CONTENTS
Introduction 7
Chapter I. The Scientific
Position 10
Chapter II. Materials and
Conditions 21
Chapter III. The Faculty of
Seership 29
Chapter IV. Preliminaries and
Practice 39
Chapter V. Kinds of
Vision 51
Chapter VI. Obstacles to
Clairvoyance 59
Chapter VII. Symbolism
67
Chapter VIII. Allied Psychic Phases
76
Chapter IX. Experience and
Use 84
Conclusion 93
INTRODUCTION
Few words will be necessary by way of preface to this
book, which is designed as an introduction to a little
understood and much misrepresented subject.
I have not here written anything which is intended to
displace the observations of other authors on this
subject, nor will it be found that anything has been
said subversive of the conclusions arrived at by
experimentalists who have essayed the study of
clairvoyant phenomena in a manner that is altogether
commendable, and who have sought to place the subject
on a demonstrable and scientific basis. I refer to the
proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research.
In the following pages I have endeavoured to indicate
the nature of the faculty of Second Sight or
Clairvoyance, the means of its development, the use of
suitable media or agents for this purpose, and the
kind of results that may be expected to follow a
regulated effort in this direction. I have also sought
to show that the development of the psychic faculties
may form an orderly step in the process of human
unfoldment and perfectibility.
As far as the nature and scope of this little work
will allow, I have sought to treat the subject on a
broad and general basis rather than pursue more
particular and possibly more attractive scientific
lines. What I have here said is the result of a
personal experience of some years in this and other
forms of psychic development and experimentation. My
conclusions are given for what they are worth, and I
have no wish to persuade my readers to my view of the
nature and source of these abnormal phenomena. The
reader is at liberty to form his own theory in regard
to them, but such theory should be inclusive of all
the known facts. The theories depending on hypnotic
suggestion may be dismissed as inadequate. There
appear to remain only the inspirational theory of
direct revelation and the theory of the world-soul
enunciated by the Occultists. I have elected in favour
of the latter for reasons which, I think, will be
conspicuous to those who read these pages.
I should be the last to allow the study of psychism to
usurp the legitimate place in life of intellectual and
spiritual pursuits, and I look with abhorrence upon
the flippant use made of the psychic faculties by a
certain class of pseudo-occultists who serve up this
kind of thing with their five o'clock tea. But I
regard an ordered psychism as a most valuable
accessory to intellectual and spiritual development
and as filling a natural place in the process of
unfoldment between that intellectualism that is
grounded in the senses and that higher intelligence
which receives its light from within. From this
view-point the following pages are written, and will,
I trust, prove helpful.
CHAPTER I.
THE SCIENTIFIC POSITION
It would perhaps be premature to make any definite
pronouncement as to the scientific position in regard
to the psychic phenomenon known as "scrying," and
certainly presumptuous on my part to cite an authority
from among the many who have examined this subject,
since all are not agreed upon the nature and source of
the observed phenomena. Their names are, moreover,
already identified with modern scientific research and
theory, so that to associate them with experimental
psychology would be to lend colour to the idea that
modern science has recognized this branch of
knowledge. Nothing, perhaps, is further from the fact,
and while it cannot in any way be regarded as
derogatory to the highest scientist to be associated
with others, of less scientific attainment but of
equal integrity, in this comparatively new field of
enquiry, it may lead to popular error to institute a
connection. It is still fresh in the mind how the
Darwinian hypothesis was utterly misconceived by the
popular mind, the suggestion that man was descended
from the apes being generally quoted as a correct
expression of Darwin's theory, whereas he never
suggested any such thing, but that man and the apes
had a common ancestor, which makes of the ape rather a
degenerate lemur than a human ancestor. Other and more
prevalent errors will occur to the reader, these being
due to the use of what is called "the evidence of the
senses"; and of all criteria the evidence of sensation
is perhaps the most faulty. Logical inference from
deductive or inductive reasoning has often enough been
a good monitor to sense-perception, and has, moreover,
pioneered the man of science to correct knowledge on
more than one occasion. But as far as we know or can
learn from the history of human knowledge, our senses
have been the chiefest source of error. It is with
considerable caution that the scientist employs the
evidence from sense alone, and in the study of
experimental psychology it is the sense which has
first to be corrected, and which, in fact, forms the
great factor in the equation. A person informs me that
he can see a vision in the crystal ball before him,
and although I am in the same relation with the
"field" as he, I cannot see anything except
accountable reflections. This fact does not give any
room for contradicting him or any right to infer that
it is all imagination. It is futile to say the vision
does not exist. If he sees it, it does exist so far as
he is concerned. There is no more a universal
community of sensation than of thought. When I am at
work my own thought is more real than any impression
received through the sense organs. It is louder than
the babel of voices or the strains of instrumental
music, and more conspicuous than any object upon which
the eye may fall. These external impressions are
admitted or shut out at will. I then know that my
thought is as real as my senses, that the images of
thought are as perceptible as those exterior to it and
in every way as objective and real. The thought-form
has this advantage, however, that it can be given a
durable or a temporary existence, and can be taken
about with me without being liable to impost as
"excess luggage." In the matter of evidence in
psychological questions, therefore, sense perceptions
are only second-rate criteria and ought to be received
with caution.
Almost all persons dream, and while dreaming they see
and hear, touch and taste, without questioning for a
moment the reality of these experiences. The dreaming
person loses sight of the fact that he is in a bedroom
of a particular house, that he has certain relations
with others sleeping in the same house. He loses sight
of the fact that his name is, let us say, Henry, and
that he is famous for the manufacture of a particular
brand of soap or cheese. For him, and as long as it
lasts, the dream is the one reality. Now the question
of the philosopher has always been: which is the true
dream, the sleeping dream or the waking dream? The
fact that the one is continuous of itself while the
other is not, and that we always fall into a new dream
but always wake to the same reality, has given a
permanent value to the waking or external life, and an
equally fictitious one to the interior or dreaming
life. But what if the dream life became more or less
permanent to the exclusion of all other memories and
sensations? We should then get a case of insanity in
which hallucination would be symptomic. (The dream
state is more or less permanent with certain poetical
temperaments, and if there is any insanity attaching
to it at all, it consists in the inability to react.)
Imagination, deep thought and grief are as much
anaesthetic as chloroform. But the closing of the
external channels of sensation is usually the signal
for the opening of the psychic, and from all the
evidence it would seem that the psychic sense is more
extensive, acuter and in every way more dependable
than the physical. I never yet have met the man or
woman whose impaired eyesight required that he or she
should use glasses in order to see while asleep. That
they do see is common experience, and that they see
farther, and therefore better, with the psychic sense
than with the physical has been often proved. Emanuel
Swedenborg saw a fire in Stockholm when he was
resident in England and gave evidence of it before the
vision was confirmed by news from Sweden. A lady of my
acquaintance saw and described a fire taking place at
a country seat about 150 miles away, the incident
being true to the minutest details, many of which were
exceptional and in a single instance tragic. The
psychic sense is younger than the physical, as the
soul is younger than the body, and its faculty
continues unimpaired long after old age and disease
have made havoc of the earthly vestment. The soul is
younger at a thousand years than the body is at sixty.
Let it be admitted upon evidence that there are two
sorts of sense perception, the physical and the
psychical, and that in some persons the latter is as
much in evidence as the former. We have to enquire
then what relations the crystal or other medium has to
the development and exercise of the clairvoyant
faculty. We know comparatively little about atomic
structure in relation to nervous organism. The
atomicity of certain chemical bodies does not inform
us as to why one should be a deadly poison and another
perfectly innocuous. We regard different bodies as
congeries of atoms, but it is a singular fact that of
two bodies containing exactly the same elements in the
same proportions the one is poisonous and the other
harmless. The only difference between them is the
atomic arrangement.
The atomic theory refers all bodies to one homogeneous
basic substance, which has been termed protyle
(proto-hyle), from which, by means of a process
loosely defined as differentiation, all the elements
are derived. These elements are the result of atomic
arrangement. The atoms have various vibrations, the
extent of which is called the mean free path of
vibration; greatest in hydrogen and least in the
densest element. All matter is indestructible, but at
the same time convertible, and these facts, together
with the absolute association of matter and force,
lead to the conclusion that every change of matter
implies a change of force. Matter, therefore, is ever
living and active, and there is no such thing as dead
matter anywhere. The hylo-idealists have therefore
regarded all matter as but the ultimate expression of
spirit, and primarily of a spiritual origin.
The somewhat irksome phraseology of Baron Swedenborg
has dulled many minds to a sense of his great acumen
and philosophical depth, but it may be convenient to
summarize his scientific doctrine of "Correspondences"
in this place as it has an important bearing on the
subject in hand. He laid down the principle of the
spiritual origin of force and matter. Matter, he
argued, was the ultimate expression of spirit, as form
was that of force. Spirit is to force what matter is
to form--its substratum. Hence for every spiritual
force there is a corresponding material form, and thus
the material or natural world corresponds at all
points to the world of spirit, without being
identical. The apparent hiatus between one plane of
existence and the next he called a discrete degree,
while the community between different bodies on the
same plane he called a continuous degree. Thus there
is community of sensation between bodies of the same
nature, community of feeling, community of thought,
and community of desire or aspiration, each on its own
plane of existence. But desire is translated into
thought, thought into feeling, and feeling into
action. The spirit, soul (rational and animal in its
higher and lower aspects), and the body appear to have
been the principles of the human constitution
according to this authority. All spirits enjoy
community, as all souls and all bodies on their
respective planes of existence; but between spirit and
soul, as between soul and body, there is a discrete
degree. In fine, mind is continuous of mind all
through the universe, as matter is continuous of
matter; while mind and matter are separated and need
to be translated into terms of one another.
Taking our position from the scientific statement of
the atomic structure of bodies, atomic vibration and
molecular arrangement, we may now consider the action
exerted by such bodies upon the nervous organism of
man.
The function of the brain, which may be regarded as
the bulbous root of a plant whose branches grow
downwards, is twofold: to affect, and to be affected.
In its active and positive condition it affects the
whole of the vital and muscular processes in the body,
finding expression in vital action. In its passive and
negative state it is affected by impressions coming to
it in different ways through the sense organs,
resulting in nervous and mental action. These two
functions are interdependent. It is the latter or
afferent function with which we are now concerned. The
range of our sense-perceptions puts us momentarily in
relations with the material world, or rather, with a
certain portion of it. For we by no means sense all
that is sensible, and, as I have already indicated,
our sense impressions are often delusive. The gamut of
our senses is very limited, and also very imperfect
both as to extent and quality. Science is continually
bringing new instruments into our service, some to aid
the senses, others to correct them. The microscope,
the microphone, the refracting lens are instances. It
used to be said with great certainty that you cannot
see through a brick wall, but by means of X-rays and a
fluorescent screen it is now possible to do so. I have
seen my own heart beating as its image was thrown on
the screen by the Rontgen rays. Many insects, birds
and animals have keener perceptions in some respects
than man. Animalculae and microbic life, themselves
microscopic, have their own order of sense-organs
related to a world of life beyond our ken. These
observations serve to emphasise the great limitation
of our senses, and also to enforce the fact that
Nature does not cease to exist where we cease to
perceive her. The recognition of this fact has been so
thoroughly appreciated by thoughtful people as to have
opened up the question as to what these human
limitations may mean and to what degree they may
extend.
