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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of How to thought-read, by James Coates
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: How to thought-read
- A manual of instruction in the strange and mystic in daily life,
- psychic phenomena
-
-Author: James Coates
-
-Release Date: June 23, 2022 [eBook #68388]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: deaurider and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO THOUGHT-READ ***
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
-
- Text in italics is shown in _underscores_.
-
- Footnotes have been moved to the end of the book.
-
- A detailed list of changes made to the text can be found at the end.
-
-
-
-
- HOW TO THOUGHT-READ:
-
- _A MANUAL OF INSTRUCTION_
-
- IN THE
-
- STRANGE AND MYSTIC IN DAILY LIFE,
- PSYCHIC PHENOMENA,
-
- INCLUDING
-
- _Hypnotic, Mesmeric, and Psychic States, Mind and Muscle
- Reading, Thought Transference, Psychometry, Clairvoyance,
- and Phenomenal Spiritualism_.
-
- BY
-
- JAMES COATES, Ph.D., F.A.S.,
-
- _Lecturer on Mental Science and Hygiene, Author of “How to Mesmerise,”
- “How to Read Heads,” “How to Read Faces,” “The Social
- Problem,” “The Antiquity of Man,” etc. etc._
-
- PRICE ONE SHILLING.
-
- LONDON: HAY NISBET & CO., 169, FLEET STREET.
- GLASGOW: 25 JAMAICA STREET.
- 1893.
-
-
-
-
- HAY NISBET AND CO., 26 JAMAICA STREET, GLASGOW,
-
- AND
-
- 169, FLEET STREET, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- Introduction, 5
-
- Chapter I.--Somnambulism and Psychic Phenomena, 9
-
- The Hypnotic, Mesmeric, and the Psychic States. Hypnotism
- a Curative Agent; the Sixth Sense; Dreams, Premonitions;
- Double and Psychic Consciousness. Evidences of the
- Soul within us.
-
-
- Chapter II.--Clairvoyance, 23
-
- Psychoscopy, or Soul Sight. Spiritual Faculty, exhibited by
- religious ecstatics, not a common possession. How Cultivated.
- The Opinions and Evidence of Men of Science.
- Second Sight. The Utility of Soul-Sight.
-
-
- Chapter III.--Clairvoyance Illustrated, 33
-
- Classified. Strange Story of the Chicago Water Supply.
- Lost Goods Restored. An Aid to the Physician. Experiments
- in Rothesay. Remarkable Clairvoyants. Clairvoyance
- in Mesmerism and in Spiritualism.
-
-
- Chapter IV.--Psychometry, 53
-
- Soul-Measuring and Soul-Measurers. Dr. Buchanan’s Discoveries.
- Professor Denton’s Experiments. Detective’s
- Clues; what Psychometry can do. Testimony of Mr. Stead
- and the Rev. Minot J. Savage. Disease Detected, and
- Character Gauged by this Faculty.
-
-
- Chapter V.--Thought-Transference and Telepathy, 69
-
- Explained and Defined. Transference of Taste in Mesmerism.
- Thought-Transference, in Dreams, from the Dying to
- the Living; the Dead to the Living; in Prayer; in ordinary
- Experience. Incidents and Experiences, etc. Mark Twain,
- Hudson Tuttle, and Dr. Hilden.
-
-
- Chapter VI.--Thought-Reading Experiments, 88
-
- Thought and Muscle-Reading Distinguished. Projecting
- Mental Pictures. Normal Experiments, without contact, by
- Professor Lodge, Mr. Guthrie, and Professor Barrett. Some
- Practical Suggestions. Muscle-Reading Entertainments.
- Directions.
-
-
- Chapter VII.--Spiritualism, 102
-
- “How to Thought-Read” and Phenomenal Spiritualism.
- The Spirit within us. The rejection of the Psychic. The
- Fraudulent in Spiritualism. Spiritualism without Spirits.
- Thought-Reading by Spirits and Mediums.
-
-
- Chapter VIII.--Spiritualism.--_Continued_, 115
-
- Automatic Writing. A Test Medium. Trance Addresses.
- A Direct Spirit-Painting. Reflections and Speculations.
- Testimony of Cromwell F. Varley, F.R.S., the Electrician.
- Theosophy a Revised Version of Hindoo Metempsychosis,
- etc. etc.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-The first book of this series, “How to Mesmerise,” gave so much
-satisfaction to the reading public, and having passed into several
-editions, my publishers have asked me to write another work on similar
-lines. This _brochure_ is my response. Clairvoyance, Psychometry, and
-Thought Transference--briefly referred to in the former--are more
-fully gone into in this. Consequently, I have little doubt “How to
-Thought-Read” will meet with acceptance.
-
-Thought-reading is duly considered and explained. A clear distinction
-is drawn between Musculation, or Muscle and Mind-Reading; and although
-these pages are not confined to Thought-Reading, as generally
-understood by the public, the subject itself, and as an entertainment,
-have been pretty fully dealt with.
-
-During the past decade, psychological subjects have, in a remarkable
-way, arrested public attention. “New Mesmerism” and “New Spiritualism”
-are popular subjects with editors and magazine writers. Whatever the
-real causes--a greater influx of the spiritual from “the state of the
-dead,” or from a reaction in the minds of men against the purblind
-materialism of our scientific leaders--it is hard to say. Possibly
-these and other causes have been at work. One thing is certain, for
-good or ill, the majority of thinking men and women of the age are
-not only interested in, but are actually searching for evidence of
-“embodied spirit.” Hence we find men of science, journalists, and even
-professed materialists and secularists, who, a few years ago, could
-scarcely speak of these subjects in the ordinary language of courtesy,
-confess now not only their belief, but are going to the other extreme
-of advocating, what as yet, they have failed to fully grasp.
-
-A few years ago “The British Parliament of Science” was nothing if
-not materialistic. The leading _savants_ of the day declared “all was
-matter, no matter what.” Consequently, man was the highest product
-of protoplasm, and his _only_ destiny the grave. The change has been
-great indeed, when one of its most brilliant members (Professor
-Oliver Lodge, D.Sc., F.R.S., British Association at Cardiff, 1891)
-in his address said: “It is familiar that a thought may be excited
-on the brain of another person, transferred thither from our brain
-by pulling a suitable trigger; by liberating energy in the form of
-sound, for instance, or by the mechanical act of writing, or in other
-ways. A pre-arranged code, called language, and a material medium of
-communication, are recognised methods. May there not, also, be an
-_immaterial_ (perhaps an ethereal) medium of communication? Is it
-possible that an idea can be transferred from one person to another
-by a process such as we have not yet grown accustomed to, and know
-practically nothing about? _In this case I have evidence. I assert I
-have seen it done, and am perfectly convinced of the fact; many others
-are satisfied of the truth, too._ It is, perhaps, a natural consequence
-of the community of life or family relationship running through all
-living beings. The transmission of life may be likened in some ways
-to the transmission of magnetism, and all magnets are sympathetically
-connected, so that, if suitably suspended, a vibration from one
-disturbs others, even though they be distant 92,000,000 miles. It is
-sometimes objected that, granting thought-transference or telepathy to
-be a fact, it belongs more especially to lower forms of life, and that
-as the cerebral hemispheres develop we become independent of it; that
-what we notice is the relic of a decaying faculty, not the germ of a
-new and fruitful sense, and that progress is not to be made by studying
-or alluding to it. As well might the objection be urged against a study
-of embryology. _It may, on the other hand, be an indication of a higher
-mode of communication, which shall survive our temporary connection
-with ordinary matter._ The whole region is unexplored territory, and it
-is conceivable that matter may react on mind in a way we can at present
-only dimly imagine.” The italics are mine.
-
-Thought-Transference and Telepathy may, indeed, be an indication of a
-higher mode of communication between human beings after we have severed
-our temporary connection with matter. Whether or not, the hope should
-repay our study. I have sought in the following pages to briefly define
-and illustrate what these phases of communication are.
-
-Double and Psychic Consciousness, Clairvoyance, natural and induced;
-Psychometry, its natural and leading features as a spiritual faculty;
-Thought-Transference, visions, dreams, and their _portents_, are in
-turn briefly dealt with, in order to extract therefrom some evidence of
-_soul_.
-
-Modern Spiritualism is referred to, in so far as Thought-Reading is
-likely to throw any light upon its psychological phases, as well as on
-its physical phenomena.
-
-While attempting to cover so much ground my difficulty was not
-what to write, but what not to write, the materials at my disposal
-being so abundant. Much has been cut down to get the whole within
-reasonable compass. Nevertheless, I hope my readers will find “How to
-Thought-Read” a readable contribution to the science of soul.
-
- JAMES COATES.
-
- Glenbeg,
- Ardbeg, Rothesay, N. B.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: EXPERIMENT IN PSYCHOMETRY.--See Page 60.
-
-MR. and MRS. COATES.]
-
-
-
-
-HOW TO THOUGHT-READ.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-Somnambulism and Psychic Phenomena.
-
-
-Before entering upon the subject of “How to Thought Read”--or rather,
-range of interesting subjects grouped under this title--it is proposed
-to deal briefly with the key to the whole, which is to be found in the
-revelations of man’s inner life, soul-life and character, presented by
-somnambulism and trance, whether natural or induced.
-
-The use of a few simple terms having a well-defined meaning will help
-the reader and prepare him for the more careful study of the psychic
-side of human life.
-
-The somnambulistic and trance states may be divided, for the
-convenience of examination, into the Hypnotic, or state of hypnosis;
-the Mesmeric, or somnambulistic; and the Psychic, or lucid
-somnambulistic--or briefly, the Hypnotic, Mesmeric, and Psychic states.
-
-The operator is the controlling agent, hypnotist, or mesmerist; in
-spiritualism, the guide or control.
-
-The sensitive is the subject, the percipient, psychic, patient, or
-person who passes into the hypnotic, mesmeric, or trance states, etc.
-
-Hypnosis is the term used for the hypnotic state artificially induced
-by the agent. Hypnosis is the lowest rung of the ladder; the psychic
-or soul state the highest. The intermediate phases, as indicated in
-conscious or sub-conscious conditions of life, are innumerable and not
-readily classified. Still, the states mentioned will give a favourable
-insight to the whole. In hypnosis, physical rather than mental
-phenomena are evolved; _anæsthesia_, or non-sensitiveness to pain, is
-more or less present. The senses of smell and hearing are partially
-exalted, and the sensitive may be partially or wholly unconscious.
-
-The mesmeric state is the term frequently used to denote ordinary
-artificial somnambulism. It is actually the higher or more perfect form
-of hypnosis. The senses in this state are more fully submerged, and the
-mental faculties are more fully exalted, than in hypnosis.
-
-The psychic state, as the mesmeric, relates to the mental, and hypnosis
-to the more physical, so does the psychic state refer to that class of
-extraordinary somnambulism in which the mental and the spiritual gifts
-transcend in character and power those of the foregoing states. In this
-state the higher phenomena of lucid somnambulism, clairvoyance, and
-thought-transference are manifested more perfectly than in any other.
-
-The hypnotic, the mesmeric, and the psychic states indicated are
-frequently interlinked in manifestation. The sensitive may pass from
-the first to the last without apparent gradation. It is well to
-keep these divisions in thought, so that in practice no one will be
-content with the _lower_ where it is possible, by wise and judicious
-observations and operations, to induce the higher.
-
-To make the matter still more clear, in hypnosis and in the mesmeric
-state all phenomena may be said to be induced through and by the
-influence and the direction of the operator. Not that he produces the
-effects as they are exhibited by the sensitive, but they are brought
-about through the agency of his suggestions or operations.
-
-In the psychic state this is not always the case. The influence of
-the operator may at times be almost _nil_. The operator will find
-it best--when the sensitive is in a high lucid state--to become an
-observer and a learner, and no longer continue the _rôle_ of director.
-
-In the psychic state, the soul-powers, so often submerged in ordinary
-life, transcend in a remarkable manner. The senses are completely
-suspended and the mind exalted to such a degree, a clearly defined
-super-sensuous condition is reached. Whether this stage or condition is
-induced by fasting, prayer, disease, or by mesmeric agencies, matters
-little. In it we find the key to the seership, and the clairvoyance,
-and the prophetic utterance, and the mystic powers attributed to
-and exercised by prophet, and seer, and sybil in the past. By the
-investigation of the phenomena evolved by the psychic state we are
-enabled to understand something of man’s soul or spiritual nature,
-apart from the phenomena induced by pathological conditions of brain
-and body.
-
-The foregoing view presented of mesmeric conditions may be very
-different from that which medical men may glean from hypnotic practice
-with hysterical and lobsided patients, and certainly not the views
-which the general public are likely to gather from seeing a number of
-paid “subjects” knocked about a music hall stage by an ignorant showman.
-
-From the roughest to the finest, from matter to spirit, from hypnosis
-to the psychic state, we find enough to arrest attention and give
-a high degree of seriousness and earnestness to our investigation.
-We stand on the threshold of soul, and the place where we stand is
-holy ground. We find, as is the physical, mental, and spiritual
-characteristics of the operator, _plus_ those of the sensitive or
-sensitives, so will be the nature of the phenomena evolved.
-
-It will be observed some subjects never get beyond the first state, or
-hypnosis; others that of the second, or mesmeric. All sensitives, in
-keeping with their temperamental and mental developments (as revealed
-by phrenology and psychometry), are better adapted for one class of
-phenomena than that of others.
-
-It may be further observed that the foregoing states may be
-self-induced or, directly and indirectly, the product of
-“spirit-control,” drugs, or bodily disease. Hypnosis, we must bear in
-mind, although not unlike the mesmeric state, has no more relation to
-that condition than sleep produced by an exhaustive walk or a dose of
-laudanum is like natural or healthy sleep. Indeed, hypnosis is not
-properly a condition of sleep. In the majority of cases the sensitive
-is never wholly unconscious. It is rather a state in which there is a
-temporary perversion or subordination between brain impressions and
-consciousness. The sensitive in hypnosis is often less intelligent than
-in the normal or waking state.
-
-For various reasons the state of hypnosis may be recognised as that
-state in which the mind is subjected to certain abnormal conditions
-of the body, notably of the brain, spinal cord, and indirectly of the
-circulation, induced by certain means determined upon by the operator.
-The mental condition in this state is one of almost pure automatism, in
-which hallucination or sense illusions are more or less present.
-
-Great and serious are the responsibilities of those who bring about the
-state of hypnosis. Every thought and feeling, of whatever kind, infused
-in this state, like seed, will take root and germinate, and finally
-bud into action in the daily or waking consciousness, and determine
-unconsciously for the sensitive the character of his life. Hypnotism
-is neither for indiscriminate use, nor is hypnosis to be induced as a
-plaything for the thoughtless--medical or lay. At the same time, in the
-hands of the thoughtful, its educative value is most important, for,
-if the operator is well poised, and feels that, he can impart higher
-thoughts and strengthen the will[A] of the sensitives by the twofold
-agencies of impressionability and suggestion. This is something not to
-be despised. It is surely no degradation to be saved from evils one
-cannot overcome or resist, unless assisted by external aid, even though
-that help can only come by submitting to hypnotism.
-
-In hypnosis the outer brain of convoluted grey matter is most affected,
-being more or less denuded of arterial and nervous stimuli. The power
-of conscious, intellectual, and abstract thought is reduced to a
-minimum. The organs of the central brain are differently influenced,
-as in inverse ratio the stimulation is increased. The eye is more
-susceptible to light, or the pupils may become dilated and fixed.
-The auditory sense is rendered more keen. The olfactory powers are
-intensified, and there is more or less insensibility of feeling. The
-powers of co-ordination and locomotion are preserved up to a certain
-stage, when these functions are disturbed, all power of voluntary
-movement ceases, lethargic and cataleptic symptoms supervene.
-
-It was by observing, more particularly, hypnosis, Professor Heidenhain
-was led to aver “inhibition” actually accounted for all phases of
-hypnotism. This opinion has evidently been based on a limited number
-of cases. “No inhibition,” says Dr. Drayton, “however ingeniously
-applied, will explain all the phenomena of magnetism. If the personal
-consciousness, the individuality, of the subject has been lost, and
-his state is that of automatism, or rather that of an involuntary
-actor, certainly his cerebral functions operate in a manner entirely
-distinct from that which is characteristic in his ordinary state.
-The inhibition relates to his common order of conduct mentally, while
-the super-sensitivity and extraordinary play of faculty that he may
-exhibit, indicate a higher phase of sensory activity, more free or
-harmonious co-ordination of the cerebral functions. The brakes are off,
-hence the phenomena that are frequently observed in the somnambulist,
-and awaken wonder, because so much out of keeping with what is known of
-his common life.”
-
-Here we find doctors--experts in hypnotism or mesmerism--agree to
-differ. They agree in this, albeit not expressly stated, they are alike
-positive and decided in their views, and certainly _without being
-positive, there is no possible success as an operator_.
-
-The mistake they make evidently arises in confounding the two
-states (hypnosis and the mesmeric), one with the other. There is no
-super-sensitivity, or extraordinary play of faculty in hypnosis,
-whatever there may be in the mesmeric state. They are similar, in
-that they may be both induced by the reduction of the activity of the
-cerebral cortex.
-
-In hypnosis the mind slumbers and dreams. The dream-life appears as
-substantial to the sensitive as the waking life. The life creations,
-thus dreamed of, are acted upon, whether they arise from suggestion or
-other causes.
-
-In the mesmeric state the senses slumber, and the mind awakens to a
-fuller enfranchisement of existence, and to the exhibition of mental
-and spiritual powers not hitherto suspected.
-
-In the lower stages the increased power of the senses is to be found
-in the _intense concentration_ of effort, brought about from the fact
-that the subject’s attention is, and his whole energies are, directed
-in one line of action or thought, to the exclusion of mind or brain
-activity in other directions. Hence all efforts are centred in the
-direction suggested by the operator, or self-induced, as suggested by
-the “dominant idea.”
-
-The sensitive exhibits powers of mind and ability of thought which
-were not noticeable in the ordinary waking condition. Not because he
-really possesses greater powers of mind or body, but because of the
-lack of concentration in the waking state. By this concentration of
-direction, so called abnormal feats of strength are performed, rigidity
-of structure brought about, and other characteristics not peculiar
-to common life. In a higher sense, we see the sensitive passing
-from this condition of concentration of one-idea-ism to a spiritual
-state, in which the phenomena exhibited are no longer the product of
-self-dethronement and of suggestion. Higher still, we see the soul
-reign supreme. The sensitive possesses a clear consciousness of what
-is transpiring at home and abroad, according to the direction of his
-psychic powers.
-
-In the psychic state--the more perfect trance state or control--the
-whole mind becomes illumined; past, present, and future become
-presentable to the mind of the lucid somnambulist as one great whole.
-This higher stage may be reached through the simple processes of
-manipulation, and passes as suggested in my little work, “How to
-Mesmerise.”
-
-In the mesmeric state the sensitive passes from the mere automatism of
-the earlier stages of hypnosis to the distinct individuality indicated
-above, although still more or less influenced or directed by his
-controller or operator into the line of thought and train of actions
-most desired.
-
-The difference between the hypnotic and mesmeric states should now be
-very clear. In the former the sensitive has no identity, in the latter
-his identity is preserved in a clearly individualised form throughout
-the whole series of abnormal acts. Whenever the sensitive enters this
-condition his personal consciousness is most apparent in the middle and
-higher stages.
-
-In fact, in the mesmeric state, it is very stupid for some operators
-to ask the sensitive, “Are you asleep?” It may be understood what is
-meant, yet the question is absurd from the standpoint of an intelligent
-observer. The sensitive is never more awake. The higher the state the
-greater the wakefulness and lucidity of the inner or soul life.
-
-
-THE SIXTH SENSE.
-
-In the mesmeric state we see developed what Lord Kelvin (Professor
-Thomson, of Glasgow University), Drs. Baird, Hammond, and
-Drayton call the magnetic sense--or “sixth sense.” It is a gift
-of super-sensitiveness. To my mind it is something more, the
-enfranchisement of the soul, the human ego--in proportion as the
-dominance of the senses is arrested.
-
-In blindness, it has been noticed how keen the sense of touch becomes.
-I have also noticed the keen sensitiveness of facial perception enjoyed
-by some of the blind, by which they are enabled to perceive objects in
-the absence of physical sight. In the mesmeric state we see a somewhat
-analogous mental condition. As the peculiar sense of the blind is
-developed by extra concentration of the mind in the direction of facial
-perception, so is “the sixth sense” developed by concentration of
-direction, as well as by the condition of sensitiveness induced by the
-mesmeric state.
-
-This newly recognised sense, “the sixth sense,” not only answers the
-purpose of sight and hearing, but transcends all senses in vividness
-and power. Materialists, no longer able to ignore the phenomena of
-somnambulism and trance, and compelled to admit man’s avenues of
-knowledge in this life were not confined to the recognised five senses,
-are good enough to give him a “sixth sense,” even while they deny
-him a soul. In the same way, no longer able to deny the existence
-of mesmerism, they now admit it to consideration--re-baptised as
-hypnotism. The phenomena being admitted, we will not quarrel over the
-names by which they are called.
-
-
-PSYCHIC-CONSCIOUSNESS.
-
-As we advance in our investigations we find in the higher conditions
-of these states a double or treble consciousness or memory. The higher
-including and overlapping the lower. Thus the consciousness of the
-hypnotic state includes that of the waking state, while the memory
-of the waking state possesses no conscious recollection of what has
-taken place in hypnosis, and so on, each stage has its own phases
-of consciousness. The memory of the sensitive, under influence,
-overlapping and including the memory of ordinary or normal life.
-
-Strange as it may appear, there are no phenomena which have been
-evolved in any of these abnormal conditions of life, which have not
-been observed again and again in ordinary or normal life, as well
-authenticated instances of dreams, warnings, and telepathy testify.
-
-Dr. Richardson notwithstanding, “in dreams and visions of the night”
-God has manifested himself to man in all ages. In other words, the
-soul (in sleep and analogous states to somnambulism and trance) comes
-more in touch with the sub-conscious or soul sphere of thought and
-existence. At times there is an inrush from that sphere into our
-present conscious state, by which we know of things which could not
-otherwise be known. Of dreams, our space will not admit more than
-occasional reference, we may mention as a case in point the dream of
-Mrs. Donan, wife of the livery stableman from whom Dr. Cronin hired
-his horse in Chicago. A week before Dr. Cronin was murdered this lady
-had a dream-vision, and dreamt he was barbarously murdered, and saw in
-a vision the whole terrible scene. This dream was a means, first, of
-forewarning the doctor, and second, of leading to the detection of the
-miscreants.
-
-Of premonitions, an incident reported in the _Register_ of Adelaide,
-will suffice:--“Constable J. C. H. Williams has reported to
-headquarters that he had an unpleasant experience at about midnight
-on Monday. He was on duty at the government offices in King William
-Street, and while standing at the main entrance he had a presentiment
-that he was in danger, and walked away a few steps. Scarcely had he
-moved from the spot, when a portion of the cornice work at the top of
-the building fell with a crash on the place where he had been standing.
-The piece of plaster must have weighed fully a stone, and had it struck
-Williams the result would doubtless have been fatal. A passer-by saw
-the constable a few minutes after, and his scared looks and agitated
-manner clearly showed that his story was true.” Concerning telepathy,
-Mrs. Andrew Crosse, the distinguished widow of the famous electrician,
-relates in _Temple Bar_ an anecdote about the late Bishop Wilberforce,
-to the effect, the Bishop was writing a dry business letter one day,
-when a feeling of acute mental agony overcame him and he felt that some
-evil had befallen his favourite son, a midshipman in the navy. The
-impression was correct. On that very day the lad, who was with his ship
-in the Pacific, had been wounded and nearly bled to death. When this
-was told Hallam, the historian, he replied that a very similar thing
-had happened to himself. A few cases are noted further on. Some persons
-would repudiate _all_ such incidents as accidents or coincidences;
-while others would fly to the extreme, and declare all such are the
-result of “spirit control”--that is, some disembodied but friendly
-spirit projected the dream, conveyed the warning, or telepathically
-despatched the news. But we must never forget news has to be received
-as well as despatched. Consequently, we, as embodied spirits, must
-possess psychic consciousness.
