To many minds the 'proof' of a doctrine is its reasonableness and its
adapability to answer existing problems. And, accordingly, to such, the
many arguments advanced in favor of the doctrine, of which we have
given a few in the preceding chapters, together with the most universal
acceptance of the fundamental ideas on the part of the race, in at least
some period of its development, would be considered as a very good
'proof' of the doctrine, at least so far as it might be considered as the
'most available working theory' of the soul's existence, past and
future, and as better meeting the requirements of a doctrine or theory than
any other idea advanced by metaphysical, theological, or philosophical
thinkers.
But to the scientific mind, or the minds of those who demand something
in the nature of actual experience of facts, no amount of reasonable
abstract theorizing and speculation is acceptable even in the way of a
'working hypothesis,' unless based upon some tangible 'facts' or
knowledge gained through human experience. While people possessing such minds
will usually admit freely that the doctrine of Reincarnation is more
logical than the opposing theories, and that it fits better the
requirements of the case, still they will maintain that all theories regarding
the soul must be based on premises that cannot be established by actual
experience in human consciousness. They hold that in absence of proof
in eperience - actual 'facts' - these premises are not established, and
that all structures of reasoning based upon them must partake of their
insecurity. These people are like the slangy 'man from Missouri' who
'wants to be shown' - nay more, they are like the companion of the
above man - the man from Texas, who not only says: "You've got to show me,"
but who also demands that the thing be "placed in my hand." And,
after all, one has no right to criticize these people - they are but
manifesting the scientific spirit of the age which demands facts as a basis
for theories, rather than theories that need facts to prove them. And,
unless Reincarnation is able to satisfy the demands of this class of
thinkers, the advocates of the doctrine need not complain if the
scientific mind dismisses the doctine as 'not proven.'
After all, the best proof along the above mentioned lines - in fact,
about the only possible strict proof - is the fragmentary recollections
of former lives, which many people possess at times - these
recollections often flashing across the mind, bringing with it a conviction that
the place or thing 'has been experienced before.' Nearly every person
has had glimpses of something that appeared to be a recollection from the
past life of the individual. We see places that we have never known,
and they seem perfectly familiar; we meet strangers, and we are
convinced that we have known them in the past; we read an old book and feel
that we have seen it before, often so much so that we can anticipate the
story or argument of the writer; we hear some strange philosophical
doctrine, and we recognize it as an old friend. Many people have had this
experience in the matter of Occultism - in the very matter of the
doctrine of Reincarnation itself - when they first heard it, although it
struck them as strange and unusual, yet they felt an inner conviction
that it was an old story to them - that they 'had heard it all before.'
These experiences are by far too common to be dismissed as mere fancy or
coincidence. Nearly every living person has had some experience along
this line.
A recent writer along the lines of Oriental Philosophy has said
regarding this common experience of the race: "Many people have had 'peculiar
experiences' that are accountable only upon the hypothesis of
Metempsychosis. Who has not experienced the consciousness of having felt the
thing before - having thought it some time in the dim past? Who has not
witnessed new scenes that appear old, very old? Who has not met
persons for the first time, whose presence awakened memories of a past lying
far back in the misty ages of long ago? Who has not been seized at
times with the consciousness of a mighty 'oldness' of soul? Who has not
heard music, often entirely new compositions, which somehow awakened
memories of similar strains, scenes, places, faces, voices, lands,
associations, and events, sounding dimly on the strings of memory as the
breezes of the harmony floats over them? Who has not gazed at some old
painting, or piece of statuary, with the sense of having seen it all
before? Who has not lived through certain events which brought with them a
certainty of being merely a repetition of some shadowy occurrences away
back in lives lived long ago? Who has not felt the influence of a
mountain, the sea, the desert, coming to them when they are far from such
scenes - coming so vividly as to cause the actual scene of the present
to fade into comparative unreality? Who has not had these epxeriences?"
We have been informed by Hindus well advanced in the occult theory and
practice that it is quite a common thing for people of their country to
awaken to an almost complete recollection of their former lives; in
some cases they have related deatails of former lives that have been
fully verified by investigation in parts of the land very remote from their
present residence. In one case, a Hindu sage related to us an
instance where a poor Hindu, who had worked steadily in the village in which
he had been born, without leaving it, ever since his childhood days.
This man one day cried out that he had awakened to a recollection of
having been a man of such and such a village, in a province hundreds of
miles from his home. Some wealthy people became interested in the matter,
and after having taken down his statements in writing, and after
careful examination and questioning they took him to the town in question.
