Only,
One facet of the stone,
One ray of the star,
One petal of the flower of life,
But the one that stands outermost
and
faces us who are men and women.
This strange story has come from a far country and was
brought in a mysterious manner; we claim only to be the scribes and the
editors. In this capacity, howevey, it is we who are answerable to the
Public and the critics. We therefore ask in advance, perfavour only of
the reader; that he will accept (while reading this story) the theory
of the re-incarnation of souls as a living fact.
M. C.
The
Blossom and the Fruit.
A True Story of a Black Magician
by
Mabel Collins
London: The Theosophical Publishing Society, New Bond Street
The Blossom and the Fruit
[Only the last seven chapters are included in this document. They
were first published in Lucifer in June, July and August
of 1888. The last six chapters were, it is said, written by HP Blavatsky,
founder and co-editor with MC of Lucifer, as Collins had
"lost control of the story".]
Chapter
XXIX
Some parts of the north-east coast of England are singularly
desolate and wild, and strangely deserted, considering how small the island
is. One would suppose it hardly possible to find retreat in an over-populated
small country such as the British islands. But nineteenth-century life
is centred in cities, and in the present day people find no landmarks
in Nature, and do not understand that by the edge of the sea, or in the
midst of fields, they may be surrounded by aerial hosts who have been
associated with that special spot since the wild small island was built
amid its harassing seas. It has been a centre and point of a special character,
for those who read between the lines during all this age of the earth
of which we have any knowledge.
But there are some who know and feel the powers that
are not visible to the material eyes, and who know how to use them.
In a remote, desolate, and very bleak part of the north-eastern
coast there stands a small house, well sheltered by a high hill close
behind it and a thick belt of trees. The land on which the house stands
is part of a very large estate, which had been cut up and sold by successive
spendthrift and dissolute owners. These men had Norman blood in them,
and never took complete root upon English soil. The big castle which was
their family house was most often untenanted, and so was this small Dower
House on the seashore.
It was now the property of a younger son, who had scarcely
ever been seen by the people of the place; never at all since he had been
quite a boy. Now and again someone visited the old house for a few days;
lights were seen in the windows so unexpectedly that the peasants said
the house was haunted. But at present it was in regular occupation. A
foreign servant came into the village one day to make purchases, and said
that he was with a friend of Mr. Veryan, to whom the house belonged, who
had borrowed it to live in for some months. He told anyone who was curious
enough to question him that his master was a doctor of great reputation
in spite of being still comparatively young; that he had come to this
remote place in order to be quiet and carry on some special studies. It
was not likely that his quiet would be disturbed, for the old castle was
nothing but a big ruin, the elder branch of the family being represented
by an agent, who was doubtful whether to make money out of converting
the castle into a show-place, or to pull it down and sell the bricks it
was built of. No one had any kind of positive idea where the present owner
was. And this was the condition of an old and proud family. Everything
had been squandered; even the beautiful old family plate had long since
been packed and sent to London for sale.
It was said that the worst of all the succession of spendthrifts
who had dissipated the fine old property was the beautiful wife of the
last lord, the mother of the two sons now the sole representatives of
the name. She was a Hungarian of noble family according to the statements
made at the time of her marriage. But the servants and peasants always
declared her to be a gipsy, pure and simple, and, moreover, a witch. She
was extraordinarily beautiful and fascinating, and in the few short years
of their married life did with her husband whatever she fancied.
Her death had been a terrible one, and the poor people
firmly believed that her ghost haunted the old castle in which her luxuriously
furnished rooms, decked in a quaint barbaric fashion, were still to be
seen, hardly touched since her death. Even the agent, whose one idea seemed
to be to sell anything convertible into money, had left her many costly
ornaments in their accustomed places. Some kind of superstitious feeling
kept him from having these rooms stripped. He had been in great terror
of the beautiful chatelaine during her life, and possibly he had not shaken
off that fear even now. It was the only theory by which to account for
the reverence with which these rooms were treated, for her son had given
no orders about them.
