rj^A. \, ' ' J ^/,^, 1 ' --it t\'AV GIFT OF I 'i^¥^^ '!gr f^G^ =^^pB@l :;fe^ t PSYCHOGRAPHY: A TREATISE ON ONE OF THE OBJECTIVE FORMS OF PSYCHIC OR SPIRITUAL PHENOMENA. By "M. a. (OXON.)" 1878. London: W. H. Harrison, t^S Great Russell Street. BIOLOGY EDUC. PSY I LlB.vnRY A testimony is sufficient when it rests on — 1. A great number of sensible witnesses, who agree on having seen clearly. 2. Who are sane, bodily and mentally. 3. Who are impartial and disinterested. 4. Who unanimously agree. 5. Who solemnly certify to the fact. Voltaire, (Philosophical Dictionary). 14^ "Never utter these words: 'I do not know this; there- fore it is false.' " " One must study to know, know to understand, under- stand to judge." Narada, (Hindu Philosopher). PREFACE. The following pages are concerned with what has been variously called Independent, Direct, or Spirit Writing. I have ventured to call it PSYCHOGRAPHY, a term intel- ligible in itself, moulded on already existing words, and expressive of what clumsy periphrases have hitherto vaguely conveyed. I was under the impression, when I first applied the term, that it was as new to the subject as it certainly was to me. I find, however, that I am using a word which has been before applied; and I am not sorry that I am only giving extended use to a term which is obviously applicable and convenient. My object has been to present within convenient space a record of facts bearing on one form only of Psychic Phe- nomena. To this end I have cut out from the quoted records all that bore upon other phenomena not now under consideration. I have desired to present no theory for acceptance. I have, indeed, enumerated several, and have shown in some cases how far they do or do not square with observed facts. But I have never presumed to take upon myself the office of advocate of any. So far have I kept myself from this that I have, in some cases, ventured to excise expressions of opinion from quoted records, where it was possible to do so without doing any violence to the context. In submitting what I have written to the judgment of my readers, I profess my own firm belief in the trustworthy nature of the facts recorded, and my own profound sense 4 827 no 6 Preface. of their far-reaching importance, both on grounds of their intrinsic value, and as parts of a great system of Psycho- logical Fact and Phenomenon, the study of which must eventually throw a flood of light on some of the problems that, in the present day, are at once most interesting and most perplexing. That men of trained and practised intellect should be found willing to devote the assiduous labour of a long life to some minute subject, in the hope of clearing up one small phase of it, is, from one point of view, a hopeful and encour- aging fact ; but it tends to engender thoughts the reverse of cheerful, when we reflect that this very search after truth in one of its minute phases is frequently allied to a scornful contempt for that noblest study of humanity, Man's own Nature, Powers, and Destiny. The result, primarily, of ignorance, next of prejudice, finally of disgust at oft-detected fraud, this attitude — this unworthy attitude — can, I believe, better be combated by patient exposition of the truth than by any proselytizing, however vigorous and wide-spread, or by any controversy, however skilfully conducted. A Fact must finally drop into its place; it matters not much, save to those who might profit by knowledge of it, whether now or in a succeeding age, when our children will, it is to be hoped, be wiser than their fathers. It is with this conviction that I have endeavoured to elucidate one among many of the facts which testify to the existence of a soul in man, and to its independent action beyond his physical body ; an earnest of its survival and independent life when released by death from its earthly prison-house. M. A. (OxoN.) SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS, PAGE PREFACE, 5 LIST OF WORKS BEARING OX THE SUBJECT, ii INTRODUCTION, 13 PSYCHOGRAPHY IN THE PAST : Guldenstubbe— Crookes, 19 PERSONAL EXPERIENCES IN PRIVATE, AND WITH PUBLIC PSYCHICS, 25 GENERAL CORROBORATIVE EVIDENCE. I. That Attested By the Senses — 1. Of Sight Evidence of INI r. E. T. Bennett, 33 ,, a Malvern Reporter, 35 , , Mr. James Bums, 36 ,, Mr. H. D. Jencken, 38 2. Of Hearing. Evidence of Mr, Serjeant Cox, 41 , , Mr. George King, 44 ,, Mr. Hensleigh Wedgwood, 49 ,, Miss * * * ^o ,, Canon Mouls, 52 8 Synopsis of Contents. PAGE Evidence of Baroness Von Vay, 5^ ,, G. H. Adshead, 53 ,, W. r. Adshead, 53 E. II. Valter, 54 J. L. O'Sullivan, 58 ,, Epes Sargent, 60 ,, James O. Sargent, 63 ,, John Wetherbee, 65 H. B. Storer, 66 C. A. Greenleaf, 66 ,, Public Committee with Watkms, 67 II. From the Writing of Languages Unknown to the Psychic. Ancient Greek — Evidence of lion. R. Dale Owen and Mr. Blackburn. (Slade), 71 Dutch, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese. (Slade), 78 Russian — Evidence of Madame Blavatsky. (Watkins), ... 78 Romaic — Evidence of T. T. Timayenis. (Watkins), 79 Chinese. (Watkins), 79 in. From Special Tests which Preclude Previous Pre- paration OF THE Writing. Psychics and Conjurers Contrasted, 80 Slade before the Research Committee of the British National Association of Spiritualists, 83 Slade Tested by C. Carter Blake, Doc. Sci., 90 Evidence of Rev. J. Page FIopps. (Slade), 94 ,, W. II. Harrison. (Slade), 96 „ J. Seaman. (Slade), 98 Synopsis of Contents. 9 PAOK ^VR^l•I^'G within Slates securely screwed togellier. Evidence of Mrs, Andrews and J. Mould, loi Dictation of Words at the Time of the Experiment. Evidence of A. R. Wallace, F.R.G.S., 104 ,, Hensleigh Wedgwood, J. I'., 105 ,, Rev. Thomas Colley, 106 ,, W. Oxley, 106 ,, George Wyld, M.D., 108 ,, Miss Kislingbury, 109 Writing in Answer to Questions Inside a Closed Box. Evidence of Messrs. Adshead, 113 Statement of Circumstances under which Experiments with F. W. Monck were conducted at Keighley, 119 Writing on Glass Coated with White Paint. Evidence of Benjamin Coleman, 120 Letters addressed to "The Times" on the Subject of the Prosecution of Henry Slade by Messrs. Jov, JoAD, AND Professor Barrett, F.R.S.E., 121 Evidence of V\'. H. PIarrison, Editor of "The Spir- itualist," 125 SUMMARY OF FACTS NARRATED, 127 DEDUCTIONS, EXPLANATIONS, AND THEORIES. The Nature of the Force : Its Mode of Operation. Evidence of C. Carter Blake, Doc. Sci., and Conrad Cooke, C.E., 128 10 Synopsis of Contents. rAGE Detonating Noises in Connexion with it. Evidence of Hensleigh Wedgwood, J. Page ilopps, Thomas Volley, 133 Method of Direction of the Force. Dr. Collyer's Theory, 135 Dr. George Wyld's Theory, 140 The Occultist's Theory, 141 The Spiritualist's Theory, 145 APPENDIX. The Berlin Court Conjurer on Slade, 149 Slade with the Grand Duke Constantine, 150 Recent Experiment with Monck, 151 LIST OF BOOKS BEARING OX PSVCHOGRAPHY AND SUBTECTS OF A KINDRED NATURE. La RiizIUJ dcs E sprits et U Phefiomene Meneilkux de latr Ecnture Directs. Baron L. de Guldenstubbe. Primitize Christiaiiity arvi Modern Spiritualism. Eugene Crowell, M.D. Flanchttte. Epes Sargent. Experivuntal Iiiz-estigathn of th: Spirit Manifestations . Robert Hare, M.D. Miracles and Modem Spiritualism. A. R, Wallace, F.R.G.S. Researches hi the Phenomena of Spiritualism. W. Crookes, F.R.S. Repjrt OJi Spiritualism, of the Committee of the London Dialectical Society. Arcana of Spiritualism. Hudson Tuttle. Liters and Tracts on Spiritualism. Judge Edmonds. Lsis Unveiled. H. P. Blavatskv. The Debatable Land. ) jr t^ Dale Owen Footfalls on the BouTidary of Another World. \ *** These Books can aU be obtained from the Publisher of this volume. INTRODUCTION. Before commencing- the special work which I have set myself to do, I wish to make clear what I propose and what I do not propose to attempt in its execution. I propose, then, to set forth certain facts within my own knowledge respecting one class of Psychic Phe- nomena — viz., Psychography, or Abnormal Writing. These facts (respecting a subject which obtained much publicity during the past year) I set forth on my own authority, and as part of my own experience in the investigation of Psychic Phenomena. I propose, further, to record, in a convenient form for reference, certain other facts of a similar nature testified to by others. In doing so, I shall rigidly adhere to the special fact under notice, and shall eliminate all evidence that will not bear rigid scrutiny. Confining myself to this one class of phenomena, I shall avoid repetition and the needless multiplication of records. P^ully conscious that evidence of this nature is cumulative, I also believe that there is a point beyond which the cumulative power ceases, and I judge it best to narrow down the issue as far as possible. Respecting these facts, I do not propose to main- tain any theory, though I shall briefly enumerate B 14 PsycJiography. some hypotheses which are put forward. I shall not vex myself and perplex my readers by the discussion of any a priori grounds of rejection with which some investigators bewilder themselves. I have nothing to do with the allegation that such and such things arc ex rertnn natiird^ and so are to be rejected without the formality of a trial. This is an ancient method — more antique than venerable — of disposing of new facts. There was a time, somewhere in the world's history, when it was employed to burke almost every manifestation of truth which was new and unwelcome, just as there comes a time in the history of each new discovery when the old method is abandoned, and those who have employed it endeavour, with a shame- faced smile, to show that they were only joking after all, and were, though we might not have observed it, truth's best and truest friends. I do not propose to anticipate that time in the history of these Psychic Phenomena by any premature argument. Convinced that the time is near at hand when Science will recognise her duty in this respect, I will patiently wait for the time when some of its prominent representatives will abandon a false posi- tion with such grace as they may. As to the facts, I shall not attempt to maintain anything more than that they furnish evidence of the existence of a P^orce, and of a governing Intelligence external to a human body. That P'orce is con- veniently called Psychic, and is the Odic, or Od P'orce, of Reichenbach; the Nerve P'^orce, or Aura, of other writers; the Ectenic Force of Thury; the Akasa Introduction. 1 5 of the Hindu; or, comprehensively, Vital Force. Tlie name matters little; but the term Psychic and its compounds, as applied to the Force, to the channel through which it flows, and to its various forms of manifestation, seems most simple and free from objection.* I do not propose to burden my record with any arguments as to the source and character of the Intelligence, except where such are plain deductions from my narrative. I will not enter into any disquisition on the use of the terms Soul and Spirit. I do not care which is used, though, for myself, I employ the term Spirit as equivalent to what St. Paul called the Spiritual Body as opposed to the Physical Body. Soul I consider to be the Divine Principle by virtue of possession of which man is an heir of Immortality. Others use the terms differently, making the Soul to be the Astral or Spiritual Body, and the Spirit the equivalent of what I call Soul. This is not the place for argument on this point. By the use of either term I intend to indicate the Spiritual Principle in man — the Self, the Ego, the Inner Being — which, acting through the material frame, is, as I believe, independent in its existence, and will survive the death of the body. Respecting this Intelligence which is displayed in the messages written out by these abnormal means, I * It is usual among many who record these phenomena to employ the term Medium for the Psychic, and from it to fabricate such philo- logically barbarous words as inediuniistic. The terms will be found in use in many of the published records ; but I have employed the term Psychic and its compounds, as, in my judgment, preferable. 1 6 PsycJiograpJiy. will not maintain that it is or is not worthy of atten- tion on account of the matter of its communications. I could say something on the just lines of criticism in this respect, but my purpose is served without any opening of side issues. What is written may be as foolish as my critic pleases. If it be never so silly, it will serve for my argument. Is it written at all ? Then let us leave its nonsense alone, and account for its presence as a fact. Nor will I maintain that the messages always, or even generally, proceed from the source pretended. No more fruitful source of controversy has arisen than this. Taste and sense of decorum and propriety are outraged by the claim that is made for these frequently silly and ludicrous writings, that they pro- ceed from the source alleged, w^hich, as often as not, is some relative of the experimenter's or some great and illustrious name in history. The shock to good taste and feeling so administered puts the investigator into an attitude of indignant opposition. He refuses to credit what is to him so monstrous, and jumps, in anger, to the conclusion that wdiat is improbable in the explanation extends also to the fact. I trust that any w^ho do me the honour to read what I write will allow me to pin their attention to the bare fact, and to ask them to leave the matter of the wTiting to another time. Just now, I will say nothing whatever about the contents. It is sufficient that they are in evidence as an objective fact. I will not maintain that the Intelligence is always independent of that of the Psychic in whose presence Introduction. \J these phenomena occur, or of some or all of the persons present. This is not the place in which to discuss the powers of the human spirit, or the limits of its trans-corporeal action. I will not even maintain that the Intellic^ence is intelligent. Sometimes it is not; but always, so far as I know, there is evidence of plan, of design, of purpose. I will not go so far, either, as to discuss the question whether, in given cases, the Intelligence is human or sub-human. These are all points which merit grave discussion, and on each of which I could say much, were it not for the fear of diverting atten- tion from my one point — the fact of Psychography. In this connexion I may, however, quote the conclu- sion arrived at by Mr. Crookes, F.R.S., after a long series of scientific experiments and observations, recorded in the Qiiarterly J oiLvnal of Science^ January, 1874. Speaking of the Phenomena of Percussive Sounds, he says: — An important question here forces itself upon the atten- tion. Are the movemeiits and sounds governed by intelligence'^ At a very early stage of the inquiry, it was seen that the power producing the phenomena was not merely a blind force, but was associated with or governed by intelligence. The intelligence governing the phenomena is sometimes manifestly below that of the medium. It is fre- quently in direct opposition to the wishes of the medium. When a determination has been expressed to do something which might not be considered quite right, I have known urgent messages given to induce a reconsideration. The intelligence is sometimes of such a character as to lead to the belief that it does not emanate from any person present. To this I may add, that in a number of recorded 1 8 PsycJiography. cases — e.g., in that of Miss Laura Edmunds, the daughter of Judge Edmunds of New York — and in several that have come under my own notice, the Intelhgence is not only distinct from that of the Psychic, but uses a language unknown to the Psychic, and conveys elaborate information, precise in detail, of which he or she had no previous knowledge; and not only that, but of which no person present had any previous knowledge. ^ PSYCHOGRAPHY IN THE PAST / GULDENSTUBBE— CROOKES. This subject of Psychography, or writing without the intervention of ordinary human agency, is by no means new, though it has of late attracted greater attention. It has been familiar to all investigators of Psychic Phenomena, and has been called variously Direct or Independent Writing. Records of its occurrence are found in the most ancient works on the subject, and it was perfectly familiar to those early and mediaeval students of occult phenomena whose researches throw so much light on that which we now find so perplexing. The most remarkable record, however, of these special facts is made by Baron Guldenstubbe, in a book entitled ''La Rcalitc des E sprits, et le pJienovienc inerveilleux de leur ccriturc directeT The Baron must have been a Psychic of great power, for all the writings were obtained without the aid of any other person, and under conditions which, in most cases, would preclude the hope of successful results. It is with experiments of this nature as with all others: certain conditions are required for success. These have been, and are, much exaggerated and 20 PsycJiography. misrepresented, darkness being popularly supposed to be the principal desideratum. This is not so. I believe that every phenomenon — except such as require darkness for their observation, as, for Instance, luminous phosphorescent appearances — can be pro- duced in full light. Much more time and patience would be required ; but, granted these, light is no final barrier to success. It Is much to be regretted that more persistent attempts have not been made to produce these phenomena in such light as suffices for exact observation. The fact that this is now being done, and with such success as I shall presently show, removes one impediment to observation in the future. Baron Guldenstubbe seems to have been able to dispense with the usual conditions under which writing is obtained — a closed room with magnetically- charged atmosphere, subdued light, and a formal gathering of persons from or through whom the neces- sary force is evolved. He obtained his writings any- where, and at any time, in the open air, and on a tombstone, of which locality he was specially fond. It squared with his idea of the source of the writing, and so facilitated its execution. This, I may say in passing. Is far more requisite than any other condition for success, that the Psychic through whom the force is evolved should be at ease and comfort. If he have any special ideas as to the source of the phenomenon, to controvert them by argument is to cause almost certain failure. Left to himself, with surroundings that conduce to comfort of mind and body, and with PsycJiograpJiy in tJic Past. 21 libcrt}' to follow out his opinions as to the best means of securing results, success will usually follow. Hence it is that the best, most sure, and most reliable phenomena are seen in private circles, where none but friends, of one mind, and united by the bonds of friendship or affection, are assembled. Among the places named as those where successful experiments were made are the Louvre, the Museum at Versailles, the Cathedral of Saint Denis, West- minster Abbey, the British Museum, the Cemeteries of Montparnasse, Montmartre, and Pere la Chaise ; the Bois de Boulogne, and various churches and ancient ruins in France, Germany, Austria, and England. The list of witnesses, twenty-seven in number, selected out of avast number of distinguished persons who have repeatedly assisted at the Baron's experi- ments, includes the names of J/. Dclaniarrc, editor of the Patrie ; M. Choisselat, Qdiior of the Univcrs ; Mr. Dale Oiven; M. Lacordaire, brother of the great orator; M. de Bofufochose, the historian ; M. Kiorboe, a well- known Swedish painter ; the Baron von Rosenbergs German ambassador at the Court of Wurtemberg ; Prince Leonide Galitzin, and two other representatives of the nobility of Moscow ; and the Rev, William Mountford, who has lately contributed his personal testimony in the Spiritualist of Dec. 2ist, 1877. Mr. Coleman, of Upper Norwood, whose experience dates so far back, informs me that he well remembers Mr. Dale Owen going to Paris for the purpose of witnessing these remarkable experiments. He told 22 PsycJwgraphy. Mr. Coleman in detail of his accompanying the Baron and his sister Julia to various chapels in Paris, where he laid down sheets of his own paper, without pencil or writing materials; retiring a few paces, but never losing sight of the paper, he found an intelligent message written upon it in every case. Mr. Coleman has one of these curious Psychographs in his own possession. It was obtained at the Palace of the Trianon, Versailles. The book is illustrated by thirty fac-similes of Psychographs thus obtained, and selected from more than two thousand specimens in twenty different languages, and some of them covering several pages. These were obtained between the years 1856 and 1872. The first experiment was made by placing paper and pencil in a box, which was locked, and the key of which never left the Baron's possession. No one was acquainted with the fact that any such ex- periment was in process. After twelve days, during which no mark was made on the paper, there appeared on it certain mysterious characters, and during that day ten separate experiments gave successful results. The box was then left open and watched, and writing was seen to grow upon the paper without the use of the pencil. From that time he abandoned the use of the pencil altogether, and obtained his vast number of Psychographs by the simple process of putting blank paper on the table of his room, or in public buildings, or on the pedestal of ancient statues, or on tombstones in churches and cemeteries. It apparently mattered little where the paper was placed ; and it is PsycJiogyapIiy in the Past. 23 more than probable that the Baroiil^ b\' exercise of his will, could have obtained any given name in an\' given place. The association of name and statue or tomb was a consequence of his mental preposses- sions. The curious reader will find a full account of these experiments made by the Baron in his book above- named ; and for further information as to these and kindred phenomena he may consult the works, a list of which is prefixed to this volume. Mr. Crookes, in his paper in the Quarterly Journal of Science above referred to, which is reprinted in his Researches, records two notable instances of Psycho- graph}^, which I quote as showing the facility for observation in the one case, and the satisfactory result obtained in darkness, where no room existed for doubting the evidence so obtained. It is usually supposed by those who have not tried the experiment that no evidence obtained in a dark room is of any value. Vix. Crookes' record may dispel that error: — The first instance which I shall give took place, it is true, at a dark seance, but the result was not less satisfactory on that account. I w\as sitting next to the medium, I\[iss Fox, the only other persons present being my wife and a lady relative, and I was holding the medium's two hands in one of mine, whilst her feet were resting on my feet. Paper was on the table before us, and my disengaged hand was holding a pencil. A luminous hand came down from the upper part of the room, and after hovering near me for a few seconds, took the pencil from my hand, rapidly wrote on a sheet of paper, threw the pencil down, and then rose up over our heads, gradually fading into darkness. 