CLAIRVOYANCE IN SPACE: UNINTENTIONAL.
Under this heading we may group together
all those cases in which visions of some event which
is taking place at a distance are seen quite unexpectedly
and without any kind of preparation. There are
people who are subject to such visions, while there
are many others to whom such a thing will happen only
once in a life-time. The visions are of all kinds
and of all degrees of completeness, and apparently
may be produced by various causes. Sometimes the
reason of the vision is obvious, and the subject matter
of the gravest importance; at other times no reason
at all is discoverable, and the events shown seem of
the most trivial nature.
Sometimes these glimpses of the super-physical
faculty come as waking visions, and sometimes they
manifest during sleep as vivid or oft-repeated dreams.
In this latter case the sight employed is perhaps
usually of the kind assigned to our fourth subdivision
of clairvoyance in space, for the sleeping man often
travels in his astral body to some spot with which
his affections or interests are closely connected,
and simply watches what takes place there; in the former
it seems probable that the second type of clairvoyance,
by means of the astral current, is called into requisition.
But in this case the current or tube is formed quite
unconsciously, and is often the automatic result of
a strong thought or emotion projected from one end
or the other either from the seer or the
person who is seen.
The simplest plan will be to give
a few instances of the different kinds, and to intersperse
among them such further explanations as may seem necessary.
Mr. Stead has collected a large and varied assortment
of recent and well-authenticated cases in his Real
Ghost Stories, and I will select some of my examples
from them, occasionally condensing slightly to save
space.
There are cases in which it is at
once obvious to any Theosophical student that the
exceptional instance of clairvoyance was specially
brought about by one of the band whom we have called
“Invisible Helpers” in order that aid
might be rendered to some one in sore need. To
this class, undoubtedly, belongs the story told by
Captain Yonnt, of the Napa Valley in California, to
Dr. Bushnell, who repeats it in his Nature and
the Supernatural.
“About six or seven years previous,
in a mid-winter’s night, he had a dream in which
he saw what appeared to be a company of emigrants
arrested by the snows of the mountains, and perishing
rapidly by cold and hunger. He noted the very
cast of the scenery, marked by a huge, perpendicular
front of white rock cliff; he saw the men cutting off
what appeared to be tree-tops rising out of deep gulfs
of snow; he distinguished the very features of the
persons and the look of their particular distress.
“He awoke profoundly impressed
by the distinctness and apparent reality of the dream.
He at length fell asleep, and dreamed exactly the
same dream over again. In the morning he could
not expel it from his mind. Falling in shortly
after with an old hunter comrade, he told his story,
and was only the more deeply impressed by his recognizing
without hesitation the scenery of the dream. This
comrade came over the Sierra by the Carson Valley
Pass, and declared that a spot in the Pass exactly
answered his description.
“By this the unsophistical patriarch
was decided. He immediately collected a company
of men, with mules and blankets and all necessary
provisions. The neighbours were laughing meantime
at his credulity. ‘No matter,’ he
said, ’I am able to do this, and I will, for
I verily believe that the fact is according to my
dream.’ The men were sent into the mountains
one hundred and fifty miles distant direct to the
Carson Valley Pass. And there they found the company
exactly in the condition of the dream, and brought
in the remnant alive.”
Since it is not stated that Captain
Yonnt was in the habit of seeing visions, it seems
clear that some helper, observing the forlorn condition
of the emigrant party, took the nearest impressionable
and otherwise suitable person (who happened to be
the Captain) to the spot in the astral body, and aroused
him sufficiently to fix the scene firmly in his memory.
The helper may possibly have arranged an “astral
current” for the Captain instead, but the former
suggestion is more probable. At any rate the
motive, and broadly the method, of the work are obvious
enough in this case.
Sometimes the “astral current”
may be set going by a strong emotional thought at
the other end of the line, and this may happen even
though the thinker has no such intention in his mind.
In the rather striking story which I am about to quote,
it is evident that the link was formed by the doctor’s
frequent thought about Mrs. Broughton, yet he had
clearly no especial wish that she should see what he
was doing at the time. That it was this kind
of clairvoyance that was employed is shown by the
fixity of her point of view which, be it
observed, is not the doctor’s point of view
sympathetically transferred (as it might have been)
since she sees his back without recognizing him.
The story is to be found in the Proceedings of
the Psychical Research Society (vol. ii.,
.
“Mrs. Broughton awoke one night
in 1844, and roused her husband, telling him that
something dreadful had happened in France. He
begged her to go to sleep again, and not trouble him.
She assured him that she was not asleep when she saw
what she insisted on telling him what she
saw in fact.
“First a carriage accident which
she did not actually see, but what she saw was the
result a broken carriage, a crowd collected,
a figure gently raised and carried into the nearest
house, then a figure lying on a bed which she then
recognized as the Duke of Orleans. Gradually
friends collecting round the bed among them
several members of the French royal family the
queen, then the king, all silently, tearfully, watching
the evidently dying duke. One man (she could see
his back, but did not know who he was) was a doctor.