Upon entering the village the man seemed dazed, and cried out:
"Everything is changed - it is the same and yet not the same!" Finally,
however, he began to recognize some of the old landmarks of the place, and to
call the places and roads by their names. Then, coming to a familiar
corner, he cried: "Down there is my old home," and, rushing down the
road for several hundred yards, he finally stopped before the ruins of an
old cottage, and burst into tears, saying that the roof of his home
had fallen in, and the walls were crumbling to pieces. Inquiry amongst
the oldest men of the place brought to light the fact that when these
aged men were boys, the house had been occupied by an old man, bearing
the same name first mentioned by the Hindu as having been his own in his
previous life. Other facts about the former location of places in the
village were verified by the old men. Finally, while walking around
the ruins, the man said: "There should be a pot of silver buried there -
I hid it there when I lived here." The people rapidly uncovered the
ground indicated, and brought to light an old pot containing a few pieces
of silver coin of a date corresponding to the lifetime of the former
occupant of the house. Our informant told us that he had personal
knowledge of a number of similar cases, none of which, however, were quite
as complete in detail as the one mentioned. He also informed us that he
himself, and a number of his acquaintances who had attained certain
degrees of occult unfoldment, were fully aware of their past lives for
several incarnations back.
Another instance came under our personal observation, in which an
American who had never been to India, when taken into a room in which a
Hindu priest who was visiting America had erected a shrine or altar before
which he performed his religious services, readily recognized the
arrangement of the deatils of worship, ritual, ceremony, etc., and was
conscious of having seen, or at least dreamed of seeing, a similar shrine at
some time in the past, and as having had some connection with the
same. The Hindu priest, upon hearing the American's remarks, stated that
his knowledge of the details of the shrine, as then expressed, indicated
a knowledge possible only to one who had served at a Hindu altear in
some capacity.
We know of another case in which an acquaintance, a prominent attorney
in the West, told us that when undergoing his initiation in the Masonic
order he had a full recollection of having undergone the same before,
and he actually anticipated each successive step. This knowledge,
however, ceased after he had passed beyond the first three degrees which
took him to the place where he was a full Master Mason, the higher
degrees being entirely new to him, and having been apparently not experienced
before. This man was not a believer in any doctrine of Reincarnation,
and related the incident merely as 'one of those things that no man
can explain.'
We know of another case, in which a student of Hindu Philosophy and
Oriental Occultism found that he could anticipate each step of the
teaching and doctrine, and each bit of knowledge gained by him seemed merely a
recollection of something known long since. So true was this that he
was able to supply the 'missing links' of the teaching, where he had
not access to the proper sources of information at the time, and in each
case he afterward found that he had stated the same correctly. And
this included many points of the Inner Teachings not generally taught to
the general public, but reserved for the few. Subsequent contact with
native Hindu teachers brought to light the fact that he had already
unraveled many tangled skeins of doctrine deemed possible only to the
'elect.'
Many of these recollections of the past come as if they were memories
of something experienced in dreams, but sometimes after the loose end of
the thought is firmly grasped and mentally drawn out, other bits of
recollection will follow. Sir Walter Scott wrote in his diary in 1828:
"I was strangely haunted by what I would call the sense of
pre-existence, viz., a confused idea that nothing that passed was said for the first
time; that the same topics had been discussed, and the same persons
has stated the same opinions of them." William Home, an English writer,
was instantly converted from materialism to a belief in a spiritual
existence by an incident that occurred to him in a part of London utterly
strange to him. He entered a waiting room, and to his surprise
everything seemed familiar to him. As he says: "I seemed to recognize every
object. I said to myself, what is this? I have never been here before,
and yet I have seen all this, and if so, there is a very peculiar knot
in that shutter." He then crossed the room, and opened the shutter,
and after examination he saw the identical peculiar knot that he had
felt sure was there. Pythagoras is said to have distinctly remembered a
number of his previous incarnations, and at one time pointed out a
shield in a Grecian temple as having been carried by him in a previous
incarnation at the seige of Troy. A well-known ancient Hindu sage is said
to have transcribed a lost sacred book of doctrine from memory of its
study in a previous life. Children often talk strangely of former lives,
which ideas, however, are generally frightened out of them by reproof
on the part of the parents, and often punishment for untruthfulness and
romancing. As they grow older these memories fade away.
