The Purple Cloud eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 363 pages of information about The Purple Cloud.

The Purple Cloud eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 363 pages of information about The Purple Cloud.

’Well, I quickly found that, in the state of trance, Miss Wilson possessed very remarkable powers:  remarkable, I mean, not, of course, because peculiar to herself in kind, but because they were so constant, reliable, exact, and far-reaching, in degree.  The veriest fledgling in psychical science will now sit and discourse finically to you about the reporting powers of the mind in its trance state—­just as though it was something quite new!  This simple fact, I assure you, which the Psychical Research Society, only after endless investigation, admits to be scientific, has been perfectly well known to every old crone since the Middle Ages, and, I assume, long previously.  What an unnecessary air of discovery!  The certainty that someone in trance in Manchester can tell you what is going on in London, or in Pekin, was not, of course, left to the acumen of an office in Fleet Street; and the society, in establishing the fact beyond doubt for the general public, has not gone one step toward explaining it.  They have, in fact, revealed nothing that many of us did not, with absolute assurance, know before.

’But talking of poor Miss Wilson, I say that her powers were remarkable, because, though not exceptional in genre, they were so special in quantity,—­so “constant,” and “far-reaching.”  I believe it to be a fact that, in general, the powers of trance manifest themselves more particularly with regard to space, as distinct from time:  the spirit roams in the present—­it travels over a plain—­it does not usually attract the interest of observers by great ascents, or by great descents.  I fancy that is so.  But Miss Wilson’s gift was special to this extent, that she travelled in every direction, and easily in all but one, north and south, up and down, in the past, the present, and the future.

This I discovered, not at once, but gradually.  She would emit a stream of sounds in the trance state—­I can hardly call it speech, so murmurous, yet guttural, was the utterance, mixed with puffy breath-sounds at the languid lips.  This state was accompanied by an intense contraction of the pupils, absence of the knee-jerk, considerable rigor, and a rapt and arrant expression.  I got into the habit of sitting long hours at her bed-side, quite fascinated by her, trying to catch the import of that opiate and visionary language which came puffing and fluttering in deliberate monotone from her lips.  Gradually, in the course of months, my ear learned to detect the words; “the veil was rent” for me also; and I was able to follow somewhat the course of her musing and wandering spirit.

At the end of six months I heard her one day repeat some words which were familiar to me.  They were these:  “Such were the arts by which the Romans extended their conquests, and attained the palm of victory; and the concurring testimony of different authors enables us to describe them with precision...”  I was startled:  they are part of Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall,” which I easily guessed that she had never read.

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The Purple Cloud from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.