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THE MANY-COLOURED LAND
I have always been curious about
the psychology of my own vision as desirous
of imparting it, and I wish in this book to relate the efforts of an artist and
poet to discover what truth lay in his own imaginations. I have brooded longer
over the nature of imagination than I have lingered over the canvas where I
tried to rebuild my vision. Spiritual moods are difficult to express and cannot
be argued over, but the workings of imagination may well be spoken of, and need
precise and minute investigation. I surmise from my reading of the psychologists
who treat of this that they themselves were without this faculty and spoke of it
as blind men who would fain draw although without vision. We are overcome when
we read Prometheus Unbound, but who, as he reads, flings off the
enchantment to ponder in what state was the soul of Shelley in that ecstasy of
swift creation. Who has questioned the artist to whom the forms of his thought are
vivid as the forms of nature? Artist and poet have rarely been curious about the
processes of their own minds. Yet it is reasonable to assume that the highest
ecstasy and vision are conditioned by law and attainable by all, and this might
be argued as of more importance even than the message of the seers. I attribute
to that unwavering meditation and fiery concentration of will a growing
luminousness in my brain as if I had unsealed in the body a fountain of interior
light. Normally we close our eyes on a cloudy gloom through which vague forms
struggle sometimes into definiteness. But the luminous quality gradually became
normal in me, and at times in meditation there broke in on me an almost
intolerable lustre of light, pure and shining faces, dazzling processions of
figures, most ancient, ancient places and peoples, and landscapes lovely as the
lost Eden. These appeared at first to have no more relation to myself than
images from a street without one sees reflected in a glass; but at times
meditation prolonged itself into spheres which were radiant with actuality.
Once, drawn by some inner impulse to meditate at an unusual hour, I
found quick oblivion of the body. The blood and heat of the brain ebbed from me as an
island fades in the mists behind a swift vessel fleeting into light. The ways
were open within. I rose through myself and suddenly felt as if I had awakened
from dream. Where was I? In what city? Here were hills crowned with glittering
temples, and the ways, so far as I could see, were thronged with most beautiful
people, swaying as if shaken by some ecstasy running through all as if the Dark
Hidden Father was breathing rapturous life within His children. Did I wear to
them an aspect like their own? Was I visible to them as a new-comer in their
land of lovely light? I could not know, but those nigh me flowed towards me with
outstretched hands. I saw eyes with a beautiful flame of love in them looking
into mine. But I could stay no longer for something below drew me down and I was
again an exile from light.
There came through meditation a more powerful orientation of my being as if
to a hidden sun, and my thoughts turned more and more to the spiritual life of
Earth. All the needles of being pointed to it. I felt instinctively that all I
saw in vision was part of the life of Earth which is a court where there
are many starry palaces. There the Planetary Spirit was King, and that Spirit
manifesting through the substance of Earth, the Mighty Mother, was, I felt, the
being I groped after as God. The love I had for nature as garment of that deity
grew deeper. That which was my own came to me as it comes to all men. That which
claimed me drew me to itself. I had my days and nights of freedom. How often did
I start in the sunshine of a Sabbath morning, setting my face to the hills,
feeling somewhat uncertain as a lover who draws nigh to a beauty he adores, who
sometimes will yield everything to him and sometimes is silent and will only
endure his presence. I did not know what would happen to me, but I was always
expectant, and walked up to the mountains as to the throne of God. Step by step
there fell from me the passions and fears of the week-day, until, as I reached
the hillside and lay on the grassy slope with shut eyes, I was bare of all but
desire for the Eternal. I was once more the child close to the Mother. She
rewarded me by lifting for me a little the veil which hides her true face. To
those high souls who know their kinship the veil is lifted, her face is
revealed, and her face is like a bride's. Petty as was my everyday life,
with the fears and timidities which abnormal sensitiveness
begets, in those moments of vision I understood instinctively the high mood they
must keep who would walk with the highest; and who with that divine face
glimmering before him could do aught but adore!
There is an instinct which stills the lips which would speak of mysteries
whose day for revelation has not drawn nigh. The little I know of these I shall
not speak of It is always lawful to speak of that higher wisdom which relates
our spiritual being to that multitudinous unity which is God and Nature and Man.
The only justification for speech from me, rather than from others whose
knowledge is more profound, is that the matching of words to thoughts is an art
I have practised more. What I say may convey more of truth, as the skilled
artist, painting a scene which he views for the first time, may yet suggest more
beauty and enchantment than the habitual dweller, unskilled in art, who may yet
know the valley he loves so intimately that he could walk blindfold from end to
end.
