66 l MYSTIC EXPERIENCES Llla : ^My memory comes back to me ! Eight hundred births have I passed through, I see, since my descent from Brahma, I was the wife of a Vidya"dhara(1) in the distant past. And, step by step, by growing crossness of desire, I fell into vegetable and animal forms. I call to mind that I was once a creeper in a Muni's 5shrama(2). And by that holy influence I rose again. And once I was a king, and then I fell again because of sins. Aho ! the marvels of these many births I I have slumbered sweetly as a bee on the soft petal of a lotus, and feasted to satiety on its pollen and its honey. As a bird I have struggled hard against and broken through the net of the horrible fowler, even as a weak cnan may break with difficulty through an evil addiction. From rock to rock have I leapt as a deer with beautiful eyes in the mind-stealing scenes of wooded hills, till I was shot down by the cruel arrow of a Kirata (3). I have also floated on the ocean billow as a huge turtle, and again as a giant fish. I have been a Pulindi (4) on the banks of the CharmanvatI (5), singing and drinking the fresh juice of the cocoanut. I have known the deepest loves of youth on the golden jewelled table-lands of Meru, and have also lain on costly couches shivering with sickness like a moon-beam on unsteady water." Conversing thus the two passed out of the house of the brahmana, and Llla recognized the things of that past life of when it opens up new avenues of perception objects flash along them, to which the mind successively responds and this gives a sense of motion. Compare the illusory motion experienced by a person in a stationary train when a moving train pas'ses. Consciousness may change without change of. locality, and we are where we perceive, space being as illusory as time. A. B.] (1) An aerial being; 'holder, possessor, of occult sciences.' (2) An ascetic's woodland abode. (8) A man of a hill tribe. (4) A woman of another hill tribe. (5) A rives in India now called the Oliambair