<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MRS. BESANT ON DEATH AND AFTER. </h2>
<p>When we first criticised Mrs. Besant's newly-found Theosophy, and thereby
incurred her severe displeasure, we predicted that her enthusiastic nature
would carry her far on the road, which she thought of true philosophy, but
which we thought of gross superstition. Our prediction has been realised;
and, unless for some accident, or some sudden turn in Mrs. Besant's mind
or life, it will be realised still further. In this, as in other matters
(as the French say) it is the first step which costs, because it involves
all the following steps. Mrs. Besant placed her feet upon the high road of
credulity when she succumbed to the Theosophical high priestess, whose
life is a highly interesting and instructive chapter in the history of
imposture. Madame Blavatsky had seen much of the world, and was up to most
things. She had a surprising power of bamboozling people of some
intelligence and culture. The broad-set eyes, and the great tiger-bar
between and over them, indicated the species to which she belonged. Mrs.
Besant, with her innocences and enthusiasms, was a baby in the hands of
this female Cagliostro. She actually gave the Blavatsky credit for what
she obviously did not possess. Her manners, for instance, were not such as
might be expected from one who had tasted of spiritual wisdom at its
secret sources; while her pretentious ignorance was enough to alarm any
student not under the glamor of her audacity. She made the most grotesque
mistakes in science, while pompously setting right in their own province
such colossal authorities as Darwin and Haeckel. She had certainly read
very widely (or got others to read very widely for her) in "occult"
literature; but wherever one's own knowledge enabled one to test, she was
a poor smatterer; and the same judgment is delivered upon her by
specialists in most of the fields she invaded. It was not her learning or
her intellectual power that captivated Mrs. Besant; it was her strong
personality, her masculine dominance, her crafty self-possession. From the
first minute of her enchantment, Mrs. Besant lost all sense of logic in
relation to Theosophy. For instance, it was asserted, and the assertion
was supported by positive, detailed-evidence, that the Blavatsky had
practised the grossest imposture in India. And how did Mrs. Besant dispose
of these charges? She says she read them, and immediately joined the
Theosophical Society—as though that were any <i>answer</i>. It is
like saying, "I don't rebut the evidence against the prisoner in the dock,
but I shall shake hands with him." What possible effect could that have on
the sensible part of the jury? But this sort of logic has been displayed
by Mrs. Besant ever since; indeed, she seems to have a dim perception of
her weakness, for she dares not discuss Theosophy, or any part of it, with
an out-and-out Freethinker—one who would subject it to the critical
tests with which she herself was familiar when she stood upon the Secular
platform.</p>
<p>There is one aspect of Mrs. Besant's advocacy of Theosophy which we
censured at first, and which we now think is something short of honest.
Mrs. Besant used to present Secularism in its naked truth, to be embraced
or rejected; but she follows a different course in regard to Theosophy;
she puts its plausible features forward and conceals the rest, so that
people who have heard her are positively astonished when they are told of
some of her printed teachings. This seems especially the case when she
addresses meetings, somewhat too chivalrously organised by Freethinkers.
Now this is not fair, it is not really honest; though it may be in accord
with the ethics of those who divide truth into "exoteric" and "esoteric."
To our mind, it is rather suggestive of the spider and the fly. "Will you
walk into my parlor?" "Oh yes," says the giddy fly, "it looks so nice,
positively inviting?" But what of the other rooms in your house; your
garret near the sky, where you do star-gazing, and your basement, where
crawl the foul things of savage superstition?</p>
<p>Many of our readers have heard Mrs. Besant in the sweet persuasive vein,
and felt pleased if rather muddled. For their sakes, and not for our own
satisfaction, we shall criticise her little volume on <i>Death—and
After?</i> just issued as No. III. of a series of Theosophical Manuals.
When we have done they will know more about Theosophy than if they had
listened to Mrs. Besant (especially from Freethought platforms) for ten
thousand years.</p>
<p>First, let us notice Mrs. Besant's attitude. Her devotion to the Blavatsky
is complete; she mentions the great woman with profound veneration, swears
to all she taught, and, in fact, just stews down the Blavatsky's
voluminous nonsense. Mrs. Besant is also a patient disciple of the Masters—to
wit, the Mahatmas. These Masters of Wisdom never appear for inspection.
