登陆注册
5433500000014

第14章 CHAPTER II(7)

Nevertheless, there is some interest in knowing whether we have to do with a general faculty latent in all men or an inexplicable privilege reserved to rare individuals. The exceptional should always be eliminated, if possible, and not left to hang over the abyss like an unfinished bridge leading to nothing. I am well aware that the compulsory intervention of the medium implies that, in spite of all, we recognize his possession of abnormal faculties; but at any rate we reduce their power and their extent appreciably and we return sooner and more easily to the ordinary laws of the great human mystery. And it is of importance that we should be ever coming back to that mystery and ever bringing all things back to it. But, unfortunately, actual experience does not admit of this generalization. It is clearly a case of a special faculty, one peculiar to the medium, one which is wholly unknown to our latent intuition. We can easily assure ourselves of this by causing the medium to receive through a third party and enclosed in a series of three envelopes, as in the experiment described above, a letter of which we know the writer, but of which both the source and the contents are absolutely unknown to the messenger. These unusual circumstances, in which all subconscious communications between consultant and consulted are strictly cut off, will in no way hamper the medium's clairvoyance; and we may fairly conclude that it is actually the medium himself who discovers directly, without any intermediary, without "relays," to use M. Duchatel's expression, all that the object holds concealed. It, therefore, seems certain that there is, at least in psychometry, something more than the mere mirror of which Dr. Osty speaks.

I consider it necessary to declare for the last time that these psychometric phenomena, astonishing though they appear at first, are known, proved and certain and are no longer denied or doubted by any of those who have studied them seriously. I could have given full particulars of a large number of conclusive experiments; but this seemed to me as superfluous and tedious as would be, for instance, a string of names of the recognized chemical reactions that can be obtained in a laboratory. Any one who pleases is at liberty to convince himself of the reality of the facts, provided that he applies to genuine mediums and keeps aloof from the inferior "seers" and especially the shams and imposters who swarm in this region more than in any other. Even with the best of them, he will have to be careful of the involuntary, unconscious and almost inevitable interference of telepathy, which is also very interesting, though it is a phenomenon of a different class, much less surprising and debatable than pure psychometry. He must also learn the art of interrogating the medium and refrain from asking incoherent and random questions about casual or future events. He will not forget that "clairvoyance is strictly limited to the perception of human personality," according to the role so well formulated by Dr. Osty. Experiments have been made in which a psychometer, on touching the tooth of a prehistoric animal, saw the landscapes and the cataclysms of the earth's earliest ages displayed before his eyes; in which another medium, on handling a jewel, conjured up, it would seem with marvellous exactness, the games and processions of ancient Greece, as though the objects permanently retained the recollection or rediscovered the "astral negatives" of all the events which they once witnessed. But it will be understood that, in such cases, any effective control is, so to speak, impossible and that the part played by telepathy cannot be decided. It is important, therefore, to keep strictly to that which can be verified.

Even when thus limiting his scope, the experimenter will meet with many surprises. For instance, though the revelations of two psychometers to whom the same letter is handed in succession most often agree remarkably in their main outlines, it can also happen that one of them perceives only what concerns the writer of the letter, whereas the other will be interested only in the person to whom the letter was addressed or to a third person who was in the room where the letter was written. It is well to be forearmed against these first mistakes, which, for that matter, in the frequent cases where strict control is possible, but confirm the existence and the independence of the astounding faculty.

As for the theories that attempt to explain it, I am quite willing to grant that they are still somewhat confused. The important thing for the moment is the accumulation of claims and experiments that go feeling their way farther and farther along all the paths of the unknown. Meanwhile, that one unexpected door which sheds at the back of our old convictions more than one unexpected door, which sheds upon the life and habits of our secret being sufficient light to puzzle us for many a long day.