We know what they mean well enough: the history of
human development is the sequel to natural evolution,
and this development could never have had place apart
from the hunger of the mind and the consequent
breaking down of sense limitations by human invention.
As to the extent of our limitations it has been
suggested that just as there are states of matter so
fine as to be beyond the range of vision, so there may
be others so coarse as to be below the sense of touch.
We cannot, however, assert anything with certainty,
seeing that proof must always require that a thing
must be brought within our range of perception before
we can admit it as fact. The future has many more
wonderful revelations in store for us, no doubt. But
there is really nothing more wonderful than human
faculty which discovers these things in Nature, things
that have always been in existence but until now have
been outside our range of perception. The ultra-solid
world may exist.
The relations of our sense-organs to the various
degrees of matter, to solids, fluids, gases,
atmosphere and ether, vary in different individuals to
such a wide extent as to create the greatest diversity
of normal faculty. The average wool-sorter will outvie
an artist in his perception of colour shades. An odour
that is distinctly recognizable by one person will not
be perceptible to others. In the matter of sound also
the same differences of perception will be noted. On a
very still night one can hear the sugar canes growing.
Most people find the cry of a bat to be beyond their
range. The eye cannot discern intervals of less than
one-fiftieth of a second. Atmospheric vibration does
not become sound until a considerable frequency is
attained. Every movement we make displaces air but our
sense of touch does not inform us of it, but if we
stand in a sunbeam the dust particles will show that
it is so. Our sense of feeling will not register above
certain degrees of heat or below certain degrees of
cold. Sensation, moreover, is not indefinitely
sustained, as anyone may learn who will follow the
ticking of a watch for five minutes continuously.
But quite apart from the sense and range of our
perceptions, the equality of a sense-impression is
found to vary with different persons, affecting them
each in a different way. We find that people have
"tastes" in regard to form, colour, flavour, scent,
sound, fabric and texture. The experience is too
general to need illustration, but we may gather thence
that, in relation to the nervous system of man, every
material body and state of matter has a variable
effect. These remarks will clear the ground for a
statement of my views upon the probable effect a
crystal may have upon a sensitive person.
CHAPTER II.
MATERIALS AND CONDITIONS
The crystal is a clear pellucid piece of quartz or
beryl, sometimes oval in shape but more generally
spherical. It is accredited by Reichenbach and other
researchers with highly magnetic qualities, capable of
producing in a suitable subject a state analogous to
the ordinary "waking trance" of the hypnotists. It is
believed that all bodies convey, or are the vehicles
of certain universal property called od or odyle
(od-hyle), which is not regarded as a force but as an
inert and passive substance underlying the more active
forces familiar to us in kinetic, calorific and
electrical phenomena. In this respect it holds a
position analogous to the argon of the atmosphere, and
is capable of taking up the vibrations of those bodies
to which it is related and which it invests. It would
perhaps not be amiss to regard it as static ether. Of
itself it has no active properties, but in its still,
well-like depths, it holds the potentiality of all
magnetic forces.
This odyle is particularly potent in certain bodies
and one of these is the beryl or quartz. It produces
and retains more readily in the beryl than in most
other bodies the images communicated to it by the
subconscious activity of the seer. It is in the nature
of a sensitized film which is capable of recording
thought forms and mental images as the photographic
film records objective things. The occultist will
probably recognize in it many of the properties of the
"astral light," which is often spoken of in this
connection. Readers of my Manual of Occultism
will already be informed concerning the nature of
subconscious activity. The mind or soul of man has two
aspects: the attentive or waking consciousness,
directed to the things of the external world; and the
subconscious, which is concerned with the things of
the interior world. Each of these spheres of the mind
has its voluntary and automatic phases, a fact which
is usually lost sight of, inasmuch as the automatism
of the mind is frequently confounded with the
subconscious. All purposive action tends to become
automatic, whether it be physical or mental, sensory
or psychic.
The soul in this connection is to be regarded as the
repository of all that complex of emotions, thoughts,
aspirations, impressions, perceptions, feelings, etc.,
which constitute the inner life of man. The soul is
none the less a fact because there are those who bandy
words about its origin and nature.
Reichenbach has shown by a series of experiments upon
sensitive and hypnotized subjects, that metals and
other materials produce very marked effects in contact
with the human body. The experiments further showed
that the same substance affected different patients in
diverse manners.
The hypnotic experiments of the late Dr. Charcot, the
well-known French biologist, also demonstrate the
rapport existing between the sensitive subject and
foreign bodies in proximity. A bottle containing a
poison is taken at random from a number of others of
similar appearance and is applied to the back of the
patient's neck. The hypnotic subject at once begins to
develop all the symptoms of arsenical, strychnine or
prussic acid poisoning; it being afterwards found that
the bottle contains the toxine whose effects have been
portrayed by the subject. But not all hypnotic
subjects are capable of the same degree of
sensibility.
Community of sensation is as common a phenomenon as
community of thought between a hypnotizer and his
subject, and what are called sympathetic pains are
included in common experience. Sensitive persons will
simulate all the symptoms of a virulent disease, e.g.
mock measles. The phenomena of psychometry reveal the
fact of bodies being able to retain records and of the
human possibility of reviving these records as
sensations and thought images, although there is no
direct community of sensation between an inanimate
object and the nervous organism of a sensitive. It
need not, therefore, be a matter of surprise that the
crystal can exert a very definite and sensible effect
upon the nervous organism of a certain order of
subjects. It does not affect all alike nor act in a
uniform and constant manner on those whom it does so
affect. The modifications of sensibility taking place
in the subject or sensitive render the action of the
agent a variable quantity. Where its action is more or
less rapid and remarkable, however, the quartz or
beryl crystal may be regarded as the most effective
agent for producing clairvoyance.
In other cases the concave mirror, either of polished
copper or black japan, will be found serviceable. In
certain cases where the faculty is already developed
but lying in latency, any shining surface will suffice
to bring it into activity. Ecstatic vision was first
induced in Jacob Boehme by the sun's rays falling upon
a bowl of water which caught and dazzled his eyes
while he was engaged in the humble task of cobbling a
pair of shoes. In consequence of this exaltation of
the visual sense we have those remarkable works, The
Aurora, The Four Complexions, Signatura
Rerum, and many others, with letters and
commentaries which, in addition to being of a
spiritual nature, are also to be regarded as scholarly
when referred to their source. In Boehme's case, as in
that of Swedenborg, whose faculty did not appear until
he was fifty-four years of age, it would appear that
the faculty was constitutional and already developed,
waiting only the conditions which should bring it into
active operation.
The agent most suitable for developing clairvoyance
cannot therefore be definitely prescribed. It must
remain a matter of experiment with the subject
himself. That there are some persons in whom the
psychic faculties are more prone to activity than in
others is certain, and it would appear also that these
faculties are native in some by spiritual or
hereditary succession, which fact is evident from
their genitures as interpreted by astrology. Many
planets in flexed signs and a satellitium in the nadir
or lower angle of the horoscope is a certain
indication of extreme nervous sensibility and
predisposition to telaesthenic impressions, though
this observation does not cover all the instances
before me. It is true, however, where it applies. The
dominant influence of the planet Neptune in a
horoscope is also to be regarded as a special
indication of some form of psychic activity, as I have
frequently observed.
In cases where the subject is not prepared by
evolutional process for the exercise of the psychic
faculties, it will be found that the same or similar
indications will tend to the simulation of such
faculties, as by mediumism, conjuring, etc., while
they may even result in chicanery and fraud.
But among those who are gifted in the direction spoken
of, all are not clairvoyant. The most common form of
psychic disturbance is involuntary clairaudience, and
telaesthesia is not perhaps less general. St. Paul
indicates a variety of such psychic "gifts," e.g.
the gifts of prophecy, of healing, of understanding,
etc.; but these may also be regarded in quite a
mundane sense. The development among the early
Christians of spiritual gifts, visions, hearing,
speaking in foreign tongues, psychic healing, etc.,
appears to have given rise to a variety of exceptional
experiences by which they were induced to say "we
cannot but speak the things we have seen and heard."
"One star differs from another in glory," says St.
Paul, and this diversity of spiritual gifts proceeds
from the celestial world, and is so ordered that each
may fulfil the part required of him in the economy of
life.
Psychic tradition is as important a fact as is
physical heredity. The latter is a factor of immense
importance as affecting the constitution and quality
of the organism in and through which the soul is
required to function. But psychic tradition is that
which determines the power and faculty brought to bear
upon the physical organism. Past evolution is not a
negligible quantity, and its effects are never wasted
or lost to the individual. We are what we are by
reason of what we have already been, as well
individually as racially. "The future is, the past
unfolded" or "entered upon by a new door," as it has
been well said. We do not suddenly acquire faculties,
we evolve them by effort and successive selection. In
our upward striving for liberty we specialize along
certain lines which appear to us to be those offering
either the least resistance or the most ready means of
self-preservation, liberty and well-being. Hence some
evolve a special faculty for money-making and, as
schoolboys, will be expert traders of alley-taws,
jack-knives, toffee and all sorts of kickshaws. Others
of another bent or list will traffic in knowledge to
the abounding satisfaction of their masters and the
jealous pride of their form.
So that psychic tradition while disposing some to the
speedy revelation of an already acquired faculty,
disposes others to the more arduous but not less
interesting work of acquiring such faculty. And
because the spiritual needs of mankind are ever of
primary importance, there are always to be found those
in whom the power of spiritual interpretation is the
dominant faculty, such persons being the natural
channels of intercourse between the superior and
inferior worlds. The physical body of man is equipped
with a corresponding order of microbic life which acts
as an organic interpreter, translating the elements of
food into blood, nerve, fibre, tissue and bone
agreeably to the laws of their being. What I have to
say in this place is addressed especially to those who
would aspire to the faculty of clear vision and in
whom the psychic powers are striving towards
expression. Every person whose life is not wholly sunk
in material and selfish pleasures but in whom the
aspiration to a higher and better life is a hunger the
world cannot satisfy, has within himself the power to
see and know that which he seeks behind the veil of
the senses. Nature has never produced a desire she
cannot satisfy. There is no hope, however vague, that
the soul cannot define, and no aspiration, however
high, that the wings of the spirit cannot reach.
Therefore be patient and strive. To others I would
say: Be content. All birds cannot be eagles. The
nightingale has a song and the humming bird a plumage
the eagle can never possess. The nightingale may sing
to the stars, the humming bird to the flowers, but the
eagle, whose tireless eyes gaze into the heart of day,
is uncompanioned in its lofty loneliness amid the
mountain tops.
CHAPTER III.
