NIRVANA
Nirvana
A Study in
Synthetic
Consciousness
by
George Sidney
Arundale
First published 1926
Dr Arundale was International President of
the Theosophical
Society (Adyar) from 1933 to 1945
__________
CHAPTER X
Later Thoughts
I look’d
And, in the likeness of a river, saw
Light flowing, from whose amber-seeming waves
Flash’d up effulgence, as they glided on
‘Twist banks, on either side, painted with spring,
Incredible how fair: and, from the tide,
There ever and anon, outstarting, flew
Sparkles instinct with life; and in the flowers
Did set them like to rubies chased in gold:
Then, as if drunk with odours, plunged
again
Into the wondrous flood; from which, as one
Re-enter’d, still another rose. “The
thirst
Of knowledge high, whereby thou art inflamed,
To search the meaning of what here thou seest,
The more it warms thee, pleases me the more.
But first behoves thee of this water
drink,
Or e’er that longing be allay’d.” So spake
The day-star of mine eyes: Then thus subjoine’d:
“This stream; and these, forth issuing from its gulf,
And diving back, a living topaz each,
With all this laughter on its bloomy shores,
Are but a preface, shadowy of the truth 8
They emblem: not that, in themselves, the things
Are crude; but on thy part is the defect,
For that thy views not yet aspire so high.”
Never did babe, that had outslept his
wont,
Rush, with such eager straining to the milk,
As I toward the water; bending me,
To make the better mirrors of mine eyes
In the refining wave: and as the eaves
Of mine eye-lids did drink of it, forthwith
Seem’d it unto me turne’d from length to
round.
Then as a troop of maskers, when they put
Their vizors off, look other than
before;
The counterfeited semblance thrown aside
So into greater jubilee were changed
Those flowers and sparkles; and distinct I saw,
Before me, either court of heaven display’d.
O prime enlightener! though who gavest me strength
On the high triumph of thy realm to gaze;
Grant virtue now to utter what I kenn’d.
There is in heaven a light, whose goodly shine
Makes the Creator visible to all
Created, that in seeing Him alone
Have peace; and in a circle spreads so far,
That the circumference were too loose a zone
To girdle in the sun. All is one beam,
Reflected from the summit of the first,
That moves, which being hence and vigour takes.
And as some cliff, that from the bottom eyes
His image mirror’d in the crystal flood
As if to admire his brave appareling
Of verdure and of flowers; so, round about,
Eyeing the light, on more than million thrones,
Stood, eminent, whatever from our earth
Has to the skies return’d. How wide the
leaves,
Extended to their utmost, of this rose,
Whose lowest step embosoms such a space
Of ample radiance! Yet, nor amplitude
Nor height impeded, but my view with ease
Took in the full dimensions of that joy.
Near or remote, what there avails, where God
Immediate rules, and Nature, awed, suspends
Her sway? Into the yellow of the rose
Perennial, which, in bright expansiveness,
Lays forth its gradual blooming, redolent
Of praise to the never-wintering sun,
As one, who fain would speak yet holds his peace,
Beatrice led me; and, “Behold,” she said,
“This fair assemblage; stoles of snowy white,
How numberless! The city, where we dwell,
Behold how vast; and these our seats so throng’d,
Few now are wanting here.
DANTE:
NATURALLY, I am continually brooding on, or may I say “in,”
Nirvana. My comparatively busy life leaves plenty of room for such brooding,
since to live in Nirvana is less to add to one’s occupations and more to follow
the daily round from a new centre. I am learning to “Nirvanize”
my life, which means that I am endeavouring to enter
into the Nirvanic spirit in everything, and so
gradually to achieve a new mode of Being.
The dominant reflection inevitably centres round the Advent of
the Lord. That He has come I know, not merely because I have been told but
because the whole world is visibly and audibly changed. A new richness of
colour has been infused into it, a new melody permeates it, because the Lord of
Nirvana, the Lord of Bliss, meditates upon His world, is engaged in the
wondrous Yoga of physical incarnation so that He lives among His younger
brethren as He has not lived for more than 2,000 years.
Not a single living thing is without a newer, a truer value,
whatever be the kingdom of nature, for the Lord of
Happiness is awakening all life to happiness. And what is this happiness but
the bright shadow and reflection of Nirvanic bliss?
The Advent of the Lord is a descent, an awakening, of Nirvana - the Abode of
Happiness. As I have already said, the world cannot yet know Nirvana, but it
can draw near. It can join in the worship, and thus gain something of the glory,
as the High Priest of Happiness celebrates the great Ritual of the
Transubstantiation at the altars of men’s hearts. The Lord Christ, the Jagat Guru, the Bodhisattwa, call
Him by whatever name you will, has come to the whole world, to all things that
live in it, has become a Priest in the innumerable tabernacles in which life
dwells in this world of forms, as the Lord Sri Krishna multiplied Himself in
gracious recognition of the selfless devotion of His Gopis.
