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.

We are outcasts from Deity; therefore we defame the place of our exile.  But who is there may set apart his destiny from the earth which bore him?  I am one of those who would bring back the old reverence for the Mother, the magic, the love.  I think, metaphysician, you have gone astray.  You would seek within yourself for the fountain of life.  Yes, there is the true, the only light.  But do not dream it will lead you further away from the earth, but rather deeper into its heart.  By it you are nourished with those living waters you would drink.  You are yet in the womb and unborn, and the Mother breathes for thee the diviner airs.  Dart out thy furthest ray of thought to the original, and yet thou has not found a new path of thine own.  Thy ray is still enclosed in the parent ray, and only on the sidereal streams are you borne to the freedom of the deep, to the sacred stars whose distance maddens, and to the lonely Light of Lights.

Let us, therefore, accept the conditions and address ourselves with wonder, with awe, with love, as we well may, to that being in whom we move.  I abate no jot of those vaster hopes, yet I would pursue that ardent aspiration, content as to here and today.  I do not believe in a nature red with tooth and claw.  If indeed she appears so terrible to any it is because they themselves have armed her.  Again, behind the anger of the Gods there is a love.  Are the rocks barren?  Lay thy brow against them and learn what memories they keep.  Is the brown earth unbeautiful?  Yet lie on the breast of the Mother and thou shalt be aureoled with the dews of faery.  The earth is the entrance to the Halls of Twilight.  What emanations are those that make radiant the dark woods of pine!  Round every leaf and tree and over all the mountains wave the fiery tresses of that hidden sun which is the soul of the earth and parent of they soul.  But we think of these things no longer.  Like the prodigal we have wandered far from our home, but no more return.  We idly pass or wait as strangers in the halls our spirit built.

Sad or fain no more to live? 
        I have pressed the lips of pain: 
With the kisses lovers give
        Ransomed ancient powers again.

I would raise this shrinking soul to a more universal acceptance.  What! does it aspire to the All, and yet deny by its revolt and inner protest the justice of Law.  From sorrow we shall take no less and no more than from our joys.  For if the one reveals to the soul the mode by which the power overflows and fills it here, the other indicates to it the unalterable will which checks excess and leads it on to true proportion and its own ancestral ideal.  Yet men seem for ever to fly from their destiny of inevitable beauty; because of delay the power invites and lures no longer but goes out into the highways with a hand of iron.  We look back cheerfully enough upon those old trials out of which we have passed; but we have gleaned only an aftermath of wisdom and missed the full harvest if the will has not risen royally at the moment in unison with the will of the Immortal, even though it comes rolled round with terror and suffering and strikes at the heart of clay.

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