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- (Part 3 of 8)
-
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- YOGA FOR YAHOOS.
-
- THIRD LECTURE. NIYAMA.
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-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- 1. The subject of my third lecture is Niyama. Niyama? H'm!
- The inadequacy of even th noblest attempts to translate these wretch-
- ed Sanskrit words is now about to be delightfully demonstrated. The
- nearest I can get to the meaning of Niyama is 'virtue'! God help us
- all! This means virtue in the original etymological sense of the
- word -- the quality of manhood; that is, to all intents and purposes,
- the quality of godhead. But since we are translating Yama 'control,'
- we find that our two words have not at all the same relationship to
- each other that the words have in the original Sanskrit; for the
- prefix 'ni' in Sanskrit gives the meaning of turning everything
- upside down and backwards forwards, -- as *you* would say, Hysteron
- Proteron -- at the same time producing the effect of transcendental
- sublimity. I find that I cannot even begin to think of a proper
- definition, although I know in my own mind perfectly well what the
- Hindus mean; if one soaks oneself in Oriental thought for a suffi-
- cient number of years, one gets a spiritual apprehension which it is
- quite impossible to express in terms applicable to the objects of
- intellectual apprehension; it is therefore much better to content
- ourselves with the words as they stand, and get down to brass tacks
- about the practical steps to be taken to master these preliminary
- exercises.
- 2. It will hardly have escaped the attentive listener that in
- my previous lectures I have combined the maximum of discourse with
- the minimum of information; that is all part of my training as a
- Cabinet Minister. But what does emerge tentatively from my mental
- fog is that Yama, taking it by long and by large, is mostly negative
- in its effects. We are imposing inhibitions on the existing current
- of energy, just as one compresess a waterfall in turbines in order to
- control and direct the natural gravitational energy of the stream.
- 3. It might be as well, before altogether leaving the subject
- of Yama, to enumerate a few of the practical conclusions which follow
- from our premiss that nothing which might weaken or destroy the
- beauty and harmony of the mind must be permitted. Social existence
- of any kind renders any serious Yoga absolutely out of the question;
- domestic life is completely incompatible with even elementary prac-
- tices. No doubt many of you will say, 'That's all very well for him;
- let him speak for himself; as for me, I manage my home and my busi-
- ness so that everything runs on ball bearings.' Echo answers . . .
- 4. Until you actually start the practice of Yoga, you cannot
- possibly imagine what constitutes a disturbance. You most of you
- think that you can sit perfectly still; you tell me what artists'
- models can do for over thirty-five minutes. They don't. You do not
- hear the ticking of the clock; perhaps you do not even know whether a
- typewriter is going in the room; for all I know, you could sleep
- peacefully through an air-raid. That has nothing to do with it. As
- soon as you start the practices you will find, if you are doing them
- properly, that you are hearing sounds which you never heard before in
- your life. You become hypersensitive. And as you have five external
- batteries bombarding you, you get little repose. You feel the air on
- your skin with about the same intensity as you would previously have
- felt a fist in your face.
- 5. To some extent, no doubt, this fact will be familiar to all
- of you. Probably most of you have been out at some time or other in
- what is grotesquely known as the silence of the night, and you will
- have become aware of infinitesimal movements of light in the dark-
- ness, of elusive sounds in the quiet. They will have soothed you and
- pleased you; it will never have occurred to you that these changes
- could each one be felt as a pang. But, even in the earliest months
- of Yoga, this is exactly what happens, and therefore it is best to be
- prepared by arranging, before you start at all, that your whole life
- will be permanently free from all the grosser causes of trouble. The
- practical problem of Yama is therefore, to a great extent, 'How shall
- I settle down to the work?' Then, having complied with the theoreti-
- cally best conditions, you have to tackle each fresh problem as it
- arises in the best way you can.
- 6. We are now in a better position to consider the meaning of
- Niyama, or virtue. To most men the qualities which constitute Niyama
- are not apprehended at all by their self-consciousness. These are
- positive powers, but they are latent; their development is not merely
- measurable in terms of quantity and efficiency. As we rise from the
- coarse to the fine, from the gross to the subtle, we enter a new (and
- what appears on first sight to be an immeasurable) region. It is
- quite impossible to explain what I mean by this; if I could, you
- would know it already. How can one explain to a person who has never
- skated the nature of the pleasure of executing a difficult figure on
- the ice? He has in himself the whole apparatus ready for use; but
- experience, and experience only, can make him aware of the results of
- such use.
