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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13137 ***
+
+THE SECRET OF DREAMS
+
+by
+
+YACKI RAIZIZUN, PH. D.
+
+Price, Fifty Cents
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ The Dreamer 5
+
+ Varieties of Dreams 12
+
+ How to Evolve the Large Consciousness 37
+
+
+
+
+DREAMS
+
+Everybody dreams, but there are few who place any importance to the
+phenomena of sleep. Before we can begin to comprehend or even analyze
+dreams, whether our dreams are symbolic or otherwise, we must first
+divert from our mind our materialistic conceptions of what the
+individual called man really is. The external or physical man, is no
+more the man than the coat he wears. The physical man is only an
+instrument of which the real inner man or soul expresses itself in the
+physical universe. Various materialistic theories have been given in
+the past, trying to explain the mighty phenomena of dreams, but these
+theories have always been more or less unsatisfactory. Why? Because
+the-materialist tries to explain the riddle of human existence without
+an individual human spirit his explanation will always be
+unsatisfactory.
+
+Dreams afford a separation of soul and body. As soon as the senses
+become torpid, the inner man withdraws from the outer. There are three
+different ways which afford this separation. First, natural sleep.
+Second, induced sleep, such as hypnotism, mesmerism or trance. Third,
+death. In the above two cases the man has only left his physical body
+temporarily, whereas in death he has left it forever. In the case of
+death, the link which unites soul and body, as seen by clairvoyant
+vision, is broken, but in trance or sleep it is released. The real man
+is then in the astral world. He now functions in his astral body,
+which becomes a vehicle for expressing consciousness, just as the
+physical body is an instrument for expressing consciousness in the
+waking state.
+
+Consciousness is not annihilated when the man is in the Astral world,
+it is only temporarily suspended. Just the same as in the case of
+death. The man is fully conscious in the astral regions clothed in the
+body of the Astral matter. This Astral body is in the physical and
+extends little beyond it. The Astral world is here and now,
+interpenetrating the physical, and not in some remote region above the
+clouds as so many imagine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Man is a soul. He has a body. He expresses himself in three worlds.
+While he functions in the physical body, viz., physical, emotional and
+mental worlds. Just as the Astral interpenetrates the physical the
+mental interpenetrates the Astral. The Astral body in which man
+functions during sleep is the body of emotions and desires and he
+expresses these desires and emotions in the physical life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Astral body in which man functions during sleep is very subtle
+matter. It resembles the physical. In fact, it is an exact
+reproduction of it, but it can only be seen by clairvoyant vision.
+When a man leaves his body in sleep or death, the spirit must leave
+the physical body before it will be rested and recuperated to enable
+it to undergo the strenuous daily toil of physical life.
+
+Here is an example. Let a man go to bed say ten o'clock. Let him sleep
+until six next morning. The ordinary man will awaken feeling refreshed
+and ready for his daily toil. Let him go to bed at ten, lie awake all
+night, next morning he will not feel refreshed and during the day he
+may feel sluggish and sleepy. Let him go to bed and lie awake night
+after night for a few weeks, what will be the result? He will be a
+physical wreck. Although he may have the same amount of hours lying in
+bed, he will not feel recuperated and refreshed unless he has had his
+natural sleep and this can only come to pass.
+
+When the soul or spirit withdraws from the physical body, the physical
+body is not the man, and as long as our materialistic writers who
+endeavor to interpret dreams fail to grasp the nature of the inner
+man, the real self, they will be forever groping in the dark.
+
+The first question that naturally arises in the mind of the layman is
+this: How can a man leave his body in sleep and continue its natural
+functions such as digestion, circulation of blood, etc.
+
+We do not consciously direct the circulation of the blood, or any of
+the natural bodily functions during our waking state. These things go
+on whether we will them or not. Although the spirit leaves the body in
+sleep as previously stated, there is still a magnetic connection with
+soul and body. This magnetic connection acts on the sympathetic
+nervous system and the cerebro spinal which controls the functions of
+the human organism. In sleep the astral man may be in the immediate
+vicinity of his sleeping recuperating physical body or it may be
+thousands of miles away in space, the magnetic connection still exists
+regardless of the distance. No matter what distance the astral man is
+away from his physical body, he can return to it with the rapidity of
+thought, as the saying is, for it is the soul that thinks, the brain
+is only an instrument of the soul.
+
+Many of our dreams may be attributed to subconscious memory, for when
+our mind is centered on a certain train of thought these thoughts are
+apt to filter through into the conscious state in sleep. The
+subconscious memory cannot be truthfully called a dream, for it is
+only a memory of something we have previously perceived in reality or
+imagination. One only has to examine his subconscious dream in the
+light of reason to eliminate them. Telepathy does explain some of our
+dreams, for just as it is possible for minds to receive telepathic
+communications (thought transference) from another in the walking
+state, it is also possible for the so-called dead to have telepathic
+communication with the living, for thought is a power, its limitation
+is unknown.
+
+While many of our dreams may be traced to subconscious memory or
+telepathy and happenings of material affairs of our daily lives,
+others are undoubtedly the astral happenings of the ego while
+functioning in the etheric regions. There we meet not only the
+misnamed dead but also many of those who are still in the physical
+body, and let me state here that many of our difficult problems of
+physical life are worked out in sleep.
+
+The old axiom, "I will go to sleep on it," has a greater significance
+than is generally attributed to it, for sleep and dreams have more to
+do in shaping your lives than you have any idea of. You can go to
+school in sleep and study anything you are studying in physical life
+and make marvelous progress. This requires much training, however.
+Keeping the mind free from evil thoughts is most essential to enable
+the sincere investigator to enter that larger state of consciousness,
+for the thoughts of our waking state have a more or less effect on the
+ego during sleep. Every individual harbors a certain train of thought,
+whether at business or pleasure this train of thought has a tremendous
+influence on the ego, in fact it shapes ones destiny.
+
+ Choose well your thoughts
+ for your choice
+ is brief and yet endless.
+ --Anna Besant in Thought Power
+
+Man may be said to live two lives in one, one when he is fully awake
+and the other when he is sound asleep. These two lives, of course, is
+the expression of his one existence. The highly developed, spiritual
+man as he retires into the interior world during sleep, realizes a
+state of spiritual bliss that is far beyond the stage of ordinary
+mortals. Man has been in the habit of looking at himself as a mass of
+flesh and muscle with a slight chance of realizing the Divinity within
+him. As the earnest soul gradually arouses himself he finds his proper
+place in the universe, for within him are all the attributes of deity,
+and when he reaches the end of the long evolutionary journey that is
+ahead of him he will find himself and know what he is destined to be,
+a God.
+
+
+
+
+VARIETIES OF DREAMS
+
+In order to distinguish and classify the different kinds of dreams in
+which everyone has an experience they may be divided into four
+variations. Nearly all dreams may be classified under this heading:
+
+ 1. Physical Stimulus.
+
+ 2. Subconscious memory.
+
+ 3. Telepathy.
+
+ 4. The Actual Astral experience of the Ego or Soul in the Astral
+ region.
+
+Physical Stimulus may be the direct cause of impressing certain ideas
+on the physical brain which may appear to be a reality. The falling of
+a book, picture or any article in the room may cause the sleeper to
+dream of firearms; a soldier may dream of a battlefield; a sensitive
+female may dream it is a burglar; a person who throws the bed clothes
+off him on a cold night may dream of snow and ice; the continual
+dropping of water from a faucet in the room of the sleeper has been
+the direct cause of a friend of mine dreaming of a passenger train;
+the steady tramping of footsteps overhead may be the cause of dreaming
+of thunder storms, etc. We must also take into consideration the
+physical and mental environments of the sleeper.
+
+
+
+THE SUBCONSCIOUS MEMORY
+
+The subconscious memory may be the direct cause of certain dreams.
+When the mind is centered on certain things, the sleeper goes over his
+life again and again in phantom fashion. He lives over the experiences
+of his daily life. Very often the ego enlightens the sleeper of some
+material thing for his own benefit, which he may use advantageously in
+his waking state, but as he generally looks at the phenomena of dreams
+as an hallucination of the brain, he allows many a golden opportunity
+to slip through his fingers because the materialist's brain cannot
+grasp things of the spirit.
+
+All the knowledge and rubbish of our past lives is stored up in the
+subconscious mind where it remains in minute form. Memory is only the
+awakening of the sub-conscious mind, a long and forgotten incident,
+that has made a deep impression on the mind, is apt to filter through
+into the conscious state in dreams. In time of illness or when one's
+vitality is low, the dream picture of the past is apt to play a very
+prominent part in one's sleep. Childhood and long-forgotten scenes
+come up frequently and appear as real and genuine as if they had only
+happened the previous day. They frequently give the dreamer joy or
+sorrow, according to the stages he passed through.
