The tidal wave of deeper souls,
Into our inmost being rolls,
And lifts us unawares,
Out of all meaner cares.
LONGFELLOW
The great psychic and spiritual change now
taking place in the realm of the human Soul, is quite remarkable.
It began towards the very commencement of the now slowly vanishing
last quarter of our century, and will end so says a mystic prophecy either
for the weal or the woe of civilized humanity with the present
cycle which will close in 1897. But the great change is not effected
in solemn silence, nor is it perceived only by the few. On the
contrary, it asserts itself amid a loud din of busy, boisterous
tongues, a clash of public opinion, in comparison to which the
incessant, ever increasing roar even of the noisiest political
agitation seems like the rustling of the young forest foliage, on a warm spring day.
Verily the Spirit in man, so long hidden out of public sight,
so carefully concealed and so far exiled from the arena of modern
learning, has at last awakened. It now asserts itself and is loudly
re-demanding its unrecognized yet ever legitimate rights. It refuses
to be any longer trampled under the brutal foot of Materialism,
speculated upon by the Churches, and made a fathomless source
of income by those who have self-constituted themselves its universal
custodians. The former would deny the Divine Presence any right
to existence; the latter would accentuate and prove it through
their Sidesmen and Church Wardens armed with money-bags and collection-boxes.
But the Spirit in man the direct, though now but broken ray and
emanation of the Universal Spirit has at last awakened. Hitherto,
while so often reviled, persecuted and abased through ignorance,
ambition and greed; while so frequently turned by insane Pride
"into a blind wanderer, like unto a buffoon mocked by
a host of buffoons," in the realm of Delusion, it remained
unheard and unheeded. Today, the Spirit in man has returned like
King Lear, from seeming insanity to its senses; and, raising its
voice, it now speaks in those authoritative tones to which the
men of old have listened in reverential silence through incalculable
ages, until deafened by the din and roar of civilization and culture,
they could hear it no longer. . . .
Look around you and behold! Think of what you see and hear, and
draw therefrom your conclusions. The age of crass materialism,
of Soul insanity and blindness, is swiftly passing away. A death
struggle between Mysticism and Materialism is no longer at hand,
but is already raging. And the party which will win the day at
this supreme hour will become the master of the situation and
of the future; i.e., it will become the autocrat and sole
disposer of the millions of men already born and to be
born, up to the latter end of the XXth century. If the signs of
the times can be trusted it is not the Animalists who will
remain conquerors. This is warranted us by the many brave and
prolific authors and writers who have arisen of late to defend
the rights of Spirit to reign over matter. Many are the honest,
aspiring Souls now raising themselves like a dead wall against
the torrent of the muddy waters of Materialism. And facing the
hitherto domineering flood which is still steadily carrying off
into unknown abysses the fragments from the wreck of the dethroned,
cast down Human Spirit, they now command: "So far hast thou
come; but thou shalt go no further!"
Amid all this external discord and disorganisation of social harmony;
amid confusion and the weak and cowardly hesitations of the masses,
tied down to the narrow frames of routine, propriety and cant;
amid that late dead calm of public thought that had exiled from
literature every reference to Soul and Spirit and their divine
working during the whole of the middle period of our century we
hear a sound arising. Like a clear, definite, far-reaching note
of promise, the voice of the great human Soul proclaims, in no
longer timid tones, the rise and almost the resurrection of the
human Spirit in the masses. It is now awakening in the foremost
representatives of thought and learning; it speaks in the lowest
as in the highest, and stimulates them all to action. The renovated,
life-giving Spirit in man is boldly freeing itself from the dark
fetters of the hitherto all-capturing animal life and matter.
Behold it, saith the poet, as, ascending on its broad, white wings,
it soars into the regions of real life and light; whence, calm
and godlike, it contemplates with unfeigned pity those golden
idols of the modern material cult with their feet of clay, which
have hitherto screened from the purblind masses their true and living gods. . . .
Literature once wrote a critic is the confession of social life,
reflecting all its sins, and all its acts of baseness as of heroism.
In this sense a book is of a far greater importance than any man.
Books do not represent one man, but they are the mirror of a host
of men. Hence the great English poet-philosopher said of books,
that he knew that they were as hard to kill and as prolific as
the teeth of the fabulous dragon; sow them hither and thither
and armed warriors will grow out of them. To kill a good book,
is equal to killing a man.
The "poet-philosopher" is right.
