登陆注册
19621000000013

第13章 Chapter 3 THE GREAT ARGUMENT(3)

He says: "It was a most successful sitting. Among other things, I addressed a remark in Danish to my wife (who is a Danish girl), and the answer came back in English without the least hesitation." The next case was again of a man who had lost a very dear male friend. "I have had the most wonderful results with

Mrs. -- -- to-day. I cannot tell you the joy it has been to me. Many grateful thanks for your help." The next one says: "Mrs. -- -- was simply wonderful. If only more people knew, what agony they would be spared."

In this case the wife got in touch with the husband, and the medium mentioned correctly five dead relatives who were in his company. The next is a case of mother and son. "I saw Mrs. -- -- to-day, and obtained very wonderful results. She told me nearly everything quite correctly -- a very few mistakes."

The next is similar. "We were quite successful. My boy even reminded me of something that only he and I knew." Says another: "My boy reminded me of the day when he sowed turnip seed upon the lawn. Only he could have known of this." These are fair samples of the letters, of which I hold a large number. They are from people who present themselves from among the millions living in London, or the provinces, and about whose affairs the medium had no possible normal way of knowing. Of all the very numerous cases which I have sent to this medium I have only had a few which have been complete failures. On q uoting my results to Sir Oliver Lodge, he remarked that his own experience with another medium had been almost identical. It is no exaggeration to say that our British telephone systems would probably give a larger proportion of useless calls. How is any critic to get beyond these facts save by ignoring or misrepresenting them? Healthy, scepticism is the basis of all accurate observation, but there comes a time when incredulity means either culpable ignorance or else imbecility, and this time has been long past in the matter of spirit intercourse.

In my own case, this medium mentioned correctly the first name of a lady who had died in our house, gave several very characteristic messages from her, described the only two dogs which we have ever kept, and ended by saying that a young officer was holding up a gold coin by which I would recognise him. I had lost my brother-in-law, an army doctor, in the war, and I had given him a spade guinea for his first fee, which he always wore on his chain. There were not more than two or three close relatives who knew about this incident, so that the test was a particularly good one. She m ade no incorrect statements, though some were vague. After I had revealed the identity of this medium several pressmen attempted to have test seances with her -- a test seance being, in most cases, a seance which begins by breaking every psychic condition and making success most improbable. One of these gentlemen, Mr. Ulyss Rogers, had very fair results. Another sent from "Truth" had complete failure. It must be understood that these powers do not work from the medium, but through the medium, and that the forces in the beyond have not the least sympathy with a smart young pressman in search of clever copy, while they have a very different feeling to a bereaved mother who prays with all her broken heart that some assurance may be given her that the child of her love is not gone from her for ever. When this fact is mastered, and it is understood that "Stand and deliver" methods only excite gentle derision on the other side, we shall find some more intelligent manner of putting things of the spirit to the proof.

Note: See Appendix D.

I have dwelt upon these results, which c ould be matched by other mediums, to show that we have solid and certain reasons to say that the verbal reports are not from the mediums themselves.

Readers of Arthur Hill's "Psychical Investigations" will find many even more convincing cases. So in the written communications, I have in a previous paper pointed to the "Gate of Remembrance" case, but there is a great mass of material which proves that, in spite of mistakes and failures, there really is a channel of communication, fitful and evasive sometimes, but entirely beyond coincidence or fraud. These, then, are the usual means by which we receive psychic messages, though table tilting, ouija boards, glasses upon a smooth surface, or anything which can be moved by the vital animal-magnetic force already discussed will equally serve the purpose.

Often information is conveyed orally or by writing which could not have been known to anyone concerned. Mr. Wilkinson has given details of the case where his dead son drew attention to the fact that a curio (a coin bent by a bullet) had been overlooked among his effects. Sir William Barrett has narrated how a young o fficer sent a message leaving a pearl tie-pin to a friend. No one knew that such a pin existed, but it was found among his things. The death of Sir Hugh Lane was given at a private seance in Dublin before the details of the Lusitania disaster had been published.

Note: The details of both these latter cases are to be found in "Voices from the Void" by Mrs. Travers Smith, a book containing some well weighed evidence. On that morning we ourselves, in a small seance, got the message "It is terrible, terrible, and will greatly affect the war," at a time when we were convinced that no great loss of life could have occurred.