+
+Even action of past lives may come up into the subconscious. Dreams of
+running around nude without any feeling of shame may be the memory of
+a previous existence. Falling from a high cliff or trees. Being chased
+around by some wild animals may be attributed to a primitive past.
+Dreaming of primitive people, places and things, only takes the
+dreamer a step nearer the stone age, from whence he came. Instead of
+looking at these subconscious dreams with horror and dread as some
+people do they should study them and shape their lives accordingly.
+
+
+
+TELEPATHIC DREAMS OR THOUGH TRANSFERENCE.
+
+Telepathy is a known and established fact. The connection between
+minds without material means of any kind, has often been demonstrated
+by the very simple method of one person acting as a sender, while the
+other acts as a receiver. The sender thinks of a certain subject
+selected before-hand. He may write it down on slate or paper. This
+often helps him to keep his mind concentrated on the subject he wishes
+to send to the receiver. The receiver places himself in as receptive a
+position as possible, and Keeping his mind calm, the impression he
+receives he makes note of. After a few experiences he may find the
+message to be correct, word for word. This is telepathy.
+
+In sleep there is often telepathic conditions between minds who are in
+close sympathy with each other, such as man and wife, mother and
+children, or people whose business brings them close together, may
+exchange thoughts during sleep. For instance, in one case a mother
+received the thought of her boy, who was away from home, telling of
+his sickness. A few days later she received a letter verifying her
+dream. A salesman dreams of a friend telling him of his company doing
+a big business in a neighboring town. Upon his friend's return his
+dream was found to be correct.
+
+A lady in San Francisco (whose husband was in Australia) for three
+successive nights, dreamed of his returning to America. She did not
+expect him until early in the fall of the year. She was dreaming of
+him in the spring. On the fourth morning after her dream she received
+a letter telling her about his unexpected return. These are so-called
+telepathic dreams, usually from minds of living people, although
+telepathic connection from minds of disincarnate beings is possible.
+
+
+
+THE ACTUAL ASTRAL EXPERIENCE OF THE EGO DURING SLEEP IN THE ASTRAL
+WORLD.
+
+The actual Astral experience in which the ego sees distant sights,
+sights and visions which he knows do not actually exist upon the
+physical plane, such as communicating with the dead, recovery of lost
+and stolen property; having premonitions of a certain thing which
+actually happens, such as approaching danger or death.
+
+Above are but a few of the actual astral experiences of the ego which
+it endeavors to impress on the physical brain. Sometimes it impresses
+them by symbols, for symbols are the true language of the soul, and to
+know how to interpret the meaning of the symbols of your dreams is of
+the utmost importance to the beginner. A symbolic dream, which is an
+actual astral experience, can only be interpreted by the dreamer
+himself, for no one lives your life but yourself. The first impression
+you receive intuitively, of a dream you see symbolically, is usually
+correct. The reason the layman does not interpret his dreams
+correctly, by following his intuition, is because he generally has
+some material idea of his own concerning dreams.
+
+Here is a dream that may be said to be an actual experience of the
+ego. Taken from the Chicago American, July 17, 1920:
+
+ Dreams sons drowned; found bodies in river, Burlington, Vt.
+ The dream was responsible for the finding of the bodies of
+ George Raymond, Jr., 14 years, son of George Raymond, and
+ his uncle, Winford Raymond, in the Lamoille river at
+ Fletcher. According to Winford's father, the vision of the
+ boy's mother appeared before him in a dream and directed him
+ to look for the boys in the river. They had been absent from
+ home since Sunday. The dream was so vivid that the father
+ wakened and at 2 o'clock went to the river bank, where he
+ found the boys' clothing. At daybreak the bodies were
+ recovered.
+
+Here is a dream of the so-called dead who, many believe, exist in a
+state of dreamless sleep or annihilation, appearing in a vision, and
+so impressing on the astral brain of the sleeper where the boy's
+bodies were, that he actually brought the vision or astral experience
+through into the waking consciousness. Here is proof of a mother
+looking over her children, even if she is separated from them through
+the doorway of the tomb. No sane person today can actually believe the
+tomb to be the doorway to the night of oblivion. Many of the misnamed
+dead are present, and when we go to sleep at night we meet them and
+converse with them just the same as if they were inhabiting their
+mortal bodies.
+
+We do not claim, however, that the dead are all-knowing; but free from
+the physical bodies, the spiritually enlightened ones have a broader
+vision of things, especially if there is a close sympathetic feeling
+between the dead and the living, as there appeared to have been in
+this case, for the conditions must be absolutely harmonious before one
+may bring his actual astral experience into the waking consciousness.
+
+An interesting case of the dead appearing in a dream was as that of
+Mrs. Marie Menge, 15 West Schiller street, Chicago. Mr. Charles
+Peterson, former lieutenant of the Danish army, was a roomer with Mrs.
+Menge for a number of years. He had no relatives or near friends in
+America. Mr. Peterson had been ill for some time with asthma and
+finally was taken to the Hahnemann Hospital, 2814 Ellis avenue,
+Chicago. In less than a half hour before she received the telephone
+call telling of his death she suddenly awakened and told her husband
+Mr. Peterson had appeared to her in a dream. She states, he appeared
+in a white cloud and seemed well and happy. He died about 1:30 A.M.,
+Saturday, March 18, 1921.
+
+It was an easy matter for C. Peterson to appear in a vision to the
+only one who had shown any sympathy and kindness toward him during his
+illness, and his landlady being asleep, was functioning in her astral
+body, which becomes a vehicle of consciousness, and as there was
+sympathy between the two it was possible for her to retain her astral
+vision in waking suddenly as she did.
+
+The dead are not dead at all, as many imagine. This man is only
+physically dead because he has lost his physical body. He is not
+intellectually and emotionally dead because he has not lost that part
+of his mechanism of consciousness which is the seat of thought and
+emotion. The physical body only allows us to express ourselves in the
+physical world, but it is not the man, any more than the clothes he
+wears.
+
+Extract from the Sunday Herald-Examiner, May 8, 1921:
+
+ NEW GHOSTS ARE WRITING POETRY BY UNIVERSAL SERVICE.
+
+ Paris, May 7.--Can a ghost write poetry? You betcha, says
+ Baron Maurice de Waleffe, the French satirist, who tells of
+ a remarkable book of spirits' poems just published in Paris
+ under the title of "The Glory of Illusion."
+
+Three years ago died Judith Gautier, niece of Theophile Gautier, and
+left a collection of slightly--er--passionate novels and collections
+of poems which were circulated among friends. One of these friends was
+a girl, Judith's most intimate companion. A year after Judith's death
+this girl dreamed a dream. In the dream Judith appeared and commanded
+her to seize a pencil and write to dictation. The result was a series
+of poems of an exoteric character which are triumphs of meter and scan
+perfectly. They are published in the name of the girl friend, Mlle. S.
+Meyer Zundel, but Mlle. Zundel says they're not really her works at
+all, but were directly dictated by her dead friend. Previous to
+Judith's death, Mlle. Zundel says she never wrote a line of poetry.
+
+Here we have direct proof of an invisible intelligence directing this
+young lady to write poems which she admits she never wrote before her
+friend's death. The materialistic skeptic who is always ready to
+interpret dreams as coincidences cannot call this a coincidence before
+the testimony of such facts when they are brought to the eyes of an
+intelligent public. The would-be interpreter of human existence
+remains baffled and silent; they can neither deny these facts nor do
+they dare to explain them.
+
+Friday, May 6, 1921, Chicago Daily News (by Marion Holmes):
+
+ Dear Marion Holmes: I should like just out of curiosity to
+ get the opinion of some of your corner readers, as well as
+ your own, on the enclosed sketch of a dream I had when
+ working out west. About 26 years ago I was working in the
+ West near the mining country, and one night I dreamed I was
+ in a mining town, the name of which I did not know in my
+ dream, nor had I ever seen it in reality. I was crossing the
+ street to a store building painted white, and in my hand I
+ carried an envelope that I was to deliver to the boss of the
+ store. When I arrived at the center of the street I was met
+ by three men who were coming from the opposite side, one of
+ whom stopped me, saying: "Come with me and I will show you
+ where there is a gold mine." I replied: "I haven't time to
+ go now," but he insisted, "Well, come anyway and when you
+ have time you can go and get it." So I went. We started off
+ in the direction of what I have since learned is the richest
+ locality in gold mines and after walking a while we seemed
+ to float through space; then we came to the ground a few
+ feet from the top of the mountain. We walked up to the top
+ and again floated in the air in a semi-circle, landing at
+ the foot of another mountain a few miles to the west.
