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 customers 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 Mental Plane
The mental
plane, as its name implies, is that which belongs to consciousness working as
thought ; not of the mind as it works through the brain, but as it works in its
own world, unencumbered with physical spirit-matter. This world is
the world of
the real man. The word "man" comes from the Sanskrit root
"man" and this is the root of the Sanskrit verb "to think,"
so that man means thinker; he is named by his most characteristic attribute,
intelligence.
In English
the word "mind" has to stand for the intellectual consciousness
itself, and also for the effects produced on the physical brain by the
vibration of that consciousness ; but we have now to conceive of the
intellectual consciousness as an entity, an individual a being, the
vibrations of whose life are thoughts, thoughts which are images, not words.
This
individual is Manas, or the Thinker ; (Derived from Manas is the technical
name, the mānasic plane. Englished as "mental." We might call it the
plane of the mind proper, to distinguish its activities from those of the mind
working in the flesh.) he is the Self, clothed in the matter, and working
within the conditions, of the higher subdivisions of the mental plane. He
reveals his
presence on
the physical plane by the vibrations he sets up in the brain and nervous system
; these respond to the thrills of his life by sympathetic vibrations, but in
consequence of the coarseness of their material they can reproduce only a small
section of his vibrations and even that very imperfectly.
Just as
science asserts the existence of a vast series of etheric vibrations, of which
the eye can only see a small fragment, the solar light spectrum, because it can
vibrate only within certain limits, so can the physical thought-apparatus, the
brain and nervous system, think only a small fragment of the vast series of
mental vibrations set up by the Thinker in his own world.
The most
receptive brains respond up to the point of what we call the great intellectual
power ; the exceptionally receptive brains respond up to the point of what we
call genius ; the exceptionally unreceptive brains respond only up to the point
we call idiocy ; but every one sends beating against his brain
millions of
thought-waves to which it cannot respond, owing to the density of its
materials, and just in proportion to its sensitiveness are the so-called mental
powers of each. But before studying the Thinker, it will be well to consider
his world, the mental plane itself.
The mental
plane is that which is next to the astral, and is separated from it only by
differences of materials, just as the astral is separated from the physical. In
fact, we may repeat what was said as to the astral and the physical with regard
to the mental and the astral. Life on the mental plane is more
active than
on the astral, and form is more plastic. The spirit-matter of that plane is
more highly vitalised and finer than any grade of matter in the astral world.
The ultimate atom of astral matter has innumerable aggregations of the coarsest
mental matter for its encircling sphere-world, so that the disintegration of
the astral atom yields a mass of mental matter of the coarsest
kinds. Under
these circumstances it will be understood that the play of the life-forces on this
plane will be enormously increased in activity, there being so much less mass
to be moved by them.
The matter is
in constant ceaseless motion, taking form under every thrill of life, and
adapting itself without hesitation to every changing motion. "Mind-stuff,"
as it has been called, makes astral spirit-matter seem clumsy, heavy, and
lustreless, although compared with the physical spirit-matter it is so
fairy-light and luminous. But the law of analogy holds good, and gives us a
clue to guide us through this super astral region, the region that is our
birthplace and our home, although, imprisoned in a foreign land, we know it
not, and gaze at descriptions of it with the eyes of aliens.
Once again
here, as on the two lower planes, the subdivisions of the spirit-matter of the
plane are seven in number. Once again, these varieties enter into countless
combinations, of every variety of complexity, yielding the solids, liquids,
gases, and ethers of the mental plane. The word "solid" seems indeed
absurd, when speaking of even the most substantial forms of mind-stuff ; yet as
they are dense in comparison with other kinds of mental materials, and as we
have no descriptive words save such as are based on physical conditions, we
must even use it for lack of a better.
Enough if we
understand that this plane follows the general law and order of Nature, which
is, for our globe, the septenary basis, and that the seven subdivisions of
matter are of lessening densities, relatively to each other, as the physical
solids, liquids, gases, and ethers ; the seventh, or highest, subdivision being
composed exclusively of the mental atoms.
These
subdivisions are grouped under two headings, to which the somewhat inefficient
and unintelligible epithets "formless" and "form" have been
assigned. (Arūpa, without form: rūpa, form. Rūpa is form, shape, body. ) The
lower four the first, second, third, and fourth subdivisions are grouped
together as "with form" ; the higher three the fifth, sixth and
seventh
subdivisions
are grouped as "formless." The grouping is necessary, for the
distinction is a real one, although one difficult to describe, and the regions
are related in consciousness to the divisions in the mind itself as will
appear more plainly a little farther on.