The new resident at the Dower House lived in great seclusion
and quite alone, save for his two foreign servants, who appeared to do
for him all that he needed. He was a great rider, but the hours he spent
out of doors were usually those of the very early morning, so that he
was seldom seen. It was soon discovered, however, that he was an extraordinarily
handsome man, in the prime of life. All sorts of rumours at once were
circulated about him. A recluse is expected to be old, crooked, eccentric
in manner. Why should this man, to whom life would be supposed to have
every attraction possible, shut himself up in absolute solitude? He was
met now and again by one of the labourers who had to rise with the dawn
and go to work, evidently returning from a walk. Such habits as these,
to the sloth-loving English peasant, could only indicate the restlessness
of a mind diseased or guilty. Yet there was something in the face of the
man which forbad this mode of accounting for his peculiar tastes from
being even talked of; the dullest mind could not but recognise the power
and strength shown in that beautiful face.
His servants always called him "Monsieur," giving him
no name. They appeared to think the peasants of too little importance
to require any more detailed information; and as no letters ever came
to the Dower House, no name was associated with its resident. This, in
itself, seemed odd; but common persons soon get. used to a custom of that
kind, and think no more of it once the first shock is over.
As a matter of fact, however, it is impossible to remain
incognito in a civilized country for long together. Some prying person,
possessed of a kind of officialism, is sure to disturb the temporary peace
of this form of oblivion. In this case the agent did it. He rode up to
the Dower House one day, got off his horse, and sent in his name. In a
few moments he was ushered into a room which he did not recognise, so
completely was its appearance changed since he had seen it last. It was
entirely hung with tapestry on which were worked figures of the most life-like
character; warriors, women in dresses of different periods, monks and
clowns. These were not formed into groups and pictures as is usual upon
tapestry, but were marshalled round the room, like so many witnesses of
any scene which might take place within it. So real was the effect that
the agent himself misdoubted whether the interview was indeed a tête-à-tête
one, when his host came forward to meet him.
He was dressed in a grey shooting suit, the simplest
dress possible for an Englishman to wear in the country. Yet it so well
suited and set off his splendid figure and face, that his visitor was
for a moment startled into silence. When he found self-possession enough
to speak, it was with much more than his usual gravity.
"I presume, sir," he said, "that you have some reason
for being here without letting the people know who you are; though it
seems a strange thing to do, for you must be recognised, sooner or later.
I have not seen you since you were a child, but your likeness to your
mother is unmistakeable; Yes I know that Sir Harold Veryan is at present
in Africa. I presume I am speaking to Ivan Veryan."
"You are right," was the answer. "I had no serious intention
of concealing my identity, for that would be absurd. But my servants habitually
call me M'sieu, finding my name a difficulty; and as the poor people here
have no recollection of me, I should prefer that they remain ignorant
of who I am. I wish for complete solitude here, not to assume the position
of the next heir, who may be supposed to take an interest in the fate
of the castle, the condition of the cottages, and the felling of the timber."
"If you, wanted seclusion this seems the last place to
come to," observed the agent.
"I find a seclusion here which suits me, for the time
being," was the reply. "I only want one thing - a key to one of the doors
of the castle, as I came here partly to use its library - unless all the
books have been sold."
"The books have not been touched," replied the agent,
"the library was one of Lady Veryan's favourite rooms, and none of them
have been disturbed."
"Then I shall be glad to have the key as soon as you
can hand it to me."
"And you wish no one told of your presence here?" inquired
the agent, doubtfully.
"Who should care to know of it?"
"The county families" he said hesitatingly wishing very
much for permission to retail his piece of gossip at the next market-day
in the county town. There was always a middle-day dinner at the biggest
hotel, where all sorts of magnates and men of property and business met
and talked; and he would have interested the whole tableful if he could
have informed them that one of the Veryans had actually returned to England
and was living in his own house.
"If I wish to see any of my neighbours I will call on
them," was the decided answer, "till then, I should prefer that nothing
is said about me."
The [voice] of command with which this was spoken made
it final. The agent said nothing more on the subject, but soon took his
leave. Later in the day a messenger came to the Dower House with a key
of the castle gate, and a key of one of the doors of the castle.