+
+ The stranger said: "I want you to note the peculiar
+ formation of this country and this stream and right here,
+ walking a short distance, is where you will find the gold."
+ About three months later I decided to return to Chicago, and
+ in the train I met a cigar salesman who, as we soon became
+ friendly, insisted that I should locate in one of the towns
+ on his route and gave me a letter to a certain friend of his
+ in the mining district. When the friend had read the letter
+ he wrote another to a friend of his own on whom I was to
+ call. As I went down the street I carried the letter in my
+ hand and as I crossed the street I stopped short, for the
+ store I sought was the store of my dream.
+
+ Three years ago at a summer resort where a company of us
+ were telling strange dreams, I remarked that the weak part
+ of my dream was that one of my guides was supposed to be a
+ dead relative of my own, and my mother remarked at once, "I
+ had an uncle, a prospector, who died out West in the mining
+ country, but nobody ever knew just where."
+
+ Chicago.
+
+
+
+CURIOUS.
+
+
+
+MARION HOLMES' ANSWER.
+
+Dr. Peterson, the New York neurologist, in a recent magazine article
+on dreams and their meaning, points out that many dreams thought to be
+prophetic can be accounted for physiologically and avers that there
+never was a purely prophetic dream. He would contend, no doubt, that
+your waking thoughts having been a good deal engaged with Western
+life, your dream carried the same train of thought straight through.
+He would probably characterize the incidents of the rich mines, the
+store and the relative as merely coincidental, yet as the writer of a
+text-book on mental philosophy observes, to call such dreams
+coincidences leaves the mystery as great as before.
+
+It is evident Curious is not as curious as what he signs himself. If
+he had investigated his dream he may have found it to his advantage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+WARDEN DREAMS OF JAIL DELIVERY--FOILS ATTEMPT.
+
+ Chicago American, February 24, 1921.
+
+ New Orleans, Feb. 24.--Because Capt. H.J. Ruffier, warden of
+ the House of Detention, dreamed there was a jail delivery
+ on, a general effort to escape from the prison was
+ frustrated. Forty prisoners confined in one big room, on the
+ Tulane avenue side of the building, were detected working at
+ the bars of a window and picking at brickworks under another
+ window when discovered.
+
+This dream may be attributed to mental telepathy. The prisoners
+evidently have been planning their escape for days. (Creating thought
+forms.) It was possible for the warden in sleep, out of his body, to
+be mentally impressed of the delivery and bring it through into waking
+consciousness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+DREAMING TO SOME PURPOSE.
+
+ Chicago Daily News, February 24, 1921.
+
+ Huntington, W. Va.--Mrs. Mattie Estep was told in a dream to
+ write songs. She did so, and two of them were accepted and
+ published in New York.
+
+
+
+PAINTS PICTURE IN DREAM, GHOST GUIDES HER BRUSH.
+
+
+Chicago Evening American, June 8, 1921.
+
+Peoria is all excited today over the announcement by Benjamin H.
+Serkowich of the Peoria Art League that a canvas painted by a woman in
+her dream with the hand of the immortal and long since departed
+Whistler guiding her brush, is on display at a local theater mezzanine
+floor which gave space to the annual exhibit of the League.
+
+Mrs. William Hawley Smith, wife of Dr. W.H. Smith of Peoria, is the
+woman. She and her husband are among the wealthiest and most socially
+prominent families in Peoria.
+
+Dr. William Hawley Smith is well known as a student and writer on
+sociological problems. Both he and Mrs. Smith claim to have frequently
+received spirit messages from the dead. Several weeks ago Mrs. Smith
+says she was sleeping soundly when Whistler appeared in a dream. The
+famous artist commanded her to don her artist smock and get her
+brushes, paints and palette; then she translated to canvas the
+instructions he imparted, and frequently his hand guided her brush.
+She worked feverishly all night, and in the morning awoke fatigued,
+but the picture was finished.
+
+ Chicago Tribune, Saturday, March 12, 1921.
+
+ Dreams being led to hiding place of missing girls. Mother's
+ vision of her daughter comes true. Girl of my dreams. Sounds
+ like the title of a new song, doesn't it. The girl is Evelyn
+ Niedziezko, 17 years old. She lives at 3939 South Campbell
+ avenue. Last Wednesday night she disappeared from home. That
+ night and on Thursday night her mother dreamed of her. In
+ both dreams she saw her daughter enter a flat building. It
+ seems to her in her dreams it was on Cottage Grove avenue,
+ near 27th street. Last night Mrs. Niedziezko reported the
+ girl's disappearance to the police. Lieut. Ben Burns, to
+ whom the mother talked, asked her if she had any idea as to
+ where the girl might be staying. She told her dreams.
+
+ TOLD TO GO THROUGH WITH IT.
+
+ "Do you think it would be any use to go over to Cottage
+ Grove avenue and look around?" she asked. "I haven't much
+ faith in dreams myself, and I guess the police would think I
+ was crazy if I asked them to make a search on the strength
+ of a dream." Lieut. Burns believes in dreams and hunches and
+ such things, and he advised Mrs. Niedziezko to go through
+ with it. Mrs. Niedziezko went over to Cottage Grove avenue,
+ and walked around until she saw a flat building that looked
+ just like the picture that had come to her that night in her
+ vision. She had seen her girl sitting in a dining room of
+ such a flat. The house proved to be 2727, mystic numbers.
+ The family of William Llewellyn lives there.
+
+ GET POLICE TO HELP FIND GIRLS.
+
+ Mrs. Niedziezko went to the Cottage Grove avenue Police
+ Station, and asked for help to search the flat for her girl.
+ She did not say anything about her dream for fear they would
+ laugh at her. Detectives Pieroth and Fitzgerald accompanied
+ her to the building. In answer to the ring Evelyn herself
+ came to the door. Evelyn had been visiting a friend.
+
+The mother had, no doubt, been thinking daily of her daughter's
+disappearance and unconsciously impressed the idea on the ego, and as
+the ego carries out the impressions of our waking state, she actually
+brought the knowledge of her astral experience into the waking
+consciousness, and the intense desire on the mother's part was the
+direct cause of her bringing the same experience through two
+successive nights, showing the ego can impress on the mind important
+information. The ego is also the source of premonitory dreams.
+
+
+
+HAS PREMONITION--DROPS DEAD IN HOTEL LA SALLE.
+
+ Chicago Evening American, Friday, March 25, 1921.
+
+ Christian H. Ronne, 60, president of the C.H. Ronne
+ Warehouse, 372 West Ontario street, dropped dead in the
+ Traffic Club on the eighteenth floor of the Hotel La Salle
+ two weeks after he had informed his son-in-law, C.A.
+ Christensen, cashier of the Mid-City Trust and Savings Bank,
+ of a premonition of death.
+
+
+
+LOCKLEAR FORECAST DEATH--FRIEND OF AVIATOR TELLS OF STUNT-FLYER'S
+PREMONITION.
+
+ Chicago Evening American, Aug. 4, 1920.
+
+ Fort Dodge, Ia., Aug. 4.--Lieut. Homer Locklear, famous
+ stunt flyer, killed in a fall at Los Angeles, Monday
+ evening, had a premonition several weeks ago that he would
+ meet his death this summer, according to Shirley Short,
+ Goldfield Iowa, original Locklear pilot. Short was married
+ recently and is passing his honeymoon at his home. He left
+ Locklear in Canada three weeks ago and had planned to rejoin
+ him in a week. "For more than a year we went together doing
+ stunts," said Short. "During that time Locklear laughed at
+ the idea of danger until about a month ago. It was shortly
+ after I left him that he became depressed and told me
+ several times that he would get knocked off this summer. It
+ worried me because it was so unlike Locklear."
+
+
+
+WRITES DEATH POEM ON FATAL PLANE FLIGHT.
+
+ Chicago Evening American, June 11, 1921.
+
+ Washington, June 1.--How Lieut. Cleveland W. McDermott
+ penned a death poem in the plane in which he and six others
+ were crashed to death Saturday night was revealed here
+ today.