They lurk in the secret fastnesses of Tibet, which is a very unexplored
part of the world, large enough to hide a good many things, even things
that do not exist. They know a lot, but what dribbles out of them is very
commonplace when it is not pompously silly. They inhabit higher planes of
life than our greatest saints and sages, but somehow they have done
nothing for Tibet, which is one of the poorest, dirtiest, and most
degraded countries on earth. Still, they are going to give a tremendous
lift to the civilisation of Europe; and if we live long enough we shall
see what we <i>do</i> see. Mahatmas are really the distinctive feature of
Theosophy; it is absolutely nothing without them; and, in our opinion,
they are a most farcical swindle Madame Blavatsky created <i>these</i> out
of her own fertile imagination, she put them where they could not be
found, and she said, "If you want to know anything about them come to me;
I am the chosen vehicle of their sublime revelations." And if you laughed
at her Mahatmas, she was capable of indulging in expletives that would
strike envy into the soul of a trooper. How curious it is, if these
Mahatmas are real personages, that they do not communicate with <i>our</i>
Masters of Wisdom. Why do they neglect our Spencers and Huxleys? Why do
they choose to speak through a woman like Madame Blavatsky, or a popular
lecturess like Mrs. Besant? Why are they so fond of the ladies? Cannot
they have some dealings with <i>a man</i>, a man of great eminence as a
philosopher, of high and undisputed character, and of vast influence with
the educated and thoughtful classes? Why, in short, do the Mahatmas
confine their attention to smaller persons <i>with fish to fry?</i></p>
<p>Relying upon these Mahatmas, and upon Madame Blavatsky, her great guide,
philosopher, and friend, Mrs. Besant has an extremely easy task. She makes
no attempt to prove, she simply asserts, and it seems to be a kind of
blasphemy to ask for evidence. She dishes everything up in Hindu
terminology, on the ground that "the English language has as yet no
equivalents." But will it ever have them? Never, we suspect, by the
assistance of Theosophists. The oriental lingo is part of the fascination
to those who like to look profound on a small stock of learning. Besides,
it imposes on the open-mouthed; and, if the Hindu terminology were
translated into vernacular English, they would probably exclaim, "Good
God! there's nothing in it." It is all very well for Mrs. Besant to pour
out second-hand praise of "technical terms." We all know their value. But
how is it we have not got them already? Because—and this is the only
answer—because we are ignorant of the <i>things</i>. Western
experience does not coincide with oriental dreams.</p>
<p>Mrs. Besant opens her little volume with the famous story of the
conversion to Christianity of Edwin, but she tells it very loosely, and in
fact wrongly; which is a proof that the infallibility of the Mahatmas has
not fallen upon their disciple. She states that while Paulinus, the
Christian missionary, was speaking to-Edwin of life, death, and
immortality, a bird flew in through a window, circled the hall, and flew
out again into the darkness; whereupon the Christian priest "bade the king
see in the flight of the bird within the-hall the transitory life of man,
and claimed for his faith that it showed the soul, in passing from the'
hall of life, winging its way, not in the darkness of night, but in the
sunlit radiance of a more glorious world." Now the bird did not fly into
the hall as Paulinus was speaking, nor did he preach this sermon upon its
movements. It was one of Edwin's suite who introduced the bird's flight as
a metaphor, reminding the king that sometimes at supper, in the winter, a
sparrow would fly in out of the storm, entering at one door and passing
out at another, staying but a minute, and after that minute returning to
winter as from winter it came. "Such is the life of man," said the Saxon
speaker, "and of what follows it, or what has preceded it, we are
altogether ignorant; wherefore, if this new doctrine should bring anything
more certain, it well deserves to be followed." This is how the incident
is related by Bede, though it is probably apocryphal; nevertheless it
ought not to be hashed up by fresh cooks; and if the matter is in itself
of trifling importance, it is as well to be accurate, especially when you
pretend a close acquaintance with the Masters of Wisdom.</p>
<p>Many hundred years have elapsed since Paulinus talked with Edwin, and
to-day, says Mrs. Besant, there are "more people in Christendom who
question whether a man has a spirit to come anywhence or to go
any-whither, than, perhaps, in the world's history could ever before have
been found at one time." We are also reminded that man has always been
asking whence the soul comes, and whither it goes, and "the answers have
varied with the faiths." <i>This</i> is true, at any rate; but it does not
suggest to Mrs. Besant any lesson of modesty or hesitation. Despite the
discord of so many ages, she is most coolly dogmatic. It does not,
apparently, occur to her to ask <i>why</i> the discord has perpetually
prevailed. In matters of science, after investigation and discussion, the
world comes to an agreement; in matters of theology (or, if you like,
Theosophy) the world grows more and more at variance. <i>Why</i> is this?
