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CHAPTER X
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THE MYSTICAL LIFE
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<p>And here the practical man, who has been strangely silent during
the last stages of our discourse, shakes himself like a terrier which has
achieved dry land again after a bath; and asks once more, with a certain
explosive violence, his dear old question, "What is the <i>use</i> of all this?"</p>
<p>"You have introduced me," he says further, "to some curious
states of consciousness, interesting enough in their way; and to a lot of
peculiar emotions, many of which are no doubt most valuable to poets and so on.
But it is all so remote from daily life. How is it going to fit in with ordinary
existence? How, above all, is it all going to help <i>me</i>?"</p>
<p>Well, put upon its lowest plane, this new way of attending to
life--this deepening and widening of outlook--may at least be as helpful to you
as many things to which you have unhesitatingly consecrated much time and
diligence in the past: your long journeys to new countries, for instance, or
long hours spent in acquiring new "facts," relabelling old experiences, gaining
skill in new arts and games. These, it is true, were quite worth the effort
expended on them: for they gave you, in exchange for your labour and attention,
a fresh view of certain fragmentary things, a new point of contact with the rich
world of possibilities, a tiny enlargement of your universe in one direction or
another. Your love and patient study of nature, art, science, politics,
business--even of sport--repaid you thus. But I have offered you, in exchange
for a meek and industrious attention to another aspect of the world, hitherto
somewhat neglected by you, an enlargement which shall include and transcend all
these; and be conditioned only by the perfection of your generosity, courage,
and surrender.</p>
<p>Nor are you to suppose that this enlargement will be limited to
certain new spiritual perceptions, which the art of contemplation has made
possible for you: that it will merely draw the curtain from a window out of
which you have never looked. This new wide world is not to be for you something
seen, but something lived in: and you--since man is a creature of
responses--will insensibly change under its influence, growing up into a more
perfect conformity with it. Living in this atmosphere of Reality, you will, in
fact, yourself become more real. Hence, if you accept in a spirit of trust the
suggestions which have been made to you--and I acknowledge that here at the
beginning an attitude of faith is essential--and if you practise with diligence
the arts which I have described: then, sooner or later, you will inevitably find
yourself deeply and permanently changed by them--will perceive that you have
become a "new man." Not merely have you acquired new powers of perception and
new ideas of Reality; but a quiet and complete transformation, a strengthening
and maturing of your personality has taken place.</p>
<p>You are still, it is true, living the ordinary life of the body.
You are immersed in the stream of duration; a part of the human, the social, the
national group. The emotions, instincts, needs, of that group affect you. Your
changing scrap of vitality contributes to its corporate life; and contributes
the more effectively since a new, intuitive sympathy has now made its interests
your own. Because of that corporate life, transfusing you, giving to you and
taking from you--conditioning, you as it does in countless oblique and
unapparent ways--you are still compelled to react to many suggestions which you
are no longer able to respect: controlled, to the last moment of your bodily
existence and perhaps afterwards, by habit, custom, the good old average way of
misunderstanding the world. To this extent, the crowd-spirit has you in its
grasp.</p>
<p>Yet in spite of all this, you are now released from that crowd's
tyrannically overwhelming consciousness as you never were before. You feel
yourself now a separate vivid entity, a real, whole man: dependent on the Whole,
and gladly so dependent, yet within that Whole a free self-governing thing.