A new era has begun in literature, this is certain. New thoughts
and new interests have created new intellectual needs; hence a
new race of authors is springing up. And this new species
will gradually and imperceptibly shut out the old one, those fogies
of yore who, though they still reign nominally, are allowed to
do so rather by force of habit than predilection. It is not he
who repeats obstinately and parrot-like the old literary formulae
and holds desperately to publishers' traditions, who will find
himself answering to the new needs; not the man who prefers his
narrow party discipline to the search for the long-exiled Spirit
of man and the now lost TRUTHS; not these,
but verily he who, parting company with his beloved "authority,"
lifts boldly and carries on unflinchingly the standard of the
Future Man. It is finally those who, amidst the present
wholesale dominion of the worship of matter, material interests
and SELFISHNESS, will have bravely fought for human rights and man's divine
nature, who will become, if they only win, the teachers of
the masses in the coming century, and so their benefactors.
But woe to the XXth century if the now reigning school of thought
prevails, for Spirit would once more be made captive and silenced
till the end of the now coming age. It is not the fanatics of
the dead letter in general, nor the iconoclasts and Vandals who
fight the new Spirit of thought, nor yet the modern Roundheads,
supporters of the old Puritan religious and social traditions,
who will ever become the protectors and Saviours of the now resurrecting
human thought and Spirit. It is not these too willing supporters
of the old cult, and the mediaeval heresies of those who guard
like a relic every error of their sect or party, who jealously
watch over their own thought lest it should, growing out of its
teens, assimilate some fresher and more beneficent idea not these
who are the wise men of the future. It is not for them that the
hour of the new historical era will have struck, but for those
who will have learnt to express and put into practice the aspirations
as well as the physical needs of the rising generations and of
the now trampled-down masses. In order that one should fully comprehend
individual life with its physiological, psychic and spiritual
mysteries, he has to devote himself with all the fervour of unselfish
philanthropy and love for his brother men, to studying and knowing
collective life, or Mankind. Without preconceptions or
prejudice, as also without the least fear of possible results
in one or another direction, he has to decipher, understand and
remember the deep and innermost feelings and the aspirations
of the poor people's great and suffering heart. To do this he
has first "to attune his soul with that of Humanity,"
as the old philosophy teaches; to thoroughly master the correct
meaning of every line and word in the rapidly turning pages of
the Book of Life of MANKIND and to be thoroughly
saturated with the truism that the latter is a whole inseparable
from his own SELF.
How many of such profound readers of life may be found in our
boasted age of sciences and culture? Of course we do not mean
authors alone, but rather the practical and still unrecognized,
though well known, philanthropists and altruists of our age; the
people's friends, the unselfish lovers of man, and the defenders
of human right to the freedom of Spirit. Few indeed are such;
for they are the rare blossoms of the age, and generally the martyrs
to prejudiced mobs and time-servers. Like those wonderful "Snow
flowers" of Northern Siberia, which, in order to shoot forth
from the cold frozen soil, have to pierce through a thick layer
of hard, icy snow, so these rare characters have to fight their
battles all their life with cold indifference and human harshness,
and with the selfish ever-mocking world of wealth. Yet, it is
only they who can carry out the task of perseverance. To them
alone is given the mission of turning the "Upper Ten"
of social circles from the broad and easy highway of wealth, vanity
and empty pleasures into the arduous and thorny path of higher
moral problems, and the perception of loftier moral duties than
they are now pursuing. It is also those who, already themselves
awakened to a higher Soul activity, are being endowed at the same
time with literary talent, whose duty it is to undertake the part
of awakening the sleeping Beauty and the Beast, in their enchanted
Castle of Frivolity, to real life and light. Let all those who
can, proceed fearlessly with this idea uppermost in their mind,
and they will succeed. It is the rich who have to be regenerated,
if we would do good to the poor; for it is in the former that
lies the root of evil of which the "disinherited" classes
are but the too luxuriant growth. This may seem at first sight
paradoxical, yet it is true, as may be shown.
In the face of the present degradation of every ideal, as also
of the noblest aspirations of the human heart, becoming each day
more prominent in the higher classes, what can be expected from
the "great unwashed"? It is the head that has to guide
the feet, and the latter are to be hardly held responsible for
their actions. Work, therefore, to bring about the moral regeneration
of the cultured but far more immoral classes before you attempt
to do the same for our ignorant younger Brethren. The latter was
undertaken years ago, and is carried on to this day, yet with
no perceptible good results. Is it not evident that the reason
for this lies in the fact that [except for a few earnest, sincere
and all-sacrificing workers in that field, the great majority
of the volunteers consists of those same frivolous, ultra-selfish classes, who "play at charity" and whose ideas of the
amelioration of the physical and moral status of the poor are
confined to the hobby that money and the Bible alone can do it.
We say that neither of these can accomplish any good; for dead-letter
preaching and forced Bible-reading develop irritation and later
atheism, and money as a temporary help finds its way into the
tills of the public-houses rather than serves to buy bread with.
