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For More Free PDF Books on the Law ofAttraction and Metaphysics Visit the Law ofAttraction Haven.Click for More Free Books by James Allen.

This edition is a combination of two books:'Morning and Evening Thoughts' by JamesAllen, published 1909 and 'James Allen'sBook of Meditations' published 1913.

ContentsJames Allen (1864 – 1912) . 5Editor’s Preface . 7He Who Does Not Find . 10The Month of January . 13The Month of February . 128The Month of March . 235The Month of April . 348The Month of May . 460The Month of June . 577The Month of July . 691The Month of August . 808The Month of September . 925The Month of October . 1038The Month of November . 1150The Month of December . 1259

James Allen (1864 – 1912)“I looked around upon the world and sawthat it was shadowed by sorrow andscorched by the fierce fires of suffering.And I looked for the cause. I looked around,but I could not find it. I looked in books, butI could not find it. I looked within, and foundthere both the cause the self-made natureof that cause. I looked again, and deeper,and found the remedy. I found one Law, theLaw of Love; one Life, the life of adjustmentto that Law; one Truth, the Truth of aconquered mind and a quiet and obedientheart.And I dreamed of writing books whichwould help men and women, whether richor poor, learned or unlearned, worldly orunworldly, to find within themselves the

source of all success, all happiness,accomplishment, all truth. And the dreamremained with me, and at last becamesubstantial; and now I send forth thesebooks into the world on a mission of healingand blessedness, knowing that they cannotfail to reach the homes and hearts of thosewho are waiting and ready to receive them.

Editor’s Preface(From 'James Allen's Book of Meditations',1913)James Allen may truly be called theProphet of Meditation. In an age of strife,hurry,religiouscontroversy,heatedarguments, ritual and ceremony, he camewith his message of Meditation, calling menaway from the din and strife of tongues intothe peaceful paths of stillness within theirown souls, where the Light that lightethevery man that cometh into the world everburns steadily and surely for all who willturn their weary eyes from the strife withoutto the quiet within. Many of the Meditationswere written as he came down from theCairn in the early morning, where he spentthose precious hours alone with God while

the world slept. Others are gleaned fromhismanywritings,publishedandunpublished, and are arranged for dailyreadings at his request, and, we believe,under his spiritual guidance. The bookmust ever be a stronghold of Spiritual Truthand blessing to all who read it, andespecially to those who use it for dailymeditation. Its great power lies in that it isthe very heart of a good man who livedevery word he wrote. The beautiful halftone portrait is a speaking likeness of theAuthor. It was taken only six weeks beforehis translation, and has not been publishedbefore.We are indebted to Messrs. Putnam’s Sons(London and New York), and to Messrs.Wm. Rider and Son, Limited (London), fortheir cordial expressions of pleasure that

some of the Meditations should be culledfrom the books published by them, viz., TheMastery of Destiny, and Above Life’sTurmoil (Putnam), and From Passion toPeace, and Man : King of Mind, Body, andCircumstance (Rider).LILY L. ALLEN.“BRYNGOLEU”,ILFRACOMBE, ENGLAND.

He Who Does Not FindThe way of Meditation cannot reachEmancipation and enlightenment.But thou wilt find the way of Holy Thought;With mind made calm and steadfast, thouwill see The Permanent amid the mutable,The Truth eternal in the things that change:Thou wilt behold the Perfect Law: CosmosFrom Chaos rises when the conquered selfLies underneath man’s heel: Love be thystrength; Look on the passion-torturedmultitudes,And have compassion on them; know theirpain By thy long sorrow ended. Thou wiltcome

To perfect peace, and so wilt bless theworld, Leading unto the High and Holy WayThe feet of them that seek.—And now I goTo my Abode; go thou unto thy work.

By Thought we rise, by Thought we fall; byThought We stand or go; all destiny iswroughtBy its swift potency; and he who standsMaster of Thought, and his desirescommands,Willing and weaving thoughts of Love andMight, Shapes his high end in Truthsunerring Light.

The Month of JanuaryJanuary FirstThought for the MorningIn aiming at the life of blessedness, one ofthe simplest beginnings to be considered,and rightly made, is that which we all makeevery day—namely, the beginning of eachday’s life. There is a sense in which everyday may be regarded as the beginning of anew life, in which one can think, act, andlive newly, and in a wiser and better spirit.The right beginning of the day will befollowed by a cheerfulness permeating thehousehold with a sunny influence, and thetasks and duties of the day will beundertaken in a strong and confident spirit,and the whole day will be well lived.

