NOL
A study in consciousness

Chapter 24

Chapter XII.

THE NATURE OF MEMORY.
§1. The Great Self and the Little Selves.
What is memory ? and how does it work ? by what means do we recover the past, whether near or remote ? For, after all, whether the past be near or remote, belonging to this or to any anterior life, the means which govern its recovery must be similar, and we require a theory which will include all cases of memory, and at the same time will enable us to understand each particular case.
The first step towards obtaining a definite and intelligible theory is a com- prehension of our own composition, of the Self with its sheaths, and their inter- relation ; and we may here briefly restate the main facts in the foregoing chapters
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264 A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
which directly bear on the problem of Memory. We must bear constantly in mind the facts that our consciousness is a unit, and that this unit of consciousness works through various sheaths, which impose upon it a false appearance of muhiplicity. The innermost, or most tenuous, of these sheaths is inseparable from the unit of consciousness ; in fact, it is this sheath which makes it a unit. This unit is the Monad, dwelling; on the anupadaka plane ; but for all practical purposes we may take it as the familiar Inner Man, the Tri- Atom, AtmS-Buddhi-Manas, thought of as apart from the dtmic, buddhic, and mSnasic sheaths. This unit of consciousness manifests through, abides in, sheaths belonging to the five planes of its activity, and we call it the Self working in its sheaths.
We must think, then, of a conscious Self dwelling in vehicles that vibrate. The vibrations of these vehicles corre- spond, on the side of matter, with the changes in consciousness on the side of the Self We cannot accurately speak of vibrations of consciousness, because vibra-
THB MATURE OF MEMORY. 365
tions can only belong to the material side of thinjjs, the form side, and only loosely can we speak of a vibrating consciousness. We have changes in consciousness corre- sponding with vibrations in sheaths.
The question of the vehicles, or bodies, in which consciousness, the Self, is working, is all - im portant as regards Memory. The whole process of recover- more or less remote events is a ition of picturing them in the particular '■heath — of shaping part of the matter of the sheath into their likeness — in which consciousness is working at the time. In the Self, as a fragment of the Universal Self — which for our purpose we can take 10 be the Lot;os, although in verity the Logos is but a portion of the Universal Self — is present everything ; for in the Universal Self is present all which has taken place, is taking place, and will take place in the universe ; all this, and an illimitable more, is present in the Universal Consciousness. Let us think only of a universe and its Logos. We speak of Him as omnipresent and omnisdent. Now, fundamentally, that
266
A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
omnipresence and omniscience are in the individualised Self, as being one with the Lodos, but — we must put in here a but — with a difference ; the difference consisting in this, that while in the separated Self as Self, apart from all vehicles, that omni- presence and omniscience reside by virtue of his unity with the One Self, the vehicles in which he dwells have not yet learned to vibrate in answer to his changes of con- sciousness, as he turns his attention to one or another part of his contents. Hence we say that all exists in him potentially, aud not as in the Logos actually : all the changes which go on in the consciousness of the Logos are reproducible in this separated Self, which is an indivisible part of His life, but the vehicles are not yet ready as media of manifestation. Because of the separation of form, because of this closing in of the separate, or individualised, Self these po.ssibilities which are within it as part of the Universal Self are latent, not manifest, are possibilities, not actualities. As in every atom which goes to the making up of a vehicle, there are illimit- able possibilities of vibration, so in every
THE NATURE OF MEMORY.
267
F separated Self there are illimitable possi- bilities of changes of consciousness.
We do not find in the atom, at the beginning of a solar system, an illimitable ■ Variety of vibrations ; but we learn that possesses a capacity to acquire an I illimitable variety of vibrations ; it acquires I these in the course of its evolution, as it F responds continually to vibrations playing Upon its surface ; at the end of a solar system, an immense number of the atoms in it have reached the stage of evolution in which they can vibrate in answer to any vibration touching them that arises within the system ; then, for that system, these atoms are said to be perfected. The same thing is true for the sejiarated, or individ- ualised, Selves. All the changes taking place in the consciousness of the Logos which arc represented in that universe, and take shape as forms in that universe, all these are also within the perfected consciousnesses tn that universe, and any l©f these changes can be reproduced in any IfHic of them. Here is Memory : the ^reappearance, the reincarnation in matter, anything that has been within that
268
A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
universe, and therefore ever is, : consciousness of its Logos, and in thi consciousnesses which are parts of His consciousness. Ahhough we think of the Self as separate as regards all other Selves, we must ever remember inseparate as regards the One Self, the! Logos. His life is not shut out from any part of His universe, and in Him we live and move and have our being, open ever to Him, filled with His life.