THE FACULTY OF SEERSHIP
Until quite recently the faculty of seership has been
associated in occult literature with various magical
formulae. There are in existence works by Tristemius,
Francis Barrett, Ebenezer Sibley and others in which
the use of the crystal is made by means of magical
invocations and a variety of ceremonial observances.
It is not within the scope of this treatise to
determine the value of such rites or the desirability
of invoking extraneous intelligences and powers by the
use of magical practices; but I think we may conclude
that communion of this order is not unattended by
grave dangers. When the Israelites were ill-content
with the farinaceous manna they invoked Heaven to send
them meat. They got what they wanted, but also the
dire penalty which it incurred; and it is quite likely
that in invoking occult forces beyond one's power to
control great evils may ensue. All action and reaction
are equal and opposite. A child can pull a trigger but
cannot withstand the recoil of a gun, or by moving a
lever may set machinery in motion which it can by no
means control. Therefore without strength and
knowledge of the right sort it is foolish to meddle
with occult forces; and in the education of the
development of the psychic and spiritual faculties
native in us, it is better to encourage their natural
development by legitimate exercise than to invoke the
action of a stimulus which cannot afterwards be
controlled. Water will wear away a rock by continual
fretting, though nobody doubts that water is softer
than a rock, and if the barrier between this and the
soul-world be like granite, yet the patient and
persistent action of the determined mind will sooner
or later wear it away, the last thin layer will break
and the light of another world will stream through,
dazzling our unaccustomed eyes with its bright
effulgence.
It is my object here to indicate by what means and by
what persons the natural development of the
clairvoyant faculty may be achieved. In regard then to
the subject, medium or seer, there are two distinct
temperaments in which the faculty is likely to be
dominant and capable of high and rapid development.
The first is the nervous temperament, characterized by
extreme activity of body and mind, nervous
excitability, dark complexion, prominent features, and
wiry frame. Types of this temperament are to be seen
in the descriptions of Dante, Swedenborg, Melancthon,
Edgar A. Poe and others. This type represents the
positive seers.
The other temperament is of the passive type and is
characterized by a full lymphatic habit, pale or
delicate complexion, blue eyes, straight fine hair,
small hands, tapering fingers, cold and fleshy to the
touch; usually a thin or high voice and languid
manner.
These two types of seers--of which there are many
varieties--achieve their development by quite opposite
means. The positive seer projects the mental images by
a psychic process impossible of description, but by a
certain psychic metabolism by which the apperceptions
of the soul are transformed into mental images of a
purely symbolical nature. The psychic process of
picture-production is involuntary and unconscious, but
the perception of the mental pictures is a perfectly
conscious process and involves the exercise of an
introspective faculty. The passive seer, on the
contrary, is effortless, and receives impressions by
reflection, the visions coming imperceptibly and
having a literal interpretation. The vision is not in
this case of an allegorical or symbolic nature, as is
the case with the positive seer, but is an actual
vision of a fact or event which has already happened
or as it will transpire in the future. Thus the
positive vision consists in the projection of the mind
towards the things of the soul-world, while the
passive vision in the result of a propulsion of the
soul-world upon the passive sense. Of the two kinds of
vision, the passive is the more serviceable as being
the more perspicuous and literal, but it has the
disadvantage of being largely under the control of
external influences and consequently of greater
variability than the positive vision. It is, indeed,
quite the common experience that the passive medium
requires "conditions" for the proper exercise of the
faculty and where these are lacking no vision can be
obtained.
The positive type of seer exercises an introspective
vision, searching inwardly towards the soul-world
whence revelation proceeds. The passive seer, on the
other hand, remains in a static condition, open to
impressions coming inwards upon the mind's eye, but
making no conscious effort towards inward searching.
Those who have experienced both involuntary and
voluntary visions will readily appreciate the
difference of attitude, which is difficult to convey
to others in so many words.
Now the exercise of this faculty does not exist apart
from some definite use, and it may be of advantage to
consider what that use may be. Primarily, I should be
disposed to regard the mere opening up of a channel of
communication between the material and psychic worlds
as adequate reason for the exercise of the faculty.
The Gates of Heaven have to be kept open by human
endeavour and the exercise of the spiritual and
psychic faculties, otherwise a complete lesion and
cutting off of our source of inspiration would follow.
Except we aspire to the higher world that world will
come no nearer to us. Action and reaction are equal
and opposite. It was never said that the door would be
opened to others than those who knocked. The law of
spiritual compensation involves the fact that we
receive what we ask for. If we get it otherwise, there
is no guarantee of its continuance or that its
possession will be a blessing. But if we ask according
to our needs and strive according to our strength
there is no law which can prevent a commensurate
response. The ignorance of our asking and the
imperfection of our striving will modify the nature of
the response, but they cannot be negative of results.
We can trust nature and there is a spiritual law in
the natural world as well as a natural law in the
spiritual world, for they are interdependent.
But even our daily life affords numerous instances
wherein the use of the clairvoyant faculty is attended
by beneficial results. How many people there are who
have been warned in dreams--wherein all people are
naturally clairvoyant--of some impending danger to
themselves or those around them, must have struck any
casual reader of the daily press; for during recent
years much greater interest has been taken in
psychological matters and we are continually in
hearing of new facts which give us knowledge of the
power of the soul to foresee danger, and to know what
is determined upon the world for the greater ends of
human evolution. Some experiences of this nature will
no doubt form a fit subject for a subsequent chapter.
The qualifications which should supplement and sustain
the natural aptitude of the seer or seeress demand
consideration in this place, and the following remarks
may not be without value in this respect.
Mental stability, self-possession and confidence in
one's own soul-faculties must be the firm rock on
which all revelation should rest. The element of doubt
either negatives results or opens the door to the
ingress of all manner of deceptive impressions.
Integrity of purpose is imperative. The purer the
intention and motive of the seer the more lucid will
be the vision accorded. No reliable vision can be
obtained by one whose nature is not inherently
truthful.
Any selfish desire dominating the mind, in regard to
any thing or person will distort the vision and render
it misleading, while a persistent self-seeking spirit
will effectually shut the door to all revelation
whatsoever.
Therefore above all things it is essential for the
investigator of psychic phenomena to have an
unflinching love of truth, to be resigned to the will
of Heaven, to accept the revelations accorded in a
spirit of grateful confidence, and to dispel all doubt
and controversy by an appeal to the eyes of one's own
immortal soul.
These are qualifications with which the seer or
seeress should be invested, and if with these the
quest of the vision is unsuccessful after a period of
earnest trial, it must be taken as sufficient warrant
that the faculty of clairvoyance is not in the
category of one's individual powers. Haply the same
qualifications brought to bear on some other psychic
faculty will result in a rich recompense.
As for those triflers who at odd moments sit for the
production of what they call "phenomena," with no
other object than the gratification of an inquisitive
vanity, I would drive them with whips from the field
of psychical research. They are people whose presence
in this area of serious enquiry does no good either to
the cause of truth or the service of the race, and
this loose traffic of sorts in the hope of finding a
new sensation would, were it transferred to another
sphere of activity, deservedly receive a very ugly
name.
The suggestion that the clairvoyant faculty is latent
in all of us has no doubt been responsible for much
misunderstanding, and not a little disappointment; but
I doubt if it is so far removed from the truth as that
which makes the possession of the faculty a certain
sign of a superior degree of evolution. Although the
faculty of clear vision brings us into more intimate
conscious relations with a new order of existence,
where the past and future, the distant and the near,
would seem to be brought into immediate perception, it
does not therefore confer upon us a higher degree of
spirituality. It may undoubtedly offer us a truer
perspective than that we may derive from the ordinary
circumstance of our lives, and may suggest good
grounds for a more comprehensive ethical system, but
it cannot compel one to do the right thing or to lead
the virtuous life. Clairvoyance, indeed, is a faculty
which has no direct moral relations. It is no more the
gift or property of the wise or the good man than
extraordinary muscular power is an adjunct of high
intelligence. And yet it is a curious fact that in all
the sacred writings of the world there is a suggestion
that holy men, or "Men of God," have this and other
transcendent faculties, such as clairaudience and the
power of healing. Throughout the Hebrew Scriptures
clairaudience seems to constitute the peculiar
authority of the teacher or prophet. Thus we have
expressions such as: "The Word of the Lord came to me
saying," etc., and "I heard a voice which said," etc.,
which is sometimes but not always associated with
direct vision. But because holy men of old were
distinguished by this power of direct vision it is not
to be supposed that all who have it are equally
sanctified. By natural gift or by such means we are
here discussing, the faculty may be brought into
active function, but we should not lose sight of the
fact that the attainment of righteousness implies that
"all these things shall be added unto you."
I think it right, therefore, to regard the quest of
clairvoyance as a legitimate occupation, providing
that it is purposeful and carried out with a right
spirit, while not being allowed to interfere with the
proper performance of one's ordinary duties in life.
For it is possible to become over-zealous and even
morbid over these mysteries of human life, and to
become so obsessed by the idea of their importance as
practically to render oneself unfitted for any
ordinary pursuits, thereby producing an isolation that
is in the best sense unprofitable. Moreover, there are
mental dangers as well as spiritual and social to be
feared, and it is unfortunately not uncommon to
observe that neuraesthenia, nervous corrosion, and
even insanity attends upon the tireless efforts of the
enthusiast in this direction.
If we regard clairvoyance as a normal faculty we are
more likely to treat it normally than if we give it a
paramount and exceptional value and seek to beatify
those in whom it appears. I am convinced from
experience that it is both normal and educable though
not usually active in the large majority of people. I
am also of the opinion that it is not peculiar, except
in its higher functions, to human beings. I have known
animals to possess this faculty; in a higher degree I
have seen humans in the exercise of it. Perhaps even
the archangels are yet seeking their vision of God.
But to us as normal beings clairvoyance should appear
a potentially normal faculty, to be studied and
pursued by methods that are efficient while yet
harmless; and this is the purport of the present
treatise. I will therefore ask the reader to follow me
in these pages with a mind divested of all disposition
to the supernatural.
CHAPTER IV.
PRELIMINARIES AND PRACTICE
The first consideration by those who would develop
clairvoyance by artificial aids is the choice of a
suitable agent. It has been the practice for many
years to substitute the original beryl or "rock
crystal" by a glass ball. I admit that many specimens
I have seen are very creditable productions, but they
are nevertheless quite worthless from the point of
view of those who consider material agents to be
important factors in the production of clairvoyance.
The glass ball may, however, very well serve the
preliminary essential of concentration, and, if the
faculty of clairvoyance is at all active, will be
entirely effective as an agent.
Those who have any experience at all in this matter
will allow that the rock crystal exerts an influence
of an entirely different nature to that observable in
the use of glass. Indeed, so far as experiment serves
us, it may be said that glass only produces negative
results and never at any time induced clairvoyance. If
this state followed upon the use of a glass ball I am
sure that the patient must have been naturally
clairvoyant, in which case a bowl of water, a spot
upon a wall, a piece of polished brass or copper, or a
spot of ink would have been equally efficacious in
inducing the degree of hypnosis required. That glass
spheres are equally efficient as those of crystal is
true only in two cases, namely, when clairvoyance is
natural, in which case neither need be used; and when
no results are observable after due experiment, from
which we may conclude either that the agent is
unsuitable or that the faculty is entirely submerged
in that individual.
