CLAIRVOYANCE IN TIME: THE FUTURE.
Even if, in a dim sort of way, we
feel ourselves able to grasp the idea that the whole
of the past may be simultaneously and actively present
in a sufficiently exalted consciousness, we are confronted
by a far greater difficulty when we endeavour to realize
how all the future may also be comprehended in that
consciousness. If we could believe in the Mohammedan
doctrine of kismet, or the Calvinistic theory of predestination,
the conception would be easy enough, but knowing as
we do that both these are grotesque distortions of
the truth, we must look round for a more acceptable
hypothesis.
There may still be some people who
deny the possibility of prevision, but such denial
simply shows their ignorance of the evidence on the
subject. The large number of authenticated cases
leaves no room for doubt as to the fact, but many
of them are of such a nature as to render a reasonable
explanation by no means easy to find. It is evident
that the Ego possesses a certain amount of previsional
faculty, and if the events foreseen were always of
great importance, one might suppose that an extraordinary
stimulus had enabled him for that occasion only to
make a clear impression of what he saw upon his lower
personality. No doubt that is the explanation
of many of the cases in which death or grave disaster
is foreseen, but there are a large number of instances
on record to which it does not seem to apply, since
the events foretold are frequently exceedingly trivial
and unimportant.
A well-known story of second-sight
in Scotland will illustrate what I mean. A man
who had no belief in the occult was forewarned by a
Highland seer of the approaching death of a neighbour.
The prophecy was given with considerable wealth of
detail, including a full description of the funeral,
with the names of the four pall-bearers and others
who would be present. The auditor seems to have
laughed at the whole story and promptly forgotten
it, but the death of his neighbour at the time foretold
recalled the warning to his mind, and he determined
to falsify part of the prediction at any rate by being
one of the pall-bearers himself. He succeeded
in getting matters arranged as he wished, but just
as the funeral was about to start he was called away
from his post by some small matter which detained him
only a minute or two. As he came hurrying back
he saw with surprise that the procession had started
without him, and that the prediction had been exactly
fulfilled, for the four pall-bearers were those who
had been indicated in the vision.
Now here is a very trifling matter,
which could have been of no possible importance to
anybody, definitely foreseen months beforehand; and
although a man makes a determined effort to alter the
arrangement indicated he fails entirely to affect
it in the least. Certainly this looks very much
like predestination, even down to the smallest detail,
and it is only when we examine this question from higher
planes that we are able to see our way to escape that
theory. Of course, as I said before about another
branch of the subject, a full explanation eludes us
as yet, and obviously must do so until our knowledge
is infinitely greater than it is now; the most that
we can hope to do for the present is to indicate the
line along which an explanation may be found.
There is no doubt whatever that, just
as what is happening now is the result of causes set
in motion in the past, so what will happen in the
future will be the result of causes already in operation.
Even down here we can calculate that if certain actions
are performed certain results will follow, but our
reckoning is constantly liable to be disturbed by
the interference of factors which we have not been
able to take into account. But if we raise our
consciousness to the mental plane we can see very
much farther into the results of our actions.
We can trace, for example, the effect
of a casual word, not only upon the person to whom
it was addressed, but through him on many others as
it is passed on in widening circles, until it seems
to have affected the whole country; and one glimpse
of such a vision is far more efficient than any number
of moral precepts in impressing upon us the necessity
of extreme circumspection in thought, word, and deed.
Not only can we from that plane see thus fully the
result of every action, but we can also see where
and in what way the results of other actions apparently
quite unconnected with it will interfere with and modify
it. In fact, it may be said that the results of
all causes at present in action are clearly visible that
the future, as it would be if no entirely new causes
should arise, lies open before our gaze.
New causes of course do arise, because
man’s will is free; but in the case of all ordinary
people the use which they will make of their freedom
can be calculated beforehand with considerable accuracy.
The average man has so little real will that he is
very much the creature of circumstances; his action
in previous lives places him amid certain surroundings,
and their influence upon him is so very much the most
important factor in his life-story that his future
course may be predicted with almost mathematical certainty.
With the developed man the case is different; for
him also the main events of life are arranged by his
past actions, but the way in which he will allow them
to affect him, the methods by which he will deal with
them and perhaps triumph over them these
are all his own, and they cannot be foreseen even
on the mental plane except as probabilities.
Looking down on man’s life in
this way from above, it seems as though his free will
could be exercised only at certain crises in his career.