As the self puts on vehicle after vehicle of matter, its powers of gaining knowledge become, with each additional vehicle, more circumscribed but also more definite. Arrived on the physical plane, conscious- ness is narrowed down to the e.xperiences which can be received through the physical body, and chiefly through those openings which we call the sense-organs ; these are avenues through which know- ledge can reach the imprisoned Self, though we often speak of them as shutting out knowledge when we think of the capacities of the subtler vehicles. The physical body renders perception definitive and clear much as a screen
THE MATURE OF MEMORY.
> with a minute hole in it allows a picture of the outside world tn appear on a wall that would otherwise show a blank surface; rays of light are truly shut off from the
I wall, but, by that very shutting off,
[ those allowed to enter form a clearly
I detincd picture.
^
§2. ClIANGtS IN THE VhHlCLKS AND IN
CowsciousN>:ss.
Let US now see what happens as regards the physical vehicle in the reception of an impression and in the subsequent recall of that impression, Le., in the memor)' of it
A vibration from outside strikes on an organ of sense, and is transmitted to the appropriate centre in the brain. A group of cells in the brain vibrates, and that vibration leaves tlie cells in a state some- what different from the one in which they were previous to its reception. The trace of that response is a possibility for the group uf cells ; it has once vibrated in a particular way, and it retains for the rest of its existence as a group of cells the
2/0 A STUDV IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
possibility of again vibrating In that same way without again receiving a stimulus from the outside world. Each repetition of an identical vibration strengthens this possibility, each leaving its own trace, but many such repetitions will be required to establish a self-initiated repetition ; the cells come nearer to this possibility of a self-initiated vibration by each repetition compelled from outside. But this vibra- tion has not stopped with the physical cells ; it has been transmitted inwards to the corresponding cell, or group of cells, in the subtler vehicles, and has ultimately produced a change in consciousness. This change, in its turn, re-acts on the cells, and a repetition of the vibrations is initiated from within by the change in consciousness, and this repetition is a memory of the object which started the series of vibrations. The response of the cells to the vibration from outside, a response compelled by the laws of the physical universe, gives to the cells the power of responding to a similar impulse, though feebler, coming from within, A little power is exhausted in each moving
THK MATURE OF HEMORV.
a? I
*of matter in a new vehicle, and hence a gradual diminution of the energy in the vibration. Less and less is exhausted as the cells repeat similar vibrations in response to new impacts from without, the cells answering more readily with each repetition.
Therein lies the value of the "without"; it wakes up in the matter, more easily than by any other way, the possibility of response, being more cinsely akin to the vehicles than the "within."
The change caused in consciousness, also, leaves the consciousness more ready to repeat that change than it was first to yield it. and each such change brings the consciousness nearer lo the power to initiate a similar change. Looking back into the dawnings of consciousness, we see that the imprisoned Selves go through innumerable experiences before a Self- initiated change in consciousness occurs ; but bearing this in mind, as a fact, we can leave these early stages, and study the workings of consciousness at a more advanced point. We must also remember that every impact, reaching the innermost
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.STUDV IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
sheath, and giving rise to a change in consciousness, is followed by a reaction, the change in consciousness causing a new series of vibrations from within out- wards ; there is the going inwards to the Self, followed by the rippling outwards from the Self, the first due to the object, and giving rise to what we call a percep- tion, and the second due to the reaction of the Self, causing what we call a memory.
A number of sense-impressions, coming through sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell run up from the physical vehicle through the astral to the mental. There they are co-ordinated into a complex unity, as a musical chord is composed of many notes. This is the special work of the mental body : it receives many streams and synthesises them into one ; it builds many impressions into a perception, a thought, a complex unity.
§3. Memories. Let us try to catch this complex thing, after it has gone inwards and has caused a change in consciousness, an idea ; the
THE NATURE OF MEMORY.
