Dreams
What They Are and How They Are Caused
by
C.W. Leadbeater
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTORY
Many of the subjects with which our theosophical
studies bring us into contact are so far removed from the experiences
and interests of everyday life, that while we feel drawn towards them
by an attraction which increases in geometrical progression as we
come to know more of them and understand them better, we are yet
conscious, at the back of our minds, as it were, of a faint sense of
unreality, or at least unpracticality, while we are dealing with
them. When we read of the formation of the solar system, or even of
the rings and rounds of our own planetary chain, we cannot but feel
that, interesting though this is as an abstract study, useful as it
is in showing us how man has become what we find him to be, it
nevertheless associates itself only indirectly with the life we are
living here and now.
No such objection as this, however, can be taken
to our present subject: all readers of these lines have dreamed —
probably many of them are in the habit of dreaming frequently; and
they may therefore be interested in an endeavour to account for dream
phenomena by the aid of the light thrown upon them by investigation
along theosophic lines.
The most convenient method in which we can arrange
the various branches of our subject will perhaps be the following:
first, to consider rather carefully the mechanism — physical,
etheric and astral — by means of which impressions are conveyed to
our consciousness; secondly, to see how the consciousness in its turn
affects and uses this mechanism; thirdly, to note the condition both
of the consciousness and its mechanism during sleep; and fourthly, to
enquire how the various kinds of dreams which men experience are
thereby produced.
As I am writing in the main for students of
theosophy, I shall feel myself at liberty to use, without detailed
explanation, the ordinary theosophical terms, with which I may safely
assume them to be familiar, since otherwise my little book would far
exceed its allotted limits. Should it, however, fall into the hands
of any to whom the occasional use of such terms constitutes a
difficulty, I can only apologize to them, and refer them for these
preliminary explanations to any elementary theosophical work, such as
Mrs Besant's "The Ancient Wisdom", or "Man and his
Bodies".
Chapter 2
THE MECHANISM
(i) PHYSICAL
First, then, as to the physical part of the
mechanism. We have in our bodies a great central axis of nervous
matter, ending in the brain, and from this a network of nerve-threads
radiates in every direction through the body. It is these
nerve-threads, according to modern scientific theory, which by their
vibrations convey all impressions from without to the brain, and the
latter, upon receipts of these impressions, translates them into
sensations or perceptions; so that if I put my hand upon some object
and find it to be hot, it is really not my hand that feels, but my
brain, which is acting upon information transmitted to it by the
vibrations running along its telegraph wires, the nerve-threads.
It is important also to bear in mind that all the
nerve-threads of the body are the same in constitution, and that the
special bundle of them that we call the optic nerve — which conveys
to the brain impressions made upon the retina of the eye, and so
enables us to see — differs from the nerve-threads of the hand or
foot only in the fact that through long ages of evolution it has been
specialized to receive and transmit most readily one particular small
set of rapid vibrations which thus become visible to us as light. The
same remark holds good with reference to our other sense organs; the
auditory, the olfactory, or the gustatory nerves differ from one
another and from the rest only in this specialization: they are
essentially the same, and they all do their respective work in
exactly the same manner, by the transmission of vibrations to the
brain.
Now this brain of ours, which is thus the great
centre of our nervous system, is very readily affected by slight
variations in our general health, and most especially by any which
involve a change in the circulation of the blood through it. When the
flow of blood through the vessels of the head is normal and regular,
the brain (and, therefore, the whole nervous system) is at liberty to
function in an orderly andefficient manner; but any alteration in
this normal circulation, either as to quantity, quality, or speed,
immediately produces a corresponding effect on the brain, and through
it on the nerves throughout the body.
If, for example, too much blood is supplied to the
brain, congestion of the vessels takes place, and irregularity in its
action is at once produced; if too little, the brain (and, therefore,
the nervous system) becomes first irritable and then lethargic. The
quality of the blood supplied is also of great importance. As it
courses through the body it has two principal functions to perform —
to supply oxygen and to provide nutrition to the different organs of
the body; and if it be unable adequately to fulfill either of these
functions, a certain disorganization will follow.
If the supply of oxygen to the brain be deficient,
it becomes overcharged with carbon dioxide, and heaviness and
lethargy very shortly supervene. A common example of this is the
feeling of dullness and sleepiness which frequently overtakes one in
a crowded and ill-ventilated room; owing to the exhaustion of the
oxygen in the room by the continued respiration of so large a number
of people, the brain does not receive its due modicum, and therefore
is unable to do its work properly.
Again, the speed with which the blood flows
through the vessels affects the action of the brain; if it be too
great, it produces fever; if too slow, then again lethargy is caused.
It is obvious, therefore, that our brain (through which, be it
remembered, all physical impressions must pass) may very easily be
disturbed and more or less hindered in the due performance of its
functions by causes apparently trivial — causes to which we should
probably often pay no attention whatever even during waking hours —
of which we should almost certainly be entirely ignorant during
sleep.
Before we pass on, one other peculiarity of this
physical mechanism must be noted, and that is its remarkable tendency
to repeat automatically vibrations to which it is accustomed to
respond. It is to this property of the brain that are to be
attributed all those bodily habits and tricks of manner which are
entirely independent of the will, and are often so difficult to
conquer; and, as will presently be seen, it plays an even more
important part during sleep than it does in our waking life.
(ii) ETHERIC
It is not alone through the brain to which we have
hitherto been referring, however, that impressions may be received by
the man. Almost exactly co-extensive with and interpenetrating its
visible form is his etheric double (formerly called in theosophical
literature the linga sharira), and that also has a brain which is
really no less physical than the other, though composed of matter in
a condition finer than the gaseous. If we examine with psychic
faculty the body of a newly-born child, we shall find it permeated
not only by astral matter of every degree of density, but also by the
different grades of etheric matter; and if we take the trouble to
trace these inner bodies backwards to their origin, we find that it
is of the latter that the etheric double — the mould upon which the
physical body is built up — is formed by the agents of the Lords of
karma; while the astral matter has been gathered together by the
descending ego — not of course consciously, but automatically —
as he passed through the astral plane, and is, in fact, merely the
development in that plane of tendencies whose seeds have been lying
dormant in him during his experiences in the heaven-world, because on
that level it was impossible that they could germinate for want of
the grade of matter necessary for their expression.
Now this etheric double has often been called the
vehicle of the human life-ether or vital force (called in Sanskrit
prana), and anyone who has developed the psychic faculties can see
exactly how this is so. He will see the solar life-principle almost
colourless, though intensely luminous and active, which is constantly
poured into the earth's atmosphere by the sun; he will see how the
etheric part of his spleen in the exercise of its wonderful function
absorbs this universal life, and specializes it into prana, so that
it may be more readily assimilable by his body; how it then courses
all over that body, running along every nerve-thread in tiny globules
of lovely rosy light, causing the glow of life and health and
activity to penetrate every atom of the etheric double; and how, when
the rose-coloured particles have been absorbed, the superfluous
life-ether finally radiates from the body in every direction as
bluish white light. If he examines further into the action of this
life-ether, he will soon see reason to believe that the transmission
of impression to the brain depends rather upon its regular flow along
the etheric portion of the nerve-threads than upon the mere vibration
of the particles of their denser and visible portion, as is commonly
supposed. It would take too much of our space to detail all the
experiments by which this theory is established, but the indication
of one or two of the simplest will suffice to show the lines upon
which they run.
When a finger becomes entirely numbed with cold,
it is incapable of feeling; and the same phenomenon of insensibility
may readily be produced at will by a mesmerizer, who by a few passes
over the arm of his subject will bring it into a condition in which
it may be pricked with a needle or burnt by the flame of a candle
without the slightest sensation of pain being experienced. Now why
does the subject feel nothing in either of these two cases? The
nerve-threads are still there, and though in the first case it might
be contended that their action was paralyzed by cold and by the
absence of blood from the vessels, this certainly cannot be the
reason in the second case, where the arm retains its normal
temperature and the blood circulates as usual.