- 7. At the same time, in a general exposition of Yoga, it may be
- useful to give some idea of the functions on which those peaks that
- pierce the clouds of the limitations of our intellectual understand-
- ing are based.
- I have found it very useful in all kinds of thinking to employ a
- sort of Abacus. The schematic representation of the universe given
- by astrology and the Tree of Life is extremely valuable, especially
- when reinforced and amplified by the Holy Qabalah. This Tree of LIfe
- is susceptible to infinite ramifications, and there is no need in
- this connectin to explore its subtleties. We ought to be able to
- make a fairly satisfactory diagram for elementary purposes by taking
- as the basis of our illustration the solar system as conceived by the
- astrologers.
- I do not know whether the average student is aware that in
- practice the significations of the planets are based generally upon
- the philosophical conceptions of the Greek and Roman gods. Let us
- hope for the best, and go on!
- 8. The planet Saturn, which represents anatomy, is the skele-
- ton: it is a rigid structure upon which the rest of the body is
- built. To what moral qualities does this correspond? The first
- point of virtue in a bone is its rigidity, its resistance to pres-
- sure. And so in Niyama we find that we need the qualities of abso-
- lute simplicity in our regimen; we need insensibility; we need
- endurance; we need patience. It is simply impossible for anyone who
- has not practised Yoga to understand what boredom means. I have
- known Yogis, men even holier than I, (*no! no!*) who, to escape from
- the intolerable tedium, would fly for refuge to a bottle party! It
- is a 'physiological' tedium which becomes the acutest agony. The
- tension becomes cramp; nothing else matters but to escape from the
- self-imposed constraint.
- But every evil brings its own remedy. Another quality of Saturn
- is melancholy; Saturn represents the sorrow of the universe; it is
- the Trance of sorrow that has determined one to undertake the task of
- emancipation. This is the energising force of Law; it is the rigidi-
- ty of the fact that everything is sorrow which moves one to the task,
- and keeps one on the Path.
- 9. The next planet is Jupiter. This planet is in many ways the
- opposite of Saturn; it represents expansion as Saturn represents
- contraction; it is the universal love, the selfless love whose object
- can be no less than the universe itself. This comes to reinforce the
- powers of Saturn when they agonise; success is not for self but for
- all; one might acquiesce in one's own failure, but one cannot be
- unworthy of the universe. Jupiter, too, represents the vital,
- creative, genial element of the cosmos. He has Ganymede and Hebe to
- his cupbearers. There is an immense and inaccessible joy in the
- Great Work; and it is the attainment of the trance, of even the
- intellectual foreshadowing of that trance, of joy, which reassures
- the Yogi that his work is worth while.
- Jupiter digests experiences; Jupiter is the Lord of the Forces
- of Life; Jupiter takes common matter and transmutes it into celestial
- nourishment.
- 10. The next planet is Mars. Mars represents the muscular
- system; it is the lowest form of energy, and in Niyama it is to be
- taken quite literally as the virtue which enables on to contend with,
- and to conquer, the physical difficulties of the Work. The practical
- point is this: 'The little more and how much it is, the little less
- and what worlds away!' No matter how long you keep water at 99
- degrees Centigrade under normal barometric pressure, it will not
- boil. I shall probably be accused of advertising some kind of motor
- spirit in talking about the little extra something that the others
- haven't got, but I assure you that I am not being paid for it.
- Let us take the example of Pranayama, a subject with which I
- hope to deal in a subsequent lucubration. Let us suppose that you
- are managing your breath so that your cycle, breathing in, holding,
- and breathing out, lasts exactly a minute. That is pretty good work
- for most people, but it may be or may not be good enough to get you
- going. No one can tell you until you have tried long enough (and no
- one can tell you how long 'long enough' may be) whether that is going
- to ring the bell. It may be that if you increase your sixty seconds
- to sixty-four the phenomena would begin immediately. That sounds all
- right but as you have nearly burst your lungs doing the sixty, you
- want this *added* energy to make the grade. That is only one example
- of the difficulty which arises with every practice.
