MYSTIC EXPERIENCES CHAPTER II The Story of the Spacs-born "Hear thou the story of the Space-born. ^Somewhere there dwells a Brahmana named Akasha"ja (Space-born). Ever intent is he on meditation for the good of all being's. He had lived thus so long that Mrtyu (Death) grew jealous, and thought to himself, 'All created things I over- power and devour resistlessly. Why do I not thus with this Space-born Brahmana ? My power is blunted against him as the edge of the strongest keenest sword on the face of the rock/ And so he went against him once again. He met a wall of fire surrounding his abode. With difficulty he broke through it, and beheld the Brahmana, and endeavoured to grasp him with his hundred hands ; but failed, even as one fails with physical hands to seize a thing of fancy. "Then Mrtyu went to his lord and master Yama,(1) and asked him why, and Yama spoke: ^Thou art unable by thyself, 0 Death !, to master any living thing. It is the actions of thy prey that make him fall into thy ruthless, hands. Go thou again, and seek for those acts of this Brahmana that shall help thee to defeat him.\3) And Mrfcyu wandered long through distant countries, lakes, rivers, and forests, (1) Yama, etymolbgioally, means role, regulation, restraint, control, law, vow of Belt-restraint; then Law-Enforcer ; (in Mythos and Super- physios), the God who is the Judge of Souls ; (in Metaphysics) the One Self ^rhioh. is the Supreme God, the [Supreme Judge, the Source of all Law and Laws of Nature, the Lord of Life and Death. (2) Acts are due to desires and cause changes ; desires mean limitations of the self, and limitations necessarily imply a beginning and an end, hence subordination to death, which is only change w excelais. Wherever there is change, death has away, and men, by acting, baoome subject to death,