24 PsychograpJiy. My second in^ance may be considered the record of a failure. " A good failure often teaches more than the most successful experiment." It took place in the light, in my own room, with only a few private friends and Mr. Home present. Several circumstances, to which I need not further allude, had shown that the power that evening was strong. I therefore expressed a wish to witness the actual production of a written message, such as I had heard described a short time before by a friend. Immediately an alphabetic com- munication was made as follows — " We will try." A pencil and some sheets of paper had been lying on the centre of the table ; presently the pencil rose up on its point, and after advancing by hesitating jerks to the paper, fell down. It tlien rose, and again fell. A, third time it tried, but with no better result. After three unsuccessful attempts, a small wooden lath, which was lying near upon the table, slid towards the pencil, and rose a few inches from the table; the pencil rose again, and propping itself against the lath, the two together made an effort to mark the paper. It fell, and then a joint effort was again made. x\fter a third trial the lath gave it up and moved back to its place, the pencil lay as it fell across the paper, and an alphabetic message told us — " We have tried to do as you asked, but our power is exhausted." ^ PERSONAL EXPERIENCES. For the past five years I have been famiHar with the phenomenon of Psychography, and have observed in a vast number of cases, both with recognized Psychics known to the pubhc, and w^ith ladies and gentlemen in private, who possess the power and readily procure the result. In the course of these observations I have seen psychographs obtained in closed and locked boxes, in a manner similar to the experiment above recorded in the case of the Baron Guldenstubbe ; on paper previously marked and placed in a special position, from which it was not moved ; on paper marked and put under the table, so as to get the assistance of darkness ; on paper on which my elbow rested, and on paper covered by my hand ; on paper inclosed in a sealed envelope; and on slates securely tied together. I have known such writing to be almost instantane- ously produced ; and late experiments, to which I shall refer in their place, confirm me in the statement that the process employed is not always the same. Whereas at times the pencil is seen to write as if moved by a hand, at times invisible, but at others visibly guiding and controlling its movements, at others the writing would seem to be produced by an instantaneous effort without the use of the pencil. I 26 PsycJiograpJiy. recal an instance which bears on this question of the use of the pencil. I was present at a s6ance held at the house of an intimate friend, three friends only present. Paper, previously initialled by each of us, was put on the floor under the table, together with an ordinary black- lead pencil. One of us, feeling the pencil against his boot, put his foot upon it, and held it there till the seance was over. Writing, however, was found on the paper ; and we debated the question how it could have been done, seeing that no pencil was available for use. The paper bore our marks, and had not been removed, so far as we could tell. We met again dur- ing the same week, and I privately provided myself with the means of testing the matter. I brought a bright green pencil, and substituted it without remark for the blacklead, keeping my foot upon it all the time. When the paper was examined the writing — a very short scrawl — was found to be in green. The pencil, therefore, was used in some way unknown to me. I believe that this is the case frequently, and that instantaneous writing is done by some method other than that of the normal use of the pencil. This is noted by Baron Guldenstubbe, as I have remarked above, and was observable in some cases of slate- writing with Slade, as I shall have occasion to note hereafter ; and one case at least is within my know- ledge where a side of a slate is frequently covered with writing in a few seconds. The psychic in this case is a lady, whose name I have no authority to make public. PERSONAL TESTIMONY I rROCEi:i) now to give my own personal testimony as to what I have witnessed in the presence of two Psychics well known to the public, Henry Slade and Francis W. Monck, selecting those points only which bear on this subject. I sat alone with Slade in the month of July, 1877 ! and I carried with me a small slate of white porcelain, taken from my own writing-desk. I held it myself under the table, at a corner furthest from Slade, and obtained a short scrawl upon it, written with a point of lead pencil which I placed upon it. Slade used ordinary slates and slate-pencil ; and on one of his slates, while we held it jointly, a number of messages were written. The longest and most elaborate o( these, which covered both sides of a folding-slate, was written while the slate lay on the table before me. I put my ear down to the cover of the slate, and could distinctly hear the writing in process. The sound was the grat- ing sound of slate-pencil deliberately and carefully moved over the slate, and lasted for a considerable time ; I should say three or four minutes. I noted especially the fact that the sound came from the slate immediately beneath my ear. I also obser\-ed that by a slight change of position the writing could be stopped. 2S PsycJiography. In order to make my position intelligible, I append an exact diagram of the table used by Slade, which was produced in the court at the Bow Street trial, and which may now be seen by the curious at the rooms of the British National Association of Spir- itualists, 38 Great Russell Street. The table used during my experiment was an old one, of about the same size, belonging to the house. It was onh' when this table was split into pieces that Slade had one constructed for himself. It was made of hard wood, to resist rough usage ; and of remarkable sim- plicity, in order to be easily examined. The subjoined diagram and explanation will enable my readers to understand what Mr. Maskelyne audaciously described at the trial at Bow Street, as if it were a trick-table. N wmmmw//^m Fig. 2 represents the table Dr. Slade ordered to be brought to Bow Street ; it is a kind of ordinary kitchen table, but Personal Testimony. 29 made of ash. The frame above A was declared by the man who made it to be somewhat larger than the frames com- monly used for such tables ; he had made it larger, without any order to that effect, to give additional strength. There is, as usual with such tables, no frame round the flaps. There being no veneering and no framework in each flaj) — nothing but an honest piece of solid ash — it is easy to see that when Dr. Slade holds a slate, B (Fig. 3), against the solid wooden flap, A, and writing comes, in dry, dusty slate- pencil, all over the upper side of the slate, in the shadow under the flap, how very disturbing such an occurrence must be to the mental equilibrium of hardened materialists. B D E, Fig. I, show the under side of the table, but we have put two ordinary brackets at R R, under the flap, B B, whereas Dr. Slade's table had but a single stick bracket under each flap, such as is shown at N, beneath the flap, E E. The slate "in position" is shown at H, where the stick bracket is out of its way, one of the double brackets, R, there, would have been an encumbrance, interfering with the placing of the slate. D D is the part of the table directly connected with the frame, and A A A A are the tops of the four legs of the table. Dr. Slade never sits at the flap side of the table at X. He always sits sideways, against the frame at T D, turning his feet in the direction of the lower E, and putting the slate under the table at that corner, so that the observer, who always sits at the same corner in broad daylight, has — or can have if he asks for it — -Dr. Slade's hands and feet, and the edge of the slate, always in full view. Sometimes Dr. Slade, with his thumb on the upper side of the slate at W, pushes the slate, W K, half under the table, as represented at K, then withdraws it, the whole motion being about as quick as the swing of a pendulum, yet during the moment the part of the slate K is in shadow, a sentence is scribbled across it in the dry, dusty writing of slate-pencil. The position in which we were placed was this : Slade sat sideways at T D, and with his back to the C 30 PsycJiograpJiy. window, through which a July sun was streaming; the bhnds were up, and every corner of the room was in clear light. I sat at the side opposite to N ; my right hand linked with Slade's on the top of the table, so as to form a chain, my left joining his in holding a slate at H. When my hand was raised so as not to touch Slade's hand on the top of the table, the writing at once ceased, and was resumed when contact was again made. It will be seen that other observers have noted this. Mr. F. W. Percival was especially impressed with the ease with which the writing could be stopped by breaking contact, and the rapidity with which a slight touch, even on the cuff of Slade's coat, would set it again into feeble action. He noted it in his printed testimony at the time, and has frequently mentioned it to me since. The writing on my own porcelain slate was obtained while I held it under the corner at E, Slade not touch- ing it. The next piece of personal evidence which I adduce was obtained with another Psychic, F. W. Monck. The place was 26 Southampton Row ; the time, Oct. 19, 1877, evening; the light, that of a small lamp, sufficient for observation ; those present, the Rev. Thomas Colley, late curate of Portsmouth, Mrs. Colley, myself, and the Psychic. I examined, carefully cleaned, and privately marked, two small school slates, which were apparently quite new ; placed a tiny fragment of slate-pencil between their inner surfaces, and tied them securely together, so that they could not slip, nor could anything be Personal Tcstimouy. 3 1 inserted between them. I fastened my strinc^'", more- over, ^\■ith a peculiar knot. When tied, I myself placed the slates on the table before me, and requested Mr. Colley to lay his finger on one corner, while I placed mine on the corner next to it, and Monck, who sat opposite to us, laid his hands on the corners nearest to him. I was requested to choose some short word, and to desire to have it written within the slates. I chose snow. The sound of writing was distintly heard, and I was informed through Monck, entranced, that the word had been written. Three facts were then stated, viz., that a badly-formed S had been erased, and that two other letters had certain specified peculiarities in their formation. These statements, made, be it observed, while the slates lay before me under my finger, I at once \eri- fied by untying the string that bound them together. As they had never left my sight, it is to no purpose to say that my knot was intact. Within the slates I found the word snow written, and with the peculiar formations and erasure which had been specified. In addition, the words "favourite way" were written. While the experiment w^as in process, we had been conversing about the peculiar way in which names were frequently spelt in these writings, and one of us remarked that, though a particular Christian name was frequently written, it was never spelt in the o\MVi^x's favourite way. The passing words had been caught up and written at the moment within the slates. 32 Psychography. Reserving comment, I note the following points in this experiment: — 1. The slates were new, clean, privately marked, and thoroughly tied. 2. They never left my sight, nor was my hand removed from them even for a moment. 3. They never were out of my own possession after I cleaned and marked them. 4. The light was sufficient for exact observation. 5. The words written could not have been prepared beforehand. 6. I have the corroboration of two witnesses. One more case I record as a piece of personal expe- rience, before proceeding to the experiments of others. When this subject first came before me, I endeavoured to submit it to a crucial test. For this purpose I made an experiment similar to that first made by Baron Guldenstubbe, of whose name even I had not then heard. I inclosed a piece of paper in a travelling desk of my own, which desk I strapped up in its cover, and placed in my private drawer. The key of that drawer, in which my most private papers are kept, never goes out of my possession, and assuredly I kept it con- sciously in view during the experiment. I left the paper undisturbed for twenty-four hours, and at the end of that time I found upon it very clear and dis- tinct writing, covering its entire upper surface. In this case I note the absence of any possibility of deception, conceivable to myself At the same time, I note also the absence of corroborative testimony. GENERAL CORROBORATIVE EVIDENCE. Starting, then, from the nucleus of my own experi- ence, recorded, I pledge myself, with the most entire accuracy, so far as I am aware ; I now proceed to adduce the evidence of others who have observed facts which corroborate those now recorded. For the sake of orderly arrangement, I shall bring forward the evidence under various heads. L_EVIDENCE ATTESTED BY THE SENSES. I. By the Sense of Sight. I have already said that the evidence on which I rely most is that obtained in light which is sufficient for exact observation. I am by no means prepared to say that very satisfactory evidence may not be obtained independently of eyesight, but I am quite aware that " seeing is believing." I commence, there- fore, with a record furnished by Mr. E. T. Bennett, of Manor-Villas, Richmond, and printed in The Spiri- tualist of Sept. 21, 1877. I may premise before I go further that the language used in the records quoted is that which all Spiritu- alists employ. I use it without connecting myself or 34 PsychograpJiy. desiring- to pledge my readers to any theory. The terms used throughout are used in their accepted signification without dispute or question. On Sunday evening, the 9th inst., a circle consisting of Dr. Monck, Mrs R, Miss R., a medical man, Mr. Christian Reimers, and myself, met at Mr. Reimers' house. No. 6, Manor- Villas, Richmond. We sat round an ordinary table, on which were placed the works of a small musical box, two small slates, paper, and black-lead pencil. A shaded candle was placed in an adjoining room, the door being open, so that there was all through the seance sufficient light to see the various objects in the room, and the time by a watch. After some ordinary preUminary manifestations, Dr. Monck's control addressed the medical man, whom I will call Dr. A., and asked him to tell him a word he would like written on the slate. The slates were examined and marked by myself, tied together securely by Dr. A. As no bit of slate-pencil could be found, a minute fragment of black-lead was placed between them, which we ascertained would make a mark. Dr. A. then chose the word " darUng," and the slates were placed on the table, and Dr. M.'s and Dr. A.'s hands on them. Dr. M.'s control: " Hav'n't you got any slate-pencil?" Dr. A. : " No. There is a bit of black-lead in ; can't you write with that?" Dr. M.'s control : " Don't like it. Shall lue get a bit of our own?" Dr. A. : " Yes." Dr. M.'s control : " My medium will carry the slates round and place them on tlie Doctor's head. There \ it is done!" Candle brought. The slates (which had never been out of sight of the whole circle) untied. Inside was the word " darling," written in a large, rather trembling hand, as if with j-/<^/(?-pencil, but there was none visible. Dr. M.'s control : " Tell me the Chrisdan name of some friend you would like to be here." Dr. A. : '' Sophia." General Corroborative Evidenee. 35 Dr. }iL's control : "She is here; and there is an old man M'ith her, of dignified appearance. He is sorry for you about something; 1 think it is about money. He has such a curious thing on his head, a crown with points upwards, and little balls on them." Dr. A. : "Will he give his name?" Dr. iM.'s control : " He says he will try and write it him- self." The medium asks for a piece of note paper, holds it in his hand a minute, places it on the table, and a pocket pencil about three inches long by it. The pencil moves, no one touching it. It makes feeble attempts to rise. Finally it succeeds, and we see it stand up by itself, and write as with a firm hand for a few seconds, and then fall down again. Dr. A. takes up the paper, and finds written the name ■:: - - =:: - Or i^^ ^|^^|. q|- ^ (deceased nobleman with whom he had been professionally connected, and who was a relative of the lady Avhose name he had given, and whose rank was correctly indicated by the " curious crown." Mr. Bennett is familiar with these phenomena, and refers them to the action of unembodied spirits, using the phraseology common to those who share this belief. He is no enthusiast, but a calm and capable observer. Nor are his records singular. I am happy to be able to call in corroboration a sceptical witness, one who is not familiar with these phenomena, who approaches them with suspicion, and is guarded in his statements, most especially in his conclusions. His prepossessions, at any rate, are not excited in our favour. I\Iy witness is a reporter for the Malvern Nezvs. The Psychic in this case also is Monck ; and the place where the experiment took place was a house in Malvern, " into which he had never entered till the evening" in ques- tion. The account, somewhat abridged, reads thus : 36 PsycJiography. Shortly after six o'clock, several ladies and gentlemen having assembled, most of them strangers to each other, sat down to an oblong deal table, which had been covered with a thick Witney blanket, the usual cover being used as a blind to darken the windows. Every particle of natural light had been shut out, and the gas turned on full. After the party had sat for some time, Dr. Monck asked for a pencil and some writing-paper. Three of the former were placed at his disposal, and he selected ours. A piece of paper was folded up, on which the pencil was put. He then borrowed some handkerchiefs, and selected ours, which he carelessly threw over the pencil and paper. In the full glare of the gas-light the pencil rose and stood upright, Dr. Monck's hands at this time being placed on his head. He removed the handkerchief, and there stood the pencil, but no writing was on the paper. A sceptical gentleman thought the pencil was sticking into the table through the blanket. At the request of Dr. Monck he lifted it up, examined it, and put it down again. It was no sooner released than it rose up again, and wrote on the paper a sentence, in the sight of all, respecting the unfavourable conditions. Here it will be noticed that the light was ample for observation, and that the requisite darkness for the production of the writing was obtained without any interference with the facilities for exact investigation. The report concludes with a confession on the part of the reporter of inability to explain how the results "witnessed by nine sane ladies and gentlemen" were produced. "As some of them," he adds, "are well known in Malvern, they can contradict us if we have stated what is not true." With the same Psychic, the editor of TJie Medium, Mr. James Burns, of the Spiritual Institution, 15 South- ampton Row, W.C., had a noteworthy experiment, which he thus records. The persons present were General Corroborative E vide nee. 37 himself and his wife, and the place was his uwn house: — I hatl on the table before ine several sheets of note-paper, on which I was taking notes. Dr. Monck took up a bkmk sheet and tore it in halves. One of these he folded up into an eiiihth of its original size bv doublinGf it three times. Thus crumpled up, he placed it under a white handkerchief which lay on the table immediately before him. An ordinary elongating pocket pencil was then put beside the paper. This pencil had a screw at the point for propelling and with- drawing the lead, the handle was of a dark colour, and it had a white bone top. The light at this part of the seance was not on full, as it had been at some other parts, but there was sufficient for me to read ray pencil notes. Dr. Monck, with his right hand, placed the pencil under the handkerchief, and continued to move his fingers about over the handker- chief for a few seconds. We were all intently looking for whatever might result, when Mrs. Burns exclaimed that the pencil was writing. I saw it standing up in a sloping posi- tion, with the point towards me, but as the handkerchief interposed between my view and the point of the pencil, I could not see what it was doing. Before I had much time for reflection, I saw that the pencil, besides being sloping with its point towards me, was in a violent state of motion from side to side, as if it were held by the middle and rapidly vibrated. This movement was not quite regular ; sometimes the jerks made by the pencil would be longer, sometimes shorter, and complicated by movements not all in one direc- tion. While I was trying to comprehend what this could mean, I saw it stand still, and then move gently from side to side. Mrs. Burns and Dr. Monck said, " It is crossing a word," and again the rapid vibration w^ent on as before. In a few seconds more the pencil fell, and the handkerchief was removed, and the paper was found opened out and covered with pencil-writing in a vigorous hand. Dr. Monck now took out his folding-slate, and gave it to me to clean. I did so carefully. He took a small crumb of slate-pencil and inclosed it between the leaves of the slate. 38 PsychograpJiy. Dr. Monck's hand was then moved towards me, till it rested on my arm. Then it ascended to my shoulder, and lastly on to my head, where I heard and felt the tremor of writing going on in the folded slate. Shortly it was finished, and when opened a message was found written, occupying both sides of the slate. The writing on paper took three minutes to tran- scribe, but it was written in about one-third of that time. The paper bore the distinctive mark of the packet from which the sheet had been taken, and one of the observers was able to watch the whole process of writing. The slate-writing is notable on account of the evi- dence from two senses which attested its production. This seems to be the place to quote a case of writing executed by a luminous hand, which was visible to at least four persons. I complicate my evidence some- what by the introduction of a new species of Psychic phenomena, that of luminous appearances, and of hands not those of any person present. Such facts, however, are familiar to those who have witnessed these phenomena, and are attested by exact and precise observations. The account {^Spiritualist, Oct. 13, 1876) is written by Mr. H. D. Jencken, barrister-at-law, and the psychic was his wife, the Kate Fox of the early history of this subject. The house where the experiment was made w^as that of Mr. S. C. Hall, editor of the Art Jour nal. The date was Sept. 6, 1876. Nine persons were present, including Mr. and Mrs. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Mayo, and Dr. Netherclift, of the Chelsea Infirmary. General Corroborative Evidence. 39 Several efforts by the unseen beings had been made to give us '* (Hrect writing." Finally, we were ordered to hold each other's hands, and to contract the circle by drawing close uj) to the table. A luminous, small, beautifully-shaped hand then descended from the side at which I was sitting, that is to say, at the opposite side to Mrs. Jencken. The hand seized a pencil which was lying on the table and wrote the letters " E. W. E." The power of holding the pencil then evidently failed. The pencil, which had been held between the forefinger and third finger, dropped on the table, and the hand raised itself high overhead, and disappeared. After a short pause it reappeared, descended, touched the table, took hold of the pencil, and wrote the words " God bless y — ." At the letter y the strength again appeared to give way, tlie pencil dropped, the hand rose quickly, and was gone. I have witnessed so many instances of direct spirit writing, that this additional instance would have been but of little attraction to me, but for the fact that others also witnessed the manifestations, some of whom were not Spiritualists, but merely witnesses. This gave interest to this seance. The hand, as sketched by me, was distinctly seen by Dr. Nether- clift, Mrs. ]\Iayo, Mr. ]\Iayo, and others present ; each of those present saw the hand from a different point of view ; in other words, the objectivity of the hand was distinctly observed. I inclose the original document, containing the direct writing, and on the right hand top of the page is the sketch of the hand. As I was drawing this sketch, several of the guests clustered round my chair, and aided me by suggest- ing how they each of them witnessed the writing. The luminosity around the wrist was singularly beautiful. The circumstances under which this direct writing happened were exceptionally favourable, as a test of the reality of what occurred. The sitting took place at the residence of Mr. Hall; those who were present retained the greatest self-com- posure. The medium was seated facing the direction whence the hand descended ; the writing was done in the centre of the table, around which we were seated ; the position of the hand was at right angles to ]\Irs. Jencken. I name these 40 PsychograpJiy. circumstances to meet in advance any theory of optical delu- sion, hallucination, or any other hypothesis to explain what happened. These instances might be greatly multiplied. I do not propose to adduce more evidence of this kind, however, having other which advances my argument a step further. I have shown that the evidence of one sense attests the reality of Psychography. I now proceed to bring forward cases where the writing is heard as the pencil grates upon the slate. 2. By the Sense of Hearing. In almost all cases where writing is produced by use of the pencil, I believe the process may be heard, especially when a slate is used. The evidence of a majority of observers makes mention of the grating General Corroborative Evidence. 41 noise which accompanied the writinc^. In several cases ijreat pressure is used, and the pencil is appre- ciably worn away, remaining", too, not unfrec^uently, at the Q:\\(\. of the last letter of the dusty, dry writing, that shows plainly enough how it has been employed. From a great number of cases I select the following", giving precedence to those which record experiments with Slade, and among them to the detailed narrative of the President of the Psychological Society of Great Britain : — Having undertaken to examine without prejudice or pre- possession, and to report faithfully, without fiivour, in a purely judicial spirit, any alleged psychological phenomena that might be submitted to me as President of the Psycho- logical Society of Great Britain, I narrate without comment what I witnessed at a sitting with Ur. Slade this afternoon. I sat alone with him, at three o'clock, in a room at 8 Upper Bedford Place, Russell Square, into which the sun shone brightly, at a table about five feet by four, having four legs, no ledge below, and no cloth upon it. Dr. Slade sat at one side of this table, sideways, so that his legs and feet were not under the table, but his whole body fully in my view as he faced me. I sat at the side, the corner of the table being between us. As I sat I could see half-way below the table, and by moving my head slightly, I could see the whole space below, which was wholly exposed in full daylight. An ordinary drawing-room chair was about six inches from the table on the opposite side, six feet from Dr. Slade, A heavy arm-chair was in the corner of the room, about the same distance from him and from the table. A slate of the ordinary school size and a piece of slate pencil were upon the table. Instantly upon taking our seats very loud rapping came upon the floor. This was followed by a succession of furious blows upon the table, jarring my hands as they were laying upon it. These blows were repeated at any part of the 42 PsycJiograpJiy. table desired, by merely touching that spot with the finger, while the blows, as forcible as if given with a sledge hammer, were being made. Dr. Slade's hands were on the table upon my hands, and his whole body to his feet was fully before my eyes. I am certain that not a muscle moved. Then he took the slate after I had carefully inspected it, to be assured that no writing was upon it, and placing there a piece of slate pencil, the size of a small grain of wheat, he pressed the slate tightly below but against the slab of the table. Presently I heard the sound as of writing on a slate. The slate was removed, and on it a zigzag line was drawn from end to end. Blows of a more gentle kind upon the table, attended with a remarkable quivering of it, announced, as he said, that his wife was present, and desired the slate. After the slate had been carefully cleaned, it was laid upon the top ot the table, with a like piece of pencil under it. Upon the slate he placed his right hand, and I placed my left hand, and with my other hand I held his left hand as it lay upon the table. As my hand lay upon the slate, I could feel, and I did also distinctly hear, something writing upon it. The communication was evidently a long one; but before I report the result, I desire to note here a remarkable phenomenon, to my mind the most suggestive that attended this experi- ment. It is necessary clearly to understand the position of the parties, therefore I repeat it. Dr. Slade and myself sat face to face. One hand of each of us was laid upon the slate. The side of the slate that was being written upon was pressed by us against the table. Our second hands were linked together, and lay upon the table. While this position was preserved, the writing pro- ceeded without pause. When Dr. Slade removed his hand from mine it ceased instantly, and as instantly was renewed when his hand and mine met. This experiment was repeated several times, and never failed. Here, then, was a chain or circle formed by my arms and body, and Dr. Slade's arms and body, the slate being between General Corroborative Evidence. 43 us, my haiitl at one end of it, his hand at the other end, and between our hands, and upon the slate that connected them, the writing was. When the chain was broken fortliwith the writing ceased. "When the chain was reformed the writing was at once resumed. The effect was instantaneous. In this curious fact we must seek the chie to this psycliological mj'stery. ■ Some rapid rappings, indicating that the writing was finished, the slate was lifted, and in a clear and perfectly distinct writing the following was read. It filled the whole side of the slate: — Dear Serj., — You are now investigating a subject that is worthy of all the time you or any other man of mind can devote to its investi^i^a- tion. When man can believe in this truth, it will in most cases make him a better man. This is our object in coming to earth, to make man and woman better, -wiser, and purer. — I am truly, A. W. Slade. Again the slate was cleaned and laid upon the table as before, my hand upon it. In a few seconds the following sentence was written. Considerable power was used in this writing, and I could distinctly feel the pressure of the pencil as every word was written : — I am Dr. John Forbes. I was the Queen's physician. God bless you. J, Forbes. Again the slate was cleaned and held under the table tight against the wood, one half of it projecting beyond the edge, so that I might be assured that it was tightly pressed against the wood; but the slate was seized, and with great force drawn away and rapidly raised above me and placed upon my head. In this position the sound of writing upon it was distinctly heard by me. On removing it, I found written upon it the following words : — Man must not doubt any more, when we can come in this way. J. F., M.D. Then the large arm-chair rushed forward from the corner of the room in which it had been placed, to the table. Again the slate was placed under the table, and projecting from it. A hand twice seized and shook my leg, both of the hands of Dr. Slade being at the moment before me, and his whole person visible. 44 PsychograpJiy. Thus ended this experiment. All that I have reported was divie, that is certain. How it was done, and by what agency, is a problem for psychology to solve. For my own l)art I can only say that I was in the full possession of my senses ; that I was wide awake ; that it was in broad day- light; that Dr. Slade was under my observation the whole time, and could not have moved hand or foot without being detected by me. That it was not a self-delusion is shown by this, that any person who chooses to go may see almost the same phenomena. I offer no opinion upon their causes, for I have formed none. If they be genuine, it is impossible to exaggerate their interest and importance. If they be an imposture, it is equally important that the trick should be exposed in the only way in which trickery can be explained, by doing the same thing, and showing how it is done. August 8th, 1876. Mr. George King, of 11 St. George's Terrace, Gloucester Road, S.W., notes in his narrative, which I append, the fact which I have just mentioned — viz., that in his experience the crumb of pencil invariably remains at the end of the writing. This affords a strong presumption that the pencil is really used : — At five o'clock in the afternoon of Saturday, i8th Nov. last, I repaired, by appointment, to the house of Dr. Slade. I had determined to take with me a slate of my own, and on the way I tried in four or five shops to find one to my mind. At last I secured what satisfied me — a folding slate with a varnished wooden case of somewhat peculiar construction. Each of the two flaps was seven and three- quarters inches long, by five inches wide, and had a three- quarter inch frame all round, which projected one-tenth inch above the surface. When the slate was folded there was, therefore, between the leaves a completely inclosed cavity about one-fifth inch deep, and nearly air-tight. The slate was done up in a paper parcel by the shopman, and tied with twine. General Corroborative Evidence. 45 Thus armed, I presented myself at Dr. Slade's door, and was ushered into the drawing-room, where were Dr. Slade, Mr. Simmons, and two ladies. Dr. Slade and Mr. Simmons were sitting by the fire, and they invited me to take a chair beside them. Dr. Slade shortly said it was time to " light up," and he retired to a small adjoining parlour. In less than two minutes he returned and asked me to follow him. The parlour was brilliantly lighted by a gaselier suspended over a small, rickety, mahogany table in the centre of the room, and the gas remained at full power during the whole of our sitting. I examined the table, turning it over for the purpose. It had four legs attached to a frame, and was about three-and-a-half feet by two feet wide, exclusive of a flap on each side. The flap and its appurtenances on the side opposite to that at which I sat was much shattered, as if by violent usage, but on my side there did not appear to be any breakage. The flap against which I sat must originally have been intended to rest on two brackets, but one of these had been removed, so that under the corner of the raised flap which was between me and Dr. Slade there was no impediment whatever. We sat down, I against a flap of the table, with my back to the fire-place ; Dr. Slade at the end of the table, on my left, with his face towards me, his left shoulder towards the table, and his legs projecting towards the fire-place. I produced my slate, and undid the wrapper. Dr. Slade had it for one instant open in his hand, but in my full view, as he dropped upon its clean surface a minute crumb of pencil. The slate was then firmly closed, and to my certain knowledge remained so till I opened it myself in the drawing-room half-an-hour afterwards. Dr. Slade proposed that it should be tied up, to which I, of course, assented. He got a piece of twine from the chimney-piece, and, while the slate was in my hands and his, the leaves were securely tied together, and the twine double knotted. Dr. Slade placed his left hand with both mine on the table, and for a few minutes held my slate in his right, but in my full view. I watched it intently all the time. He said there was a power which prevented him from putting it under the table even if he would. After a short time, as nothing came, Dr. Slade placed my slate on the table, under D 46 PsycJiograpJiy. my left arm, and my left elbow rested on it almost till the close of the sitting. Dr. Slade never touched it again. He took a slate of his own, with a crumb of pencil on its surface, and passed it out of sight under the table, saying, '' Our friends have done nothing for us yet. Perhaps they do not want to write on the gentleman's slate while I hold it. Will they write while the slate is under his arm and I am not touching it?" For a second of time scratching was heard on Dr. Slade's slate, and, when it was brought up, the words were on it "We will." He then joined his right hand to my left, his left still clasping my right, and instantly within my slate the sound of writing became audible, and continued for about ten minutes. At frequent intervals I put my ear close to the slate to listen, and there could be no mistake. The sound was low, but very distinct, and I specially noted that we could recognise the crossing of the "t's," the dotting of the "i's," and the insertion of the punctuation. It seemed as if a person were writing not rapidly, but steadily and deliberately, without jerk or pause. Two loud raps on the table announced the conclusion of the message. Dr. Slade then passed his own large slate, apparently perfectly clean and dry, half under the table, but so that I could see the other half and his hand holding it. My own slate mean- while I placed beside my right elbow to be out of the way. Dr. Slade asked, "Can you do more for us to-night.?" A scratching was heard, and the word " cannot " appeared on that portion of the upper side of his slate which had been beneath the table. The "c" was close to the side of the slate nearest to me, and far out of reach of Dr. Slade's hand, and the word was written not horizontally but per- ])endicularly towards Dr. Slade. The "t" was carefully crossed, and the fragment of the pencil lay where it had stopped, just at the end of the cross stroke of the "t." We returned to the drawing-room, I carrying my own slate, and there I cut the string that bound it, and within I found a long message, entirely filling both sides of the slate and consisting of ninety-nine words, besides the signature " A. W. Slade." It was carefully written in a good firm hand, and the lines were straight and even. Each " t " was accurately crossed and each "i" was dotted. The crumb General Corroborative Evidence. 47 of pencil, too, was there, with one end worn away as if in writing. Had only a few words been scrawled on my slate, it would have been, under the circumstances, astonishing, but tlie result actually obtained is simply confounding, when it is remembered that the quickest penman, with every facility for writing, cannot put down on paper, in long hand, with every word at full length, more tlian about twenty words X>Q.x minute, and that writing on a slate, where there is more friction, occupies more time. By whomsoever it was done, this message must have taken at least five minutes to pro- duce; but Dr. Slade had not the slate for that length of time in his hand — and, be it repeated, it had never left my sight — and for less than five seconds only was it open. As already explained, it was, except for one instant, firmly tied up with twine. It is impossible to describe the jealous care with which I watched to detect deceit. I could discover none, nor the jjossibility of any. I had gone with my mind full of the evidence given in court by Messrs. Lankester and Don kin, but their alleged exposure was quite inapplicable to wiiat took place in my presence. On December 15th I had again an opportunity, in con- junction with a few friends, of testing Dr. Blade's alleged mediumship. We sat in our own room, at our own table, and used our own slates, one ordinary school slate, and one folding book-rslate. As the seance was not so completely under my personal control as the previous one, it is not worth while describing it with so great minuteness. Suffice it to say that I sat next Dr. Slade, on his right hand, and tliat, as he always held the slate in that hand when he placed it under the table, I had every opportunity of closely watching him. We had a number of very short messages, sometimes on one slate, sometimes on the other. I observed a mark on the school slate, which, on those occasions when the slate was not passed entirely out of sight, enabled me to say positively that the writing was done on the upper side, and not on the under. One little circumstance seems to me very remarkable : I have already alluded to it above. When one of these messages appears, the crumb of pencil 48 Psychography. invariably remains at the point where it stops after writing the communication, forming a perfect continuation of the last stroke of the last letter. This fact, trifling in itself, to my mind, goes far to prove that the message has been written with that identical piece of pencil, and on the upper side of the slate. I do not see how otherwise it could be placed instantaneously in position with such mathematical accuracy. The messages always purport to emanate from some invisible being. The major part come in the name of A. W. Slade, the deceased wife of the medium, but other so-called " spirits " are frequently represented, and it is a curious fact that with the change in the name of the penman the character of the handwriting completely changes too. It would be interesting to submit various specimens to a caligraphic expert. The matter of the communications appears to me to be of far less importance than the manner of their coming. The only one of any length received by me was that of ninety-nine words above mentioned. It is couched in somewhat high-flown language, and the subject is the advantages of an assured knowledge of immortality. It is very much such as a person of fair intelligence and education might utter on being suddenly asked to make a neat little speech to a total stranger. George King. II St. George's Terrace, Gloucester Road, S.W., Dec. 18, 1876. This evidence receives additional corroboration from the further fact that in many cases the pencil is worn away, and great pressure has been evidently used. The following is a case in point: — "On Sunday morning, Oct. 22nd [1876], at one o'clock, Mr. W. Metherell and Mr. G. De Carteret, of Jersey, had a sea7ice\N\\\\ Dr. Slade, at 8 Upper Bedford Place, London, W.C. Dr. Slade produced two new slates, which were perfectly dry, and appeared never to have been used before. They were closely examined by the inquirers. Mr. Metherell then placed tliem together, with a crumb of pencil between. General Corroborative Evidence. 49 and Dr. Slade tied them firmly to each other, while Mr. Metherell held them. The tied slates were then laid on the top of the table, and Dr. Slade touched the frame of the uppermost one with one hand, whilst his other hand was held by those present. The slates never passed out of sight of the observers. A noise like that of writing was then heard, and it appeared to be executed at the ordinary speed. Dr. Slade then requested the two observers to take the slates into the next room, and to open them in the presence of two gentlemen who chanced to be there — namely, Mr. Charles Blackburn, of Didsbury, near Manchester, and Mr. W. H. Harrison, of The Spiritualist. The strings w^ere accordingly cut in their presence, and the inner sides of the slates were found to be filled completely from top to bottom, and from edge to edge — with writing, including about seventy words altogether. The writing had manifestly been produced with a piece of slate pencil applied to the surface of the slate with considerable pressure." In attestation of the truth of the foregoing statement, we append our signatures. Wm. Metherell. Charles Blackburn. Geo. De Carteret. W. H. Harrison. Mr. Wedgwood, J. P. for Middlesex, who has had a large experience in the observation of these pheno- mena, relates how he obtained writing in Greek and English on two new slates, w^hich he had securely tied together. The sense of hearing detected a differ- ence in the sound of the writing from that usually made, and when the slates were untied, this was satis- factorily accounted for by the presence of the Greek characters. The material part of Mr. Wedgwood's evidence is as follows : — I breathed on the slates, and rubbed them well with my pocket-handkerchief, and putting the rubbed faces together, we tied them up fast with a piece of cord, with a fragment 50 PsycJiography. of slate-pencil between them. Thus tied up, the slate was laid flat on the table, without having been taken under it at all or removed for a moment from under my eyes. I placed both my hands upon it, and Slade one of his. Presently we heard the writing begin, coming distinctly from the slate as I leaned down my ear to listen to it. It did not sound, however, like running writing, as we both remarked, but like a succession of separate strokes, as if someone was trying to write and could not make his pencil mark, and I expected that it would prove an abortive attempt. It went on, how- ever, with the same kind of sound for a long time, perhaps for six or seven minutes. At last there was a decided change in the sound, which became unmistakably that of rapid writing in a running hand. When this was done, I took the slates into the other room, leaving Slade entranced behind, and untying them, I found that on one face was written in a very good hand the 26th verse of the ist chapter of Genesis, in Greek, from the Septuagint, and on the other a message of the usual character in English running hand. The Greek letters, being each written separately, w^as what had given the broken sound of the former part of the writing, the change from which to the continued sound of running writing had been so striking. If it be suggested that the slates were really prepared beforehand with some invisible writing which was brought out by the heat of my hand, I answer (independent of other grave objections) that the writing as it stands can be wiped out by the merest touch, and could not possibly in its sup- posed invisible state have escaped obliteration when the slates were well rubbed by my pocket-handkerchief. H. Wedgwood. The same result is noted by observers who have carried with them their own slates, and have taken special precautions to prevent deception. A lady whose name I have no authority to publish, but who is known to me, and who professes her readiness to give private testimony if desired, records a very General Corroborative Evidence. 5 1 interesting experiment with Sladc (Aug. 16, 1876), in which she and a friend succeeded in getting writing on her own shite while it lay upon the table in broad light, with her friend's elbow resting upon it. In every case — the experiment was repeated several times — the writer " could distinctly hear sounds of writing on the slate." The record further proceeds, noting that cessation of writing when the chain was broken by removing the hands, of which I have already spoken : — Dr. Slade then moved across the room to procure a larger slate ; this we examined to satisfy ourselves that there was nothing written upon it. The slate was then placed under the table, with a small piece of slate-pencil upon it, Dr. Slade holding it with his right hand, and my friend with his left. My friend said he kept the slate as close as possible to the table, but the pressure caused by the writing seemed to force it downwards. The result of this was, that shortly, a distinct sound of rapid writing was heard upon the slate, and a message, of which the following is a copy, was found to have been written : — Dear Friends, — It is an undeniable fact that man is more willing to receive the mysterious than he is to receive plain teaching that appeals to his own reason, and will be approved by it. Now all theologians of the present day have the Bible for their foundation ; they all differ. Now as they express the Bible it is the most mysterious book man's eyes ever beheld ; everything there set down is clothed in mystery, when you look at it from this standpoini. Christ told the multitudes that he came to establish a new law, that he came to fulfil a mighty mission, but how few that follow his teaching, or follow his laws of love. Spiritualism comes and brings its own proof, as this letter is proof of the presence of A. W. Slade. This message covered the whole side of the slate which had been next to the table. The lines were close together, and extremely evenly kept. We were conversing with Dr. Slade more or less all the time the writing continued, and I noticed that whenever I loosed his hand the writing ceased ; when I again held it it continued. 52 Psychography. I was anxious to have a few words written upon my slate while I alone held it, which I might presume to show to my friends. Dr. Slade requested me to move near him, so I changed places with my friend, and held the slate with my left hand close under the table. The medium first made a few passes dawn my left arm with his right hand, then placed it so that all our five hands met in the centre of the table ; the only one which was invisible being my left, which was holding the slate. In this position, and while my foot was upon the medium's left foot, his other to be plainly seen, I heard and felt the pencil writing, and on looking found upon my slate, which had been held by my own hand alone, " Good-bye; God bless you. Allie." The same results, I may here add, are obtained by Slade at the present time. La Renovation, a paper published in Belgium, has lately contained a long article detailing the experiences of Canon X. Mouls with Slade. The usual examination of the table, and preparation of slate and fragment of pencil, having taken place, Slade held the slate under the table. " Suddenly," says the Canon, " we heard a kind of grating noise, and presently a knock, which signified that the slate could be withdrawn. Upon it were two sentences, one in French, the other in English." On another occasion, the Canon took his own slate, held it himself, and again distinctly heard writing going on. What was written was found to be a long extract from the New Testament, beautiful in caligraphy, and with the straight lines exactly preserved. The Baroness von Vay, a name well known to Eng- lish investigators of these subjects, lately writes to a friend after having seen Slade at the Hague, whither he went after his departure from England : — General Corroborative Evidence. 53 Our seance with Mr. Slade, at the Hague, was one of the best ones. I am fully convinced, and so is the Baron, of that medium's genuineness and good character. We sat in full daylight at midday, and got spirit-writing upon our oivn slates, Slade holding them upon the Baron's head. He (my husband) felt the writing upon the top of his head, and we heard it distinctly. Then Slade held the slate upon the Baron's shoulder, and again a message was written. Not to multiply instances respecting the phenomena observed with this special Psychic, I pass to records which show that the sense of hearing bears similar testimony to the reality of the phenomena observed with Francis W. Monck. Mr. George H. Adshead, of Derby, who has had great opportunity of experiment with this Psychic, records (Sept. 17 and 18, 1876) a remarkable case of the nature now under notice. The meeting was held at 27, Uttoxeter Road, Derby ; the light was good, clear gas-light. Present, Mrs. Ford, Mr. Oxley, of Manchester ; Mr. W. P. Adshead, of Belper ; and Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Adshead, of Derby. Omitting all notice of other phenomena, I notice two cases of Psychography which occurred, one on each evening. Mr. Adshead brought and placed a box on the table. A piece of paper was initialled by those present, and placed, together with a lead pencil, in the box, which was then securely tied up with tapes, and these were knotted at the crossings and sealed. On opening the box there were found on the paper several sentences which had been dictated by the company. 54 Psychog7'aphy. After this Mr. W. P. Adshead cleaned a slate, placed some pencil upon it, and held it under the table, in close contact with the top of it. Monck held the other end. Mr. Adshead thus describes what took place: — We asked that there might be written on the upper sur- face, "The former things are passed away," "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." We heard the pencil writing, and on bringing the slate up found the above sentences written on it in a clear, neat hand. The experi- ment was repeated. Mr. Oxley held one end this time, and the sound of writing was heard, and a sentence suggested by one of the company was found written on the clean side of the slate. The slate did not pass from my brother's hand from the moment he held it under the table after clean- ing it until he brought it up with one side covered with writ- ing. Mr. Oxley was equally positive of the same when he held it. They each felt Dr. Monck pulling vigorously at his end of the slate, and they exerted a similar force at their end, so that it was clear the Doctor's hand was not free, and his disengaged hand was resting on the table. Seance No. 2, September i8th. — There were eight persons present, three ladies and five gentlemen. A lady whom Dr. Monck had never before seen had a slate passed to her by a sitter, which she examined and found clean, the slate-pencil which was on the table a few minutes before we sat down could not be found. An investigator suggested that it would be a good test if a lead-pencil were used. Accordingly a lead-pencil was put on the slate, and the lady held both under the table ; the sound of writing was instantly heard, and in a few seconds a communication had been written filling one side of the slate. The writing was done in lead, and was very small and neat, and alluded to a strictly private matter. Here were three tests at once: — 1. Writing was obtained without the medium (or any other person but the lady) touching the slate from first to last. 2. It was written with a lead-pencil at the spontaneous suggestion of another stranger. 3. It gave an important test-communication regarding a matter that was strictly General Corroborative Evidence. 55 private. Dr. IVIonck did not so much as touch the slate from first to last. Mr. E. H. Valter, of 51 Belgrave Road, Birmingham, testifies to the same effect. The senses of both hear- ing and feeling testified to the fact of the production of the writing at the time of observation. Dr. Monck asked any person present to clean a small folding-slate. This done, he placed a small fragment ot slate-pencil on the slate, and closed it. He then placed it on the head of any of the persons present, and requested them to place their hands upon the slate, so as to be quite certain that it did not go out of their possession. The pencil inside the slate was then both heard by those present to be writing, and the person who had the slate upon his head could also feel the pressure caused by the pencil in writing. The time occupied in writing the communication was only a few seconds, according to its length, but considerably less time than any person could possibly have written it in. These manifestations took place in the light, so that all the movements of Dr. Monck were closely scrutinised. The following are some of the messages given. The words under- lined [printed in Italic], and also those words with a capital, are exactly as they were written on the slate : — "Truth \sfoicr square, and cannot be displaced. "Saml." "Great is the Truth, and it must prevail. "Saml. August 2ist, 1876." "We love you, and are ever about your paths, studying your well- being, and actively co-operating with you in every good word and work. "Saml. Tuesday evening, Aug. 22, '76." "It is as difficult to shut out from humanity the truth of Spirit-inter- course, as to exclude the daylight from this room, "Saml. Tuesday morning, Aug. 22, '76." This last communication was given on the morning of the 22nd of August. We had just been observing to each other that the bright rays of sunlight were rather troublesome, so 56 Psychography. that the message was very a pj'opos. Many other messages were given, some were written on note-paper, marked by all present, so as to be certain that another paper was not sub- stituted, and under these conditions the messages were still given, in the light, and Dr. IMonck's hands clearly in view. The messages or writings are of the usual type, and I lay no stress upon their substance. I direct atten- tion solely to the fact of their presence ; and I reiterate my desire to seek a solution of the question, How is writing done under such circumstances at all '^. To say that the matter of the writing is silly does not dispose of the fact that writing is there. By what method is it executed } EXPERIMENTS WITH OTHER PSYCHICS. I HAVE hitherto alluded only to Slade and Monck as the vehicles of this force, and the Psychics in whose presence these phenomena are produced. Though they afford us, by virtue of their prominence before the public, most available evidence, it must not be supposed that abundant facts of a similar description are not to be found in other quarters. I am pre- cluded from referring to cases where the Psychic is not before the public. For obvious reasons, ladies and gentlemen do not voluntarily expose themselves to the curiosity of those who, only too frequently, reward information given by an incredulous stare, or an insinuation of delusion or imposture. When the plain facts are so far recognised that a profession of belief in their reality does not involve social stigma, or suspicion of a latent craziness, many persons will step forward to give their own testimon}-. That they do not now do so is not surprising ; but the fact remains, though I cannot make use of it for purposes of argument, that these phenomena occur in the privacy of domestic life, are witnessed in many a family where no stranger is admitted, and where no aid in the evolution of the phenomena is sought. 5 8 PsycJiograpJiy. I have records of experiments with two American Psychics, which I adduce here by way of corrobora- tion. The first is given by the Hon. J. L. O'Sullivan, formerly American Minister at the Court of Portugal, and his experiments were made with Mrs. Harman of San Francisco. The power of obtaining this pheno- menon was rapidly developed in her within three weeks, and the progress made was very sudden. The noise made by the act of writing, it will be noted, was different from that observed with Slade, though the more familiar sound of cursive writing could appar- ently be imitated at will. Mr. O'Sullivan thus describes what he saw : — The modus operandi was this. The slate (sponged clean with a small piece of pencil laid upon it, at first like Slade's, but afterwards, by direction, considerably bigger) was held under a common table, about a couple of inches below the table-top, she holding one corner between her thumb and fingers, and I supporting it lightly between mine, at the opposite diagonal corner of the slate. Our other hands were on the top of the table. In this situation it is clear that if she had relaxed her hold, to make any other use of her fingers, the slate must have dropped instantly to the ground, so light was the support contributed to it by me. Nay, more — I having once asked to have my hand touched, there was then written on the slate that I should place my entire hand on the top of the slate, which I did, so that the slate was then held up solely by her thumb and fingers at one corner of it. My hand was then touched, stroked, and patted, and a ring on the little finger taken off, at my re- quest, dropped audibly on the slate, and again put on, with some little difficulty in pushing it over the thickness of the joint. Sometimes, too, she laid the slate on the open palm of her hand, and then directed me to place my hand under Experiments ivith other Psychics. 59 hers, so that the entire back of her hand rested on the palm of mine, botli liands thus uniting in holding the slate up to within an inch or two of the under side of the table top. Both of these modes of holding the slate certainly constituted the most complete of test conditions as to the point that the medium's hand could not possibly have had anything to do, either with the touching mine and taking off the ring, or with the copious writing on the slate, which would take place as will be seen below. These things were certainly done by no mortal hand. She and I were alone in the room ; the table was a common everyday one, standing on an unbroken spread of carpet : will Dr. Carpenter consider that they come within the reach of " unconscious cerebration"? Another point as to the modus opera?idi, which differs from the experiences with Dr. Slade. While the slate was being held under the table, we would not hear the scratching of the pencil in the act of writing, bid a steady stream as of rapid little ticks on the slate, for all the world like the sound of a stream of electric sparks. We would then hear three loud ticks and the sound of the pencil dropping on the slate, as a signal that it was done. We would withdraw the slate, and there would be the message, always distinctly written. And yet, on my once remarking on this circumstance as being different from what occurred at Dr. Slade's, and also with Mrs. Francis (another slate-writing medium at San Francisco), the next time we heard, first the flow of the stream of ticks, and then the scratching sound of writing with a slate pencil, as though to show that they could do that too if they chose. It was also to be noted that a communication of some length would be given in broken parts, even a sentence being sometimes broken off in the middle. The signal for stop- ping would be given, as though for rest and recuperation of the force. This will be illustrated below\ Seldom would more than twenty or twenty-five words be given consecutively without such an intermission, long enough for me to read, copy, expunge, and rub the slate, and again restore it to its position under the table. It seemed as though some force analogous to electricity flowed down the medium's arm, so as to charge the slate and pencil with some spiritual power, 6o PsycJiography. so as to establish the conditions under which the spirit hands were able to act. That no mortal hands were, or could possibly have been there, was, I repeat, absolutely certain. There is now before the public in America a Psychic of very great power, Charles E. Watkins, of Cleve- land, Ohio. From several accounts of phenomena observed in his presence, I select now what bears upon my present point, but I shall have reason to recur to him again before my argument is complete. My friend, Mr. Epes Sargent, of Boston, U.S.A., who is indefatigable in his attempts to convince an unwilling world that there is in and around us some- thing more than materialists would have us to believe, has published in the Sph^itualist of Oct. 12, 1877, a very precise account of his experiments with Watkins. On the 1 8th of September, he tells us, he bought a new slate, protected by paste-board covers, and re- paired to Watkins' temporary residence, 46 Beach Street, Boston. Apparently Mr. Watkins was in a very unsuitable frame of mind — worried, out of temper, ill at ease — just the worst state, one would say, for hope of success in an experiment which demands, above all, passivity and ease in the Psychic. It does not seem, however, to have made much difference in the present instance. Mr. Sargent was alone, and the time was about noon on a clear, bright September day. The pheno- mena all centred round a belief in intercourse with the Spiritual world. Mr. Sargent wrote six names on six different slips of paper, concealing the movement of Experime?tts with otJicr Psychics. G\ Ill's hand from Watkins, who, however, had turned his back and made no effort to see what was being writ- ten. " Without touching the pellets — only pointing at them with a slate-pencil — Watkins gave the name written on each." Mr. Sargent unfolded them one by one, and found that in every instance he was right. His power of clairvoyance was very strong, and I think it likely that this supersensuous condition is a frequent concomitant of the state in which Psycho- graphy becomes possible. Mr. Sargent's narrative, so far as it bears on my present subject, reads thus : — He now handed me two slates, which I cleaned thoroughly with a wet towel, which I had asked for. The theory that by some chemical process there might be some writing upon a slate ineftaceable by scrubbing, but made visible after a minute or two, was wholly disproved by subsequent occur- rences. Mr. Watkins did not touch the slates after I had washed them. He simply placed a crumb of slate-pencil between them, and told me to hold them out at arm's length. This I did, first satisfying myself once more that they did not bear the mark of a single letter on any of their surfaces. I held the two joined slates out in my left hand, the medium being some four feet distant from them. " Do you hear writing?" asked he. I put my ear down, and distinctly heard the light scratching of the bit of slate-pencil. ''It is finished," said he, as a slight rap came on the slate. I did not see how there could have been time for more than a simple name to have been written ; but when I took one slate from the other, there, on the surface of the lower slate, was a letter oi jifty-foiir words, signed with the name of a deceased brother, which name I had not written down among those on the pellets. The letter was characteristic, but gave no startling proof of the writer's identity. The hand-writing had a general resemblance to my brother's, but I omitted to E 62 PsycJiograpJiy. take steps to compare it carefully before the writing was rubbed out. A still better test was in store for me. The little slate, in stiff pasteboard covers, which I had bought an hour before, and brought with me, had rested untouched near my right elbow on the table. Mr. Watkins now took it up, lifted a cover, put a crumb of slate-pencil on the surface of the slate, closed the cover, and handed the slate to me. I know that there was no manipulation, no delay, no possibihty of trick on his part. I kjioiu that no "prepossession" or ex- pectancy of my own was a possible factor in the case, if I can be permitted to use my reason in saying so. I looked at the slate on both sides — satisfied myself (though there was no occasion for this under the circumstances) that it had not been tampered with, then held it out, and the name written on it was Anna Cora Afowatt, afterwards Ritchie, whose funeral I attended at Kensal-Green in London, when Mr. Varley, Mr. D. D. Home, Mrs. Cox, Mr. Harrison, and other Spiritualists were present. T held my own slate out a second time, and then came the words: "J/y dear brother. — Yours, Lizzie.'' Her name had not been even written or uttered by me up to this time. Lizzie was the name by which we had always called her, though she usually signed herself Elizabeth. Again I held out my own slate, and there came the words : — " My dear son, God bless you. Your father, who loves you dearly. — Epes Sargent. '^ During these intervals the slate was held by me, and there was no possible way by which any humafi trick or jugglery could have been practised. The sunshine still streamed into the room ; the medium sat there before me ; no other person was present. No more stringent conditions could have been demanded, even by Messrs. Lankester and Donkin. The medium, however, writhed as if in torture every time the slate-writing took place. It was evidently accompanied by some powerful nervous excitement on his part. Mr. Chas. E. Watkins is twenty-nine years old, and a man of a highly nervous and sensitive temperament. He is a far different person intellectually from what I had been led Experiments zcitk other PsycJdcs. 63 to expect. He showed, by flashes, a high order of mind, and I regret that I could not have taken down in short- hand some of his remarks. He now took my slate, and, after I had re-examined it, he held it out in his own hand, and in less than ten seconds one side was fully covered with a letter from my sister Lizzie. Here it is: — Spirit-land. My Dear Brother, — I come to you this morning with my heart full of love for you, and 1 think that perhaps you may believe that it is me, your own sister. George is here with me. Your loving sister, Lizzie. If you ever doubt spirit communion, look at this slate. Your sister, Lizzie. I still have the slate, with the writing uneffaced. There were no punctuation marks, but the word "believe" was underlined. The whole was written in less than twelve seconds. His brother, Mr. James Otis Sargent, a man of calm and clear mind, and a thoroughly capable observer, also went to experiment with Watkins, and his testimony corroborates that of Epes Sargent. He is good enough to send me the following account of an interview with C. E. Watkins, at his room, No. 46 Beach Street, Boston, on the 19th day of September, 1877: — Watkins and myself were the only persons present. He handed me some slips of paper on which I wrote the names of five deceased persons, folding up each paper as soon as I had written the name upon it, so that its contents were thoroughly concealed. While I was doing this, W. left the room. When he came back, the five folded papers, all mixed together, lay on the table under my right hand. Without 64 PsycIiograpJiy. touching them, he requested me to pick out one of them and hold it in my left hand. I did so. After walking across the room once or twice, and laying his hand on my head, he told me correctly the name that was written on the paper. In like manner, he told me the names written on the remain- ing papers, while I held them, one by one, tightly grasped in my hand. I now threw the papers aside, and took the slates, two of which, precisely alike, were lying on the table. I cleaned each slate carefully on both sides with a damp towel. Wat- kins then sat down at the table, opposite me, laid one slate on the table, bit otf a little piece of slate-pencil and laid it on the slate, put the other slate over it as a cover, placed his two hands flat on that, and told me to put my hands on his, which I did. In a moment he drew out his own hands, so that my hands were left with the slates beneath them. Then he said that if I put my ear down I would hear the pencil writing. I put my ear down (not forgetting, however, to keep an eye upon him), and I heard distinctly the sound of the pencil. While I was listening, the pencil gave three shght taps, and then the sound stopped. I lifted the upper slate, and on the under one two com- munications were written. The first purported to come from a deceased brother, whose name was on one of the papers ; the second from my father, whose name I had not written. The handwriting of the two was quite different. I did not recognise it. But the signature of the second communication, in the peculiar form of some of the letters, was like my father's signature. The slates were now cleansed again, the bit of pencil was placed between them, and I held them myself at arm's length, Waikins not touching them or 7nc. On opening them I found a short communication signed with another of the names that I had written. The next time Watkins held the slates, and a message appeared purporting to be from a deceased sister named in one of my papers. Here the seance ended. It took place in broad daylight. I watched every movement of the medium, and there was no possibility of fraud. There was nothing in the messages by which I could identify them as coming from the persons Experiments witJi other Psychies. 65 named ; but that they were written by some mysterious agency I have no doubt. James Otis Sargent. Cedar Square, Roxbury, Nov. 20, 1877. Mr. John Wetherbee, of Boston, U.S.A., gives a similar testimony. He is a well-known writer on Psychological subjects, and has devoted prolonged attention to them. Few writers in America are more entitled to speak on these subjects, or command more attention by their utterances. He testifies thus : — I followed an impression I had, and bought two new slates at a store, and had holes bored in the frames, and tied the two slates together, and sealed the knots. The slates were clean, and the medium never touched or saw the inside of them. I had charge of them, and they were never out of my sight. The room was as light as a clear afternoon sun shining into it could make it. The tied slates lay on the table before me and before him — not under table, but on the table. It took some little time, for the new slates were not in so good mesmerically charged condition as the slates in his common use are ; but I felt as though I would like to have the writing on the new slates, so I was patient, and was well paid for my patience, for after a while I heard the atom of pencil that I had put in the slates before tying them together beginning to write, after which I cut the strings, and found one of the slates filled with a communication signed by the name of a well-beloved friend and relative who died some seven years ago. Now, my good reader, I know — as well as I know that the sun has shone to-day— 3/frj/, that, as I said, the slates were new and clean ; secondly, that no one in the room or out of the room (the only occupants being the medium and myself) wrote the communication on the slate ; and, thirdly, that it must have been done by an invisible, intelligent being or beings, and could not have been done in any other con- ceivable way. I make this statement as strongly as I know how, and my oath shall be attached if needed. 66 PsycJiograpJiy. I had many communications besides the one described with the tied slates. I will describe one which was on his own slates, but just as good a test, for my eyes are open and my head is level. I took his two slates, and washed them clean, and laid one on the other, like a double slate, and held them out at arm's length, and three feet or more from the medium, and he never once touched them ; the bit of pencil began to write ; I had put it between the upper and under slates ; then I opened them, and on each slate was an intelligent comm.unication — one from a relative and one from a friend. Both, it will be seen, were written at the same time, both by different spirits and on different subjects, and the handwriting of each was very different also. Dr. H. B. Storer, 29 Indiana Place, Boston, has the same story to tell. I give his record : — I took his own two slates, first examining them, to know, as I positively do, that there was no writing upon -them. I placed them together, the medium simply dropping a crumb of slate-pencil between them, and held them at arm's length in my left hand, in the bright light of the sun, the medium sitting within about three feet of the slate, convulsively writhing, while the noise of scratching was feebly heard, appar- ently on the slates. In some two or three minutes, I should think, he said: "It is done," and I separated the slates and found a short message written in a large, bold hand, and signed " Dr. Warren." I know that some invisible but intel- ligent being, other than the medium or myself, wrote that message, and such a being I call a spirit. Mr. Chester A. Greenleaf writes from Chicopee, Mass., under date, Nov. 14th, 1877: — My wife received a long communication on new double slates bought and screwed together by myself, and untouched by Watkins. The moving of the tiny pencil was heard by her while Watkins was standing in a doorway about twelve feet distant from where the slates were held by her. Mr. Watkins seems to obtain this phenomenon under Experiments with other Psychics. Gj almost any prescribed condition. It is recorded of him (Aug. 25 ult.) that he submitted his powers to a crucial testing on the public platform. Two new slates were bought, and kept in the possession of the chairman of the meeting, Dr. Beals, and by him car- ried to the platform. A committee, consisting of two gentlemen who are not believers in the phenomena called Spiritual, and one who is, was chosen from the audience. The usual preparations having been made, the slates were held by Watkins and the three gentle- men. " Soon the scratch of the pencil was heard, and on taking the slates apart, a message of fifty words was found on one of them ; the committee affirming the impossibility of any substitution of slates, or of chemical writing." I have now brought forward testimony sufficient for my purpose. If what I have adduced does not establish my case, then no amount of proof would suffice. I pass to another class of evidence. ^ II. EVIDENCE FROM THE WRITING OF LAN- GUAGES UNKNOWN TO THE PSYCHIC. It is a by no means uncommon thing for the hand- writing in which the messages are written to be one totally different from that of the Psychic ; and it is a noteworthy fact that when a special handwriting is associated with a special signature, that association (so far as I have seen) is always preserved. I am acquainted with many cases in which this is very observable. I have now before me a specimen of Psychography obtained in private without the interven- tion of any one outside the family circle, in which the writing is so minute as to be illegible without the use of a strong magnifying-glass. Yet the letters are clearly and beautifully formed, the lines are straight and regularly spaced, and the capitals and the name of the Supreme Being are written large, and with great care in their formation. The same half-sheet of note- paper which contains this specimen contains also another message, written in a totally different hand- writing, but also with great neatness and care. Each is signed by a name, or rather by a designation, and each contains coherent and sensible matter. Each handwriting has been preserved exactly in all com- munications made now for some five years ; and no Evidence from tJie Wi'iting of Languages. 69 variation is discernible between the writing when obtained without human intervention, as in the case above quoted, and that which is automatically written through the hand of the Psychic through whom these messages are given. There is an absolute identity preserved throughout. It is not only that the character of the writing is the same, but there is a marked presence in these messages of individuality on the part of the Intelli- gence. The matter of the message is as marked as the manner of it. This is observable especially in writings obtained under the best conditions of privacy in a family circle. Those who have looked carefully into the laws which govern these phenomena do not expect to gain any information that merits attention amid the distracting surroundings of a public circle, where the Psychic is valuable chiefly for the unfavour- able conditions under which he can manage to give evidence to a sceptical inquirer ; where the perform- ance is a species of psychical gymnastics, conditions being prescribed for the special purpose, apparently, of rendering it impossible to produce a given result ; and success being the invariable signal for still more stringent demands. Such investigators, it is presumed, have their reward. In private, on the contrary, when the method of production is familiar, and the attention is directed more to the nature of information given, there is observable a very distinct and marked individuality in the Intelligent operator, and much that is written is worthy of attention on its merits. JO PsycJwgrapJiy. Almost invariably this individuality is not akin to that of the Psychic. When only one Intelligence can be detected, then usually the broad characteristics of the Psychic are reproduced, but with a marked variation in minute points, and with either the absence of some strong personal peculiarity, or with the addi- tion of one equally forcibly marked. And where several Intelligences can be traced, they differ among themselves as strongly as they do from the Psychic. Not only do these Intelligences present character- istics of form and style of communication different from what would have been used by the Psychic, but they give information which is beyond his knowledge, and sometimes use a language with which he is not acquainted. It is not my purpose now to dwell on the fact that information is given by means of these messages which neither is nor ever has been within the knowledge of the special Psychic through whom the phenomenon was caused. That would lead me into details which do not rightly belong to my subject, and I should manifestly be compelled to narrow down my argument to such cases as are within my own private knowledge. It is impossible to say of a given public Psychic, like Monck or Slade, that he does or does not know such a fact, or has or has not ever heard of it in his past life. I could only say that it was un- likely that he has such out-of-the-way knowledge, and could ground no argument on such an opinion. It is easier to adduce evidence as to the language used. When we find Ancient and Modern Greek, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Swedish, Dutch, Ger- Evidence from tJie Writing of Languages. Ji man, Arabic, and Chinese forming the language of some of these Psychographs, obtained in the presence of Slade and Watkins, we shall not have much diffi- culty in concluding that their linguistic attainments are not of this polyglot character. As a matter of fact, Watkins is a young man whose past life has not been one that has been favourable to the acquisition of any knowledge, except that gained in the hard school of experience ; and Slade knows no language but his own mother tongue. I am in a position to affirm this with confidence, on the authority of Dr. Carter Blake, who was accustomed to read French with Miss Slade and Miss Simmons during their stay in London. He sa5^s, in a letter to me, " We used to act little plays by Moliere, and the like. I am certain that Slade, who was generally present, was entirely and hopelessly ignorant of every word Simmons is as ignorant of the 'ethnic' languages as Slade, and the girls have a very moderate school-girl acquaintance wdth the French language alone." 1 adduce, therefore, this fact, that languages un- known to the Psychic are frequently used, as an additional proof of the absence of fraud. When such precautions are taken to prevent previous fraudulent preparations of the slates as I have noted in each quoted case, the presumption is in favour of the reality of the phenomenon. When the evidence of the senses tells of the progress of the writing, that presumption 'is increased. If, when the slate is inspected, the language used is one unknown to the Psychic, I sub- mit that the presumption is still further increased, 72 Psychography. and that another link has been added to the chain of evidence. I have already mentioned one case, that of Mr. Hensleigh Wedgwood, J. P., in which his ear detected the sound of Greek writing, and afterwards of the cursive script of English. I will add two other cases, one recorded by the Hon. R. Dale Owen, formerly American Minister at the Court of Naples. It dates back to a time when Slade was comparatively unknown in this country. The record is curious, inasmuch as Mr. Owen had the slate and papers on his knees, and saw the detached hand, like those mentioned by Mr. Crookes and Mr. Jencken, which executed the writing: At half-past seven on Monday evening, Feb. 9th, 1874, I called at Dr. Slade's rooms, 413 Fourth Avenue, New York, found him disengaged, and had a sitting which I shall re- member while I live. It was held in his back parlour ; no one but myself pres- ent ; doors closed and locked ; sufficient gaslight from a chandelier suspended above the table to make every object in the room distinctly visible. We sat at a table without cover, five feet by two and a half, Slade at one end, and I on one side, near him ; Slade's hands on the table through- out the sitting. An interval of some ten or fifteen minutes during which nothing occurred ; Slade nervous, restless, and seemingly disappointed. Then he laid a small slate on the table before me, and, after a time, went to a writing-desk, brought thence half a quire of paper, selected a sheet, and handed it to me with a request that I would examine it. I did so, carefully, under the gaslight, and can positively affirm that not a word or letter was visible upon it. Thereupon he added, " They wish you to lay it on the slate, and to lay the slate on your knee.^' Evidence frovi the Writing of Languages. 73 Then, after another pause : '' Have you a lead pencil?" "Yes." " Please throw it under the table." I did so. A few minutes afterwards I felt the grasp as of a hand on one of my knees, arresting my attention, for the touch was unmistakably distinct. Presently there appeared, stealing over my knees, and creeping slowly up the slate, a hand, holding my pencil. This hand resembled, point for point, that of a white marble female statue, alike in size, in colour, and in form ; the fingers taper, and the whole most deli- cately moulded. // was detached and shaded 0^ at thew?ist. It cojHvicnced writing about the middle of the note sheets and continued to write snider my eyes for tiuo or three minutes, ending at the bottom of the page. Then it slipped gently back under the table, carrying the pencil with it. Again an interval, perhaps of five minutes. Then ap- peared a second hand, somewhat smaller than the first, but in colour and symmetry closely resembling it. This hand moved to the top of the sheet of paper, wrote as the former had done, and for about the same period of time, then dis- appeared slowly in like manner. I saw it even more dis- tinctly than the first, because it wrote outside of the shadow of the projecting table-top, and directly under the gaslight. As we had no raps indicating the close of the sitting, we kept our places, talking over what had happened. After some time, a hand similar to that which first wrote, showed itself coming out from below the end of the table furthest from Dr. Slade. It was detached, as the others had been, remained visible several minutes, then sank out of sight. This closed the sitting. When I came to examine the writing of which I had thus witnessed the execution, I found the first written to be in English, a commonplace communication with the signature of Dr. Slade's deceased wife. The last written, but first on the note sheet (headed in English, "Law of Love. Matt. v. 43 — 45"), was in Greek. Now, my knowledge of Greek, imperfect when I left col- lege, has, during more than half-a-century of disuse, so faded out that I can barely translate a word, here and there. I 74 PsycJiography. ■^toLw. M^ V^'-*^^ i^ TlTt'-y /l^^-^^ ^^^t-^:^-^ Evidence from the Writing of Languages. 75 referred the manuscript to two of the best Greek scholars in Harv^ard University, and from them I ascertained that it was what it purported to be (a few aspirates and accents only omitted), the original of the three well-known verses, thus rendered in our revised version : — "43. Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour and hate thine enemy. " 44. But I say unto you, love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you. " 45. That ye may Idc the children of your Father which is in heaven ; for He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust." Truly the " Law of Love." That those of your readers who are familiar with Greek may judge the original MS. for themselves, I here submit a half-size photograph of what I obtained. (See p. 74.) I close without comment, merely reminding your readers : That this sitting was held in the light. That the sheet of note paper remained in my possession from the time I first received and examined it till the close of the sitting ; and has never been out of my possession since. That, for the reality of the phenomena I had the evidence of two senses : that of feeling, and best and most convincing of all, the testimony of what the old poet calls the " faithful eyes." New York, Oct. 15th, 1S76. The other case is recorded in the Spiritualist of Dec. I, 1876, and Mr. Blackburn's attestation supplies all the necessary information: — The writing in the accompanying cut is a fac-simile of that which was obtained upon one of Dr. Slade's slates in the presence of Mr. Charles Blackburn of Parkfield, Didsbury, near Manchester. Mr. Blackburn states that in broad day- light a crumb of pencil was placed on the top of the table. 76 PsycJiograpJiy. and a clean slate turned face downwards over the pencil. The four sitters, including Dr. Slade, then joined their hands, with the exception that Dr. Slade placed one of his hands V5 ?^ - '^ -Sj ^;5 ^°4 ^ V) '3 .-^ >> 5 ^ *{ ^te > > ;5> O-N ;^ *f^ ^ P 6 -*<} ..^'? o ^ ^ 'f w.^ s .2 few ^ -^ ..'^ *xr K 7 ^P- ^ Y Evidence from the Writbig in Languages. yj upon the top of one corner of the slate, whilst Miss Cook, at the other end of the chain of sitters, placed one of her hands upon the opposite corner. Dr. Slade sat sideways, and his feet were in sight all the time. Soon they heard the pencil hard at work, and the message seemed to be a long one, for the writing could be heard going on for five or six minutes ; then it ceased, and raps came upon the table. The slate was turned up and found to be full of Greek writing. Mr. Blackburn wrapped up the slate in his hand- kerchief, and carried it to the rooms of the National Asso- ciation of Spiritualists, where it is now framed under glass, and is on public view. The writing is the dry dusty writing of slate pencil. The sitters were Mr. Charles Blackburn, Mrs. Henry Cook, of Hackney, Miss Kate S. Cook, and Dr. Slade. Another specimen of Greek was obtained by Mr. Gledstanes, who also had son^e Arabic and English writing on the same slate. He went to Slade, I may say, with the desire and hope of getting some French message, which he might give to M. Leymaric in Paris, a city in which Mr. Gledstanes had for some time been resident. The remarks which I have before made as to the difference in handwritings find an illustration here. The Greek writings obtained by Messrs. Owen and Blackburn are identical in type, and seem to me to be hastily written, as if by a hand familiar with the character, and accustomed to write it cnrrente calamo. The letters are not laboriously formed, as would be the case if they were copied by one who was ignorant of the language. The characters on the slates of Messrs. Gledstanes and Wedgwood are entirely differ- ent — are, in my opinion, formed by another hand — and are signed alike, but differently from the other writings. These points have their obvious bearing yS PsycJiograpJiy. on the question of the separate nature of the Intelli- gence, and also of the reality of the phenomenon. Since Slade has been on the Continent, at the Hague and Berlin, we find that messages in Dutch and German are written. Canon X. Mouls, with Slade in Belgium, obtained writing in French, a language with which he was probably most familiar, as well as in English, the language of the Psychic. In London one gentleman obtained writing in both Spanish and Portuguese, though neither he nor any person in the room knew a word of either language. In an adjoining room, however, it is curious to note that there was a gentleman. Dr. Carter Blake, who knows both. It is right, however, to notice that dur- ing the time when the experiment was being made, Dr. Blake was in conversation about other subjects. The matter of the message, he tells me, is quite unlike anything that would have been in his mind. He has no pretensions to be a good Portuguese scholar; never uses the language for thought or word, except in the way of business, though he knows Spanish well. The same results are got with Watkins, in America. Madame H. P. Blavatsky, a Russian lady now resi- dent in New York, and author of his Unveiled^ went to Watkins, and having written among other names, on separate pieces of paper, one in Russian character, she was asked by the Psychic to allow it to be written on the slate, as it was too difficult for him to pronounce. Madame Blavatsky placed her hand alone on a slate, under which a fragment of pencil had been placed. Mr. Watkins did not touch the slate. "An instant Evidence fron the Writing vi Languages. 79 after, on turninq- up the slate, the appellation, consist- ing of three names, was found written in full, and in Russian characters, with this curious exception, that one or two letters were exchanged for those of Latin character, having the same phonetic value ; eg. an /", pronounced in Russian v, but written b, was substi- tuted for the latter letter." Again, a teacher of the Greek language in the Col- legiate Institute, Springfield, Massachusetts, United States of America, Mr. T. T. Timayenis, a modern Greek by birth, obtained from Watkins, in original characters of Romaic, "the name of his grandfather, and three lines of Greek words, correctly spelled, and with accents and breathings correctly placed." To this he testifies in his own name, and, moreover, states that the " name written is very peculiar, almost unpro- nounceable by English lips. The slate was in full view throughout, and Watkins merely touched one corner with a motionless finger." The same Psychic has recently obtained writing in correct and properly formed Chinese characters. It is probable that Psychography could be obtained in any given language, provided a person were present who understood that language even slightly. And there is some evidence w^hich goes to prove that on rare occa- sions a language is used with which no person present is familiar; just as, far more certainly, facts are given which are not known to any one in the room. It is, however, very desirable that extended experi- ment should be made in this direction before any definite opinion is formed. III. SPECIAL TESTS, SHOWING THE IMPOSSI- BILITY OF PREVIOUS PREPARATION OF THE WRITING. Beyond the evidence obtained by the senses of the observer, and from the fact that the subject-matter of the communications frequently contains what the Psychic could not be supposed to know, as well as from the fact that the language in which it is con- veyed is one with which he is not familiar, there are additional tests which go still further to show the impossibility of previous preparation for purposes of deception. It must be borne in mind that these writings are not obtained solely by professional Psychics, who, having an interest in procuring them for money, may be supposed to be under some temptation to manu- facture a counterfeit when the real article is not forth- coming. They are of frequent, not to say regular occurrence in families into which no professional aid ever is admitted, when the matter of the writing is of so private a nature usually as to be held sacred, and where publicity is neither asked nor tolerated. Such cases form a very large factor in a fair argument on this question. special Tests of the IT/'iti/i^. 8 1 And in this connexion I am concerned to say again tliat the so-called exposure of the viodus opera?idi of a professional Psychic by a professional conjurer is of so little importance as to be practically iii/nl ad rem. Mr. Maskelyne, on his own stage, surrounded by his own confederates, and using his own prepared appa- ratus, does something which burlesques the results obtained by Slade. What then ? If the imitation were moderately good, it would be a creditable coun- terfeit, such as the skilful illusionist should have no difficulty in producing on his own terms. The stage thunder, the stage dinner, the false sovereign, the mask and wig of the actor, may all be made more or less like the reality which they counterfeit. Mr. Maskelyne's is a sorry piece of illusion, unworthy one who passes as so great an artist, and only excusable because he finds it good enough for his method of misguiding a credulous public. But were it never so good, what would it prove t Simply that a thing can be imitated when unlimited means of so doing are provided. That is hardly a point that we need to have demonstrated ; and if those who lay stress upon it find any comfort in that demonstration they are welcome to it. If, however, they flatter themselves that it extends any further, then they must be advised to commence the study of logic. Furthermore, let it be remembered that the conjurer is a man who has devoted special faculties, specially trained, to the development of his art. His nimble fingers have gone through many a weary lesson before they have enabled him to do what he does. The 82 PsycJiograpJiy. Psychic, as often as not, is a lady or gentleman, a boy, or even a child, who could not perform a Maskelyne trick to save his or her life, and who has usually as little knowledge of the method by which the results are obtained as my reader probably has. It is Nature versus Art ; and in this, as in all other cases, though Art may copy, it cannot rival Nature. A great deal is made too, and quite naturally, of the tricks that can be played in the dark, when a trained and practised trickster has full liberty for his pranks. As I write there lies before me this week's Academy (Jan. 5, 1878), in which a review oi Hoitdin's Conjiu'i7ig is made the vehicle for a long story of the method of imposture used on a certain occasion (not specified) by a Psychic (not named) at a time and place (not particularised) in Cambridge. This is, most unfairly, turned into a sort of illustration of the way in which Slade managed his business. The critic, who evidently knows nothing of the subject, must prepare himself to answer such cases as those adduced here before his attacks will have much weight. As a matter of fact, no case is here recorded which took place in darkness; none where any such imposture as he relies upon was possible ; none where the critic can fairly say that every reasonable precaution was not taken to insure fair and straightforward dealing. I reiterate the fact that, when these experiments are made in public, they are made under rigid condi- tions which preclude deception. Men familiar with the phenomena, and who are not scared or driven off their balance by their occurrence, subject them to special Tists of the Writing. ^2> repeated observation, and evoke them under carefully prescribed conditions. They are not content to leave a conjurer's license to the Psychic, but compel him to attempt his experiment under conditions which render it absolutely sure that all is straightforward, and which frequently are so rigid as to make success all but impossible. Under these conditions many of the experiments quoted in this treatise have been con- ducted, and I claim to advance my argument a step further by referring here to some of the most con- spicuous. I have already recorded that Watkins has submitted himself to the careful testing of a committee, in a strange hall, and with slates wdiich he had never even seen. Under these circumstances fifty words were written. This is a fair instance of the difference between the modus operandi of the true Psychic, and the method of the conjurer. In a similar manner Slade, when in London, volun- tarily came from his own rooms to those of the British Association of Spiritualists, 38 Great Russell Street, and submitted himself to test by a committee speci- ally selected from the members of that association, and permanently organised for the purpose of con- ducting scientific research into Psychic phenomena. He made no other condition save this. He requested that the committee should experiment with him by twos, as he had found by experience that the best results are obtained when the number of persons present is small. He was willing to use the table and slates provided by the committee, and made no 84 PsychograpJiy. stipulation whatever as to who the observers should be, or in what order or manner they tested his powers. From the carefully-recorded minutes of the com- mittee I extract the reports of Mr. Desmond Fitz- Gerald, M.S.Tel.K, and Mr. J. W. Gray, C.E. ; of Mr. George King, and Dr. Carter Blake, Doc. Sci. ; and of Mr. T. H. Edmands and Mr. Hannah. REPORT OF MR. DESMOND FITZ-GERALD, M.S.TEL.E., AND MR. J. W. GRAY, C.E. We sat down to an ordinary deal, double-flap, Pembroke table. Dr. Slade sat with a flap to right and left, but side- ways, so that his legs did not pass under the table. Mr. Fitz-Gerald sat on his right, opposite the flap, and Mr. Gray opposite to Dr. Slade. All joined hands on the top of the table, and at about the middle thereof Raps, and even blows, were then almost immediately heard and felt beneath the table, these being sufficiently strong to cause the table to vibrate distinctly ; and in this way was affirmatively answered the question, " Will you write ?" Dr. Slade then bit oft' a small piece of pencfl and placed it on a slate, the frame of which bore a mark, so that the slate could not be turned over without detection. The slate was then passed several times partially under the table and withdrawn by Dr. Slade, who held it by one corner, his other hand joining that of the other sitters on the top of the table. At no time was the slate in such a position that the writing could by any possibility have been done by Dr. Slade. After a few of these movements of the slate, and whilst it was partially visible, and apparently close against the table, both Dr. Slade's hands being full in view, a sound as of writing on the slate was distinctly heard, and then, after it had moved three times against the table (to indicate that the writing was finished), the slate was withdrawn, and writing was found thereon, extending right across the slate, length- wise. The next experiment was with a folding slate, which had special Tests of t/ie ]Vriti}ig: 85 been bought l)y Mr. Fitz-Gerald for the purpose. A crumb of pencil having been placed on one leaf of the slate, and the other leaf folded over it, Dr. Slade took hold of the closed slate between the thumb and forefinger of the right hand, and placed his other hand on those of the other sitters, on the top of the table. The slate was then passed several times beneath the table for the fraction of a second, and was then held by Dr. Slade above the table, in which position writing was distincdy heard on it, Mr. Fitz-Gerald placing his ear close to the slate to make quite sure of this fact. On the slate being then opened, writing was found on one leaf thereof, the words being : "He is not a developing medium;" this being evidently a reply to a remark made by Dr. Slade, a minute or so before, that Mr. Gray was a strong medium. The slates being then removed from the table, we placed our hands on the latter, and Dr. Slade asked that it might be raised. After being strongly tilted once or twice, it was suddenly raised from the floor, and turned over above our heads. The latter movement was so sudden, however, that the exact conditions immediately before it occurred had not been noted. It was therefore suggested that the experi- ment should be tried whether the table could be made to rise slowly and vertically whilst under careful observation. The request that it should do so was immediately acceded to. The medium placed one foot right away from the table, so that it was well in view of the sitters, and the other foot he placed beneath one of Mr. Fitz-Gerald's, while all hands were joined on the top of the table. It then, and under the closest observation, rose twice about six inches from the ground, the top remaining perfectly horizontal during the movements. Thus ended a most satisfactory se'ance. (Signed) John W.m. Gray. I fully concur in the above account. Desmond G. Fitz-Gerald. REPORT OF MR. GEORGE KING AND DR. CARTER BLAKE. Dr. Slade having kindly volunteered to give a seance to the members of the Experimental Research Gommittee, we 86 PsychograpJiy. assembled to meet him this evening. We gathered in the large seance room, and while waiting proceeded with the routine business of the committee. At about seven o'clock Dr. Slade arrived, and sat for a little chatting with us. He said he could not that evening sit with more than two at a time, and as there were about eight of us, we drew lots for the order of precedence. My lot fell to be in the third couple, and my partner was Dr. Carter Blake. The pre- vious sitters were with the medium about twenty minutes, and experienced some strong physical manifestations, for when Dr. C. Blake and I entered the small se'ance room we found that one globe of the gaselier had been broken, we were told, by the table having been violently tossed up into the air. Dr. Slade, Dr. Blake, and I sat down at a small and very rough table belonging to Dr. Carter Blake. My companions sat facing each other at opposite sides of the table, and I sat between them at the medium's right, and thus, as he always held the slate in his right hand when he placed it under the table, I had every opportunity of closely observing him. We used two slates, supplied by a member of the committee, one an ordinary school slate, the other a folding book-slate. We had a number of very short messages, sometimes on one slate, sometimes on the other, obtained in the way which has been so often described. Usually the slates were completely hidden under the table, and thus the seance was not so conclusive as the private one I had had with the same medium a week or two before. I observed a mark on the school slate, which, on these occasions when the slate was not passed entirely out of sight, enabled me to say positively that the writing was done on the upper side of the slate, and not on the under. One little circumstance seems to me very remarkable, and I am astonished that attention has not been more forcibly called to it in accounts of seances with Dr. Slade. \_Note A.] The crumb of pencil invariably remains at the point where it stops after writing the message, forming a perfect continuation of the last stroke of the last letter. This fact, trifling in itself, to my mind goes far to prove that the message had been written with that identical piece of pencil, and on the upper side of the special Tests of tJie Writing. Zj slate. I do not see how otherwise the medium could place it in position with such mathematical accuracy. It may also be thought worthy of record that the style of the hand- writing was very dissimilar from that of the message I had received at the private se'ance above referred to, and that the intelligence purporting to communicate was different also. {Note B.'\ ]3r. Slade afterwards took an ordinary blacklead pencil, about six inches in length, and laid it on the slate above a half sheet of note paper which I had supphed. He passed them under the table, when the pencil appeared to drop on the ground. We immediately looked for it, but could no- where find it. Dr. Slade then passed the slate with a crumb of slate pencil on it under the table, and asked where the blacklead pencil had been put. The written answer was, " On the top of the door ;" and on the top of the door Dr. Blake found it. The door was about ten feet from where we sat, and none of us had stirred from our chairs from the moment of entering the room. The incident was a curious one ; but as I had not the means of identifying the pencil, and had not searched the top of the door before beginning the seance, it does not carry very great weight. \_Note C] Geo. King. Note A. — Attention has been often drawn to this point in communi- cations which have appeared in the The Spiritualist newspaper, — C. C. B. Note B. — The handwriting was dissimilar from that of "Allie," *' Phoebe," and purported to be that of "Owossoo." — C. C. B. Note C. — The pencil found by me on the lintel of the door was iden- tified by me by certain marks as the same pencil placed by Dr. Slade on the paper, and subsequently dropped. It ought to be stated that my own chair was dragged from beneath me by a force acting on the other side of the room to that on which Dr. Slade sat; and that I was forcibly touched on the shoulder under like conditions. With these additions I coincide in Mr. G. King's report. — C. Carter Blake. REPORTS OF MR. T. H. EDMANDS AND MR. R. HANNAH. Dr. Slade attended the meeting of the Research Com- mittee, and, after a short interval, was shown into the front seance room, where he received the members by twos. ]Mr. S8 Psychography. R. Hannah and I were the last to enter. We found Dr. Slade standing by a common deal table, which, with the three chairs to be occupied by us, was detached by an inter- val of eight or ten feet from the other articles in the room. I received the slates which were used, one a double-folding, and the other a common school slate, from the members who had entered immediately preceding Mr. Hannah and myself, and took them into the seance room. On the com- mon slate a short message was written whilst it was partially under the table. I then expressed a wish that something might be written in my pocket-book, which I handed to Dr. Slade, with a small bit of my own pencil (blue). We were informed that a trial would be made to give us a message. Dr. Slade held the pocket book over the table, open and in full view, then dropped the bit of pencil on the open leaf, then turned over the half cover so as to close the book, except so far as was prevented by Dr. Slade's thumb being at one corner holding the book. In about a minute, without any action or movement by Dr. Slade, writing was heard to be in progress, the whole book being still in sight, as also were both hands of Dr. Slade, one only being used to hold the book, and a message was written. A small piece of pencil was then placed on one side of the double slate, and the other side closed over it. The closed slate was then held for an instant by Dr. Slade, partly under the table, but at Mr. Hannah's suggestion, it was put on the top of the table, and pressed down with the tips of Dr. Slade's fingers and thumb. When the slate was brought up and placed on the top of the table, Dr. Slade opened it to show that it was then free from writing. Almost instantly writing was heard, and on opening the slate a sentence was found to be written, which was preserved, and attested by Mr. Hannah and myself by our signatures on the frame of the slate, and the slate handed to Mr. Fitz-Gerald, to whom it belonged. Mr. Hannah is of opinion that no more satis- factory conditions could be required as proof, that Dr. Slade had no active part in producing the writings, than were afforded by these two experiments with the pocket-book and the slate, and I concur with him entirely. T. H. Edmands. special Tests of tJic Writitig. 89 A series of sittings was given by Dr. Slade to the Researcli Committee at 1'^, Great Russell Street, on the 15th Decem- ber. He was sliown into the front seance room, where he received the members by twos. Mr. Edmands and I were the last to enter, and we fountl Dr. Slade standing by a bare table, which, with the three chairs to be occupied by us, was detached by an interval of eight or ten feet from the other articles in the room. Mr. Edmands took into the room the slates to be experi- mented upon, one a double-folding, and the other a common school slate. On this common slate a short message was written whilst it was partially under the table. Mr. Edmands then expressed a wish that something might be written in his pocket-book. A very small portion of prepared lead was placed upon it, and Dr. Slade held it, quite open, in sight, but partly covered by the corner of the flap of the table. In about a minute the book seemed to shut without any action on the part of Dr. Slade, and writing was heard to be in progress, the whole book being then in sight, as also were both of Dr. Slade's hands. A small piece of pencil was then placed on one side of the double slate, and the other side closed down over it. The closed slate was then held for an instant by Dr. Slade, partly under the table, but at my suggestion he put it on the top of the table, and pressed it down with the tips of his fingers and thumb. Almost instantly writing was heard, and on opening the slate a sentence was found, which was preserved, and afterwards attested by Mr. Edmands and myself signing our names on the frame. I do not think more satisfactory conditions could be required as proof that Dr. Slade had no active part in pro- ducing the writing than were afforded by these two experi- ments with the pocket-book and the folding slate. An incident attracted my notice during the sitting which I may be allowed to mention, as it bears on a part of the evidence given in the prosecution, where it was said that Dr. Slade adopted the rather uncouth mode of biting off bits- of pencil in order that he might have some pretext for the noise made by "clearing his throat." The only time during 90 PsycJiograpJiy. the sitting Dr. Slade indulged in this " knack " was when holding the pocket-book open partly under the table. He had not hitherto bitten a pencil at all, as the sentence on the common slate was written with a largish piece, which had been on the table. The knack seemed spasmodic, or as indicating that he might be in very slight degree in the state which is called " under control. '^ Besides these writ- ings, certain unimportant movements of the table occurred. R. Hannah. In the course of this report occurs the name of a scientific gentleman who had great opportunity of observing the phenomena which occurred in Slade's presence, and who has left us a very exact record of some of his observations. Mr. Carter Blake, Doctor of Science, late secretary to the Anthropological Society of Great Britain, and now lecturer on comparative anatomy at Westminster Hospital, is the observer, and his records, beside giving facts, note also some deduc- tions bearing on the source and operation of the force to which I shall have occasion to recur hereafter. On Monday, the 8th instant, I had the pleasure of visit- ing Dr. Slade. The manifestations were of the same kind as those described by many of your correspondents. 1 was struck with the fact that the motive power which pulled at my coat, took a slate from my hand, and carried it under the table, proceeded from my right hand, while Dr. Slade was on my left. The message given on the slate was of the usual character from "Allie." Subsequently, the initials of a deceased person known to myself were written on the slate when the side was turned downwards, and quite invisible to Dr. Slade. Afterwards some writing was obtained on the slate from the same assumed source, the meaning of which was intelligible to myself, and not to Dr. Slade. Hands were seen, and my coat forcibly pulled by some other force than his own. The table was raised up when both his special Tests of the Writing: 91 hands, and both mine, were on it, and my feet on his. No motion of his feet could have done this. He then leaving the table, it forcibly threw itself in my lap, and subsequently, in a reversed position, on my head. The accordion was played when held by one of Dr. Slade's hands. The hands shown near me cast a distinct shadow, pro- duced by the sunliglit on the table, and on my white waistcoat. The eftect on my mind was the certainty of Dr. Slade's perfect good faith in the matter, and the conviction that the force which produced these singular conditions was intelli- gent, and acted from a spot or spots separate from the medium. On Sunday, September 10, 1876, after mass, I visited Dr. Slade at 9*40 a.m., and found him in good health and spirits. Stepping into the back drawing-room, the table, which was covered, had the cloth removed, and the cloth as well as the table were most minutely inspected by me, as had been the carpet on a previous occasion. Dr. Slade sat at the west side of the table, and I at the south. I do not think it necessary in any way further to describe the table than by saying it is of good solid ash, and the carpentry with which it is made is good. The "strut" or "bracket," which may be used to support either of the flaps of the table, is precisely similar to that in a deal table which I have in my own possession. There is, in fact, nothing abnormal or unusual about this arrangement, which I only mention because attention had been drawn to it with a view to infer that there was something suspicious. The chairs around the table (which do not belong to Dr. Slade) are ordinary cane-bottom chairs, are not connected with any mechanism either under the carpet, to the ceiling, or in any way what- ever. The chair which I will call A was placed by me, after inspection, at the north-east corner of the table, its front face being diagonal with the north side of the table. Another chair (B) was placed in full view of myself, parallel with the eastern face of the table. Dr. Slade had on French pumps, and his dress was " of the period." I had on heavy side-spring walking boots. Dr. Slade, with a view to show that it was perfectly impossible 92 Psychography for him to produce any motion of or under the table by his feet, attempted to sit sideways with one of his feet on a chair moved to the south-west corner of the table between us. Failing to be able to sit comfortably in this way, he placed his feet at a distance of about six inches (minimum distance) from the south-west corner of the table. I took off my own boots and placed them behind my chair at tlie spot marked F, where they could not be touched by any one but myself, and only by my right hand. A sofa was behind me, and the boots were partially underneath this sofa. E A Chair. B Chair. C Dr. Slade. D Myself. E Armchair. F Boots. G Point to which boot was tlirown. I then placed my feet on those of Dr. Slade, and rendered any action on the part of his feet impossible. The slate was then held by huii under the table, as already described by Serjeant Cox, and some twenty others, \vith perfect accuracy. I do not think it necessary to say more than tliat on the present occasion my attention was chiefly directed to coiistatcr the fact that both sides of the slate were care- fully examined by me and ascertained not to have any pre- pared writing or marking. Dr. Slade permitted me to hold the slate in my own hands and turn either side up. The pencil crumb was soon heard writing, and the following message produced on the upper surface of the slate: — special Tests of the Writing. 