-
-I believe that _much_ of the phenomena, directly and indirectly
-attributed to disincarnate spirit control, are traceable to _no other
-source_ than the powers of our own embodied spirits, as revealed by
-the facts of somnambulism and trance, and this is the opinion of all
-intelligent spiritualists.
-
-“Because,” says Mr. G. H. Stebbins, a prominent investigator of modern
-spiritualism in the United States “a person quotes from books he never
-saw, or _tells of what he never knew_ in any external way, that is not
-final proof that he is under an external spirit control. Psychometry
-and clairvoyance may sometimes solve it all.”
-
-“I hold,” says Mr. Myers, “that telepathy and clairvoyance do, in fact,
-exist--telepathy, a communication between incarnate mind and incarnate
-mind, and perhaps between incarnate minds and minds unembodied;
-clairvoyance, a knowledge of things terrene which over-passes the
-limits of ordinary perception, and which, perhaps, achieves an insight
-with some other than terrene world.”
-
-These are the cautious admissions of eminent investigators in psychical
-research.
-
-
-DOUBLE OR SUB-CONSCIOUSNESS.
-
-“There are two sets,” says Dr. Brown-Sequard, “a double state of mental
-powers in the human organism, essentially differing from each other.
-The one may be designated as ordinary conscious intelligence; the
-other, a superior power, which controls our better nature.”
-
-J. Balfour Brown, in his “Medical Jurisprudence,” says:--“In no case
-of pure somnambulism, waking consciousness of the individual knows
-anything of the sleeping consciousness. It is as if there were two
-distinct memories.”
-
-This double-consciousness, memory, or sub-state of mental powers, is
-another but lower phase of psychic-consciousness, and is sometimes
-exhibited by accidents, and also by disease.
-
-Dr. Abercromby relates the case of a boy, four years old who was
-trepanned for a fracture of the skull. He was in a _complete stupor_
-during the operation, and was not conscious of what took place. At
-fifteen he became seriously ill of fever. In the delirium occasioned
-by the fever, he gave a correct description of the operation, _and of
-all the persons present, their dress_, manners, and actions, to the
-minutest particulars. The “superior power” must have obtained this
-knowledge in some other way than through the ordinary channels of the
-outward senses.
-
-In cases of apparent drowning, where the person has been saved from
-death by active, external help, we have been informed that the human
-mind has worked with a rapidity of action not thought possible in the
-waking state, the intensity of menial action being increased in adverse
-ratio to the inaction of the external senses and consciousness. In
-this state the career of a lifetime has been reviewed, conversations,
-actions, persons seen and places visited, all vividly brought to
-mind--in possibly less time than it takes to pen this paragraph. These
-phenomena suggest the reflection that the daily waking life--sensuous
-and worldly-minded--is possibly, to many, the least real and effective.
-How much our external life is influenced by our unconscious (to us in
-the waking state) sub-life, is an interesting problem.
-
-Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes says:--“The more we examine the mechanism
-of thought, the more we shall see that the automatic and unconscious
-action of the mind enters largely into all its processes. We _all_ have
-a _double_ who is wiser and better than we, who puts thoughts into our
-heads and words into our mouths.”
-
-A commercial gentleman of my acquaintance, who was rather sceptical
-on the subject of double-consciousness--although, “notwithstanding,”
-he said, “Mr. Stead, in the _Review of Reviews_, had turned an
-honest penny out of ghosts, double-consciousness, and that sort of
-rubbish”--admitted to me, he had a maid, who had an awkward habit of
-rising in her sleep, carefully setting the fires, cleaning and dusting
-out the rooms, setting the breakfast table, and doing many other things
-which appeared important to the servant-mind. Her movements were
-watched. She slipped about with eyes closed, avoiding obstacles, and
-doing her work systematically and neatly, and without fuss, when done,
-she would go to bed. In the morning she had no recollection of what she
-had said or done. It was a curious thing, he had to admit. The girl
-was honest enough. He was certain this habit had not been simulated.
-Threats of discharge, and possible loss of wages, did not cure her of
-this habit. There was a certain form of “double consciousness” in this
-case.
-
-“The subliminal consciousness” of Mr. Myers, by which he accounts for
-the phenomena of genius, is but another way of expressing the concept
-of an “identity underlying all consciousness,” the psyche, the real “I,
-me,” “the superior power which directs and controls our better nature,”
-the “double who is wiser and better than we,” the reality of which is
-so much hidden from our ordinary experience, because our soul-life is
-so much buried out of sight by the _débris_ of the “things of this
-life,” which, fortunately or otherwise, pre-occupy so much of our
-attention.
-
-It is this “subliminal consciousness” we see manifested in the psychic
-state, and natural somnambulism. Clairvoyance, psychometry, thought
-transference, etc., are as so many spectrum rays of the one soul light.
-Call them “subliminal” if you will. These rays flow out from the soul,
-and are many-hued, distinct or blurred, according to the degree of
-pureness or super-sensitivity of the external corporeal prism through
-which they are projected.
-
-Persons have lived for years, we are credibly informed, who have
-spent half their lives entranced, _in the alternation of two distinct
-individualities_ or two distinct states of consciousness, in one of
-which they forget all they had learned or did in the other.
-
-Professor Huxley described (British Association of Science, Belfast,
-1874) a case in which two separate lives, a normal, and abnormal one,
-seemed to be lived at intervals by the same individual during the
-greater portion of her life.
-
-The conclusion to the whole matter is--the psychic, or soul-powers in
-some persons are less entrammelled by the senses than in others; that a
-high degree of organic sensitiveness always accompanies those who are
-recognised as psychics or sensitives; that this state of sensitiveness
-is natural to some, and in others may be developed by accident,
-disease, or induced by somnambulism and trance.
-
-I will endeavour to show these psychic characteristics, or soul
-gifts, underlie, and enter into the varied phenomena--clairvoyance,
-psychometry, thought transference, thought-reading, and what not, which
-are collated under the title of,
-
- “HOW TO THOUGHT-READ.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Clairvoyance.
-
-
-What is clairvoyance? “The term, clairvoyance,” says Dr. George
-Wyld, in a paper read before the Psychical Research Society, London,
-“is French, and means _clear-seeing_, but it appears to me to be
-an inadequate term, because it might signify clear optical vision,
-or clear mental vision. What is signified by the term is the power
-which certain individuals possess of seeing external objects under
-circumstances which render the sight of these objects impossible to
-physical optics. In short, by clairvoyance, we mean the power which
-the _mind_ has of seeing or knowing thoughts and psychical conditions,
-and objects hidden from or beyond the reach of the physical senses;
-and if the existence of this faculty can be established, we arrive
-at a demonstration that man has a power within his body as yet
-unrecognised by physical science--a power which is called soul, or
-mind-seeing, and for the description of such a power the term might
-be auto-nocticy (αυτονοητικος), or psychoscopy.” Psychoscopy, or soul
-sight, would, perhaps, be the better term. I propose to use the old
-term--clairvoyance--as it signifies, in popular usage, the power of
-seeing beyond the range of physical vision, as we know it.
-
-That certain persons are endowed with this faculty of clear seeing--in
-some of its various phases--is a matter settled beyond dispute. What
-special name to call this faculty, or what are the true causes of
-its existence; why it should be possessed by some persons and not by
-others; why it should be so frail and fugitive in the presence of
-some people, and strong and vivid before others; why some persons
-are never clairvoyant until they have been through the mesmeric and
-psychic states; why some become possessed of the faculty through
-disease; while, with others, the gift of clairvoyance appears to be
-a spontaneous possession; and why some operators are successful in
-inducing clairvoyance, and others not, etc., are interesting questions
-to which the student of psychology may, with advantage, direct his
-attention.
-
-Clairvoyance is soul-sight--the power of the soul to see. It is
-the state of refined psychic perception. This state increases in
-lucidity--clearness and power of penetration--in proportion as the
-activity of the physical senses are reduced below normal action. It
-is observed to be most effective in the trance state--natural or
-induced--as in the mesmeric and psychic states. I conclude, then,
-clairvoyance depends upon the unfolding of the spirit’s perception, and
-is increased in power as the ascendency of the spirit arises above the
-activities of the spirit’s corporeal envelope--the body. In proportion
-to the spirit’s ascendency over the organs and senses of the body, is
-this psychic gift perfect or imperfect.
-
-The large brain or cerebrum is the physical organ of the soul, as the
-cerebellum is of the physiological brain functions. Mental functions
-are manifested by the former, and physical functions by the latter.
-
-Clairvoyance, as a spiritual faculty, will doubtless have its
-appropriate organ in the brain. I do not profess to locate that organ.
-At the same time I have noticed the best clairvoyants are wide and full
-between the eyes, showing there is a particular fulness of the frontal
-cerebral lobes, at their juncture at the root of the nose. This may
-be something more than a mere physiognomic sign. When this sign is
-accompanied by refinement of organisation, and a fine type of brain, I
-always look for the possible manifestation of clairvoyance in mesmeric
-subjects.
-
-Some writers are of the opinion clairvoyance is actually soul-sight,
-more or less retarded in lucidity by the action or activity of
-the bodily senses. Others believe it to be a state arising from a
-peculiar highly-strained nervous condition, which induces the state
-of super-sensitivity or impressionability of the organisation. The
-first may be termed the spiritual, and the latter the physiological
-hypothesis. But, as a matter of fact, both conditions are noted. The
-latter may account for much, and possibly is sufficient to explain much
-that is called thought-reading--so often mistaken for clairvoyance.
-It does appear to me that certain peculiar physiological conditions,
-varying from semi-consciousness to profound trance, are necessary
-for the manifestation of clairvoyance, even when it takes place in
-apparently normal life of the possessor.
-
-It is more than likely that the ornate and mystic ceremonies indulged
-in by Hindoo mystics, Egyptian, Grecian, and Roman priests, had
-the one grand end in view--viz., to induce the requisite state of
-super-sensitivity, and thus prepare the consecrated youths, sybils,
-and vestal virgins for the influx of spiritual vision, prophecy, and
-what not. When this subtle influx came--by whatever name called--the
-phenomena manifested were pretty much the same as we know them, only
-varied in degree. The gods spoke per oracle, Pythean, or Delphic. The
-man of God either coronated a king or foretold the end of a dynasty.
-St. Stephen saw Christ, St. John beheld visions, Joan of Arc was
-directed, Swedenborg illumined, and religious ecstatics in ancient and
-modern times partook more or less of the sacred fire--the inner sight.
-This (stripped of the fantastic surroundings, priestly mummeries,
-and dominant belief of the times) simply indicated the evolution and
-exercise of clairvoyance and other psychic gifts.
-
-Coming nearer home, we hear of the mysterious visions at the Knock,
-and at Lourdes. Miraculous appearances of the Virgin and winged
-angels, to cheer the hearts of the faithful, and to cause the heads
-of the scornful to rejoice in sceptical derision. Then we have all the
-vagaries produced by the high nervous tension of modern revivalism, in
-which the visions seen are but a transformation of church and chapel
-dogmas into objective realities. These illusionary visions--mistaken
-for clairvoyance--possess less reality than the delusive fancies of the
-sensitive in the state of hypnosis.
-
-Clairvoyance will be governed by its own spiritual laws, just as sight
-is affected or retarded by physical conditions. What these spiritual
-laws are we can only surmise, but this we may safely conjecture--viz.,
-that soul-sight is not trammelled or limited by the natural laws which
-govern physical optics. Clairvoyance and physical vision are absolutely
-distinct, and possess little in common.
-
-To illustrate a new subject, it is permissible to draw upon the
-old and the well-known. So I venture to illustrate clairvoyance by
-certain facts in connection with ordinary human vision. Although some
-children see better than others, the power to see, with the ability
-to understand the relative positions and uses of the things seen, is
-a matter of development. In psychic vision, we also see growth or
-development, with increasing power to use and understand the faculty.
-Some children are blind from birth, and others, seeing, lose the power
-of sight. Many are _blind_, although they have physical sight, they see
-not with _the educated eye_. Many, again, have greater powers of sight
-than they are aware of. As so it is with psychic vision.
-
-What is true of the physical is also true of the psychic. From the
-first glimmerings, to the possession of well-defined sight, a period
-of growth and time elapses. From the first incoherent cry of infancy
-to well defined and intelligent speech of manhood, we notice the same
-agencies at work. Not only is clairvoyant vision generally imperfect
-at first, but the psychic’s powers of description are also at fault.
-St. Paul could not give utterance to what he saw, when caught up to
-the third heavens. His knowledge of things and powers of speech failed
-him to describe the startling, the new, and the unutterable. He had
-a sudden revelation of the state of things in a sphere which had no
-counterparts in his previous experience, in this--his known--world.
-Hence, although he knew of his change of state, he could give no lawful
-or intelligible expression to his thoughts.
-
-Between the first incongruous utterances, and apparent fantastic
-blunderings, and the more mature period in which “things spiritual” can
-be suitably described in our language, to our right sense of things, or
-comprehension, a period of development and education must elapse. It is
-true some clairvoyants develop much more readily than others.
-
-In the entrancement of the mesmeric and psychic states, there is a
-lack of external consciousness. The soul is so far liberated from
-the body as to act independently of the ordinary sensuous conditions
-of the body, and sees by the perception and light of the inner or
-spiritual world, as distinct from the perception and light of this
-external or physical world. Elevated, or rather, liberated into this
-new condition, the clairvoyant loses connection with the thrums and
-threads of the physical organism, and is unable, or forgets for a
-time, how to speak of things as they are, or as they would appear
-to the physical vision of another. It is not surprising that in the
-earlier stages of clairvoyant development, and consequent transfer of
-ordinary consciousness and sensuous perception to that of spiritual
-consciousness and perception, the language of the clairvoyant should
-appear peculiar, incongruous, and “wanting,” according to our ideas of
-clearness and precision.
-
-One important lesson may be learned from this--viz., the operator
-should never force results, or strive to develop psychic perception by
-short cuts. Time must be allowed to the sensitive, for training and
-experience, and the development of self-confidence and expression.
-
-Clairvoyance is not a common possession. Nevertheless, I believe there
-are many persons who possess the faculty unknown to themselves. By
-following out patiently, for a time, the requisite directions, the
-possession of this invaluable psychic gift might be discovered by many
-who now appear totally devoid of any clairvoyant indications. Its
-cultivation is possible and, in many ways, desirable.
-
-“The higher attainment,” says Dr. John Hamlin Davey, “of occult
-knowledge and power, the development of intuition, the psychometric
-sense, clairvoyant vision, inner hearing, etc., etc., thus reached,
-so open the avenues to a higher education, and enlarge the boundaries
-of human consciousness and activity, as to fairly dwarf into
-insignificance the achievements of external science.”
-
-Clairvoyance is as old as mankind, but the exhibition of clairvoyance,
-induced by mesmeric processes, was first announced by Puysegeur, a
-favourite pupil of Mesmer, in 1784. Since that time to the present
-not only have remarkable cases of clairvoyance cropped up, but there
-have been few mesmerists of any experience who have not had numerous
-cases under observation. Clairvoyance converted Dr. John Elliotson,
-F.R.S., one of the most scientific of British physicians, from extreme
-materialistic views to that of belief in soul and immortality. The
-same may be said of the late Dr. Ashburner, who was one of the
-Queen’s physicians. Dr. Georget, author of “Physiology of the Nervous
-System,”--who was at one time opposed to a belief in the existence of a
-transcendental state in man,--found upon examination of the facts and
-incidents of artificial somnambulism, that _his materialism must go_.
-In his last will and testament, referring to the above-mentioned work,
-he says:--“This work had scarcely appeared, when renewed meditations
-on a very extraordinary phenomenon, somnambulism, no longer permitted
-me to entertain doubts of the existence within us, and external to
-us, of an intelligent principle, altogether different from material
-existences; in a word, of the soul and God. With respect to this I
-have a profound conviction, founded upon facts which I believe to be
-incontestable.” Dr. Georget directed this change of opinion should have
-full publicity after his death.
-
-Space would not suffice me to mention the names of all the highly
-educated and refined minds, in the medical, literary, philosophic,
-and scientific walks of life, who have studied these phenomena, and
-who, like Dr. Georget, have no more doubts of their reality than they
-have of their own physical existence, status, or reputation. Among
-medical men--some of whom I have known and corresponded with--might be
-mentioned Sir James Simpson, Drs. Elliotson, Ashburner, Esdaile, Buss,
-Garth Wilkinson, Hands, Wyld, Hitchman, Eadon, and Davey. Among others
-on the roll of fame, might be noticed Archbishop Whately; Earls Ducie,
-Stanhope, Macclesfield, Charleville; the present Duke of Argyle; Lord R.
-Cavendish, Lord Lindsay; Burton, the traveller; and the late Sergeant
-Cox. Among literary men, Mr. Gladstone, Britain’s foremost statesman
-and scholar; Mr. Balfour, his able and talented opponent; Bulwer
-Lytton, Marryat, Neal, Robert Chambers, Dickens, and Stevenson, of “Dr.
-Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” fame. Mr. George Combe, the distinguished Scottish
-metaphysician, philosopher, author, phrenologist, etc., was profoundly
-interested in the phenomena. Among well-known men of science might
-be mentioned Camille Flammarion, the French astronomer; Fichte, the
-German philosopher; Professors Tornebom and Edland, Swedish physicists;
-Professor Oliver Lodge, D.Sc., F.R.S.; Alfred Russell Wallace,
-D.C.L., LL.D.; William Crookes, F.R.S.; Cromwell F. Varley, F.R.S.
-Notwithstanding this somewhat formidable array of investigators of
-clairvoyance, many good people will not hesitate to deny the value of
-such evidence, and yet will believe anything in its favour which may be
-found in the Bible, as to its existence in the _past_. It is a strange
-perversion of judgment--not at all surprising--when the majority take
-(second-hand) for their religious(?) views whatever is recognised as
-“sound” in each particular district and Church. It is not a question of
-belief, it is “a question of evidence,” as Mr. Gladstone avers.
-
-The Rev. Mr. MʽKinnon, late pastor of Chalmers’ Free Church, Glasgow,
-told me a short time ago, “Clairvoyance was nothing more than a high
-nervous concentrated form of mental vision,” to which I replied,
-“Admitting the hypothesis--which, however, explained nothing--it
-matters little what clairvoyance is esteemed to be or called, if the
-facts connected with it are acknowledged.” Even this friend admitted
-he knew a man in Mull, who lived on the half croft, next to his
-father’s croft. This man had great repute in that district as “having
-the Second Sight.” Whatever this man foretold always came to pass.
-One instance will suffice. He (Mr. MʽKinnon) remembered that one day,
-while this crofter (who was a tailor by trade) was working, he suddenly
-stopped, and looked _out into vacancy_--as he always did when the
-“Second Sight was on him”--and described a funeral coming over the
-hill, the mourners, who they were, and numbers, the way the procession
-took, and the name of the “man whose face was covered,” and finally,
-when the procession would appear. Mr. MʽKinnon’s parents noted the
-time, and being simple Highland folk, accustomed to the accuracy of
-this man’s visions, they believed what he said, and kept his saying
-in their hearts till the time of fulfilment came about. Mr. MʽKinnon
-assured me “the funeral took place to the day and hour, twelve months
-subsequently to the vision, as predicted.” All I can say is, if “a high
-nervous concentrated form of mental vision” is capable of pointing out
-all this, it is worthy of investigation. It is evident this tailor at
-least had a power of vision--prevoyance--not of the ordinary, everyday
-kind of vision. Second sight, as exhibited in this case, is what may be
-termed spontaneous clairvoyance.
-
-Epes Sargent, in his work, “The Scientific Basis of Spiritualism,”
-referring to clairvoyance, says: “As far as I have admitted it as part
-of a scientific basis (demonstrating man’s spiritual nature), it is the
-exercise of the supersensual faculty of penetrating opaque and dense
-matter as if by the faculty of sight. But it does more. It detects
-our unuttered, undeveloped thoughts; it goes back along the past, and
-describes what is hidden; nay, the proofs are overwhelming that it may
-pierce the future, and predict coming events from the shadows they cast
-before.
-
-“What is it that sees without the physical eyes, and without the
-assistance of light? What is normal sight? It is not the vibrating
-ether--it is not the external eye--that sees. It is the soul using the
-eye as an instrument, and light as a condition. Prove once that sight
-can exist without the use of light, sensation, or any physical organ of
-vision, and you prove an abnormal, supersensual, spiritual faculty--a
-proof which puts an end to the theory of materialism, and which,
-through its affinity with analogous or corresponding facts, justifies
-its introduction as part of a scientific basis for the spiritual
-theory.”
-
-J. F. Deleuze was profoundly convinced of the existence of this
-faculty. He claimed that the power of seeing at a distance, prevision,
-and the transference of thought without the aid of external signs, were
-in themselves sufficient proofs of the existence of spirituality of
-soul.
-
-Except in a very few instances, little or no pains are taken to
-cultivate the spiritual nature of man. Civilised man of to-day is
-but rising out of the age of brute force of yesterday, and he is
-still circumscribed by love of earthly power and position. He is an
-acquisitive rather than a spiritual being. Being dominated by the
-senses, he will naturally seek and appreciate that which gratifies
-his senses most. He has little time or patience for anything which
-does not contribute pleasure to his sensuous nature. He would give
-time to the investigation of the soul side of life if it brought gold,
-the means of enjoyment, and gratified his acquisitiveness and love of
-power. Probably the majority give the subject no attention at all. If
-the spiritual side of our natures were as fully cultivated as those
-elements which bring us bread and butter and praise of men in the
-market-place, there is no doubt, no manner of doubt whatever, but the
-most of us would occupy a nobler and more spiritually elevated plane in
-life; and were adequate means taken, I doubt not but this faculty of
-clairvoyance would become more generally known and cultivated. Even to
-the selfish, worldly and non-spiritual man, clairvoyance is not without
-its practical side and utility, such, for instance, as supplying
-Chicago with water. To the spiritually minded, clairvoyance and all
-psychic gifts are appreciated, less for what they will bring, than for
-the testimony they present of man’s spiritual origin, transcendental
-powers and probable continuity of life beyond this mortal vale.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-Clairvoyance Illustrated.
-
-
-Clairvoyance may be briefly classified as far and near, direct
-and indirect, objective and subjective. I propose to give a few
-well-authenticated cases to illustrate these phases in this chapter.
-
-
-FAR AND DIRECT CLAIRVOYANCE
-
-is possibly the highest and purest combination. The sensitive is able
-to state facts not within the range of the knowledge of those present.
-Thus when Swedenborg described to the Queen and her friends, when at a
-distance of several hundred miles from the conflagration, the burning
-of her palace at Christiania, no one present could possibly know of the
-fire or the incidents connected therewith. Hence no thought-reading,
-brain-picking, much less guess-work or coincidence, could account
-for the exactness of details given by the seer. Clairvoyance in this
-case was not only far and direct, but objective. That is, the matter
-recorded was connected with the physical or objective plane.
-
-
-CLAIRVOYANCE AN AID TO SCIENCE.
-
-“Chicago, as is well-known, is one of the most go-ahead cities in the
-world. Like Jonah’s gourd it appeared to spring up in a night. Its
-population rapidly increased, and water soon became a _sine qua non_,
-both as regards use and luxury. Science was at fault; for geologists
-had pronounced that there could be no water beneath such a strata. Top
-water was all that could be looked for, and presently a water company
-was formed to supply this impure kind of liquid.
-
-“There happened to live at this time in Chicago a person named Abraham
-James, a simple-minded man, of Quaker descent, uneducated, and in fact,
-quite an ignorant person. It was discovered by a Mrs. Caroline Jordon
-that James was a natural clairvoyant, in fact a medium, and that he
-had declared when put into the trance condition that both water and
-petroleum, in large quantities, would be found in a certain tract of
-land in the neighbourhood of the city. For a long time no attention
-was paid to his statements. At length two gentlemen from Maine, called
-Whitehead and Scott, coming to Chicago on business, and hearing what
-had been said by Abraham James, had him taken to the land where he
-said water could be had in immense quantities by boring for. Being
-entranced, James at once pointed out the very spot. He told them that
-he not only saw the water, but could trace its source from the Rocky
-Mountains, 2000 miles away, to the spot on which they stood, and
-could sketch out on maps the strata and caverns through which it ran.