+
+It is the story of perhaps the most remarkable premonition of death
+that ever has been recorded before the fatal flight. McDermott, who
+was a seasoned world-war veteran and accustomed to hazardous flights,
+wrote seven letters to as many friends. These he placed in the hands
+of a fellow officer with instructions that they be mailed in the event
+of his death. The poem was discovered in the lieutenant's personal
+effects, written on a piece of scratch paper. It had been stuffed in a
+breast pocket of his uniform. The writing was scraggly, due to the
+vibration of the motors. This is the death poem:
+
+ Another hour and far away I fly;
+ A last farewell to my friends I cry;
+ Then up to the rosy dawn in flight;
+ A battle with the elements I must fight.
+ Lost in the fog and mist and rain;
+ Tossed hither and yonder I strive in vain
+ To again win out as I have in the past;
+ Little I knew this was to be my last.
+ Sharp crash, and my wings are broken back;
+ Every wire is useless with too much slack.
+ Down, down I swirl and slip and spin;
+ Thinking only of all my worldly sin.
+ The earth seems rushing up to me;
+ While rigged crags raise their heads to greet me.
+ As twisting and twirling downward I swirl;
+ I bid a sad good-bye to a little girl.
+ Lower down into the trees I crash;
+ My plane and I have gone to smash.
+ Up from the Mass call me,
+ My untouched, unfettered spirit flies
+ Straight to mother's waiting overhead.
+
+Although no one, so far as is known, saw Lieutenant McDermott write
+the poem, his fellow officers at Golding field pointed out today that
+every indication points to it having been written during the hour
+preceding the fatal crash. His first act following the premonition was
+to write the farewell letters, said a fellow officer today. The poem
+obviously was written under the vibration of engines, so it follows it
+must have been set down during the last few minutes of his life. The
+officer to whom Lieutenant McDermott intrusted the farewell letters
+mailed them a few minutes after he heard of the fatality.
+
+In this case the premonition seems to have served its purpose
+advantageously. Death had no terrors for Lieutenant McDermott.
+
+
+
+SON'S DREAM LOCATES HIS FATHER'S BODY.
+
+ Chicago Herald-Examiner, Thursday, June 23, 1921
+
+ Dickinson, N.D., June 22--A dream in which he saw the spot
+ where his father's body lay led Raymond Everetts, 11, to
+ discover the body yesterday. Tom Everetts, the father, was
+ one of three section men drowned by a flood near Medora
+ Saturday. Several years ago the boy announced the death of
+ an aunt shortly before a telegram confirmed his prophesy.
+
+When the ego impresses the lower mind of approaching danger, in dreams
+or otherwise, it is simply for the individual to be prepared for what
+is in store for him, just as a wise physician tells his patient when
+the end is near to be prepared.
+
+Miss Miller, 375 Brenner street, Muncie, Germany, had a premonition of
+her brother drowning. She states:
+
+ "My brother was a great swimmer. Two weeks before he was
+ drowned I had a premonition of his death. In my dream I saw
+ him diving into the river. His head struck a rock, then I
+ saw his lifeless body float before me for three successive
+ nights. I told him of my dream. I begged him not to go
+ bathing, but he only laughed at me, saying, 'I can protect
+ myself in the water.' His death was the exact working out of
+ the premonition of his death."
+
+The student of dream-lore knows the ego is ever watchful, and it
+always impresses the lower mind when danger approaches. There are also
+cases which appear to indicate when the ego is unable to impress the
+individual. The information is often conveyed through another person,
+as the above would indicate, who is sensitive enough to bring the
+information in the waking state.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO EVOLVE THE LARGER CONSCIOUSNESS.
+
+It is a very difficult matter for the layman to bring his actual
+astral experiences into the waking state (but fortunately for us) any
+faculty that is lacking may be evolved. It takes a very sensitive
+instrument to register all that is seen, heard and done while out of
+the body. It also requires physical, emotional and mental harmony, or
+the dreamer is apt to mistake an actual astral experience for an
+automaton of the physical brain, or vice versa. To what extent the ego
+would guide us and warn us, if we were only sensitive and responsive
+to the delicate vibrations sent down into the physical brain, it is
+impossible to guess, says L.W. Rogers in his volume, "Dreams and
+Premonitions." The extent by which we are guided and warned from the
+ego depends upon how much we are not swayed by our physical methods of
+artificial civilization implying the power to impress the astral
+experience on the physical brain.
+
+The habit of our scattering thoughts must also be brought under
+control. One must be able to concentrate his mind on what he wants to
+think about. Camille Flammarion says nineteen-hundredths of the human
+family never think at all. They are merely shallow receptives for the
+thoughts of others. As you acquire the habit of controlling your
+thoughts and with the emotions well under control, then you begin to
+turn the consciousness back upon self, and as the sleeper lays his
+body down to rest he gives the ego an opportunity to impress itself on
+the lower mind. Gradually the mind is brought under control. This
+connects the two different states of consciousness. At first you begin
+to see pictures, landscapes, faces, etc., only for a flash. Then you
+will fall into unconsciousness. Once this state is attained, if
+continued the rest will not be so difficult.
+
+With practice, you will be conscious of yourself leaving your body,
+conscious of yourself looking down on your body asleep, and seeing
+yourself going on a journey to inspire a friend or to acquire some
+knowledge of something you are studying in physical life. In this way
+you make your nights, as well as your days, to be of assistance to
+others. Your nights may be made useful even if you are not conscious
+of yourself out of the body, by suggesting to yourself upon retiring,
+that you will go somewhere, and meet some one and assist them in an
+unselfish act. If you persist in your suggestion on retiring, your
+spirit will go where you demand it to go, although you may not
+remember your experience in your waking state.
+
+Just as it is possible for you to render help to another in sleep, so
+you can influence them for a good purpose. It is also possible for you
+to influence another selfishly, and let me warn you here, if you do,
+you are practicing black art, and as surely as night follows day it
+will return and burn you as you justly deserve, so beware and think
+well before you act. He who dabbles in occult teachings for selfish
+ends treads on dangerous ground, and he will not attain his desires,
+but rather the reverse. The unselfish soul who acts unselfishly can be
+of much service to his fellow-man, not only the living but also the
+misnamed dead, and they can often remember their astral happenings in
+waking consciousness to the minutest detail. This requires rigid
+training.
+
+The beginner will find it to his advantage, to resolve before falling
+asleep that he will bring his astral experience through into his
+waking consciousness. It is also well to keep a notebook at hand and
+write down your dreams in the morning, if you cannot remember your
+dreams.
+
+Speak to no one. Do not leave your sleeping chamber. Before the day is
+many hours old your dream will come to you. In this way if the student
+is patient and sincere he will, in time, be able to find out many
+things of the invisible realm where his soul functions during the time
+his body sleeps. I do not claim that our physical plane affairs should
+be guided entirely by dreams, nor are dreams of the fortune-telling
+variety to be relied upon. You must use your reason and judgment in
+this the same as anything else, and only when the student has attained
+to that point in his development where there is no break in
+consciousness, may he be guided by the astral life. The mystic, and
+sages, go beyond the astral life. They go into a state of
+dreamlessness. Listen to what a great mystic said:
+
+ "In waking state we are conscious of the objective universe.
+ In dreaming we are conscious of the inner world. Then we are
+ of great help to the living, and also the misnamed dead. In
+ dreamlessness the true seer turns the light of consciousness
+ back upon itself and in its own light sees the gloom of
+ nothingness. Imagine for a moment the absolute non-existence
+ of the vast world devoid of sight and sound. What remains a
+ vast space. Imagine the vast space to be void of ether and
+ the subtle seeds of creation. Perfect stillness reigns
+ supreme over the ocean of universal space, beginningless and
+ endless. What supports it? It is supportless, soundless,
+ cloudless. He does not see. Yet he is not blind, does not
+ hear, yet he is not deaf. He goes beyond the feeling of time
+ and space. Every time the true seer enters a state of
+ dreamless sleep he enjoys the span of Ethereal Glory; his
+ consciousness is centered in the bosom of the Absolute."
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF BOOKS
+
+
+BY YACKI RAIZIZUN
+
+
+
+Breathing Exercise--Price, 15c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+The Psychology of Success--Price, 35c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+The Secret of Dreams--Price, 50c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+Reincarnation Lecture--Price, 25c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+Unfired Food and Trophotherapy--Price $4.00, By GEORGE J. DREWS, AL.
+D.N.D., Bound in Black Cloth, Postage Free.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO:
+
+ YACKI RAIZIZUN
+ ---- West Schiller Street
+ Chicago, Illinois.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13137 ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13137 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13137)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Secret of Dreams, by Yacki Raizizun
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Secret of Dreams
+
+Author: Yacki Raizizun
+
+Release Date: August 8, 2004 [eBook #13137]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECRET OF DREAMS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Keith M. Eckrich, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+THE SECRET OF DREAMS
+
+by
+
+YACKI RAIZIZUN, PH. D.
