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I am presenting a truthful account of facts, witnessed by myself; I do not deny but that these facts seem fantastical and incredible; but I do not ask credence of them in the least, nor do I care whether I am believed or not. I know that a good many of the errors that crept in while humanity was in the course of its development, are chiefly due to the superabundance of implicit faith in so-called authorities; and what sort of authority can I pretend to be in the domain of phenomenal manifestations, heretofore ignored and completely new to any known science?'' ''I desire but one thing, namely, that all those who will not believe me, may prove to me that I am wrong; but in such a case they will have to support their case with ''facts'', as positive and as undeniable as those that forced me to my present conviction, that the mediumistical, or so-called spiritual, phenomena are real existing facts. | I am presenting a truthful account of facts, witnessed by myself; I do not deny but that these facts seem fantastical and incredible; but I do not ask credence of them in the least, nor do I care whether I am believed or not. I know that a good many of the errors that crept in while humanity was in the course of its development, are chiefly due to the superabundance of implicit faith in so-called authorities; and what sort of authority can I pretend to be in the domain of phenomenal manifestations, heretofore ignored and completely new to any known science?'' ''I desire but one thing, namely, that all those who will not believe me, may prove to me that I am wrong; but in such a case they will have to support their case with ''facts'', as positive and as undeniable as those that forced me to my present conviction, that the mediumistical, or so-called spiritual, phenomena are real existing facts. | ||
Faith in these manifestations increases with striking rapidity. True enough, it may be that this belief is entirely based upon erroneous and thoroughly mystical ideas; but the number of Spiritualists in America alone, which is computed at 11,000,000,(?)* proves undoubtedly the existence at least of some facts, since they are strong enough to support so firmly those errors. On the other hand we arrive at the same conclusion in consequence of the fact of so many well-balanced persons, sober, and armed to the teeth with all the implements of modern science, having, notwithstanding all that, arrived at the full conviction of the reality of the same mediumistical phenomena. The names of these persons are known to the world of science as those of capable, meritorious, and worthy investigators of its questions. But it is evidently the common lot and propensity of the human mind, as soon as the question of facts overthrowing its habitual convictions or ideas is presented to it, it rouses itself immediately in opposition to them. At the time when Crookes, Huggins, and Varley were preparing to give to the public the account of their scientific researches, the scientific world never once thought of opposing or doubting the accuracy of their researches; but suddenly arose the question as to the mediumistic phenomena and the same army of scientists instantly go back on their own brethren, and treat their discoveries with the utmost contempt and skepticism. It seems to me I should have never accorded to myself the right of condemning such proceedings had I not personally experienced all their inconsistency. I, too, had suspected somewhat the investigation of Mr. Crookes, in the psycho-dynamical phenomena, until {{Style S-HPB SB. Continues on |3-221}} | Faith in these manifestations increases with striking rapidity. True enough, it may be that this belief is entirely based upon erroneous and thoroughly mystical ideas; but the number of Spiritualists in America alone, which is computed at 11,000,000,(?){{Footnote mark|*}} proves undoubtedly the existence at least of some facts, since they are strong enough to support so firmly those errors. On the other hand we arrive at the same conclusion in consequence of the fact of so many well-balanced persons, sober, and armed to the teeth with all the implements of modern science, having, notwithstanding all that, arrived at the full conviction of the reality of the same mediumistical phenomena. The names of these persons are known to the world of science as those of capable, meritorious, and worthy investigators of its questions. But it is evidently the common lot and propensity of the human mind, as soon as the question of facts overthrowing its habitual convictions or ideas is presented to it, it rouses itself immediately in opposition to them. At the time when Crookes, Huggins, and Varley were preparing to give to the public the account of their scientific researches, the scientific world never once thought of opposing or doubting the accuracy of their researches; but suddenly arose the question as to the mediumistic phenomena and the same army of scientists instantly go back on their own brethren, and treat their discoveries with the utmost contempt and skepticism. It seems to me I should have never accorded to myself the right of condemning such proceedings had I not personally experienced all their inconsistency. I, too, had suspected somewhat the investigation of Mr. Crookes, in the psycho-dynamical phenomena, until {{Style S-HPB SB. Continues on |3-221}} | ||
{{Footnotes start}} | {{Footnotes start}} | ||
{{Footnote return|*}} This number is quoted from statistical information, presented to the Congress of Roman Catholic Bishops, in 1876. ( Judge Edmond’s letter, Spiritual Magazine, 1876, p.327).— {{Style S-Small capitals|Ed.}} | |||
{{Footnotes end}} | {{Footnotes end}} |
Latest revision as of 08:34, 11 February 2024
Legend
< Another Eminent Convert (continued from page 3-219) >
heard to scratch on this paper. To our question: “Jeke, is it you? Will you write us something?” We received affirmative rape on the door-frame.
