CLAIRVOYANCE THE VISION OF THE OUT OF SIGHT: Chapter III
My Own Experience.
It is difficult for those who are
not clairvoyant to understand what those who are clairvoyant
describe, often with the most extraordinary precision
and detail. Unfortunately for myself I am not
a clairvoyant, but on one occasion I had an experience
which enabled me to understand something of clairvoyant
vision. I had been working late at night, and
had gone to bed at about two o’clock in the morning
somewhat tired, having spent several hours in preparing
“Real Ghost Stories” for the press.
I got into bed, but was not able to go to sleep, as
usual, as soon as my head touched the pillow.
I suppose my mind had been too much excited by hard
work right up to the moment of going to bed for me
readily 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 out 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
was just as if I had been looking out upon 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 than any amount of disquisition
how it is that clairvoyants see. 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.
Crystal-Gazing.
Crystal-gazing is somewhat akin to
clairvoyance. There are some people who cannot
look into an ordinary globular bottle without seeing
pictures form themselves, without any effort or will
on their part, in the crystal globe. This is
an experience which I have never been able to enjoy.
But I have seen crystal-gazing going on at a table
at which I have been sitting on one or two occasions
with rather remarkable results. The experiences
of Miss X. in crystal-gazing have been told at length
and in detail in the “Proceedings of the Psychical
Research Society.” On looking into the
crystal on two occasions as a test, to see if she
could see me when she was several miles off, she saw,
not me, but a different friend of mine on each occasion,
whom she had never seen, but whom she immediately
identified on seeing them afterwards at my office.
Crystal-gazing seems to be the least
dangerous and most simple of all methods of experimenting.
You simply look into a crystal globe the size of a
five-shilling piece, or a water-bottle which is full
of clear water, and is placed so that too much light
does not fall upon it, and then simply look at it.
You make no incantations and engage in no mumbo-jumbo
business; you simply look at it for two or three minutes,
taking care not to tire yourself, winking as much as
you please, but fixing your thought upon whoever it
is you wish to see. Then, if you have the faculty,
the glass will cloud over with a milky mist, and in
the centre the image is gradually precipitated in just
the same way as a photograph forms on the sensitive
plate. At least, the description given by crystal-gazers
as to the way in which the picture appears reminded
me of nothing so much as what I saw when I stood inside
the largest camera in the world, in which the Ordnance
Survey photographs its maps at Southampton.