THE SECRET OF STRENGTH
I
STRENGTH to step forward is the primary need of him who has chosen his path. Where is this to be found? Looking round,
it is not hard to see where other men find their strength. Its source is profound conviction. Through this great moral power
is brought to birth in the natural life of the man that which enables him, however frail he may be, to go on and conquer.
Conquer what? Not continents, not worlds, but himself. Through that supreme victory is obtained the entrance to the whole,
where all that might be conquered and obtained by effort becomes at once not his, but himself.
To put on armor and go forth to war, taking the chances of death in the hurry of the fight, is an easy thing; to stand
still amid the jangle of the world, to preserve stillness within the turmoil of the body, to hold silence amid the thousand
cries of the senses and desires, and then, stripped of all armor and without hurry or excitement take the deadly serpent of
self and kill it, is no easy thing. Yet that is what has to be done; and it can only be done in the moment of equilibrium
when the enemy is disconcerted by the silence.
But there is needed for this supreme moment a strength such as no hero of the battlefield needs. A great soldier must be
filled with the profound convictions of the justness of his cause and the rightness of his method. The man who wars against
himself and wins the battle can do it only when he knows that in that war he is doing the one thing which is worth doing,
and when he knows that in doing it he is winning heaven and hell as his servitors. Yes, he stands on both. He needs no heaven
where pleasure comes as a long-promised reward; he fears no hell where pain waits to punish him for his sins. For he has conquered
once for all that shifting serpent in himself which turns from side to side in its constant desire of contact, in its perpetual
search after pleasure and pain. Never again (the victory once really won) can he tremble or grow exultant at any thought of
that which the future holds. Those burning sensations which seemed to him to be the only proofs of his existence are his no
longer. How, then, can he know that he lives? He knows it only by argument. And in time he does not care to argue about it.
For him there is then peace; and he will find in that peace the power he has coveted. Then he will know what is that faith
which can remove mountains.
II
Religion holds a man back from the path, prevents his stepping forward, for various very plain reasons. First, it makes
the vital mistake of distinguishing between good and evil. Nature knows no such distinction; and the moral and social laws
set us by our religions are as temporary, as much a thing of our own special mode and form of existence, as are the moral
and social laws of the ants or the bees. We pass out of that state in which these things appear to be final, and we forget
them forever. This is easily shown, because a man of broad habits of thought and of intelligence must modify his code of life
when he dwells among another people. These people among whom he is an alien have their own deep-rooted religions and hereditary
convictions, against which he cannot offend. Unless his is an abjectly narrow and unthinking mind, he sees that their form
of law and order is as good as his own. What then can he do but reconcile his conduct gradually to their rules? And then if
he dwells among them many years the sharp edge of difference is worn away, and he forgets at last where their faith ends and
his commences. Yet is it for his own people to say he has done wrong, if he has injured no man and remained just?
I am not attacking law and order; I do not speak of these things with rash dislike. In their place they are as vital and
necessary as the code which governs the life of a beehive is to its successful conduct. What I wish to point out is that law
and order in themselves are quite temporary and unsatisfactory. When a man's soul passes away from its brief dwelling-place,
thoughts of law and order do not accompany it. If it is strong, it is the ecstasy of true being and real life which it becomes
possessed of, as all know who have watched by the dying. If the soul is weak, it faints and fades away, overcome by the first
flush of the new life.
Am I speaking too positively? Only those who live in the active life of the moment, who have not watched beside the dead
and dying, who have not walked the battlefield and looked in the faces of men in their last agony, will say so. The strong
man goes forth from his body exultant.
Why? Because he is no longer held back and made to quiver by hesitation. In the strange moment of death he has had release
given him; and with a sudden passion of delight he recognizes that it is release. Had he been sure of this before, he would
have been a great sage, a man to rule the world, for he would have had the power to rule himself and his own body. That release
from the chains of ordinary life can be obtained as easily during life as by death. It only needs a sufficiently profound
conviction to enable the man to look on his body with the same emotions as he would look on the body of another man, or on
the bodies of a thousand men. In contemplating a battlefield it is impossible to realize the agony of every sufferer; why,
then, realize your own pain more keenly than another's? Mass the whole together, and look at it all from a wider standpoint
than that of the individual life. That you actually feel your own physical wound is a weakness of your limitation. The man
who is developed psychically feels the wound of another as keenly as his own, and does not feel his own at all if he is strong
enough to will it so. Every one who has examined at all seriously into psychic conditions knows this to be a fact, more or
less marked, according to the psychic development. In many instances the psychic is more keenly and selfishly aware of his
own pain than of any other person's; but that is when the development, marked perhaps so far as it has gone, only reaches
a certain point. It is the power which carries the man to the margin of that consciousness which is profound peace and vital
activity. It can carry him no further. But if he has reached its margin he is freed from the paltry dominion of his own self.
