Color in the Visible and Invisible World 263 



within two other withins, or planes of subjectivity 

 merging gradually into that of terrestrial objectiv- 

 ity, this being for man the last one, his own 

 plane." 



Just as every thought has form and consequently 

 color, so sounds which, you know, are differentiated 

 one from another by form, have their distinguish- 

 ing colors, hues, and tints. Speech, which is 

 sound in this physical world, echoes as color in the 

 astral sphere around us and has its influence. All 

 the wonderful harmony of color that delights our 

 eyes has its correspondence with an inaudible har- 

 mony of sounds. The entrancing colors of na- 

 ture, the blue dome of the sky, the violet and 

 purple of distant mountain heights, the green ca- 

 dences of forest and meadow, the gold of the sun- 

 lit fields of ripening grain, the red of the igneous 

 rocks and the fresh-turned earth, all these are 

 the visible tones of the "Harmony of the Sphere." 



" The totality of the Seven Rays," says Mme. 

 Blavatsky, " spread through the Solar system, con- 

 stitute, so to say, the physical Upadhi [basis] of 

 the Ether of Science." To the seventh sense 

 these inaudible sounds will be as perceptible as are 

 the colors of musical tones to the clairvoyant now. 

 The rudiments of the sense of sound exist in the 

 minutest fragments of the Universe. The subtle 

 space-granules Sukshma-Akdsha are every- 

 where, sound is inherent in them, not to be disso- 



