Versione ebook di Readme.it powered by Softwarehouse.it    THE VITAL MESSAGE 
BY ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE 
PREFACE 
In "The New Revelation" the first dawn of the coming change 
has been described. In "The Vital Message" the sun has risen 
higherand one sees more clearly and broadly what our new 
relations with the Unseen may be. As I look into the future of 
the human race I am reminded of how oncefrom amid the bleak 
chaos of rock and snow at the head of an Alpine passI looked 
down upon the far stretching view of Lombardyshimmering in the 
sunshine and extending in one splendid panorama of blue lakes and 
green rolling hills until it melted into the golden haze which 
draped the far horizon. Such a promised land is at our very feet 
whichwhen we attain itwill make our present civilisation seem 
barren and uncouth. Already our vanguard is well over the pass. 
Nothing can now prevent us from reaching that wonderful land 
which stretches so clearly before those eyes which are opened to 
see it. 
That stimulating writerV. C. Desertishas remarked that 
the Second Comingwhich has always been timed to follow 
Armageddonmay be fulfilled not by a descent of the spiritual to 
usbut by the ascent of our material plane to the spiritualand 
the blending of the two phases of existence. It isat leasta 
fascinating speculation. But without so complete an overthrow of 
the partition walls as this would imply we know enough already to 
assure ourselves of such a close approximation as will surely 
deeply modify all our views of scienceof religion and of life. 
What form these changes may take and what the evidence is upon 
which they will be founded are briefly set forth in this volume. 
ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE. 
CROWBOROUGH
July1919. 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER 
I THE TWO NEEDFUL READJUSTMENTS 
II THE DAWNING OF THE LIGHT 
III THE GREAT ARGUMENT 
IV THE COMING WORLD 
V IS IT THE SECOND DAWN? 
APPENDICES 
A. DR. GELEY'S EXPERIMENTS 
B. A PARTICULAR INSTANCE 
C. SPIRIT PHOTOGRAPHY 
D. THE CLAIRVOYANCE OF MRS. B. 
THE VITAL MESSAGE 
CHAPTER I 
THE TWO NEEDFUL READJUSTMENTS 
It has been our fateamong all the innumerable generations 
of mankindto face the most frightful calamity that has ever 
befallen the world. There is a basic fact which cannot be 
deniedand should not be overlooked. For a most important 
deduction must immediately follow from it. That deduction is 
that wewho have borne the painsshall also learn the lesson 
which they were intended to convey. If we do not learn it and 
proclaim itthen when can it ever be learned and proclaimed
since there can never again be such a spiritual ploughing and 
harrowing and preparation for the seed? If our soulswearied 
and tortured during these dreadful five years of selfsacrifice 
and suspensecan show no radical changesthen what 
souls will ever respond to a fresh influx of heavenly 
inspiration? In that case the state of the human race would 
indeed be hopelessand never in all the coming centuries would 
there be any prospect of improvement. 
Why was this tremendous experience forced upon mankind? 
Surely it is a superficial thinker who imagines that the great 
Designer of all things has set the whole planet in a fermentand 
strained every nation to exhaustionin order that this or that 
frontier be movedor some fresh combination be formed in the 
kaleidoscope of nations. Nothe causes of the convulsionand 
its objectsare more profound than that. They are essentially 
religiousnot political. They lie far deeper than the national 
squabbles of the day. A thousand years hence those national 
results may matter littlebut the religious result will rule the 
world. That religious result is the reform of the decadent 
Christianity of to-dayits simplificationits purificationand 
its reinforcement by the facts of spirit communion and the clear 
knowledge of what lies beyond the exit-door of death. The 
shock of the war was meant to rouse us to mental and moral 
earnestnessto give us the courage to tear away venerable shams
and to force the human race to realise and use the vast new 
revelation which has been so clearly stated and so abundantly 
provedfor all who will examine the statements and proofs with 
an open mind. 
Consider the awful condition of the world before this 
thunder-bolt struck it. Could anyonetracing back down the 
centuries and examining the record of the wickedness of manfind 
anything which could compare with the story of the nations during 
the last twenty years! Think of the condition of Russia during 
that timewith her brutal aristocracy and her drunken democracy
her murders on either sideher Siberian horrorsher Jew 
baitings and her corruption. Think of the figure of Leopold of 
Belgiuman incarnate devil who from motives of greed carried 
murder and torture through a large section of Africaand yet was 
received in every courtand was eventually buried after a 
panegyric from a Cardinal of the Roman Church--a church which 
had never once raised her voice against his diabolical career. 
Consider the similar crimes in the Putumayowhere British 
capitalistsif not guilty of outragecan at least not be 
acquitted of having condoned it by their lethargy and trust in 
local agents. Think of Turkey and the recurrent massacres of her 
subject races. Think of the heartless grind of the factories 
everywherewhere work assumed a very different and more 
unnatural shape than the ancient labour of the fields. Think of 
the sensuality of many richthe brutality of many poorthe 
shallowness of many fashionablethe coldness and deadness of 
religionthe absence anywhere of any deeptrue spiritual 
impulse. Thinkabove allof the organised materialism of 
Germanythe arrogancethe heartlessnessthe negation of 
everything which one could possibly associate with the living 
spirit of Christ as evident in the utterances of Catholic 
Bishopslike Hartmann of Cologneas in those of Lutheran 
Pastors. Put all this together and say if the human race has 
ever presented a more unlovely aspect. When we try to find the 
brighter spots they are chiefly where civilisationas apart 
from religionhas built up necessities for the communitysuch 
as hospitalsuniversitiesand organised charitiesas 
conspicuous in Buddhist Japan as in Christian Europe. We cannot 
deny that there has been much virtuemuch gentlenessmuch 
spirituality in individuals. But the churches were empty husks
which contained no spiritual food for the human raceand had in 
the main ceased to influence its actionssave in the direction 
of soulless forms. 
This is not an over-coloured picture. Can we not seethen
what was the inner reason for the war? Can we not understand 
that it was needful to shake mankind loose from gossip and pink 
teasand sword-worshipand Saturday night drunksand selfseeking 
politics and theological quibbles--to wake them up and 
make them realise that they stand upon a narrow knife-edge 
between two awful eternitiesand thathere and nowthey have 
to finish with make-beliefsand with real earnestness and 
courage face those truths which have always been palpable where 
indolenceor cowardiceor vested interests have not obscured 
the vision. Let us try to appreciate what those truths are 
and the direction which reform must take. It is the new 
spiritual developments which predominate in my own thoughtsbut 
there are two other great readjustments which are necessary 
before they can take their full effect. On the spiritual side I 
can speak with the force of knowledge from the beyond. On the 
other two points of reformI make no such claim. 
The first is that in the Biblewhich is the foundation of 
our present religious thoughtwe have bound together the living 
and the deadand the dead has tainted the living. A mummy and 
an angel are in most unnatural partnership. There can be no 
clear thinkingand no logical teaching until the old 
dispensation has been placed on the shelf of the scholarand 
removed from the desk of the teacher. It is indeed a wonderful 
bookin parts the oldest which has come down to usa book 
filled with rare knowledgewith historywith poetrywith 
occultismwith folklore. But it has no connection with modern 
conceptions of religion. In the main it is actually antagonistic 
to them. Two contradictory codes have been circulated under 
one coverand the result is dire confusion. The one is a scheme 
depending upon a special tribal Godintensely anthropomorphic 
and filled with ragejealousy and revenge. The conception 
pervades every book of the Old Testament. Even in the psalms
which are perhaps the most spiritual and beautiful sectionthe 
psalmistamid much that is noblesings of the fearsome things 
which his God will do to his enemies. "They shall go down alive 
into hell." There is the keynote of this ancient document--a 
document which advocates massacrecondones polygamyaccepts 
slaveryand orders the burning of so-called witches. Its Mosaic 
provisions have long been laid aside. We do not consider 
ourselves accursed if we fail to mutilate our bodiesif we eat 
forbidden dishesfail to trim our beardsor wear clothes of two 
materials. But we cannot lay aside the provisions and yet regard 
the document as divine. No learned quibbles can ever persuade an 
honest earnest mind that that is right. One may say: "Everyone 
knows that that is the old dispensationand is not to be acted 
upon." It is not true. It is continually acted uponand 
always will be so long as it is made part of one sacred book. 
William the Second acted upon it. His German God which wrought 
such mischief in the world was the reflection of the dreadful 
being who ordered that captives be put under the harrow. The 
cities of Belgium were the reflection of the cities of Moab. 
Every hard-hearted brute in historymore especially in the 
religious warshas found his inspiration in the Old Testament. 
Smite and spare not!An eye for an eye!how readily the 
texts spring to the grim lips of the murderous fanatic. Francis 
on St. Bartholomew's nightAlva in the LowlandsTilly at 
MagdeburgCromwell at Droghedathe Covenainters at 
Philliphaughthe Anabaptists of Munsterand the early Mormons 
of Utahall found their murderous impulses fortified from this 
unholy source. Its red trail runs through history. Even where 
the New Testament prevailsits teaching must still be dulled and 
clouded by its sterner neighbour. Let us retain this honoured 
work of literature. Let us remove the taint which poisons the 
very spring of our religious thought. 
This isin my opinionthe first clearing which should be 
made for the more beautiful building to come. The second is less 
importantas it is a shifting of the point of viewrather than 
an actual change. It is to be remembered that Christ's life in 
this world occupiedso far as we can estimate33 yearswhilst 
from His arrest to His resurrection was less than a week. Yet 
the whole Christian system has come to revolve round His death
to the partial exclusion of the beautiful lesson of His life. 
Far too much weight has been placed upon the oneand far too 
little upon the otherfor the deathbeautifuland indeed 
perfectas it wascould be matched by that of many scores of 
thousands who have died for an ideawhile the lifewith its 
consistent record of charitybreadth of mindunselfishness
couragereasonand progressivenessis absolutely unique and 
superhuman. Even in these abbreviatedtranslatedand secondhand 
records we receive an impression such as no other life can 
give--an impression which fills us with utter reverence. 
Napoleonno mean judge of human naturesaid of it: "It is 
different with Christ. Everything about Him astonishes me. 
His spirit surprises meand His will confounds me. Between Him 
and anything of this world there is no possible comparison. He 
is really a being apart. The nearer I approach Him and the 
closer I examine Himthe more everything seems above me." 
It is this wonderful lifeits example and inspirationwhich 
was the real object of the descent of this high spirit on to our 
planet. If the human race had earnestly centred upon that 
instead of losing itself in vain dreams of vicarious sacrifices 
and imaginary fallswith all the mystical and contentious 
philosophy which has centred round the subjecthow very 
different the level of human culture and happiness would be today! 
Such theorieswith their absolute want of reason or 
moralityhave been the main cause why the best minds have been 
so often alienated from the Christian system and proclaimed 
themselves materialists. In contemplating what shocked their 
instincts for truth they have lost that which was both true and 
beautiful. Christ's death was worthy of His lifeand rounded 
off a perfect careerbut it is the life which He has left as 
the foundation for the permanent religion of mankind. All the 
religious warsthe private feudsand the countless miseries of 
sectarian contentionwould have been at least minimisedif not 
avoidedhad the bare example of Christ's life been adopted as 
the standard of conduct and of religion. 
But there are certain other considerations which should have 
weight when we contemplate this life and its efficacy as an 
example. One of these is that the very essence of it was that He 
critically examined religion as He found itand brought His 
robust common sense and courage to bear in exposing the shams and 
in pointing out the better path. THAT is the hall-mark of 
the true follower of Christand not the mute acceptance of 
doctrines which areupon the face of themfalse and pernicious
because they come to us with some show of authority. What 
authority have we nowsave this very lifewhich could compare 
with those Jewish books which were so binding in their forceand 
so immutably sacred that even the misspellings or pen-slips of 
the scribewere most carefully preserved? It is a simple 
obvious fact that if Christ had been orthodoxand had 
possessed what is so often praised as a "child-like faith there 
could have been no such thing as Christianity. Let reformers who 
love Him take heart as they consider that they are indeed 
following in the footsteps of the Master, who has at no time said 
that the revelation which He brought, and which has been so 
imperfectly used, is the last which will come to mankind. In our 
own times an equally great one has been released from the centre 
of all truth, which will make as deep an impression upon the 
human race as Christianity, though no predominant figure has yet 
appeared to enforce its lessons. Such a figure has appeared once 
when the days were ripe, and I do not doubt that this may occur 
once more. 
One other consideration must be urged. Christ has not given 
His message in the first person. If He had done so our position 
would be stronger. It has been repeated by the hearsay and 
report of earnest but ill-educated men. It speaks much for 
education in the Roman province of Judea that these fishermen, 
publicans and others could even read or write. Luke and Paul 
were, of course, of a higher class, but their information 
came from their lowly predecessors. Their account is splendidly 
satisfying in the unity of the general impression which it 
produces, and the clear drawing of the Master's teaching and 
character. At the same time it is full of inconsistencies and 
contradictions upon immaterial matters. For example, the four 
accounts of the resurrection differ in detail, and there is no 
orthodox learned lawyer who dutifully accepts all four versions 
who could not shatter the evidence if he dealt with it in the 
course of his profession. These details are immaterial to the 
spirit of the message. It is not common sense to suppose that 
every item is inspired, or that we have to make no allowance for 
imperfect reporting, individual convictions, oriental 
phraseology, or faults of translation. These have, indeed, been 
admitted by revised versions. In His utterance about the letter 
and the spirit we could almost believe that Christ had foreseen 
the plague of texts from which we have suffered, even as He 
Himself suffered at the hands of the theologians of His day, who 
then, as now, have been a curse to the world. We were meant 
to use our reasons and brains in adapting His teaching to the 
conditions of our altered lives and times. Much depended upon 
the society and mode of expression which belonged to His era. To 
suppose in these days that one has literally to give all to the 
poor, or that a starved English prisoner should literally love 
his enemy the Kaiser, or that because Christ protested against 
the lax marriages of His day therefore two spouses who loathe 
each other should be for ever chained in a life servitude and 
martyrdom--all these assertions are to travesty His teaching and 
to take from it that robust quality of common sense which was its 
main characteristic. To ask what is impossible from human nature 
is to weaken your appeal when you ask for what is reasonable. 
It has already been stated that of the three headings under 
which reforms are grouped, the exclusion of the old dispensation, 
the greater attention to Christ's life as compared to His death, 
and the new spiritual influx which is giving us psychic religion, 
it is only on the latter that one can quote the authority of the 
beyond. Here, however, the case is really understated. In 
regard to the Old Testament I have never seen the matter treated 
in a spiritual communication. The nature of Christ, however, and 
His teaching, have been expounded a score of times with some 
variation of detail, but in the main as reproduced here. Spirits 
have their individuality of view, and some carry over strong 
earthly prepossessions which they do not easily shed; but reading 
many authentic spirit communications one finds that the idea of 
redemption is hardly ever spoken of, while that of example and 
influence is for ever insisted upon. In them Christ is the 
highest spirit known, the son of God, as we all are, but nearer 
to God, and therefore in a more particular sense His son. He 
does not, save in most rare and special cases, meet us when we 
die. Since souls pass over, night and day, at the rate of about 
100 a minute, this would seem self-evident. After a time we may 
be admitted to His presence, to find a most tender, sympathetic 
and helpful comrade and guide, whose spirit influences all things 
even when His bodily presence is not visible. This is the 
general teaching of the other world communications concerning 
Christ, the gentle, loving and powerful spirit which broods ever 
over that world which, in all its many spheres, is His special 
care. 
Before passing to the new revelation, its certain proofs and 
its definite teaching, let us hark back for a moment upon the two 
points which have already been treated. They are not absolutely 
vital points. The fresh developments can go on and conquer the 
world without them. There can be no sudden change in the ancient 
routine of our religious habits, nor is it possible to conceive 
that a congress of theologians could take so heroic a step as to 
tear the Bible in twain, laying one half upon the shelf and one 
upon the table. Neither is it to be expected that any formal 
pronouncements could ever be made that the churches have all laid 
the wrong emphasis upon the story of Christ. Moral courage will 
not rise to such a height. But with the spiritual quickening and 
the greater earnestness which will have their roots in this 
bloody passion of mankind, many will perceive what is reasonable 
and true, so that even if the Old Testament should remain, like 
some obsolete appendix in the animal frame, to mark a lower 
stage through which development has passed, it will more and more 
be recognised as a document which has lost all validity and which 
should no longer be allowed to influence human conduct, save by 
way of pointing out much which we may avoid. So also with the 
teaching of Christ, the mystical portions may fade gently away, 
as the grosser views of eternal punishment have faded within our 
own lifetime, so that while mankind is hardly aware of the change 
the heresy of today will become the commonplace of tomorrow. 
These things will adjust themselves in God's own time. What is, 
however, both new and vital are those fresh developments which 
will now be discussed. In them may be found the signs of how the 
dry bones may be stirred, and how the mummy may be quickened with 
the breath of life. With the actual certainty of a definite life 
after death, and a sure sense of responsibility for our own 
spiritual development, a responsibility which cannot be put upon 
any other shoulders, however exalted, but must be borne by each 
individual for himself, there will come the greatest 
reinforcement of morality which the human race has ever 
known. We are on the verge of it now, but our descendants will 
look upon the past century as the culmination of the dark ages 
when man lost his trust in God, and was so engrossed in his 
temporary earth life that he lost all sense of spiritual reality. 
CHAPTER II 
THE DAWNING OF THE LIGHT 
Some sixty years ago that acute thinker Lord Brougham 
remarked that in the clear sky of scepticism he saw only one 
small cloud drifting up and that was Modern Spiritualism. It was 
a curiously inverted simile, for one would surely have expected 
him to say that in the drifting clouds of scepticism he saw one 
patch of clear sky, but at least it showed how conscious he was 
of the coming importance of the movement. Ruskin, too, an 
equally agile mind, said that his assurance of immortality 
depended upon the observed facts of Spiritualism. Scores, and 
indeed hundreds, of famous names could be quoted who have 
subscribed the same statement, and whose support would dignify 
any cause upon earth. They are the higher peaks who have been 
the first to catch the light, but the dawn will spread until 
none are too lowly to share it. Let us turn, therefore, 
and inspect this movement which is most certainly destined to 
revolutionise human thought and action as none other has done 
within the Christian era. We shall look at it both in its 
strength and in its weakness, for where one is dealing with what 
one knows to be true one can fearlessly insist upon the whole of 
the truth. 
The movement which is destined to bring vitality to the dead 
and cold religions has been called Modern Spiritualism." The 
modernis goodsince the thing itselfin one form or another
is as old as historyand has alwayshowever obscured by forms
been the red central glow in the depths of all religious ideas
permeating the Bible from end to end. But the word 
Spiritualismhas been so befouled by wicked charlatansand so 
cheapened by many a sad incidentthat one could almost wish that 
some such term as "psychic religion" would clear the subject of 
old prejudicesjust as mesmerismafter many years of obloquy
was rapidly accepted when its name was changed to hypnotism. On 
the other handone remembers the sturdy pioneers who have fought 
under this bannerand who were prepared to risk their 
careerstheir professional successand even their reputation 
for sanityby publicly asserting what they knew to be the truth. 
Their braveunselfish devotion must do something to cleanse the 
name for which they fought and suffered. It was they who nursed 
the system which promises to benot a new religion--it is far 
too big for that--but part of the common heritage of knowledge 
shared by the whole human race. Perfected Spiritualismhowever
will probably bear about the same relation to the Spiritualism of 
1850 as a modern locomotive to the bubbling little kettle which 
heralded the era of steam. It will end by being rather the proof 
and basis of all religions than a religion in itself. We have 
already too many religions--but too few proofs. 
Those first manifestations at Hydesville varied in no way 
from many of which we have record in the pastbut the result 
arising from them differed very muchbecausefor the first 
timeit occurred to a human being not merely to listen to 
inexplicable soundsand to fear them or marvel at thembut to 
establish communication with them. John Wesley's father 
might have done the same more than a century before had the 
thought occurred to him when he was a witness of the 
manifestations at Epworth in 1726. It was only when the young 
Fox girl struck her hands together and cried "Do as I do" that 
there was instant complianceand consequent proof of the 
presence of an INTELLIGENT invisible forcethus differing 
from all other forces of which we know. The circumstances were 
humbleand even rather sordidupon both sides of the veil
human and spirityet it wasas time will more and more clearly 
showone of the turning points of the world's historygreater 
far than the fall of thrones or the rout of armies. Some artist 
of the future will draw the scene--the sitting-room of the 
woodenshack-like housethe circle of half-awed and halfcritical 
neighboursthe child clapping her hands with upturned 
laughing facethe dark corner shadows where these strange new 
forces seem to lurk--forces often apparentand now come to stay 
and to effect the complete revolution of human thought. We may 
well ask why should such great results arise from such petty 
sources? So argued the highbrowed philosophers of Greece and 
Rome when the outspoken Paulwith the fisherman Peter and his 
half-educated disciplestraversed all their learned theories
and with the help of womenslavesand schismatic Jews
subverted their ancient creeds. One can but answer that 
Providence has its own way of attaining itsresultsand that it 
seldom conforms to our opinion of what is most appropriate. 
We have a larger experience of such phenomena nowand we can 
define with some accuracy what it was that happened at Hydesville 
in the year 1848. We know that these matters are governed by law 
and by conditions as much as any other phenomena of the universe
though at the moment it seemed to the public to be an isolated 
and irregular outburst. On the one handyou had a material
earth-bound spirit of a low order of development which needed a 
physical medium in order to be able to indicate its presence. On 
the otheryou had that rare thinga good physical medium. The 
result followed as surely as the flash follows when the electric 
battery and wire are both properly adjusted. Corresponding 
experimentswhere effectand cause duly followare being 
worked out at the present moment by Professor Crawfordof 
Belfastas detailed in his two recent bookswhere he shows that 
there is an actual loss of weight of the medium in exact 
proportion to the physical phenomenon produced.[1] The whole 
secret of mediumship on this material side appears to lie in the 
powerquite independent of oneselfof passively giving up some 
portion of one's bodily substance for the use of outside 
influences. Why should some have this power and some not? We do 
not know--nor do we know why one should have the ear for music 
and another not. Each is born in usand each has little 
connection with our moral natures. At first it was only physical 
mediumship which was knownand public attention centred upon 
moving tablesautomatic musical instrumentsand other crude but 
obvious examples of outside influencewhich were unhappily very 
easily imitated by rogues. Since then we have learned that there 
are many forms of mediumshipso different from each other that 
an expert at one may have no powers at all at the other. The 
automatic writerthe clairvoyantthe crystal-seerthe trance 
speakerthe photographic mediumthe direct voice mediumand 
othersare allwhen genuinethe manifestations of one force
which runs through varied channels as it did in the gifts 
ascribed to the disciples. The unhappy outburst of roguery was 
helpedno doubtby the need for darkness claimed by the early 
experimenters--a claim which is by no means essentialsince the 
greatest of all mediumsD. D. Homewas able by the exceptional 
strength of his powers to dispense with it. At the same time the 
fact that darkness rather than lightand dryness rather than 
moistureare helpful to good results has been abundantly 
manifestedand points to the physical laws which underlie the 
phenomena. The observation made long afterwards that wireless 
telegraphyanother etheric forceacts twice as well by night as 
by daymaycorroborate the general conclusions of the early 
Spiritualistswhile their assertion that the least harmful light 
is red light has a suggestive analogy in the experience of the 
photographer. 
[1] "The Reality of Psychic Phenomena." 
Experiences in Psychical Science.(Watkins.) 
There is no space here for the history of the rise and 
development of the movement. It provoked warm adhesion and 
fierce opposition from the start. Professor Hare and Horace 
Greeley were among the educated minority who tested and endorsed 
its truth. It was disfigured by many grievous incidentswhich 
may explain but does not excuse the perverse opposition which it 
encountered in so many quarters. This opposition was really 
largely based upon the absolute materialism of the agewhich 
would not admit that there could exist at the present moment such 
conditions as might be accepted in the far past. When actually 
brought in contact with that life beyond the grave which they 
professed to believe inthese people wincedrecoiledand 
declared it impossible. The science of the day was also rooted 
in materialismand discarded all its own very excellent axioms 
when it was faced by an entirely new and unexpected proposition. 
Faraday declared that in approaching a new subject one should 
make up one's mind a priori as to what is possible and what 
is not! Huxley said that the messagesEVEN IF TRUE
interested him no more than the gossip of curates in a 
cathedral city.Darwin said: "God help us if we are to believe 
such things." Herbert Spencer declared against itbut had no 
time to go into it. At the same time all science did not come so 
badly out of the ordeal. As already mentionedProfessor Hare
of Philadelphiainventoramong other thingsof the oxyhydrogen 
blow-pipewas the first man of note who had the moral 
courageafter considerable personal investigationto declare 
that these new and strange developments were true. He was 
followed by many medical menboth in America and in Britain
including Dr. Elliotsonone of the leaders of free thought in 
this country. Professor Crookesthe most rising chemist in 
EuropeDr. Russel Wallace the great naturalistVarley the 
electricianFlammarion the French astronomerand many others
risked their scientific reputations in their brave assertions of 
the truth. These men were not credulous fools. They saw and 
deplored the existence of frauds. Crookes' letters upon the 
subject are still extant. In very many cases it was the 
Spiritualists themselves who exposed the frauds. They 
laughedas the public laughedat the sham Shakespeares and 
vulgar Caesars who figured in certain seance rooms. They 
deprecated also the low moral tone which would turn such powers 
to prophecies about the issue of a race or the success of a 
speculation. But they had that broader vision and sense of 
proportion which assured them that behind all these follies and 
frauds there lay a mass of solid evidence which could not be 
shakenthough like all evidenceit had to be examined before it 
could be appreciated. They were not such simpletons as to be 
driven away from a great truth because there are some dishonest 
camp followers who hang upon its skirts. 
A great centre of proof and of inspiration lay during those 
early days in Mr. D. D. Homea Scottish-Americanwho possessed 
powers which make him one of the most remarkable personalities of 
whom we have any record. Home's lifewritten by his second 
wifeis a book which deserves very careful reading. This man
who in some aspects was more than a manwas before the public 
for nearly thirty years. During that time he never received 
payment for his servicesand was always readyto put 
himself at the disposal of any bona-fide and reasonable 
enquirer. His phenomena were produced in full lightand it was 
immaterial to him whether the sittings were in his own rooms or 
in those of his friends. So high were his principles that upon 
one occasionthough he was a man of moderate means and less than 
moderate healthhe refused the princely fee of two thousand 
pounds offered for a single sitting by the Union Circle in Paris. 
As to his powersthey seem to have included every form of 
mediumship in the highest degree--self-levitationas witnessed 
by hundreds of credible witnesses; the handling of firewith the 
power of conferring like immunity upon others; the movement 
without human touch of heavy objects; the visible materialisation 
of spirits; miracles of healing; and messages from the deadsuch 
as that which converted the hard-headed ScotRobert Chambers
when Home repeated to him the actual dying words of his young 
daughter. All this came from a man of so sweet a nature and of 
so charitable a dispositionthat the union of all qualities 
would seem almost to justify those whoto Home's great 
embarrassmentwere prepared to place him upon a pedestal above 
humanity. 
The genuineness of his psychic powers has never been 
seriously questionedand was as well recognised in Rome and 
Paris as in London. One incident only darkened his careerand 
itwas one in which he was blamelessas anyone who carefully 
weighs the evidence must admit. I allude to the action taken 
against him by Mrs. Lyonwhoafter adopting him as her son and 
settling a large sum of money upon himendeavoured to regain
and did regainthis money by her unsupported assertion that he 
had persuaded her illicitly to make him the allowance. The facts 
of his life arein my judgmentample proof of the truth of the 
Spiritualist positionif no other proof at all had been 
available. It is to be remarked in the career of this entirely 
honest and unvenal medium that he had periods in his life when 
his powers deserted him completelythat he could foresee these 
lapsesand thatbeing honest and unvenalhe simply abstained 
from all attempts until the power returned. It is this 
intermittent character of the gift which isin my opinion
responsible for cases when a medium who has passed the most rigid 
tests upon certain occasions is afterwards detected in 
simulatingvery clumsilythe results which he had once 
successfully accomplished. The real power having failedhe has 
not the moral courage to admit itnor the self-denial to forego 
his fee which he endeavours to earn by a travesty of what was 
once genuine. Such an explanation would cover some facts which 
otherwise are hard to reconcile. We must also admit that some 
mediums are extremely irresponsible and feather-headed people. A 
friend of minewho sat with Eusapia Palladinoassured me that 
he saw her cheat in the most childish and bare-faced fashionand 
yet immediately afterwards incidents occurred which were 
absolutely beyond anynormal powers to produce. 
Apart from Homeanother episode which marks a stage in the 
advance of this movement was the investigation and report by the 
Dialectical Society in the year 1869. This body was composed of 
men of various learned professions who gathered together to 
investigate the alleged factsand ended by reporting that 
they really WERE facts. They were unbiasedand their 
conclusions were founded upon results which were very soberly set 
forth in their reporta most convincing document whicheven now 
in 1919after the lapse of fifty yearsis far more intelligent 
than the greater part of current opinion upon this subject. None 
the lessit was greeted by a chorus of ridicule by the ignorant 
Press of that daywhoif the same men had come to the opposite 
conclusion in spite of the evidencewould have been ready to 
hail their verdict as the undoubted end of a pernicious movement. 
In the early daysabout 1863a book was written by Mrs. de 
Morganthe wife of the well-known mathematician Professor de 
Morganentitled "From Matter to Spirit." There is a sympathetic 
preface by the husband. The book is still well worth reading
for it is a question whether anyone has shown greater brain power 
in treating the subject. In it the prophecy is made that as the 
movement develops the more material phenomena will decrease and 
their place be taken by the more spiritualsuch as automatic 
writing. This forecast has been fulfilledfor though physical 
mediums still exist the other more subtle forms greatly 
predominateand call for far more discriminating criticism in 
judging their value and their truth. Two very convincing forms 
of mediumshipthe direct voice and spirit photographyhave also 
become prominent. Each of these presents such proof that it is 
impossible for the sceptic to face themand he can only avoid 
them by ignoring them. 
In the case of the direct voice one of the leading exponents 
is Mrs. Frenchan amateur medium in Americawhose work is 
described both by Mr. Funk and Mr. Randall. She is a frail 
elderly ladyyet in her presence the most masculine and robust 
voices make communicationseven when her own mouth is covered. 
I have myself investigated the direct voice in the case of four 
different mediumstwo of them amateursand can have no doubt of 
the reality of the voicesand that they are not the effect of 
ventriloquism. I was more struck by the failures than by the 
successesand cannot easily forget the passionate pantings with 
which some entity strove hard to reveal his identity to me
but without success. One of these mediums was tested afterwards 
by having the mouth filled with coloured waterbut the voice 
continued as before. 
As to spirit photographythe most successful results are 
obtained by the Crewe circle in Englandunder the mediumship of 
Mr. Hope and Mrs. Buxton.[2] I have seen scores of these 
photographswhich in several cases reproduce exact images of the 
dead which do not correspond with any pictures of them taken 
during life. I have seen fathermotherand dead soldier son
all taken together with the dead son looking far the happier and 
not the least substantial of the three. It is in these varied 
forms of proof that the impregnable strength of the evidence 
liesfor how absurd do explanations of telepathyunconscious 
cerebration or cosmic memory become when faced by such phenomena 
as spirit photographymaterialisationor the direct voice. 
Only one hypothesis can cover every branch of these 
manifestationsand that is the system of extraneous life and 
action which has alwaysfor seventy yearsheld the field for 
any reasonable mind which had impartially considered the 
facts. 
[2] See Appendix. 
I have spoken of the need for careful and cool-headed 
analysis in judging the evidence where automatic writing is 
concerned. One is bound to exclude spirit explanations until all 
natural ones have been exhaustedthough I do not include among 
natural ones the extreme claims of far-fetched telepathy such as 
that another person can read in your thoughts things of which you 
were never yourself aware. Such explanations are not 
explanationsbut mystifications and absurditiesthough they 
seem to have a special attraction for a certain sort of psychical 
researcherwho is obviously destined to go on researching to the 
end of timewithout ever reaching any conclusion save that of 
the patience of those who try to follow his reasoning. To give a 
good example of valid automatic scriptchosen out of many which 
I could quoteI would draw the reader's attention to the facts 
as to the excavations at Glastonburyas detailed in "The Gate of 
Remembrance" by Mr. Bligh Bond. Mr. Bligh Bondby the wayis 
not a Spiritualistbut the same cannot be said of the writer 
of the automatic scriptan amateur mediumwho was able to 
indicate the secrets of the buried abbeywhich were proved to be 
correct when the ruins were uncovered. I can truly say that
though I have read much of the old monastic lifeit has never 
been brought home to me so closely as by the messages and 
descriptions of dear old Brother Johannesthe earth-bound 
spirit--earthbound by his great love for the old abbey in which 
he had spent his human life. This bookwith its practical 
sequelmay be quoted as an excellent example of automatic 
writing at its highestfor what telepathic explanation can cover 
the detailed description of objects which lie unseen by any human 
eye? It must be admittedhoweverthat in automatic writing you 
are at one end of the telephoneif one may use such a simile
and you haveno assurance as to who is at the other end. You 
may have wildly false messages suddenly interpolated among 
truthful ones--messages so detailed in their mendacity that it is 
impossible to think that they are not deliberately false. When 
once we have accepted the central fact that spirits change little 
in essentials when leaving the bodyand that in consequence 
the world is infested by many low and mischievous typesone can 
understand that these untoward incidents are rather a 
confirmation of Spiritualism than an argument against it. 
Personally I have received and have been deceived by several such 
messages. At the same time I can say that after an experience of 
thirty years of such communications I have never known a 
blasphemousan obscene or an unkind sentence come through. 
admithoweverthat I have heard of such cases. Like attracts 
likeand one should know one's human company before one joins in 
such intimate and reverent rites. In clairvoyance the same 
sudden inexplicable deceptions appear. I have closely followed 
the work of one female mediuma professionalwhose results are 
so extraordinarily good that in a favourable case she will give 
the full names of the deceased as well as the most definite and 
convincing test messages. Yet among this splendid series of 
results I have notes of several in which she was a complete 
failure and absolutely wrong upon essentials. How can this be 
explained? We can only answer that conditions were obviously 
not propitiousbut why or how are among the many problems of the 
future. It is a profound and most complicated subjecthowever 
easily it may be settled by the "ridiculous nonsense" school of 
critics. I look at the row of books upon the left of my desk as 
I write--ninety-six solid volumesmany of them annotated and 
well thumbedand yet I know that I am like a child wading ankle 
deep in the margin of an illimitable ocean. But thisat least
I have very clearly realisedthat the ocean is there and that 
the margin is part of itand that down that shelving shore the 
human race is destined to move slowly to deeper waters. In the 
next chapterI will endeavour to show what is the purpose of the 
Creator in this strange revelation of new intelligent forces 
impinging upon our planet. It is this view of the question which 
must justify the claim that this movementso long the subject of 
sneers and ridiculeis absolutely the most important development 
in the whole history of the human raceso important thatif we 
could conceive one single man discovering and publishing ithe 
would rank before Christopher Columbus as a discoverer of new 
worldsbefore Paul as a teacher of new religious truthsand 
before Isaac Newton as a student of the laws of the Universe. 
Before opening up this subject there is one consideration 
which should have due weightand yet seems continually to be 
overlooked. The differences between various sects are a very 
small thing as compared to the great eternal duel between 
materialism and the spiritual view of the Universe. That is the 
real fight. It is a fight in which the Churches championed the 
anti-material viewbut they have done it so unintelligentlyand 
have been continually placed in such false positionsthat they 
have always been losing. Since the days of Hume and Voltaire and 
Gibbon the fight has slowly but steadily rolled in favour of the 
attack. Then came Darwinshowing with apparent truththat man 
has never fallen but always risen. This cut deep into the 
philosophy of orthodoxyand it is folly to deny it. Then again 
came the so-called "Higher Criticism showing alleged flaws and 
cracks in the very foundations. All this time the churches were 
yielding ground, and every retreat gave a fresh jumping-off 
place for a new assault. It has gone so far that at the present 
moment a very large section of the people of this country, rich 
and poor, are out of all sympathy not only with the churches but 
with the whole Spiritual view. Now, we intervene with our 
positive knowledge and actual proof--an ally so powerful that we 
are capable of turning the whole tide of battle and rolling it 
back for ever against materialism. We can say: We will meet 
you on your own ground and show you by material and scientific 
tests that the soul and personality survive." That is the aim of 
Psychic Scienceand it has been fully attained. It means an end 
to materialism for ever. And yet this movementthis Spiritual 
movementis hooted at and reviled by Romeby Canterbury and 
even by Little Betheleach of them for once acting in concert
and including in their battle line such strange allies as the 
Scientific Agnostics and the militant Free-thinkers. Father 
Vaughan and the Bishop of Londonthe Rev. F. B. Meyer and Mr. 
CloddThe Church Timesand "The Freethinker are united in 
battle, though they fight with very different battle cries, 
the one declaring that the thing is of the devil, while the other 
is equally clear that it does not exist at all. The opposition 
of the materialists is absolutely intelligent since it is clear 
that any man who has spent his life in saying No" to all 
extramundane forces isindeedin a pitiable position when
after many yearshe has to recognise that his whole philosophy 
is built upon sand and that "Yes" was the answer from the 
beginning. But as to the religious bodieswhat words can 
express their stupidity and want of all proportion in not running 
halfway and more to meet the greatest ally who has ever 
intervened to change their defeat into victory? What gifts this 
all-powerful ally brings with himand what are the terms of his 
alliancewill now be considered. 
CHAPTER III 
THE GREAT ARGUMENT 
The physical basis of all psychic belief is that the soul is 
a complete duplicate of the bodyresembling it in the smallest 
particularalthough constructed in some far more tenuous 
material. In ordinary conditions these two bodies are 
intermingled so that the identity of the finer one is entirely 
obscured. At deathhoweverand under certain conditions in the 
course of lifethe two divide and can be seen separately. Death 
differs from the conditions of separation before death in that 
there is a complete break between the two bodiesand life is 
carried on entirely by the lighter of the twowhile the heavier
like a cocoon from which the living occupant has escaped
degenerates and disappearsthe world burying the cocoon with 
much solemnity by taking little pains to ascertain what has 
become of its nobler contents. It is a vain thing to 
urge that science has not admitted this contentionand that the 
statement is pure dogmatism. The science which has not examined 
the facts hasit is truenot admitted the contentionbut its 
opinion is manifestly worthlessor at the best of less weight 
than that of the humblest student of psychic phenomena. The real 
science which has examined the facts is the only valid authority
and it is practically unanimous. I have made personal appeals to 
at least one great leader of science to examine the facts
however superficiallywithout any successwhile Sir William 
Crookes appealed to Sir George Stokesthe Secretary of the Royal 
Societyone of the most bitter opponents of the movementto 
come down to his laboratory and see the psychic force at work
but he took no notice. What weight has science of that sort? It 
can only be compared to that theological prejudice which caused 
the Ecclesiastics in the days of Galileo to refuse to look 
through the telescope which he held out to them. 
It is possible to write down the names of fifty professors in 
great seats of learning who have examined and endorsed these 
factsand the list would include many of the greatest 
intellects which the world has produced in our time--Flammarion 
and LombrosoCharles Richet and Russel WallaceWillie Reichel
MyersZollnerJamesLodgeand Crookes. Therefore the facts 
HAVE been endorsed by the only science that has the right to 
express an opinion. I have neverin my thirty years of 
experienceknown one single scientific man who went thoroughly 
into this matter and did not end by accepting the Spiritual 
solution. Such may existbut I repeat that I have never heard 
of him. Let usthenwith confidence examine this matter of the 
spiritual body,to use the term made classical by Saint Paul. 
There are many signs in his writings that Paul was deeply versed 
in psychic mattersand one of these is his exact definition of 
the natural and spiritual bodies in the service which is the 
final farewell to life of every Christian. Paul picked his 
wordsand if he had meant that man consisted of a natural body 
and a spirit he would have said so. When he said "a spiritual 
body" he meant a body which contained the spirit and yet was 
distinct from the ordinary natural body. That is exactly 
what psychic science has now shown to be true. 
When a man has taken hashish or certain other drugshe not 
infrequently has the experience that he is standing or floating 
beside his own bodywhich he can see stretched senseless upon 
the couch. So also under anaestheticsparticularly under 
laughing gasmany people are conscious of a detachment from 
their bodiesand of experiences at a distance. I have myself 
seen very clearly my wife and children inside a cab while I was 
senseless in the dentist's chair. Againwhen a man is fainting 
or dyingand his system in an unstable conditionit is asserted 
in very many definite instances that he canand doesmanifest 
himself to others at a distance. These phantasms of the living
which have been so carefully explored and docketed by Messrs. 
Myers and Gurneyran into hundreds of cases. Some people claim 
that by an effort of will they canafter going to sleeppropel 
their own doubles in the direction which they desireand visit 
those whom they wish to see. Thus there is a great volume of 
evidence--how great no man can say who has not spent diligent 
years in exploring it--which vouches for the existence of 
this finer body containing the precious jewels of the mind and 
spiritand leaving only gross confused animal functions in its 
heavier companion. 
Mr. Funkwho is a critical student of psychic phenomenaand 
also the joint compiler of the standard American dictionary
narrates a story in point which could be matched from other 
sources. He tells of an American doctor of his acquaintanceand 
he vouches personally for the truth of the incident. This 
doctorin the course of a cataleptic seizure in Floridawas 
aware that he had left his bodywhich he saw lying beside him. 
He had none the less preserved his figure and his identity. The 
thought of some friend at a distance came into his mindand 
after an appreciable interval he found himself in that friend's 
roomhalf way across the continent. He saw his friendand was 
conscious that his friend saw him. He afterwards returned to his 
own roomstood beside his own senseless bodyargued within 
himself whether he should re-occupy it or notand finallyduty 
overcoming inclinationhe merged his two frames together and 
continued his life. A letter from him to his friend 
explaining matters crossed a letter from the friendin which he 
told how he also had been aware of his presence. The incident is 
narrated in detail in Mr. Funk's "Psychic Riddle." 
I do not understand how any man can examine the many 
instances coming from various angles of approach without 
recognising that there really is a second body of this sort
which incidentally goes far to account for all storiessacred or 
profaneof ghostsapparitions and visions. Nowwhat is this 
second bodyand how does it fit into modern religious 
revelation? 
What it isis a difficult questionand yet when science and 
imagination uniteas Tyndall said they should uniteto throw a 
searchlight into the unknownthey may produce a beam sufficient 
to outline vaguely what will become clearer with the future 
advance of our race. Science has demonstrated that while ether 
pervades everything the ether which is actually in a body is 
different from the ether outside it. "Bound" ether is the name 
given to thiswhich Fresnel and others have shown to be denser. 
Nowif this fact be applied to the human bodythe result 
would be thatif all that is visible of that body were removed
there would still remain a complete and absolute mould of the 
bodyformed in bound ether which would be different from the 
ether around it. This argument is more solid than mere 
speculationand it shows that even the soul may come to be 
defined in terms of matter and is not altogether "such stuff as 
dreams are made of." 
It has been shown that there is some good evidence for the 
existence of this second body apart from psychic religionbut to 
those who have examined that religion it is the centre of the 
whole systemsufficiently real to be recognised by clairvoyants
to be heard by clairaudientsand even to make an exact 
impression upon a photographic plate. Of the latter phenomenon
of which I have had some very particular opportunities of 
judgingI have no more doubt than I have of the ordinary 
photography of commerce. It had already been shown by the 
astronomers that the sensitized plate is a more delicate 
recording instrument than the human retinaand that it can show 
stars upon a long exposure which the eye has never seen. It 
would appear that the spirit world is really so near to us that a 
very little extra help under correct conditions of mediumship 
will make all the difference. Thus the plateinstead of the 
eyemay bring the loved face within the range of visionwhile 
the trumpetacting as a megaphonemay bring back the familiar 
voice where the spirit whisper with no mechanical aid was still 
inaudible. So loud may the latter phenomenon be that in one 
caseof which I have the recordthe dead man's dog was so 
excited at hearing once more his master's voice that he broke his 
chainand deeply scarred the outside of the seance room door in 
his efforts to force an entrance. 
Nowhaving said so much of the spirit bodyand having 
indicated that its presence is not vouched for by only one line 
of evidence or school of thoughtlet us turn to what happens at 
the time of deathaccording to the observation of clairvoyants 
on this side and the posthumous accounts of the dead upon the 
other. It is exactly what we should expect to happengranted 
the double identity. In a painless and natural process the 
lighter disengages itself from the heavierand slowly draws 
itself off until it stands with the same mindthe same emotions
and an exactly similar bodybeside the couch of deathaware of 
those around and yet unable to make them aware of itsave where 
that finer spiritual eyesight called clairvoyance exists. How
we may well askcan it see without the natural organs? How did 
the hashish victim see his own unconscious body? How did the 
Florida doctor see his friend? There is a power of perception in 
the spiritual body which does give the power. We can say no 
more. To the clairvoyant the new spirit seems like a filmy 
outline. To the ordinary man it is invisible. To another spirit 
it wouldno doubtseem as normal and substantial as we appear 
to each other. There is some evidence that it refines with time
and is therefore nearer to the material at the moment of death or 
closely after itthan after a lapse of months or years. Hence
it is that apparitions of the dead are most clear and most common 
about the time of deathand hence alsono doubtthe fact that 
the cataleptic physician already quoted was seen and 
recognised by his friend. The meshes of his etherif the phrase 
be permittedwere still heavy with the matter from which they 
had only just been disentangled. 
Having disengaged itself from grosser matterwhat happens to 
this spirit bodythe precious bark which bears our all in all 
upon this voyage into unknown seas? Very many accounts have come 
back to usverbal and writtendetailing the experiences of 
those who have passed on. The verbal are by trance mediums
whose utterances appear to be controlled by outside 
intelligences. The written from automatic writers whose script 
is produced in the same way. At these words the critic naturally 
and reasonably shieswith a "What nonsense! How can you control 
the statement of this medium who is consciously or unconsciously 
pretending to inspiration?" This is a healthy scepticismand 
should animate every experimenter who tests a new medium. The 
proofs must lie in the communication itself. If they are not 
presentthenas alwayswe must accept natural rather than 
unknown explanations. But they are continually presentand in 
such obvious forms that no one can deny them. There is a 
certain professional medium to whom I have sent manymothers who 
were in need of consolation. I always ask the applicants to 
report the result to meand I have their letters of surprise and 
gratitude before me as I write. "Thank you for this beautiful 
and interesting experience. She did not make a single mistake 
about their namesand everything she said was correct." In this 
case there was a rift between husband and wife before deathbut 
the medium was ableunaidedto explain and clear up the whole 
mattermentioning the correct circumstancesand names of 
everyone concernedand showing the reasons for the non-arrival 
of certain letterswhich had been the cause of the 
misunderstanding. The next case was also one of husband and 
wifebut it is the husband who is the survivor. He says: "It 
was a most successful sitting. Among other thingsI addressed a 
remark in Danish to my wife (who is a Danish girl)and the 
answer came back in English without the least hesitation." The 
next case was again of a man who had lost a very dear male 
friend. "I have had the most wonderful results with Mrs. 
---- to-day. I cannot tell you the joy it has been to me. Many 
grateful thanks for your help." The next one says: "Mrs. ---was 
simply wonderful. If only more people knewwhat agony they 
would be spared." In this case the wife got in touch with the 
husbandand the medium mentioned correctly five dead relatives 
who were in his company. The next is a case of mother and son. 
I saw Mrs. ---- to-day, and obtained very wonderful results. 
She told me nearly everything quite correctly--a very few 
mistakes.The next is similar. "We were quite successful. My 
boy even reminded me of something that only he and I knew." Says 
another: "My boy reminded me of the day when he sowed turnip 
seed upon the lawn. Only he could have known of this." These 
are fair samples of the lettersof which I hold a large number. 
They are from people who present themselves from among the 
millions living in Londonor the provincesand about whose 
affairs the medium had no possible normal way of knowing. Of all 
the very numerous cases which I have sent to this medium I have 
only had a few which have been complete failures. On quoting 
my results to Sir Oliver Lodgehe remarked that his own 
experience with another medium had been almost identical. It is 
no exaggeration to say that our British telephone systems would 
probably give a larger proportion of useless calls. How is any 
critic to get beyond these facts save by ignoring or 
misrepresenting them? Healthyscepticism is the basis of all 
accurate observationbut there comes a time when incredulity 
means either culpable ignorance or else imbecilityand this time 
has been long past in the matter of spirit intercourse. 
In my own casethis medium mentioned correctly the first 
name of a lady who had died in our housegave several very 
characteristic messages from herdescribed the only two dogs 
which we have ever keptand ended by saying that a young officer 
was holding up a gold coin by which I would recognise him. I had 
lost my brother-in-lawan army doctorin the warand I had 
given him a spade guinea for his first feewhich he always wore 
on his chain. There were not more than two or three close 
relatives who knew about this incidentso that the test was a 
particularly good one. She made no incorrect statements
though some were vague. After I had revealed the identity of 
this medium several pressmen attempted to have test seances with 
her--a test seance beingin most casesa seance which begins by 
breaking every psychic condition and making success most 
improbable. One of these gentlemenMr. Ulyss Rogershad very 
fair results. Another sent from "Truth" had complete failure. 
It must be understood that these powers do not work from the 
mediumbut through the mediumand that the forces in the beyond 
have not the least sympathy with a smart young pressman in search 
of clever copywhile they have a very different feeling to a 
bereaved mother who prays with all her broken heart that some 
assurance may be given her that the child of her love is not gone 
from her for ever. When this fact is masteredand it is 
understood that "Stand and deliver" methods only excite gentle 
derision on the other sidewe shall find some more intelligent 
manner of putting things of the spirit to the proof.[3] 
[3] See Appendix D. 
I have dwelt upon these resultswhich could be matched 
by other mediumsto show that we have solid and certain reasons 
to say that the verbal reports are not from the mediums 
themselves. Readers of Arthur Hill's "Psychical Investigations" 
will find many even more convincing cases. So in the written 
communicationsI have in a previous paper pointed to the "Gate 
of Remembrance" casebut there is a great mass of material which 
proves thatin spite of mistakes and failuresthere really is a 
channel of communicationfitful and evasive sometimesbut 
entirely beyond coincidence or fraud. Thesethenare the usual 
means by which we receive psychic messagesthough table tilting
ouija boardsglasses upon a smooth surfaceor anything which 
can be moved by the vital animal-magnetic force already discussed 
will equally serve the purpose. Often information is conveyed 
orally or by writing which could not have been known to anyone 
concerned. Mr. Wilkinson has given details of the case where his 
dead son drew attention to the fact that a curio (a coin bent by 
a bullet) had been overlooked among his effects. Sir William 
Barrett has narrated how a young officer sent a message 
leaving a pearl tie-pin to a friend. No one knew that such a pin 
existedbut it was found among his things. The death of Sir 
Hugh Lane was given at a private seance in Dublin before the 
details of the Lusitania disaster had been published.[4] On that 
morning we ourselvesin a small seancegot the message "It is 
terribleterribleand will greatly affect the war at a time 
when we were convinced that no great loss of life could have 
occurred. Such examples are very numerous, and are only quoted 
here to show how impossible it is to invoke telepathy as the 
origin of such messages. There is only one explanation which 
covers the facts. They are what they say they are, messages from 
those who have passed on, from the spiritual body which was seen 
to rise from the deathbed, which has been so often photographed, 
which pervades all religion in every age, and which has been 
able, under proper circumstances, to materialise back into a 
temporary solidity so that it could walk and talk like a mortal, 
whether in Jerusalem two thousand years ago, or in the 
laboratory of Mr. Crookes, in Mornington Road, London. 
[4] The details of both these latter cases are to be found in 
Voices from the Void" by Mrs. Travers Smitha book containing 
some well weighed evidence. 
Let us for a moment examine the facts in this Crookes' 
episode. A small book exists which describes themthough it is 
not as accessible as it should be. In these wonderful 
experimentswhich extended over several yearsMiss Florrie 
Cookwho was a young lady of from 16 to 18 years of agewas 
repeatedly confined in Prof. Crookes' studythe door being 
locked on the inside. Here she lay unconscious upon a couch. 
The spectators assembled in the laboratorywhich was separated 
by a curtained opening from the study. After a short interval
through this opening there emerged a lady who was in all ways 
different from Miss Cook. She gave her earth name as Katie King
and she proclaimed herself to be a materialised spiritwhose 
mission it was "to carry the knowledge of immortality to mortals. 
She was of great beauty of facefigureand manner. She was 
four and a half inches taller than Miss Cookfairwhereas the 
latter was darkand as different from her as one woman could be 
from another. Her pulse rate was markedly slower. She became 
for the time entirely one of the companywalking about
addressing each person presentand taking delight in the 
children. She made no objection to photography or any other 
test. Forty-eight photographs of different degrees of excellence 
were made of her. She was seen at the same time as the medium on 
several occasions. Finally she departedsaying that her mission 
was over and that she had other work to do. When she vanished 
materialism should have vanished alsoif mankind had taken 
adequate notice of the facts. 
Nowwhat can the fair-minded inquirer say to such a story as 
that--one of manybut for the moment we are concentrating upon 
it? Was Mr. Crookes a blasphemous liar? But there were very 
many witnessesas many sometimes as eight at a single sitting. 
And there are the photographs which include Miss Cook and show 
that the two women were quite different. Was he honestly 
mistaken? But that is inconceivable. Read the original 
narrative and see if you can find any solution save that it is 
true. If a man can read that sobercautious statement and not 
be convincedthen assuredly his brainis out of gear. 
Finallyask yourself whether any religious manifestation in the 
world has had anything like the absolute proof which lies in this 
one. Cannot the orthodox see that instead of combating such a 
storyor talking nonsense about devilsthey should hail that 
which is indeed the final answer to that materialism which is 
their really dangerous enemy. Even as I writemy eye falls upon 
a letter on my desk from an officer who had lost all faith in 
immortality and become an absolute materialist. "I came to dread 
my return homefor I cannot stand hypocrisyand I knew well my 
attitude would cause some members of my family deep grief. Your 
book has now brought me untold comfortand I can face the future 
cheerfully." Are these fruits from the Devil's treeyou timid 
orthodox critic? 
Having then got in touch with our deadwe proceed
naturallyto ask them how it is with themand under what 
conditions they exist. It is a very vital questionsince what 
has befallen them yesterday will surely befall us to-morrow. But 
the answer is tidings of great joy. Of the new vital message 
to humanity nothing is more important than that. It rolls away 
all those horrible man-bred fears and fanciesfounded upon 
morbid imaginations and the wild phrases of the oriental. We 
come upon what is sanewhat is moderatewhat is reasonable
what is consistent with gradual evolution and with the 
benevolence of God. Were there ever any conscious blasphemers 
upon earth who have insulted the Deity so deeply as those 
extremistsbe they CalvinistRoman CatholicAnglicanor Jew
who pictured with their distorted minds an implacable torturer as 
the Ruler of the Universe! 
The truth of what is told us as to the life beyond can in its 
very nature never be absolutely established. It is far nearer to 
complete proofhoweverthan any religious revelation which has 
ever preceded it. We have the fact that these accounts are mixed 
up with others concerning our present life which are often 
absolutely true. If a spirit can tell the truth about our 
sphereit is difficult to suppose that he is entirely false 
about his own. Thenagainthere is a very great similarity 
about such accountsthough their origin may be from people very 
far apart. Thus though "non-veridical to use the modern 
jargon, they do conform to all our canons of evidence. A series 
of books which have attracted far less attention than they 
deserve have drawn the coming life in very close detail. These 
books are not found on railway bookstalls or in popular 
libraries, but the successive editions through which they pass 
show that there is a deeper public which gets what it wants in 
spite of artificial obstacles. 
Looking over the list of my reading I find, besides nearly a 
dozen very interesting and detailed manuscript accounts, such 
published narratives as Claude's Book purporting to come from 
a young British aviator; Thy Son Liveth from an American 
soldier, Private Dowding"; "Raymond from a British soldier; 
Do Thoughts Perish?" which contains accounts from several 
British soldiers and others; "I Heard a Voice where a wellknown 
K.C., through the mediumship of his two young daughters, 
has a very full revelation of the life beyond; After Death 
with the alleged experiences of the famous Miss Julia Ames; The 
Seven Purposes from an American pressman, and many others. 
They differ much in literary skill and are not all equally 
impressive, but the point which must strike any impartial mind is 
the general agreement of these various accounts as to the 
conditions of spirit life. An examination would show that some 
of them must have been in the press at the same time, so that 
they could not have each inspired the other. Claude's Book" and 
Thy Son Livethappeared at nearly the same time on different 
sides of the Atlanticbut they agree very closely. "Raymond" 
and "Do Thoughts Perish?" must also have been in the press 
togetherbut the scheme of things is exactly the same. Surely 
the agreement of witnesses must hereas in all casesbe 
accounted as a test of truth. They differ mainlyas it seems to 
mewhen they deal with their own future including speculations 
as to reincarnationetc.which may well be as foggy to them as 
it is to usor systems of philosophy where again individual 
opinion is apparent. 
Of all these accounts the one which is most deserving of 
study is "Raymond." This is so because it has been compiled from 
several famous mediums working independently of each other
and has been checked and chronicled by a man who is not only one 
of the foremost scientists of the worldand probably the leading 
intellectual force in Europebut one who has also had a unique 
experience of the precautions necessary for the observation of 
psychic phenomena. The bright and sweet nature of the young 
soldier upon the other sideand his eagerness to tell of his 
experience is also a factor which will appeal to those who are 
already satisfied as to the truth of the communications. For all 
these reasons it is a most important document--indeed it would be 
no exaggeration to say that it is one of the most important in 
recent literature. It isas I believean authentic account of 
the life in the beyondand it is often more interesting from its 
sidelights and reservations than for its actual assertions
though the latter bear the stamp of absolute frankness and 
sincerity. The compilation is in some ways faulty. Sir Oliver 
has not always the art of writing so as to be understanded of the 
peopleand his deeper and more weighty thoughts get in the way 
of the clear utterances of his son. Then againin his anxiety 
to be absolutely accurateSir Oliver has reproduced the fact 
that sometimes Raymond is speaking directand sometimes the 
control is reporting what Raymond is sayingso that the same 
paragraph may turn several times from the first person to the 
third in a manner which must be utterly unintelligible to those 
who are not versed in the subject. Sir Oliver willI am sure
not be offended if I say thathaving satisfied his conscience by 
the present editionhe should now leave it for referenceand 
put forth a new one which should contain nothing but the words of 
Raymond and his spirit friends. Such a bookpublished at a low 
pricewouldI thinkhave an amazing effectand get all this 
new teaching to the spot that God has marked for it--the minds 
and hearts of the people. 
So much has been said here about mediumship that perhaps it 
would be well to consider this curious condition a little more 
closely. The question of mediumshipwhat it is and how it acts
is one of the most mysterious in the whole range of science. It 
is a common objection to say if our dead are there why should we 
only hear of them through people by no means remarkable for 
moral or mental giftswho are often paid for their 
ministration. It is a plausible argumentand yet when we 
receive a telegram from a brother in Australia we do not say: 
It is strange that Tom should not communicate with me direct, 
but that the presence of that half-educated fellow in the 
telegraph office should be necessary.The medium is in truth a 
mere passive machineclerk and telegraph in one. Nothing comes 
FROM him. Every message is THROUGH him. Why he or she 
should have the power more than anyone else is a very interesting 
problem. This power may best be defined as the capacity for 
allowing the bodily powersphysical or mentalto be used by an 
outside influence. In its higher forms there is temporary 
extinction of personality and the substitution of some other 
controlling spirit. At such times the medium may entirely lose 
consciousnessor he may retain it and be aware of some external 
experience which has been enjoyed by his own entity while his 
bodily house has been filled by the temporary tenant. Or the 
medium may retain consciousnessand with eyes and ears attuned 
to a higher key than the normal man can attainhe may see 
and hear what is beyond our senses. Or in writing mediumshipa 
motor centre of the brain regulating the nerves and muscles of 
the arm may be controlled while all else seems to be normal. Or 
it may take the more material form of the exudation of a strange 
white evanescent dough-like substance called the ectoplasmwhich 
has been frequently photographed by scientific enquirers in 
different stages of its evolutionand which seems to possess an 
inherent quality of shaping itself into parts or the whole of a 
bodybeginning in a putty-like mould and ending in a resemblance 
to perfect human members. Or the ectoplasmwhich seems to be an 
emanation of the medium to the extent that whatever it may weigh 
is so much subtracted from his substancemay be used as 
projections or rods which can convey objects or lift weights. A 
friendin whose judgment and veracity I have absolute 
confidencewas present at one of Dr. Crawford's experiments with 
Kathleen Goligherwho isit may be remarkedan unpaid medium. 
My friend touched the column of forceand found it could be felt 
by the hand though invisible to the eye. It is clear that we 
are in touch with some entirely new form both of matter and of 
energy. We know little of the properties of this extraordinary 
substance save that in its materialising form it seems extremely 
sensitive to the action of light. A figure built up in it and 
detached from the medium dissolves in light quicker than a snow 
image under a tropical sunso that two successive flash-light 
photographs would show the one a perfect figureand the next an 
amorphous mass. When still attached to the medium the ectoplasm 
flies back with great force on exposure to lightandin spite 
of the laughter of the scoffersthere is none the less good 
evidence that several mediums have been badly injured by the 
recoil after a light has suddenly been struck by some amateur 
detective. Professor Geley hasin his recent experiments
described the ectoplasm as appearing outside the black dress of 
his medium as if a hoar frost had descended upon herthen 
coalescing into a continuous sheet of white substanceand oozing 
down until it formed a sort of apron in front of her.[5] 
This process he has illustrated by a very complete series of 
photographs. 
[5] For Geley's ExperimentsAppendix A. 
These are a few of the properties of mediumship. There are 
also the beautiful phenomena of the production of lightsand the 
rarerbut for evidential purposes even more valuable
manifestations of spirit photography. The fact that the 
photograph does not correspond in many cases with any which 
existed in lifemust surely silence the scofferthough there is 
a class of bigoted sceptic who would still be sneering if an 
Archangel alighted in Trafalgar Square. Mr. Hope and Mrs. 
Buxtonof Crewehave brought this phase of mediumship to great 
perfectionthough others have powers in that direction. Indeed
in some cases it is difficult to say who the medium may have 
beenfor in one collective family group which was taken in the 
ordinary wayand was sent me by a master in a well known public 
schoolthe young son who died has appeared in the plate seated 
between his two little brothers. 
As to the personality of mediumsthey have seemed to me to 
be very average specimens of the communityneither markedly 
better nor markedly worse. I know manyand I have never met 
anything in the least like "Sludge a poem which Browning might 
be excused for writing in some crisis of domestic disagreement, 
but which it was inexcusable to republish since it is admitted to 
be a concoction, and the exposure described to have been 
imaginary. The critic often uses the term medium as if it 
necessarily meant a professional, whereas every investigator has 
found some of his best results among amateurs. In the two finest 
seances I ever attended, the psychic, in each case a man of 
moderate means, was resolutely determined never directly or 
indirectly to profit by his gift, though it entailed very 
exhausting physical conditions. I have not heard of a clergyman 
of any denomination who has attained such a pitch of altruism-nor 
is it reasonable to expect it. As to professional mediums, 
Mr. Vout Peters, one of the most famous, is a diligent collector 
of old books and an authority upon the Elizabethan drama; while 
Mr. Dickinson, another very remarkable discerner of spirits, who 
named twenty-four correctly during two meetings held on the same 
day, is employed in loading canal barges. This man is one 
gifted clairvoyants in England, though Tom Tyrrell the 
weaver, Aaron Wilkinson, and others are very marvellous. 
Tyrrell, who is a man of the Anthony of Padua type, a walking 
saint, beloved of animals and children, is a figure who might 
have stepped out of some legend of the church. Thomas, the 
powerful physical medium, is a working coal miner. Most mediums 
take their responsibilities very seriously and view their work in 
a religious light. There is no denying that they are exposed to 
very particular temptations, for the gift is, as I have explained 
elsewhere, an intermittent one, and to admit its temporary 
absence, and so discourage one's clients, needs greater moral 
principle than all men possess. Another temptation to which 
several great mediums have succumbed is that of drink. This 
comes about in a very natural way, for overworking the power 
leaves them in a state of physical prostration, and the stimulus 
of alcohol affords a welcome relief, and may tend at last to 
become a custom and finally a curse. Alcoholism always weakens 
the moral sense, so that these degenerate mediums yield 
themselves more readily to fraud, with the result that 
several who had deservedly won honoured names and met all hostile 
criticism have, in their later years, been detected in the most 
contemptible tricks. It is a thousand pities that it should be 
so, but if the Court of Arches were to give up its secrets, it 
would be found that tippling and moral degeneration were by no 
means confined to psychics. At the same time, a psychic is so 
peculiarly sensitive that I think he or she would always be well 
advised to be a life long abstainer--as many actually are. 
As to the method by which they attain their results they 
have, when in the trance state, no recollection. In the case of 
normal clairvoyants and clairaudients, the information comes in 
different ways. Sometimes it is no more than a strong mental 
impression which gives a name or an address. Sometimes they say 
that they see it written up before them. Sometimes the spirit 
figures seem to call it to them. They yell it at me said one. 
We need more first-hand accounts of these matters before we can 
formulate laws. 
It has been stated in a previous book by the author, but it 
will bear repetition, that the use of the seance should, in 
his opinion, be carefully regulated as well as reverently 
conducted. Having once satisfied himself of the absolute 
existence of the unseen world, and of its proximity to our own, 
the inquirer has got the great gift which psychical investigation 
can give him, and thenceforth he can regulate his life upon the 
lines which the teaching from beyond has shown to be the best. 
There is much force in the criticism that too constant 
intercourse with the affairs of another world may distract our 
attention and weaken our powers in dealing with our obvious 
duties in this one. A seance, with the object of satisfying 
curiosity or of rousing interest, cannot be an elevating 
influence, and the mere sensation-monger can make this holy and 
wonderful thing as base as the over-indulgence in a stimulant. 
On the other hand, where the seance is used for the purpose of 
satisfying ourselves as to the condition of those whom we have 
lost, or of giving comfort to others who crave for a word from 
beyond, then it is, indeed, a blessed gift from God to be used 
with moderation and with thankfulness. Our loved ones have their 
own pleasant tasks in their new surroundings, and though they 
assure us that they love to clasp the hands which we stretch out 
to them, we should still have some hesitation in intruding to an 
unreasonable extent upon the routine of their lives. 
A word should be said as to that fear of fiends and evil 
spirits which appears to have so much weight with some of the 
critics of this subject. When one looks more closely at this 
emotion it seems somewhat selfish and cowardly. These creatures 
are in truth our own backward brothers, bound for the same 
ultimate destination as ourselves, but retarded by causes for 
which our earth conditions may have been partly responsible. Our 
pity and sympathy should go out to them, and if they do indeed 
manifest at a seance, the proper Christian attitude is, as it 
seems to me, that we should reason with them and pray for them in 
order to help them upon their difficult way. Those who have 
treated them in this way have found a very marked difference in 
the subsequent communications. In Admiral Usborne Moore's 
Glimpses of the Next State" there will be found some records 
of an American circle which devoted itself entirely to missionary 
work of this sort. There is some reason to believe that there 
are forms of imperfect development which can be helped more by 
earthly than by purely spiritual influencesfor the reason
perhapsthat they are closer to the material. 
In a recent case I was called in to endeavour to check a very 
noisy entity which frequented an old house in which there were 
strong reasons to believe that crime had been committedand also 
that the criminal was earth-bound. Names were given by the 
unhappy spirit which proved to be correctand a cupboard was 
describedwhich was duly foundthough it had never before been 
suspected. On getting into touch with the spirit I endeavoured 
to reason with it and to explain how selfish it was to cause 
misery to others in order to satisfy any feelings of revenge 
which it might have carried over from earth life. We then prayed 
for its welfareexhorted it to rise higherand received a very 
solemn assurancetilted out at the tablethat it would mend its 
ways. I have very gratifying reports that it has done so
and that all is now quiet in the old house. 
Let us now consider the life in the Beyond as it is shown to 
us by the new revelation. 
CHAPTER IV 
THE COMING WORLD 
We come first to the messages which tell us of the life 
beyond the gravesent by those who are actually living it. 
have already insisted upon the fact that they have three weighty 
claims to our belief. The one isthat they are accompanied by 
signs,in the Biblical sensein the shape of "miracles" or 
phenomena. The second isthat in many cases they are 
accompanied by assertions about this life of ours which prove to 
be correctand which are beyond the possible knowledge of the 
medium after every deduction has been made for telepathy or for 
unconscious memory. The third isthat they have a remarkable
though not a completesimilarity from whatever source they come. 
It may be noted that the differences of opinion become most 
marked when they deal with their own futurewhich may well be a 
matter of speculation to them as to us. Thusupon the 
question of reincarnation there is a distinct cleavageand 
though I am myself of opinion that the general evidence is 
against this oriental doctrineit is none the less an undeniable 
fact that it has been maintained by some messages which appear in 
other ways to be authenticandthereforeit is necessary to 
keep one's mind open on the subject. 
Before entering upon the substance of the messages I should 
wish to emphasize the second of these two pointsso as to 
reinforce the reader's confidence in the authenticity of these 
assertions. To this end I will give a detailed examplewith 
names almost exact. The medium was Mr. Phoenixof Glasgowwith 
whom I have myself had some remarkable experiences. The sitter 
was Mr. Ernest Oatenthe President of the Northern Spiritual 
Uniona man of the utmost veracity and precision of statement. 
The dialoguewhich came by the direct voicea trumpet acting as 
megaphoneran like this:-
The Voice: Good eveningMr. Oaten. 
Mr. O.: Good evening. Who are you? 
The Voice: My name is Mill. You know my father. 
Mr. O.: NoI don't remember anyone of the name. 
The Voice: Yesyou were speaking to him the other day. 
Mr. O.: To be sure. I remember now. I only met him 
casually. 
The Voice: I want you to give him a message from me. 
Mr. O.: What is it? 
The Voice: Tell him that he was not mistaken at midnight on 
Tuesday last. 
Mr. O.: Very good. I will say so. Have you passed long? 
The Voice: Some time. But our time is different from yours. 
Mr. O.: What were you? 
The Voice: A Surgeon. 
Mr. O.: How did you pass? 
The Voice: Blown up in a battleship during the war. 
Mr. O.: Anything more? 
The answer was the Gipsy song from "Il Trovatore very 
accurately whistled, and then a quick-step. After the latter, 
the voice said: That is a test for father." 
This reproduction of conversation is not quite verbatimbut 
gives the condensed essence. Mr. Oaten at once visited Mr. Mill
who was not a Spiritualistand found that every detail was 
correct. Young Mill had lost his life as narrated. Mr. Mill
seniorexplained that while sitting in his study at midnight on 
the date named he had heard the Gipsy song from "Il Trovatore 
which had been a favourite of his boy's, and being unable to 
trace the origin of the music, had finally thought that it was a 
freak of his imagination. The test connected with the quick-step 
had reference to a tune which the young man used to play upon the 
piccolo, but which was so rapid that he never could get it right, 
for which he was chaffed by the family. 
I tell this story at length to make the reader realise that 
when young Mill, and others like him, give such proofs of 
accuracy, which we can test for ourselves, we are bound to take 
their assertions very seriously when they deal with the life 
they are actually leading, though in their very nature we can 
only check their accounts by comparison with others. 
Now let me epitomise what these assertions are. They say 
that they are exceedingly happy, and that they do not wish to 
return. They are among the friends whom they had loved and lost, 
who meet them when they die and continue their careers together. 
They are very busy on all forms of congenial work. The world in 
which they find themselves is very much like that which they have 
quitted, but everything keyed to a higher octave. As in a higher 
octave the rhythm is the same, and the relation of notes to each 
other the same, but the total effect different, so it is here. 
Every earthly thing has its equivalent. Scoffers have guffawed 
over alcohol and tobacco, but if all things are reproduced it 
would be a flaw if these were not reproduced also. That they 
should be abused, as they are here, would, indeed, be evil 
tidings, but nothing of the sort has been said, and in the much 
discussed passage in Raymond their production was alluded to 
as though it were an unusual, and in a way a humorous, 
instance of the resources of the beyond. I wonder how many of 
the preachers, who have taken advantage of this passage in order 
to attack the whole new revelation, have remembered that the only 
other message which ever associated alcohol with the life beyond 
is that of Christ Himself, when He said: I will not drink 
henceforth of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink 
it new with you in my Father's kingdom." 
This matter is a detailhoweverand it is always dangerous 
to discuss details in a subject which is so enormousso dimly 
seen. As the wisest woman I have known remarked to me: "Things 
may well be surprising over therefor if we had been told the 
facts of this life before we entered itwe should never have 
believed it." In its larger issues this happy life to come 
consists in the development of those gifts which we possess. 
There is action for the man of actionintellectual work for the 
thinkerartisticliterarydramatic and religious for those 
whose God-given powers lie that way. What we have both in brain 
and character we carry over with us. No man is too old to learn
for what he learns he keeps. There is no physical side to 
love and no child-birththough there is close union between 
those married people who really love each otherandgenerally
there is deep sympathetic friendship and comradeship between the 
sexes. Every man or woman finds a soul mate sooner or later. 
The child grows up to the normalso that the mother who lost a 
babe of two years oldand dies herself twenty years later finds 
a grown-up daughter of twenty-two awaiting her coming. Age
which is produced chiefly by the mechanical presence of lime in 
our arteriesdisappearsand the individual reverts to the full 
normal growth and appearance of completed man--or womanhood. Let 
no woman mourn her lost beautyand no man his lost strength or 
weakening brain. It all awaits them once more upon the other 
side. Nor is any deformity or bodily weakness therefor all is 
normal and at its best. 
Before leaving this section of the subjectI should say a 
few more words upon the evidence as it affects the etheric body. 
This body is a perfect thing. This is a matter of consequence in 
these days when so many of our heroes have been mutilated in 
the wars. One cannot mutilate the etheric bodyand it remains 
always intact. The first words uttered by a returning spirit in 
the recent experience of Dr. Abraham Wallace were "I have got my 
left arm again." The same applies to all birth marks
deformitiesblindnessand other imperfections. None of them 
are permanentand all will vanish in that happier life that 
awaits us. Such is the teaching from the beyond--that a perfect 
body waits for each. 
But,says the criticwhat then of the clairvoyant 
descriptions, or the visions where the aged father is seen, clad 
in the old-fashioned garments of another age, or the grandmother 
with crinoline and chignon? Are these the habiliments of 
heaven?Such visions are not spiritsbut they are pictures 
which are built up before us or shot by spirits into our brains 
or those of the seer for the purposes of recognition. Hence the 
grey hair and hence the ancient garb. When a real spirit is 
indeed seen it comes in another form to thiswhere the flowing 
robesuch as has always been traditionally ascribed to the 
angelsis a vital thing whichby its very colour and 
textureproclaims the spiritual condition of the wearerand is 
probably a condensation of that aura which surrounds us upon 
earth. 
It is a world of sympathy. Only those who have this tie 
foregather. The sullen husbandthe flighty wifeis no longer 
there to plague the innocent spouse. All is sweet and peaceful. 
It is the long rest cure after the nerve strain of lifeand 
before new experiences in the future. The circumstances are 
homely and familiar. Happy circles live in pleasant homesteads 
with every amenity of beauty and of music. Beautiful gardens
lovely flowersgreen woodspleasant lakesdomestic pets--all 
of these things are fully described in the messages of the 
pioneer travellers who have at last got news back to those who 
loiter in the old dingy home. There are no poor and no rich. 
The craftsman may still pursue his craftbut he does it for the 
joy of his work. Each serves the community as best he canwhile 
from above come higher ministers of gracethe "Angels" of holy 
writto direct and help. Above allshedding down His 
atmosphere upon allbroods that great Christ spiritthe 
very soul of reasonof justiceand of sympathetic 
understandingwho has the earth spherewith all its circles
under His very special care. It is a place of joy and laughter. 
There are games and sports of all sortsthough none which cause 
pain to lower life. Food and drink in the grosser sense do not 
existbut there seem to be pleasures of tasteand this 
distinction causes some confusion in the messages upon the point. 
But above allbrainenergycharacterdriving powerif 
exerted for goodmakes a man a leader there as herewhile 
unselfishnesspatience and spirituality thereas herequalify 
the soul for the higher placeswhich have often been won by 
those very tribulations down here which seem so purposeless and 
so crueland are in truth our chances of spiritual quickening 
and promotionwithout which life would have been barren and 
without profit. 
The revelation abolishes the idea of a grotesque hell and of 
a fantastic heavenwhile it substitutes the conception of a 
gradual rise in the scale of existence without any monstrous 
change which would turn us in an instant from man to angel or 
devil. The systemthough different from previous ideas
does notas it seems to merun counter in any radical fashion 
to the old beliefs. In ancient maps it was usual for the 
cartographer to mark blank spaces for the unexplored regions
with some such legend as "here are anthropophagi or here are 
mandrakes scrawled across them. So in our theology there have 
been ill-defined areas which have admittedly been left unfilled, 
for what sane man has ever believed in such a heaven as is 
depicted in our hymn books, a land of musical idleness and barren 
monotonous adoration! Thus in furnishing a clearer conception 
this new system has nothing to supplant. It paints upon a blank 
sheet. 
One may well ask, however, granting that there is evidence 
for such a life and such a world as has been described, what 
about those who have not merited such a destination? What do the 
messages from beyond say about these? And here one cannot be too 
definite, for there is no use exchanging one dogma for another. 
One can but give the general purport of such information as has 
been vouchsafed to us. It is natural that those with whom we 
come in contact are those whom we may truly call the blessed, for 
if the thing be approached in a reverent and religious spirit it 
is those whom we should naturally attract. That there are many 
less fortunate than themselves is evident from their own constant 
allusions to that regenerating and elevating missionary work 
which is among their own functions. They descend apparently and 
help others to gain that degree of spirituality which fits them 
for this upper sphere, as a higher student might descend to a 
lower class in order to bring forward a backward pupil. Such a 
conception gives point to Christ's remark that there was more joy 
in heaven over saving one sinner than over ninety-nine just, for 
if He had spoken of an earthly sinner he would surely have had to 
become just in this life and so ceased to be a sinner before he 
had reached Paradise. It would apply very exactly, however, to a 
sinner rescued from a lower sphere and brought to a higher one. 
When we view sin in the light of modern science, with the 
tenderness of the modern conscience and with a sense of justice 
and proportion, it ceases to be that monstrous cloud which 
darkened the whole vision of the mediaeval theologian. Man has 
been more harsh with himself than an all-merciful God will ever 
be. It is true that with all deductions there remains a great 
residuum which means want of individual effort, conscious 
weakness of will, and culpable failure of character when the 
sinner, like Horace, sees and applauds the higher while he 
follows the lower. But when, on the other hand, one has made 
allowances--and can our human allowance be as generous as 
God's?--for the sins which are the inevitable product of early 
environment, for the sins which are due to hereditary and inborn 
taint, and to the sins which are due to clear physical causes, 
then the total of active sin is greatly reduced. Could one, for 
example, imagine that Providence, all-wise and all-merciful, as 
every creed proclaims, could punish the unfortunate wretch who 
hatches criminal thoughts behind the slanting brows of a criminal 
head? A doctor has but to glance at the cranium to predicate the 
crime. In its worst forms all crime, from Nero to Jack the 
Ripper, is the product of absolute lunacy, and those gross 
national sins to which allusion has been made seem to point to 
collective national insanity. Surely, then, there is hope that 
no very terrible inferno is needed to further punish those who 
have been so afflicted upon earth. Some of our dead have 
remarked that nothing has surprised them so much as to find who 
have been chosen for honour, and certainly, without in any way 
condoning sin, one could well imagine that the man whose organic 
makeup predisposed him with irresistible force in that direction 
should, in justice, receive condolence and sympathy. Possibly 
such a sinner, if he had not sinned so deeply as he might have 
done, stands higher than the man who was born good, and remained 
so, but was no better at the end of his life. The one has made 
some progress and the other has not. But the commonest failing, 
the one which fills the spiritual hospitals of the other world, 
and is a temporary bar to the normal happiness of the after-life, 
is the sin of Tomlinson in Kipling's poem, the commonest of all 
sins in respectable British circles, the sin of conventionality, 
of want of conscious effort and development, of a sluggish 
spirituality, fatted over by a complacent mind and by the 
comforts of life. It is the man who is satisfied, the man who 
refers his salvation to some church or higher power without 
steady travail of his own soul, who is in deadly danger. All 
churches are good, Christian or non-Christian, so long as they 
promote the actual spirit life of the individual, but all are 
noxious the instant that they allow him to think that by any form 
of ceremony, or by any fashion of creed, he obtains the least 
advantage over his neighbour, or can in any way dispense with 
that personal effort which is the only road to the higher places. 
This is, of course, as applicable to believers in Spiritualism as 
to any other belief. If it does not show in practice then it is 
vain. One can get through this life very comfortably following 
without question in some procession with a venerable leader. But 
one does not die in a procession. One dies alone. And it is 
then that one has alone to accept the level gained by the work of 
life. 
And what is the punishment of the undeveloped soul? It is 
that it should be placed where it WILL develop, and sorrow 
would seem always to be the forcing ground of souls. That 
surely is our own experience in life where the insufferably 
complacent and unsympathetic person softens and mellows into 
beauty of character and charity of thought, when tried long 
enough and high enough in the fires of life. The Bible has 
talked about the Outer darkness where there is weeping and 
gnashing of teeth." The influence of the Bible has sometimes 
been an evil one through our own habit of reading a book of 
Oriental poetry and treating it as literally as if it were 
Occidental prose. When an Eastern describes a herd of a thousand 
camels he talks of camels which are more numerous than the hairs 
of your head or the stars in the sky. In this spirit of 
allowance for Eastern expressionone must approach those lurid 
and terrible descriptions which have darkened the lives of so 
many imaginative children and sent so many earnest adults into 
asylums. From all that we learn there are indeed places of outer 
darknessbut dim as these uncomfortable waiting-rooms may be
they all admit to heaven in the end. That is the final 
destination of the human raceand it would indeed be a 
reproach to the Almighty if it were not so. We cannot dogmatise 
upon this subject of the penal spheresand yet we have very 
clear teaching that they are there and that the no-man's-land 
which separates us from the normal heaventhat third heaven to 
which St. Paul seems to have been wafted in one short strange 
experience of his lifetimeis a place which corresponds with the 
Astral plane of the mystics and with the "outer darkness" of the 
Bible. Here linger those earth-bound spirits whose worldly 
interests have clogged them and weighed them downuntil every 
spiritual impulse had vanished; the man whose life has been 
centred on moneyon worldly ambitionor on sensual indulgence. 
The one-idea'd man will surely be thereif his one idea was not 
a spiritual one. Nor is it necessary that he should be an evil 
manif dear old brother John of Glastonburywho loved the great 
Abbey so that he could never detach himself from itis to be 
classed among earth-bound spirits. In the most material and 
pronounced classes of these are the ghosts who impinge very 
closely upon matter and have been seen so often by those who 
have no strong psychic sense. It is probablefrom what we 
know of the material laws which govern such mattersthat a ghost 
could never manifest itself if it were alonethat the substance 
for the manifestation is drawn from the spectatorand that the 
coldnessraising of hairand other symptoms of which he 
complains are caused largely by the sudden drain upon his own 
vitality. Thishoweveris to wander into speculationand far 
from that correlation of psychic knowledge with religionwhich 
has been the aim of these chapters. 