He arrives at a point in his life where there are obviously
two or three alternative courses open before him;
he is absolutely free to choose which of them he pleases,
and although some one who knew his nature thoroughly
well might feel almost certain what his choice would
be, such knowledge on his friend’s part is in
no sense a compelling force.
But when he has chosen, he
has to go through with it and take the consequences;
having entered upon a particular path he may, in many
cases, be forced to go on for a very long way before
he has any opportunity to turn aside. His position
is somewhat like that of the driver of a train; when
he comes to a junction he may have the points set
either this way or that, and so can pass on to whichever
line he pleases, but when he has passed on
to one of them he is compelled to run on along the
line which he has selected until he reaches another
set of points, where again an opportunity of choice
is offered to him.
Now, in looking down from the mental
plane, these points of new departure would be clearly
visible, and all the results of each choice would
lie open before us, certain to be worked out even to
the smallest detail. The only point which would
remain uncertain would be the all-important one as
to which choice the man would make. We should,
in fact, have not one but several futures mapped out
before our eyes, without necessarily being able to
determine which of them would materialize itself into
accomplished fact. In most instances we should
see so strong a probability that we should not hesitate
to come to a decision, but the case which I have described
is certainly theoretically possible. Still, even
this much knowledge would enable us to do with safety
a good deal of prediction; and it is not difficult
for us to imagine that a far higher power than ours
might always be able to foresee which way every choice
would go, and consequently to prophesy with absolute
certainty.
On the buddhic plane, however, no
such elaborate process of conscious calculation is
necessary, for, as I said before, in some manner which
down here is totally inexplicable, the past, the present,
and the future, are there all existing simultaneously.
One can only accept this fact, for its cause lies
in the faculty of the plane, and the way in which
this higher faculty works is naturally quite incomprehensible
to the physical brain. Yet now and then one may
meet with a hint that seems to bring us a trifle nearer
to a dim possibility of comprehension. One such
hint was given by Dr. Oliver Lodge in his address
to the British Association at Cardiff. He said:
“A luminous and helpful idea
is that time is but a relative mode of regarding things;
we progress through phenomena at a certain definite
pace, and this subjective advance we interpret in an
objective manner, as if events moved necessarily in
this order and at this precise rate. But that
may be only one mode of regarding them. The events
may be in some sense in existence always, both past
and future, and it may be we who are arriving at them,
not they which are happening. The analogy of a
traveller in a railway train is useful; if he could
never leave the train nor alter its pace he would
probably consider the landscapes as necessarily successive
and be unable to conceive their co-existence....
We perceive, therefore, a possible fourth dimensional
aspect about time, the inexorableness of whose flow
may be a natural part or our present limitations.
And if we once grasp the idea that past and future
may be actually existing, we can recognize that they
may have a controlling influence on all present action,
and the two together may constitute the ‘higher
plane’ or totality of things after which, as
it seems to me, we are impelled to seek, in connection
with the directing of form or determinism, and the
action of living beings consciously directed to a
definite and preconceived end.”
Time is not in reality the fourth
dimension at all; yet to look at it for the moment
from that point of view is some slight help towards
grasping the ungraspable. Suppose that we hold
a wooden cone at right angles to a sheet of paper,
and slowly push it through it point first. A
microbe living on the surface of that sheet of paper,
and having no power of conceiving anything outside
of that surface, could not only never see the cone
as a whole, but he could form no sort of conception
of such a body at all. All that he would see would
be the sudden appearance of a tiny circle, which would
gradually and mysteriously grow larger and larger
until it vanished from his world as suddenly and incomprehensibly
as it had come into it.
Thus, what were in reality a series
of sections of the cone would appear to him to be
successive stages in the life of a circle, and it
would be impossible for him to grasp the idea that
these successive stages could be seen simultaneously.
Yet it is, of course, easy enough for us, looking
down upon the transaction from another dimension, to
see that the microbe is simply under a delusion arising
from its own limitations, and that the cone exists
as a whole all the while. Our own delusion as
to past, present, and future is possibly not dissimilar,
and the view that is gained of any sequence of events
from the buddhic plane corresponds to the view of
the cone as a whole. Naturally, any attempt to
work out this suggestion lands us in a series of startling
paradoxes; but the fact remains a fact, nevertheless,
and the time will come when it will be clear as noonday
to our comprehension.