There must be an explanation. And to our mind the explanation is very
simple. In matters of science men deal with <i>facts</i>, while in those
other matters they deal with <i>fancies</i>, and the more freedom you give
them the greater will be the variety of their preferences.</p>
<p>Mrs. Besant's new superstition of Theosophy is, in our judgment, more
foolish and less dignified than Christianity. We are therefore moved to
say that she does injustice to Christianity in representing it as
responsible for all the black paraphernalia and lugubrious ceremonies of
death. There was, indeed, nothing of all this among the primitive
Christians. Such things belong to the world's common customs and
superstitions. Black was not merely a sign of sorrow, or at least of
depression; it was also thought to be protective against ghosts; so that
these trappings and suits of woe belong to the very "spookology" which is
an integral part of Theosophy. Of course I freely admit that the ordinary
gloom of death has been deepened by the Christian doctrine of hell, though
Mrs. Besant seems to think otherwise. She inclines to the belief that the
Western fear of death is ethnological, being the antithesis of its
vigorous life. But it may be objected that the old Romans were
comparatively free from this terror. On the other hand, it must be allowed
that Mrs. Besant is right in her observation that "the more mystical
dreamy East" has little dread of the "shadow cloaked from head to foot,"
since it is ever ever seeking to escape from "from the thraldom of the
senses," and is apt to look upon "the disembodied state as eminently
desirable and as most conducive to unfettered thought." In other words,
that "when the brains are out," as Macbeth says, man's intellect undergoes
a wonderful improvement; an opinion, by the way, which is quite in harmony
with Theosophical teaching.</p>
<p>After giving the Theosophical view of the "body," Mrs. Besant says that
when once we <i>thus</i> come to regard it, death loses all its terrors.
But this is not the sole achievement of Theosophy. What terror had death
to Charles Bradlaugh? What terror had death to Mrs. Besant while she was
an Atheist? There are thousands of sceptics who do not want Theosophy to
redeem them from a terror which they have long cast behind them, with the
superstition by which it was bred and cherished.</p>
<p>Let us pause to remark that Mrs. Besant quotes from <i>Paradise Lost</i>
its magnificent description of Death. She appreciates at least the
splendor of the diction, but she does not notice how poor in comparison
are the words she quotes from her "Masters." How is it that Milton beats
the Mahatmas? What objects they look when the great English poet rises
"with his singing robes about him"! How thin their music when he strikes
upon his thrilling lyre, or blows his rousing trumpet, or rolls from his
mighty organ the floods of entrancing harmony!</p>
<p>But to return to the main subject. It is absurd, as Mrs. Besant points
out, to claim for Christianity that it "brought life and immortality to
light." The belief in a future life was an intense conviction—or,
perhaps we should say, a perfect truism—among the people of ancient
India and Egypt. Yet here again, with her taste for dogmatic rhetoric,
Mrs. Besant gratuitously exaggerates. "The whole ancient world," she says,
"basked in the full sunshine of belief in the immortality of man, lived in
it daily, voiced it in their literature, and went with it in calm serenity
through the gate of Death." Now "calm serenity" is bad tautology, and the
general assertion of this passage is equally open to censure. "The whole
ancient world," as the Americans would say, is a large order. Greece and
Rome (to say nothing of the pre-Maccabean Jews) were very important parts
of "the whole ancient world," and whoever asserts that <i>their</i>
citizens "basked in the sunshine of belief in immortality" is simply
making a confession of ignorance. Greek and Roman poets and philosophers
in many cases doubted, or even denied, a life beyond the grave. Even when
the doctrine was entertained it does not appear to have been productive of
much "sunshine." Does not the poet make the shade of the great Achilles
say that he would rather be the veriest day-drudge on earth than command
all the armies of the ghosts in the cold pale realm of the dead? We do not
ignore, on the other hand, the Islands of the Blest; we are only objecting
to Mrs. Besant's loose and sweeping assertions, which prove very clearly
that her new "faith" is not remarkable in the cultivation of accuracy.</p>
<p>With regard to man—the <i>entire</i> human being, mortal and
immortal—Mrs. Besant remarks that "un-instructed Christians" chop
him into two, the body-that perishes at death, and the "something that
survives death." She omits to notice that a good many Christians chop him
into three, to say nothing of others, like the Christadelphians, who leave