This brings us back once more to the omniscience and perhaps the omnipotence of our hidden guest, to the brink of the mysterious reservoir of every manner of knowledge which we shall meet with again when we come to speak of the future, of the talking horses, of the divining-rod, of materializations and miracles, in short, in every circumstance where we pass beyond the horizon of our little daily life. As we thus advance, with slow and cautious footsteps, in them as yet deserted and very nebulous regions of metapsychics, we are compelled to recognize that there must exist somewhere, in this world or in others, a spot in which everything is known, in which everything is possible, to which everything goes, from which everything comes, which belongs to all, to which all have access, but of which the long-forgotten roads must be learnt again by our stumbling feet. We shall often meet those difficult roads in the course of our present quest and we shall have more than one occasion to refer again to those depths into which all the supernatural facts of our existence flow, unless indeed they take their source there. For the moment, that which most above all engage our attention in these psychometric phenomena is their purely and exclusively human character. They occur between the living and the living, on this solid earth of ours, in the world that lies before our eyes; and the spirits, the dead, the gods and the interplanetary intelligences know them not. Hardly anywhere else, except in the equally perplexing manifestations of the divining-rod and in certain materializations, shall we find with the same clearness this same specific character, if we may call it so. This is a valuable lesson. It tells us that our every-day life provides phenomena as disturbing and of exactly the same kind and nature as those which, in other circumstances, we attribute to other forces than ours. It teaches us also that we must first direct and exhaust our enquiries here below, among ourselves, before passing to the other side; for our first care should be to simplify the interpretations and explanations and not to seek elsewhere, in opposition, what probably lies hidden within us in reality.

Afterwards, if the unknown overwhelm us utterly, if the darkness engulf us beyond all hope, there will still be time to go, none can tell where, to question the deities or the dead.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 恬妃传 第二册

    恬妃传 第二册

    帝王之爱,是一种距离,若能拿捏得当,你就是这后宫最成功的女人!即便从一个弱小的女子走向后宫的顶端得到帝王最真挚的爱。傅茜宇始终保持拥有一颗善良的心。茜宇生下皇子臻昕之后,赫臻因御驾亲征受伤,宣布退位,将皇位传给了大皇子臻杰,然后带领茜宇、璋瑢、德妃等人去燕城居住。成为皇贵太妃的茜宇仍然被人陷害,几度小产。为了保护茜宇不再受伤,赫臻故意冷落她,将她又送回了京城……赫臻与她的爱情能否天荒地老?茜宇年幼的儿子命运将会如何?陈璋瑢是否能坚守善良的本性?新任皇后悠儿如何在茜宇的辅佐下掌管后宫?臻杰的后宫里又将掀起怎样的波澜?
  • 我的21岁护士姐姐

    我的21岁护士姐姐

    神秘符种传授修真能力,保护青梅竹马的护士姐姐不被伤害,学雷锋做好事积攒功德好修炼。超级记忆力过目不忘,学习成绩飞速提升,让美丽校花和美女老师都叹为观止。考试、赚钱、泡妞、开公司……一切的改变,从那种入眉心神奇的符种开始,面对这些种种,林烨只能大喊一声:“小生有礼了!小生不客气了!还有……小生来了!”
  • 犹太人教子枕边书

    犹太人教子枕边书

    本书从真爱、品质、信念、习惯、求知、交友、金钱等方面总结了犹太人家庭教育的智慧精髓,从头到尾都由引人胜的有关犹太人的故事所组成,故事所要表达的思想直、鲜明地体现了犹太人的独特的家庭教育观念。相信中国的父母一定能从书中发现适合自己孩子的完美教育指南,培养孩子成为有用的人才。
  • 纨绔邪王:霸宠毒医大小姐

    纨绔邪王:霸宠毒医大小姐

    她是古医世家传人,一手毒医出神入化。一朝穿越,却被腹黑毒舌的纨绔王爷缠上了身。她怒吼:你为什么非缠着我不放?他挑眉:吃抹干净就想脚底抹油?天下哪有这种好事儿?她跑,他追,她躲,他寻……兜兜转转,她却始终都逃不开他布下的情网。阴谋阳谋中,他谋尽了天下,只为了把那个没良心的小东西拐回家。她揉脚:不跑了,脚疼!他欺身上前:过来!朕背你回宫……【QQ群:529630248拍门砖:文中任意角色名,欢迎各位亲们来做客哦!】
  • 溯源历史

    溯源历史

    本书主要介绍了新中国成立之前的古代社会,让你从头回顾中国历史,让你了解中国是怎样一步步的走到今天。中华人民共和国成立之时,标志着帝国主义、封建主义和官僚资本主义在中国反动统治的彻底结束。
  • 骗子王妃,我要了!

    骗子王妃,我要了!