Perhaps you always fancied that your will was free--that you were actually, as
you sometimes said, the "captain of your soul." If so, this was merely one
amongst the many illusions which supported your old, enslaved career. As a
matter of fact, you were driven along a road, unaware of anything that lay
beyond the hedges, pressed on every side by other members of the flock; getting
perhaps a certain satisfaction out of the deep warm stir of the collective life,
but ignorant of your destination, and with your personal initiative limited to
the snatching of grass as you went along, the pushing of your way to the softer
side of the track. These operations made up together that which you called
Success. But now, because you have achieved a certain power of gathering
yourself together, perceiving yourself as a person, a spirit, and observing your
relation with these other individual lives--because too, hearing now and again
the mysterious piping of the Shepherd, you realise your own perpetual forward
movement and that of the flock, in its relation to that living guide--you have a
far deeper, truer knowledge than ever before both of the general and the
individual existence; and so are able to handle life with a surer hand.</p>
<p>Do not suppose from this that your new career is to be
perpetually supported by agreeable spiritual contacts, or occupy itself in the
mild contemplation of the great world through which you move. True, it is said
of the Shepherd that he carries the lambs in his bosom: but the sheep are
expected to walk, and put up with the inequalities of the road, the bunts and
blunders of the flock. It is to vigour rather than to comfort that you are
called. Since the transcendental aspect of your being has been brought into
focus you are now raised out of the mere push-forward, the blind passage through
time of the flock, into a position of creative responsibility. You are aware of
personal correspondences with the Shepherd. You correspond, too, with a larger,
deeper, broader world. The sky and the hedges, the wide lands through which you
are moving, the corporate character and meaning of the group to which you
belong--all these are now within the circle of your consciousness; and each
little event, each separate demand or invitation which comes to you is now seen
in a truer proportion, because you bring to it your awareness of the Whole. Your
journey ceases to be an automatic progress, and takes on some of the characters
of a free act: for "things" are now under you, you are no longer under them.</p>
<p>You will hardly deny that this is a practical gain: that this
widening and deepening of the range over which your powers of perception work
makes you more of a man than you were before, and thus adds to rather than
subtracts from your total practical efficiency. It is indeed only when he
reaches these levels, and feels within himself this creative freedom--this full
actualisation of himself--on the one hand: on the other hand the sense of a
world-order, a love and energy on which he depends and with whose interests he
is now at one, that man becomes fully human, capable of living the real life of
Eternity in the midst of the world of time.</p>
<p>And what, when you have come to it, do you suppose to be your
own function in this vast twofold scheme? Is it for nothing, do you think, that
you are thus a meeting-place of two orders? Surely it is your business, so far
as you may, to express in action something of the real character of that
universe within which you now know yourself to live? Artists, aware of a more
vivid and more beautiful world than other men, are always driven by their love
and enthusiasm to try and express, bring into direct manifestation, those deeper
significances of form, sound, rhythm, which they have been able to apprehend:
and, doing this, they taste deeper and deeper truths, make ever closer unions
with the Real. For them, the duty of creation is tightly bound up with the gift
of love. In their passionate outflowing to the universe which offers itself
under one of its many aspects to their adoration, that other-worldly fruition of
beauty is always followed, balanced, completed, by a this-world impulse to
creation: a desire to fix within the time-order, and share with other men, the
vision by which they were possessed. Each one, thus bringing new aspects of
beauty, new ways of seeing and hearing within the reach of the race, does
something to amend the sorry universe of common sense, the more hideous universe
of greed, and redeem his fellows from their old, slack servitude to a lower
range of significances. It is in action, then, that these find their truest and
safest point of insertion into the living, active world of Reality: in sharing
and furthering its work of manifestation they know its secrets best. For them
contemplation and action are not opposites, but two interdependent forms of a
life that is <i>one</i>--a life that rushes out to a passionate communion with
