1
The two great daily pauses in Nature offer wonderful
minutes when we, her children, should pause too. Sunrise is the chance and time
to prepare inwardly for activity; sunset to counterbalance it. We do not take
proper advantage of the gifts of Nature but let ourselves be defeated by the
conditions in which we have to live under our times and civilization.
2
Dusk is my mystic hour. With its soft coming I am
drawn again to turn away from the world and recognize the divine presence within
me.
3
The diurnal miracle of sunrise and the nocturnal
fascination of sunset are worth much more than every minute we give them. This
is not only because we owe so much to the great orb, but because we can get so
much from the salutations themselves.
4
A profound feeling of reverence for the Sun should be
a part of the worship, the visible orb being regarded as the vesture worn by the
Great Being behind it.
5
The distant horizon, bathed in a sunset of quivering
amethyst light, gives joy to the heart, uplift to the reverent worshipper of the
Holy and Benign.
6
How lovely are those reddened evenings when the sun
is about to bid us adieu! How the heart is warmed and the mind enlightened as it
harmonizes with the hush of eventide. It is then so easy to receive what the
poet called "intimations of immortality."
7
The sun's dying touch turned the field to sudden
gold.
8
The minutes between light and dark just after the
sun's setting are precious to him.
9
Fascinated by the utter beauty of a fiery sunset,
held and hypnotized by it, the turning away merely to continue a piece of work,
to eat a meal or to go out on some business seems reprehensible sacrilege. And
perhaps it is. It is in such moments that a glimpse of God's presence becomes
possible. For the consciousness is carried outside the ego, desire is diverted
to savouring the mysterious stillness, and thought's constant labour is subdued
or, if good luck prevails, even suspended.
10
The Incas of South America plainly taught that God
was unknown and unknowable and therefore unworshippable, but that his highest
creation being the Sun, the latter was the visible God for man and fit to be
worshipped.
11
Plato tells us of the Greeks prostrating themselves
before the sun at its rising and setting. Hence it is not only an Indian custom
but one which other enlightened ancients practised.
12
Consider the tranquillity which comes, either to
the mind or the body or both, when men live more in harmony with Nature, at
sunset. The orb descends in a blaze of glory in the West. Consider further the
Greek idea of the "blessed Western isles" and the Chinese "happy realm of the
West" pertaining to the soul.
13
As I watch the pair of cranes, themselves watching
with perfect concentration the sun's last diurnal glow before the coming of
twilight, I smile at the thought of what they are able to achieve with such
instinctive ease while humans, who are supposedly higher in evolution, struggle
vainly for years to achieve it.
14
In those moments of suspense when light is yielding
so reluctantly to the dark, there is an opportunity to look within and come
closer to the Overself.
15
In this mellow autumn dusk, when the passing sun no
longer incarnadines the fallen leaves and the night's peace is softly creeping
up, a man may fitly turn inwards to cultivate his awareness of the Overself.
16
Outside, Nature is beautifully still; inside,
consciousness is just as beautifully still. The two tranquillities blend into
one another.
17
To anticipate the sunset hour or await the break of
dawn, with body unmoving and mind absorbed, is one timing of this exercise which
allies itself with Nature's helpful rhythm.
18
TO BE USED AS A VARIATION ON THE MEDITATION ON THE
RISING OR SETTING SUN (GIVEN IN THE WISDOM OF THE OVERSELF) First
stage: He should fix his gaze upon the rising sun or coloured sky. All other
thoughts should be put away at first and his whole attention concentrated upon
the physical phenomenon which he is witnessing.
The rays of light must enter his body through his eyes. In this way alone do they attain their utmost efficacy for the purpose of this exercise. Second stage: The student tries to partake of the profound inner pause wherein the entire solar system is briefly plunged, to experience within himself what is actually occuring within the greater existence of which he is a part...to tranquillize all his thoughts so that personal matters are wholly absent.
The Sun behind the sun, the mystical Light of the World-Mind illumes man's mental world and at the same time penetrates it through and through, provided he is present and passive in consciousness to receive its power.