The
distinction may perhaps be best expressed by saying that in the lower four
subdivisions the vibrations of consciousness give rise to forms, to images or
pictures, and every thought appears as a living shape ; whereas in the higher
three, consciousness, though still, of course, setting up vibrations, seems
rather to send them out as a mighty stream of living energy, which does not
body itself into distinct images while it remains in this higher region, but
which steps up a variety of forms all linked by some common condition when it
rushes into the lower worlds.
The nearest
analogy that I can find for the conception I am trying to express is that of
abstract and concrete thoughts ; an abstract idea of a triangle has no form,
but connotes any plane figure contained within three right lines, the angles of
which make two right angles ; such an idea, with conditions but without shape,
thrown into the lower world, may give birth to a vast variety of figures,
right-angled, isosceles, scalene, of any colour and size, but all filling the
conditions concrete triangles each one with a definite shape of its own. The
impossibility of giving in words a lucid exposition of the difference in the
action of consciousness in the two regions is due to the fact that words are
the symbols of images and belong to the workings of the lower mind in the
brain, and are based wholly upon those workings ; while the
"formless" region belongs to the Pure reason, which never works
within the narrow limits of language.
The mental
plane is that which reflects the Universal Mind in Nature, the plane which in
our little system corresponds with that of the Great Mind in the Kosmos.
(Mahat, the Third LOGOS, or Divine Creative Intelligence, the Brahmā of the
Hindus, the Mandjusri of the Northern Buddhists, the Holy Spirit of the
Christians.) In its higher regions exist all the archetypal ideas which are now
in course of concrete evolution, and in its lower the working out of these into
successive forms, to be duly reproduced in the astral and physical worlds.
Its materials
are capable of combining under the impulse of thought vibrations, and can give
rise to any combination which thought can construct ; as iron can be made into
a spade for digging or into a sword for slaying, so can mind-stuff be shaped
into thought-forms that help or injure ; the vibrating life of the Thinker
shapes the materials around him, and according to his volitions so is his work.
In that region thought and action, will and deed, are one and the same thing
spirit-matter here becomes the obedient servant of the life, adapting itself to
every creative motion.
These
vibrations, which shape the matter of the plane into thought-forms, give rise
also from their swiftness and subtlety to the most exquisite and constantly
changing colours, waves of varying shades like the rainbow hues of
mother-of-pearl, etherialised and brightened to an indescribable extent,
sweeping over and through every form, so that each presents a harmony of
rippling, living, luminous, delicate colours, including many not ever known to
earth.
Words can
give no idea of the exquisite beauty and radiance shown in combinations of this
subtle matter, instinct with life and motion.
Every seer
who has witnessed it, Hindu, Buddhist, Christian, speaks in rapturous terms of
its glorious beauty, and ever confesses his utter inability to describe it;
words seem but to coarsen and deprave it, however deftly woven in its praise.
Thought-forms
naturally play a large part among the living creatures that function on the
mental plane. They resemble those with which we are already familiar in the
astral world, save that they are far more radiant and more brilliantly
coloured, are stronger, more lasting, and more fully vitalised. As the higher
intellectual qualities become more clearly marked, these forms show very
sharply defined outlines, and there is a tendency to a singular perfection of
geometrical figures accompanied by an equally singular purity of luminous
colour. But, needless to say at the present stage of humanity, there is a vast
preponderance of cloudy and irregularly shaped thoughts, the production of the
ill-trained minds of the majority.
Rarely
beautiful artistic thoughts are also here encountered, and it is little wonder
that painters who have caught, in dreamy vision, some glimpse of their ideal,
often fret against their incapacity to reproduce its glowing beauty in earths
dull pigments. These thought-forms are built out of the elemental essence of
the plane, the vibrations of the thought throwing the elemental essence into a
corresponding shape, and this shape having the thought as its informing life.
Thus again we have "artificial elementals" created in a way identical
with that by which they come into being in the astral regions. All that is said
in Chapter II of their generation and of their importance may be repeated of
those of the mental plane, with here the additional responsibility on their
creators of the greater force and permanence belonging to those of this higher
world.
The elemental
essence of the mental plane is formed by the Monad in the stage of its descent
immediately preceding its entrance into the astral world, and it constitutes
the second elemental kingdom, existing on the four lower subdivisions of the
mental plane. The three higher subdivisions, the "formless," are
occupied by the first elemental kingdom, the elemental essence there being
thrown by thought into brilliant coruscations, coloured streams, and flashes of
living fire, instead of into definite shapes, taking as it were its first
lessons in combined action, but not yet assuming definite limitations of forms.