Chapter
XXX
The old castle of the Veryans - which was a queer building,
roomy, rambling, not beautiful, but very strong and amply veiled with
green ivy, stood on high ground, looking well over land and sea. It was
not sheltered like the Dower House but faced all fortunes of weather,
confident in its own strength. No tree stood close to it, for the position
was too exposed. But gardens which had once been glorious, and even now
were beautiful with the remains of their past glory, stretched on every
side. They had the supreme charm, unknown to modern gardens, of never
being flowerless. All the year round, even in the bitterest weather, lines
and stars of colour made the ground beautiful. Along the cliff edge of
the garden two high walls were built; and between these was the Lady's
Walk - a place of delight to any sightseer who might stray to this deserted
place. A wide gravel path went straight down its centre, forming a wonderfully
dry promenade. On each side were wide flower beds full of rare plants
that grew well in this sheltered spot; and the walls were covered with
fruit trees; and blooming creepers which flourished luxuriantly. On the
side of the sea were openings in the wall, here and there; and seats were
placed in sheltered, sunny nooks, from which the grand view might be seen.
It was to the Lady's Walk that Ivan went direct, as soon
as he entered the castle grounds that same evening. The flower-beds were
neglected and overgrown, tile creepers, untrimmed and hanging in thick
masses from the walls. The place was all the more beautiful from this
neglect just overlying the high and careful cultivation of the past. It
was like the languor of a tired beauty, her hair loose and undressed,
but its richness undimmed.
Ivan wandered up and down the path for a long time, full
of thought, very grave, yet sometimes smiling faintly. It was the early
spring, and small yellow flowers were peering out here and there, some
on the ground, some, on the walls. This colour, which is so associated
with the birth of the year, had a meaning of its own for Ivan. He stopped
often to look at these flowers, but he did not pluck them. He never picked
a flower or a leaf, except for use in some definite experiment. At one
end of the walk the common rose called the monthly rose, was trained upon
the wall, and on this there was one delicate pink bud, half blown. This
flower appeared at last to attract Ivan's attention entirely. He sat down
on a bench near it, and looked at it for a long while. It was late in
the afternoon, but though the air was growing very cold the light was
still strong, for the long days had begun. He sat there, apparently disinclined
to move, full of thought.
A sound of footsteps disturbed him. Turning his head
he saw Fleta approaching him, walking down the path with the rare, proud
carriage which distinguished her.
"You left the gate open for me" she said questioningly.
" Yes," he answered.
"Then I did right to come to you here?" she said, in
a reassured tone.
"Certainly, you did right," he replied. "Do not doubt
your own knowledge. You have known from the first you had to meet me here."
"Yes," she answered.
Ivan had risen when she approached him, and they stood
face to face. His eyes were steadily and very earnestly fixed on her.
Fleta had only glanced at him, aud then turned her gaze on the sea. But
in the pause that followed her answer she suddenly lifted her eyes and
answered his look.
'I needed the mask," she said, speaking with an evident
effort; "for I was still woman enough to worship you as a splendid being
of my own race. I did right to cast the mask away, and suffer as I did,
because it has made my lesson shorter, if fiercer. I know now that you
are not a being of my own race - supposing me still nothing more than
a woman. You are divine and a teacher, and I can be nothing to you but
your servant.
Teach me to serve! Teach me to, so transform this love
for you that it shall become pure service, not to you, but to the divine
in you. I have cut all knots; I have cast aside all that dragged me back.
My duty is done and utterly fulfilled. I stand freed from the past. Teach
me!
Ivan stepped to the side of the path and plucked the
pink rosebud. He gave it to her. Fleta held it in her hand, but looked
at it as if utterly bewildered. "Do you not know the colour?" he said.
When you have entered the Hall of Learning, you will see such flowers
on the altars. The purple of passion burns but to this pale pink, which
also is the colour of resurrection and of dawn. Sit here till I return."
He left her and walked down the path, through the gardens,
to the gate. Here Fleta's carriage was standing. He bade the man take
Fleta's trunks to the village inn and leave them there till they should
be fetched away, paid, and dismissed him. Then he re-entered the grounds,
locking the gate behind him. He went to Fleta, where she still sat, regarding
the flower she held in her hand.
"Are you ready for the offering?" he asked her.
"Yes, I am ready," she replied, without looking up.
"Come, then," he said, and turned to walk away over the
grassy slopes of the garden. She rose and accompanied him. It was nearly
dark now. He walked round the castle to a side door, which he opened.
A deathly chill came from the interior of the building. Fleta shivered
slightly as she crossed the threshold.
"Are you afraid?" said Ivan, pausing before he closed
the door; "there is still time to go back."
"Back to what?" asked Fleta.