93 Dear Sir, — I present my compliments, and wish you to say \Vm. Trippen [or Tuppen] came, and wishes his friends to know he can return, I left earth Aug. i6th, at No. i, Thomas's Cottage, T3ournc- walk, Butler, age 68. Wm. T. The meaning of the above is perfectly unintelh'gible to me. While it was being written, Dr. Slade was carrying on a conversation on another subject. We then proceeded with the seance. Whilst waiting for the next manifestation, I noticed a condition which I had not previously observed with Dr. Slade. His hands being on both mine, in the centre of the table, the muscles of my forearms were seized with a convul- sive motion, and the waves of this motion, according to my impression, proceeded from my elbows to the finger tips, and not the converse, as some persons might be led to expect. The sensation was unlike that which would have been produced by an electric battery under the table, and was more like what I should imagine was the sensation of the aura epileptica. Of course I have not the slightest pre- tensions to the abnormal condition which is called, for reasons unknown to me, " mediumistic," a badly-constructed word, which has apparently been coined on as absurd a model as " ritualistic." The chair marked A then rose to a distance of nine inches from the ground, preserving its parallelism with the floor, and fell with a violent blow. The arm-chair, E, in the corner of the room, was slid on its castors in the direction of the dotted Hue in the sketch. My right boot was violently thrown over my head in the air to the point marked G. I requested that the other boot should be placed gently on the chair B, but before the words were out of my mouth it was thrown on the table, striking the hands of Dr. Slade and myself, and producing slight excoriation in his case, and ecchymosis in mine. During all this time his hands were on mine on the table, and my feet on his. No possible motion of any part of his body could have produced any of these effects. The distance between the leg of the chair A and his toe, if the latter had been outstretched, was found to be sixteen inches. The distance between him in his chair and the spot where I had placed the boots was three feet G 94 PsycJiography. four inches, and that from the spot where the boots were to the spot where one of them fell was seven feet three inches, a curved trajectory being added, so as to allow for my height in the chair. I should estimate the line of trajectory at twelve feet. The table was afterwards raised, and thrown in a reversed position on my head. In the evening I had another seance with Dr. Slade, at which was present a celebrated anatomist, who was satisfied of the bona fide character of the manifestations. I was struck with the identity in so many cases of the phenomena. Both at this and at the previous seance short messages were written by a long pencil — six inches in length — held about nine inches under the table. The public may be amused with the statement that such pencils are invariably rejected by Dr. Slade's controls. I must quote the evidence of the Rev. John Page Hopps, editor of TJie Triithseeker^ principally because his report shows that he went to Slade with a mind possessed of the various allegations which had been made against him. The usual conditions obtained, and the slate, having been first held by Slade in order to inquire whether anything could be done, was then held in order to put the question, whether writing could be produced so as to fill the slate. To this query the reply, "We will do so soon," was given, the pencil lying at the end of the last letter. Mr. Page Hopps then proceeds : — The slate was again put under, and then for about three minutes I heard writing. When the sounds ceased, the slate was carefully withdrawn (in this, as in every case, flat as it had lain during the writing). The slate was completely filled with the following "message," addressed, I presume, to me : — Dear Sir, — God's will be done on earth, as it is done in heaven: that the Christ-principle of doing good be inculcated as the only saving special Tests of the Writing. 95 efficacy from selfishness, discord, and error; not simply to be investi- gated, but unfolded ; not to be obtained by formal rites, but because originally implanted, must necessarily be developed in the everlasting life of man, and it only remains for man to place himself under the con- ditions of harmony to become receptive to the wide-spreading volume of God's universal welcome. — A. W, Slade, It may be said tliat this slate was written already, and adroitly changed ; but further on it will be seen that I got, without waiting, a similar slateful on my own marked slate, only produced by me just before the writing occurred. I had heard of suspicious delays, movements, and noises, elaborate breaking of pencil, throat sounds, and the like. I was astonished at the ease, simi)licity, and quiet of the whole thing. I had heard of the slate being detained on Dr. Slade's knees, or disappearing. More than once I saw it at once put under the table, with its top pressed close under the top of the table, and one side of the frame well seen the whole time. I had heard of the writing being done before the slate went into position ; I, on each occasion that the writing was produced, heard all the sounds of writing on a slate I had seen was blank. I had heard of the slates being changed ; I can only say that, after the sounds of writing were heard by me, the slate was very slowly with- drawn, and, in each case, the pencil lay precisely at the end of the last word. I had heard of the writing being done by Dr. Slade's finger, armed with a tiny grain of pencil, but one of his hands lay on mine upon the table, while part of the other, holding the slate, \vas in view the whole time, and it never stirred during the writing which I heard, and which on one occasion covered the whole of a moderate-sized slate. I had heard of sympathetic ink and the like ; the slate we used was a new one, perfectly grey ; the pencil was a soft slate pencil, and the whole of the writing which I examined, was composed of dry pencil dust. I had heard of doubts whether the writing was done on the top or the under side of the slate ; in my case I am certain the writing was done on the side between the slate and the table. Two days after, I saw Dr. Slade again. On this occasion I took two new-framed slates, which I marked. I par- ticularly asked whether it w^as not possible to get writing g6 PsychograpJiy. without putting the slate under the table, and was told it was quite possible. My two slates were then laid upon the table, with a tiny bit of pencil between ; and upon them in the full daylight we laid our four hand's. I then distinctly heard the sound of writing, and, on lifting up the top slate, found these words written, but very badly: — "We cannot give you a communication, only a proof our power." I remarked that though one or two words (the word " communication," for instance) were very badly written, Dr. Slade at once read them. On my way from Dr. Slade's this slate got broken to splinters — how, I know not ; so I returned the next day to try another, again taking two marked framed slates. A first "message" procured under the table as on the first day, but with more agitation of the hand, told me that "they" had broken my slate, because they wanted to give me more ! Anyhow, the result was remarkable. My first slate, held by Dr. Slade, was somehow smashed to atoms, only about two inches remaining in one corner of it. The second I laid on the top of the table, a bit of pencil was put under it, and our hands were then put on or near it. The writing was then heard, and in about three minutes ceased, when, on lifting the slate, this "message" was found, well written, in regular lines, and covering the slate : — The spirit of truth, which Jesus prophesied would come in these days of the age of war and force, is that undivided fraternising spirit of all love and goodness that unites the redeemed souls on earth and in heaven into one grand brotherhood of God — to open the way for the coming of this spirit has been the work of mediums — now may they have the strength given them to go on with the good work. A. W. Slade. I have the slate in my study now. It has on it my private mark. The following account, drawn up by the editor of the Spiritualist, and published in that journal, records a remarkable duplication of a message, as well as the production of the original message on slates which were never out of sight of the observers : — A few days ago Mr. Charles Blackburn, of Parkfield^ special Tests of the IVriting. 97 Didsbury, near Manchester, came to London, and invited two thorough disbeUevers in Spirituahsm, both of them influ- ential men of business well known in the city, to a seance with Dr. Slade. They visited him at 8, Upper Bedford Place on Monday last week, between three and four o'clock in the afternoon. Mr. Blackburn brought with him a slate purchased in Manchester. It was a folding slate — that is to say, it had hinges on the back, and when it was closed the two slates faced each other ; the outside case was of wood. A private mark was put upon this slate by a friend of Mr. Blackburn's in Manchester ; and a London partner of the gentleman who had made that mark was one of those who attended the se'ance to watch the results. The two London gentlemen took the slate into the seance room, and as they held it open. Dr. Slade dropped a piece of pencil upon it, about the size of a grain of wheat. They then tied a string tightly round the slate, after which one of them laid it upon the table, placed his elbow upon it. Writing was heard. They then took the slate into the next room, opened it in the presence of Mr. and Miss Blackburn and Mr. Simmons, and both leaves of the state were found to be covered 7uith the dry dusty wj'itijig of slate pencil. The crumb of pencil had been somewhat worn in the production of the writing. From first to last the slate 7iarr went out of sight of its owners. The se'ance took place in broad day- light. Two or three words were spelt wrongly in the message. So after it had been examined. Dr. Slade washed it otf, and the pencil was placed in it again to get more writing under the same conditions. A noise inside the slate like that of writing was heard, and the gentlemen took the slate away for the purpose of opening it at one of their offices. After they had left the house. Dr. Slade passed into a trance, and the communicating intelligence told Mr. Simmons that the sitters had not waited long enough ; there was no writing on the slate ; the spirits had been rolling the pencil about, try- ing to take hold of it. This afterwards proved to be the case. Next day they accordingly came again at 2.30 p.m., and obtained writing under the same conditions as at the first 98 PsycJwgraphy. sitting. After they left the seance room, and before they untied the slate, Mr. Blackburn had a sitting with Dr. Slade, and asked whether there were any writing on the slate this time. The spirits said they would write a duplicate of the message on another slate. This was done while the slate, with a crumb of pencil on it, was held by Dr. Slade flat against the under side of the table. His face was to the light. Mr. Blackburn had previously cleaned the slate him- self. He took the message into the next room, the string of the folding slate was cut, and the messages on the two slates were found to be identical, with the exception that the one on the folding slate contained an additional paragraph. This account is drawn up from testimony given to us by Mr. Blackburn, Mr. Simmons, and Dr. Slade. And this satisfactory method of endeavouring to obtain writing on the investigator's own slate was successful in the case of Mr. J. Seaman, well known in the newspaper world, who writes from 1 1 Southamp- ton Street, Strand, and who, primed (as in a case above noted) with all that suspicion could instil, obtained what convinced him of the bond fides of Slade, and of the reality of his power : — On Friday morning last, the ist inst., at about noon, I called, with my friend, Dr. Carter Blake, at 8 Upper Bedford Place, and was introduced to Dr. Slade, who was quietly chatting with Mr. Simmons and another gentleman in the drawing-room — the room which will go down to posterity as the apartment where Simmons " winked " and " pumped the visitors." I found Mr. Simmons without his " wink," but he certainly " pumped me," for as he politely asked me to remove my overcoat, he ascertained from my answer that I was only wearing one. But no use was made of this dis- covery by him. Dr. Slade, who took me into the back room, did not sit with his back to the window, but full in the light. He never once rested the slate (my own) on his knee, but held it in such a manner that I saw quite one- special Tests of tJic Writing. e the table. Dr. Slade asked the question verbally, and placing the slate, as before, under the flap, the following words were written on it, "I do not know, but I will try." The "grain" of slate pencil was then placed on the table and covered by the slate, upon which Dr. Slade placed the palm of his left liand, his other hand being above the table and touching ours. The sound of the writing immediately commenced, and continued for several minutes, only stopping whenever any of us lifted a hand so as to " break the chain," as Dr. Slade expressed it. When the slate was turned up, it was perfectly covered with small, clear writing, a sort of essay upon the beneficial and harmless nature of Spiritualism, which it called by that name, and finishing up with the sig- nature ''A. F. Slade:' Professor then requested to be allowed to hold the slate himself. A grain of slate-pencil was placed on the slate, which he held under the flap of the table, and press- ing it up against it. In a moment the writing commenced, and a word or two was written on the slate. During the experiment both Dr. Slade's hands were above the table. A few minutes after, when the slate was held under the table, the following words were written : — " Good-bye, I cannot do any more," and after that no more writing or raps were produced, and we came away. In the above notes I have simply stated the facts as they took place before my eyes and those of my friend in open daylight, on an afternoon in August, between three and four o'clock, and I offer no comments as to their cause. Several observers noticed the fact that Slade's hands, when in contact with their own, were feverishly^ hot, and emitted a crackling, detonating sound. He would withdraw them as though the contact burnt him. I specially noticed this during the writing while I held the slate. After Slade had made a few down- 1 34 Psychogi^apJiy. ward passes over my arm, my fingers tingled, and I heard distinct detonating noises in the table. These detonations sometimes are so powerful as to split the slate to fragments. Mr. Wedgwood's double- hinged slate was thus broken into minute pieces. The Rev. J. Page Hopps took away with him a slate which, in an unaccountable manner, o)i his zvay home was similarly pulverised. Several other observers have recorded the same action of what is apparently an explosive force within the object — not something that acts on it from without. And the Rev. Thomas Colley, writing on December 14, 1877, gives a very instructive record of a similar kind. A gentleman had forwarded to Monck a slate which he had so prepared as to render it impossible that it should be tampered with. He had embedded over the slate a plate of stout glass by means of plaster of Paris, leaving a space of about an inch between the slate and the glass. Into this chamber a fragment of pencil was introduced. The slate was perfectly clean, and it was physically impossible to write upon its inner surface by any normal means. Mr. and Mrs. Colley, together with Mr. and Mrs. Cranstoun, of the Tyrol, met Monck on the 14th December, and then and there the word desired by the gentleman who devised the test was clearly written. That word was Tangier. It was, in an unlucky moment for the safety of that slate, proposed that an attempt should be made to add a word at the separate dictation of each person present. The glazed slate, probably to obtain the necessary darkness, was placed under the table, and Deductions, Explanations, and Theories. 135 the two gentlemen had each a foot upon it. Mr. Colley describes a sensation of throbbing within the slate — a heaving as when the confined steam lifts the lid of a kettle — and in a moment an explosion took place that scattered it in fragments over the carpet, like spray from a foiL7itain. Mr. Colley instantly took up the slate, and found the words written in the order in which they had been dictated. The interesting part of this narrative, apart from the crucial test contained in it, is the explosive action of the force, and the sensation of throbbing which Mr. Colley, by the accident of having his foot on the brick, was enabled to feel before the explosion took place. It would seem as if the little chamber between the glass and slate were made a receptacle in which the force conveyed through the Psychic was stored, just as, I believe, the table is charged with the force before any manifestation is given of its presence. So much we are able to gather as to the source and operation of this Psychic Force. It is the " mesmeric fluid" of Mesmer ; the odyle of Reichenbach ; the nerve-aura of other investigators. When we come to consider the method of its direc- tion, we are on more precarious ground. So many theories have been propounded that their bare enu- meration will suffice to show the lines on which speculation has worked. Dr. Collyer is a type of those who consider that the phenomenon of Psychography is due to the uncon- scious action of the will of the Psychic. I append an 136 Psychography. interesting- statement of his views, extracted from a pamphlet pubHshed by him at the time of the Slade prosecution. His views are not original, but the extract which I .quote gives a convenient exposition of them : — I will briefly narrate my experience with Mr. Henry Slade, and will confine my remarks to the automatic writing, leav- ing the various other phenomena for another occasion to describe. On the 6th day of October, 1876, at 7 p.m., I called at 8 Upper Bedford Place. I was shown into the draw- ing-room, where I found Mr. Henry Slade, Mr. Simmons, and two young ladies. After some few minutes, Mr. Slade and myself went into a small back room. There were two gaslights turned on to their full extent, making the room as light as gas could make it. Mr. Slade took hold of my hands, and after a few moments he was in " the state." This transition was accompanied by the usual nervous twitchings. He told me to clean the slate which lay on the table. I did so, both with a sponge and then with my handkerchief I never let go of the said slate, which he placed under the corner of the table. A small piece of slate pencil was placed on the upper surface of the slate. In less than ten seconds the said slate was written on, and in ten seconds more eight lines of writing, filling up the entire upper surface of the slate, were written. As I have before stated, Mr. Slade believes that this was written by his wife's spirit. What he believes is quite beside the fact of writing occurring under circumstances that none of your wiseacres and tricksters could imitate. It was Slade's blind faith that the writing was spiritually produced, that enabled his Will-power to embody the thought. Having attended the trial at the Bow Street police court, I heard the childish propositions of chemical pencils, sympathetic inks, and so forth. I, accordingly, to meet all such objec- tions, purchased of a stationer in Holborn two white porce- lain slates, 7 inches long, 5 broad ; these I took with me to Slade's rooms on Friday, Nov. 2nd, at noon. We retired into the same room as on the previous occasion. Mr. Slade Deductions, Explanations, and Theories. 137 sat for twenty minutes, but entirely failed, and said he had no power. I was not in the least astonished, as I have known persons for weeks to lose all power. On the follow- ing Sunday, Nov. 5, at noon, I again visited Mr. Slade. I untied the slates myself, broke off a piece of Cumberland lead, one-eighth of an inch in length, which I placed between the slates, and retied them together with the tape I had brought with mc. The slates were then placed on the top of the table, Mr. Shade's fingers being in contact with the frame of the upper slate, his other hand was on my own. I distinctly heard the writing going on or being made. On opening the slates these words were written : — "We cannot write with this point of pencil. — A, W. Slade." I retied the slate, leaving within the original piece of pencil. An ordinary slate, which I carefully cleaned, was placed on the top of the table ; on the under surface of the slate I heard the wTiting taking place. I had my elbow on the slate all the time. On turning the slate I found forty-nine w^ords, written in less than three minutes by my watch. On returning to the drawing-room, I found a gentleman who had brought a folding-slate with him ; this was written on both sides — that is, the upper and lower surface, inside the folded part of the slate. There were sixty-four words. At page 94 of my work, Exalted States of the Nervous System (Renshaw, 356 Strand), I use these words: "Faith and Will, — The power of the will, in the ordinary normal state, is con- fined to the immediate acts essential to the functions of life; but it may be educated (during an abnormal state) so as to be directed out of or beyond the ordinary channel, so that brain phenomena, or abnormal states, may be induced at the will of the individual. In order to arrive at perfect control of the organs not normally under the influence of the will, much time is required." At page 106 I state: "The embodiment of thought is the cerebral representation or production of the figure thought of If there be sufficient nervo-vital fluid at the command of the medium, he is enabled to project an embodiment which will, for the time being, under the direction of the will-power, ' manifest all the conditions of an independent existence." 138 PsycJiography. The medium must necessarily be an extremely sensitive person — even morbidly so. How, then, is it possible that he can be calm and self-possessed, exercise mental concen- tration or will-power, if he is purposely rendered irritable ; his sensitiveness wounded by wanton, puerile opposition ? It cannot be expected that if the necessary conditions to success are destroyed that successful results can follow. It would be as unphilosophical to break your watch, and then to grumble because it ceased to keep time. No man is a greater admirer of pure philosophy and close inductive reasoning than myself I also abhor with detes- tation and contempt those upstart parvenus in science who imagine that by coups de main they can solve the most recon- dite revelations of brain function. It cannot be forgotten I that the College of Physicians of London ignored both Harvey and Jenner. It should not be forgotten that the Royal Society of Great Britain received the report of Benjamin Franklin's experiments, showing the identity of I lightning with other electrical phenomena, with a shout of ' laughter. Napoleon referred the subject of steam navigation to the \ Academy of Science. The result was that the Academy pronounced the idea to be " a ridiculous notion." When George Stephenson first proposed railroad travelling, how was the idea treated by the British House of Commons? Did not his distinguished son, Robert Stephenson, with all England, ridicule the French project of digging a canal at Suez? Still, the British nation a few years subsequently gave four millions sterling for an interest in the same canal ! Who, fifty years since, would not have been pronounced a madman if he had had the temerity to state the practicabi- lity of holding in a few minutes communication with his friends in Australia? Cases could be multiplied showing the ignorance of the most intellectual in matters which are beyond their knowledge. The universe abounds in mys- teries, exciting only the barren wonder of the desponding observer, but stimulating the philosophical to untiring and earnest research. To contradict past experience is a cer- tain indication of error ; to march beyond it is the truest indication of genuine discovery. If ignorance is punishable Deductions^ Explanations^ and Theories. 