When the pupil’s consciousness
is fully developed upon the buddhic plane, therefore,
perfect prevision is possible to him, though he may
not nay, he certainly will not be
able to bring the whole result of his sight through
fully and in order into this light. Still, a great
deal of clear foresight is obviously within his power
whenever he likes to exercise it; and even when he
is not exercising it, frequent flashes of fore-knowledge
come through into his ordinary life, so that he often
has an instantaneous intuition as to how things will
turn out even before their inception.
Short of this perfect prevision we
find, as in the previous cases, that all degrees of
this type of clairvoyance exist, from the occasional
vague premonitions which cannot in any true sense be
called sight at all, up to frequent and fairly complete
second-sight. The faculty to which this latter
somewhat misleading name has been given is an extremely
interesting one, and would well repay more careful
and systematic study than has ever hitherto been given
to it.
It is best known to us as a not infrequent
possession of the Scottish Highlanders, though it
is by no means confined to them. Occasional instances
of it have appeared in almost every nation, but it
has always been commonest among mountaineers and men
of lonely life. With us in England it is often
spoken of as though it were the exclusive appanage
of the Celtic race, but in reality it has appeared
among similarly situated peoples the world over.
It is stated, for example, to be very common among
the Westphalian peasantry.
Sometimes the second-sight consists
of a picture clearly foreshowing some coming event;
more frequently, perhaps, the glimpse of the future
is given by some symbolical appearance. It is
noteworthy that the events foreseen are invariably
unpleasant ones death being the commonest
of all; I do not recollect a single instance in which
the second-sight has shown anything which was not
of the most gloomy nature. It has a ghastly symbolism
which is all its own a symbolism of shrouds
and corpse-candles, and other funereal horrors.
In some cases it appears to be to a certain extent
dependent on locality, for it is stated that inhabitants
of the Isle of Skye who possess the faculty often
lose it when they leave the island, even though it
be only to cross to the mainland. The gift of
such sight is sometimes hereditary in a family for
generations, but this is not an invariable rule, for
it often appears sporadically in one member of a family
otherwise free from its lugubrious influence.
An example in which an accurate vision
of a coming event was seen some months beforehand
by second-sight has already been given. Here is
another and perhaps a more striking one, which I give
exactly as it was related to me by one of the actors
in the scene.
“We plunged into the jungle,
and had walked on for about an hour without much success,
when Cameron, who happened to be next to me, stopped
suddenly, turned pale as death, and, pointing straight
before him, cried in accents of horror:
“‘See! see! merciful heaven, look there!’
“‘Where? what? what is
it?’ we all shouted confusedly, as we rushed
up to him and looked round in expectation of encountering
a tiger a cobra we hardly knew
what, but assuredly something terrible, since it had
been sufficient to cause such evident emotion in our
usually self-contained comrade. But neither tiger
nor cobra was visible nothing but Cameron
pointing with ghastly, haggard face and starting eyeballs
at something we could not see.
“‘Cameron! Cameron’
cried I, seizing his arm, “’for heaven’s
sake, speak! What is the matter?’
“Scarcely were the words out
of my mouth when a low, but very peculiar sound struck
on my ear, and Cameron, dropping his pointing hand,
said in a hoarse, strained voice, ’There! you
heard it? Thank God it’s over’ and
fell to the ground insensible.
“There was a momentary confusion
while we unfastened his collar, and I dashed in his
face some water which I fortunately had in my flask,
while another tried to pour brandy between his clenched
teeth; and under cover of it I whispered to the man
next to me (one of our greatest sceptics, by the way),
‘Beauchamp, did you hear anything?’
“‘Why, yes,’ he
replied, a curious sound, very; a sort of crash or
rattle far away in the distance, yet very distinct;
if the thing were not utterly impossible, I could
have sworn it was the rattle of musketry.’
“‘Just my impression,’
murmured I; ‘but hush! he is recovering.’
“In a minute or two he was able
to speak feebly, and began to thank us and apologize
for giving trouble; and soon he sat up, leaning against
a tree, and in a firm, though still low voice said:
“’My dear friends, I feel
I owe you an explanation of my extraordinary behaviour.
It is an explanation that I would fain avoid giving;
but it must come some time, and so may as well be
given now. You may perhaps have noticed that
when during our voyage you all joined in scoffing at
dreams, portents and visions, I invariably avoided
giving any opinion on the subject. I did so because,
while I had no desire to court ridicule or provoke
discussion, I was unable to agree with you, knowing
only too well from my own dread experience that the
world which men agree to call that of the supernatural
is just as real as nay, perhaps, even far
more real than this world we see about us.
In other words, I, like many of my countrymen, am cursed
with the gift of second-sight that awful
faculty which foretells in vision calamities that
are shortly to occur.
“’Such a vision I had
just now, and its exceptional horror moved me as you
have seen. I saw before me a corpse not
that of one who has died a peaceful natural death,
but that of the victim of some terrible accident;
a ghastly, shapeless mass, with a face swollen, crushed,
unrecognizable. I saw this dreadful object placed
in a coffin, and the funeral service performed over
it. I saw the burial-ground, I saw the clergyman:
and though I had never seen either before, I can picture
both perfectly in my mind’s eye now; I saw you,
myself, Beauchamp, all of us and many more, standing
round as mourners; I saw the soldiers raise their
muskets after the service was over; I heard the volley
they fired and then I knew no more.’
“As he spoke of that volley
of musketry I glanced across with a shudder at Beauchamp,
and the look of stony horror on that handsome sceptic’s
face was not to be forgotten.”
This is only one incident (and by
no means the principal one) in a very remarkable story
of psychic experience, but as for the moment we are
concerned merely with the example of second-sight which
it gives us, I need only say that later in the day
the party of young soldiers discovered the body of
their commanding officer in the terrible condition
so graphically described by Mr. Cameron. The narrative
continues:
“When, on the following evening,
we arrived at our destination, and our melancholy
deposition had been taken down by the proper authorities,
Cameron and I went out for a quiet walk, to endeavour
with the assistance of the soothing influence of nature
to shake off something of the gloom which paralyzed
our spirits. Suddenly he clutched my arm, and,
pointing through some rude railings, said in a trembling
voice, ’Yes, there it is! that is the burial-ground
I saw yesterday.’ And when later on we
were introduced to the chaplain of the post, I noticed,
though my friends did not, the irrepressible shudder
with which Cameron took his hand, and I knew that he
had recognized the clergyman of his vision.”
As for the occult rationale of all
this, I presume Mr. Cameron’s vision was a pure
case of second-sight, and if so the fact that the
two men who were evidently nearest to him (certainly
one probably both actually touching
him) participated in it to the limited extent of hearing
the concluding volley, while the others who were not
so close did not, would show that the intensity with
which the vision impressed itself upon the seer occasioned
vibrations in his mind-body which were communicated
to those of the persons in contact with him, as in
ordinary thought-transference. Anyone who wishes
to read the rest of the story will find it in the
pages of Lucifer.
Scores of examples of similar nature
to these might easily be collected. With regard
to the symbolical variety of this sight, it is commonly
stated among those who possess it that if on meeting
a living person they see a phantom shroud wrapped
around him, it is a sure prognostication of his death.
The date of the approaching decease is indicated either
by the extent to which the shroud covers the body,
or by the time of day at which the vision is seen;
for if it be in the early morning they say that the
man will die during the same day, but if it be in
the evening, then it will be only some time within
a year.
Another variant (and a remarkable
one) of the symbolic form of second-sight is that
in which the headless apparition of the person whose
death is foretold manifests itself to the seer.
An example of that class is given in Signs before
Death as having happened in the family of Dr.
Ferrier, though in that case, if I recollect rightly,
the vision did not occur until the time of the death,
or very near it.
Turning from seers who are regularly
in possession of a certain faculty, although its manifestations
are only occasionally fully under their control, we
are confronted by a large number of isolated instances
of prevision in the case of people with whom it is
not in any way a regular faculty. Perhaps the
majority of these occur in dreams, although examples
of the waking vision are by no means wanting.
Sometimes the prevision refers to an event of distinct
importance to the seer, and so justifies the action
of the Ego in taking the trouble to impress it.
In other cases, the event is one which is of no apparent
importance, or is not in any way connected with the
man to whom the vision comes. Sometimes it is
clear that the intention of the Ego (or the communicating
entity, whatever it may be) is to warn the lower self
of the approach of some calamity, either in order
that it may be prevented or, if that be not possible,
that the shock may be minimized by preparation.
The event most frequently thus foreshadowed
is, perhaps not unnaturally, death sometimes
the death of the seer himself, sometimes that of one
dear to him. This type of prevision is so common
in the literature of the subject, and its object is
so obvious, that we need hardly cite examples of it;
but one or two instances in which the prophetic sight,
though clearly useful, was yet of a less sombre character,
will prove not uninteresting to the reader. The
following is culled from that storehouse of the student
of the uncanny, Mrs. Crowe’s Night Side of
Nature, .