If we call in the aid of the clairvoyant, we shall
be able to get somewhat nearer to a real explanation, for he will
tell us that the reason why the frozen finger seems dead, and the
blood is unable to circulate through its vessels, is because the rosy
life-ether is no longer coursing along the nerve-threads; for we must
remember that though matter in the etheric condition is invisible to
ordinary sight, it is still purely physical, and, therefore, can be
affected by the action of cold or heat.
In the second case he will tell us that when the
mesmerizer makes the passes by which he renders the subject's arm
insensible, what he really does is to pour his own nerve-ether (or
magnetism, as it is often called) into the arm, thereby driving back
for the time that of the subject. The arm is still warm and living,
because there is still life-ether coursing through it, but since it
is no longer the subject's own specialized life-ether, and is
therefore not en rapport with his brain, it conveys no information to
that brain, and consequently there is no sense of feeling in the arm.
From this it seems evident that though it is not absolutely the
life-ether itself which does the work of conveying impressions from
without to a man's brain, its presence as specialized by the man
himself is certainly necessary for their due transmission along the
nerve-threads.
Now just as any change in the circulation of the
blood affects the receptivity of the denser brain-matter, and thus
modifies the reliability of the impressions derived through it, so
the condition of the etheric portion of the brain is affected by any
change in the volume or the velocity of these life-currents.
For example, when the quantity of nerve-ether
specialized by the spleen falls for any reason below the average,
physical weakness and weariness are immediately felt, and if, under
these circumstances, it also happens that the speed of its
circulation is increased, the man becomes supersensitive, highly
irritable, nervous, and perhaps even hysterical, while in such a
condition he is often more sensitive to physical impressions than he
would normally be, and so it often occurs that a person suffering
from illhealth sees visions or apparitions which are imperceptible to
his more robust neighbour. If, on the other hand, the volume and
velocity of the life-ether are both reduced at the same time, the man
experiences intense languor, becomes less sensitive to outside
influences, and has a general feeling of being too weak to care much
about what happens to him.
It must be remembered also that the etheric matter
of which we have spoken and the denser matter ordinarily recognized
as belonging to the brain are really both parts of one and the same
physical organism, and that, therefore, neither can be affected
without instantly producing some reaction on the other. Consequently
there can be no certainty that impressions will be correctly
transmitted through this mechanism unless both portions of it are
functioning quite normally; any irregularity in either part may very
readily so dull or disturb its receptivity as to produce blurred or
distorted images of whatever is presented to it. Furthermore, as will
presently be explained, it is infinitely more liable to such
aberrations during sleep than when in the waking state.
(iii) ASTRAL
Still another mechanism that we have to take into
account is the astral body, often called the desire-body. As its name
implies, this vehicle is composed exclusively of astral matter, and
is, in fact, the expressionof the man on the astral plane, just as
his physical body is the expression of him on the lower levels of the
physical plane.
Indeed, it will save the theosophical student much
trouble if he will learn to regard these different vehicles simply as
the actual manifestation of the ego on their respective planes — if
he understands, for example, that it is the causal body (sometimes
called the auric egg) which is the real vehicle of the reincarnating
ego, and is inhabited by him as long as he remains upon the plane
which is his true home, the higher levels of the mental world: but
that when he descends into the lower levels he must, in order to be
able to function upon them, clothe himself in their matter, and that
the matter which he thus attracts to himself furnishes his mind-body.
Similarly, descending into the astral plane, he forms his astral or
desirebody out of its matter, though, of course, still retaining all
the other bodies; and on his still further descent to this lowest
plane of all, the physical body is formed in the midst of the auric
egg, which thus contains the entire man.
This astral vehicle is even more sensitive to
external impressions than the gross and etheric bodies, for it is
itself the seat of all desires and emotions — the connecting link
through which alone the ego can collect experiences from physical
life. It is peculiarly susceptible to the influence of passing
thoughtcurrents, and when the mind is not actively controlling it, it
is perpetually receiving these stimuli from without, and eagerly
responding to them.
This mechanism also, like the others, is more
readily influenced during the sleep of the physical body. That this
is so is shown by many observations, a fair example of them being a
case recently reported to the writer, in which a man who had been a
drunkard was describing the difficulties in the way of his
reformation. He declared that after a long period of total abstinence
he had succeeded in entirely destroying the physical desire for
alcohol, so that in his waking condition he felt an absolute
repulsion for it; yet he stated that he still frequently dreamed that
he was drinking, and in that dream state he felt the old horrible
pleasure in such degradation.
Apparently, therefore, during the day his desire
was kept under control by the will, and casual thoughtforms or
passing elementals were unable to make any impression upon it; but
when the astral body was liberated in sleep it escaped to some extent
from the domination of the ego, and its extreme natural
susceptibility so far reasserted itself that it again responded
readily to these baneful influences, and imagined itself experiencing
once more the disgraceful delights of debauchery.
Chapter 3
THE EGO
All these different portions of the mechanism are
in reality merely instruments of the ego, though his control of them
is as yet often very imperfect; for it must always be remembered that
the ego is himself a developing entity, and that in the case of most
of us he is scarcely more than a germ of what he is to be one day.
A stanza in the Book of Dzyan tells us:
'Those who received but a spark remained destitute
of knowledge: the spark burned low'; and Madame Blavatsky explains
that 'those who receive but a spark constitute the average humanity
which have to acquire their intellectuality during the present
manvantaric evolution'. (The Secret Doctrine, ii, 167, 1979 ed.). In
the case of most of them that spark is still smouldering, and it will
be many an age before its slow increase brings it to the stage of
steady and brilliant flame.
No doubt there are some passages in theosophical
literature which seem to imply that our higher ego needs no
evolution, being already perfect, and godlike on his own plane; but
wherever such expressions are used, whatever may be the terminology
employed, they must be taken to apply only to the atma, the true god
within us, which is certainly far beyond the necessity of any kind of
evolution of which we can know anything.
The reincarnating ego most undoubtedly does
evolve, and the process of his evolution can be very clearly seen by
those who have developed clairvoyant vision to the extent necessary
for the perception of that which exists on the higher levels of the
mental plane. As before remarked, it is of the matter of that plane
(if we may venture still to call it matter) that the comparatively
permanent causal body, which he carries with him from birth to birth
until the end of the human stage of his evolution, is composed. But
though every individualized being must necessarily have such a body —
since it is the possession of it which constitutes individualization
— its appearance is by no means similar in all cases. In fact, in
the average unevolved man it is barely distinguishable at all, even
by those who have the sight which unlocks for them the secrets of
that plane, for it is a mere colourless film — just sufficient,
apparently, to hold itself together and make a reincarnating
individuality, but no more.
As soon, however, as the man begins to develop in
spirituality, or even higher intellect, a change takes place. The
real individual then begins to have a persisting character of his
own, apart from that moulded in each of his personalities in turn by
training and surrounding circumstances: and this character shows
itself in the size, colour, luminosity, and definiteness of the
causal body just as that of the personality shows itself in the
mind-body, except that this higher vehicle is naturally subtler and
more beautiful.
In one other respect, also, it happily differs
from the bodies below it, and that is that in any ordinary
circumstances no evil of any kind can manifest through it. The worst
of men can commonly show himself on that plane only as an entirely
undeveloped entity; his vices, even though continued through life
after life, cannot soil that higher sheath; they can only make it
more and more difficult to develop in it the opposite virtues.
On the other hand, perseverance along right lines
soon tells upon the causal body, and in the case of a pupil who has
made some progress on the Path of Holiness, it is a sight wonderful
and lovely beyond all earthly conception; while that of an Adept is a
magnificent sphere of living light, whose radiant glory no words can
ever tell. He who has even once seen so sublime a spectacle as this,
and can also see around him individuals at all stages of development
between that and the colourless film of the ordinary person, can
never feel any doubt as to the evolution of the reincarnating ego.
The grasp which the ego has of his various
instruments, and, therefore, his influence over them, is naturally
small in his earlier stages. Neither his mind nor his passions are
thoroughly under his control; indeed, the average man makes almost no
effort to control them, but allows himself to be swept hither and
thither just as his lower thoughts or desires suggest. Consequently,
in sleep the different parts of the mechanism which we have mentioned
are very apt to act almost entirely on their own account without
reference to him, and the stage of his spiritual advancement is one
of the factors that we have to take into account in considering the
question of dreams.