In hypnotic clairvoyance the glass ball will be found
as useful a "field" as the best rock crystal. Yet it
does not follow that because the crystal is highly
odylic and glass altogether negative the former will
induce clairvoyance. My own first experience with the
crystal was entirely disappointing, while very
striking results followed immediately upon the use of
a black concave mirror.
The mirror is usually circular in shape and about
one-quarter-inch curve to a six-inch diameter. This
gives a long focus, so that the mirror may be hung
upon a wall at about two yards distance from the
subject. A greater degree of concavity proportionate
to the diameter will produce a focus which allows the
mirror to be held in the hand while resting in the
lap.
This disposes to a very easy and passive attitude and
helps towards results. The base of the mirror may be
of tin, wood or other material, and it is usually
filled with a composition of a bituminous nature, the
glass covering being painted with a preparation of
coal-tar on its nether or convex side. The exact focus
and consequent size of the mirror employed as most
suitable to the individual is a matter of experiment.
It is also to be observed that the distance of the
mirror, as also the angle of vision, are matters of
experiment. Beyond a certain distance it will be found
that the mirror has no "draw" on the subject. If
brought closer its pull is immediately felt.
It is perhaps too early to theorize upon the modus
operandi of the "magic mirror," as it has been
called. It appears to induce hypnosis and consequent
elevation of nervous activity by refracting and
throwing back the rays of magnetic energy which
emanate from the subject.
In the foregoing illustration let A-B be the
mirror with F for its focus. Let the subject be
stationed at S. Then the rays directed towards the
surface of the mirror will be represented by RR-RR.
These rays impinge upon a diamagnetic surface which is
concave. The rays are therefore bent inwards and
thrown back upon the person at S in the form of a cone
of energy which has the effect of producing
auto-hypnosis. There are other forms of agency, such
as the zinc disc with the copper centre as used by
Braid to induce the hypnotic sleep, but these appear
to depend upon tiring the optic nerves and thus,
through their action upon the thalami to produce
temporary inhibition of the whole basilar tract of the
brain.
The mesmerist who throws streams of energy upon the
patient would appear to be working on the same
principle as that by which the person using the
concave mirror induces self-hypnosis. Possibly the
latter method may be found to be conducive to the
phenomena arising from auto-suggestion, while the
conditions induced by the action of the hypnotist may
be less liable to the effects of auto-suggestion and
more responsive to hypnotic suggestion, i.e.
the mental action of the hypnotist.
These, however, are considerations which need not
trouble us overmuch, since by whatever agent the
subject is made clairvoyant, the results are equally
curious and informing. Auto-suggestion, at least, can
hardly be regarded in the category of objections,
since we cannot auto-suggest that which does not first
of all arise as an image in the mind. It is in the
spontaneous and automatic production of auto-suggested
impressions that the phenomena of clairvoyance very
largely consist; only we have to remember that the
suggesting self is a more considerable quantity than
the personality to which these suggestions are made,
and is in touch with a world immeasurably greater and
in every sense less limited than that to which the
person is externally related. Looked at from whatever
point of view we may choose, the phenomena of
clairvoyance cannot be adequately explained without
recourse to psychology on the one hand and occultism
on the other. Psychology is needed in order to explain
the nature and faculty of the human soul, and
occultism to define for us the nature of that
universal mirror in which the whole category of human
events, both past and future, are reflected. Having
decided upon a course of experiments with a crystal or
mirror, the best of the kind should be obtained. A
black velvet covering should be made in which to
envelop the crystal when not in use. Mirrors are
usually made with a suitable lid or covering. Care
should be taken not to scratch the surface, and all
cleaning should be done with a dry silk handkerchief
kept for the purpose. Exposure to the sun's rays not
only scores the surface of a crystal or mirror, but
also puts the odylic substance into activity,
distributing and dissipating the magnetic power stored
up therein.
And now a word or two about the disposition and
attitude of the subject. The visions do not occur in
the crystal itself. They may appear to do so, but this
is due, when it occurs, to the projection and
visualization of the mental images. The visions are in
the mind or soul of the seer and nowhere else. It is a
matter of constitutional psychism as to where the
sense of clear vision will be located. Personally I
find the sense to be located in the frontal coronal
region of the brain about 150 to the right of the
normal axis of vision, which may be regarded as the
meridian of sight. Other instances are before me in
which the sense is variously located in the back of
the head, the nape of the neck, the pit of the
stomach, the summit of the head, above and between the
eyes, and in one case near the right shoulder but
beyond the periphery of the body. The explanation
appears to be that the nervo-vital emanations from the
body of the seer act upon the static odyle in the
agent, which in turn reacts upon the brain centres by
means of the optic nerves. And this appears to be
sufficient reason why the crystal or mirror should be
kept as free as possible from disturbing elements.
Water is extremely odylic and should never come in
contact with the agent employed as it effectually
carries off all latent or stored imports. I am forced
to use a crude terminology in order to convey the idea
in my mind, but I recognize that the whole explanation
may appear vague and inadequate. It is of course at
all times easier to observe effects than to offer a
clear explanation of them. Yet some sort of working
hypothesis is constructed when we collate our
observations, and it is this that I have sought to
communicate.
For similar reasons, when in use the crystal or mirror
should be shaded and so placed that no direct rays
from sun or artificial light may fall upon it. The
odyle, as Reichenbach so conclusively proved by his
experiments, rapidly responds to surrounding magnetic
conditions and to the vibrations of surrounding
bodies, and to none more rapidly than the etheric
vibrations caused by combustion or light of any kind.
There should be no direct rays of light between the
agent and the seer.
The room in which the sitting takes place should be
moderately warm, shady, and lit by a diffused light,
such as may be obtained by a light holland blind or
casement cloth, in the daytime. The subject should sit
with his back to the source of light, and the
illumination will be adequate if ordinary print can be
read by it.
It is important that all persons sitting in the same
room with the seer should be at least at arm's length
from him.
Silence should be uniformly observed by those present,
until the vision is attained.
It will then be found convenient to have two persons
present to act as Interrogator and Recorder
respectively.
The Interrogator should be the only person whose voice
is heard, and it should be reduced to a soft but
distinct monotone. The Recorder will be occupied in
setting down in writing all questions asked by the
Interrogator and the exact answers made by the seer.
These should be dated and signed by those present when
completed. It is perhaps hardly necessary to remark
that precautions should be taken to prevent sudden
intrusions, and as far as possible to secure general
quiet without.
I may here interject an observation which appears to
me suggestive and may prove valuable. It has been
observed that the inhabitants of basaltic localities
are more generally natural clairvoyants than others.
Basalt is an igneous rock composed largely of augite
and felspar, which are silicate crystals of calcium,
potassium, alumina, etc., of which the Moonstone is a
variety. The connecting link is that clairvoyance is
found to be unusually active during and by means of
moonlight. What psycho-physical effect either basalt
or moonlight has upon the nervous system of
impressible subjects appears to be somewhat obscure,
but there is little difference between calcium light
and moonlight, except that the latter is moderated by
the greater atmosphere through which it comes to us.
It is only when we come to know the psychological
values of various chemical bodies that we can hope for
a solution of many strange phenomena connected with
the clairvoyant faculty. I recollect that the seeress
of Prevorst experienced positive pain from the near
presence of water during her abnormal phases.
Reichenbach found certain psycho-pathological
conditions to be excited by various metals and foreign
bodies when brought into contact with the sensitive.
These observations are extremely useful if only in
producing an awareness of possible reasons for such
disturbance as may occur in the conditions already
cited.
At the outset the sittings should not last longer than
at most half-an-hour, but it is important that they
should be regular, both as to time and place. We are
already informed from a number of observations that
every action tends to repeat itself under similar
conditions. Habits of life and mind are thus formed so
that in time they become quite involuntary and
automatic. A cumulative effect is obtained by
attention to this matter of periodicity, while the use
of the same place for the same purpose tends to
dispose the mind to the performance of particular
functions. In striving for psychic development of any
sort we shall do well not to disregard these facts.
For since all actions tend to repeat themselves and to
become automatic, to pass from the domain of the
purposive into the habitual, the psychic faculties
will similarly, if actuated at any set time and place,
tend to bestir themselves to the same effects as those
to which they were first moved by the conscious will
and intention of the seer. Until the clairvoyant
faculty is fully assured and satisfactory results
obtained without any inconvenience to the seer, not
more than two persons should be present at the
sittings. These should be in close sympathy with the
seer and with each other.
When the sitting is over it will be found useful to
repair to another place and fully discuss the results
obtained, the impressions and feelings of the seer
during the seance, and matters which appear to have a
bearing on the facts observed.
A person should not be disheartened if at the first
few sittings nothing of any moment takes place, but
should persevere with patience and self-control.
Indeed, if we consider the fact that for hundreds of
generations the psychic faculties latent in man have
lain in absolute neglect, that perhaps the faculty of
clear vision has not been brought into activity by any
of our ancestors since remote ages, it should not be
thought remarkable that so few find the faculty in
them to be practically dormant. It should rather be a
matter of surprise that the faculty is still with us,
that it is not wholly irresponsive to the behests of
the soul. While in the course of physical evolution
many important functions have undergone remarkable
changes, and organs, once active and useful, have
become stunted, impotent, and in some cases extinct,
yet on the other hand we see that seeds which have
lain dormant in arid soil for hundreds of years can
spring into leaf and flower under the influence of a
suitable climate.
The vermiform appendix, so necessary to the bone
eaters of a carnivorous age, has no part in the
physical economy of a later and more highly-evolved
generation. The pineal gland and the pituitary body
are adjuncts of the brain whose functions have long
been in latency. The Anastatica hierochuntica,
commonly called the Rose of Jericho, is a wonderful
example of functional latency. The plant will remain
for ages rolled up like a ball of sun-dried heather,
but if placed in water it will immediately open out
and spread forth its nest of mossy green fronds, the
transition from seeming death to life taking place in
a few minutes. The hygrometric properties of the plant
are certainly exceptional. They illustrate the
responsiveness of certain natures to a particular
order of stimulus, and in a sense they illustrate the
functions of the human soul. The faculty of direct
vision is like the latent life of the vegetable world.
It waits only the conditions which favour its activity
and development, and though for generations it may
have lain dormant, yet in a few days or weeks it may
attain the proportions of a beautiful flower, a thing
of wonder and delight, gracing the Garden of the Soul.
CHAPTER V.
KINDS OF VISION
There are two kinds of vision, and each of
these may be perceived in two different ways. The two
sorts of vision are called the Direct Vision and the
Symbolic Vision.
The first of these is an exact representation of some
scene or incident which has taken place in the past or
will subsequently be experienced in the future. It may
have relation to the experience of the seer, or of
those who are present at the sitting, or yet may have
a general or public application.