139 with three months' hard labour, who could escape the amusing task of continually walking upstairs ? Slade is not responsible for his want of knowledge as to the modus operandi of the most recondite phenomena con- nected with cerebral function. All he knows is, that these phenomena do not occur under certain conditions. It is not because he verily believes that they are produced by the spirit of his late wife, that such a belief comes within the sphere of criminal jurisdiction. I am not responsible for Slade's ideas. I am thoroughly convinced he is honest in his belief. What concerns myself is the production of these cerebral phenomena. I\Iy conviction of the fact that they are produced without the least attempt at trickery or fraud, is a conviction arrived at after thirty- five years' investiga- tion. That many persons with partially-developed powers have resorted to deception I am equally convinced. I have discovered on many occasions false representations, but these do not militate against the genuine phenomena. There is scarcely a subject with which the human mind is conversant that may not be simulated or imitated so closely as to deceive and betray the unsuspecting. I am as satisfied of the genuineness of the automatic writing presented by Henry Slade, of the United States, as I am of my own existence, or that the sun gives light, or is the cause of light, or of any other physical phenomenon, universally admitted. I do not find fault with the learned magistrate who defined "palmistry" to be analogous to these new recondite mental phenomena. Nor do I blame Mr. Henry Slade for believing that the phenomena are pro- duced by his deceased wife's spirit. I am firmly convinced that if he had not this belief the phenomena would not be produced. BHnd faith is essential to the exercise of will- power. It is the will-power during an abnormal or exalted state of brain which produces all these varied phenomena, no matter how diversified or apparently complicated. Absolute blind faith (not exercisable during the normal state of existence) is necessary to the full development of will-power. Doubt your own capacity, and it ceases to exist. Conviction of power is the surest road to success ; " he who I40 PsycJwgrapJiy. hesitates is lost." It is really ridiculously funny to find men of the most ordinary mental faculties writing of the " Common Course of Nature." All the world believed the postulates advanced by Aris- totle, and these were defined as " The Laws of Nature " until Galileo and Newton demonstrated the contrary. As to the laws of falling bodies and gravitation, for two thousand years the whole world had spoken of the " Common Course of Nature." Common enough would poor Nature be if interpreted by such conjuring mechanicians. What is that which we entitle a Law of Nature ? Is it, as is generally conceived, an abstract sovereign rule of Divine authority before the beginning of the world's existence? Or is it only a synthetical epitome of Nature's operations, such as human experience and assiduity has found out, and human ingenuity arranged? Here, on this very topic, is an error most prevalent, even amongst the men best versed in science. They are too apt to confound scientific theory, convention- ally stamped, as a " law of Nature," as an original principle established by the fiat of Omnipotence. The poor wretch who has the temerity or foolish hardihood to question its validity is denounced as a heretic to the order of Nature herself. Roger Bacon was excommunicated by the Pope for such a crime, and imprisoned ten years, accused of having dealings with the devil. At that period (the 13th century) professors were bound, under oath, to follow no other guide than Aristotle. "There is a wide difterence between the idols of the human mind and ideas of the Divine mind." Dr. Geo. Wyld entertains a somewhat similar idea. In an elaborate paper printed in the SpU'ititalist of Dec. 14, 1877, he maintains the opinion "that all the phenomena we have yet obtained inigJit be pro- duced by the spirits of the living." Respecting Slade's Psychography, he " believes that it was produced by his own partially entranced spirit," although Slade was, to all appearance, in Ids normal state at the time. Deductions, E'xplanatioiis, and Theories. 141 This theory finds a curious illustration in the experi- ments recorded by Miss Kislingbury, which I have already quoted. There, however, the Psychic's will was decidedly not the only active cause. And, most probably, this may be so in any given case. Dr. Collyer's idea is that most in accordance with the ancient belief. Those who in days of old have studied the mysteries of occult phenomena have left for us a more or less bewildering record of their conclusions. Those who are curious enough to desire to peep behind the veil, and to master what the wisdom of the ancients has collected, may do so by perusing a work which has recently been published by Bouton of New York — IsiS Unveiled : a Master-Key to the Mys- teries of Ancieiit and Modern Science and Theology. By H. P. Blavatsky. There he will find, scattered up and down through two huge volumes — master-pieces of industry and erudition — much that will attract his attention and exercise his thought. And there, too, he will find the views of the ancients and mediaevalists respecting the innate power of the human spirit set forth at length. They believed that the human spirit, properly trained to energize through its will, had incalculable powers ; that its action was by no means limited to the body in which it was imprisoned, but extended, under favour- ing circumstances, to almost any distance. They held that this phenomenon of Psychography, with which they were perfectly familiar, was effected by the spirit of the Psychic just as really as when his hand held the pencil and framed the letters. K 142 Psychography. They would say that such performances as we are familiar with are but the unconscious and feeble pro- ducts of an untrained spirit, which possesses magical powers without knowing it. These unconscious and unregulated Psychic phenomena they would discour- age, and would substitute for their feeble and uncertain results the sure and calculated efforts of a trained Will. Man, they say, an Incarnate Spirit, has in him- self all he needs for the production of the most appa- rently miraculous results. He is lord of creation, with the " promise and potency" within him of all, even creative power, did he only know it. The Kabalist is very strong in his claims, but he is at least coherent. Both Dr. Wyld and Dr. Collyer would seem to mix up two totally different states : one which I call Psychism, in which the Psychic is so far from exercising the power of his will with that concentrated energy which alone avails, that he must ex JiypotJiesi be passive and at perfect rest in order to obtain results; and another, which is the state of conscious and concentrated Will-power — a state as positive as the other is negative — one that admits of no passivity, but is characterized by severest energy. There are, indeed, grades of distinction between all three explanations ; and the curious reader may amuse himself, without experiencing much fear of failure, by suggesting difficulties which neither of the modern theorists can hope to solve. In Dr. MoYivis Journal de Magftetisme, published in Paris, at a time when table-turning was at its height. Deductions, Explanations, and Theories. 143 a letter was printed which contains statements of opinion bearing- upon what I am now saying. I quote from the same work of Madame Blavatsky's before alluded to : — We, who well know the value of the phenomenon, . . . are perfectly sure that after having charged the table with our magnetic efflux, we have called to life, or created, an intelligence analogous to our own, which, like ourselves, is endowed with a free will — can talk and discuss with us with a degree of superior lucidity, considering that the resultant is stronger than the individual, or rather the whole is larger than a part of it. . . . The phenomenon is as old as the world. . . . The priests of India and China practised before the Egyptians and the Greeks. The savages and the Esquimaux know it well. It is the phenomenon of Faith, sole source of every prodigy. This is the magic secret of the Kabalist, the grand truth enunciated in days long past by Jesus Christ —"Thy faith hath saved thee," "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say to this moun- tain, Be thou cast into the depths of the sea, and it shall be done " — the sole secret of success, a will that knows no "perhaps," and a faith whose confidence no temporary failure can shake. This theory of the action of a new consciousness, framed out of the intelligences of those .present at the experiment, has been many times put forward, to be as often upset by some fact which it is not sufficient to explain. It is the fate of theories. All gravitate to the same grave, until the time comes and the man, who explains, in the light of accumulated facts, by severe process of deductive logic, what insufficient knowledge has only blundered over. 144 Psychography. Perhaps the greatest light will be shed on these obscure phenomena by the study of mesmerism. The passive state in which the Psychic is thrown before any phenomena are produced may be regarded by some as a state of auto-mesmerism, during which his liber- ated spirit displays some of the strange phenomena of clairvoyance, prevision, introvision, and the like, which successful mesmerists study in their " subjects." The trance-state, during which the best phenomena are observed, is one known to mesmerists by the name of ecstasis, and many remarkable facts are recorded respecting it, as, for instance, in a valuable work on the subject by Professor Gregory, F.R.S.E., entitled Animal Magnetism. This has been lately republished by Mr. Harrison (38, Great Russell Street), and is an excellent introduction to the study of the phenomena now under notice. Indeed the whole subject of the trans-corporeal action of the human spirit — its power of making its presence felt far away from its bodily prison-house under the influence of strong emotion ; its sympathies and antipathies ; its strange power of mind-reading and transfusion of thought, under certain circumstances and in certain states; — are all points to be cleared up by the student of these phenomena before he ought to venture far into the domain of theory. Professor Barrett very properly said, in the course of a letter to The Times, when the Slade prosecution was before the public : " I am inclined to believe that other mental phenomena — such, for example, as the possi- bility of the action of one mind upon another, across Deductions, Explanations^ and Theories. 145 space, without the intervention of the senses — demand a prior investigation." He had previously recom- mended the study of mesmerism ; and he might have added that the whole subject of Psychology in its various branches, respecting which so little is now known, should receive careful attention in the light of knowledge which ancient students possessed. It is thus that the gates will be opened, after prolonged and patient investigation and study. But when all this has been admitted, and when these theorisers have said their say, there remains, it must be confessed, a numerous, compact, and firm body of observers who correlate these phenomena with others called spiritual, and refer them to the action of disembodied human spirits. These are the Spiritualists p2cr sang. They cut the knot of every difficulty with an all-sufficient knife ; and, starting with a tremendous postulate, account for everything on comprehensive principles. They say, in effect, that the pretensions which, it must be conceded, are invariably put forward by the intelligent operator are such as they see no reason to reject. They ask, with considerable cogency, what ground the theorist has for rejecting a hypothesis which has the merit of being consistently put forward by the Invisible Intelligence; and why this Intelligence, being interrogated, should invariably return an answer identifying itself with the spirit of a departed human being, if it be, indeed, as alleged, only the liberated spirit of the Psychic .^ They propound, indeed, several difficulties which are some- what staggering to the theorists who maintain the 146 PsycJiograpJiy. action of the spirit of the Psychic as the sole and sufficient cause ; and — with a faith which, if it cannot move mountains, has apparently no difficulty in swal- lowing them — all to them is plain and simple. The world of spirit, they say, is all around us, only a crass materialism has so blinded our eyes that we can no longer discern it, save in those comparatively rare cases where the gulf is bridged by Psychic power. The various Biblical records, which I need not quote, of the intervention of spirit on the material plane, fortify them in their faith, which, they allege, has the venerable prescription of semper, itbiqiie, et ab onuiibus (who, at least, have not wilfully closed their spiritual eyes, or become spiritually blind by inheritance of defective spiritual sense). These claim kinship, too, with the great Eastern schools of thought whose adepts can demonstrate at will what the Western Psychic only fitfully evokes. They contend that what strikes the English mind as portentously incredible is matter of every-day experience to the spiritually-cultured Eastern ; as it has been to all who have striven to obey the maxim, Knoiu thyself. Between these various theories — and their ramifica- tions are far wider than I have thought it necessary to indicate — the candid reader may be left to choose, unless, indeed, he be made in that rare and robust mould which is content with facts and facts onh', satisfied with accumulating and preserving them, and willing to leave theory to the day when sufficient material shall have been accumulated to lift a deduc- tion out of the mists of mere speculation. Deductions, Explanations, and Theories. 147 In concluding', I am bold to reiterate what I said at starting. I hav^c no controversial end in view, else my tone had been other than it has been. I have neither the wish nor the power to force unwelcome truth on unwilling minds. My aim has been to record facts for such as will value them. I have but enume- rated certain theories, without any desire — at this juncture, and in this volume — to advocate any of them. In the words of Professor Gregory — writing, I am rejoiced to think, about a subject then sneered at, but now generally accepted — " I\Iy object has not been to explain the facts I have described, but rather to show that a large number of facts exist which require explanation, but which can never be explained unless we study them. I am quite content that any theoretical suggestions I have made should be thrown aside as quite unimportant, provided the facts be attended to, because I consider it too early for a comprehensive theory, and because I believe the facts are as yet but very partially known." — Animal Mag- netism, p. 252. ^ APPENDIX. Since writing the body of this volume, two or three facts have come under my notice which I take this means of noticing. I. Henry Slade, being then resident at BerHn, was visited by the Court Conjurer and Prestidigitator to the Emperor of Germany, Samuel Bellachini, No. 14 Grossbaron-strasse, who subsequently made affidavit before a public notary, Gustav Haagen, in the follow- ing terms : — Executed at Berlin on the sixth of December, one thou- sand eight hundred and seventy-seven, and entered in the Notary's register under the number four hundred and eighty- two, for the year eighteen hundred and seventy-seven. Signed and officially stamped. GusTAV Haagen, Counsellor and Notary. I hereby declare it to be a rash action to give decisive judg- ment upon the objective medial performance of the Ameri- can medium, I\Ir. Henry Slade, after only one sitting, and the observations so made. After I had, at the wish of several highlv-esteemed gentle- men of rank and position, and also for my own interest, tested the physical mediumship of Mr. Slade in a series of sittings by full daylight, as well as in the evening:, in his bedroom, I must, for the sake of truth, hereby certify that the phenomenal occurrences with Mr. Slade, have been 150 Appendix. thoroughly examined by me, with the minutest observation and investigation of his surroundings, including the table, and that I have not in the stnallest instance found anything to be produced by means of prestidigitative manifestations, or by mechanical apparatus, and that any explanation of the experiments which took place under the circumstances and co7iditions then obtaining^ by any reference to prestidigitation, to be absolutely impossible. It must rest with such men of science as Crookes and Wallace, in London; Perty, in Berne; Boutlerof, in St. Petersburg, to search for the explanation of this phenomenal power, and to prove its reality. I declare, moreover, the published opinions of laymen, as to the "how" of this subject to be premature, and according to my view and experience, false and one-sided. This, my declaration, is signed and executed before a notary and witnesses. (Sigjied) Samuel Bellachini. Berlin, 6th December, 1877. 2. Henry Slade having proceeded to St. Petersburg in order to fulfil his engagement with M. Aksakof and Professor Boutlerof, and to present the phenomenon of Psychography to the scrutiny of a committee of scientific experts, has had a series of successful sittings, in the course of which writing has been obtained in the Russian language. At one recent sitting writing in six different languages was obtained on a single slate. On Wednesday, Feb. 20, accompanied by M. Aksakof and Professor Boutlerof, Slade had a most successful sitting with the Grand Duke Constantine, who received them cor- dially, and himself obtained writing on a new slate held by himself alone. 3. The Rev. Thomas Colley thus testifies, under date January 17, 1878 : — Appendix. 1 5 1 This afternoon I had a sitting with Dr. Monck of a some- what unique character. I had purchased this morning a transparent drawing-slate ; and, taking out one of the pic- tures, I wrote my name on the . "A number of clever sketches and poems, among the latter being a series of papers entitled ' The Wobblejaw Ballads,' which ajjpeared in the columns of this ]iaper a short time ago, and which created such a furore at the time." [N.B. — An irate member of the Town Council oficially called the attention of the Mayor and Corporation of Folke- stone to the burlesques in the " Wobbleja^o Ballads ;" but the members assembled laughed at the matter, and proceeded to the next business. The Mayor said that he did yiot mind them.] . . . "It contains some very choice poems and prose essays, is bound in cloth richly gilt, and has an original design of uo ordinary' merit on the cover." [advertisements.] W. H. HARKISON'S PUBLICATIONS. Price OS., cloth, red edijrt<. PSYCHOG-BAPHY By M. a. OXON. SYNOPSIS 0? CONTENTS. List of "Works Bearing on the Subject. Preface. Introduction. PsYCHOGRAPHY IN THE Past : Guldenstiibbd— Crookes. Personal Expekiences in Private, and with Public psy'chics. General Corroborative Evidence. I. That Attested by the Senses— 1. Of Sight. Evidence of Mr. E. T. Bennett. ,, a Malvern Reporter. ,, Mr. James Burns. ,, Mr. H. D. Jencken. 2. Of Hearing. Evidence of Mr. Serjeant Cox, ,, Mr. George King, Mr. Hensleigh "Wedgwood. ', Miss * * * * , , Canon Mouls. . , Baroness Yon Yay. ,, G. H. Adshead. W. P. Adshead. \, E. H. Yalter. ,, J. L. O'Sullivan. ,, Epes Sargent. ,, James 0. Sargent. John Wetherbee. H. B. Storer. ,, C. A. Greenleaf. ,, Public Committee wdth "\Yatkins. II. From the "\Yriting of Languages Unknown to the Psychic. Ancient Greek — Evidence of Hon. R. Dale Owen and Mr. Blackburn. (Slade.) Dutch, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese. (Slade.) Russian— Evidence of Madame Blavatsky. ("Wat- kins.) Romaic— Evidence of T. T. Timayenis. ("\Yatkins. ) Chinese. (Watkins.) [advertisements. ] W. H. HARRISON'S PUBLICATIONS. III. From Special Tests which Preclude Previous Pre- pai'ation of the AVriting, Psychics and Conjurers Contrasted. Slade before the Research Committee of the Britidi National Association of Spiritualists. Slade Tested by C. Carter Blake, Doc. Sci. Evidence of Rev. J. Page Hopes. (Slade.) W. H. Harrison. (Slade.) ,, J. Seaman. (Slade.) Writing within Slates securely screwed together. Evidence of Mrs. Andrews and J. Mould. Dictation of Words at the Time of the Experiment. Evidence of A. R. Wallace, F.R.G.S. Hensleigh Wedgwood, J. P. Rev. Thomas Colley. W. Oxley. George Wyld, M.D. Miss Kislingbury. Writing in Answer to Questions Inside a Closed Box. Evidence of Messrs. Adshead. Statement of Circumstances under which Experi- ments with F. ^V. Monck were conducted at Keighley. Writing on Glass Coated with White Paint. Evidence of Benjamin Coleman. Letters addressed to llie Times on the Subject of the Prosecution of Henry Slade by Messrs. Joy, Joad, and Professor Barrett, F.R.S.E. Evidence of W. H. Harrison, Editor of The Spiritualist. Summary or Facts Narrated. Deductions, Explanations, and Theories. The Nature of the Force: Its Mode of Operation. Evidence of C. Carter Blake, Doc. Sci., and Conrad Cooke, C.E. Detonating Noises in Connection v.4th it. Evidence of Hensleigh Wedgwood, J. Page Hopps, Thomas Colley. Method of Direction of the Force. Dr. Collyer's Theory. Dr. George Wyld's Theory, The Occultist's Theory. The Spiritualist's Theory. Appendix. The Court Conjurer of Berlin on Slade. Slade with the Gi-and Duke Constantine. Recent Experiment with Monck. [advektisements.] W. H. HARRISON'S PUBLICATIONS. Price 5s. , richly gilt, "RIFTS IN THE YEIL." A collection of choice poems and prose essays given thi'ongh mediuniship, also of articles and poems written by Spiritualists. A useful book to place in public libraries, and to present or lend to those who are unacquainted with Spiritualism. CONTENTS. 1. Introduction : The Philosophy of Inspiration. 2. "0! Beautiful White Mother Death." Given through the trance-mediumship of Cora L. V. Tappan- Richmond. 3. The Apparition of Sengireef. By Sophie Aksakof. 4. The Translation of Shelley to the Higher Life. Given through the trance-mediumship of T. L. Harris. 5. Gone Home. Given through the trance-mediumship of Lizzie Doten. 6. The Birth of the Spirit. Given through the trance- mediumship of Cora L. V. Tappan-Richmond. 7. Angel Guarded. 8. An Alleged Post-Mortem Work by Charles Dickens. How the writings were produced : The Magnifi- cent Egotist, Sapsea : Mr. Stollop Reveals a Secret : A Majestic Mind Severely Tried : Dwellers in Cloisterham : Mr. Peter Peckcraf t and Miss Keep : Critical Comments. 9. The Spider of the Period. By Georgina Weldon (Miss Treherne) and Mrs. . 10. Margery Miller. Given through the trance-mediumship of Lizzie Doten. 11. Ode by "Adamanta." 12. Swedenborg on Men and Women. By William White, author of The Life of Sivedenborg, 13. Resurgam. By Caroline A. Burke. 14. Abnormal Spectres of Wolves, Dogs, and other Ani- mals. By Emile, Prince of Wittgenstein. 15. To you who Loved Me. By Florence Marryat. 16. Desolation. By Caroline A. Burke. 17. Truth. Given through the mediumship of "M.A., Oxon." 18. Thy Love. By Florence Marryat. 19. Haunting Spirits. By the Baroness Adelma Von Vay (Countess Wiirmbrand). 20. Fashionable Grief for the Departed. 21. The Brown Lady of Rainham. By Lucia C. Stone. 22. A Vision of Death. By Caroline A. Burke. [advektisements. ] W. H. HARRISON'S PUBLICATIONS. 23. A Story of a Haunted House. By F. J. Theobald. 24. "Love the Truth and Peace." By the Rev. C. Maurice Davies, D.D. 25. The Ends, Aims, and Uses of Modern Spiritualism. By Louisa Lowe. 26. De Profundis. By Anna Blackwell. 27. Ancient Thought and Modern Spiritualism. By C. Carter Blake, Doc. Sci., Lecturer on Comparative Anatomy at Westminster Hospital. 28. Die Sehnsucht. Translated by Emily Kislingbury, from the German of Schiller. 29. The Relation of Spiritualism to Orthodox Christianity. Given through the mediumship of "M.A., Oxon." 30. A Seance in the Sunshine. By the Rev. C. Maurice Davies, D.D. 3L " My Saint." By Florence Marryat. 32. The Death-beds of Spiritualists. By Epes Sargent. 33. The Touch of a Vanished Hand. By the Rev. C. Maurice Davies, D.D. 34. Death. By Caroline A. Burke. 35. The Spirit Creed. Through the mediumship of "M. A,, Oxon," 36. The Angel of Silence. By W. H. Harrison. 37. The Prediction. By Alice Worthington (Ennesfallen). 38. Longfellow's Position in Relation to Spiritualism. 39. Spiritual Manifestations among the Fakirs in India. By Dr. Maximilian Perty, Professor of Natural Philosophy, Berne ; translated from Psychic Studies (Leipzig) by Emily Kislingbury. 40. The Poetry of Science. By W. H. Harrison. 41. Meditation and the Voice of Conscience. By Alex. Calder. 42. Dirge. By Mrs. Eric Baker. 43. Epigrams. By Gerald Massey, 44. Some of the Difficulties of the Clergy in Relation to Spiritualism. By Lisette Makdougall Gregory. 45. Immortality. By Alfred Russel Wallace, F.R.G.S. 46. A Child's Prayer. By Gerald Massey. W. 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