Third stage: This stage moves with the outspreading or waning light until he embraces the whole planet along with it. For this purpose he has to:
1. picture a great globe growing larger and larger within himself as a formless consciousness mentally dissociated from the physical body, until it assumes GIGANTIC SIZE;
2. make the conception as alive as possible by permeating it with faith and conviction, holding the sense of countless creatures existing everywhere;
3. reverse the process, until it finally encloses his own body alone (globe gets smaller and smaller);
4. exercise the belief that he is mind not matter;
5. strengthen the perception of the true relationship between himself and cosmic life, his physical and vital oneness with the universe...and try to realize that his own existence is inter-connected by a beginningless and endless web with all the other existences around him.
6. There must be deep devotion and heartfelt feeling in his thoughts. Goal: He reaches the goal of this stage when the physical scene vanishes, when he is no longer conscious of it, when attention is turned inward wholly on the beautiful mood or spirit thus invoked, when all form is absent and he feels in complete rapport with the universal being, so complete that he knows he is an integral part of it.
When he feels something of this relationship as a loving response, then he should cease trying to absorb support from the All - whose soul is the World-Mind - and begin to pass it out compassionately and share its grace unselfishly with others.
He sees them in his imagination suffused with its warm light and sublime peace.
First, he directs his effort with his love towards those who are near or dear to him and to any special individuals whom he would like to help in this way.
Then, he directs his effort with his love towards mankind in the mass - whom he must regard as unconsciously forming one great family.
Third, he directs it towards individuals who are hostile to him, who hate, injure, or criticize him. He must consider them as his teachers, for it is their business to pick out and make him aware of his faults. He need not send his love, but he must send them his pity.
Close exercise with: Short, silent, personal prayer to the Overself.
19
The loveliest of sights is the sunset's
transformation of Himalaya's snowy summits from pure white to pale gold, and
then to rosy pink. And then to wait, in the hushed expectant atmosphere, for
night!
20
It was one of those lovely summer evenings when I
sat far into the night: first, enjoying the sunset, then, the darkening
landscape, lastly, the lights alone. The curtains remained undrawn: I could not
bring myself to attend to waiting work, and shut out this fascinating scene. For
it drew me away, held me, melted me. The "I" was going.
I love these long lingering summer sunfalls. Then I can put duties aside, turn from the activities which life amongst men imposes, and go with all this beauty into Mystery Itself.
21
Thus we let our mind, our life, sink out of
activity into rest with the twilight itself. We decline into not only stillness
of thought, but also stillness of individuality.
22
The light in the room gets less and less, the
shades draw in upon him more and more, as his worship proceeds deeper and deeper
to its silence and inwardness.
23
Rich are those possible experiences when one sits
and gazes at the western horizon before eventide, the sun going out of sight,
the heart open to beauty and grace as it longs for the Overself.
24
Once more when the light starts to fail and dusk
takes over, the period of withdrawal from outer activity has come. It may last
only a few minutes or, better, an hour, but it will be a beautiful, pacific, and
profitable recess.
25
In those long summer evenings when the day lingers
on as if loath to withdraw from our world and admit the night, when colours run
through the spectrum around the sky, we may find new incentive and fresh
sustenance for this meditational practice.
26
How beautiful a sight when the last evening rays
shine through the shut window on a seated figure whose face is rapt in listening
to inner music, whose thoughts lie in stilled abeyance.
27
About the sunset meditation exercise: The practice
itself does not depend on whether the sun is actually shining at the time. For
Nature comes to a great but brief pause just then. This cessation of inner
activity takes place whatever the outer physical conditions are. It can be felt
by sensitive persons. Therefore the meditation need not be abandoned if outer
conditions seem undesirable, although the beautiful colouring of the skies when
sunshine is present helps those who have aesthetic feeling.
28
Whether the sun sets with or without a display of
colours, behind trees or in the sea, obscured by high buildings or urban
settlements, it should fix the direction of worship in this exercise.
29
As dusk begins, the sacred call is heard and the
mind turns inward to its centre.
30
In the rosy glow of sunset, after a wearisome
descent into the world of human affairs, celestial hopes are restored and one
can turn around to look within.
