The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 11, September, 1858 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 318 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 11, September, 1858.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 11, September, 1858 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 318 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 11, September, 1858.
or Territorial Extensionist;—­the name is a long, decent overcoat for his shabby ideas.  So when wonderful phenomena in the nervous system are observed,—­when tables are smashed by invisible hands,—­when people see ghosts through stone walls, and know what is passing in the heart of Africa,—­how easily you unlock your wardrobe of terms and clap on the back of every eccentric fact your ready-made phrase-coat,—­Animal Magnetism, Biology, Odic Force, Optical Illusion, Second Sight, Spirits, and what not!  It is a wonderful labor-saving and faith-saving process.  People say, “Oh, is that all?” and pass on complacently.  There are such explanatory labels to be met with everywhere.  They save a deal of trouble.  All the shops keep these overcoats,—­shops ecclesiastical, medical, juridical, professional, political, social.

Now all I have to do is, not to go to the second-hand slop-shops for the phrase-coat I need for my naked discovery, but look for some unfamiliar robe,—­some name more recherche, learned, and transcendental than my neighbors sport,—­and then I shall pass muster.  The classic togas seem to be the most imposing.  The Germans, who weave their names out of their indigenous Saxon roots, are much too naive.  I will get a Greek Lexicon and set about it this very night.

After all, why should it be thought so improbable, in this age of strange phenomena, that the ideas transmitted through the electro-magnetic wire may be communicated to the brain,—­especially when there exist certain abnormal or semi-abnormal conditions of that brain and its nerves?  Is it not reasonable to suppose that all magnetisms are one in essence?  The singular experiences above related seem to hint at the truth of such a view.  If it be true that certain delicately-organized persons have the power of telling the character of others, who are entire strangers to them, simply by holding in their hands letters written by those strangers, is it not full as much within the scope of belief that there are those who, under certain physical conditions, may detect the purport of an electro-magnetic message,—­that message being sent by vibrations of the wire through the nerves to the brain?  If all magnetisms are one in essence,—­as I am inclined to believe,—­and if the nerves, the brain, and the mind are so swayed by what we term animal magnetism, why not allow for the strong probability of their being also, under certain conditions, equally impressible by electro-magnetism?  I put these questions to scientific men; and I do not see why they should be answered by silence or ridicule, merely because the whole subject is veiled in mystery.

It may be asked,—­How can an electro-magnetic message be communicated to the mind, without a knowledge of the alphabet used by the telegraphers?  This question may seem a poser to some minds.  But I don’t see that it raises any grave difficulty.  I answer the question by asking another:—­How can persons in the somnambulic state read with the tops of their heads?

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 11, September, 1858 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.