Meditation for the DayThe way from passion to peace is byovercoming oneself.FREQUENTLY the man of passion is mosteager to put others right; but the man ofwisdom puts himself right. If one is anxiousto reform the world, let him begin byreforming himself. The reformation of selfdoes not end with the elimination of thesensual elements only; that is its beginning.It ends only when every vain thought andselfish aim is overcome. Short of perfectpurity and wisdom, there is still some formof self-slavery or folly which needs to beconquered.On the wings of aspiration man rises fromearth to heaven, fromignorance toknowledge, from the under darkness to the

upper light. Without it he remains agrovellinganimal,earthly,sensual,unenlightened, and uninspired.Aspiration is the longing for heavenlythings.Thought for the EveningTherecanbenoprogress,noachievement, without sacrifice, and aman’s worldly success will be in themeasure that he sacrifices his confusedanimal thoughts, and fixes his mind on thedevelopmentofhisplans,andthestrengthening of his resolution and selfreliance. And the higher he lifts histhoughts, the more manly, upright, andrighteous he becomes, the greater will behis success, the more blessed andenduring will be his achievements.

January SecondThought for the MorningNone but right acts can follow rightthoughts; none but a right life can followright acts; and by living a right life allblessedness is achieved. Mind is theMaster-power that moulds and makes. AndMan is Mind, and evermore he takes thetool of thought, and, shaping what he wills,brings forth a thousand joys, a thousandills;—He thinks in secret, and it comes topass: environment is but his looking-glass.Meditation for the DayWhere is peace to be found! Where is thehiding-place of truth!LET first things be put first; work beforeplay; duty before enjoyment; and others

before self: this is an excellent rule whichcannot lead astray. To make a rightbeginning is half-way to victory. The athletewho makes a bad start may lose his prize;the merchant who makes a false start maylose his reputation; and the Truth-seekerwho makes a wrong start may forego thecrown of Righteousness. To begin withpure thoughts, sterling rectitude, unselfishpurpose, noble aims, and an incorruptibleconscience this is to start right; this it is toput first things first, so that all other thingswill follow in harmonious order, making lifesimple, beautiful, successful, and peaceful.The soul will cry out for its lost heritage.Thought for the EveningCalmness of mind is one of the beautifuljewels of wisdom. A man becomes calm in

the measure that he understands himselfas a thought-evolved being. . . and he ashe develops a right understanding, andsees more and more clearly the internalrelations of things by the action of causeand effect, he ceases to fret and fume, andworry and grieve, and remains poised,steadfast, serene.

January ThirdThought for the MorningTo follow, under all circumstances, thehighest promptings within you; to be alwaystrue to the divine self; to reply upon theinward voice, the inward light, and topursue your purpose with a fearless andrestful heart, believing that the future willyield unto you the need of every thoughtand effort; knowing that the laws of theuniverse can never fail, and that your ownwill come back to you with mathematicalexactitude—this is faith and the living offaith.Meditation for the DayIf one would find peace, he must come outof passion.

SO long as animal conditions taste sweetto a man, he cannot aspire: he is so farsatisfied; but when their sweetness turns tobitterness, then in his sorrow he thinks ofnobler things. When he is deprived ofearthly joy, he aspires to the joy which isheavenly. It is when impurity turns tosuffering that purity is sought. Trulyaspiration rises, phoenix-like, from thedead ashes of repentance, but on itspowerful pinions man can reach theheaven of heavens.The man of aspiration has entered the waywhich leads to peace; and surely he willreach that end if he stays not nor turnsback. If he constantly renews his mind withglimpses of the heavenly vision, he willreach the heavenly state.

That which can be conceived can beachieved.Thought for the EveningHave a thorough understanding of yourwork, and let it be your own; and as youproceed, ever following the inward guide,the infallible voice, you will pass on fromvictory to victory, and will rise step by stepto higher resting-places, and your everbroadening outlook will gradually reveal toyou the essential beauty and purpose oflife. Self-purified, health will be yours; selfgoverned, power will be yours, and all thatyou do will prosper.And I may stand where health, success,and power await my coming, if, eachfleeting hour, I cling to love and patience;and abide with stainlessness; and never

step aside from high integrity; so shall I seeat last the land of immortality.

