Legend
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The Soul of Things
A Curious Presentiment
The following extract from a private letter records a case of presentiment belonging to a large and peculiar class; much larger, it may be surmised, than is likely to be generally known, owing to the very peculiarity which gives it special interest and significance. The trivial is not often recorded, and, unfortunately, triviality in the matter of occult communications is considered a reason for neglecting them, instead of being recognised, on that very ground, as the more suggestive. I can only say of the writer of the following that she is a lady very well known to me, of quite exceptional education and intelligence, and of the most scrupulous veracity. Her letter is dated December 2nd, and I received it the following day.
“Ten days ago there came to me a conviction that I should find in the Echo—the name of the paper came to me clearly—an announcement of the illness of the Queen. I mentioned this presentiment to—on the instant; and the forecast continuing to oppress me, I have daily told various persons of my expectation, the source of which I could not trace, for I could not recollect the Royal family having been in any way called to my mind at any recent date. Moreover, we take the Times and Daily News, as well as the Echo; so why should, the Echo be my medium of information? However, that was the first paragraph I saw on taking up the Echo, which reached us by this morning’s post.”
Now what I find suggestive in the above and similar cases is this. There is an utter absence of purpose'' in the anticipation or any trace of a motive which we would ascribe to a foreign intelligence. No conceivable object could be served by this lady knowing ten days before that she would see a particular piece of intelligence which did not concern her more than any other subject of Her Majesty. Does it not rather point (1) to the fact, so often insisted upon by Dr. Wyld, that our own souls or spirits are organs of powers unsuspected in our normal consciousness? and (2) to the Kantian principle that time is only the form of our consciousness, not an absolute, objective condition of all existence? This form, if and when we can in any way transcend it, would no longer condition our knowledge, in which events, phenomenally future, would he revealed as present. It is a fact much to be regretted that the attention of Spiritualists is almost exclusively directed to the evidences of disembodied soul, and that thus many most significant facts, which are in reality the strongest possible confirmations of our own supersen-suous being, are either misinterpreted or neglected. “Occultism” and theosophy seek to discover our own latent powers. That these are veræ causæ'' such facts as the above seem to prove, to the extent that they <... continues on page 10-130 >
Editor's notes
Sources
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London Spiritualist, No. 381, December 12, 1879, p. 277