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The Heart of Nature

Chapter 8 THE HEAVENS

Word Count: 3302    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

its finest delicacy. But for depth, extent, and brilliancy of colour we must look to sunsets-an

s slant across the scene the desert glows with colour of every shade and hue and in ever-changing combination. In the Gobi Desert of Central Asia, in the Egyptian Desert, in the Arabian Desert, in Arizona, I have seen sunsets that thrill one with delight. But nowhere have I seen more glorious sunsets than in the highlands of Tibet. And what

atmosphere here is so thick that the colours appear as if thrown on to a solid background. So the sunsets look opaque. On the continent of Europe the atmosphere is clearer and the opaqueness less pronounced. The colouring is in consequence more vivid. But-except in hi

s we see in precious stones than the colours a painter throws on a canvas. There is no milkiness or murkiness in them. The sky is so clear that we see a colour a

ssion is derived from light, and the colours are therefore far more glowing than they could ever be reproduced on canvas. Nor can the changing effects be reproduced on a stationary medium. The nearest approach to the glory of a Tibet sunset which I have seen is a picture in pastel by

s with the colours of flowers and precious stones. But here also we miss the light which is the very foundati

han orange into the reds of the ruby or the cardinal flower, and lighter into the pinks of the rose or the carnation; and the yellows range from the gold of the eseholtzia to the delicate hue of the primrose. And for the translucency of their yellower effects we must bring in the amber. Often there is a green which can only be matched by jade or emerald. And

es. So we must imagine all these colours glowing with light and never still-perpetually changing from one to the other and shading off from one into the other, one colour emerging, rising to the dominant positi

that line, in Tibet, the sky was nearly always clear and blue of the bluest. With nothing whatever to impede my view-no trees, nor houses, nor fences, nor obstacles of any kind-I could look out far over these open plains to distant hills; beyond them, again, to Mount Everest a hundred miles away; beyond it, again, to still more distant mountains; and, finally, behind them

e presence of these calm but fervent sunsets there was a different feeling. I had a sense of expansion, a longing to let myself go. And I would feel myself craving to let myself go out all I could into these glowing depths of light and colour, and trying to open myself out to their beauty, that as much as possible

ite unconsciously, and as it were inevit

, spirit

thou me, mos

y lips to un

et of a p

rs know what glory there was in the world, and to be able to communicate to them something of the joy I was then feeling in beholding it. I was

ts fulness. But now in these Tibetan sunsets we have not purity alone, but warmth and richness as well. They give an impression of infinity of glory. We catch alight from their con

f things. And in gazing on them we are prone to have a sense of sadness mingled with our

succeeds, but a light that enables us to see farther, a mellower light that enables us to see the Univer

a murky atmosphere we see a few stars. Even when we have a clear sky we seldom get a chance of seeing the whole expanse of the heavens all the way round

garden and looks up casually to the stars. I was tense with high enterprise. I was passing through unknown country on a journey across the Chinese Empire from Peking to Ind

traversed by Europeans, and the distance to be covered across the open steppes of Mongolia and over the Gobi Desert to the first town in Turkestan was twelve hundred miles. Beyond that was the whole length of Tu

l through the night and well into the following day. Frequently there were terrific sandstorms, but there were seldom any clouds. So the atmosphere was clear. In the distance were sometimes

Each through the ascendancy of some one shade of colour, or through an unusual combination of colour, had a special beauty of its own. I would watch each ripening to t

lliance only surpassed by the stars in the high Himalayan solitudes I have already described. And a great stillness would be over all-a silence even completer than the silence among the mountains, for there it was often broken by cre

rry firmament than with this Earth. In a curious way the bodily and the material seemed to exist no longer, and I would be in spirit among the stars. They served to guide us over the desert and I gradually became familiar with them. And I used to feel

d farthest stars I knew had been measured. I knew that the resulting number of miles is something so immense as to be altogether beyond human conception. I knew also that the number of stars, besides those few thousands which I saw, had to be numbered in hundreds of millions. All this was astonishing, and th

the order which prevails. We feel that the whole is kept together in punctual fashion, and is not mere chaos and chance. The presence of some Power upholding, sustaining, and directing the whole is deep

nd all for the time seems turmoil and confusion and nothing is visible. But behind all we know the stars still pursue their mig

tly contemplation of the stars makes upon us. At the foundation of things is something dependab

e otherwise. For nowhere do we feel the Influence nearer, more intimate or more beneficent. We seem in the very midst of the great Presence. We are immersed in it. It is pervading us on every side. We do not expect it to alter the whole course of Nature for our

lt around us. The Activity does not appear to us to emanate from some Invisible Being dwelling wholly apart and isolated from the stars and this Earth, and sending forth invisible spiritual rays, as the Sun stands apart from the Earth but sends out rays of sunlight to it. It seems rather to dwell in the very heart and centre of each star, and the stars seem spiritual rather than material beings. So this Power, as we experience it in

re revealed is both dependable and kindly. Nature is our friend. And in her certain friendship the balm of peace falls softly on

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