January FourthThought for the MorningWhen the tongue is well controlled andwisely subdued; when selfish impulses andunworthy thoughts no longer rush to thetongue demanding utterance; when thespeech has become harmless, pure,gracious, gentle, and purposeful, and noword is uttered but in sincerity and truth—then are the five steps in virtuous speechaccomplished, then is the second greatlesson in Truth learned and mastered.Make pure thy heart, and thou wilt make thylife rich, sweet and beautiful.Meditation for the DayOur life is what we make it by our ownthoughts and deeds.

MAN attains in the measure that heaspires. His longing to be is the gauge ofwhat he can be. To fix the mind is to foreordain the achievement. As man canexperience and know all low things, so hecan experience and know all high things.As he has become human, so he canbecome divine. The turning of the mind inhigh and divine directions is the sole andneedful task. What is impurity but theimpure thoughts of the thinker?What is purity but the pure thoughts of thethinker? One man does not do the thinkingof another. Each man is pure or impure ofhimself alone. The man of aspiration seesbefore him the pathway up the heavenlyheights, and his heart already experiencesa foretaste of the final peace.

There is a life of victory over sin, andtriumph over evil.Thought for the EveningHaving clothed himself with humility, thefirst questions a man asks himself are:“How am I acting towards others?”“What am I doing to others?”“How am I thinking of others?”“Are my thoughts of, and acts towardsothers prompted by unselfish love?”As a man, in the silence of his soul, askshimself these searching questions, he willunerringly see where he has hitherto failed.

January FifthThought for the MorningTo dwell in love always and towards all isto live the true life, is to have Life itself.Knowing this, the good man gives uphimself unreservedly to the Spirit of Love,and dwells in Love towards all, contendingwith none, condemning none, but loving all.The Christ Spirit of Love puts an end, notonly to all sin, but to all division andcontention.Meditation for the DayWhen a man wishes and wills he can findthe good and the true.THE Gates of Heaven are forever open, Iand no one is prevented from entering! by

any will or power but his own; but no onecan enter the Kingdom of Heaven so longas he is enamoured of, and chooses, theseductions of hell, so long as he resignshimself to sin and sorrow.There is a larger, higher, nobler, diviner lifethan that of sinning and suffering, which isso common in which, indeed, nearly all areimmersed a life of victory over sin, andtriumph over evil; a life wise and happy,benign and tranquil, virtuous and peaceful.This life can be found and lived now, andhe who lives it is steadfast in the midst ofchange;restfulamongtherestless;peaceful, though surrounded by strife.Every moment is the time of choice; everyhour is destiny.

Thought for the EveningWhen sin and self are abandoned, theheart is restored to its imperishable Joy.Joy comes and fills the self-emptied heart;it abides with the peaceful; its reign is withthe pure. Joy flees from the selfish, itdeserts the quarrelsome; it is hidden fromthe impure. Joy cannot remain with theselfish; it is wedded to Love.

January SixthThought for the MorningIn the pure heart there is no room left wherepersonal judgments and hatreds can findlodgement, for it is filled to overflowing withtenderness and love; it sees no evil, andonly as men succeed in seeing no evil inothers will they become free from sin, andsorrow,andsuffering.Ifmenonlyunderstood that the heart that sins mustsorrow, that the hateful mind tomorrowreaps its barren harvest, weeping, starving,resting not, nor sleeping; tenderness wouldfill their being, they would see with pity’sseeing, if they only understood.Meditation for the Day

The lover of the pure life renews his minddaily.AS the energetic man of business is notdaunted by difficulties, but studies how toovercome them, so the man of ceaselessaspiration is not crushed into submissionby temptations, but meditates how he mayfortify his mind; for the tempter is like acoward, he only creeps in at weak andunguarded points. The tempted one shouldstudy thoughtfully the nature and meaningof temptation, for until it is known it cannotbe overcome. He who is to overcometemptation must understand how it arisesin his own darkness and error, and muststudy, by introspection and meditation, howto disperse the darkness and supplant errorby truth.