the true and beautiful, only that it may draw from this direct experience of
Reality a new intensity wherewith to handle the world of things; and remake it,
or at least some little bit of it, "nearer to the heart's desire."</p>
<p>Again, the great mystics tell us that the "vision of God in His
own light"--the direct contact of the soul's substance with the Absolute--to
which awful experience you drew as near as the quality of your spirit would
permit in the third degree of contemplation, is the prelude, not to a further
revelation of the eternal order given to you, but to an utter change, a vivid
life springing up within you, which they sometimes call the "transforming union"
or the "birth of the Son in the soul." By this they mean that the spark of
spiritual stuff, that high special power or character of human nature, by which
you first desired, then tended to, then achieved contact with Reality, is as it
were fertilised by this profound communion with its origin; becomes strong and
vigorous, invades and transmutes the whole personality, and makes of it, not a
"dreamy mystic" but an active and impassioned servant of the Eternal Wisdom.</p>
<p>So that when these full-grown, fully vital mystics try to tell
us about the life they have achieved, it is always an intensely active life that
they describe. They say, not that they "dwell in restful fruition," though the
deep and joyous knowledge of this, perhaps too the perpetual longing for an
utter self-loss in it, is always possessed by them--but that they "go up <i>and
down</i> the ladder of contemplation." They stretch up towards the Point, the
unique Reality to which all the intricate and many-coloured lines of life flow,
and in which they are merged; and rush out towards those various lives in a
passion of active love and service. This double activity, this swinging between
rest and work--this alone, they say, is truly the life of man; because this
alone represents on human levels something of that inexhaustibly rich yet simple
life, "ever active yet ever at rest," which they find in God. When he gets to
this, then man has indeed actualised his union with Reality; because then he is
a part of the perpetual creative act, the eternal generation of the Divine
thought and love. Therefore contemplation, even at its highest, dearest, and
most intimate, is not to be for you an end in itself. It shall only be truly
yours when it impels you to action: when the double movement of Transcendent
Love, drawing inwards to unity and fruition, and rushing out again to creative
acts, is realised in you. You are to be a living, ardent tool with which the
Supreme Artist works: one of the instruments of His self-manifestation, the
perpetual process by which His Reality is brought into concrete expression.</p>
<p>Now the expression of vision, of reality, of beauty, at an
artist's hands--the creation of new life in all forms--has two factors: the
living moulding creative spirit, and the material in which it works. Between
these two there is inevitably a difference of tension. The material is at best
inert, and merely patient of the informing idea; at worst, directly recalcitrant
to it. Hence, according to the balance of these two factors, the amount of
resistance offered by stuff to tool, a greater or less energy must be expended,
greater or less perfection of result will be achieved. You, accepting the wide
deep universe of the mystic, and the responsibilities that go with it, have by
this act taken sides once for all with creative spirit: with the higher tension,
the unrelaxed effort, the passion for a better, intenser, and more significant
life. The adoration to which you are vowed is not an affair of red hassocks and
authorised hymn books; but a burning and consuming fire. You will find, then,
that the world, going its own gait, busily occupied with its own system of
correspondences--yielding to every gust of passion, intent on the satisfaction
of greed, the struggle for comfort or for power--will oppose your new eagerness;
perhaps with violence, but more probably with the exasperating calmness of a
heavy animal which refuses to get up. If your new life is worth anything, it
will flame to sharper power when it strikes against this dogged inertness of
things: for you need resistances on which to act. "The road to a Yea lies
through a Nay," and righteous warfare is the only way to a living and a lasting
peace.</p>
<p>Further, you will observe more and more clearly, that the stuff
of your external world, the method and machinery of the common life, is not
merely passively but actively inconsistent with your sharp interior vision of
truth. The heavy animal is diseased as well as indolent. All man's perverse ways
of seeing his universe, all the perverse and hideous acts which have sprung from
them--these have set up reactions, have produced deep disorders in the world of
things. Man is free, and holds the keys of hell as well as the keys of heaven.