“A few years ago Dr. Watson,
now residing at Glasgow, dreamt that he received a
summons to attend a patient at a place some miles from
where he was living; that he started on horseback,
and that as he was crossing a moor he saw a bull making
furiously at him, whose horns he only escaped by taking
refuge on a spot inaccessible to the animal, where
he waited a long time till some people, observing his
situation, came to his assistance and released him.
“Whilst at breakfast on the
following morning the summons came, and smiling at
the odd coincidence (as he thought it), he started
on horseback. He was quite ignorant of the road
he had to go, but by and by he arrived at the moor,
which he recognised, and presently the bull appeared,
coming full tilt towards him. But his dream had
shown him the place of refuge, for which he instantly
made, and there he spent three or four hours, besieged
by the animal, till the country people set him free.
Dr. Watson declares that but for the dream he should
not have known in what direction to run for safety.”
Another case, in which a much longer
interval separated the warning and its fulfilment,
is given by Dr. F. G. Lee, in Glimpses of the Supernatural..
“Mrs. Hannah Green, the housekeeper
of a country family in Oxfordshire, dreamt one night
that she had been left alone in the house upon a Sunday
evening, and that hearing a knock at the door of the
chief entrance she went to it and there found an ill-looking
tramp armed with a bludgeon, who insisted on forcing
himself into the house. She thought that she
struggled for some time to prevent him so doing, but
quite ineffectually, and that, being struck down by
him and rendered insensible, he thereupon gained ingress
to the mansion. On this she awoke.
“As nothing happened for a considerable
period the circumstance of the dream was soon forgotten,
and, as she herself asserts, had altogether passed
away from her mind. However, seven years afterwards
this same housekeeper was left with two other servants
to take charge of an isolated mansion at Kensington
(subsequently the town residence of the family), when
on a certain Sunday evening, her fellow-servants having
gone out and left her alone, she was suddenly startled
by a loud knock at the front door.
“All of a sudden the remembrance
of her former dream returned to her with singular
vividness and remarkable force, and she felt her lonely
isolation greatly. Accordingly, having at once
lighted a lamp on the hall table during
which act the loud knock was repeated with vigour she
took the precaution to go up to a landing on the stair
and throw up the window; and there to her intense
terror she saw in the flesh the very man whom years
previously she had seen in her dream, armed with the
bludgeon and demanding an entrance.
“With great presence of mind
she went down to the chief entrance, made that and
other doors and windows more secure, and then rang
the various bells of the house violently, and placed
lights in the upper rooms. It was concluded that
by these acts the intruder was scared away.”
Evidently in this case also the dream
was of practical use, as without it the worthy housekeeper
would without doubt from sheer force of habit have
opened the door in the ordinary way in answer to the
knock.
It is not, however, only in dream
that the Ego impresses his lower self with what he
thinks it well for it to know. Many instances
showing this might be taken from the books, but instead
of quoting from them I will give a case related only
a few weeks ago by a lady of my acquaintance a
case which, although not surrounded with any romantic
incident, has at least the merit of being new.
My friend, then, has two quite young
children, and a little while ago the elder of them
caught (as was supposed) a bad cold, and suffered
for some days from a complete stoppage in the upper
part of the nose. The mother thought little of
this, expecting it to pass off, until one day she
suddenly saw before her in the air what she describes
as a picture of a room, in the centre of which was
a table on which her child was lying insensible or
dead, with some people bending over her. The
minutest details of the scene were clear to her, and
she particularly noticed that the child wore a white
night-dress, whereas she knew that all garments of
that description possessed by her little daughter
happened to be pink.
This vision impressed her considerably,
and suggested to her for the first time that the child
might be suffering from something more serious than
a cold, so she carried her off to a hospital for examination.
The surgeon who attended to her discovered the presence
of a dangerous growth in the nose, which he pronounced
must be removed. A few days later the child was
taken to the hospital for the operation, and was put
to bed. When the mother arrived at the hospital
she found she had forgotten to bring one of the child’s
night-dresses, and so the nurses had to supply one,
which was white. In this white dress the
operation was performed on the girl the next day, in
the room that her mother saw in her vision, every
circumstance being exactly reproduced.