- Mars, morever, is the flaming energy of passion, it is the male
- quality in its lowest sense; it is the courage which goes berserk,
- and I do not mind telling you that, in my own case at least, one of
- the inhibitions with which I had most frequently to contend was the
- fear that I was going mad. This was especially the case when those
- phenomena began to occur, which, recorded in cold blood, did seem
- like madness. And the Niyama of Mars is the ruthless rage which
- jests at scars while dying of one's wounds.
- ' . . . the grim Lord of Colonsay
- Hath turned him on the ground,
- And laughed in death-pang that his blade
- The mortal thrust so well repaid'
- 11. The next of the heavenly bodies is the centre of all, the
- Sun. The Sun is the heart of the system; he harmonises all, ener-
- gises all, orders all. His is the courage and energy which is the
- source of all the other lesser forms of motion, and it is because of
- this that in himself he is calm. They are planets; he is a star.
- For him all planets come; around him they all move, to him they all
- tend. It is this centralisation of faculties, their control, their
- motivation, which is the Niyama of the Sun. He is not only the heart
- but the brain of the system; but he is not the 'thinking' brain, for
- in him all thought has been resolved into the beauty and harmony of
- ordered motion.
- 12. The next of the planets is Venus. In her, for the first
- time, we come into contact with a part of our nature which is none
- the less quintessential because it has hitherto been masked by our
- pre-occupation with more active qualities. Venus resembles Jupiter,
- but on a lower scale, standing to him very much as Mars does to
- Saturn. She is close akin in nature to the Sun, and she may be
- considered an externalisation of his influence towards beauty and
- harmony. Venus is Isis, the Great Mother; Venus is Nature herself;
- Venus is the sum of all possibilities.
- The Niyama corresponding to Venus is one of the most important,
- and one of the most difficult of attainment. I said the sum of all
- possibilities, and I will ask you to go back in your minds to what I
- said before about the definition of the Great Work itself, the aim of
- the Yogi to consummate the marriage of all that he is with all that
- he is not, and ultimately to realise, insofar as the marriage is
- consummated, that what he is and what he is not are identical.
- Therefore we cannot pick and choose in our Yoga. It is written in
- the 'Book of the Law', Chapter 1, verse 22, 'Let there be no dif-
- ference made among you between any one thing and any other thing, for
- thereby there cometh hurt.'
- Venus represents the ecstatic acceptance of all possible experi-
- ence, and the transcendental assumption of all particular experience
- into the one experience.
- Oh yes, by the way, don't forget this. In a lesser sense Venus
- represents tact. Many of the problems that confront the Yogi are
- impracticable to intellectual manipulation. They yield to
- graciousness.
- 13. Our next planet is Mercury, and the Niyama which correspond
- to him are as innumerable and various as his own qualities. Mercury
- is the Word, the Logos in the highest; he is the direct medium of
- connection between opposites; he is electricity, the very link of
- life, the Yogic process itself, its means, its end. Yet he is in
- himself indifferent to all things, as the electric current is indif-
- ferent to the meaning of the messages which may be transmitted by its
- means. The Niyama corresponding to Mercury in its highest forms may
- readily be divined from what I have already said, but in the tech-
- nique of Yoga he represents the fineness of the method which is
- infinitely adaptable to all problems, and only so because he is
- supremely indifferent. He is the adroitness and ingenuity which
- helps us in our difficulties; he is the mechanical system, the
- symbolism which helps the human mind of the Yogi to take cognisance
- of what is coming.
- It must here be remarked that because of his complete indif-
- ference to anything whatever (and that thought is -- when you get
- far enough -- only a primary point of wisdom) he is entirely unreli-
- able. One of the most unfathomably dreadful dangers of the Path is
- that you must trust Mercury, and yet that if you trust him you are
- certain to be deceived. I can only explain this, if at all, by
- pointing out that, since all truth is relative, all truth is false-
- hood. In one sense Mercury is the great enemy; Mercury is mind, and
- it is the mind that we have set out to conquer.