It is also important for us to realize the part
which this ego takes in the formation of our conceptions of external
objects. We must remember that what the vibrations of the
nerve-threads present to the brain are merely impressions, and it is
the work of the ego, acting through the mind, to classify, combine,
and re-arrange them.
For example, when I look out of the window and see
a house and a tree, I instantly recognize them for what they are, yet
the information really conveyed to me by my eyes falls very far short
of such recognition. What actually happens is that certain rays of
light — that is, currents of ether vibrating at certain definite
rates — are reflected from those objects and strike the retina of
my eye, and the sensitive nerve-threads duly report those vibrations
to the brain.
But what is the tale they have to tell? All the
information they really transmit is that in a particular direction
there are certain varied patches of colour bounded by more or less
definite outlines. It is the mind which from its past experience is
able to decide that one particular square white object is a house,
and another rounded green one is a tree, and that they are both
probably of such and such a size, and at such and such a distance
from me.
A person who, having been born blind, obtains his
sight by means of an operation, does not for some time know what are
the objects he sees, nor can he judge their distance from him. The
same is true of a baby, for it may often be seen grasping at
attractive objects (such as the moon, for example) which are far out
of its reach; but as it grows up it unconsciously learns, by repeated
experience, to judge instinctively the probable distance and size of
the form it sees. Yet even grown-up people may very readily be
deceived as to the distance and therefore the size of any unfamiliar
object, especially if seen in a dim or uncertain light.
We see, therefore, that mere vision is by no means
sufficient for accurate perception, but that the discrimination of
the ego acting through the mind must be brought to bear upon what is
seen; and furthermore we see that this discrimination is not an
inherent instinct of the mind, perfect from the first, but is the
result of the unconscious comparison of a number of experiences —
points which must be carefully borne in mind when we come to the next
division of our subject.
Chapter 4
THE CONDITION OF SLEEP
Clairvoyant observation bears abundant testimony
to the fact that when a man falls into a deep slumber the higher
principles in their astral vehicle almost invariably withdraw from
the body and hover in its immediate neighbourhood. Indeed, it is the
process of this withdrawal which we commonly call 'going to sleep'.
In considering the phenomena of dreams, therefore,
we have to bear in mind this re-arrangement, and see how it affects
both the ego and his various mechanisms. In the case we are to
examine, then, we assume that our subject is in deep sleep, the
physical body (including that finer portion of it which is often
called the etheric double) lying quietly on the bed, while the ego,
in its astral body, floats with equal tranquility just above it.
What, under these circumstances, will be the condition and the
consciousness of these several principles?
(i) THE BRAIN
When the ego has thus for the time resigned the
control of his brain, it does not therefore become entirely
unconscious, as one would perhaps expect. It is evident from various
experiments that the physical body has a certain dim consciousness of
its own, quite apart from that of the real self, and apart also from
the mere aggregate of the consciousness of its individual cells.
The writer has several times observed an effect of
this consciousness when watching the extraction of a tooth under the
influence of gas. The body uttered a confused cry, and raised its
hands vaguely towards the mouth, clearly showing that it to some
extent felt the wrench; yet when the ego resumed possession twenty
seconds later, he declared that he had felt absolutely nothing of the
operation. Of course I am aware that such movements are ordinarily
attributed to 'reflex action', and that people are in the habit of
accepting that statement as though it were a real explanation — not
seeing that as employed here it is a mere phrase and explains nothing
whatever.
This consciousness then, such as it is, is still
working in the physical brain although the ego floats above it, but
its grasp is, of course, far feebler than that of the man himself,
and consequently all those causes which were mentioned above as
likely to affect the action of the brain are now capable of
influencing it to a very much greater extent. The slightest
alteration in the supply or circulation of the blood now produces
grave irregularities of action, and this is why indigestion, as
affecting the flow of the blood, so frequently causes troubled sleep
or bad dreams.
But even when undisturbed, this strange, dim
consciousness has many remarkable peculiarities. Its action seems to
be to a great extent automatic, and the results are usually
incoherent, senseless, and hopelessly confused. It seems unable to
apprehend an idea except in the form of a scene in which it is itself
an actor, and therefore all stimuli, whether from within or without,
are forthwith translated into perceptual images. It is incapable of
grasping abstract ideas or memories as such; they immediately become
imaginary percepts. If, for example, the idea of glory could be
suggested to that consciousness, it could take shape only as a vision
of some glorious being appearing before the dreamer; if a thought of
hatred somehow came across it, it could be appreciated only as a
scene in which some imaginary actor showed violent hatred towards the
sleeper.
Again, every local direction of thought becomes
for it an absolute spatial transportation. If during our waking
hours we think of China or Japan, our thought is at once, as it were,
in those countries; but nevertheless we are perfectly aware that our
physical bodies are exactly where they were a moment before. In the
condition of consciousness which we are considering, however, there
is no discriminating ego to balance the cruder impressions, and
consequently any passing thought suggesting China and Japan could
image itself only as an actual, instantaneous transportation to those
countries, and the dreamer would suddenly Find himself there,
surrounded by as much of the appropriate circumstance as he happened
to be able to remember.
It has often been noted that while startling
transitions of this sort are extremely frequent in dreams, the
sleeper never seems at the time to feel any surprise at their
suddenness. This phenomenon is easily explicable when examined by the
light of such observations as we are considering, for in the mere
consciousness of the physical brain there is nothing capable of such
a feeling as surprise — it simply perceives the pictures as they
appear before it; it has no power to judge either of their sequence
or of their lack of that quality.
Another source of the extraordinary confusion
visible in this half-consciousness is the manner in which the law of
the association of ideas works in it. We are all familiar with the
wonderful instantaneous action of this law in waking life; we know
how a chance word — a strain of music — even the scent of a
flower — may be sufficient to bring back to the mind a chain of
long-forgotten memories.
Now in the sleeping brain this law is as active as
ever, but it acts under curious limitations; every such association
of ideas, whether abstract or concrete, becomes a mere combination of
images; and as our association of ideas is often merely by
synchronism, as of events which, though really entirely unconnected,
happened to us in succession, it may readily be imagined that the
most inextricable confusion of these images is of frequent
occurrence, while their number is practically infinite, as whatever
can be dragged from the immense stores of memory appears in pictorial
form. Naturally enough a succession of such pictures is rarely
perfectly recoverable by memory, since there is no order to help in
recovery — just as it may be easy enough to remember in waking life
a connected sentence or a verse of poetry, even when heard only once,
whereas without some system of mnemonics it would be almost
impossible to recollect accurately a mere jumble of meaningless words
under similar circumstances.
Another peculiarity of this curious consciousness
of the brain is, that while singularly sensitive to the slightest
external influences, such as sounds or touches, it yet magnifies and
distorts them to an almost incredible degree. All writers on dreams
give examples of this, and, indeed, some will probably be within the
knowledge of everyone who has paid any attention to the subject.
Among the stories most commonly told is one of a
man who had a painful dream of being hanged because his shirt-collar
was too tight; another man magnified the prick of a pin into a fatal
stab received in a duel; another translated a slight pinch into the
bite of a wild beast. Maury relates that part of the rail at the head
of his bed once became detached and fell across his neck, so as just
to touch it lightly; yet this trifling contact produced a terrible
dream of the French Revolution, in which he seemed to himself to
perish by the guillotine.
Another writer tells us that he frequently awoke
from sleep with a confused remembrance of dreams full of noise, of
loud voices and thunderous sounds, and was entirely unable for a long
time to discover their origin; but at last he succeeded in tracing
them to the murmurous sound made in the ear (perhaps by the
circulation of the blood) when it is laid on the pillow, much as a
similar but louder murmur may be heard by holding a shell to the ear.
It must by this time be evident that even from
this bodily brain alone there comes enough confusion and exaggeration
to account for many of the dream phenomena; but this is only one of
the factors that we have to take into consideration.