People travelling in strange places often experience emotion when
viewing some particular scene, and memory seems to painfully struggle to
bring into the field of consciousness the former connection between the
scene and the individual. Many persons have testified to these
occurrences, many of them being matter-of-fact, unimaginative people, who had
never even heard of the doctrine of Reincarnation. Charles Dickens, in
one of his books of foreign travel, tells of a bridge in Italy which
produced a peculiar effect upon him. He says: "If I had been murdered
there in some former life, I could not have seemed to remember the place
more thoroughly, or with more emphatic chilling of the blood; and the
real remembrance of it acquired in that minute is so strengthened by the
imaginary recollection that I hardly think I could forget it." Another
recorded instance is that of a person entering a foreign library for
the first time. Passing to the department of ancient books, he said
that he had a dim idea that a certain rare book was to be found on such a
shelf, in such a corner, describing at the same time certain
peculiarities of the volume. A search failed to discover the volume in the
stated place, but investigation showed that it was in another place in the
library, and an old assistant stated that a generation back it had been
moved from its former place (as stated by the visitor), where it had
previously been located for very many years. An examination of the
volume showed a perfect correspondence in every detail with the description
of the strange visitor.
And so the story proceeds. Reference to the many works written on the
subject of the future life of the soul will supply many more instances
of the glimpses of recollection of past incarnations. But why spread
these instances over more pages? The experience of other people, while
of scientific interest and value as affording a basis for a theory or
doctrine, will never supply the experience that the close and rigid
investigator demands. Only his own experiences will satisfy him - and
perhaps not even those, for he may consider them delusions. These
experiences of others have their principal value as corroborative proofs of
one's own experiences, and thus serve to prove that the individual
experience was not abnormal, unusual or a delusion. To those who have not had
these glimpses of recollection, the only proof that can be offered is
the usual arguments in favor of the doctrine, and the account of the
experiences of others - this may satisfy, and may not. But to those who
have had these glimpses - particularly in a marked degree - there will
come a feeling of certainty and conviction that in some cases is as
real as the certainty and conviction of the present existence, and which
will be proof against all argument to the contrary. To such people the
knowledge of previous existences is as much a matter of consciousness
as the fact of the existence of last year - yesterday - a moment ago -
or even the present moment, which slips away while we attempt to
consider it. And those who have this consciousness of past lives, even though
the details may be vague, intuitively accept the teachings regarding
the future lives of the soul. The soul that recognizes its 'oldness'
also feels its certainty of survival - not as a mere matter of faith,
but as an item of consciousness, the boundaries of time being
transcended.
But there are other arguments advanced in favor of Reincarnation, which
its advocates consider so strong as to entitle them to be classed as
'proofs.' Among these may be mentioned the difference in tastes,
talents, predispositions, etc., noticeable among children and adults, and
which can scarcely be attributed to heredity. This same idea carries one
to the consideration of the question of 'youthful genius,' 'prodigies,'
etc.
It is a part of this argument to assume that if all souls were freshly
created, by the same Creator, and from the same material, they would
resemble each other very closely, and in fact would be practically
identical. And, it is urged, the fact that every child is different in
tastes, temperament, qualities, nature, etc., independent of heredity and
environment, then it must follow that the difference must be sought for
further back. Children of the same parents differ very materially in
nature, disposition, etc.; in fact, strangers are more often alike than
children of the same parents, born within a few years of each other, and
reared in the same environment. Those having much experience of young
babies know that each infant has its own nature and disposition, and
in which it differs from every other infant, although they may be
classed into groups, of course. The infant a few hours born shows a
gentleness, or a lack of it - a yeilding or a struggle, a disposition to adjust
itself, or a stubbornness, etc. And as the child grows, these traits
show more plainly, and the nature of the individual asserts itself,
subject of course, to a moulding and shaping, but always asserting its
original character in some way.
Not only in the matter of disposition but in the matter of tastes,
tendencies, moral inclinations, etc., do the children differ. Some like
this, and dislike that, and the reverse; some are attracted toward this
and repelled by that, and the reverse; some are kind while others are
cruel; some manifest an innate sense of refinement, while others show
coarseness and lack of delicate feeling. This among children of the same
family, remember. And when the child enters school, we find this one
takes to mathematics as the duck does to water, while its brother
loathes the subject; the anti-arithmetic child may excel in history or
geography, or else grammar, which is the despair of others. Some are at once
attracted to music, and others to drawing, while both of these
branches are distasteful to others. And it will be noticed that in the
studies to which the child is attracted, it seems to learn almost without
effort, as if it were merely re-learning some favorite study, momentarily
forgotten. And in the case of the disliked study, every step is
attended with toil. In some cases the child seems to learn every branch with
the minimum effort, and with practically no effort; while in other
cases the child has to plod wearily over every branch, as if breaking
entirely new ground. And this continues into after life, when the adult
finds this thing or that thing into which he naturally fits as if it were
made for him, the knowledge concerning it coming to him like the
lesson of yesterday.
