1
Writing can remain a way of expressing the narrowest
and basest parts of the ego, a stimulant to violence and coarseness and
animality. Or, in the hands of a more evolved person, it can become a source of
uplift to others and, like any other art, even a way of development for the
writer.
2
When writing achieves importance through style or
effectiveness of expression or beauty of form, it has attained the level of
literature.
3
If the writer is to come to inspiration, he should
not be aware of any audience: the only reader must be himself. Otherwise he does
not do his best work, for the self-conscious ego is behind it all, puffed up
with its own importance.
4
The creative writer must give his topic an
inward-turned concentration as if he were listening to a mental voice speaking
within himself. The concentration must be absolute, without distraction; it must
not even be shared with any background music.
5
Wisdom is all the better when it is likewise witty.
Raise a laugh while you lift a man. Mix some humour with your ink and you shall
write all the better. Sound sense loses nothing of its soundness when it is
poured into bright, good-humoured phrases. Truth is often cold-blooded and a
bath in warm smiles makes it the more attractive.(P)
6
The writer may set down whatever word comes into his
mind to express his thought in order not to lose the thought, but later he
should not hesitate to come back and examine what he has written and ruthlessly
to change those words or to throw them out altogether if his meaning is not
expressed with sufficient fineness.
7
Keep on writing no matter what it is - put down
whatever comes into your head; in this way you develop fluency. The criticism
and crossings out of what has been done can follow at a later time.
8
The notion that the effects of inspiration should
not be handled by the labours of revision is a wrong one. This is so, first,
because few artists ever achieve a total purity of inspiration - however
ecstatic their creative experience may be - and, second, because even if
achieved it is still limited by the personal nature of the channel through which
it flows. The writer who refuses to touch manuscripts again or to correct proofs
displays vanity or ignorance or both.(P)
9
We who work in literature or poetry must learn to
put images of truth or beauty into the minds of readers. The sensitive person is
too often cowed by the prevailing materialism in the society around him and
particularly in its way of life - cowed to the point of falling in with this way
and doing what the others are doing. This is weakness and cowardliness, the
surrender to external suggestion.
10
It is the business of a philosophic writer to put
a moral value and metaphysical meaning into life for those who can perceive
neither one nor the other in it.
11
The author who puts pen and paper into fruitful
conjunction is stating a message for others. Does he recognize in the depths of
his being, his soul, his conscience, that he has a certain moral responsibility
there?
12
I feel that it is a writer's duty to write about
the best, the highest, the truest things he knows and then only to communicate
these thoughts to others. Only when I can see them quite clearly and am
convinced of their correctness, ought I to start to turn to others.
13
We who write have a responsibility for the
thought-forms we create and let loose in the world.
14
We should remember that a piece of prose which
uplifts the reader and gratifies the writer is the work of his best moments.
What does he do with his lesser ones - for he must be humble enough to accept
that they are there. If he is wise he will accept the Pythagorean advice to work
upon himself. He will do more than well to transfer activity from unresistant
white paper to obdurate negative tendencies. The reshaping of the self is not
pleasant and not easy but it is rewarding.
15
When the presence of the Real is so ineffable, its
secret so incommunicable, how can any writer - no matter how deft and
experienced - put a correct picture of it in a book?
16
A piece of writing which lacks literary form does
not have the power over readers of one which does have it. Two men may utter the
same truth but one will have many more hearers than the other. Style still
counts.
17
The best service a writer can render is to seek
and find divine inspiration and true thinking, and then to offer the result to
his fellowmen.
18
No man who has seen his soul's grandeur and felt
its sublimity could write in a dull dreary inartistic style about it.
19
In this matter of communication he must be
contemporary, producing work of and for his own time, current and therefore
resultful, alive and therefore able to reach the living more closely and more
personally than a dead person could reach them.
20
Sentences free from voluble overdecoration, almost
as nude as they are noble; ideas phrased with verbal thrift so that meaning is
kept clear and communication is as explicit as can be - this ought to be the
modern idea. There are not many countries left today where such open speech
about religion - Jewish, Christian, Islamic, or otherwise - will be punished by
execution or persecution for heresy.
21
Playing with the power of words to give new forms,
new expressions, new images, and new mantrams for the spiritual revivification
of man, the writer of vision truly makes the Word become flesh. His gifts should
be valued accordingly and received gratefully.
22
The nimble use of words is not alone a
satisfactory substitute for the accurate use of facts.
23
A writer cannot work properly when surrounded by
noise, when compelled to work at conventional hours, when society, neighbours,
and would-be friendly persons intrude upon him.
24
When a writer feels that the flow of thought runs
smoothly, he should not interrupt the work by taking to some other task
temporarily or let anyone else interrupt it, but should take advantage of this
peak period, as one might call it, for when he picks it up again the work may
not run so smoothly, because the inner push is absent.
25
It is hard for an author to efface himself from
his production. Not only is this so, but a one-pointed attention is also needed
in the reader. He can do so only if he possesses the capacity to be so
completely concentrated in the work as to forget everything else. This achieved,
the personal ego will naturally be absent.
26
A budding author usually thinks his work to be far
better than it really is, whereas the mature, proficient one is his own best
critic - always ready to amend, revise, cancel, and change what he has written
earlier.
27
One should be willing to examine carefully what he
has said or done or written; and he should do it not to praise it but to correct
or improve it imaginatively.
28
The value of documentation in a book, whether
through footnotes or text, is that it answers critics or opponents holding
opposite views, in advance with facts, and also that it helps to prevent
the malicious falsification or distortion of history.
29
He should know that no man's work is so good that
it could not be better. Save for the plea of lack of time a writer is prudent to
revise sentences and even polish phrases. As soon as he assumes the mantle of
vanity his work suffers.
30
When an author can effect contact with his
Overself his writing becomes a spiritual activity. It inspires him, teaches him,
uplifts him.
31
How often he will have to erase words and alter
phrases and improve sentences, if his communication is to fit the thought which
his intuition has given him!
32
Inspiration is more valuable than information. But
the writer who can impart both to his readers renders them the best service.
33
Do not allow stylizing to usurp the throne of
truth; do not let mannerism get out of hand.
34
The same fact which, when presented drily and
logically, leads to no result may, when presented vividly and imaginatively,
lead to a stirring of the emotions. This, in turn, may lead the man to take
action.
35
Technique does count. Sentences which are slipshod
in construction irritate the reader, and phrases which are awkward in form
obscure the meaning.
36
If his thinking upon this matter is logical and
coherent, and if the expression of his thoughts is grammatical and accurate,
then those who seek to learn from him will have less difficulty in understanding
him.
37
The writer reduces life to words, that is, to mere
symbols.
38
Write what can be useful to others, what will
simplify the teaching for them, and what will lead them to seek the source
within their own beings.
39
Even if nobody wants to read his books the author
of concentrated, well-done, or finely inspired work benefits himself internally.
40
The poet who lives at times from this profounder
self will link his words with words as others do, and his rhythms with rhythms,
but the difference of level will appear in their effect.
41
When he writes at his best, what he writes may be
on a higher level than himself.
42
If a writer can put his theme, case, statement, or
argument only in shrill hysteric tones, you may be sure he is an ill-balanced
person.
43
Complimentary letters from readers may fatten an
author's ego if he is not careful. It is therefore good if there is a sufficient
leaven of criticism, or even abusive letters, from those who dislike his work or
who disagree violently with his ideas.
44
The equilibrium of a written piece may be upset
and the meaning somewhat falsified by putting too much stress or according too
little weight. A prudent balance is essential in expressing any particular idea.
45
Goethe on writing: "I have the whole thing in my
head and only need the mood to write. I wrote down little or nothing until I had
worked out most of it in detail in my head."
46
We must write from what we know, from our own
experience, from what we observe as facts around us, but where we cannot do
either we must state that a theory is only a theory, however plausible and good
it may be and however worth our hoarding.
47
There are different ways of making notes and
marking books. There are also different colours which appeal to some writers and
not to other ones. Queen Victoria scribbled her thoughts or decisions,
suggestions or comments on official reports submitted to her: all were endorsed
with a violet-coloured pencil. Alice Bailey wrote her Arcane Teaching books with
an ordinary black-lead pencil, never with pen-and-ink: she got inner contact
either with her higher self or with her guru's mind that way, she explained.
48
Aldous Huxley has outgrown his merely
rationalistic stage and begun to express mystical ideas. This is a most
gratifying advance. But he has fallen into the common error which makes the
quietist ideal the supreme ideal. He may try to refute this activist outlook as
being mystical heresy. He may even write a whole book, such as Grey
Eminence, to show the misfortunes brought on his country by a French mystic
leaving his monastic retreat to meddle in State affairs. But Huxley's effort has
been a vain one. It is just as easy to write another book showing the good
fortune brought to her country by Joan of Arc, also a French mystic, through
meddling in State affairs. In this matter, I would rather accept Plato's
teaching, that true knowledge compels to action. And Plato's philosophy was
surely a mystical one. But there are two facts which refute Huxley. First, there
is no such thing as inaction. No man in his senses will spend every day every
year in contemplation alone. He has to get up and do something, even if it be
only eating his dinner. A life of continuous meditation, without any
interruption, would be impossible and undesirable, impracticable and unbalanced.
Everywhere in Nature we see striving and activity. For man to attempt to refrain
from both (as if he really could!) in the name of an exaggerated unbalanced and
perverted surrender to God is to misunderstand God's - that is, Nature's -
working. Second, the refusal to act is itself a kind of action; the real
available choice is only between one kind and another, between good action and
bad action. Walking about in the monastic cell is as active a deed as walking
about in the statesman's chamber. But whether we take a short or a long view of
the matter it is a mistake to regard the worldly life as necessarily
materialistic and sordid. Men may make it so or they may ennoble it. The evil or
the good is in their thought of it, that is, in themselves. The notion that the
quest of the Divine must necessarily lead to denying the social and despising
the historical belongs only to an unripened and imperfect mysticism. The fact is
that no mystical experience and no metaphysical idea can complete our duty
towards life. They are no substitute for right conduct.