(ii) THE ETHERIC BRAIN
It will be obvious that this part of the organism,
so sensitive to every influence even during our waking life, must be
still more susceptible when in the condition of sleep. When examined
under these circumstances by a clairvoyant, streams of thought are
seen to be constantly sweeping through it — not its own thoughts in
the least, for it has of itself no power to think — but the casual
thoughts of others which are always floating round us.
Students of occultism are well aware that it is
indeed true that 'thoughts are things', for every thought impresses
itself upon the plastic elemental essence and generates a temporary
living entity, the duration of whose life depends upon the energy of
the thought-impulse given to it. We are therefore living in the midst
of an ocean of other men's thoughts, and whether we are awake or
asleep, these are constantly presenting themselves to the etheric
part of our brain.
So long as we ourselves are actively thinking and
therefore keeping our brain fully employed, it is practically
impervious to this continual impingement of thought from without; but
the moment that we leave it idle, the stream of inconsequent chaos
begins to pour through it. Most of the thoughts sweep through
unassimilated and almost unnoticed, but now and then one comes along
which reawakens some vibrations to which the etheric part of the
brain is accustomed; at once that brain seizes upon it, intensifies
it, and makes it its own; that thought in turn suggests another; and
so a whole train of ideas is started, until eventually it also fades
away, and the disconnected, purposeless stream begins flowing through
the brain again.
The vast majority of people, if they will watch
closely what they are in the habit of calling their thoughts will
find that they are very largely made up of a casual stream of this
sort — that in truth they are not their thoughts at all, but simply
the cast-off fragments of other people's. For, the ordinary man seems
to have no control whatever over his mind; he hardly ever knows
exactly of what he is thinking at any particular moment, or why is
he thinking of it; instead of directing his mind to some definite
point, he allows it to run riot at its own sweet will, or lets it lie
fallow, so that any casual seed cast into it by the wind may
germinate and come to fruition there.
The result of this is that even when he, the ego,
really wishes for once to think consecutively on any particular
subject, he finds himself practically unable to do so; all sorts of
stray thoughts rush in unbidden from every side, and since he is
quite unused to controlling his mind, he is powerless to stem the
torrent.
Such a person does not know what real concentrated
thought is; and it is this utter lack of concentration, this
feebleness of mind and will, that makes the early stages of occult
development so difficult to the average man. Again, since in the
present state of the world's evolution there are likely to be more
evil thoughts than good ones floating around him, this weakness lays
him open to all sorts of temptations which a little care and effort
might have avoided altogether.
In sleep, then, the etheric part of the brain is
even more than usually at the mercy of these thoughtcurrents, since
the ego is, for the time, in less close association with it. A
curious fact brought out in some recent experiments is that when by
any means these currents are shut out from this part of the brain, it
does not remain absolutely passive, but begins very slowly and
dreamily to evolve pictures for itself from its store of past
memories. An example of this will be given later, when some of these
experiments are described.
(iii) THE ASTRAL BODY
As before mentioned, it is in this vehicle that
the ego is functioning during sleep, and it is usually to be seen (by
anyone whose inner sight is opened) hovering over the physical body
on the bed. Its appearance, however, differs very greatly according
to the stage of development which the ego to which it belongs has
reached. In the case of the entirely uncultured and undeveloped
person it is simply a floating wreath of mist, roughly ovoid in
shape, but very irregular and indefinite in outline, while the figure
within the mist (the denser astral counterpart of the physical body)
is also vague, though generally recognizable.
It is receptive only of the coarser and more
violent vibrations of desire, and unable to move more than a few
yards away from its physical body; but as evolution progresses, the
ovoid mist becomes more and more definite in outline, and the figure
within it more and more nearly a perfect image of the physical body
beneath it. Its receptivity simultaneously increases, until it is
instantly responsive to all the vibrations of its plane, the finer as
well as the more ignoble; though in the astral body of a
highly-developed person there would naturally be practically no
matter left coarse enough to respond to the latter.
Its power of locomotion also becomes much greater;
it can travel without discomfort to considerable distances from its
physical encasement, and can bring back more or less definite
impressions as to places which it may have visited and people whom it
may have met. In every case this astral body is, as ever, intensely
impressionable by any thought or suggestion involving desire, though
in some the desires which most readily awaken a response in it may be
somewhat higher than in others.
(iv) THE EGO IN SLEEP
Though the condition in which the astral body is
to be found during sleep changes largely as evolution takes place,
that of the ego inhabiting it changes still more. Where the former is
in the stage of the floating wreath of mist, the ego is practically
almost as much asleep as the body lying below him; he is blind to the
sights and deaf to the voices of his own higher plane, and even if
some idea belonging to it should by chance reach him, since he has no
control over his mechanism, he will be quite unable to impress it
upon his physical brain so that it may be remembered upon waking. If
a man in this primitive condition recollects anything at all of what
happens to him during sleep, it will almost invariably be the result
of purely physical impressions made upon the brain either from within
or from without — any experience which his real ego may have had
being forgotten.
Sleepers may be observed at all stages, from this
condition of all but blank oblivion, up to full and perfect
consciousness on the astral plane, though this latter is naturally
comparatively rare. Even a man who is sufficiently awake to meet not
infrequently with important experiences in this higher life, may yet
be (and often is) unable so far to dominate his brain as to check its
current of inconsequent thought-pictures and impress upon it instead
what he wishes it to recollect; and thus when his physical body
awakes he may have only the most confused memory, or no memory at
all, of what has really happened to him. And this is a pity, for he
may meet with much that is of the greatest interest and importance to
him.
Not only may he visit distant scenes of surpassing
beauty, but he may meet and exchange ideas with friends, either
living or departed, who happen to be equally awake on the astral
plane. He may be fortunate enough to encounter those who know far
more than he does, and may receive warning or instruction from them,
he may, on the other hand, be privileged to help and comfort some who
know less than himself. He may come into contact with non-human
entities of various kinds — with nature-spirits, artificial
elementals, or even, though very rarely, with Devas; he will be
subject to all kinds of influences, good or evil, strengthening or
terrifying.
His transcendental measure of time but whether he
remembers anything when physically awake or not, the ego who is fully
or even partially conscious of his surroundings on the astral plane
is beginning to enter into his heritage of powers which far transcend
those he possesses down here; for his consciousness when thus
liberated from the physical body has very remarkable possibilities.
His measure of time and space is so entirely different from that
which we use in waking life, that from our view it seems as though
neither time nor space existed for him.
I do not wish here to discuss the question,
intensely interesting though it be, as to whether time can be said
really to exist, or whether it is but a limitation of this lower
consciousness, and all that we call time — past, present and future
alike — is 'but one eternal Now'; I wish only to show that when the
ego is freed from physical trammels, either during sleep, trance or
death, he appears to employ some transcendental measure of time
which has nothing in common with our ordinary physiological one. A
hundred stories might be told to prove this fact; it will be
sufficient if I give two — the first a very old one (related, I
think, by Addison in "The Spectator"), the other an account
of an event which happened but a short time ago, and has never before
appeared in print.
It seems that in the Koran there is a wonderful
narrative concerning a visit paid one morning by the prophet Mohammed
to heaven, during which he saw many different regions there, had them
all very fully explained to him, and also had numerous lengthy
conferences with various angels; yet when he returned to his body,
the bed from which he had risen was still warm, and he found that but
a few seconds had passed — in fact, I believe the water had not yet
all run out from a jug which he had accidentally overturned as he
started on the expedition!
Now Addison's story runs that a certain sultan of
Egypt felt it impossible to believe this, and even went to the
impolitic length of bluntly declaring to his religious teacher that
the tale was a falsehood. The teacher, who was a great doctor learned
in the law, and credited with miraculous powers, undertook to prove
on the spot to the doubting monarch that the story was, at any rate,
not impossible. He had a large basin of water brought, and begged the
sultan just to dip his head into the water and withdraw it as quickly
as he could.
The king accordingly plunged his head into the
basin, and to his intense surprise found himself at once in a place
entirely unknown to him — on a lonely shore, near the foot of a
great mountain. After the first stupefaction was over, what was
probably the most natural idea for an oriental monarch came into his
head — he thought he was bewitched, and at once began to execrate
the doctor for such abominable treachery. However, time passed on; he
began to get hungry, and realized that there was nothing for it but
to find some means of livelihood in this strange country.
