Страница 23

 

Письмо №85-Б, стр. 23

various states of happiness & misery, emotional states having their source in the physical as well as the spiritual faculties and senses, and only the latter surviving. An honest labourer will feel differently from an honest millionaire. Miss Nightingale's state will differ considerably from that of a young bride who dies before the consummation of what she regards as happiness. The two former love their families; the philanthropist — humanity; the girl centres the whole world in her future husband; the melomanic knows of no higher state of bliss & happiness than music — the most divine and spiritual of arts. The devachan merges from its highest into its lowest degree — by insensible gradations; while from the last step of devachan, the Ego will often find itself in Avitcha's faintest state, which, towards the end of the "spiritual selection" of events may become a bona fide "Avitcha." X Remember, every feeling is relative. There is neither good nor evilhappiness nor misery per se. The transcendent, evanescent bliss of an adulterer, who by his act murders the happiness of a husband, is no less spiritually


Notes: 

Miss Nightingale refers to Florence Nightingale, an English nurse noted for her work during the Crimean War and for founding nursing schools.

Avitcha is a miswriting by the chela-amanuensis for Avitchi.