49
I agree with Israel Zangwill, when he remarked at
a public speech, "It is always a mistake for a literary man to show himself in
the flesh; the flesh is generally a little disappointing; an author should be a
disembodied spirit!"
50
Many writers get into an excited state about the
work they happen to be engaged in, but few have also gotten into a state of
entrancement. In the latter case, the works produced seem to have had
considerable effect upon the readers and made quite an impression upon their
feelings. Three writings come to mind immediately: the first, Walt Whitman's
Leaves of Grass; the second, Joel Goldsmith's first and most celebrated
work [The Art of Meditation]; and the third, Allen Ginsberg's
Howl.
51
Words are clumsy things with which to express
these ethereal moods: a telepathic concentration on the one side and a passive
meditation on the other would be better. But failing such silent inner contact,
what else can we use but words, or music, or some other art form?
52
T.S. Eliot is too often a neurotic writer of the
"precious" school, begetting muddled mystical nonsense. His reputation is
overrated partly because of the portentous air he gives himself and partly
because he is sufficiently incomprehensible to put himself out of the herd. But
in The Cocktail Party, where he leaves verse for playwriting, he rises to
a truly superior and truly mystical level.
53
When Wordsworth first saw that beautiful structure
Tintern Abbey, he was uplifted to a spiritual plane. He put his feeling into a
poem which those who could not visit the Abbey could read. A glimpse which
inspired one art-form was transferred to another.
54
There are those who claim the poetic value to be
as important as any other; who make poetry synonymous with spirituality; who
rank it at the head of all the arts. "When I read poetry there is evoked in me a
sense of beauty. My feelings, however, go deeper...I approach God through
poetry. This is the true experience of a deep-searching person." These lines
were written by Ryosen in the first few years of this century. He was a leader
of the young intellectuals in Japan but died in his thirties. He began as a
devout religionist, became a sceptical rationalist, but in the last few years of
his short life moved over into mysticism.
He later explained the above quotation: "The sphere of truth and the sphere of poetry are from the outset different.... To the extent that we penetrate to the innermost part of human life, truth and poetry draw close ...now in harmonious union."
55
I consider poetry to be a grand form of human
culture but poets to be, quite often, victims of their own conceit,
emotionalism, hallucination, and wishful thinking. Plato severely criticized
them. Muhammed wrote harshly in the Holy Koran: "And as to the poets,
those who go astray follow them; do you not see that they wander about
bewildered in every valley? And they say that which they do not do."
56
Plato banished poets from his ideal Republic but
nevertheless he crowned them first. By doing so he acknowledged poetry's
well-deserved prestige but also its danger. For poets are more tempted, because
more responsive to feelings, to exaggerate or sometimes even to falsify in their
attempts to weave an emotional atmosphere and create an influential effect upon
the reader by using metaphors and figures of speech. Of course that would not
mean a deliberate falsification but rather a carelessness about truth.
Unfortunately, truth was Plato's primary value. Take the famous and beautiful
line: "A rose-red city, half as old as time." Note the exaggeration concerning
time.
57
I am not alone in regarding the mystical
deliverances of poets with special caution. Quite unconsciously, and because
they are carried away by emotion, their sense of truth becomes impaired, their
capacity for judgement imperilled. Moreover, poetry is concerned with personal
feelings; prose can ascend higher and express the impersonal and the universal.
Hence the poet is so often an egotist whereas it is easier for the prose writer,
so far as his work goes, to be an altruist. Newman, although himself a Catholic,
criticized Faber's writings in favour of Papal Infallibility as follows:
"Judicious people think them crude and young, perhaps extravagant. He was a
poet."
58
Poetry is akin to music in that it appeals more to
feelings, and feelings in the end are so important that they push us into
actions and deeds. But feelings can also mislead us and endanger us; therefore
they need to be brought into equilibrium with reason and even more with
intuition. Hence a poem which combines wisdom with its beauty, thought with
emotion, will serve its auditors better in the end than one which does not.
59
An author is not always to be judged by his books.
Sometimes he is much better than his writings; sometimes they are much better
than he. The reason is plain. Inspiration raises the writer to a higher level of
being; his inspired moments represent the peaks of his character, but afterwards
he must fall back into everyday normalcy.
60
An autobiography can be and most often is what
Guide, the English Victorian novelist, now so forgotten, called a degrading form
of vanity - which he refused to write despite the request of publishers. But it
can also be a work of utility to those who read it, even of wise helpful
instruction to the younger people who have to find their way through the
difficulties of early life and the deceptions of later life.
61
When will people understand that they come closer
to a writer by studying his ideas rather than by meeting him in the flesh?
Thoreau once said: "The best of me is in my books; I am not worth seeing
personally."
62
All imperishable poems have this same quality -
they worship beauty of the highest kind.
63
The Razor's Edge, by Somerset Maugham: The
guru described in Maugham's novel is a compound of Ramana Maharshi and others,
but the descriptions are fanciful and the events unreal. The ashram is greatly
exaggerated and the young American rishee has not yet existed on earth. Maugham
is a newcomer to these things, anyway, and cannot get even a quarter of an inch
below appearances, while often soaking in clouds of self-deception. Nevertheless
he has come out of agnosticism to this higher standpoint; it is good to know
that he wrote this novel instead of concentrating exclusively on sex, as in his
other stories.
64
The malign destiny which snatched the young Keats
and Shelley from physical life, which kept the gifted Byron captive of his
physical passion, deprived them of their chance to come to spiritual maturity,
and the world of a greater deeper poetry.
65
Once W.B. Yeats wrote in admiration of Shankara's
teaching. But in middle age he married and later revised his views and then
wrote: "Ah, how many years it has taken me to awake from out of that dream!"
66
The poet should bring us to adore an uplifting
beauty, not plunge us in a mad frenzy.
67
The sensual weaknesses to which writers like D.H.
Lawrence devoted so much of their literary talent, instead of being regarded as
morally undesirable, came to be regarded as praiseworthy virtues! It was
forgotten that the prudent man will contain his desires within reasonable
limits, if ideals and not caprices are to rule his life. It is true that
Lawrence possessed ideals, even mystical ones, but lacked prudence. In short, he
was unbalanced.
68
What D.H. Lawrence wrote in one of his private
letters - "I feel sometimes that I shall go mad" - is the key to both the man
and his work. One part of his being was, in his own words, "damnably violent"
but another and - as he granted - a deeper part responded to "the kindness of
the Cosmos." He was a disjointed disconnected man, a seer filled often with
bitter spleen.
69
Leslie A. Fiedler, summarizing an article in "CEA
Critic," May 1974, said, "Popular Literature - sentimental, horror, pornographic
- titillates the emotions, releasing the reader from rationality and allowing
him a moment of ecstasy. To define a true majority literature [i.e., low
cultural - P.B.] we should evaluate a work not by ethics or aesthetics, but by
the ecstasy it produces." Comment by P.B.: If a literature of refined cultural
taste, mature intellectual statements, and civilized courtesy is to be rejected
because it admires self-control, then we surely shall move backwards.
70
I do not understand much in modern art, modern
poetry, and modern literature. When I hear on all sides, from professors in
colleges and universities - more particularly, those in American institutions -
when I hear them placing James Joyce's work (especially his Ulysses)
among the creations of genius and fulsomely praising it, I am dumbfounded! I
feel like Mansfield when, after trying to read this book, she wrote, "This is
the future, and I'm glad I've got tuberculosis." As we know, she died from this
dreadful disease. I do not take so black a view as hers because I believe the
future contains positive as well as this negative material.
71
Shelley's death at an early age has often been
lamented. Yet, leaving aside the elements of fate or karma, we may see how the
negative quality of impatience contributed towards it. He had bought a small
sailing vessel during his residence, on the Italian coast. He went on a journey
to purchase supplies and to tend to other matters and then was about to return
to the residence, where his wife and child awaited him. It was only one day's
sailing from where he was, but an expert seaman and also the lighthouse-keeper
warned him that a storm was coming and that he would do better to postpone his
trip until it had passed. He did not listen to them owing to his eagerness to
return to his wife, and he sailed away. Within a very short time, quite short,
the storm suddenly appeared. There were violent upheavals of the water, and the
little ship disappeared beneath the waves. This is how he was drowned. Shelley
was lost with it - at least t he living Shelley - for his body was recovered
later, and humanity was deprived of the products of his bright genius at a still
more mature age.
72
The modern verse movement in the English language
came into being largely through the pioneering efforts of T.S. Eliot and Ezra
Pound. Of the first man I have little to say: he was a good man, a talented man,
a spiritually sensitive man, but in this effort he was misguided, and would have
done better for the world if he had never gotten associated with Pound, who was
a bad influence on him.
73
It is pardonable for people to expect a writer to
incarnate his own words. This would seem necessary if he is not to be a
hypocrite. But they forget that his best writing comes out of his best moments,
that such times come only at intervals, that such levels are inspired, hence
beyond or above his ordinary ones, and that like all true artists he is used to
paint ideals for the benefit of himself as well as other people. The ideal has
its legitimate place even though there is a time-gap between it and the
actuality. We need not be harshly over-critical of the writer who portrays it
but is unable to live by its higher standard today. If he is sincere, he will
arrive at it another day. If he is not, he still renders a useful service
despite himself.
74
Those whose literary actions come not out of
goodwill but out of hate hurt themselves as well as others.