After wandering about for some time, he found some
men at work felling trees in a wood, and applied to them for
assistance. They set him to help them, and eventually took him with
them to the town where they lived. Here he resided and worked for
some years, gradually amassing money, and at length contrived to
marry a rich wife. With her he spent many happy years of wedded life,
bringing up a family of no less than fourteen children, but after her
death he met with so many misfortunes that he at last fell into want
again, and once more, in his old age, became a wood-porter.
One day, walking by the sea-side, he threw off his
clothes and plunged into the sea for a bath; and as he raised his
head and shook the water from his eyes, he was astounded to find
himself standing among his old courtiers, with his teacher of long
ago at his side, and a basin of water before him. It was long — and
no wonder — before he could be brought to believe that all those
years of incident and adventure had been nothing but one moment's
dream, caused by the hypnotic suggestion of his teacher, and that
really he had done nothing but dip his head quickly into the basin of
water and draw it out again.
This is a good story, and illustrates our point
well, but, of course, we have no proof whatever as to its truth. It
is quite different, however, with regard to an event that happened
only the other day to a wellknown man of science. He unfortunately
had to have two teeth removed, and took gas in the ordinary way for
that purpose. Being interested in such problems as these, he had
resolved to note very carefully his sensations all through the
operation, but as he inhaled the gas, such a drowsy contentment stole
over him that he soon forgot his intention and seemed to sink into
sleep.
He rose next morning, as he supposed, and went on
with his regular round of scientific experiment, lecturing before
various learned bodies, etc., but all with a singular sense of
enhanced power and pleasure — every lecture being a remarkable
achievement, every experiment leading to new and magnificent
discoveries. This went on day after day, week after week, for a very
considerable period, though the exact time is uncertain; until at
last one day, when he was delivering a lecture before the Royal
Society, he was annoyed by the unmannerly behaviour of some one
present, who disturbed him by remarking, 'It's all over now'; and as
he turned round to see what this meant, another voice observed, 'They
are both out'. Then he realized that he was still sitting in the
dentist's chair, and that he had lived through that period of
intensified life in just forty seconds!
Neither of these cases, it may be said, was
exactly an ordinary dream. But the same thing occurs constantly in
ordinary dreams, and there is again abundant testimony to show it.
Steffens, one of the German writers on the
subject, relates how when a boy he was sleeping with his brother, and
dreamed that he was in a lonely street, pursued by some dreadful wild
beast. He ran on in great terror, though unable to cry out, until he
came to a staircase, up which he turned, but being exhausted with
fright and hard running, was overtaken by the animal, and severely
bitten in the thigh. He awoke with a start, and found that his
brother had pinched him on the thigh.
Richers, another German writer, tells the story of
a man who was awakened by the firing of a shot, which yet came in as
the conclusion of a long dream, in which he had become a soldier, had
deserted and suffered terrible hardship, had been captured, tried,
condemned, and finally shot — the whole long drama being lived
through in the moment of being awakened by the sound of the shot.
Again, we have the tale of the man who fell asleep in an armchair
while smoking a cigar, and after dreaming through an eventful life of
many years, awoke to find his cigar still alight. One might multiply
authenticated cases to any extent.
Another remarkable peculiarity of the ego, in
addition to his transcendental measure of time, is suggested by some
of these stories, and that is his faculty, or, perhaps, we should
rather say his habit, of instantaneous dramatization. It will be
noticed in the cases of the shot and the pinch which have just been
narrated, that the physical effect which awakened the person came as
the climax to a dream apparently extending over a considerable space
of time, though obviously suggested in reality entirely by that
physical effect itself.
Now the news, so to speak, of this physical
effect, whether it be a sound or a touch, has to be conveyed to the
brain by the nerve-threads, and this transmission takes a certain
space of time — only a minute fraction of a second, of course, but
still a definite amount which is calculable and measurable by the
exceedingly delicate instruments used in modern scientific research.
The ego, when out of the body, is able to perceive with absolute
instantaneity without the use of the nerves, and consequently is
aware of what happens just that minute fraction of a second before
the information reaches his physical brain.
In that barely-appreciable space of time he
appears to compose a kind of drama or series of scenes, leading up to
and culminating in the event which awakens the physical body; and
when after waking he is limited by the organs of that body, he
becomes incapable of distinguishing in memory between the subjective
and the objective, and therefore imagines himself to have really
acted through his own drama in a dream state.
This habit, however, seems to be peculiar to the
ego which, as far as spirituality goes, is still comparatively
undeveloped; as evolution takes place, and the real man slowly comes
to understand his position and his responsibilities, he rises beyond
these graceful sports of his childhood. It would seem that just as
primitive man casts every natural phenomenon into the form of a myth,
so the unadvanced ego dramatizes every event that comes under his
notice; but the man who has attained continuous consciousness finds
himself so fully occupied in the work of the higher planes that he
devotes no energy to such matters, and therefore he dreams no more.
Another result which follows from the ego's
supernormal method of time-measurement is that in some degree
prevision is possible to him. The present, the past, and, to a
certain extent, the future lie open before him if he knows how to
read them; and he undoubtedly thus foresees at times events that will
be of interest or importance to his lower personality, and makes more
or less successful endeavours to impress them upon it.
When we take into account the stupendous
difficulties in his way in the case of an ordinary person — the
fact that he is himself probably not yet even half awake, that he has
hardly any control over his various vehicles, and cannot, therefore,
prevent his message from being distorted or altogether overpowered by
the surgings of desire, by the casual thought-currents in the etheric
part of his brain, or by some slight physical disturbance affecting
his denser body — we shall not wonder that he so rarely fully
succeeds in his attempt. Once, now and again, a complete and perfect
forecast of some event is vividly brought back from the realms of
sleep; far more often the picture is distorted or unrecognizable,
while sometimes all that comes through is a vague sense of some
impending misfortune, and still more frequently nothing at all
penetrates the body.
It has sometimes been argued that when this
prevision occurs it must be mere coincidence, since if events could
really be foreseen they must be fore-ordained, in which case there
can be no free-will for man. Man, however, undoubtedly does possess
free-will; and therefore, as remarked above, prevision is possible
only to a certain extent. In the affairs of the average man it is
probably possible to a very large extent, since he has developed no
will of his own worth speaking of, and is consequently very largely
the creature of circumstances; his karma places him amid certain
surroundings, and their action upon him is so much the most important
factor in his history that his future course may be foreseen with
almost mathematical certainty.
When we consider the vast number of events which
can be but little affected by human action, and also the effects, it
will scarcely seem wonderful to us that on the plane where the result
of all causes at present in action is visible, a very large portion
of the future may be foretold with considerable accuracy even as to
detail. That this can be done has been proved again and again, not
only by prophetic dreams, but by the second-sight of the Highlanders
and the predictions of clairvoyants; and it is on this forecasting of
effects from the causes already in existence that the whole scheme of
astrology is based.
But when we come to deal with a developed
individual — a man with knowledge and will — then prophecy fails
us, for he is no longer the creature of circumstances but to a great
extent their master.
True, the main events of his life are arranged
beforehand by his past karma; but the way in which he will allow them
to affect him, the method by which he will deal with them, and
perhaps triumph over them — these are his own, and they cannot be
foreseen except as probabilities. Such actions of his in their turn
become causes, and thus chains of effects are produced in his life
which were not provided for by the original arrangement, and,
therefore, could not have been foretold with any exactitude.
An analogy may be taken from a simple experiment
in mechanics: if a certain amount of force be employed to set a ball
rolling, we cannot in any way destroy or decrease that force when
once the ball has started, but we can counteract or modify its
actions by the application of a fresh force in a different direction.
An equal force applied to the ball in exactly the opposite direction
will stop it entirely; a lesser force so applied will reduce its
speed; any force applied from either side will alter both its speed
and its direction.
So with the working out of destiny. It is clear
that at any given moment, a body of causes is in action which, if not
interfered with, will inevitably produce certain results — results
which on higher planes would seem already present, and could
therefore be exactly described. But it is also clear that a man of
strong will can, by setting up new forces, largely modify these
results; and these modifications could not be foreseen by any
ordinary clairvoyance until after the new forces had been set in
motion.