31
I remember the long twilights of Scandinavia and
the Scottish Highlands, as reluctant to go as I to lose them. Here the brief
tropical twilight bursts with colour but is soon over.
32
It is time well used and not lost if, in the
presence of Nature's masterpiece - the solar beauty at its dawn or declination -
he turns his back on personal activity to pause for a few moments or minutes,
admiring quietly, even humbly reverent. Such attention is, for the atheist,
religion discovered: for the toiler, art appreciated.
33
Yes! let us worship Eos, Greek goddess of sunset,
who accompanies Helios in his sungold chariot. O! sunsets! moving through the
most beautiful range of colours in the spectrum.
34
Why is it that sensitive refined souls would rather
a hundred times look down on a long mountain valley than on a long city street?
Why does the handiwork of Nature rest them but the handiwork of man disturbs? A
lovely sunset, with its glowing colours and peaceful landscape, may move them
deeply. Whence comes this emotion? It is aesthetic, yes, but it is also mystical
at its root. Hence the sunset's gold mauve and grey tints may start feelings
which uplift, console, and spiritualize a man.
35
The red beauty and hushed serenity of a sunset
affect even the insensitive person and make him pause for a few moments. Why is
this? Because in that brief while he does what his extroverted life does not
ordinarily permit him to do, he concentrates and quiets himself, and thus
receives a dim echo of the beauty and serenity which belong to his own innermost
being.
36
To the older Greeks the sun was an emblem of
beauty. They looked at it with joy. But to the Hindus it was an emblem of
divinity. They looked at it with worship. Both attitudes were right and both are
called for today.
37
Men pass it by every day, disregarded, as if it
were not there at all. This sacred moment of truth is bestowed upon them in
those pauses of life whose higher use and real importance are missed because
unknown.
38
However hard-pressed, troubled, or fatigued his day
has been, this is the hour which relieves - even saves - it, this pause
harmonized with Nature's own pause.
39
These spiritual evenings can serve us Westerners
better than the spiritual dawns serve the Easterners.
40
The sunset brings rest to Nature's activities. Man
may stop his own activity for a few minutes and come into harmony with Nature.
41
He who rises with the rising sun and dies with the
dying one in an act of worship gains greatly on all levels of his being.
42
Exercise: In this exercise the eyes are
fixed on the sinking sun, the mind lost in its beauty, and the body kept still
on its seat.
43
It is as if the sun gave a last lingering kiss to
this earth, a farewell greeting to act as a reminder to hold on to hope.
44
If the rising sun stimulates man and many other
living creatures to prepare for the day's coming activity, the descending sun
warns him to relax from it.
45
This hour when the sun drops low, glowing with
colours as it goes down, is well celebrated by evensong services and
bell-ringings of the church.
46
If there is a sun showing on any day of the month
let face be turned toward it when it goes down.
47
How soothing to sit in the half-light of early
evening and let the mind fall away from the world.
48
When the coming of night brings repose to Nature
and silence to the landscaped scenes, we experience a stillness outside the self
comparable to the stillness which contemplation brings out inside the self.
49
To let the mind come to rest in love and with
concentration on a vividly coloured sunset or a garden of flowers is to invite
the glimpse.
50
When the sun vanishes in golden splendour there is
a mysterious moment: all is still. This is your chance.
51
The charm of long lingering twilights may be
deepened and strengthened by sustained surrender until it becomes a gateway to
the mystically hidden self.
52
Those drowsy sundown evenings which come in the
warmer months of the year, so restful and so undemanding as they are, can be
used to relax all mental effort and to enjoy the affirmations and mantrams which
declare divinity of the human soul.
53
The evening light is a blessed one. It transfigures
a landscape or a seascape. The evening pause of Nature is for many the favoured
hour of meditation. When alone I arrange matters, work, and meals so that this
hour of sunset watching and sun worship is not missed.
54
These twilight periods become a veritable oasis in
the desert of ordinary living, a sacred sanctuary in the materialism of modern
day existence.
55
How much of his philosophy did Plato owe to that
habit of his of watching the sunset from a hillside?
56
One who never tires of watching spectacular sunsets
has been turned by them into a sun-worshipper, a votary of the oldest religion
in existence.