273
inwa:
ige it has caused gives rise to new vibrations in the vehicles, reproducing those it had caused on its inward way, and in each vehicle i t reappears in a fainli^r form. It is not strong, vigorous, and vivid, as when its component parts flashed from the physical to the astral, and from the astral to the mental ; it reappears in the mental in a fainter form, the copy of that which the mental sent nwards. but the vibrations feebler ; as le Self receives from it a reaction — for impact of a vibration on touching vehicle musi cause a reaction — that Lclion is far feebler than the original action, and will therefore seem less "real" than that action ; it makes a lesser change consciousness, and that lessening repre- ils inevitably a less "reality." So long as the consciousness is too little >nsive to be aware of any impacts that not come through with the impulsive vigour of the physical, it is literally more in touch with tlie physical than with any other sheath, and there will be no memories of ideas, but only memories of perceptions, i.e., of pictures of out-
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A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
side objects, caused by vibrations of the nervous matter of the brain, reproducing themselves in the related astral and mental matter. These are literally pictures in the mental matter, as are the pictures on the retina of the eye. And the consciousness perceives these pictures, "sees" them, as we may truly say. since the seeing of the eye is only a limited expression of its perceptive power. As the consciousness draws a little away from the physical, turning attention more to the modifica- tions in its inner sheaths, it sees these pictures reproduced in the brain from the astral sheath by its own reaction passing outwards, and there is the memory of sensations. The picture arises in the brain by the reaction of the change in consciousness, and is recognised there. This recognition implies that the con- sciousness has withdrawn largely from the physical to the astral vehicle, and is working therein. The human conscious- ness is thus working at the present time, and is, therefore, full of memories, these memories being reproductions in the physical brain of past pictures, caused
THE NATURE OF MEMORY. 275
by reactions from consciousness. In a lowly evolved human type, these pictures are pictures of past events in which the physical body was concerned, memories of hunger and thirst and of their gratifi- cation, of se.icual pleasures, and so on, things in which the physical body took an active part. In a higher type, in which the consciousness is working more in the mental vehicle, the pictures in the astral body will draw more of its attention ; these pictures are shaped in the astral body by the vibrations coming outwards from the mental, and are percfived as pictures by the consciousness as it with- draws itself more into the mental body as its immediate vehicle. As this process goes on. and the more awakened con- sciousness responds to vibrations initiated from outside on the astral plane by astral objects, these objects grow " real," and become distinguishable from the memories, the pictures in the astral body caused by the reactions from consciousness.
Let us note, in passing, that with the memory of an object goes hand in hand a picture of the renewal of the keener
276 A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
experience of the object by physical contact, and this we call anticipation ; and the more complete the memory of an event the more complete is this anticipa- tion. So that the memory will sometimes even cause in the physical body the reactions which normally accompany the contact with the external object, and we may savour in anticipation pleasures which are not within present reach of the body. Thus the anticipation of savoury food will cause "the mouth to water." This fact will again appear, when we reach the completion of our theory of Memory. ■
§4- What is Memokv?
Now, having noted the changes in the vehicles which arise from impacts from the external world, the response to these as changes of consciousness, the feebler vibrations produced in the vehicles by the reaction of consciousness, and the recognition of these again by conscious- ness as memories, let us come to the crux of the question: What is Memory? The breaking up of ihe bodies between death
tJRE OF memo:
and reincarnation puts an end to their automatism, to their power of responding to vibrations similar to those already experienced ; the responsive groups are disintegrated, and all chat remains as a seed for future responses is stored within the permanent atoms; how feeble this is. as compared with the new automatisms imposed on the mass of the bodies by new experiences of the external, may be judged by the absence of any memory of past lives initiated in the vehicles themselves. In fact, all the permanent atoms can do is to answer more readily l(» vibrations of a kind similar to those previously experienced than to those that come to them for the first time. The memory of the cells, or of groups of cells, perishes at death, and cannot be said to be recover- able, as such. Where then is Memory preserved ?