him one and indivisible. Mrs. Besant, for her part, as a true
Theo-sophist, goes farther than the sharpest Christian dissectors. She
chops man into <i>seven</i>. When she was a Materialist she never
suspected that her nature was so composite, and we are still in the same
benighted condition. One begins to feel that the injunction, "Man, know
thyself," is a terrible burden. It is hard enough to get a fair knowledge
of our organism, its physical constitution, its intellectual faculties,
and its moral tendencies; but the task is absolutely appalling when, we
have to get a satisfactory knowledge of our Atma, our Buddhi, our Manas,
our Kama, our Prana, our Linga Sharira, and our Sthula Sharira. Anyone who
can master all that may as well go on unto seventy times seven.</p>
<p>The immortal soul consists of the upper three, which are a trinity in
everlasting unity. The heavens may wax old as a garment, but they "go on
for ever," and flourish in immortal youth. Death is the first step in the
process of their separation from the lower and perishable four. One after
another of these is shed, as the serpent sloughs its skin, or the
butterfly its chrysalis; or, to use a more familiar and pungent
illustration, which we make a present of to Mrs. Besant, as you peel an
onion, fold after fold, until you get to the tender core. Sthula Sharira
goes first, and the organism becomes a corpse, which is buried, or
cremated, or eaten by cannibals. Linga Sharira, the Astral Double, had
been attached to it by a "delicate cord," which is our old friend "the
thread of life"—a convenient metaphor turned into a positive
proposition. This delicate cord is snapped, not immediately, "but some
hours" (as many as thirty-six occasionally) after "apparent death." It is
necessary, therefore, to be very quiet in the death-chamber, while the
Linga Sharira is eloping. One shudders to think of what might happen, of
the indecent haste to which Number Six might be compelled, if a corpse
were cremated a few hours after death; the corpse, for instance, of a man
who died from cholera or the plague.</p>
<p>This "delicate cord" which attaches Number Seven to Number Six is
perceptible if your eyes are constructed that way; that is, if you are a
clairvoyant, one who is able to see beyond the real. Mrs. Besant does not
say she has seen it herself; indeed, she is always relying on someone
else. She refers us to Andrew Jackson Davis, the "Poughkeepsie Seer" (and
a Spiritist, though she does not say so), who "watched this escape of the
ethereal body" and states that "the magnetic cord did not break for some
thirty-six hours." "Others," says Mrs. Besant, "have described, in similar
terms, how they saw a faint violet mist rise from the dying body,
gradually condensing into a figure which was the counterpart of the
expiring person, and attached to that person by a glittering thread." Thus
the attachment is "delicate," "magnetic," and "glittering." In the course
of time, we dare say, it will be decorated with a much larger variety of
adjectives. Meanwhile we may observe that if Mrs. Besant were to preach
this sort of "higher wisdom" to savages she would find an attentive and
sympathetic audience. The violet mist, the Astral Double, and the
delicate, magnetic, glittering cord, are things that they are to some
extent already familiar with; and if she could only get them to accept her
terminology, and talk of Sthula Sharira and Linga Sharira, they would be
extremely promising candidates for the Theosophical kingdom of heaven.</p>
<p>Mrs. Besant tells us that the Linga Sharira, or Astral Double, rots away
(disintegrates) in time. It is "the ethereal counterpart of the gross body
of man," and takes a longer time in dropping into nothingness.</p>
<p>"Sometimes this Double is seen by persons in the house, or in the
neighborhood... the Double may be seen or heard; when seen it shows the
dreamy hazy consciousness alluded to, is silent, vague in its aspect, and
unresponsive.... This astral corpse remains near the physical one, and
they disintegrate together; clairvoyants see these astral wraiths in
churchyards, sometimes showing likeness of the dead body, sometimes as
violet mists or lights. Such an astral corpse has been seen by a friend of
my own."</p>
<p>At this point we think it well to part company with Mrs. Besant. Who would
have imagined, ten years ago, that the colleague of Charles Bradlaugh
would ever descend so far into superstition as to write and talk seriously
about churchyard spooks? What she may have to say about Theosophy after
this can hardly be of interest to any thoroughly sane person. We therefore
close with an expression of profound regret that an earnest, eloquent lady
who once did such service in the cause of progress, should thus fall a
victim to some of the most childish superstitions of the human race.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />