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Andrew Lang - The Book of Dreams and Ghosts

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Andrew Lang investigates famous stories of ghosts and the paranormal. Subjects include; Common Features of Ghosts and Dreams, Mark Twains Story, St. Augustines Story, Past, Present and Future unknown Events revealed, Mr. Williamss Dream before Mr. Percevals Murder, A Celtic Dream, Transition from Dreams to Waking Hallucinations, Voluntary or Induced Hallucinations, The Benedictines Voices, The Man at the Lift, Case at Ballachulish, Transition to Appearances of the Dead, The Ghosts of Dogs, The Amherst Mystery, and many more.**About the AuthorAndrew Lang (March, 31, 1844 July 20, 1912) was a Scottish writer and literary critic who is best known as a collector of folk and fairy tales. Lang s academic interests extended beyond the literary and he was a noted contributor to the fields of anthropology, folklore, psychical research, history, and classic scholarship, as well as the inspiration for the University of St. Andrew s Andrew Lang Lectures. A prolific author, Lang published more than 100 works during his career, including twelve fairy books, in which he compiled folk and fairy tales from around the world. Lang s Lilac Fairy and Red Fairy books are credited with influencing J. R. R. Tolkien, who commented on the importance of fairy stories in the modern world in his 1939 Andrew Lang Lecture On Fairy-Stories.

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Footnotes

Principles of Psychology, vol. ii., p. 115. By Professor William James, Harvard College, Macmillans, London, 1890. The physical processes believed to be involved, are described on pp. 123, 124 of the same work.

Op. cit., ii., 130.

Story received from Miss ---; confirmed on inquiry by Drumquaigh.

Phantasms of the Living, ii., 382.

To send a dream the old Egyptians wrote it out and made a cat swallow it!

See Queen Marys Jewels in chapter ii.

Narrated by Mrs. Herbert.

Story confirmed by Mr. A.

This child had a more curious experience. Her nurse was very ill, and of course did not sleep in the nursery. One morning the little girl said, Macpherson is better, I saw her come in last night with a candle in her hand. She just stooped over me and then went to Tom (a younger brother) and kissed him in his sleep. Macpherson had died in the night, and her attendants, of course, protested ignorance of her having left her deathbed.

Story received from Lady X. See another good case in Proceedings of the Psychical Society, vol. xi., 1895, p. 397. In this case, however, the finder was not nearer than forty rods to the person who lost a watch in long grass. He assisted in the search, however, and may have seen the watch unconsciously, in a moment of absence of mind. Many other cases in Proceedings of S.P.R.

Story received in a letter from the dreamer.

Augustine. In Library of the Fathers, XVII. Short Treatises, pp. 530-531.

St. Augustine, De Cura pro Mortuis.

The professor is not sure whether he spoke English or German.

From Some Account of the Conversion of the late William Hone, supplied by some friend of W. H. to compiler. Name not given.

What is now called mental telegraphy or telepathy is quite an old idea. Bacon calls it sympathy between two distant minds, sympathy so strong that one communicates with the other without using the recognised channels of the senses. Izaak Walton explains in the same way Dr. Donnes vision, in Paris, of his wife and dead child. If two lutes are strung to an exact harmony, and one is struck, the other sounds, argues Walton. Two minds may be as harmoniously attuned and communicate each with each. Of course, in the case of the lutes there are actual vibrations, physical facts. But we know nothing of vibrations in the brain which can traverse space to another brain. Many experiments have been made in consciously transferring thoughts or emotions from one mind to another. These are very liable to be vitiated by bad observation, collusion and other causes. Meanwhile, intercommunication between mind and mind without the aid of the recognised sensesa supposed process of telepathyis a current explanation of the dreams in which knowledge is obtained that exists in the mind of another person, and of the delusion by virtue of which one person sees another who is perhaps dying, or in some other crisis, at a distance. The idea is popular. A poor Highland woman wrote to her son in Glasgow: Dont be thinking too much of us, or I shall be seeing you some evening in the byre. This is a simple expression of the hypothesis of telepathy or mental telegraphy.

Perhaps among such papers as the Casket Letters, exhibited to the Commission at Westminster, and tabled before the Scotch Privy Council.