Two incidents which recently came to the knowledge
of the writer will serve as excellent illustrations both of the
possibility of prevision and also of its modification by a determined
will. A gentleman whose hand is often used for automatic writing one
day received in that way a communication professing to come from a
person whom he knew slightly, in which she informed him that she was
in a great state of indignation and annoyance because, having
arranged to give a certain lecture, she found no one in the hall at
the appointed time, and was consequently unable to deliver her
discourse.
Meeting the lady in question a few days later and
supposing the letter to refer to a past event, he
condoled with her on the disappointment, and she
remarked with great surprise that what he told her was certainly very
odd, as, though she had not yet delivered her lecture, she was to do
so the following week, and she hoped the letter might not prove a
prophecy. Unlikely as such an event seemed, the account written did
prove to be a prophecy; no one attended at the hall, the lecture was
not delivered, and the lecturer was much annoyed and distressed,
exactly as the automatic writing had foretold. What kind of entity
inspired the writing does not appear, but it was evidently one who
moved on a plane where prevision was possible; and it may really have
been, as it professed to be, the ego of the lecturer, anxious to
break the disappointment to her by preparing her mind for it on this
lower plane.
If it were so, it will be said, why should he not
have influenced her directly? He may very well have been quite unable
to do this, and the sensitivity of her friend may have been the only
possible channel through which he could convey his warning.
Roundabout as this method may seem, students of these subjects are
well aware that there are many examples in which it is evident that
means of communication such as are here employed are absolutely the
only ones available.
On another occasion the same gentleman received in
the same way what purported to be a letter from another feminine
friend, relating a long and sad story from her recent life. She
explained that she was in very great trouble, and that all the
difficulty had originally arisen from a conversation (which she gave
in detail) with a certain person, by means of which she was
persuaded, much against her own feeling, to adopt a particular course
of action. She went on to describe how, a year or so later, a series
of events directly attributable to her adoption of this course of
action ensued, culminating in the commission of a horrible crime,
which had for ever darkened her life.
As in the previous case, when next the gentleman
met the friend from whom the letter was supposed to come, he told her
what it had contained. She knew nothing whatever of any such story,
and though she was greatly impressed by its circumstantiality, they
eventually decided that there was nothing in it. Sometime later, to
her intense surprise, the conversation foretold in the letter
actually took place, and she found herself being implored to take the
very course of action to which so disastrous an ending had been
foreshadowed. She would certainly have yielded, distrusting her own
judgement, but for the memory of the prophecy; having that in mind,
however, she resisted in the most determined manner, even though her
attitude caused surprise and pain to the friend with whom she was
talking. The course of action indicated in the letter not being
followed, the time of the predicted catastrophe naturally arrived and
passed without any unusual incident.
So it might have done in any case, it may be said.
Perhaps so; and yet, remembering how exactly that other prediction
was fulfilled, one cannot but feel that the warning conveyed by this
writing probably prevented the commission of a crime. If that be so,
then here is a good example of the way in which our future may be
altered by the exercise of a determined will.
Another point worth notice in relation to the
condition of the ego when out of the body during sleep is that he
appears to think in symbols — that is to say, that what down here
would be an idea requiring many words to express, is perfectly
conveyed to him by a single symbolical image. Now when such a thought
as this is impressed upon the brain, and so remembered in the waking
consciousness, it of course needs translation. Often the mind duly
performs this function, but sometimes the symbol is recollected
without its key — comes through untranslated, as it were; and then
confusion arises.
Many people, however, are quite in the habit of
bringing the symbols through in this manner, and trying to invent an
interpretation down here. In such cases, each person seems usually to
have a system of symbology of his own. Mrs Crowe mentions, in her
"Night Side of Nature" (p.54), 'a lady who, whenever a
misfortune was impending, dreamt that she saw a large fish. One night
she dreamt that this fish had bitten two of her little boy's fingers.
Immediately afterwards a school-fellow of the child's injured those
two very fingers by striking him with a hatchet. I have met with
several persons who have learnt by experience to consider one
particular dream as a certain prognostic of misfortune.' There are,
however, a few points upon which most of these dreamers agree — as,
for example, that to dream of deep water signifies approaching
trouble, and that pearls are a sign of tears.
(v) THE FACTORS IN THE PRODUCTION OF DREAMS
Having thus examined the condition of man during
sleep, we see that the factors which may be concerned in the
production of dreams are:
1. The ego, who may be in any state of
consciousness from almost utter insensibility to perfect command of
his faculties, and as he approximates to the latter condition, enters
more and more fully into possession of certain powers transcending
any that most of us possess in our ordinary waking state.
2. The astral body, ever palpitating with the wild
surgings of emotion and desire.
3. The etheric part of the brain, with a ceaseless
procession of disconnected pictures sweeping through it.
4. The lower physical brain, with its infantile
semi consciousness and its habit of expressing every stimulus in
pictorial form.
When we go to sleep our ego withdraws further
within himself, and leaves his various encasements freer to go their
own way than they usually are; but it must be remembered that the
separate consciousness of these vehicles, when they are thus allowed
to show it, is of a very rudimentary character. When we add that each
of these factors is then infinitely more susceptible of impression
from without even than it ordinarily is, we shall see small cause to
wonder that the recollection on waking, which is a sort of synthesis
of all the different activities which have been going on, should
generally be somewhat confused. Let us now, with these thoughts in
our minds, see how the different kinds of dreams usually experienced
are to be accounted for.
Chapter 5
DREAMS
(i) THE TRUE VISION
This, which cannot properly be classified as a
dream at all, is a case where the ego either sees for himself some
fact upon a higher plane of nature, or else has it impressed upon him
by a more advanced entity; at any rate he is made aware of some fact
which it is important for him to know, or perhaps sees some glorious
and ennobling vision which encourages and strengthens him. Happy is
the man to whom such vision comes with sufficient clearness to make
its way through all obstacles and fix itself firmly in his waking
memory.
(ii) THE PROPHETIC DREAM
This also we must attribute exclusively to the
action of the ego, who either foresees for himself or is told of some
future event for which he wishes to prepare his lower consciousness.
This may be of any degree of clearness and accuracy, according to the
power of the ego to assimilate it himself and, having done so, to
impress it upon his waking brain.
Sometimes the event is one of serious moment, such
as death or disaster, so that the motive of the ego in endeavouring
to impress it is obvious. On other occasions, however, the fact
foretold is apparently unimportant, and it is difficult for us to
comprehend why the ego should take any trouble about it. Of course it
is always possible that in such a case the fact remembered may be
only a trifling detail of some far larger vision, the rest of which
has not come through to the physical brain.
Often the prophecy is evidently intended as a
warning, and instances are not wanting in which that warning has been
taken, and so the dreamer has been saved from injury or death. In
most cases the hint is neglected, or its true signification not
understood until the fulfillment comes. In others an attempt is made
to act upon the suggestion, but nevertheless circumstances over which
the dreamer has no control bring him in spite of himself into the
position foretold.
Stories of such prophetic dreams are so common
that the reader may easily find some in almost any of the books on
such subjects. I quote a recent example from Mr W.T. Stead's "Real
Ghost Stories" (p. 77).
The hero of the tale was a blacksmith at a
manufacturing mill, which was driven by a water-wheel. He knew the
wheel to be out of repair, and one night he dreamed that at the close
of the next day's work the manager detained him to repair it, that
his foot slipped and became entangled between the two wheels, and was
injured and afterwards amputated. He told his wife the dream in the
morning, and made up his mind to be out of the way that evening if he
was wanted to repair the wheel.
During the day the manager announced that the
wheel must be repaired when the workpeople left that evening, but the
blacksmith determined to make himself scarce before the hour arrived.
He fled to a wood in the vicinity, and thought to hide himself there
in its recesses. He came to a spot where lay some timber which
belonged to the mill, and detected a lad stealing some pieces of wood
from the heap. On this he pursued him in order to rescue the stolen
property, and became so excited that he forgot all about his
resolution, and ere he was aware of it, found himself back at the
mill just as the workmen were being dismissed.