By one of those strange coincidenceswhich seem to me 
sometimes to be more than coincidencesI had reached this point 
in my explanation of the difficult question of the intermediate 
stateand was myself desiring further enlightenmentwhen an old 
book reached me through the postsent by someone whom I have 
never metand in it is the following passagewritten by an 
automatic writerand in existence since 1880. It makes the 
matter plainendorsing what has been said and adding new points. 
Some cannot advance further than the borderland--such as never 
thought of spirit life and have lived entirely for the 
earth, its cares and pleasures--even clever men and women, who 
have lived simply intellectual lives without spirituality. There 
are many who have misused their opportunities, and are now 
longing for the time misspent and wishing to recall the earthlife. 
They will learn that on this side the time can be 
redeemed, though at much cost. The borderland has many among the 
restless money-getters of earth, who still haunt the places where 
they had their hopes and joys. These are often the longest to 
remain . . . many are not unhappy. They feel the relief to be 
sufficient to be without their earth bodies. All pass through 
the borderland, but some hardly perceive it. It is so immediate, 
and there is no resting there for them. They pass on at once to 
the refreshment place of which we tell you.The anonymous 
authorafter recording this spirit messagementions the 
interesting fact that there is a Christian inscription in the 
Catacombs which runs: NICEFORUS ANIMA DULCIS IN REFRIGERIO
Nicephorus, a sweet soul in the refreshment place.One more 
scrap of evidence that the early Christian scheme of things 
was very like that of the modern psychic. 
So much for the borderlandthe intermediate condition. The 
present Christian dogma has no name for itunless it be that 
nebulous limbo which is occasionally mentionedand is usually 
defined as the place where the souls of the just who died before 
Christ were detained. The idea of crossing a space before 
reaching a permanent state on the other side is common to many 
religionsand took the allegorical form of a river with a ferryboat 
among the Romans and Greeks. Continuallyone comes on 
points which make one realise that far back in the world's 
history there has been a true revelationwhich has been blurred 
and twisted in time. Thus in Dr. Muir's summary of the RIG. 
VEDAhe saysepitomising the beliefs of the first Aryan 
conquerors of India: "Beforehoweverthe unborn part" (that 
isthe etheric body) "can complete its course to the third 
heaven it has to traverse a vast gulf of darknessleaving behind 
on earth all that is eviland proceeding by the paths the 
fathers trodthe spirit soars to the realms of eternal light
recovers there his body in a glorified formand obtains 
from God a delectable abode and enters upon a more perfect life
which is crowned with the fulfilment of all desiresis 
passed in the presence of the Gods and employed in the fulfilment 
of their pleasure." If we substitute "angels" for "Gods" we must 
admit that the new revelation from modern spirit sources has much 
in common with the belief of our Aryan fathers. 
Suchin very condensed formis the world which is revealed 
to us by these wonderful messages from the beyond. Is it an 
unreasonable vision? Is it in any way opposed to just 
principles? Is it not rather so reasonable that having got the 
clue we could now see thatgiven any life at allthis is 
exactly the line upon which we should expect to move? Nature and 
evolution are averse from sudden disconnected developments. If a 
human being has technicalliterarymusicalor other 
tendenciesthey are an essential part of his characterand to 
survive without them would be to lose his identity and to become 
an entirely different man. They must therefore survive death if 
personality is to be maintained. But it is no use their 
surviving unless they can find means of expressionand means of 
expression seem to require certain material agentsand also a 
discriminating audience. So also the sense of modesty among 
civilised races has become part of our very selvesand implies 
some covering of our forms if personality is to continue. Our 
desires and sympathies would prompt us to live with those we 
lovewhich implies something in the nature of a housewhile the 
human need for mental rest and privacy would predicate the 
existence of separate rooms. Thusmerely starting from the 
basis of the continuity of personality one mighteven without 
the revelation from the beyondhave built up some such 
system by the use of pure reason and deduction. 
So far as the existence of this land of happiness goesit 
would seem to have been more fully proved than any other 
religious conception within our knowledge. 
It may very reasonably be askedhow far this precise 
description of life beyond the grave is my own conceptionand 
how far it has been accepted by the greater minds who have 
studied this subject? I would answerthat it is my own 
conclusion as gathered from a very large amount of existing 
testimonyand that in its main lines it has for many years been 
accepted by those great numbers of silent active workers all over 
the worldwho look upon this matter from a strictly religious 
point of view. I think that the evidence amply justifies us in 
this belief. On the other handthose who have approached this 
subject with cold and cautious scientific brainsendowedin 
many caseswith the strongest prejudices against dogmatic creeds 
and with very natural fears about the possible re-growth of 
theological quarrelshave in most cases stopped short of a 
complete acceptancedeclaring that there can be no positive 
proof upon such mattersand that we may deceive ourselves either 
by a reflection of our own thoughts or by receiving the 
impressions of the medium. Professor Zollnerfor examplesays: 
Science can make no use of the substance of intellectual 
revelations, but must be guided by observed facts and by the 
conclusions logically and mathematically uniting them--a passage 
which is quoted with approval by Professor Reicheland would 
seem to be endorsed by the silence concerning the religious 
side of the question which is observed by most of our great 
scientific supporters. It is a point of view which can well be 
understoodand yetclosely examinedit would appear to be a 
species of enlarged materialism. To admitas these observers 
dothat spirits do returnthat they give every proof of being 
the actual friends whom we have lostand yet to turn a deaf ear 
to the messages which they send would seem to be pushing caution 
to the verge of unreason. To get so farand yet not to go 
furtheris impossible as a permanent position. Iffor example
in Raymond's case we find so many allusions to the small details 
of his home upon earthwhich prove to be surprisingly correct
is it reasonable to put a blue pencil through all he says of the 
home which he actually inhabits? Long before I had convinced my 
mind of the truth of things which appeared so grotesque and 
incredibleI had a long account sent by table tilting about the 
conditions of life beyond. The details seemed to me impossible 
and I set them asideand yet they harmoniseas I now discover
with other revelations. Sotoowith the automatic script 
of Mr. Hubert Waleswhich has been described in my previous 
book. He had tossed it aside into a drawer as being unworthy of 
serious considerationand yet it also proved to be in harmony. 
In neither of these cases was telepathy or the prepossession of 
the medium a possible explanation. On the wholeI am inclined 
to think that these doubtful or dissentient scientific men
having their own weighty studies to attend tohave confined 
their reading and thought to the more objective side of the 
questionand are not aware of the vast amount of concurrent 
evidence which appears to give us an exact picture of the life 
beyond. They despise documents which cannot be provedand they 
do notin my opinionsufficiently realise that a general 
agreement of testimonyand the already established character of 
a witnessare themselves arguments for truth. Some complicate 
the question by predicating the existence of a fourth dimension 
in that worldbut the term is an absurdityas are all terms 
which find no corresponding impression in the human brain. We 
have mysteries enough to solve without gratuitously 
introducing fresh ones. When solid passes through solidit 
issurelysimpler to assume that it is done by a 
dematerialisationand subsequent reassembly--a process which 
canat leastbe imagined by the human mind--than to invoke an 
explanation which itself needs to be explained. 
In the next and final chapter I will ask the reader to 
accompany me in an examination of the New Testament by the light 
of this psychic knowledgeand to judge how far it makes clear 
and reasonable much which was obscure and confused. 
CHAPTER V 
IS IT THE SECOND DAWN? 
There are many incidents in the New Testament which might be 
taken as starting points in tracing a close analogy between the 
phenomenal events which are associated with the early days of 
Christianityand those which have perplexed the world in 
connection with modern Spiritualism. Most of us are prepared to 
admit that the lasting claims of Christianity upon the human race 
are due to its own intrinsic teachingswhich are quite 
independent of those wonders which can only have had a use in 
startling the solid complacence of an unspiritual raceand so 
directing their attention violently to this new system of 
thought. Exactly the same may be said of the new revelation. 
The exhibitions of a force which is beyond human experience and 
human guidance is but a method of calling attention. To 
repeat a simile which has been used elsewhereit is 
the humble telephone bell which heralds the all-important 
message. In the case of Christthe Sermon on the Mount was more 
than many miracles. In the case of this new developmentthe 
messages from beyond are more than any phenomena. A vulgar mind 
might make Christ's story seem vulgarif it insisted upon loaves 
of bread and the bodies of fish. Soalsoa vulgar mind may 
make psychic religion vulgar by insisting upon moving furniture 
or tambourines in the air. In each case they are crude signs of 
powerand the essence of the matter lies upon higher planes. 
It is stated in the second chapter of the Acts of the 
Apostlesthat theythe Christian leaderswere all "with one 
accord" in one place. "With one accord" expresses admirably 
those sympathetic conditions which have always been foundin 
psychic circlesto be conducive of the best resultsand which 
are so persistently ignored by a certain class of investigators. 
Then there came "a mighty rushing wind and afterwards there 
appeared cloven tongues like unto fire and it sat upon each of 
them." Here is a very definite and clear account of a 
remarkable sequence of phenomena. Nowlet us compare with this 
the results which were obtained by Professor Crookes in his 
investigation in 1873after he had taken every possible 
precaution against fraud which his experienceas an accurate 
observer and experimentercould suggest. He says in his 
published notes: "I have seen luminous points of light darting 
aboutsitting on the heads of different persons" and then again: 
These movements, and, indeed, I may say the same of every class 
of phenomena, are generally preceded by a peculiar cold air, 
sometimes amounting to a decided wind. I have had sheets of 
paper blown about by it. . . .Nowis it not singularnot 
merely that the phenomena should be of the same orderbut that 
they should come in exactly the same sequencethe wind first and 
the lights afterwards? In our ignorance of etheric physicsan 
ignorance which is now slowly clearingone can only say that 
there is some indication here of a general law which links those 
two episodes together in spite of the nineteen centuries which 
divide them. A little laterit is stated that "the place 
was shaken where they were assembled together." Many modern 
observers of psychic phenomena have testified to vibration of the 
walls of an apartmentas if a heavy lorry were passing. It is
evidentlyto such experiences that Paul alludes when he says: 
Our gospel came unto you not in word only, but also in power.
The preacher of the New Revelation can most truly say the same 
words. In connection with the signs of the pentecostI can most 
truly say that I have myself experienced them allthe cold 
sudden windthe lambent misty flamesall under the mediumship 
of Mr. Phoenixan amateur psychic of Glasgow. The fifteen 
sitters were of one accord upon that occasionandby a 
coincidenceit was in an upper roomat the very top of the 
house. 
In a previous section of this essayI have remarked that no 
philosophical explanation of these phenomenaknown as spiritual
could be conceived which did not show that allhowever different 
in their workingcame from the same central source. St. Paul 
seems to state this in so many words when he says: "But all 
these worketh that one and the selfsame spiritdividing to 
every man severally as he will." Could our modern speculation
forced upon us by the factsbe more tersely stated? He has just 
enumerated the various giftsand we find them very close to 
those of which we have experience. There is first "the word of 
wisdom the word of knowledge" and "faith." All these taken in 
connection with the Spirit would seem to mean the higher 
communications from the other side. Then comes healingwhich is 
still practised in certain conditions by a highly virile medium
who has the power of discharging strengthlosing just as much as 
the weakling gainsas instanced by Christ when He said: "Who 
has touched me? Much virtue" (or power) "has gone out of me." 
Then we come upon the working of miracleswhich we should call 
the production of phenomenaand which would cover many different 
typessuch as apportswhere objects are brought from a 
distancelevitation of objects or of the human frame into the 
airthe production of lights and other wonders. Then comes 
prophecywhich is a real and yet a fitful and often delusive 
form of mediumship--never so delusive as among the early 
Christianswho seem all to have mistaken the approaching fall of 
Jerusalem and the destruction of the Templewhich they could 
dimly seeas being the end of the world. This mistake is 
repeated so often and so clearly that it is really not honest to 
ignore or deny it. Then we come to the power of "discerning the 
spirits which corresponds to our clairvoyance, and finally that 
curious and usually useless gift of tongues, which is also a 
modern phenomenon. I can remember that some time ago I read the 
book, I Heard a Voice by an eminent barrister, in which he 
describes how his young daughter began to write Greek fluently 
with all the complex accents in their correct places. Just after 
I read it I received a letter from a no less famous physician, 
who asked my opinion about one of his children who had written a 
considerable amount of script in mediaeval French. These two 
recent cases are beyond all doubt, but I have not had convincing 
evidence of the case where some unintelligible signs drawn by an 
unlettered man were pronounced by an expert to be in the Ogham or 
early Celtic character. As the Ogham script is really a 
combination of straight lines, the latter case may be taken with 
considerable reserve. 
Thus the phenomena associated with the rise of Christianity 
and those which have appeared during the present spiritual 
ferment are very analogous. In examining the gifts of the 
disciples, as mentioned by Matthew and Mark, the only additional 
point is the raising of the dead. If any of them besides their 
great leader did in truth rise to this height of power, where 
life was actually extinct, then he, undoubtedly, far transcended 
anything which is recorded of modern mediumship. It is clear, 
however, that such a power must have been very rare, since it 
would otherwise have been used to revive the bodies of their own 
martyrs, which does not seem to have been attempted. For Christ 
the power is clearly admitted, and there are little touches in 
the description of how it was exercised by Him which are 
extremely convincing to a psychic student. In the account of how 
He raised Lazarus from the grave after he had been four days 
dead--far the most wonderful of all Christ's miracles--it is 
recorded that as He went down to the graveside He was 
groaning." Why was He groaning? No Biblical student seems to 
have given a satisfactory reason. But anyone who has heard a 
medium groaning before any great manifestation of power will read 
into this passage just that touch of practical knowledgewhich 
will convince him of its truth. The miracleI may addis none 
the less wonderful or beyond our human powersbecause it was 
wrought by an extension of natural lawdiffering only in degree 
with that which we can ourselves test and even do. 
Although our modern manifestations have never attained the 
power mentioned in the Biblical recordsthey present some 
features which are not related in the New Testament. 
Clairaudiencethat is the hearing of a spirit voiceis common 
to bothbut the direct voicethat is the hearing of a voice 
which all can discern with their material earsis a wellauthenticated 
phenomenon now which is more rarely mentioned of 
old. SotooSpirit-photographywhere the camera records what 
the human eye cannot seeis necessarily a new testimony. 
Nothing is evidence to those who do not examine evidence
but I can attest most solemnly that I personally know of several 
cases where the image upon the plate after death has not only 
been unmistakablebut also has differed entirely from any preexisting 
photograph. 
As to the methods by which the early Christians communicated 
with the spiritsor with the "Saints" as they called their dead 
brethrenwe haveso far as I knowno recordthough the words 
of John: "Brothersbelieve not every spiritbut try the 
spirits whether they are of God show very clearly that spirit 
communion was a familiar idea, and also that they were plagued, 
as we are, by the intrusion of unwelcome spiritual elements in 
their intercourse. Some have conjectured that the Angel of the 
Church who is alluded to in terms which suggest that he was a 
human being, was really a medium sanctified to the use of that 
particular congregation. As we have early indications of 
bishops, deacons and other officials, it is difficult to say what 
else the angel" could have been. Thishowevermust remain a 
pure speculation. 
Another speculation which isperhapsrather more 
fruitful is upon what principle did Christ select his twelve 
chief followers. Out of all the multitudes he chose twelve men. 
Why these particular ones? It was not for their intelligence or 
learningfor Peter and Johnwho were among the most prominent
are expressly described as "unlearned and ignorant men." It was 
not for their virtuefor one of them proved to be a great 
villainand all of them deserted their Master in His need. It 
was not for their belieffor there were great numbers of 
believers. And yet it is clear that they were chosen on some 
principle of selection since they were called in ones and in 
twos. In at least two cases they were pairs of brothersas 
though some family gift or peculiaritymight underlie the 
choice. 
Is it not at least possible that this gift was psychic power
and that Christas the greatest exponent who has ever appeared 
upon earth of that powerdesired to surround Himself with others 
who possessed it to a lesser degree? This He would do for two 
reasons. The first is that a psychic circle is a great source of 
strength to one who is himself psychicas is shown continually 
in our own experiencewherewith a sympathetic and helpful 
surroundingan atmosphere is created where all the powers are 
drawn out. How sensitive Christ was to such an atmosphere is 
shown by the remark of the Evangelistthat when He visited His 
own native townwhere the townspeople could not take Him 
seriouslyHe was unable to do any wonders. The second reason 
may have been that He desired them to act as His deputieseither 
during his lifetime or after His deathand that for this reason 
some natural psychic powers were necessary. 
