THE PATH TO
HEAVEN
The day succeeding that on which Seraphita
foresaw her death and bade farewell to Earth, as a
prisoner looks round his dungeon before leaving it
forever, she suffered pains which obliged her to remain
in the helpless immobility of those whose pangs are
great. Wilfrid and Minna went to see her, and
found her lying on her couch of furs. Still veiled
in flesh, her soul shone through that veil, which grew
more and more transparent day by day. The progress
of the Spirit, piercing the last obstacle between
itself and the Infinite, was called an illness, the
hour of Life went by the name of death. David
wept as he watched her sufferings; unreasonable as
a child, he would not listen to his mistress’s
consolations. Monsieur Becker wished Seraphita
to try remedies; but all were useless.
One morning she sent for the two beings
whom she loved, telling them that this would be the
last of her bad days. Wilfrid and Minna came in
terror, knowing well that they were about to lose her.
Seraphita smiled to them as one departing to a better
world; her head drooped like a flower heavy with dew,
which opens its calyx for the last time to waft its
fragrance on the breeze. She looked at these friends
with a sadness that was for them, not for herself;
she thought no longer of herself, and they felt this
with a grief mingled with gratitude which they were
unable to express. Wilfrid stood silent and motionless,
lost in thoughts excited by events whose vast bearings
enabled him to conceive of some illimitable immensity.
Emboldened by the weakness of the
being lately so powerful, or perhaps by the fear of
losing him forever, Minna bent down over the couch
and said, “Seraphitus, let me follow thee!”
“Can I forbid thee?”
“Why will thou not love me enough to stay with
me?”
“I can love nothing here.”
“What canst thou love?”
“Heaven.”
“Is it worthy of heaven to despise the creatures
of God?”
“Minna, can we love two beings
at once? Would our beloved be indeed our beloved
if he did not fill our hearts? Must he not be
the first, the last, the only one? She who is
all love, must she not leave the world for her beloved?
Human ties are but a memory, she has no ties except
to him! Her soul is hers no longer; it is his.
If she keeps within her soul anything that is not
his, does she love? No, she loves not. To
love feebly, is that to love at all? The voice
of her beloved makes her joyful; it flows through
her veins in a crimson tide more glowing far than
blood; his glance is the light that penetrates her;
her being melts into his being. He is warm to
her soul. He is the light that lightens; near
to him there is neither cold nor darkness. He
is never absent, he is always with us; we think in
him, to him, by him! Minna, that is how I love
him.”
“Love whom?” said Minna, tortured with
sudden jealousy.
“God,” replied Seraphitus,
his voice glowing in their souls like fires of liberty
from peak to peak upon the mountains,—“God,
who does not betray us! God, who will never abandon
us! who crowns our wishes; who satisfies His creatures
with joy—joy unalloyed and infinite!
God, who never wearies but ever smiles! God,
who pours into the soul fresh treasures day by day;
who purifies and leaves no bitterness; who is all
harmony, all flame! God, who has placed Himself
within our hearts to blossom there; who hearkens to
our prayers; who does not stand aloof when we are
His, but gives His presence absolutely! He who
revives us, magnifies us, and multiplies us in Himself;
God! Minna, I love thee because thou mayst
be His! I love thee because if thou come to Him
thou wilt be mine.”
“Lead me to Him,” cried
Minna, kneeling down; “take me by the hand; I
will not leave thee!”
“Lead us, Seraphita!”
cried Wilfrid, coming to Minna’s side with an
impetuous movement. “Yes, thou hast given
me a thirst for Light, a thirst for the Word.
I am parched with the Love thou hast put into my heart;
I desire to keep thy soul in mine; thy will is mine;
I will do whatsoever thou biddest me. Since I
cannot obtain thee, I will keep thy will and all the
thoughts that thou hast given me. If I may not
unite myself with thee except by the power of my spirit,
I will cling to thee in soul as the flame to what
it laps. Speak!”
“Angel!” exclaimed the
mysterious being, enfolding them both in one glance,
as it were with an azure mantle, “Heaven shall
by thine heritage!”
Silence fell among them after these
words, which sounded in the souls of the man and of
the woman like the first notes of some celestial harmony.
“If you would teach your feet
to tread the Path to heaven, know that the way is
hard at first,” said the weary sufferer; “God
wills that you shall seek Him for Himself. In
that sense, He is jealous; He demands your whole self.
But when you have given Him yourself, never, never
will He abandon you. I leave with you the keys
of the kingdom of His Light, where evermore you shall
dwell in the bosom of the Father, in the heart of
the Bridegroom. No sentinels guard the approaches,
you may enter where you will; His palaces, His treasures,
His sceptre, all are free. ‘Take them!’