That is the first great release. Look at the sufferings which come upon us from our narrow and limited experience and sympathy.
We each stand quite alone, a solitary unit, a pygmy in the world. What good fortune can we expect? The great life of the world
rushes by, and we are in danger each instant that it will overwhelm us or even utterly destroy us. There is no defence to
be offered to it; no opposition army can be set up, because in this life every man fights his own battle against every other
man, and no two can be united under the same banner. There is only one way of escape from this terrible danger which we battle
against every hour. Turn round, and instead of standing against the forces, join them; become one with Nature, and go easily
upon her path. Do not resist or resent the circumstances of life any more than the plants resent the rain and the wind. Then
suddenly, to your own amazement, you find you have time and strength to spare, to use in the great battle which it is inevitable
every man must fight, -- that in himself, that which leads to his own conquest.
Some might say, to his own destruction. And why? Because from the hour when he first tastes the splendid reality of living
he forgets more and more his individual self. No longer does he fight for it, or pit its strength against the strength of
others. No longer does he care to defend or to feed it. Yet when he is thus indifferent to its welfare, the individual self
grows more stalwart and robust, like the prairie grasses and the trees of untrodden forests. It is a matter of indifference
to him whether this is so or not. Only, if it is so, he has a fine instrument ready to his hand; and in due proportion to
the completeness of his indifference to it is the strength and beauty of his personal self. This is readily seen; a garden
flower becomes a mere degenerate copy of itself if it is simply neglected; a plant must be cultivated to the highest pitch,
and benefit by the whole of the gardener's skill, or else it must be a pure savage, wild, and fed only by the earth and sky.
Who cares for any intermediate state? What value or strength is there in the neglected garden rose which has the canker in
every bud? For diseased or dwarfed blossoms are sure to result from an arbitrary change of condition, resulting from the neglect
of the man who has hitherto been the providence of the plant in its unnatural life. But there are wind-blown plains where
the daisies grow tall, with moon faces such as no cultivation can produce in them. Cultivate, then, to the very utmost; forget
no inch of your garden ground, no smallest plant that grows in it; make no foolish pretence nor fond mistake in the fancy
that you are ready to forget it, and so subject it to the frightful consequences of half-measures. The plant that is watered
today and forgotten tomorrow must dwindle or decay. The plant that looks for no help but from Nature itself measures its strength
at once, and either dies and is re-created or grows into a great tree whose boughs fill the sky. But make no mistake like
the religionists and some philosophers; leave no part of yourself neglected while you know it to be yourself. While the ground
is the gardener's it is his business to tend it; but some day a call may come to him from another country or from death itself,
and in a moment he is no longer the gardener, his business is at an end, he has no more duty of that kind at all. Then his
favorite plants suffer and die, and the delicate ones become one with the earth. But soon fierce Nature claims the place for
her own, and covers it with thick grass or giant weeds, or nurses some sapling in it till its branches shade the ground. Be
warned, and tend your garden to the utmost, till you can pass away utterly and let it return to Nature and become the wind-blown
plain where the wild-flowers grow. Then, if you pass that way and look at it, whatever has happened will neither grieve nor
elate you. For you will be able to say, "I am the rocky ground, I am the great tree, I am the strong daisies," indifferent
which it is that flourishes where once your rose-trees grew. But you must have learned to study the stars to some purpose
before you dare to neglect your roses, and omit to fill the air with their cultivated fragrance. You must know your way through
the trackless air, and from thence to the pure ether; you must be ready to lift the bar of the Golden Gate.