75
It may be asked why Plato banned the poets from
his ideal Republic. Is it not, perhaps, because poetry seeks to move the
feelings of its hearers or readers and that feeling induced from outside, as by
poetry, can be carried to an extreme point and sweep a man off his feet, as the
saying is, so that he acts on impulse or from ungoverned emotion and passion?
76
There are pieces of prose which are almost pure
poetry, and there are lines of verse which are almost pure prose.
77
The most intelligent of writers are sometimes the
least intelligent of philosophers.
78
Nietzsche's distorted semi-mysticism set up before
educated people the ideal of a barbaric Superman, and Oswald Spengler's
distorted intellectualism led them to draw the false lesson from history that
man is always a beast of prey.
79
Nietzsche was a lunatic who rejected Jesus but
accepted Socrates, an ascetic who denounced hedonism, and a firebrand admired by
the Nazis.
80
There is this weakness in the poet who is only a
poet and nothing more - that he is likely to accept almost anything as truth,
provided it be beautiful.
81
Whoever writes for publication is in a position of
public trust.
82
The sculpted wood, cast metal, or carven stone
image speaks instantly to all, but the written word only to those who know the
language used.
83
There is a difference between those who report in
their writings and those who create. The first are carried away by the moment's
happenings, the second look deeper and find weightier things.
84
The poet's language is necessarily rich in
metaphor and simile because he himself is rich in imagination.
85
Nobody could look less like a mystic than Walter
Russell, yet his long poem The Divine Iliad is a kind of work we
associate with hirsute, eccentric dreamers.
86
When anyone reads a book, he comes into mental
contact with an author - that is to say, with a creature who is a part of a
human being. But when one meets him in person he meets the other part. He will
see the difference.
87
In biography and autobiography he will get
something of the thrill of reading fiction yet possess the satisfaction of
discovering truth.
88
Toneless verses fall somewhat flat in the ear.
Meaningless ones offer no nourishment to the mind.
89
Shakespeare has been justly praised and admired
for his extraordinary dramatic genius and for its unusual breadth of subject.
"Unique!" we exclaim. And on the few occasions when he allowed a little
philosophy to creep in and interrupt the story we begin to wonder whether
Francis Bacon did write the plays.
How did the same man come to create so brilliant a play as The Merchant of Venice and then stuff it with such narrow, rabid, and unkindly prejudice? How could he fall into the common superstition which, for over a thousand years, led to widespread intolerance and persecution?
90
The key to Henry Miller's real character is plain
from his own confession: "...the life of the streets, of which I never tire. I
am a city man; I hate nature, just as I hate the classics." There is revealed
all the commonness and vulgarity of his character, the coarseness of taste, the
lack of true culture.
91
Norman Mailer has enormous creative powers; he is
unquestionably a genius: but this does not stop him from being somewhat mad.
92
Wilde's highly coloured paradox-loving
alliterative style degenerated from being a means into becoming an end. Truth
was sacrificed to style.
93
"Elbert Hubbard had his moments before big
business got him," is Stuart Chase's critical appraisal of this great American
genius. Whether so or not, the wisdom expressed in his writings and the
originality exhibited in his printings were inspired, as we might anticipate, by
a living faith in the esoteric philosophy.
94
Of the five most famous Russian writers of the
nineteenth century, Tolstoy was the most powerful writer of them all. He was
also the most spiritual and most influential. But in himself he was an
ill-balanced man. Dostoevski, who is usually praised as being the most
spiritual, was the most religious; but he was an emotional psychopath in love
with the idea of suffering. He needed straightening out. Turgenev was competent
and talented but quite worldly. Maxim Gorki, although but a materialist, was
fairly sensible and an excellent writer. It would not be fair to compare Chekhov
with the others, because, although his work was always good, he wrote plays,
which the others did not.
95
When we find that leaders in English literature
like Somerset Maugham and Aldous Huxley, who received supreme homage from the
most cultivated and sophisticated audience outside France, bravely turned from
scepticism to mysticism despite the howling of disappointed followers, we find a
phenomenon worth looking into.
96
Poetry provides images for the mind to dwell upon.
If it is inspired, those images bring man to a higher plane.
97
Too much of modern literature has too little of
greatness, let alone nobility or goodness. Where it is not morbidly pathological
it is aggressively scatological; where it is not criminally violent it is
absurdly trivial.
98
A printed page has served us well if it enables us
to meet a finer character, a riper intelligence, and a deeper knowledge than our
own.
99
Tolstoy, in the earlier period of his life,
created some artistic pieces which gave him Europe-wide fame. But in the later
period of his life, when a gloomy saturnine asceticism held his mind, he
preached moralizing sermons instead and puritanically denounced art.
100
It makes all the difference possible if a man
plows through twenty books in order to put out the twenty-first on the subject,
or if he writes it out of direct firsthand knowledge.
101
The interest in physical adventure stories is a
sign of adolescence and, when they involve crime, of undisciplined adolescence.
102
The work of Emerson's pen is excitingly inspired
and serenely beautiful.
103
No boat from America brought the other four
continents more inspired writings than that Argosyan vessel which left her
shores with the first published work of R.W. Emerson. There are some of his
phrases which hold the memory as in a vice! And Emerson's sky is always blue.
However, I was not always in this perfect concord with the Concord philosophy.
When I first came to Emerson's pages, as a green and guileless youth, I found
the epigrammatic nuts of his wisdom too hard for the teeth of my understanding.
So I put him aside for a few years, and then, with stronger molars, successfully
renewed the attack.
104
A good book which revives inspiration or
invigorates reason is as blessed to write as to read. Its cost is no adequate
return and its author can never be adequately thanked.
105
Despite the volume and variety of Bertrand
Russell's comments and considerations upon life, I have come across no interest
in the appreciation or cultivation of beauty. Does this not help to explain his
mystical deficiency?
106
On this topic of writing I would like to quote
from an experienced writer himself - a man who wrote over one hundred books,
though I doubt whether they are at all read today. I met him only once. He was a
staunch Catholic, highly dogmatic, but very devoted to the values of
contemplation even though he was too busy a man to practise them much. He was
violently critical of most things and most leaders in society - so much so that
he abandoned his membership in the British Parliament in disgust. His name was
Hilaire Belloc and he wrote about writing: "The worst enemy of prose today is
the snobbishness of rules and forms...the mumbo-jumbo of hieratic prescription."
107
The young writer has one great defect and one
great lack. The defect is that he is irresponsible; the lack is that he is
inexperienced. The mature, perhaps middle-aged, writer is much more cautious,
much more careful of the words he uses.
108
D.H. Lawrence told a friend who was at the dying
novelist's bedside that he could feel himself withdrawing from the physical body
yet at the same time looking at the scene from outside as if he were floating
away.
109
If both beauty and melody are removed from a
poem, what is left? Call it what you wish but do not insult readers by calling
it poetry.
110
The writer who continues civilized cultural
traditions may also be a creator of culture itself.
111
Do not seek to meet the author of a mystic noble
or wise book, for you may suffer disappointment. You expect to find him superior
to his book but then he is revealed as inferior to it. (Not always.)
112
A book which evokes the intuitive in you,
however briefly or spasmodically, or which awakens you to newer recognition or
deeper perceptions is itself a guru to that extent.
113
What I appreciate about Cardinal Newman's
personality and writing is exactly what repels others. I appreciate his
aristocratic attitude, his refined speech, his dignity and quality.
114
I would like to give myself the pleasure of
quoting here a writer whose personality I esteemed when he was alive and whose
books I admire - A.E., the Irish poet.
115
Seventy years ago that versatile Irishman who
used the pen name A.E. published his collected poems. He was a gifted painter as
well as poet, economist as well as a prose essayist, clairvoyant, seer, and,
when I met him, more of a sage. Looking through his verses, I select a few lines
which impress me:
1. The power is ours to make or mar Our fate has on the earliest morn, The DARKNESS and the RADIANCE are Creatures within the spirit born. 2. The Wisdom that within us grows Is absolution for our sins. 3. He does not love the bended knees, The soul made wormlike in HIS sight, Within whose heaven are hierarchies And solar kings and lords of light. 4. He felt an inner secret joy - A spirit of unfettered will Through light and darkness moving still Within the ALL to find its own, To be immortal and alone. 5. Dark churches where the blind Mislead the blind. 6. Unto the deep the deep heart goes, It seeks a deeper silence still; It folds itself around with peace, With folds alike of good or ill In quietness unfostered cease.
116
It is a great and widespread error to identify
the best modern poetry with the disciples of Ezra Pound, as the naïve Mr. T.S.
Eliot, himself one of them, did. Perhaps we owe this bit of literary foolishness
to the American professors of English Literature, not necessarily because Pound
was also American but because they were too naïvely led astray by the editors -
and editresses - of poetry's "little journals."
117
Ralph Waldo Emerson's intellectual way of life
is a great standby for many. One could not wish for a finer example.
118
Some spiritual books are written in a dull,
almost dead manner. The writers seem to believe that because perchance they are
writing of an ancient wisdom, they must be dull and mournful, with no more joy
in their work than there is in the rumble of a hearse.
119
Those who can only learn by trial and error will
continue to do so. The results are important only to themselves, and to a few
others in their orbits. But when the trial is made by writers and the error is
passed on to numerous readers, the situation which develops becomes of wider
importance.
120
Early in the nineteenth century a young writer
unexpectedly broke in upon British attention, electrifying people with his
thought and phrase alike. That man was Carlyle. Out of his hermit-like
meditations upon his epoch, he emerged to peal forth in thunderous tones the
plaint of a truth-seeker in an age of social shams.