- 14. The last of the seven sacred planets is the Moon. The Moon
- represents the totality of the female part of us, the passive princi-
- ple which is yet very different to that of Venus, for the Moon
- corresponds to the Sun much as Venus does to Mars. She is more
- purely passive than Venus, and although Venus is so universal the
- Moon is also universal in another sense. The Moon is the highest and
- the lowest; the Moon is the aspiration, the link of man and God; she
- is the supreme purity: Isis the Virgin, Isis the Virgin Mother; but
- she comes right down at the other end of the scale, to be a symbol of
- the senses themselves, the mere instrument of the registration of
- phenomena, incapable of discrimination, incapable of choice. The
- Niyama corresponding to her influence, the first of all, is that
- quality of aspiration, the positive purity which refuses union with
- anything less than the All. In Greek mythology Artemis, the Goddess
- of the Moon, is virgin; she yielded only to Pan. Here is one parti-
- cular lesson: as the Yogi advances, magic powers (Siddhi the teach-
- ers call them) are offered to the aspirant; if he accepts the least
- of these -- or the greatest -- he is lost.
- 15. At the other end of the scale of the Niyama of the Moon are
- the fantastic developments of sensibility which harass the Yogi.
- These are all help and encouragement; these are all intolerable
- hindrances; these are the greatest of the obstacles which confront
- the human being, trained as he is by centuries of evolution to
- receive his whole consciousness through the senses alone. And they
- hit us hardest because they interfere directly with the technique of
- our work; we are constantly gaining new powers, despite ourselves,
- and every time this happens we have to invent a new method for
- bringing their malice to naught. But, as before, the remedy is of
- the same stuff as the disease; it is the unswerving purity of aspira-
- tion that enables us to surmount all these difficulties. The Moon is
- the sheet-anchor of our work. It is the Knowledge and Conversation
- of the Holy Guardian Angel that enables us to overcome, at all times
- and in all manners, as the need of the moment may be.
- 16. There are two other planets, not counted as among the
- sacred seven. I will not say that they were known to the ancients
- and deliberately concealed, though much in their writing suggests
- that this may be the case. I refer to the planet Herschel, or
- Uranus, and Neptune. Whatever may have been the knowledge of the
- ancients, it is at least certain that they left gaps in their system
- which were exactly filled by these two planets, and the newly dis-
- covered Pluto. They fill these gaps just as the newly discovered
- chemical elements discovered in the last fifty years fill the gaps in
- Mendelejeff's table of the Periodic Law.
- 17. Herschel represents the highest form of the True Will, and
- it seems natural and right that this should not rank with the seven
- sacred planets, because the True Will is the sphere which transcends
- them. 'Every man and every woman is a star.' Herschel defines the
- orbit of the star, your star. But Herschel is dynamic; Herschel is
- explosive; Herschel, astrologically speaking, does not move in an
- orbit; he has his own path. So the Niyama which corresponds to this
- planet is, first and last, the discovery of the True Will. This
- knowledge is secret and most sacred; each of you must incorporate for
- yourself the incidence and quality of Herschel. It is the most
- important of the tasks of the Yogi, because, until he has achieved
- it, he can have no idea who he is or where he is going.
- 18. Still more remote and tenuous is the influence of Neptune.
- Here we have a Niyama of infinite delicacy, a spiritual intuition
- far, far removed from any human quality whatever. Here all is
- fantasy, and in this world are infinite pleasure, infinite perils.
- The True Niyama of Neptune is the imaginative faculty, the shadowing
- forth of the nature of the illimitable light.
- He has another function. The Yogi who understands the influence
- of Neptune, and is attuned to Neptune, will have a sense of humour,
- which is the greatest safeguard for the Yogi. Neptune is, so to
- speak, in the front line; he has got to adapt himself to difficulties
- and tribulations; and when the recruit asks 'What made that 'ole?' he
- has got to say, unsmiling, 'Mice.'
- Pluto is the utmost sentinel of all; of him it is not wise to
- speak.
- . . . Having now given vent to this sybilline, obscure and sinister
- utterance, it may well be asked by the greatly daring: Why is it not
- wise to speak of Pluto? The answer is profound. It is because
- nothing at all is known about him.