Cultivate, I say, and neglect nothing. Only remember, all the while you tend and water, that you are impudently usurping
the tasks of Nature herself. Having usurped her work, you must carry it through until you have reached a point when she has
no power to punish you, when you are not afraid of her, but can with a bold front return her her own. She laughs in her sleeve,
the mighty mother, watching you with covert, laughing eye, ready relentlessly to cast the whole of your work into the dust
if you do but give her the chance, if you turn idler and grow careless. The idler is father of the madman in the sense that
the child is the father of the man. Nature has put her vast hand on him and crushed the whole edifice. The gardener and his
rose-trees are alike broken and stricken by the great storm which her movement has created; they lie helpless till the sand
is swept over them and they are buried in a weary wilderness. From this desert spot Nature herself will re-create, and will
use the ashes of the man who dared to face her as indifferently as the withered leaves of his plants. His body, soul, and
spirit are all alike claimed by her.
III
The man who is strong, who has resolved to find the unknown path, takes with the utmost care every step. He utters no idle
word, he does no unconsidered action, he neglects no duty or office however homely or however difficult. But while his eyes
and hands and feet are thus fulfiling their tasks, new eyes and hands and feet are being born within him. For his passionate
and unceasing desire is to go that way on which the subtile organs only can guide him. The physical world he has learned,
and knows how to use; gradually his power is passing on, and he recognizes the psychic world. But he has to learn this world
and know how to use it, and he dare not lose hold of the life he is familiar with till he has taken hold of that with which
he is unfamiliar. When he has acquired such power with his psychic organs as the infant has with its physical organs when
it first opens its lungs, then is the hour for the great adventure. How little is needed -- yet how much that is! The man
does but need the psychic body to be formed in all parts, as is an infant's; he does but need the profound and unshakable
conviction which impels the infant, that the new life is desirable. Once those conditions gained and he may let himself live
in the new atmosphere and look up to the new sun. But then he must remember to check his new experience by the old. He is
breathing still, though differently; he draws air into his lungs, and takes life from the sun. He has been born into the psychic
world, and depends now on the psychic air and light. His goal is not here: this is but a subtile repetition of physical life;
he has to pass through it according to similar laws. He must study, learn, grow, and conquer; never forgetting the while that
his goal is that place where there is no air nor any sun or moon.
Do not imagine that in this line of progress the man himself is being moved or changing his place. Not so. The truest illustration
of the process is that of cutting through layers of crust or skin. The man, having learned his lesson fully, casts off the
physical life; having learned his lesson fully, casts off the psychic life; having learned his lesson fully, casts off the
contemplative life, or life of adoration.
All are cast aside at last, and he enters the great temple where any memory of self or sensation is left outside as the
shoes are cast from the feet of the worshipper. That temple is the place of his own pure divinity, the central flame which,
however obscured, has animated him through all these struggles. And having found this sublime home he is sure as the heavens
themselves. He remains still, filled with all knowledge and power. The outer man, the adoring, the acting, the living personification,
goes its own way hand in hand with Nature, and shows all the superb strength of the savage growth of the earth, lit by that
instinct which contains knowledge. For in the inmost sanctuary, in the actual temple, the man has found the subtile essence
of Nature herself. No longer can there be any difference between them or any half-measures. And now comes the hour of action
and power. In that inmost sanctuary all is to be found: God and his creatures, the fiends who prey on them, those among men
who have been loved, those who have been hated. Difference between them exists no longer. Then the soul of man laughs in its
strength and fearlessness, and goes forth into the world in which its actions are needed, and causes these actions to take
place without apprehension, alarm, fear, regret, or joy.
This state is possible to man while yet he lives in the physical; for men have attained it while living. It alone can make
actions in the physical divine and true.
Life among objects of sense must forever be an outer shape to the sublime soul, -- it can only become powerful life, the
life of accomplishment, when it is animated by the crowned and indifferent god that sits in the sanctuary.
The obtaining of this condition is so supremely desirable because from the moment it is entered there is no more trouble,
no more anxiety, no more doubt or hesitation. As a great artist paints his picture fearlessly and never committing any error
which causes him regret, so the man who has formed his inner self deals with his life.
But that is when the condition is entered. That which we who look towards the mountains hunger to know is the mode of entrance
and the way to the Gate. The Gate is that Gate of Gold barred by a heavy bar of iron. The way to the threshold of it turns
a man giddy and sick. It seems no path, it seems to end perpetually, its way lies along hideous precipices, it loses itself
in deep waters.