The second order of vision is a representation by
ideograph, symbol or other indirect means, of events
similar to those conveyed by direct vision. The
visions of Ezekiel and John of Patmos are of the
symbolic order, and although to the seers themselves
there probably was a very clear apperception of their
import, yet for others they require interpretation. In
most cases it will be found that the nature of the
vision has relation to that sphere of life and
interest in which the seer or those for whom he is
serving are concerned. But this is not always the
case, for there are some peculiarly sensitive seers
whose visions have a wider range and a more general
application. In the first case it would seem that the
impressions latent in the individual sphere of
subconscious activity are brought into evidence, and
in the other case the seer comes into relations with
the world-soul or earth-sphere, so that political,
social and cosmic events are brought out of latency
into conscious perception. In most cases it will be
found that answers to questions are conveyed by
symbols, though this is not an invariable rule, as
will appear from the following remarks.
The vision, when it occurs, may be conveyed in one of
two ways: first, as a vivid picture affecting the
focus and retina of the eye, perfect in its outline
and colouring, and giving the sense of nearness or
distance; secondly, as a vivid mental impression
accompanied by a hazy or dim formation in the "field"
of vision. In this latter form it becomes an
apperception rather than a perception, the mind
receiving the impression of the vision to be conveyed
before it has had time to form and define itself in
the field.
As already intimated, there appears to be a connection
between the temperamental peculiarities of the two
classes of clairvoyants and the kind of vision
developed in them. Thus the direct vision is more
generally found in association with the passive
temperament. The direct vision is neither so regular
nor so constant as the symbolic vision owing to the
peculiarities of the negative or passive subject. When
it does develop, however, the direct vision is both
lucid and actual, and has literal fulfilment in the
world of experience and fact. It is an actual
representation of what has actually happened or will
have place in the future, or yet may be presently
happening at some place more or less distant.
The symbolic vision, on the other hand, is more
generally developed in the positive or active type of
seer. It has the advantage of being more regular and
constant in its occurrence than the direct vision,
while at the same time being open to the objection
that it is frequently misinterpreted. Nothing shows
this better perhaps than the various interpretations
which have been made of the Apocalypse.
The positive temperament appears to throw off the
mental images as speedily as they are developed in the
subconscious area, and goes out to meet them in a mood
of speculative enquiry. But the passive temperament
most frequently feels first and sees afterwards, the
visionary process being entirely devoid of speculation
and mental activity. In a word, the distinction
between them is that the one sees and thinks while the
other feels and sees.
The manner in which the visions appear to develop in
the field requires some description, and for reasons
which will presently appear it is essential that the
earliest experiments should be made in the light of a
duly informed expectancy.
At first the crystal or mirror will appear to be
overclouded by a dull, smoky vapour which presently
condenses into milky clouds among which are seen
innumerable little gold specks of light, dancing in
all directions, like gold-dust in a sunlit air. The
focus of the eye at this stage is inconstant, the
pupil rapidly expanding and contracting, while the
crystal or mirror alternately disappears in a haze and
reappears again. Then suddenly the haze disappears and
the crystal looms up into full view, accompanied by a
complete lapse of the seer into full consciousness of
his surroundings.
This may be the only experience during the first few
sittings. It may be that of many. But if it occurs it
is an entirely satisfactory and hopeful symptom. For
sooner or later, according to the degree of
susceptibility or responsiveness in the subject, there
will come a moment when the milky-looking clouds and
dancing starlights will suddenly vanish and a bright
azure expanse like an open summer sky will fill the
field of vision. The brain will now be felt to
palpitate spasmodically, as if opening and closing
again in the coronal region; there will be a
tightening of the scalp about the base of brain, as if
the floor of the cerebrum were contracting; the seer
will catch his breath with a spasmodic sigh and the
first vision will stand out clear and life-like
against the azure screen of space.
Now the danger at this supreme moment is that the seer
will be surprised into full waking consciousness.
During the process of abstraction which precedes every
vision or series of visions, the consciousness of the
seer is gradually but imperceptibly withdrawn from
physical surroundings. He forgets that he is seated in
a particular place or room, that he is in the company
of another or others. He forgets that he is gazing
into a crystal or mirror. He knows nothing, sees
nothing, hears nothing, save that which is being
enacted before the senses of his soul. He loses sight
for the time even of his own identity and becomes as
it were merged in the vision itself.
When, therefore, his attention is suddenly arrested by
an apparition, startling in its reality and
instantaneous production, the reaction is likely to be
both rapid and violent, so that the seer is frequently
carried back into full waking consciousness. When,
however, the mind is previously instructed and warned
of this stage of the process, a steady and
self-possessed attitude is ensured and a subconscious
feeling of expectancy manifests at the critical
moment. I have known so many cases of people being
surprised out of clairvoyance and so to have lost what
has often been an isolated experience, that this
treatise will be wholly justified if by the inclusion
of this warning the novice comes successfully through
his first experience of second sight.
We come now to the point where it becomes necessary to
consider other important reactions which the
development of any psychic sense involves. To some
favoured few these supernormal faculties appear to be
given without any cost to themselves. Perhaps they are
direct evolutional products, possibly psychic
inheritances; but to such as have them no price is
asked or penalty imposed.
Others there are who are impelled by their own
evolutional process to seek the development in
themselves of these psychic powers; and to these a
word of warning seems necessary, so that at the risk
of appearing didactic I must essay the task. To some
it may seem unwelcome, to others redundant and
supererogatory. But we are dealing with a new stage in
evolutional progress--the waking up of new forces in
ourselves and the prospective use of a new set of
faculties. It is of course open to anybody to
experiment blindly, and none will seek to deter them
save those who have some knowledge of the attendant
dangers, and which knowledge alone can help us to
avoid. I should consider the man more fool than hero
who, in entire ignorance of mechanics and aeronautics,
stepped on board an aeroplane and started the engines
running. Even the most skilful in any new field of
experiment or research consciously faces certain but
unknown dangers. The victims of the aeroplane--brave
pioneers of human enterprise and endeavour that they
were--fell by lack of knowledge. By lack of knowledge
also have the humane efforts of many physicians been
cut short at the outset of what might have been a
successful career. It was this very lack of knowledge
they knew to be the greatest of all dangers, and it
was this they had set out to remedy.
It is not less dangerous when we begin to pursue a
course of psychic development. The ordinary functions
of the mind are well within our knowledge and control.
There is always the will by which we may police the
territory under our jurisdiction and government. It is
another matter when we seek to govern a territory
whose peculiar features and native laws and customs
are entirely unknown to us. It is obvious that here
the will-power, if directed at all, is as likely to be
effectual for evil as for good. The psychic faculties
may indeed be opened up and the unknown region
explored, but at fatal cost, it may be, to all that
constitutes normal sanity and physical well-being; in
which case one may say with Hamlet it be better to
"bear those ills we have, than fly to others that we
know not of."
Some of the conditions imposed upon those who, not
being naturally gifted in this direction, would wish
to experiment in clairvoyant development, may
conveniently be stated and examined in another
chapter.
CHAPTER VI.
OBSTACLES TO CLAIRVOYANCE
Various impediments stand in the way of
inducing second sight, and certain others may be
expected to arise in connection with the faculty when
induced. Putting aside the greatest of all obstacles,
that of constitutional unfitness, as having already
been discussed in the preceding pages, the first
obstacle to be encountered is that of ill health. It
can hardly be expected that new areas can be opened up
in the mind without considerable change and adjustment
taking place by reflection in the physical economy.
The reaction is likely to be attended by physical
distress. But Nature is adaptable and soon
accommodates herself to changed conditions, so that
any results directly attributable to the development
of the psychic centres of activity is not likely to be
more than transient, providing that due regard has
been given to the normal requirements of health.
The importance of a moderate and nourishing diet
cannot be too strongly urged upon those who seek for
psychic development. All overloading of the stomach
with indigestible food and addiction to alcoholic
drinks tend to cloud the higher faculties. The brain
centres are thereby depleted, the heart suffers
strain, and the equilibrium of the whole system is
disturbed. Ill health follows, the mind is centred
upon the suffering body, spiritual aspiration ceases,
and the neglected soul folds its wings and falls into
the sleep of oblivion.
But, on the other hand, one must not suppose that the
adoption of a fruit and cereal diet will of itself
induce to the development of the psychic powers. It
will aid by removing the chief impediments of
congestion and disease. Many good people who adopt
this dietetic reform have a tendency to scratch one
another's shoulder blades and expect to find their
wings already sprouting. If it were as easy as this
the complacent cow would be high up in the scale of
spiritual aspirants.
The consciousness of man works from a centre which
co-ordinates and includes the phenomena of thought,
feeling, and volition. This centre is capable of rapid
displacement, alternating between the most external of
physical functions and the most internal of spiritual
operations. It cannot be active in all parts of our
complex constitutions at one and the same moment. When
one part of our nature is active another is dormant,
as is seen in the waking and sleeping stages, the
dream-life being in the middle ground between the
psychic and physical. It will therefore be obvious
that a condition in which the consciousness is held in
bondage by the infirmities of the body is not one
likely to be conducive to psychic development. For
this reason alone many aspirants have been turned back
from initiation. The constitution need not be robust,
but it should at all events be free from disorder and
pain. Some of the most ethereal and spiritual natures
are found in association with a delicate organism. So
long as the balance is maintained the soul is free to
develop its latent powers. A certain delicacy of
organization, together with a tendency to
hyperaesthesia, is most frequently noted in the
passive or direct seer; but a more robust and forceful
constitution may well be allied to the positive type
of seership.
As a chronic state of physical congestion is
altogether adverse to the development of the second
sight or any other psychic faculty, so the temporary
congestion following naturally upon a meal indicates
that it is not advisable to sit for psychic exercise
immediately after eating. Neither should a seance be
begun when food is due, for the automatism of the body
will naturally demand satisfaction at times when food
is usually taken and the preliminary processes of
digestion will be active. The best time is between
meals and especially between tea and supper, or an
hour after the last meal of the day, supposing it to
be of a light nature. The body should be at rest, and
duly fortified, and the mind should be contented and
tranquil.
The attitude of the would-be seer should not be too
expectant or over-anxious about results. All will come
in good time, and the more speedily if the conditions
are carefully observed. It is useless to force the
young plant in its growth. Take time, as Nature does.
It is a great work and much patience may be needed.
Nature is never in a hurry, and therefore she brings
everything to perfection. The acorn becomes the sturdy
oak only because Nature is content with small results,
because she has the virtue of endurance. She is
patient and careful in her beginnings, she nurses the
young life with infinite care, and her works are
wonderfully great and complete in their issues.
Moreover, they endure. Whoever breathes slowest lives
the longest.