+
+Price, Fifty Cents
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ The Dreamer 5
+
+ Varieties of Dreams 12
+
+ How to Evolve the Large Consciousness 37
+
+
+
+
+DREAMS
+
+Everybody dreams, but there are few who place any importance to the
+phenomena of sleep. Before we can begin to comprehend or even analyze
+dreams, whether our dreams are symbolic or otherwise, we must first
+divert from our mind our materialistic conceptions of what the
+individual called man really is. The external or physical man, is no
+more the man than the coat he wears. The physical man is only an
+instrument of which the real inner man or soul expresses itself in the
+physical universe. Various materialistic theories have been given in
+the past, trying to explain the mighty phenomena of dreams, but these
+theories have always been more or less unsatisfactory. Why? Because
+the-materialist tries to explain the riddle of human existence without
+an individual human spirit his explanation will always be
+unsatisfactory.
+
+Dreams afford a separation of soul and body. As soon as the senses
+become torpid, the inner man withdraws from the outer. There are three
+different ways which afford this separation. First, natural sleep.
+Second, induced sleep, such as hypnotism, mesmerism or trance. Third,
+death. In the above two cases the man has only left his physical body
+temporarily, whereas in death he has left it forever. In the case of
+death, the link which unites soul and body, as seen by clairvoyant
+vision, is broken, but in trance or sleep it is released. The real man
+is then in the astral world. He now functions in his astral body,
+which becomes a vehicle for expressing consciousness, just as the
+physical body is an instrument for expressing consciousness in the
+waking state.
+
+Consciousness is not annihilated when the man is in the Astral world,
+it is only temporarily suspended. Just the same as in the case of
+death. The man is fully conscious in the astral regions clothed in the
+body of the Astral matter. This Astral body is in the physical and
+extends little beyond it. The Astral world is here and now,
+interpenetrating the physical, and not in some remote region above the
+clouds as so many imagine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Man is a soul. He has a body. He expresses himself in three worlds.
+While he functions in the physical body, viz., physical, emotional and
+mental worlds. Just as the Astral interpenetrates the physical the
+mental interpenetrates the Astral. The Astral body in which man
+functions during sleep is the body of emotions and desires and he
+expresses these desires and emotions in the physical life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Astral body in which man functions during sleep is very subtle
+matter. It resembles the physical. In fact, it is an exact
+reproduction of it, but it can only be seen by clairvoyant vision.
+When a man leaves his body in sleep or death, the spirit must leave
+the physical body before it will be rested and recuperated to enable
+it to undergo the strenuous daily toil of physical life.
+
+Here is an example. Let a man go to bed say ten o'clock. Let him sleep
+until six next morning. The ordinary man will awaken feeling refreshed
+and ready for his daily toil. Let him go to bed at ten, lie awake all
+night, next morning he will not feel refreshed and during the day he
+may feel sluggish and sleepy. Let him go to bed and lie awake night
+after night for a few weeks, what will be the result? He will be a
+physical wreck. Although he may have the same amount of hours lying in
+bed, he will not feel recuperated and refreshed unless he has had his
+natural sleep and this can only come to pass.
+
+When the soul or spirit withdraws from the physical body, the physical
+body is not the man, and as long as our materialistic writers who
+endeavor to interpret dreams fail to grasp the nature of the inner
+man, the real self, they will be forever groping in the dark.
+
+The first question that naturally arises in the mind of the layman is
+this: How can a man leave his body in sleep and continue its natural
+functions such as digestion, circulation of blood, etc.
+
+We do not consciously direct the circulation of the blood, or any of
+the natural bodily functions during our waking state. These things go
+on whether we will them or not. Although the spirit leaves the body in
+sleep as previously stated, there is still a magnetic connection with
+soul and body. This magnetic connection acts on the sympathetic
+nervous system and the cerebro spinal which controls the functions of
+the human organism. In sleep the astral man may be in the immediate
+vicinity of his sleeping recuperating physical body or it may be
+thousands of miles away in space, the magnetic connection still exists
+regardless of the distance. No matter what distance the astral man is
+away from his physical body, he can return to it with the rapidity of
+thought, as the saying is, for it is the soul that thinks, the brain
+is only an instrument of the soul.
+
+Many of our dreams may be attributed to subconscious memory, for when
+our mind is centered on a certain train of thought these thoughts are
+apt to filter through into the conscious state in sleep. The
+subconscious memory cannot be truthfully called a dream, for it is
+only a memory of something we have previously perceived in reality or
+imagination. One only has to examine his subconscious dream in the
+light of reason to eliminate them. Telepathy does explain some of our
+dreams, for just as it is possible for minds to receive telepathic
+communications (thought transference) from another in the walking
+state, it is also possible for the so-called dead to have telepathic
+communication with the living, for thought is a power, its limitation
+is unknown.
+
+While many of our dreams may be traced to subconscious memory or
+telepathy and happenings of material affairs of our daily lives,
+others are undoubtedly the astral happenings of the ego while
+functioning in the etheric regions. There we meet not only the
+misnamed dead but also many of those who are still in the physical
+body, and let me state here that many of our difficult problems of
+physical life are worked out in sleep.
+
+The old axiom, "I will go to sleep on it," has a greater significance
+than is generally attributed to it, for sleep and dreams have more to
+do in shaping your lives than you have any idea of. You can go to
+school in sleep and study anything you are studying in physical life
+and make marvelous progress. This requires much training, however.
+Keeping the mind free from evil thoughts is most essential to enable
+the sincere investigator to enter that larger state of consciousness,
+for the thoughts of our waking state have a more or less effect on the
+ego during sleep. Every individual harbors a certain train of thought,
+whether at business or pleasure this train of thought has a tremendous
+influence on the ego, in fact it shapes ones destiny.
+
+ Choose well your thoughts
+ for your choice
+ is brief and yet endless.
+ --Anna Besant in Thought Power
+
+Man may be said to live two lives in one, one when he is fully awake
+and the other when he is sound asleep. These two lives, of course, is
+the expression of his one existence. The highly developed, spiritual
+man as he retires into the interior world during sleep, realizes a
+state of spiritual bliss that is far beyond the stage of ordinary
+mortals. Man has been in the habit of looking at himself as a mass of
+flesh and muscle with a slight chance of realizing the Divinity within
+him. As the earnest soul gradually arouses himself he finds his proper
+place in the universe, for within him are all the attributes of deity,
+and when he reaches the end of the long evolutionary journey that is
+ahead of him he will find himself and know what he is destined to be,
+a God.
+
+
+
+
+VARIETIES OF DREAMS
+
+In order to distinguish and classify the different kinds of dreams in
+which everyone has an experience they may be divided into four
+variations. Nearly all dreams may be classified under this heading:
+
+ 1. Physical Stimulus.
+
+ 2. Subconscious memory.
+
+ 3. Telepathy.
+
+ 4. The Actual Astral experience of the Ego or Soul in the Astral
+ region.
+
+Physical Stimulus may be the direct cause of impressing certain ideas
+on the physical brain which may appear to be a reality. The falling of
+a book, picture or any article in the room may cause the sleeper to
+dream of firearms; a soldier may dream of a battlefield; a sensitive
+female may dream it is a burglar; a person who throws the bed clothes
+off him on a cold night may dream of snow and ice; the continual
+dropping of water from a faucet in the room of the sleeper has been
+the direct cause of a friend of mine dreaming of a passenger train;
+the steady tramping of footsteps overhead may be the cause of dreaming
+of thunder storms, etc. We must also take into consideration the
+physical and mental environments of the sleeper.
+
+
+
+THE SUBCONSCIOUS MEMORY
+
+The subconscious memory may be the direct cause of certain dreams.
+When the mind is centered on certain things, the sleeper goes over his
+life again and again in phantom fashion. He lives over the experiences
+of his daily life. Very often the ego enlightens the sleeper of some
+material thing for his own benefit, which he may use advantageously in
+his waking state, but as he generally looks at the phenomena of dreams
+as an hallucination of the brain, he allows many a golden opportunity
+to slip through his fingers because the materialist's brain cannot
+grasp things of the spirit.
