AN ALLEGORY
Walking
within the garden of his heart, the pupil suddenly came upon the Master, and
was glad, for he had but just finished a task in His service which he hastened
to lay at His feet.
"See, Master," said he, "this is
done; now give me other teaching to do."
The Master looked upon him sadly yet
indulgently, as one might upon a child which can not understand.
"There are already many to teach
intellectual conceptions of the Truth," he replied. "Thinkest thou to
serve best by adding thyself to their number?"
The pupil was perplexed.
"Ought we not to proclaim the Truth from
the very housetops, until the whole world shall have heard?" he asked.
"And then-"
"Then the whole world will surely accept
it."
"Nay," replied the Master, "the
Truth is not of the intellect, but of the heart. See!"
The pupil looked, and saw the Truth as though it
were a White Light, flooding the whole earth; yet none reaching the green and
living plants which so sorely needed its rays, because of dense layers of
clouds intervening.
"The clouds are the human intellect,"
said the Master. "Look again."
Intently gazing, the pupil saw here and there
faint rifts in the clouds, through which the Light struggled in broken, feeble
beams. Each rift was caused by a little vortex of vibrations, and looking down
through the openings thus made the pupil perceived that each vortex had its
origin in a human heart.
Only by adding to and enlarging the rifts will
the Light ever reach the earth," said the Master. "Is it best, then,
to pour out more Light upon the clouds, or to establish a vortex of heart
force? The latter thou must accomplish unseen and unnoticed, and even
unthanked. The former will bring thee praise and notice among men. Both are necessary:
both are Our work; but - the rifts are so few! Art strong enough to forego the
praise and make of thyself a heart center of pure impersonal force?"
The pupil sighed, for it was a sore question.
HIERONYMUM
Path,
October, 1893
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