-Negotiations were at once entered into for the purchase of the land,
-and the work of boring was commenced. This was in February, 1864, and
-the process went on daily till November, when, having reached a depth
-of 711 feet, water was struck, and flowed up at once at the rate of
-600,000 gallons every 24 hours.
-
-“The borings showed the following kinds of strata passed through by the
-drill, and this was spiritually seen and described by the clairvoyant
-as practical proofs to the senses of other people. First the drill
-passed through alluvium soil, 100 feet; limestone, saturated with oil,
-35 feet, which would burn as well as any coal; Joliet marble, 100
-feet; conglomerate strata of sand and flint, mixed with iron pyrites
-and traces of copper, 125 feet; rock (shale) saturated with petroleum,
-the sediment coming up like putty, thick and greasy, 156 feet; galena
-limestone was next reached at a depth of 530 feet; a bed of limestone,
-containing flint and sulphuret of iron was bored through, the depth
-being 639 feet, and being very hard, the work went on slowly. At this
-point there appeared a constant commotion arising from the escape
-of gas, the water suddenly falling from 30 to 60 feet, and then as
-suddenly rising to the surface, carrying with it chippings from the
-drill, and other matters. The work still went on; when at the depth of
-711 feet the arch of the rock was penetrated, and the water suddenly
-burst forth from a bore 4½ in. at the bottom, of a temperature of 58°
-F., clear as crystal, pure as diamond, and perfectly free from every
-kind of animal and vegetable matter, and which, for drinking purposes
-and health, is much better adapted than any water yet known, and will
-turn out to be the poor man’s friend for all time to come.
-
-“Here, then, is a huge fact for the faithless: the fact brought to
-light by dynamic or invisible agency, and which no power of negation
-can gainsay. Natural science said, No water could be found; but
-psychology said--False, for I will point out the spot where it will
-flow in splendid streams as long as the earth spins on its axis. Since
-1864 the artesian well of Chicago has poured forth water at the rate
-of a million and a half gallons daily; and what is economic, to say
-nothing of Yankee shrewdness, it is conveyed into ponds or reservoirs
-which in winter freeze, producing 40,000 tons of ice for sale, and
-which might be quadrupled at any time.”[B] This is a case of far and
-near, direct and objective clairvoyance. This historical incident
-proves the value and reality of psychic vision.
-
-Indirect clairvoyance is the power of discerning what may be more or
-less in the minds of those present, including absent or forgotten
-thoughts and incidents. Thus, when a clairvoyant describes a place with
-accuracy, recognised by some one present to be correct, and also gives
-details partly known and unknown, but afterwards found to be correct,
-this mixture of phases may be recognised as indirect.
-
-
-SUBJECTIVE CLAIRVOYANCE
-
-is that phase which enables the sensitive to perceive things and
-ideas on the spiritual or subjective plane. The late Rev. Stainton
-Moses, well known in literary circles as “M.A., Oxon,” once asked the
-following pertinent questions:--“Is there conceivably a mass of life
-all round us of which most of us have no cognisance? One gifted lady
-I know sees clairvoyantly the spirit-life of all organised things,
-of a tree or plant for example. I have heard her describe what her
-interior faculties perceive. Is it a fact that spirit, underlying
-everything, can be so perceived by the awakened faculties?” I should
-say yes. If this lady’s clairvoyance has been of a high order in other
-respects--why not in this? This type of psychic vision is of the
-subjective order.
-
-There are necessarily an infinite variety of phases, pure and mixed,
-which the investigator will meet in practice. These phases may be
-called _far_, such as seeing objects, etc., at a distance--prevoyance,
-predicting events; retrovoyance, reading the past; introvoyance,
-seeing internally, or examining bodies, as in disease; external
-introvoyance, seeing into lockets, packets, letters, safes, and
-discovering hidden, known or forgotten, or lost objects. Lastly, there
-is pseudo-clairvoyance. For one case of direct there are hundreds
-of well authenticated cases of indirect clairvoyance, and again for
-one of the latter there are thousands of pseudo-clairvoyance, which
-are the outcome of states similar to hypnosis, and are nothing more
-than an incongruous medley of suggested ideas and fancies. Thus a
-strong and positive willed person can impinge his ideas through
-the thought-atmosphere of the sensitive and distort or deflect the
-psychic vision, and render abortive any attempts to get beyond the
-circle of the dominating influence. Again, the sensitive may enter
-a realm of fancy--a veritable dreamland of coherent and incoherent
-ideation, either the product of the sensitive’s own condition, or of
-suggestion--accidental, spontaneous, and determined--in the sensitive’s
-surroundings. Of course any classification of the numerous phases of
-clairvoyance must be purely arbitrary.
-
-
-DIRECT AND OBJECTIVE CLAIRVOYANCE--LOST GOODS RESTORED.
-
-This instance of far vision is taken from “A Tangled Yarn,” page 173,
-“Leaves from Captain James Payn’s Log,” which was published recently
-by C. H. Kelly. As I knew Captain Hudson, of Swansea, personally, and
-heard from his own lips the following incident, I have much pleasure
-in introducing it here as a further illustration of the _Cui bono_ of
-clairvoyance:--
-
-“The _Theodore_ got into Liverpool the same day as the _Bland_. She was
-a larger ship than ours but had a similar cargo. The day that I went
-to the owners to report ‘all right,’ I met with Captain Morton in a
-terrible stew because he was thirty bales of cotton short, a loss equal
-to the whole of his own wages and the mate’s into the bargain. He was
-so fretted over it that his wife in desperation recommended him to get
-the advice of a Captain Hudson, who had a young female friend clever as
-a clairvoyant. We were both sceptical in the matter of clairvoyance. At
-first Morton didn’t wish to meddle, he said, with ‘a parcel of modern
-witchcraft,’ and that sort of thing; but he at last yielded to his
-wife’s urgency and consented to go. There was first of all a half-crown
-fee to Captain Hudson, and then the way was clear for an interview with
-the young clairvoyant. I was present to ‘see fair.’ When the girl had
-been put into the clairvoyant state Morton was instructed to take her
-right hand in his right hand and ask her any questions he wished. The
-replies were in substance as follows:--She went back mentally to the
-port whence the _Theodore_ had sailed, retracing with her hand as she
-in words also described the course of the ship from Liverpool across
-the Atlantic, through the West Indian group, etc., back to New Orleans.
-At length she said, ‘Yes, this is the place where the cotton was lost;
-it’s put on board a big black ship with a red mark round it.’ Then she
-began to trace with her hand and describe the homeward course of the
-vessel, but after re-crossing the Atlantic, instead of coming up the
-Irish Channel for Liverpool, she turned along the English Channel as
-though bound for the coast of France; and then stretching out her hand
-she exclaimed, ‘Oh, here’s the cotton; but what funny people they are;
-they don’t talk English.’ Captain Morton said at once, ‘I see; it’s
-the _Brunswick_, Captain Thomas,’ an American ship that lay alongside
-of him at New Orleans and was taking in her cargo of cotton while the
-_Theodore_ was loading, and was bound for Havre de Grace. Captain
-Morton, satisfied with his clairvoyant’s information, went home and
-wrote immediately to Captain Thomas, inquiring for his lost cargo.
-In due course he got an answer that the cotton was certainly there,
-that it had been taken off the wharf in mistake, and that it was about
-to be sold for whomsoever it might concern; but that if he (Captain
-Morton) would remit a certain amount to cover freight and expenses
-the bales should be forwarded to him at once. He did so, and in due
-time received the cotton, subject only to the expenses of transit from
-Havre to Liverpool. Such are the facts; I do not profess to offer any
-explanation.”
-
-
-CLAIRVOYANCE AN AID TO THE PHYSICIAN.
-
-I am indebted to Dr. George Wyld for this case, which also exhibits
-the value of clairvoyance. Dr. Wyld had the good fortune to make the
-acquaintance of a Mrs. D----, a lady in private life who was endowed
-with the gift of natural clairvoyance. Dr. Wyld told this lady of “a
-friend who had for years suffered intense agony for hours every night
-in his back and chest, and that latterly he had been obliged to sit up
-all night in a chair, and his legs began to swell.”
-
-“This gentleman had regularly for three years been under many of the
-leading physicians of London. Some said that there must be some obscure
-heart affection, others said it was neuralgia, one said it was gout,
-and the last consulted said it was malignant caries of the spine.”
-
-Dr. Wyld’s friend called upon him by appointment, and met Mrs. D----.
-This lady merely looked at him. When he had retired from the room Mrs.
-D---- made the following statement of his case to the doctor:--“I have
-seen what the disease is; I saw it as distinctly as if the body were
-transparent. There is a tumour behind the heart, about the size of a
-walnut; it is of a dirty colour; and it jumps and looks as if it would
-burst. Nothing can do him any good but entire rest.”
-
-“I at once saw,” says Dr. Wyld, what she meant, and sat down to write
-to my friend’s medical attendant as follows:--
-
-“I believe I have discovered the nature of Mr.----’s disease. He has
-an aneurism on the descending aorta, about the size of a walnut. It
-is this which causes the slight displacement which has been observed
-in the heart, and the pressure of the tumour against the intercostal
-nerves is the cause of the agony in the back, and the peripheral pains
-in the front of the chest. You are going to-morrow to see Sir ---- in
-consultation; show him this diagnosis, and let me know what he says.”
-
-“Next the patient had the consultation, and Mrs. D----’s diagnosis
-was confirmed; and the doctors agreed with Mrs. D---- the only thing
-to be done was to take entire rest. The treatment was duly followed
-up, with successful results.” Dr. Wyld thoughtfully adds--“It is true
-that the diagnosis cannot be absolutely confirmed during life, but as
-the profession unanimously pronounce the disease to be aneurism, the
-diagnosis may be accepted as correct. This diagnosis has probably saved
-the gentleman’s life, as before Mrs. D---- saw him he was allowed to
-shoot over Scotch moors, and to ride, drive, and play billiards.”
-
-The use of clairvoyance in the diagnosis of disease is by no means
-as rare as the majority of physicians and the general public would
-naturally assume. I have had many opportunities of witnessing the
-accuracy of diagnosis and the excellence of the methods of treatment
-advised by clairvoyants. In my own personal experience I have had much
-evidence of correctness of clairvoyance in diagnosis, and subsequent
-success in treatment. It is a phase most desirable to cultivate if
-possible, and all allied conditions connected therewith.
-
-
-TRAVELLING CLAIRVOYANCE.
-
-As a public entertainer at one time, giving demonstrations of mesmeric
-phenomena, I have had naturally many opportunities of seeing different
-types of clairvoyance. During a course of entertainments given by
-me in Rothesay, 1881, I was able to introduce clairvoyance to public
-notice by the most difficult method, that of public experiments.
-
-M. C., the clairvoyante, was a native of Newcastle-on-Tyne. All her
-clairvoyant experiments were satisfactory. Her husband was also a
-clairvoyant, but not so striking for public exhibition. M. C. seemed
-to possess all phases. One or two experiments out of many will be
-interesting not only as illustrative of clairvoyance, but because what
-I relate can be easily ratified.
-
-M. C. arrived in Rothesay for the first time about four hours
-previously to taking her seat upon the platform, in the New Public
-Halls. It was neither possible nor probable she could have obtained the
-information she possessed by other than psychic means. The clairvoyant
-was mesmerised and blindfolded before the audience. After some
-experiments in objective clairvoyance were given, such as describing
-a watch, telling the time, and the number, by having the watch held
-silently over her forehead, she gave several experiments in travelling
-clairvoyance. Many visitors in the hall--for Rothesay is a well known
-and fashionable seaside resort--sent up requests to the platform, and
-desired the clairvoyante should visit their homes in Kent, Cornwall,
-Island of Jersey, in the Isle of Man, Glasgow, and other places. Her
-visits and descriptions were in all instances extremely satisfactory.
-How far thought-transference and objective clairvoyance commingled and
-entered into her descriptions it would be difficult to say, but the
-results were simply marvellous.
-
-Test case, by the late Dr. Maddever, M.D., M.R.C.S., and Dr. John
-Maddever, his son. These medical gentlemen resided in Rothesay,
-and were present in the hall. Dr. Maddever desired me to send the
-clairvoyante into a certain room in his house and that she should
-describe it.
-
-All the directions the clairvoyante obtained were, “to go out of the
-hall, down the front steps; when out turn to the right and proceed
-onward till she came to an iron-railed gate, on which was a small brass
-plate, bearing the name of ‘Dr. Maddever,’ she was to open the gate, go
-up to the hall-door, enter, pass the first door to the left, and turn
-round a passage to the left and enter the first door to which she came,
-and describe what she saw.”
-
-Sitting still upon the platform in silence for a minute or two, she
-suddenly exclaimed:--“I am at the gate--at the door--now in the hall--I
-have found the room, and I am now inside, and stand with my back to the
-door.” She then proceeded to describe the room, the book-cases which
-surrounded it, their peculiar structure; the mantel-piece, the form of
-the clock, the time, and the appearance of the ornaments. The table in
-the centre of the room, its form, the colour and style of the cloth
-upon it, books, albums, and papers thereon, the flower vase support in
-the window, and a number of other particulars.
-
-At the conclusion Dr. Maddever arose in the audience and said:--“Ladies
-and gentlemen, Professor Coates is a stranger to me, I only know of him
-by report. The young lady on the platform I do not know. I have not
-seen either till this evening, and they have never been in my house.
-The experiment we have had is most remarkable, and should be of deep
-and profound interest to all. The young lady has described the room, as
-far as I can remember, most correctly--in fact very much better than I
-could have done myself.” This statement was received with applause.
-
-After one or two instances of travelling clairvoyance, a young
-gentleman rose in the body of the hall and desired I should send the
-sensitive to a house or villa not far from the juncture of Marine Place
-and Ardbeg Road.
-
-The directions given to the clairvoyante were briefly to the effect,
-she was to leave the place, on reaching the front street she was to
-turn to her left and keep on past the Post Office, Esplanade, past the
-Skeoch Woods, etc., till she came to the house. She nodded her head in
-compliance, and presently announced she “had found the house.” Then she
-shivered and appeared to draw back, and said “I won’t go in.”
-
-Some persons in the audience laughed, and one (I think it was the
-young gentleman who asked that she might be sent) said: “The whole
-thing is a swindle.” Now, considering there was not a single flaw in
-the experiments that night, surprise after surprise being given, and
-the audience had risen in enthusiasm, this opinion was not favourably
-received.
-
-I asked the gentleman “to have patience.” I had no doubt but we would
-know soon enough the reasons. “Whatever they were I would try and
-ascertain them.”
-
-With much hesitancy she declared that “the house was not one any
-respectable female would enter, and she would not.” When I repeated
-this statement to the audience, there was what the newspapers call
-“sensation.” The sensation was intensified when one of the Rothesay
-Magistrates, Bailie Molloy, the then senior Bailie of the Royal Burgh,
-declared “the young woman was right, perfectly right, this was a house
-which had been inadvertently let to persons of ill-fame, and he, for
-one, had recently had the facts of the case placed before him, and he
-was most anxious that these people should be put out, and they would
-be, as soon as the proper steps could be taken.”
-
-The young gentleman retired somewhat discomfited, and the excitement
-produced by these and other experiments brought crowded houses during
-my professional stay.
-
-When my “mesmeric exposition” was concluded, the two medical gentlemen
-referred to, were good enough to introduce themselves, and invited me
-to call next day to see the room. I accepted the invitation during
-the following day and saw how truly correct and vivid her description
-had been. In the first experiment the sensitive described the state of
-the doctor’s library, pointing out what had not been recollected by
-either of the medical men, and I believe the other case comes under the
-heading of direct and objective clairvoyance. Dr. Maddever’s house was
-about a quarter of a mile, and the other house about a mile and a half
-from the hall.
-
-The persistent and reliable clairvoyance evinced by this sensitive
-was induced. She was a mesmeric subject, and when such subjects are
-properly treated they make the very best clairvoyants.
-
-
-PSYCHIC VISION POSSESSED BY THE PHYSICALLY BLIND.
-
-Mrs. Croad resided at Redland, Bristol. My attention was called to
-her case about fifteen years ago by Dr. J. G. Davey, of Bristol.
-Unfortunately circumstances at the time prevented a personal visit and
-report. Her psychic gifts and wonderful supersensitivity have been
-amply testified to, by most reliable witnesses, such as Dr. Davey, Hy.
-G. Atkinson, F.G.S., and others.
-
-Clairvoyance in Mrs. Croad’s case was and is (for I believe the lady is
-still living) a singular admixture of subtle sense transference so well
-known to mesmerists of the old school, and spontaneous psychic vision.
-Thought-transference and indirect clairvoyance, more or less induced,
-by intense voluntary concentration.
-
-Mrs. Croad is deaf, dumb, and paralysed, and stone blind. She can
-see and hear, read with powers “denied to ordinary mortals,” and
-discern pictures and writings in the dark. She is aware of her
-daughter’s thoughts when the latter touches her, and becomes at once
-acquainted with what her daughter wishes to communicate. She possesses
-supersensitivity of touch, and discerns colour by their degrees of
-heat, roughness or smoothness. She can also identify photographs and
-pictures in the same way. From time to time she has exhibited the
-highest phases of clairvoyance. Reports have been made in this case
-by medical experts in the _Journal of Psychological Medicine_, and
-other magazines and journals several years ago. The most recent was
-contributed by the Rev. Taliesin Dans, The Cottage, Claptons, to _The
-Review of Reviews_ in January, 1891.
-
-
-THE SPIRITUALISTIC AND PRACTICAL CHARACTER OF CLAIRVOYANCE
-
-might be further illustrated by the well known case of Miss Eliza
-Hamilton, who became paralysed in her limbs and right arm, through
-severe injury to the spine. She had been in hospital for four months,
-on her return home frequently passed into the trance state, and
-on awakening described various people and places she had visited,
-and objects seen. These descriptions have been invariably verified
-subsequently. “She also at times,” says her physician, “speaks of
-having been in the company of persons with whom she was acquainted in
-this world, but who have passed away; and she tells her friends that
-they have become more beautiful, and have cut off their infirmities
-with which they were afflicted while here. She often describes events
-which _are about to happen_, and these are always fulfilled exactly as
-she predicts.”
-
-“Her father,” says Mr. Hudson Tuttle, “read in her presence a letter
-he had received from a friend in Leeds, speaking of the loss of his
-daughter, about whose fate he was very unhappy, as she had disappeared
-nearly a month before, and left no trace. Eliza went into the trance
-state, and cried out, ‘Rejoice! I have found the lost girl! She is
-happy in the angel world.’ She said the girl had fallen into the dark
-water where dyers washed their cloths; that her friends could not have
-found her had they sought her there, _but_ now the body had floated a
-few miles, and would be found in the River Aire. The body was found as
-described.
-
-“Now, knowing that her eyes were closed, that she could not hear, that
-her bodily senses were in profound lethargy, how are we to account for
-the intensity and keenness of sight? Her mental powers were exceedingly
-exalted, and scarcely a question could be asked her but she correctly
-answered.
-
-“In this case the independence of the mind of the physical body are
-shown in every instance of clairvoyance, is proven beyond cavil or
-doubt. If it is demonstrated that the mind sees without the aid of
-eyes, hears when the ears are deaf, feels when the nerves of sensation
-are at rest, it follows that it is independent of these outward
-avenues, and has other channels of communication with the external
-world essentially its own.”
-
-
-CLAIRVOYANCE FROM DISEASE.
-
-Miss Mollie Fancher, of Brooklyn Heights, fell off a tramway car when
-eighteen years of age, experienced very severe injuries to head and
-spine, her body being dragged a distance, through her dress catching on
-the step of the car. She became paralysed, lost all her senses, except
-touch. She gradually recovered hearing, taste, and ability to talk
-in time. She was also blind for nine years. Drs. Speir and Ormiston
-were her physicians, men of skill and marked probity. These, with a
-veritable host of medical men--ministers of the Gospel, educationists
-and specialists--have borne testimony to her remarkable endowments,
-from which we take two extracts. Mr. Charles Ewart, Principal of the
-Brooklyn Heights Seminary, where she was under special care, writes:--
-
-“For many days together she has been to all appearances dead. The
-slightest pulse could not be detected; there was no evidence of
-respiration. Her limbs were as cold as ice, and had there not been
-some warmth about her heart, she would have been buried. When I first
-saw her she had but one sense--that of touch. By running her fingers
-over the printed page, she could read with equal facility in light or
-darkness. The most delicate work is done by her in the night.... Her
-power of clairvoyance, or second sight, is marvellously developed.
-_Distance imposes no barriers_, without the slightest error she
-dictates the contents of sealed letters which have never been in her
-hands. She discriminates in darkness the most delicate shades of
-colour. She writes with extraordinary rapidity.”
-
-Mr. Henry M. Parkhurst, the astronomer (residing at 173 Gates Avenue,
-Brooklyn, N.Y.), writes:--
-
-“From the waste-basket of a New York gentleman acquaintance he
-fished an unimportant business letter, without reading it, tore it
-into ribbons, and tore the ribbons into squares. He shook the pieces
-well together, put them into an envelope, and sealed it. This he
-subsequently handed to Miss Fancher. The blind girl took the envelope
-in her hand, and passed her hand over it several times, called for
-paper and pencil, and wrote it verbatim. The seal of the letter had
-not been broken. Mr. Parkhurst himself opened it, pasted the contents
-together, and compared the two. Miss Fancher’s was a literal copy of
-the original.”
-
-
-MESMERIC CLAIRVOYANCE AND SPIRITUALISM.
-
-“A few evenings ago I called upon Mr. and Mrs. Loomis, 2 Vernon
-Place, Bloomsbury, and after we had chatted for a short time in the
-drawing-room with the door closed and nobody else present, I asked if
-they would try a mesmeric experiment for me. They willingly agreed,
-and Mr. Loomis, by passes, threw his wife into a mesmeric state, as he
-often does, and an intelligence, which claimed to be the spirit of her
-mother, spoke through her lips. Until this moment I had said nothing to
-any living soul about the nature of my contemplated experiment, but I
-then asked the unseen intelligence if it could then and there go to the
-house of Mrs. Macdougall Gregory, 21 Green Street, Grosvenor Square,
-London, and move a heavy physical object in her presence. The reply
-was, I do not know, I will try. About three minutes afterwards, at 8.40
-p.m., the intelligence said that Mrs. Gregory was in her drawing-room
-with a friend, and added, ‘I have made Mrs. Gregory feel a prickly
-sensation in her arm from the elbow down to the hand, as if some person
-had squeezed the arm, and she has spoken about it to her friend.’
-
-“I took a note in writing of this statement at the time it was made. A
-few minutes later I left Mr. and Mrs. Loomis, and without telling them
-my intention to do so, went straight to the house of Mrs. Gregory about
-a mile and a half off. I had selected Mrs. Gregory for this experiment
-because she is not afraid to publish her name in connection with
-psychic truths, and her word carries weight, especially in Scotland,
-where she and her family are well-known. She is the widow of Professor
-Gregory, of Edinburgh University, and is a lineal descendant of the
-Lord of the Isles. I then for the first time told Mrs. Gregory of the
-experiment. She replied that between half-past eight and nine o’clock
-that evening she was playing the piano, and suddenly turned round to
-her friend, Miss Yauewicz, of Upper Norwood, saying, ‘I don’t know what
-is the matter with me, I feel quite stupid, and have such a pain in
-my right arm that I cannot go on playing.’ Miss Yauewicz, who was no
-believer in spiritualism or any of the marvels of psychology, felt a
-lively interest when she was informed of the experiment. She told me
-that she clearly remembered Mrs. Gregory’s statement that she could not
-go on playing because of the pain in her right arm.”[C]
-
-Mrs. Loomis was a remarkable clairvoyante, whom I accidently became
-acquainted with in Liverpool many years ago, shortly after her arrival
-from America. I introduced the lady and her husband, Mr. Daniel Loomis,
-to Mr. Harrison, then editor of _The Spiritualist_. The Guion steamer,
-_Idaho_, in which they came from New York, was wrecked off the Irish
-Coast, and all they possessed in this world was lost with the vessel.