Once crossed and the way found it appears wonderful that the difficulty should have looked so great. For the path where
it disappears does but turn abruptly, its line upon the precipice edge is wide enough for the feet, and across the deep waters
that look so treacherous there is always a ford and a ferry. So it happens in all profound experiences of human nature. When
the first grief tears the heart asunder it seems that the path has ended and a blank darkness taken the place of the sky.
And yet by groping the soul passes on, and that difficult and seemingly hopeless turn in the road is passed.
So with many another form of human torture. Sometimes throughout a long period or a whole lifetime the path of existence
is perpetually checked by what seem like insurmountable obstacles. Grief, pain, suffering, the loss of all that is beloved
or valued, rise up before the terrified soul and check it at every turn. Who places those obstacles there? The reason shrinks
at the childish dramatic picture which the religionists place before it, -- God permitting the Devil to torment His creatures
for their ultimate good! When will that ultimate good be attained? The idea involved in this picture supposes an end, a goal.
There is none. We can any one of us safely assent to that; for as far as human observation, reason, thought, intellect, or
instinct can reach towards grasping the mystery of life, all data obtained show that the path is endless and that eternity
cannot be blinked and converted by the idling soul into a million years.
In man, taken individually or as a whole, there clearly exists a double constitution. I am speaking roughly now, being
well aware that the various schools of philosophy cut him up and subdivide him according to their several theories. What I
mean is this: that two great tides of emotion sweep through his nature, two great forces guide his life; the one makes him
an animal, and the other makes him a god. No brute of the earth is so brutal as the man who subjects his godly power to his
animal power. This is a matter of course, because the whole force of the double nature is then used in one direction. The
animal pure and simple obeys his instincts only and desires no more than to gratify his love of pleasure; he pays but little
regard to the existence of other beings except in so far as they offer him pleasure or pain; he knows nothing of the abstract
love of cruelty or of any of those vicious tendencies of the human being which have in themselves their own gratification.
Thus the man who becomes a beast has a million times the grasp of life over the natural beast, and that which in the pure
animal is sufficiently innocent enjoyment, uninterrupted by an arbitrary moral standard, becomes in him vice, because it is
gratified on principle. Moreover he turns all the divine powers of his being into this channel, and degrades his soul by making
it the slave of his senses. The god, deformed and disguised, waits on the animal and feeds it.
Consider then whether it is not possible to change the situation. The man himself is king of the country in which this
strange spectacle is seen. He allows the beast to usurp the place of the god because for the moment the beast pleases his
capricious royal fancy the most. This cannot last always; why let it last any longer? So long as the animal rules there will
be the keenest sufferings in consequence of change, of the vibration between pleasure and pain, of the desire for prolonged
and pleasant physical life. And the god in his capacity of servant adds a thousand-fold to all this, by making physical life
so much more filled with keenness of pleasure, -- rare, voluptuous, aesthetic pleasure, -- and by intensity of pain so passionate
that one knows not where it ends and where pleasure commences. So long as the god serves, so long the life of the animal will
be enriched and increasingly valuable. But let the king resolve to change the face of his court and forcibly evict the animal
from the chair of state, restoring the god to the place of divinity.
Ah, the profound peace that falls upon the palace! All is indeed changed. No longer is there the fever of personal longings
or desires, no longer is there any rebellion or distress, no longer any hunger for pleasure or dread of pain. It is like a
great calm descending on a stormy ocean; it is like the soft rain of summer falling on parched ground; it is like the deep
pool found amidst the weary, thirsty labyrinths of the unfriendly forest.
But there is much more than this. Not only is man more than an animal because there is the god in him, but he is more than
a god because there is the animal in him.
Once force the animal into his rightful place, that of the inferior, and you find yourself in possession of a great force
hitherto unsuspected and unknown. The god as servant adds a thousand-fold to the pleasures of the animal; the animal as servant
adds a thousand-fold to the powers of the god. And it is upon the union, the right relation of these two forces in himself,
that man stands as a strong king, and is enabled to raise his hand and lift the bar of the Golden Gate. When these forces
are unfitly related, then the king is but a crowned voluptuary, without power, and whose dignity does but mock him; for the
animals, undivine, at least know peace and are not torn by vice and despair.
That is the whole secret. That is what makes man strong, powerful, able to grasp heaven and earth in his hands.
Mabel Collins, The Path