57
There are some sunsets which inspire ebullient joy
and other ones which put us in a cathedral by their grave beauty.
58
Was there an unconscious knowledge of the 365-Day
Meditation on the Setting Sun Exercise in Benjamin Disraeli? In his novel
entitled Contarini Fleming, a psychological romance written in 1832, he
makes Contarini sit at a window and watch the westering sun go down, with the
consequence that he exclaims, "I felt a disgust for all the worldliness on which
I had been lately pondering. And there arose in my mind a desire to create
things beautiful."
59
Some magnificent play of sun on earth, ocean, or
sky may provide a spectacle to hold sense and mind alike enthralled. The effect
on feeling may deepen to the point where a sense of uplift, exaltation, and
peace becomes overwhelming. This is rare, memorable vision, where faith in an
intelligent Power behind things is restored or fortified. It will pass
completely, it may even never recur again, but it cannot be forgotten.
60
The sun sinks and vanishes but his admiration does
not vanish: it deepens and sinks into love, till he can repeat the
seventeenth-century poet Herbert's lines, "Thou art my lovelinesse, my life, my
light, Beautie alone to me;"
61
It is not enough to practise mechanically: one
should love this sunset-watching exercise and never tire of waiting for
the sun to go down, never weary of staring at the shimmering fading colours.
62
There are few persons who are not susceptible to
the charm of a failing, highly coloured sun towards the end of the day. But
there are fewer still who understand how to use this feeling in order to obtain
a mystical glimpse. To watch the sun change the landscape from green to rainbow
colours as it makes its last glorious splash of rays before the evening folds,
is to invite the glimpse, provided the watching is done with intense
concentration and tender feeling for the beauty of the scene.
63
My happiest hours come when the sun is about to bid
us farewell. Those lovely minutes are touched with magic; they bring my active
mind and body to a pause. They invite me to appreciate the radiant glowing
colours of the sky and finally they command me to enter the deep stillness
within, so that when all is dark with the coming of night all is brilliantly
illuminated inside consciousness.
64
In Morocco, Egypt, Sudan, Arabia, India, Malaya,
Cambodia, and farther east still, the hour of departure for the sun becomes a
conflagration of colours far beyond its Western parallel. The joy it yields or
the sadness it suggests never tires a sensitive man, not even the thousandth
time.
65
No hour of the day provides a stronger hint of
life's tragically passing character than sunset. What reflection tells us
through thought, this period - so lovely yet so doomed to perish soon - tells us
through ecstatic sight.
66
To revel in the sky's twilight colouring, its
translucent gold and purple, to wait further and revel again in the afterglow -
this is poetic feeling, artistic development, and semi-mystical experience.
67
It is no waste of time to let activity melt into
vacuity when the evening pageant of the sun's departure sets in.
68
The joy of watching the sun pass away in a glow of
colour is not entirely unmixed. At some point in the period, towards the end,
the remembrance that all this beauty, so intense at that moment, is doomed to
vanish very soon, touches the mind with melancholy.
69
The sun which is to be seen is a reminder to blind
faithless man of That which is not to be seen (unless the inner sight and the
inner life are active) - the glorious hidden royal Sun of the World-Mind.
70
One is reluctant to leave the gorgeous,
eye-delighting, heart-satisfying feast of colour.
71
This is the radiant magical hour of sunset when
worship is the instinctive mood.
72
To sit on a fine day on a park-bench or café-table,
watching the late afternoon or early evening sky's light change and the colours
of objects darken, provided another setting for this beautiful feeling of inward
peace. This has always been the day's finest hour. But it comes to its best with
solitude. The company of other people's voices does not help it, only obstructs
while their thoughts, vividly felt in that passive mood, may be even worse.
73
A beautiful, colourful, and paintable waning of the
sun is an offer of grace to the human beings who take the trouble to pause and
notice their parent - Nature.
74
The sun is God's face in the physical world.
75
The uncertain light of sundown, the objects
indistinctly seen, helps a little this passing into a half-mystic state; but the
primal actuator is his willingness to relax from activities, to let his thought
drift back to his aspiration, and wait in patience.
76
This visual adventure with sunset ends in a
mystical one.
77
Witness a glorious dawn or a golden sunset and let
the feeling of admiration grow into adoration.
78
There is a mysterious pause of nature at sunset,
sundawn, and at solstices. The most important is winter-solstice, everywhere
celebrated in the ancient world; it is Christmas for us. So the ego-thought
should pause and recollect. Just as the visible sun is essential to human bodily
life and existence, so the invisible sun of consciousness is essential to its
mental, emotional, and spiritual life. It is our Overself and God: give it
homage.
79
During that pause in Nature which is so noticeable
in very quiet country places, away from the towns, and during the fall of the
sun in the evening, we may hear the last sounds and calls of animals and birds
from a far longer distance than at other times or in other places.
80
We are part of the life of the cosmos. As such, it
is possible for us to commune with it inwardly or to be penetrated by it
outwardly. In connection with the Sun Worship exercise, it might be mentioned
that since both points of the day are equally sacred - that is, the rising and
the setting sun hours - the benefit is not only spiritual, but could also
be physical. A visitor once told me that having faithfully practised for 365
days the exercise given in this reference in The Wisdom of the Overself,
deafness suddenly disappeared. And lately I was told of a Japanese writer who,
after a long illness with lung consumption, went on the morning of the Winter
Solstice to worship the rising sun. He felt a great fervour. He experienced some
kind of illumination, and the same day recovered good health. This happened
about a hundred years ago.
81
When the pause is greatest - that is to say, when
the sun is down so low as to be almost on the horizon - there is his greatest
chance to merge with it in a beautiful, smiling harmony.
82
Other men usually worship in the way they are
taught; mine came from no outside instruction but from a spontaneous and
instinctive reaction of the heart. It is the only religious rite that stirs me,
this worship of the declining sun, of its coloured beauty and healing stillness.
83
When the sun has descended to the line from where
it rose - the earthly horizon - his thought can descend too and sink back into
its quiet source.
84
There is a point where this inner world of divine
being intersects the outer world of common existence, and therefore where
awakening is possible more easily than at other times: the pause between day and
night (paralleled by its counterpart the pause between night and day). Anyone
can take advantage of Nature's stillness by willing his own stillness in
untensed passivity.
85
One morning a neatly dotted in jacket and trousers,
tall and lean man appeared on the doorstep of the little house where I lived in
Mysore City (whenever I was not travelling around India). With him, but a short
distance away, I then noticed another man standing there, who was shorter,
sterner, and stouter. He wore the white robes of a swami. The wiry-figured man
addressed me in simple, half-broken but quite understandable English; he
introduced himself as a disciple, the other as a guru, and proffered his service
as interpreter between us. The guru then addressed me and explained that they
had come from the North, that he wished, if acceptable, to teach me a single
exercise and talk about certain other spiritual matters, and that he would then
depart in the early evening. (They had brought their own food with them.) This
is how the knowledge of the Meditation on the Sun exercise in The Wisdom of
the Overself (Chapter 14, "The Yoga of the Discerning Mind") was literally
brought to me. It must be added, though, that I took a writer's license to adapt
the exercise to Western culture. Where the guru showed and quoted some obscure
Hindu Veda, to prove that the exercise was a fully authentic prescription
- an authority which did not carry the same weight to non-Hindu Western minds -
I saw and seized on the possibilities of appealing to the aesthetic
sensibilities, the artistic appreciation of the sun's beauty instead. The guru
did not object to this adaptation. It illustrates the mysterious oneness of the
mystical life all over the world that what was prescribed in some little-known
scriptural text in India of several thousand years ago, was practised personally
by a European who had never left Spain, never studied any Oriental text at all.
I refer to Saint Juan de Cruz, better known to us as Saint John of the Cross,
who lived about four centuries ago (1542-1591). (He was the Spiritual Director
of the more famous Saint Teres a of Avila.) Such was the genesis of this lovely
and easy exercise among my writings. It used physical act - seeing - to yield an
emotional consequence, and then led the practicant into a state of consciousness
which transcended both. It is an exercise which has helped many people, if their
reports are valid. Certainly it has consoled and comforted the ill-fortuned,
actually helped some sufferers of bodily maladies, while those who care for art
got artistic treats they might otherwise have missed!