121
Francis Bacon makes a new sentence hold a new
idea. He requires an audience of busy thinkers, rather than mere readers. I
refer of course to his Essays.
122
Some years ago a Czech writer, Karel Capek,
published a novel called The Absolute at Large in which he pictures an
inventor who succeeds in utilizing the energy of the atom, not for military
purposes but only for peacetime industrial purposes. In the same book, he
imagines the effect of this discovery upon religion and metaphysics. Supporting
the doctrine of pantheism and affirming that divinity is present in all matter,
he pictures a divine by-product issuing from each atomic turbine. The
consequence is that all the people in the neighbourhood of the turbine become
spiritually-minded! They begin to renounce the world, to talk inspirationally,
to perform miracles, and to engage in revivals. The idea is a clever one, but is
it a true one? How can spirituality be turned on by a mechanical instrument and
let loose upon the people? The basic fallacy in Capek's notion is that divinity
is contained within the atom. On the contrary, philosophy says that the atom
itself is in divinity, which requires no machine to release it. It is everywhere
and always present and if it is to be released and communicated, that can only
be done through a human instrument, not through an arrangement of steel and
springs.
123
In Sanskrit formulations and analyses on the art
of poetry, its place and purpose, its styles and techniques, the important thing
is for its message to be implicit rather than explicit, to give hints and clues
rather than revelations, to use suggestive imagery rather than to deliver plain
statements - but, as with our own Western work, to use myth, metaphor, and
symbol to arouse feeling and release emotion.
124
Poetry which gives no beauty to man or which
raises him to no nobility has failed even to become itself, that is, poetical.
But when it is mere disjointed gibberish, spluttering nonsense, then it is
harmful to the orderly sanity of those who adore it.
125
What witchery is this which enables a man to
take some words and connect them with other words, so that the result affects
other people's feelings and minds?
126
A genuine aesthetic feeling shrinks from the
crude filth and the vulgar four-letter words of some of these "in" young
writers. They elevate the lowest as if it were to be admired.
127
The writer who knows no more of truth than what
some guru - that is, what someone else - has told him ought frankly to say so to
his readers.
128
The neurotic screaming of a D.H. Lawrence is
seen for what it is: an adolescent's passional excited discovery of sex and his
(Lawrence's) inability to get over it, his incapacity to grow up into an adult
responsible and balanced view of it.
129
In his book Between Heaven and Earth, the
late Franz Werfel wrote: "The stupidest of all inventions of nihilistic thinking
is the so-called impersonal God. Confronted with this non-personal God, one is
tempted to bless the personal non-God of the honest atheist; for the concept of
a spiritless and senseless world created by nothing and by no one, and existing
nevertheless, is for all its ghastliness, more acceptable than the idiotic
notion of a kind of extra-mundane and autonomous power station that creates and
feeds all things without ever at all having been invented or operated by a
creative Mind. The impersonal God is the most wretched reflection of
technologized and thought-weary brains, the modern old folks' home of senile
pantheism."
These sentences betray such a misunderstanding of one of philosophy's basic metaphysical tenets that they call for a reply. We offer the most unstinted praise of Werfel's genius as a novelist and we consider his book The Song of Bernadette one of the finest permanent contributions to modern religio-mystical biography. But Werfel got out of his depth when he attempted to criticize this, the ultimate concept of all possible human concepts about God. For he brought to his thinking, albeit quite unconsciously, all the limitations of his otherwise gifted personality. We must remember that he was primarily a man of imagination, an artist to whom "forms" and "entities" are a necessity in the working of his mind. Consequently the idea of Void, which is Spirit in all its uttermost purity, remained impenetrable to him. To the philosopher, the privation of all things and even thoughts represents the only absolute emancipation from the limits set by matter time space and ego. Therefore it represents the only power which is really infinite and almighty. That is, it represents the only true God. Werfel unconsciously looked for a mental picture in his search for God because only such a picture, together with the ecstatic devotion it arouses, could give him, as an artist, the assurance of a real presence.
Werfel not only was incapable of accepting the concept of the Void but he also did not want to accept it. This was because he was, like so many artists, an emotionalist. Witness in proof of this assertion the three intellectually weak reasons he gives why a Jew should never become a formal convert to Christianity. When analysed, these reasons turn out to be nothing more than mere historical tradition-worship, passionate sentimentality.
130
There are great books, call them scriptures,
classics, or commentaries, which are vehicles not only of instruction but also
of inspiration and enlightenment.
131
Ordinary writing is a process of the common
intellect, whereas revelatory writing is a product of the inspired intellect. In
the first state the intellect works by its own power and momentum, whereas in
the second it works under the possession of the higher power and by a higher
activity.
132
There is a style which is formed artificially
and self-consciously by nimble, intellectual rhetoric. There is a style which
forms itself unconsciously out of natural loftiness of character. Truly inspired
writing and speaking come from the latter class.
133
The author who willingly and humbly gives
himself up to such an inwardly guided mode of writing learns new truths from its
results, just as his readers do.
134
A piece of writing which expresses the
illumination of the writer has the possibility of initiating the reader. It is
an echo or a reflected image.
135
In inspired writing you meet an individual worth
meeting; you are taken directly into a mind worth knowing. You partake of
communion with a being superior to yourself.
136
When the inspired sentence is read, the
sensitive mind comprehends that it is no longer merely reading words. It is also
receiving the grace of the Presence.
137
The effect of inspired writing is to arouse
spiritual aspiration or provide spiritual guidance. This is its highest
function.
138
What readers get from an inspired book depends
on their own capacity. It can communicate the truth or beauty, the sublimity or
goodness found in the inspiration only to the extent that the reader can feel
something of such a thing himself. The better it is written, the more effective
is the communication.
139
A spiritually inspired book must not be read too
lightly or too quickly. The reader should try to penetrate deeply into the ideas
on each page...so deeply that he comes out on the other side.
140
When writing of writers and their productions,
Thomas de Quincey set forward an interesting theory. He divided books into two
kinds. The first belonged to what he called the "Literature of Knowledge," and
they were intended to give instruction or to present information. But such books
would, from time to time, become obsolete and have to be brought up to date, or
need revision for some other reason, or re-arrangement. But, anyway, they do not
generally have permanency. The second kind, which he called "The Literature of
Power," did have permanency because it moved: it had the power to move
the heart, the feelings of people. And being what it was, written from the
author's living experience or what he had himself seen, gave the writing a power
which instructed works of information do not possess. In other words, the
Literature of Power survives, whereas the Literature of Knowledge gets
superseded.
141
Truth sits perched upon the pen of one who has
surrendered his hand to the Overself. Hence his words endure and are to be found
among the records that Time keeps in its treasury, whereas the words of
egotistic and ephemeral writers are often thrown off into oblivion as soon as
they are written.
142
The literary legacy of the modern world is
nothing short of amazing. Although the wisdom of the Alexandrian Library was
burnt down with it, I warrant we have today a fuller and more rounded record of
human knowledge than the ancients ever thought likely. Yet withal the great
secret eludes us.
143
There is a power in inspired writings and
authoritative revelations not only to work upon the minds and hearts of their
readers, like many other books, but also to work upon their intuitive natures.
This is a far more valuable service than providing information or stimulating
emotion. They start a process of fruitful thought or give glimpses of hitherto
unperceived truth or formulate clearly and decisively what has been half-felt
and vaguely known.
144
The writer follows a profession which is
glamorous but hollow: he is merely a manipulator of words. But it is hollow only
if his words come out of no facts, if they are nothing but babble. It is only
when his experience of living is rich, wide, and vertically cross-sectioned, or
when his mind touches deep sources by its power of concentration, that his words
are loaded with content and his readers are enriched with inspiration.
145
It is for the reader successfully to recreate in
himself the mood which inspired the writer.
146
You must look for meaning not only in the words
but also in between the letters of the words, for such are the ways of the
mystics and also of the writers of paradox.
147
The writer who engages the reader's mind and
invites it to think renders an intellectual service. But the writer who incites
it to intuit renders a spiritual one.(P)
148
There are phrases in the New Testament which
must impress the mind of every sensitive person. These phrases embody truths but
they embody them in language which carries added authority derived from the
style. I refer to the King James version, the translation into English made in
the seventeenth century and today replaced by several modern versions in plain
everyday twentieth-century English. It is true that in the modern ones the
ordinary person gets a clearer notion of the meaning and, therefore, for him the
modern translation is undoubtedly more useful. But I wrote of the sensitive
person. For him not only is the meaning clear enough in the old version, but the
style, with its beauty and authority, makes the statements even weightier.(P)
149
The way to use a philosophic book is not to
expect to understand all of it at the first trial, and consequently not to get
disheartened when failure to understand is frequent. Using this cautionary
approach, he should carefully note each phrase or paragraph that brings an
intuitive response in his heart's deep feeling (not to be confused with an
intellectual acquiescence in the head's logical working). As soon as, and every
time, this happens, he should stop his reading, put the book momentarily aside,
and surrender himself to the activating words alone. Let them work upon him in
their own way. He is merely to be quiet and be receptive. For it is out of such
a response that he may eventually find that a door opens to his inner being and
a light shines where there was none before. When he passes through that doorway
and steps into that light, the rest of the book will be easy to understand.(P)
150
A writer who gives out high ideals ought to be
the first man to follow them himself.
151
It has been said that it is somewhat
disillusioning to make the acquaintance of writers in person and that it is
better to be satisfied with enjoying their work. This is less true of the
general category of authors than it is of those who write upon religious,
mystical, and philosophical subjects. Readers form preconceptions of what the
authors of such books must be like personally and physically, but such pictures
are based upon their bias, their prejudice, the limits of their reading and
experience - especially social experience. So they receive a surprise, sometimes
even a shock, when they find that the reality does not coincide with the
preconception.