-Mrs. Loomis predicted the disaster, where it was likely to take place;
-that all hands would be saved, but all they had lost. Upon the arrival
-of the officers of the vessel in Liverpool, they presented Mrs. Loomis,
-at the Bee Hotel, John Street, Liverpool, with a basket of flowers,
-purse, and testimonial, in recognition of her gift, and heroic conduct
-during and after the disaster. I may add I knew Mr. Harrison as a most
-careful investigator and a man of scientific tastes and ability.
-
-I select the following case of a mesmeric sensitive controlled by
-a disembodied spirit, from the writings of Mr. Epes Sargent, author
-of “Planchette on the Despair of Science,” etc., as appropriately
-illustrative of this form of clairvoyance:--
-
-“One of the daughters of my valued correspondent, the late William
-Howett, was a mesmeric sensitive. Howett told Professor W. D. Gunning,
-whose words (slightly abridged) I here use, that, on one occasion his
-daughter, being entranced, wrote a communication signed with the name
-of her brother, supposed to be in Australia. The import was, that he
-had been drowned a few days before in a lake. Dates and details were
-given. The parents could only wait, as there was no trans-oceanic
-telegraph. Months passed, and at last a letter came from a nephew in
-Melbourne, bearing the tidings that their son had been drowned on such
-a day, in such a lake, under such and such circumstances. Date, place,
-and all the essential details were the same as those given months
-before through the daughter. Mr. Howett believed that the freed spirit
-of his son influenced the sister to write; and I know of no explanation
-more rational that this.”
-
-
-CLAIRVOYANCE DUE TO SPIRITUAL CONTROL.
-
-Such cases as the above are the most difficult of all to prove. What I
-contend for is, if it is demonstrated we can control a fellow-being,
-throw him or her into a trance state--in which the phenomena of the
-psychic state are evolved--and seeing such state is induced largely
-by the control of spirit over spirit in the body, why may not a
-disembodied spirit control, direct, or influence a suitable sensitive
-or medium in the body? If not, why not? There is abundant evidence of
-such controls.
-
-Seeing objects concealed in boxes and letters, or reading books and
-mottoes, etc., appears to some clairvoyants to be more difficult than
-diagnosing disease, or seeing objects at a distance. The why and
-wherefore seems at first difficult to explain.
-
-The deliberate concealment of objects for the purpose of testing
-clairvoyance is often the result of a spirit of virulent suspicion,
-disbelief, and what is worse, _an earnest desire for failure_, so that
-the parties may rejoice on the discomfiture of the clairvoyants. With
-such people failure is a source of pleasure. Nevertheless, seeming
-impossibilities have been triumphed over. Long lost wills have been
-found, and places of the accidental or intentional hiding discovered.
-In more than one case deliberate fraud has been exposed, and the guilty
-parties brought to acknowledge the truth of the sensitive’s revelations.
-
-
-THE FUGITIVE NATURE OF CLAIRVOYANCE.
-
-“The chief feature,” said Alexis Didier, “of the somnambulistic
-lucidity is its variability. While the conjurer or juggler, at all
-moments in the day and before all spectators, will invariably succeed,
-the somnambulist, endowed with the marvellous power of clairvoyance,
-will not be lucid with all interviewers and at all moments of the
-day; for the faculty of lucidity being a crisis painful and abnormal,
-there may be atmospheric influences or invincible antipathies at work
-opposing its production, and which seem to paralyse all supersensual
-manifestation. Intuition, clairvoyance, lucidity, are faculties which
-the somnambulist gets from the nature of his temperament, and which
-are rarely developed in force.” Further, he adds, “the somnambulistic
-lucidity varies in a way to make one despair; success is continually
-followed by failure; in a word, error succeeds a truth; but when one
-analyses the causes of this no right-minded person will bring up the
-charge of Charlatanism, since the faculty is subject to influences
-independent of the will and the consciousness of the clairvoyant.”
-
-Alexis Didier, like his brother Adolphe, was a natural clairvoyant,
-and excelled in direct and objective clairvoyance, phases of the most
-striking and convincing character.
-
-Clairvoyance can be cultivated by the aid of mesmerism and by the
-introspection process. By the first, the sensitive can be materially
-assisted by the experience and help of the operator. By the second,
-something like natural clairvoyance can be induced. Either processes
-are more or less suitable to subdue the activity of the senses, and
-give greater range to the psychic powers. General instructions are
-of little use. Personal advice is best. The operator then knows with
-whom he has to do, their special temperament and character, what are
-the best processes to adopt to cultivate their gift, and how far such
-sensitives and students are themselves likely to be suitable for
-clairvoyant experiments. I have found the “Mirror Disc” useful in
-inducing favourable conditions in the normal state for the development
-of clairvoyance, and recommend its use.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-Psychometry.
-
-
-[Illustration: J. RHODES BUCHANAN, M.D.]
-
-What is psychometry? Dr. George Wyld esteems psychometry a phase of
-clairvoyance--“the knowledge the psychic obtains by a _clue_, such as
-a lock of the hair of some absent person, or some portion of a distant
-object.” Mr. Stead calls it (_Review of Reviews_, p. 221, September,
-1892) “the strange new science of psychometry.” In this he pardonably
-errs. Psychometry may be strange, but _it_ is _not_ new. We may not
-recognise the name as old, but the class of phenomena it specialises
-is as old as clairvoyance and mind-reading.
-
-“The word psychometry,” says Dr. Buchanan, “coined in 1842, to express
-the character of a new science and art, is the most pregnant and
-important word that has been added to the English language. Coined
-from the Greek (_psyche_, soul; and _metron_, measure), it literally
-signifies _soul-measuring_.”... “The psychometer measures the soul.”
-
-In the case of psychometry, the measuring assumes a new character, as
-the object measured and the measuring instrument are the same psychic
-element, and its measuring power is not limited to the psychic, as it
-was developed in the first experiments, but has appeared by successive
-investigations to manifest a wider and wider area of power, until it
-became apparent that this psychic capacity was really the measure of
-all things in the universe. Hence, psychometry signifies not merely the
-measuring of souls and soul capacities, or qualities by our own psychic
-capacities, but the measurement and judgment of all things conceivable
-by the human mind; and psychometry means practically _measuring by
-the soul_, or grasping and estimating all things which are within the
-range of human intelligence. Psychometry, therefore, is not merely an
-instrumentality for measuring soul powers, but a comprehensive agency
-like mathematics for the solution of many departments of science.
-
-“Prophecy,” says Buchanan, “is the noblest aspect of psychometry, and
-there is no reason why it should not become the guiding power to each
-individual life, and the guiding power of the destiny of nations.”
-For instance, while all Europe feared for Boulanger, Metz was getting
-stored with food; Lord Wolseley declared war imminent, and the French
-themselves prepared for _revanche_. Psychometers declared for peace
-in 1889, and said there was no prospect of war for five years.
-Subsequent events have proved Boulanger lacking in both generalship and
-statesmanship--a veritable Bombastes Furioso; and peace up to the time
-of writing is as yet unbroken.
-
-Dr. Buchanan claims--“In physiology, pathology, and hygiene,
-psychometry is as wise and parental as in matters of character and
-ethics. A competent psychometer appreciates the vital forces, the
-temperament, the peculiarities, and every departure from the normal
-state, realising the diseased condition with an accuracy in which
-external diagnosis often fails. In fact, the natural psychometer is
-born with a genius for the healing art, and if the practice of medicine
-were limited to those who possess this power in an eminent degree, its
-progress would be rapid, and its disgraceful failures in diagnosis and
-blunders in treatment and prognosis would be less frequently heard
-of.” Many happy tests in diagnosis and in the successful treatment
-of disease--out of the ordinary routine--are due, in my opinion,
-not so much to elaborate medical training as to the fact of the
-practitioner--perhaps unconscious to himself--being possessed of more
-or less of the psychometric faculty.
-
-Dr. Buchanan,[D] in his “Original Sketch,” gives us the history and
-some details of his discovery, based upon certain investigations of
-the nervous system. Already he was well versed in the phenomena of
-hypnotism, which is at this late day becoming a fashionable study and
-recreation of medical men. He had demonstrated the responsive action
-of cerebral organs to mesmeric touch and influence, and he was already
-acquainted with the curious psychological phenomena of sense and
-thought transference, of double consciousness, and all the nervous and
-pathological phases peculiar to natural and artificial somnambulism.
-His investigation for years of the nervous system had clearly shown him
-that its capacities were far more extensive, varied, and interesting
-than physiologists and philosophers either knew or were prepared to
-admit. He found in the nervous system a vast aggregate of powers which
-constitute the vitality of man, existing in intimate connection with
-the vast and wonderful powers of his mind. Was it possible or rational
-to suppose that this nerve-matter, so intimately co-related with mind,
-and upon which the mind depends for the manifestation of its powers,
-could be entirely limited to the narrow materialistic sphere assigned
-by physiologists? He thought not.
-
-In a conversation with Bishop Polk (who afterwards became the
-celebrated General Polk of Confederate fame), Dr. Buchanan ascertained
-that Bishop Polk’s nervous sensibility was so acute that, if by
-accident he touched a piece of brass in the night, when he could not
-see what he had touched, he immediately felt the influence through his
-system, and recognised an offensive metallic taste.
-
-The discovery of such sensitiveness in one of the most vigorous men,
-in mind and body, of his day, led Dr. Buchanan to believe it might
-be found in many others. It is needless to say his conjecture was
-correct. Accordingly, in the numerous neurological experiments which he
-afterwards commenced, he was accustomed to place metals of different
-kinds in the hands of persons of acute sensibility, for the purpose of
-ascertaining whether they could feel any peculiar influence, recognise
-any peculiar taste, or appreciate the difference of metals, by any
-impression upon their own sensitive nerves. It soon appeared that the
-power was quite common, and there were a large number of persons who
-could determine by touching a piece of metal, or by holding it in their
-hands, what the metal was, as they recognised a peculiar influence
-proceeding from it, which in a few moments gave them a distinct taste
-in the mouth. But this sensitiveness was not confined to metallic
-substances. Every substance possessing a decided taste--sugar, salt,
-nutmeg, pepper, acid, etc.--appeared to be capable of transferring its
-influence. The influence appeared to affect the hand, and then travel
-upwards. He afterwards demonstrated when a galvanic or electric current
-passed through a medicinal substance, the influence of the substance
-was transmitted with the current, detected and described by the person
-operated upon. Medicinal substances, enclosed in paper, were readily
-recognised and described by their effects. In due time, stranger
-still, a geological specimen, an article worn, a letter written upon,
-a photograph which had been handled, a coin, etc., transmitted their
-influence, and the psychometrist was enabled to read off the history
-concerning the particular object.
-
-Nearly fifty years have elapsed since the discovery of this “strange
-new science” and art. “To-day it is widely known, has its respected
-and competent practitioners, who are able to describe the mental
-and vital peculiarities of those who visit or write them, and who
-create astonishment and delight by the fidelity and fulness of the
-descriptions which they send to persons unknown, and at vast distances.
-They give minute analysis of character and revelations of particulars
-_known only to the one described_, pointing out with parental delicacy
-and tenderness the defects which need correction, or in the perverse
-and depraved they explain what egotism would deny, but what society,
-family, and friends recognise to be too true.”
-
-
-PSYCHOMETRIC REFLECTIONS.
-
-Professor J. W. Draper says:--“A shadow never falls upon a wall
-without leaving thereupon a permanent trace--a trace made visible by
-resorting to proper processes. Upon the walls of private apartments,
-where we think the eye of intrusion is altogether shut out, and our
-retirement can never be profaned, there exists the vestiges of our
-acts, silhouettes of whatever we have done. It is a crushing thought
-to whoever has committed secret crime, that the picture of his deed,
-and the very echo of his words, may be seen and heard countless years
-after he has gone the way of all flesh, and left a reputation for
-‘respectability’ to his children.”
-
-Detectives have received impressions from a scene of crime, a clue to
-the unravelment of the mystery and the detection of the criminal. Yet
-they could not trace the impressions to anything they saw or heard
-during their preliminary investigations. No detective will throw aside
-such impressions. Indeed, those most successful are those who, while
-paying attention to all outward and so-called tangible clues, _do not
-neglect for one moment_ the impressions received, and the thoughts
-_felt_, when gathering information likely to lead to the detection of
-the law-breakers. Hugh Miller was right when he said, “I suspect that
-there are provinces in the mind that physicians have not entered into.”
-
-Thoughts are things--living, real and tangible, images, visions, deep
-and pungent sensations--which exist after their creation distinct
-and apart from ourselves--“Footprints on the sands of time,” in more
-senses than one. We all leave our mark in a thousand subtle ways. No
-material microscope or telescope can detect, nevertheless our mark
-can be discovered by the powers of the human soul. From our cradle
-to the grave--does it stop there?--every thought, emotion, movement,
-and action have left their subtle traces, so that our whole life can
-be traced out by the psychometric expert. We verily give hostages to
-fortune all through life.
-
-
-PSYCHOMETRIC SENSITIVES.
-
-Professor Denton was very fortunate in having in his wife, children,
-and in his sister, Mrs. Cridge, gifted psychometers. His sister
-possessed this psychic, intuitive faculty in a high degree. Dr.
-Buchanan was equally fortunate; not only was his wife a first-class
-sensitive, but he discovered the faculty in several university
-professors, and in students innumerable. Denton in his travels over
-America, Europe, and Australia found several hundred good sensitives,
-some of whom have since made a reputation both in Europe and America
-for their powers.
-
-One important fact we learn from these pioneers in psychometric
-research is that not one of these persons knew they were endowed with
-the psychometric gift prior to taking part in classes or experiments.
-
-The possession of the faculty is not confined to any age, or to the
-gentle sex; and Denton concludes, as an average, that one female in
-four and one man in ten are psychometric sensitives. The possibility is
-all healthy, sensitive, refined, intuitive, and impressionable persons
-possess the soul-measuring faculty, and this faculty, like all other
-innate human powers, can be cultivated and brought to a high stage of
-perfection.
-
-The psychometer, unlike the induced clairvoyant or entranced medium, is
-in general, or outwardly at least, a mere spectator, as one who beholds
-a drama or witnesses a panorama, and tells in his own way to someone
-else what he sees and what he thinks about it. The sensitive can dwell
-on what is seen, examine it closely, and record individual opinions
-of the impressions of the persons, incidents, and scenes of the long
-hidden thus brought to light. The sensitive has merely to hold the
-object in hand--as Mrs. Coates is represented doing in frontispiece--or
-hold it to the forehead (temple), when he or she is enabled to come in
-contact with the soul of the person or thing with which the object has
-been in relation. There is no loss of external consciousness, no “up
-rush” of the subliminal, obliterating and overlapping that of common
-life. The sensitive appears to be in a perfectly normal condition
-during the whole time of examination, can lay the article down,
-noticing what takes place, and entering into conversation with those in
-the room, or drawing subjects, seen or not, as they think best.
-
-
-WHAT PSYCHOMETRY CAN DO.
-
-We can do little more than give a few general illustrations.
-Professor Denton, having thoroughly satisfied himself of the reality
-of psychometry, wondered if letters had photographed upon them the
-impressions of the life and the image of the writer. Why not fossils?
-“He gave his sister a specimen from the carboniferous formation;
-closing her eyes, she described those swamps and trees, with their
-tufted heads and scaly trunks, with the great frog-like animals that
-existed in that age. To his inexpressible delight the key to the ages
-was in his hands. He concluded that nature had been photographing from
-the very first. The black islands that floated upon the fiery sea, the
-gelatinous dots, the first life on our planet, up through everything
-that flew or swam, had been photographed by Nature, and ten thousand
-experiments had confirmed the theory. He got a specimen of the lava
-that flowed from Kilava, in Hawaii, in 1848. His sister by its means
-described the boiling ocean, the cataract of molten lava that almost
-equalled Niagara in size. A small fragment of a meteorite that fell in
-Painesville, O., was given to his wife’s mother, a sensitive who did
-not then believe in psychometry. This is what she said: ‘I seem to be
-travelling away, away, through nothing, right forward. I see what look
-like stars and mist. I seem to be taken right up; the other specimens
-took me down.’ His wife, independently, gave a similar description,
-but saw it revolving, and its tail of sparks. He took steps to prove
-that this was not mind reading by wrapping the specimens in paper,
-shaking them up in a hat, and allowing the sensitive to pick out one
-and describe it, without anyone knowing which it was. Among them were a
-fragment of brick from ancient Rome, antimony from Borneo, silver from
-Mexico, basalt from Fingal’s Cave. Each place was described correctly
-by the sensitive in the most minute detail. A fragment from the Mount
-of Olives brought a description of Jerusalem; and one from the Great
-Pyramid enabled a young man of Melbourne to name and describe it. There
-was a practical side to the question. His wife had, from a chip of
-wood, described a suicide; this was subsequently confirmed. A number of
-experiments from a fragment of Kent’s Cave, fragments from Pompeii and
-other places brought minute descriptions from the sensitive.”
-
-Mr. Stead bears his testimony to psychometry. He gave a shilling
-to two ladies, at different periods, and unknown to each other. In
-fact, they were perfect strangers. This shilling, in his mind, had a
-special story connected with it. The first lady lived in Wimbledon,
-and had the profession of being a clairvoyante. To use Mr. Stead’s
-own words, he states:--“I took from my purse a shilling which I most
-prized of all the pieces of money in my possession. I said nothing to
-her beyond that I had carried it in my pocket for several years. She
-held the shilling in her hand for sometime, and said:--‘This carries
-me back to a time of confusion and much anxiety, with a feeling that
-everything depended upon a successful result. This shilling brings me
-a vision of a very low woman, ignorant and drunken, with whom you had
-much better have nothing to do. There is a great deal of fever about. I
-feel great pains, as if I had rheumatic fever in my ankles and joints,
-but especially in my ankles and my throat. I suffer horribly in my
-throat; it is an awful pain. And now I feel a coarse, bare hand pass
-over my brow as distinctly as if you had laid your hand there. It must
-be her hand. I feel the loss of a child. This woman is brought to me
-by another. She is about thirty-two years; about five feet high, with
-dark brown hair, grey eyes, small, nicely-formed nose, large mouth.’”
-“Can you tell me her name?” asked Mr. Stead. “Not certain, but I think
-it seems like Annie.” “That is all right,” said Mr. Stead, and he told
-her the story of that shilling. About a month afterwards, Mr. Stead
-tried a Swedish opera singer, who had clairvoyant powers, with the
-shilling. She pressed it to her brow, and then she told Mr. Stead “she
-saw a poor woman give him, from her pocket-money, the last shilling she
-possessed. She has a great admiration for you, she said. She seems to
-think you have saved her, but she is not _une grande dame_. Indeed, she
-seems to be a girl of the town.” Mr. Stead said:--“I had not spoken a
-word, or given her the least hint of the story of the shilling.” Now,
-what are the facts? Mr. Stead says that he “was standing his trial at
-the Old Bailey, a poor outcast girl of the streets, who was dying of a
-loathsome disease in the hospital, asked that the only shilling that
-she possessed in the world, might be given to the fund which was being
-raised in his defence. It was handed to him when he came out of jail,
-with, ‘From a dying girl in hospital, who gives her last shilling,’
-written on the paper.” He (Mr. Stead) has carried it about him ever
-since, never allowing it to be out of his possession for a single day.
-
-The symptoms which the first clairvoyante, or psychometrix, described,
-were very like those which this poor creature was suffering from in her
-dying hours. It is too probable that the donor was a low, drunken woman.
-
-These two readings are actually more psychometric than clairvoyant,
-because, from the clue furnished, they went back and described the
-conditions and surroundings of the woman who parted with this shilling.
-They were not thought-readers, because they did not describe what was
-passing in Mr. Stead’s mind. Mr. Stead’s experiences fairly illustrate
-the exercise, in the earlier stages of employment, of the psychometric
-faculty.
-
-While engaged writing the “Real Ghost Stories,” Mr. Stead says:--“My
-attention was called to a young lady, Miss Catherine Ross, of 41 High
-Street, Smethwick, Birmingham, who, being left with an invalid sister
-to provide for, and without other available profession or industry,
-bethought herself of a curious gift of reading character, with which
-she seems to have been born, and had subsequently succeeded in earning
-a more or less precarious income by writing out characters at the
-modest fee of 5s. You sent her any article you pleased that had been in
-contact with the object, and she sent you by return a written analysis
-of the subject’s character. I sent her various articles from one person
-at different times, not telling her they were from the same person. At
-one time a tuft of hair from his beard, at another time a fragment of
-a nail, and a third time a scrap of handwriting. Each delineation of
-character differed in some points from the other two, but all agreed,
-and they were all remarkably correct. When she sent the last she added,
-‘I don’t know how it is, but I feel I have described this person
-before.’ I have tried her since then with locks of hair from persons of
-the most varied disposition, and have found her wonderfully correct.”
-
-“All these things are very wonderful, but the cumulative value of the
-evidence is too great for any one to pooh-pooh it as antecedently
-impossible. The chances against it being a mere coincidence are many
-millions to one.”
-
-I believe had this young lady, or others thus endowed, had the
-training, such as Buchanan, Denton, or other experienced teachers give
-their pupils, she would make a high class psychometer.
-
-Rev. Minot J. Savage had a paper in a recent number of _The Arena_, on
-Psychical Research, etc., in which he said--“On a certain morning I
-visited a psychometrist. Several experiments were made. I will relate
-only one, as a good specimen of what has occurred in my presence more
-than once. The lady was not entranced or, so far as I could see, in
-any other than her normal condition. I handed her a letter which I had
-recently received. She took it, and held it in her right hand, pressing
-it close, so as to come into as vital contact with it as possible.
-I had taken it out of its envelope, so that she might touch it more
-effectively, but it was not unfolded even so much as to give her an
-opportunity to see even the name. It was written by a man whom she had
-never seen, and of whom she had never heard. After holding it a moment
-she said, ‘This man is either a minister or a lawyer; I cannot tell
-which. He is a man of a good deal more than usual intellectual power.
-And yet he has never met with any success in life as one would have
-expected, considering his natural ability. Something has happened to
-thwart him and interfere with his success. At the present time he is
-suffering with severe illness and mental depression. He has pain here’
-(putting her hand to the back of her head, at the base of the brain).
-
-“She said much more, describing the man as well as I could have done
-it myself. But I will quote no more, for I wish to let a few salient
-points stand in clear outline. These points I will number, for the sake
-of clearness:--
-
-1. “She tells me he is a man, though she has not even glanced at the
-letter.”
-
-2. “She says he is either a minister or a lawyer; she cannot tell
-which. No wonder, for he was both; that is, he had preached for some
-years, then he had left the pulpit, studied law, and at this time was
-not actively engaged in either profession.”
-
-3. “She speaks of his great natural ability. This was true in a most
-marked degree.”
-
-4. “But he had not succeeded as one would have expected. This again was
-strikingly true. Certain things had happened--which I do not feel at
-liberty to publish--which had broken off his career in the middle and
-made his short life seem abortive.”
-
-About eighteen years ago a lady in Swansea sent me a lock of hair,
-and asked me to send her my impressions. I did so, which I remember
-were not pleasant. I informed her, as near as my recollection now
-serves, that the person to whom the hair belonged was seriously ill.
-No earthly skill could do anything for him. Diagnosing the character
-of the insidious disease which was then undermining a once powerful
-and active organisation, I felt constrained to add he _would live six
-weeks_. I held the envelope, with its contents, in my left hand, and
-wrote the impressions as they came with my right. I remember hesitating
-about sending that letter, but eventually sent it. The accuracy of
-my diagnosis, description of the patient, and the fulfilment of the
-prophecy as to his death were substantiated in a Swansea paper, _The
-Bat_. The patient was no other than Captain Hudson, the British master
-mariner who sailed the first ship on teetotal principles from a British
-port, and who subsequently became one of the most powerful of British
-mesmerists. The lady who sent the lock of hair was his wife, and the
-lady who contributed the letter to the papers was his widow. Of similar
-experiences Mrs. Coates and I have had many.
-
-
-HOW TO CULTIVATE THE PSYCHOMETRIC FACULTY.