He says. But—you must will to
go there. Like one preparing for a journey, a
man must leave his home, renounce his projects, bid
farewell to friends, to father, mother, sister, even
to the helpless brother who cries after him,—yes,
farewell to them eternally; you will no more return
than did the martyrs on their way to the stake.
You must strip yourself of every sentiment, of everything
to which man clings. Unless you do this you are
but half-hearted in your enterprise.
“Do for God what you do for
your ambitious projects, what you do in consecrating
yourself to Art, what you have done when you loved
a human creature or sought some secret of human science.
Is not God the whole of science, the all of love,
the source of poetry? Surely His riches are worthy
of being coveted! His treasure is inexhaustible,
His poem infinite, His love immutable, His science
sure and darkened by no mysteries. Be anxious
for nothing, He will give you all. Yes, in His
heart are treasures with which the petty joys you lose
on earth are not to be compared. What I tell
you is true; you shall possess His power; you may
use it as you would use the gifts of lover or mistress.
Alas! men doubt, they lack faith, and will, and persistence.
If some set their feet in the path, they look behind
them and presently turn back. Few decide between
the two extremes,—to go or stay, heaven
or the mire. All hesitate. Weakness leads
astray, passion allures into dangerous paths, vice
becomes habitual, man flounders in the mud and makes
no progress towards a better state.
“All human beings go through
a previous life in the sphere of Instinct, where they
are brought to see the worthlessness of earthly treasures,
to amass which they gave themselves such untold pains!
Who can tell how many times the human being lives
in the sphere of Instinct before he is prepared to
enter the sphere of Abstractions, where thought expends
itself on erring science, where mind wearies at last
of human language? for, when Matter is exhausted, Spirit
enters. Who knows how many fleshly forms the
heir of heaven occupies before he can be brought to
understand the value of that silence and solitude
whose starry plains are but the vestibule of Spiritual
Worlds? He feels his way amid the void, makes
trial of nothingness, and then at last his eyes revert
upon the Path. Then follow other existences,—all
to be lived to reach the place where Light effulgent
shines. Death is the post-house of the journey.
A lifetime may be needed merely to gain the virtues
which annul the errors of man’s preceding life.
First comes the life of suffering, whose tortures
create a thirst for love. Next the life of love
and devotion to the creature, teaching devotion to
the Creator,—a life where the virtues of
love, its martyrdoms, its joys followed by sorrows,
its angelic hopes, its patience, its resignation,
excite an appetite for things divine. Then follows
the life which seeks in silence the traces of the
Word; in which the soul grows humble and charitable.
Next the life of longing; and lastly, the life of
prayer. In that is the noonday sun; there are
the flowers, there the harvest!
“The virtues we acquire, which
develop slowly within us, are the invisible links
that bind each one of our existences to the others,
—existences which the spirit alone remembers,
for Matter has no memory for spiritual things.
Thought alone holds the tradition of the bygone life.
The endless legacy of the past to the present is the
secret source of human genius. Some receive the
gift of form, some the gift of numbers, others the
gift of harmony. All these gifts are steps of
progress in the Path of Light. Yes, he who possesses
a single one of them touches at that point the Infinite.
Earth has divided the Word —of which I
here reveal some syllables—into particles,
she has reduced it to dust and has scattered it through
her works, her dogmas, her poems. If some impalpable
grain shines like a diamond in a human work, men cry:
‘How grand! how true! how glorious!’ That
fragment vibrates in their souls and wakes a presentiment
of heaven: to some, a melody that weans from
earth; to others, the solitude that draws to God.
To all, whatsoever sends us back upon ourselves, whatsoever
strikes us down and crushes us, lifts or abases us,—that
is but a syllable of the Divine Word.
“When a human soul draws its
first furrow straight, the rest will follow surely.
One thought borne inward, one prayer uplifted, one
suffering endured, one echo of the Word within us,
and our souls are forever changed. All ends in
God; and many are the ways to find Him by walking
straight before us. When the happy day arrives
in which you set your feet upon the Path and begin
your pilgrimage, the world will know nothing of it;
earth no longer understands you; you no longer understand
each other. Men who attain a knowledge of these
things, who lisp a few syllables of the Word, often
have not where to lay their head; hunted like beasts
they perish on the scaffold, to the joy of assembled
peoples, while Angels open to them the gates of heaven.
Therefore, your destiny is a secret between yourself
and God, just as love is a secret between two hearts.
You may be the buried treasure, trodden under the
feet of men thirsting for gold yet all-unknowing that
you are there beneath them.
“Henceforth your existence becomes
a thing of ceaseless activity; each act has a meaning
which connects you with God, just as in love your
actions and your thoughts are filled with the loved
one. But love and its joys, love and its pleasures
limited by the senses, are but the imperfect image
of the love which unites you to your celestial Spouse.
All earthly joy is mixed with anguish, with discontent.
If love ought not to pall then death should end it
while its flame is high, so that we see no ashes.
