CYCLES
A PAPER READ BY WILLIAM Q. JUDGE BEFORE
THE ARYAN T. S., OCTOBER 22, 1889
IN advancing these few observations upon the
doctrine of cycles, no claim to an exhaustive study of the matter is made. This
paper is merely by way of suggestion.
The subject was brought before my mind by our
discussion some evenings ago, when the question of the descent upon earth, or
ascent from it, of celestial beings or progressed souls engaged our attention.
It seemed certain that such ascent and descent were governed by cyclic laws,
and therefore proceeded in regular periods. Some sentences from the Wisdom
of the Egyptians by Synesius in matter furnished me by Bro. Chas.
Johnston, now of India, read:
After Osiris, therefore, was initiated by his
father into the royal mysteries, the gods informed him . . . that a strong
tribe of envious and malignant dæmons were present with Typhos as his patrons,
to whom he was allied and by whom he was hurled forth into light, in order that
they might employ him as an instrument of the evil which they inflict on
mankind. For the calamities of nations are the banquets of the evil dæmons.
Yet you must not think that the gods are without
employment, or that their descent to this earth is perpetual. For they descend
according to orderly periods of time, for the purpose of imparting a
beneficent impulse in the republics of mankind. But this happens when they
harmonize a kingdom and send to this earth for that purpose souls who are
allied to themselves. For this providence is divine and most ample, which
frequently through one man pays attention to and affects countless multitudes
of men.
For there is indeed in the terrestrial abode the
sacred tribe of heroes who pay attention to mankind, and who are able to give
them assistance even in the smallest concerns. . . . This heroic tribe is, as
it were, a colony from the gods established here in order that this terrene
abode may not be left destitute of a better nature. But when matter excites her
own proper blossoms to war against the soul, the resistance made by these
heroic tribes is small when the gods are absent; for everything is strong only
in its appropriate place and time. . . . But when the harmony adapted in the beginning
by the gods to all terrene things becomes old, they descend again to earth that
they may call the harmony forth, energize and resuscitate it when it is as it
were expiring. . . . When, however, the whole order of mundane things, greatest
and least, is corrupted, then it is necessary that the gods should descend for
the purpose of imparting another orderly distribution of things.
And in the Bhagavad Gita it is said by
Krishna:
When Righteousness
Declines, O Bharata! when Wickedness
Is strong, I rise, from age to age, and take
Visible shape, and move a man with men,
Succoring the good and thrusting the evil back,
And setting Virtue on her seat again,
And
At the approach of Brahmas day, which ends after
a thousand ages, all manifested objects come forth from the non-developed
principle. At the approach of Brahmas night they are absorbed in the original
principle. This collective mass of existing things, thus coming forth out of
the absolute again and again, is dissolved at the approach of that night; and at
the approach of a new day it emanates again spontaneously.
In the foregoing quotations two great aspects of
cyclic law are stated.
The latter has reference to the great cycle
which includes all cycles of every kind. All the minor cycles run their course
within it. When it begins a new creation is ushered in, and when it ends the
great day of dissolution has arrived. In Arnold's translation of the Bhagavad
Gita the beginning of this great cycle is beautifully called by him "this
vast Dawn," and of the close he reads:
When that deep night doth darken, all which is
Fades back again to Him who sent it forth.
The real figures expressing the mortal years
included in this period are not given. Each Manwantara, according to the
Hindus, is divided into the four Yugas or Ages, with a certain number of years
allotted to each. Speaking on this subject in the Key to Theosophy (page
83), H. P. Blavatsky gives us a clue thus:
Take as a first comparison and a help towards a
more correct conception, the solar year; and as a second, the two halves of
that year, producing each a day and a night of six months duration at the North
Pole. Now imagine, if you can, instead of a solar year of 365 days, ETERNITY.
Let the sun represent the universe, and the polar days and nights of six
months each--days and nights lasting each 182 trillions and quadrillions of
years instead of 182 days each. As the sun rises every morning on our objective
horizon out of its (to us) subjective and antipodal space, so
does the Universe emerge periodically on the plane of objectivity, issuing from
that of subjectivity--the antipodes of the former. This is the "Cycle of
Life." And as the sun disappears from our horizon, so does the Universe
disappear at regular periods when the "Universal Night" sets in....
This is about the best idea we can get of it. It
is impossible for the human mind to conceive these periods. No brain can grasp
182 trillions of years, much less if quadrillions are added. Few if any persons
can mentally traverse the full extent of even a million. But we can
make an approximation to the idea by using her suggestion of dividing the year
and calling six months a day and six months a night, and then extending each into
what is equivalent to infinity with us, since it is impossible to seize such
immense periods of time.
And carrying out the correspondence suggested by
her, we have at once a figure of the inclusion of all the minor cycles, by
calling each day when we rise and night when we sleep as the beginning and
ending of minor cycles. Those days and nights go to make up our years and our
life. We know each day and can calculate it, and fairly well throw the mind
forward to see a year or perhaps a life.
A quotation from Vol. I.., at 31 of Isis
Unveiled will give us the Indian figures. She says:
The Maha-Kalpa embraces an untold number of
periods far back in the antediluvian ages. Their system comprises a Kalpa or
grand period of 4,320,000,000 years which they divide into four lesser yugas
running as follows:
|
Satya yug
|
-------------
|
1,728,000
|
years
|
|
Treta yug
|
-------------
|
1,296,000
|
years
|
|
Dwapara yug
|
-------------
|
864,000
|
years
|
|
Kali yug
|
-------------
|
432,000
|
years
|
|
|
|
________
|
|
|
|
|
4,320,000
|
|
|