-
-_Class Experiments._--The sensitives are not to be magnetised or
-unduly influenced by positive manner and suggestions, but are to sit
-in their normal state (and without mental effort or straining to find
-out what they have in their hands), and simply give expression to
-their impressions--sensations, tastes, etc., if any, and no matter
-how strange to them these may be. Let the experimenter or operator
-place different metallic substances in their hands, taking care that
-these substances are carefully covered with tissue paper or other
-light substance, which will help to hide their character, and at the
-same time not prevent their influence being imparted, or try them with
-medical substances. In those sufficiently sensitive, an emetic will
-produce a feeling of nausea. The substance must be put down before it
-causes vomiting. Geological specimens can be given--a shell, a tooth,
-or tusk. Let the experimenter record the utterances patiently, and seek
-confirmation of the description from an examination of the specimen
-subsequently. He should not know what special specimen it is previous
-to the psychometer’s declared opinion. Good specimens are best. Thus
-a fragment of pottery, a piece of scori, or a bit of brick from, say,
-Pompeii would present material from which the psychometrist could glean
-strong and vivid impressions.
-
-If a medical man is not satisfied as to the correct pathological
-conditions of his patient, he might ask the psychometer to take some
-article of the patient in hand, and get, in the sensitive’s own--and
-therefore very likely untechnical--language, what he feels and sees
-regarding this particular patient’s case. Unsuspected abscesses and
-tumours have been correctly pointed out in this way.
-
-In the same way a correct diagnosis of character can be given in many
-instances more correctly, more subtle, and penetrating in detail, than
-estimates built upon mere external and physical signs of temperament
-and cranial contours.
-
-Lay a coin on a polished surface of steel. Breathe upon it, and all
-the surface will be affected save the portion on which the coin lay.
-In a few minutes neither trace of breathing nor of the coin are likely
-to be seen on the surface of the polished steel. Breathe again, and
-the hitherto unseen image of the coin is brought to light. In like
-manner, everything we touch records invisibly to us that action. Hand
-your sensitive a letter which has been written in love or joy, grief
-or pungent sorrow, and let them give expression to their sensations.
-As the breath brought back the image on the steel, so will the nervous
-and the psychic impressionability of the sensitive bring to light the
-various emotions which actuated the writers who penned the letters.
-Mr. G. H. Lewes says “that he has brushed the surface of the polished
-plate with a camel’s-hair brush, yet on breathing upon it the image
-of the coin previously laid upon it was distinctly visible.” The mere
-casual handling of letters by intermediates will not obliterate the
-influence of the original writers; they have permeated the paper with
-their influence, so that, if a score or more of psychometrists held
-the paper, they would coincide, perhaps not in their language, but in
-their descriptions of the originals and the state of their minds while
-writing.
-
-The experimenter may help, by asking a few judicious but not leading
-questions, to direct and guide the attention of the psychometrist. The
-description will be a capital delineation of the individual who wrote
-the letter. We have frequently tested the sincerity of correspondents,
-real and other friends, by this process. If the results have sometimes
-been unpleasant revelations, we have yet to find in any case that we
-have been mistaken. How is the sensitive able to glean so much of the
-real character of the original? one is inclined to ask. While writing,
-sincerity and earnestness leave a deeper impression than indifference,
-pretence, or ordinary come-to-tea politeness. Some letters are instinct
-with the writer’s identity, individuality, masculinity, earnestness,
-and enthusiasm. Others are lacking in these things, because the writers
-were devoid of these qualities, while others vary at different times.
-The writer writes as _his soul_ moves him, and the writing expresses
-his aims and hopes as they appear to his external consciousness.
-While writing, _his soul_ draws his image on the paper, and pictures
-out thereon his real thoughts; and when the sensitive gets hold of
-the letter, outstands the image of the writer and the imagery of his
-thoughts. The psychic consciousness of the psychometer grasps the
-details and describes them.
-
-“The strange new science of psychometry” is of profound interest to
-all. Psychometers are to be found in every household. The whole subject
-is one about which a good deal more could be easily written, but this
-must do.
-
-Those who desire to understand psychometry cannot do better than
-read up fully the literature of the subject, and those who desire to
-practise psychometry may do much to ascertain whether they possess
-the faculty in any degree; but all are warned to have nothing to do
-with persons who undertake to _develop_ their powers, a _self-evident
-absurdity_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Thought-Transference and Telepathy.
-
-
-Thought-Transference is evidently a phase of psychic perception. In
-some respects it bears a greater relation to feeling than sight. It
-is distinguished from pure clairvoyance by the result of experiment.
-For instance, suppose I had in the Rothesay case designed M. C., the
-clairvoyante, should see “a maid in the room, dressed in a black
-dress, with neat white collar and cuffs, wearing a nicely-trimmed
-white apron, and a white tulle cap with bows and streamers, or that
-a black-and-white spotted cat lay comfortably coiled up upon the
-hearth-rug, or some other strongly-projected mental image.” Now,
-suppose while M. C. was examining the room, she declared she _saw_
-the maid, and described her, or the cat, or other objects projected
-from my mind, and described these, then this would be a case of
-thought-transference.
-
-There is a distinction between thought-transference and
-thought-reading. It is no mere fanciful distinction either.
-Thought-transference occurs when the ideas, thoughts, and emotions of
-one mind are projected by intense action and received by the sensitive
-and impressionable mind of another--awake or asleep is immaterial--so
-long as it occurs without pre-arrangement and contact.
-
-Telepathy is a more vivid form of sudden and unexpected
-thought-transference, in which the intense thoughts and wishes of one
-person, more or less in sympathy, are suddenly transferred to the
-consciousness of another. The thoughts transmitted are often so intense
-as to be accompanied by the vision of the person, and by the sound of
-their voice.
-
-Telepathy bears about the same relation to thought-transference
-as “second sight” does to clairvoyance. Thought-transference and
-clairvoyance can be cultivated. Not so telepathy and second sight.
-They are phenomena, which belong to the unexpected, portents of the
-unusual, or sudden revelations of what is, and what is about to happen.
-Doubtless, there are conditions more favourable than others for
-inception of these. One needs to be “in spirit on the Lord’s day,” or
-any day, before telepathic and second sight messages are secured. Hence
-it is noticed telepathic revelations mostly come in the quietude of the
-evening, just before sleep, between sleep and waking, and under similar
-conditions favourable to passivity and receptivity in the sensitive or
-percipient.
-
-In thought-reading both operator and sensitive are aware that
-something is to be done, and indications, intentional or otherwise,
-are given to make the thought-reader find out what is required. More
-or less sensitiveness is required in both phases. In telepathy and
-thought-transference the psychic elements are in the ascendency; in
-thought-reading they may be more or less present, but intention,
-sensitiveness, and muscular contact are adequate enough, I think, to
-account for the phenomena, as witnessed at public entertainments--so
-far, at least, as these entertainments are genuine.
-
-How do we think? what are thoughts? and how are thoughts transferred?
-are reasonable questions, and merit more elaborate solution than is
-possible in an elementary work like this.
-
-We think in pictures: words are but vehicles of thought. In
-thought-transference we can successfully project actions, or a series
-of actions, by forming in our minds a scene or picture of what is done
-and what is to be reproduced. When, however, we think of a sentence
-consisting of few or many words, there is nothing more difficult to
-convey. Words belong to our external life here, and are but arbitrary
-expressions and signs for what in the internal or soul-life is flashed
-telepathically from mind to mind.
-
-Thoughts are things for good or ill, veritable and living realities,
-apart from our exterior selves, independent of words. The more words,
-often the less thought. Try to teach a child by the slow, dry-as-dust
-method of words, and the road to knowledge is hard and wearisome.
-Convey the same thoughts by illustrations and experiments, and the
-child’s mind at once grasps the ideas we desire to convey.
-
-Thoughts are living entities (how poor are words!) which our own
-souls have given birth to, or created in the intensity of our love,
-wisdom, or passion. One Eastern adept has taught, “A good thought is
-perpetuated as an active, beneficent power, an evil one as a malignant
-demon. The Hindoo calls this _karma_. The adept evolves these shapes
-consciously; other men throw them off unconsciously.” How true in our
-experience! The thoughts of some men blast, while those of others
-bless. There is wisdom in thinking deliberately, intelligently, and
-therefore conscientiously, not passionately, impulsively, or carelessly.
-
-In thought-transference the reproduction of exact words and dates seems
-to be most difficult. Indeed, the transmission of arbitrary words and
-signs is apparently the most difficult. The reason, I conclude, is,
-ideas belong to our inner, real, and spiritual life, and names, words,
-and dates to our exterior existence. The ideas can be expressed in the
-language of the sensitive, according to culture or the want of it. If
-the true lineaments of the picture are given, need we be too exacting
-as to the special frame surrounding the picture?
-
-Notwithstanding the difficulty in transference and the reading of the
-exact words, this has also been frequently done. A very high state of
-receptivity and sensitiveness, however, is necessary in the percipient.
-
-An incident of exact word-reading is related by Gerald Massey, the
-distinguished philosopher and poet. Mr. Massey met Mr. Home at the
-London terminus just on his (Mr. Massey’s) arrival from Hertfordshire.
-Home and he entered into conversation, during which Home suddenly said
-“he hoped Mr. Massey would go on with his poem.”
-
-“What did he mean?” asked Mr. Massey.
-
-“The poem,” replied Home, “you composed four lines of just now in the
-train.”
-
-This was surprising to Mr. Massey, who had actually composed, but had
-not written, the four lines of a new poem on the journey. Mr. Massey
-challenged Mr. Home to repeat the lines, which Home did word for word.
-
-How are thoughts transferred? No one can positively say. There are
-theories enough--the _theory of brain-waves_ and of _a universal
-impalpable elastic ether_, of _undulating motions_, or other more or
-less materialistic hypothesis.[E]
-
-We know there are no psychic phenomena without their corresponding
-physical correlatives, and, in this life at least, these are in
-thoughts evolved without producing corresponding molecular changes in
-the brain.
-
-We notice the human brain is capable of being, and is, acted upon
-daily by much less subtle influences than mental impressions. We can
-appreciate light impinged upon our cerebral centres at the rate of
-millions of undulations, and sound as the result of 20,000 to 30,000
-vibrations per second. So sensitives, when in the mesmeric or psychic
-states, are readily acted upon, and respond as in thought-transference
-to our thoughts and sensations, and veritably read our minds,
-because of the _rapport_ or sympathy thus established. Whether they
-become percipients of the nerve-vibrations which escape from our own
-sensoriums or not, what does it matter _if they can, as they frequently
-do_, read our minds?
-
-“Professor Wheaton,” says Hudson Tuttle, “devised a means of
-illustrating sympathy. If a sounding board is placed so as to resound
-to all instruments of the orchestra, and connected by a metallic rod
-of considerable length with the sounding board of a harp or piano, the
-instrument will accurately repeat the notes transmitted.
-
-“The nervous system, in its two-fold relation to the physical and
-spiritual being, is inconceivably more finely organised than the most
-perfect musical instrument, and is possessed of finer sensitiveness.
-
-“It must not be inferred that all minds are equally receptive. Light
-falls on all substances alike, but is very differently affected by
-each substance. One class of bodies absorb all but the yellow rays,
-another all but the blue, another all but the red, because these
-substances are so organised that they respond only to the waves of the
-colours reflected.”
-
-All persons do not hear alike. They receive certain sounds and are deaf
-to all others, although the sound-waves strike all tympanums alike.
-All persons do not see alike. Some perceive colours, others cannot
-distinguish between one colour and another, or can only see the more
-striking colours--fineness of shade they do not perceive. So there are
-individuals who cannot receive mental impressions, unless, indeed,
-they are conveyed in the baldest and most esoteric manner. In a word
-to convey and receive impressions they must be sent along the line of
-the least resistance, that of _true sympathy_. There must be one mind
-adequate to the projection, and another mind sufficiently sensitive to
-receive and record the thoughts projected.
-
-
-TRANSFERENCE OF TASTE IN THE MESMERIC STATE.
-
-The operator will slowly eat or taste half-a-dozen lozenges or sweets
-of different flavours, and the subject or sensitive most in sympathy
-with him will also in imagination eat of and describe the taste of the
-various sweets, concerning which he has no other knowledge than the
-thoughts of eating and tasting, which are transmitted to him from the
-brain of the operator. The mere eating of the lozenges by the operator,
-without his being fully aware of the fact, will deepen the impression
-on the operator’s mind, and help to concentrate his energies for the
-transmission of his ideas or mental suggestions to his subject.
-
-A step or two further and we find with greater sensitiveness the
-sensitives can read the thoughts of the operator, whether the thoughts
-were transmitted intentionally or not.
-
-“We are compelled (says Dr. Hands) to acknowledge that certain
-emanating undulations from the sensorium can generate different series
-of thoughts, and that the trembling organisation, or parts of it, can,
-by flinging or throwing off distinct or particular pulsatory waves,
-inoculate or produce like vibrations in another person’s brain, making
-up in it identical thoughts, followed by like feelings, and often
-in this way, perhaps, capable of inciting, _through sympathy_, like
-enactments of deeds and pursuits.”
-
-
-THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE IN DREAMS.
-
-The following interesting letter appeared in _The Phrenological
-Magazine_ (p. 260, April, 1890), and as I know of the _bona-fides_ of
-the writer, I have much pleasure in reproducing it:--
-
-“Dear Sir,--This morning, at a little before four o’clock, I awoke as
-the outcome of great mental distress and grief through which I had
-just passed in a dream, my body trembling and in a cold perspiration.
-I had been walking with my little boy, aged five and a half years, and
-some friends. A heavy rain overtaking us, we stood up for shelter; and
-venturing forth into a maze of streets, I missed my two friends, who,
-threading among the people, had turned into a side street without my
-noticing. Looking for them, my boy slipped from me, and was lost in
-the crowd. I became bewildered by the strange labyrinth of streets
-and turnings, and quickly taking one of them which gave an elevated
-position, I looked down on the many windings, but could nowhere see
-my boy. It was to me an unknown locality, and, running down among the
-people, I was soon sobbing aloud in my distress, and calling out the
-name of the child, when I awoke. With wakefulness came a sense of
-relief and thankfulness. Gladly realising that the whole was only a
-dream, and still scarcely awake, I was startled by a cry of terror
-and pain from an adjoining bedroom--such a cry as could not be left
-unheeded. It came from the same child, and pierced me with a distinct
-sense of pain. I was immediately by his side. My voice calmed him. ‘I
-thought I was lost’ was all he could say, and doubtless he was soon
-composed and asleep again. To me the coincidence was too remarkable
-and without parallel in my own experience. Later on, at breakfast, the
-child gave further his dream that he _had been out with me and was
-lost_. I am only familiar with such things in my reading. Mr. Coates’s
-article in last month’s _Phrenological Magazine_ (page 143) mentions
-that, ‘when the Prince Imperial died from assegai thrusts in Zululand,
-his mother in England felt the intensity of his thoughts at the time,
-felt the savage lance pierce her own side, and knew or felt at the
-time that she was childless.’ But I am not of the _spirituelle_ type,
-with only a thin parchment separation between this life of realities
-and the great beyond, of those who, privileged to live in close touch
-with the future, are the subjects of premonitions and warnings. My
-spirituality 4 to 5 and reflectives 6 point rather the other way, but
-I shall, nevertheless, hold tight to the lad. What is the underlying
-cause of the coincidence? Which of the two minds influenced the other,
-if either?--Yours truly,
-
- “G. Cox.
-
- “16 Bramfield Road,
- Wandsworth Common, April 20, 1890.”
-
-In this case of thought-transference, I am inclined to the opinion
-that the father’s mind influenced that of the boy, the son being the
-more sensitive of the two. Mr. Cox dreamt an ordinary but pretty vivid
-dream, which aroused from its nature vivid and intense anxiety on
-his part. A similar train of thought was awakened in the child. If
-thought-transference occurs in waking life, why not in sleep, when,
-as abundant telepathic instances testify, the phenomenon is of most
-frequent occurrence.
-
-
-THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE AT SEA.
-
-The percipient was Captain G. A. Johnson, of the schooner “Augusta
-H. Johnson.” He had sailed from Quero for home. On the voyage he
-encountered a terrible hurricane. On the second day he saw a disabled
-brig, and near by a barque. He was anxious to reach home, and, thinking
-the barque would assist the brig, continued on.
-
-But the impression came that he must turn back and board the brig. He
-could not shake it off, and at last he, with four men, boarded the brig
-in a dory. He found her deserted, and made sail in her. After a time
-they saw an object ahead, appearing like a man on a cake of ice. The
-dory was again manned, and set to the rescue. It proved to be the mate
-of the barque “Leawood” clinging to the bottom of an overturned boat,
-which, being white, appeared in the distance as ice.
-
-The captain’s sensitiveness may have been aroused by the exhaustion of
-so much wakefulness and care during the length of the storm, the sight
-of the derelict and deserted brig; at the same time the premonitions
-were opposed to his own desire and anxiety to get home.
-
-
-THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE FROM THE DYING TO THE LIVING IN DREAM.
-
-The following, by E. Ede, M.D., of Guilford (J.S.P.R., July, 1882):--
-
-“Lady G. and her sister had been spending the evening with their
-mother, who was in her usual health and spirits when they left her.
-In the middle of the night the sister awoke in a fright, and said to
-her husband, ‘I must go to my mother at once; do order the carriage.
-I am sure she is ill.’ The husband, after trying in vain to convince
-his wife that it was only a fancy, ordered the carriage. As she was
-approaching the house, where two roads met, she saw lady G.’s carriage.
-When they met, each asked the other why she was there. The same reply
-was made by both--‘I could not sleep, feeling sure my mother was ill,
-and so I came to see.’ As they came in sight, they saw their mother’s
-confidential maid at the door, who told them when they arrived that
-their mother had taken suddenly ill, and was dying, and had expressed
-an earnest wish to see her daughters.”
-
-The percipients having been so lately in company and sympathy with
-their mother possibly rendered them more susceptible to her influence.
-
-
-THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE FROM THE DEAD (?) TO THE LIVING IN DREAM.
-
-Related by Mr. Myers, page 208, Proceedings S.P.R., July, 1892:--
-
-“About March, 1857, Mrs. Mennier, in England, dreamt that she saw her
-brother, whose whereabouts she did not know, standing headless at the
-foot of the bed with his head lying in a coffin by his side. The dream
-was at once mentioned. It afterwards appeared that at about the time
-the head of the brother seen, Mr. Wellington, was actually cut off by
-the Chinese at Sarawak.” On this case, Mr. Gurney remarks--“This dream,
-if it is to be telepathically explained, must apparently have been
-due to the last flash of thought in the brother’s consciousness. It
-may seem strange that a definite picture of his mode of death should
-present itself to a man in the instant of receiving an unexpected and
-fatal blow; but, as Hobbes said, ‘Thought is quick.’ The coffin, at
-any rate, may be taken as an item of death-imagery supplied by the
-dreamer’s mind.”
-
-“We have now, however,” says Mr. Myers, “seen a letter from Sir James
-Brookes (Rajah of Sarawak), and an extract from the _Straits Times_ of
-March 21st, 1857, in the (London) _Times_ for April 29th, 1857, which
-makes it, I think, quite conceivable that the dream was a reflection
-of knowledge acquired after death, and the head on the coffin had a
-distinct meaning.” Sir James Brookes says:--“Poor Wellington’s remains
-were consumed [by the Chinese]; his head, borne off in triumph, alone
-attesting his previous murder.” The _Straits Times_ says:--“The head
-was given up on the following day. The head, therefore, and the head
-alone, must have been buried by Mr. Wellington’s friends; and its
-appearance in the dream _on the coffin_, with a headless body standing
-beside it, is a coincidence even more significant than the facts which
-Mr. Gurney had before him when he wrote.”
-
-The transmission of thought from a spirit discarnate to one incarnate,
-whose body was asleep, should not be esteemed impossible. Abundant
-instances, equally well substantiated, might be recorded did space
-permit.
-
-
-THOUGHT TRANSFERENCE IN PRAYER.
-
-This may be a common experience, but only once in my life have I had
-conscious knowledge of anything so remarkable. For some years before
-devoting my attention to these subjects, I resided in Liverpool, and
-had been a member of the Zion Methodist Church, or Chapel, in Everton,
-and in time was duly placed on the local preachers’ plan. In this
-capacity I became acquainted with a worthy old man--a chapel-keeper,
-who looked after the meeting house situated in ---- street. He had
-been an old soldier, and possessed something of the faith of the Roman
-centurion. Poor in the things of this world, he was rich in the
-sublimity of his love to God and the nobility and purity of his life. I
-never think of “Old Daddy Walker” but his character and this incident
-comes to my mind, viz.:--One morning I was hurrying down West Derby
-Road to business, and, indeed had got halfway down Brunswick Road, when
-I commenced to think about old Walker (I had not seen or thought of him
-for some months). I attempted to throw aside my impressions, as passing
-thoughts. No use. I became worried about him, and was asking myself
-questions. “Was he ill?” “Maybe, he is in want?” “I think I will hurry
-back and see?” I had not much time to spare. It would consume fully
-twenty minutes to walk back. After hesitating, I went up Brunswick Road
-and up West Derby Road, and to ---- Street, and tapped at the door of
-his house. There was no response. The street door was slightly ajar. I
-went in, and found the old pair on their knees in the kitchen. He was
-engaged in earnest prayer. After kindly salutations, I apologised for
-intruding, and told him, as I went to business, “I had been bothered
-about him in my mind, and did not feel satisfied until I had seen him,
-and knew the truth.” He told me, as near as I can recollect, “He was at
-his last extremity. There was no food or fuel in the house, he had no
-money, and he had been putting the whole case before the Lord.” I had
-half a sovereign about me, which I had taken out of the house for an
-entirely different purpose. This I gave to him. The old man, rubbing a
-tear from his eye, looking at his wife, said: “Mary, don’t thee doubt
-the Lord anymore. I said He would help, and He has given me what I
-asked for.” Old Walker went on to explain, not only his bad fix, but
-that he had no money to buy firewood with. He meant that he bought up
-old wood and tar-barrels, which he cut up into lengths and made into
-bundles, and sold for firewood; and that he had asked the Lord for ten
-shillings, as he wanted that sum to buy a certain lot which could be
-obtained for that amount. The old man obtained what he asked for. He
-believed the Lord had answered his prayer.
-
-
-THOUGHT TRANSMISSION IN PRAYER.
-
-Since writing the above, the following came under my notice. In the
-J.S.P.R., May, 1885, Dr. Joseph Smith, Warrington, England, says:--
-
-“I was sitting one evening reading, when a voice came to me, saying:
-‘Send a loaf to James Grady’s.’ I continued reading, and the voice
-continued with greater emphasis, and this time it was accompanied with
-an irresistible impulse to get up. I obeyed, and went into the village
-and bought a loaf of bread, and, seeing a lad at the shop door, I
-asked him if he knew James Grady. He said he did, so I bade him carry
-it and say a gentleman sent it. Mrs. Grady was a member of my class,
-and I went next morning to see what came of it, when she told me a
-strange thing happened to her last night. She said she wished to put
-the children to bed, they began to cry for want of food, and she had
-nothing to give them. She then went to prayer, to ask God to give them
-something. Soon after which the lad came to the door with the loaf. I
-calculated, on inquiry, that the prayer and the voice I heard exactly
-coincided in point of time.”
-
- “More things are wrought by prayer
- Than this world dreams of.”
-
-Those who know anything of Methodism, will know this. The Methodists
-have a profound faith in prayer, and also there is a very close
-relationship between a class-leader and his members. Dr. Smith was,
-therefore, all the more likely to be the percipient of the woman’s
-earnest and intense prayer to God to feed her hungry children. The
-Infinite must have an infinite variety of ways of fulfilling His own
-purposes. Is it unreasonable to suppose that prayer to Him may not be
-answered indirectly “through means”? and that thought-transference, as
-in this instance, may be one of the means? If not, why not?
-
-Charitable institutions are maintained; orphans saved, reared, and
-educated; missions of mercy organised, and the necessary means found by
-the agency of prayer. Beside “the angels,” in That Sphere just beyond
-the ken of the physical, may not our waves of thought, projected by
-prayer, be impinged upon, and directly affect susceptible minds in
-this world, by directing their attention to those works of faith and
-goodness? Prayer is the language of love, and the outcome of true
-helplessness and need. A praying man is an earnest man. In prayer
-thoughts are things--bread upon the waters.