In all these cases the prevision achieved
its result, but the books are full of stories of warnings
neglected or scouted, and of the disaster that consequently
followed. In some cases the information is given
to someone who has practically no power to interfere
in the matter, as in the historic instance when John
Williams, a Cornish mine-manager, foresaw in the minutest
detail, eight or nine days before it took place, the
assassination of Mr. Spencer Perceval, the then Chancellor
of the Exchequer, in the lobby of the House of Commons.
Even in this case, however, it is just possible that
something might have been done, for we read that Mr.
Williams was so much impressed that he consulted his
friends as to whether he ought not to go up to London
to warn Mr. Perceval. Unfortunately they dissuaded
him, and the assassination took place. It does
not seem very probable that, even if he had gone up
to town and related his story, much attention would
have been paid to him, still there is just the possibility
that some precautions might have been taken which would
have prevented the murder.
There is little to show us what particular
action on higher planes led to this curious prophetic
vision. The parties were entirely unknown to
one another, so that it was not caused by any close
sympathy between them. If it was an attempt made
by some helper to avert the threatened doom, it seems
strange that no one who was sufficiently impressible
could be found nearer than Cornwall. Perhaps Mr.
Williams, when on the astral plane during sleep, somehow
came across this reflection of the future, and being
naturally horrified thereby, passed it on to his lower
mind in the hope that somehow something might be done
to prevent it; but it is impossible to diagnose the
case with certainty without examining the akashic
records to see what actually took place.
A typical instance of the absolutely
purposeless foresight is that related by Mr. Stead,
in his Real Ghost Stories , of his friend
Miss Freer, commonly known as Miss X. When staying
at a country house this lady, being wide awake and
fully conscious, once saw a dogcart drawn by a white
horse standing at the hall door, with two strangers
in it, one of whom got out of the cart and stood playing
with a terrier. She noticed that he was wearing
an ulster, and also particularly observed the fresh
wheel-marks made by the cart on the gravel. Nevertheless
there was no cart there at the time; but half an hour
later two strangers did drive up in such an
equipage, and every detail of the lady’s vision
was accurately fulfilled. Mr. Stead goes on to
cite another instance of equally purposeless prevision
where seven years separated the dream (for in this
case it was a dream) and its fulfilment.
All these instances (and they are
merely random selections from many hundreds) show
that a certain amount of prevision is undoubtedly
possible to the Ego, and such cases would evidently
be much more frequent if it were not for the exceeding
density and lack of response in the lower vehicles
of the majority of what we call civilized mankind qualities
chiefly attributable to the gross practical materialism
of the present age. I am not thinking of any profession
of materialistic belief as common, but of the fact
that in all practical affairs of daily life nearly
everyone is guided solely by considerations of worldly
interest in some shape or other.
In many cases the Ego himself may
be an undeveloped one, and his prevision consequently
very vague; in others he himself may see clearly,
but may find his lower vehicles so unimpressible that
all he can succeed in getting through into his physical
brain may be an indefinite presage of coming disaster.
Again, there are cases in which a premonition is not
the work of the Ego at all, but of some outside entity,
who for some reason takes a friendly interest in the
person to whom the feeling comes. In the work
which I quoted above, Mr. Stead tells us of the certainty
which he felt many months beforehand that be would
be left in charge of the Pall Mall Gazette though
from an ordinary point of view nothing seemed less
probable. Whether that fore-knowledge was the
result of an impression made by his own Ego or of
a friendly hint from someone else it is impossible
to say without definite investigation, but his confidence
in it was fully justified.
There is one more variety of clairvoyance
in time which ought not to be left without mention.
It is a comparatively rare one, but there are enough
examples on record to claim our attention, though
unfortunately the particulars given do not usually
include those which we should require in order to
be able to diagnose it with certainty. I refer
to the cases in which spectral armies or phantom flocks
of animals have been seen. In The Night Side
of Nature et seq.) we have accounts
of several such visions. We are there told how
at Havarah Park, near Ripley, a body of soldiers in
white uniform, amounting to several hundreds, was
seen by reputable people to go through various evolutions
and then vanish; and how some years earlier a similar
visionary army was seen in the neighbourhood of Inverness
by a respectable farmer and his son.
In this case also the number of troops
was very great, and the spectators had not the slightest
doubt at first that they were substantial forms of
flesh and blood. They counted at least sixteen
pairs of columns, and had abundance of time to observe
every particular. The front ranks marched seven
abreast, and were accompanied by a good many women
and children, who were carrying tin cans and other
implements of cookery. The men were clothed in
red, and their arms shone brightly in the sun.
