AE in the Irish Theosophist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about AE in the Irish Theosophist.

AE in the Irish Theosophist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about AE in the Irish Theosophist.
arrange themselves in order.  He seemed to himself to have fallen downwards through a long series of lines of ever-lessening beauty—­fallen downwards from the mansions of eternity into this truckling and hideous life.  As Harvey walked homewards through the streets, some power must have guided his steps, for he saw or knew nothing of what was about him.  With the sense of the reality of his imaginations came an energy he had never before felt:  his soul took complete possession of him:  he knew, though degraded, that he was a spirit.  Then, in that supreme moment, gathered about him the memories of light and darkness, and they became the lips through which eternal powers spake to him in a tongue unlike the speech of men.  The spirit of light was behind the visions of mystical beauty:  the spirit of darkness arrayed itself in the desires of clay.  These powers began to war within him:  he heard voices as of Titans talking.

The spirit of light spake within him and said—­“Arouse now, and be thou my voice in this dead land.  There are many things to be spoken and sung—­of dead language the music and significance, old world philosophies; you will be the singer of the sweetest songs; stories wilder and stranger than any yet will I tell you—­deeds forgotten of the vaporous and dreamy prime.

The voice came yet again closer, full of sweet promise, with magical utterance floating around him.  He became old—­inconceivably old and young together.  He was astonished in the wonders of the primal world.  Chaos with tremendous agencies, serpentine powers, strange men-beasts and men-birds, the crude first thought of awakening nature was before him; from inconceivable heights of starlike purity he surveyed it; he went forth from glory; he descended and did battle; he warred with behemeths, with the flying serpents and the monstrous creeping things.  With the Lords of Air he descended and conquered; he dwelt in a new land, a world of light, where all things were of light, where the trees put forth leaves of living green, where the rose would blossom into a rose of light and lily into a white radiance, and over the vast of gleaming plains and through the depths of luminous forests, the dreaming rivers would roll in liquid and silver flame.  Often he joined in the mad dance upon the highlands, whirling round and round until the dark grass awoke fiery with rings of green under the feet.  And so, on and on through endless transformations he passed, and he saw how the first world of dark elements crept in upon the world of beauty, clothing it around with grossness and veiling its fires; and the dark spirits entered by subtle ways into the spheres of the spirits of light, and became as a mist over memory and a chain upon speed; the earth groaned with the anguish.  Then this voice cried within him—­“Come forth; come out of it; come out, oh king, to the ancestral spheres, to the untroubled spiritual life.  Out of the furnace, for it leaves you dust.  Come away, oh king, to old dominion and celestial sway; come out to the antique glory!”

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AE in the Irish Theosophist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.