This statement opens up a very important matter
connected with all psychic phenomena, and one that
deserves more than casual notice. It has been long
known to the people of the East that there is an
intimate connection between brain and lung action, and
modern experiment has shown by means of the spirometer
that the systole and diastole motion of the
hemispheres of the brain coincide exactly with the
respiration of the lungs. The brain as the organ of
the mind registers every emotion with unerring
precision. But so also do the lungs, as a few common
observations will prove. Thus if a person is in deep
thought the breathing will be found to be long and
regular, but if the mind is agitated the breathing
will be short and stertorous, while if fear affects
the mind the breathing is momentarily suspended. A
person never breathes from the base of the lung unless
his mind is engrossed. Hard exercise demands deep
breathing and is therefore helpful in producing good
mental reactions. It is said that the great preacher
De Witt Talmage used to shovel gravel from one side of
his cellar to the other as a preliminary to his fine
elocutional efforts. It is this obvious connection
between respiration and mental processes which is at
the base of the system of psycho-physical culture
known as Hatha Yoga in distinction from Râj
Yoga, which is concerned solely with mental and
spiritual development. The two systems, which have of
late years found frequent exposition in the New
Thought school, are to be found in Patanjali's Yoga
sutrâ. Some reference to the synchronous action
of lung and brain will also be found in Dr. Tafel's
translation and exposition of Swedenborg's luminous
work on The Brain. In this work the Swedish
seer frankly refers his illumination regarding the
functions of the brain to his faculty of introspective
vision or second sight, and it is of interest to
observe that all the more important discoveries in
this department of physiology during the last two
centuries are clearly anticipated by him. The
scientific works of this great thinker are far too
little known by the majority, who are apt to regard
him only as a visionary and a religious teacher.
Ad rem. The vision is produced. The faculty of
clairvoyance is an established fact of experience and
has become more or less under the control of the mind.
There will yet remain one or two difficulties
connected with the visions. One is that of time
measure, and another that of interpretation. The
former is common to both orders of vision, the direct
and the symbolic. The difficulty of interpretation is,
of course, peculiar to the latter order of vision.
The sensing of time is perhaps the greatest difficulty
encountered by the seer, and this factor is often the
one that vitiates an otherwise perfect revelation. I
have known cartomantes and diviners of all sorts to
express their doubt as to the possibility of a correct
measure of time. Yet it is a question that follows
naturally upon a clear prediction--When?
It is sometimes impossible to determine whether a
vision relates to the past, the present, or the
future. In most cases, however, the seer has an
intuitive sense of the time-relations of a vision
which is borne in upon him with the vision itself. It
will generally be observed that in ordinary mental
operations the time sense is subject to localization,
and a distinct throw of the mind will be experienced
when speaking of the past and the future. Personally I
find the past to be located on my left and the future
on my right hand, but others inform me that the habit
of mind, places the past behind and the future in
front of them, while others again have the past
beneath their feet and the future over their heads. It
is obviously a habit of mind, and this usually inheres
in the visionary state so that a sense of time is
found to attach to all visions, though it cannot be
relied upon to register on every occasion. But also it
is frequently found that there is an automatic
allocation of the visions, those that are near of
fulfilment being in the foreground of the field, the
approximate in the middle ground, and the distant in
the background; position answering to time interval.
In such case the vision has a certain definition or
focus according to the degree of its proximity. These
points are, however, best decided by empiricism, and
rarely does it happen that the intuitive sense of the
seer is at fault when allowed to have play.
The other difficulty to which I have referred, that of
interpretation of symbols when forming the substance
of the vision, may be dealt with somewhat more fully.
Symbolism is a universal language and revelation most
frequently is conveyed by means of it. As a
preliminary to the study of symbolism the student
should read Swedenborg's Hieroglyphical Key to
Natural and Spiritual Mysteries, one of the
earliest of his works and in a great measure the
foundation of his thought and teaching. The Golden
Book of Hermes containing the twenty-two Tarots is
open to a universal interpretation as may be seen from
the works of the Kabalists, and in regard to their
individual application may be regarded in a fourfold
light, having reference to the spiritual, rational,
psychic and physical planes of existence. It is by
means of symbols that the spiritual intelligences
signal themselves to our minds, and the most exalted
vision is, as an expression of intelligence, only
intelligible by reason of its symbolism. Something
more may be said in regard to the interpretation of
symbols which may possibly be of use to those who have
made no special study of the subject, and this may
conveniently form the material of another chapter.
CHAPTER VII.
SYMBOLISM
Symbols formed the primitive language of the
human race, they spoke and wrote in symbols. The
hieroglyphic writings of the aborigines of Central
America, of the ancient Peruvians, of the Mongolians,
and of the ancient Copts and Hebrews all point to the
universal use of the ideograph for the purpose of
recording and conveying ideas.
If we study the alphabets of the various peoples, we
shall find in them clear indications of the physical
and social conditions under which they evolved. Thus
the Hebrew alphabet carries with it unmistakable
evidence of the nomadic and simple life of those
"dwellers in tents." The forms of the letters are
derived from the shapes of the constellations, of
which twelve are zodiacal, six northern and six
southern. This implies a superficial intimacy with the
heavens such as would result from a life spent in hot
countries with little or no superstructure to shut out
the view. The wise among them would sit beneath the
stars in the cool night air and figure out the
language of the heavens.
It was God's message to mankind, and they sought not
only to understand it but to make imitation of it. So
they built an alphabet of forms after the pattern of
things in the heavens. But when we come to the names
of these forms or letters we come at once into touch
with the life of the people. Thus aleph, an
ox; beth, a tent; daleth, a tent-door;
lamed, an ox-goad; mem, water; tzadde,
a fish-hook; quoph, a coil of rope; gimel,
a camel; yod, a hand; oin, an eye; vau,
a hook or link; heth, a basket; caph,
a head; nun, a fish; phe, a mouth; shin,
a tooth; resh, a head; etc., all speaking to
us of the ordinary things of a simple, wandering life.
These symbols were compounded to form ideographs, as aleph
= a, and lamed = l, being the first and last
of the zodiacal circle, were employed for the name of
the Creator, the reverse of these, la,
signifying non-existence, negation, privation. In
course of time a language and a literature would be
evolved, but from the simple elements of a nomadic
life. Knowledge came to them by action and the use of
the physical sense. They had no other or more
appropriate confession of this than is seen in the
root דע yedo--knowledge, compounded of the three
symbols yod, daleth, oin--a
hand, a door, an eye. The hand is a symbol of action,
power, ability; the door, of entering, initiation; the
eye, of seeing, vision, evidence, illumination.
Hence the ideograph formed by the collation of these
symbols signifies, opening the door to see, i.e.
enquiry.
The Chinese alphabet of forms is entirely hieroglyphic
and symbolical in its origin, though it has long
assumed a typal regularity. What were once curved and
crude figures have become squared and uniform
letterpress. But the names of these forms bring us
into touch at once with the early life of the
Mongolian race. We have, however, indications of a
wider scope than was enjoyed by the primitive Semites,
for whereas we find practically all the symbols of the
Hebrews employed as alphabetical forms, we also have
others which indicate artifice, such as hsi,
box; chieh, a seal or stamp; mien, a
roof; chin, a napkin; kung, a bow; mi,
silk; lei, a plough, and many others, such as
the names of metals, wine, vehicles, leather in
distinction from hides, etc. But further, we have a
mythology as part of the furniture of the primitive
mind, the dragon and the spirit or demon being
employed as radical symbols.
Considered in regard to their origin, symbols may be
defined as thought-forms which embody, by the
association of ideas, definite meanings in the mind
that generates them. They wholly depend for their
significance upon the laws of thought and the
correspondence that exists between the spiritual and
material worlds, between the subject and object of our
consciousness, the noumenon and phenomenon.
All symbols therefore may be translated by reference
to the known nature, quality, properties and uses of
the objects they represent. A few interpretations of
symbols actually seen in the mirror may serve to
illustrate the method of interpretation.
A foot signifies a journey, and also understanding. A
mouth denotes speech, revelation, a message. An ear
signifies news, information; if ugly and distorted,
scandal and abuse.
The sun, if shining brightly, denotes prosperity,
honours, good health, favours.
The moon when crescent denotes success, public
recognition, increase and improvement; when gibbous,
sickness, decadence, loss and trouble.
The sun being rayless or seen through a haze denotes
sickness to a man, some misfortune, danger of
discredit. When eclipsed it denotes the ruin or death
of a man. The moon similarly affected denotes equal
danger to a woman. These are all natural
interpretations and probably would be immediately
appreciated.
But every symbol has a threefold or fourfold
interpretation and the nature of the enquiry or
purpose for which the vision is sought will indicate
the particular meaning conveyed. For if the enquiry be
concerning things of the spiritual world the
interpretation of the answering vision must be in
terms of that world, and similarly if the question has
relation to the intellectual or the physical worlds.
Thus a pain of scales would denote in the spiritual
sense, absolute justice; in the intellectual,
judgment, proportion, comparison, reason; in the
social, debt or obligation, levy, rate, or tax; and in
the material, balance of forces, equilibrium, action
and reaction. If the scales are evenly balanced the
augury will be good and favourable to the purport of
the quest, but if weighted unevenly it is a case of mene,
tekel, upharsin; for it shows an erring
judgment, an unbalanced mind, failure in one's
obligations, injustice. A sword seen in connection
with the scales denotes speedy judgment and
retribution. This is an illustration of an artificial
symbol.
A ship is a symbol of trading, of voyaging, and is
frequently used in the symbolical vision. If in full
sail it indicates that communication with the
spiritual world is about to be facilitated, that news
from distant lands will come to hand, that trade will
increase, that a voyage will be taken. If writing
should appear on the sails it will be an additional
means of enlightenment. If flying the pirate flag it
denotes translation to another land, death. The land
indicated may be the spiritual world itself, in which
case the death will be natural; but if it should be a
foreign country, then death will take place there by
some unlooked-for disaster. The ship's sails being
slack denotes a falling off of afflatus or spiritual
influx, loss of trade, misfortune, delays and bad
news, or if news is expected it will not come to hand.
Black bread denotes a famine; spotted or mottled
bread, a plague. This symbol was seen in June 1896,
with other symbols which connected it with India, and
there followed a great outbreak of bubonic plague in
that country. This symbol, however, was not properly
understood until the event came to throw light upon
it. The following note is from a seance which took
place in India in the spring of 1893: "A leaf of
shamrock is seen. It denotes the United Kingdom or the
Triple Alliance. It is seen to split down the centre
with a black line. It symbolizes the breaking of a
treaty. Also that Ireland, whose symbol is the
shamrock, will be separated by an autonomous
government from the existing United Kingdom and will
be divided into two factions."
In this way all symbols seen in the crystal or mirror
may be interpreted by reference to their known
properties and uses, as well as by the associations
existing between them and other things, persons and
places, in the mind of the seer. Nor is it always
required that the scryer should understand symbology,
for as already said, the meanings of most of the
symbols will be conveyed to the consciousness of the
seer at the time of their appearance in the field.
Experience will continually throw new light upon the
screen of thought, and a symbol once known will assume
a constant signification with each seer, so that in
course of time a language will be instituted by means
of which constant revelations will be made.