+
+All the knowledge and rubbish of our past lives is stored up in the
+subconscious mind where it remains in minute form. Memory is only the
+awakening of the sub-conscious mind, a long and forgotten incident,
+that has made a deep impression on the mind, is apt to filter through
+into the conscious state in dreams. In time of illness or when one's
+vitality is low, the dream picture of the past is apt to play a very
+prominent part in one's sleep. Childhood and long-forgotten scenes
+come up frequently and appear as real and genuine as if they had only
+happened the previous day. They frequently give the dreamer joy or
+sorrow, according to the stages he passed through.
+
+Even action of past lives may come up into the subconscious. Dreams of
+running around nude without any feeling of shame may be the memory of
+a previous existence. Falling from a high cliff or trees. Being chased
+around by some wild animals may be attributed to a primitive past.
+Dreaming of primitive people, places and things, only takes the
+dreamer a step nearer the stone age, from whence he came. Instead of
+looking at these subconscious dreams with horror and dread as some
+people do they should study them and shape their lives accordingly.
+
+
+
+TELEPATHIC DREAMS OR THOUGH TRANSFERENCE.
+
+Telepathy is a known and established fact. The connection between
+minds without material means of any kind, has often been demonstrated
+by the very simple method of one person acting as a sender, while the
+other acts as a receiver. The sender thinks of a certain subject
+selected before-hand. He may write it down on slate or paper. This
+often helps him to keep his mind concentrated on the subject he wishes
+to send to the receiver. The receiver places himself in as receptive a
+position as possible, and Keeping his mind calm, the impression he
+receives he makes note of. After a few experiences he may find the
+message to be correct, word for word. This is telepathy.
+
+In sleep there is often telepathic conditions between minds who are in
+close sympathy with each other, such as man and wife, mother and
+children, or people whose business brings them close together, may
+exchange thoughts during sleep. For instance, in one case a mother
+received the thought of her boy, who was away from home, telling of
+his sickness. A few days later she received a letter verifying her
+dream. A salesman dreams of a friend telling him of his company doing
+a big business in a neighboring town. Upon his friend's return his
+dream was found to be correct.
+
+A lady in San Francisco (whose husband was in Australia) for three
+successive nights, dreamed of his returning to America. She did not
+expect him until early in the fall of the year. She was dreaming of
+him in the spring. On the fourth morning after her dream she received
+a letter telling her about his unexpected return. These are so-called
+telepathic dreams, usually from minds of living people, although
+telepathic connection from minds of disincarnate beings is possible.
+
+
+
+THE ACTUAL ASTRAL EXPERIENCE OF THE EGO DURING SLEEP IN THE ASTRAL
+WORLD.
+
+The actual Astral experience in which the ego sees distant sights,
+sights and visions which he knows do not actually exist upon the
+physical plane, such as communicating with the dead, recovery of lost
+and stolen property; having premonitions of a certain thing which
+actually happens, such as approaching danger or death.
+
+Above are but a few of the actual astral experiences of the ego which
+it endeavors to impress on the physical brain. Sometimes it impresses
+them by symbols, for symbols are the true language of the soul, and to
+know how to interpret the meaning of the symbols of your dreams is of
+the utmost importance to the beginner. A symbolic dream, which is an
+actual astral experience, can only be interpreted by the dreamer
+himself, for no one lives your life but yourself. The first impression
+you receive intuitively, of a dream you see symbolically, is usually
+correct. The reason the layman does not interpret his dreams
+correctly, by following his intuition, is because he generally has
+some material idea of his own concerning dreams.
+
+Here is a dream that may be said to be an actual experience of the
+ego. Taken from the Chicago American, July 17, 1920:
+
+ Dreams sons drowned; found bodies in river, Burlington, Vt.
+ The dream was responsible for the finding of the bodies of
+ George Raymond, Jr., 14 years, son of George Raymond, and
+ his uncle, Winford Raymond, in the Lamoille river at
+ Fletcher. According to Winford's father, the vision of the
+ boy's mother appeared before him in a dream and directed him
+ to look for the boys in the river. They had been absent from
+ home since Sunday. The dream was so vivid that the father
+ wakened and at 2 o'clock went to the river bank, where he
+ found the boys' clothing. At daybreak the bodies were
+ recovered.
+
+Here is a dream of the so-called dead who, many believe, exist in a
+state of dreamless sleep or annihilation, appearing in a vision, and
+so impressing on the astral brain of the sleeper where the boy's
+bodies were, that he actually brought the vision or astral experience
+through into the waking consciousness. Here is proof of a mother
+looking over her children, even if she is separated from them through
+the doorway of the tomb. No sane person today can actually believe the
+tomb to be the doorway to the night of oblivion. Many of the misnamed
+dead are present, and when we go to sleep at night we meet them and
+converse with them just the same as if they were inhabiting their
+mortal bodies.
+
+We do not claim, however, that the dead are all-knowing; but free from
+the physical bodies, the spiritually enlightened ones have a broader
+vision of things, especially if there is a close sympathetic feeling
+between the dead and the living, as there appeared to have been in
+this case, for the conditions must be absolutely harmonious before one
+may bring his actual astral experience into the waking consciousness.
+
+An interesting case of the dead appearing in a dream was as that of
+Mrs. Marie Menge, 15 West Schiller street, Chicago. Mr. Charles
+Peterson, former lieutenant of the Danish army, was a roomer with Mrs.
+Menge for a number of years. He had no relatives or near friends in
+America. Mr. Peterson had been ill for some time with asthma and
+finally was taken to the Hahnemann Hospital, 2814 Ellis avenue,
+Chicago. In less than a half hour before she received the telephone
+call telling of his death she suddenly awakened and told her husband
+Mr. Peterson had appeared to her in a dream. She states, he appeared
+in a white cloud and seemed well and happy. He died about 1:30 A.M.,
+Saturday, March 18, 1921.
+
+It was an easy matter for C. Peterson to appear in a vision to the
+only one who had shown any sympathy and kindness toward him during his
+illness, and his landlady being asleep, was functioning in her astral
+body, which becomes a vehicle of consciousness, and as there was
+sympathy between the two it was possible for her to retain her astral
+vision in waking suddenly as she did.
+
+The dead are not dead at all, as many imagine. This man is only
+physically dead because he has lost his physical body. He is not
+intellectually and emotionally dead because he has not lost that part
+of his mechanism of consciousness which is the seat of thought and
+emotion. The physical body only allows us to express ourselves in the
+physical world, but it is not the man, any more than the clothes he
+wears.
+
+Extract from the Sunday Herald-Examiner, May 8, 1921:
+
+ NEW GHOSTS ARE WRITING POETRY BY UNIVERSAL SERVICE.
+
+ Paris, May 7.--Can a ghost write poetry? You betcha, says
+ Baron Maurice de Waleffe, the French satirist, who tells of
+ a remarkable book of spirits' poems just published in Paris
+ under the title of "The Glory of Illusion."
+
+Three years ago died Judith Gautier, niece of Theophile Gautier, and
+left a collection of slightly--er--passionate novels and collections
+of poems which were circulated among friends. One of these friends was
+a girl, Judith's most intimate companion. A year after Judith's death
+this girl dreamed a dream. In the dream Judith appeared and commanded
+her to seize a pencil and write to dictation. The result was a series
+of poems of an exoteric character which are triumphs of meter and scan
+perfectly. They are published in the name of the girl friend, Mlle. S.
+Meyer Zundel, but Mlle. Zundel says they're not really her works at
+all, but were directly dictated by her dead friend. Previous to
+Judith's death, Mlle. Zundel says she never wrote a line of poetry.
+
+Here we have direct proof of an invisible intelligence directing this
+young lady to write poems which she admits she never wrote before her
+friend's death. The materialistic skeptic who is always ready to
+interpret dreams as coincidences cannot call this a coincidence before
+the testimony of such facts when they are brought to the eyes of an
+intelligent public. The would-be interpreter of human existence
+remains baffled and silent; they can neither deny these facts nor do
+they dare to explain them.
+
+Friday, May 6, 1921, Chicago Daily News (by Marion Holmes):
+
+ Dear Marion Holmes: I should like just out of curiosity to
+ get the opinion of some of your corner readers, as well as
+ your own, on the enclosed sketch of a dream I had when
+ working out west. About 26 years ago I was working in the
+ West near the mining country, and one night I dreamed I was
+ in a mining town, the name of which I did not know in my
+ dream, nor had I ever seen it in reality. I was crossing the
+ street to a store building painted white, and in my hand I
+ carried an envelope that I was to deliver to the boss of the
+ store. When I arrived at the center of the street I was met
+ by three men who were coming from the opposite side, one of
+ whom stopped me, saying: "Come with me and I will show you
+ where there is a gold mine." I replied: "I haven't time to
+ go now," but he insisted, "Well, come anyway and when you
+ have time you can go and get it." So I went. We started off
+ in the direction of what I have since learned is the richest
+ locality in gold mines and after walking a while we seemed
+ to float through space; then we came to the ground a few
+ feet from the top of the mountain. We walked up to the top
+ and again floated in the air in a semi-circle, landing at
+ the foot of another mountain a few miles to the west.