The brief answer is : Memory is not a faculty, and is not preser\'ed : it does not inhere in consciousness as a capacity, nor is any memory of events stored up in the individual consciousness Every event is a present fact in the universe -conscious-
278 A STUDY m CONSCIOUSNESS.
ness, in the consciousness of the Logos ; everything that occurs in His universe, past, present, and future, is ever there in His all-embracing consciousness, in His "eternal now." From the beginning of the universe to its ending, from its dawn to its sunset, all is there, ever-present, existent. In that ocean of ideas, all IS ; we, wandering in the ocean, touch fragments of its contents, and our response to the contact is our knowledge ; having known, we can more readily again contact, and this repetition— when falling short of the contact of the outside sheath of the moment with the fragments occupying its own plane — is Memory. All "memories" are recoverable, because all possibilities of image-producing vibrations are within the consciousness of the Locos, and we can share in that consciousness the more easily as we have previously shared more often similar vibrations ; hence, the vibrations which have formed parts of our experience are more readily repeated by us than those we have never known, and here comes in the value of the
JORV. 279
permanent atoms ; they thrill out again, on being stimulated, the vibrations previously performed, and out of all the possibilities of vibrations of the atoms and molecules of our bodies those sound out which answer to the note struck by the permanent atoms. The fact that we have been affected vibrationally and by changes of consciousness during the present life makes it easier for us to take out of the universal consciousness that of which we have already had experience in our own. Whether it be a memory in the present life, or one in a life long past, the method of recovery is the same. There is no memory save the ever-present consciousness of the Logos, in whom we literally live and move and have our being ; and our memory is merely putting ourselves into touch with such parts of His conscious- ness as we have previously shared.
Hence, according to Pythagoras, all learning is remembrance, for it is the drawing from the consciousness of the Locos into that of the separated Self that which in our essential unity with
aSo A STUDV IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
Him is eternally ours. On the where the unity overpowers the sep. ness, we share His consciousness of our universe ; on the lower planes, where the separateness veils the unity, we are shut out therefrom by our unevolved vehicles. It is the lack of responsiveness in these which hinders us, for we can only know the planes through them. Therefore we cannot directly improve our memory ; we can only improve our general receptivity and power to reproduce, by rendering our bodies more sensitive, while being careful not to go beyond their limit of elasticity. Also we can "pay attention"; i.e., we can turn the awareness of consciousness, we can concentrate consciousness, on that special part of the consciousness of the Logos to which we desire to attune ourselves. We need not thus distress ourselves with calculations as to "how many angels can stand on the point of a needle." how we can preserve in a limited space the illimitable number of vibrations experi- enced in many lives ; for the whole of the form -producing vibrations in the universe
THE NATURE OF MEMORY.
are ever-present, and aje available to be drawn upon by any individual unit, and can be reached as, by evolution, such a
I one experiences ever more and more. ■ §5. Remembering and Forgktiing.
Let us apply this to an event in our past life : Some of the circumstances " remain in our memory." others are "forgotten." Really, the event exists with all its surrounding circumstances, ■* remembered " and '" forgotten " alike, in but one state, the memory of the Logos, the Universal Memory. Anyone who is able to place himself in touch with that memory can recover the whole circum- stance as much as we can ; the events through which zue have pasied are not ours, but form part of the contents of His consciousncs ; and our sense of property in them is only due to the fact that we have previously vibrated to them, and therefore vibrate again to them more readily than if we contacted them Jbr the first time.
Ve may. however, contact ihem with ifferent sheaths at different times, living
A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
as we do under time and space conditions which vary with each sheath. The part of the consciousness of the Logos that we move through in our physical bodies is far more restricted than that we move through in our astral and mental bodies, and the contacts through a well -organised body are far more vivid than those through a less-organised one. Moreover, it must be remembered that the restriction of area is due to our vehicles only ; faced by the complete event, physical, astral, mental, spiritual, our consciousness of it is limited within the range of the vehicles able to respond to it. We feel ourselves io be among the circumstances which surround the grossest vehicle we are acting in, and which thus touch it from " outside " ; whereas we " remember " the circumstances which we contact with the finer vehicles, these transmitting the vibrations to the grosser vehicle, which is thus touched from "within."
