (1271cc) engine with a single overhead cam, and
hydraulic brakes. The engine was modified in 1932 to make it shorter and it was
moved forwards on the chassis. In 1935 the engine size was increased to
1378 cc.
Wolseley supplied the firsts cars as either an enclosed saloon with steel
or fabric body or open two seater. From 1931 it was available without the
saloon body, and was used as the basis for a number of sporting specials for
which the customer could choose a styling from a range of coachbuilders. In
1932 Wolsley added two and four seat coupés to the range. For its final year of
production the range was rationalised to a standard saloon and coupé.
A three speed gearbox was fitted to the earliest cars but this was upgraded
to a four speed in 1932 and fitted with synchromesh from 1933. A freewheel
mechanism could be ordered in 1934.The engine was also used in a range of MG
cars.
If you
run a Theosophy Group, please feel free
to use
any of the material on this site
1930s
Wolseley Hornet racing car circuiting the track in modern times
Theosophy Cardiff’s Instant Guide
Wolseley
Hornet on a rally circa 1963
Theosophical Movement in Wales
as it separates into independent
groups that run do their own show
Early
1930s Wolseley Hornet customized roadster design
Basic
front mudguards not extending to runner boards.
Only
the driver gets a windscreen wiper
Patriotic
Wolseley Hornet on the race track in 1965
One liners and quick explanations
H P
Blavatsky is usually the only
Theosophist
that most people have ever
heard
of. Let’s put that right
The Voice of the Silence Website
An
Independent Theosophical Republic
Links
to Free Online Theosophy
Study
Resources; Courses, Writings,
Early
1930s Customized Wolseley Hornet with integrated front mudguards
and
runner boards. Two windscreen wipers on this one.
The main criteria for the inclusion of
links on this site is that they have some
relationship (however tenuous) to Theosophy
and are lightweight, amusing or entertaining.
Topics include Quantum Theory and Socks,
Dick Dastardly and Legendary Blues Singers.
Four
views of the car in the picture above
A selection of articles on Reincarnation
Provided in response to the large
number of enquiries we receive at
Cardiff Theosophical Society on this subject
The Voice of the Silence Website
Swallow Wolseley Hornet 1932
A
leaflet promoting the new hydrolastic suspension introduced in the mid sixties.
This
became standard on many BMC models including the Mini, 1100, 1300
&
1800 models. Suspension was maintained by means of a sealed fluid system
which
was claimed to be very comfortable but appeared to make some people
seasick
in the larger cars. As the cars got older, the suspension might burst
causing
the car’s suspension to collapse on one side meaning a difficult
drive
home or to a garage.
This is for
everyone, you don’t have to live
in Wales to
make good use of this Website
1930s
Corsica Wolseley Hornet
No Aardvarks
were harmed in the
A 1966 Wolseley Hornet
convertible by Crayford Engineering
Convertible 1960s Hornets
were not standard and were very rare as
were all convertibles in the
Mini range.
Crayford did a run of 57
Hornet convertibles for Heinz to be given
as prizes in a competition
Within the British Isles, The Adyar Theosophical Society
has Groups in;
Bangor*Basingstoke*Billericay*Birmingham*Blackburn*Bolton*Bournemouth
Bradford*Bristol*Camberley*Cardiff*Chester*Conwy*Coventry*Dundee*Edinburgh
Folkstone*Glasgow*Grimsby*Inverness*Isle of
Man*Lancaster*Leeds*Leicester
Letchworth*London*Manchester*Merseyside*Middlesborough*Newcastle upon
Tyne
North Devon*Northampton*Northern Ireland*Norwich*Nottingham
Perth*Republic of Ireland*Sidmouth*Southport*Sussex*Swansea*Torbay
Tunbridge Wells*Wallasey*Warrington*Wembley*Winchester*Worthing
The Spiritual Home of Urban Theosophy
The Earth Base for Evolutionary Theosophy
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Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
1.22MB
__________________
& of course
you don’t need to live in Wales
to take advantage of this guide
_____________________
Camberley, Surrey, England GU15 - 2LF
Tekels Park to be Sold to a Developer
Concerns are raised about the fate of the wildlife as
The Spiritual Retreat, Tekels Park in Camberley,
Surrey, England is to be sold to a developer
Tekels Park is a 50 acre woodland park, purchased
for the Adyar
Theosophical Society in England in 1929.
In addition to concern about the park, many are
worried about
the future of the Tekels Park Deer
as they are not a protected species.
Many feel that the sale of a
sanctuary
for wildlife to a developer can only
mean
disaster for the park’s animals
In addition to concern about the
park,
many are worried about the future
of the Tekels Park Deer as they
Confusion as the Theoversity moves out of
Tekels Park to Southampton, Glastonbury &
Chorley in Lancashire while the leadership claim
that the Theosophical Society will carry on
using
Tekels Park despite its sale to a developer
Anyone planning a “Spiritual” stay at
the
Tekels Park Guest House should be
aware of the sale.
Theosophy talks of a compassionate
attitude
to animals and the sale of the Tekels
Park
sanctuary for wildlife to a developer
has
Future
of Tekels Park Badgers in Doubt
Party On!
Tekels Park Theosophy NOT
St Francis Church at Tekels Park
Tekels Park & the Loch Ness Monster
A Satirical view of
the sale of Tekels Park
in Camberley,
Surrey to a developer
The Toff’s Guide to the Sale of Tekels Park
What the men in top
hats have to
say about the sale
of Tekels Park
____________________
The Theosophy Cardiff
Guide to
Pendle Hill, Lancashire, England.
Quick
Explanations with Links to More Detailed Info
What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis
Anthropogenesis
Root Races
Karma
Ascended Masters After Death States Reincarnation
The Seven Principles of Man Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical Society
History of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical Society Presidents
History of the Theosophical Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the Theosophical Society
Explanation of the Theosophical Society Emblem
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
Another
good example of a 1930s Wolseley Hornet
An Outstanding Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
1960s
Riley Elf
Outwardly
the same as the Wolseley Hornet except for the badge & grill
A
bit more expensive
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
1930’s
Wolseley Hornet on a hill climb trial
An Outline of Theosophy
Charles Webster Leadbeater
Theosophy - What it is How is it Known? The Method of Observation
General Principles The Three Great Truths The Deity
Advantage Gained from this
Knowledge The Divine Scheme
The Constitution of Man The True Man Reincarnation
The Wider Outlook Death Man’s Past and Future
Cause and Effect What Theosophy does for us
Side
and rear view of a 1960s Wolseley Hornet
Try these if you are looking
for a local
Theosophy Group or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Please tell us about your UK Theosophy Group
1960s
Wolseley Hornet promotional leaflet
___________________
into categories and
presented according to relevance of website.
Web Directory
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General pages about Wales, Welsh History
and The History of Theosophy in Wales
Wales is a
Principality within the United Kingdom and has an eastern
border with
England. The land area is just over 8,000 square miles.
Snowdon in North
Wales is the highest mountain at 3,650 feet.
The coastline is
almost 750 miles long. The population of Wales
as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.
________________
Bangor Conwy & Swansea Lodges are
members
of the Welsh Regional Association
(Formed 1993).
Theosophy Cardiff separated from the
Welsh Regional
Association in March 2008 and became an independent
body within the Theosophical Movement in March 2010
High
Drama & Worldwide Confusion
as
Theosophy Cardiff Separates from the
Welsh
Regional Association (formed 1993)
Theosophy Cardiff cancels its Affiliation
to the Adyar Based Theosophical Society
Cardiff, Wales,
UK, CF24 – 1DL