It will thus be obvious, I think, that symbolism is to
a large extent subject to a personal colouring, so
that the same symbol may, by different associations,
convey a different meaning to various seers. This may
arise in part from the diversities of individual
experience, of temperament, and the order to which the
soul belongs in the spiritual world. These
dissimilarities between individuals may be noted from
their highest intellectual convictions down to the
lowest of their sensations, and it is difficult to
account for it. We all have the same laws of thought
and the same general constitution. Humanity
comprehends us all within the bonds of a single
nature. Yet despite these facts we are divided by
differences of opinion, of emotion, of sympathy, of
taste and faculty. It is probable that these
differences obtain in spheres immeasurably higher than
our own, the sole element of consent being the
recognition of dependence upon a Higher Power. God is
the co-ordinating centre in a universe of infinite
diversity.
Therefore, despite the fact that symbolism is capable
of a universal interpretation, it would appear that
the images projected by the magical power of the soul
must have different significations with each of us,
the meanings being in some mysterious way in agreement
with the nature of the person who sees them. Hence we
may come to the conclusion that every person must be
his own interpreter, there being no universal code for
what are peculiarly individualized messages. For
although every symbol has a general signification in
agreement with its natural properties and uses, it yet
obtains a particular signification with the
individual.
It is within common experience with those who have
regard to the import of dreams, wherein the faculty of
seership is acting on its normal plane, that a dream
constantly recurring is found to have a particular
meaning, which however is not applicable to others who
have a similar dream. Every person is a seer in dream
life, but few pay that attention to dreams which their
origin and nature warrant. The crystal or mirror is an
artificial means of bringing this normal faculty of
dreaming into activity in waking life. Those who are
capable of making the dream life normal to the working
consciousness, rise to a higher plane when they sleep.
But, as stated above, the differences of import or
meaning, even in dream life, of any particular symbol
is a common experience. One person will dream of
wading in water whenever there is trouble ahead.
Another will dream of a naked child, and yet another
of coal, when similar trouble is in store. Butchers'
meat will signify financial trouble to one person, to
another the same will denote a fortunate speculation.
The controlling factor in this matter would appear to
be founded in the mental and psychic constitution
conferred by physical heredity and psychic tradition,
converging at the conception of the individual and
expressed in the birth. Probably an argument could
thence be made in regard to the influence of the
planets and the general cosmic disposition attending
upon birth: I have frequently found that dreams may be
interpreted by reference to the individual horoscope
of birth, and if dreams, possibly also visions, which
are but dreams brought into the field of conscious
reality. But any such argument, however tempting,
would be beyond the scope of this work.
CHAPTER VIII.
ALLIED PSYCHIC PHASES
The faculty of second sight is not by any
means the most common of the psychic powers.
Psychometric impressions which proceed by the sense of
touch into that of a superior order of feeling are far
more general. We are affected much more than is
generally recognized by the impressions gathered from
the things we have contact with, and it is quite a
common experience that very delicate and sensitive
people take the "atmosphere" of places into which they
go. I have in mind an instance of an extremely
high-keyed person who invariably takes on the
atmosphere of new localities, houses and even rooms.
Going to view a house with the object of taking it on
rental, she will as likely as not pronounce against
the moment she enters on the ground that it is a
"house of death" or a "quarrelsome house," full of
sickness, intemperance or what not, and wherever
enquiry has been possible it has invariably confirmed
her impressions. On one occasion she had telegraphed
to engage a room at an hotel in a seaside town, and on
being shown to it by the maid found that it was
locked. While the maid went to fetch the key the young
lady tried the door and immediately received a
psychometric impression. "Oh, M--," she said to her
companion, "we cannot possibly have this room, there's
a corpse in it!" This was confirmed, almost as soon as
said, by the appearance of the proprietor, who
explained that the maid had made a mistake in the
number of the room, and then, feeling that there was a
state of tension, confidentially informed his visitors
that the locked room had really been booked to them
but the old lady who was to have vacated it that
morning had unfortunately died, and in order not to
distress the other visitors the door had been locked
pending the removal of the body, and even the servants
had not been informed of it.
The experiments of Denton recorded in his Soul of
Things are full of interest for those who would
learn something more about the phenomena of
psychometry.
The suggestion is that every particle of matter has
its own aura or "atmosphere" in which are stored up
the experiences of that particle. What is said of the
particle applies also to the mass of any body, and in
effect we get the aura of a room, of a house, of a
town, of a city; and so successively until we come to
that of the planet itself. These stored-up impressions
are not caused by the mental action of human beings in
association with the material psychometrized, they
appertain entirely to the associations of the material
itself, and the psychometric sense consists in
recovering these associations and bringing them into
terms of human sense and consciousness. The experience
seems to suggest a nexus between the individualized
human soul and the world-soul in which the generic
life is included; also that the human soul is a
specialized evolution from the world-soul, and hence
inclusive of all stages of experience beneath the
human. I think it was Draper who suggested in his Conflict
that a man's shadow falling upon a wall produced an
indelible impression which was capable of being
revived. The cinematograph film is that brick wall
raised to the nth power of impressibility. The
occultist will point you to a universal medium as much
above the cinema film as that is above the brick or
stone, and in which are stored up the memoria
mundi. It is this sensitized envelope of the
planetary atom that your sensitive taps by means of
his clairvoyant, psychometric and clairaudient senses.
Clairaudience is far more general than second sight,
but there is the same variability in the range of
perception as is seen in clairvoyance and psychometry.
Thus while one hears only the evil suggestions of
"obsessing spirits" or discarnate souls being dinned
into his ears, another will be lifted to the third
heaven and hear "things unutterable." Brain-cell
discharges will hardly account for the phenomena of
clairaudience. A brain-cell discharge never goes
beyond the repetition of one's own name in some
familiar voice, or at most the revival of a phrase or
the monotonous clang of a neighbouring church bell.
These are not clairaudiences at all. Clairaudience
consists in receiving auditory impressions of
intelligible phrases not previously associated with
the name of person or place involved in the statement.
These impressions may be sporadic or may be
continuous. In the case of a genuine development where
the interior sense is fully opened up, the
communication will be continuous and normal, as much
so as ordinary conversation, and the translation of
consciousness into terms of sense will be so rapid and
unimpeded as to give the impression to an Englishman
that he is listening to his native language and to a
Frenchman that he is listening to French, though the
communication may proceed from a source which renders
this impossible. The universal language of humanity is
neither Volapuk, nor Esperanto, nor Ido. It is
Thought, and when thought proceeds from a point beyond
the plane of differentiation it can be determined
along the line which makes for English as readily as
that which makes for French, or any other tongue. It
is they of the soul-world who convey the thought, it
is we of the sublunary world who translate that
thought into our own language. The Hebrew prophets
were almost uniformly instructed by means of
clairaudience. But as I have already said there are
degrees of clairaudience, as of any other psychic
faculty. The danger is that a false value may be set
upon the experiences, especially during the early
stages of development when everything is very new and
very wonderful.
Telepathy is another and yet more general phrase of
psychic activity. It may consist in the transmission
from one person to another of a feeling or impression
merely, which results in a certain degree of awareness
to the state of mind in which the transmitter may be
at the time, as when a mother has a "feeling" that all
is not well with her absent child. Or it may yet take
a more definite and perspicuous form, even to the
transmission of details such as the names of persons
and places, of numbers, forms and incidents. Telepathy
commonly exists between persons in close sympathy; and
when two persons are working along separate lines
toward the same result, it is quite usual that they
unconsciously "telepath" with one another, their
brains being for the time in synchronous vibration.
Spiritual communication in any degree is nothing more
or less than sympathy--those who feel together, think
together. The modern development of the aerial post is
a step towards the universal federation of thought,
but it is not comparable with the astral post which
carries a thousand miles an hour. In this sort of
correspondence the communication is written like any
ordinary letter designed for transmission, but instead
of stamping and posting it, a lighted match is applied
to the finished work. The material part is destroyed,
but the intangible and only real and lasting part
remains behind. This is attached, by the direction of
the will, to a particular person and set in a certain
direction. If all the conditions have been properly
observed it will not fail to reach its destination. I
have fortunately been able to demonstrate this fact in
public on more than one occasion. The phenomenon is
repeated in a less striking form in every case of what
is called "crossing," as when one correspondent feels
suddenly called upon to write urgently to another and
receives a reply to his enquiries while his letter is
still in course of delivery.
Nature is full of a subtle magic of this sort for
which we have no organized science. It is said that if
you put snails together and afterwards separate them,
placing each upon a copper ground to which electric
wires are attached, a shock given to one snail will be
registered by the other at the same moment. I have not
tried this theory, but the idea is fundamental to a
mass of telepathic observations which have found
practical expression in wireless telegraphy. Some
thirty years ago, however, I made trial of the twin
magnet theory and was entirely successful in getting
wireless messages from one room to another. The
performance was, however, clumsy and tedious, and I
did not then know enough to see how it could be
perfected. The idea is now in the very safe custody of
the Patents Office.
Community of taste can be demonstrated under hypnosis.
It is not otherwise usually active in sensitives, and
Swedenborg was hence of opinion that the sense of
taste could not be obsessed. This, however, is
incorrect. I have illustrated community of all the
senses under hypnosis in circumstances which entirely
precluded the possibility of feint or imposition on
the part of the subject.
Another phase of psychic activity is that illustrated
in "dowsing" or water-finding by means of the hazel
fork. It may be accounted a form of hyperaesthesia and
no doubt has a nervous expression, but it is not the
less psychic in its origin. I have already referred to
the action of water upon psychic sensitives, and there
seems little room for doubt that it is the
psychometric sense which, by means of the
self-extensive faculty inhering in consciousness,
registers the presence of the great diamagnetic agent.
Professor Barrett has written a most interesting
monograph on this subject, and there are many books
extant which make reference to and give examples of
this curious phenomenon. The late British Consul at
Trieste and famous explorer and linguist, Sir Richard
Burton, could detect the presence of a cat at a
considerable distance, and I have heard that Lord
Roberts experiences the same paralyzing influence by
the proximity of the harmless feline. If, therefore,
one can register the presence of a cat, and another
that of a dead body, I see no difficulty in others
registering water or any other antipathetic. All we
have to remember is that these things are psychic in
their origin, and not ignorantly confound sensation
with consciousness, or hyperaesthesia with the various
psychopathic faculties we have been discussing. But it
is necessary to return to our main subject and
consider where our developed clairvoyant or
second-sight faculty will lead us, and what sort of
experience we may expect to gain by its use. These
points may now be dealt with.
CHAPTER IX.
EXPERIENCE AND USE
First let us have the facts, we can then best
see what use we can make of them. This I think is the
correct position in regard to any abnormal claim that
is made upon our attention. Everybody has heard of the
prophecies of the Brahmin seer, most people have some
acquaintance with the phenomena attending the
clairvoyance of the seeress of Prevorst, while the
experiences of Emanuel Swedenborg have been set forth
in many biographies, but in none more lucidly and
dispassionately than that by William White. Traditions
have come to us concerning the clairvoyance of the
Greek exponent of the Pythagorean teachings,
Apollonius of Tyana, and the case of Cavotte, who
predicted his own death and that of Robespierre and
others by the guillotine, is on record. The
illumination of Andrew Jackson Davis, the Poughkeepsie
seer, and that of Thomas Lake Harris of Fountain
Grove, are modern examples of abnormal faculty of a
nature which places them outside the field of direct
evidence. A prophecy made from the use of the
super-sense which is followed by exact fulfilment
appears to be the best criterion, though it is a very
imperfect illustration of the scope of clairvoyance.
