THE LAW OF REBIRTH 29 is gone out into all lands and their words unto the ends of the world," thsrt the reply came to His call through all the perfect forms. Count Keyserling has put this very well, though I repeat it as a translation, which means in other words, that a perfect rose in its own line repre- sents His life better than an imperfect life can do even in a more evolved form. Every manifestation (form, appearance) can, within its limits, express the Atman. To God the perfection of the Rose and of the Buddha mean the same thing; the former stands closer to God than the Buddha stood before He reached His perfection (illumination). It may be then that we go through various forms and come to a stage of perfection in each- It seems as if this must be so, and not that we leave that special form before it is as perfect as it can be in its own line. Down through the ages then we have all come, expressing life in various forms until we come to the time when we have evolved sufficiently to take a man's body, a man in the elementary state of a savage. I have hurried over this possibly too much to be clear, but I would refer you to a large amount of Theosophical literature, if you wish to trace in detail the course of evolution. Life after life, return after return, is required by us to learn and to complete in ourselves that which