On the mental
plane, in both its great divisions, exist numberless
Intelligences,
whose lowest bodies are formed of the luminous matter and elemental essence of
that plane Shining ones who guide the processes of natural order, overlooking
the hosts of lower entities before spoken of, and yielding submission in their
several hierarchies to their great overlords of the seven Elements. (These are
the Arūpa and Rūpa Devas of the Hindus and the Buddhists, the "Lords of
the heavenly and the earthly" of the Zoroastrians, the Archangels and
Angels of the Christians and Mahomedans).
They are, as
may readily be imagined, beings of vast knowledge, of great power, and most
splendid in appearance, radiant, flashing creatures, myriad-hued, like rainbows
of changing supernal colours, of stateliest mien, calm energy incarnate,
embodiments of resistless strength. The description of the great Christian Seer
leaps to mind, when he wrote of a mighty angel: "A rainbow was upon his
head, and his face was imperial as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of
fire.( Revelation, x, 1). "As the sound of many waters" are their
voices, as echoes from the music of the spheres. They guide natural order, and
rule the vast companies of the elementals of the astral world, so that their
cohorts carry on ceaselessly the processes of nature with undeviating
regularity and accuracy.
On the lower
mental plane are seen many Chelās at work in their mental bodies, (Usually
called Māyāvi Rūpa, or illusory body, when arranged for independent functioning
in the mental world.) --- freed for a time from their physical vestures. When
the body is wrapped in deep sleep the true man, the Thinker, may escape from
it, and work untrammelled by its weight in these higher regions.
From here he
can aid and comfort his fellowmen by acting directly on theirminds, suggesting
helpful thoughts, putting before them noble ideas, more effectively and
speedily than he can do when encased in the body.
He can see
their needs more clearly and therefore can supply them more perfectly, and it
is his highest privilege and joy thus to minister to his struggling brothers,
without their knowledge of his service or any ideas of theirs as to the strong
arm that lifts their burden, or the soft voice that whispers solace in their
pain.
Unseen,
unrecognised, he works, serving his enemies as gladly and as freely as his
friends, dispensing to individuals the stream of beneficent forces that are
poured down from the great Helpers in higher spheres. Here also are sometimes
seen the glorious figures of the Masters, though for the most part They reside
on the highest level of the "formless" division of the mental plane ;
and other Great Ones may also sometimes come hither on some mission of
compassion requiring such lower manifestation.
Communication
between intelligences functioning consciously on this plane, whether human or
non-human, whether in or out of the body, is practically instantaneous, for it
is with:the "speed of thought." Barriers of space have here no power
to divide, and any soul can come into touch with any one by merely directing
his attention to him.
Not only is
communication thus swift, but it is also complete, if the souls are at about
the same stage of evolution ; no words fetter and obstruct the communion, but
the whole thought flashes from the one to the other, or, perhaps more exactly,
each sees the thought as conceived by the other.
The real
barriers between souls are the differences of evolution ; the less evolved can
know only as much of the more highly evolved as his is able to respond to ; the
limitation can obviously be felt only by the higher one, as the lesser has all
that he can contain.
The more
evolved a soul, the more does he know of all around him, the nearer does he
approach to realities ; but the mental plane has also its veils of illusion, it
must be remembered, though they be far fewer and thinner than those of the
astral and the physical worlds. Each soul has its own mental atmosphere, and,
as all impressions must come through this atmosphere, they are all distorted
and coloured. The clearer and purer, the atmosphere, and the less it is
coloured by the personality, the fewer are the illusions that can befall it.
The three
highest subdivisions of the mental plane are the habitat of the Thinker
himself, and he dwells on one or other of these, according to the stage of his
evolution. The vast majority live on the lowest level, in various stages of
evolution ; a comparatively few of the highly intellectual dwell on the second
level, the Thinker ascending thither to use a phrase more suitable to the
physical than to the mental plane when the subtler matter of that region
preponderates in him, and thus necessitates the change ; there is of course, no
"ascending," no change of place, but he receives the vibrations of
that subtler matter, being able to respond to them, and he himself is able to
send out forces that throw its rare particles into vibration.
The student
should familiarise himself with the fact that rising in the scale of evolution
does not move him from place to place, but renders him more and more able to
receive impressions. Every sphere is around us, the astral, the mental, the
buddhic, the nirvānic, and worlds higher yet, the life of the supreme God ; we
need not stir to find them, for they are here; but our dull unreceptivity shuts
them out more effectively than millions of miles of mere space.
We are
conscious only of that which affects us, which stirs us to responsive
vibration, and as we become more and more receptive, as we draw into ourself
finer and finer matter, we come into contact with subtler and subtler worlds.