A man must know himself if he is to knowtruth. Self-knowledge is the handmaid ofself-conquest.Engage daily in holy meditation on Truthand its attainment.Thought for the EveningTo stand face to face with truth; to arrive,after innumerable wanderings and pains, atwisdom and bliss; not to be finally defeatedand cast out, but to ultimately triumph overevery inward foe—such is man’s divinedestiny, such his glorious goal; and this,everysaint,sage,andsaviourhasdeclared. A man only begins to be a manwhen he ceases to whine and revile, andcommences to search for the hidden justicewhich regulates his life. And as he adaptshis mind to that regulating factor, he ceases

to accuse others as the cause of hiscondition, and builds himself up in strongand noble thoughts; ceases to kick againstcircumstances, but begins to use them asaids to his more rapid progress, and as ameans of discovering the hidden powerand possibilities within himself.

January SeventhThought for the MorningThe will to evil and the will to good are bothwithin thee, which wilt thou employ? Thouknowest what is right and what is wrong,which wilt though love and foster, whichdestroy?Thou art the chooser of thy thoughts anddeeds; thou art the maker of thine inwardstate; the power is thine to be what thou wiltbe; thou buildest Truth and Love, or liesand hate.Meditation for the DayAs errors and impunities are revealed,purge them away.

EVERY step upward means the leaving ofsomething behind and below. The high isreached only at the sacrifice of the low. Thegood is secured only by abandoning theevil. Knowledge is acquired only by thedestruction of ignorance. Every acquisitionhas its price, which must be paid “to theuttermost farthing”. Every animal, everycreeping thing, possesses some gift, somepower, which man, in his upward march,has laid down, which he has exchanged forsome higher gift, or power. What greatgood men forfeit by clinging to old selfishhabits! Behind every humble sacrifice awinged angel waits to bear us up theheights of knowledge and wisdom.Let him who has attained guard againstfalling back. Let him be careful in little

things, and be well fortified against theentrance of sin.Aim, with ardor, for the attainment of aperfect life.Thought for the EveningThe teaching of Jesus brings men back tothe simple truth that righteousness, or rightdoing, is entirely a matter of individualconduct, and not a mystical somethingapart from a man’s thoughts and deeds.Calmness and patience can becomehabitual by first grasping, through effort, acalm and patient thought, and thencontinuously thinking it, and living in it, until“use becomes second nature,” and angerand impatience pass away for ever.

January EighthThought for the MorningMan is made or unmade by himself; in thearmoury of thought he forges the weaponsby which he destroys himself; he alsofashions the tools with which he builds forhimself heavenly mansions of joy andstrength and peace. By the right choice andtrue application of thought man ascends tothe Divine Perfection; by the abuse andwrong application of thought he descendsbelow the level of the beast. Between thesetwo extremes are all the grades ofcharacter and man is their maker andmaster.As a being of Power, Intelligence, andLove, and the lord of his own thoughts, manholds the key to every situation.

Meditation for the DayThe strife of the world in all its forms has itsorigin in one common cause, namely,individual selfishness.ALL the varied activities of human life arerooted in, and draw their vitality from, onecommon source the human heart. Thecause of all suffering and all happinessresides, not in the outer activities of humanlife, but in the inner activities of the heartand mind; and every external agency issustained by the life which it derives fromhuman conduct.The man who cannot endure to have hiserrors and shortcomings brought to thesurface and made known, but tries to hidethem, is unfit to walk the highway of Truth.He is not properly equipped to battle with

and overcome temptation. He who cannotfearlessly face his lower nature cannotclimb the rugged heights of renunciation.Each man comes under the laws of his ownbeing, never under the laws of another.Thought for the EveningWhatsoever you harbour in the inmostchambers of your heart will, sooner or later,by the inevitable law of reaction, shapeitself in your outward life.Every soul attracts its own, and nothing canpossibly come to it that does not belong toit. To realize this is to recognize theuniversality of Divine Law.If thou would’st right the world, and banishall its evils and its woes, make its wild

places bloom, and its drear desertsblossom as the rose—then right thyself.

January NinthThought for the MorningWhatever conditions are rendering your lifeburdensome, you may pass out of andbeyond them by developing and utilizingwithin you the transforming power of selfpurification and self-conquest.Before the divine radiance of a pure heartall darkness vanishes and all clouds meltaway, and he who has conquered self hasconquered the universe.He who sets his foot firmly upon the path ofself-conquest, who walks, aided by the staffof faith, the highway of self-sacrifice, willassuredly achieve the highest prosperity,and will reap abounding and enduring joyand bliss.