Within the love-driven universe which you have learned to see as a whole, you
will therefore find egotism, rebellion, meanness, brutality, squalor: the work
of separated selves whose energies are set athwart the stream. But every aspect
of life, however falsely imagined, can still be "saved," turned to the purposes
of Reality: for "all-thing hath the being by the love of God." Its oppositions
are no part of its realness; and therefore they can be overcome. Is there not
here, then, abundance of practical work for you to do; work which is the direct
outcome of your mystical experience? Are there not here, as the French proverb
has it, plenty of cats for you to comb? And isn't it just here, in the new
foothold it gives you, the new clear vision and certitude--in its noble,
serious, and invulnerable faith--that mysticism is "useful"; even for the most
scientific of social reformers, the most belligerent of politicians, the least
sentimental of philanthropists?</p>
<p>To "bring Eternity into Time," the "invisible into concrete
expression"; to "be to the Eternal Goodness what his own hand is to a
man"--these are the plainly expressed desires of all the great mystics. One and
all, they demand earnest and deliberate action, the insertion of the purified
and ardent will into the world of things. The mystics are artists; and the stuff
in which they work is most often human life. They want to heal the disharmony
between the actual and the real: and since, in the white-hot radiance of that
faith, hope, and charity which burns in them, they discern such a reconciliation
to be possible, they are able to work for it with a singleness of purpose and an
invincible optimism denied to other men. This was the instinct which drove St.
Francis of Assist to the practical experience of that poverty which he
recognised as the highest wisdom; St. Catherine of Siena from contemplation to
politics; Joan of Arc to the salvation of France; St. Teresa to the formation of
an ideal religious family; Fox to the proclaiming of a world-religion in which
all men should be guided by the Inner Light; Florence Nightingale to battle with
officials, vermin, dirt, and disease in the soldiers' hospitals; Octavia Hill to
make in London slums something a little nearer "the shadows of the angels'
houses" than that which the practical landlord usually provides.</p>
<p>All these have felt sure that a great part in the drama of
creation has been given to the free spirit of man: that bit by bit, through and
by him, the scattered worlds of love and thought and action shall be realised
again as one. It is for those who have found the thread on which those worlds
are strung, to bring this knowledge out of the hiddenness; to use it, as the old
alchemists declared that they could use their tincture, to transmute all baser;
metals into gold.</p>
<p>So here is your vocation set out: a vocation so various in its
opportunities, that you can hardly fail to find something to do. It is your
business to actualise within the world of time and space--perhaps by great
endeavours in the field of heroic action, perhaps only by small ones in field
and market, tram and tube, office and drawing-room, in the perpetual
give-and-take of the common life--that more real life, that holy creative
energy, which this world manifests as a whole but indifferently. You shall work
for mercy, order, beauty, significance: shall mend where you find things broken,
make where you find the need. "Adoro te devote, latens Deitas," said St. Thomas
in his great mystical hymn: and the practical side of that adoration consists in
the bringing of the Real Presence from its hiddenness, and exhibiting it before
the eyes of other men. Hitherto you have not been very active in this matter:
yet it is the purpose for which you exist, and your contemplative consciousness,
if you educate it, will soon make this fact clear to you. The teeming life of
nature has yielded up to your loving attention many sacramental images of
Reality: seen in the light of charity, it is far more sacred and significant
than you supposed. What about <i>your</i> life? Is that a theophany too? "Each
oak doth cry I AM," says Vaughan. Do you proclaim by your existence the
grandeur, the beauty, the intensity, the living wonder of that Eternal Reality
within which, at this moment, you stand? Do your hours of contemplation and of
action harmonise?</p>
<p>If they did harmonise--if everybody's did--then, by these
individual adjustments the complete group-consciousness of humanity would be
changed, brought back into conformity with the Transcendent; and the spiritual
world would be actualised within the temporal order at last. Then, that world of
false imagination, senseless conflicts, and sham values, into which our children
are now born, would be annihilated. The whole race, not merely a few of its
noblest, most clearsighted spirits, would be "in union with God"; and men,
transfused by His light and heat, direct and willing agents of His Pure