Hence, rising
from one level to another means that we are weaving our vestures of finer
materials and can receive through them the contacts of finer worlds ; and it
means further that in the Self within these vestures diviner powers are waking
from latency into activity, and are sending out their subtler thrills of life.
At the stage
now reached by the Thinker, he is fully conscious of his surroundings and is in
possession of the memory of his past. He knows the bodies he is wearing,
through which he is contacting the lower planes, and he is able to influence
and guide them to a great extent. He sees the difficulties, the obstacles, they
are approaching the results of past careless living and he sets himself to
pour into them energies by which they may be better equipped for their task.
His direction
is sometimes felt in the lower consciousness as an imperiously compelling force
that will have its way, and that impels to a course of action for which all the
reasons may not be clear to the dimmer vision caused by the mental and astral
garments. Men who have done great deeds have occasionally left on record their
consciousness of an inner and compelling power, which seemed to leave them no
choice save to do as they had done. They were then acting as the real man ; the
Thinkers, that are the inner men, were doing the work consciously through the
bodies that then were fulfilling their proper functions as vehicles of the
individual. To these higher powers all will come as evolution proceeds.
On the third
level of the upper region of the mental plane dwell the Egos of the Masters,
and of the Initiates who are Their Chelās, the Thinkers having here a
preponderance of the matter of this region in their bodies. From this world of
subtlest mental forces the Masters carry on Their beneficent work for humanity,
raining down noble ideals, inspiring thoughts, devotional aspirations, streams
of spiritual and intellectual help for men.
Every force
there generated, rays out in myriad directions, and the noblest, purest souls
catch most readily these helpful influences. A discovery flashes into the mind
of the patient searcher into Natures secrets ; a new melody entrances the ear
of the great musician ; the answer to a long studied problem illumines the
intellect of a lofty philosopher ; a new energy of hope and love suffuses the
heart of an unwearied philanthropist. Yet men think that they are left uncared
for, although the very phrases they use ; "the thought occurred to me; the
idea came to me; the discovery flashed on me " unconsciously testify to
the truth known to their inner selves though the outer eyes be blind.
Let us now
turn to the study of the Thinker and his vestures as they are found in men on
earth. The body of the consciousness, conditioning it in the four lower
subdivisions of the mental plane the mental body, as we term it is formed
of combinations of the matter of these subdivisions. The Thinker, the
individual, Human Soul formed in the way described in the latter part of this
chapter when he is coming into incarnation, first radiates forth some of his
energy in vibrations that attract round him, and clothe him in, matter drawn
from the four lower subdivisions of his own plane.
According to
the nature of the vibrations are the kinds of matter they attract ; the finer
kinds answer the swifter vibrations and take form under their impulse ; the
coarser kinds similarly answer the slower ones ; just as a wire will
sympathetically sound out a note i.e., a given number of vibrations coming
from a wire similar in weight and tension to itself, but will remain dumb amid
a chorus of notes from wires dissimilar to itself in these respects, so do the
different kinds of matter assort themselves in answer to different kinds of
vibrations. Exactly according to the vibrations sent out by the Thinker will be
the nature of the mental body that he thus draws around him, and this mental
body is what is called the lower mind, the lower Manas, because it is the
Thinker clothed in the matter of the lower subdivisions of the mental plane and
conditioned by it in his further working.
None of his
energies which are too subtle to move this matter, too swift for its response,
can express themselves through it ; he is therefore limited by it, conditioned
by it, restricted by it in his expression of himself. It is the first of his
prison-houses during his incarnate life, and while his energies are acting
within it he is largely shut off from his own higher world, for his attention
is with the outgoing energies and his life is thrown with them into the mental
body, often spoken as a vesture, or sheath, or vehicle any expression will
serve which connotes the idea that the Thinker is not the mental body, but
formed it and uses it in order to express as much of himself as he can in the
lower mental region.
It must not
be forgotten that his energies, still pulsing outwards, draw round him also the
coarser matter of the astral plane as his astral body ; and during his
incarnate life the energies that express themselves through the lower kinds of
mental matter are so readily changed by it into the slower vibrations that are
responded to by astral matter that the two bodies are continually vibrating
together, and become very closely interwoven ; the coarser the kinds of matter
built into the mental body, the more intimate becomes this union, so that the
two bodies are sometimes classed together and even taken as one.( Thus the
Theosophist will speak of Kāma Manas, meaning the mind as working in and with
the desire nature, affecting and affected by the animal nature. The Vedāntin
classes the two together, and speaks of the Self as working in the
Manomayakosha,
the sheath composed of the lower mind, emotions, and passions.
The European
psychologist makes "feelings" one section of his tripartite division
of "mind", and includes under feelings both emotions and sensations.)