But in God our wretchedness becomes delight, joy lives
upon itself and multiplies, and grows, and has no limit.
In the Earthly life our fleeting love is ended by
tribulation; in the Spiritual life the tribulations
of a day end in joys unending. The soul is ceaselessly
joyful. We feel God with us, in us; He gives a
sacred savor to all things; He shines in the soul;
He imparts to us His sweetness; He stills our interest
in the world viewed for ourselves; He quickens our
interest in it viewed for His sake, and grants us
the exercise of His power upon it. In His name
we do the works which He inspires, we act for Him,
we have no self except in Him, we love His creatures
with undying love, we dry their tears and long to
bring them unto Him, as a loving woman longs to see
the inhabitants of earth obey her well-beloved.
“The final life, the fruition
of all other lives, to which the powers of the soul
have tended, and whose merits open the Sacred Portals
to perfected man, is the life of Prayer. Who
can make you comprehend the grandeur, the majesty,
the might of Prayer? May my voice, these words
of mine, ring in your hearts and change them.
Be now, here, what you may be after cruel trial!
There are privileged beings, Prophets, Seers, Messengers,
and Martyrs, all those who suffer for the Word and
who proclaim it; such souls spring at a bound across
the human sphere and rise at once to Prayer.
So, too, with those whose souls receive the fire of
Faith. Be one of those brave souls! God welcomes
boldness. He loves to be taken by violence; He
will never reject those who force their way to Him.
Know this! desire, the torrent of your will, is so
all-powerful that a single emission of it, made with
force, can obtain all; a single cry, uttered under
the pressure of Faith, suffices. Be one of such
beings, full of force, of will, of love! Be conquerors
on the earth! Let the hunger and thirst of God
possess you. Fly to Him as the hart panting for
the water-brooks. Desire shall lend you its wings;
tears, those blossoms of repentance, shall be the celestial
baptism from which your nature will issue purified.
Cast yourself on the breast of the stream in Prayer!
Silence and meditation are the means of following
the Way. God reveals Himself, unfailingly, to
the solitary, thoughtful seeker.
“It is thus that the separation
takes place between Matter, which so long has wrapped
its darkness round you, and Spirit, which was in you
from the beginning, the light which lighted you and
now brings noon-day to your soul. Yes, your broken
heart shall receive the light; the light shall bathe
it. Then you will no longer feel convictions,
they will have changed to certainties. The Poet
utters; the Thinker meditates; the Righteous acts;
but he who stands upon the borders of the Divine World
prays; and his prayer is word, thought, action, in
one! Yes, prayer includes all, contains all; it
completes nature, for it reveals to you the mind within
it and its progression. White and shining virgin
of all human virtues, ark of the covenant between earth
and heaven, tender and strong companion partaking of
the lion and of the lamb, Prayer! Prayer will
give you the key of heaven! Bold and pure as
innocence, strong, like all that is single and simple,
this glorious, invincible Queen rests, nevertheless,
on the material world; she takes possession of it;
like the sun, she clasps it in a circle of light.
The universe belongs to him who wills, who knows, who
prays; but he must will, he must know, he must pray;
in a word, he must possess force, wisdom, and faith.
“Therefore Prayer, issuing from
so many trials, is the consummation of all truths,
all powers, all feelings. Fruit of the laborious,
progressive, continued development of natural properties
and faculties vitalized anew by the divine breath
of the Word, Prayer has occult activity; it is the
final worship—not the material worship of
images, nor the spiritual worship of formulas, but
the worship of the Divine World. We say no prayers,—prayer
forms within us; it is a faculty which acts of itself;
it has attained a way of action which lifts it outside
of forms; it links the soul to God, with whom we unite
as the root of the tree unites with the soil; our
veins draw life from the principle of life, and we
live by the life of the universe. Prayer bestows
external conviction by making us penetrate the Material
World through the cohesion of all our faculties with
the elementary substances; it bestows internal conviction
by developing our essence and mingling it with that
of the Spiritual Worlds. To be able to pray thus,
you must attain to an utter abandonment of flesh; you
must acquire through the fires of the furnace the
purity of the diamond; for this complete communion
with the Divine is obtained only in absolute repose,
where storms and conflicts are at rest.
“Yes, Prayer—the
aspiration of the soul freed absolutely from the body—bears
all forces within it, and applies them to the constant
and perseverant union of the Visible and the Invisible.
When you possess the faculty of praying without weariness,
with love, with force, with certainty, with intelligence,
your spiritualized nature will presently be invested
with power. Like a rushing wind, like a thunderbolt,
it cuts its way through all things and shares the
power of God. The quickness of the Spirit becomes
yours; in an instant you may pass from region to region;
like the Word itself, you are transported from the
ends of the world to other worlds. Harmony exists,
and you are part of it! Light is there and your
eyes possess it! Melody is heard and you echo
it! Under such conditions, you feel your perceptions
developing, widening; the eyes of your mind reach
to vast distances. There is, in truth, neither
time nor place to the Spirit; space and duration are
proportions created for Matter; spirit and matter have
naught in common.