The following instances are within my personal
experience, and being already on record and well
attested, will serve equally to illustrate the fact of
clairvoyance as would numerous others within my
knowledge.
In June, 1896, a lady visited me in Manchester Square
and, being anxious on several points, asked that I
would scry for her. A blue beryl was used as agent.
She was told that she would have news from a tropical
country concerning the birth of a child, a boy, who
would arrive in the following year in the month of
February. That on a certain date while travelling she
would meet with an accident to the right leg. Previous
to this, in October she would have a welcome surprise
connected with papers and a contest in which her son
was engaged.
Now here was a network of disaster for any would-be
prophet who relied upon what is called the "lucky
shot." If we enumerate the items of prediction, on any
of which a fatal error could have been made, we shall
find a very formidable list:--
A tropical country.
A birth.
A boy then unborn.
February, 1897.
A journey on a particular date.
The right leg.
The son.
October.
Papers.
At least nine points on which the faculty could have
been wholly at fault. The fulfilment, however, came in
due course. The lady heard that her sister, then
vicereine of India, was about to have a child, and in
February, 1897, a son was born to Lord Elgin. In
October the lady referred to was agreeably surprised
to learn that her son had passed his examination for
the military college with honours. Further, while
boarding a train at Victoria station she had the
misfortune to slip between the platform and the
footboard, so that the shin of the right leg was badly
damaged and severe muscular strain was also suffered,
in consequence of which she was laid up for several
days.
Mrs. H. was consulted by an authoress, her profession
being unknown to the scryer. She was told that she
would go up a dingy staircase with a roll of papers
under her arm; that she would see a dark man, thickset
and of quiet demeanour. He would take the roll of
papers and it would be a source of good fortune to
her. The prediction was literally fulfilled.
The first case cited is an example of the positive and
symbolic type of vision; the second being of the
passive and direct type.
Mrs. A. was consulted by a lady of the writer's
acquaintance and was told that she would not marry the
man to whom she was then engaged as there was a
certain other person, described, coming across the
seas to claim her. She would meet him three years
later in the month of January.
The event transpired exactly as stated, though nothing
at that time appeared less probable, and indeed the
lady was not a little irate at the allusion to the
breaking off of the engagement and of marrying a man
whom she had never seen and for whom she could have no
sort of regard. In fact, the whole revelation was very
revolting to one so wholly absorbed as was she at the
time. It cannot be argued that this was a case of
suggestion working itself out, for one cannot
auto-suggest the arrival of a person of a particular
description from a distant land to one's own
drawing-room at any time, and there is here a
prediction as to the date which was duly fulfilled.
This was a case of direct vision.
Mrs. G. consulted a seer on September 27, 1894. She
was told she would have sickness affecting the loins
and knees; that she would be the owner of a house in
the month of December; that a removal would be made
when the trees were leafless; that there would be a
dispute about a sum of money.
This is positive or symbolical clairvoyance. The
symbols seen were as follow: a figure with a black
cloth about the loins, the figure stooping and resting
the hands upon its knees. A house covered with snow,
bare trees around it. A bird on a leafless branch; the
bird flies away. Several hands seen grabbing at a pile
of money.
All the predictions were fulfilled.
Interpretations of symbols when made during the vision
are frequently far removed from what one would be led
to expect. But we have to remember that the seer is
then in a psychologized state, and there is reason to
believe that interpretations made from the inner plane
of consciousness are due to the fact that the symbols
appear in a different light. Our ordinary dreams
follow the same change. While asleep we are impressed
by the importance and logical consistency of the dream
incident, which assumes, possibly, the proportions of
a revelation, but which dissolves into ridiculous
triviality and nonsense as soon as we awake. The
reason is that there is a complete hiatus between the
visionary and the waking state of consciousness, and
even the laws of thought appear to undergo a change as
the centre of consciousness slides down from the inner
to the outer world of thought and feeling.
In the Eastern conception the three states of jagrata,
waking, swapna, dreaming, and sushupti, sleeping, are
penetrated by the thread of consciousness, the
sutrâtma, a node of complete unconsciousness
separating one state from the next. The centre of
consciousness, like a bead on the thread, alternates
between the three states as it is impelled by desire
or will.
I have known sickness predicted, both as to
time and nature of the malady; the receipt of
unexpected letters and telegrams with indications of
their contents and resulting incident; changes,
voyages, business transactions, deaths, and even
changes in the religious views of individuals, all by
means of the crystal vision.
It sometimes happens that the visionary state is
induced by excessive emotion during which the
prophetic faculty is considerably heightened. Some
temperaments on the other hand will fall into the
clairvoyant condition when engaged in deep thought.
The thread of thought seems suddenly to be broken, and
there appears a vision wholly unconnected with the
subject but a moment ago absorbing the mind. It is as
if the soul, while probing the depths of its inner
consciousness, comes into contact with the thin
partition which may be said to divide the outer world
of reason and doubt from the inner world of intuition
and direct perception, and breaking through, emerges
into the light beyond. In trance there is generally a
development of other super-senses, such as
clairaudience and psychic touch, as well as
clairvoyance. Examples might be multiplied and would
but serve to show that the rapport existing between
the human soul and the world soul, the individual
consciousness and the collective consciousness, is
capable of being actively induced by recourse to
appropriate means and developed where it exists in
latency by means of the crystal, the black concave
mirror or other suitable agent. As yet, however, the
majority are wholly ignorant of the existence of such
psychic faculties, and even those who possess them are
conscious of having but an imperfect control of them.
As in the case of genius where nature is opening up
new centres of activity in the mind, the casual
observer notes an eccentricity hardly distinguishable
from some incipient forms of insanity; so the
development of new psychic faculties is frequently
attended by temporary loss of control over the normal
brain functions. Loss of memory, hysteria,
absent-mindedness, unconscious utterance of thought,
illusions, irritability, indifference, misanthropy and
similar perversions are not infrequent products of the
preliminary stages of psychic development. These,
however, will pass away as the new faculty pushes
through into full existence. Nature is jealous of her
offspring and concentrates the whole of her forces
when in the act of generation, and that is the reason
of her apparent neglect of powers and functions,
normally under her control, while the evolution of a
new faculty is in process. Let it be understood
therefore that the faculty of clairvoyance or any
other super-sense is not to be artificially developed
without some cost to those who seek it. "The universe
is thine; take what thou wilt, but pay the price,"
says Emerson. This is the divine mandate. It is not
merely a question of the price of a crystal or a
mirror, the sacrifice of time, the exercise of
patience: it may mean something much more than this.
It is a question of the price of a new faculty. What
is it worth to you? That is the price you will be
required to pay. And with this equation in mind the
reader must consider the use to which, when obtained,
he will apply his faculty; for the virtue of
everything is in its use. It is reasonable to presume
that one's daily life can supply the true answer. To
what use are we employing the faculties we already
have, all of them acquired with as much pain and
suffering, it may be, as any new ones we are ever
likely to evolve? If we are using these faculties for
the benefit of the race we shall employ others that
are higher to even greater effect. In other case it is
not worth the effort of acquiring, nor is it likely
that anybody of a radically selfish nature will take
the trouble to acquire it. Natural selection is the
fine sieve which the gods use in their prospecting.
The gross material does not go through.
CONCLUSION.
The foregoing short treatise will gain some
practical value by a statement of the conditions most
suitable for scrying.
A diffused natural light, preferably from the north,
is always better than an artificial light.
The subject should sit with his back to the source of
light, at a distance from the mirror determined by its
focus; or if the agent be a crystal it should be held
in the hands, one supporting the other.
Steady gazing in complete silence should be maintained
for a quarter of an hour, which may be afterwards
gradually extended to half or even a full hour.
Success depends largely upon idiosyncrasy and
temperamental aptitude. Seers are often to be found
among men and women of imperfect education owing to
fitness of temperament; seers of this order are born
with the faculty. Others, seemingly non-sensitive at
first, may develop the faculty after a few short
sittings.
The eyes should not be strained, but the gaze should
be allowed to rest casually yet steadily on the agent
as if one were reading a book.
It will be found that the sight is presently drawn
inwards to a focus beyond the surface of the agent.
This opening up of the field of vision is the symptom
of success. The next step is indicated by a change in
the atmosphere of the field. Instead of reflecting or
remaining translucent, the agent will appear to cloud
over. This will appear to become milky, then to be
diffused with colour which changes to black or murky
brown, and finally the screen appears to be drawn
away, revealing a picture, a scene, figures in action,
symbolical forms, sentences, etc.
The physiological symptoms are: first, a slight chill
along the spine like cold water trickling from the
neck downwards; secondly, a returning flush of heat
from the base of the spine upwards to the crown of the
head; thirdly, a gaping or spasmodic action of the
brain; and lastly, a deep inward drawing of the
breath, as if sobbing. When these symptoms follow
closely upon one another, vision will be assured. It
generally happens, however, that the various symptoms
are separately developed by repeated sittings, only
appearing in proper sequence when the experiment is
finally successful.
One of the most interesting phases of this development
of second sight is the opening up of lost impressions,
the revival of lapsed memories; "looking for one
thing, you find another" is an experience in daily
life which has a psychological application. The things
which pass into the limbo of forgetfulness are never
lost to us. They remain stored up in latency and are
ready to spring into activity as soon as the depths of
the mind are probed. Necessarily this experience is
more generally interesting than pleasant, but it
serves to give one a sense of the connectedness of
life's incident and to show a certain sequential
necessity in the course of events. The "whyness" of
our various experiences is revealed when they are
displayed in their true relations and given their true
value in the scheme of individual evolution. As
detached experiences they appear without reason or
purpose, apparently futile, often painful and even
cruel; but as a consecutive scheme, completed by the
revival of all the connecting links, the wisdom,
justice, kindness and beneficence of the Great Arbiter
of our destinies are fully and conspicuously revealed.
My own first suspicions of a former embodied existence
were derived from psychic experiences, and later on
were confirmed by the course of events. I saw myself
reaping that which I had sown, and I observed that
what was sown in ignorance might be reaped in the
light of a fuller knowledge; only we must henceforth
be wise in the sowing. I would say in conclusion that
it is the duty of man to himself and humanity not only
to hold himself in readiness, but also to fit himself
for the reception of new light. Since evolution is the
law of life and the glory of going on man's highest
guerdon, and since we are all candidates for
responsibility, asking as reward for work well done
to-day a task of greater magnitude on the morrow, it
appears that the development of the psychic faculties
may well form an orderly step in the process of human
perfectibility, and help to bring us nearer to the
source of all good. If it serves only to keep open the
door between the two worlds it will have filled a good
purpose, and if in the writing of this little
exposition, I may have contributed to the confidence
and security of any who may adventure these obscure
paths, I shall be well content.
THE END