When we come to study Reincarnation we shall find this fact assuming vital
importance.
According to the
stage of evolution reached by the man will be the type of mental body he forms
on his way to become again incarnate, and we may study, as we did with the
astral body, the respective mental bodies of three types of men
a) an
undeveloped man
b) an average
man
c) a
spiritually advanced man.
In the
undeveloped man the mental body is but little perceptible, a small amount of
unorganised mental matter, chiefly from the lowest subdivisions of the plane,
being all that represents it. This is played on almost entirely from the lower
bodies, being set vibrating feebly by the astral storms raised by the contacts
with material objects through the sense organs. Except when stimulated by these
astral vibrations it remains almost quiescent, and even under their impulses
its responses are sluggish. No definite activity is generated from within,
these blows from the outer world being necessary to arouse any distinct
response.
The more
violent the blows, the better for the progress of the man, for each responsive vibration
aids in the embryonic development of the mental body. Riotous pleasure, anger,
rage, pain, terror, all these passions, causing whirlwinds in the astral body,
awaken faint vibrations in the mental, and gradually these vibrations, stirring
into commencing activity the mental consciousness, cause it to add something of
its own to the impressions made on it from without.
We have seen
that the mental body is so closely mingled with the astral that they act as a
single body, but the dawning mental faculties add to the astral passions a
certain strength and quality not apparent in them when they work as purely
animal qualities. The impressions made on the mental body are more permanent
than those made on the astral, and they are consciously reproduced by it. Here
memory and the organ of imagination begin, and the latter gradually moulds
itself, the images from the outer world working on the matter of the mental
body and forming its materials into their own likeness.
These images,
born of the contacts of the senses, draw round themselves the coarsest mental
matter; the dawning powers of consciousness reproduce these images, and thus
accumulate a store of pictures that begin to stimulate action initiated from
within, from the wish to experience again through the outer organs the
vibrations that were found pleasant, and to avoid those productive of pain.
The mental
body then begins to stimulate the astral, and to arouse in it the desires that,
in the animal, slumber until awakened by a physical stimulus ; hence we see in
the undeveloped man a persistent pursuit of sense-gratification never found in
the lower animals, a lust, a cruelty, a calculation, to which they are
strangers. The dawning powers of the mind, yoked to the service of the senses,
make of man a far more dangerous and savage brute than any animal, and the
stronger and more subtle forces inherent in the mental-spiritual matter lend to
the passion-nature an energy and a keenness that we do not find in the animal
world.
But these
very excesses lead to their own correction by the sufferings which they cause,
and these resultant experiences play upon the consciousness and set up new
images on which the imagination works. These stimulate the consciousness to
resist many of the vibrations that reach it by way of the astral body from the
external world, and to exercise its volition in holding the passions back
instead of giving them free rein.
Such
resistant vibrations are set up in, and attract towards, the mental body, finer
combinations of mind-stuff and tend also to expel from it the coarser
combinations that vibrate responsively to the passional notes set up in the
astral body ; by this struggle between the vibrations set up by passion-images
and the vibrations set up by the imaginative reproduction of past experiences,
the mental body grows, begins to develop a definite organisation, and to
exercise more and more initiative as regards external activities.
While the
earth life is spent gathering experiences, the intermediate life is spent
assimilating them, as we shall see in detail in the following chapter, so that
in each return to earth the Thinker has an increased stock of faculties to take
shape as his mental body. Thus the undeveloped man, whose mind is the slave of
his passions, grows into the average man, whose mind is a battleground in which
passions and mental powers wage war with varying success, about balanced in
their forces, but who is gradually gaining the mastery over his lower nature.
In the
average man, the mental body is much increased in size, shows a certain amount
of organisation, and contains a fair proportion of matter drawn from the
second, third, and fourth subdivisions of the mental plane. The general law
which regulates all the building up and modifying of the mental body may here
be fitly studied, though it is the same principle already seen working in the
lower realms of the astral and physical worlds.
Exercise
increases, disuse atrophies and finally destroys. Every vibration set up in the
mental body causes changes in its constituents, throwing out of it, in the part
affected, the matter that cannot vibrate sympathetically, and replacing it by
suitable materials drawn from the practically illimitable store around. The
more a series of vibrations is repeated, the more does the part affected by
them increase in development ; hence, it may be noted in passing, the injury
done to the mental body by over-specialisation of mental energies.