In the midst of them was an animal, a deer or a horse,
they could not distinguish which, that they were driving
furiously forward with their bayonets.
The younger of the two men observed
to the other that every now and then the rear ranks
were obliged to run to overtake the van; and the elder
one, who had been a soldier, remarked that that was
always the case, and recommended him if he ever served
to try to march in the front. There was only
one mounted officer; he rode a grey dragoon horse,
and wore a gold-laced hat and blue Hussar cloak, with
wide open sleeves lined with red. The two spectators
observed him so particularly that they said afterwards
they should recognize him anywhere. They were,
however, afraid of being ill-treated or forced to
go along with the troops, whom they concluded to have
come from Ireland, and landed at Kyntyre; and whilst
they were climbing over a dyke to get out of their
way, the whole thing vanished.
A phenomenon of the same sort was
observed in the earlier part of this century at Paderborn
in Westphalia, and seen by at least thirty people;
but as, some years later, a review of twenty thousand
men was held on the very same spot, it was concluded
that the vision must have been some sort of second-sight a
faculty not uncommon in the district.
Such spectral hosts, however, are
sometimes seen where an army of ordinary men could
by no possibility have marched, either before or after.
One of the most remarkable accounts of such apparitions
is given by Miss Harriet Martineau, in her description
of The English Lakes. She writes as follows:
“This Souter or Soutra Fell
is the mountain on which ghosts appeared in myriads,
at intervals during ten years of the last century,
presenting the same appearances to twenty-six chosen
witnesses, and to all the inhabitants of all the cottages
within view of the mountain, and for a space of two
hours and a half at one time the spectral
show being closed by darkness! The mountain,
be it remembered, is full of precipices, which defy
all marching of bodies of men; and the north and west
sides present a sheer perpendicular of 900 feet.
“On Midsummer Eve, 1735, a farm
servant of Mr. Lancaster, half a mile from the mountain,
saw the eastern side of its summit covered with troops,
which pursued their onward march for an hour.
They came, in distinct bodies, from an eminence on
the north end, and disappeared in a niche in the summit.
When the poor fellow told his tale, he was insulted
on all hands, as original observers usually are when
they see anything wonderful. Two years after,
also on a Midsummer Eve, Mr. Lancaster saw some men
there, apparently following their horses, as if they
had returned from hunting. He thought nothing
of this; but he happened to look up again ten minutes
after, and saw the figures, now mounted, and followed
by an interminable array of troops, five abreast,
marching from the eminence and over the cleft as before.
All the family saw this, and the manoeuvres of the
force, as each company was kept in order by a mounted
officer, who galloped this way and that. As the
shades of twilight came on, the discipline appeared
to relax, and the troops intermingled, and rode at
unequal paces, till all was lost in darkness.
Now of course all the Lancasters were insulted, as
their servant had been; but their justification was
not long delayed.
“On the Midsummer Eve of the
fearful 1745, twenty-six persons, expressly summoned
by the family, saw all that had been seen before,
and more. Carriages were now interspersed with
the troops; and everybody knew that no carriages had
been, or could be, on the summit of Souter Fell.
The multitude was beyond imagination; for the troops
filled a space of half a mile, and marched quickly
till night hid them still marching.
There was nothing vaporous or indistinct about the
appearance of these spectres. So real did they
seem, that some of the people went up, the next morning,
to look for the hoof-marks of the horses; and awful
it was to them to find not one foot-print on heather
or grass. The witnesses attested the whole story
on oath before a magistrate; and fearful were the
expectations held by the whole country-side about
the coming events of the Scotch rebellion.
It now comes out that two other persons had seen something
of the sort in the interval viz.,
in 1743 but had concealed it, to escape
the insults to which their neighbours were subjected.
Mr. Wren, of Wilton Hall, and his farm servant, saw,
one summer evening, a man and a dog on the mountain,
pursuing some horses along a place so steep that a
horse could hardly by any possibility keep a footing
on it. Their speed was prodigious, and their
disappearance at the south end of the fell so rapid,
that Mr. Wren and the servant went up, the next morning,
to find the body of the man who must have been killed.
Of man, horse, or dog, they found not a trace and
they came down and held their tongues. When they
did speak, they fared not much better for having twenty-six
sworn comrades in their disgrace.