-
-
-THOUGHT TRANSFERENCE IN DISTRESS.
-
-I withhold the names for family reasons. Mr. ---- had been in business
-in Glasgow for nearly thirty years, and, from comparatively small
-beginnings, had been very successful. Latterly, he and his family
-resided in ----, a suburb of Glasgow. Both in the city and in this
-district Mr. ---- was very much respected, being a church member and
-holding office in ---- Free Church. For some time Mr. ---- had been
-ailing, and his medical attendant advised him to take a sea voyage--a
-thorough change, etc. In compliance with this advice, he took a trip
-up the Mediterranean. Miss ----, a distant relative of his, had been
-visiting Glasgow, and, being on terms of intimacy with the family,
-knew of his departure from Glasgow. About two weeks after he left, she
-also left Glasgow for Edinburgh. While in the train for Edinburgh, she
-was overcome with great anxiety for Mrs. ----, his wife. Unable to
-shake the feeling off, instead of going to Edinburgh, she actually got
-out of the train halfway, at Falkirk, and took the next train back
-to Glasgow, and went to her friend’s house, whom she found in great
-distress. Mrs. ---- had, about the time Miss ---- became distressed
-in the train, received word that her husband was found dead (having
-committed suicide) in his berth on the steamer at Constantinople. The
-state of mind of the newly-made widow re-acted on that of Miss ----.
-As Miss ---- was not only a dear friend, but was noted for her earnest
-piety, the widow at once earnestly desired to see her. When last
-these two friends saw each other, everything seemed to contribute to
-happiness and comfort. Mrs. ---- was looking forward hopefully for the
-return of her husband, restored in health, to herself and children.
-
-
-THOUGHT TRANSFERENCE IN ORDINARY EXPERIENCE.
-
-Whether thought-transference is a “relic of a decaying faculty,” or the
-“germ of a new and fruitful sense,” daily experience in the lives of
-most furnish abundant evidence of the existence of such a power. My own
-life has supplied me with abundant evidence of the fact. It is a common
-occurrence with us for either my wife or I to utter or give expression
-to the thoughts which, for the time being, occupied the conscious plane
-in the other. It is possible there may have been, as there has been in
-some instances, some half phrase uttered or manner shown, which in the
-one have aroused the thoughts expressed by the other.
-
-It has been our habit for several years to stay at Rothesay during the
-summer season. As an instance of thought-transference quite common
-in our experience;--On Saturday, 1st October, 1892, I went to the
-Revision Court at the Town Hall to hear registration disputes settled
-between Tory and Gladstonian lawyers. Finding nothing to interest me,
-I entered into conversation with Mr. Thompson, jeweller and hardware
-merchant, whom I met in the Court, and went with him to his shop in
-Montague Street, Rothesay. Standing at his door a short time, I noticed
-a solitary pair of shamrock earrings, composed of crystal brilliants
-and gold, lying on a tray, with a number of other earrings, in one of
-the windows. I inquired the price, as I felt sure Mrs. Coates would be
-pleased with them. They were packed up in a neat box, and I took them
-home. At dinner, I gave the box to my wife, who said, “What is this,
-papa?”
-
-“Open and see,” I replied.
-
-Animated with a little curiosity, she did, and, as soon as she saw
-the earrings, said, “Thompson’s! Well, papa, that is funny. James (my
-little son) and I stood at Thompson’s window last night, and I admired
-these earrings. I thought them so neat, and that they would match my
-brooch. I thought I would like to have them, and then I thought to
-myself, no; I will not spend the money. I pointed them out to James,
-and said to him, I am sure if papa saw them, he would buy them--and
-here you have brought them home. I cannot tell you how much I prize
-them.”
-
-My little boy said, “Thought-reading again, papa!” and, with a good
-laugh, we proceeded to discuss our dinner. Mrs. Coates had not been in
-the habit of seeing this particular window, and I am not in the habit
-of buying jewellery.
-
-I record this trifle here, as one of our common experiences, and I am
-satisfied similar experiences are common to all.
-
-Another experience is the anticipation of letters and their contents.
-This is most frequent in the morning, just before rising. I frequently
-see the letters and the shape of the envelope and style of address
-before I actually see the letters on my consulting table.
-
-The most common experience of all is recognised by the adage, “Think
-of the Devil, and he will appear.” I have noted this in particular.
-Sitting at the table, there is “popped” into my mind a thought of
-someone. I will remark, “I think Mr. or Mrs. ---- will be here to-day,”
-and they come. Certainly, all who have come in this way have been
-relatives or friends; and although they appear subsequent to the
-thought of them, the evidence in favour of thought-transference may not
-be esteemed conclusive. I say it is a common experience. I don’t think
-we should despise any experience, because it is common. To be common,
-indicates there is a basis, amounting to a psychic law, to account for
-its existence.
-
-Another common experience is the crossing of letters. One person
-suddenly recollects “So-and-so;” and writes them a letter excusing
-delay in writing, retailing news, and in all probability writing on
-some subject more particularly than on others. Strange to say, the
-person you have written to, has also been engaged writing to you about
-the same time and on similar subjects. Both have possibly posted their
-letters at such a time that the delivery has been crossed. I do not say
-this proves anything; yet I cannot help thinking the experience is too
-frequent to be accounted for by the usual explanation of accident or
-coincidence.
-
-Mark Twain’s article on “Mental Telegraphy” is fresh in the minds of
-most magazine readers. Whether that article had a basis in the writer’s
-actual experience or not, it is a pretty common experience with most
-literary men.
-
-“Distance,” says Mr. Tuttle, “has inappreciable influence on the
-transference of thought. It may take place in the same room, or where
-the two persons are thousands of miles apart. As a personal experience,
-I will relate one of many similar incidents which have awakened my
-attention to this wonderful phenomenon. Sitting by my desk one evening,
-suddenly as a flash of light, the thought came to write an article for
-the _Harbinger of Light_, published at Melbourne, Australia. I had,
-by correspondence, become acquainted with the editor, W. H. Terry, but
-there had been no letters passed for many a year. I had not thought
-of him or his journal for I do not know how long a time, and I was
-amused at first with the idea of writing on the subject suggested.
-But the impression was so strong that I prepared and forwarded an
-article. Nearly two months passed before I received a letter from Mr.
-Terry, requesting me to write an article on the subject on which I have
-written; and, making due allowance for time, the date of our letters
-were the same. In our experience, this crossing of letters answering
-each other has twice occurred--the second by Mr. Terry answering a
-request of mine.”
-
-Dr. Charles W. Hidden, of Newburyport, Mass., U.S.A., reports a
-somewhat similar experience to that of Mark Twain and the above, which
-was reported in a recent number of the _Religio-Philosophical Journal_:
-A very peculiar plot impressed itself upon his mind, and he immediately
-based a story upon the plot. He read the story to his family, and was
-about to send it to a publication to which his wife had recently become
-a subscriber. When the next number arrived he opened it to learn how to
-forward his manuscript, and great was his surprise to find on the first
-page a story bearing the title of his own, and a plot almost identical
-with that which he had written. Parts of the published article appeared
-word for word. It is needless to add that Dr. Hidden tossed his
-manuscript into his desk, and it is there yet. His explanation is,
-that he caught the title and the plot from another, just as Mark Twain
-caught the plot of the “Big Bonanza” from his friend Simmons.
-
-It would be nigh impossible to illustrate the various phases of
-thought-transference, ranging, as they do, from the association of
-ideas which may be aroused by a hint, a half-uttered word, or a
-gesture, to the unmistakable facts of pure mental transference,
-and, higher still, to the region of pure psychism, where spirit
-influences inspire and direct spirit, and thought-bodies are no longer
-recognised as mere subjective spirits but living and tangible objective
-personalities, albeit discarnate.
-
-We can say truly with Voltaire, “There is a power that acts within us,
-without consulting us.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-Thought-Reading Experiments.
-
-
-Having satisfactory evidence of the reality of thought-transference,
-it would be interesting to know if this power or faculty can be
-cultivated, and if so, how? I propose in this chapter to show how this
-can be done, and how to give thought-reading entertainments.
-
-Experimental mind-reading may be distinguished, for the sake of study,
-as the abnormal, the normal, and the spurious.
-
-The abnormal, that which takes place in trance, dream, vision, or
-which may be the product of artificial somnambulism or of some
-super-sensitive condition of the nervous system, through disease. We
-observe thought-transference in these conditions, rather than attempt
-to cultivate it.
-
-The normal, where the phenomena takes place in the ordinary waking
-state, _without muscular contact_.
-
-The spurious mind-reading, so-called, as the result of musculation or
-_contact_, but which is, in fact, only muscle-reading.
-
-In both the abnormal and normal, direct transference of thought
-from mind to mind can only take place when there is the necessary
-development of psychic activity in the agent or operator, and the
-equally necessary sensitiveness in the sensitive or percipient.
-
-Classed under muscle-reading are those performances and games in which
-the sensitive reads not the mind, but some special desire (of those
-with whom he or she may be placed _in contact_), by a “careful study
-of the indications unconsciously given by the agent or operator to the
-percipient or reader.”
-
-In both abnormal and normal thought-reading, then, are presented
-innumerable instances of the possession of psychic faculties; in the
-muscle-reading phase there may be, and it is possible all successful
-“readers” have, more or less sensitiveness, to take impressions.
-
-To cultivate mind-reading in a sensitive, the operator should first
-cultivate in himself the habit of projecting mental pictures, and
-think of things as seen by the eye, rather than as described by words.
-This is best done by calling to mind a landscape or domestic scene, by
-conceiving and mentally building up the same, and, by degrees, getting
-each feature or detail well stamped in his mind.
-
-It is well in the beginning of these experiments to make the scene as
-simple, and yet as natural and as complete in detail, as possible. For
-instance, let the operator think of such a picture as this:--A bright
-little landscape, having a well-defined cottage on the left, just on
-the margin of a small lake; boat with two figures in the foreground;
-rising bank upon the right; and a little higher up a defined windmill,
-well thrown out by the perspective of blue-ridged and undulating
-mountains, and sky in the background.
-
-The agent, having satisfied himself of his sensitive’s whole or
-partial powers of psychic perception, might ask:--“Do you see anything
-now?” and quickly and deliberately go to work, meanwhile formulating
-definitely such a picture as the above; even allowing himself to get
-into ecstacies over the scene--peopling the cottage and the mill, and
-introducing imaginary conversation between the individual dwellers
-therein, and so on. The sensitive will describe the whole as the
-same is _felt_ or perceived. This experiment may appear to some to
-be impossible, but the word impossible belongs to the limitations of
-sense, and not to the range of the things possible to the human spirit.
-
-Some sensitives and mediums take impressions from their
-surroundings--their clairvoyant revelations are often nothing more
-than so much Mind-reading. _Nothing more_; but this nothing more is a
-great deal. Certainly, it may not prove the existence of spirit, apart
-from the sensitive’s own powers; but it does prove that man has other
-avenues of knowledge than those with which he is usually credited.
-
-The development of mind-reading in the psychic states may be encouraged
-by a little judicious assistance or direction. Invite the sensitive
-to pay attention to So-and-so; to visit places, to examine rooms, or
-describe people whom the sensitive has never seen. But the places,
-the rooms, and the persons must be _distinctly in the minds_ of those
-persons, or agents, with whom he or she is placed in _rapport_.
-
-During these experiments the sensitive will say, “I _see_ this,” or
-describe that other, as if he actually saw. Hence the infinitely close
-relationship of mind-reading to clairvoyance. Thought-reading in
-spiritualism will be referred to in the next chapter.
-
-Once possessing a good sensitive, the development of the power, as
-a matter of fact, lies particularly in the operator’s ability to
-concentrate and focus his thoughts--to think clearly, calmly, vividly,
-and distinctly himself--and to deliberately and conscientiously project
-the same.
-
-
-THE NORMAL EXPERIMENTS WITHOUT CONTACT.
-
-A pleasant hour or so can be profitably filled up on a long winter’s
-evening with experiments in mind reading, without resorting to
-mesmerism. It will be found that there are mind-readers in every
-family--some boy, girl, or young woman more sensitive than the rest to
-impressions.
-
-Sometimes it has been found, when two or more persons think of the
-same object, as in the “willing game,” the impression becomes more
-vivid, and the sensitive finds, or describes, the article, or thing,
-more easily. It has been left to the versatility of Professor Lodge,
-of the University College, Liverpool, to project two distinct images
-at the same time to a sensitive. He requested two friends to look at
-a paper that he had given to each. On one paper a square was drawn,
-and on the other an oblique cross. Neither person knew what the other
-was looking at, and after they had looked intently at these diagrams
-for a short time, the sensitive, who was in a normal condition, but
-blindfold, said:--“I see two figures--first I see one, and then,
-below that, another. I do not know which I am to draw. I cannot see
-either plainly.” Having been requested to draw what she saw, she drew
-a square, with an oblique cross inside of it. On being questioned,
-she replied that she did not know why she placed the cross in the
-square. The two images projected by distinct minds, intermingled, and
-were produced, as narrated by Professor Lodge. We can readily see
-that confusion will arise where a number of persons are thinking of
-different subjects, or when some positive-minded individual declares
-mind-reading to be an impossibility.
-
-Something after the above experiments of Professor Lodge are those
-which were conducted by Mr. Guthrie, a London barrister, and reported
-by him to the Society of Psychical Research.
-
-A number of diagrams, roughly drawn off-hand at the time, were shown to
-the agent or precipitant, Mr. G., the subject, or percipient, a lady,
-being blind-fold. During the process of transference, the agent looked
-steadily and in silence at the drawing, the subject meanwhile sitting
-opposite to him, and behind the stand on which the drawing lay, so
-that it was entirely out of her range of vision had her eyes not been
-blind-folded.
-
-The agent stopped looking at the drawing when the subject professed
-herself ready to make the attempt to reproduce it. The time occupied
-thus was from half a minute to two or three minutes. Then the
-handkerchief was removed, and she drew with a pencil what had occurred
-to her mind.
-
-[Illustration: RESULTS OF EXPERIMENTS IN THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE.]
-
-[Illustration: RESULTS OF EXPERIMENTS IN THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE.]
-
-The reproductions were made generally without the agent following or
-watching the process. We reproduce several of the attempts here, giving
-both the successes and the failures. Even the failures show the effect
-Mr. G. produced upon the reader’s mind.
-
-The experiments conducted so successfully in the family of the Rev.
-Mr. Creery, of Boston, and made public by Professor Barrett in _The
-Journal of Psychical Research_, show to what extent thought-reading
-may be successfully carried on in the quietude and confidence of a
-well-regulated family.
-
-The mode of procedure adopted by Professor Barrett to test the faculty
-as possessed by the children was as follows:--“One of the children,”
-says Professor Barrett, “was sent into an adjoining room, the door of
-which I saw was closed. On returning to the sitting-room, and closing
-the door also, I thought upon some object in the house, fixed upon at
-random. Writing the name down, I showed it to the family present, the
-strictest silence being preserved throughout. We then all silently
-thought of the name of the thing selected. In a few seconds the door
-of the adjoining room was heard to open, and after a short interval
-the child would enter the sitting-room, generally speaking, with the
-object selected. No one was allowed to leave the sitting-room after
-the object had been fixed upon, and no communication with the child
-was conceivable, as her place was often changed. Further, the only
-instructions given to the child were to fetch some objects in the house
-that I would think upon and, together with the family, silently keep in
-mind, to the exclusion as far as possible of all other ideas.”
-
-Now, if Professor Barrett had told the children to select a word, and
-upon coming into the room were to spell or state what the word was, I
-question if the experiments would have been so successful. The articles
-thought of, whether a hair brush, an orange, wine glass, apple, or a
-playing card, were of such a nature that a definite picture or image of
-the thing thought of could be formed in the mind. The father, mother,
-and even Professor Barrett, seem to have been especially in _rapport_
-with the little sensitives, and thus all the more readily were they
-able to transmit the mental picture of the articles selected. Trick or
-collusion in this case is absolutely out of the question. It would be
-interesting to know if these young sensitives, who were so bright in
-1881, still retain, or have increased or lost, their powers.
-
-There were 312 trials made during Professor Barrett’s stay of six
-days, who adds--“One most striking piece of success, when the things
-selected were divulged to none of the family, was five cards running
-named correctly on the first trial--the odds against this happening
-once in our series, being considerably over one million to one. We had
-altogether a good many similar batches, the two longest runs being
-eight consecutive successes, once with cards and once with names,
-when the adverse odds in the former case were over one hundred and
-forty-two millions to one, and on the latter, something incalculably
-greater. _Walls and closed doors made no difference._” [The italics are
-mine.--J.C.]
-
-Something after the foregoing style are drawing-room entertainments
-given. If failure result, no one is blamed, and ridiculous mistakes
-only lend pleasure to the company, where all are known one to the other.
-
-The usual method is to select someone for thought-reader. Lady or
-gentleman, matters little. He or she is sent out of the room. Some
-one in the room generally takes the lead, who may suggest the article
-to be selected and hidden, which the thought-reader is to find. The
-article selected is thought of by the entire company. The reader is
-to go to the place where it is, lift it, put it down, or give it to
-some one else; or to find a certain book and remove it from its place
-on table or elsewhere, and put it somewhere else; to come in and sit
-on a certain chair or to lead someone else to it, or perform whatever
-other test that is decided upon. The reader is admitted into the
-room, and, if at all receptive, will do or say something like what is
-desired--often going direct to the spot, lifting the article, or doing
-the things which the company have decided upon.
-
-A good plan is to get the assistance of one or two friends, use a bag
-of counters, upon which numbers 10 to 100 are placed; also a smaller
-bag with numbers 1 to 9. Let the sensitive sit at a table in such a
-position, so as, if not blindfolded, he or she could not see what the
-agent has in his hand. Use the small bag to begin with. Let one friend
-hold the bag, another select a number. When both have carefully looked
-at it, let it be handed to the agent, who shall fix his eyes steadily
-upon the figure, and picture the said figure on his mind. The sensitive
-will in one or two minutes either say or write down what the figure is.
-If these experiments become satisfactory, the larger bag can be used.
-The experiments with numbers must not be continued too long, and so
-weary the faculty. In the same way a number of simple outline designs
-can be used--these presented one by one to the agent or operator--a
-fish, a boy and barrow, a fireman with escape, a negro and banjo, a
-lecturer on platform, an orange, a book, etc., such as are found in
-children’s school books; repeating the same processes as above. No one
-must speak but the agent and the percipient, nor is the agent to know
-what the numbers or designs are before the experiments are commenced.
-
-Should failure occur, select another medium. In a company of twenty
-to thirty persons it will be very strange if a good thought-reading
-sensitive is not found. In which case, more serious experiments may be
-attempted subsequently, and attain scientific value.
-
-The thought-reader should be blindfolded, and _resign_ himself to the
-_influence_ of the agent or operator. Although he understands that
-something is expected of him, he is not to be anxious about what, but
-simply _act_ as he _feels_ himself prompted.
-
-In proportion as the sensitive is able to give up anxiety and desire,
-so will he be able to become a good reader.
-
-The operator, or agent, must concentrate his mind upon what is
-required, and _will_ the sensitive to do it. When two or more persons,
-or all in the room, _are_ concentrating their minds upon the thing,
-object, or word, the sensitive may all the sooner be influenced; but
-I prefer that one person should be chosen as the operator, and all
-intended experiments be submitted to him.
-
-The process is analogous to that of mesmerism. We see traces here of
-the influence of mind over mind. We see the operator determines and
-the subject performs, although it may not be very clear how thought is
-actually projected, or in what way it is received, other than already
-suggested.
-
-Practice makes perfect in this as in other things. Success is
-proportionate to success. A reader showing a degree of susceptibility
-at first attempts will generally improve by subsequent efforts. In a
-similar way, operators will make headway with practice. Some operators
-and sensitives will be successful at first trial; others again have
-failed after repeated attempts.
-
-Plenty of time should be taken for all first attempts. Let the
-operator, for instance, keep his mind thoroughly fixed on the object.
-Should the reader be going away from it, let the agent strongly wish
-him to go back, _touch_ it, lift it, etc., as previously decided upon
-by the company.
-
-All sensitive persons are likely to make good thought-readers; the less
-sensitive, muscle-readers.
-
-
-MUSCLE-READING ENTERTAINMENTS.
-
-Thought-transference, like clairvoyance, is unequal in power and
-manifestation, even with good percipients, and cannot be turned on
-like, and with, the evening gas, to enlighten and entertain. Hence
-those enterprising entertainers, like Bishop and Cumberland, depended
-on “muscle-reading,” and “backed-up their show” with tricks, some of
-them so puerile and barefaced that a third-rate conjuror would be
-ashamed of them.
-
-The general public, however, enjoyed these entertainments. They were
-something new, and, like “angel’s visits,” were few and far between.
-Not only so, but that wonderful combination, the general public, saw
-that these entertainments were patronised by men of science, such as
-Carpenter, Beard, Hammond, Baron Kelvin, and others deeply in love
-with strictly materialistic hypothesis. They were also patronised by
-“society.” These entertainers undertook to read thoughts and expose
-spiritualism; and as the dear public loves mystery, it went. But the
-dear public don’t like to be “taken in,” hence these performances are
-generally repeated--in the next town.
-
-The following, reported from St. John’s, N.B., January 17, 1887, in
-the _Herald_, is a good illustration of the psychic and muscular
-indications involved in an experiment of this kind:--“In a
-‘mind-reading’ performance on Saturday night, after several examples
-indoors, the ‘reader,’ a young man who belongs to this city, asked for
-an outdoor test. The party separated, one remaining with the reader,
-and hid a pin in the side of a little house used by the switchman of
-the New Brunswick Railway at Mill Street. In their travels they went
-over the new railway trestle, a most difficult journey. The reader
-was blindfolded, and one took his wrist, but at the trestle hesitated,
-fearing to venture, and was told by the reader to let go his wrist and
-place his hand on his head. The subject did so, and the reader went
-upon the trestle. Some of the party suggested that the bandage should
-be removed, but he told them not to mind, and, the subject again taking
-the wrist, he went over the ice and snow-covered sleepers. With a
-firm step he crossed to the long wharf, went over as far as the mill
-gates, then quickly turned, retraced his steps, and went back to the
-corner of Mill Street. Here he rested a minute, then again took the
-subject’s hand, and in less than five minutes afterwards found the pin.
-At the conclusion of the test, the reader inquired what the matter had
-been when they first reached the trestle. It was easily explained.
-The storm had covered the sleepers with snow, and it was thought
-dangerous, even for a man not blindfolded to cross them. The subject
-felt anxious for the reader’s safety, and hesitated about going across.
-The tests were most satisfactory.” Thought or mind-reading applied to
-these experiments is a misnomer. If this young gentleman could “read
-thoughts” by musculation, or _contact_, he would have known what the
-matter had been when they first reached the trestle. Muscle-reading is
-not thought-reading. Hence it is classified as spurious.
-
-Any number of illustrations could be given of such entertainments. The
-foregoing is sufficiently adequate to give an idea of how these muscle
-(not thought) reading entertainments are given.
-
-For drawing-room entertainments, first blindfold the reader, who is
-conducted out of the room while the experiments are decided upon. The
-blindfolding helps to mystify friends, who think the work is rendered
-more difficult. As a matter of fact, the reader’s work is rendered much
-more easy. It helps to isolate him, and leaves his mind much less
-entrammelled by sights and impressions which would otherwise prevent
-him receiving _the_ impressions which it is desirable he should receive.
-
-Suppose the reader is to locate the seat of an imaginary pain, the
-assistant or operator _pro tem._ will grasp[F] with his left hand
-the sensitive’s right wrist and hold it firmly. While the reader is
-endeavouring to locate the pain, the operator must give up his will,
-and think intently on the situation of the pain. The reader will then
-locate it.
-
-There is less secret in this than appears at first sight. The
-sensitive, or reader, is simply guided or led by the operator, and the
-reader’s hand either stops partially over or is pressed upon the seat
-of the pain. He then declares he has found the seat of the pain, and
-points it out accordingly.