I owe my readers an explanation as to who “Jeke” was— Spiritualists, who were thoroughly well acquainted with the medium, assured us that he was visited by the spirit of a Chinese woman, who called herself “Jeke,” and who materialized through him. Of course, I had no desire to see my name mixed up with what I considered such a superstitious statement. I felt perfectly indifferent as to under what name or delusive circumstances the phenomenon appeared so long as it could be proved genuine.
A few seconds later, we heard a more significant rustling of the papers than before, as though some one were folding them. The hangings shook again, invisible, trembling hands apparently tried to open them, and then the same hand appeared again at the aperture with two folded notes on its opened palm. We took them from the hand. One of them was blank, but on the other we found an attempt at a letter. At the end of the seance, when carefully examining the dark recess and its corners, we found two more papers on the floor; on one of them, in the corner of the sheet, was written “Je..” on the other, in a bold and handsome handwriting, the whole name of Jeke, with a flourish at the end of it. In the course of the subsequent seances, this signature became a great deal firmer and bolder. Besides this, we received several long sentences, which ran sometimes as follow:
“Jeke, 11 of February 23…—I love you all, but I...— Thank God, I feel very well…”
We heard the conventional five raps—which implies an order to bring out the alphabet. After complying with which the raps indicated three letters: T A M. “Tambourine?” we ventured to suggest; and on receiving an answer in the affirmative, we passed the hand the desired instrument Immediately, some one began drumming on it, keeping time with the music-box. Moreover, it sounded in many different parts of the dark cabinet. But the most remarkable feature of the seance was the feeling of the hand that appeared to us, or rather that farmed itself directly before our eyes. It was a warm, delicate, female hand, presenting to our sight and touch the appearance of a perfectly natural human hand. Every one who wished felt his own hand touched and its fingers pressed. From off my own finger, this hand, whose- soever it was, wanted to take my ring, and I felt very distinctly how it was being pulled off, and how it was caught inside by a finger-nail. Through the cloth of the hangings, we all felt and touched this hand; I squeezed its fingers, and felt and touched its nails. The same thing happened when that hand, or rather the hands, caught hold of our hands, pressing them and pulling them inside the dark cabinet. Once the curtain at the side opposite that where the medium vat, was pulled apart to wide, and lifted up to high, that Prof. Boutleroff and Dr. A—, who were sitting close by, had all the required time to tee very clearly Brediff reclining in his chair, motionless, and with his hands folded on his knees, and his knots undisturbed; while aver his head they saw the white hand flattering about in the air.
Soon after this, the phenomena became weaker, and finally all manifestations ceased. We beard the medium sighing and feebly moving as he was coming out of his trance. We immediately and carefully examined him and the position he was in. All our knots and tics were undisturbed. To allow the least suspicion of fraud or jugglery on his part was a pure impossibility. True enough, some skeptic might perhaps suspect the premises themselves, the door-frame, and in short, the door itself, which might have been opened from a neighboring room, as it was hidden in part from tight by the curtain, and perchance some confederate of the medium might have slipped in, and, biding himself, performed the part of the hands we both saw and felt. But such a theory as that for all of us who were present at the seance, is perfectly void of common sense. We are perfectly certain that the door-frame is the most innocent of its kind, and that no one could approach h at the time of the seance. Moreover, this door remained perfectly visible to us through the opening of the hanging, expressly arranged 4o that view in such a way, and I repeat again, to all of us who were present the witnessed phenomena has all the merit of perfect genuineness, and are thoroughly objective. All these manifestations were repeated, with various changes, during a course of many seances.