86
It is a quietening experience to sit in the sinking
sunlight and let the play of personal matters recede from the forefront to the
background of attention.
87
To sit in utter silence, while subdued twilight
touches us with peace and the room around and the world outside darken in the
dusk, can be a beautiful experience.
88
The falling shadows of eventide worked their
ancient witchery on me. I ceased this endless activity and lapsed into a stilled
body and a silent mind.
89
Let him greet the new day with a new smile: for
dawn is to be welcomed by both body and soul.
90
It is a joy to gaze reverently during a calm
evening at a sunset tinting the sky with soft pink, lilac, and green, and then
use this mood for entry into meditation.
91
When the twilight hour is at its peak, a spell
seems to have fallen over the lake, the fields, and the mountains.
92
It is a lovely countryside experience to let the
sunset lapse into a quiet broken only by the croaking of frogs or the shrilling
of crickets.
93
Those who pay homage to the sun whether they admire
it for aesthetic reasons or revere it for spiritual ones are obeying a right
instinct.
94
Was it a time of such a sunset viewed from his
Thames-side Chelsea home that Carlyle wrote: "From a small window we can see the
infinite."?
95
For evening brings the mild sadness which attends
darkness but also the contrary feeling of mild pleasure which attends repose
after toil.
96
Soon the lamps will be lit in the darkening room,
this holy pause will come to an end, this strange reminder of a Home beyond home
will pass into a gentle memory.
97
Yes, it is true, one may be a sun worshipper and
love those moments when it lights up the pieces, the furnishings, or the
pictures in one's room and this is even more accentuated when the sun has its
last burst of glory in the evening.
98
In that mysterious period of the day when the light
fades out but lamps are not yet switched on, when the room is half lost in
growing shadows, when Nature itself seems to pause for a few moments in its
work, lies an opportunity for man. It is an opportunity to create a
corresponding pause within himself.
99
What could be more important symbolically or more
pleasing aesthetically than to watch the shining sun rise from behind mountains
or over seas? What hope it gives, what help it promises to all beings and not
only to mankind. What too could be more beautiful and more tranquillizing than
to watch the same sun setting in the evening?
100
"It came to be my favourite place. It was there
that I usually...gazed, as I never could do enough, at the setting sun." -
Johann Wolfgang Goethe.
101
The poet Keats knew the richness of this hour,
which left "the reader [of poetry] breathless...in the luxury of twilight."
102
What is all this reverence for holiness and
appreciation of beauty which come of themselves at sunset but an effect of light
upon Nature's land or seascapes?
103
The light has nearly gone. The city has become a
gigantic silhouette in the dusk. The recession into contemplative peace is
almost over. Soon - movement begun, activity resumed - the outward phase of life
where the ego has to struggle its way through problems while enjoying its few
pleasures follows.
104
As day retreats and night falls, the opportunity
enters. When measured in time it stays differently at different seasons of the
year, that is, while dusk lingers.
105
Looking out of the little window and across the
lake, after glancing at the mountains to the right and to the left, I stared at
the vanishing sun, absorbed in its beauty and its mystery.
106
The charming hour of sunset brings its message of
repose not only to us but also to most of the birds who flock home to their
perches.
107
When the sun dips low and vanishes, when dusk
begins to fall and the colours darken and merge, the mind can move with Nature
into its great pause. A man whose temperament is sensitive, aesthetic,
religious, psychic, or Nature-loving can profit by this passage from day to
night and come closer to awareness of his soul.
108
As the dwindling light and increasing shadow
bring on dusk's soft melancholy, it is offset by the still-fresh memory of the
lovely colours just passed from the sky.
109
In those few moments all Nature seems to hold her
breath, to rest and be still. But he seldom hears or listens and misses the
chance.
110
The final glimmer of sunlight followed by the
closing-in of darkness could be a melancholy event. But the adoration and
concentration which preceded it bring enough tranquillity to dissolve all such
negative feelings.