We know of a case in which a man had proved a failure in everything he
had undertaken up to the age of forty, when his father-in-law, in
disgust, placed him at the head of an enterprise which he had had to 'take
over' for a bad debt. The 'failure' immediately took the keenest
interest in the work, and in a month knew more about it than many men who had
been in the concern for years. His mind found itself perfectly at
home, and he made improvement after improvement rapidly, and with uniform
success. He had found his work, and in a few years stepped to the
front rank in the country in that particular line of business. 'Blessed is
he that hath found his work.' Reincarnationists would hold that that
man had found his work in a line similar in its mental demands with
that of his former life or lives - not necessarily identical in details,
but similar in its mental requirement. Instances of this thing are to
be seen all around us. Heredity does not seem to account for it - nor
does environment answer the requirements. Some other factor is there -
is it Reincarnation?
Allied to this phenomena is that of 'youthful genius,' - in fact,
genius of any age, for that matter, for genius itself seems to be out of the
category of the ordinary cause of heredity and environment, and to
have its roots in some deeper, richer soil. It is a well-known fact that
now and then a child is born which at an early age shows an
acquaintance with certain arts, or other branches of mental work, which is usually
looked for only from those of advanced years, and after years of
training. In many cases these children are born of parents and grandparents
deficient in the particular branches of knowledge evidenced by the
child. Babes scarcely able to sit on the piano stool, or to hold the
violin, have begun to play in a way that certainly indicated previous
knowledge and technique, often composing original productions in an amazing
manner. Other young children have begun to draw and design without any
instruction whatsoever. Others have shown wonderful mathematical
ability, there being several cases on record where such children have
performed feats in mathematics impossible to advanced adults teaching the
same lines. What are the cause of these phenomena? Is it Reincarnation?
As Figuier said, years ago: "We hear it said every day that one child
has mathematical, another a musical, another an artistic turn. In
others we notice savage, violent, even criminal instincts. After the first
years of life these dispositions break out. When these natural
aptitudes are pushed beyond the usual limit, we find famous examples that
history has cherished, and that we love to recall. There is Pascal,
mastering at the age of twelve years the greater part of Plane Geometry
without any instruction, and not a figment of Calculus, drawing on the floor
of his chamber all the figures in the first book of Euclid, estimating
accurately the mathematical relations of them all - that is,
reconstructing for himself a part of descriptive Geometry; the herdsman Mangia
Melo, manipulating figures, when five years old, as rapidly as a
calculating machine; Mozart, executing a sonata on the pianoforte with
four-years-old fingers, and composing an opera at the age of eight; Theresa
Milanollo, playing the violin at four years, with such eminent skill that
Baillot said she must have played it before she was born; Rembrandt,
drawing with masterly power before he could read." The same authority
says, in reference to the fact that some of these prodigies do not
become famous in their after years, and that their genius often seems to
flicker out, leaving them as ordinary children: "That is easily
understood. They come on earth with remarkable powers acquired in an anterior
existence, but they have done nothing to develop their aptitudes; they
have remained all their lives at the very point where they were at the
moment of their birth. The real man of genius is he who cultivates and
improves incessantly the great natural aptitudes that he brought into
the world."
There is an interesting field for study, thought and investigation,
along the lines of the early development of traits, tendencies, and
thought in young children. Here evidently will be found the answer to many
problems that have perplexed the race. It is true that heredity and
environment play an important part, but nevertheless, there seems to be
another element working in the case, which science must have to reckon
with in making up its final conclusions. Is that 'something' connected
with the 'soul' rather than the mind of the child? Is that 'something'
that which men call Metempsychosis - ReBirth - Reincarnation?
Along the same lines, or thought, lie the great questions of
instinctive Like and Dislike - Loves and Hates - that we find among people
meeting as strangers. From whence come those strange, unaccountable
attractions and repulsions that many feel when meeting certain strangers, who
could never have occasioned such feelings in the present life, and which
heredity does not account for? Is it merely an absurd irrational
fancy or feeling,; is it the result of natures inharmonious and discordant;
is it remnants of inherited ancestral feelings toward similar
individuals hated, loved or feared; is it a telepathic sensing of certain
elements in the other; or is it a manifestation of the feelings experienced
in a past existence? Is this phenomena to be included in the Proofs of
Reincarnation? Many people think that in Reincarnation the only
answer may be found.