I am stating facts, the solution of which I consider at the present time a perfect impossibility. All of us saw and felt the hands, that were formed in our presence. True enough, we could nut well follow the process of that formation, but I deem it fully possible and even necessary to admit the facts all the same I will here remark a circumstance that struck me. As I had the opportunity of stating before, a certain periodicity, a sort of regular ebb and flow, can be always easily detected in this sort of manifestation by the attentive investigator. The same thing was observed by me in the course of the materialization of these hands. The manifestations flowed regular and wave-like, and gradually became strikingly powerful; the hands pulled the curtain violently, and rapped on the table placed outside the curtain with remarkable force. After which, the progressive development, seeming to arrive at its maximum, suddenly stopped and the manifestations lost their power or were brought altogether to an end for a few minutes, as if they had lost all their reserve of strength, so necessary for their production. The same oscillatory movements were as evident in the apparition of the hands. Generally speaking, the rapidity exhibited in their movements as they fly from one place to another is remarkable. No less worthy of observation is the fact of the great weakness and the complete lick of strength in those apparitions at the first stage of their development Very often the hands would drop the pencil without being able to finish the sentence or word begun, and had to employ the greatest exertions to pick it up from the floor. The same was the case with the tambourine and bell.
I am presenting a truthful account of facts, witnessed by myself; I do not deny but that these facts seem fantastical and incredible; but I do not ask credence of them in the least, nor do I care whether I am believed or not. I know that a good many of the errors that crept in while humanity was in the course of its development, are chiefly due to the superabundance of implicit faith in so-called authorities; and what sort of authority can I pretend to be in the domain of phenomenal manifestations, heretofore ignored and completely new to any known science? I desire but one thing, namely, that all those who will not believe me, may prove to me that I am wrong; but in such a case they will have to support their case with facts, as positive and as undeniable as those that forced me to my present conviction, that the mediumistical, or so-called spiritual, phenomena are real existing facts.
Faith in these manifestations increases with striking rapidity. True enough, it may be that this belief is entirely based upon erroneous and thoroughly mystical ideas; but the number of Spiritualists in America alone, which is computed at 11,000,000,(?)* proves undoubtedly the existence at least of some facts, since they are strong enough to support so firmly those errors. On the other hand we arrive at the same conclusion in consequence of the fact of so many well-balanced persons, sober, and armed to the teeth with all the implements of modern science, having, notwithstanding all that, arrived at the full conviction of the reality of the same mediumistical phenomena. The names of these persons are known to the world of science as those of capable, meritorious, and worthy investigators of its questions. But it is evidently the common lot and propensity of the human mind, as soon as the question of facts overthrowing its habitual convictions or ideas is presented to it, it rouses itself immediately in opposition to them. At the time when Crookes, Huggins, and Varley were preparing to give to the public the account of their scientific researches, the scientific world never once thought of opposing or doubting the accuracy of their researches; but suddenly arose the question as to the mediumistic phenomena and the same army of scientists instantly go back on their own brethren, and treat their discoveries with the utmost contempt and skepticism. It seems to me I should have never accorded to myself the right of condemning such proceedings had I not personally experienced all their inconsistency. I, too, had suspected somewhat the investigation of Mr. Crookes, in the psycho-dynamical phenomena, until <... continues on page 3-221 >
* This number is quoted from statistical information, presented to the Congress of Roman Catholic Bishops, in 1876. ( Judge Edmond’s letter, Spiritual Magazine, 1876, p.327).— Ed.