Meditation for the DayWhen the soul is most tried, its need isgreatest.DO not despair because of failure. Fromyour particular failure there is a specialgreatness, a peculiar wisdom, to be gained;and no teacher can lead you to thatgreatness, that wisdom, more surely andswiftly than your experience of failure. Inevery mistake you make, in every fall youencounter, there is a lesson of vital importif you will but search it out; and he who willstoop to discover the good in that whichappears to be disastrous will rise superiorto every event, and will utilize his failuresas winged steeds to bear him to a final andsupreme success.

Foolish men blame others for their lapsesand sins, but let the truth-lover blame onlyhimself. Let him acknowledge his completeresponsibility for his own conduct.Where temptation is powerful, the greaterand more enduring will be the victory.Thought for the EveningIt is the silent and conquering thoughtforceswhichbringallthingsintomanifestation. The universe grew out ofthought.To adjust all your thoughts to a perfect andunswerving faith in the omnipotence andsupremacy of Good is to co-operate withthat Good, and to realize within yourself thesolution and destruction of all evil.

To mentally deny evil is not sufficient; itmust, by daily practice, be risen above andunderstood. To affirm the Good mentally eredunswervingintoand

January TenthThought for the MorningEvery thought you think is a force sent out.Whatever your position in life may be,before you can hope to enter into anymeasure of success, usefulness, andpower, you must learn how to focus yourthought forces by cultivating calmness andrepose.There is no difficulty, however great, butwill yield before a calm and purposefulconcentration of thought, and no legitimateobject but may be speedily actualized bythe intelligent use and direction of one’ssoul forces.

Think good thoughts, and they will quicklybecome actualized in your outward life inthe form of good conditions.Meditation for the DayThe great need of the soul is the need ofthatpermanentPrinciplecalledRighteousness.THE old must pass away before the newcan appear. The old cottage must bedemolished before the new mansion canappear upon its site. The old error must bedestroyed before the new truth can come.The old self must be renounced before thenew man can be born. When the old self oftemper, impatience, envy, pride, andimpurity has perished, then in its place willappear the new man of gentleness,patience, goodwill, humility, and purity. Let

the old life of sin and sorrow pass; let thenew life of Righteousness and Joy come in.Then all that was old and ugly will be madenew and beautiful. It is in the realization ofthis Principle where the Kingdom ofHeaven, the abiding home of the soul,resides, and which is the source andstorehouse of every permanent blessing.A life of virtue is noble and excellent.Thought for the EveningThat which you would be and hope to be,you may be now. Non-accomplishmentresides in your perpetual postponement,and, having the power to postpone, youalso have the power to accomplish—toperpetually accomplish: realize this truth,and you shall be today, and every day, theideal being of whom you dreamed.

Say to yourself, “I will live in my Ideal now;I will manifest my ideal now; I will be myIdeal now; and all that tempts me awayfrom my Ideal I will not listen to; I will listenonly to the voice of my Ideal.”

January EleventhThought for the MorningBe as a flower; content to be, to grow insweetness day by day. If thou would’stperfect thyself in knowledge, perfect thyselfin Love. If thou would’st reach the e heart.To him who chooses Goodness, sacrificingall, is given that which is more than, andincludes, all.Meditation for the DayIt matters little what is without, for it is all areflection of your own consciousness.THE deplorable failure of many outwardand isolated reforms is traceable to the fact

that their devotees pursue them as an endin themselves, failing to see that they aremerely steps towards ultimate, individualperfection.All true reform must come from within, in achanged heart and mind. The giving up ofcertain foods and drinks, and the breakingaway from certain outward habits, are goodand necessary beginnings; but they areonly beginnings, and to end there is to fallfar short of a true spiritual life. It is good,therefore, to cleanse the heart, to correctthemind,andtodeveloptheunderstanding, for we know that the onething needed is a regenerate heart.It matters everything what you are within,for everything without will be mirrored andcolored accordingly.

Thought for the EveningThe Great Law never cheats any man of hisjust due.Human life, when rightly lived, is simplewith a beautiful simplicity.He who comprehends the utter simplicity oflife, who obeys its laws, and does not stepaside into the dark paths and complexmazes of selfish desire, stands where noharm can reach him.Then there is fullness of joy, aboundingplenty, and rich and complete blessedness.