The close connection which appears to exist between the 
Apostles and the miracleshas been worked out in an interesting 
fashion by Dr. Abraham Wallacein his little pamphlet "Jesus of 
Nazareth."[6] Certainlyno miracle or wonder workingsave that 
of exorcismis recorded in any of the Evangelists until after 
the time when Christ began to assemble His circle. Of this 
circle the three who would appear to have been the most psychic 
were Peter and the two fellow-fishermensons of Zebedee
John and James. These were the three who were summoned when an 
ideal atmosphere was needed. It will be remembered that when the 
daughter of Jairus was raised from the dead it was in the 
presenceand possiblywith the co-operationof these three 
assistants. Againin the case of the Transfigurationit is 
impossible to read the account of that wonderful manifestation 
without being reminded at every turn of one's own spiritual 
experiences. Hereagainthe points are admirably made in 
Jesus of Nazareth,and it would be well if that little book
with its scholarly toneits breadth of treatment and its psychic 
knowledgewas in the hands of every Biblical student. Dr. 
Wallace points out that the placethe summit of a hillwas the 
ideal one for such a manifestationin its pure air and freedom 
from interruption; that the drowsy state of the Apostles is 
paralleled by the members of any circle who are contributing 
psychic power; that the transfiguring of the face and the shining 
raiment are known phenomena; above allthat the erection of 
three altars is meaninglessbut that the alternate reading
the erection of three booths or cabinetsone for the medium and 
one for each materialised formwould absolutely fulfil the most 
perfect conditions for getting results. This explanation of 
Wallace's is a remarkable example of a modern brainwith modern 
knowledgethrowing a clear searchlight across all the centuries 
and illuminating an incident which has always been obscure. 
[6] Published at sixpence by the Light Publishing Co.6
Queen SquareLondonW.C. The same firm supplies Dr. Ellis 
Powell's convincing little book on the same subject. 
When we translate Bible language into the terms of modern 
psychic religion the correspondence becomes evident. It does not 
take much alteration. Thus for "Loa miracle!" we say "This is 
a manifestation." "The angel of the Lord" becomes "a high 
spirit." Where we talked of "a voice from heaven we say the 
direct voice." "His eyes were opened and he saw a vision" means 
he became clairvoyant.It is only the occultist who can 
possibly understand the Scriptures as being a real exact record 
of events. 
There are many other small points which seem to bring the 
story of Christ and of the Apostles into very close touch with 
modern psychic researchand greatly support the close 
accuracy of some of the New Testament narrative. One which 
appeals to me greatly is the action of Christ when He was asked a 
question which called for a sudden decisionnamely the fate of 
the woman who had been taken in sin. What did He do? The very 
last thing that one would have expected or invented. He stooped 
down before answering and wrote with his finger in the sand. 
This he did a second time upon a second catch-question being 
addressed to Him. Can any theologian give a reason for such an 
action? I hazard the opinion that among the many forms of 
mediumship which were possessed in the highest form by Christ
was the power of automatic writingby which He summoned those 
great forces which were under His control to supply Him with the 
answer. Grantingas I freely dothat Christ was preternatural
in the sense that He was above and beyond ordinary humanity in 
His attributesone may still inquire how far these powers were 
contained always within His human bodyor how far He referred 
back to spiritual reserves beyond it. When He spoke merely from 
His human body He was certainly open to errorlike the rest 
of usfor it is recorded how He questioned the woman of Samaria 
about her husbandto which she replied that she had no husband. 
In the case of the woman taken in sinone can only explain His 
action by the supposition that He opened a channel instantly for 
the knowledge and wisdom which was preter-humanand which at 
once gave a decision in favor of large-minded charity. 
It is interesting to observe the effect which these 
phenomenaor the report of themproduced upon the orthodox Jews 
of those days. The greater part obviously discredited them
otherwise they could not have failed to become followersor at 
the least to have regarded such a wonder-worker with respect and 
admiration. One can well imagine how they shook their bearded 
headsdeclared that such occurrences were outside their own 
experienceand possibly pointed to the local conjuror who earned 
a few not over-clean denarii by imitating the phenomena. There 
were othershoweverwho could not possibly denybecause they 
either saw or met with witnesses who had seen. These declared 
roundly that the whole thing was of the devildrawing from 
Christ one of those pithycommon-sense arguments in which He 
excelled. The same two classes of opponentsthe scoffers and 
the diabolistsface us to-day. Verily the old world goes round 
and so do the events upon its surface. 
There is one line of thought which may be indicated in the 
hope that it will find development from the minds and pens of 
those who have studied most deeply the possibilities of psychic 
power. It is at least possiblethough I admit that under modern 
conditions it has not been clearly provedthat a medium of great 
power can charge another with his own forcejust as a magnet 
when rubbed upon a piece of inert steel can turn it also into a 
magnet. One of the best attested powers of D. D. Home was that 
he could take burning coals from the fire with impunity and carry 
them in his hand. He could then--and this comes nearer to the 
point at issue--place them on the head of anyone who was fearless 
without their being burned. Spectators have described how the 
silver filigree of the hair of Mr. Carter Hall used to be 
gathered over the glowing emberand Mrs. Hall has mentioned how 
she combed out the ashes afterwards. Nowin this case
Home was clearlyable to conveya power to another personjust 
as Christwhen He was levitated over the lakewas able to 
convey the same power to Peterso long as Peter's faith held 
firm. The question then arises if Home concentrated all his 
force upon transferring such a power how long would that power 
last? The experiment was never triedbut it would have borne 
verydirectly upon this argument. Forgranting that the power 
can be transferredthen it is very clear how the Christ circle 
was able to send forth seventy disciples who were endowed with 
miraculous functions. It is clear also whynew disciples had to 
return to Jerusalem to be "baptised of the spirit to use their 
phrase, before setting forth upon their wanderings. And when in 
turn they, desired to send forth representatives would not they 
lay hands upon them, make passes over them and endeavour to 
magnetise them in the same way--if that word may express the 
process? Have we here the meaning of the laying on of hands by 
the bishop at ordination, a ceremony to which vast importance is 
still attached, but which may well be the survival of 
something really vital, the bestowal of the thaumaturgic power? 
When, at last, through lapse of time or neglect of fresh 
cultivation, the power ran out, the empty formula may have been 
carried on, without either the blesser or the blessed 
understanding what it was that the hands of the bishop, and the 
force which streamed from them, were meant to bestow. The very 
words laying on of hands" would seem to suggest something 
different from a mere benediction. 
Enough has been saidperhapsto show the reader that it is 
possible to put forward a view of Christ's life which would be in 
strict accord with the most modern psychic knowledgeand which
far from supplanting Christianitywould show the surprising 
accuracy of some of the details handed down to usand would 
support the novel conclusion that those very miracleswhich have 
been the stumbling block to so many truthfulearnest mindsmay 
finally offer some very cogent arguments for the truth of the 
whole narrative. Is this then a line of thought which merits the 
wholesale condemnations and anathemas hurled at it by those 
who profess to speak in the name of religion? At the same 
timethough we bring support to the New Testamentit would
indeedbe a misconception if theseor any such remarkswere 
quoted as sustaining its literal accuracy--an idea from which so 
much harm has come in the past. It wouldindeedbe a good
though an unattainable thingthat a really honest and openminded 
attempt should be made to weed out from that record the 
obvious forgeries and interpolations which disfigure itand 
lessen the value of those parts which are really above suspicion. 
Is it necessaryfor exampleto be toldas an inspired fact 
from Christ's own lipsthat Zachariasthe son of Barachias[7] 
was struck dead within the precincts of the Temple in the time of 
Christwhenby a curious chanceJosephus has independently 
narrated the incident as having occurred during the siege of 
Jerusalemthirty-seven years later? This makes it very clear 
that this particular Gospelin its present formwas written 
after that eventand that the writer fitted into it at least one 
other incident which had struck his imagination. Unfortunately
a revision by general agreement would be the greatest of all 
miraclesfor two of the very first texts to go would be those 
which refer to the "Church an institution and an idea utterly 
unfamiliar in the days of Christ. Since the object of the 
insertion of these texts is perfectly clear, there can be 
no doubt that they are forgeries, but as the whole system of the 
Papacy rests upon one of them, they are likely to survive for a 
long time to come. The text alluded to is made further 
impossible because it is based upon the supposition that Christ 
and His fishermen conversed together in Latin or Greek, even to 
the extent of making puns in that language. Surely the want of 
moral courage and intellectual honesty among Christians will seem 
as strange to our descendants as it appears marvellous to us that 
the great thinkers of old could have believed, or at least have 
pretended to believe, in the fighting sexual deities of Mount 
Olympus. 
[7] The References are to Matthew, xxiii 35, and to Josephus, 
Wars of the Jews, Book IV, Chapter 5. 
Revision is, indeed, needed, and as I have already pleaded, a 
change of emphasis is also needed, in order to get the grand 
Christian conception back into the current of reason and 
progress. The orthodox who, whether from humble faith or some 
other cause, do not look deeply into such matters, can hardly 
conceive the stumbling-blocks which are littered about before the 
feet of their more critical brethren. What is easy, for faith is 
impossible for reflection. Such expressions as Saved by the 
blood of the Lamb" or "Baptised by His precious blood" fill their 
souls with a gentle and sweet emotionwhile upon a more 
thoughtful mind they have a very different effect. 
Apart from the apparent injustice of vicarious atonementthe 
student is well aware that the whole of this sanguinary metaphor 
is drawn really from the Pagan rites of Mithrawhere the 
neophyte was actually placed under a bull at the ceremony of the 
TAUROBOLIUMand was drenchedthrough a gratingwith the blood 
of the slaughtered animal. Such reminiscences of the more brutal 
side of Paganism are not helpful to the thoughtful and sensitive 
modern mind. But what is always fresh and always useful and 
always beautifulis the memory of the sweet Spirit who wandered 
on the hillsides of Galilee; who gathered the children 
around him; who met his friends in innocent good-fellowship; who 
shrank from forms and ceremoniescraving always for the inner 
meaning; who forgave the sinner; who championed the poorand who 
in every decision threw his weight upon the side of charity and 
breadth of view. When to this character you add those wondrous 
psychic powers already analysedyou doindeedfind a supreme 
character in the world's history who obviously stands nearer to 
the Highest than any other. When one compares the general effect 
of His teaching with that of the more rigid churchesone marvels 
how in their dogmatismtheir insistence upon formstheir 
exclusivenesstheir pomp and their intolerancethey could have 
got so far away from the example of their Masterso that as one 
looks upon Him and themone feels that there is absolute deep 
antagonism and that one cannot speak of the Church and Christ
but only of the Church or Christ. 
And yet every Church produces beautiful soulsthough it may 
be debated whether "produces" or "contains" is the truthful 
word. We have but to fall back upon our own personal 
experience if we have lived long and mixed much with our fellowmen. 
I have myself lived during the seven most impressionable 
years of my life among Jesuitsthe most maligned of all 
ecclesiastical ordersand I have found them honourable and good 
menin all ways estimable outside the narrowness which limits 
the world to Mother Church. They were athletesscholarsand 
gentlemennor can I ever remember any examples of that casuistry 
with which they are reproached. Some of my best friends have 
been among the parochial clergy of the Church of Englandmen of 
sweet and saintly characterwhose pecuniary straits were often a 
scandal and a reproach to the half-hearted folk who accepted 
their spiritual guidance. I have knownalsosplendid men among 
the Nonconformist clergywho have often been the champions of 
libertythough their views upon that subject have sometimes 
seemed to contract when one ventured upon their own domain of 
thought. Each creed has brought out men who were an honour to 
the human raceand Manning or ShrewsburyGordon or 
DollingBooth or Stopford Brookeare all equally admirable
however diverse the roots from which they grow. Among the great 
mass of the peopletoothere are very many thousands of 
beautiful souls who have been brought up on the old-fashioned 
linesand who never heard of spiritual communion or any other of 
those matters which have been discussed in these essaysand yet 
have reached a condition of pure spirituality such as all of us 
may envy. Who does not know the maiden auntthe widowed mother
the mellowed elderly manwho live upon the hilltops of 
unselfishnessshedding kindly thoughts and deeds around them
but with their simple faith deeplyrooted in anything or 
everything which has come to them in a hereditary fashion with 
the sanction of some particular authority? I had an aunt who was 
such an oneand can see her nowworn with austerity and 
charitya smallhumble figurecreeping to church at all hours 
from a house which was to her but a waiting-room between 
serviceswhile she looked at me with sadwonderinggrey eyes. 
Such people have often reached by instinctand in spite of 
dogmaheightsto which no system of philosophy can ever 
raise us. 
But making full allowance for the high products of every 
creedwhich may be onlya proof of the innate goodness of 
civilised humanityit is still beyond all doubt that 
Christianity has broken downand that this breakdown has been 
brought home to everyone by the terrible catastrophe which has 
befallen the world. Can the most optimistic apologist contend 
that this is a satisfactoryoutcome from a religion which has 
had the unopposed run of Europe for so many centuries? Which has 
come out of it worstthe Lutheran Prussianthe Catholic 
Bavarianor the peoples who have been nurtured by the Greek 
Church? If weof the Westhave done betteris it not rather 
an older and higher civilisation and freer political institutions 
that have held us back from all the crueltiesexcesses and 
immoralities which have taken the world back to the dark ages? 
It will not do to say that they have occurred in spite of 
Christianityand that Christianity isthereforenot to blame. 
It is true that Christ's teaching is not to blamefor it is 
often spoiled in the transmission. But Christianity has 
taken over control of the morals of Europeand should have the 
compelling force which would ensure that those morals would not 
go to pieces upon the first strain. It is on this point that 
Christianity must be judgedand the judgment can only be that it 
has failed. It has not been an active controlling force upon the 
minds of men. And why? It can only be because there is 
something essential which is wanting. Men do not take it 
seriously. Men do not believe in it. Lip service is the only 
service in innumerable casesand even lip service grows fainter. 
Menas distinct from womenhaveboth in the higher and lower 
classes of lifeceasedin the greater number of casesto show 
a living interest in religion. The churches lose their grip upon 
the people--and lose it rapidly. Small inner circles
convocationscommitteesassembliesmeet and debate and pass 
resolutions of an ever narrower character. But the people go 
their way and religion is deadsave in so far as intellectual 
culture and good taste can take its place. But when religion is 
deadmaterialism becomes activeand what active 
materialism may produce has been seen in Germany. 
Is it not timethenfor the religious bodies to discourage 
their own bigots and sectariansand to seriously considerif 
only for self-preservationhow they can get into line once more 
with that general level of human thought which is now so far in 
front of them? I say that they can do more than get level--they 
can lead. But to do so they muston the one handhave the firm 
courage to cut away from their own bodies all that dead tissue 
which is but a disfigurement and an encumbrance. They must face 
difficulties of reasonand adapt themselves to the demands of 
the human intelligence which rejectsand is right in rejecting
much which they offer. Finallythey must gather fresh strength 
by drawing in all the new truth and all the new power which are 
afforded by this new wave of inspiration which has been sent into 
the world by Godand which the human racedeluded and bemused 
by the would-be cleverhas received with such perverse and 
obstinate incredulity. When they have done all thisthey will 
find not only that they are leading the world with an 
obvious right to the leadershipbutin additionthat they have 
come round once more to the very teaching of that Master whom 
they have so long misrepresented. 
APPENDICES 
A 
DOCTOR GELEY'S EXPERIMENTS 
Nothing could be imagined more fantastic and grotesque than 
the results of the recent experiments of Professor Geleyin 
France. Before such results the braineven of the trained 
psychical studentis dazedwhile that of the orthodox man of 
sciencewho has given no heed to these developmentsis 
absolutely helpless. In the account of the proceedings which he 
read lately before the Institut General Psychologique in Paris
on January of last yearDr. Geley says: "I do not merely say 
that there has been no fraud; I say`there has been no 
possibility of fraud.' In nearly every case the materialisations 
were done under myeyesand I have observed their whole genesis 
and development." He adds thatin the course of the 
experimentsmore than a hundred expertsmostly doctorschecked 
the results. 
These results may be briefly stated thus. A peculiar whitish 
matter exuded from the subjecta girl named Evacoming partly 
through her skinpartly from her handspartly from the orifices 
of her faceespecially her mouth. This was photographed 
repeatedly at every stage of its productionthese photographs 
being appended to the printed treatise. This stuffsolid enough 
to enable one to touch and to photographhas been called the 
ectoplasm. It is a new order of matterand it is clearly 
derived from the subject herselfabsorbing into her system once 
more at the end of the experiment. It exudes in such quantities 
as to entirelycover her sometimes as with an apron. It is soft 
and glutinous to the touchbut varies in form and even in 
colour. Its production causes pain and groans from the subject
and any violence towards it would appear also to affect her. A 
sudden flash of lightas in a flash-photographmay or may not 
cause a retraction of the ectoplasmbut always causes a spasm of 
the subject. When re-absorbedit leaves no trace upon the 
garments through which it has passed. 