152
The spiritual author who conforms to his own
teachings, who is as careful of his ethics, motives, actions, and thoughts as he
is of his style, is a rare creature. There is not less posing to a public
audience in the world of religio-mysticism than there is in the world of
politics. The completely sincere may write down their experiences or their ideas
for the benefit of others, but they are more likely to do so for posterity
rather than for their own era. Their most inspired work is published after their
death, not before it. The half-sincere and the completely insincere feel the
need of playing out their roles during life, for the ego's vanity, ambition, or
acquisitiveness must be gratified. The half-sincere seldom suspect their own
motives; the insincere know their own too well.(P)
153
Most modern writers who deal with some aspect of
mysticism, spirituality, and the higher consciousness generally have done little
more than probe along the margins. This is true no matter how fluently or
authoritatively or mysteriously or loftily they write. It is easier and commoner
to enter the stillness and speak from its pleasant transcendence than to
penetrate to its inconceivable core and achieve insight.
154
He who can put God's Great Silence into words
renders a high service to his fellows. He is not only a revealer who opens doors
in their minds; he is also a healer who relieves hurt places in their hearts.
155
The correct key to the meaning of Omar Khayyam's
Rubaiyat is neither the literal nor the mystical one, but a combination
of both. The Persian character and outlook are such that they can easily hold
the sceptical analyst, the pious devotee, the careless sensualist, and the
theosophical fakir under a single hat. Consequently some of the verses of
the Rubaiyat are to be taken as they stand, but others must be searched
for an inner meaning. And this meaning is openly hinted at by a Persian Sufi
teacher, Sheikh Ibrahim, in a quatrain where we are told to weep in yearning for
the divine soul and to give it our heart's love:
The real wine is the blood of our hearts, Do not search for it in the bottle. The true pearls are the tears of our eyes, Do not look for them in the ocean.
156
A work which brings true faith and
reasonable hope to hearts not only bereft of both but steeped in despair,
has some usefulness.
157
A man's spiritual aspirations may remain asleep
until he comes into contact with an advanced mystic or an inspired book. By
marking out the path which his feet will have to tread as well as by showing its
deviations and pitfalls, the man or the book may help him to tread aright.
158
Some of those ancient texts were written on so
high a level of inspiration that one approaches them in awe and reverence. It is
as if the Word was made script, the intangible given form to break through the
limitations which shut man up in tight ignorance. The unnameable Godhead has
used a few humans to tell humanity that it IS and that they are not alone.
159
A mere handful of words may contain the wisdom
of a lifetime. A single page may teach a man much about himself. No one - even
the mystic - need despise books, but they need to be kept in their proper place.
Reading cannot supplant meditation.
160
To read inspired books is to live for a time
with inspired minds.
161
You may test a piece, a book, or a passage for
inspiration by whether or not it yields the feeling that a living person is
speaking behind its words.
162
The idea may previously have come intuitively to
them, but too weakly to have directly influenced them. Yet when they read it
formulated effectively in words and put into print by someone who is expert in
both writing and the subject itself, the likelihood of acceptance is so very
much more that a result like conversion is not seldom produced. When the readers
find their secret but uncertain thought openly proclaimed in the strong language
of direct knowledge and personal conviction, they may submit to its authority in
a single transforming moment.
163
Any piece of writing that can move men to seek
the true and honour the good will have done more for them than if it moves them
to join a sect or a cult.
164
It may not be important to arrange a lot of
words on paper, but if those words convey intimations of an inner life that is
more satisfying and less illusory than the outer life, then their writer
performs a useful activity at least, a very necessary one at most. Even if his
be only a voice in the wilderness with few or none to hear him, the tremendous
importance of his message remains.
165
Those who lack the capacity to practise
meditation should compensate for this by reading and studying the writings of
the others who possess it.
166
There is a deep chasm between books written out
of genuine knowledge and those written to advocate a point of view.
167
The beginner has little capacity to discriminate
and seldom knows whether he is reading the work of a great mystic or only the
imitation of such a work. What makes the situation even worse is that in
addition to such copies there exist the mere imitations of imitations. Of course
it is mainly the ideas themselves that are plagiarized, for the inspired
presentation of them is not commonly within the compass of mediocrity's hand.
168
There is something like magic in the way a
simple white sheet of paper can stir one man to rancorous frenzy, or another to
delirious joy, if certain black marks are made upon it. But still more magical
is it when the message contained in those marks induces a transcendental state.
169
The work of an inspired individual will always
carry authenticity but it may not always carry style.
170
Light comes to us with certain writings; they
make our mind fertile and our understanding clear. These are the great writings
of the human race, whether they are known to it or neglected by it.
171
Poetry arouses feeling and this in turn, if
lofty enough, can awaken intuition.
172
Words may give other persons their cue to start
off in a new or higher direction, may encourage or inspire this move, but the
inner work has still to be done by each person for himself. The words become
more valuable as they lead the aspirant to absorb intuitions. This is their best
service.
173
There are authors who get these inspired
moments, who sometimes write better than they know, who have to wait - like
their readers - to catch the high revelatory meaning of a piece they have put
down as it flowed through them.
174
Ancient Oriental authors on spiritual subjects
offered, in their first lines, their homage to their master or to their personal
ideal - the purpose being partly to keep their writing free from personal
distortion and partly to gain inspiration.
175
To sit there, spinning out the phrases which
shall carry ideas to other men, is not less an act of worship or of preachment -
if they be reverently composed religious mystical or philosophic ideas - than
praying on one's knees or addressing others from a pulpit.
176
In the reading of these books, just as in the
presence of the masters, we grow emotionally and are at our best mentally.
177
A word, a phrase, a sentence, or a paragraph may
be enough to awaken a hundred sleeping minds.
178
A spoken word or a written book which reaches
through a man's ordinary everyday character to his better self renders him a
service which may be fleeting or lasting. The result will depend on whether or
not he follows up the mood invoked.
179
It is not only that he is trying to communicate
a message; the work does not end there: it is also that he is trying to move his
readers to feeling and to action or, contrariwise, to a depth of stillness they
do not ordinarily know.
180
Shankara of Kanchi: "The Hindu artist dedicates
his work to God. By such dedication purity of mind arises."
181
In the symbolism of several scriptures, the
Saviour represents the higher self and the seeker the lower one. Thus, in the
Bhagavad Gita, Krishna is the divine soul, Arjuna the human ego.
182
To write noble and beautiful words constituting
a message that will still be read eagerly a thousand years later and that will
seem fresh and inspired is something worth doing.
183
Fine passages grow upon the pages of the olden
seers as thickly as grass in spring. Where are such great and true voices as
those today? I can hear the bleat of the lost sheep but I cannot hear such
voices.
184
Style and its artistic function may have no
place in the ascetic prophet's scheme of things. He may say what he has to say
in the barest most unattractive way, or put it so clumsily that his hearers may
have to interpret his meaning.
185
If any passage in his writing moves your mind or
will in the right direction, it has served you well. Do not ask that it shall do
more and solve your own personal problem directly and definitely.
186
These great minds actively live again in his own
consciousness during the intent study of the ideas in their writings.
187
It is a useful exercise to memorize the most
inspired or the most appealing passages in books written by masters of the
spiritual or philosophic life.
188
The difference between inspired writing drawn
from within by intuitive feeling and paraphrased writing drawn from without by
omnivorous reading is always clear to a practising mystic.
189
Writings so inspired, so revelatory, exorcise
the evil spirits of hate and anger from our hearts.
190
Coleridge's Ancient Mariner is a mystical
poem. When he wrote it, he was plunged into the study of the metaphysical
mystics such as Plotinus and other Neoplatonists.
191
If through a book we can associate ourselves
with a mastermind, it represents an opportunity we cannot afford to miss.
192
Truth takes on flesh and blood in such inspired
writings, embodies the bodiless Spirit and announces its own existence to a
doubting argumentative world.
193
Some come among us commissioned with a sacred
message.
194
If it is to be inspired work it will have to be
written out of the fullest inner conviction.
195
The writer who lifts his readers to a higher
plane, who makes them feel that spiritual achievement is within their reach, is
as much a minister of religion as any ordained one.
196
These inspired phrases lure the understanding on
to seek the seraphic Source whence they have arisen.
197
Through inspired documents and inspired
prophets, people who are blind to this reality are enabled to see.
198
These passages seem to bring with them the
higher part of the reader's nature. They not only stand for it symbolically but
also deputize for it actually.
199
If I read a truly inspired piece of writing with
all the attention and feeling it deserves, then I take part in a sacrament no
less religious than the one in a church.
200
The permanent truths enshrined in inspired
classics are to be loved, their good counsels deeply respected.
201
The words of a book may speak to an inner need
which may be raging within him or which may not even enter his consciousness
until that moment.
202
When anyone else utters for the ordinary
inarticulate man, in words and with precision, what he feels vaguely and
obscurely, he is helped intellectually and fortified spiritually.
203
Here are words aglow with divine ecstasy, ashine
with divine truth.
204
Philo the Alexandrian tells of feeling so
inspired that the ideas flowed of themselves effortlessly through his pen.
205
That book renders a real service which lets in
light.
206
If the book is really inspired it will strike
sparks in the reader's mind.
207
The songs of Kabir show what wisdom can go into
an artistic form: the two are not necessarily divorced. The poems of Rumi
perform the same function.
208
An utterance which is authentically inspired
will leave its mark on someone.
209
A noble piece of writing can serve those who are
receptive to its message by cleansing their hearts and uplifting their minds.
210
The translation of the Bhagavad Gita by
Prabhavananda and Isherwood is one of the most readable, clearest, easiest to
understand.
