SOME EFFECTS OF THEOSOPHY 63 to break through, as it were, and claim its own and be recognised. We are all seeking something greater than ourselves. We all acknowledge, therefore, something greater than ourselves. There is no such person as the one who disbelieves in this something greater than himself. He may cavil; he may say he wants proof; he may say there is no proof to be got; he may say he will wait and see; but within himself there is always that some- thing that is fluttering after life which tells him in a thousand ways that he (his body) is not the beginning and the end, that there is something greater, something behind, something above, and something below. So he cannot get away from it, and he is silent, knowing full -well the truth of what is told though a veil seems to cloud him. In realising the truths of Theosophy one becomes changed. Possibly if I speak to-day a little of this change, it will be a reply to the question "What is Theosophy? " in another form, and will at least show some of the effect of Theosophical thought. I have alluded to the question in former articles why children should be born into the world to suffer, and I tried to show that the suffering of this life is the effect of that which has been