He is embodied Nirvana in us all. Nirvana has come to us. Can you not feel and
understand all that I have written, I hope far more than I have written,
because His Light shines as rarely it has shone before throughout the world?
Remember that though the nucleus, so far as regards this outer
world, may be the body He has chosen for certain aspects of His ministry, yet
in very truth He is omnipresent. Have you, my reader, yet welcomed the Guest Who is knocking at your door? Has He come to you, for you
have welcomed Him?
I could write at length upon the inner universal
transubstantiation effected by the Lord’s closer presence, how a new Light
radiates upon all things and therefore from all things. But I should like my
readers to be able to sense this for themselves,
themselves to meet the Lord face to face in a shrine of their being. They will
then know, in the flash of recognition and of adoration, more of Nirvana than
any pen could depict, than any brush could paint, than any outer music could
voice.
To turn to a lesser theme, may I in all humility set forth my
growing conviction that gravitation
should less be considered as a specific and specialized attribute of, say, the
Sun or of a planet than as an inherent property of all matter everywhere? It
is, I believe, said nowadays that the Sun does not exercise Gravitation upon a
planet, and I believe the statement to be profoundly true, except for the fact
that the finer the body the greater the power of spiritual gravitation, and the
larger the mass the greater the quality of physical gravitation, so that the
gravitational co-efficient of the Sun as a body is greater than that of any
other body in this universe. The Law of gravitation is a law of all planes and
of all modes of consciousness, for it is the Law of Brotherhood, the Law of
Essential Identity.
As I have already said, the Sun is everywhere and is essentially
all things, so that the Law of Gravitation is in fact nothing more, though
nothing less, than an expression of a quality of Light. In the light of Nirvana
I perceive a transcendent gravitation which I have expressed in the word
“Being”. In that word is disclosed an apotheosis of
gravitation. “Being” holds universes together, as does
gravitation. I must not speculate further, but it will be seen that along this
pathway is a fascinating avenue of study.
To change the subject, and to follow another line of meditation,
I find that while reasoning is doubtless a useful process of growth, in the para-rational regions of Buddhi and Nirvana there are other
measurement-standards.
Reasoning is a good servant, but a bad master. Reasoning helps us
a little on our way, but only as far as the frontiers of the lower mind. Once
beyond these, reasoning can do nothing for us. What then are the new
measurement-standards?
I can only describe these in a phrase - a sense of inherent
essential values. It is as if we now weighed things not in terms of logic but
in terms of unity or of being.
More unity, greater value. More being, greater value.
Less unity, less being, less value. And, what is more
important, the greater the unity, the being, the more truly logical so far as
regards the lower worlds, whatever our so-called logic may say. Logically we
come to such and such a conclusion. If the logic be accurate we must come to
the same conclusion when we apply the measurement of unity-value and of
being-value.
How infinitely more careful those of us need to be, who have some
acquaintance with these finer instruments of precision, that we make no hasty
judgments, that we do not blindly accept outer world valuations, that we test
even vaunted logic in the keener and more penetrating light of unity and
being-measures. Things as they appear to be so often disclose little of
themselves as they are. As we develop the Buddhic and Nirvanic
measurement-standards we re-measure our worlds, and often reach startling
results, one of these being that not infrequently those who are first in the
world’s estimation are the real laggards, while those who come last in the
world's estimation are nearest to the
The logical process is a step by step process, is a process of
deduction from premisses to conclusion, or is a process
of inferring from individualities to generalizations. On the 9other hand, the
unity and being-measurement-standards have nothing to do with stages, or with
deduction or induction. They examine qualitatively. They determine direction.
They listen to motifs and compare them with the Divine motif. They explore
colour schemes and compare them with the Divine Colour Scheme. They stop short
at the very premises themselves.
The conclusion will take care of itself. It is the child of the
premises. So it is the premises that matter. Let them ring true to these inner
measurement-standards and all must inevitably be well with the conclusion. Similarly with arguments and reasonings.
Their validity and worth depend upon the extent to which they lead in the
direction of Unity and of Being. Once Buddhi and
Nirvana have been contacted there can no longer be satisfaction with written
word, with Scripture, with dogma or doctrine, conventional or otherwise. To
agree that such and such a theory is generally accepted, or that the Scriptures
say so and so and that therefore so and so is so, ceases to be enough for those
who, entering these inner regions, are beginning to learn that they can and
must know for themselves.
They have ceased to be cripples walking with the aid of external
sanctions. They have ceased to be orthodox or, for the matter of that,
heterodox. They are learning to be true.