Such mistaken
direction of these powers causes a lopsided development of the mental body ; it
becomes proportionately over developed in the region in which these forces are
continually playing and proportionately undeveloped in other parts, perhaps
equally important. A harmonious and proportionate all-round development is the
object to be sought, and for this we need a calm self-analysis and a definite
direction of means to ends. A knowledge of this law, further explains certain
familiar experiences, and affords a sure hope of progress. When a new study is
commenced, or a change in favour of high morality is initiated, the early
stages are found to be fraught with difficulties ; sometimes the effort is even
abandoned because the obstacles in the way of its success appear to be
insurmountable.
At the
beginning of any new mental undertaking, the whole automatism of the mental
body opposes it ; the materials habituated to vibrate in a particular way,
cannot accommodate themselves to the new impulses, and the early stage consists
chiefly of sending out thrills of force which are frustrated, so far as setting
up vibrations in the mental body are concerned, but which are the necessary
preliminary to any such sympathetic vibrations, as they shake out of the body
the old refractory materials and draw into it the sympathetic kinds.
During this
process, the man is not conscious of any progress; he is conscious only of the
frustration of his efforts and of the dull resistance he encounters. Presently,
if he persists, as the newly attracted materials begin to function, he succeeds
better in his attempts, and at last, when all the old materials are expelled
and the new are working, he finds himself succeeding without an effort, and his
object is accomplished.
The critical
time is during the first stage ; but if he trust in the law, as sure in its
working as every other law in Nature, and persistently repeat his efforts, he
must succeed ; and a knowledge of this fact may cheer him when otherwise he
would be sinking in despair. In this way, then, the average man may work on,
finding with joy that as he steadily resists the promptings of the lower nature
he is conscious they are losing their power over him, for he is expelling from
his mental body all the materials that are capable of being thrown into
sympathetic vibrations. Thus the mental body gradually comes to be composed of
the finer constituents of the four lower subdivisions of the mental plane,
until it has become radiant and exquisitely beautiful form which is the mental
body of the
Spiritually
developed man. From this body all the coarser combinations have been
eliminated, so that the objects of the senses no longer find in it, or in the
astral body connected with it, materials that respond sympathetically to their
vibrations. It contains only the finer combinations belonging to each of the
four subdivisions of the lower mental world, and of these again the materials
of the third and fourth sub-planes very much predominate in its composition
over the materials of the second and first, making it responsive to all the
higher workings of the intellect, to the delicate contacts of the higher arts,
to all the pure thrills of loftier emotions.
Such a body
enables the Thinker who is clothed in it to express himself much more fully in
the lower mental region and in the astral and physical worlds ; its materials
are capable of a far wider range of responsive vibrations, and the impulses
from a loftier realm mould it into nobler and subtler organisation.
Such a body
is rapidly becoming ready to reproduce every impulse from the Thinker which is
capable of expression on the lower subdivisions of the mental plane ; it is
growing into a perfect instrument for activities in this lower mental world.
A clear
understanding of the nature of the mental body would much modify modern
education, and would make it far more serviceable to the Thinker than it is at
present. The general characteristics of this body depend on the past lives of
the Thinker on earth, as will be thoroughly understood when we have studied
Reincarnation and Karma. The body is constituted on the mental plane, and its
materials depend on the qualities that the Thinker has garnered within himself
as the results of his past experiences.
All that
education can do is to provide such external stimuli as shall arouse and
encourage the growth of the useful faculties he already possesses, and stunt
and help in the eradication of those that are undesirable. The drawing out of
these inborn faculties, and not the cramming of the mind with facts, is the
object of true education.
Nor need
memory be cultivated as a separate faculty, for memory depends on attention
that is on the steady concentration of the mind on the subject studied and on
the natural affinity between the subject and the mind. If the subject be liked
that is, if the mind has a capacity for it memory will not fail, provided
due attention be paid. Therefore education should cultivate the habit of steady
concentration, of sustained attention, and should be directed according to the
inborn faculties of the pupil.
Let us now
pass into the "formless" divisions of the mental plane, the region
which is mans true home during the cycle of his reincarnations, into which he
is born, a baby soul, an infant Ego, an embryonic individuality, when he begins
his purely human evolution.( See Chapters VII and VIII, on
"Reincarnation").
The outline
of this Ego, the Thinker, is oval in shape, and hence H.P. Blavatsky speaks of
this body of Manas which endures throughout all his incarnations as the Auric
Egg. Formed of the matter of the three highest subdivisions of the mental
plane, it is exquisitely fine, a film of rarest subtlety, even at its first
inception ; and, as it develops, it becomes a radiant object of supernal glory
and beauty, the shining One, as it has been aptly named. ( This is the Augides
of the Neo-Platonists, the "spiritual body" of St. Paul).