211
Much of Emerson's writing came from his
intuition rather than from his intellect.
212
There are truths which do not easily declare
themselves, which hide or resist so that they must be dug for. But that is
precisely where an inspired book can help the seeker so much. And then when the
discovery is made, when the jewel is found, it can be added for his greater
enrichment.
213
That writer has fulfilled his purpose whose
reader catches fire from his words.
214
Oratory is great when it gives its auditors more
understanding, but it is greatest when it gives them a glimpse!
215
It is right to expect that a writer on the art
of mental quiet will produce works which themselves bear a style and atmosphere,
a content and message of quietness.
216
The book which prods us into finer thought or
higher feeling or makes us live better has served us well.
217
A voluble tongue or a prolific pen is no
evidence of an inspired mind.
218
In these pages they will find their half-held
best hopes taken up and transformed into reasoned affirmations.
219
When you read such inspired works, it is not
enough to read them with the eyes alone: you must absorb their contents into
your inner self; they must penetrate you through and through.
220
A poem which stirs a young person to high
aspiration has done a noble service.
221
To regard every part of a work as equal in
inspiration, or even in value, with every other part is naïve. The artist or
writer has times when he may be only half-awake, overtired, moody, and
depressed, and his work is not likely to be then at its best.
222
These words evoke exalted feelings in the heart
of a thoughtful, well-informed, and sensitive person, but is the same result
likely to happen to a cynical, sceptical, totally materialistic person? Without
some preparation of philosophy they may fail to take hold on a limited mind or a
mainly selfish one.
223
He will love the writings of inspired prophets,
illumined seers, or intuitive thinkers. The more they succeed in conveying the
feeling of their experience of, or kinship with, the Overself, its presence and
power, its beauty and peace, the more will he love them.
224
An artistic or literary product may be nothing
more than the mere expression of a capricious mood, of a passing whimsy,
something altogether insignificant; or it may be allied with great spiritual
meaning, loaded with riches for beholder, listener, or reader, and finally
metamorphosed into a ritual of high magic.
225
A deeper force is operating at such a time than
either reader or hearer is aware of, but the result depends on whether the
sensitivity, receptivity, and passivity are permitted to dominate.
226
The reader who joins his own with an author's
mind gets a chance to go as far as the author has gone.
227
Lao Tzu's classic and only work, Book of the
Way and of its Merit, tries to make its readers see values which only the
sage ordinarily sees.
228
A wise and noble statement in an inspired book
may come back to some reader's mind at a moment of great need when it will be
meaningful to him and help him through a difficult period.
229
A few words may carry a man's mind to an
uplifted state, may help to awaken a brief association with his better self, and
may help him relate to a finer state of consciousness. But this depends on who
uttered or wrote those words.
230
Is it possible that something of the writer's
mind infuses itself in the attentive reader's? Why not, if the reader is also
receptive? But the effect may be brief and soon fade out.
231
A single word or a short phrase may become so
charged with meaning for him that, pondering upon it, enlightenment grows
rapidly and the inner work progresses accordingly.
232
A writer in this field of study attracts the
serious and earnest, the sensible and level-headed, but he also attracts the
psychotics and neurotics, the mildly lunatic fringe who become a menace to his
quiet industrious existence.
233
We all know that there is a dark negative side
to life, with its miseries and sufferings, as we know that there are so many
imperfections, follies, meannesses, and wickednesses in humans. But why should
an author on spiritual topics depict them? There is not much in existence today
to comfort and gladden us, so we look to such an author to hold up noble,
beautiful, peace-bringing ideals, ideas, and experiences for our gaze.
234
Sometimes a single spoken or written sentence
can reveal to the perceptive mind that the speaker or writer is, for those
moments at least, an enlightened individual.
235
This literature has begun to familiarize them
with the ideas and practices of mysticism, the lives and ways of the yogis.
Ignorance must give place to acquaintance before it can give place to
acceptance.
236
Wilhelm von Humboldt read Wilkins' English
translation of the Bhagavad Gita, with the result that he felt bound to
thank destiny for having left him life long enough to allow him to read the
incomparable work, which he called "the finest philosophic poem that the
literatures known to us can offer to humanity."
237
If we believe that the men who wrote scriptures
were inspired and if we know our world literature, we must be very insensitive
not to see that other men have written since then who were at least only a
little less inspired than the scriptural authors and who wrote with a light and
wisdom not their own.
238
Literature can be as much a spiritual force in
these modern times as liturgy has been in medieval times.
239
Ancient Greek tragedy plays, with their
atmosphere of helpless and hopeless disaster, give truth only if they are
countered by modern writings or speeches based on worship, personal optimism,
and success stories.
240
If The Tempest was Shakespeare's final
work, it was also his most philosophical play, neatly expressing his highest
thoughts. There is less conflict and tragedy, more calm and dignity in it than
in any of his other writings.
241
The theory of Tragedy, which developed out of
the Dionysus cult, remained a spiritual thing for the Greeks. Aristotle
considered that it aroused pity and fear for the hero and thus purged and healed
the audience's emotions.
242
It is important to remember the power of
suggestion when we examine the effect of a theatrical play on the spectators.
This power can be used to harm them morally or to elevate them emotionally.
243
I have often asked people connected with the
theatre whether they become the role which they play and entirely forget
themselves; or whether they never entirely let their own personal identity
disappear. The answers have been contradictory. There does not seem to be
universal agreement upon this point. Some say they no longer identify with
themselves, others say they always remember themselves. Perhaps the solution is
that the very few who have real genius do succeed in letting go of the ego and
becoming the character which they play, totally. Others, who may have good, real
talent but not genius, will not be able to let go of their ego, will not be able
to forget self, however well they may assume the role on the stage itself.
244
Was Salvini right when he said that an actor
weeps and laughs on the stage yet all the while he is watching his own tears and
smiles?
245
The people of Athens could think of no better
honour for their tragic dramatist Sophocles after his death than to say that a
god had lived with him as a guest!
246
We have gone far from the serious use of a play
in the theatre. Shakespeare used it to help us get, for a couple of hours at
least, a slightly more detached view of human existence than is possible
normally. This might help us to get a slightly better understanding of our own
existence. But today criminals are admired by the audience and held up for
admiration by the author. Sex without self-control is another praised theme for
the titillation of audiences and the brisker sale of tickets at the box office.
247
It is risky to try to modernize Shakespeare's
story and language unless great restraint is used.
248
The fictitious sufferings and joys enacted upon
a theatrical stage may move an audience to tears or pleasure, but with its
departure comes the awakening to reality, that knowledge of what is which
is truth.
249
A play which carries something of the atmosphere
of a religious ritual thereby brings the Theatre near to the Church.
250
If the audience reflects, either during or after
the show, on the piece of life it has seen on the stage, it will have some
higher profit than mere entertainment.
251
It is true that Shakespeare held a mirror up to
the events, persons, and histories of his time. But it is also true that he
inserted philosophical comments which carried force.
252
We may ask why Shakespeare has portrayed too
many human faults and too few human virtues. But the answer can only be because
he has gone to life itself for his sources, where human imperfections are all
too plain.
253
I have known the man who was, in his time, the
world's greatest screen comedian - Chaplin.
254
I go to the cinema partly to get the opposition
which will in a mild but varied form test my ascetic indifference towards
earthly attractions and partly to get vivid instruction in their deceptiveness
and vanity. The very scenes which excite the sensuality of most beholders, I
use, by a process of keen intellectual analysis, to excite my repulsion.
Finally, I also go to the cinema simply to enjoy myself with comedies and laugh
over them.
255
Too many films are turned out following a
cheaply melodramatic or allegedly funny formula. Soon after the start of a
picture one knows how it is going to unfold. It is inane, a denial of true
artistry, a false escape from reality, a waste of time. One can attend
cinemas only when they show versions of a good novel, a good play, or a
worthwhile comedy.
256
The cinema is here to stay. Everybody
understands its pictorial language. But like other forms of science applied to
art, its powerful influence needs to be purified.
257
The cinema has over-exploited sex and
over-pictured its saccharine sensualities.
258
The box-office success of the film The
Razor's Edge is proof that there is a little room for something loftier in
the entertainment world. Here is a story of a young war veteran whom Nature has
made an individualist and whom experience has made reflective about experience
itself. He begins a search for inner peace, which in the story is contrasted
with a setting of continental worldliness and Parisian sin.
259
Rudolf Steiner compared the effects of
cinema-going to those of a drug. Perhaps he would have included the
entertainment side of television, the reading of light fiction, too. But if we
analyse the pleasure which such attractive distractions yield, we shall find
that they let us get away from the ego.
260
The dances used in connection with the ancient
religions, and particularly those of the Near and Middle East, were not intended
to offer pleasure or provide entertainment as most of our modern or Western
dancing is. They had a sacred or symbolic meaning. At some stages they might
bring the audience into chorus chanting or even certain movements along with the
original dances.
261
Whatever the other reasons are for the
tremendous postwar popularity of the ballet both in Europe and America, be they
its colourfulness, its poetry, its vigour, its beauty, and its blending of
different arts, there is one more, which is important: its other-worldliness. It
answers a spiritual craving that does not know it is spiritual.
262
The painter must not only have the talents of
drawing and colouring, but also the bodily gift of seeing sharply and the mental
gift of visualizing, imaging.
263
The light which informs and brightens the
colours of the best medieval paintings is suggestive and symbolic. The artists
worked often under inspiration got from mystical rapture, for they worked often
with religious subjects.
264
The tiny figure of a Buddha appears in some
Tibetan paintings or statuettes. It is a perfect replica of midget size placed
in the heart or head. It is put in by the artist to show the unseen, the real
Buddha within the outer form that is all most people see.