To record yet another reflection, I find myself increasingly
impressed by the way in which the Nirvanic
consciousness lifts one out of the domination of space and time and gives free
access to past, present and future. Einstein has already been freeing us from
slavery to time and to space. We are learning to evolve a space-time, which
itself is relative, out of the two, and we emphasize our freedom from the thraldom of space and time by talking of conditions which
are space-like or time-like. Even at the Buddhic level we begin the conscious
transcendence of space and time, while at the Nirvanic
level they almost cease to have meaning for us. Space and time were merely
“invented” to show that there is something beyond them both. The value of
limitation is not the life within it but rather the effort to get beyond it,
and Buddhi and Nirvana are a beyond to which, as science is now dimly beginning
to perceive, they point.
At the Nirvanic level of consciousness
one can be, or at least begin to be, simultaneously everywhere - “everywhere”
still a limited area, but a transcendence of time and space as we conceive
these “down here”. The value of time and space are in connection with
objectivity. Tables and chairs owe that mode of being, which we designate as
table and chair, to considerations of time-space.
We need time-space to give us tables and chairs, for we need
objects down here and time-space gives them to us. Objects, as we are told, are
events in time-space. A table is an event. But we are not concerned with
objects in Nirvanic consciousness. We are concerned
with that subjectivity of which they are the expression in the lower worlds. Hence
the limitations of time and space, appropriate and necessary to objective
existence in the lower worlds, cease to exist when we deal with their
subjective realities, and it is even possible, after practice, to a certain
extent - I do not know how far - to hold this subjectivity in relation to the
very objects themselves so as to perceive them in some measure without their
time-space qualifications, thus uniting subject and object, or should I say
thus merging object in subject and yet retaining a shadow of objectivity. I am
afraid I am expressing myself somewhat confusedly, but I can only hope my
readers follow to a certain extent what I am driving at.
I see what I mean; but this is hardly encouraging to those who
have yet to know that there is a meaning to see. Perhaps I can make myself
clearer if I suggest to you to try the experiment of universalizing a chair or
a table, subjectivizing it, while at the same time,
as long as you can, holding to the objectivity.
I do not advise you to try very hard. Try lazily and comfortably.
You may then begin to see what I mean (about as much as I see what I mean),
which, believe me, scoff as some may, is by no means not all.
But we can not only de-time-space the ordinary objects of the outer
world. We can de-time-space faiths and nationalities, races and peoples. From
the Nirvanic standpoint the essence of life is
Universal Being, which is the same thing as Universal
Truth or as Universal Law. There is no Christianity, or Hinduism, or Buddhism,
or Islam, or Zoroastrianism in Nirvana. These terms are time-space terms,
highly vital up to a certain point, but beyond this point perceived to be no
more than a number of objects depending upon a universal subject. The subject
passes through the spectrum and objects are reflected. The vision of most
people does not include perception of the spectrum, so they see but one object
as true.
They are not aware that it is one among many reflections. But
Buddhic consciousness discloses the existence of the spectrum, enabling us to
infer the subject behind; and Nirvanic consciousness
takes us into the realm of the subject itself, though it is quite clear that
the time will some day come when the Nirvanic
“subject” will be perceived to be but a mode of a still more essential unity.
How much happier the world would be if we could at least realize the
subjectivity common to all faiths, however much we might in our lower bodies
prefer a special reflection, a special objectivity. It is the same as regards
nations and peoples and classes. There is a subjectivity embracing
them all. I would, however, recommend students to guard against the
very real danger of ignoring the objects as they gain vision of the subject. To
put the matter in comprehensible terms, a spirit of internationalism is a most
valuable quality, but we must never be international at the expense of national
duty.
Patriotism is not in the least degree irreconcilable with the
spirit of universal brotherhood. On the contrary, the virtue of universal
brotherhood can only truly be practised as we fulfil the smaller duties of national citizenship. We do
not discard Buddhi as we assume Nirvana. We fulfil
Buddhi in Nirvana.
We do not discard Christianity or any other faith as we assume Theosophy. We fulfil our faith, we fulfil our nationality, as we become Theosophists. We
become wiser, not less ardent.
Let me now show how entry into the Nirvanic
consciousness enables us to transcend time in a very special way. I can do this
no better than by means of the following quotation from Camille Flammarion’s Popular Astronomy:A man, a spirit, leaving the earth, either by death
or otherwise, this year, and transported in some hours or days to a great
distance, would see the earth of
former times, and would see himself again as a child, for this aspect
of the earth would not arrive where he was till after a long delay.
Now Flammarion here postulates a
particular place so determined as to effect a synchronization
between the individual as now and himself as then, the present meeting the
past. But from the Nirvanic standpoint there is no
need for transportation or place. All times and places are modes of being. It
is therefore but a matter of ringing the changes upon a Mode Universal. Light
travels, no doubt, or at least we say it does, though I have my doubts, but it
never travels so far away that it can be lost. The Light which made that mode
of time-space which I call my childhood is not, from the Nirvanic
standpoint, in the past. It has not travelled away to
a distance.
