THE DWELLER OF THE THRESHOLD
HAS such a being any existence? Has any one ever seen it? Are there many or
several, and has it any sex? Such are the questions asked by nearly all
students who read theosophical books. Some of those who all their life believed
in fairies in secret and in the old tales of giants, have proceeded to test the
question by calling upon the horrid shade to appear and freeze their blood with
the awful eyes that Bulwer Lytton has made so famous in his "Zanoni." But the
Dweller is not to be wooed in such a way, and has not appeared at all, but by
absolute silence leads the invoker to at last scout the idea altogether.
But this same inquirer then studies theosophical books with diligence, and
enters after a time on the attempt to find out his own inner nature. All this
while the Dweller has waited, and, indeed, we may say, in complete ignorance as
yet of the neophyte's existence. When the study has proceeded far enough to
wake up long dormant senses and tendencies, the Dweller begins to feel that
such a person as this student is at work. Certain influences are then felt, but
not always with clearness, and at first never ascribed to the agency of what
had long ago been relegated to the lumber-room of exploded superstitions. The
study goes still farther and yet farther, until the awful Thing has revealed
itself; and when that happens, it is not a superstition nor is it disbelieved.
It can then never be gotten rid of, but will stay as a constant menace until it
is triumphed over and left behind.
When Glyndon was left by Mejnour in the old castle in Italy, he found two
vases which he had received direction not to open. But disobeying these he took
out the stoppers, and at once the room was filled with intoxication, and soon
the awful, loathsome creature appeared whose blazing eyes shone with malignant
glare and penetrated to Glyndon's soul with a rush of horror such as he had
never known.
In this story Lytton desired to show that the opening of the vases is like
the approach of an enquirer to the secret recesses of his own nature. He opens
the receptacles, and at first is full of joy and a sort of intoxication due to
the new solutions offered for every problem in life and to the dimly seen
vistas of power and advancement that open before him. If the vases are
kept open long enough, the Dweller of the Threshold surely appears, and no
man is exempt from the sight. Goodness is not sufficient to prevent its
appearance, because even the good man who finds a muddy place in the way to
his destination must of necessity pass through it to reach the end.
We must ask next, WHAT is the Dweller? It is the combined evil influence
that is the result of the wicked thoughts and acts of the age in which any one
may live, and it assumes to each student a definite shape at each appearance,
being always either of one sort or changing each time. So that with one it may
be as Bulwer Lytton pictured it, or with another only a dread horror, or even
of any other sort of shape. It is specialized for each student and given its
form by the tendencies and natural physical and psychical combinations that
belong to his family and nation.
Where, then, does it dwell? is the very natural inquiry which will follow.
It dwells in its own plane, and that may be understood in this manner.
Around each person are planes or zones, beginning with spirit and running
down to gross matter. These zones extend, within their lateral boundaries, all
around the being. That is to say, if we figure ourselves as being in the center
of a sphere, we will find that there is no way of escaping or skipping any one
zone, because it extends in every direction until we pass its lateral boundary.
When the student has at last gotten hold of a real aspiration and some
glimmer of the blazing goal of truth where Masters stand, and has also aroused
the determination to know and to be, the whole bent of his nature, day and
night, is to reach out beyond the limitations that hitherto had fettered his
soul. No sooner does he begin thus to step a little forward, than he reaches
the zone just beyond mere bodily and mental sensations. At first the minor
dwellers of the threshold are aroused, and they in temptation, in bewilderment,
in doubt or confusion, assail him. He only feels the effect, for they do not
reveal themselves as shapes. But persistence in the work takes the inner man
farther along, and with that progress comes a realization to the outer mind of
the experiences met, until at last he has waked up the whole force of the evil
power that naturally is arrayed against the good end he has set before him.
Then the Dweller takes what form it may. That it does take some definite shape
or impress itself with palpable horror is a fact testified to by many students.
One of those related to me that he saw it as an enormous slug with evil
eyes whose malignancy could not be described. As he retreated - that is, grew
fearful -, it seemed joyful and portentous, and when retreat was complete it
was not. Then he fell further back in thought and action, having occasionally
moments of determination to retrieve his lost ground. Whenever these came to
him, the dreadful slug again appeared, only to leave him when he had given up
again his aspirations. And he knew that he was only making the fight, if ever
he should take it up again, all the harder.
Another says that he has seen the Dweller concentrated in the apparent form
of a dark and sinister-looking man, whose slightest motions, whose merest
glance, expressed the intention and ability to destroy the student's reason,
and only the strongest effort of will and faith could dispel the evil
influence. And the same student at other times has felt it as a vague, yet
terrible, horror that seemed to enwrap him in its folds. Before this he has
retreated for the time to prepare himself by strong self-study to be pure and
brave for the next attack.
These things are not the same as the temptations of Saint Anthony. In his
case he seems to have induced an hysterical erotic condition, in which the
unvanquished secret thoughts of his own heart found visible appearance.
The Dweller of the Threshold is not the product of the brain, but is an
influence found in a plane that is extraneous to the student, but in which his
success or failure will be due to his own purity. It is not a thing to be
dreaded by mere dilettanti theosophists; and no earnest one who feels himself
absolutely called to work persistently to the highest planes of development for
the good of humanity, and not for his own, need fear aught that heaven or hell
holds.
Eusebio Urban
Path, December, 1888
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