The root of evil lies, therefore, in a moral not in a physical cause.
If asked, what is it then that will help, we answer boldly: Theosophical
literature; hastening to add that under this term, neither books
concerning adepts and phenomena, nor the Theosophical Society publications are meant.
Take advantage of, and profit by, the "tidal wave" which
is now happily overpowering half of Humanity. Speak to the awakening
Spirit of Humanity, to the human Spirit and the Spirit in man,
these three in One and the One in All. Dickens and Thackeray both
born a century too late or a century too early came between
two tidal waves of human spiritual thought, and though they have
done yeoman service individually and induced certain partial reforms,
yet they failed to touch Society and the masses at large. What
the European world now needs is a dozen writers such as Dostoevsky,
the Russian author, whose works, though terra incognita for
most, are still well known on the Continent, as also in England
and America among the cultured classes. And what the Russian novelist
has done is this: he spoke boldly and fearlessly the most unwelcome
truths to the higher and even to the of official classes the
latter a far more dangerous proceeding than the former. And yet,
behold, most of the administrative reforms during the last twenty
years are due to the silent and unwelcome influence
of his pen. As one of his critics remarks, the great truths uttered
by him were felt by all classes so vividly and so strongly that
people whose views were most diametrically opposed to his own
could not but feel the warmest sympathy for this bold writer and even expressed it to him.
In the eyes of all,
friends or foes, he became the mouthpiece
of the irrepressible no longer to be delayed need felt by Society,
to look with absolute sincerity into the innermost depths of its
own soul, to become the impartial judge of its own actions and
its own aspirations.
Every new current of thought, every new tendency of the age had
and ever will have, its rivals, as its enemies, some counteracting
it boldly but unsuccessfully, others with great ability. But such,
are always made of the same paste, so to say, common to all. They
are goaded to resistance and objections by the same external,
selfish and worldly objects, the same material ends and calculations
as those that guided their opponents. While pointing out other
problems and advocating other methods, in truth, they cease not
for one moment to live with their foes in a world of the same
and common interests, as also to continue in the same fundamental
identical views on life.
That which then became necessary was a man, who, standing outside
of any partizanship or struggle for supremacy, would bring his
past life as a guarantee of the sincerity and honesty of his views
and purposes; one whose personal suffering would be an imprimatur
to the firmness of his convictions, a writer finally, of undeniable
literary genius: for such a man alone, could pronounce words
capable of awakening the true spirit in a Society which had drifted
away in a wrong direction.
Just such a man was Dostoevsky the patriot-convict, the galley-slave,
returned from Siberia; that writer, far-famed in Europe and Russia,
the pauper buried by voluntary subscription, the soul-stirring
bard, of everything poor, insulted, injured, humiliated; he who
unveiled with such merciless cruelty the plagues and sores of his age. . . .
It is writers of this kind that are needed in our day of reawakening;
not authors writing for wealth or fame, but fearless apostles
of the living Word of Truth; moral healers of the pustulous sores
of our century. France has her Zola who points out, brutally enough,
yet still true to life the degradation and moral leprosy of his
people. But Zola, while castigating the vices of the lower classes,
has never dared to lash higher with his pen than the petite
bourgeoisie, the immorality of the higher classes being ignored
by him. Result: the peasants who do not read novels have not been
in the least affected by his writings, and the bourgeoisie
caring little for the plebs, took such notice of Pot
bouille as to make the French realist lose all desire of burning
his fingers again at their family pots. From the first then, Zola
has pursued a path which though bringing him to fame and fortune
has led him nowhere in so far as salutary effects are concerned.
Whether Theosophists, in the present or future, will ever work
out a practical application of the suggestion is doubtful. To
write novels with a moral sense in them deep enough to stir Society,
requires a great literary talent and a born theosophist
as was Dostoevsky Zola standing outside of any comparison with
him. But such talents are rare in all countries. Yet, even in
the absence of such great gifts one may do good in a smaller and
humbler way by taking note and exposing in impersonal narratives
the crying vices and evils of the day, by word and deed, by publications
and practical example. Let the force of that example impress others
to follow it; and then instead of deriding our doctrines and aspirations
the men of the XXth, if not the XIXth century will see clearer,
and judge with knowledge and according to facts instead of prejudging
agreeably to rooted misconceptions. Then and not till then will
the world find itself forced to acknowledge that it was wrong,
and that Theosophy alone can gradually create a mankind as harmonious
and as simple-souled as Kosmos itself; but to effect this theosophists
have to act as such. Having helped to awaken the spirit in many
a man we say this boldly, challenging contradiction shall we
now stop instead of swimming with the TIDAL
WAVE?
Lucifer, November, 1889
H. P. Blavatsky
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