He could not escape notice, and as he was
principal smith he had to go upon the wheel, but he resolved to be
unusually careful. In spite of all his care, however, his foot
slipped and got entangled between the two wheels, just as he had
dreamed. It was crushed so badly that he had to be carried to the
Bradford Infirmary, where the leg was amputated above the knee; so
the prophetic dream was fulfilled throughout.
(iii) THE SYMBOLICAL DREAM
This, too, is the work of the ego, and, indeed, it
might almost be defined as a less successful variant of the preceding
class, for it is, after all, an imperfectly translated effort on his
part to convey information as to the future.
A good example of this kind of dream was described
by Sir Noel Paton in a letter to Mrs Crowe, published by the latter
in "The Night Side of Nature" (p. 54). The great artist
writes:
"That dream of my mother's was as follows.
She stood in a long, dark, empty gallery; on one side was my father,
on the other my eldest sister, then myself and. the rest of the
family according to their ages. ...We all stood silent and
motionless. At last it entered — the unimagined something that,
casting its grim shadow before, had enveloped all the trivialities of
the preceding dream in the stifling atmosphere of terror. It entered,
stealthily descending the three steps that led from the entrance down
into the chamber of horror; and my mother felt that it was Death.
He carried on his shoulder a heavy axe, and had
come, she thought, to destroy all her little ones at one fell swoop.
On the entrance of the shape my sister Alexes leapt out of the rank,
interposing herself between him and my mother. He raised his axe and
aimed a blow at my sister Catherine — a blow which, to her horror,
my mother could not intercept, though she had snatched up a
three-legged stool for that purpose. She could not, she felt, fling
the stool at the figure without destroying Alexes, who kept shooting
out and in between her and the ghastly thing ....Down came the axe,
and poor Catherine fell. ...Again the axe was lifted by the
inexorable shape over the head of my brother, who stood next in the
line, but now Alexes had disappeared somewhere behind the ghastly
visitant, and with a scream my mother flung the stool at his head. He
vanished and she awoke. ...Three months had elapsed when we children
were all of us seized with scarlet fever. My sister Catherine, died
almost immediately — sacrificed, as my mother in her misery
thought, to her (my mother's) over-anxiety for Alexes, whose danger
seemed more imminent. The dream prophecy was in part fulfilled. I
also was at death's door — given up by the doctors, but not by my
mother; she was confident of my recovery. But for my brother, who was
scarcely considered in danger at all, but over whose head she had
seen the visionary axe impending, her fears were great; for she could
not recollect whether the blow had or had not descended when the
spectre vanished. My brother recovered, but relapsed and barely
escaped with life; but Alexes did not. For a year and ten months the
poor child lingered ... and I held her little hand as she died. ...
Thus the dream was fulfilled."
It is very curious to notice here how accurately
the details of the symbolism work themselves out, even to the
supposed sacrifice of Catherine for the sake of Alexes, and the
difference in the manner of their deaths.
(iv) THE VIVID AND CONNECTED DREAM
This is sometimes a remembrance, more or less
accurate of a real astral experience which has occurred to the ego
while wandering away from his sleeping physical body; more
frequently, perhaps, it is the dramatization by that ego either of
the impression produced by some trifling physical sound or touch, or
of some casual idea which happens to strike him.
Examples of this latter kind have already been
given, and there are many to be found of the former also. We may take
as an instance an anecdote quoted by Mr Andrew Lang, in "Dreams
and Ghosts" (p. 35), from the distinguished French physician Dr
Brierre de Boismont, who describes it as occurring within his own
intimate knowledge.
"Miss C., a lady of excellent sense, lived
before her marriage in the house of her uncle D., a celebrated
physician and member of the Institute. Her mother at this time was
seriously ill in the country. One night the girl dreamed that she saw
her mother, pale and dying, and especially grieved at the absence of
two of her children — one a cure in Spain, and the other (herself)
in Paris.
Next she heard her own Christian name called,
"Charlotte!" and in her dream saw the people about her
mother bring in her own little niece and godchild Charlotte from the
next room. The patient intimated by a sign that she did not want this
Charlotte, but her daughter in Paris. She displayed the deepest
regret; her countenance changed, she fell back and died.
Next day the melancholy of Miss C., attracted the
attention of her uncle. She told him her dream, and he admitted that
her mother was dead. Some months later, when her uncle was absent,
she arranged his papers, which he did not like anyone to touch. Among
these was a letter containing the story of her mother's death and
giving all the details of her own dream, which D. had kept concealed
lest they should impress her too painfully."
Sometimes the clairvoyant dream refers to a matter
of much less importance than a death, as in the following case, which
is given by Dr F.G. Lee in "Glimpses in the Twilight" (p.
108). A mother dreams that she sees her son on a boat of strange
shape, standing at the foot of a ladder which leads to an upper deck.
He looks extremely pale and worn, and says to her earnestly, 'Mother,
I have nowhere to sleep.' In due course a letter arrives from the
son, in which he encloses a sketch of the curious boat, showing the
ladder leading to the upper deck; he also explained that on a certain
day (that of his mother's dream) a storm nearly wrecked their boat
and hopelessly soaked his bed, and the account ends with the words,
`I had nowhere to sleep.'
It is quite clear that in both these cases the
dreamers, drawn by thoughts of love or anxiety, had really travelled
in the astral body during sleep to those in whose fate they were so
keenly interested, and simply witnessed the various occurrences as
they took place.
(v) THE CONFUSED DREAM
This, which is by far the commonest of all, may be
caused, as has already been pointed out, in various ways. It may be
simply a more or less perfect recollection of a series of the
disconnected pictures and impossible transformations produced by the
senseless automatic action of the lower physical brain; it may be a
reproduction of the stream of casual thought which has been pouring
through the etheric part of the brain; if sensual images of any kind
enter into it, it is due to the ever-restless tide of earthly desire,
probably stimulated by some unholy influence of the astral world; it
may be due to an imperfect attempt at dramatization on the part of an
undeveloped ego; or it may be (and most often is) due to an
inextricable mingling of several or all of these influences. The way
in which such mingling takes place will perhaps be made clearer by a
short account of some of the experiments on the dream state recently
made by the London Lodge of the Theosophical Society, with the aid of
some clairvoyant investigators among its members.
Chapter 6
EXPERIMENTS ON THE DREAM-STATE
The object specially in view in the investigation,
part of which I am about to describe, was to discover whether it was
possible to impress the ego of an ordinary person during sleep
sufficiently to enable him to recollect the circumstance when he
awoke; and it was also desired, as far as possible, to find out what
are the obstacles that usually stand in the way of such recollection.
The first experiment tried was with an average man of small education
and rough exterior — a man of the Australian shepherd type —
whose astral form, as seen floating above his body, was externally
little more than a shapeless wreath of mist.
It was found that the consciousness of the body on
the bed was dull and heavy, both as regards the grosser and the
etheric parts of the frame. The former responded to some extent to
external stimuli — for example, the sprinkling of two or three
drops of water on the face called up in the brain (though somewhat
tardily) a picture of a heavy shower of rain; while the etheric part
of the brain was as usual a passive channel for an endless stream of
disconnected thoughts, it rarely responded to any of the vibrations
they produced, and even when it did it seemed somewhat sluggish in
its action. The ego floating above was in an undeveloped and
semi-unconscious condition, but the astral envelope, though shapeless
and ill-defined, showed considerable activity.
The floating astral can at any time be acted upon,
with an ease that can scarcely be imagined, by the conscious thought
of another person; and in this case the experiment was made
withdrawing it to some little distance from the physical body on the
bed, with the result, however, that as soon as it was more than a few
yards away considerable uneasiness was manifested in both the
vehicles, and it became necessary to desist from the attempt, as
evidently any further withdrawal would have caused the man to awake,
probably in a state of great terror.
A certain scene was chosen — a view of the most
magnificent character from the summit of a mountain in the tropics —
and a vivid picture of it was projected by the operator into the
dreamy consciousness of the ego, which assimilated and examined it,
though in a dull, apathetic, and unappreciative kind of way. After
this scene had been held before his view for some time the man was
awakened, the object being, of course, to see whether he recollected
it as a dream. His mind, however, was an absolute blank on the
subject, and except for some vague yearnings of the most animal
description, he had brought back no memory whatever from the state of
sleep.
