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Death—and After? by Annie Wood Besant
page 19 of 93 (20%)

He will be present in the body in such wise that the best
part of himself will be absent from it, and will join himself
by an indissoluble sacrament to divine things, in such a way
that he will not feel either love or hatred of things mortal.
Considering himself as master, and that he ought not to be
servant and slave to his body, which he would regard only as
the prison which holds his liberty in confinement, the glue
which smears his wings, chains which bind fast his hands,
stocks which fix his feet, veil which hides his view. Let him
not be servant, captive, ensnared, chained, idle, stolid, and
blind, for the body which he himself abandons cannot
tyrannise over him, so that thus the spirit in a certain
degree comes before him as the corporeal world, and matter is
subject to the divinity and to nature.[10]

When once we thus come to regard the body, and by conquering it we
gain our liberty, Death loses for us all his terrors, and at his touch
the body slips from us as a garment, and we stand out from it erect
and free.

On the same lines of thought Dr. Franz Hartmann writes:

According to certain views of the West man is a developed
ape. According to the views of Indian Sages, which also
coincide with those of the Philosophers of past ages and with
the teachings of the Christian Mystics, man is a God, who is
united during his earthly life, through his own carnal
tendencies, to an animal (his animal nature). The God who
dwells within him endows man with wisdom. The animal endows
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