-
-A somewhat similar method is adopted in finding the pin, or the _hole_
-in which a pin _had been_. The racing and flying about of public
-thought-readers are only so much “theatrical side,” thrown in to give
-dramatic effect to their performances.
-
-In reading the numbers on bank-notes, or spelling out certain words, a
-board with the numerals and the alphabet (see front cover) is placed
-in sight of the audience. The reader takes the wrist of the operator,
-and, commencing at the left side of the board, proceeds from figure to
-figure till he detects the right one. The operator thinks only of _one_
-figure or letter at a time. This is the whole secret of “musculation.”
-Even when the operators are sincere, and are careful to give no
-conscious indications to the reader, yet it is almost certain, if they
-keep their mind fixed on the desired figure or letter, object or place,
-they will unconsciously indicate to the reader the right number or
-letter.
-
-To find an article, number, or do a certain act, it is necessary
-for the reader to give prompt obedience to the indications given
-him. The concentration of attention necessary can only come with
-practice. No end of surprises and amusement will follow if the operator
-honestly concentrates his mind upon the things to be done, and a good
-muscle-reader is found to take up the indications. Apparently, the most
-difficult feats are sometimes accomplished.
-
-During the experiments, the reader will have curious sensations, such
-as heaviness of feeling, dread and uncertainty, and then _blankness_
-of mind, followed by an impulse to do something. If the reader can
-keep his mind passive enough, he may receive impressions, as in
-thought-transference; anyway, it is advisable to wait for the impulse
-to move and to do. The highest percentages of success always follow.
-
-General directions for the cultivation of experimental
-thought-transference and mind-reading given in these pages are
-sufficiently specific, to be found thoroughly practical by those who
-have put them into practice; and certainly no harm, either mental or
-physical, can come to those who are willing to give them a fair trial.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Spiritualism.
-
-
-Any reference to Spiritualism here must be very brief, and, I am
-afraid, very incomplete. I will deal with the subject in the light of
-the preceding chapters.
-
-It has been established on the clearest evidence that
-thought-transference and reception between two nearly harmonised or
-sympathetic human beings, or embodied human spirits, are possible, and
-this without intermediate sense or physical agencies. If, then, between
-mind and mind on earth, distance or space being no obstacle, matter no
-hindrance, why not between mind disincarnate--if we can conceive of
-mind apart from the human brain and organism--and mind incarnate? If
-not, why not?
-
-It seems to me very difficult, if we accept the first, to reject the
-latter conclusion. If we accept the latter, we are committed in the
-main to belief in Spiritualism, ancient and modern. If we admit that it
-is possible for a disembodied spirit to communicate with us in dream,
-vision, or, as in the case of Miss Howett, have our hands influenced to
-write, or that we see and converse with spirits, as in the case of Mary
-Reynolds, we then admit, and accept in the main, the essential features
-of what is known as Spiritualism. The subject is not only interesting,
-but of vital importance; therefore, I think, the fear of being called
-a “Spiritualist,” or any other name, should not prevent us sounding to
-the depths, the psychic possibilities of our human nature.
-
-
-THE SPIRIT WITHIN US.
-
-There is Spiritualism _and_ Spiritualism. That which I am most
-interested in is not so much a hankering after spirits, “spirit
-controls,” and the phenomena, generally recognised as the right thing
-in certain circles, as that other Spiritualism which leads to an honest
-endeavour on our parts to ascertain if we are spirits, here and now,
-albeit clothed for the time being in an organic envelope, relating us
-to our present estate.
-
-If we are embodied spirits, it will be possible for the spirit-man (the
-essential self--_ego_, I am), in each human being to communicate at
-times, and under certain fitting conditions, with other fellow-beings,
-under such circumstances, and in such a way, as to make it clear:--
-
-(_a._) That the communications could not have been transmitted and
-received by the ordinary channels, or physical sense organs, which in
-ordinary circumstances appear essential to our exchange of thought.
-
-(_b._) That the exchange of thought, in independence of the ordinary
-sense channels, will demonstrate that man must possess other,
-extraordinary or psychic, organs for the transmission and the reception
-of thought.
-
-Both positions I have endeavoured to sustain on the foregoing pages;
-and, lastly, concerning spiritualism, I have arrived at the profound
-conclusion that spirit-communion--that is, thought transmission from
-the disembodied to the embodied--is a solemn fact. After carefully
-eliminating all the possibilities of self-deception--auto-trance,
-discreet degrees of consciousness, of natural and acquired
-clairvoyance, of thought-transference and mind-reading, and lastly,
-the puerile performances of conjurors and the simulated phenomena of
-tricksters--there remains evidence of disembodied or disincarnate
-spirit, and of such control influencing and directing the actions of
-men, just as one man in this life influences and directs the actions of
-another.
-
-What I esteem, however, as satisfactory evidence might not be evidence
-to another; and I for one do not think it necessary to open up the
-life chambers of my psychic experiences to the indifferent, the
-thoughtless, or the sceptic, to furnish the desired evidence. Others
-must travel by the way I have come to understand something of that way.
-All men cannot believe alike, hence it will not be surprising that some
-will accept as sufficient evidence of spirit what others would deem
-insufficient.
-
-It is not my intention meantime to advocate spiritualism. I only refer
-to it, in so far as it is related to “How to Thought-Read.” However,
-phenomenal spiritualism is not a matter of belief so much as of
-evidence, and many eminent thinkers have been compelled by the force of
-the evidence to accept spiritualism now, who, a quarter of a century
-ago, would have hesitated, principally through fear of ridicule, to
-speak of the subject in language of ordinary civility.
-
-While I am convinced that such communications between the so-called
-dead and the living are possible, I do know and feel satisfied that
-much which is accepted as evidence of the existence and influence of
-spirits by the majority of the unthinking and excitable crowd who rush
-after novelties, and perchance call themselves “spiritualists,” is
-traceable to no other or higher source than our own innate, but little
-understood, human or psychic powers. I have arrived at this conclusion
-also, as the result of carefully investigating spiritualism, and it
-is therefore not an _a priori_ hypothesis conveniently elaborated
-from my own or borrowed from the brains of others who are opponents
-to spiritualism. It is probable, had I not devoted the greater part
-of my life to spiritualism, as one of the factors in human character,
-I should have known but little of that sympathetic transference of
-thought from one mind to another, or of the light which that fact
-throws upon our dual or compound existence.
-
-In this “sympathetic transference of thought” we find a solution to the
-problem of spiritualism, whether old or new. I conclude, with Buffon,
-“The true springs of our organisation are _not_ these muscles, these
-veins, these arteries, which are described with so much exactness and
-care. There exist in organised bodies _internal forces_ which do not
-follow the gross mechanical laws we imagine, and to which we would
-reduce everything.” Or, as Laplace puts it more strongly--“Beyond
-the limits of this visible anatomy commences another anatomy, whose
-phenomena we cannot perceive; beyond the limits of this external
-physiology of forces, of action, and of motion, exists another
-_invisible physiology, whose principles, effects, and laws are of the
-greatest importance to know_.”
-
-It may be esteemed reprehensible to “seek communion with the dead;”
-but to know ourselves, to fathom this _invisible physiology_, whose
-principles, effects, and laws are of such importance to understand, I
-hold to be not only legitimate but perfectly laudable. How can we serve
-God, whom we have not seen, if we do not understand ourselves, whom we
-think we have seen, or the laws which govern our being, as created by
-him? To know ourselves as we should, we ought not to neglect the search
-for “the spirit within us.”
-
-
-THE REJECTION OF THE PSYCHIC.
-
-Many persons--scientific, theological, learned, and illiterate--reject
-the psychic, and refrain from investigating, either from constitutional
-bias or from crass ignorance; and such have played the part of learned
-Sadducees or low fellows of the baser sort before anything having the
-remotest flavour of spirit. The man of science is rendered purblind by
-“my hypothesis,” the theologian by “my belief,” the man of the world
-by “my business” or “my position.” The respectable church-goer--who
-vaccinates his children, as he has them baptised, because it is
-the proper thing to do--has neither head nor heart, apparently, to
-understand anything beyond the common ideas of the hour. He would
-crucify all new thought, or new spiritualism for that matter, as the
-Jews did Jesus, because the new doctrines promulgated and the new
-wonders performed tend to subvert the present respectable order of
-things.
-
-The worship of Diana is not confined to ancient Ephesus. The great
-Diana of old was the type of that “Respectable Custom” which the
-majority of mankind worship and obey to-day, because, as of yore, it
-conserves their vested interests, official connections, and brings
-them “much gain.” As for the man in the street--the multitude having
-no shepherd--he is always more or less hypnotised by the well-clad and
-well-fed, smug-faced worshippers of the aforesaid “Respectable Custom;”
-hence he is ever ready to shout “Crucify,” or “Hurrah,” or aught else
-he is influenced to do, especially if such exercises give him pleasure
-and excitement for the time being. He accepts or rejects as he sees
-“his betters” think best, and so, unfortunately, is unfitted to a large
-degree, for the intelligent investigation of his own nature. These form
-the largest group of rejectors of the phenomenal evidences of soul.
-
-The psychic, however, has suffered less from such rejectors than from
-those who claim to be recognised and known as converts and exponents
-of the same, who at best have only shown themselves to be “seekers
-after a sign.” They may have run into the wilderness and have had
-a bit of miraculous bread, and yet not be a pennyworth the better
-of it in either soul or body--_i.e._, life or conduct. These, by
-their foolishness, have prevented many well-meaning and otherwise
-able persons investigating the psychic, for the latter saw nothing
-in the lives of professed spiritualists to make them desire to have
-anything to do with spiritualism. Moreover, coming in contact with
-the iconoclastic in spiritualism, they have become disgusted with the
-crude and the coarse therein, as they have with the revelations,
-inspirations, and fads, advocated by certain mediums, and hence have
-rejected the wheat because of the apparent great quantity of tares.
-
-
-THE FRAUDULENT IN SPIRITUALISM.
-
-I am afraid the trend of modern civilisation, which leads men from
-the beauties and quietude of hill and dale, of valley and river side,
-into crowded city life, has tended to make men exoteric. They run
-after signs and wonders without, and too little to the spirit within.
-The broader view of being, and that self-culture and purity which
-arises from the exercise of man’s innate powers, and makes for true
-regeneration and spiritual progress, here and hereafter, have been more
-or less sacrificed to the external and the phenomenal.
-
-The love of the phenomenal, in and out of Spiritualism, has created
-a crowd of harpies, impostors, or fraudulent mediums--male and
-female--who trade on human credulity, some to earn a pittance, and
-others to gratify vanity. Men and women have been known to risk
-reputation for both. In this way Spiritualism has its quota of
-deceivers and deceived.
-
-There are some people who must have phenomena, just as there are other
-people who will have sermons. If they don’t get exactly what they want,
-they withdraw “their patronage”--the finances. So, if the patronage is
-to be retained, phenomena and sermons have to be supplied--if the first
-are fraudulent or the latter stolen.
-
-Seeing how fugitive real psychological phenomena are--natural or
-induced--one must necessarily hesitate to accept “trance addresses,”
-“inspirational orations,” “medical controls,” clairvoyant, and
-second-sight exhibitions, which are supplied to order, to gratify
-patrons, at so much per hour. It is human to err, but the manufacturer
-of spurious phenomena, the impostor who trades on the ties, and the
-dearest of human affections, is a devil. There is no iniquity too
-low--earthly or devilish--to which he will not as readily descend to
-gratify his vampirish nature.
-
-I am not disposed to accept the infallibility of spirits for that of
-Popes--large or small--or professional media, in place of professional
-priests and ministers, and there is by far too much of this in
-Spiritualism.
-
-In the foregoing connection, I must refer to another source of
-error--this time, however, more related to physical rather than psychic
-phenomena--viz., the credulity of those who are disposed to believe
-that certain conjurors are aided in their performances by spirit
-agency. Personally, I would sooner believe that mediums for “Physical
-Phenomena” resorted to conjuring to aid “spirits,” than believe that
-“spirits” resorted to “hanky-panky” to aid conjurors. No wonder
-“frauds” smile. Years ago I had to protest against this absurdity,
-when people--who ought to know better--talked this kind of nonsense
-about conjurors, as they do about certain fraudulent mediums now--viz.,
-“they are aided by spirits.” Owing to this lack of discrimination and
-want of trained discernment in Spiritualists and the general public,
-mediumistic frauds have fooled, to their utmost bent, fresh groups of
-dupes at home and abroad.
-
-I am none the less disposed to accept the genuine, because we recognise
-sources of error connected therewith, and are determined to set our
-faces against palpable frauds.
-
-
-SPIRITUALISM WITHOUT SPIRITS.
-
-We may now turn from the wretched arena of imposture, duplicity,
-and credulity, to genuine, but little understood, phenomena in
-Spiritualism. We have seen that much which has been attributed to
-the agency of disembodied spirits is due, in many instances, to the
-action of man’s own psychic states, “the double, who is wiser than
-we,” and to the fact that, as often as not, trance states, automatic
-and planchette writing, are self-induced conditions. Equally so,
-clairvoyance, thought-transference, and psychometry do not require
-the “agency of spirit” to account for their existence as “gifts,”
-qualities or powers. It will be time enough to admit such agency--that
-of disembodied spirit--when the evidence in each particular case is
-reasonably conclusive. I think this is the only wise and safe course to
-pursue.
-
-Clairvoyance may be native or induced, self-cultivated or cultivated
-by aid of a mesmerist. As it has been exercised naturally, and without
-any such aid, the exhibition of clairvoyance--in itself--is no evidence
-of disembodied spirit-presence or control. Equally, the seeing of, and
-the describing of, spirits by a clairvoyant--even if the descriptions
-are apparently accurate--may present no evidence of the real presence
-of such spirits. I do not deny that clairvoyants can see spirits,
-but the mere fact of being able to see and describe spirits, is not
-sufficient evidence--the _seer_ is controlled by spirit-power to
-see, or that the spirits described are actually _bona-fide_ spirits.
-Frequently, so-called spirits have no other existence than the image
-of them possessed by some positive-minded individual. A clairvoyant,
-_perceiving_ these images, might naturally enough conclude she was
-actually seeing the spirits which she described.
-
-If Mr. Stead, for instance, is convinced that “Sister Dora,”
-“Cardinal Manning,” or “Lord Tennyson,” are at his side, in his
-rooms, influencing and directing his mind, or at other times actually
-controlling his arm and hand to write, a clairvoyant in sympathy with
-him may describe this or that other spirit he is _thinking_ about. But
-that does not prove the spirit or spirits are actually present.
-
-A lady (Mrs. Davis), whose name has come prominently before the
-public as Mr. Stead’s clairvoyante, being questioned as to Mr. Stead’s
-automatic writing and her own gift, said:--“I know probably more about
-that than anyone. I was in his office some time in the beginning of
-December last regarding the forthcoming publication of a book of mine
-concerning spiritualism. The conversation turned upon spiritualistic
-automatic handwriting. I did not know the deceased lady who was writing
-through him, but I saw her behind his chair as distinctly as if she
-had been in the flesh. I described her position as she stood and her
-appearance. She at once wrote through Mr. Stead’s hand confirming all I
-had stated concerning her in my description. Mr. Stead’s hand continued
-to write. I knew afterwards it wrote out a message stating that another
-spirit was in the room. Mr. Stead asked me if I could describe that
-spirit. I had to wait some little time before I detected it, and
-there I recognised as in the flesh a very famous personage recently
-dead, whose loss was mourned all the world over in prose and verse. I
-carefully described the spirit as he appeared to me, and then Mr. Stead
-said I was right. But, I answered, I see another male spirit. Ask the
-deceased lady who is writing through you to write the name of the last
-spirit. Mr. Stead’s hand automatically moved, and he wrote the name
-of a son of the famous personage already alluded to.” Mrs. Davis says
-she has been strongly impressed with the fact that Mr. Stead has been
-selected by the spirits as their champion from the peculiar and unique
-position he occupies in the journalistic world, and he will be the
-agent who will break through the solid walls of bigotry and prejudice.
-Mr. Stead may or may not have written under spirit influence, and
-this lady may or may not have seen spirits as described. We must
-not conclude in the latter case that Mr. Stead and his “trustworthy
-clairvoyante” are stating anything they do not believe to be true. I
-believe she saw, as described or thought of by Mr. Stead, a “deceased
-lady;” and that she also saw, as equally thought by him, “a very famous
-personage recently dead;” also “another male spirit,” whose name she
-did not know until Mr. Stead wrote the name. This narrative, however
-interesting as to automatic writing and spirit agency in the opinions
-of those concerned, conveys no tangible evidence of either the one or
-the other. To us it is interesting in the fact that Mrs. Davis _saw the
-spirits thought of by Mr. Stead_. We must think twice before we can
-accept this as evidence of spirits and spirit-presence. Although it is
-possible those concerned have evidence, we have not. We have, however,
-evidence here of thought-transmission and psychic impressionability.
-
-When we read of persons who have been raised up, as mediums of St.
-Peter, St. Paul, or St. John, or a publishing company being run by
-Shakespeare through a special medium, and worked by a syndicate of
-Spiritualists, I think we are entitled to doubt these claims, even
-though a dozen clairvoyants vouched for the existence and presence of
-the aforesaid spirits.
-
-Psychometry furnishes evidence that many so-called spirits are not
-spirits “at all, at all”--only visions of the originals; and the fact
-that such and such an individual has been accurately described--actions
-and manners carefully indicated--and this has been and is accurately
-done in health and disease daily--is no evidence, in itself, that
-psychometers have seen spirits. Thus, when a psychometer places a
-geological specimen to his forehead, and describes an “antediluvian
-monster,” roaring and walking about, no one but a very shallow
-individual would imagine for a second the psychometer was actually
-seeing the original. So many of the spirits and spectres seen do
-not proceed from our own brains, but from objects, relics, and old
-houses, which had been in times past impinged by the living presence
-and magnetism of the originals. Then we must take into consideration
-those spectres which proceed from our own brains, such as the
-realistic images which are sometimes projected from the background
-of consciousness to our eyes and ears. Many so-called spirits are
-simply the product of diseased neurological conditions, in short,
-hallucinations, which arise from some derangement of the optic and
-auditory centres. The spectres seen by Nicolai gradually disappeared as
-he lost blood, as the prescribed leeches tranquilised his system. We
-have no reason to believe the spectres he saw, visions and what not,
-were actually either spirits or produced by spirits.
-
-
-MIND-READING IN SPIRITUALISM
-
-is the commonest of most common experiences. I have known mediums to
-graphically describe scenes, persons, and incidents with such vividness
-as to impress one they must be controlled by spirits intimately
-acquainted with the whole circumstances which were revealed. Closer
-examination indicates that all the information so given by these
-mediums was based on the thought-read phase. That is, the information
-was culled from the minds of spirits in the flesh, and did not come
-from disembodied sources.
-
-Some years ago I attended a series of seances in Liverpool. Nearly
-all the family were mediums of some sort. I was at this time very
-enthusiastic in my investigations. Consequently, the following incident
-was not lost upon me. One evening the circle met, with the usual
-members. Shortly after the circle was formed, the daughter of the
-house went into the trance state. There were several controls, one
-of whom professed to be a man who, the day before, had been injured
-on board one of Lambert & Holt’s steamers, which lay in the Bramley
-Moore Dock. The “spirit” described the accident, how he was injured,
-and that he was carried to the hospital, and had “passed away.” Owing
-to the suddenness of his death, he wished us to communicate with his
-family, and desired the circle to pray for him, etc. As near as I can
-recollect, when asked for further particulars, name, family, there was
-no definite reply. The medium quivered, and a new control had taken
-possession of her. I, however, neither doubted the _bona-fides_ of the
-spirit nor the medium. I was especially interested in this control. I
-thought this time I had obtained a test of spirit identity. But alas
-for the imperfection of human hopes, I was doomed to disappointment.
-I clung to the idea the spirit would come back again, and when he got
-“more power,” we would get the particulars he wanted to give us. He did
-not come back--and no wonder. Four months subsequently, I met the real
-Simon Pure in the flesh.
-
-To explain more fully: On the day previous to the seance mentioned, I
-was on board the newly-arrived steamer in question. The lumpers were
-getting out the cargo. This man had been working on the top of the
-cargo in the main hold “hooking on.” I paid no particular attention at
-the time to him, but an hour after I heard a great outcry, and saw a
-rush of men to the main hold. When I turned back and got there, I found
-this man senseless and bleeding.
-
-The hooks had slipped off a bale while easing out some cargo. One of
-them had caught the poor fellow in the mouth, and had torn up his cheek
-almost to the right ear. He was to all appearance dying. I temporarily
-dressed his face, and the stevedore had him put on a stretcher and sent
-to the hospital. _I did not know his name or the hospital to which
-he was removed._ That day and the next the whole scene was vividly
-impressed on my mind. Hence that night the circumstances at the seance
-seem to me to be quite natural. Everything advanced was wonderfully
-apposite and convincing. It was not till I saw the man, and conversed
-with him, that my so-called test of spirit identity resolved itself
-into so much thought or mind reading, so that, even presuming the
-medium or sensitive was controlled by “a spirit,” there can be no doubt
-the source of the spirit’s information was purely mundane.
-
-
-AUTOMATIC AND PLANCHETTE WRITING,
-
-upon which so much reliance is placed, as furnishing evidence of
-“disembodied spirit control,” presents similar difficulties. The
-recording of forgotten incidents, and predicting possibilities in the
-future, are not beyond the powers of the innate human spirit--wholly
-and utterly unaided by spirit agency. Therefore automatic writing--when
-genuine--does not necessarily furnish evidence of spirit control, not
-even when the person who writes believes, and honestly believes too, he
-is so controlled to write.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-Spiritualism.--_Continued._
-
-
-Automatic writing is a phase of phenomenal Spiritualism most difficult
-to prove. In the majority of cases we are reduced to the awkward
-position of accepting or rejecting the assertions of the persons who
-declare that the writing done by them is automatic--that is, written
-without thought and volition on their part. A close examination of
-this claim may lead to the conclusion that automatic writing is not
-impossible. Whether the controlling agent is “the spirit within us,” or
-a disembodied spirit, or both, is not a matter of much importance, if
-it is established, the writing is automatic. When messages are written
-without volition, in the handwriting of deceased persons, signed by
-their names, such messages must be treated on their merits. I have
-seen messages written in this way. I have seen messages written, not
-only automatically, but _direct_. Some were written the reverse way,
-and could only be read by holding up to the light or to a mirror. The
-direct writing was done in an exceedingly short time, two or three
-hundred words in less time than an expert phonographer could write
-the same by the most expeditious efforts. The evidence in favour of
-telepathic writing is not very strong, but of _direct_ writing there
-appears to be abundant proof.
-
-Dr. Nichols, in his fascinating work, “Forty Years of American Life,”
-writes:--“I knew a Methodist sailor in New York, a simple, illiterate,
-earnest man, who became what is called a test medium. He came to
-see me in Cincinnati, and one evening we had also as visitors two
-distinguished lawyers: one of them a brother of Major Anderson, “the
-hero of Fort Sumter;” the other, a gentleman from Michigan, and one
-of the ablest lawyers practising in the Supreme Court of the United
-States. I had brought into the drawing-room a heavy walnut table, and
-placed it in the centre of the room. The medium sat down on one side
-of it, and the sharp Michigan lawyer, who was a stranger to us and the
-medium, on the other. The medium placed his fingers lightly upon the
-table. It tilted up under them, the two legs nearest him rising several
-inches. The lawyer examined the table, and tried to give it a similar
-movement, but without success. There was a force and a consequent
-movement he could not account for. There was no other person near the
-table, there was no perceptible muscular movement, and in no way in
-which it could be applied to produce the effect.
-
-“When there was no doubt on this point, the lawyer, at the
-suggestion of the medium, wrote with careful secrecy on five bits
-of paper--rolling each up like a pea as he wrote--the names of five
-deceased persons whom he had known. Then he rolled them about until
-he felt sure that no one could tell one pellet from the other. Then,
-pointing to them successively, the tipping table selected one, which
-the gentleman, without opening, put in his waistcoat pocket, and threw
-the rest into the fire.
