TWENTY-FIRST TALK 433 religious teacher meant poverty and self-abnegation* And yet that turned out to be a higher position in reality than 'that of any king. There have been several rajas who* have ruled over the whole of India—I doubt very much whether any of you know the name of one of those kings, and practically not a person in the whole of this city would know them. But I am quite certain there is not a person among you, nor indeed in this great city, who has not heard of the Lord Buddha. It is not the great king whose name goes down longest and furthest in history, but the greatest religious teacher. King Suddhodana wished enormous power and fame without parallel for his son, and he has had it, but not in the way that he wished or -expected it. The power of the Lord Buddha is greater than that of any earthly monarch, and His renown has spread all over the world. The more that men know of Occultism, the greater is their reverence for that Mighty Person, and so is it in many other cases. We seek, for those whom we love, that which we have fcfad ourselves, that which we know; and yet there may be greater things which have not come to us, and which may be in their karma, just as was the case with King Suddhodana. Yet it is the last and most difficult test. How must you take these trials ? Even then the Master says you must be cheerful, ready to part with anything and everything. In the darker forms of magic they escape, or try to escape such pain and 28