+
+ The stranger said: "I want you to note the peculiar
+ formation of this country and this stream and right here,
+ walking a short distance, is where you will find the gold."
+ About three months later I decided to return to Chicago, and
+ in the train I met a cigar salesman who, as we soon became
+ friendly, insisted that I should locate in one of the towns
+ on his route and gave me a letter to a certain friend of his
+ in the mining district. When the friend had read the letter
+ he wrote another to a friend of his own on whom I was to
+ call. As I went down the street I carried the letter in my
+ hand and as I crossed the street I stopped short, for the
+ store I sought was the store of my dream.
+
+ Three years ago at a summer resort where a company of us
+ were telling strange dreams, I remarked that the weak part
+ of my dream was that one of my guides was supposed to be a
+ dead relative of my own, and my mother remarked at once, "I
+ had an uncle, a prospector, who died out West in the mining
+ country, but nobody ever knew just where."
+
+ Chicago.
+
+
+
+CURIOUS.
+
+
+
+MARION HOLMES' ANSWER.
+
+Dr. Peterson, the New York neurologist, in a recent magazine article
+on dreams and their meaning, points out that many dreams thought to be
+prophetic can be accounted for physiologically and avers that there
+never was a purely prophetic dream. He would contend, no doubt, that
+your waking thoughts having been a good deal engaged with Western
+life, your dream carried the same train of thought straight through.
+He would probably characterize the incidents of the rich mines, the
+store and the relative as merely coincidental, yet as the writer of a
+text-book on mental philosophy observes, to call such dreams
+coincidences leaves the mystery as great as before.
+
+It is evident Curious is not as curious as what he signs himself. If
+he had investigated his dream he may have found it to his advantage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+WARDEN DREAMS OF JAIL DELIVERY--FOILS ATTEMPT.
+
+ Chicago American, February 24, 1921.
+
+ New Orleans, Feb. 24.--Because Capt. H.J. Ruffier, warden of
+ the House of Detention, dreamed there was a jail delivery
+ on, a general effort to escape from the prison was
+ frustrated. Forty prisoners confined in one big room, on the
+ Tulane avenue side of the building, were detected working at
+ the bars of a window and picking at brickworks under another
+ window when discovered.
+
+This dream may be attributed to mental telepathy. The prisoners
+evidently have been planning their escape for days. (Creating thought
+forms.) It was possible for the warden in sleep, out of his body, to
+be mentally impressed of the delivery and bring it through into waking
+consciousness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+DREAMING TO SOME PURPOSE.
+
+ Chicago Daily News, February 24, 1921.
+
+ Huntington, W. Va.--Mrs. Mattie Estep was told in a dream to
+ write songs. She did so, and two of them were accepted and
+ published in New York.
+
+
+
+PAINTS PICTURE IN DREAM, GHOST GUIDES HER BRUSH.
+
+
+Chicago Evening American, June 8, 1921.
+
+Peoria is all excited today over the announcement by Benjamin H.
+Serkowich of the Peoria Art League that a canvas painted by a woman in
+her dream with the hand of the immortal and long since departed
+Whistler guiding her brush, is on display at a local theater mezzanine
+floor which gave space to the annual exhibit of the League.
+
+Mrs. William Hawley Smith, wife of Dr. W.H. Smith of Peoria, is the
+woman. She and her husband are among the wealthiest and most socially
+prominent families in Peoria.
+
+Dr. William Hawley Smith is well known as a student and writer on
+sociological problems. Both he and Mrs. Smith claim to have frequently
+received spirit messages from the dead. Several weeks ago Mrs. Smith
+says she was sleeping soundly when Whistler appeared in a dream. The
+famous artist commanded her to don her artist smock and get her
+brushes, paints and palette; then she translated to canvas the
+instructions he imparted, and frequently his hand guided her brush.
+She worked feverishly all night, and in the morning awoke fatigued,
+but the picture was finished.
+
+ Chicago Tribune, Saturday, March 12, 1921.
+
+ Dreams being led to hiding place of missing girls. Mother's
+ vision of her daughter comes true. Girl of my dreams. Sounds
+ like the title of a new song, doesn't it. The girl is Evelyn
+ Niedziezko, 17 years old. She lives at 3939 South Campbell
+ avenue. Last Wednesday night she disappeared from home. That
+ night and on Thursday night her mother dreamed of her. In
+ both dreams she saw her daughter enter a flat building. It
+ seems to her in her dreams it was on Cottage Grove avenue,
+ near 27th street. Last night Mrs. Niedziezko reported the
+ girl's disappearance to the police. Lieut. Ben Burns, to
+ whom the mother talked, asked her if she had any idea as to
+ where the girl might be staying. She told her dreams.
+
+ TOLD TO GO THROUGH WITH IT.
+
+ "Do you think it would be any use to go over to Cottage
+ Grove avenue and look around?" she asked. "I haven't much
+ faith in dreams myself, and I guess the police would think I
+ was crazy if I asked them to make a search on the strength
+ of a dream." Lieut. Burns believes in dreams and hunches and
+ such things, and he advised Mrs. Niedziezko to go through
+ with it. Mrs. Niedziezko went over to Cottage Grove avenue,
+ and walked around until she saw a flat building that looked
+ just like the picture that had come to her that night in her
+ vision. She had seen her girl sitting in a dining room of
+ such a flat. The house proved to be 2727, mystic numbers.
+ The family of William Llewellyn lives there.
+
+ GET POLICE TO HELP FIND GIRLS.
+
+ Mrs. Niedziezko went to the Cottage Grove avenue Police
+ Station, and asked for help to search the flat for her girl.
+ She did not say anything about her dream for fear they would
+ laugh at her. Detectives Pieroth and Fitzgerald accompanied
+ her to the building. In answer to the ring Evelyn herself
+ came to the door. Evelyn had been visiting a friend.
+
+The mother had, no doubt, been thinking daily of her daughter's
+disappearance and unconsciously impressed the idea on the ego, and as
+the ego carries out the impressions of our waking state, she actually
+brought the knowledge of her astral experience into the waking
+consciousness, and the intense desire on the mother's part was the
+direct cause of her bringing the same experience through two
+successive nights, showing the ego can impress on the mind important
+information. The ego is also the source of premonitory dreams.
+
+
+
+HAS PREMONITION--DROPS DEAD IN HOTEL LA SALLE.
+
+ Chicago Evening American, Friday, March 25, 1921.
+
+ Christian H. Ronne, 60, president of the C.H. Ronne
+ Warehouse, 372 West Ontario street, dropped dead in the
+ Traffic Club on the eighteenth floor of the Hotel La Salle
+ two weeks after he had informed his son-in-law, C.A.
+ Christensen, cashier of the Mid-City Trust and Savings Bank,
+ of a premonition of death.
+
+
+
+LOCKLEAR FORECAST DEATH--FRIEND OF AVIATOR TELLS OF STUNT-FLYER'S
+PREMONITION.
+
+ Chicago Evening American, Aug. 4, 1920.
+
+ Fort Dodge, Ia., Aug. 4.--Lieut. Homer Locklear, famous
+ stunt flyer, killed in a fall at Los Angeles, Monday
+ evening, had a premonition several weeks ago that he would
+ meet his death this summer, according to Shirley Short,
+ Goldfield Iowa, original Locklear pilot. Short was married
+ recently and is passing his honeymoon at his home. He left
+ Locklear in Canada three weeks ago and had planned to rejoin
+ him in a week. "For more than a year we went together doing
+ stunts," said Short. "During that time Locklear laughed at
+ the idea of danger until about a month ago. It was shortly
+ after I left him that he became depressed and told me
+ several times that he would get knocked off this summer. It
+ worried me because it was so unlike Locklear."
+
+
+
+WRITES DEATH POEM ON FATAL PLANE FLIGHT.
+
+ Chicago Evening American, June 11, 1921.
+
+ Washington, June 1.--How Lieut. Cleveland W. McDermott
+ penned a death poem in the plane in which he and six others
+ were crashed to death Saturday night was revealed here
+ today.