“Though these things take place
in stillness, in silence, without agitation, without
external movement, yet Prayer is all action; but it
is spiritual action, stripped of substantiality, and
reduced, like the motion of the worlds, to an invisible
pure force. It penetrates everywhere like light;
it gives vitality to souls that come beneath its rays,
as Nature beneath the sun. It resuscitates virtue,
purifies and sanctifies all actions, peoples solitude,
and gives a foretaste of eternal joys. When you
have once felt the delights of the divine intoxication
which comes of this internal travail, then all is yours!
once take the lute on which we sing to God within your
hands, and you will never part with it. Hence
the solitude in which Angelic Spirits live; hence
their disdain of human joys. They are withdrawn
from those who must die to live; they hear the language
of such beings, but they no longer understand their
ideas; they wonder at their movements, at what the
world terms policies, material laws, societies.
For them all mysteries are over; truth, and truth
alone, is theirs. They who have reached the point
where their eyes discern the Sacred Portals, who,
not looking back, not uttering one regret, contemplate
worlds and comprehend their destinies, such as they
keep silence, wait, and bear their final struggles.
The worst of all those struggles is the last; at the
zenith of all virtue is Resignation,—to
be an exile and not lament, no longer to delight in
earthly things and yet to smile, to belong to God
and yet to stay with men! You hear the voice that
cries to you, ‘Advance!’ Often celestial
visions of descending Angels compass you about with
songs of praise; then, tearless, uncomplaining, must
you watch them as they reascent the skies! To
murmur is to forfeit all. Resignation is a fruit
that ripens at the gates of heaven. How powerful,
how glorious the calm smile, the pure brow of the
resigned human creature. Radiant is the light
of that brow. They who live in its atmosphere
grow purer. That calm glance penetrates and softens.
More eloquent by silence than the prophet by speech,
such beings triumph by their simple presence.
Their ears are quick to hear as a faithful dog listening
for his master. Brighter than hope, stronger
than love, higher than faith, that creature of resignation
is the virgin standing on the earth, who holds for
a moment the conquered palm, then, rising heavenward,
leaves behind her the imprint of her white, pure feet.
When she has passed away men flock around and cry,
‘See! See!’ Sometimes God holds her
still in sight,—a figure to whose feet
creep Forms and Species of Animality to be shown their
way. She wafts the light exhaling from her hair,
and they see; she speaks, and they hear. ‘A
miracle!’ they cry. Often she triumphs in
the name of God; frightened men deny her and put her
to death; smiling, she lays down her sword and goes
to the stake, having saved the Peoples. How many
a pardoned Angel has passed from martyrdom to heaven!
Sinai, Golgotha are not in this place nor in that;
Angels are crucified in every place, in every sphere.
Sighs pierce to God from the whole universe.
This earth on which we live is but a single sheaf of
the great harvest; humanity is but a species in the
vast garden where the flowers of heaven are cultivated.
Everywhere God is like unto Himself, and everywhere,
by prayer, it is easy to reach Him.”
With these words, which fell from
the lips of another Hagar in the wilderness, burning
the souls of the hearers as the live coal of the word
inflamed Isaiah, this mysterious being paused as though
to gather some remaining strength. Wilfrid and
Minna dared not speak. Suddenly HE lifted himself
up to die:—
“Soul of all things, oh my God,
thou whom I love for Thyself! Thou, Judge and
Father, receive a love which has no limit. Give
me of thine essence and thy faculties that I be wholly
thine! Take me, that I no longer be myself!
Am I not purified? then cast me back into the furnace!
If I be not yet proved in the fire, make me some nurturing
ploughshare, or the Sword of victory! Grant me
a glorious martyrdom in which to proclaim thy Word!
Rejected, I will bless thy justice. But if excess
of love may win in a moment that which hard and patient
labor cannot attain, then bear me upward in thy chariot
of fire! Grant me triumph, or further trial,
still will I bless thee! To suffer for thee,
is not that to triumph? Take me, seize me, bear
me away! nay, if thou wilt, reject me! Thou art
He who can do no evil. Ah!” he cried, after
a pause, “the bonds are breaking.
“Spirits of the pure, ye sacred
flock, come forth from the hidden places, come on
the surface of the luminous waves! The hour now
is; come, assemble! Let us sing at the gates
of the Sanctuary; our songs shall drive away the final
clouds. With one accord let us hail the Dawn
of the Eternal Day. Behold the rising of the one
True Light! Ah, why may I not take with me these
my friends! Farewell, poor earth, Farewell!”