January TwelfthThought for the MorningEvery man reaps the results of his ownthoughts and deeds, and suffers for hisown wrong.He who begins right, and continues right,does not need to desire, and search forfelicitous results; they are already at hand;they follow as consequences; they are thecertainties, the realities, of life.Sweet is the rest and deep is the bliss ofhim who has freed his heart from its lustsand hatreds and dark desires.Meditation for the Day

Renew your resolution daily, and in thehour of temptation do not depart from theright path.THE days are lengthening. Each day nowthe sun rises a little higher, and the lightlingers a little longer. So each day we canstrengthen our character; each day we canopen our heart a little more to the light ofTruth, and allow the Sun of Righteousnessto shine more highly in our mind. The sundoes not increase in volume or intensity,but the earth turns towards it, and receivesmore as it turns. All that there is of Truthand Good is now. It does not increase ordiminish, but as we turn towards it wereceive of its radiance and beneficence inever-increasing abundance and power.

As the artisan acquires skill in fashioningthe articles of his craft by daily and diligentpractice with his tools, so do you acquireskill in fashioning good deeds by daily anddiligent practice of the Truth.You can acquire Truth only by practice.Thought for the EveningYou are the creator of your own shadows;you desire, and then you grieve; renounce,and then you shall rejoice.Of all the beautiful truths pertaining to thesoul. . . none is more gladdening or fruitfulof divine promise and confidence thanthis—that man is the master of thought, themoulder of character, and the maker andshaper of character, environment, anddestiny.

January ThirteenthThought for the MorningAs darkness is a passing shadow, and lightis a substance that remains, so sorrow isfleeting, but joy abides for ever. No truething can pass away and become lost; nofalse thing can remain and be preserved.Sorrow is false, and it cannot live; joy istrue, and it cannot die. Joy may becomehidden for a time, but it can always berecovered; sorrow may remain for a period,but it can be transcended and dispersed.Do not think your sorrow will remain; it willpass away like a cloud. Do not believe thatthe torments of sin are ever your portion;they will vanish like a hideous nightmare.Awake! Arise! Be holy and joyful.

Meditation for the DayThe wise purify their thoughts.EVERY day is a new birth in time, holdingout new beginnings, new possibilities, newachievements. The ages have witnessedthe stars in their orbits, but this day hath noage witnessed. It is a new appearance, anew reality. It heralds a new life yea, a neworder, a new society, a new age. It holdsout new hopes, new opportunities, to allmen. In it you can become a new man, anew woman. For you it can be the day ofregeneration, renewal, rebirth. From theold past with its mistakes, failures, andsorrows, you can rise a new being, enduedwith power and purpose, and radiant withthe inspiration of a new ideal.

Be chaste in mind and body. Abandonsensual pleasures. Purge the mind ofselfishness, and live a life of exalted purity.Be upright, gentle, and pure-hearted.Thought for the EveningTribulation lasts only so long as thereremains some chaff of self which needs tobe removed. The tribulum, or threshingmachine, ceases to work when all the grainis separated from the chaff; and when thelast impurities are blown away from thesoul, tribulation has completed its work,and there is no more need for it; thenabiding joy is realized.The sole and supreme use of suffering is topurify, to burn out all that is useless andimpure. Suffering ceases for him who is

pure. There could be no object in burninggold after the dross had been removed.

January FourteenthThought for the MorningIn speaking of self-control, one is easilymisunderstood. It should not be associatedwith a destructive repression, but with aconstructive expression.A man is happy, wise and great in themeasure that he controls himself; he iswretched,foolish,and meanin themeasure that he allows his animal natureto dominate his thoughts and actions.He who controls himself, controls his life,hiscircumstances,hisdestiny;andwherever he goes he carries his happinesswith him as an abiding possession.Renunciation precedes regeneration. Thepermanent happiness which men seek in

dissipation, excitement, and abandonmentto unworthy pleasures, is found only in thelife which reverses all this—the life of selfcontrol.Meditation fo

(From 'James Allen's Book of Meditations', 1913) James Allen may truly be called the Prophet of Meditation. In an age of strife, hurry, religious controversy, heated arguments, ritual and ceremony, he came with his message of Meditation, calling men away from the din and strife of tongues into the peaceful paths of stillness within theirFile Size: 1MBPage Count: 389Explore furtherFor More Free PDF Books on the Law of Attraction Haven.www.law-of-attraction-haven.comAa allen books free downloadziwarafe.weebly.comDownload File PDF Meditationssearch.mpja.comJames Allen's Book of Meditations and Thoughts for the Day .archive.orgJames Allens Book Of Meditations : Allen,James. : Free .archive.orgRecommended to you b