265
Inspired drawings may give as much a spiritual
impact as inspired paintings.
266
Those pictures - Buddhist, Hindu, and Christian
- which show the benedictory raising of a hand, show only one of the ideas which
exist side by side in different religions.
267
Christian art was not the first to use a halo
round the head when depicting holiness. Chinese pictures have used it too.
268
Some paintings of pop art seem to be scenes
taken from the astral plane. They are more than mere imagination - extraordinary
creatures or amazing monsters. They are mostly results of astral clairvoyance.
269
A painting which beholders find quite
incomprehensible and whose maker boasts of its meaninglessness belongs to human
pathology, not to human art. To him life itself is without meaning: his picture
is a jumble because his soul is a chaos.
270
Those ultramodern artists who scorn to draw well
because they cannot draw at all, whose slovenly productions and ugly colouring
repel the seeker after beauty in art, possess neither technique nor inspiration.
271
Raphael, Leonardo, Michelangelo, Fra Angelico,
and Piero della Francesca had unquestioned genius in art. But they belong to the
old school, and modern youth craves the new, the different. The craving is
legitimate but the acceptance of crazy nonsense merely because it is new, of
untalented ugliness merely because it is different, must be rejected.
272
It may be that those whose taste has been formed
around the modern expressions by contemporary artists will have some difficulty
in adapting it to the completely different masterpieces of Byzantine art, and in
appreciating them. Those who are confronted by them for the first time may need
a sufficient period of adjustment to the highly ornamental character of
Byzantine painting.
273
When we stand before one of the luminous dawns
so frequently painted by the Frenchman Corot we feel peace - giving healing
radiations.
274
Despite the fine work put forth by our European
masters, Western art has yet to reach the level of vitality in colouring
attained by old China.
275
In a painting of the Chinese master Chou Tun-Yi,
the great philosopher is shown holding a sceptre. This is called "The Sceptre of
Power." It stands for the masculine elements within the person. The sceptre
being held within his hands shows that the masculine energy is held within his
control, that he is indeed a master in this sense, a ruler of himself - for the
sceptre is adorned with a diamond, hardest of stones.
276
In this portrait of Chou Tun-Yi which looks down
upon me from the study wall this great master is sitting in full robes holding
the flat sceptre of authority at its lower end with his right hand and
supporting its upper part with his left hand. This ceremonial sceptre is not
only symbolic of high status on the worldly scene, but in his case is also
symbolic of spiritual power.
277
Even if the simple peasant fervour of the
figures appearing in medieval pictures may not be in accord with modern
mentalities, yet the authentic inspiration is there; also admiration is due for
the magnificent paintwork itself, the clear luminous colouring, and the skilled
drawing of a Piero della Francesca or a Fra Angelico. Art was alive then,
artists were creative, talent was visible, and training was fundamental. Today
the contrast is saddening: pseudo-art flourishes, is well-paid, while the taste
for the real thing is little.
278
The Chinese regard painting and calligraphy as
the highest forms of their artistic expression.
279
Not the slow and patient building-up of a
picture, as is ordinarily done, but the swift strokes, the decisive confident
execution of the work in the shortest possible time and the least amount of
effort: that is Zen artistry. It tries to take advantage of the inspired moments
to give birth to memorable and exceptional drawing on paper or painting on silk.
It is truly creative.
280
The icons of Greek Orthodoxy were highly
stylized and tradition-bound: the artist was not free to introduce his
individual variation.
281
What the painter puts with his brush and colour
on a canvas becomes the medium of his own expression. If, in addition, he has
become a vehicle for his higher self, then there will be a twofold effect, the
one personal and the other inspired.
282
Calligraphy was placed as high among the arts by
prewar Chinese as music and poetry have been placed by us. Handwriting and
sign-writing were used not only to communicate but also to decorate, not only to
express but also to give joy.
283
How inspired by the feeling for beauty are often
those delicately painted scrolls on which Chinese artists put their impressions
of pine trees set on mountainsides, leaping waterfalls, and quiet river banks.
284
The strength shown in Greek male statues, the
gracefulness shown in their female ones are matched by the equipoise shown in
Greek philosophy.
285
What the Asian adept pointed to, in a statue
confronting us and which he called "the Angkor smile," could only have been
chiselled by a skilled artist who was also intuitively sensitive to the profound
serenity of his subject.
286
In a piece of Japanese lettering, the arch over
a Moorish doorway, or an old Greek pediment, beauty naturally inheres. Each in
its own way is symmetrical, balanced, a harmony of two opposite sides. In a
sage's mind there is the same attractive equilibrium.
287
The solid balance and intelligent proportion
which Greek philosophy admired and taught were expressed in the elegant
pediments and colonnades of Greek architecture. The fervent devotion and direct
simplicity of Muhammedan religion were brought into the tapered minarets and
arcades of Arab architecture. From the thought and faith of a people came forth
its art.
288
The superb balance and fine proportion of Greek
architecture holds lessons for man, for his person as for his way of life.
289
It is one more sign of the unbalance of our
times that architects overconcentrate on the straight line in their designs for
the massive new buildings which appear in all major cities, and ignore its
counterpoise the curve.
290
Too many modern buildings have the soullessness,
the materialistic inner and outer nature, of mechanical constructions. They are
not growths. This is why they lack beauty, grace, charm. Competent
function only is their purpose. They achieve it. But they are monotonous
barracks.
291
Buildings that are like boxes, without any
identity or individuality of their own, show the decay of imagination and the
mistake of letting the functionalist supplant the artist instead of working side
by side with him.
292
The pillared arcades which transform a street,
making it picturesque and giving it dignity, ought to be multiplied a
hundredfold.
293
The dignity of Greek architecture, expressed in
fine stately pillars, invites respect for the Greek mind.
294
The straight clean-cut lines of the exterior,
the modernistic cubes and parabolic curves of their interior, are fit symbols of
directness and newness; the sky-jutting spires are apt symbols of the altitude
of achievement which beckons young ambition.
295
Musical compositions which carry their hearers
up into higher worlds of being are benedictions.
296
The miracle of musical beauty is to be
experienced gratefully, not for the sensuous and emotional satisfactions alone,
but also for the reminder to make all life beautiful.
297
Of all the arts which minister to the enjoyment
of man, music is the loftiest. It provides him with the satisfaction which
brings him nearer to truth than any other art. Such is its mysterious power that
it speaks a language which is universally acknowledged throughout the world and
amongst every class of people; it stirs the primitive savage no less than the
cultured man of the twentieth century. When we try to understand this peculiar
power which resides in music, we find that it is the most transient of all the
others. The sounds which delight your ears have appeared suddenly out of the
absolute silence which envelops the world and they disappear almost
instantaneously into that same silence. Music seems to carry with it something
of the divine power which inheres in that great silence so that it is really an
ambassador sent by the Supreme Reality to remind wandering mortals of their real
home. The aspirant for truth will therefore love and enjoy music, but he must
take care that it is the right kind of music - the kind that will elevate and
exalt his heart rather than degrade and jar it.(P)
298
Music can be a start along the Path the same as
other arts, if it is used as a means of elevating feeling and uplifting oneself
to the primal beauty of the Soul. It is itself a yoga path and can be not only a
means of expression but one of lifting thought and feeling to the higher realm
of illumination.
299
What man cannot receive directly through the
intuition, he must receive in a different form through the physical senses. This
is why music, for example, takes the place of a spiritual medium, as it can be
heard by anyone, whereas intuition is unfelt by the insensitive.
300
Those who are insensible to the mystical in its
ordinary form may be responsive to its musical form.
301
Music can express the mystical experience better
than language; it can tell of its mystery, joy, sadness, and peace far better
than words can utter. The fatigued intellect finds a tonic and the harassed
emotions find comfort in music.(P)
302
Who can respond to the genius of Bach's Saint
Matthew Passion unless some awakening of spirituality - however small - is
in him?
303
We come to concerts and operas to hear music.
Loud applause interrupting what we hear introduces the shock of noise. It spoils
the atmosphere.
304
Music is still used, as it was for more than a
thousand years past, by many Sufis to help bring on lovingly and devotedly the
joyous abstracted depths of meditation.
305
Music like any of the intellectual arts may help
or hinder this Quest. When it is extremely sensual or disruptive or noisy, it is
a hindrance and perhaps even a danger. When it is uplifting or inspiring or
spiritually soothing, it is a help.(P)
306
Warner Allen says he got, at the age of fifty,
the mystic experience of timelessness, saw the Divine Light in vision, and felt
one with God while listening rapt in Beethoven's Seventh Symphony. (I have heard
it but only the second movement is mystical.)
307
If an inspired sonata by Beethoven brings you
momentarily to the borders of heaven, do not stop with the enjoyment. Explore
the glimpse afterwards for all its rich content, its immense meaning, its
glorious revelation.
308
(1) Bach: the final chorus from Saint Matthew
Passion, (2) Beethoven's last piano trio (Archduke), (3) the slow
movement from Mozart's G Major Violin Concerto, K. 216 - these three are
spiritually inspired musical works.
309
Musical geniuses like Bach and Beethoven, Mozart
and Brahms, Handel, Vivaldi, Puccini, Rachmaninoff, Schubert, and Wagner touched
and drew from the Overself's inspiration, although in unequal degree. They gave
their hearers higher values and even, in the case of the more sensitive and
prepared ones, spiritual glimpses. Beethoven himself said, "I was conscious of
being inspired by God." Brahms said, "When I reach my best level during the task
of composition, I feel a higher power working through me."
310
Beethoven's music is not only melodious, which
is common, but also charged with thought, which is not.
311
Tchaikovsky's Symphony no. 5 is a spiritually
elevating composition.
312
The Pastorale Symphony by Beethoven is a
call in music to our native spiritual homeland.