The test of objectivity that we apply to circumstances "present" or "remembered" is that of the "common sense." If others around us see as we see, hear as we hear,
THE NATURE OF MEMORY. 283
regard the circumstances as objective ; if they do not, if they are unconscious of that of which we are conscious, we regard the circumstances as subjective. But this test of objectivity is only valid for those who are active in the same sheaths ; if one person is working in the physical body and another in the physical and the astral, the things objective to the man in the astral body cannot affect the man in the physical boily, and he will declare them to be subjective hallucinations. The " common sense " can only work in similar bodies ; it will give similar results when all are in physical bodies, all in astral, or all in mental For the *' common sense " is merely the thought-forms of the Logos on each plane, conditioning each embodied consciousness, and enabling it to respond by certain changes to certain vibrations in jts vehicles. It is by no means confined
the physical plane , but the average humanity at the present stage of evolution has not sufficiently unfolded the indwelling consciousness for them to exercise any ■* common sense " on the astral and mental planes. " Common sense " is an eloquent
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284 A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
testimony to the oneness of our indwelling lives ; we see all things around us on the physical plane in the same way, because our apparently separate consciousnesses are all really part of the One Consciousness ensouling all forms. We all respond inJ the same general way, according to th stage of our evolution, because we shared the same consciousness ; and we are affected similarly by the same things because the action and reaction between them and ourselves is the interplay of the One Life in varied forms.
Recovery of anything by memory, then, is due to the ever-existence of everything in the consciousness of the Locos, and He has Imposed upon us the limitations of time and space in order that we may. by practice, be able to respond swiftly by changes of consciousness to the vibrations caused in our vehicles by vibrations coming from other vehicles similarly ensouled by consciousness ; thus only can we gradually learn to distinguish precisely and clearly; contacting things successively — that is, being in time- — and contacting them in relative directions in regard to
Hature of memory. 285
rselves and to each other — that is, being in space — we are gradually unfolded to the stite in which we can recognise all simul- taneously and each everywhere — that is. tut of time and space. As we pass through countless hap- inings in life, we find that we do not ;p in touch with all through which we there is a very limited iwer of response iu our physical vehicle, id hence numerous experiences drop out 'of its purview. In trance, we can recover these, and they are said to emerge from the sub ■ conscious. Truly they remain ever unchanging in the Universal Con- sciousness, and as we pass by them we become aware of them, because the very limited light of our consciousness, shrouded in the physical vehicle, falls upon them, and they disappear as we pass on ; but as the area covered by that same light shining through the astral vehicle is larger, they again appear when we are in trance— that is, in the astral vehicle, free from the physical ; they have not come and gone and come back again, but the light of our consciousness in the physical
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vehicle had passed on, and so we saw them not, and the more extended light in the astral vehicle enables us to see them again. As BhagavSn Dis has well said : —
" If a spectator wandered unrestinglj through the halls of a vast museum, great art - gallery, at the dead of night, with a single small lamp in one hand, each of the natural objects, the pictured scenes, the statues, the portraits, would be illumined by that lamp, in succession, for a single moment, white alt the rest were in darkness, and after that single moment, would itself fall into darkness again. Let there now be not one but countless such spectators, as many in endless number as the objects of sight within the place, each spectator meandering in and out inces- santly through the great crowd of all the others, each lamp bringing momentarily into light one object and for only that spectator who holds that lamp. This immense and unmoving building is the rock -bound ideation of the changeless Absolute. Each lamp-carrying spectator out of the countless crowd is one line of
THE NATURE OF~MEMORV. 287
consciousness out of the pseudo - infinite lines of such, that make up the totality of the one universal consciousness. Each coming into hght of each object is its patency, is an experience of the Jiva ; each falling into darkness is its lapse into the latenL From the standpoint of the objects themselves, or of the universal consciousness, there is no latency, nor patency. From that of the lines of con- sciousness, there is."'
As vehicle after vehicle comes into fuller
[ working, the area of light extends, and the
I ■ consciousness can turn its attention to any
one part of the area and observe closely
I the objects therein included. Thus, when
the consciousness can function freely on
the astral plane, and Is aware of its
surroundings there, it can see much that
on the physical plane is "past" — or
"future," if they be things to which in the
"past" it ha-s learned to respond. Things
I outside the area of Hght coming through
I the vehicle of the astral body will be within
[the area of that which streams from the
f subtler mental vehicle. When the causal
• 7*1- .'vtfmct of PtaM. (In ihe pnsa.)
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265 A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
body is the vehicle, the " memory of past lives " is recoverable, the causal body vibrating more readily to events to which it has before vibrated, and the light shining through it embracing a far larger area and illuminating scenes long " past " — those scenes being really no more past than the scenes of the present, but occupying a different spot in time and space. The lower vehicles, which have not previously vibrated to these events, cannot readily directly contact them and answer to them ; that belongs to the causal body, the relatively permanent vehicle. But when this body answers to them, the vibrations from it readily run downwards, and may be reproduced in the mental, astral, and physical bodies.