+
+It is the story of perhaps the most remarkable premonition of death
+that ever has been recorded before the fatal flight. McDermott, who
+was a seasoned world-war veteran and accustomed to hazardous flights,
+wrote seven letters to as many friends. These he placed in the hands
+of a fellow officer with instructions that they be mailed in the event
+of his death. The poem was discovered in the lieutenant's personal
+effects, written on a piece of scratch paper. It had been stuffed in a
+breast pocket of his uniform. The writing was scraggly, due to the
+vibration of the motors. This is the death poem:
+
+ Another hour and far away I fly;
+ A last farewell to my friends I cry;
+ Then up to the rosy dawn in flight;
+ A battle with the elements I must fight.
+ Lost in the fog and mist and rain;
+ Tossed hither and yonder I strive in vain
+ To again win out as I have in the past;
+ Little I knew this was to be my last.
+ Sharp crash, and my wings are broken back;
+ Every wire is useless with too much slack.
+ Down, down I swirl and slip and spin;
+ Thinking only of all my worldly sin.
+ The earth seems rushing up to me;
+ While rigged crags raise their heads to greet me.
+ As twisting and twirling downward I swirl;
+ I bid a sad good-bye to a little girl.
+ Lower down into the trees I crash;
+ My plane and I have gone to smash.
+ Up from the Mass call me,
+ My untouched, unfettered spirit flies
+ Straight to mother's waiting overhead.
+
+Although no one, so far as is known, saw Lieutenant McDermott write
+the poem, his fellow officers at Golding field pointed out today that
+every indication points to it having been written during the hour
+preceding the fatal crash. His first act following the premonition was
+to write the farewell letters, said a fellow officer today. The poem
+obviously was written under the vibration of engines, so it follows it
+must have been set down during the last few minutes of his life. The
+officer to whom Lieutenant McDermott intrusted the farewell letters
+mailed them a few minutes after he heard of the fatality.
+
+In this case the premonition seems to have served its purpose
+advantageously. Death had no terrors for Lieutenant McDermott.
+
+
+
+SON'S DREAM LOCATES HIS FATHER'S BODY.
+
+ Chicago Herald-Examiner, Thursday, June 23, 1921
+
+ Dickinson, N.D., June 22--A dream in which he saw the spot
+ where his father's body lay led Raymond Everetts, 11, to
+ discover the body yesterday. Tom Everetts, the father, was
+ one of three section men drowned by a flood near Medora
+ Saturday. Several years ago the boy announced the death of
+ an aunt shortly before a telegram confirmed his prophesy.
+
+When the ego impresses the lower mind of approaching danger, in dreams
+or otherwise, it is simply for the individual to be prepared for what
+is in store for him, just as a wise physician tells his patient when
+the end is near to be prepared.
+
+Miss Miller, 375 Brenner street, Muncie, Germany, had a premonition of
+her brother drowning. She states:
+
+ "My brother was a great swimmer. Two weeks before he was
+ drowned I had a premonition of his death. In my dream I saw
+ him diving into the river. His head struck a rock, then I
+ saw his lifeless body float before me for three successive
+ nights. I told him of my dream. I begged him not to go
+ bathing, but he only laughed at me, saying, 'I can protect
+ myself in the water.' His death was the exact working out of
+ the premonition of his death."
+
+The student of dream-lore knows the ego is ever watchful, and it
+always impresses the lower mind when danger approaches. There are also
+cases which appear to indicate when the ego is unable to impress the
+individual. The information is often conveyed through another person,
+as the above would indicate, who is sensitive enough to bring the
+information in the waking state.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO EVOLVE THE LARGER CONSCIOUSNESS.
+
+It is a very difficult matter for the layman to bring his actual
+astral experiences into the waking state (but fortunately for us) any
+faculty that is lacking may be evolved. It takes a very sensitive
+instrument to register all that is seen, heard and done while out of
+the body. It also requires physical, emotional and mental harmony, or
+the dreamer is apt to mistake an actual astral experience for an
+automaton of the physical brain, or vice versa. To what extent the ego
+would guide us and warn us, if we were only sensitive and responsive
+to the delicate vibrations sent down into the physical brain, it is
+impossible to guess, says L.W. Rogers in his volume, "Dreams and
+Premonitions." The extent by which we are guided and warned from the
+ego depends upon how much we are not swayed by our physical methods of
+artificial civilization implying the power to impress the astral
+experience on the physical brain.
+
+The habit of our scattering thoughts must also be brought under
+control. One must be able to concentrate his mind on what he wants to
+think about. Camille Flammarion says nineteen-hundredths of the human
+family never think at all. They are merely shallow receptives for the
+thoughts of others. As you acquire the habit of controlling your
+thoughts and with the emotions well under control, then you begin to
+turn the consciousness back upon self, and as the sleeper lays his
+body down to rest he gives the ego an opportunity to impress itself on
+the lower mind. Gradually the mind is brought under control. This
+connects the two different states of consciousness. At first you begin
+to see pictures, landscapes, faces, etc., only for a flash. Then you
+will fall into unconsciousness. Once this state is attained, if
+continued the rest will not be so difficult.
+
+With practice, you will be conscious of yourself leaving your body,
+conscious of yourself looking down on your body asleep, and seeing
+yourself going on a journey to inspire a friend or to acquire some
+knowledge of something you are studying in physical life. In this way
+you make your nights, as well as your days, to be of assistance to
+others. Your nights may be made useful even if you are not conscious
+of yourself out of the body, by suggesting to yourself upon retiring,
+that you will go somewhere, and meet some one and assist them in an
+unselfish act. If you persist in your suggestion on retiring, your
+spirit will go where you demand it to go, although you may not
+remember your experience in your waking state.
+
+Just as it is possible for you to render help to another in sleep, so
+you can influence them for a good purpose. It is also possible for you
+to influence another selfishly, and let me warn you here, if you do,
+you are practicing black art, and as surely as night follows day it
+will return and burn you as you justly deserve, so beware and think
+well before you act. He who dabbles in occult teachings for selfish
+ends treads on dangerous ground, and he will not attain his desires,
+but rather the reverse. The unselfish soul who acts unselfishly can be
+of much service to his fellow-man, not only the living but also the
+misnamed dead, and they can often remember their astral happenings in
+waking consciousness to the minutest detail. This requires rigid
+training.
+
+The beginner will find it to his advantage, to resolve before falling
+asleep that he will bring his astral experience through into his
+waking consciousness. It is also well to keep a notebook at hand and
+write down your dreams in the morning, if you cannot remember your
+dreams.
+
+Speak to no one. Do not leave your sleeping chamber. Before the day is
+many hours old your dream will come to you. In this way if the student
+is patient and sincere he will, in time, be able to find out many
+things of the invisible realm where his soul functions during the time
+his body sleeps. I do not claim that our physical plane affairs should
+be guided entirely by dreams, nor are dreams of the fortune-telling
+variety to be relied upon. You must use your reason and judgment in
+this the same as anything else, and only when the student has attained
+to that point in his development where there is no break in
+consciousness, may he be guided by the astral life. The mystic, and
+sages, go beyond the astral life. They go into a state of
+dreamlessness. Listen to what a great mystic said:
+
+ "In waking state we are conscious of the objective universe.
+ In dreaming we are conscious of the inner world. Then we are
+ of great help to the living, and also the misnamed dead. In
+ dreamlessness the true seer turns the light of consciousness
+ back upon itself and in its own light sees the gloom of
+ nothingness. Imagine for a moment the absolute non-existence
+ of the vast world devoid of sight and sound. What remains a
+ vast space. Imagine the vast space to be void of ether and
+ the subtle seeds of creation. Perfect stillness reigns
+ supreme over the ocean of universal space, beginningless and
+ endless. What supports it? It is supportless, soundless,
+ cloudless. He does not see. Yet he is not blind, does not
+ hear, yet he is not deaf. He goes beyond the feeling of time
+ and space. Every time the true seer enters a state of
+ dreamless sleep he enjoys the span of Ethereal Glory; his
+ consciousness is centered in the bosom of the Absolute."
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF BOOKS
+
+
+BY YACKI RAIZIZUN
+
+
+
+Breathing Exercise--Price, 15c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+The Psychology of Success--Price, 35c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+The Secret of Dreams--Price, 50c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+Reincarnation Lecture--Price, 25c, Paper Cover, Postage Free.
+
+Unfired Food and Trophotherapy--Price $4.00, By GEORGE J. DREWS, AL.
+D.N.D., Bound in Black Cloth, Postage Free.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO:
+
+ YACKI RAIZIZUN
+ ---- West Schiller Street
+ Chicago, Illinois.
+
+
+
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