To Joseph himself she bequeathed the ruby tortoise given to her by his brother. Probably the diamonds were not Rizzios gift.

Boismont was a distinguished physician and Mad Doctor, or Alienist. He was also a Christian, and opposed a tendency, not uncommon in his time, as in ours, to regard all hallucinations as a proof of mental disease in the hallucinated.

S.P.R., v., 324.

Ibid., 324.

Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, vol. v., pp. 324, 325.

Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. xi., p. 495.

Signed by Mr. Cooper and the Duchess of Hamilton.

See Galton, Inquiries into Human Faculty, p. 91.

Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. xi., p. 522.

The case was reported in the Herald (Dubuque) for 12th February, 1891. It was confirmed by Mr. Hoffman, by Mr. George Brown and by Miss Conley, examined by the Rev. Mr. Crum, of Dubuque.Proceedings, S.P.R., viii., 200-205. Pat Conley, too, corroborated, and had no theory of explanation. That the girl knew beforehand of the dollars is conceivable, but she did not know of the change of clothes.

Told by the nobleman in question to the author.

The author knows some eight cases among his friends of a solitary meaningless hallucination like this.

As to the fact of such visions, I have so often seen crystal gazing, and heard the pictures described by persons whose word I could not doubt, men and women of unblemished character, free from superstition, that I am obliged to believe in the fact as a real though hallucinatory experience. Mr. Clodd attributes it to disorder of the liver. If no more were needed I could scry famously!

Facts attested and signed by Mr. Baillie and Miss Preston.

Story told to me by both my friends and the secretary.

Mmoires, v., 120. Paris, 1829.

Readers curious in crystal-gazing will find an interesting sketch of the history of the practice, with many modern instances, in Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. v., p. 486, by Miss X.. There are also experiments by Lord Stanhope and Dr. Gregory in Gregorys Letters on Animal Magnetism, p. 370 (1851). It is said that, as sights may be seen in a glass ball, so articulate voices, by a similar illusion, can be heard in a sea shell, when

It remembers its august abodes,
And murmurs as the ocean murmurs there.

A set of scientific men, as Llut and Lombroso, seem to think that a hallucination stamps a man as mad. Napoleon, Socrates, Pascal, Jeanne dArc, Luther were all lunatics. They had lucid intervals of considerable duration, and the belief in their lunacy is peculiar to a small school of writers.

A crowd of phantom coaches will be found in Messrs. Myers and Gurneys Phantasms of the Living.

See The Slaying of Sergeant Davies of Guises.

Principles of Psychology, by Prof. James of Harvard, vol. ii., p. 612. Charcot is one of sixteen witnesses cited for the fact.

Story written by General Barter, 28th April, 1888. (S.P.R.) Corroborated by Mrs. Barter and Mr. Stewart, to whom General Barter told his adventure at the time.

Statement by Mr. F. G., confirmed by his father and brother, who were present when he told his tale first, in St. Louis. S.P.R. Proceedings, vol. vi., p. 17.

S.P.R., viii., p. 178.

Mrs. M. sent the memorandum to the S.P.R. March 13, 1886. Have just seen visions on lawna soldier in generals uniform, a young lady kneeling to him, 11.40 p.m.

S.P.R., viii., p. 178. The real names are intentionally reserved.

Corroborated by Mr. Elliot. Mrs. Elliot nearly fainted. S.P.R., viii., 344-345.

Oddly enough, maniacs have many more hallucinations of hearing than of sight. In sane people the reverse is the case.

Anecdote by the lady. Boston Budget, 31st August, 1890. S.P.R., viii., 345.

Tom Sawyer, Detective.

Phantasms of the Living, by Gurney and Myers.

The story is given by Mr. Mountford, one of the seers.

Journal of Medical Science, April, 1880, p. 151.

Catholic theology recognises, under the name of Bilocation, the appearance of a person in one place when he is really in another.

Phantasms, ii., pp. 671-677.

Phantasms of the Living.

Mr. E. B. Tylor gives a Maori case in Primitive Culture. Another is in Phantasms, ii., 557. See also Polacks New Zealand for the prevalence of the belief.

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