It is immanent. All is immanent in Nirvana, and had Flammarion experienced Nirvanic
consciousness it would not have been necessary for him to go to the trouble of
removing the man or spirit. He would have made him change his mode of
consciousness. And as for the Past, so for the Future.
That, too, is immanent, as now and then I have had occasion to experience. It
is extremely difficult to suggest how the future is as immanent as past or
present, but it might be useful to advance the postulate that God began with
the Future and organized His unfoldment so as inevitably to lead to it. Thus
everything has its Futurity as it were stamped upon it. All things are cast in
the mould of the Future, however long they may take to fill the mould and to
become its perfect replica. And Nirvana is a department of God's Laboratory in
which certain of His Plans are stored, and in which are models - nay, more than
models - of the relative perfections now being carved in the lower worlds out
of the great Rough Ashlars of Life.
Is there not a complete Light-History of the world, written in
the language of the Eternal Now? What is the Akashic Record but such a history?
Even we ordinary creatures can make Light-History in the form of
films. We can do this for past and present. Is it difficult to conceive that
Once again, inevitably, I am fascinated by my contemplation of
our Lord the Sun. To read about Him in an astronomical treatise is, perhaps, to
me the most enjoyable of all forms of reading. At every point I stop both to
marvel and to relate the description, whatever it may be, to its Nirvanic counterparts. For example, I read somewhere
recently the following passage:
What comes from the Sun and from all sources of Light and Heat is
not then, to speak accurately, either light or heat (for these are merely impressions)
but motion - motion extremely rapid. It is not heat which is scattered through
space, for the temperature of space is, and remains everywhere, glacial. It is
not light, for space has constantly the darkness seen at
Without being able to follow the author in his observations
regarding space, the most significant fact remains that while, Nirvanically speaking, Light may be regarded as the
archetypal substans of the lower worlds, yet Light
itself has its own archetype for which we use the word “motion”. Light may be
our supreme archetypal percept of the Divine Motion of things, yet the Divine
Motion itself, which down here we may call Light or Sound, is other than these
expressions of itself, as we begin to realize when we contemplate that
wonderful shadow of Reality which in Hinduism is depicted as the Dance of the Lord
Shiva. Even motion leaves me dissatisfied. I know that this word limits, and
that our idea of motion, however exalted, is but a caricature of the Divine
Motion.
But it is something to imagine, however feebly, a transcendence beyond Light, beyond the Lightning-standing-still.
I am interested in the last portion of the concluding sentence - no
“perceptible effect until it meets with an obstacle which transforms it”. This
is an admirable statement of the continual transubstantiation taking place
between higher and lower, between inner and outer. The Divine “Friction”
between subjectivity and objectivity is the whole of evolution. But 0in truth,
of course, obstacles are non-existent. The vibrations of Divinity do not meet
obstacles. They readjust as between their respective particles. It is
readjustment that is continually taking place, and
readjustment only.
Then there is another passage which I would venture to quote
here:
The Sun comes to us in the form of heat, He leaves us in the form
of heat, but between His arrival and His departure He has given birth to the
varied powers of our globe … (yet) the earth only stops in its passage the two
thousand millionth part of the total radiation … all the planets of the system
intercept but the
227 millionth part of the radiation emitted by the Central Star. The rest passes
by the worlds and appears to be lost …but is, on the contrary, utilized to
purposes of which we can have no conception.
At this point I contact once again a
Universality beyond the limits of any one individual system. I know that
a Centauri and Cygni, the Suns
nearest to us, even though 25 and 43 millions of miles distant from us, or 4.35
and 7.2 light-years respectively away, exercise potent influences upon us in
the marvellous scheme of interpenetration and cosmic adjustment with which some
of the Greater Elders of our world are concerned. They reach us, affect us,
modify us, through the universal Light in which the whole Cosmos shares.
Indeed, though sound would take us more than three million years to reach us
from Centauri, still the sound does reach us and can be heard by Those Who have the ears to hear. As has been truly said,
“Light transports us into the infinite life. It also transports us into the
eternal life.”
Let me add the following beautiful passage from Flammarion:
(It is the heat of the Sun) which maintains the three states of
bodies - solid, liquid, gaseous … It is the Sun which blows in the air, which
flows in the water, which moans in the tempest, which sings in the unwearied
throat of the nightingale. It attaches to the sides of the mountains, the
cataracts, and the avalanches are precipitated with an energy they draw from
Him. Thunder and
lightning are in their turn a manifestation of His Power. Every fire which
burns, and every flame which shines, has received its life from the Sun … and
still all this is nothing, or almost nothing, compared with the real Power of
Sun!
A fine description of Immanence, yet telling only a tithe of the
truth, for the Sun is all things everywhere.
__________
THEOSOPHY
NIRVANA
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