He stood bending over the duke, feeling his pulse,
with his watch in the other hand. And then all
passed away, and she saw no more.
“As soon as it was daylight
she wrote down in her journal all that she had seen.
It was before the days of electric telegraph, and two
or more days passed before the Times announced
’The Death of the Duke of Orleans.’
Visiting Paris a short time afterwards she saw and
recognized the place of the accident and received the
explanation of her impression. The doctor who
attended the dying duke was an old friend of hers,
and as he watched by the bed his mind had been constantly
occupied with her and her family.”
A commoner instance is that in which
strong affection sets up the necessary current; probably
a fairly steady stream of mutual thought is constantly
flowing between the two parties in the case, and some
sudden need or dire extremity on the part of one of
them endues this stream temporarily with the polarizing
power which is needful to create the astral telescope.
An illustrative example is quoted from the same Proceedings
.
“On September 9th, 1848, at
the siege of Mooltan, Major-General R ,
C.B., then adjutant of his regiment, was most severely
and dangerously wounded; and, supposing himself to
be dying, asked one of the officers with him to take
the ring off his finger and send it to his wife, who
at the time was fully one hundred and fifty miles distant
at Ferozepore.
“‘On the night of September
9th, 1848,’ writes his wife, ’I was lying
on my bed, between sleeping and waking, when I distinctly
saw my husband being carried off the field seriously
wounded, and heard his voice saying, “Take this
ring off my finger and send it to my wife.”
All the next day I could not get the sight or the voice
out of my mind.
“’In due time I heard
of General R having been severely
wounded in the assault of Mooltan. He survived,
however, and is still living. It was not for
some time after the siege that I heard from General
L , the officer who helped to carry
my husband off the field, that the request as to the
ring was actually made by him, just as I heard it
at Ferozepore at that very time.”
Then there is the very large class
of casual clairvoyant visions which have no traceable
cause which are apparently quite meaningless,
and have no recognizable relation to any events known
to the seer. To this class belong many of the
landscapes seen by some people just before they fall
asleep. I quote a capital and very realistic account
of an experience of this sort from Mr. W. T. Stead’s
Real Ghost Stories .
“I got into bed but was not
able to go to sleep. I shut my eyes and waited
for sleep to come; instead of sleep, however, there
came to me a succession of curiously vivid clairvoyant
pictures. There was no light in the room, and
it was perfectly dark; I had my eyes shut also.
But notwithstanding the darkness I suddenly was conscious
of looking at a scene of singular beauty. It
was as if I saw a living miniature about the size
of a magic-lantern slide. At this moment I can
recall the scene as if I saw it again. It was
a seaside piece. The moon was shining upon the
water, which rippled slowly on to the beach. Right
before me a long mole ran into the water.
“On either side of the mole
irregular rocks stood up above the sea-level.
On the shore stood several houses, square and rude,
which resembled nothing that I had ever seen in house
architecture. No one was stirring, but the moon
was there and the sea and the gleam of the moonlight
on the rippling waters, just as if I had been looking
on the actual scene.
“It was so beautiful that I
remember thinking that if it continued I should be
so interested in looking at it that I should never
go to sleep. I was wide awake, and at the same
time that I saw the scene I distinctly heard the dripping
of the rain outside the window. Then suddenly,
without any apparent object or reason, the scene changed.
“The moonlit sea vanished, and
in its place I was looking right into the interior
of a reading-room. It seemed as if it had been
used as a schoolroom in the daytime, and was employed
as a reading-room in the evening. I remember
seeing one reader who had a curious resemblance to
Tim Harrington, although it was not he, hold up a magazine
or book in his hand and laugh. It was not a picture it
was there.
“The scene was just as if you
were looking through an opera-glass; you saw the play
of the muscles, the gleaming of the eye, every movement
of the unknown persons in the unnamed place into which
you were gazing. I saw all that without opening
my eyes, nor did my eyes have anything to do with
it. You see such things as these as it were with
another sense which is more inside your head than in
your eyes.
“This was a very poor and paltry
experience, but it enabled me to understand better
how it is that clairvoyants see than any amount of
disquisition.
“The pictures were apropos
of nothing; they had been suggested by nothing I had
been reading or talking of; they simply came as if
I had been able to look through a glass at what was
occurring somewhere else in the world. I had
my peep, and then it passed, nor have I had a recurrence
of a similar experience.”
Mr. Stead regards that as a “poor
and paltry experience,” and it may perhaps be
considered so when compared with the greater possibilities,
yet I know many students who would be very thankful
to have even so much of direct personal experience
to tell. Small though it may be in itself, it
at once gives the seer a clue to the whole thing, and
clairvoyance would be a living actuality to a man who
had seen even that much in a way that it could never
have been without that little touch with the unseen
world.
These pictures were much too clear
to have been mere reflections of the thought of others,
and besides, the description unmistakably shows that
they were views seen through an astral telescope; so
either Mr. Stead must quite unconsciously have set
a current going for himself, or (which is much more
probable) some kindly astral entity set it in motion
for him, and gave him, to while away a tedious delay,
any pictures that happened to come handy at the end
of the tube.