It was suggested that possibly the constant stream
of thought-forms from outside, which flowed through his brain, might
constitute an obstacle by so distracting it as to make it unreceptive
to influences from its higher principles; so after the man had again
fallen asleep, a magnetic shell was formed around his body to prevent
the entrance of this stream, arid the experiment was tried again.
When thus deprived of its ordinary pabulum, his
brain began very slowly and dreamily to evolve out of itself scenes
of the man's past life; but when he was again aroused, the result was
precisely the same — his memory was absolutely blank as to the
scene put before him, though he had some vague idea of having dreamed
of some event in his past. This subject was then for the time
resigned as hopeless, it being fairly evident that his ego was too
little developed, and his kamic principle too strong, to give any
reasonable probability of success.
Another effort made with the same man at a later
period was not quite so utter a failure, the scene put before him in
this case being a very exciting incident from the battle-field, which
was chosen as being probably more likely to appeal to his type of
mind than the landscape. This picture was undoubtedly received by
this undeveloped ego with more interest than the other, but still,
when the man was awakened the memory was gone, all that remained
being an indistinct idea that he had been fighting, but where or why
he had quite forgotten.
The next subject taken was a person of much higher
type — a man of good moral life, educated and intellectual, with
broad philanthropic ideas and exalted ambitions. In his case the
denser body responded instantaneously to the water test by a very
respectable picture of a tremendous thunder-storm, and that in turn,
reacting on the etheric part of the brain, called up by association a
whole series of vividly represented scenes. When this disturbance was
over, the usual stream of thoughts began to flow through, but it was
observable that a far greater proportion of them awoke a response in
this brain — also that the responsive vibrations were much
stronger, and that in each case a train of associations was started
which sometimes excluded the stream from outside for quite a
considerable time.
The astral vehicle in this subject was far more
definite in its ovoid outline, and the body of denser astral matter
within it was a very fair reproduction of his physical form; and
while desire was decidedly less active, the ego itself possessed a
much higher grade of consciousness.
The astral body in this case could be drawn away
to a distance of several miles from the physical without apparently
producing the slightest sense of disquiet in either of them.
When the tropical landscape was submitted to this
ego, he at once seized upon it with the greatest appreciation,
admiring and dwelling upon its beauties in the most enthusiastic
manner. After letting him admire it for awhile the man was aroused,
but the result was somewhat disappointing. He knew that he had had a
beautiful dream, but was quite unable to recall any details, the few
elusive fragments that were uppermost in his mind being remnants of
the ramblings of his own brain.
With him, as with the other man, the experiment
was then repeated with the addition of a magnetic shell thrown round
the body, and in this case, as in the other, the brain at once began
to evolve pictures of its own. The ego received the landscape with
even greater enthusiasm than at first, recognizing it at once as the
view he had seen before, and surveying it point by point with quite
ecstatic admiration of its many beauties.
But while he was thus engaged in contemplation of
it, the etheric brain down below was amusing itself by recalling
pictures of his school-life, the most prominent being a scene on a
winter day, when the ground was covered with snow, and he and a
number of his playmates were snowballing one another in the school
playground.
When the man was aroused as usual, the effect was
exceedingly curious. He had a most vivid remembrance of standing upon
the summit of a mountain, admiring a magnificent view, and he even
had the main features of the scenery quite clearly in his mind; but
instead of the gorgeous tropical verdure which lent such richness to
the real prospect, he saw the surrounding country entirely covered
with a mantle of snow! And it seemed to him that even while he was
drinking in with deep delight the loveliness of the panorama spread
out before him, he suddenly found himself, by one of the rapid
transitions so frequent in dreams, snowballing with boyhood's
long-forgotten companions in the old school-yard, of which he had not
thought for years.
Chapter 7
CONCLUSION
Surely these experiments show very clearly how the
remembrance of our dreams becomes so chaotic and inconsequent as it
frequently is. Incidentally they also explain why some people — in
whom the ego is undeveloped and earthly desires of various kinds are
strong — never dream at all, and why many others are only now and
then, under a collocation of favourable circumstances, able to bring
back a confused memory of nocturnal adventure; and we see, further,
from them that if a man wishes to reap in his waking consciousness
the benefit of what his ego may learn during sleep, it is absolutely
necessary for him to acquire control over his thoughts, to subdue all
lower passions, and to attune his mind to higher things.
If he will take the trouble to form during waking
life the habit of sustained and concentrated thought, he will soon
find that the advantage lie gains thereby is not limited to the
daytime in its action. Let him learn to hold his mind in check — to
show that he is master of that also, as well as of his lower
passions; let him patiently labour to acquire absolute control of his
thoughts, so that he will always know exactly what he is thinking
about, and why, and he will find that his brain, thus trained to
listen only to the promptings of the ego, will remain quiescent when
not in use, and will decline to receive and respond to casual
currents from the surrounding ocean of thought, so that he will no
longer be impervious to influences from the less material planes,
where insight is keener and judgment truer than they can ever be down
here.
The performance of a very elementary act of magic
may be of assistance to some people in this training of the etheric
part of the brain. The pictures which it evolves for itself (when the
thought-stream from outside is shut off) are certainly less likely
altogether to prevent the recollection of the ego's experiences, than
is the tumultuous rush of that thought-stream itself; so the
exclusion of this turbid current, which contains so much more evil
than good, is of itself no inconsiderable step towards the desired
end. And that much may be accomplished without serious difficulty.
Let a man when he lies down to sleep think of the aura which
surrounds him; let him will strongly that the outer surface of that
aura shall become a shell to protect him from the impingement of
influences from without, and the auric matter will obey his thought;
a shell will really be formed around him, and the thought-stream will
be excluded.*
* WARNING. Students wishing for some reason to
guard their physical bodies during sleep may be warned not to repeat
the mistake made some time ago by a worthy friend who took a great
deal of trouble to surround himself with a specially impenetrable
shell on a certain occasion, but made it of astral instead of etheric
matter, and consequently took it away with him when he left his
physical body!
Naturally the result was that his physical body
was left entirely unprotected, while he himself floated about all
night enclosed in triple armour, absolutely incapable of sending out
a single vibration to help anybody, or of being helped or
beneficially influenced by any loving thoughts which may have been
directed towards him by teachers or friends. [From C. W. Leadbeater's
The Hidden Side of Things].
Another point very strongly brought out in our
further investigations is the immense importance of the last thought
in a man's mind as he sinks to sleep. This is a consideration which
never occurs to the vast majority of people at all, yet it affects
them physically, mentally, and morally.
We have seen how passive and how easily influenced
man is during sleep; if he enters that state with his thought fixed
upon high and holy things, he thereby draws round him the elementals
created by like thought in others; his rest is peaceful, his mind
open to impressions from above and closed to those from below, for he
has set it working in the right direction. If, on the contrary, he
falls asleep with impure and earthly thoughts floating through his
brain, he attracts to himself all the gross and evil creatures who
come near him, while his sleep is troubled by the wild surgings of
passion and desire which render him blind to the sights, deaf to the
sounds, that come from higher planes.
All earnest Theosophists should therefore make a
special point of raising their thoughts to the loftiest level of
which they are capable before allowing themselves to sink into
slumber. For remember, through what seem at first but the portals of
dream, entrance may perchance presently be gained into those grander
realms where alone true vision is possible.
If one guides his soul persistently upward, its
inner senses will at last begin to unfold; the light within the
shrine will burn brighter and brighter, until at last the full
continuous consciousness comes, and then he will dream no more. To
lie down to sleep will no longer mean for him to sink into oblivion,
but simply to step forth radiant, rejoicing, strong, into that
fuller, nobler life where fatigue can never come — where the soul
is always learning, even though all his time be spent in service; for
the service is that of the great Masters of Wisdom, and the glorious
task They set before him is to help ever to the fullest limit of his
power in Their never-ceasing work for the aiding and the guidance of
the evolution of humanity.
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