What is this
Thinker? He is the divine Self, as already said, limited, or individualised, by
this subtle body drawn from the materials of the "formless" region of
the mental plane. (The Self, working in the Vignyānamayakosha, the sheath of
discriminative knowledge, according to the Vedāntic classification).
This matter
drawn around a ray of the Self, a living beam of the one Light and Life of the
universe shuts off this ray from its Source, so far as the external world is
concerned, encloses it within a filmy shell of itself, and so makes it "an
individual." The life is the Life of the LOGOS, but all the powers of that
Life are lying latent, concealed ; everything is there potentially, germinally,
as the tree is hidden within the tiny germ in the seed.
This seed is
dropped into the soil of human life that its latent forces may be quickened
into activity by the sun of joy and the rain of tears, and he fed by the juices
of the life-soil that we call experience, until the germ grows into a mighty
tree, the image of its generating Sire. Human evolution is the evolution of the
Thinker; he takes on bodies on the lower mental and astral, and the physical
planes, wears then through earthly, astral, lower mental life, dropping them
successively at the regular stages of this life-cycle as he passes from world
to world, but ever storing up within himself the fruits he has gathered by
their use on each plane.
At first, as
little conscious as a babys earthly body, he almost slept through life after
life, till the experiences playing on him from without awakened some of his
latent forces into activity; but gradually he assumed more and more part in the
direction of his life, until, with manhood reached, he took his life into his
own hands, and an ever-increasing control over his future destiny.
The growth of
the permanent body which, with the divine consciousness, forms the Thinker is
extremely slow. Its technical name is the causal body, because he gathers up
within it the results of all experiences, and these act as causes, moulding
future lives. It is the only permanent one among the bodies during incarnation,
the mental, the astral, and physical bodies being reconstituted for each fresh
life ; as each perishes in turn, it hands on its harvest to the one above it,
and thus all the harvests are finally stored in the permanent body ; when the
Thinker returns to incarnation he sends out his energies, constituted of these
harvests, on each successive plane, and thus draws round him a anew body after
body suitable to his past.
The growth of
the causal body itself, as said, is very slow, for it can vibrate only in
answer to impulses that can be expressed in the very subtle matter of which it
is composed, thus weaving them into the texture of its being. Hence the
passions, which play so large a part in the early stages of human evolution,
cannot directly affect its growth. The Thinker can work into himself only the
experiences that can be reproduced in the vibrations of the causal body, and
these must belong to the mental region, and be highly intellectual or loftily
moral in their character ; other wise its subtle matter can give no sympathetic
vibration in answer.
A very little
reflection will convince any one how little material, suitable for the growth
of this lofty body, he affords by his daily life ; hence the slowness of
evolution, the little progress made. The Thinker should have more of himself to
put out in each successive life, and, when this is the case, evolution goes
swiftly forward. Persistence in evil courses reacts in a kind of indirect way
on the causal body, and does more harm than the mere retardation of growth ; it
seems after a long time to cause a certain incapacity to respond to the
vibrations set up by the opposite good, and thus to delay growth for a
considerable period after the evil has been renounced.
Directly to
injure the causal body, evil of a highly intellectual and refined kind is
necessary, the "spiritual evil" mentioned in the various Scriptures
of the world. This is fortunately rare, rare as spiritual good, and found only
among the highly progressed, whether they be following the Right-hand or the
Left-hand Path. (The Right-hand Path is that which leads to divine manhood, to
Adeptship used in the service of the worlds. The Left-hand Path is that which
also leads to Adeptship, but to Adeptship that is used to frustrate the progress
of evolution and is turned to selfish individual ends. They are sometimes
called the White and Black Paths respectively.)
The habitat
of the Thinker, of the Eternal Man, is on the fifth subplane, the lowest level
of the "formless" region of the mental plane. The great masses of
mankind are here, scarce yet awake, still in the infancy of their life. The
Thinker develops consciousness slowly, as his energies, playing on the lower
planes, there gather experience, which is indrawn with these energies as they
return to him treasure-laden with the harvest of life. This eternal Man, the
individualised Self, is the actor in every body that he wears ; it is his
presence that gives the feeling of " I " alike to body and mind, the
" I " being that which is self-conscious and which, by illusion,
identifies itself with that vehicle in which it is most actively energising.
To the man of
the senses the " I " is the physical body and the desire nature ; he
draws from these his enjoyment, and he thinks of these as himself, for his life
is in them. To the scholar the " I " is the mind, for in its exercise
lies his joy and therein his life is concentrated. Few can rise to the abstract
heights of spiritual philosophy, and feel this Eternal Man as " I ",
with memory ranging back over past lives and hopes ranging forward over future
births.