This is wonderful enoughbut far more fantastic is what has 
still to be told. The most marked property of this ectoplasm
very fully illustrated in the photographsis that it sets or 
curdles into the shapes of human members--of fingersof hands
of faceswhich are at first quite sketchy and rudimentarybut 
rapidly coalesce and develop until they are undistinguishable 
from those of living beings. Is not this the very strangest and 
most inexplicable thing that has ever yet been observed by human 
eyes? These faces or limbs are usually the size of lifebut 
they frequently are quite miniatures. Occasionally they begin by 
being miniaturesand grow into full size. On their first 
appearance in the ectoplasm the limb is only on one plane of 
mattera mere flat appearancewhich rapidly rounds itself off
until it has assumed all three planes and is complete. It may be 
a mere simulacrumlike a wax handor it may be endowed with 
full power of grasping another handwith every articulation in 
perfect working order. 
The faces which are produced in this amazing way are worthy 
of study. They do not appear to have represented anyone who 
has ever been known in life by Doctor Geley.[8] My impression 
after examining them is that they are much more likely to be 
within the knowledge of the subjectbeing girls of the French 
lower middle class typesuch as Eva wasI should imaginein 
the habit of meeting. It should be added that Eva herself 
appears in the photograph as well as the simulacra of humanity. 
The faces areon the wholeboth pretty and piquantthough of a 
rather worldly and unrefined type. The latter adjective would 
not apply to the larger and most elaborate photographwhich 
represents a very beautiful young woman of a truly spiritual cast 
of face. Some of the faces are but partially formedwhich gives 
them a grotesque or repellant appearance. What are we to make of 
such phenomena? There is no use deluding ourselves by the idea 
that there may be some mistake or some deception. There is 
neither one nor the other. Apart from the elaborate checks upon 
these particular resultsthey correspond closely with those 
got by Lombroso in Italyby Schrenk-Notzing in Germanyand by 
other careful observers. One thing we must bear in mind 
constantly in considering themand that is their abnormality. 
At a liberal estimateit is not one person in a million who 
possesses such powers--if a thing which is outside our volition 
can be described as a power. It is the mechanism of the 
materialisation medium which has been explored by the acute brain 
and untiring industry of Doctor Geleyand even presumingas one 
may fairly presumethat every materialising medium goes through 
the same process in order to produce resultsstill such mediums 
are exceedinglyrare. Dr. Geley mentionsas an analogous 
phenomenon on the material sidethe presence of dermoid cysts
those mysterious formationswhich rise as small tumors in any 
part of the bodyparticularly above the eyebrowand which when 
opened by the surgeon are found to contain hairteeth or 
embryonic bones. There is no doubtas he claimssome rough 
analogybut the dermoid cyst isat leastin the same flesh and 
blood plane of nature as the foetus inside itwhile in the 
ectoplasm we are dealing with an entirely new and strange 
development. 
[8] Dr. Geley writes to me that they are unknown either to him 
or to the medium. 
It is not possible to define exactly what occurs in the case 
of the ectoplasmnoron account of its vital connection with 
the medium and its evanescent naturehas it been separated and 
subjected to even the roughest chemical analysis which might show 
whether it is composed of those earthly elements with which we 
are familiar. Is it rather some coagulation of ether which 
introduces an absolutely new substance into our world? Such a 
supposition seems most probablefor a comparison with the 
analogous substance examined at Dr. Crawford's seances at 
Belfastwhich is at the same time hardly visible to the eye and 
yet capable of handling a weight of 150 poundssuggests 
something entirely new in the way of matter. 
But setting asideas beyond the present speculationwhat 
the exact origin and nature of the ectoplasm may beit seems to 
me that there is room for a very suggestive line of thought if we 
make Geley's experiments the starting pointand lead it in the 
direction of other manifestations of psychomaterial activity. 
First of alllet us take Crookes' classic experiments with 
Katie Kinga result which for a long time stood alone and 
isolated but now can be approached by intermittent but definite 
stages. Thus we can well suppose that during those long periods 
when Florrie Cook lay in the laboratory in the darkperiods 
which lasted an hour or more upon some occasionsthe ectoplasm 
was flowing from her as from Eva. Then it was gathering itself 
into a viscous cloud or pillar close to her frame; then the form 
of Katie King was evolved from this cloudin the manner already 
describedand finally the nexus was broken and the completed 
body advanced to present itself at the door of communication
showing a person different in every possible attribute save that 
of sex from the mediumand yet composed wholly or in part from 
elements extracted from her senseless body. So farGeley's 
experiments throw a strong explanatory light upon those of 
Crookes. And here the Spiritualist mustas it seems to mebe 
prepared to meet an objection more formidable than the absurd 
ones of fraud or optical delusion. It is this. If the body of 
Katie King the spirit is derived from the body of Florrie 
Cook the psychicthen what assurance have we that the life 
therein is not really one of the personalities out of which the 
complex being named Florrie Cook is constructed? It is a thesis 
which requires careful handling. It is not enough to say that 
the nature is manifestly superiorfor supposing that Florrie 
Cook represented the average of a number of conflicting 
personalitiesthen a single one of these personalities might be 
far higher than the total effect. Without going deeply into this 
problemone can but say that the spirit's own account of its own 
personality must count for somethingand also that an isolated 
phenomenon must be taken in conjunction with all other psychic 
phenomena when we are seeking for a correct explanation. 
But now let us take this idea of a human being who has the 
power of emitting a visible substance in which are formed faces 
which appear to represent distinct individualitiesand in 
extreme cases develop into complete independent human forms. 
Take this extraordinary factand let us see whetherby an 
extension or modification of this demonstrated processwe 
may not get some sort of clue as to the modus operandi in 
other psychic phenomena. It seems to me that we mayat least
obtain indications which amount to a probabilitythough not to a 
certaintyas to how some resultshitherto inexplicableare 
attained. It is at any rate a provisional speculationwhich may 
suggest a hypothesis for future observers to destroymodifyor 
confirm. 
The argument which I would advance is this. If a strong 
materialisation medium can throw out a cloud of stuff which is 
actually visiblemay not a medium of a less pronounced type 
throw out a similar cloud with analogous properties which is not 
opaque enough to be seen by the average eyebut can make an 
impression both on the dry plate in the camera and on the 
clairvoyant faculty? If that be so--and it would not seem to be 
a very far-fetched proposition--we have at once an explanation 
both of psychic photographs and of the visions of the clairvoyant 
seer. When I say an explanationI mean of its superficial 
method of formationand not of the forces at work behindwhich 
remain no less a mystery even when we accept Dr. Geley's 
statement that they are "ideoplastic." 
Here we haveI thinksome attempt at a generalisation
which mightperhapsbe useful in evolving some first signs of 
order out of this chaos. It is conceivable that the thinner 
emanation of the clairvoyant would extend far further than the 
thick material ectoplasmbut have the same property of moulding 
itself into lifethough the life forms would only be visible to 
the clairvoyant eye. Thuswhen Mr. Tom Tyrrellor any other 
competent exponentstands upon the platform his emanation fills 
the hall. Into this emanationas into the visible ectoplasm in 
Geley's experimentsbreak the faces and forms of those from the 
other side who are attracted to the scene by their sympathy with 
various members of the audience. They are seen and described by 
Mr. Tyrrellwho with his finely attuned sensescarefully 
conserved (he hardly eats or drinks upon a day when he 
demonstrates)can hear that thinner higher voice that calls 
their namestheir old addresses and their messages. Sotoo
when Mr. Hope and Mrs. Buxton stand with their hands joined 
over the cap of the camerathey are really throwing out a 
misty ectoplasm from which the forms loom up which appear upon 
the photographic plate. It may be that I mistake an analogy for 
an explanationbut I put the theory on record for what it is 
worth.
B
A PARTICULAR INSTANCE 
I have been in touch with a series of events in America 
latelyand can vouch for the facts as much as any man can vouch 
for facts which did not occur to himself. I have not the least 
doubt in my own mind that they are trueand a more remarkable 
double proof of the continuity of life hasI should think
seldom been published. A book has recently been issued by 
Harpersof New Yorkcalled "The Seven Purposes." In this book 
the authoressMiss Margaret Camerondescribes how she suddenly 
developed the power of automatic writing. She was not a 
Spiritualist at the time. Her hand was controlled and she wrote 
a quantity of matter which was entirely outside her own knowledge 
or character. Upon her doubting whether her sub-conscious self 
might in some way be producing the writingwhich was 
partly done by planchettethe script was written upside down and 
from right to leftas though the writer was seated opposite. 
Such script could not possibly be written by the lady herself. 
Upon making enquiry as to who was using her handthe answer came 
in writing that it was a certain Fred Gaylordand that his 
object was to get a message to his mother. The youth was unknown 
to Miss Cameronbut she knew the family and forwarded the 
messagewith the result that the mother came to see her
examined the evidencecommunicated with the sonand finally
returning homeburied all her evidences of mourningfeeling 
that the boy was no more dead in the old sense than if he were 
alive in a foreign country. 
There is the first proof of preternatural agencysince Miss 
Cameron developed so much knowledge which she could not have 
normally acquiredusing many phrases and ideas which were 
characteristic of the deceased. But mark the sequel. Gaylord 
was merely a pseudonymas the matter was so private that the 
real namewhich we will put as Bridgerwas not disclosed. A 
few months after the book was published Miss Cameron 
received a letter from a stranger living a thousand miles away. 
This letter and the whole correspondence I have seen. The 
strangerMrs. Nicolsays that as a test she would like to ask 
whether the real name given as Fred Gaylord in the book is not 
Fred Bridgeras she had psychic reasons for believing so. Miss 
Cameron replied that it was soand expressed her great surprise 
that so secret and private a matter should have been correctly 
stated. Mrs. Nicol then explained that she and her husbandboth 
connected with journalism and both absolutely agnostichad 
discovered that she had the power of automatic writing. That 
whileusing this power she had received communications 
purporting to come from Fred Bridger whom they had known in life
and that upon reading Miss Cameron's book they had received from 
Fred Bridger the assurance that he was the same person as the 
Fred Gaylord of Miss Cameron. 
Nowarguing upon these factsand they would appear most 
undoubtedly to be factswhat possible answer can the materialist 
or the sceptic give to the assertion that they are a double proof 
of the continuity of personality and the possibility of 
communication? Can any reasonable system of telepathy explain 
how Miss Cameron discovered the intimate points characteristic of 
young Gaylord? And thenhow are we afterwardsby any possible 
telepathyto explain the revelation to Mrs. Nicol of the 
identity of her communicantFred Bridgerwith the Fred Gaylord 
who had been written of by Miss Cameron. The case for return 
seems to me a very convincing onethough I contend nowas ever
that it is not the return of the lost ones which is of such 
cogent interest as the message from the beyond which they bear 
with them.
C
SPIRIT PHOTOGRAPHY 
On this subject I should recommend the reader to consult 
Coates' "Photographing the Invisible which states, in a 
thoughtful and moderate way, the evidence for this most 
remarkable phase, and illustrates it with many examples. It is 
pointed out that here, as always, fraud must be carefully guarded 
against, having been admitted in the case of the French spirit 
photographer, Buguet. 
There are, however, a large number of cases where the 
photograph, under rigid test conditions in which fraud has been 
absolutely barred, has reproduced the features of the dead. Here 
there are limitations and restrictions which call for careful 
study and observation. These faces of the dead are in some cases 
as contoured and as recognisable as they were in life, and 
correspond with no pre-existing picture or photograph. 
One such case absolutely critic-proof is enough, one would think, 
to establish survival, and these valid cases are to be counted 
not in ones, but in hundreds. On the other hand, many of the 
likenesses, obtained under the same test conditions, are 
obviously simulacra or pictures built up by some psychic force, 
not necessarily by the individual spirits themselves, to 
represent the dead. In some undoubtedly genuine cases it is an 
exact, or almost exact, reproduction of an existing picture, as 
if the conscious intelligent force, whatever it might be, had 
consulted it as to the former appearance of the deceased, and had 
then built it up in exact accordance with the original. In such 
cases the spirit face may show as a flat surface instead of a 
contour. Rigid examination has shown that the existing model was 
usually outside the ken of the photographer. 
Two of the bravest champions whom Spiritualism has ever 
produced, the late W. T. Stead and the late Archdeacon Colley-names 
which will bulk large in days to come--attached great 
importance to spirit photography as a final and 
incontestable proof of survival. In his recent work, Proofs of 
the Truth of Spiritualism" (Kegan Paul)the eminent botanist
Professor Henslowhas given one case which would really appear 
to be above criticism. He narrates how the inquirer subjected a 
sealed packet of plates to the Crewe circle without exposure
endeavoring to get a psychograph. Upon being asked on which 
plate he desired ithe said "the fifth." Upon this plate being 
developedthere was found on it a copy of a passage from the 
Codex Alexandrinus of the New Testament in the British Museum. 
Reproductionsboth of the original and of the copywill be 
found in Professor Henslow's book. 
I have myself been to Crewe and have had results which would 
be amazing were it not that familiarity blunts the mind to 
miracles. Three marked plates brought by myselfand handled
developed and fixed by no hand but minegave psychic extras. In 
each case I saw the extra in the negative when it was still wet 
in the dark room. I reproduce in Plate I a specimen of the 
resultswhich is enough in itself to prove the whole case of 
survival to any reasonable mind. The three sitters are Mr. 
OatenMr. Walkerand myselfI being obscured by the psychic 
cloud. In this cloud appears a message of welcome to me from the 
late Archdeacon Colley. A specimen of the Archdeacon's own 
handwriting is reproduced in Plate II for the purpose of 
comparison. Behindthere is an attempt at materialisation 
obscured by the cloud. The mark on the side of the plate is my 
identification mark. I trust that I make it clear that no hand 
but mine ever touched this platenor did I ever lose sight of it 
for a second save when it was in the carrierwhich was conveyed 
straight back to the dark room and there opened. What has any 
critic to say to that? 
By the kindness of those fearless pioneers of the movement
Mr. and Mrs. Hewat MackenzieI am allowed to publish another 
example of spirit photography. The circumstances were very 
remarkable. The visit of the parents to Crewe was unproductive 
and their plate a blank save for their own presentment. 
Returning disappointedto London they managedthrough the 
mediumship of Mrs. Leonardto get into touch with their 
boyand asked him why they had failed. He replied that the 
conditions had been badbut that he had actually succeeded some 
days later in getting on to the plate of Lady Glenconnorwho had 
been to Crewe upon a similar errand. The parents communicated 
with this ladywho replied saying that she had found the image 
of a stranger upon her plate. On receiving a print they at once 
recognised their sonand could even see thatas a proof of 
identityhe had reproduced the bullet wound on his left temple. 
No. 3 is their gallant son as he appeared in the fleshNo. 4 is 
his reappearance after death. The opinion of a miniature painter 
who had done a picture of the young soldier is worth recording as 
evidence of identity. The artist says: "After painting the 
miniature of your son WillI feel I know every turn of his face
and am quite convinced of the likeness of the psychic photograph. 
All the modelling of the brownose and eyes is marked by 
illness--especially is the mouth slightly contracted--but this 
does not interfere with the real form. The way the hair 
grows on the brow and temple is noticeably like the photograph 
taken before he was wounded."
D
THE CLAIRVOYANCE OF MRS. B. 
At the time of this volume going to press the results 
obtained by clients of this medium have been forty-two successes 
out of fifty attemptschecked and docketted by the author. This 
series forms a most conclusive proof of spirit clairvoyance. An 
attempt has been made by Mr. E. F. Bensonwho examined some of 
the lettersto explain the results upon the grounds of 
telepathy. He admits that "The tastesappearance and character 
of the deceased are often givenand many names are introduced by 
the mediumsome not traceablebut most of them identical with 
relations or friends." Such an admission would alone banish 
thought-reading as an explanationfor there is no evidence in 
existence to show that this power ever reaches such perfection 
that one who possesses it could draw the image of a dead 
man from your brainfit a correct name to himand then 
associate him with all sorts of definite and detailed actions in 
which he was engaged. Such an explanation is not an explanation 
but a pretence. But even if one were to allow such a theory to 
passthere are numerous incidents in these accounts which could 
not be explained in such a fashionwhere unknown details have 
been given which were afterwards verifiedand even where 
mistakes in thought upon the part of the sitter were corrected by 
the medium under spirit guidance. Personally I believe that the 
medium's own account of how she gets her remarkable results is 
the absolute truthand I can imagine no other fashion in which 
they can be explained. She hasof courseher bad daysand the 
conditions are always worst when there is an inquisitorial rather 
than a religious atmosphere in the interview. This intermittent 
character of the results isaccording to my experience
characteristic of spirit clairvoyance as compared with thoughtreading
which canin its more perfect formbecome almost 
automatic within certain marked limits. I may add that the 
constant practice of some psychical researchers to take no 
notice at all of the medium's own account of how he or she 
attains resultsbut to substitute some complicated and unproved 
explanation of their ownis as insulting as it is unreasonable. 
It has been alleged as a slur upon Mrs. B's results and character 
that she has been twice prosecuted by the police. This isin 
factnot a slur upon the medium but rather upon the lawwhich 
is in so barbarous a condition that the true seer fares no better 
than the impostorand that no definite psychic principles are 
recognised. A medium may under such circumstances be a martyr 
rather than a criminaland a conviction ceases to be a stain 
upon the character.