313
Even until a couple of decades ago the better
class Indonesians would play one of their several native musical instruments
after sunset as a spiritual exercise to refine, purify, and discipline their
feeling.
314
Music receives a sacramental form when it is the
expression of an inspired composer; it truly helps its hearers spiritually.
315
It is curious - this contrast and contradiction
of Buddha banning music and Beethoven receiving divine exaltation from it.
Buddha said it led astray; Beethoven said it led to God. But analysis shows that
most people were too tasteless or weak or ignorant to be entrusted with such an
influence and allowed to make their own discrimination between the degrading or
exciting and the ennobling or calming, so it was probably safer to ban music
altogether. Besides, their time as monks could be better used in reflections and
meditations, studies and practices.
316
In the Persian Sufi book Diwan i Shams i
Tabriz it is written: "We do not attend musical assemblies nor employ music.
In our position there is more harm than good in it. Music improves the approach
to the consciousness, if heard in the right way. But it will harm persons who
are insufficiently developed. Those who do not know this have taken up music as
if it were something sacred in itself. The feelings they experience from it are
mistaken for sublime ones; sentiments are aroused, which is no basis for further
progress." - Bahaudin Naqshband, leader of the Naqshabendi-Dervish Order
317
Sufi Teaching on Music:
(1) "Do not train yourself to music in case this holds you back from higher perceptions." - Ibn Hamdan (medieval)
(2) "They play music and cast themselves into states.... Every learning must have all its requirements fulfilled, not just music, thought, concentration." - Mainuddi Chishti, in a letter to disciples, referring to ecstatic states. The master explained further the fact that love of music was not enough, that emotional feelings produced by music were being confused with spiritual experience.
318
Play of the Soul and the Body -
Cavalieri, born mid-sixteenth century in Rome, died 1602 in Rome, was General
Director of the Tuscan Court in Florence in 1588. He belonged to the circle of
"Camerata Fiorentina," which brought a great innovation in Western music: the
"Nuove Musiche" (New Music), a special new manner which had a hypnotic effect on
the whole audience. His Rappresentazione was performed twice in Rome in
1600. Fifteen Cardinals were present at the first performance. It was the first
work written in a recitatio style. It is a religious play, related to the
medieval "mystery plays," especially to the morality play Everyman. It is
Buddhistic in basic theme - the human soul, blinded by worldly life and deceived
by pleasures, finally has a revelation of the transitoriness and shallowness;
then it rises to the higher experience, the sphere of true happiness, of angelic
hosts and eternal peace.
319
In 1822 Rossini visited Beethoven at the
latter's Viennese lodging. Two impressions remained vividly and dominantly
afterwards in the visitor's mind: "...the indescribable untidiness of the room
and the indefinable sadness of Beethoven's features." The question arises: How
could the creator of such joyous music appear so unhappy himself?
320
What Mozart expressed in his Fortieth Symphony
was what, in a different way, Buddha expressed in many of his sermons - a
melancholy, a sadness, a dissatisfaction with life amounting almost to
rebellious protest. Yet in neither case does one leave it with a feeling of
despair, as one does in the case of Tchaikovsky's Pathétique symphony. On
the contrary, there seems to be a way of escape: with Buddha plainly stated as
the "Noble Eightfold Path" to Nirvana, but with Mozart appearing only as the joy
which is so fundamental in most of his other works.
321
Brahms got creative moods in the woods. Walking
did not stop them from occurring, despite the body's movements, while the
solitude combined with Nature to foster his inspiration. It was only at home
that he put his composition into writing.
322
Mozart was able to compose and complete a whole
symphony in his mind before he put it down on paper.
323
Wagner himself tells us that he composed
Parsifal as an escape from the human evils of this world and as an
attempt to picture a nobler one.
324
There are many passages, melodies, pieces of
inspired music. These include parts of such works as Saint Matthew
Passion, The Magic Flute, Haydn's Duet Song, and Bach's church music.
325
Handel's Messiah is as inspired a piece
of music as any ever written. It is a communication from heaven to earth, from
the gods to man. The machine has made it available on a scale and to homes
impossible in the days when Handel composed it. All aspirants who need to
cultivate the religious-devotional and reverential side of their nature should
hear it from time to time.
326
"I've never seen him act like this before," said
Handel's servant to a friend. "He just stares at me and doesn't see me. He said
the gates of heaven opened wide for him and God Himself was there. I'm afraid
he's going mad." But the fruit of this "madness," of these long hours when
Handel refused to eat and wrote and wrote, was the greatest oratorio written
during, before, or after his century - the Messiah.
327
The sensitive heart will feel inexpressibly
grateful for the soothing melodies, the peace-fraught bars of such music as
Bach's fugues. Life is temporarily glorified and redeemed under this spell.
328
Handel sat for three days motionless.
Then, out of this physical and inner stillness there came to him the
tremendously inspired, triumphantly majestic strains of the Messiah.
329
It was an ill and suffering Handel, an ageing
and impoverished man, who gave the world its greatest oratorio. How did he do
it? He sat immobile, staring vacantly into space until the inspiring choruses
burst upon his inner ears, and then he wrote feverishly for hours at a time.
This went on for three weeks. So was born the Messiah.
330
The unearthly beauty of Gregorian sacred chants
must bring joy to sensitive ears, whether those ears are Catholic or Protestant,
Hindu or Muhammedan, if prejudice does not intrude itself and block or distort
the hearing.
331
Mendelssohn's Concerto for Violin offers not
only beautiful sounds to the ear but also celestial peace to the heart.
332
The ancient Greeks gave more importance to
singing than to instrumental music, for the reason that it was associated with
words, and hence ideas.
333
I shall never forget the wonderful message which
Ramana Maharshi sent me by the lips of an Indian friend (he never wrote
letters). It was some years before his death and my friend was visiting the
ashram preparatory to a visit to the West, whither he was being sent on a
mission by his government. I had long been estranged from the ashram management,
and there seemed no likelihood of my ever seeing the saint again. The visitor
mentioned to the Maharishee that he intended to meet me: was there any
communication of which he could be the bearer? "Yes," said the Maharishee, "When
heart speaks to heart, what is there to say?" Now I don't know if he was aware
of Beethoven's existence in the distant world of Western music, but I am certain
he could not have known that the dedication to the Missa Solemnis was
"May heart speak to heart." This is a work whose infrequent performance stirs me
to depths when I hear it, so reverential, so supernal is it. Few know that
Beethoven himself regarded the Missa as his greatest composition. It must
surely be his most spiritual composition, a perfect expression of the link
between man and God.(P)
334
It is said that Handel declared that he wished
to make people better, not just to entertain them.
335
The witch-doctor who beats out a rhythm on his
drum - or who has an assistant do the same - accomplishes a concentration of
mind, a lulling of the senses, and a recession from the world for his hearers to
a greater extent than they would have been able to accomplish for themselves.
336
Schubert was deeply affected by the beauty and
tranquillity of eventide. His song "In Abendrot" expresses this mood, and how
his complaints at life, his confusions in human relations fade away when viewing
the sky's red glory.
337
In the choired singing of a Russian church, in
the Sanskrit chanting of a Hindu ashram, the Soul of bhakti finds a
magnificent outlet.
338
Art is not only here to embellish human
existence. It is also here to express divine existence. In good concert music,
especially, a man may find the most exalted refuge from the drab realism of his
prosaic everyday life. For such music alone can express the ethereal feelings,
the divine stirrings and echoes which have been suppressed by mundane
extroversion. The third movement of Beethoven's Quartet in A Minor, for
instance, possesses genuine mystical fervour. One may derive for a few minutes
from hearing its long slow strains a grave reverence, a timeless patience, a
deep humility, an utter resignation and withdrawnness from the turmoil of the
everyday world.(P)
339
In Oratorio, music rises to its most spiritual
height. It not only gives the joyous feeling that other musical forms can give
but also a spiritual message.
340
Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto is grandly
beautiful, spiritually ecstatic, happy, elevating, other-worldly.
341
Refresh yourself at the end of a day's hard work
with food and drink and then settle down to listen to a recording of Beethoven's
Emperor Concerto. It will enrich and refine your feelings until, at the
end, your mind will be well prepared and elevated to enter the state of
meditation and attune itself to the infinite silence deep in the heart's core.
Thus, the beauty of music can lead you to the beauty of the Overself.
342
In the greatest works of composers like Bach,
Beethoven, and Vivaldi, we hear music which brings us as close to inspired moods
as music can bring human beings.
343
A music which enchants the senses, refines the
emotions, and temporarily dissolves some limitations of human existence must be
an inspired one.
344
It is hard to translate these moments of uplift
into music but, aside from and quite different from Beethoven's, Bach's, and
Handel's most religious compositions, the music got by the Chinese from pigeons
by tying tiny pipes to their pinion-feathers and then letting a flock of these
birds take flight is most spiritually suggestive.
345
A man may enjoy listening to Beethoven; to that
extent he appreciates music and derives pleasure from the physical sounds; but
if this is as far as he goes he has not sounded art's depth.
346
Music fulfils its highest purpose when it
honours the higher power in that aspect which is beauty.
347
Church music and choir singing may be helpful to
put a congregation into a more receptive and worshipful mood; but when they are
repeated too often, become too familiar, and are no longer spontaneous, there is
the danger that they then become mere theatrical performances or musical shows.
348
Who has not felt the strength which some of
Beethoven's music imparts, far profounder than the melodious rhythms of so many
other composers' works, charming though they are!
349
Moved by the exultation of Beethoven's music,
the intense passion behind it all, he can come nearer to the higher life.
350
Why is it that the divinest of the arts - music
- is nevertheless the most evanescent of the arts?