Such examples are very numerous, and are only quoted here to show how impossible it is to invoke telepathy as the origin of such messages. There is only one explanation which covers the facts. They are what they say they are, messages from those who have passed on, from the spiritual body which was seen to rise from the deathbed, which has been so often photographed, which pervades all religion in every age, and which has been able, under proper circumstances, to materialise back into a temporary solidity so that it could walk and talk like a mortal, whether in Jerusalem two thousand years a go, or in the laboratory of Mr. Crookes, in Mornington Road, London.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 痞少追爱:预定小小妻

    痞少追爱:预定小小妻

    据说阮氏的大少爷有了一个未婚妻,对于这段灰姑娘与王子的“爱情”,很多人都是抱着看戏的态度,这不,刚订婚不久,一个自称阮少高中同学的女人就跑到公司公然勾引他。我去……阮家那本《阮王氏打击小三大全》她是白读的吗?与小三斗争,绝不手下留情,为了自己的幸福着想,该出手时就出手,一场好戏开始了……
  • 穿越情殇:掌心烙之彼岸花

    穿越情殇:掌心烙之彼岸花

    “踏入轮回道,不为来生,只为与你相遇。”这是她曾经的执着,却发现伤的不仅是自己,还有他,身边所有爱自己和自己所爱的人。八世的轮回,纠缠,爱恨情愁,积累了一身的伤痕,身心疲惫,于是选择了放手,不再执着,想要得到一份属于自己真正的爱情。奈何桥前的别离与相遇,那笑,到底纠缠着几个人的来世今生?
  • 重生之走出大山

    重生之走出大山

    秦晓彤一觉醒来发现自己重生成了十五岁的山里姑娘。山是深山,姑娘是文盲……村人愚昧,村里有被拐卖来的姑娘,村外还有被赶来支教的逗比纨绔子弟。而她自己,会被用来给哥哥换老婆。秦晓彤知道,自己必须逃出去——在做好万全准备之后。
  • 混迹高校的日子

    混迹高校的日子

    大三男生郭大风,人如其名,行如风,成日不学无术,吊儿郎当,调戏美女,明明是“女也不爽”,在他这里却成了“她不爽”。不会吧,这样的人,也会有梦想?真让人难以置信,还要刮目相看?似乎命中注定,他想学有所成,就得戴上紧箍咒,还得有七十二般变化,才能修成正果……
  • 古董王

    古董王

    靠古董发家,靠古董出名,靠古董赢得身边美女如云。屌丝男突然拥有了金手指,开始了自己独特的捡宝之路。游荡在庞杂的良莠不齐的古玩市场中,赢它个罐满钵盈。
  • 气象谚语与历法节气趣谈

    气象谚语与历法节气趣谈

    《气象谚语与历法节气趣谈》是一本有关谚语或曰气象谚语的科普性读物。全书共分两部分内容:谚语和历法节气。全书内容相当丰富,且知识性、趣味性、可读性都相当强。可作为中学生补充文学知识的课外读物,也可作为普通成人文学知识的自我充电读本。
  • 婚来天成:总裁宠妻入骨

    婚来天成:总裁宠妻入骨

    白若夏是白家长女,家中有钱有势,可惜自己的妹妹白情,夺去了自己身上所有的光芒,所有人都知道,白家的父母只爱白情,根本不把白若夏放在眼里。白若夏27岁大龄未嫁,一场相亲,让他认识了比她还小三岁的英俊男子——沈其睿。可惜沈其睿虽然长得英俊潇洒,却没权没势。于白若夏,可谓是高攀了。但若夏只是挂着一个白家长女的名头,却没一点白家财产,而沈其睿也被当做了只是看重白家财产的小白脸而已。所有人都在看着这一对悲惨的收场。只可惜,让他们都失望了。沈其睿在遇到若夏之后,是真的将其宠到了天上,爱到了骨子里。而沈其睿的身份,似乎也并不是那么简单……
  • 神之刃

    神之刃

    维克多踏上圣山的时候,突然回忆起那个深秋的午后,当自己还是一个普通的猎人时,那场飞来的横祸。如果不是因为那一次惊险,他或许永远都只是个猎人,终老于山林,葬于屋前。就是那一次,他成为了一名神之刃,太阳神迪尔手中的刀刃,在阴影中战斗,揽下所有罪恶,将荣耀归于神祇,换取丰厚的“神恩”。那个时候,他完全没有想到,自己会接触到这个世界被刻意隐藏的历史,并且最终来到了这里。而这个时候,他也没有想到,自己将会面对怎样的未来。啊,让我们从那个午后开始说起吧。【书友群:120679052】
  • 英雄联盟之电竞追梦自由

    英雄联盟之电竞追梦自由

    不一样的世界,一样的英雄联盟。普通小城走出的少年杨烨,将会给这个世界带来巨大的波澜,上演不一样的人生百态。给你最纯正的感受
  • 师徒二人的修仙物语

    师徒二人的修仙物语

    某个人在假期脑洞大开的产物。一个进阶无望,修为只有筑基期,人称“修士之耻”的师父。一个天赋异禀,骨骼精奇,修仙之路一片光明的徒弟。师徒两个人的修仙经历。