- Anyhow it hardly matters; we have surely had enough of Niyama
- for one evening!
- 19. It is now proper to sum up briefly what we have learnt
- about Yama and Niyama. They are in a sense the moral, logical
- preliminaries of the technique of Yoga proper. They are the stra-
- tegical as opposed to the tactical dispositions which must be made by
- the aspirant before he attempts anything more serious than the five
- finger exercises, as we may call them -- the recruit's drill of
- postures, breathing exercises and concentration which the shallow
- confidently suppose to constitute this great science and art.
- We have seen that it is presumptuous and impractical to lay down
- definite rules as to what we are to do. What does concern us is so
- to arrange matters that we are free to do anything that may become
- necessary or expedient, allowing for that development of super-normal
- powers which enables us to carry out our plans as they form in the
- mutable bioscope of events.
- If anyone comes to me for a rough and ready practical plan I
- say: Well, if you must stay in England, you may be able to bring it
- off with a bit of luck in an isolated cottage, remote from roads, if
- you have the services of an attendant already well trained to deal
- with the emergencies that are likely to arise. A good disciplinarian
- might carry on fairly well, at a pinch, in a suite in Claridge's.
- But against this it may be urged that one has to reckon with
- unseen forces. The most impossible things begin to happen when once
- you get going. It is not really satisfactory to start serious Yoga
- unless you are in a country where the climate is reliable, and where
- the air is not polluted by the stench of civilisation. It is ex-
- tremely important, above all things important, unless one is an
- exceedingly rich man, to find a country where the inhabitants under-
- stand the Yogin mode of life, where they are sympathetic with its
- practices, treat the aspirant with respect, and unobtrusively assist
- and protect him. In such circumstances, the exigency of Yama and
- Niyama is not so serious a stress.
- There is, too, something beyond all these practical details
- which it is hard to emphasise without making just those mysterious
- assumptions which we have from the first resolved to avoid. All I
- can say is that I am very sorry, but this particular fact is going to
- hit you in the face before you have started very long, and I do not
- see why we should bother about the mysterious assumptions underlying
- the acceptance of the fact any more than in the case of what is after
- all equally mysterious and unfathomable: any object of any of the
- senses. The fact is this; that one acquires a feeling -- a quite
- irrational feeling -- that a given place or a given method is right
- or wrong for its purposes. The intimation is as assured as that of
- the swordsman when he picks up an untried weapon; either it comes up
- sweet to the hand, or it does not. You cannot explain it, and you
- cannot argue it away.
- 21. I have treated Yama and Niyama at great length because
- their importance has been greatly under-rated, and their nature
- completely misunderstood. They are definitely magical practices,
- with hardly a tinge of mystical flavour. The advantage to us here is
- that we can very usefully exercise and develop ourselves in this way
- in this country where the technique of Yoga is for all practical
- purposes impossible. Incidentally, one's real country -- that is,
- the conditions -- in which one happens to be born is the only one in
- which Yama and Niyama can be practised. You cannot dodge your Karma.
- You have got to earn the right to devote yourself to Yoga proper by
- arranging for that devotion to be a necessary stage in the fulfilment
- of your True Will. In Hindustan one is now allowed to become
- 'Sanyasi' -- a recluse -- until one has fulfilled one's duty to one's
- own environment -- rendered to Caesar the things which are Caesar's
- before rendering to God the things which are God's.
- Woe to that seven months' abortion who thinks to take advantage
- of the accidents of birth, and, mocking the call of duty, sneaks off
- to stare at a blank wall in China! Yama and Niyama are only the more
- critical stages of Yoga because they cannot be translated in terms of
- a schoolboy curriculum. Nor can schoolboy tricks adequately excuse
- the aspirant from the duties of manhood. Do what thou wilt shall be
- the whole of the Law.
- Rejoice, true men, that this is thus!
- For this at least may be said, that there are results to be
- obtained in this way which will not only fit the aspirant for the
- actual battle, but will introduce him to classes of hitherto un-
- guessed phenomena whose impact will prepare his mind for that terific
- shock of its own complete overthrow which marks the first critical
- result of the practices of Yoga.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
-
- may w