CLAIRVOYANCE IN SPACE: SEMI-INTENTIONAL.
Under this rather curious title I
am grouping together the cases of all those people
who definitely set themselves to see something, but
have no idea what the something will be, and no control
over the sight after the visions have begun psychic
Micawbers, who put themselves into a receptive condition,
and then simply wait for something to turn up.
Many trance-mediums would come under this heading;
they either in some way hypnotize themselves or are
hypnotized by some “spirit-guide,” and
then they describe the scenes or persons that happen
to float before their vision. Sometimes, however,
when in this condition they see what is taking place
at a distance, and so they come to have a place among
our “clairvoyants in space.”
But the largest and most widely-spread
band of these semi-intentional clairvoyants are the
various kinds of crystal-gazers those who,
as Mr. Andrew Lang puts it, “stare into a crystal
ball, a cup, a mirror, a blob of ink (Egypt and India),
a drop of blood (among the Maories of New Zealand), a bowl of water (Red
Indian), a pond (Roman and African), water in a glass bowl (in Fez), or almost
any polished surface.
Two pages later Mr. Lang gives us
a very good example of the kind of vision most frequently
seen in this way. “I had given a glass ball,”
he says, “to a young lady, Miss Baillie, who
had scarcely any success with it. She lent it
to Miss Leslie, who saw a large square, old-fashioned
red sofa covered with muslin, which she found in the
next country-house she visited. Miss Baillie’s
brother, a young athlete, laughed at these experiments,
took the ball into the study, and came back looking
‘gey gash.’ He admitted that he had
seen a vision somebody he knew under a
lamp. He would discover during the week whether
he saw right or not. This was at 5.30 on a Sunday
afternoon.
“On Tuesday, Mr. Baillie was
at a dance in a town some forty miles from his home,
and met a Miss Preston. ‘On Sunday,’
he said, ’about half-past five you were sitting
under a standard lamp in a dress I never saw you wear,
a blue blouse with lace over the shoulders, pouring
out tea for a man in blue serge, whose back was towards
me, so that I only saw the tip of his moustache.’
“‘Why, the blinds must
have been up,’ said Miss Preston.
“‘I was at Dulby,’
said Mr. Baillie, and he undeniably was.”
This is quite a typical case of crystal-gazing the
picture correct in every detail, you see, and yet
absolutely unimportant and bearing no apparent signification
of any sort to either party, except that it served
to prove to Mr. Baillie that there was something in
crystal-gazing. Perhaps more frequently the visions
tend to be of a romantic character men
in foreign dress, or beautiful though generally unknown
landscapes.
Now what is the rationale of this
kind of clairvoyance? As I have indicated above,
it belongs usually to the “astral-current”
type, and the crystal or other object simply acts
as a focus for the will-power of the seer, and a convenient
starting-point for his astral tube. There are
some who can influence what they will see by their
will, that is to say they have the power of pointing
their telescope as they wish; but the great majority
just form a fortuitous tube and see whatever happens
to present itself at the end of it.
Sometimes it may be a scene comparatively
near at hand, as in the case just quoted; at other
times it will be a far-away Oriental landscape; at
others yet it may be a reflection of some fragment
of an akashic record, and then the picture will contain
figures in some antique dress, and the phenomenon
belongs to our third large division of “clairvoyance
in time.” It is said that visions of the
future are sometimes seen in crystals also a
further development to which we must refer later.
I have seen a clairvoyant use instead
of the ordinary shining surface a dead black one,
produced by a handful of powdered charcoal in a saucer.
Indeed it does not seem to matter much what is used
as a focus, except that pure crystal has an undoubted
advantage over other substances in that its peculiar
arrangement of elemental essence renders it specially
stimulating to the psychic faculties.
It seems probable, however, that in
cases where a tiny brilliant object is employed such
as a point of light, or the drop of blood used by
the Maories the instance is in reality merely
one of self-hypnotization. Among non-European
nations the experiment is very frequently preceded
or accompanied by magical ceremonies and invocations,
so that it is quite likely that such sight as is gained
may sometimes be really that of some foreign entity,
and so the phenomenon may in fact be merely a case
of temporary possession, and not of clairvoyance at
all.