Activity, would achieve that completeness of life which the mystics dare to call
"deification." This is the substance of that redemption of the world, which all
religions proclaim or demand: the consummation which is crudely imagined in the
Apocalyptic dreams of the prophets and seers. It is the true incarnation of the
Divine Wisdom: and you must learn to see with Paul the pains and disorders of
creation--your own pains, efforts, and difficulties too--as incidents in the
travail of that royal birth. Patriots have sometimes been asked to "think
imperially." Mystics are asked to think celestially; and this, not when
considering the things usually called spiritual, but when dealing with the
concrete accidents, the evil and sadness, the cruelty, failure, and degeneration
of life.</p>
<p>So, what is being offered to you is not merely a choice amongst
new states of consciousness, new emotional experiences--though these are indeed
involved in it--but, above all else, a larger and intenser life, a career, a
total consecration to the interests of the Real. This life shall not be abstract
and dreamy, made up, as some imagine, of negations. It shall be violently
practical and affirmative; giving scope for a limitless activity of will, heart,
and mind working within the rhythms of the Divine Idea. It shall cost much,
making perpetual demands on your loyalty, trust, and self-sacrifice: proving now
the need and the worth of that training in renunciation which was forced on you
at the beginning of your interior life. It shall be both deep and wide,
embracing in its span all those aspects of Reality which the gradual extension
of your contemplative powers has disclosed to you: making "the inner and outer
worlds to be indivisibly One." And because the emphasis is now for ever shifted
from the accidents to the substance of life, it will matter little where and how
this career is actualised--whether in convent or factory, study or battlefield,
multitude or solitude, sickness or strength. These fluctuations of circumstance
will no longer dominate you; since "it is Love that payeth for all."</p>
<p>Yet by all this it is not meant that the opening up of the
universe, the vivid consciousness of a living Reality and your relation with it,
which came to you in contemplation, will necessarily be a constant or a
governable feature of your experience. Even under the most favourable
circumstances, you shall and must move easily and frequently between that
spiritual fruition and active work in the world of men. Often enough it will
slip from you utterly; often your most diligent effort will fail to recapture
it, and only its fragrance will remain. The more intense those contacts have
been, the more terrible will be your hunger and desolation when they are thus
withdrawn: for increase of susceptibility means more pain as well as more
pleasure, as every artist knows. But you will find in all that happens to you,
all that opposes and grieves you--even in those inevitable hours of darkness
when the doors of true perception seem to close, and the cruel tangles of the
world are all that you can discern--an inward sense of security which will never
cease. All the waves that buffet you about, shaking sometimes the strongest
faith and hope, are yet parts and aspects of one Ocean. Did they wreck you
utterly, that Ocean would receive you; and there you would find, overwhelming
and transfusing you, the unfathomable Substance of all life and joy. Whether you
realise it in its personal or impersonal manifestation, the universe is now
friendly to you; and as he is a suspicious and unworthy lover who asks every day
for renewed demonstrations of love, so you do not demand from it perpetual
reassurances. It is enough, that once it showed you its heart. A link of love
now binds you to it for evermore: in spite of derelictions, in spite of darkness
and suffering, your will is harmonised with the Will that informs the Whole.</p>
<p>We said, at the beginning of this discussion, that mysticism was
the art of union with Reality: that it was, above all else, a Science of Love.
Hence, the condition to which it looks forward and towards which the soul of the
contemplative has been stretching out, is a condition of <i>being</i>, not of <i>
seeing</i>. As the bodily senses have been produced under pressure of man's
physical environment, and their true aim is not the enhancement of his pleasure
or his knowledge, but a perfecting of his adjustment to those aspects of the
natural world which concern him--so the use and meaning of the spiritual senses
are strictly practical too. These, when developed by a suitable training, reveal
to man a certain measure of Reality: not in order that he may gaze upon it, but
in order that he may react to it, learn to live in, with, and for it; growing
and stretching into more perfect harmony with the Eternal Order, until at last,
like the blessed ones of Dante's vision, the clearness of his flame responds to
the unspeakable radiance of the Enkindling Light.</p>
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