-
-“The next step was to write the ages of these five persons at their
-death, on as many bits of paper, which were folded with the same care.
-One of these was selected, and again, without being opened, deposited
-in the lawyer’s pocket, which now contained a name and a number
-indicating age.
-
-“With the same precautions the lawyer then wrote, in the same way, on
-bits of paper, the places where these persons died, the diseases of
-which they died, and the dates of their decease, going through the
-same process with each. He had then in his pocket five little balls of
-paper, each selected by a movement of the table, for which no one could
-account.
-
-“At this moment the hand of the medium seized a pencil, and with
-singular rapidity dashed off a few lines, addressed to the lawyer as
-from a near relative, and signed with a name which the medium very
-certainly had never heard.
-
-“The lawyer, very much astonished, took from his pocket the five paper
-balls, unrolled them, spread them before him on the table, and read the
-same name as the one on the written message, with the person’s age, the
-place and time of death, and the disease of which he died. They all
-corresponded with each other and the message. No person had approached
-the table, and neither lawyer nor medium had moved. It was in my own
-house, under a full gas light, and, so far as I could see, or can see
-now, no deception was possible.
-
-“The written communication, which purported to come from a deceased
-relative of the gentleman only expressed, in affectionate terms,
-happiness at being able to give him this evidence of immortality.”
-
-This incident is introduced here in illustration of one out of many
-phases of mediumship known to spiritualists. We see here both psychic
-and physical powers-exercised, not generally recognised as possible.
-A massive table moved without physical leverage or exertion, and
-“thoughts read,” which formed the basis of the message. Trickery and
-collusion in this instance are absolutely out of the question. The
-only questions which remain to answer are: “Did this medium possess in
-himself the powers referred to? or did he possess them in consequence
-of being controlled by a disembodied spirit, as claimed by the
-message?” Although the message in itself did not contain evidence of
-any other source of information than that emanating from the lawyer’s
-own mind, we are forced to the conclusion that either the medium or
-the spirit controlling the medium had power to read his mind, and of
-exerting what Professor Crookes and Sergeant Cox would call Psychic
-Force to move the table, and indicate what pellets to select. We have
-here evidence of an intelligence capable of exercising an unknown force
-and of reading thoughts--that intelligence claimed to be a human spirit.
-
-
-TRANCE ADDRESSES.
-
-Trance and inspirational addresses, however, do not, in my opinion,
-furnish much evidence of the reality of spirit control. We are
-interested in the phenomena--taking for granted that these trance and
-inspirational states are genuine--although the evidence of external
-spirit control presented is often _nil_. The controls may or may
-not be veritable realities to their own mediums--professional or
-otherwise--but this is of little value, as evidence, to the public.
-I have known mediumistic and otherwise sensitive persons to be
-controlled--_i.e._, taken possession of by their reading. One gentleman
-swallowed large doses of Theodore Parker. In time he thought of
-Parker, talked of Parker, and finally believed he was “inspired” by
-Theodore Parker. This gentleman had been a Unitarian before being a
-Spiritualist, and doubtless his mind had been broadened and brightened
-by his course of Theodore Parker; but beyond his own belief and the
-evident state of excitability he exhibited when speaking under this
-supposed control, there was actually no evidence of “spirit control”
-worthy of notice.
-
-Mrs. Cora L. V. Tappan-Richmond, an inspirational medium, from America,
-delivered a series of remarkable addresses in this country about
-twenty years ago. These were published by J. Burns, of Southampton
-Row, Holborn, W.C. A young gentleman from Brighton heard and read the
-lectures, and finally budded forth as “an inspirational speaker.” For
-a long time the public got nothing but the Tappan lectures diluted. We
-had the same marvellous, even flow, similar processes of reasoning,
-fertility of illustration, and unbounded capacity for assertion. No one
-dare say this person was not inspired by the spirits. It might have
-been a way the spirits had of breaking in their instrument, but I had
-a shrewd suspicion the young orator was controlled by his reading. I
-don’t know how many others have been influenced in this way. I have
-noticed when a noted medium “came to town,” delivered a number of
-addresses in public, or gave seances in private, immediately thereafter
-a number of imitators professed--correctly or otherwise--principally
-otherwise--to have been controlled by the guides, who were supposed
-to control the medium aforesaid, and that they would soon be able to
-give addresses and manifestations, and what not. On the other hand, the
-noted mediums averred “their guides never controlled any other than
-themselves,” etc. The conscientious investigator is left to wonder
-how much imitation, vanity, and self-deception have to do with such
-statements.
-
-Some of the most perfect oratory, and some of the ablest and most
-cogent lectures and addresses I have ever listened to have been given
-by trance and inspirational mediums. It was stated, as evidence of
-spirit control, by those who professed to know, “that these mediums
-could not reason and speak that way in their normal condition.”
-All of which is worthy of consideration. At the same time I saw
-nothing inherently impossible--judging from a physiological or
-cerebral-physiognomic standpoint--to prevent these persons delivering,
-unaided by spirit agency, the addresses referred to. That a person
-speaks with greater ability, intelligence, or fluency in the trance
-state compared with his known powers in the waking state, cannot,
-alone, be accepted as proof of spirit control. We have seen hypnotised
-subjects do the same. But the reality, or otherwise, of spirit agency,
-cannot be estimated by the superiority, or otherwise, of the addresses
-and messages given.
-
-In all public meetings and in seances where a medium is expected to
-give trance and inspirational addresses the platform is “supported”
-or the chair surrounded by sympathisers, whose presence is esteemed
-favourable to “good conditions”--a “nebulous term” better understood
-by Spiritualists than the public. When the address is, as is often the
-case, a miserable jumble of things inconsequential, old, experienced
-Spiritualists say it is owing “to bad conditions,” _i.e._, the
-influence of the audience on the speaker being conflicting and bad,
-hence the inconclusive rambling of the spirit’s oration. Whether
-this is the true explanation or not, whether the medium was really
-controlled or not, or the addresses successful or not, the fact remains
-that Spiritualists admit that the “message” is not only “seriously
-modified,” according to the channel (or medium) through whom it is
-given, but that it may be deflected and distorted by the influences
-of the audience to whom it is given. Whatever the real cause of the
-imperfect oratory, what is this but admitting _the thoughts transferred
-from the audience to the sensitive either make or mar the utterance_?
-If spirit utterance is thus influenced, it becomes a difficult matter
-to decide how much of the original message has reached us as intended,
-and how unwise it is for some to have their lives directed by such
-uncertain counsel.
-
-There are many persons so organised, that when they come in contact
-with Spiritualism, (not knowing anything about clairvoyance,
-psychometry, thought-transference, thought-reading, etc.) are so
-convinced by what they hear and see for the first time--so much out of
-the ordinary run of their experience--the only way they can account for
-the phenomena is, “that they must be the work of spirits, for no human
-being could tell what they knew, or what they wanted, save a spirit
-who could read their thoughts.” This is just where, I think, the error
-creeps in. Those very revelations which they in ignorance so readily
-attribute as only possible coming from disembodied spirits, may be and
-are in some instances quite possible to man, unaided by any such agency.
-
-Many years ago I sat with Mr. David Duguid, the Glasgow painting
-medium. I had a “direct spirit painting” done. It was a correct--as
-far as I can recollect--painting of a small farm-house and stead, in
-the North of Ireland, where I as a child had been sent for my health.
-Neither Mr. Duguid nor the control claimed to possess any actual
-knowledge of me, or of the circumstances of my childhood. When I had an
-opportunity of attending the seance in question, I wondered if such a
-scene could be painted, and my wonder was greater when it was done.
-
-Here again, we have evidence of thought-transference. Whether Mr.
-Duguid, by some occult power, caused the direct painting to be
-done--his own spirit doing it while his body was in the trance
-state--or the painting was produced by one of his controls, I am not
-prepared to state. I am willing to state my belief that the painting
-was not done by Duguid, the medium, or any other person present in the
-room. One of the controls of the medium claimed to have painted the
-little sketch, and, truth to tell, it is not more difficult to accept
-this hypothesis than “the spirit of the medium did it.” In our ordinary
-experience of human nature, we do not find it usual for men to give
-credit to others--men or spirits--for what they are capable of doing
-and saying themselves.
-
-
-REFLECTIONS.
-
-It is quite possible, seeing that out of this life into the next,
-through the portals of death, pass all sorts and conditions of human
-beings, that in the next stage of existence--most closely allied
-to that in which we now live--mankind are not essentially different
-in character from what we find now. It is not, therefore, necessary
-to call in the agency of demons, as distinct from human spirits,
-to account for the phenomena of Spiritualism. If in artificial
-somnambulism and the phenomena of the psychic state the operating agent
-is an embodied human spirit, it is possible the same human spirit,
-albeit disembodied, may still retain power to control or influence
-other human beings.
-
-There is another and more serious matter for consideration, concerning
-which our investigations of Spiritualism have thrown little or no
-light--Spirit Identity. Not only do our friends depart and never
-return, and many have promised to do so. How far are we certain
-when spirits have returned? We may have been deceived by our own
-impulsiveness, anxiety, and desire to feel and to know that “they are
-not lost but gone before.” Again, admitting the genuineness of physical
-phenomena, and conceding that all the communications are really made
-by disembodied spirits or intelligent beings like unto ourselves,
-what proof do we possess that they are really what they represent
-themselves to be, or what they appear to be in spirit circles? “A bad
-or mischievous spirit,” says Dr. Nichols, “may, for aught we know,
-personate our friends, _penetrate our secrets_, and deceive us with
-false representations.” This is certainly worth thinking about. My
-object in writing is not to turn my readers against Spiritualism,
-but to get them to bring into the investigation judgment, not only
-to analyse evidence, but the capacity to “judge not according to
-appearance, but judge righteous judgment.” It is no part of my
-purpose to deal with the history, ethics, or even the phenomena of
-Spiritualism. That has been well done by others. I merely write to show
-that Spiritualism “has something in it,” and is of such importance
-that it is neither to be lightly rejected on the one hand, nor are
-its phenomena at all times to be attributed to agency of disembodied
-spirits.
-
-Spiritualism is a many-sided subject, and too vast in its
-proportions to be dealt with here, and while I have no doubt that
-its public mediumistic exponents are no more perfect than the rest
-of humanity--much is laid at their door which may have a basis on
-fact--yet I do think they often suffer unjustly. Firstly, from the
-cries of the ignorant--educated or otherwise, matters little--who
-charge them with fraud, simply because such people are ignorant of the
-psychic possibilities of man; and, secondly, from the admiring and
-thoughtless many who are prepared to accept the commonest of psychic
-phases instanter as evidence of “disembodied spirit” presence and
-power. I have no doubt many phenomena are quite explicable on natural
-grounds. Setting aside the possibilities of self-deception in untrained
-observers, and of fraud in dishonest mediums, and of genuine phenomena
-traceable to the powers of the “spirit which is within each of us,”
-there remains, to my mind, abundant evidence of the existence of
-“discarnate spirit,” possessing all the attributes of the human spirit,
-as we know ourselves from the study of man as a psychological subject.
-Unfortunately, the very best evidence in favour of both “embodied”
-and “disembodied spirit” is not of that kind which is available for
-publicity. Still, I hold, if there is evidence (psychological and
-physical) for disembodied spirit in Spiritualism, I am also satisfied
-there is abundant evidence for embodied spirit in the psychological
-experiences of life, apart from what we know of Spiritualism.
-
-I may fitly close these reflections by quoting the testimony of that
-keen scientific observer anent phenomenal Spiritualism--namely,
-Cromwell F. Varley, Esq., F.R.S:--“Twenty-five years ago I was a
-hard-headed unbeliever.... Spiritual phenomena, however, suddenly and
-quite unexpectedly was soon after developed in my own family.... This
-led me to inquire, and to try numerous experiments in such a way as to
-preclude, as much as circumstances would permit, the possibility of
-trickery and self-deception.”... He then details various phases of the
-phenomena which had come within the range of his personal experience,
-and continues:--“Other and curious phenomena had occurred, proving
-the existence (_a_) of forces unknown to science; (_b_) _the power of
-instantly reading my thoughts_; (_c_) the presence of some intelligence
-or intelligences controlling those powers.... That the phenomena occur
-there is overwhelming evidence, and it is too late to deny their
-existence.”
-
-The Bibliography of Spiritualism is somewhat extensive. What books are
-best to recommend to beginners is not an easy matter to decide. “The
-Use of Spiritualism,” by the late S. C. Hall, F.S.A.,[G] however, will
-repay perusal, and from the intellectual fitness, high moral tone, and
-spotless reputation of the author, this book may be safely recommended
-to all readers.
-
-
-THEOSOPHY.[H]
-
-I have been frequently asked, What is Theosophy? A question more easily
-asked than answered, and in answering I may do even less justice to it
-than to Spiritualism. Theosophy is an intellectual speculation, having
-for its main object the supplanting of Christianity, by a Revised
-Version of Hindoo Metempsychosis. An attempt to foist upon our western
-ideas and exoteric habits of thought, the mysticisms and esoteric
-speculations of the mystics of India and Japan. Modern Spiritualism is
-not a religion. Theosophy not only claims to be a religion, but to be
-“the essential basis of all religions.” Modern Spiritualism may have
-its faults, and be as imperfect as human souls are here or hereafter.
-But we at least understand its faults and defects. The triple-crowned
-spiritual monarch--sitting on the seven hills of Rome--is not more
-infallible than the principles which underlie Theosophy--with its
-demi-gods, its Mahatmas, its adepts, miracle workers and wonders. To
-not understand and be able to accept these principles at once, is to
-proclaim oneself an ignoramus. Theosophy is a strangely fascinating
-religion for intellectual æsthetics.
-
-Spiritualism is at least susceptible of being observed and
-investigated, and the hypothesis of Spiritualism is naturally a
-reasonable deduction from the facts. Not so Theosophy, which is
-merely a theory, an _a priori_ assumption pleasing to those with
-more reflective and imaginative powers than capacity for practical
-observation. Spiritualism has given facts to be examined and tested,
-Theosophy nothing save gigantic and baseless assertions. Its _astral
-shells_ and _elementals_ are like its _Mahatmas_, flimsy phantasies,
-less tangible than the ghost seen and described by Dr. Jessop, or
-visions of the _shade of shades_, seen by psychometers. For these
-latter we have at least a basis in psychic phenomena.
-
-_Re-incarnation_ is the back bone of Theosophy, and Karma its necessary
-adjunct. The _Kismet_ of Mahomet and the doctrines of election of
-Calvinism are not more inexorable than the _Karma_ of Theosophy.
-_Karma_ is a combination of earthly experiences and expiations of the
-soul of man in time, during its everlasting process of incarnating and
-re-incarnating in search of Wisdom, the Eternal Reality, and the final
-extinction of all _individuality_ in the Nirvana. _Devachan_ is the
-intermediate state of oblivion, in which _personality_ is blotted out,
-and into which the spiritual soul, etc., enters between the periods of
-incarnation.
-
-Theosophy--the Wisdom of God religion--attempts to explain all the
-inequalities of life, the intellectual and moral differences in men,
-of sin and suffering, by its working theory, _Re-incarnation_, which
-doubtless has many attractive features.
-
-The phenomena Theosophists place so much reliance upon are the property
-of mankind--somnambulism, psychic consciousness, clairvoyance,
-psychometry, thought-transference, etc. The “Theosophic miracles of
-communication with persons in other parts of the world” are explicable
-by thought-transference, and in time may be no more inherently
-impossible than telegraphy without wires and poles. The physical
-wonders of Theosophy, akin to those of Spiritualism, are attributed
-to _shells_, the _astral_ carcases of once embodied but now rapidly
-dissolving _personality_ of man, and _elementals_, fragmentary
-spirit imps or sprites, who up to the present have not been as yet
-incorporated in some incarnated human soul.
-
-As to the ethics of Theosophy, brotherly kindness, charity, and
-self-sacrifice--most desirable virtues and _divine_ attainments--are
-neither new nor the special property of Theosophy. Such _divine_
-qualities and virtues are common to all religions and religious
-teaching, and if they ever reached their climax in human form, they did
-in the person of Jesus, the Lord’s Christ. He was the embodiment of
-these, and a living example for all time, long, long before unthinkable
-and “ungetatable” Mahatmas were announced by Madame Blavatsky, or
-believed in by Mrs. Besant.
-
-Theosophists recognise seven distinct parts in man, _i.e._, four
-transitory and three eternal. The transitory elements are--the physical
-body, the vital principle, the _astral body_, and the _animal soul_.
-These four comprise man’s _personality_, and being transitory are
-perishable. Hence the _personality_ of man is annihilated at death. The
-three eternal elements are--the _spirit_, the _spiritual soul_, and
-the _mind_. These being imperishable form man’s _individuality_, and
-constitute the immortal part of man. This immortal part _incarnates_
-and _re-incarnates_ throughout innumerable personalities on this
-globe, and the rest of the planets, beside having alternate periods
-of “rosy slumber” and of activity. Our _individuality_ has no sex,
-consequently we may be a little negro wench in one incarnation,
-an Egyptian monarch in another, a Nero in another, a John Knox in
-another, and so on. Others may not progress, but sink from incarnation
-to incarnation, from a mother in Israel, to a Deeming in Australia,
-and, finally, to utter annihilation. Those good souls who _live the
-life_, and perfect their souls through much suffering, will become as
-one with “the Eternal Reality, the Rootless Root of all that was, or
-is, or ever shall be.” The higher and ever advancing Theosophist may,
-however, stop short before he reaches the Nirvana, and elect to become
-a Mahatma, or great soul, and reside on this or some other planet to
-exercise power and precipitate wisdom, by letters and otherwise, to
-the world, through chosen adepts. The good Theosophist in this world
-and the next is surrounded by “thought-forms,” which influence him
-in his upward career. The Spiritualist has his departed friends for
-guides, and the Christian (Spiritualist) is comforted by “messengers
-sent forth to minister to them that are heirs of salvation.” I don’t
-know that “thought-forms” administering counsel to a spirit having no
-_personality_ is an improvement on the old ideas.
-
-It is impossible to do justice to this Wisdom-Religion with its
-orders, grades, and bewildering phraseology. It is a fancy religion
-for the intellectual, without a personal God or a personal soul. Its
-circles are masonic lodges for the rich. In no sense is it a religion
-to meet the wants of man as man, like that founded on the life and
-death of Jesus Christ. I do not pretend to explain Theosophy, for the
-task is beyond me. It is a religion intended for those who realise they
-are divine sparks of the Rootless Root, and not for the common people,
-who are incapable of understanding a system of morals thus veiled in
-allegory, and illustrated by signs and symbols. Amid the perplexities
-of many words, we learn that Theosophy teaches what St. Paul indicates
-as the divine order of morals by the words: “Whatsoever a man soweth,
-that shall he also reap.” To work out one’s own salvation is as old as
-the race. We may all be Theosophists without knowing it, as we don’t
-know who we are, what we were, or who we are going to be, such is
-_Karma_. Spiritualism and Theosophy are only referred to here seeing
-how largely the phenomena on which they are based, is explained by “How
-to Thought-Read.”
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] In this way evil habits, such as erotic mania, opium eating,
-dipsomania, etc., may be cured. When the strength of the vice and
-the deterioration of the brain and body are such as to undermine the
-will of the patient, hypnotism, properly employed, may be used and
-recognised as a powerful and legitimate curative agent.
-
-[B] “Phrenological Annual,” 1892. Extract from article by Dr. Samuel
-Eadon, M.D., M.A., LL.D. and Ph.D., etc., Aberdeen and Edinburgh
-Universities.
-
-[C] “Spirits Before our Eyes,” page 215. By W. H. Harrison, 1879.
-
-[D] Dr. Joseph Rhodes Buchanan has been Dean and Professor in several
-American universities. As far back as 1830 he was Professor of
-Medicine in Transylvania University. In the year 1841 he made several
-important discoveries in cerebral psychology, which he communicated
-to the American and to the Edinburgh Phrenological Journals. These
-discoveries are elaborated in his unique system of Anthropology, and
-are published in his works--“Therapeutic Sarcognomy,” “Psychometry,”
-“The Dawn of a New Civilisation,” “System of Anthropology,” and “The
-New Education--which can be obtained through my publishers, or direct
-from myself.”
-
-[E] Thought (says Professor Houston) is accompanied by molecular
-vibrations in the grey matter of the brain, and these brain molecules,
-like everything else, are immersed in and interpenetrated by ether;
-this being so, their vibrations must set up wave-motions in the ether,
-and these must spread out from the brain in all directions. Further,
-these brain-waves, or thought waves, being thus sent out into space,
-will produce some phenomena, and, reasoning by analogy we may expect
-that--as in the case of sound-waves--sympathetic vibrations will be
-set up in bodies similar to that which generates the waves, if those
-bodies are attuned to respond. Again, reasoning by analogy, we may
-expect--as in electric resonance--that such oscillations would be set
-up as are found when electric waves are sent out and, meeting a circuit
-in consonance with them, set up in that circuit oscillations like their
-own.
-
-In view of these facts, which are well ascertained, he (Professor
-Houston) considers that it does not seem improbable that a
-brain engaged in intense thought should act as a centre for
-thought-radiation, nor that these radiations, proceeding outwards in
-all directions, should affect other brains on which they fall, provided
-that these other brains are tuned to vibrate in unison with them.
-
-Light waves are etheric vibrations, and it would seem that these
-brain-waves should “partake of the nature of light.” If so, why should
-it not be possible to obtain, say, by means of a lens, a photographic
-impression of them?
-
-Such a thought-record suitably employed might be able to awaken at any
-subsequent time in the brain of a person submitting himself to its
-influence thoughts identical to those recorded.--_English Mechanic._
-
-[F] The _contact_ is usually made by the agent taking the wrist, or by
-placing his hand on the brow of the reader.
-
-[G] “The Use of Spiritualism.” By S. C. Hall, F.S.A., late Editor of
-the _Art Journal_, author of “The Retrospect of a Long Life,” etc.
-Price, 1s., Post Free, 1s. 1d. Hay Nisbet & Co., London and Glasgow.
-
-[H] “What is Theosophy?” By Walter R. Old, F.T.S. Price, 1s., Post
-Free, 1s. 2d., gives an excellent outline of this interesting subject.
-Hay Nisbet & Co., London and Glasgow.
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
-
- Most of the inconsistent hyphenation has been retained as
- in the original, like ‘mind reading’ and ‘mind-reading’,
- ‘supersensitivity’ and ‘super-sensitivity’, etc.
-
- Obvious punctuation errors have been silently corrected.
-
- Original spelling and grammar have been preserved except for the
- following:
-
- page 5: “the ordinary lauguage” changed to “the ordinary language”
-
- page 23: “render she sight” changed to “render the sight”
-
- page 29: “Stanhope, Macclesfield, Charlville” changed to
- “Stanhope, Macclesfield, Charleville”
-
- page 29: “Camillie Flammarion” changed to “Camille Flammarion”
-
- page 29: “Dr. Jykell and Mr. Hyde” changed to “Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
- Hyde”
-
- page 30: “and discribed a funeral” changed to “and described a
- funeral”
-
- page 31: “s capable of” changed to “is capable of”
-
- page 42: “enter the first doo” changed to “enter the first door”
-
- page 45: “She can also indentify” changed to “She can also
- identify”
-
- page 54: “why it hould not” changed to “why it should not”
-
- page 73: “from our own sensorums” changed to “from our own
- sensoriums”
-
- page 75: “following by like feelings” changed to “followed by
- like feelings”
-
- page 77: “the brig in a dorry” changed to “the brig in a dory”
-
- page 77: “the dorry was again” changed to “the dory was again”
-
- page 79: “The coffin, at anyrate” changed to “The coffin, at any
- rate”
-
- page 81: “happened her” changed to “happened to her”
-
- page 84: “I notice a solitary” changed to “I noticed a solitary”
-
- page 118: “This gentlemen had” changed to “This gentleman had”
-
- page 125: “understand it faults” changed to “understand its
- faults”
-
- page 125: “election of Calvanism” changed to “election of
- Calvinism”
-
- page 126: “Devachian is the intermediate” changed to “Devachan is
- the intermediate”
-
- Footnote A: “such as errotic mania” changed to “such as erotic
- mania”
-
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