    红纱帐内,香肩半露,美人媚眼如钩,柔情似水红纱帐外,外袍已除,男子雄伟若山,眉眼似火美人:“相公,你让妾身等了很久。”男子:“娘子,你越发娇媚可人了。”美人微笑,男子浅笑,却谁也不动分毫,屋里暧昧加重。男子:“还玩仙人跳吗?”美人:“不玩了,我只等相公施云布雨。”大门被人一脚踢开,一猛男怒吼:“敢睡我的女人,老子砍了你!”男子一脚将猛男踢出去后笑道:“娘子,原来你还在玩仙人跳…”他回头,笑容凝住,美人已不知所踪。易采薇:江湖第一骗子,骗财、骗色、骗情…最擅长骗人心,空空妙手是手段,暗器千千是退敌策,轻功卓绝是逃跑必备她自诩骗尽天下财,骗尽天下情,骗尽天下心却惹了不该惹的人逃难误嫁后,戏玩仙人跳,却是失身又失心…兰无痕:天下首富,样貌英伟不凡,身世曲折,谈笑间能令天下风云变色。一言能令朝堂颠覆,一计敛尽天下之财!眼中无一物,自诩无人能配得上。却大意失荆州,家底被骗空…那看似温婉可人的女子、被他极度唾弃的女子,让他失财又失心…他要重振夫纲!白水离:当今皇子,权势无双,手段高明,性情喜怒无常,喜欢扮猪吃老虎一言能令天地变色,一计能退敌千里!南巡被人劫财又财色,再被人弃于荒野那个千娇百媚的女子、贤良淑德的女子,让他失身又失心…他要重振夫纲!本文女主无良,只是江湖骗子一枚。男主两枚,一个变态,另一个更变态而已。本文是《枭妃》的后传,有兴趣的亲们可以去看看《枭妃》,了解一下上一辈的恩怨。------------------------------------推荐新文《七小姐》:------------------------------------推荐自己已完结的文:《丑妃无敌》:《劣妻》:《坏坏相公倒霉妻》:《强嫁》:《枭妃》:《娘子你别太嚣张》:《夫君,女子不好欺!》:《错惹狂帝》:《王爷让偶轻薄下》:已签约出版-------------------------推荐朋友的文:《赖上吸血鬼老公》超好看的文《娘子为夫饿了》《半路杀出个庶女来》《极品辣妈》《弱妾》偶每天追的文《九师妹》很好看,很轻松的文《“娘娘”夫君》卫是怪才,她的文很有才《妾室谋略》很精彩的种田文《邪玲珑》琴的文笔一级棒
  • 千秋家国梦

    千秋家国梦

    本书是作家曾纪鑫近几年来思考地域文化、历史名人及现实社会问题的大文化散文著作。全书由15篇各自独立的文章组成,但强烈的优患意识与炽热的爱乡爱国之心始终是本书的主调。作者以地处中华腹心位置的荆楚地区为标本,通过一个个历史人物的命运遭际、一桩桩历史事件的风云变幻、一处处历史名胜的兴衰荣枯起笔,毅然穿透那重重的历史帷幕,犀利的笔触直指现实社会那一个个令人尴尬的沉重话题。其中,《走出古隆中》、《古城荆州》等文热切地呼唤改革,希望人们冲决封建网罗,摒弃小农意识,以跃身现代文明的大潮中去中流击水。
  • 攻略男神小白系统

    攻略男神小白系统

    一次意外,她就开始了穿越之旅,但是!为啥在不同位面还能碰见同一个人,这不科学!“你……你的手往哪放!”“娘子,你不是我娘子吗,我在履行我的义务啊。”
  • 涴漫的狱中日记:瞿秋白作品精选

    涴漫的狱中日记:瞿秋白作品精选

    文学大师是一个时代的开拓者和各种文学形式的集大成者,他们的作品来源于他们生活的时代,记载了那个时代社会生活的缩影,包含了作家本人对社会、生活的体验与思考,影响着社会的发展进程,具有永恒的魅力。他们是我们心灵的工程师,能够指导我们的人生发展,给予我们心灵鸡汤般的精神滋润。
  • 佛系:如何成为一个快乐的人

    佛系:如何成为一个快乐的人

    烦恼始于“心灵的反应”,痛苦源于“不满的心”。日式“佛系”快乐思考法,传授“清·简·行”的健康生活理念,帮助现代人缓解因社会压力、人际关系、资讯爆炸而带来的焦虑不安。清——清理内心多余的烦恼,感受“被欲望所驱使,感到不快乐”和“享受快乐”的两种心理状态:“快乐”是指感到喜悦或欢乐时的心理状态,也就是幸福。“不快乐”是指内心充满愤怒、恐惧或不安时的心理状态,也就是不幸福。简——简洁理性的正面思考,放下多余的执念、妄想,将合理的欲望转化为能量。行——践行重视快乐的生活方式,以“慈、悲、喜、舍”之心与世界相处,享受当下的圆满。