“As for the explanation, the
editor of the Lonsdale Magazine declared that it was discovered that on the Midsummer
Eve of 1745 the rebels were ’exercising on the
western coast of Scotland, whose movements had been
reflected by some transparent vapour, similar to the
Fata Morgana.’ This is not much in the way
of explanation; but it is, as far as we know, all
that can be had at present. These facts, however,
brought out a good many more; as the spectral march
of the same kind seen in Leicestershire in 1707, and
the tradition of the tramp of armies over Helvellyn,
on the eve of the battle of Marston Moor.”
Other cases are cited in which flocks
of spectral sheep have been seen on certain roads,
and there are of course various German stories of
phantom cavalcades of hunters and robbers.
Now in these cases, as so often happens
in the investigation of occult phenomena, there are
several possible causes, any one of which would be
quite adequate to the production of the observed occurrences,
but in the absence of fuller information it is hardly
feasible to do more than guess as to which of these
possible causes were in operation in any particular
instance.
The explanation usually suggested
(whenever the whole story is not ridiculed as a falsehood)
is that what is seen is a reflection by mirage of
the movements of a real body of troops, taking place
at a considerable distance. I have myself seen
the ordinary mirage on several occasions, and know
something therefore of its wonderful powers of deception;
but it seems to me that we should need some entirely
new variety of mirage, quite different from that at
present known to science, to account for these tales
of phantom armies, some of which pass the spectator
within a few yards.
First of all, they may be, as apparently
in the Westphalian case above mentioned, simply instances
of prevision on a gigantic scale by whom
arranged, and for what purpose, it is not easy to divine.
Again, they may often belong to the past instead of
the future, and be in fact the reflection of scenes
from the akashic records though here again
the reason and method of such reflection is not obvious.
There are plenty of tribes of nature-spirits perfectly
capable, if for any reason they wished to do so, of producing such appearances
by their wonderful power of glamour, and such action would be quite in
keeping with their delight in mystifying and impressing
human beings. Or it may even sometimes be kindly
intended by them as a warning to their friends of events
that they know to be about to take place. It
seems as though some explanation along these lines
would be the most reasonable method of accounting
for the extraordinary series of phenomena described
by Miss Martineau that is, if the stories
told to her can be relied upon.
Another possibility is that in some
cases what have been taken for soldiers were simply
the nature-spirits themselves going through some of
the ordered evolutions in which they take so much delight,
though it must be admitted that these are rarely of
a character which could be mistaken for military manoeuvres
except by the most ignorant.
The flocks of animals are probably in most instances mere
records, but there are cases where they, like the wild huntsmen of German
story, belong to an entirely different class of phenomena, which is altogether
outside of our present subject. Students of the occult will be familiar
with the fact that the circumstances surrounding any scene of intense terror or
passion, such as an exceptionally horrible murder, are liable to be occasionally
reproduced in a form which it needs a very slight development of psychic faculty
to be able to see and it has sometimes happened that various animals formed part
of such surroundings, and consequently they also are periodically reproduced by
the action of the guilty conscience of the murderer .
Probably whatever foundation of fact
underlies the various stories of spectral horsemen
and hunting-troops may generally be referred to this
category. This is also the explanation, evidently,
of some of the visions of ghostly armies, such as
that remarkable re-enactment of the battle of Edgehill
which seems to have taken place at intervals for some
months after the date of the real struggle, as testified
by a justice of the peace, a clergyman, and other
eye-witnesses, in a curious contemporary pamphlet
entitled Prodigious Noises of War and Battle, at
Edgehill, near Keinton, in Northamptonshire.
According to the pamphlet this case was investigated
at the time by some officers of the army, who clearly
recognized many of the phantom figures that they saw.
This looks decidedly like an instance of the terrible
power of man’s unrestrained passions to reproduce
themselves, and to cause in some strange way a kind
of materialization of their record.
In some cases it is clear that the
flocks of animals seen have been simply hordes of
unclean artificial elementals taking that form in
order to feed upon the loathsome emanations of peculiarly
horrible places, such as would be the site of a gallows.
An instance of this kind is furnished by the celebrated
“Gyb Ghosts,” or ghosts of the gibbet,
described in More Glimpses of the World Unseen,
, as being repeatedly seen in the form of herds
of mis-shapen swine-like creatures, rushing,
rooting and fighting night after night on the site
of that foul monument of crime. But these belong
to the subject of apparitions rather than to that
of clairvoyance.