§ 6. Attention.
The phrase is used above, as to con* -sciousness, that " it can turn its attention to any one part of the area, and observe closely the objects therein included." This " turning of the attention " corresponds very closely in consciousness to what we should call focussing the eye in the physical
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289
y. If we watch the action taking place in the muscles of the eye when we look first at a near and then at a distant object, or vice versa, we shall be conscious of a slight movement, and ihis constriction or relaxation causes a slight compression or the reverse in the lenses of the eye. It is an automatic action now, quite instinctive, but it has only become so by practice ; a baby does not focus his eye. nor judge distance. He grasps as readily at a candle on the other side of the room as at one within his reach, and only slowly learns to know what is beyond his reach. The , effort to see clearly leads to the focussing \. of the eye, and presently it becomes auto- ! malic. The objects for which the eye is focussed arc within the field of clear vision, and the rest are vaguely seen. So, also, ihe consciousness is clearly aware of that to which its attention is turned ; other things remain vague, "out of focus."
A man gradually learns to thus turn his
attention to things long past, as wc measure
lime. The causal body is put into touch
with them, and the vibrations are then
ktntnsi lower bodies. The
290
A STUDY m CONSCIOUSNESS.
presence of a more advanced student will help a less advanced, because when the astral body of the former has been made to vibrate respoiisively to long past events, thus creating an astral picture of them, the astral body of the younger student can more readily reproduce these vibrations and thus also " see." But even when a man has learned to put himself into touch with his past, and through his own with that of others connected with it, he will find it more diflicult to turn his atten- tion effectively to scenes with which he has had no connexion ; and when that is mastered, he will still find it difficult to put himself into touch with scenes outside the experiences of his recent past ; for instance, if he wishes to visit the moon, and by his accustomed methods launches himself in that direction, he will find himself bom- barded by a hail of unaccustomed vibrations to which he cannot mstinctively respond, and will need to fall back on his inherent divine power to answer to anything which can affect his vehicles. If he seeks to go yet further, to another planetary system, he will find a barrier he cannot overleap,
THE NATURE OF HEMORV. 29I
he Ring Pass-not of his own Planetary
§ 6. Thk One Consciousness.
We thus begin to understand what is meant by the statements that people at a n grade of evolution can reach this or that part of the kosmos ; they can put themselves into touch with the conscious- ness of the Lcx;os outside the limitations imposed by their material vehicles on the less evolved. These vehicles, being com- [X)sed of matter modified by the action of the Planetary Logos of the Chain to which they belong, cannot respond to the vibra- tions of matter differently modified ; and the student must be able to use his 4tmic body before he can contact the Universal Memory beyond the limits of his own
, Chain.
Such is the theory of Memory which ' present for the consideration of theo-
* sophical students. It applies equally to the small memories and forgeltings of every- day life as to the vast reaches alluded to in the above paragraph. For there is nothing small or great to the Logos, and
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A STUDY IN CONSCIOUSNESS.
when we are performing the smallest act of memory, we are as much putting ourselves into touch with the omnipresence iin omniscience of the Logos, as when are recalling a far-off past. There is no "far-off," and no "near." All are equally present at all times and in all spaces ; the difficulty is with our vehicles, and not with that all-embracing changeless Life. All becomes more and more intelligible and more peace-giving as we think of that Consciousness, In which is no " before " and no "after," no " past " and no "future." We begin to feel that these things are but the illusions, the limitations, imposed upon us by our own sheaths, necessary until our powers are evolved and at our service. We live unconsciously in this mighty Con- sciousness in which everything is eternallyii present, and we dimly feel that if we couldfl live consciously in that Eternal there were peace. I know of nothing that can more give to the events of a life their true pro- portion than this idea of a Consciousness in which everything is present from the beginning, in which Indeed there beginning and no ending. We learn thal.^
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there is nothing terrible and nothing which is more that relatively sorrowful ; and in that lesson is the beginning of a true peace, which in due course shall brighten into joy.
Part n.
WILL, DESIRE, AND EMOTION,
CONTENTS.
PAGR
Chaptrr I. The Will to Live 299