The
physiologists tell us that if we cut the finger we do not really feel the pain
there where the blood is flowing, but that pain is felt in the brain, and is by
imagination thrown outwards to the place of the injury ; the feeling of pain in
the finger is, they say an illusion ; it is put by imagination at the point of
contact with the object causing the injury ; so also will a man feel pain in an
amputated limb, or rather in the space the limb used to occupy.
Similarly
does the one " I ", the Inner Man, feel suffering and joy in the
sheaths which enwrap him, at the points of contact with the external world, and
feels the sheath to be himself, knowing not that this feeling is an illusion,
and that he is the sole actor and experiencer in each sheath.
Let us now
consider, in this light, the relations between the higher and lower mind and
their action on the brain. The mind, Manas, the Thinker, is one, and is the
Self in the causal body; it is the source of innumerable energies, of
vibrations of innumerable kinds. These it sends out, raying outwards from
itself. The subtlest and finest of these are expressed in the matter of the
causal body, which alone is fine enough to respond to them ; they form what we
call the Pure Reason, whose thoughts are abstract, whose method of gaining
knowledge is intuition ; its very "nature is knowledge," and it
recognises truth at sight as congruous with itself.
Less subtle
vibrations pass outwards, attracting the matter of the lower mental region, and
these are the Lower Manas, or lower mind the coarser energies of the higher
expressed in denser matter ; these we call the intellect, comprising reason,
judgement, imagination, comparison, and the other mental faculties ; its
thoughts are concrete, and its method is logic ; it argues, it reasons, it
infers. These vibrations, acting through astral matter on the etheric brain,
and by that on the dense physical brain, set up vibrations therein, which are
the heavy and slow reproductions of themselves heavy and slow, because the
energies lose much of their swiftness in moving the heavier matter.
This
feebleness of response when a vibration is initiated in a rare medium and then
passes into a dense one is familiar to every student of physics. Strike a bell
in air and it sounds clearly ; strike it in hydrogen, and let the hydrogen
vibrations have to set up the atmospheric waves, and how faint the result.
Equally feeble are the workings of the brain in response to the swift and
subtle impacts of the mind ; yet that is all that the vast majority know as
their "consciousness."
The immense
importance of the mental workings of this "consciousness" is due to
the fact that it is the only medium whereby the Thinker can gather the harvest
of experience by which he grows. While it is dominated by the passions it runs
riot, and he is left unnourished and therefore unable to develop ; while it is
occupied wholly in mental activities concerned with the outer world, it can arouse
only his lower energies; only as he is able to impress on it the true object of
its life, does it commence to fulfil its most valuable functions of gathering
what will arouse and nourish his higher energies.
As the Thinker
develops he becomes more and more conscious of his own inherent powers, and
also of the workings of his energies on the lower planes, of the bodies which
those energies have drawn around him. He at last begins to try to influence
them, using his memory of the past to guide his will, and these
impressions
we call "conscience" when they deal with morals and "flashes of
intuition " when they enlighten the intellect.
When these
impressions are continuous enough to be normal, we speak of their aggregate as
"genius." The higher evolution of the Thinker is marked by his
increasing control over his lower vehicles, by their increasing susceptibility
to his influence, and their increasing contributions to growth.
Those who
would deliberately aid in this evolution may do so by a careful training of the
lower mind and of the moral character, by steady and well directed effort.
The habit of
quiet, sustained, and sequential thought, directed to non-worldly subjects, of
meditation, of study, develops the mind-body and renders it a better instrument
; the effort to cultivate abstract thinking is also useful, as this raises the
lower mind towards the higher, and draws into it the subtlest materials of the
lower mental plane.
In these and
cognate ways all may actively co-operate in their own higher evolution, each
step forward making the succeeding steps more rapid. No effort, not even the
smallest, is lost, but is followed by its full effect, and every contribution
gathered and handed inwards is stored in the treasure-house of the causal body
for future use. Thus evolution, however slow and halting, is yet ever onwards,
and the divine Life, ever unfolding in every soul, slowly subdues all things to
itself.
_____________________________________
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.
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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
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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
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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
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mechanism could be ordered in 1934.The engine was also used in a range of MG
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Wolseley Hornet racing car circuiting the track in modern times
Theosophy Cardiffs Instant Guide
Wolseley
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Early
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Patriotic
Wolseley Hornet on the race track in 1965
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Early
1930s Customized Wolseley Hornet with integrated front mudguards
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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
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1930s
Corsica Wolseley Hornet
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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
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Another
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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
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A
bit more expensive
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
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The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
1930s
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
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The Constitution of Man The True Man Reincarnation
The Wider Outlook Death Mans Past and Future
Cause and Effect What Theosophy does for us
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