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MUCH READING, LITTLE THOUGHT
The wise man sagely said that of making books there is no
end. If true in his day, it is the same now. Among members of
the Theosophical Society the defects are widespread, of reading
too many of the ever coming books and too little thought upon
the matter read. Anyone who is in a position to see the letters
of inquiry received by those in the Society who are prominent,
knows that the greater number of the questions asked are due
to want of thought, to the failure on the part of the questioners
to lay down a sure foundation of general principles.
It is so easy for some to sit down and write a book containing
nothing new save its difference of style from others, that the
pilgrim theosophist may be quickly bewildered if he pays any
attention. This bewilderment is chiefly due to the fact that
no writer can express his thoughts in a way that will be exactly
and wholly comprehended by every reader, and authors in theosophic
literature are only, in fact, trying to present their own particular
understanding of old doctrines which the readers would do much
better with if they devoted more time to thinking them out for
themselves.
In the field of every day books there is so much light reading
that the superficial habit of skimming is plainly everywhere
apparent, and it threatens to show itself in theosophical ranks.
So well am I convinced there are too many superfluous books
in our particular field, that, if I had a youth to train in that
department, I should confine him to the Bhagavad-Gita,
and the Upanishads, and the Secret Doctrine for
a very long time, until he was able to make books for himself
out of those, and to apply the principles found in them to every
circumstance and to his own life and thought.
Those theosophists who only wish to indulge in a constant
variety of new theosophical dishes will go on reading all that
appears, but the others who are in earnest, who know that we
are here to learn and not solely for our pleasure, are beginning
to see that a few books well read, well analysed, and thoroughly
digested are better than many books read over once. They have
learned how all that part of a book which they clearly understand
at first is already their own, and that the rest, which is not
so clear or quite obscure, is the portion they are to study,
so that it also, if found true, may become an integral part of
their constant thought.
William Brehon
Path, June, 1890
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