I do not wish to write a book of wonders, but rather to bring thought back to
that Being whom the ancient seers worshipped as Deity. I believe that most of what was
said of God was in reality said of that Spirit whose body is Earth. I must in
some fashion indicate the nature of the visions which led me to believe with
Plato that the earth is not at all what the geographers suppose it to be, and
that we live like frogs at the bottom of a marsh knowing nothing of that Many-Coloured
Earth which is superior to this we know, yet related to it as soul to body. On
that Many-Coloured Earth, he tells us, live a divine folk, and there are temples
wherein the gods do truly dwell, and I wish to convey, so far as words may, how
some apparitions of that ancient beauty came to me in wood or on hillside or by
the shores of the western sea.
Sometimes lying on the hillside with the eyes of the body shut as in sleep I
could see valleys and hills, lustrous as a jewel, where all was self-shining,
the colours brighter and purer, yet making a softer harmony together than the
colours of the world I know. The winds sparkled as they blew hither and thither,
yet far distances were clear through that glowing air. What was far off was
precise as what was near, and the will to see hurried me to what I
desired. There, too, in that land I saw fountains as of luminous
mist jetting from some hidden heart of power, and shining folk who passed into
those fountains inhaled them and drew life from the magical air. They were, I
believe, those who in the ancient world gave birth to legends of nymph and
dryad. Their perfectness was like the perfectness of a flower, a beauty which
had never, it seemed, been broken by act of the individualised will which with
us makes possible a choice between good and evil, and the marring of the mould
of natural beauty. More beautiful than we they yet seemed less than human, and I
surmised I had more thoughts in a moment than they through many of their days.
Sometimes I wondered had they individualised life at all, for they moved as if
in some orchestration of their being. If one looked up, all looked up. If one
moved to breathe the magical airs from the fountains, many bent in rhythm. I
wondered were their thoughts all another's. one who lived within them, guardian
or oversoul to their tribe?
Like these were my first visions of supernature, not spiritual nor of any
high import, not in any way so high as those transcendental moments of
awe, when almost without vision the Divine Darkness seemed to
breathe within the spirit. But I was curious about these forms, and often lured
away by them from the highest meditation; for I was dazzled like a child who
escapes from a dark alley in one of our cities of great sorrow where its life
has been spent, and who comes for the first time upon some rich garden beyond
the city where the air is weighted with scent of lilac or rose, and the eyes are
made gay with colour. Such a beauty begins to glow on us as we journey towards
Deity, even as earth grows brighter as we journey from the gloomy pole to lands
of the sun; and I would cry out to our humanity, sinking deeper into the Iron
Age, that the Golden World is all about us and that beauty is open to all, and
none are shut out from it who will turn to it and seek for it.
As the will grew more intense, the longing for the ancestral self more
passionate, there came glimpses of more rapturous life in the being of Earth.
Once I lay on the sand dunes by the western sea. The air seemed filled with
melody. The motion of the wind made a continuous musical vibration. Now
and then the silvery sound of bells broke on my ear. I saw nothing for a
time. Then there was an intensity of light before my eyes like the flashing of
sunlight through a crystal. It widened like the opening of a gate and I saw the
light was streaming from the heart of a glowing figure. Its body was pervaded
with light as if sunfire rather than blood ran through its limbs. Light streams
flowed from it. It moved over me along the winds, carrying a harp, and there was
a circling of golden hair that swept across the strings. Birds flew about it,
and over the brows was a fiery plumage as of wings of outspread flame. On the
face was an ecstasy of beauty and immortal youth. There were others, a lordly
folk, and they passed by on the wind as if they knew me not or the earth I lived
on. When I came back to myself my own world seemed grey and devoid of light
though the summer sun was hot upon the sands.
One other vision I will tell because it bears on things the ancients taught
us, and on what I have to write in later pages. Where I saw this I will not say.
There was a hall vaster than any cathedral, with pillars that seemed built out
of living and trembling opal, or from some starry substances which shone with every colour, the
colours of eve and dawn. A golden air glowed in this place, and high between the
pillars were thrones which faded, glow by glow, to the end of the vast hall. On
them sat the Divine Kings. They were fire-crested. I saw the crest of the dragon
on one, and there was another plumed with brilliant fires that jetted forth like
feathers of flame. They sat shining and starlike, mute as statues, more colossal
than Egyptian images of their gods, and at the end of the hall was a higher
throne on which sat one greater than the rest. A light like the sun glowed
behind him. Below on the floor of the hall lay a dark figure as if in trance,
and two of the Divine Kings made motions with their hands about it over head and
body. I saw where their hands waved how sparkles of fire like the flashing of
jewels broke out. There rose out of that dark body a figure as tall, as
glorious, as shining as those seated on the thrones. As he woke to the hall he
became aware of his divine kin, and he lifted up his hands in greeting. He had
returned from his pilgrimage through darkness, but now an initiate, a master in
the heavenly guild. While he gazed on them the tall golden figures from
their thrones leaped up, they too with
hands uplifted in greeting, and they passed from me and faded swiftly in the
great glory behind the throne.

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