"I cannot answer that," he replied. "I do not know what
you have left behind you."
"I have cut off everything," she answered. "There is
nothing for me to return to. Let me go on. I am afraid of nothing now.
How should I be?"
Ivan closed the door and led the way down a long passage.
He opened a door and said, "Enter." Fleta, passed through it, and was
immediately aware that he had shut it behind her without passing through
himself that in fact she was alone.
Alone! and where? She had no notion - she only knew she
was in complete darkness. For the first time she fully realised the ideas
of darkness and solitude. They did not terrify her, but they presented
themselves as absolute facts to her consciousness; the only facts she
was conscious of. Moreover, she was vividly aware that she could not,
escape from them, which made them much more intensely real! She could
not guess which way to move, nor did it occur to her that she would be
in any way benefitted by moving. She stepped back to the door through
which she had passed, which was, to her fancy, the only link between her
and the actual world, and stood there with her hand upon it.
The next thing she became conscious of was that there
was no air. At all events she believed there was none, which was quite
as bad as if it were so. She imagined herself in some very large place,
whether a room or a hall she could not guess, which was hermetically sealed
and had been so for years. Faint fancies as to what kind of place she
was in formed themselves in her mind at first, but presently passed away
altogether; for she had no clue or image to which to attach any picture.
Her mind became quite blank. Presently she became aware that she had lost,
all sense of time. She could not tell if, she had been standing in this
way for minutes or for hours. Her sensations were extraordinarily acute,
and yet to her they hardly seemed to exist, because there was nothing
objective for them to be marked by. In a little while, the moment when
Ivan had ushered her into this place had become removed to an immense
distance, in the past, and presently she found herself thinking of Ivan
as a figure in her life which had entirely retreated from it; she could
not imagine that she would see him tomorrow; for tomorrow appeared to
her no longer to be possible. This black night looked like an eternity.
No danger or adventure which she had ever experienced had affected her
like this. She was completely unprepared for such a sudden fall into the
abyss of nothingness. And yet she had just strength enough to stand against
it by summoning the philosophy which told her never to fear anything,
for nothing could in reality injure her. She kept her mind and, nerves
from being affected by steadily recollecting this. But she was unable
to stem a wave of exhaustion which gradually swept over her and which
made her tremble as she stood.
It was the incredible completeness of the silence and
darkness which baffled her and at last daunted her. No creak or groan
sounded in the house, no echo of wind or sea came to her. At last she
began to doubt if she was alive or whether, instead of passing through
a door, she had stepped into some deep water and met death unconsciously.
But she had too much experience, too great a knowledge of life and of
death, to be deceived so easily. She would never have succumbed even so
far as she had done, so far as to be physically unnerved to any extent,
but that she had been anticipating some experience of an entirely different
character. She believed she had offered her heart, had lived past the
mistakes which hitherto had held her back, and that she would have been
able to ask direct help from her master and obtain it. Something friendly,
quiet, natural, had been more in her expectations than anything else.
Instead of which she found herself facing the most extraordinary experience
she had ever been through.
The complete and absolute silence wrought on her physical
sensibilities more than any other circumstance. She found she was watching
the silence, listening to it, and that she dreaded to move, that she held
her breath in some vague and unreasonable dread of disturbing it.
It seemed to be a positive fact instead of a negative
one, this complete and immovable silence. Then suddenly a power appeared
to rise within her to oppose this fact - a power stronger than it. And
as the feeling came to her, the silence broke, and a soft shower of music
rilled the air - something as tender as tears and as lovely as sunshine.
The keenest pleasure filled Fleta's soul, and she leaned against the door
and listened. But suddenly a thought darted into her mind: "The silence
is here still - this music is only my own imagination, filling the hateful
void!" And as the thought came the silence returned. Fleta fell on her
knees. It was the first time she had moved since she entered this place.
With the movement came a whole rushing tide of emotions, of phantasmagoria
- feelings, of fancies, a great passing ???? She saw Ivan standing at
her side, but she would not even turn to look at him, for she knew this
was only an image created by her longing. She saw the place in which she
was, suddenly lit and full of people. It was a great hall, gloomy and
vast. There was a moving crowd in it of persons dressed very brilliantly.
"Ah" cried Fleta, in a voice of despair, "that I should
be so cheated by my own fancies is too terrible." and with the sound of
her voice, the darkness returned, closing heavily in upon her. She rose
and drew herself up to her full height. A consciousness of what she was
actually experiencing had come, and she became instantly calm and strong.
"I refuse," she said aloud, "to go through this neophyte's
exercise. I am not the slave of my senses any longer. I dominate them;
I see beyond them. Come you to me, thou that art my own self, and that
art pure, impalpable, unsubstantial, without glamour. Come you and guide
me, for there is none other and nothing else on which my consciousness
has power to rest."
She leaned back against the door, for she was trembling
with the force of her own fierce effort. The door and the floor on which
she stood, were now her only links with the actual or material world.
She knew of nothing else; it appeared to her as though she had forgotten
the material world knew not whether she lived or died; certainly the power
of hope or of fear was leaving her. She became indifferent to everything
except the desire to hold her own higher self, her pure soul in view;
her longing to face herself, and so find some certainty and knowledge,
swallowed up every other desire. She remained a long time, resolutely
fixing her whole intensity of will on this, and waited, expecting in a
moment to see the starry figure close in front of her. Once she saw it,
quite distinctly; but it was like a marble statue, lifeless. She knew
this was no reality, only her own imagining, and her power and strength
began slowly to leave her after this cold vision.
If unconsciousness could have come to her now, it would
have come like rain to a parched land. Her brain was on fire, her heart
like lead. But nothing came to her, nothing became visible. And then she
knew that she had offered up not only the physical senses and emotion,
but the psychic senses and power.
Again she fell on her knees, and clasping her hands fell
into an attitude as if of prayer. In reality she was in profound meditation.
As in a long series of pictures, she now saw herself passing through innumerable
experiences. She saw herself, and without anger, regret, or pain, suffer,
and enjoy. She watched her slow separation from those who loved her, even
until, now when Ivan left her in the hour of trial. She had passed through
fiery trials and all the tests of the passions and emotions. But these
were as nothing beside this mysterious blank, this great chasm of darkness,
which seemed to be not only outside her, but actually within her own soul.
How was it to end? Was there any end? Or was this the
state to which her labours had brought her triumphantly, and in which
she must remain? Impossible. This was not life; it was death. And was
not her effort to attain to life in its essential vitality? Death surely
could not be the final king!
Fleta, the powerful, the disciple, as she had imagined
herself, with knowledge, thus doubted and despaired. Her confidence left
her when she saw this blankness which lay before her.
So it must be always with the unknown.
Suddenly a new mood fell on her. She began to dread lest
she should see forms and shapes, or conjure up the voice or features of
anyone she knew or loved. Most of all, she dreaded to see again the image
of Ivan at her side.
"If I see this," she said to herself, "then indeed I
shall be fallen back into the world of forms. I must not look for anything
but darkness." At this moment a hand was very gently laid on her hair.
Fleta was not so completely unnerved as to tremble or cry out; yet the
shock of the sudden contact shook her so that she could not speak or move.
Then came a voice:
"My child," said a very gentle voice, which sounded like
a woman's, "do you not know that out of chaos must come order, out of
darkness light, out of nothingness something? Neither state is permanent.
Do not make the mistake of dreading or welcoming the return to the world
of forms after having become one with the formless."
Fleta made no answer. She was aware that there was some
deep familiarity about this voice which as yet, she could not understand.
She was at home, like a child with its mother. All fear, all anxiety,
all doubt, had dropped from her.
"You must not die under this ordeal," said the voice,
"and you have been here many hours. Come with me, and I will take you
to a quiet place where you can rest."
Fleta rose; a hand was put into hers. When she attempted
to move she realised that she must, indeed, have been here a long time,
for she was entirely numbed and helpless, and found it almost impossible
to use her limbs. She put out her right hand mechanically, as if to balance
herself, and was much startled by being unable to stretch her arm. - Immediately
she touched a wall close to her. In a moment she understood that she was
in no large hall, but in a small, narrow cell, scarcely wide enough for
two steps to be taken in it. This seemed to her very strange, for she
had so positively believed herself to be in some very spacious place.
"How wide my fancy is!" she thought, almost, smiling
to herself. For now she was at peace, without any anxiety, though she
knew not where she was or who was with her.
Part II
of Blossom and the Fruit, continued by H.P. Blavatsky
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